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A29696 London's lamentation, or, A serious discourse concerning the late fiery dispensation that turned our (once renowned) city into a ruinous heap also the several lessons that are incumbent upon those whose houses have escaped the consuming flames / by Thomas Brooks. Brooks, Thomas, 1608-1680. 1670 (1670) Wing B4950; ESTC R24240 405,825 482

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being not so much to be called offences as monsters and not to be named without holy detestation by Saints though they be committed without shame by Sodomites The Saxons who of old inhabited this Land Boniface strangled the Adulteress being taken and then burnt her body with fire and hanged the Adulterer over a flaming fire burning him by degrees till he dyed Opilius Macrinus an Julius Capit●linus Emperor caused the body of the Adulterer and the Whore to be joyned together and so burnt with fire Aurelianus caused the Adulterers legs to be bound to the boughs of two trees bent together and then violently being lifted up again his body was torn asunder And the Julian Law among the Romans punished Adultery with death by cutting off the heads of those that were guilty of that fact And the Turks stone Adulterers to death Zaleucus King of the Locrians ordained that Adulterers should have their eyes put out and therefore when his Son was taken in Adultery that he might both keep the Law and be compassionate to his Son he put forth one of his own eyes to redeem one of his Sons I have read of some Heathens that have punished this sin with a most shameful death and the death was this they would have the Adulterers or Adulteresses head to be put into the paunch of a beast where lay all the filth and uncleaness of it and there to be stif●ed to death This was a fit punishment for so filthy a sin In old time the Egyptians Diodor. used to punish Adulte●y on this sort the man with a thousand jerks with a reed and the woman with cutting off her nose but he who forced a free woman to his lusts had his privy members cut off But Thirdly Such who give themselves over to fornication overthrow the state of mankind while no man knoweth his own wife nor no wife knoweth her own husband and while no father knows his own children nor no children know ●heir own father Affinities and Consanguini●ies are the joynts and sinews of the world lose these and lose all Now what Affinities or Consanguinities can there be when there is nothing but confusion of blood the son knoweth not his father nor the father the son But Fourthly These expressions of giving themselves over to fornication and going after strange flesh implies First Their making constant provisions for their base lusts O the time the pains the cost the charge that such Rom. 13. ult are at to make provision for their unsatiable lusts Secondly It implies an excessive violent spending of their strength beyond all measure and bounds in all lasciviousness and Sodomitical uncleanness Pliny tells of Cornelius Gallus Pliny lib. 7. and Q. Elerius two Roman Knights that dyed in the very action of filthiness Theodebert the eldest Son of Glotharius Pontanus Fulgos lib. 6. cap. 12. dyed amongst his Whores so did Bertrane Ferrier at Bacelone in Spain Giachet Geneve of Saluces who had both wife and children of his own being carnally joyned with a young woman was suddenly smitten with death his wife and children wondring why he stayed so long in his Study when it was time to go to bed called him and knockt at his door very hard but when no answer was made they broke open the doors that were locked on the inner side and found him lying upon the woman stark dead and her dead also Claudus of Asses Counsellor of the Parliament of Paris a desperate Persecutor of the Protestants whilst he was in the very act of committing filthiness with one of his waiting Maids was taken with an Apoplexy which immediately after made an end of him Many other instances might be produced but let these suffice Thirdly It implies their impudency and shamelesness in their filthiness and uncleanness they had a Whores forehead they proclaimed their lasciviousness before all the Jer. 3. 3. Chap. 6. 15. Isa 3. 10. Gen. 13. 13. world they were not ashamed neither could they blush hence 't is that the men of Sodom are said to be sinners before the Lord that is they sinned openly publickly and shamelesly without any regard to the eye of God at all Bring Gen. 19. 5. them out to us that we may know them O faces hatcht with impudency they shrowd not their sins in a mantle of secrecy but proclaim their filthiness before all the world they had out-sinn'd all shame and therefore they gloried in their shame they were so arrogant and impudent in sinning that they proclaimed their filthiness upon the house-top But Fourthly It implies their resolvedness and obstinacy in sinning in the face of all the terrible Warnings and Alarms that God had formerly given them by a bloody War and by Gen. 14. 