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A61468 A brief commentary upon the CIII Psalme with the severall axiomes or doctrines therein conteined [sic], and uses thereupon inferred. Sterne, Richard, 1596?-1683. 1649 (1649) Wing S5473; ESTC R21977 156,758 358

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nature they are farre more dangerous The diseases of the body tend onely to the death of the body which of it self must necessarily dy and by the power of God shall most certainly rise again but the diseases of the soule tend to the eternall death and destruction both of body and soule 2 That those places of Scripture where the faithfull are said to be dead unto sinne buried with Christ to have the world crucified unto them and themselves unto the world c. are to be understood not according to rigour but according to the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or equity of the Gospell Repr Here come to be reproved 1 Such as are not sensible of the diseases of their soules like men who having their brain distempered by some hote and violent disease know not that they are ill when they are even hard at deaths doore but sometimes raile at the physician sometimes are merry and laugh whilest their friends stand about them with teares in their eyes But here is the difference that these mens ignorance of their disease is invincible they can not help it but those we speak of are ignorant of their estate either affectedly or of extreme negligence which can neither excuse nor be excused For if they would examine themselves by the Scriptures as they might ought to do they would easily discerne if not straightway all yet many of their diseases and the rest by degrees Which because they doe not their condition is farre worse then theirs to whom we liken them not onely because the death and destruction of the soule whereof they are in danger is far worse then that of the body but also because they are in more danger of it For they who are bodily sick by how much the lesse sensible they are of their disease themselves have their friends so much the more solicitous for them and the physick which is administred to them though they desire it not neither perceive when they take it working by the naturall vertue which God hath put into herbs c. may restore them to their health But they who are spiritually sick and yet wilfully refuse to know or acknowledge it can not whilest they so continue receive any good by spirituall physick neither will Christ the great Physician of souls take in hand to cure them Luk. 5.30 31 32. 2 Such as daily cast their soules into new diseases There are two principall means of preserving health and preventing diseases Diet and Exercise But for the former as it is Hos 12.1 many so feed themselves with vain and impious principles not onely speculative but practicall that thereby the mind and heart and whole man fall into sundry and great distempers Some eat the bread of wickednesse and drink the wine of violence Prov. 1.17 18 19. 4.17 Some eat the bread of deceit which is sweet at the first tasting but afterwards fills the mouth with gravell Prov. 20.17 Some swallow down riches ill gotten which prove the gall of aspes within them Job 20.14 15. Some by oppression swallow up the needy Amos 8.4 And is it any wonder if such diet breed diseases So for Exercise many giving themselves to spirituall idlenesse altogether neglect the exercises of piety and so both of themselves contract abundance of ill humours and also give the devil opportunity to infect their souls with his temptations yea tempt him to it Standing waters putrifie breed frogs noisome vermine c. Again this doctrine as it informs us of our misery Consol so it ministers unto us some comfort I Against the trouble which ariseth from the sense of these diseases For as the diseases themselves are common lesse or more to all Gods children in this life so the sense and trouble arising thereupon is a good both sign cause of amendment We may and ought whilest we live here to be daily gathering strength against these diseases but perfect and uninterrupted health is to be expected onely in heaven 2 Against the imperfection of our good works if grieving for what is wanting in them we seriously and diligently endeavour to grow in grace and holinesse He were a cruell master that should require the same work of a sick which he doth of a sound servant The Father of mercies Who knowes our mold and temper how weak and sickly our soules are doth not expect from us a conversation so every way perfect in all points as He did from Adam in the first covenant but if He sees us truly sory for our imperfections and daily to our power endeavouring towards greater perfection He accepts of our endeavours in Christ and pardons what is wanting Two things we are here to be exhorted to Exhort 1 To withstand these diseases as much as may be both by way of prevention and by way of remedy Motiv 1. From the worth and price of the soul the subject of these diseases 2 From the great and imminent danger wherein it is by reason of them 3 From the difficulty of overcoming them 4 From the possibility notwithstanding of doing it in some competent measure by the power of Gods grace Meanes 1 Withdraw whatsoever may nourish or foster these diseases 2 Feed upon the sincere milk and solid meat of Gods word and exercise the graces of His Holy Spirit 2 To search diligently what diseases we have Motiv 1 It is too certain we have our diseases we shall not seek a knot in a bulrush 2 Unlesse we know them we cannot be healed of them as we heard before Repr 1. 