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A51842 One hundred and ninety sermons on the hundred and nineteenth Psalm preached by the late reverend and learned Thomas Manton, D.D. ; with a perfect alphabetical table directing to the principal matters contained therein. Manton, Thomas, 1620-1677.; White, Robert, 1645-1703.; Bates, William, 1625-1699. 1681 (1681) Wing M526A; ESTC R225740 2,212,336 1,308

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as the benefits that he bringeth with him He doth approve things upon good knowledg and cometh to a well setled resolution Another defect in wicked men is because the judgment is superficial and so come to nothing 'T is not full clear and ponderous 't is not a dictamen a resolute decree not ultimum dictamen the last decree all things considered and well weighed 2. God's Grace God doth never fully and spiritually convince the judgment but he doth also work upon the will to accept embrace and prosecute those good things of which it is convinced He teacheth and draweth they are distinct works but they go together therefore the one is inferred out of the other Drawn and taught of God both are necessary for as there is blindness and inadvertency in the mind so obstinacy in the will which is not to be cured by meer perswasion but by a gracious quality infused inclining the heart which by the way freeth this doctrine from exception as if all Gods works were meer moral suasion The will is renewed and changed but so as God doth it by working according to the order of Nature USE By all means look after this Divine illumination whereby your judgment may be convinced of the truth and worth of spiritual things 'T is not enough to have some general and floating notions about them or slightly to hear of them or talk of them but they must be spiritually discern'd and judg'd of for if our judgments were throughly convinced our pursuit of true happiness would be more earnest you would see sin to be the greatest mischief and grace the chiefest treasure and accordingly act God inlightning the soul doth 1. Take away carnal principles Many men can talk well but they are leavened with carnal principles as 1. That he may do as most do and yet be safe Mat. 7. 23. Many will say in that day Lord Lord have we not prophesied in thy name c. and then will I profess unto them I never knew you depart from me ye that work iniquity Prov. 11. 31. Behold the righteous shall be recompenced upon the earth much more the wicked and the sinner Exod. 32. c. 2. That he may go on in ungodliness injustice intemperance because grace hath abounded in the Gospel Tit. 2. 11 12. For the grace of God that bringeth salvation hath appeared to all men Teaching us that denying ungodliness and worldly lusts we should live soberly righteously and godlily in this present world And Luke 1. 75. That we being delivered out of the hands of our enemies might serve him without fear in holiness and righteousness before him all the days of our life 3. That he may spend his youth in pleasure and safely put off repentance till age But Eccles. 12. 1. we are bid to Remember our creator in the days of youth while the evil days come not nor the years draw nigh when thou shalt say I have no pleasure in them And Luke 12. 20. when the rich man said to his soul Soul thou hast much goods laid up for many years take thine ease eat drink and be merry God said unto him Thou fool this night shall thy soul be required of thee then whose shall those things be which thou hast provided Heb. 3. 7. Wherefore as the Holy Ghost saith To day if ye will hear his voice harden not your hearts c. Men think it is a folly to be singular and precise that 't was better when there was less preaching and less knowledg that small sins are not to be stood upon But God inlightning the soul maketh us to see the vanity and sinfulness of such thoughts 2. There is a bringing the understanding to attend and consider there is much lieth upon it Acts 16. 14. The Lord opened the heart of Lydia so that she attended unto the things which were spoken of Paul That is weighed them in her heart SERMON XXXVIII PSAL. CXIX 34. Yea I shall observe it with my whole heart I Come now to the last clause I shall observe it with my whole heart The Point is Doct. That it is not enough to keep Gods law but we must keep it with the whole heart Here I shall shew you 1. That God requireth the heart 2. The whole heart 1. God requireth the heart in his service the heart is the Christians sacrifice the fountain of good and evil and therefore should be mainly looked after without this 1. External profession is nothing most Christians have nothing for Christ but a good opinion or some outward prof●…on Iudas was a disciple but Satan entred into his heart Luke 22. 3. Ananias joyned himself to the people of God but Satan filled his heart Acts 5. 3. Simon Magus was baptized but his heart was not right with God Acts 8. 22. Here is the great defect 2. External conformity is nothing worth It is not enough that the life seem good and many good actions be performed unless the heart be purified otherwise we do with the Pharisees wash the outside of the platter Mat. 23. 25 26. when the inside is full of extortion and excess 'T is the heart God looketh after 1 Sam. 16. 7. For the Lord seeth not as man seeth for man looketh on the outward appearance but the Lord looketh on the heart Prov. 4. 23. Keep thy heart with all diligence for out of it are the issues of life Cast salt into the spring As Iehu said to Ionadab so doth God say to us 2 Kings 10. 15. Is thy heart right as my heart is with thy heart We should answer it is Men are not for obsequious compliances if not with the heart so neither is God Though thou pray with the Pharisee pay thy vows with the Harlot kiss Christ with Iudas offer sacrifice with Cain fast with Iezebel sell thine inheritance to give to the poor with Ananias and Saphira all is in vain without the heart for 't is the heart enliveneth all our duties 3. It is the heart wherein God dwelleth not in the tongue the brain unless by common gifts till he take possession of the heart all is as nothing Ephes. 3. 17. He dwelleth in our hearts by faith The bodies of believers are Temples of the Holy Ghost yet the heart will and affections of man are the chief place of his habitation wherein he resideth as in his strong Citadel and from whence he commandeth other faculties and members and without his presence there he cannot have any habitation in us the tongue cannot receive him by speaking nor the understanding by knowing nor the hands by external working Prov. 4. 23. Out of it are the issues of life 't is the forge of spirits He dwelleth not in temples made with hands Acts 7. 48. and Jer. 23. 24. Do not I fill heaven and earth saith the Lord He will dwell in thine heart and remain there if thou wilt give thy heart to him 4. If Christ have it not Satan will have it The heart of man is
according to the Analogy of Faith and there is not a more powerful incentive of Duty Psal. 130. 5. There is forgiveness with thee that thou maist be feared Jer. 2. 11 12. The Grace of God that bringeth Salvation hath appeared to all men teaching us that denying ungodliness and worldly Lusts we should live soberly righteously and godly in this present World Rom. 12. 1. I beseech you Brethren by the mercies of God that you present your bodies a living Sacrifice holy acceptable to God which is your reasonable Service This is true Divinity The flesh deviseth another Doctrine let us Sin that Grace may abound to make a carnal Pillow of Gods Mercy that they may sleep securely in sin yea a Dung-cart to carry away their filth God is Merciful but to those that count sin a burden and misery God is slow to Anger but yet angry when provoked abused Patience kindleth into Fury as water when the mouth of the Fountain or course of the River is stopped breaketh out with more violence God hath his Arrows of Displeasure to shoot at the wicked you must not fancy a God all Honey all sweetness He is the Father of Mercies but so that he is also a God of Vengeance Psal. 68. 19 20. Blessed be the Lord who daily leadeth us with Benefits even the God of our Salvation Selah He that is our God is the God of Salvation and unto God the Lord belong the issues from Death But God shall wound the hairy scalpe of his Enemies the mercy of God is large and free if men do not make themselves uncapable by their Impenitency 4. We must beg 1. The Application of these to me also We have heard that the Kings of Israel are merciful Kings 1 Kings 20. 31. Now we would feel it 1 Tim. 1. 15. This is a Faithful saying and worthy of all acceptation that Iesus Christ came into the World to save Sinners of whom I am chief Wind in our selves within the Covert of a Promise enter at the back door of a Promise there comes Virtue from Christ if but touched the Woman came behind him and touched the hem of his garment so we must seek the Application of this Vertue 2. Effectual Application Let it come unto me Mercy cometh unto us or we shall never come unto it 1 Pet. 1. 10. The Grace that cometh to us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Grace which is brought to you at the Revelation of Jesus Christ Gods Grace is brought home to our doors we seek not after it but it seeketh after us Salvation is gone forth saith the Prophet to find out lost sinners Wisdom hath sent forth her Maidens she crieth upon the high places of the City whoso is simple let him turn in hither Prov. 9. 3 4. God sends the Gospel up and down the Worldto offer his Grace to men it worketh out its way Use. Here is Incouragement and Direction to poor Creatures how to obtain Gods Mercy for their Comfort 1. Incouragement Mercy doth all with God it is the first cause that setteth every thing awork 1. Mercy is natural to God 2 Cor. 1. 3. Father of Mercies God is not merciful by Accident but by Nature the Sun doth not more naturally shine nor Fire more naturally burn nor Water more naturally flow than God doth naturally shew Mercy 2. It is pleasing to him Micah 7. 18. Who is a God like unto thee that Pardoneth Iniquity and passeth by the Transgression of the remnant of his Heritage he retaineth not his Anger for ever because he delighteth in Mercy Judgment is called his Strange work Isa. 28. 21. That he may do his work his strange work and bring to pass his Act his strange Act. Primitive Acts he is forced to but he rejoyceth to do good as Life-Honey droppeth of its own accord 3. It is plentiful in God he is rich in Mercy abundant in Goodness and Truth thy sins are like a spark of Fire that falleth into the Ocean it is quenched presently so are all thy sins in the Ocean of Gods Mercy there is not more water in the Sea than there is Mercy in God 4. It is the great wonder of the Divine Nature Every thing in God is wonderful especially his pardoning Mercy It is no such great wonder in God that he stretcheth out the Heavens like a Curtain since he is Omnipotent that he formed the Earth or the Waters since he is strong that he distinguished Times adorned the Heavens with so many Stars decked the Earth with such variety of Plants and Herbs since he is Wise that he hath set Bounds to the Sea Governeth the Waters since he is Lord of all that he made Man a living Creature since he is the Fountain of Life but that he can be Merciful to Sinners infinitely Merciful when infinitely Just. There is a conflict in the Attributes about us but Mercy rejoyceth over Iudgment Iames 2. 13. That he is so Gracious and condescending when his first Covenant seemed to bind him to destroy us that he that hateth sin is so ready to forgive it pardoneth it so often and punisheth it so seldom 5. He is Communicative it is over all his Works Psal. 145. 9. Not a Creature but subsisteth by Gods Mercy he loveth Man and Beast Psal. 36. 6. and 1 Tim. 4. 10. He is the Saviour of all men especially of those that believe the whole Earth is full of his goodness Lord shew it to me also he heareth the cry of Ravens 2. To direct us how to sue for it in a broken hearted manner there are two Exreams Self-confidence and Desperation Self-confidence challengeth a Debt and Despair shutteth out hopes of Mercy a proud Pharisee pleads his Works Luke 18. 11. Kain saith Gen. 4. 13. My Punishment is greater then I can bear The middle between both is the penitent Publican Luke 18. 13. He stood afar off and would not lift up so much as his eyes to Heaven but smote on his Breast saying God be merciful to me a Sinner Go to him that which with men is the worst Plea with God is the best SERMON XLVIII PSALM CXIX Verse 42. So shall I have wherewith to answer him that Reproacheth me for I trust in thy Word IN the former Verse we saw the man of God begging for Deliverance or Temporal Salvation from the Mercies of God according to his Word Salvation belongeth to the Lord and his Mercy can pardon great sins and fetch us off from great extremities and that according to the Word of God he had boasted of this there is his Request here is his Argument from the use and fruit of his Deliverance he should have something to reply to the Scoffs and Mocks of wicked men who insulted over him in his Distress and Calamity he had spoken of great things or the Promise and now desireth the Promise to be made good that he might have an Answer ready against their Reproaches So shall I have wherewith to answer him that
us in Christ that keepeth us doing Rom. 12. 1. I beseech you by the mercies of God that you present your bodies a living sacrifice holy acceptable unto God which is your reasonable service And Tit. 2. 11 12. The grace of God that bringeth salvation hath appeared to all men teaching us that denying ungodliness and worldly lusts we should live soberly righteously and godly in this present world Thankfulness to God is the great Principle of Gospel-Obedience 2. Love thy commandments which I have loved 2 Cor. 5. 12 The love of Christ constraineth us Nothing holdeth up the hands in a constant obedience to God and performance of his Will so much as a thorough Love to God and his Ways Faith begets Love and Love Obedience These are the true Principles of all Christian Actions 6. This lifting up of the hands imports a right End Commanded Work must be done to commanded Ends else we lift up our hands to our own Work Now the true End is the Glory of God 1 Cor. 10. 32. Whether therefore ye eat or drink or whatsoever you do do all to the glory of God And Phil. 1. 11. Being filled with the fruits of righteousness which are by Christ Iesus unto the glory and praise of God God's Glory must be our main scope not any bye respect of our own Well then this is lifting up our hands to the commandments of God not doing one good Work but all and this with a serious Diligence in our ordinary Practice continuing therein with Patience whatever Oppositions we meet with and this out of Faith or a sincere belief of the Gospel and fervent Love and an unfeigned respect to God's Glory II. Why such a lifting up the hands or serious addressing our selves to our Duty is necessary My Answer shall be given in a fourfold respect God Ordinances Graces and the Christian who is to give an account of himself unto God 1. God Father Son and Holy Ghost Father as a Law-giver Son as a Redeemer and Head of the Renewed Estate Holy Ghost as our Sanctifier 1. God the Father who in the Mystery of Redemption is represented as our Law-giver and Sovereign Lord and will be not onely known and worshipped but served by a full and intire Obedience 1 Chron. 28. 9. And thou Solomon my son know the God of thy father and serve him with a perfect heart and a willing mind He hath given us a Law not to be trampled upon or despised but observed and kept and that not by fear or force but of a ready mind Though there be an after-provision of Grace for those that break his Law because of the frailty of the Creature yet if we presume upon that Indulgence and sin much that God may pardon much we may render our selves uncapable of that Grace For the more presumptuously wicked we are the less pleasing unto God The Governour of the World should not be affronted upon the pretence of a Remedy which the Gospel offered for this is to sin that Grace may abound than which wicked Imagination nothing is more contrary to Gospel-Grace Rom. 6. 1. What shall we say then shall we continue in sin that grace may abound God forbid To check this Conceit God deterreth Men from greater Sins as more difficult to be pardoned than less they shall not have so quick and easie a pardon of them as of others nay he deterreth Men from going on far in sin either as to the intensive increase or the continuance in time lest he cut them off and withdraw his Grace and pardon them not at all Therefore he biddeth them to call upon him while he is near Isa. 55. 6. Not to harden their hearts while it is called to day Heb. 3. 7 8. Therefore if we should onely consider God as our Lord and Law-giver we should earnestly betake our selves to Obedience 2. If we consider the Son as Redeemer and Head of the Renewed Estate he standeth upon Obedience Heb. 5. 9. He is the authour of eternal life to them that obey him As he hath taken the Commandments into his own hand he insisteth upon Practice if his People will enjoy his favour Iohn 15. 10. If ye keep my commandments ye shall abide in my love as I have kept my fathers commandments and abide in his love He hath imposed a yoke upon his Disciples and hath Service for them to do he being a Pattern and Mirrour of Obedience expects the like from his People He fully performed what was enjoyned him to do as the Surety of Believers and therefore expecteth we should be as faithful to him as he hath been to God So Iohn 14. 21. He that hath my commandments and keepeth them he it is that loveth me No love of Christ should encourage us to cast off Duty but continue it He taketh himself to be honoured when his People obey 2 Thess. 1. 11 12. Wherefore also we pray always for you that God would count you worthy of this calling and fulfil all the good pleasure of his goodness and the work of faith with power that the name of our Lord Iesus Christ may be glorified in you The Work of Faith is Obedience and Christ is dishonoured and reproched when they disobey Luke 6. 46. Why call ye me Lord Lord and do not the things which I say 3. The Spirit is given to make Graces operative to flow forth Iohn 4. 14. Whosoever drinketh of the water that I shall give him shall never thirst but the water that I shall give him shall be in him a well of water springing up unto everlasting life And Iohn 7. 38. He that believeth on me out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water This spake he of his Spirit which they that believe in him should receive Therefore if we have an inward approbation of the Ways of God unless we lift up our hands we resist his Work 2. With respect to Ordinances They are all Means and Means are imperfect without their End Things 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are of no use unless that other thing be accomplished for which they serve As he is a foolish Workman that contents himself with having Tools and never worketh for Tools are in order to Work and all the Means of Grace are in order to Practice We read hear meditate to understand our Duty Now if we never put it in practice we use Means to no end and purpose Hear and live Hear and do The Word layeth out Work for us it was not ordained for speculation onely but as a Rule of Duty to the Creatures therefore if we are to hear read meditate we must also lift up our hands 3. All Graces are imperfect till they end in Action for they were not given us for idle and useless Habits Knowledge to know meerly that we may know is Curiosity and idle Speculation So Psal. 111. 10. A good understanding have all they that do his commandments Jer. 22. 16. He judgeth the cause of the poor and the