10 11 12. the spoiling and plundering of their Cities and by taking away of their victuals fulness of bread was a part of their sin and now cleanness of teeth is made a piece of their punishment in Gods just Judgment and by Lots admonition Gen. 19. 11. and mild opposition It is observable that when they were smitten with blindness they wearied themselves to find the door God smote them with blindness both of body and mind and yet they continued groaping to find the door being highly resolved upon buggery and beastiality though they dyed for it O the hideous wickedness and prodigious madness of these Sodomites that when divine Justice had struck them blind their hearts should be so desperately set upon their lusts as to weary themselves to find the door But what will not Satans bond-slaves and fire-brands of Hell do Sottish and besotted sinners will never tremble when Phil. 2. 12. God strikes But Fifthly These expressions of giving themselves over to fornication and going after strange flesh implies the delight Rom. 1. 32. pleasure content and satisfaction that they took in those abominable practices They have chosen their own ways and their souls delight in their abominations They had Isa 66. 3. 2 Thes 2. 12. 2 Pet. 2. 13. pleasure in unrighteousness Luther tells us of a certain Grandee in his Country that was so besotted with the sin of Whoredom that he was not ashamed to say that if he might ever live here and be carried from one Whore-house to another there to satisfie his lusts he would never desire any other Heaven This filthy Grandee did afterwards breathe out his wretched Soul betwixt two notorious Harlots All the pleasure and Heaven that these filthy Sodomites look after was to satisfie their brutish lusts Hark Scholar said the Harlot to Apulcius it is but a bitter-sweet that you are so sond of and this the Sodomites found true at the long run when God showred down fire and brimstone upon them But Sixthly and lastly These words of giving themselves over to fornication and going after strange flesh implies their great setled security in those brutish practices The Old world was not more secure when God swept them away
guilt and stain of sin of its own nature and unpardoned endures eternally upon the soul and therefore what can follow but eternal torments The lasting continuance of sin is remarkably deseribed by the Prophet Jeremiah Chap. 17. 1. The sin of Judah is written with a Pen of Iron and with the point of a Diamond it is graven upon the table of their hearts Not only written but engraven that no hand can deface it Slight not the commission of any sin it perishes not with the acting The least vanity hath a perpetuity nay an eternity of guilt upon it Sin leaving a blot in the soul brings the matter of Hell fire is eternally punished because there is still matter for that everlasting fire to work upon But Fifthly I answer Though death put an end to mens lives yet not to sins Hell is as full of sin as it is of punishment or torment Though the Schoolmen determine that after this life men are capable neither of merit nor demerit and therefore by their sins do not incurr a greater measure of punishment yet they grant that they sin still Though when the creature is actually under the sentence of condemnation the Law ceases to any further punishment yet there is an obligation to the precepts of the Law still Though a man be bound only to the curse of the Law as he is a sinner yet he is bound to the precept of the Law as he is a creature so that though the demerit of sin ceaseth after death yet the nature of sin remaineth though by sinning they do not incurr a higher and a greater degree of punishment yet as they continue sinning so it is just with God there should be a continuation of the punishment already inflicted But Sixthly I answer It is no injustice in God to punish temporal offences with perpetual torments God measureth the punishment by the greatness of the offence and not by the time wherein the sin was acted Murder Adultery Sacriledge Treason and the like capital crimes are doomed in the Judicatories of men to death without mercy and sometimes to perpetual imprisonment or to perpetual banishment and yet these high offences were committed and done in a short time Now this bears a proportion with eternal torments O Sirs if the offences committed against God be infinitely heinous why may not the punishment be infinitely lasting Sinners offences as Austin well observes are not to be measured temporis longitudine Aug. de C●v●t D●● l. 1. c. 11. by the length of time wherein they were done but iniquitatis magnitudine by the foulness of the crime and if so then God is just in binding the sinner in everlasting chains We must remember that God is a great and a glorious God and that he is an omniscient and an omnipotent God and that he is a mighty yea an almighty God and that he is a ●oly and a just God and that he is out of Christ an incomprehensible incommunicable and very terrible God and that he is an infinite eternal and independent God And Heb. 12. 