3 The sense of them will humble us will excite us diligently to seek after the means of health will make us more ready to pity and help others Means 1 Consider out of Gods word what is required to the health of the soule 2 Examine our selves according thereunto 5 Doctrine The LORD healed all Davids diseases Here we have three things to be explained Expl. 1 Wherein this healing consists As before it was said of diseases so there being the same reason of contraries healing also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 bath for its proper subject the body naturall ill affected by some disease or wound but by Metaphor it may be transferred to other things also For as in the proper sense he is said to heale who takes away that which hinders the health of the body so in the metaphoricall he who takes away from any thing that which hinders the well being of it So 2 King 2.21 22. Psal 60.2 And thus it is often transferred to the soule though here the similitude holds not in every point For in the body nature being freed from the noxious humour doth of it self breed good blood and supply it to the repairing the strength of the whole impaired by the disease But in the soule after lapse there is no power to any saving good 2 How this healing is wrought Namely by the Spirit of God using the Word and Sacraments It is the work of the
those two 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 mercifull and gracious in the 8th verse of this Psalme Quest If it be questioned how our forgivenesse is free seeing it is merited by Christ Answ I answer 1 Christs merit is it self most free both on the part of God the Father freely sending Christ Joh. 3.16 and on the part of Christ Himself freely taking this office upon Him 2 Whereas in regard both of Gods Justice and of our behoof and benefit it was requisite that there should be such an expiation of sin made by Christ and that being perfectly made without any help of ours God might now most freely without violation of His Justice or Truth pardon our sinnes this pardon upon that expiation is so farre from derogating from the Grace of God or the freenesse of this benefit that it much more illustrates and amplifies it Uses For our instruction 1 Here we see to which of all Gods benefits David gives the precedency viz. to remission of sins Instr For till a mans sinnes be forgiven he is liable to all kinds of miseries and as that which fills up the measure of all to eternall death And whatsoever good things or blessings he receives from God though such indeed in themselves they are turned into curses Mal. 2.2 unlesse leading him to repentance they become means of his obtaining forgivenesse of sinnes On the other side forgivenesse obtained as it makes way for all other blessings so it makes us beare all kind of afflictions patiently as knowing them to be none other then fatherly chastisements or trialls and which shall all work together for our good 2 In that David blesseth God for the forgivenesse of all his sins we see there is no sin so small or light but that it both needs forgivenesse and being forgiven deserves and requires that we should blesse God for it Hence are reproved 1 Such as never regard or look after forgivenesse of sinnes Repr this great and prime benefit for which David gives thanks in the first place Nay who are so far from seeking forgivenesse of sins past that they daily heap up new sins and wait for occasions and opportunities of sinning Job 24.15 Psal 10.8 9 10. Prov. 1.11 Jer. 20.10 Luke 11.54 2 Such as haply desire forgivenesse of sins but not upon those terms or conditions upon which God hath promised it thinking they may obtain it though they walk in the stubbornnesse of their hearts Such men the Lord threatens that He will not pardon 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He will not yeeld or consent to pardon though desired for so the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is commonly used but His anger and His jealousy shall smoke against them Deut. 29.20 3 Such who though they nothing doubt but think themselves surer then David of the forgivenesse of their sins yet doe not with David shew themselves thankfull to God for it In words haply they will sometimes give Him thanks But how little they either value the benefit in their minds or love the Benefactour in their hearts appeares by their conversation and secure continuance in their sinnes Which shewes that they either never truly repented of their sinnes at all for true repentance begets the fear of God Psal 130.4 by which men depart from evil Pro. 16.6 and carefulnesse to avoid sin for the future 2 Cor. 7.11 or that they are again returned with the dog to their vomit and with the sow to their wallowing in the mire whose latter end unlesse they timely beware will be worse then their beginning But let us imitate David in a true hearty Exhort and reall thankfulnesse to God for the forgivenesse of our sins and to that end enlarge our meditations upon the reasons before mentioned which will be strong Motives to excite us hereunto We have seen the first part of Davids spirituall deliverance namely from the guilt of sin by Justification or remission Who forgiveth all thy sinnes The 2d followes Who healeth all thy diseases Wherein also three things are in like manner to be considered in the three following Axiomes or Doctrines 4. Doctrine David had his diseases 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thy diseases This word Expl. as also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the verb 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whereof they come properly signifie the diseases of the body but by Metaphor they are transferred sometimes to the body politique Isa 1.5 sometimes to the soule signifying the distempers of it either penall Prov. 13.12 or sinfull Eccle. 