in the use of all these things Now let a carnal Wretch work upon this Principle and what inference doth he draw Let us eat and drink for to morrow we shall die 1 Cor. 15. 32. See this other Principle The Grace of God brings salvation to poor Sinners Tit. 2. 12. How doth a gracious heart work upon it Teaching us to deny ungodliness and worldly Lusts c. O what shall be done for this God the Grace that offers such salvation by Christ Let a carnal wretch work upon this principle and he will take liberty to sin that Grace may abound Rom. 6. 1. Shall we continue in sin that Grace may abound God forbid Such kind of reasonings there are in the hearts of the Godly 2 Sam. 7. 2. saith David I dwell in an house of Cedar but the Ark of God dwelleth within Curtains God hath fenced me with his Providence What then Here I may sit down and rest and take my ease and pleasure and gratifie my sensual lusts No he doth not argue so but what shall I do for God that hath done so much for me Now see those ungracious Jews after their return how they reason Hagg. 1. 2. The time is not come the time that the Lords house should be built no matter for Gods House It is the Lords hand let Eli work upon that 1 Sam. 3. 18. Let him do what seemeth him good he draws from it a submissive patience O the Sovereign God will take his own way and the Creature must not murmure repine and set up an Anti-providence against him But now saith that carnal Wretch 2 Kings 6. 33. Behold this evil is of the Lord what should I wait for the Lord any longer he murmures and frets and grows impatient Solomon tells us Prov. 26. 9. As a Thorn goeth up into the hand of a Drunkard so is a Parable in the mouth of Fools A Thorn was their instrument of sewing now when a Drunkard should manage his Needle he wounds and gores himself so is a Parable in a Fools mouth a carnal heart wounds and gores himself with the most holy Principle of Religion The 2. Sort of vain thoughts are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 musings and here take notice the vanity of our thoughts appears First In the slipperiness and inconstancy of them We run from object to object in a moment and our thoughts look like strangers one upon another wondring like those vagabond Iews Act. 19. 13. so they are called because of their uncertain station and frequent removes Eccl. 6. 9. Better is the sight of the eyes than the wandring of the desire in the Original 't is the working out of the Soul Usually we have a stragling Soul roving wandring here and there and all in an instant especially this roving madness may we take notice of when we are employed in holy things hearing prayer meditation It is strange to see what impertinent sudden discursions there are from good to lawful from lawful to sinful and how far the heart is removed from God when we are before him when a man hath brought his body to God his heart is turned back again These vain thoughts pursue and haunt us in Duties so that we mingle Sulphur with our incense it is Gregory's comparison even in our prayers and holy addresses to God Secondly The unprofitableness and folly of our musings Our thoughts are set upon trifles and frivolous things neither tending to our own profit nor the benefit of others Prov. 10. 20. The heart of the wicked is little worth all their debates conceits musings are of no value The tongue of the just is as choise Silver but all their thoughts are taken up about childish vanity and foolish conceits Prov. 24. 9. The thought of foolishness is sin not only the thought of wickedness but foolishness Thoughts are the first-born of the Soul the immediate issues of the mind yet we lavish them away upon every trifle Follow men all the day long and take an account of their thoughts O what madness and folly are in all the musings they are conscious to Psal. 94. 11. The Lord knoweth the thoughts of man that they are vanity If we did judge as God judges all the thoughts reasonings discourses of the mind if they were set down in a Table we might write at the bottom Here 's the Summ and Total Account of all nothing but vanity Thirdly The carnality and fleshliness of our thoughts Phil. 3. 19. They mind earthly things How sweet is it to us to be thinking of worldly matters how to grow great to advance our selves here This carnal mind is very natural to us We are in our Element and do with a great deal of savour and sweetness think of these things it makes our heart merry but when we come to think of that which is good we are tired presently and it is very tedious to spend our thoughts upon them Good things come upon us like a flash of Lightning soon gone but on carnal things we can spend our thoughts freely These carnal musings are stirred up by carnal desire or carnal delight sometimes by a desire of worldly things so they are forming images and suppositions of those things they hope for As Faith works in a godly man forming images and suppositions of that happy time when they shall be gathered to God and all holy ones and rejoyce in his presence He hath a Faith the substance of things hoped for the evidence of things not seen Heb. 11. 1. which represents his hopes to him so carnal men dream of preferment riches honours vain-glorious applause they are looking out after their hopes they send their thoughts as Messengers of the Soul to forestal the contentment of those carnal things which they do expect Sometimes they are employed by carnal delight when the thing we muse upon is enjoyed the complacency men take in any carnal enjoyment it is part of this vanity when we go musing upon our own worth and our own excellency as that King Dan. 4. 30. Is not this great Babel that I have built for the honour of my Majesty Men take some time every day to worship the Idol of self and dote and gaze upon their own excellencies and atchievements their wisedom and wit Hab. 1. 15. They gather them in their drag therefore they rejoyce and are glad Or else pleasing themselves in their Estates dialogizing within themselves as the word is Luke 12. 13. Soul take thine ease thou hast Goods laid up for many years c. Fourthly By the impiety and apparent filthiness of them When men are taken up with sin so as to act it over in their own minds delighting themselves in fansying of sin either by way of revenge or lust or any other such thing as an unclean person sets up a stage in his own heart 2 Pet. 2. 14. Eyes full of adultery or the adulteress their fancy is upon the beauty of women their soul is set upon it The 3. Thing is
Promises with a qualification Rom. 2. 7. To them who by patient continuance in well-doing seek for glory honour and immortality eternal life God hath not simply promised Blessedness but the Promise requireth a qualification and a performance of Duty in the Person to whom the Promise is made and therefore before we can have a certainty of Hope we must not only look upon the Assurance on Gods part but make out our qualification So Psal. 1. 1 2. Blessed is the man that walketh not in the counsel of the ungodly nor standeth in the way of sinners nor sitteth in the seat of the scornful But his delight is in the law of the Lord and in his law doth he meditate day and night So Psal. 119. 1 2. Blessed are the undefiled in the way who walk in the law of the Lord Blessed are they that keep his testimonies and seek him with the whole heart and many such places which intimate that blessedness belongeth to such as are of an holy Heart and intirely give up themselves to an holy Course that doing the Commandments uprightly and in a Gospel Sense is a necessary Condition to qualifie those Persons which shall be saved And therefore they that live in any sin against Conscience may take notice how fearful their Estate is for the present and how needful it is to begin a good course before they can have any hope toward God 2. And Partly Because true hope is operative and hath an influence this way There are two parts in Sanctification Mortification and Vivification and true Hope hath an influence upon both Mortification 1 Ioh. 3. 3. And every man that hath this hope in him purisieth himself as he is pure that when we see God we shall be like him he that hopeth for such a pure and sinless Estate either to see God will he appear before him in his filthy Rags Ioseph washed himself when he was to come before Pharaoh so when to appear before God what with this wanton vain unclean heart We are to be like him is this to be like Christ where there is such a disproportion between Head and Members And if this hope be fixed in our hearts it will set us a purifying more and more So for Vivification it urgeth and incourageth to Obedience Tit. 2. 12 13. For the grace of God that bringeth salvation hath appeared to all men teaching us that denying ungodliness and worldly lusts we should live soberly righteously and godly in the present world Look backward or forward it urgeth the heart to Obedience Why backward to the duties of Holiness shall we be Lazy in his work when we expect such a great Reward 3. Because there is no such thing to damp Hope and weaken our Confidence as Sin We cannot trust him whom we have offended freely and without restraint and therefore while we please the flesh we break our Confidence Sin will breed shame and fear and 't is impossible to hope in God unless we serve him in love and seek to please him if we feel it not presently we shall feel it sin that now weakeneth the Faith which we have in the Commandments will in time weaken the Faith that we have in the Promises Every part of Gods revealed Will cometh to be tried one time or another our Confidence in Gods Mercy is not earnestly and directly assaulted till the hour of Death or the time of extraordinary Trial When the evil day cometh then the Consciousness of my own sin whereunto we have been indulgent will be of like force to withdraw our assent from Gods Mercies as the delight and pleasure we took was to cause us to Transgress his Commandments 1 Cor. 15. 56. The sting of death is sin and the strength of sin is the law 4. Because our hope is increased by our diligence in the holy life This fostereth and augments it Heb. 6. 11. And we desire that every one of you doth shew the same diligence to the full assurance of hope unto the end It must needs be so for since there is a qualification the more clear our qualification is the more full is our assurance of hope and so far as a man neglects his duty and abateth in his Qualification so far doth his Assurance abate To look on one side of the Covenant is a groundless presumption 2. None do and can keep the Commandments but they that hope for Salvation This is plain from the order of the words in the Text first I hoped for thy Salvation therefore done the Commandments implying that thereby he kept the Commandments without this none can have an heart nor hand to do any thing for God Peccator saith Bernard nihil expectat indique peccator est quod bonis presentibus Non modo delectus sed etiam contentus nihil in futurum expectat He that looketh for nothing from God can never be diligent in his service nor faithful and true to him Hope 't is our strength Lam. 3. 18. And I said my strength and my hope is perished from the Lord we first begin continue and go on with God upon the hope he offereth to us Use. I. It reproveth those that hope well but take no care to do any thing for God Every one will say they must hope in God but none looketh after this lively and operative hope their hope is barren and unfruitful who are they that can make Application of the Promises 2 Tim. 4. 8. Use. II. Is to perswade us to the coupling of these two when this Conjunction is founded then are we in a right frame if we would keep the Commandments we must hope for the Salvation of God if we would hope for the Salvation of God we must keep the Commandments This is most acceptable to the Lord Psal. 147. 11. The Lord taketh pleasure in them that fear him and hope in his mercy Such as believe and fear to offend him they have acceptable Communion with him 'T is for your Comfort Acts 9. 31. 't is for the honour of Religion on the one side to avoid the carnal Confidence of Papists on the other the cold Profession of Protestants if you hope for temporal Deliverance They that make no Conscience of obeying God cannot hope for Deliverance from him for his Salvation must be expected in the way of his Precepts Psal. 37. 3. Trust in the Lord and do Good so shalt thou dwell in the land So Wait on the Lord and keep his way and he shall exalt thee to inherit the land when the wicked are cut off thou shalt see it Then we may commend our selves and all our Affairs to Gods care and trust it becometh them that look for Salvation and to be helped out of their troubles to be more earnest than others in keeping his Law If you would enjoy the comfortable Assurance that you shall be saved at length live so as you may never mar your Confidence 1 Pet. 1. 13. Be sober and hope to the end Live
confession of sin with grief and desire of the grace of Christ with a serious purpose of newness of life this is the doctrine of the Scripture They think that to the essence of true Repentance there is required Auricular confession penal satisfactions and the absolvence of the Priest without which true faith profiteth nothing to salvation Again the Scripture teacheth this doctrine That the Ordinances confer grace by virtue only of God's promises and the Sacraments are signs and seals of the Covenant of Grace to them that believe And they would teach us that they deserve and confer grace from the work wrought The Scripture teacheth that good works are such as are done in obedience to God and conformity to his Law and are compleated in love to God and our neighbour They teach us that there are works of supererogation which neither the Law nor the Gospel requireth of us and that the chief of these are Monastical Vows several Orders and Rules of Monks and Friers The Scripture teacheth us That God the Father Son and Holy Ghost is only to be worshipped both with natural and instituted worship in spirit and in truth and they teach both the making and worshipping of an Image and that the Images of Saints are to be worshipped The Scripture teacheth That there is but one holy Apostolical Catholick Church joined together in one faith and one spirit whose Head Husband and Foundation is the Lord Jesus Christ out of which Church there is no salvation And they teach us the Church of Rome is the center the right Mother of all Churches under one head the Pope infallible and supreme Judg of all truth and out of communion of this Church there is nothing but Heresie Schism and everlasting condemnation Instead of that lively Faith by which we are justified by Christ they cry up a dead assent Instead of sound knowledg they cry up an implicite faith believing as the Church believes Instead of Affiance they cry up wavering conjectural uncertainty Thirdly Come to their worship Their adoration of the Host their invocation of Saints and Angels their giving to the Virgin Mary and other Saints departed the titles of Mediator Redeemer and Saviour in their publick Liturgies and Hymns their bowing to and before Images their Communion in one kind and that decreed by their Councils with a non obstante Christi instituto notwithstanding Christs express Institution to the contrary their service in an unknown Tongue and the like are just causes of our separation from them But it is tedious to rake in these things So that unless we would be treacherous to Christ and not only deny the faith but forfeit sense and reason and give up all to the lusts and wills of those that have corrupted the truth of Christianity we ought to withdraw and our Separation is justifiable notwithstanding this plea. The USE Here is Reproof to divers sorts 1. To those that think they may be of any Sect among Christians as if all the differences in the Christian world were about trifles and matters of small concernment and so change their Religion as they do their clothes and are turned about with every puff of new doctrine If it were to turn to Heathenism Turcism or Judaism they would rather suffer banishment or death than yield to such a change but to be this day of this Sect and to morrow of another they think it is no great matter as the wind of Interest bloweth so are they carried and do not think it a matter of such moment to venture any thing upon that account You do not know the deceitfulness of your hearts he that can digest a lesser error will digest a greater God trieth you in the present truth He that is not faithful in a little will not be faithful in much As he that giveth entertainment to a small temptation will also to a greater if put upon it Where there is not a sincere purpose to obey God in all things God is not obeyed in any thing Every Truth is precious The dust of Gold and Pearls is esteemed Every truth is to be owned in its season with full consent To do any thing against conscience is damnable You are to chuse the way of truth impartially to search and find out the paths thereof 2. It reproves those that will be of no Religion till all differences among the learned and godly are reconciled and therefore willingly remain unsetled in Religion and live out of the communion of any Church upon this pretence that there is so much difference such shew of reason on each side and such faults in all that they doubt of all and therefore will not trouble themselves to know which side hath the truth You are to chuse the way of truth And this is such a fond conceit as if a man desperately sick should resolve to take no physick till all Doctors were of one opinion or as if a traveller when he seeth many ways before him should lye down and refuse to go any farther You may know the truth if you will search after it with humble minds Joh. 7. 17. If any man will do his will he shall know of the doctrine whether it be of God or whether I speak of my self The meek he will teach the way If you be diligent you may come to a certainty notwithstanding this difference 3. It reproves those that take up what comes next to hand are loth to be at the pains of study and searching and prayer that they may resolve upon evidence that commonly set themselves to advance that faction into which they are entred Alas you should mind Religion seriously though not lightly leave the Religion you are bred in yet not hold it upon unsound grounds As Antiquity Joh. 4. 20. Our father 's worshipped in this mountain Or custom of the times and places where you live Eph. 2. 2. According to the course of the world the general and corrupt custom or example of those where we live nor be led by affection to o●… admiration of some persons Gal. 2. 12. Holy men may lead you into error Nor by multitude to do as the most do follow not a multitude to do evil but get a true and sound conscience of things for by all these things opinions are rather imposed upon us than chosen by us 4. It reproves those that abstain from fixing out of a fear of troubles as the King of Navarre would so far put forth to sea as that he might soon get to shore again You must make God a good allowance when you imbark with him though called not only to dispute but to dye for Religion you must willingly submit If any man come to me and hate not his own life he cannot be my disciple Luke 14. 26. How soon the fire may be kindled we cannot tell times tend to Popery though there be few left to stick by us the favour of the times run another way we ought to resolve for God