29. 30. we must remember that man is a shaddow a bubble a vapour a dream a base vile sinful worthless Worm Now these things being considered must we not confess that eternity it self is too short a space for God to revenge himself on sinners in But Seventhly and lastly I answer Such sinners have but what they chose Whilest they lived under the means of Grace the God of Grace sat before them Heaven and Hell Glory Deut. 11. 26 27. Chap. 30 15. Heb. 2. 2 3. Chap. 10. 28 29. John 3. 14 15 16 17 36. Chap. 1. 11. and misery eternal life and eternal death so that if they eternally miscarry they have none to blame but themselves for choosing Hell rather than Heaven misery rather than glory and eternal death rather than eternal life Ah how treely how fully how frequently how graciously how gloriously hath Christ been offered in the Gospel to poor sinners and yet they would not choose him they would not close with him they would not embrace him nor accept of him nor enter into a marriage Covenant with him nor resign themselves up to him nor part with their lusts to enjoy him They would not come to Christ that they might have John 5. 40. Mat●h 22. 2 3 4 5. 2 Cor. 4. 3 4. life they slighted infinite mercy and despised the riches of Grace and trode under foot the blood of the everlasting Covenant and scorned the offers of eternal salvation and therefore 't is but just that they should lye down in everlasting sorrows How can that sinner be saved that still refuses salvation How can mercy save him that will not be saved by mercy yea how can Christ save such a man that will not be saved by him All the world can't save that man from going to Hell who is peremptorily resolved that he will not go to Heaven Sinners have boldly and daily refused eternal life eternal mercy eternal glory and therefore 't is but just that th●y should endure eternal misery And let thus much suffice for answer to the Objection But Sir pray what are those duties that are incumbent upon Quest those that have been burnt up and whose habitations are n●w laid in its ashes I answer They are these that follow Answ First See the hand of the Lord in this late dreadful fire acknowledge the Lord to be the Author of all Judgements and of this in particular 'T is a high point of Christian Prudence Lev. 26. 41. Mich. 7. 9. and Piety to acknowledge the Lord to be the Author of all personal or National sufferings that b●fall us Jer. 9. 12. Who is the wise man that may understand this for what the Land perisheth and is burnt up like a Wilderness that none passeth through It is very great wi●dom to know from whom all our afflictions come and for what all our affl●ctions come upon us God looks that we should observe his hand in all our sufferings Hear the rod and who hath appointed it God challenges all sorts of afflictions as his own special Administration Mich. 6 9. See this Text fully opened in my first Epistle to my Treatise on ●loset Prayer Amos 3. 6. Is there any evil in the City and the Lord hath not done it I form the light and create darkness I make peace and create evil I the Lord do all th●se things Isa 45. 7. God takes it very hainously and looks upon it as a very great indignity that is put upon his Power Providence and Justice when men will neither see nor acknowledge his hand in those sore afflictions and sad sufferings that he brings upon them Of such the Prophet Isaiah complains Chap. 26. 11. Lord when thy hand is lifted up they will not see The hand the power of the Lord was so remarkable and conspicuous in the Judgements that were inflicted upon them as might very well wring an acknowledgement out
Whether Paul or Apollos or Cephas or the world or life or death or things present or things to come all are yours But how come they to be interested in this large Char●er the Apostle answers it in ver 23. Ye are Christs and Christ is Gods All comes to us by Jesus Christ All the Corn in Egypt came through Josephs Gen. 41. hands So all we have be it little or much we have i● through Christs hands upon the account of our marriage union with Christ We may say as Hamar and Sechem said to their people Shall not all their Cattel and substance and Gen. 34. 