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A16535 The balme of Gilead prepared for the sicke The whole is diuided into three partes: 1. The sicke mans sore. 2. The sicke mans salue. 3. The sicke mans song. Published by Mr. Zacharie Boyd, preacher of Gods Word, at Glasogw [sic].August. Boyd, Zacharie, 1585?-1653. 1629 (1629) STC 3445A; ESTC S117235 88,780 280

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power of death that is the devil and deliver these who through feare of death were all their lifetyme subject vnto bondage Let vs remember then that death before Christs death had portes of power But so soone as the Captane of our salvation came hee cast downe the portes and dang death from the portes yea hee beseiged death yea hee overcame death even into the graue deaths dungeon and strongest hold yea not onely that but also hee put the devill that had the power of death to such a straite that hee was forced to quite his castell for to goe lodge into swine The vse of this is our great comfort against the feare of death What neede wee now to feare death seeing Christ our fastest friend hath conquessed the portes of death When a Christian seeth Christ hee groweth bold yea so that hee will boast death and the graue saying O death where is thy sting O graue where is thy victorie Heere againe I obserue that hee saith that the sicke fooles drawe neere the gates of death they drawe neere and yet enter not in The lesson is this so long as there is lyfe in a man there is hope all is not lost that is in perrill Epaphroditus was sicke nigh vnto death yet GOD had mercy on him The vse of this is so long as there is lyfe in man in sickenesse let both spirituall and bodily dueties be done let prayers be made and other lawfull meanes sought whereby the precious lyfe of man may be preserved Say not there is no remeed all hope of lyfe is past and therefore wee neede not care what bee done to him Mans extremitie is Gods opportunitie when man lest looketh for it GOD at his will can bring backe the sicke man from the doores of death The best vse wee can make of that that sinners sicken and at last drawe neere the doores of death is that we remember that we all haue this voyage to make We are all dayly drawing neerer and neerer vnto death vnto our long home as Salomon saith and therefore the neerer our bodies drawe to the doores of death let our soules drawe neerer the portes of Heaven All things giue vs warning that wee must flit and remoue thy beard thy face thy skinne thy acquaintance the season of the yeere are all crying we are subject to changes The houres the dayes the nights are all as it were vpon horsebacke posting to their end The Heavens crye vnto vs our powers are shaken and wee waxe old as doeth a garment See yee not that sand running out of my houre glasse Jt cryeth vnto you that tyme is running away with your lyfe As yee see that sand running out so is also the tyme of your lyfe running away and now yee haue neere by an houre of lyfe lesse since J reade my texte and shortly shall yee goe out with lesse naturall lyfe than yee came in The Lord increase our spirituall lyfe J wish J could let you see the vanitie of this lyfe that yee may learne to looke for a better There is a swift motion into man from lyfe to death My dayes said Job are swifter then a weevers shittle yea swifter then a post yea they are swift as ships as the Eagle that hasteth to the preye What is man but a broken leafe driven to and fro with dayes of trouble as with mightie tempests And yet for all thi● while hee is driving swiftly vnto death he dreameth that he is drawing neere to the doores of life Put thy house to an order yee must make your testament are fearefull wordes to a naturall man Most men even while they are a-dyeing desire to dreame of lyfe neither without some wrath will they suffer them selues to bee wakned out of this dreame and yet doe what they can they are ever drawing nearer and nearer the doores of death I wish that these doores were ofter into our memorie then they are If yee will take heede and considder I shall let you knowe two pages that God hath commanded ever to be watches in man so long as hee hath lyfe for to advertise him that hee must die The one is called the pulse which God hath set into the arme of man knocking night and day for to tell him that at the last knocke hee must enter in at the doores of death The other page is called the breath which God hath set into the breast of man this reciprocation of the breath is like reciprocatio serrae the drawing to and froo of a sawe This breath O man is night and day going to and froo like a savve man is the tree when the tree is cutted then must it fall and where it falleth there shall it lye whether in a myre or vpon the cleane As a man dieth so shall he be for ever If being well prepared hee enter in at the doores of death happie shall his lyfe bee for evermore Yee who of before did never obserue these two watching pages the pulse and the breath take warning by them that dayly yee drawe neerer to the gates of death THE SECOND PART THE SICKE MANS SALVE WEE haue hard in the first part of the verses which wee haue reade concerning the sicke mans sore Now it followeth that we heare of the second part wherein is the sicke mans salve it is contained in these words Then they cry vnto the Lord in their trouble Hee saveth them out of their distresses He sent his word and healed them and delivered them from their destructions In the words J see tvvo speciall things first the sicke man crying to God for helpe secondly GOD delivering the sicke man The first is in these words Then they cry vnto the Lord in their trouble the second is in these words Hee saveth them out of their trouble c. Heere then is both mans part and Gods part Mans part is in these words then they cry vnto the LORD Gods part is in these words He saveth them c. Heere first in mans part let vs obserue that while hee is neere the doores of death hee cryeth vnto God for lyfe where we may learne that it is lawfull for a man beeing in danger of death to begge his lyfe from his GOD This Hezekiah did while hee was sicke of his boile He weept before God in his bed and besought him that hee would spaire him for a space Moses had a great desire to liue and to enter into Canaan This was the prayer of him that compiled the hundreth and two psalme that GOD would yet let him liue I said O my GOD take mee not away in the middest of my dayes In the Kings Psalme the Prophet saith vnto GOD He asked lyfe of thee thou gavest it him I confesse that men had great need to bee wise in this sute
beaten before the men of Ai hee put dust vpon his head crying Oh Lord what shall I say seeing Israel hath turned their backe before their enemies now what could bee the cause of that flight Israel hath sinned and haue also transgressed saide the Lord therefore they could not stand before their enemies There must ever bee a wherefore of sinne before the therefore of affliction Can the rush grow vp without myre can the flagge grow without water no more can affliction grow without sinne Sin to affliction is like myre to the rush and like water to the flagge it maketh a division betweene our God our Soule God cannot shine vpon the Counsell of the wicked So soone as men beginne to sinne the clowds of his glowmes beginne to gather then thou markest mee and thou wilt not acquite mee from mine iniquitie if I be wicked woe vnto mee As a man soweth so shall hee reape Even as I haue seene said Eliphaz they that plow iniquitie and sowe wickednesse reape the same Who ever hee bee that takes pleasure in sinne shall possesse moneths of Vanitie wearisome nights are appointed for him The vse of all this is that wee studie to sinceritie of life if wee would bee free of afflictions The wicked while they are afflicted are bound with afflictions like a murtherer cast in the stockes but godly Ioseph in the stockes is a free man The sakelesse Soule is ever in libettie their is no such buckler for holding off afflictions as innocencie of life If because of their transgressions and because of their iniquities bee away the words following are afflicted should bee as scraped out Let a man keepe himselfe from sinne vnspotted of this World and hardlie shall affliction come neere him Doe what Balaam could doe hee could not curse Israel though hee was waged for the same The reason thereof is declared by himselfe God hath not beheld iniquitie in Iacob neither hath hee seene perversnesse in Israel the Lord God is with him and the shout of a King is among them So long as God beholdeth not iniquitie into a man a house or a nation the Lord God is there and they shout as Kings that is they triumph over all their enemies If afflictions come for to trye their forces they likewise shout as Kings triumphing over Death it selfe and the grave whome they boast with doubled interrogations O Death where is thy sting O Grave where is thy victorie What wonder that fooles bee afflicted for their follie seeing other innocent creatures smart for the same Doth not Scripture record that senselesse creatures sicken for our sinnes Thus wee see the walls of an house became leper of a freting leprosie a wonderfull thing to think how hard stones of the house wall where the sinner dwelt could become sick Because of the transgressions and iniquities of fooles in an house the dead stones in the wall were afflicted Yea which is more for the sins of man the whole creation groneth travelleth in paine together as if it were a Woman