must run in the way of Gods Commandments It noteth speedy or a ready obedience without delay We must begin with God betimes Alas when we should be at the Goal we scarce set forth many of us And it noteth earnestness when a mans heart is set upon a thing he thinks he can never soon enough do it And this is running when we are vehement and earnest upon the enjoyment of God and Christ in the way of obedience And it notes again when the heart freely offereth it self to God Now this running is very necessary as it is the fruit of effectual calling When the Lord speaks of effectual calling the issue of it is running when he speaks of the Conversion of the Gentiles Nations that know thee not shall run to thee And draw me and we will run after thee And in the day of thy power thy people shall be a willing people There are no slow motions but when God draws there 's a speedy an earnest motion of the soul. And this running as it is the fruit of effectual calling so it is very needful for cold and faint motions are soon overborn with every difficulty and temptation Heb. 12. 1. Let us run with patience the race that is set before us When a man hath a mind to do such a thing though he be hindred and justled he takes it patiently he goes on and cannot stay to debate the business A slow motion is easily stopt whereas a swift one bears down that which opposeth it so when men run and are not tired in the service of God And then the prize calls for running 1 Cor. 9. 24. So run that ye may obtain There is a prize which is eternal life in Christ Jesus the reward or Crown which he keepeth for us in Heaven They that ran for a Garland of flowers in the Isthmick Cames the Apostle alludes to them how would they diet themselves that they might be in breath and heart to win a poor Garland of Flowers There 's a Crown of glory set before us therefore we should so run that we may obtain and be temperate in all things we should keep down the body deny fleshly lusts and the like Use To reprove faint cold motions in the things of God Many instead of running lye down or which is worse go back again or at best but a very slow pace Christ is running to you to snatch you out of the fire and will you not run towards him when we have abated the fervor of our motion towards God then we lye open to temptation therefore let us not loiter run it is for a Crown If Heaven be worth nothing lye still but if it be run wicked men run fast to Hell as if they did strive who should be soonest there bewail your slowness and lameness in obedience SERMON XXXVI PSALM CXIX 33. Teach me O Lord the way of thy Statutes and I shall keep it unto the end THE man of God had promised to run the way of God's commandments but being conscious of many swervings beggeth God further to teach him In the words two things are observable 1. A Prayer for Grace 2. A Promise made upon supposition of obtaining the grace asked He promiseth 1. Diligence and Accuracy of practice I will keep it 2. Perseverance unto the end 1. In the prayer for grace observe 1. The Person to whom he prays O Lord. 2. The person for whom teach me 3. The grace for which he prayeth to be taught 4. The object of this teaching the way of God's statutes The teaching which he beggeth is not speculative but practical to learn how to walk in the way of God 1. David a man after Gods own heart maketh this Prayer the more Love any have to God the more they desire to know his ways Carnal men are of another spirit they say Iob 21. 14. Depart from us we desire not the knowledge of thy ways The more ignorant the more quiet they that love their lusts cannot heartily desire the knowledge of those Truths which will trouble them in the following of their lusts We often consult with our Affections about our Opinions and where we have a mind to hate we have no desire to know Ordinary Professors a little knowledge serveth their turn some few obvious Truths but others such as David follow on to know the Lord. David that had a singular measure of knowledge already yet there is no end of his desire in this Psalm and shall we be contented as if we needed no more 2. Consider David a Prophet a Teacher a Pen-man of Scripture There was some Knowledg which the Prophets got by ordinary means and some by immediate Revelation as Daniel by vision and Daniel by reading of books Dan. 7. 〈◊〉 either by a new Revelation or by the study of what was already revealed and if extraordinary men were bound to the ordinary duties of Gods service as the means of their improvement and growth in Grace such as Reading Prayer Hearing Meditation use of Seals c. surely none can plead exemption or conceit themselves to be above Duties Now that they were thus bound we find by David's prayer for Knowledg Daniel's reading of Books namely that of Ieremiah and all of them meditating or inquiring diligently what manner of salvation should ensue 1 Pet. 1. 10 11. Of which salvation the Prophets have enquired and searched diligently who prophesied of the Grace that should come unto you searching what or what manner of time the spirit of Christ which was in them did signifie when it testifyed before-hand of the sufferings of Christ and the glory that should follow meditating and prying into the meaning of that salvation which by the motion of the spirit they held forth to others labouring to make these Truths their own and to get their hearts affected therewith In their prophetick revelations they were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Pet. 1. 21. forcibly moved by the spirit and carryed beyond their intention and the line of their natural strength but in other things they get knowledg by the same means that we do and as Believers were to stir up the gifts and graces which they had in the ordinary way of Duty waiting and crying for the Influences of the Lords grace You must distinguish then of what they did when they acted as Prophets and when they acted as Believers 3. David that had means external sufficient to direct him in the way of God as the Scriptures then written and the Ordinances of the Law the Expositions of the Scribes yet beggeth God to teach him So must we beg God to teach us whatever means we have It is true we have an advantage above the Old Testament Church as we have their helps and more and the Doctrin eof salvation is now clearer and the gifts and graces of the Spirit more plentifully dispensed since the price of Redemption is actually payed than before when God gave out grace and glory only upon trust yet still
that are gotten by studying and obeying it they exceed worldly things as will appear because the one suits with our bodily necessities the other with our spiritual Our bodily necessities are supplied by Gold our spiritual necessities by Grace Gold will not comfort a distressed Conscience no more than Nosegay-Flowers a condemned man Quod si dolentem c. saith Horace Prov. 11. 4. Riches avail not in the day of wrath The one renders us acceptable to men the other to God The world knoweth all things after the Flesh they measure men by splendor and pomp of living but it is Grace that God approveth most and accepteth most Grace is of great price in the sight of God 1 Pet. 3. 4. But let it be the hidden man of the heart in that which is not corruptible even the ornament of a meek and quiet spirit which is in the sight of God of great price The one much embaseth our Nature it is something more vile than us therefore that affection is debased But Grace always ennobleth our Nature and is something above us A greater affection is due to things above us than to things beneath us The one is useful to us in viâ the other in patriâ Surely that which is of eternal use and comfort to us is better than that which is only of a temporal use In our passage to Heaven we need Gold and Silver for the supply of our bodily necessities and the support of outward life so far as we have to do in the world but with respect to the world to come Gold doth nothing there we leave our wealth behind us but our works follow us Our treasure we quit when we dye but our Grace we carry with us Once more the price by which things may be purchased sheweth the worth of them Wisdom is of so great a price that all the treasures of the world cannot purchase it Iob 28. 15. to 20. It cannot be gotten for gold neither shall silver be weighed for the price thereof it cannot be valued with the gold of Ophir with the precious Onyx or the Saphire the Gold and the Crystal cannot equal it and the exchange of it shall not be for Iewels of fine Gold no mention shall be made of Corral or of Pearls for the price of Wisdom is above Rubies the Topaz of Ethiopia shall not equal it neither shall it be valued with pure Gold What cannot money do in the World yet it can do nothing as to the procuring of Grace The Apostle telleth us This is a dear bought blessing 1 Pet. 1. 18 19. Forasmuch as ye know that ye were not redeemed with corruptible things as silver and gold from your vain conversations received by tradition from your fathers but with the precious blood of Christ as of a Lamb without blemish and without spot To despise the favour of God the image of God is to despise the price that was paid for these things to have lessening thoughts of the blood of Christ. To conclude those we count lesser gifts which we bestow upon friends than upon enemies a man would give meat and drink unto enemies when they hunger and thirst but other gifts of a greater value to friends and relations God giveth his Christ his Spirit his Grace to his Friends Children Servants but Corn and Wine and Oil these he giveth promiscuously yea to his enemies a larger portion Surely then these are better than Gold Our love should be according to the value of things 2. Because if the word be not preferred before earthly things it is not received with any profit and good effect Christ saith He that loveth any thing more than me is not worthy of me Matth. 10. 37. He that studieth to please his friends rather than Christ or to gratifie his interest more than his Conscience within a very little while his Christianity will be worth nothing It is not a simple love but a greater love that we shew to worldly things Matth. 13. 44 45 46. Again the Kingdom of Heaven is like unto treasure hid in a field the which when a man hath found he hideth and for joy thereof goeth and selleth all that he hath and buyeth that field Again the Kingdom of Heaven is like unto a merchant man seeking goodly pearls who when he had found one pearl of great price he went and sold all that he had and bought it We must part with all rather than miss of his Grace all that is pleasant and profitable renounce all other things When Christ propounds his terms he would have us surrender all to his will and pleasure Luke 9. 23. If any man will come after me let him deny himself and take up his cross daily and follow me He must not avoid the Cross by sinful shifts we are ready to do so every day These are the necessary terms else we are not fit for the masters use 2 Tim. 2. 21. If any man therefore purge himself from these he shall be a vessel unto honour sanctified and meet for the masters use and prepared unto every good work 3. Unless we love the word above Riches we cannot possess Riches without a snare then it will be not only hard but impossible to enter into the Kingdom of Heaven Mark 10. 23 24 25 26 27. And Iesus looked round about and saith unto his Disciples How hardly shall they that have Riches enter into the Kingdom of God And the Disciples were astonished at his words But Iesus answereth again and saith unto them Children how hard is it for them that trust in Riches to enter into the Kingdom of God It is easier for a Camel to go through the eye of a Needle than for a rich man to enter into the Kingdom of God And they were astonished out of measure saying among themselves Who then can be saved And Iesus looking about him said With men it is impossible but not with God for with God all things are possible Riches will so prevail over us and wholly sway us if they be our chief good and portion and we have not an higher end to check our love to them If a man would have all things cleave to him he must be sure the world doth not sit nearest his heart for if they do such a man as he is unfit for Heaven so he is unfit for the world too If they be your good things Luke 16. 25. Son rememember thou in thy life time receivedst thy good things you will get and keep and use them otherwise than the word doth allow 4. From the fruit of Grace where it is planted in the heart and prevaileth the desire of wealth is mortified worldly lust denied Tit. 2. 12. Teaching us to deny ungodliness and worldly lusts And desires of Grace enlarged and encreased 1 Pet. 2. 2. As new born babes desire the sincere milk of the word that ye may grow thereby And when it prevaileth further and to an higher degree they come to Moses's frame to
what is to come yet fear of punish ment alone sheweth you are slaves and only love your selves the Devils fear and tremble but do not love You may fear a thing though you hate it So far as the heart is affected with the fear of Hell 't is good 3. There are very good and sound Principles yet do not always argue Grace as when duties are done out of the urgings of an enlightened Conscience this may be without the bent of a renewed heart but yet the principle is sound for the first thing that influenceth a man is to consider himself a Creature and so to look upon himself as bound to obey his Creator I shall illustrate it by the Apostles words in another case I must preach the Gospel and wo unto me if I preach not the Gospel 1 Cor. 9. 16. 17. Whether I do it willingly or unwillingly yet a Dispensation is committed to me So saith the Soul whether I be fitted to do God service or no God must be obeyed but because Gods precept is invested with a Sanction of Threatnings and Rewards here comes in the fear of Hell and the hopes of heaven The Lord hath commanded me to fly from Hell this is a good principle So the hope of Heaven Heb. 11. 26. 't is a sound principle a man may be gracious or he may not Many have a liking to Heaven and Eternal Life as 't is a state of happiness not of likness to God where 't is not alone 't is a very sound principle but as 't is it may sometimes be the sign of a renewed man and sometimes not 4. There are rare and excellent Principles when we Act out of thankfulness to God when we consider the Lords goodness that might have required Duty out of meer Soveraignty he hath laid the Foundation of it in the bloud of his own Son 1 Ioh. 4. 29. When we love him out of the sense of his love to us in Christ And when the grace of God that hath appeared teacheth us to deny ungodliness Tit. 2. 11. when the Mercies of God melt us Rom. 12. 1. when there are no intreaties so powerful as that of Love Again another principle that is rare and excellent is when the Glory of God doth season us in our whole Course that it may be to the praise of his glorious grace 1 Cor. 10. 31. Another is Complacency in the Work for the Works sake When we love the Law because it is pure when I see it will ennoble me and make me like God when I love God and his wayes when nothing but so noble imployment doth ingage me to his service and service to God is the sweetest life in the World SERMON CLVIII PSALM CXIX VER 141. I am Small and Despised yet do I not forget thy Precepts HEre David proveth the Truth of his former Assertion that seeing the Word of God was so Pure he loved it for its own sake and that he did not Court Religion for the portion that he should have with it but for it self Some are meer Mercenaries no longer then they are bribed by some Worldly profit they have no respect for God and his Wayes The Man of God was of another Temper if God would bestow any thing on him well if not he would love his Word still yea when it brought him apparent Loss Meanness and Contempt yet this could not make any divorce between his Heart and the Word I am small and despised c. In the Words we have 1. David's Condition 2. David's Carriage under that Condition His Condition might have been a Snare to him yet still he keepeth up his Affection 1. His Condition is set forth by two Notions the one of which implyeth the other Gods Providence I am small God had reduced him to streights the other Mans Treatment of him and despised the one sheweth what he was really in himself the other what he was in the opinion of others Mean in himself and Contemptible in the eye of others The Sept. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I am the younger and set at nought Therefore the Greek Interpreters suppose it relateth to the story when God bids Samuel to anoint one of the Sons of Iesse to be King and the elder Children were brought forth who were Taller and more likely too and they said of them surely the Lords Anointed is before him and when Samuel enquired for another they told him 1 Sam. 16. 7. That there remaineth the youngest and he keepeth sheep then when he was but an Youth and a despised stripling his heart was with God and God favoured him Or else they refer it to the time when Eliab his eldest Brother despised him 1 Sam. 17. 28. Others think this was verified when the Elders of Israel forsook him and clave to Absalom rather I think it generally to any Afflicted Condition when he was little in Estate and Reputation rather than in years elsewhere so is this word small taken Amos 7. 2 5. Iacob is small by whom shall he arise When his Condition was helpless and hopeless and Interest inconsiderable in the World So here I am small and despised I am looked upon as a man of no Value and Interest 2. Davids Carriage under this Condition Yet do I not forget thy Precepts First here is a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 less is said more is intended I do earnestly remember them Again a man may be said to remember or forget two wayes Notionally or Affectively Notionally a man forgets when the Notions of things formerly known are quite vanished out of our Minds Affectively when though he retaineth the notions yet he is not answerably affected he doth not act suitably So 't is taken here and implyeth as much as I am stedfast in the profession of this Truth as they say in a like Case Psal. 44. 17. We have not forgotten thee nor dealt falsely in thy Covenant not parted with any point of Truth or neglected and dispensed with any part of Duty Precepts is put for the whole word of God I do not forget thy Word the Comforts and Duties of it None do so far forget God and his Precepts as those that make defection from him The sum of all is My mean and despicable Condition doth not make a breach upon my Constancy but still I keep the Credit of being a Faithful Servant to thee His Temptation was double his Faithfulness had made him small God seemeth to forget us in our low Estate yet we should not forget him and had made him despised though we lose esteem with men by sticking to the Word of God yet the Word of God should lose no esteem with us Doctrine They that love God may be reduced to a Mean Low and Afflicted Condition I am small saith David The Lord seeth it meet for divers reasons 1. That they may know their happiness is not in this World and so the more long for Heaven and delight in Heavenly things Psal. 17. 14 15. From men