23. every beast of the field be ours So being married to Christ and become one with him all comes to be ours through him who is the heir of all By vertue of our marriage union with Christ our title to the creatures is not only restored but strengthened That little we have is entailed upon us by Christ in a more firm and b●tter way than ever In the first Adam our Tenure was lower and meaner and baser and uncertainer than now it is for our Title our Tenure by Christ is more honourable and stronger and sweeter and lastinger than ever it was before For now we hold all we have in Capite Christ is our head and husband and by him we hold all we have But now wicked men by the fall of Adam have lost their Original Patent and Charter which once they had to shew for the things of this life By Adams fall they have forfeited Gods primitive donation of all right in the creatures every wicked man in the world has forfeited his right to the creatures in Adam and lies under that forfeiture But to the glory of divine patience be it spoken God has not sued out his forfeiture God has not brought a Writ of ejection against him and by this means he comes to be lawfully possessed of those earthly blessings he dos enjoy As a Fellon though he hath forfeited his life and estate to the Kings Justice and is still subject to ejection at the Kings pleasure yet while the King forbears him his possession is good and lawful and no man may disturb him Wicked men are lawful owners and possessors of the good things God hath given them Numb 22. 30. Am not I thine Ass Whence you may observe 1. That the silliest and simplest being wronged may justly speak in their own defence 2. That they who have done many good Offices and fail in one are often not only unrewarded for former services but punished for that one offence 3. That when the creatures formerly officious to serve us start from their former obedience man ought to reflect upon his own sin as the sole cause thereof 4. That the worst men have good title to their own Consult these Scriptures Deut. 32. 8. Acts 17. 26. Luke 3. 14. goods For though Balaam was a Sorcerer yet the Ass confesseth twice that he was his Ass Luke 12. 33. Sell and give are words of propriety And God hath set the eighth Commandment as a hedge as a fence to every mans possession Dan. 4. 17. This matter is by the Decree of the Watchers and the demand by the word of the Holy Ones to the intent that the living may know that the Most High ruleth in the Kingdoms of men and giveth it to whomsoever he will and setteth up over it the basest of men He that gave Canaan to Jacob gave Mount-Seir to Esau and did not Jacob Gen. 23. 3. 4 5 9. Gen. 42. 3 5. buy a burying place of the Sons of H●●h and did he not buy Corn of the Egyptians by all which they did acknowledge that those wicked men and Idolaters had a lawful Title to those temporal blessings that they did enjoy Now mark God as he is the God of Nature by common Providence allo●s to wicked men their lawful possessions and this is the best Tenure they hold by O b●t now that little that a child of God has ●he holds it by a more glor●ous tenure and honourable Title and ther●fore his m●te is b●●ter than a wicked mans millions But Secondly That little a righteous man hath he hath th●ough the Covenant and through precious promises Now 2 Pet. 1. 4. a little mercy reacht out to a man through the Covenant and as a fruit of the promise is more worth than a world of blessings that flow in upon a man meerly by a gen●r●l Providence There are no mercies so sweet so sure so firm so lasting as those that flow in upon us through the Covenant of Grace O this sweetens every drop and sip and crust and crum of mercy that a godly man enjoyes All the paths Psalm 25. 10. of the Lord are mercy and truth to such as keep his Covenant This is a sweet promise a precious promise a soul satisfying promise a promise more worth than all the riches of the Indies Mark all the paths of the Lord to his people are not only mercy but they are mercy and truth that Consult these Scriptures Josh 23. 14 15. 1 Tim. 4. 8. is they are sure mercies that str●am in upon them through the Covenant Well Sirs you must remember this viz. That the least mercy the least blessing flowing in upon us through the promise is more worth than a thousand blessings that flow in upon us from a general Providence the least blessing flowing in upon us through the Cov●n●nt is better than ten thousand Talents that are the meer products of a general Providence For First Such as enjoy all they have only from a general Providence they enjoy their mercies from that common source or Psalm 145. 15 16. pring that feeds the Birds of the Air and the beasts of the Field The same common bounty of God that feeds and clothes the wicked feeds the Birds and Beasts that perish But Secondly There is no certainty of the continuance of such mercies that are only the product of a common Providence Isa 33. 16. But now the mercies that flow in upon the Saints through the Covenant of Grace they shall be sure to us so long as the Chap. 55. 3. continuance of them may be for our good and Gods glory Now the least mercies held by Covenant are infinitely better than the greatest riches in the world that only drop up on us out of the hand of a common Providence Thirdly The Righteous man hath his little from the special love and favour of God All his little flowes in upon Psal 146. 8. Prov. 15. 17. him from that very same love which moved the Lord to bestow Christ upon him All the righteous mans little is from the good will of him that dwelt in the Bush his little comes Deut. 33. 16. from a reconciled God as well as a bountiful God from a tender Father as well as a merciful Creator A Dinner of Dan. 1. 12. green Hearbs Daniels Pulse Barley Loaves