in her shewers their sicknesse is vanitie caused by our iniquitie * Seeing then other creatures that cannot sinne are afflicted because of mans sins what wonder if fooles because of their transgressions yea and also because of their iniquitie hee affl●cted Observe heere howe the worde because is doubled First because of their transgressions and againe because of their iniquities Is not this all one what neede was it then that hee should have thus doubled the worde Because and againe because I answere that this forme of speach is as were the dreames of Pharaoh of the kine and of the corne of one thing hee had two dreames The dreame of Pharaoh is one said Ioseph But wherefore was it doubled Joseph ●aith that it was to shew Pharaoh what hee was about to doe that is for to assure him that the matter should surely come to passe God of one thing doubled Pharaohs dreames for that the dreame was doubled vnto Pharaoh twise it is because the thing is established by GOD and God will shortly bring it to passe So for to assure vs heere that sinne is the cause of all our afflictions it is saide that men are afflicted because of their transgressions and againe because of their iniquities The word doubled is lyke two witnesses for to confirme the trueth The first lesson I observe heere is of the great stupiditie of man that very hardlie can rightly take vp the cause of his troubles It must bee told him againe and againe line after line commandement after commandement because after because The first bell ringes to the preaching and yet wee slumber The second ringes yet we are not ready The third must ring also with a doubled sound and yet we come behind Either preface or prayer is past before wee come to our place Wee come to the Lords house as to a place of girth or as to a city of refuge for to saue the the lyfe of our soules yet beholde how sluggish wee are like Lot who would not leaue his house till hee was pressed out by the Angel So heere behold thy senslese nature that can not take vp the cause of thy troubles till it be told againe and againe Because of transgressions will not waken the sleeping sinner till it be doubled into an other word because of iniquities lyke the doubled crowe of the Cock to Peter Let all men learne heere the cause of all their woes Now O man would thou knowe the cause of thy afflictions it is because of thy transgressions Hast thou not hard that Was thou sleeping while I said it Heare me againe it is b●cause of thy iniquities If the because of thy transgressions hath not weakned thee let the because of thy iniquities rouse thee vp GOD cryed once Samuel but hee made no answere to GOD hee cryed againe Samuel but yet hee answered not to God The third tyme hee cryed Samuel neither as yet could hee answere vnto God Last of all the Lord doubled his cry Samuel Samuel Then Samuel said Speake Lord forthy servant heareth Many preachings haue many heard and yet haue not learned the cause of their afflictons Many strokes haue many gotten and as yet never could take vp the cause of their stroakes and so they continue into their sinnes like the drunkard in his drinking who though in his drunknesse he hath gotten many a sore fall many a sore stroake yet can not refraine They haue stricken me will he say and I was not sicke they haue beaten me and I felt it not when I shall awake yet will I till it againe Woe to him that is not sensible to his afflictions for to seeke out the cause thereof that it may bee removed If a sinner hath beene stricken and hath not beene sicke if
drunkards but becaus they were lyars they fell both downe dead at the Apostles feere Iudas and Iulian were not guiltie of all these fore-said transgressions yet because they were traitours and Apostate they died shamefully Many of our weemen if they can say J am neither whoore nor theese think that all is well The second generall observation J make here is that in generall sinners are said to bee afflicted in this verse indeede thereafter the affliction is specified viz sicknesse But in this generall word afflicted I find as it were a meeting of Gods judgements with mens transgressious as all sorts of sinnes may be included into these words transgressions and iniquities so all sorts of iudgments may bee contained into that word afflicted If one affliction be not fearefull to the sinner another will bee terrible This is Gods aw-band aboue the heads of men The doctrine J gather heere is that as there bee diverse sortes of transgressions and of iniquities so there bee diverse sortes of iudgements that are all in readinesse at the first call to helpe the Lord to helpe the Lord against the iniquities of men If God but cry vpon his plagues ●aying whome shall I send and who will goe for vs There is not one but it will come our before the Lord saying with that evill Spirit send me when God is angry against man for sinne the famine will say send me and I shall eate him vp Send mee faith the pestilence and I shall destroy him send mee saith the sword and I shall hewe him in peeces These bee Gods three great Captaines which are appoynted by him to runne through the world for to scourge men because of their transgressions and because of their iniquities Not only those three but all the creatures of God are in readinesse in coats of armes for to execute his will against transgressours There is no creature of God either aboue or belowe but when they see God angry for sinne they will desire to be sent for to revenge the Lords quarrell against sinners The fire saith send me and I shall burne Sodom send me saith the water and I shall drowne Pharoah his host Send mee saith the earth and J shall swallow vp Dathan and Abiram The winds crye send vs and wee shall chase and chastise Ionas for his rebellion The lyons cry send vs and wee shall roare devore the enemies of Daniel The Deares cry send vs and wee shall destroy the mockers of Elisha The dagges crye send vs and we shall eate the flesh of Iozahel the lyce crye send vs and wee shall bring downe the pryde of Herode Againe there bee legions of disenses waiting vpon his nod for to afflict sinners Send mee saith one and I shall strike him blind Send mee saith another and I shall make him dease Send mee saith another and I shall make him dumbe Send me saith another and I shall lame him Send mee saith another to his head Send mee to his heart will another say Send mee to his lights and to his lever will others say Thus migrims and phrenesies fevers and fluxes gouts gravels catarres quartaines and cataractes armies of diseases will at Gods command runne vpon miserable man till from the sole of his feete to the crowne of his head there be nothing without or within but boils botches and putrifieing sores See what diseases feesters fevers fluxes c. See what beasts and vnbeasts Beares dogges lyons lyce c. These with all the elements are ready to afflict man because of his transgressions and because of his iniquities Moreover not only will other creatures bee in readinesse for God for to afflict and execute his vengance against sinners But even sinners them selues will runne as Posts this earand for to be against them selves for the Lord. Send me said Iudas and I shall hang that traitour Judas that betrayed his maister Send mee said Zimri and I shall cast Zimri into a fire Send me saith Achitophel and I shall hang Achitophel for abuseing of his wisedome Send me saith King Saul and I shall put a sword through King Saul to teach all the Kings of the earth obedience to the King of Heaven See what armies God hath for to afflict all men in all sorts of afflictions because of his transgressions and because of his iniquities The vse of all this is that we stand in awe and feare to offend so great and so high a Majestie Jf any man be guiltie of many transgressions of many iniquities God as yee see he are hath many judgements ready at his nod for the afflicting of such fooles A whip for the horse a bridle for the asse and many strips for the fooles back The Lord giue vs wisedome in all things to God be glory for ever THE SICKE MANS SORE THE SECOND SERMON PSAL. 107. verse 18. Their Soule abhorreth all maner of meate and they drawe neere the gates of death Verse 19. Then they cry vnto the Lord in their troubles and hee delivereth them out of their distresses IN my former sermon Beloved in the Lord the cause of the sicke mans sore hath beene declared in these words that because of their transgressions and because of their iniquities they are afflicted I wish from my heart that all sinners could thinke well vpon this that sinne is the very seede of affliction for the godly and of fearefull iudgement for the wicked Every man while he sinneth thinketh to escape even as God could bee false As God is a righteous Lord hee will not suffer sinners to escape vnpunished As the shaddow followeth the body so there is a thing that followeth sinne which Job calleth a rod which the wicked man never thinketh of before he hath done when the lowne hath faulted then is hee beaten When Belshazzar is drinking then God is writing his dittay vpon the wall After the wicked hath sinnsed the hand of Gods justice shall catch him by the hairie scalpe which shall make all his joynts to tremble The particular affliction wherewith the sinners of this Text are said to bee afflicted NOW according to my division made in the former sermon It followeth that wee knowe with what particular affliction fools in this text are said to bee scourged for their sinnes The rodde is sickenesse sore sickenesse deadly diseases This is plainely set downe into these words Their soule abhorreth all maner of meate and they drawe neere the gates of death The sickenesse as yee see is not some light trouble a tooth ache or an head-worke as wee say but a deadly disease declared in these words Their soule abhorreth all maner of meate c. Beholde heere J say the description of a deadly disease First it begins with want of appetite after that the sicke man draweth neere the gates of death The first doctrine J obserue heere is towards man in that hee maketh