we are dead and gone The word will tell you of promises made to you and your children and of Gods taking care of them In short God is a sun and shield and no good thing will he withhold c. Psal. 84. 11. There 's all manner of blessings adopted and taken into Covenant Look round about the Covenant look into the word of God there is nothing wanting for the comfort of believers in every condition there 's a promise to support and bear them up Now because of this comfort they have in the word of God therefore it quickens their desires 3. To supply and strengthen us It is our food Alas what a poor languishing Christian will a man be that doth not often make use of the word this strengthens him against corruptions quickens him in duties and gives success in conflicts The Sword of the Spirit is the choicest weapon It is the power of God to salvation Rom. 1. 16. And the word of his grace which is able to build us up Acts 20. 32. If our heart be dead in prayer here 's the Rod of Moses to strike upon the rock to make the waters gush out Therefore since we have such benefit by the word we should long and desire to get such a strong affection 2. Consider what benefit you will have by these desires after the word It will keep up our diligence and will make us exercise our selves therein Desire doth all that is done in the world digging for knowledg is tedious but the end sweetens it They that have an affection to the word shall never be destitute of success therein God will fulfil the desire of the Saints He that satisfieth the gaping of the young Raven will these desires A strong affection to the word is the argument that moves God Psal. 145. 19. He will fulfil the desire of them that fear him he also will hear their cry and will save them And if this desire be painful yet it is salutary and healthful to the soul. In this sickness there is health in this weakness there 's strength in this thirst comfort and in this hunger satisfaction For Means 1. Get a high esteem of spiritual enjoyments Valuation and esteem precedes desire Wicked men that value themselves by carnal comforts their souls run out with vehement longing that way A child of God that values himself by spiritual enjoyments by knowledg grace subjection to God that counts these his greatest benefits his main desire is to be acquainted with the word of God The word hath a subserviency to his end Poor low-spirited creatures that value themselves by the plenty of external accommodations they will never feel this longing after the word Prov. 8. 10. Receive instruction rather than silver and knowledg rather than choice gold 2. Let a man live in the awe of God and make it his business to maintain communion with him and then he will be longing after him This will shew the necessity of the word of God for his comfort and strength upon all occasions A lively Christian that is put to it in good earnest he must have the word by him to direct comfort and strengthen him As he that labours hard must have his Meals or else he will faint and be overcome by his labour We content our selves with a loose profession and so do not see the need of food have not this hungring longing desire after the bread of life Painted fire needs no fuel a dead formal profession is easily kept up but a man that makes it his business to maintain communion with him and much exercised to godliness is hungring and thirsting that he might meet with God SERMON XXII PSAL. CXIX 21. Thou hast rebuked the proud that are cursed which do err from thy commandments IN the 18th Verse the Prophet had begged divine illumination that his eyes might be opened to see more into the nature of the word He backeth that Petition with three Arguments The 1. is taken from his condition in the world I am a stranger upon earth The 2. Argument is taken from the vehemency of his affection to the word My soul breaketh c. A man that is regenerate as David was he hath not only some faint and languid motions towards holy things but a great and strong affection of heart My heart even breaketh for the longing c. In this Verse here 's the third reason Open mine eyes why because erring from the commandment is dangerous and bringeth us under Gods curse which will be executed by the rebukes of his Providence There have been ever some that opposed God but yet they have ever been blasted by God he hath always vindicated the contempt of his Law by the severe executions of his Justice upon the contemners of it Thou hast rebuked the proud We should not let pass Gods judgments without profit but the more the Law is owned from heaven the more intirely should we apply our selves to the obedience of it therefore this is one reason why David begs for light direction and strength For thou hast rebuked the proud c. therefore Lord teach me that I may not come under the rebukes of thine anger Some read the words in two distinct sentences Thou hast rebuked the proud and then Cursed are they which do err from thy commandments But it comes all to one with our reading therefore I shall not stand to insist upon examining the ground of this difference In the words observe 1. The term that 's given to wicked men the proud so commonly called in Scripture Mal. 3. 15. They call the proud happy yea they that work wickedness are set up 2. The instance and discovery of their pride They err from thy commandments 3. The evil state in which they are they are cursed Though the wicked are not presently punished yet they are all cursed and in time they shall be punished 4. The begun-execution of this curse Thou hast rebuked them that is punished or destroyed Psal. 6. 1. Rebuke me not in thine anger neither chasten me in thy hot displeasure The Points are 1. That the worst sort of proud creatures are those that do err from Gods Commandments for so is the description here The proud have erred c. 2. These proud ones they are cursed Those that continue in obstinacy and impenitency in their sins and errors they are under a curse 3. They are not only cursed but are also rebuked that is not only threatned but this curse shall be surely executed In this world 't is begun many times and in part executed but in the next fully and sorely Doct. 1. That the worst sort of proud creatures are those that err from Gods Commandments Here we must distinguish of Erring then of Pride First Of erring from Gods Commandments There is an erring out of frailty and an erring out of obstinacy 1. An erring out of frailty and so David saith Psal. 119. 176. I have gone astray like a lost sheep and again
and so do the beasts yea many of the beasts excell us in the perfection of that kind of life Lions excell in strength Roes in swiftness Eagles in long age none of their pleasures are soured with remorse of conscience But the inward Spiritual life is called the life of God Ephes. 4. 18. 6. The inward life is the beginning of our life in heaven A glorified Saint and a Saint militant upon earth they both live the life of God and the life of grace is the same life for kind though not for degree and one that is glorified and one here upon earth differ but as a child and a man But now the life of sense and the life of grace differ as a Toad and a man not only in degree but also in kind 7. Yet further this is that great thing which God hath been at such great expence about to raise the being of the new creature John 6. 51. This is my flesh which I give for the life of the world The supports the strength of the inward man cost dearer than all other comforts whatsoever it must have nobler supports it must have the blood of Christ daily supplies from heaven but the other life is called the life of our hands Isa. 57. 10. We patch up to ourselves some conveniencies for the sensible life by labour and service here in the world Well then this is that which the children of God do mostly look after that the inward life may be kept free from annoyance and fit for the purposes of grace USE The Use of this is to chek our carnal and preposterous care for the outward man to the neglect of the inward How much are we for the outward man that it may be well fed and well cloathed well at ease as for the present life there 's all our care but not so careful to get the soul furnished with grace and strengthened and renewed by continued influences from Christ. Certainly if men did look after soul strength they would be more careful to wait upon God for his blessing You may know the disproportion of your care for outward things and for the inward man by these Questions 1. How much do you prize Gods day the means of grace opportunities of worship that are for the inward man The Sabbath day is a feast day for souls Now when men are weary of it it 's the most burdensome day of all the week round Amos 8. 5. When will the Sabbath be gone that we may set forth wheat It is a sign they are carnal when men count that day the only lost day as Seneca saith of the Jews they lost the full seventh of their lives speaking of the Sabbath day so carnal men think it is a lost day to them they look upon the Sabbath as a melancholy interruption of their affairs and business The Apostle Iames saith of those that are begotten by God Chap. 1. 9. that they are swift to hear certainly they that have an inward man to maintain another life than an outward and animal life must have the supply and will look after the comforts of it 2. Consider how differently we are concerned with bodily and soul concernments If the body be but a little diseased if we want an appetite to a meal or a little sleep in the night we complain of it presently we enquire what 's the cause and look for a remedy but what a wonderfull disproportion is there as to the soul 'T is a strange expression that 3 Epist. John 2. I wish that thy body prosper as thy soul prospers Alas we may say of the most O that their souls did prosper as their bodies as they flourish in the conveniencies of the outward man 3. What care have you for the inward man to adorn the soul to beautify it with grace that it may be of price and esteem with God or to fortify it with grace Now when all our strength and travel is laid out for that which doth not conduce to the inward life Isa. 55. 2. and we lay out our money for that which is not bread it is a sign we are wholly carnal We read in Ecclesiastical story of one that wept when he saw a wanton woman decking her self with a great deal of care to please her lovers saith he Have I been so careful to deck my soul for Christ Iesus 4. Do you take in spiritual refreshments even when afflictions abound 2 Cor. 1. 5. As the sufferings of Christ abound in us so our consolation also aboundeth by Christ then you are affected as the children of God whose heart and care runs out mainly for the inward man This in general Doct. 2. Secondly more especially observe He goes to God for strength Let me shew 1. What is this Spiritual strength 2. How it is given out 3. How God is concerned in it David goes to God Lord strengthen me First What Spiritual strength is It is Gods perfecting of his work Strength supposeth life therefore in general it is God's renewed influence when he hath planted habits of grace he comes and strengthens There is gratia praeveniens operans co-operans there is preventing-grace working-grace and co-working-grace Preventing-grace that is when God converts us when the Lord turns us to himself and doth plant grace in the soul at first Working grace that is when God strengthens the habit Co-working grace when God stirs up the act and helps us in the exercise of the grace we have First He plants grace into the heart then there 's a constant influence as the two Olive-trees in Zechariah were always dropping into the Lamps and then by excitation and co-operation he stirs it up Saith Austin Unless God gives us the faculties and unless he gives us the will we can do nothing and unless he concurs with the exercise of these faculties still we cannot work in the spiritual life as we ought to do and therefore first God infuseth grace and then strengthens grace first he worketh in us then by us First we are objects of his work then instruments To shew wherein the strength of the soul lies 1. There are planted in the soul habits of grace There are not only high operations of grace but permanent and fixed habits the seed of God that remaineth within us 1 Ioh. 3. 9. which cannot be the in-dwelling of the Spirit for this seed of God is some created thing Psal. 51. 10. Create in me a clean heart O God and it is something that grows 2 Pet. 3. 6. Grow in grace And therefore 't is evident there are habits of grace planted in the soul a good stock that we have from God at first called the good treasure of the heart Matth. 12. these habits of grace are called armour of God the shield of faith the helmet of salvation This is the strength of the soul. 2. But besides this there 's a continuance and an increase of these graces when the Lord confirms his work and perfects what
offence Christians what Religion is it you are of Is it not the Christian Religion whose great interest and work it is to draw you off from the concernments of the present world unto things to come The whole drift and frame of the Christian Religion is to draw mens hearts off from earthly things and to comfort and support them under the troubles inconveniences and molestations of the flesh therefore for a Christian to hope an exemption from them is to make the doctrine of the Gospel as incongruous and useless as to talk of bladders and the art of swimming to a man that never goes to sea nor intends to go off from the firm land 3. A great occasion to shake the faith of many is Scandals the evil practices of those that profess the name of God O! when they run into disorder especially into all manner of unrighteousness and iniquity and cruel things and make no conscience of the duties of their relations as subjects as children and the like it is a mighty offence and we that have to do with persons and sinners of all sorts find it a very hard matter to keep them from Atheism such stumbling blocks having been laid in their way Scandal's far more dangerous than Persecution There are many that have been gained by the patience courage and constancy of the Martyrs but never any were gained by the scandalous falls of professors Persecutions do only work upon our fear which may be allayed by proposal of the Crown of life but by scandalous actions how many settle into a resolved hardness of heart In crosses and persecutions a man may have secret likings of truth and a purpose to own it but by scandal She dislikes the way of God of Religion it self it begets a base and vile esteem thereof in the hearts of men so they are loose and fall off And this mischief doth not only prevail with the lighter sort of Christians but many times those which have had some taste it makes them fly off exceedingly Matt. 18. 7. There will be offences but wo be unto them by whom they come Christ hath told us all will not walk up to the Religion they own therefore we must stand out against this temptation Secondly Be fortified within by taking heed to the causes of apostasie and falling off from the truth either in judgment or practice What is there will make men apostates 1. Ungrounded assents A choice lightly made is lightly altered When we do not resolve upon evidence and have not taken up the ways of God upon clear light we shall turn and wind to and fro as the posture of our interest is changed First we must try all things then hold fast 1 Thes. 5. 21. Men waver hither and thither for want of solid rooting in truth they take up things hand over head and then like light chaff they are driven about with every wind of doctrine Eph. 4. 14. Half conviction leaveth us open to changes Iames 1. 8. A double-minded man is unstable in all his ways A man that seems to have a faith concerning such a thing then seems to have a doubt concerning such a thing sometimes led by his faith at other times carried away by his doubts If we have not a clear and full perswasion of the ways of God in our own minds we shall never be constant 2. Want of solid rooting in grace that is rooted in faith Col. 2. 7. or rooted and grounded in Love Eph. 3. 17. as to both it is said Heb. 13. 9. It is a good thing that the heart be established with grace that is by a sound sense of the love of God in Christ. A sweet superficial tast may be lost but a sound sense of the love of God in Christ will engage us to him O! we have felt so much sweetness and have had such real proof of the goodness of Christ that all the world cannot take us off The more experience you have and the deeper it is the more you will be confirmed The most of us content our selves but in a superficial tast When we hear of the doctrine of salvation by Christ we are somewhat pleased and tickled with it but this is not that which doth establish us but a deep sense of God's grace or feeling the blood of Christ pacifying our Consciences this is that which establisheth our heart and setleth us against apostasie 3. Unmortified lusts which must have some error to countenance them By an inordinate respect to worldly interests we are sure to miscarry A man governed by lusts will be at uncertainty according as he is swayed by the fear or favour of men or his carnal hopes 2 Tim. 4. 10. Demas hath forsaken us having loved this present world If a man hath love to present things if that be not subdued and purged out of his heart he will never be stable never upright with God It may be he may stand when put upon some little self-denial for Christ he may endure some petty loss or some tender assault I but at length the man will be carried away as Ioab that turned after Adonijah though he turned not after Absolom 1 King 2. 28. there will some temptation come that will carry them away though at first they seem to stand their ground as long as lust remains unmortified in the heart 4. Sometimes a faulty-easiness As there is an ingenuous facility The wisdom that is from above is gentle and easie to be entreated Jam. 3. 17. so there 's a faulty easiness when men cannot say nay when they change their Religion with their company out of a desire to please all and Camelion-like they change colour with every object Some are of such a facile easie nature soon perswaded into great inconvenience This faulty-easiness always makes bold with God and conscience to please men when we are of this temper Jer. 38. 5. The King is not he that can do any thing against you It is not a good disposition but baseness and pusillanimity It is observed of Chrysostome though a good man in the main yet he ran into many inconveniences why because he was through simplicity and plainness of his nature easily to be wrought upon Therefore though a good man in regard of the sweetness of his temper and converse should be as a Load-stone yet he should be also resolute and severe in the things of God Paul though they did even break his heart they could not break his purpose 5. Self-confidence when we think to bear it out with natural courage and resolution as Peter did Though all men forsake thee yet will not I. We are soon over-born and a light temptation will do it God gives men over that trust in themselves For the Lord takes it to be his honour to be the Saints Guardian to keep the feet of his Saints 1 Sam. 2. 9. He will be owned and depended upon 6. There 's an itch of Novelty when men are weary of old truths and