and kindness of God towards you manifested in the mighty preservations protections and salvations that he has vouchsafed to you when you were surrounded with all manner of hazzards and dangers O that you would strive as for life to come up to duties which are certainly incumbent upon all those who have escaped the burning flames But you will say What are they Quest These that follow Answ First It highly concerns you who have escaped the fiery dispensation to take heed of those sins which bring the fiery Rod and which have turned many of your neighbours out of house and home What they are I have already declared 2 Pet. 2. 6. Luke 17. 32. Jer. 7. 12. 1 Sam. 4. 11. Psalm 78. 60 at large If those sins that have brought the fiery judgement upon your neighbours are to be found among you you have cause to fear the fiery Rod or else some other judgement that shall be equivalent to it If you sin with others you shall suffer with others except there be found repentance on your side and pardoning grace on Gods The Lord hath punished your neighbours with that judgement of judgements the fire and he expects that you should take notice thereof and be instructed thereby to take heed of those sins that they have been judged for else the same or worser judgements will certainly befall you Because Jer. 3. 8. Obad. 11 12 13 14. Edom made no good use of Jerusalems sufferings therefore the Lord threatens her that shame should cover her and that she should be cut off for ever God expects that the judgements that he hath executed upon all round about you should awaken you out of security and work in you a holy dread of his name and provoke you to repentance for what is past and engage you to a more exact walking with him for the time to come But Secondly It highly concerns you not to think those who are burnt up to be greater sinners than your selves who have Isa 5. 22. 23 24. Chap. 51. 17 22 23. ●er 25. 15. 30. escaped the consuming flames Some there were that told Christ of certain Galileans whose blood Pilate had mingled with their Sacrifices an argument of Gods sore displeasure in the eye of man to be surpised with a bloody death even in the act of Gods service But Jesus answered suppose Luk. 13. 1 2 3. ye that these Galileans were sinners above all the Galileans because they suffered such things I tell you nay but except ye repent ye shall all likewise perish And Christ confirmeth it by another parallel to it of the men upon whom the Tower in Sil●am fell Luke 13. 4 5. Or those eighteen upon whom the Tower in Siloam fell think ye that they were sinners above all men that dwell in Jerusalem I tell you nay but except ye repent ye shall all likewise perish Doubtless there are many fifties in London whose habitations are laid desolate who were more righteous than many of those whose houses have escaped the consuming flames Judgements many times begin at the house of God The hand of God is many times 1 Pet. 4. 17. Ezek. 9. 6. Job 1. heaviest upon the holiest of people Job was stript of all his earthly comforts and set upon a Dunghill to scrape his sores with Potsheards and yet Job had not at that time his fellow in all the East Countrey for a man fearing God and eschewing evil Job was a perfect peerless man and yet had his habitation laid in ashes and his substance destroyed when his neighbours round about him enjoyed their all without disturbance Doubtless many of them whose houses are turned into a ruinous heap were good people people of unblameable lives people of exemplary lives yea earthly Angels if compared with many of those who have escaped the fiery Rod. Many have drunk deep of this cup of wrath who are a people of his choicest love and therefore do not judge all them to be greater sinners than your selves that have not escaped the fiery Rod as well as your selves You who have escaped the consuming flames should make other mens lashes your lessons and their burnings your warning● You should not so much eye what others have suffered as what your selves have deserved But Thirdly It concerns you to be much in blessing of God that your habitations are standing when others habitations are laid desolate round about you But here look that your thankfulness is 1. Reall 2. Great 3. Cordial 4. Practical and 5. Constant No thankfulness below such a thankfulness will become such whose habitations are standing Monuments of Gods free mercy I have largely prest this duty before and therefore a touch here must suffice B●t Fourthly Be not secure do not say the bitterness of death is past as Agag did when he came before Samuel stately and 1 Sam. 15. 