sake that showed it and for conscience sake That which hee said of eating that may J say of drinking Drinke of any drinke that is set downe before you but if a scoll come to the table drinke it not because it is a sacrifice offered vnto the stinking idoll of the belly Let vs not onely flee all evill but all appearance of evill What hurt to health such scolls haue bene the conscience of many will beare mee record I wish that the force of Gods word could sweepe that out which mans corruption hath brought in When the brasen serpent made by Gods command was abused good Hezekiah brake it in peeces and called it Nehushtan that is a lumpe of brasse Seeing scols haue beene so vilely abused let vs breake them in peeces away with all appearance of evill This much concerning these enemies of health who by excessiue drinking drowne their spirits and the gifts of GOD within them There be now another sort of drunkards who spoile their health with reeke and smoke Tobacca-men who goe about to smoke the soule out of the body as if it were a foxe chased out of his hole this fire may be called as the fire of Nadab was called viz. strange fire I speake not of the vse but of the abuse of Gods creatures my reproofe is against these that spend the tyme with plussing of reeke which should be better imployed What count should such firie pipers make to God if death in an instant should feaze vpon them with that fire pipe at their mouth If God should say to that man what was thou doeing while I sent my servant death for thee Will that bee a gratious answere Lord I was spending the tyme that thou gavest mee for repentance at such and such an exercise I will not insist against this sinne that was once a great streanger in this land Onely this will J say for the present this taking of reeke seemeth to be a gracelesse thing Jf a man come in into a house and take but a drinke he wil first pray to God for a blessing But there is no grace for Tobacca as if it were not a creature of God Every creature of God is good and nothing to bee refused if it bee received with thanksgiving Away with such new inventions whereof the event is this the soule abhorreth all manner of meate Away with these creaturs which are nor received with thanksgiving Let vs now proceede in our text And they drewe neere the gates of death VVEE haue heard how all the sicke mans appetite is lost That which followeth is that they drawe neere the gates of death See how the living man sickneth and decayeth See how his sinne goeth downe by degrees first he can not eate after that all natural strength failing him hee draweth neere the gates of death yea so neere that with Job he is not able to swallow downe his spittle The doctrine J obserue heere is that sicknesse commeth formest death followeth after There is no disease that commeth to a man but it is like a warning peece of preparation for death The vse when ever wee find our appetite decay let vs remember the doores of death Againe let vs obserue heere that the Psalmist speaketh not heere of any light disease as of a tooth-ache or of some little throwing of the belly but of a deadly disease wherein all the cunning of the physician is gone See what doloures the sinne of man is able to bring vpon him Sinne while it is in doeing goeth merrily on like a ship falling into calme waters with flaunting failes but tary till the revenging tempest of Gods wrath come rush vpon the sinner and tumble him vp downe then is hee forced to know that there bee some great power provoked but let vs see what is vnderstood heere by the gates or doores of death By the gates or doores of death some vnderstand the graue when your graues are opened for to receiue your bodies then are the gates or ports of death opened that yee may enter in The graue maker is deaths porter A man is said to bee neere the gates of death when he is so sicke that there be more appearance of death then of lyfe Some are so sicke that they must make their Testament Some are yet neerer yea so neere that no hope of lyfe being left the living will cut off their winding-sheete The last yeere when J came out of that fever in all mens opinions deadly I found my winding sheete cut off lying in my studie amongst my bookes In such a case man may well bee said to be neere the gates of death when at every moment wee thinke that his breath should goe out In this drawing neere the graue J obserue also the weaknesse of man Were hee never so strong death at last will drawe him with sicknesse to her portes Samson for all his force yelded vnto this draught Let mee dye said hee with the Philistims there is neither force nor bewtie nor wisdome able to resist this draught Man in his name may learne his weaknesse The Hebrewes call him Enosh quasi●●ger di●●us ●● mortifera agritudine in quam 〈◊〉 peccatum incidit that is from ●iseases wherevnto hee hath beene made subject by sinne Eliphaz speaking of mans weaknesse faith that wee dwell in houses of clay whose foundation is in the dust which are crushed before the moth See what an house thy soule ô man dwelleth into It is but a little lodge so ruinous that if a moth but creepe vp vpon it with the weight thereof it will be crushed The vse let no man lippen to his strength or youth While thou art into thy greatest force remember that God can cause thee to be crushed before a moth which shall drawe thee perforce in at the doores of death for to dwell amongst the crawling wormes Others by the gates of death heere vnderstand the power that death hath over all the living They call the power of death gates of death quia judicia olim in portis exercebantur because the magistrats in whose hand was the civill power sat into the portes of the City while they did exercise judgement In this sease Christ said that the gates of hell should not prevaile against his Church By the gates or portes of Hell is to be vnderstood the power of hell So heere by the gates of death learned interpreters vnderstand the power of death The doctrine J obserue heere is that great was the power of death before the coming of Christ. It is heere set foorth as a King or a magistrate sitting with great power rule and dominion This impire it keept ever till Christ came who tooke part of our flesh and blood that through death hee might destroye him that had the
For if a man desire lyfe for to eate drinke and make good cheere of his provisions laide vp for many yeeres it were better for him to die before such riots Lord keepe me from the gift of lyfe except it bee that J may amend my lyfe lyfe should bee desired that it may bee better spended The vse of this doctrine is that every man in his sicknesse try wherefore hee desireth his lyfe Jf it be for to glorifie God and to redeeme evill spent tyme to doe some more good in the world such a desire is godly such a request is holy whether it be graunted or not Well is the man that hath gotten lyfe and thereafter so liveth and learneth to die that hee may dye to liue Let him whom God hath afflicted with sore sicknesse and thereafter hath brought even from the doores of death let him I say learne to be circumspect in his wayes When Christ met afterwarde with the sicke man whom hee had cured at the poole of Bethesda hee gaue him a godly counsell Behold said hee thou art made whole sinne no more lest a worse thing come vnto thee It is a token of a deadly disease when the phisicke can not worke Againe heere I obserue the sluggishnesse of mans heart in prayer He will not pray till hee bee at the extremitie even at the doores of death then and not till then saith my text they cry vnto the Lord. Why would they not cry while they perceived their appetite decaying why would they not cry while their soule began to abhorre all maner of meate Doeth the wild asse bray when hee hath grasse Or loveth the oxe over his fodder No not So long as a man hath the grasse of prosperitie and the fodder of wealth hee can neither loue nor bray nor pray The young man will not quite the harlot till a dart strake through his liver If the vntamed colt be not sore ridden and beat●● hee can not bee broken Hard hearts like hard knots must haue hard wedges A small wind is notable to fanne away meakell chaffe A hautie heart will not stoupe for a little distresse Jt is not the little touch of affliction that will waken a snorting sinner Except it bee an imperious crosse which cause him smart hardly will hee yeeld so head strong a thinge is sinne So long as the Mariners can worke among●t their cordes they runne ra●●le reele and sweate in the tempe●t But after that they haue reeled to c fro and staggered like drunken men when all their running is gone then as it is said in the psalme they cry vnto the Lord in their trouble yea though the ship reele and crack as thought it should bee crusht yet Jonas will not waken till a Pagan pull him vp and buffet him with rebukes what meanest thou O sleeper Arise call vpon thy God The vse While God giveth vs warning by any disease let vs take it as a precept of