our works for us Isa. 26. 12. Now this actual help is necessary 1. Partly to direct us Psal. 74. 24. Thou shalt guide me with thy counsel and afterward receive me to glory We need not only a principle within and a rule without but need also a guide Though we have grace in our hearts though we have the Law of God to direct us yet we need also a guide upon all occasions the Rule is the Scripture and the Guide is the Spirit of God 2. Partly to quicken and excite us by effectual motions The heart of man is very changeable and it is like the eye easily discomposed and put out of frame Deadness creeps upon us and we drive on heavily in the work of God Psal. 119. 37. Quicken thou me in thy way God doth renew the vigor of the life of grace upon all occasions 3. Partly to corroborate and strengthen that which we have received and make it encrease and grow in the soul and more firmly rooted there Eph. 3. 16. The Apostle prays That God would strengthen you with might by his spirit in the inner man the inward man the frame of grace that we have received needs to be strengthned encreased and be more deeply rooted in the soul. So 1 Pet. 5. 10. The God of all grace make you perfect stablish strengthen settle you Many words are used to shew how God is interested in maintaining and keeping a foot the grace he hath planted in the soul. 4. Partly in protecting and defending them against the incursions and assaults of the Devil The regenerate are not only escaped out of his clutches but appointed to be his Judges which an envious and proud spirit cannot endure therefore he maligneth assaulteth and besiegeth them with temptations daily therefore Christ prays Joh. 17. 11. Keep through thy own name those whom thou hast given me When a City is besieged fresh supplies are sent in they are not kept to their standing-provision so it is not the ordinary power of God that doth preserve and keep us from danger there 's new relief and fresh strength We are kept by the power of God through faith unto salvation 2 Pet. 1. 5. Now we experience the help we have from God partly by the change and frame of our heart when we are acted by him and when we are not When God by the impulsions of his grace doth quicken and awaken our hearts we are carried on with a great deal of earnestness and strength but at other times we seem to be much bound and have not those breathings from the Spirit of God to fill our sails and carry us on with the same life and strength Yea in the same duty how is a Christian up and down carried out sometimes with a great deal of zeal and warmth but if God withdraw that assistance before the duty be over how do the affections flag So that we are like the wards of a Lock kept up while the key is turned but fall again when the key is turned the other way While the work of grace is powerful we are kept in a warm and heavenly plight Thus as to duties we need spiritual relief Likewise in temptations when we are ready to fall into such a sin with great proneness of heart and the Lord quickens and excites us by his grace It is often with a Christian as with David Psal. 73. 2. My feet were almost gone my steps had well nigh slipt even carried away by the violence of Satan and importunate motions of our own lusts then the Lord gives grace to help in a time of need Heb. 4. 16. in the Original it is no more but this seasonable relief God vouchsafeth Object I but are we to do nothing when we are indisposed This case is often traversed in this Psalm 1. The Precept of God falls upon us as reasonable creatures and doth not consider whether we are disposed or indisposed and God's influence is not our rule but our help We are to stir up our selves the Lord complains Isa. 64. 7. There is none that stirreth up himself to take hold of me And Timothy is bid to stir up the gift of God which is in him 2 Tim. 1. 6. God's assistance will be best expected in a way of doing Up and be doing and the Lord will be with thee 2 Chron. When we stir up our selves and set our selves to the work in the conscience of our duty we can better expect God's help and assistance 2. In great distempers there may be some pause Elisha would not prophesie when he was under a passion of anger therefore he calls for a Minstrel to sing a Psalm 2 King 3. 13 14 15. and as he plaid upon an Instrument the Spirit of the Lord came upon him He was under a passion offended with the King of Israel therefore he would not prophesie until his spirit was composed Certainly we are not to run head-long upon duties in the midst of these distempers Sailing is more safely delayed in time of an extreme storm When the heart is put into some great disorder in a great storm of spirit the distemper should first be mourned for and prayed against The Reasons why that from first to last he must make us to go in the way of his Commandments 1. God keeps this power in his own hands that his grace might be all in all and 't is the glory of his actions always to set the crown upon graces head Not only those permanent and fixed habits which constitute the new man but those daily supplies without which the motions and operations of the spiritual life would be at a stand are for grace When the Lord reckons with his servants about the improvement of their talents he doth not say My industry but Lord thy pound Luke 19. 18. He puts all the honour upon grace So 1 Cor. 16. 10. Not I but the grace of God So Gal. 2. 20. I live yet not I but Christ liveth in me So that still they are giving the glory to grace Acts are more perfect than habits therefore if we had only the power from God and acts from our selves we should not give all to God That acts are more perfect than the power is clear it is more perfect to understand than to have a power to understand power is in order to the act and the end is more noble than the means 2. This is a very great encouragement to us to set upon the exercise of grace in the midst of weaknesses and several difficulties and temptations wherewith we are encompassed because God will enable and assist us he will not leave us to our standing strength but he concurs Phil. 2. 12 13. Work out your salvation with fear and trembling why for it is God that worketh in you to will and to do of his good pleasure When God will concur to the will and to the deed to both when we have wind and tide he is very lazy that will not take his
advantage and ply the oar then And the Apostle was not disheartned with the several conditions he was to run through in his passage to heaven Phil. 4. 13. I can do all things through Christ that strengthneth me When we have such an able Second God is at our right hand Psal. 16. 8. we need not be so dismayed with temptations and difficulties we meet with in the progress of our duty though we have many letts and hindrances yet God will cause us to walk in his ways 3. This keeps us humble and lowly in our own conceit and that is very necessary for us For pride is that sin which cleaves to us all our life and is called pride of life and lasts as long as life lasts How doth this keep us humble and lowly Partly thus because we have all by gift What hast thou that thou hast not received 1 Cor. 4. 7. All the strength that we have is but borrowed and who will be proud that is more in debt than others We would laugh at a Groom that is proud of his Master's Horse All grace comes from God Shall vve usurp the honour due to God And partly because vve have but from hand to mouth Though vve have all from God yet vve should soon grovv proud if God did not diet us and give out renevved evidences of his love and care over us by degrees some novv some then by fresh influences and acts of grace Look as David prays Psal. 59. 11. of his outvvard enemies Destroy them not O Lord lest my people forget scatter them by thy power and bring them down O! if all enemies vvere destroyed at once the people vvould forget thee the deliverance vvould be past antiquated and out of date and vvould not be so freshly thought of nor produce such vvarm affections in the hearts of his people So it is true in the spiritual World God doth not destroy all at once but brings dovvn our spiritual enemies that vve may acknovvledge vvhence vve have it And partly because this is a means to make us sensible of the mutability of our nature for when all depends upon God his coming and going it will make us see what poor creatures we are of our selves when he comes we are able to do something when he goes what poor creatures are we 2 Chron. 32. 31. God left him to try him that he might know all that was in his heart When vve are renevved yet vve are not fully recovered there 's a great deal of tang and taste of the old leaven and if God leave us vve shall soon sin vvhereas if vve vvere carried on vvith an even constant tenor of grace that is in our ovvn keeping vve should be proud 4. It endears the heart to God and God to the heart by acts of friendship and familiarity as it extracts from us acts of prayer and dependance and as we receive new supplies and daily influences of grace from him God is more endeared to the soul by his multiplied free gifts Look as at every lifting up of the foot there are new influences of life go to that stirring and motion so all in the spiritual life are his acts of grace If so much rain fell in one day as would suffice for seven years there would be no notice taken of Gods acts of Providence God would not have such witness to keep up his memory to the sons of men so here if we had all graces in our souls and needed not new excitement but he dispensed all at once God and we should grow strangers When the Prodigal had his portion in his own hands he leaves his father and therefore there must be continual acts of kindness to maintain a holy friendship between God and us USE 1. Look after renewing grace see whether there be a principle of life in you or no whether you be his workmanship in Christ Jesus Better never be his creature if not a new creature a dog is in a better condition You can do nothing in the spiritual life until there be a principle In vain to expect new operation before a new creation be past upon you The stream cannot be maintained without the spring 2. Let us pray for strength upon all occasions and beg the renewings of Gods efficacious grace that we may avoid sin and be ready to every good work Alas there are many discouragements from without and sundry baits which tickle the flesh and would seduce us from our duty unless the Lord stand by us and protect and strengthen us within Deadness will soon creep upon us and our heart run out of order look after new influences of grace this will make you ready to every good work not only the remote preparation but the furniture of the faculties and abilities Lo I come to do thy will and this will make you fruitful otherwise you will be as dry trees in Gods garden And this will make you lively and constant not off and on but fixed with God 3. If all depends upon God then let us not by any negligence of ours or by presumptuous sins provoke God to withdraw his assisting grace from us This is the Apostles meaning when he saith Phil. 2. 12 13. Work out your salvation with fear and trembling c. O take heed go about the business of Religion with holy caution and jealousie over your selves and fear the Lords displeasure for all depends upon him Dependance among men begets observance where men have their meat drink clothing they will be careful to please there So work out your Salvation c. for it is God that worketh in you c. you have all from God the business of the spiritual life will be interrupted and be at a stand if God with-hold his grace Every sin weakens that you have already and provokes God to with-hold his hand that he will not give more That which is the greatest ground of comfort and confidence is always the greatest ground of fear and trembling It 's a ground of great comfort and confidence in the spiritual life that he will help us in every action of ours and it is a ground also of the greatest fear and trembling that we should be careful not to offend him upon whom all depends The second point Doct. 2. That they which delight in Gods Commandments will beg his gracious assistance and are most likely to speed in their requests I make it to be both the reason of asking and the reason of granting First The reason of asking 1. What is this delight in God what is necessary to it 2. What are the fruits and effects of it First What is necessary to it 1. A new nature for what we do naturally we do with complacency and delight That which is forced and done against the grain and bent of our hearts can never be delightful and therefore there needs a principle of grace within Psal. 112. 1. Blessed is the man that feareth the Lord that delighteth greatly in his
Trust whatever contrariety appeareth in Gods Providence Gods word must bear up our hearts it is as a Pawn till the Deliverance come Gods mercy is the same still his word calleth for Trust the more we trust and hope in his mercy the better for us Psal. 13. 5. I have trusted in thy mercy my Soul shall rejoyce in thy Salvation Psal. 33. 22. Let thy mercy O Lord be upon us as we hope in thee And Psalm 32. 10. He that trusteth in the Lord Mercy shall compass him about The more clear is your claim when you trust your selves with him he is a merciful God and his word saith he will take care for them that fear him 4. All this trust must be set a work in Prayer so doth David and so saith the Word Psal. 50. 15. Call upon me in the day of Trouble I will deliver thee and thou shalt glorifie my Name Ier. 29. 11 12. I know the thoughts that I think towards you saith the Lord thoughts of peace and not of evil to give you an expected end Then shall ye call upon me and ye shall go and pray unto me and I will hearken unto you Ezek. 36. 37. Thus saith the Lord God I will yet for this be enquired of by the House of Israel to do it for them 4. The effectual Application Let thy Mercies come also unto me 1. He beggeth Application unto me also God is every day scattering his Mercies abroad in the world and David would not be left out of Gods Care and blessed Provision but have his share also Esau's words are applicable upon this occasion Gen. 27. 38. Hast thou but one blessing O my Father Bless me even me also When the Earth is full of his goodness beg your share God is the Father of Mercies he hath not the less for bestowing as the Sun hath not less Light for us because others enjoy it with us God doth not wast by giving 2. He beggeth an effectual Application Let thy mercies come unto me the way was blocked up with sins and difficulties yet Mercy could clear all and find access to him or make out its way Let it come to me that is let it be performed or come to pass as it is rendred Iudges 13 12. Now let thy words come to pass to us Heb. Let it come here let it come home to me for my comfort and deliverance David elsewhere saith Psal. 23. 6. Mercy and Goodness shall follow me all my days go after him find him out in his wandrings So Psalm 116. 12. What shall I render to the Lord for all his benefits towards me They found their way to him though shut up with sins and dangers Thus we see how to plead with God for temporal Salvation we must make Grace and nothing but Grace the ground of our hope and this according to the tenor of the word 2. As it is applicable to eternal Salvation and then 1. The ground of all is mercy or pity of the Creatures misery the Lord is not moved to bestow Grace upon Sinners for any goodness that he findeth in them or could foresee in them for he findeth none and could foresee nothing but what was the fruit of his own Grace Rom. 11. 35. Who hath given him first and it shall be recompensed unto him again It is the honour of God to begin all things as the River oweth all to the Fountain the Fountain nothing to the River as none can give him first so none can be profitable unto him for he needeth nothing Acts 17. 25. Neither is worshipped with mens hands as though he needeth any thing seeing he giveth to all life and breath and all things Nay we deserve the contrary to be cast into utter darkness Ezek. 36. 21 22. I do not this for your sakes I had pity for my Names sake which ye have prophaned among the Heathen 1 Pet. 1. 3. Of his abundant goodness he hath begotten us to a lively hope We have not a right notion of mercy unless we admire the plenty of it Eph. 2. 4. God who is rich in mercy for his great love wherewith he loved us when we were dead in trespasses and sins hath quickned us with Christ. There need many mercies from first to last for the saving of a poor sinner their natural misery is great Ezek. 16. 6. When I passed by thee and saw thee polluted in thine own blood I said unto thee when thou wast in thy blood live yea I said unto thee when thou wast in thy blood live Their actual Sins many Ier. 14. 7. Our iniquities testifie against us the way of their recovery by Christ is mysterious Iohn 3. 16. God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life The course taken for satisfying wronged Justice the Application involveth many mercies the renewing of their Natures Titus 3. 5. According to his mercy he saved us by the washing of Regeneration and the renewing of the Holy Ghost The preserving of inherent Grace against temptations forgiving many sins after Conversion Isa. 55. 7. Let the wicked for sake his way and the unrighteous man his thoughts and let him return unto the Lord and he will have mercy upon him and to our God for he will abundantly pardon The righteous fall seven times a day and riseth up again Prov. 24. 16. The great eternal good things to be bestowed on them Iude 21. Looking for the mercy of our Lord Iesus Christ unto eternal life So that from first to last there is nothing but a concatenation of mercies 2. The Effect Salvation This properly deserveth to be called so we are saved but in part before then from all evils from the greatest evil Hell before we are saved but we may be troubled again now no more sorrow when all opposition is broken and God is all in all and the Church presented as a prey snatched out of the teeth of Lions all former things are done away 3. This dispensed according to the Word Now what doth the Word say when a sinner repenteth all the Iniquities which he hath committed shall be forgotten there is abuse of Mercy noted Deut. 29. 19. If he shall bless himself and say I shall have Peace though I walk in the imagination of my heart I may go on in sin and cry God mercy and there is an end No Mercy issueth out it self for Salvation of men according to the Word these are Conclusions contrary to Grace Iude 4. There are certain men crept in unawares who were before of old ordained to this condemnation ungodly men turning the Grace of our God into Lasciviousness The Principle is true but the Conclusion is false certainly God is merciful there is no end nor measure nor bank nor bottom in his Mercy but throughout the whole Scriptures Mercy is only promised to the Penitent and those that come to God by Christ. Take mercy according to the Word