6.2 where he speaks of sordid covetousnesse or tenaciousnesse In this place the word seems to be taken not in the proper sense for the diseases of the body which are rather intimated in the beginning of the next verse among the causes of bodily death or destruction but in the metaphoricall for the diseases of the soule namely sinfull corruptions whether inclinations or habits For the healing of these being a great benefit of God and indeed greater then forgivenesse as sinne is worse then damnation therefore it is not probable that David reckoning up particularly the causes of his thankfulnesse would passe this over in silence and insist twice upon another far lesse then it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That Davids soule had such diseases appeares in the Text in like manner as was said of his actuall sinnes in the 1 Doctrine of this verse both by the pronown affixt and by the act of God exercised about them So Psalm 41.4 And it is further evident by the history of his life by his own confessions and complaints in this book of Psalmes and by those very actuall iniquities before mentioned which are the effects of these diseases So for the generall Prov. 20.9 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 For 1 Adams sin is according to the tenour of the first covenant imputed to all that are naturally propagated from him whereupon being deprived of originall justice and wisedome we become blind in our minds and perverse in our hearts and so sold under sinne that till we be in some measure freed by the grace of God we cannot but do viciously and daily contract strengthen ill habits Joh. 15.5 2 Cor. 3.5 2 Although beleevers having the Sonne Joh. 8.36 and the Spirit 2 Cor. 3.17 are freed as from the guilt of sins past so also from the dominion of sin yet the flesh still lusts against the Spirit and there remain still in them to be further mortified 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 those earthly members Coloss 3.5 Uses Here then we see 1 How miserable our condition is in this life Instr How many troubles and dangers our bodies are subject to by diseases c. we are not ignorant The soule also hath her diseases too and those sinfull diseases the tympany of pride the burning feaver of filthy lust the dropsy of covetousnesse the consumption of envy c. which as they are in number not inferiour to those of the body so in their
blessings as the healing the diseases of their soules c. So in respect of the acts some give thanks in words but not in deeds and so not with the heart which hath command of the whole man nor with the mind or else they detain the truth in unrighteousnesse Lastly in respect of the intensnesse of the acts some doe it but coldly faintly carelesly not diligently fervently with all the heart with all the soule with all the mind and with all the strength 3 Such as doe not think this healing to be a benefit and so neither a cause of thankfulnesse as being in love with their diseases And therefore neither do they desire it at all but on the contrary when God by His ministers offers to heale them they are angry and murmure at them and return injuries in stead of thanks 4 Such as give thanks for the strengthening of their diseases 1 Sam. 23.21 Zech. 11.5 The Exhortation arising from hence is Exh. that we should imitate David herein Motives See the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vers 4. Who redeemeth thy life from destruction Who crowneth thee with loving-kindnesse and tender-mercies We have seen Davids deliverance from the evil of sin viz. both from the guilt dominion There remaines his deliverance from the evil of punishment in the former part of this 4th verse Wherein we have 3 Axiomes or Doctrines 1 Doctrine Davids life was in danger of destruction 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies corruption or destruction Explic. Also the pit the place of corruption or which receives them that are destroyed Now seeing destruction is either temporall or eternall and so the pit or place of destruction either the grave or hell there is nothing hinders but that all these may be here understood Yea the scope of David being to set forth the greatnesse of Gods deliverances may seem to require that the word be taken in its greatest latitude namely that David was in danger both of bodily death viz. untimely death and so of the grave and likewise of eternall death and so of hell For bodily death and so for the grave 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 how often he was in danger of it the history of his life abundantly testifies See 1 Sam. 20.3 There is but a step between me and death And Psal 119.109 My soule or my life is continually in mine hand Which phrase notes great danger of death Judg. 12.3 1 Sam. 19.5 28.21 Job 13.14 For eternall death and so for hell his danger appeares by his feares and agonies frequently expressed in this book of Psalmes which considering his valiant and undaunted courage would never have been so great had the cause or object of them been onely bodily death And it is yet more evident from the causes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Of temporall death he was many waies in danger Whilest he lived a private life by the beare and lion which he encountred by Goliath so terrible to the whole Army of Israel with whom he entred a single combat by the envy of Saul c. After he was come to the kingdome by many forein enemies with whom he had continuall warres more particularly see 2 Sam. 21.15 16. by comesticall treasons and rebellions of Abner and the house of Saul of Absalorn and Achitophel whose desperate counsell see 2 Sam. 17.1 2 3. of Sheba 2 Sam. 20. Of eternall death he was in danger by reason of his sinnes For this death especially is the wages of sinne Rom. 6.23 And what is here said of David is for the same or the like reasons true of men in generall We are all both many waies subject to danger of untimely bodily death as dwelling in houses of clay whose foundation is in the dust which are crushed before the moth Job 