warning from GOD and prepare our selues for death * Jt is to bee too venturous not to cry till thou be at the doores of death that is to put craig in perrill wise Salomon forbiddeth a man to delay a day This was his watch-word Boast not thy selfe of to morrowe for tho● knowest not what a day may bringe foorth Age hodie quod moriturus agas Doe that to day that thou would desire to bee doing in the day of thy death But alas what order for all this haue wee taken with our soules though wee know not how neere wee are to the doores of death Who amongst vs can say with the Psalmist My heart is prepared my heart is prepared Alas for our heart it is like the field of the sloathfull and like the vineyard of the man voide of vnderstanding I went by it saith Salomon and loe it was all growen over with thornes and nettles had covered the face thereof Our hearts for the most part are either pricked with the thornie cares of the world or burnt so with the burning nettles of lust that we remember not our latter end So soone as wee come out of the burning nettles of youth wee fall into the pricking thornes of worldly cares the sicknesse of colde and olde age Except that wee take heede to our selues in tyme our damnation shall come as one that travaileth our destruction like an armed man For this cause let every man rouse vp him selfe at the first touch of affliction and no more put the Lord as it were to paines for to stretch out his arme still Why should yee bee striken any more said God to his people Though God spare man in his sinnes for a space yet at last shall hee not disdaine to bee crossed of dust asses I will tell thee ô man that if thou sit the Lords first summonds Hee vvill send to thee a new charge which shall make thy griefe to grow If yee walk stubbornly against mee said the LORD I will bring seven tymes more plagues vpon you according to your sinnes If seven will not worke God hath seventie seven at his command every one readier than another to say with that spirit send me Jf for the gentle corrections of his rodde thou will not turne Hee shall scourge thee with scorpions till hee cause thee c●y If a sinner overcome a little affliction and come out of it not being bettered thereby Gods armie shall bee stretched out still by some greater judgement After that Hananiah had broken the yoke of wood which was about Ieremiah his ●ecke for to bee a token of a great judgement God commanded to tell Hananiah Thou hast broken the yokes of wood but thou shalt make for t●●m yokes of yron If yokes of wood can not da●ton stif-necked sinners the Lord shall change wood into yron malo nodo malus cuneus for a hard knot he can make a hard wedge nill wee will we God will haue his blowes felt Againe heere in that a sicke man at the doores of death is said to cry to God I obserue a powerfull working of the spirit of God in his owne children While they are at the doores of death and can not speake vnto man for weaknesse yet are they said to cry vnto the Lord. At such a tyme all the force of nature is spent and words are said to be swallowed vp yet such are said heere to cry vnto the Lord. Wherefrae commeth this force to cry Not from nature It is from the spirit within While the godly man is at his last gaspes and hath layd speach before men even then is a voice of power within him crying through the heavens vnto God The vse In confidence of Gods assisting power let vs comfort our selues against the houre of death the houre of our greatest weaknesse Heere is the ground
gold and buy this But if he be drowned into deb●e and cast into prison then and there he will cry vnto the Lord. So long as the forlorne sonne had a pennie into his purse he thought never of home but when he was forced to feede with the swine he said I will returne to my father againe So long as wee haue peace in our land and Barnes full of corne and purses full of money we ly in securitie lyke these of L●ish But if the foraine enemy come and depriue vs of such comforts then we shall crye vnto the Lord. So long as Iehoshaphat in the battell sawe his partie to be equall he fought as he could But so soone as hee sawe him selfe neere straited by the enemie then hee cryed vnto the Lord. So long as Hagar had water into the bottles she and Ismael dranke together enjoying the creature But so soone as all was spent then she weept and cryed vnto the Lord. So ●long as the Raven can find a fleshy carion hee will quietly feede vpon it But while hee is straited with hunger hee beggeth his meate from God The young Lions saith the Psalmist roare a●ter their prey and seeke their meate from God All things men beasts fowles yea Papists in their greatest pinch are forced to quite all other vaine hopes for to cry vnto the Lord. I remember that in the tyme of the French persecution J came by sea to Flanders and as I was sailing from Flanders to Scotland a fearfull tempest arose which made our Mariners reele to and fro and stagger like drunken men In the meane tyme th●re was in our ship a Scots papist who lay neere me while the ship gaue a great shake his ordinarie cry was O Lord J observed the man and after the Lord had sent a calme I said to him Sir now yee see the weaknesse of your religion so long as yee are in prosperitie yee cry vnto this Sainct and that Sainct Jn our greatest danger J heard you cry often Lord Lord but not a word yee spake of our Lady J compare a Papist in his pilgrimages to creatures to a sheepe that is hunted of a flie it runneth from bush to bush every bush catcheth a l●ck till the silly sheepe bee threed-bare and tirred of all his fleece sinne lyke a cleg-flee maketh the soule to startle like a beast there is no sure refuge but in God Away then with Papistrie and with all that draweth a man from the Lord vnto any other The highest point of tribulation or some great danger of death wakning a man will tell a man that there is none that can helpe but the Lord and that hee onely is to bee called vpon Call vpon mee in the day of trouble said the Lord Whom haue I in heaven but thee said the Psalmist All things are for the Lord and from the Lord and all things in their troubles must come to the Lord as the hunger-bitten Aegiptians came all to Joseph for meate Thus yee see the great good of greevous afflictions They chase the creature till it cry to the Creator I will goe saith the Lord and returne to my place till they acknowledge their offence and seeke my face In their affliction they will seeke mee early This is hee●e declared in these words of my text Then they cry vnto the Lord in their trouble The vse let vs rejoyce in tribulation seeing God hath made it a spnrre vnto prayer Man is like waters Putrescunt ni movcantur aquae waters spill and stinke if they stand without any motion so will the soule stinke without affliction Before I was afflicted said David I went astray but now I learne thy statutes Indeede it is true that no affliction for the present seem●th to bee joyous but grievous Neverthelesse afterward it yeeldeth the p●●c●able f●uit of righteousnesse to these that are exercised thereby This is a quiet fruit of righteousnesse when the soule is moved to cry vnto God Cryes in prayer vnto God are the quietnesse of righteousnesse I confesse that both the wicked and the godly will crye in their distresse but the wicked cry like dogs beaten with a staffe the godly crye into their hearts like children with Moses to whom God said why cryest thou vnto mee Let vs praye the Lord that hee would rouze vp these sleepie soules of ours that sleepe so oftin sinne like Jonah in the hatches Well is the man to whom God shall send some affliction crying to the sinner as the Ship-master cryed to Jonah what meanest thou O sleeper arise crye and call vpon thy God It is goode that man while hee is forewarned by any affliction strive to bee friends with his God Men may rebell for a space and may turne the grace of God into wantonnesse yea and harden their hearts with Pharaoh against his plagues But at last when all their excellencie is swept away like a spiders web as Eliphaz sayeth they die without wisdome As a man liveth ordinarly so dieth hee He that liveth a foole shall readily die without wisedome a fore-warning affliction doeth goode to the godly man it maketh him to be fore-armed But as for the wicked man though God send sicknesse after sicknesse and delaye his death yet hee is not a whit the better But while hee liveth hee letteth the debt run on like a spender or waster who carelesly puts more and more vpon the score Jt were good for the wicked that hee had never beene borne as Christ said of Iudas or that hee had died in the birth yet seeing life in itselfe is a benefite while it is abused by those that have gotten it by crying vnto the Lord it is righteous with God to punish them in rigour for the abuse of his benefite which should have beene to them a large time well imployed in repentance where-with as with a brush they should have clensed their hearts from the scailles of wickednesse Againe heere some may obiect how is it that the godly man beeing sicke and neere the doores of death shuld cry so earnestly for life Should not a godly man bee glad to goe to GOD his Father to his long home where are pleasures for evermore What see wee heere but the back-parts of Iehovah Are wee not in this world as David was in Kedar and in Meshech or as Israel were captives in Babilon Is not this earth a strange land wherein wee can not sing the praises of our God Are not our Harpes heere hung vpon the willowes Our Musick is dumbe I answere that indeede if the godly well prepared as they should bee when sicknesse commeth vnto them they would not crye for health of body but their chiefe crye should bee Come Lord Iesus come and fetch away my soule that panteth after thee like a cha●ed Hart desiring the rivers of waters The chiefe desire