Oppression and Deceit this was the reason why they rose up against Moses and would go back to Egypt they would not believe God could maintain them in the Wilderness warping and declining from God cometh from want of Faith The first Use is to perswade us to trust in God upon his Word I will direct you 1. As to the Means 2. The Nature of this Trust. 1. As to the Means if you would do so 1. Know him Psal. 9. 10. They that know thy name will put their Trust in thee if God were better known he would be better trusted 2 Tim. 1. 12. I know whom I have believed 2. Get a Covenant Interest in him if our Interest be clouded how can we put Promises in suit but when it is clear you may draw comfortable conclusions thence Psal. 31. 14. I trusted in thee O Lord I said thou art my God Psal. 23. 1. The Lord is my Shepherd I shall not want he will provide for his own Lam. 3. 24. The Lord is my Portion saith my Soul therefore will I hope in him 3. Walk closely with him Micah 3. 11. The Heads thereof Iudge for reward and the Priests thereof teach for Hire and the Prophets thereof divine for Money yet will they lean upon the Lord and say Is not the Lord among us None evil shall come upon us God will shake them as Paul did the Viper Shame Fear and Doubts do always follow sin will a man trust him whom he hath provoked Doubts are the Fumes of Sin like vapours that come from off a foul Stomach If we mean to make God and keep a friend we will be careful to please him A good Conversation breedeth a good Conscience and a good Conscience Trust in God 4. Observe Experiences when he maketh good his Word Psal. 18. 30. As for God his way is perfect the word of the Lord is tryed he is a Buckler to all them that trust in him All these Providences are confirmations that feed and nourish Faith Psal. 56. 10 11. In God will I praise his Word in the Lord will I praise his Word in God have I put my trust I will not be afraid what man can do unto me 2. As to the Nature of this Trust. Let me commend to you 1. The Adventure of Faith Luke 5. 5. At thy Word we will let down the Net At thy Command when we cannot apply the Promise venture for the Commands sake see what God will do for you and what Believing comes to 2. The waiting of Faith when expectation is not answered and you find not at first what you wait for yet do not give God the lye but resolve to keep the Promise as a pawn till the Blessing promised cometh Isa. 28. 15. He that believeth maketh not hast it is Carnal Affection must have present Satisfaction greedy and impatient longings argue a Disease Revenge must have it by and by Covetousness wax Rich in a day Ambition would rise presently Lusts are earnest and ravenous like Diseased Stomachs must have green Trash 3. The Obstinacy and Resolution of Faith resolve to dye holding the horns of the Altar you will not be put off as she cryed so much the more and the woman of Canaan turned Discouragements into Arguments Iob 13. 15. Though he slay me yet will I trust in him 4. The Submission and Resignationof Faith Mark 6. 33. Seek ye first the Kingdom of God and the Righteousness thereof and all these things shall be added to you Set your hearts upon the highest interest make sure of Heaven and refer other things to God be at a point of indifferency for Temporal supplies 5. The Prudence of Faith settle your mind against present necessities and for future contingencies leave them to Gods Providence Mat. 6. ult Sufficient for each day is the evil thereof Children that have to allay present hunger do not cark how to bring the Year about they leave that to their Father Manna was to be gathered daily when it was kept till the Morning it putrified 6. The Obedience of Faith mind Duty and let God take care of success let God alone with the Issues of things otherwise we take the Work out of his Hands A Christians Care should be what he should do not what shall become of him Phil. 4. 6. Be careful for Nothing and 1 Pet. 5. 7. Be careful for Nothing But cast your Care on him for he feareth for you There is a Care of Duties and a Care of Events God is more Solicitous or you than you for your selves Use 2. Do we thus trust in the Lord All will pretend to trust in God but there is little of this true Trusting in him in the World 1. If we trust God we shall be often with him in Prayer Psal. 62. 8. Trust in the Lord at all times pour out your Hearts before him 2 Sam. 22. 2 3 4. The Lord is my Rock and my Fortress and my Deliverer the God of my Rock in him will I Trust He is my Shield and the Horn of my Salvation my high Tower and my Refuge my Saviour thou savest me from Violence I will call on the Lord who is worthy to be Praised so shall I be saved from mine Enemies We act our Trust at the Throne of Grace incourage our selves in God 2. It will quiet and fix the Heart free it of Cares Fears and anxious Thoughts Phil. 4. 6. 7. Be careful for Nothing but in every Thing by Prayer and Supplication with Thanks-giving let your request be made known unto God and the Peace of God which passeth all understanding shall keep your Hearts and Minds through Iesus Christ. Psa. 94. 19. In the Multitude of my thoughts within me thy Comforts delight my Soul 3. A Care to Please for Dependence begets Observance they that have all from God will not easily break with him II. Doct. Those that do trust in God must look to be Reproached for it by carnal Men. 1. There are two sorts of Men in the World ever since the beginning contrary Seeds Gen. 3. 15. I will put Enmity between thee and the Woman and between thy Seed and her Seed Some born of the Flesh some of the Spirit the Seed of the Woman and the Seed of the Serpent some that live by Sense some by Faith ever it will be so And there is an Enmity between these two and this Enmity vented by reproach Gall. 4. 27. But as he that was born after the Flesh Persecuted him that was born after the Spirit even so it is now that Persecution was by bitter Mockings so Ishmael Gen. 21. 9. Sarah saw the Son of Hagar the Egyptian which she had born unto Abraham Mocking 2. The occasion from their low Condition hence they will take Liberty to mock at their interest in God and to shame them from their Confidence as if the Promise of God were to none Effect Carnal men measure all things by a Carnal interest and therefore the Life of those
often are they disappointed but if their Hopes should succeed and they should make themselves this way Eternal yet when the Pageantry of this World is over the great ungodly Men of the World who have Names Lands Families in the general Resurrection shall be Poor Base Contemptible whereas he that made it his Business to look after the World to come shall be Glorious for ever 4. When once our Qualification is clear every step of our remove out of this World is an approach to our abiding City Our Salvation nearer Rom. 13. 11. than when we first believed And 2 Cor. 4. 16. though our outward man perish yet the inward man is renewed day by day 5. Every degree of Grace makes your Qualification clearer Col. 1. 12. giving thanks to the Father who hath made us meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the Saints in light and 1 Tim. 6. 18. laying up in store for themselves a good foundation against the time to come that they may lay hold of eternal life Evidences are encreased when ripening for Heaven more and more 2. Let us carry our selves as such as count our best Estate in this World as the House of our Pilgrimage 1. Let us with great Joy and Delight of heart entertain the Promises of the Life to come resolving to hold and hugg them and esteem them and make much of them till the Performance come Heb. 11. 13. These all died in Faith not having received the Promises but having seen them afar off and were perswaded of them and embraced them and confessed that they were Strangers and Pilgrims on the Earth 2. Let us take heed of what may divert us and besot us and hinder us in our heavenly Journey 1 Pet. 2. 11. Dearly beloved I beseech you as Strangers and Pilgrims abstain from fleshly Lusts which war against the Soul A Relish of the Pleasures that offer themselves in the course of our Pilgrimage spoileth the sense that we have of the World to come and weakens our care and pursuit of it 3. Let us be contented with those Provisions that God in his Providence affordeth us by the way though they be mean and scanty 1 Tim. 6. 8. having food and raiment let us be content for we brought nothing into the world and it is certain we can carry nothing out we came into the World contented with a Cradle and must go out contented with a Grave therefore if we want the Pomp of the World let it not trouble us we have such allowance as our Heavenly Father seeth necessary for us till our great Inheritance cometh in hand 4. If the World increase upon us we should take the more care that we may have the Comfort of it in the World to come Rev. 14. 13. Their works follow them Luk. 16. 9. Make to your selves friends of the Mammon of unrighteousness that when ye fail they may receive you into everlasting habitations There is no other way to shew our weanedness in a full Estate nor to keep our hearts clean or to express our deep sense of the World to come but this 2. Doct. That during this Estate and the inconveniencies thereof God's Children find matter of Rejoycing in his Word 1. Let us consider how this Point lieth in this Text. 1. The Psalmist had a sufficient sense of the inconveniencies of the House of his Pilgrimage his absence from God for therefore he counts it a Pilgrimage the many affronts and dishonours that are done to God in the World which go near to a gracious heart who espouseth God's quarrel and interest therefore he saith Horrour hath taken hold upon me because men keep not thy Law nay and possibly his own Afflictions and Troubles for many Interpreters suppose him now expelled from Ierusalem and driven to wander up and down in the Forrests and Wildernesses yet then could he comfort himself in God and pass over his time in meditating on his Precepts and Promises The troubles and inconveniencies of our Pilgrimage are easily disregarded by them that have no sense of them or are slight-hearted or whose time of Trial is not yet come but then is strength of Grace seen when we can overcome sense of Trouble by the incouragements which the bare naked Word of God offereth If David were now in Exile it was a trouble to him not to enjoy the Ordinances and Means of Grace with the rest of God's People but to deceive the tediousness of it by God's Word that is the Trial. If we can depend upon the Promise when nothing but the Promise is left us there are no Difficulties too great for the Comfort of God's Word to allay 2. The Psalmist speaketh not of what he would doe but what he had done thy Statutes have been my Songs Experience of the Comfort of the Word is more than a Resolution to seek it there in his Resolution he would have been a Pattern of Duty but now he is a President of Comfort That which hath been may be God that hath given a Promise and Comfort to his Saints before will continue it in all Ages 3. The Psalmist speaketh not of an ordinary Joy but such as was ready to break out into singing which noteth the heart is full and can hold no longer without some vent and utterance As Paul and Silas were so full of Joy that they sang at midnight in the Stocks 2. Now I come to the Reasons why God's Pilgrims find matter of rejoycing in his Word during the time of their Exile and absence from God and all the Inconveniencies that attend it 1. Some on the Words part 2. Some on the part of him that rejoyceth 1. On the Words part God's Pilgrims can rejoyce in it 1. There they have the Discovery and Promise of eternal Life It telleth them of their Country a firm deed and conveyance is a Comfort to us before we have possession 2 Pet. 1. 4. To us are given exceeding great and precious Promises that being made partakers of the Divine nature we may escape the Corruptions that are in the world through Lust. In the Word there are Promises neither of small things of things of a little moment nor of things that we have nothing to doe with but of great moment and weight and given to us The Promises make the things promised certain to those to whom they do belong though they be not yet actually in their Possession and therefore the Children of God are delighted in them and so far as that their hearts are drawn off from worldly things They that adhere to them and prize the Comfort which they offer have something in them above natural Men or the ordinary sort of those that live in the World 2. There they have sure direction how they may attain this Blessedness which the Promises speak of and that is a great Comfort in the midst of the Darkness and Uncertainty of the present Life The Word of God is said to be a light that shineth to us
little longer No it is demanded now he doth not give it up but it is taken away from him Reason with thy self as Isaac Gen. 27. 2. I allude to it Behold now I am old I know not the day of my death make me savoury meats that my Soul may bless thee before I die So reason I have spent so much time in the world and I know not the day of my dissolution when God will call me home Oh let me go to God that he may bless me before I die 2. You know not whether the means of Gra●… shall be continued to you or no and such affectionate offers and melting entreaties Acts 13. 46. Since you put away the word of God from you you judge your selves unworthy of everlasting Life God will not always wait upon a lingring Sinner but will take the denial and be gone They judge themselves unworthy of that Grace they pass Sentence upon themselves 2 Cor. 6. 1 2. Now is the accepted time now is the day of Salvation we beseech you receive not the Grace of God in vain God hath his seasons and when these are past will not treat with us in such a mild affectionate manner The means of Grace are removed from a people by strange Providences when they have slighted the offers of Grace Luke 13. 7. These three years I came seeking fruit on this Fig-tree and finde none cut it down why cumbreth it the ground In that Text there 's first God 's righteous expectation These three years I came seeking Fruit. He was the dresser of the Vineyard they were the three years of his Ministry as by a serious harmonizing the Evangeli●…ts will appear that he was just now entring upon his last half year they had his Ministry among them 2 Their unthankfull frustration I find none nothing answerable to what means they enjoyed 3 God's terrible denunciation Cut it down why cumbreth it the ground God will root up a people or remove the means and therefore will ye leave it upon such uncertainties 3. There 's an uncertainty of Grace 2 Tim. 2. 25. If God peradventure will give them repentance to the acknowledging of the truth It is a meer hazard it may be he will it may be not It is uncertain whether the Spirit of God will ever put in your Heart a thought of turning to God again Gen. 6. 3. My Spirit shall not always strive with man The Spirit of God strives for a long while follows a Sinner casts in many an anxious Thought troubles and shakes him out of his carnal quiet and security but this will not always last Ah Christians there are certain Seasons if we had the skill to take hold of them there is an appointed fixed time when God is nearer to us then at another time and we shall never have our Hearts at such an advantage Isa. 55. 6. Call upon him while he is near and while he may be found There are certain Seasons which are times of finding Some are of opinion that there are certain Seasons when a Man may be rich if he will when God offereth him an opportunity for an Estate in the World if he knew the time and how to take hold of it Certainly to those that live under the means of Grace there 's a time of finding when God is nearer to them than at another time and therefore will you slip that and leave it upon such great uncertainties 4. There 's an uncertainty in this we are not certain of having the use of our natural Faculties we may lose our Understandings by a stupid Disease and God may bring a Judgment upon those that dally with him in the work of Repentance It is an usual Judgment upon them that while they were alive did forget God when they come to die to forget themselves and have not the free use of their Reason but invaded with some stupid Disease die in their Sins and so pass into another World Reason 4. The Fourth Reason is the great mischief of delay 1. The longer we delay the greater indisposition is there upon us to embrace the Ways of God Oh Christians when we press you to Holy things to turn your selves to the Lord you begin to make some Essay and then are discouraged and find it is hard and tedious to Flesh and Bloud and so you give over Now mark if it be hard to day it will be harder the next so the third onward for it is hardness of heart that makes the Work of God hard Now the more we provoke God the more we resist his Call the more hard the Heart is the impulsions of his Grace are not so strong as before and the Heart every day is more hardned As a Path weareth the harder by frequent treading so the Heart is more hard the Mind more blind the Will more obstinate the Affections more engaged and rooted in a course of Sin Ier. 13. 23. Can the Ethiopian change his Skin or the Leopard his Spots then may ye also doe good that are accustomed to doe evil O to break off an inveterate Custom is hard A Plant newly set is more easily taken up than a Plant that hath taken root When we grow old and rotten in the way of Sin it will be much harder for us than now it is the longer we lie soaking here in Sin the farther off from God 2. We provide the more discomfort for our selves Always the proportion of our Sorrow is according to the measure of our Sins Whether it be godly Sorrow the sorrow of Repentance or desparing Sorrow those Horrours which are imprest upon us as a Punishment of our Rebellion and Impenitency in both sences you still increase your Sorrow the more you sin For the sorrow of Repentance it is clear that Sorrow must carry proportion with our Offences She that had much forgiven wept much Certainly it will cost you the more Tears a greater humbling before God the longer you continue in a course of Sin against him And for the sorrow of Punishment you are treasuring up wrath against the day of wrath Rom. 2. 5. your Burthen will be greater and more increased upon you It is too heavy for your Shoulders already to bear why should we adde to the weight of it Either our sorrow of Repentance will be greater or the anxious sense of our Punishment for in both God observes and God requires a proportion 3. Consider how unfit we shall be for God's service if we delay a little longer when our strength is spent and vigour of youth exhausted when our Ears grow deaf Eyes dim Understanding dull Affections spent Memory lost is this a time to begin with God and to look after the business of our Souls Certainly he that made all that was our Creatour deserves the flowr of our strength Eccles. 12. 1. when the tackling is spoil'd and Ship rotten is that a time to put to Sea or rather when the Ship is new built Shall the Devil feast upon