4.19 and by our sinnes lyable to Gods wrath and thereby to eternall death both of body and soul Rom. 3.19 Uses The consideration of both may afford us severall instructions Instr 1 For bodily death 1 If we be so many waies in danger of it before our time we may take it the more patiently and contentedly either in our selves or our friends when it comes in its full time in a ripe age in an ordinary course of nature which is elegantly expressed and promised as the complement of all Gods temporall blessings Job 5.26 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Zenob 2 Hereby we see how little reason we have to set our hearts upon outward things which the Apostle calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the things pertaining to this life 1 Cor. 6.3 4. For 1 the life which is the foundation of enjoying them is as we see here very casuall and uncertain 2 The things themselves are yet more casuall more uncertain then the life to which they pertaine both because a man is lesse carefull of them Job 2.4 Prov. 13.8 and because Gods providence also is lesse watchfull over them For although God being alwayes every where present hath a continuall inspection upon all things and so farre as he sees expedient preserves them Psal 36.6 Heb. 1.3 yet His providence hath its degrees as being more intensely exercised about things of more worth 1 Cor. 9.9 Now of all outward things food and rayment are the principall and most necessary and yet the life is more worth then these Mat. 6.25 And therefore Job 1.12 though God gave the devil power over all that Job had yet he restrained him from touching his person And chap. 2.6 when he extended his power to his person also yet he excepted his life If therefore our life which both Gods providence and our own especially tenders be yet lyable to dangers how much more the things which pertain to it And how vain a thing then is it to set our hearts upon them 2 For eternall death if David and all men be by sinne lyable to it then there is no respect of persons with God Rom. 5.12 18. We being all fallen in Adam are alike become the children of wrath and lyable to eternall death Onely therefore the grace of God in Christ exempting out of the common masse those who obey him makes a difference between man and man And if we be all in danger both of temporall and eternall death Repr what a strange lethargie possesses their soules who so live as if they were lyable to neither of both whose deeds declare that they doe not beleeve or at least that they doe not think of either Were it not for bonds indentures c. a man might well think they never dreamed of death There indeed upon supposall and feare of their own death they will put in heirs executors administrators make many provisos in behalf of posterity But they lay their worldly projects for one seaven tenne twenty yeares without once looking after any proviso for their own eternall security if death happen in the mean time Kind hearts that are so much more carefull of the outward estate of their children then of the
eternall welfare of their own soules But will neither the remembrance of all their ancestors dead before them nor the daily examples of mortality nor so many clear testimonies of Scripture that all must die nor that Statute of the immutable and omnipotent God Heb. 9.27 any thing at all move them The reason sure is that which the Philosopher toucheth Rhet. lib. 2. cap. 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 All men know they must die but because it is not near they regard it not Or that which Thomas saith Plerique non timent mortem quia apprehendunt sub remotâ distantiâ Most men feare not death because they apprehend it as at a remote distance And for the same reason they much lesse feare what may come after death But let us make it our continuall meditation Exhort 1 Of bodily death to which we are so lyable that there is no possibility of avoiding it and for the time as we know it cannot be farre off so we know not how near it may be This meditation will be of excellent use 1 For the taking down of our pride the worst of evils what ever the ground of it be whether we be proud of the goods of the mind Psal 146.4 or of the goods of the body strength beauty c. Job 21.23 24 25 26. or of our kindred Job 17.14 or of outward things riches honours c. Psal 49.16 17. 2 For the moderating our desires of earthly things as which can neither keep off death nor continue with us after death 3 For the bridling our unruly passions anger envy impatience whether at our own or our friends sufferings or at the prosperity of Gods and our enemies Psalm 37. 73. 2 Of eternall death which though it be farre worse yet is avoidable And the meditation of it will be both a Motive and a Meanes to us to avoyd it by hastening our repentance and taking heed of sinne for the future To this purpose is that redoubled admonition of our Saviour to His friends Luke 12.5 Feare Him Who after He hath killed hath power to cast into hell yea I say unto you Feare Him 2 Doctrine The Lord redeemed Davids life from destruction 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Who redeemeth Expl. This word signifies 1 To preserve a thing which otherwise would be lost Levit. 27.27 Lam. 3.58 2 To recover a thing that is lost and that either by price Levit. 