of a godly heart is all in this wish when shall I come and appeare before God Item I desire to bee dissolved and to bee with Christ. But for some reasons the most godly whiles will seek life from God some desire to live because they desire yet to doe some better service for God than hitherto they have done they are sorie that in their calling they have not beene so busie as it became them to bee the desire of their life is onelie that they may redeeme the time by dooing some one good turne or other for their God Jn my iudgment this chieflie made Hezekiah to weepe to croude and to chatter while hee heard the message of death This chiefly made the Psalmist crye Take mee not away in the midst of my dayes * Others even of the number of the godly will crye for life because they finde not themselves so well prepared for to come before the face of their Iudge they see that as yet they have not put the affaires of their Soule to an order It is likelie that this also made Hezekiah to weepe so fore that he chattered at the words of the messinger of death God by Isaiah bade him put his house in order if that had beene already done it had not needed Gods command seeing then his house was not set in order which is but an easie matter it would seeme that his soule was not so set in order as that hee found it ready to compeare before the iudgment seat of God O how fearefull is that tribunall for an vnprepared soule What terrours are these sinne and sicknesse death the grave an vnprepared soule The vse of all this is seeing there is nothing more certaine than death and nothing more vncertaine than the time and place thereof let vs ever be vpon our guarde ready to flitte and remove out of our tabernacles of clay My time is in thine hand said David Wee cannot tell how soone our glasse shall end Let vs therefore resolve with Hezekiah in all the way of our pilgrimage to goe softly in the bitternesse of our soule Againe in that it is said that the sicke men cry vnto the Lord in their trouble let vs observe the perversnesse of our nature Troubles make vs to crye bodily afflictions rouze vs vp to crye but alas while wee sinne we keepe silence while the Thiefe is cutting a purse hee is quiet but while hee is scourged for his fault hee will shoute for every stripe While Satan is forcing vs with his tentations to offend our God wee often yeelde therevnto without any crye to our God Jt is then especially that wee shoulde crye vnto him when wee finde sinne comming against vs to force vs to offend our God God in his word hath set downe a notable Lawe for a Damsell betrothed to a husband I will let you heare the Law If a Damsell saith the Lord that is a virgin● bee betrothed to an husband and a man find her in the Citie and lye with her Then yee shall bring them both out to the gate of that Citie and yee shall stone them with stones that they die the Damsell because shee cryed not and the man because hee humbled his neigboures wife But if a man finde a betrothed Damsell in the field and the man force her and lye with her then the man only that lay with her shall die But in the Damsell there is no sinne worthie of death for hee found her in the field and the betrothed Damsell cryed and there was none to save her Now what is to bee inferred vpon this This is the matter The soule of a Christian is as a Damsell a virgin betrothed vnto Christ the blessed Bridegrome of our soules Sathan the tempter is like a Russian comming to force and defile this Damsell Jf the soule crye not while Sathan is vsing violence the Soule and Sathan shall die the soule because it cryed not and Sathan because hee forced the Soule But if while Sathan is vsing violence rhe soule cry vnto God for help then Sathan shall only die yea though in that case the soule in something should bee defiled yet shall shee not die because she cryed vnto the Lord. The vse of this is that whensoever wee shall perceive Sathan comming with force for to deflore or defile our soule Christs Damsell we incontinent crye with all our force vnto GOD. Lord help mee Lord leade mee not into tentation O God of my m●●●● prevent mee and keepe m● from these snares bee thou a shelter for mee and a strong tower from the enemie This was Pauls doing when hee feared to bee forced with that bodie of death hee cryed Miserable man that I am who shall deliver mee from this body of death This was the practise of Joseph while his Mistresse saide to him lye with mee hee cryed vnto God How should I doe this wickednesse and sinne against God * Hee that will not crye to God before hee sinne Gods plagues at last shall cause him crye for his sins * Well is that man and that woman that can crye to God for to save them from the houre of tentation If a Damsell was forced in the fielde her sinne was not thought worthye of death because it was supponed that shee cryed but that there was none to help her But it is not so with our soule whether it crye in the Citie or in the field if shee cry shee shall find that there is a God for to help her and therefore if shee be forced shee can have no excuse Well is that soule that is continually crying to God in prayer Jf a palliard knowe that a woman will crye hee will feare to make an onset but if hee see her smyle hee knoweth that hee hath found his match It is so with Sathan that great palliard and the soule of man If Sathan knowe thy soule to bee a crying soule a soule that will tell all his te●tations to Christ her husband hee will feare to tempt that soule Satan is feared for Christ hee beleeveth and hee trembleth But if hee see a soule that is quiet a soule that heares his filthie language and smileth vpon him with a wanton eye there the vncleane Spirit knoweth that hee hath founde his match Well is that soule that Sathan finds weeping for offending Christ her husband O what a difference is betweene a soule whose eyes are drumly with teares of repentance and a soule whose eyes are wanton ' light and smyling eyes filled with spirituall adulterie Remember this vse O man when ever Sathan shall come to tempt thee vnto sinne then crye thou vnto the Lord vnto Christ thy husband and Sathan that filthy Russian shall flie awaye in haste so long as wee breath let vs pray that the Lord would lead vs into the land of righteousnesse
Last of all in that these that are troubled crye to God J observe a comfort for these that crye in trouble when a man can once crye to God in his trouble it is a token that God shortly will deliver One that is pined with the stone gravell so long as hee but whineth for the difficultie hee hath in making water the Surgeon will not cut him but will say let him bee till hee crye from the time once hee beginneth to cry then is it time to cutt that once done he is delivered from his paine There is in man a stone harder than the Stone of the bladder viz. the stone of the heart The heart stone is of sinne the bladder Stone is but of sand Sinne gravell is a stone gravell for hardnesse there is no flint so hard as a hard heart As the Stone gravell is from sand one pickle ioyning to another till at last manie pickles beeing knit together in a lumpe become a confirmed stone even so the heart gravell is from one sinne joyned to another till they be in an huge number together like a cluster At last in length of time by custome they harden together from thence is the confirmed stone of the heart So long as this stone is not very painefull in affliction but onely maketh the sinner to whine the Lord will let that sinner suffer still for a space hee will delay his cure but if once the paine bee so that it cause the sinner to cry God that most cunning Surgeon will cut out the cause of his cry Behold the trueth of this into my text Then they cry vnto the Lord there is the cry and he delivereth them there is the cure The vse Let vs try our soules in trouble whither they cry or but whine if the soule but whine in afflictions it is a token that deliverance is yet far off but if the soule once begin to crye God is ready to deliver By our prayer to God we shall know the mind of our God in our troubles the working of our afflictions In this crying to God there is a great difference the wicked cryeth more for his sore than his sinne the godly man cryeth more for his sin than his sore So to doe is not the practise of a prentise The Lord teach vs both how wee should cry to our God and wherfore chiefly we should cry To God bee glorye for ever Amen A SHORT MEDITATION against mans securitie in life AS intensive colde in time of frost maketh water to congeale and bindeth all vp so that the earth is neither fit for plowing or sowing so into the hearts of manie there is a frost yea a lying frost so that the fallow ground of their heartes cannot bee riven vp An excessive cold at Gods service stayeth the pleugh of Gods ●grace Yee all woulde thinke it an vncouth thing to see pleughsly in frost in the moneth of May and yet more into August The yeere is but of the age of twelve monethes Maye is but the youth thereof and yet if in that moneth there should bee no appearance of fruites what would you thinke of such a yeere And yet alas many of vs who have past the June yea the August of our age are as yet frozen in the dregges of our