are not to defraud a poor Servant nor to delay him but to make him quick payment and shall we defraud our great Creator of the debt we owe to him and put him off from day to day Use 2. To exhort us with speed to turn to the Lord and to comply with his motions Let us not put off God from day to day I shall urge it 1 as to the general case 2 as to particular Duties which are prest upon you First As to the general Case Oh go and bethink your selves how do matters stand between God and thy Soul Debate it seriously that if you have neglected God and his Salvation already you may now turn to him without delay Let me pre●…●…ou further 1. You can never part with Sin soon enough it is a cursed Inmate that will surely bring mischief upon the Soul that harbours it It will set its own dwelling on ●…ire If there be a moat in the Eye a thorn in the Foot we take them out without delay and is not sin a greater mischief and sooner to be looked into and parted with certainly the evil of sin is greater then all evil and hereafter the trouble will be greater therefore we can never soon enough part with it 2. Let th●…s move you sin must have a quick dispatch and shall not God It would defeat temptations if we would but delay them it would stop the furies of anger and suppress the motions of Lust. Augustus the Emperour advised those who were angry to repeat the Greek Alphabet meaning that he might take time to consider So for uncleanness and other sins if the Practice and Execution of many Lusts were but delayed we would not be so frequent in them as we are to the dishonour of God and scandal of Religion Prov. 7. 22. it is said of the young man enticed by the Harlot that forthwith he went after her When our Lusts are a gog all the checks of Conscience and perswasions of the World will not prevail for a little respite Now shall sin have a more ready entertainment then God Will you rush upon the practice of sin like a Horse into the battle and come on in the Service of God like a Snail Will you be so eager and passionate upon the impulsion of every Lust and so hardly be entreated by the Spirit of God and by the word of God 3. If you be not ready God is ready How ready is he on the one hand to receive you and on the other hand to punish you The one quickens us by hope and the other by fear For the consideration which works upon hope God is ready Matth. 22. 4 5. Come to the Wedding all things are ready He hath a Christ ready to receive you a Spirit ready to sanctifie and cure all your Soul distempers he hath pardoning Mercy to forgive all your sins he hath power of Grace to remedy all your distempers and will not you be ready Luke 15. 20. The Prodigal said I will go to my Father Mark his Language I will go the Father ran When we do but relent and with brokenness of heart come and lie at the feet of God Loves pace is very swift and runs to snatch us out of the fire therefore will you not be ready to cast your selves into the Armes of his Compassion Cant. 2. 8. Christ is represented as leaping upon the Mountains and skipping upon the Hills Christ thinks he can never be soon and early enough with a returning sinner to revive a poor broken hearted sinner therefore if God ●…e so ready so should you On the other side to work upon your fear if you delay God is ready to punish you The wrath of God hangs over your heads like a sharp sword by a slender thread and will you sit still and keep your place The Iudge is at the door he is ready to judge 1 Pet. 4. 2. are you ready to be judged God is ready to condemn to execute and are not you ready to implore Mercy to seek the Lords Favour ready to fall flat and beg terms of Grace in and through Christ Iesus Rahab when the Lord had by his Messengers threatned destruction to Iericho onely Rahabs house was to be safe she hanged out a scarlet thread ere the Spies were departed Ioshua 2. she did not delay till the Army came and the city was surprized When the Lord is marching against sinners with vengeance and fury you cannot come soon enough to God to prevent it Luke 14. 32. That King that had twenty thousand marching against him doth not stay till they were in his quarters but while the other is yet a great way off he sendeth an Ambassage and desireth conditions of peace God is ready to execute all his vengeance and Curses of the Law therefore while you may O seek conditions of peace You have been spared long it may be for the next sin you may pay for all A Thief that hath long escaped when he is taken at length all his villany is recompensed into his Bosome if he had not stolen the last time he had escaped God hath spared you hitherto it may be upon the next sin he will strike you and hold his hands no longer If God now strike in what a wofull case would you be 4. There was never any that came to God too soon many have come too late the foolish Virgins are an instance When they brought little Children to Christ Christ received them There are none so little but the great God can form and fashion them into a temple for himself Usually God chooseth his People from among the Youth There may be some converted in Old-age but few usually 't is in our Youth or as soon as we come to our Maturitie Reason thus I may be too late I cannot be too early let me no longer dally with God Secondly As to the particular duties which are prest upon you let me caution you and direct you I. By way of Caution 1. When you have any stirrings of heart any anxious thoughts about your Eternal condition beware you do not believe the Devil that hereafter will be a more convenient season I shall give directions suitable to the grand Enemies of our Salvation the Devil the World and the Flesh. Now do not believe the Devil This was Felix case Paul was reasoning of Justice and Temperance Graces that he was little acquainted withall and Paul quickens all by a remembrance of Judgment to come and then Felix trembled but how doth he put off this Heart-work Hereafter we shall have a more convenient season Acts 24. 25. O never will it be better with you than now when the Waters are stirred Still there is something in the sinners way when God hath any business for him When young we want Wisdom when old we want strength in the middle of business we want leisure in the midst of leisure we are corrupted and want a heart We are lazy and then every Mole-hill seems
sufficiently sheweth how good it is to have the Mind illuminated and endowed with the true Knowledge of things In handling this Point I shall shew 1. What is the use of a sound Mind 2. Why this should be so often and earnestly asked 1. What is the use of a sound Mind There is a threefold Act of Judgment 1. To distinguish 2. To determine 3. To direct and order 1. To distinguish and judge rightly of things that differ that we may not mistake Errour for Truth and Evil for Good So the Apostle maketh it the great work of Judgment to discerne between Good and Evil Heb. 5. 14. But strong meat belongeth to those that are of full age even those who by reason of use have their Sense exercised to discerne both good and bad The things that are to be judged are true and false right and wrong necessary or indifferent expedient or inexpedient fit or unfit For many things are lawfull that are not expedient 1 Cor. 6. 12. All things are lawfull for me but all things are not expedient as to Time Place Persons Well then Judgment is a Spirit of discerning of Truth from Falsehood Good from Evil that we may approve what is Good and disallow the contrary So the spiritual man judgeth all things 1 Cor. 2. 15. That is Though he hath not an authoritative Judgment he hath a Judgment of Discretion and if he did stir up this gift of Discerning he might more easily understand his Duty and how far he is concerned in point of Conscience and in order to Salvation So 1 Cor. 10. 15. I speak as to wise men judge ye what I say The spiritually Wise if they would awaken the gifts of Grace received in Regeneration by Diligence and Prayer and heedfulness of Soul might sooner come to a resolution of their Doubts than usually they do As Bodily Tast doth discern things savory from unsavory profitable from noxious so is Judgment given us that we may distinguish between the Poysons which the World offereth in a golden Cup to impure Souls and that wholsome spiritual Milk which we suck out of the Breasts of Scripture between savory Food and hurtfull Diet how neatly soever cooked The Souls Tast is more necessary than the Bodies as the Soul is the better part and as our danger is greater and errours there cost us dearer 2. To determine and resolve practicum dictamen the Tast of the Soul is for God that bindeth our Duty upon us when there is a decree issued forth in the Soul that after we know our Duty there may be a resolvedness of Mind never to swerve from it First the distinguishing work proceedeth there is a clear and distinct approbation of God then the determining followeth this is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Acts 11. 23. The purpose of heart 2 Tim. 3. 10. Thou hast known fully my doctrine manner of life 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 purpose The forme of this Decree and Resolution you have in Psalm 73. 28. But it is good for me to draw near to God This in the Soul hath the authority of a Principle he that meaneth to be a thorough Christian must set the bent and biass and purpose of his heart strongly upon it Psalm 39. 1. I said I will take heed to my ways So Psalm 32. 5. I said I will confess mine iniquities These Purposes have a powerfull command upon the whole Soul to set it a working whatever they purpose with this strong decree how backward soever the heart be otherwise They will excite and quicken us and admit of no contradiction it is our Judgments leade us and guide and poise us A man may have Knowledge and Learning and play the fool if his Judgment be not biassed a man never taketh any Course but his Judgment telleth him it is best and best for him all things considered It is not mens Knowledge leadeth them but their Judgments say to their Wills this is not for me the other conduceth most to my profit honour or delight but when the Judgment is in some measure set towards God then the man is for God 3. To direct as well as to decree so good Judgment and Knowledge serveth for the right guiding of our selves and all our Affairs Many are wise in generals that erre in particulars and have a Knowledge of Principles but their Affairs are under no conduct Particulars are nearer to Practice and very Learned men are deceived in Particulars Rom. 2. 20 21 22. An instructor of the Foolish a teacher of Babes which hast the form of Knowledge and of the Truth in the Law Thou therefore which teachest another teachest thou not thy self thou that preachest a man should not Steal dost thou Steal Thou that sayest a man should not commit Adultery dost thou commit Adultery thou that abhorrest Idols dost thou commit Sacriledge Therefore besides the general Rule the Knowledge of God's Will it is necessary to have the gift of Discretion when Particulars are cloathed with Circumstances There is an infinite variety of Circumstances which requireth a deale of prudence to determine them a man may easily discourse general Truths concerning God our Selves the state of the Church the privileges of Christianity but to direct them to particular Cases to govern our own Hearts and order our own Ways that is an harder thing Hos. 14. ult Whoso is wise and prudent c. Prov. 8. 12. I Wisdome dwell with Prudence To direct is harder than to determine or distinguish It is easier to distinguish of good and evil in the general to lay down conclusions upon the evidence of the goodness of the ways of God but to reduce our Knowledge to Practice in all Cases that is the great work of Judgment that we may know what becometh the Time the Place the Company where we are and may have that ordering of our Conversation aright Psalm 50. 23. to know how to carry our selves in all Relations Business civil sacred light serious that we neither offend in excess nor defect that we judge what is due to the Creatour and what is to be allowed to the Creature what is good what is better what is best of all that we know how to pay Reverence to Superiours how most profitably to converse with Equals what compassion to Inferiours how to doe good to them how to behave our selves as Husbands Wives Fathers Children Wisdome maketh us profitable in our Relations 1 Pet. 3. 7. Let Husbands dwell with Wives according to Knowledge There is much prudence and wisdome required to know how to converse profitably and Christianly with all that we have to doe with In short how to love our Friends in God and our Enemies for God how to converse secretly with God and to walk openly before men how to cherish the Flesh that it may not be unserviceable yet how to mortify it that it may not wax wanton against the Spirit how to doe all things in the fear of God in Meats Drinks Apparel
another thing to the Saints if they are advanced their Hearts are inlarged to God if afflicted they grow more humble watchfull serious all things work together for the worst to the Wicked if God make Saul a King Iudas an Apostle Balaam a Prophet their Preferment shall be their Ruine Human's Honour Achitophel's Wit and Herod's Applause turned to their hurt If in Prosperity they contemn God if in Adversity they deny and blaspheme him Prov. 1. 32. For the turning away of the simple shall slay them and the prosperity of fools shall destroy them As the salt Sea turneth all into salt water so a man is in the Constitution of his Soul all things are converted to that use Use 3. Is to perswade us to make this acknowledgment that Affliction is good There needs many Graces before we can thus determine 1. Faith 't is not present but it must be believed hoped and waited for 'T is not fit all should be done in a day and as early as we would in the Lord's time the Fruit will appear The Word doth not work by and by so not the Rod. Faith can see good in that in which Sense onely can find smart Phil. 1. 19. I know this shall turn to my Salvation through your prayer and the supply of the Spirit of Iesus Christ. And we know that all things shall work together for good Rom. 8. 28. Though it doth not appear yet we know 2. Love The Children of God out of their Love to God and present submission to God do count whatsoever he doth to be good Psalm 73. 1. Tet God is good to Israel though he seemeth to deale with his People hardly yet Love pronounceth the Dispensation to be good it can see a great deal of love in pain and smart and chastenings I have read once and again of such a Rabbin that when told of an Affliction would say this is good because it cometh from God 3. Spiritual Wisdome and Choice to esteem things according to their intrinsick worth an high value of Holiness profiting in Sanctification is more than enough to recompence all the trouble we are put to in learning it This will make us yield to be lessened in our worldly Comforts for the increase of spiritual Grace as Paul would cheerfully part with his Health that he might have more Experience of Christ 2 Cor. 12. 10. I will take pleasure in infirmities necessities and distresses for Christ's sake Surely the loss of outward things should trouble us the less and we should be the sooner satisfied in God's Dispensation if he will take away our earthly Comforts and make us more mindfull of that which is heavenly if by an aking Head God will give you a better Heart by the death of Friends promote the life of Grace 4. Diligence and Heedfulness 1. To observe Afflictions 2. To improve 1. To observe what falleth out from what hand it cometh to what issue it tendeth otherwise if we observe it not how can we acknowledge it give God the glory of his Wisdome and Goodness In Heaven when we shall know as we are known 't will be a great part of our lauding of God to look back on his Providence conducting us through troubles as 't is pleasant for Travellers in their Inn to discourse of the deepness and danger of the Ways and now when we rather are known than know Gal. 4. 9. 't is usefull and comfortable to take notice of God's dealing with us Oh what a deal of Wisdome Faithfulness and Truth may we see in the Conduct of his Providence Gen. 32. 10. I am not worthy of the least of all thy mercies and of all the truth which thou hast shewed unto thy Servant for with my staff I passed over this Iordan and now I am become two bands Psal. 119. 75. I know O Lord that thy Iudgments are right and that in faithfulness thou hast afflicted me What necessity of his Chastisement to prevent our Pride Security Negligence with what Wisdome was our Cross chosen how did God strike in the right Vein you were running on apace in some neglect of God till he awakened you this observation will help us to love God who is vigilant and carefull of our welfare it will allay all the hard thoughts that we have of the seeming severity of his Dispensations 2. Diligence to improve it for the bringing about of this good We must not be idle Spectatours but active under God we must more stir up our selves and exercise our selves to Godliness The Affliction of it self is a dead thing there must be help Phil. 1. 19. For I know this shall turn to my Salvation through your prayer and the supply of the Spirit of Iesus Christ 2 Cor. 1. 11. Ye also helping together by prayer for us 'T is not the nature of the Cross nor the power of inherent Grace without the actual influence of the Spirit that makes Troubles profitable We must excite our selves also for the Saints are not onely passive Objects but active Instruments of Providence We are not merely to be passive Heb. 12. 11. It yieldeth the pleasant fruit of Righteousness to them that are exercised thereby God exerciseth us with the Rod and we must exercise our selves under the Rod. We are ingaged to use all holy Means to this end searching praying rowsing up our selves learning our proper Lessons then we will come and make our acknowledgment It is good for me that I have been afflicted SERMON LXXX PSAL. CXIX 72. The Law of thy Mouth is better to me than thousands of gold and silver THESE words may be conceived as a reason of what was said in the foregoing Verse David hath told us there that it was good for him that he was afflicted because of the Benefit obtained by his Afflictions he had learned God's Statutes knew more of his Duty and had an heart to keep closer to it now this gain was more to him than his loss by Affliction for he doth not value his Happiness by his temporal Interests so much as by his thriving in Godliness all the Wealth in the World was not so much to him as the spiritual Benefit which he got by his sore Troubles For the Law of thy Mouth c. The Text is a profession of his respect to the Word a profession which containeth in it the very spirit of Godliness a speech that becometh onely such a man's mouth as David was one that is sincerely godly Many will be ready to make this profession but other things do not suit the profession of their Mouths is contradicted by the disposition of their Hearts and the course and tenour of their Lives Observe here two things 1. The things compared 2. The value and preference of the one above the other 1. The things compared on the one side there is the Law of God's Mouth on the other thousands of gold and silver 2. The value and preference of the one above the other 't is better to me 't is