25.25 power Ex. 6.6 Psalm 77.15 Here understand it the first way viz. the preserving Davids life which otherwise would have been lost This David often acknowledges In generall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Psal 19.14 In speciall for temporall death 2 Sam. 4.9 for eternall death Psal 71.23 So Nathan tells him 2 Sam. 12.13 For the Reason hereof 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 though the first cause of all Gods benefits be that which is mentioned in the latter part of this verse His own loving-kindnesse and tender-mercies and the last end His own glory yet among the benefits themselves also there may be a subordination so that one benefit may be the cause or end of another So here God out of His free love to David and to His people Israel and for His own glory and their good had decreed from all eternity to set him as king over them and for a testimony thereof had commanded Samuel to anoint him 1 Sam. 16. In order therefore hereunto and that the immutability of His counsell and the truth of His promise might appeare He redeemed or preserved Davids life from temporall death both whilest he was yet a private man that He might bring him to the kingdome and after hee was king that he might goe through with the administration of it to the ends before mentioned For eternall death his preservation from it necessarily follows upon his deliverance from the guilt and dominion of sinne vers 3. And therefore that deliverance is the immediate cause of this and the causes of that do mediately and by necessary consequence inferre this Uses Our instructions from hence may be 1 Concerning temporall death Instr 1 We see what it is to walk under Divine protection How many and how great dangers Davids life was lyable to we heard before yet out of them all the Lord delivered him Of this David was throughly sensible Psal 23.4 and could say experimentally of himself in particular what he saith of the righteous in generall Psal 34.19 2 We see also who they are that may expect this protection from Almighty God viz. not such as wander in the by-paths of sinne provoking God continually to His face Such men indeed God sometimes delivers from many dangers but 1 they have no promise from God whereupon they may rely to expect it 2 Though such deliverance be in it self good and by God intended for their good yet if they go on in their sinnes it will through their own fault prove very ill to them as giving them time to heap up more sinnes and so more wrath against the day of wrath but such as are like unto David who serve God and trust in Him who though they have not such speciall promises for this as David had yet they have Gods generall promises Psal 84.11 33.18 19. c. Whereupon they may expect protection from temporall death so farre as is expedient for them that is so farre as that death would be truly hurtfull to them 2 Concerning eternall death we see 1 The great mercy of God not willing to deale with mankind fallen into sinne according to the rigour of His justice but finding out a way whereby we may be delivered from it 2 To whom this deliverance belongs viz. to David and by the like reason to all that observe the condition of the covenant For in this David had no speciall promise nor any other then what all true beleevers in like manner have Here are reproved 1 In respect of bodily death 1 Such as presume to be delivered from it Repr when yet by their own deeds they call it unto themselves as by immoderate worldly sorrow 2 Cor. 7.10 by envy Job 5.2 Prov. 14.30 by drunkennesse Prov. 23.29 c. In like manner by gluttony idlenesse quarrelling unwarrantable venturing upon dangers c. 2 Such as doe not trust or seek to God for deliverance from it but to secondary meanes whether in themselves lawfull as Asa 2 Chron. 16.12 or unlawfull 2 In respect of eternall death 1 Such as expect of God deliverance from it but presumptuously as being nothing lesse then such as David here was 2 Such as expect it otherwise then from God Two things we are here to be exhorted to Exhort 1 In respect of our selves To flee unto God for protection from both kinds of death Motiv 1 In respect of the objectum quod the deliverance it self which we seek 1 We stand in great need of it in regard of the many dangers both bodily and spirituall to which we are
alienated from good men as whom he might suppose to be offended at his sins whereupon haply he might raise persecution against them 2 Chron. 16.10 and thereby such as had not already entred into a godly course of life might be kept back and such as had might apostatise or fall back from it Or suppose Davids sinnes could have been concealed from the vulgars notice yet it would have been very probable that a king conscious to himself of such sinnes would not have been very severe in punishing others whereby sin upon hope of impunity would have spread far and wide and have overflowed the whole land The internall causes are different according to the diversity of sinnes But the principall and direct cause perse consilio was the will determining the power or faculty to an undue object or an undue manner The previous or antecedent causes which made way for that determination were negligence in using the means to avoid sin viz. watchfulnesse prayer attention to Gods word c. and the entertaining and harbouring wicked thoughts so long till they had driven away the Spirit of grace captivated right reason and obtained the consent of the will Uses Hereby we learne 1 That even the best men are not in this life free from possibility of sinning Instr and therefore that Christianity is not a state of security but of watchfulnesse wherein we ought to work out our salvation with feare and trembling 2 That even the greatest and mightiest of men for who greater then a king or who can challenge any exemption or prerogative above him are yet subject to the law of God For sin is a transgression of the law now no man can transgresse the law but he that is subject to the law The sinnes therefore of great men are sins and seeing He that is higher then the highest observes them Eccles 5.8 they must without repentance render an account to Him of them and that so much the heavier by how much their sinfull example hath been more dangerous to others and their sins in themselves so much the more hainous as they being obliged to God by more