32. haughtily with the garb and gate of a King Many times when wicked men are in the greatest security they are then nearest the highest pitch of misery Is there not guilt enough upon all your hearts and upon all your habitations to expose them to as great a desolation as London lyes under Ans Yes yes Why then do not you get off this guilt by frequent exercises of faith in the blood of Christ or else prepare to drink of the same cup that London hath drunk off or of a worse Ponder seriously and frequently upon these Scriptures Isa 51. 17. Awake awake stand up O Jerusalem which hast drunk at the hand of the Lord the cup of his fury thou hast drunken the dregs of the cup of trembling and wrung them out Verse 22. Thus saith thy Lord the Lord and thy God that pleadeth the cause of his people behold I have taken out of thy hand the cup of trembling even the dregs of the cup of my fury thou shalt no more drink it again Verse 23. But I will put it into the hands of them that afflict thee which have said to thy soul bow down that we may go over and thou hast laid thy body as the ground and as the street to them that went over Jer. 25. 15. For thus saith the Lord God of Israel unto me take the wine cup of this fury at my hand and cause all the Nations to whom I send thee to drink it Verse 17. Then took I the cup at the Lords hands and made all the Nations to drink unto whom the Lord had sent me Verse 18. To wit Jerusalem and the Cities of Judah and the Kings thereof and the Princes thereof to make them a desolation an astonishment an hissing and a curse as it is this day Verse 28. And it shall be if they refuse to take the cup at thine hand to drink then shalt thou say unto The particular Kings and Kingdoms that must drink of this cup are set down from verse 19. to verse 28. See Lam. 4. 21. Ezek. 23. 31 32 33 34. them thus saith the Lord of Hosts
humble thy self under the mighty hand of God God has ab●sed the● and therefore make it thy work to b● base in thine own eyes W●en N●hemiah understood that the Chald●ans There is nothing more more evident ●n History than this viz. That those d●eadful fires that have b●en ki●d●ed amongst the Christian have been still kind●ed by Idolatrous hands who were a generation of Idolaters had made Jerusalem desol●te by Fire he greatly humbl●d himself under the mighty hand of God He lookt through all act●ve causes to the efficient cause and accordingly he abased himself before the L●rd as you may see Neh. 1. 3 4. And they said unto me the remnant that are left of the Captivity there in the Province are in great ●●fl●ction and reproach the Wall of Jerus●lem also is broken down and the Gates thereof are burnt with fire And it came to pass when I heard these words that I sate down and wept and mourned certain dayes and fasted and prayed before the God of Heaven When Nehemiah ●eard that th● Wall of Jerusalem was broken down and that the gates thereof were b●rnt with fire his grief was so great that he could not stand under it and therefore he sits down and weeps Who is there that is a man that is an Englishman that is a C●ri●●●an that is a Protestant that can behol● the Ru●nes of Lond●n and not at least the frame of his Spirit sit down and wee● ov●r those R●in●s The way of wayes ●o be truly yea ●ighly ●x●lted is to be thoroughly humbled The h●g●est Heavens and the lowest hearts do both alike please Isaiah 57. 15. the most high God God will certainly make it his work to ex●lt them who make it their great work to abase themselves Such who are low in their ow● eyes and can be be content to be low in the eyes of others such are most high and ●ono●rable in the eye of God in the esteem and account ●f God The lowly Christian is alwayes the mo●● lovely C●ristian Now God hath laid your City low you● all low he ex●ects that your hearts should lye low unde● his mighty ha●d All the world cannot long keep up thos● men who do'nt labour to keep down their hearts under Judgements inflicted or Judgements feared Remember the sad Catastrophe of Herod the great of Agrippa the great of Pompey the great and of Alexander the great If your spirits remain great under great Judgements 't is an evident sign that more raigning Judgements lye at your doors But T●e seventh D●ty that lyes upon those who have been burnt up is to bless a taking God as well as a giving God 't is to encourage themselves in the Lord their God though he has stript them of all their worldly goods Thus did Job when he had lost his all The Lord gave and the Lo●d hath Job 1. 21. taken away blessed be the name of the Lord. One brings in holy Job standing by the ruined house under whose Walls his ten Children lay dead and buried and lifting up his D●e●ellius in his Gynnasiun Patient●ae heart and hands towards Heaven saying Naked came I out of my Mothers womb and naked shall I return thither the Lord gave and the Lord hath taken away Blessed be the name of the Lord. Ecce spectaculum sayes he dignum ad quod respiciat intentus operi suo Deus Behold a spectacle a spectacle worthy of God himself were he never so intent upon his work in Heaven yet worthy of his cognizance When Ziklag was burnt with fire and David plundered by the Amalekites and his Wives carried captive yet then he encouraged 1 Sam. 30. 