sinnes as though the beames of Christ the Sunne of righteousnesse had never shined vpon our soules What is this that wee cannot remember our mortalitie * One sythe cutteth down both Prince and people How manie Kings of this land are dead and but one alive The rest are gone for to give account how they have swayed the scepter when they sustained the person of God All the glorie of the greatest except they bee godly shall perish like the snuffe of a candle that is trodde vnder-foote Let vs therefore so live to die that wee maye die to live If wee digge not the Myne we shall never find the treasure If wee could lay this to our heart wee should bee swifter than Hazael in running to our God THE SICKE MANS SALVE THE THIRD SERMON Psal. 107. v. 19. Then they cry vnto the Lorde in their trouble hee saved them out of their distresses V. 20. Hee sent his word and healed them and delivered them from their destructions IN my former Sermon it hath beene declared what the sicke fooles did while they were neere the doores of death it is saide Then they cryed vnto the Lord Jn this Sermon wee shall heare Gods part It is in these words ●ee saved them out of their distresses hee sent his word and healed them and delivered them from their destructions The division of these words Jn these wordes I see two things first God after hee hath heard afflicted sinners saveth them and delivereth them out of their distresse secondly it is set downe by what meanes hee delivered these sicke persons in these wordes hee sent his word and healed them and delivered them from their graves or destructions As for that it is saide in the first part of my d●yes Text that God saved these sicke out of their distresses J observe the great mercie of God there is no sinne or sicknesse I see so great but if the sicke sinner can crye to him God hath mercie for him as it is of sicknesse so of all other affliction If man can crye vnto God God is readie to send succour This Moses declared well vnto Jsrael The Lord said hee shall scatter you among the nations and yee shall bee left few in number and there yee shall serve gods the workes of mens handes wood and stone which neither heare nor see nor eate nor smell there is Gods iudgment against mans sin But shall the LORDS arme bee stretched out still Will not God bee any more mercifull heare what is subioyned But if from thence thou shalt seeke the Lord thy God thou shalt find him if thou seeke him with all thy heart and with all thy soule Manie a time had the sicke fooles of my text offended his Majestie yet here is mercie they cryed and hee saved God sometimes indeed while hee hath beene often provoked by the sinnes of men after diverse deliverances will seeme to bee more hard to bee intreated that men maye beware to be relapses from such he will hide his face for a space Verily said Jsaiah thou art a God that hideth thy self O God of Israel the Saviour hee may hide himself for a litle but not long While hee heareth the heart-cryes of his creature hee is forced to draw the curtaine and shew himselfe vnto it He that forbade man to hide himself from his owne flesh can not long deny himselfe to a sicke sinner crying in his distresse Of this we have a notable speach in the Psalme I sought the Lord and hee heard mee delivered mee from all my feares
They looked vnto him and were lightened and their faces were not ashamed Now let vs see the kirnell of that comfort in the verse following This poore man cryed and the Lord heard him and saved him out of all his troubles Behold a progresse of seeking and of deliverance first hee sought God secondly he looked vnto God thirdly the poore man cryed So first God mett mans seeking with deliverance from the feare of trouble secondly while man looked vnto him hee made him to bee inlightened so that hee knew both who did afflict and wherefore hee did afflict him But last of all while God saw this sinner humbled like a poore man and heard him crye then hee saved him from his troubles This poore man cryed saith the Psalmist and the Lord heard him and saved him out of all his troubles See how the Lord at the first saved him not from all his troubles but by degrees till hee cryed vnto him like a poore man crying for an almes The harder health is more come by the more it is set by a disease easily cured is easily incurred The sooner a sinner bee helped if hee returne againe to his sinnes hee shall find God the slower to come to his helpe againe God will let him seeke and looke and cry yea and crye againe to teach him better manners This wee see in the booke of Iudges to have beene Gods doing with Israel The Israelites beeing oppressed by the Philistimes and Ammonites in their miserie they sought vnto God they looked vnto him yea and they cryed but what answere got they at the first God sent them vnto their false gods at the first and yet vpon their repentance hee hee pittied them The wordes are so weightie that they are worthie to be heard these be they euen as they were writen by Gods pen-man when the Israelites sawe that they were so sore afflicted by their enemies it is said They cryed vnto the Lord saying wee haue sinned against thee both because we haue forsaken our God and also serued Balaam let vs now heare what answere God made vnto them Hee said vnto them Did I not deliuer you from the Egyptians and from the Ammorits and from the Children of Ammon and from the Philistimes The Zidonians also and the Amalelikites and the Maonites did oppresse you and yee cryed vnto mee and I deliuered you out of their hands yet ye ha●e forsaken mee and serued other Gods Behold their relaps what saith the Lord to that I will deliuer you no more Goe and crye vnto the Gods which ye haue chosen let them deliuer you in the time of your tribulation heare what a hard answere Now what did the Jsraelites They said to God We haue sinned doe thou vnto vs whatsoeuer seemeth good vnto thee deliuer vs onely we praye thee this day as if they should haue said Lord but for this one time Thus after they had cryed they amended their life by putting away the strange Gods from among them and serued the Lord what did God then It is said that his soule was grieued for the miserie of Israel So at last they got help but after many prayers and after the amendement of their life O the great mercy of our God! O the preseruer of man Let vs make vse of this by applying it to our present purpose which is concerning these that are so sicke that they seeme to bee neere the doores of death While God delayeth to bring them from their sicknesse notwithstanding of all their prayers and of all our prayers private or publicke let vs not grudge neither let the sicke murmure God while hee delayeth their health hee as it were sayeth to them as hee said to Israel I will deliver you no more yet if the poore patient persist to murne before him God will not faile to give him full contentment at last God afflicteth not willingly the children of men no not his soule often is grieved for the miserie of Israel How can hee but deliver repenting sinners seeing their miserie grieveth his verie soule It is not wonder that God repented himselfe to have made man because that hee is the chiefe matter of his griefe As for the Devils they grieve GOD by their sinnes but he is not grieved for their torments God gladly shall cause scourge them with scorpions But as for his owne children heere hee is grieved and grieved againe first for their sinnes but most for their sufferings hee is grieved for their sinnes as a father for his childrens faults and againe he is grieved to strike them Last of all hee is most grieved after that hee hath striken them These bee wonderfull wordes his soule was grieued for the miserie of Israel God that forgave David his sinne could as gladly have spared him in his iudgments but the wicked were looking on wondred how God did spare and therefore ●or his honour and for his names sake he could not let David go vnpunished So soone as David had said I have sinned against the Lord Nathan answered that the Lord had put away his sinne but as for afflictions and troubles hee could not put them awaye because by that deede hee had giuen great occasion to the enemies of the Lord to blaspheme Jf all the wicked were blind God would often spare to afflict his Children An obiection Heere some may obiect and saye that this our Text is not ever true Js it not cleare that God delivereth not all men from the gates of death though they cry vnto him The answere It is certaine that it is not aye done For if men by crying to God were ever brought backe from the doores of death death should bee a rare thing among men If life could bee had for crying to GOD the World should be deafned with din for all that a man hath he will giue it for his life Jt is but one of a thousand that can say with S. Paul I desire to be dissolued what then shall we say to our Texte wherein is said that when the sicke man cryeth then God deliuereth Surely this is not euer done but if it be once done to a man in his life they be fewe here of anye age but once in their lifetime God hath brought them from the doores of death If God once hath done this to thee by thy owne experience subscribe to the trueth of my Texte Neither doth my Text say that this is done to all left that anye should beguile himselfe saying I may sinne seeing as yet I haue neuer bene so sicke as to be at the ports of death before J die I must first be neere these portes and be broght backe againe to health and so shall liue a space and afterward die No not God hath not astricted himselfe by promise to anye that he shall get but an houres sicknesse before he die If