benefits have broken more bonds of duty This reproves Repr 1 Libertines c. who think they are come to that height of perfection that they can not by any temptation be drawn into sin yea that the acts which they commit though sins in other men as drunkennesse theft whoredome c. yet in them are no sins neither can defile them seeing to the pure all things are pure But against this opinion so absurd that it is a wonder the devil himself is not ashamed to perswade any man to it there needs no more to be said for the present but that David another manner of man for holinesse and perfection then the best of them had his iniquities and so called and accounted of them 2 Carnall Gospellers who have little or no care of hearing the word or performing other duties of religion who know not what belongs to the girdle of sincerity the helmet of hope c. yea who dare adventure upon any occasions of sin and yet think they have so good command of themselves that they can keep within compasse well enough What 's the matter I wonder Is sin grown lesse dangerous or men more skilfull to avoid it now then heretofore Sin was wont to be very watchfull and crafty to catch men Gal. 6.1 Eph. 4.22 Heb. 3.13 2 It was wont to be so strong that none but Christ Who hath power to subdue all things unto Himself was able to deliver any that once came within the reach of it 3 It was wont to be so cruell that look who were not pluck'd out of its jawes by Christ it would use them most unmercifully All the miseries of this life proceed from sin and yet all doe not satisfy the cruelty of it but at last it brings to death Rom. 5.12 Nor is it yet satisfied for it drawes the soul also to the place of torment and at last the body also united to it and so drowns the whole man in wofull perdition Nor is it yet fully satisfied for being committed against an infinite justice it requires that the sinner should likewise undergoe an infinite punishment But because the creature being finite can not undergoe a punishment infinite in measure therefore it rests though hardly content with a punishment infinite in duration Such was sin wont to be And is it now grown to some better terms of moderation No surely it is as ready to intrap men now as ever which appears by the abounding of it every where and daily ensnaring such as would think much not to be accounted very wise men And 2ly it holds those it once seises upon as fast now as ever for still that stands good that there is no Name under heaven whereby men can be saved but onely the Name of Jesus it is onely He that can save His people from their sinnes Lastly the rigor in binding over to punishment is nothing abated the same law being broken and the same infinite justice offended Well then sin being the same it was wont to be why are not we so watchfull against it as the servants of God have been in former times who were so wary that in some things they would not doe all they might but used to make railes on either side their way to heaven lest unawares they should fall into sinne as never thinking themselves far enough out of the reach of it till they should get to heaven But oh the piercing wit the undaunted courage the firm faith of our age All foregoing generations were but babes to us the world had never any men to shew till we came in play We know so exactly how far we may goe in every thing and can so accurately to the very cleaving of a haire distinguish between the use and abuse of things that we scorn to lose any jote of our privileges Yea many times we make a sport of it to shew how nigh the pits brink we can goe and yet not fall in Nay we mock and sometimes deadly hate such as dare not goe so far as we think they might Those proverbs of not touching pitch or not putting coals into the bosome c. befitted those simple souls in time of yore but are now out of date Simple Job why wouldst thou so restrain thy self as to make a covenant with thine eyes not to look upon a maid Job 31.1 we have such as can dally with them and dance with them and court them whole nights together yet look to the main chance well enough who much delight in lascivious songs wanton plaies and such like frothy execrable filth yet never any infection once comes neare them nay they can pick as good lessons out of these as others doe out of sermons David what a silly weakling wast thou to think thou couldst not keep Gods commandements unlesse thou didst first proclaim Away from
duties of their generall and speciall callings may be saved and God glorifyed thereby 2 From the expression of strength and vigour by youth Where we see to what age these ordinarily belong Every one must not look to have his strength renewed or continued to old age to be so lusty and vigorous when yeares come on as David here was Many yeares commonly bring many infirmities with them Therefore we must not spend our youth idly but in this spring or summer of our age whilest time and strength permit gather something with the ant whereby the winter time of our life may be sustained and passed with more comfort But especially hearken to Solomon Eccles 12.1 Remember now thy Creatour in the daies of thy youth c. 3 From the similitude whereby this is illustrated viz. as the eagle Whence we may gather that the prorogation of youthfull strength and vigour though an excellent benefit yet is not of the best kind of all For those God hath prepared peculiarly for his children but this he bestowes not onely upon wicked men Job 21.23 24. Psalm 73.4 but also upon eagles and other unreasonable creatures Therefore let no man from these things make an argument to himself either of the favour of God because he hath them or of His displeasure because he hath them not Eccles 9.1 Neither let any man by using unlawfull meanes for the continuance or recovery of his bodily health or strength hazard the