1 2 3 6. himself in the Lord his God His God notes 1. His nearness and dearness to God Saints are very near and dear to God Psal 148. 14. Ephes 2. 13. 2. His God notes his Relation to God God is the Saints Father 3. His God notes his right to God Whole God 2 Cor. 6. 18. is the believers All he has and all he can do is the believers From these and such other like considerations David encouraged himself in the Lord his God when all was gone and so should we So the believing Hebrews took joyfully the Heb. 10. 34. spoiling of their goods whether by fire or plundering or otherwise is not said knowing in themselves that they had in Heaven a better and more enduring substance And to this duty James exhorts James 1. 2. Count it all joy my brethren when you fall into divers temptations or tribulations or afflictions A Christian in his choicest deliberation ought to count it all joy when he falls into divers tribulations The words are emphatical the Apostle doth not say be patient or quiet when you fall into divers temptations or afflictions but be joyful Nor the Apostle doth not say be joyful with a little joy but be joyful with exceeding great joy All joy The words are an Hebraism is full joy all joy is perfect joy And this becomes the Saints when they fall or are begirt round not with some but with divers that is with any kind of affliction or tribulation An omnipotent God will certainly turn his peoples misery into felicity And therefore it concerns them to be divinely merry in the midst of their greatest misery Oh that all burnt Citizens would seriously consider of these three things 1. That this fiery Rod has been a Rod in a Fathers hand 2. That this fiery Rod shall sooner or later be like Aarons Rod a blooming Rod. Choice fruit will one day grow upon this burnt Tree London No man can tell what good God may do England by that fiery Rod that he has laid upon London 3. That this fiery Rod that has been laid upon London has not been laid on 1. According to the greatness of Gods anger Nor 2. According to the greatness of his power Nor. 3. According to the strictness of his justice Nor 4. According to the d●merits of our sins Nor 5. According to the expectations of men of a Romish faith who 't is to be feared Acts 1. 19. did hope to see every house laid desolate and London made an Aceldama a Field of Blood Nor 6. Accordingly to the extensiveness of many of your fears for many of you have feared worse things than yet you feel Now upon all these considerations how highly dos it concern the people of God to be thankful and cheerful yea and to encourage themselves in the Lord under that fiery dispensation that has lately past upon them But what is there considerable in God to encourage the soul under Quest heavy crosses and great l●sses and fiery tryals First There is his gracious his special and pecular presence Answ Psalm 23. 4. Though I walk through the valley of the shadow Dan. 3. 24 25. of death I will fear no evil for thou art with me thy rod and thy staff they comfort me Psal 91. 15. He shall
call upon me and I will answer him I will be with him in trouble Oh the precious presence of God with a mans spirit will sweeten every fiery dispensation and take off much of the bitterness and terribleness of it In the gracious presence of God with our spirits lyes 1. Our greatest Happiness 2. Our greatest Honor. 3. Our greatest profit and advantage 4. Our greatest joy and delight 5. Our greatest safety and security The Bush which was a Type of the Church consumed not all the while it burned with fire because God was in the midst of it The gracious presence of God with a mans spirit 2 Cor. 4. 16 17 18. will make heavy affl●ctions light and long afflictions short and bitter afflictions sweet Gods gracious presence makes every burden light He that has the presence of God with Psal 55. 22. his spirit can bear a burden without a burden What burden Deut. 33. 27 29. can sink that man that hath everlasting Armes under him and over him and round about him But Secondly There is wisdom in God to encourage them under all their tryals There is wisdom in God so to temper Jer. 24. 5. Rom. 8. 28. and order all judgements afflictions crosses and losses as to make them work kindly and sweetly for their good Whilst God is near us wisdom and counsel is at hand God is that wise and skilful Physitian that can turn Poyson into Cordials Diseases into Remedies Crosses into Crowns and the greatest losses into the greatest gains What can hurt us whilst an infinite wise God stands by us But Thirdly There is strength power and omnipotency in God to encourage them There is nothing too high for Prov. 18. 