call Charmes In my iudgement it it is from this place that by an Apish imitation he hath learned the first inuention of charmes or of healing by words This of before did I neuer obserue Often did I wonder where frae he had taken the vse of healing by words All that Sathan doeth in draweing ●oules vnto him he hath learned it out of GODS wisdome by counterfeiting the Lords workes as the Magitians that turned their rods into Serpents as Moses turned his rod into a Serpent But as Moses his Serpent swallowed vp the serpents of the Magicians ●o Gods word shall at last swallowe vp and destroye the devils charmes Sathan is an Apish creature striuing euer to counterfeit God in all his actions So from God hee learned to teach men to make sacrifices to himselfe as if hee had bene the God of the world As God is euer turning euill vnto good so Sathan is euer turning good vnto euill Out of this place in my iudgement are all witches charmes by imitation Jf yee would have the definition of a Charme take it in these words It is a word sent from the deuill for healing of these that put not their trust into God O but will ye say they doe good and helpe vs O follie if God in such a case remoue his heavie hand it is for to lay it on againe with a greater burden such a deliuerance is by breaking the prison to be clogged with more fearfull fetters Heere is Gods precept Psal. 50.15 Call vpon me in the day of trouble Heere is a promise and I will deliuer thee O but will yee say in all that they say J heare no thing but good wordes O foole if the baite were not sweete the fish would not plucke the poisond gloves must bee most sweetly perfumed The most deadly drinke must bee most sugred There is no such liquour for the mouth as the deuils posset sweet in the mouth but death into the belly Obserue also that it is a righteous thing with God to suffer Sathans wordes haue power to giue such a bodily benefite to these that loue their health better then God He that seeketh his health by vnlawfull meanes loueth his health better then God And therefore iust and righteous is hee when hee giueth ouer to a reprobate mind these that like not to retaine God in their knowledge A mind voide of all iudgement is a plague ordained for all these that desire not to retaine God in their knowledge Because they receiued not the loue of the trueth that they might be saued for this cause God sent them strong delusion that they should belieue● a lye If men and women will not desist from seeking such vnlawfull meanes but leauing the word that God hath sent for health will beetake themselues to the word that the deuill hath sent let them knowe that God hath plagued them with strong delusion because they haue not the loue of the trueth What rage is this for a man to goe and seeke health from the devill in his sickenesse Is it not as Elijah said concerning Ahazia who in his sicknesse sent vnto Baalzebub because there is not a God in Israel These that thinke that there is a God in Israel will neuer seeke to be healed by the deuiles wordes So long as God would speake to Saul Saul sought not to Sathan After that God was departed from him and would answere him no more then hee ranne to the deuill of Endor But what comfort gote hee there euen that which the deuill himselfe abhorreth viz. torment before the time Which made him fall straight way all along on the earth These were the cheefe wordes of the deuils comfortes Tomorrow thou shall be with mee So must they bee heal●● that desire the deuill to send wordes for their health An obiection Heere some curious spirit may object that where as it is said heere that God sendeth his worde and healeth the sicke and that therefore in sicknesse this word should be sought vnto that seemeth not to be needfull My dayes are they not numbered a man can not dye before his dayes what needs a man then in sicknesse seeke his life from God The Answere Jt is certaine that mans time is determined mans dayes are bounded like the sea To mans age God saith as hee saith to the waves of the Sea Hitherto shall thou come but no further and heere shall thy proud ●a●es be stayed The proudest dayes of mans age are s●ayed at a certaine hitherto when they are come to that they can w●nn● no further But yet till they come there man must vse the meanes where by his life may be preserued God promised to adde to Hezekiahs yeeres other fifeteene Hezekiah knew well that God would keepe his promise and yet for all that he left not off to eate and to drinke whereby his life might be preserued This is most forcible against these that obiecting against predestination say most profanely that if they know they were predestinate to life eternall they should not care what ill they doe why because they would be assured not to goe to Hell First that were great ingratitude to giue the goodnesse of God such a meeting What ignorance is this that a man should not know that the goodnesse of God leadeth him to repentance and not to sinne more and more Againe though God hath promised to him life eternall and that God can not lye yet man should no more neglect the meanes of his spirituall life then Hezekiah neglected the meanes for keeping of his naturall life As for vs though wee knowe that our life can not ouerreach our spanne yet seeing the day of our death is concealed from vs we may lawfully c●y to God for help in our troubles Jf we be sicke let vs intreat God to send his word the messenger of health that with the liuing as Hezekiah said wee may praise his name But if so be that our day be come that God say to vs concerning life as he said to Moses concerning Canaan let it suffice thee speak no more vnto me of this matter then let vs resolue to pray with Simeon that the Lord would let his servant depart in peace And delivered them from their destructions IN the former wordes wee haue heard what good the sicke persons haue gotten from God by their prayers viz health Hee sent his word and healed them Jn these words the spirit of God letteth vs see from what ill by his word he hath delivered them viz. from destruction and deliuered them from their destructions Behold in the coherence of the words two things first a positiue good viz. health Secondlie a deliuerance from a great ill viz. from their destructions Heere obserue the great wisdome of GOD who for to stirre vp men to thankfulnes letteth men first
resurrection The vse of this doctrine is t●●o sold first for ●●se godly secondlie for the wicked As for the godly let them bee thankfull vnto God who hath changed their destructions into beds of rest where they shall sleepe most softly vntill the great blast of the last trumpet This is one of the speciall comforts which God hath prepared for the godly man in his bed of languishing that God will make all his bed in his sicknesse Beh●ld heere a greater comfort In death God will make all the godly mans bed The graue to him is but a bed made for him by the Lord. O man of GOD for thy graue bee thankfull vnto God When death is drawing neere comfort thy selfe with this that God is preparing a well made bed for thee in the graue Blesse him who hath turned thy destruction into rest As for the wicked let the fearfull word of my text viz. destructions let it bee as it were a Remembrancer vnto them that there is a thing after this lyfe prepared for them which God his word calleth destruction While they heare of it let them come out of their chaire of ease for to be friends with God in time O mercifull God what terrour must this bee while a man on his death bed perceiveth nothing but GODS wrath a gape●ng graue and an v●prepared soule Let this memorandum rouse vp all slippry soules so to liue in this lyfe that they losse not that lyfe which is to come No man can tell how soone his glasse shall runne out What a follie is this for a moment of pleasures to losse eternitie and to goe to destruction Happy then I see is the man that liveth well he●re Blessed is he whose GOD is the Lord Thrise happy is hee that hath faith in Christ for in the very graue he shall find salvation Hee hath a cordiall antido● against the poison of destruction who hath Christ to bee his salvation Christ our salvation hath destroyed this destruction He hath gotten such a victorie not only for him selfe but also for all his Saints that the least and weakest of them may defye both death and destruction with those words of boast O death where is thy sting O graue where is thy victorie Death like that viper of Malta may hang vpon a godly mans hand but in the day the Lord shall purge the world with fire the godly man shall shake death from him as St. Paul cast the v●per from him into the fire without any hurt But as for the wicked that are not in Christ their graues are their destructions death in the graue feedeth on them as on sheepe To euery one of them death may say as Christ said to death I shall be thy death While Christs friends with Lazarus are said to sleepe into the graue the wicked man there is but a destroyed creature While he is there he is in destruction hee is in abstracto mall into evill it selfe hee is nothing there but the Carion of a creature VVoe be to him to whom the graue is a destruction Let therefore all men st●●e so to liue that while they goe to their graues their graues may bee a bed of rest vnto them Jf the graue bee a destruction to thy body the place of damnation is prepared for thy soule Let Epicures while they liue