eternall health of his soul But how opposite to Gods intentions and their own good are gluttons Repr drunkards c. who when God hath supplyed them with plenty of good things and given them a rule according to which if they would walk in the use of them their bodies might by his ordinary blessing be kept in health and strength contrarywise abuse these good things to the impairing and dishonouring their bodies and so through their own fault that curse of the Psalmist Psal 69.22 falls upon them By immoderate eating and drinking they overcharge their hearts oppresse their strength cast themselves headlong into many infirmities and diseases and consequently into untimely death And if at any time they pray to God for better health yet themselves still hinder Him from granting their desire according to that of the Poet Poscis opem nervis corpúsque fidele senecta Esto age sed grandes patinae tucetáque crassa Annuere his superos vetuere Jovemque morantur Pers satyr 2. These men to say nothing of their soules their credit their estates in stead of renewing or continuing their youth to their old age precipitate their old age upon their youth and are so farre from attaining to the eagles vigour or swiftnesse that sometimes their feet are not able to doe their ordinary office so that they are fit for nothing but to stretch themselves upon their couches with those gluttons Amos 6.4 or to ly along and wallow in their vomit with the drunkard Ier. 48.26 their braine besotted their bodies faces bloted their bellies of the barrell fashion their liver enflamed their lungs corrupted from the sole of their foot to the crown of their head scarce any sound part But let us Exhort when God hath done His part in satisfying our mouth with good things and that to this end that thereby we might renew our youth as the eagle not be wanting to our selves but by a right use of Gods blessings improve them to the end for which He hath appointed them Motive Long life is indeed desirable vers 4. Doctr. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but with this condition among other that we may enjoy tolerable health and strength to promote Gods glory our own salvation and the good of others For otherwise although we must patiently beare whatsoever it shall please God to send there is small comfort in living long and groning under almost continuall pain sicknesse being unable to help our selves and a daily trouble and burden to others Meanes Let us 1 implore Gods blessing by prayer 2 That our prayer may prevail 1 use these outward things moderately 2 imploy the strength we have or shall have by them to the diligent and faithfull performance of our duty in our generall speciall callings to the glory of God 3 Doctrine David mentions this as an argument of blessing God And to the same end he mentions it Psal 23.5 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 For as we have noted upon the former benefits 1 He knew 1 That this was just matter of gratitude 1 Because to be satisfyed with good and with such an effect was a great benefit no lesse then prolonging of life and supplying of strength to glorify God in the diligent performance of his duty 2 It was a benefit necessary for David as without which he had not been able rightly to have undergone so great burdens and of such great necessity 3 God bestowed this benefit upon him out of His love and goodnesse for ends most profitable to David 4. Of His free grace without any precedent merit of David or hope of subsequent reward 2 That gratitude was enjoined of God and necessary for divers most excellent ends 2 What he thus knew to be just and necessary to be done he being a pious man and according to Gods own heart would in like manner performe Uses Here then we see 1 That even Kings themselves Instr much more they who are farre inferiour and subject to them are but tenants or almesmen to Almighty God not lords or owners of the things they possesse and therefore are bound to render thanks to God for them of Whose onely gift and that most free gift they have received them 2 If David gave thanks to God for meat and drink and such like corporall things which perish Joh. 6.27 and that with the using Colos 2.22 much more ought we to give thanks for the meat which endures to eternall life that is for Christ offered to us in the Word and Sacraments Who is the bread that came down from heaven Whose flesh is meat indeed c. Hence are reproved divers sorts of men unthankfull to God even for this particular benefit of meat and drink Repr wherewith according to the letter their mouthes are satisfyed 1 Such as goe to and from their repast like brute beasts without ever blessing God at all either before or after as if their mouthes were made to be filled onely with His good things but never with His praises Psalm 71.8 to be open when they should receive his benefits but shut when they should returne Him thanks for them What though they have gotten the things they live upon by their labour and industry yet that these things are to be gotten at all that they are able to take paines for them that their labours have any successe that these things have power to doe them good c. is all the mere gift of God 2 Such as give