10. Psal 46. 1 2. Isa 26. 4. Psal 3. 17. him nor nothing too hard for him he is able easily and speedily to bring to pass all contrivances You read of many who have been mighty but you read but of one Almighty Rev. 4. 8. Holy holy holy Lord God Almighty Chap. 11. 17. We give thee thanks Lord God Almighty Chap. 15. 3. Great and marvellous are thy works Lord God Almighty Chap. 16. 7. And I heard another out of the Altar say c. Even so Lord God Almighty true and righteous are thy judgements Under all your fiery tryals an Almighty God can do mighty things for you And therefore it concerns you to encourage your selves in him even when you are stript of all O Christians it highly concerns you to be●r all your losses chearfully and thankfully In every thing give thanks saith the 1 Thes 5. 18. Apostle for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus concerning you Chrysostom speaks excellently This saith he is the very Ch●ysost To● 5. Ho●●l 68. will of God to give thanks alwayes this argues a soul rightly instructed Hast thou suffered any evil if thou wilt it is no evil Give thanks to God and then thou hast turned the evil into good Say thou as Job said when he had lost all The Lord hath given and the Lord hath taken away blessed be the name of the Lord. What evil hast thou suffered What is it a disease This is no strange thing to us seeing our bodies are mortal and naturally born to suffer What dost thou want money this may be gotten here and lost here Whatsoever evils or losses therefore do oppress thee give thou thanks and thou ha●● changed the nature of them Job then did more deeply wound the Devil when being stript out of all he gave thanks to God than if he had distributed all to the poor and needy For it is much more to be stript of all and yet to bear it patiently generously and thankfully than for a rich man to give Alms as it here happened to righteous Job But hath fire suddenly taken hold upon thy house destroyed thy house and consumed thy whole substance Remember the sufferings of Job Give thanks to God who could though he did not have hindered that mischance and thou shalt be sure to receive as equal a reward as if thou hadst put all into the bosome of the indigent This he repeateth over again and saith thy reward being thankful is equal to his who gave all he had to the poor To wind up your hearts to thankfulness and chearfulness under this late desolating Judgement Consider 1. God might have taken away all 'T is good to bless When a Gentleman in Atheis had his Plate taken away by Ahashue●us as he was at dinner he smiled upon his friends saying I thank God that his Highness hath left me any thing him for what he has left 2. He has taken away more from others than he has taken away from you ergo be thankful 3. You are unworthy of the least mercy you deserve to be stript of every mercy and therefore be thankful for any thing that is left God has a Soveraign right over all you have and might have stript you as naked as the day wherein you were born 4. God has left you better and greater merci●s than any those were that he has stript you off viz. your lives your limbs your friends your Relations yea and the means of Grace which is better than all and more than all other mercies ergo be thankful 5. The Lord has given those choice things to you as shall never be taken from you viz. himself his Son his Spirit which shall abide with you for ever his Grace which is an abiding seed and his peace which none can give to you nor take from you John 16. 1 John 3. 9. ergo be thankful though God has laid all your pleasant things desolate 6. Thankfulness under crosses and losses speak out much integrity and ingenuity of Spirit Hypocrites and prophane persons are more apt to blaspheme than to bless a taking God ergo be thankful The Ancients say Ingratum dixeris omnia dixeris say a man is unthankful and say he is any thing Ingratitude is a Monster in nature say some a Solecism in Manners a Paradox in Grace damming up the course of donations divine and humane If there be any sin in the world against the Holy Ghost said Queen Elizabeth in a Letter to Henry the fourth of France it is ingratitude The Laws of Persia Macedonia and Athens condemned the ungrateful to death and unthankfulness may well be styled the Epitome of Vices Ingratitude was so hateful to the Egyptians that they used to make Eunuchs of ungrateful persons that no posterity of theirs might remain Well Sirs remember this the best way to get much is to be thankful for a little God loves to sow much where he reaps much Thankfulness for one mercy makes way for another mercy as many thousand Christians have experienced The Lords Impost for all his blessings is our thankfulness if we neglect to pay this Impost the commodity is forfeit and so will take it back Our returnes must be according to our receipts Good men should be