sport and say Hell is not so ●●te nor sinne so heavy nor the divell so blacke nor GOD so severe as Preachers prattle The day shall come when they shall find it farre other wayes Shall GOD suffer the whole creation to groane vnder the burden of our sinnes Shall GOD him selfe be pressed vnder the weight thereof as a cart laden with sheaues and shall he not be avenged of vs in death except we repent Let vs therefore least our graues after death bee our destructions amend our lyfe in tyme Let vs abhorre the filthie shape of our sinnes Let vs lay hold on GOD his mercy and CHRIST his merits which are two shoulders that shall carie away all the weights of wickednesse Well is that soule whose Bill Bond before death is cancelled and crost With great joy may he goe to the graue to whom the LORD hath said I haue put away thy transgression like a cloud and thy sinnes as a mist Lord make our eyes nimble to rip our hearts to the bottome that wee may bring out our sinnes from thence that they may get a dead stroake before wee dye Heere let vs obserue who is hee that is said heere to haue delivered the sicke from their destructions it is the Lord The greatnesse of the worke declareth plainly that it could bee no other then the Lord when Iohn and Peter went a fishing after Christs resurrection Christ appeared vnto them after they had toiled the whole night in vaine at last at Christs command they cast the nets Christ at the first they knew not but by the great draught of fishes they began to know him the disciple whom Jesus loved considering the draught said vnto Peter it is the Lord So may a man who hath beene delivered from his destructions easily know that none could deliver him but the LORD the text is plaine heere and hee delivered them from their destructions Heere is a lesson of the great power of God the angell of the covenant said well when he sawe Sarah laughing at the promise is any thing too hard for the Lord. Christ speaking of the hard entrie of rich men into God his kingdome compared it to the passing of a Camell thorow the eye of a needle this thereafter hee made more cleare saying with men it is impossible but not with God for with GOD all things are possible This great power heere appeareth in that when the sicke man is hard at the doores of death vpon the very brime of destruction yet the Lord by his infinit power delivereth him from his destructions The vse is this when ever we find our selues perplexed let vs haue recourse to him that is only able to helpe vs Who can deliver from destruction the abstract of ill but God who is salvation essentially that which is good yea goodnesse it selfe No man can deliver his friend from feare in the dayes of evill when the iniquities of his heeles shall compasse him about Though men were never so wealthy boasting them selues in the multitude of their riches none of them can by any meanes redeeme his brother nor gius to God a ransome for him All the gold of ●ndia is not able to deliver a man from his destructions no not to prolong his lyfe but an houre Hee only who ga●e the lyfe is able to preserue the lyfe He only who gaue the lyfe is able for to take away the lyfe vnto God the Lord alone belong the issues from
Oh in thy distresse Againe in those words Oh that men would praise the Lord for his goodnesse I obserue how sensible the godly are when the least point of GOD his service is neglected If a godly man cryeth Oh that men would praise the Lord because hee seeth them flow vnto it how grieved will his heart bee when hee shall see men not only not praising God but dishonouring GOD for his goodnesse Many haue gotten health from God God in great mercy hath brought them from the gates of death and hath restored vnto them their former strength but what thankes They haue lyke the dogge returned to their ●●nite againe The drunkard resto●ed runneth backe to the taverne and the harlot to his old acquaintance lyke that divell returning from dry places vnto his house whence hee came out The last of such persons is worse then their first Good had it beene for many that they had never beene brought backe from the doores of death because that after a newe t●●ke of their lyfe they dishonour God more then ever they did before As Iacob said of Simeon and Levi so say I of such O my soule come not thou into their secret vnto their assembly mine honour bee thou not vnited The vse let vs striue to be sensible of sinne so that wee make conscience of the least sinne Many thinke vnthankfulnesse to GOD no sinne The leav●n of the Pharisees hath sowred the whole lumpe of many mens hearts Jf they bee not Adulterers but can fast and giue almes at once they will thanke GOD that they are not lyke other men GOD desyreth no such thankes when man praiseth GOD for his owne goodnesse But OH that m●● would praise the LORD for his goodnesse and for his wonderfull workes to the children of men Let man praise GOD for his goodnesse but in his owne goodnesse there is no matter of praise What can bee said to the praise of a m●●st●u●us cloath Such is all our righteousnesse Let vs also obserue heere another lesson The deliverance from death is said to bee from the goodnesse of God and it is also called a wonderfull worke for while it is said Oh that men would praise the Lord for his goodnesse it is cleare that the deliverance from death in sicknesse is from the goodnesse of our GOD. The vse let all those who are sicke haue recourse vnto the goodnesse of God by which only wee haue health When wee seeke health from God let vs say for thy goodnesse sake O Lord. The second vse I make of those words is for them that are recouered of their sickenesse Let such learne to bee good seing their health is from the goodnesse of God A lyfe given in goodnesse should not bee spent in wickednesse The goodnesse of God inviteth all men to repentance Againe obserue heere that great must bee that goodnesse of God whereby hee bringeth man backe from the doores of death The preservation of mans lyfe in his sicknesse is also called a wonderfull worke Js it not a great goodnesse of God and a wonder that hee should spare the lyfe of a rebellious foole What a wonder is this in God his goodnesse that the lyfe of man should be so precious in his sight Is not man naturally the enemie of God It must bee a great goodnesse that will make a man spare his enemie his lyfe And who said Saul to David finding his enemie will let him goe well away O but in God then must be a wonderfull goodnesse in that not onely he spareth his enemie but which is more euen preserueth the life of his enemie Did not God dye for his enemies did he not suffer for them by whom hee suffered By this meanes such was his goodnesse hee heaped vpon their heads coales of fire that is as St. Augustine saith vrentes poenitentiae gemitus the burning sighs of repentance Who can not bee but burnt with sighs while hee considereth the goodnesse of GOD that hath rendered him so mekle good for so mekle ill What a great mercie is this that GOD should prolong the lyfe of a sinner but an houre The vse seeing the deliverance from death and destruction is called a wonderfull work and seeing it is so indeede let vs wonder at it when J arose out of that deadly fever Anno 1626 in the moneth of September and J fand my winding sheete wrapped together into my studie amongst my bookes J began to wonder at GOD his great worke I thought it wonderfull But alace we wonder at God his works of mercie as at other common worldly thinges but for a litle space From thence is the proverb A wonder lasteth but nyne nights into a city Fy vpon vs that can not wonder still at the wonderfull works of our GOD. The Hebrew word Pala in Niphal signifieth both admirabile occuitum that is both secret wonderfull a fit word for to declare the worke to be wonderfull indeede David speaking of his making in the belly vseth this word I will praise thee said hee for I am fearfully and wonderfully mad● Likewise in another Psalme speaking how Christ the stone which the builders refused was become the head stone of the corner he said This is the Lords doing it is marveilous or wonderfull in our eyes So heere the bringing from the doores of death is called a wonderfull worke of GOD tovvard the children of men Obserue the lesson only the workes of God are wonderfull Men may wonder at some workes of men but no works of men are wonderfull No created wisdome can fill a worke with wonder There is nothing that man can doe but man may come after and doe better plus vident oculi quam oculus many eyes see better than one This is true amongst men But all the eyes of men can not perceiue that God in any worke hath either beene defectuous or superfluous Looke vp to the Heavens and consider the sunne in his goings Behold how in the spring he commeth slowly by degrees till our day be at the longest Behold and wonder at such slownesse in such a swiftnesse If hee were not slow in such swiftnesse what fearfull changes should ensue If from the elleventh of December in the space of a day the sunne should be into that part of Heaven whereinto he is seene into the elleventh of Iune what discorder should be in the creatures below All men know how dangerous are sudden changes from heate to cold and from cold to heate Behold then and wonder how the Creator hath so ruled that Bridgroome of light that no man can imagine how his course could be changed for a better What shall I speake of the sea tide which made that most subtile searcher of secrets as some thinke to haue drowned him selfe in the