whereby from those things which yet remaine we recall those which are slipt out of memory This latter act of memory can have no place in God to Whom all things are alwaies most present but onely the former and that after an eminent manner beseeming God And whereas the memory as was said before vers 2. Doctr. 2. is either merely notionall or affective also here the latter is to be understood To the same effect with this Doctrine is that Psal 78.39 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He remembred they were but flesh a wind that passeth away and cometh not againe For 1 that we are dust 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the former Doctrine taught us 2 As God knows all things that are all things that are done by the creatures so He can not be ignorant of that which is done by Himself Now it was He Himself Who first formed Adam of the dust and also for sinne made both him and his posterity dust in this sense here in the Text by taking away from them the means of immortality and appointing unto all men once to dy 3 He can not by any means forget any thing of what He knowes seeing this is a point of infirmity or imperfection which can no waies agree to Him Who is absolute perfection it self Object But God is sometimes said to forget Jer. 23.39 31.34 Ezek. 33.13 Answ There is a twofold forgetfulnesse 1 Properly so called when a thing once known slips out of memory 2 Metaphorically when one so carries himself as if he had forgotten The former can not be attributed to God but the latter may as in the places objected Where God being provoked by the horrid sinnes of the Jewes so punished them as if He had forgotten that they were his people and on the other side being appeased by the repentance of them that had sinned so carryed Himself toward them as if He had forgotten that they had ever committed any sinne against Him Uses Now if God remembers what we are Instr then by the same reason seeing He is not like to us who of those few things we know remember some and forget many more but as He knows all things so He can never forget any thing He remembers also whatsoever we doe good or evil 1 For good deeds Heb. 6.10 Ephes 6.8 So whosoever hath from the beginning of the world relieved Christ in His members He at His coming to judge the quick and the dead shall remember acknowledge and recompense Mat. 25. And therefore they are sayd to be written in a book Mal. 3.16 2 For evil deeds Hos 7.2 So 1 Sam. 15.2 I remember saith God that which Amalek did to Israel c. though it was done about 400 yeares before Yea Cains murther whatsoever other sinne hath been by any man committed since the beginning of the world whereof he shall not have repented God shall in the end of the world remember and punish as a righteous Judge And therefore these also are sayd to be written Isa 65.6 Jer. 17.1 Our sinnes may be concealed from men but God can not be deceived We may forget our own sinnes but God will be sure most perfectly to remember them and hereafter unlesse we repent will set them in order before us And both for good and evil deeds if God should forget any of them we might say with Saint Paul Rom. 3. How shall He judge the world How should He bring every work to judgement with every secret thing whether it be good or whether it be evil Eccle. 12.14 if He did not both know and remember all our works both good and evil And if God remember that our bodies are dust Repr why do we our selves forget it Whereupon we either on the one side too highly prize our bodies and too much pamper and trimme them or on the other side are too litle sparing of them laying more upon them then dust can beare or not affording them such necessaries as their frailty requires Yea let us ever remember Exhort and often actually recount with our selves what God here remembers viz. That we all are dust Motiv 1. In respect of our selves If every one of us remember that himself is dust 1 It will humble us before God that when we are to pray as Abraham Gen. 18. or to performe any other duty of religion we shall think with our selves Behold we have taken upon us to speak unto the Lord in praier to heare His word to approch unto His Table c. who are but dust and ashes with what reverence therefore had we need to come before Him 2 It will beget in us a hatred of sinne as out of sense of the punishment so especially because it is so hatefull to God both which are here manifest in that God for one onely sin of Adam hath made us all dust in this miserable sense 3 It will make us carefull to search our hearts and try our waies vigilant against Satan and all occasions of sinning and more diligent and constant in the use of the word sacraments and all other meanes serving to strengthen our soules 4 Whereas no care can long preserve the body from death it will excite us so to live that when the dust shall be turned to the earth as it was the spirit may with comfort return to God Who gave it in Him quietly resting and expecting a joyfull resurrection of the body and reunion with it self 2 In respect of others If we remember that they are dust 1 It will restraine us from envying the prosperity of wicked men Psal 37.1 2. 73.16 c. 2 It will make us more favourable to them who slip through infirmity 3 It will make us not too much to trust in humane helps Psal 146.3 4. Isa 2.22 4 On the other side not to feare the wrath and power of men Isa 51.7 8 12. 5 It will moderate our grief for the death of our friends For to him that considers all are dust it will not seem strange that the dust should returne to dust againe So Anaxagoras when he had newes of the death of his sonne answered Sciebam me genuisse mortalem I knew that I begat him mortall 6 It more specially concernes masters of families that they should not intreat their servants too hardly in imposing of work inflicting of correction abbridging them of necessaries c. but afford them convenient rest especially on the Lords day moderate their corrections according to prudence and clemency and readily allow them all things necessary and convenient for them Prov. 31.15 21. Otherwise let them think they heare their servants complaining with Job chap. 6.12 Is my strength the strength of stones or is my flesh of brasse that I should have so much businesse and correction layd upon me and so slender provision afforded me Let them also consider and say of their servants as Job of his chap. 31.15 Did not He that made me in the wombe make him