love Much work driveth them oftner to the Throne of Grace None rest in duties so much as they that have least cause Mal. 1. What a weariness is it 2. These ask more regularly therefore 't is said Psal. 37. 4. Delight thy self in the Lord and he shall give thee the desire of thy heart Why so unlimitedly Because delight in the Lord retrencheth carnall desires and moderateth earthly desires their hearts are not so set upon outward things as the hearts of other men are Iohn 15. 7. If ye abide in me and my words abide in you ye shall ask what ye will and it shall be done unto you Why doth God make so large an offer he trusteth such as keep communion with Christ. There is a conformity between their wills and ' Gods in the matter of their desire so far as we are renewed and hold communion with him their unruly lusts will be subdued and their unlawfull desires for matter manner and end be laid aside and they will acquiesce in the good pleasure of God and the most excellent things Therefore God maketh them this offer ask what ye will not that men are warranted to pray for what they will or to expect an answer in whatsoever they desire but as their delight in his Law is prevalent their wills are limited by his word and will and the Spirit in them maketh intercession according to the will of God Rom. 8. 26 27. 3. These may with most confidence ask mercy Others are excluded Prov. 28. 9. He that turneth away his ear from hearing the Law his Prayer is an abomination to the Lord. These are included 1 John 3. 22. And whatsoever we ask we receive of him because we keep his commandments and do those things that are pleasing in his sight If we refuse God speaking to us in infinite wisdom as he does in the word no wonder if God refuse us stammering foolishly in Prayer Ier. 9. 21. Men that purpose to continue in their sins shall not be heard in other things otherwise the grossest sinners may come to God to have their sins pardoned and removed and expect to be accepted and heard through Christ but the perpetuall assistance and favour of God is not given to them Such as would be heard and accepted and come with assurance of welcome and audience ought to be devoted to him to worship him to call on him 2. These are qualified to receive mercy according to the tenour of that covenant in which mercy is dispensed and magnified in the covenant of Grace or the covenant of Gods mercy in Christ Heb. 5. 9. and Heb. 10. 14. This being apt to be abused let us explain how obedience is a condition of the covenant A condition meriting and purchasing the blessings of the covenant it cannot be For God giveth the ability to obey whole and solely of his own Grace it is short of the rule and infinitely inferiour to the reward A condition applicatory whereby we apply our selves to the covenant on our part it is and therefore necessary It is a secondary condition disposing us to communion with God in and by the covenant At first we must be turned by repentance towards God through faith in the Redeemer before we receive remission of sins Acts 20. 18. Faith and Repentance are conditions of Pardon and sincere Obedience a condition of Salvation The first condition containeth a resolution of obedience for the future though we have not actually so obeyed The secondary condition that we should make good our resolution We must keep covenant as well as make covenant Faith is an entring into covenant for 't is a consent to take Christ as Lord and Saviour and constant and delightfull obedience is a constant keeping covenant Psalm 25. 10. and Psa. 103. 17 18. The making covenant was necessary for our entrance the keeping covenant for our continuance Consent to take any for King Husband Master draweth another condition after it that we carry our selves in these relations dutifully besides promising there must be performing he that is my soveraign must be obeyed There must be conjugal fidelity to the Husband and faithfull service to the chosen Master so in the covenant between us and God us and Christ. Object But you will say how then shall we take comfort in the new covenant who are so many ways faulty Answ. We must consider 1. What it exacts 2. What it accepteth 1. What it exacts To quicken us to more earnest endeavours and humble confession of failings It exacteth perfect obedience admits of no imperfection either of parts or degrees 2. It accepteth a perfection of parts there being truth of Godliness and a single-hearted inclination to observe the whole will of God then our defects and weaknesses are covered by Christ's perfect righteousness The unregenerate lye under the rule of exaction but being out of Christ are denyed the benefit of acceptation The Use Is to inform us that Petitions of mercy and the plea for new obedience are very consistent Let thy tender mercies come unto me And his argument is For I delight in thy Word Mercy is nevertheless free though the creature mind his duty for when we have done all we are but unprofitable servants Luke 17. 10. and Grace helpeth us to doe what we doe Luke 19. 18. Thy pound not my Industry And 1 Cor. 15. 10. By the Grace of God I am what I am and his Grace which was bestowed upon me was not in vain But I laboured more abundantly than they all yet not I but the Grace of God which was with me 'T was Grace to appoint such reasonable terms to accept of them though done in that sorry fashion which our frailty permitteth us to tender them to God 2. Use. To quicken us to a delightfull course of Obedience if we would have the sense of Mercy The same spirit that urgeth us to obey a sense of God's Love urgeth us also to delight in his Law The same Spirit that urgeth us to sue out the Promise urgeth also to obey the Precept 1. Consider how God hath twisted his Honour with our Interest and ordered both for his own Glory God's Interest and Honour is to be considered as well as our Salvation We must never look for such Mercy and Grace from God as shall discharge us from our duty and subjection to God or give you liberty to dishonour and disobey him No Christ redeemed us to God Rev. 5. and Luke 1. 74 75. Salvation is our benefit Obedience is Gods Right and Interest Happiness man is not averse from but he sticketh at the terms Some part of this Happiness suiteth well enough with our natural desires as Pardon and life But we care not for his Law and the Obedience we owe by virtue of it We are naturally more willing of what maketh for our selves for our comfort than what maketh for the Honour of God 2. Consider A great part of Gods first mercy is expressed in healing our natures and
for ever I shall illustrate this Proposition by these Considerations 1. That God's Children are sometimes under deadness 2. That in such deadness the Word of God is the onely means to quicken them 3. Though the Word be quick and lively and powerful yet it is God that must bless it that must make it a support to the Soul 4. That whenever we have received these Comforts Quicknings and Supports from him they should ever be recorded and treasured up in the Registers of a thankful memory for the great uses of Christianity I. First God's Children are under deadness sometimes which hapneth to them for many causes 1. By reason of some Sin committed and not repented of or not fully repented of God smites them with deadness and hardness of heart and the spiritual life for awhile is greatly obstructed and impaired that it cannot discover itself and they have not those lively influences of grace as formerly Thus it was with David when he had strayed so greatly from God and begs God not to cast him off Psal. 51. 11. Cast me not away from thy presence and take not thy holy Spirit from me As a wound in the body lets out the life blood and the spirits so these grievous sins are as a wound in the soul Sin against the conscience of a renewed man defaceth the work of the holy Spirit so that for a while he seems to be shut out from God's favor and his gracious abilitie are lessened and impaired he is like a wounded man till he be cured and made whole again The Spirit being grieved and resisted withdraws and the strength of the Soul is wasted and therefore be very tender stand in awe not only of greater but smaller sins 2. By reason of some good omitted especially neglect of the means whereby we may be kept alive fresh and lively in God's service Lazy fits of indisposition and omissions of duty do more frequently steal in upon Believers than positive out-breakings and commissions of sin and they are more ready to please themselves in them and lie still under them and so by this means contract much deadness of heart As a Lute that is not play'd upon but hangs by the wall and not used it soon grows out of keller for want of use so if we do not diligently and constantly exercise our selves in godliness our hearts grow dead and vain It is the complaint of the Church Isa. 64. 7. There is none that stirreth up himself to take hold of thee If we do not stir up our selves to keep on a constant commerce with God and respect to God alas deadness creeps upon the heart unawares and we are commanded 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Tim. 1. 6. To stir up the gift of God which is in us Surely a sloathful servant will soon become an evil servant Mat. 25. 26. Thou evil and sloathful servant Therefore our sinful sluggishness is one cause of our deadness for he that doth not trade with his Talents will necessarily become poor and if we do not continue this holy attendance upon God the heart suffers loss 1 Thess. 5. 19 20. Despise not prophesie quench not the Spirit The coupling of these two things together shews that if we despise Prophesie we quench the Spirit as fire goes out not only by pouring on water but by not stirring and blowing it up To expect help from God when we are sluggish is to tempt Christ and put him still upon a miraculous way to heal and cure our distempers Who will bring bread and meat to a Sluggard's Bed who will not arise to labor for it o●… will not rise at least to fetch it Therefore if we will not attend upon God in the means of grace he will not bring us that help comfort and supply that otherwise we might have God worketh but so that we work also 2 Phil. 12. 13. Work out your own salvation with fear and trembling For it is God that worketh c. God's working is not a ground of laziness but for more strict observance Since all depends upon God therefore take heed you do not offend God and provoke him to suspend his grace We must not lie upon a Bed of ease and cry Christ must do all for this is to abuse the power of grace to laziness It is notable that God bids his people do that which he promiseth to give them Psal. 31. 24. Psal. 27. 14. Be of good courage and he shall strengthen your heart As if he had said strengthen thine heart and he will strengthen thy heart The courage of Faith is both commanded and promised why God by this would shew how we should shake our selves out of our laziness and idleness that though God gives us grace and power yet he will have us to work as a Father that lifts up his childs arm to a burden and bids him lift it up Usually we complain of deadness with a reflection upon God he quickens the dead and therefore I am dead ay but what hast thou done to quicken thy self for grace was never intended that we might be idle you must complain of your selves as the moral faulty cause God is the efficient cause you do not meditate pray draw life out of the precious promises when the Spouse sleeps and keeps her Bed then Christ withdraws Cant. 5. 6. 3. Another cause is unthankfulness for Benefits received especially spiritual Benefits for God loves to have his grace acknowledged He stops his hand and suspends the influences of his grace when the creature doth not acknowledge his bounty Col. 2. 7. Be stablished and rooted in the faith abounding therein with thanksgiving The way to grow in Faith and get by Faith is to be thankful for what we have received that 's an effectual means both to keep it and to get more Therefore if we be always querulous and do not give thanks for the goodness of God to us for what he hath already vouchsafed to us in Christ no wonder that deadness and discouragement creeps upon our hearts 4. Pride in Gifts for we are told Iam. 4. 6. God resisteth the proud but giveth grace to the humble The Garland we put on our own heads soon withers and those Gifts which we are pusst up with are presently blasted and have deadness upon them for he will teach us to ascribe all to himself 5. Some great and heavy Troubles We read ver 107. of this Psalm I am afflicted very much quicken me O Lord according unto thy Word O! when we are afflicted sore there 's a deadness upon the heart the spiritual life clogged with what alacrity did they go about good things before but then there 's a damp worldly sorrow deadens the spirit as godly sorrow quickens it and is a means to keep us alive to God 6. Another cause is Carnal liberty or intermedling with worldly vanities So much we may learn from that Prayer Psal. 119. 37. Turn away mine eyes from beholding vanity and quicken thou
honours and pleasures and are notable in this kind of skill in promoting their secular ends in these things A child of God may be a Fool to them for this kind of wisdom for it is our Saviour's observation Luke 16. 8. The children of this world are in their generation wiser than the children of light Though David was wiser than his Enemies yet the children of this world are wiser in their Generations that is as to carnal fetches and devices to accomplish their worldly purposes In their Generation that is about the course of their affairs Thus David is not wiser than his Enemies 3. It is not great skill in Arts and Civil Discipline This is indeed a gift of God but given promiscuously sometimes to the good and sometimes to the bad sometimes to the good for Solomon could unravel all the secrets of nature and dispute of every thing from the cedar to the hysop 1 Kings 4. 23 29 30 31. and sometimes to the bad as the Heathen Philosophers many of whom knew all things almost within the circuit of the world yet how little this wisdom is to be valued in regard of that wisdom which we get by God's Commandments God hath in some short shew'd in that he hath suffered those Books which Solomon writ concerning Trees Plants Beasts to be lost whereas to this day the writings of the Heathens are preserved as Aristotle's Book de Animalibus c. But now those Books in which Solomon taught the fear of God and true wisdom which is godliness are by the singular care of God's Providence conserved for our use and benefit God hath herein shew'd that we might want those other Books without the loss of true wisdom but those Books that indeed make us wise to salvation those are kept Learning is a glorious endowment indeed but God would give us that gift by the writings of Heathens but grace which is true wisdom he would give us that by the holy Scripture A Man may excel in learning yet after all the profound researches and enquiries of his high flown reason into the mysteries of nature he may be a very Fool and be damned for ever for Paul saith of the Philosophers Rom. 1. 22. Professing to be wise they became fools since they had not the true knowledge of God and the way of salvation 4. 'T is not a bare knowledge of God's will but wisdom Knowledge is one thing and wisdom another I wisdom dwell with prudence Prov. 8. 12. Many are knowing men well skill'd with notions but they want prudence or practical direction for the governing of their hearts and ordering of their ways In the Scripture you shall find Faith is not only opposed to ignorance but to folly Luke 24. 25. O ye fools and slow of heart to believe Every natural Man is a Fool Tit. 3. 3. though never so notionally wise and skill'd in the theory of divine knowledge Prov. 14. 8. The wisdom of the prudent is to understand his way Not to soar aloft in speculation abstract from practice and remote from spiritual influence but to direct his course so as he may attain to the chiefest good not only to know what is to be done but to do what is to be known Carnal men they have great knowledge and yet are spiritual Fools for all that they may lick the glass and never taste the honey or like Negroes that dig in Mines of knowledge while others enjoy the gold they may search out the mysteries of that Religion which the godly man lives upon dispute of Heaven while others surprize it and take it by force or like the Lark soar high but fall into the Net of the Fowler A careful strict walking that 's the true wisdom and thus we have stated the Benefit II. Secondly Here 's the Author of this Benefit which is God Thou through thy Commandments which I note not only to shew to whom we must go for this wisdom If any man lack wisdom let him ask it of God Jam. 1. 5. Nor to shew to whom we must ascribe the glory of it if we get any benefit by the Word praise belongeth to God who is the Father of lights from whom cometh every good and perfect gift Jam. 1. 17. All Candles are lighted at his Torch and all the Stars owe their brightness to this Sun to the Father of lights we owe all the light wisdom and direction that we have I say not only for these ends do I note it but to shew the main and principal reason why a Child of God is far more safe by his godly wisdom than their Enemies by all their worldly policy why God is of his side counselling directing and instructing him what to do whereas they are acted and influenced by Satan Psal. 37. 12 13. The wicked plotteth against the just the Lord shall laugh at him for he seeth that his day is coming The wicked plotteth against him but there 's a wise God that acts for him He doth not say the just countermineth the wicked and strains himself to match his Enemy with policy and craft but God watcheth for him If it were only this Policy against Piety it were not so much but it is Mens craft against God's wisdom Prov. 21. 30. There is no wisdom nor understanding nor counsel against the Lord. These three words express the sum and heighth of all natural abilities Wisdom notes a quick apprehension Understanding a wise foresight grounded upon experience Counsel a designation of some rare artifice and device now neither Wisdom nor Understanding nor Counsel none of these can stand against the Lord. God's Children are sometimes dismay'd when they consider the advantages of their Enemies their wisdom learning malice experience But here 's their comfort that they may set God against all these God who is the Fountain of wisdom for he is interested in their cause his wisdom against their craft and so having the direction of the mighty Counsellor they are safe III. Thirdly Here is the means Through thy Commandments or through the directions of the Word You will say What can we learn from the Word to match our Enemies in Policy What wisdom will that teach us for our safety and preservation against the malice of our wicked Enemies There is our Rule and the more close and punctual we are in the observance of it the more safe we are A double wisdom we learn from the Word of God which is our security against the malice and craft of our Enemies 1. This wisdom we get by the Commandment it directs us how to keep in with God which is our great wisdom this is to stop danger at the fountain head Prov. 16. 7. When a man's ways please the Lord he maketh even his enemies to be at peace with him The way to get peace and safety in evil times is not to comply with Enemies but to comply with God All our danger lies in his anger not in their wrath and rage for God can
that wisdom Again a necessary good is to be prefer'd before an arbitrary now one thing is necessary Luke 10. 42. It is not necessary to be rich to live in pleasure to wallow in delights within a while we shall not be a Peny the better for these things It is not necessary to have so great a plenty of worldly accommodations it is not necessary to our happiness hereafter nor to the comfort of our lives for the present to have so much here Now see who is the wiser Man he that looks no higher than to some subordinate end or he that fixeth upon the last end He that pitcheth upon some limited good or he that pitcheth upon the most universal good that will yield him all things He that pleaseth his fancy with toys or he that looketh after a solid benefit He that taketh care for his body or he that minds his soul He that mindeth that which is accessary or indifferent to his happiness or he that mindeth that which is mainly necessary He that looketh after a perishing vanity or he that mindeth eternal happiness Certainly if there be a God and this God can do all things and our happiness lies in the enjoyment of him he is the wisest Man that takes God for his Portion and makes it his business to keep in with him and so doth a child of God Thus wisdom is seen in fixing our aim 2 Wisdom lies in the choice of apt and proper means and that is to take the Word for his Rule First God for his Portion then the Word for his Rule To presume of the end without using the means is folly therefore next to a good end and scope there must be a good path Now that we might not grope blindfold and wander up and down in fond Superstitions God hath given us his Word to instruct us in all things which concern our duty and our danger and to make us every way wise to salvation 2 Tim. 3. 15. If our happiness lies in the enjoyment of God it is meet God should appoint the way how we should come to him We should have been at a great loss if the Lord had given us grace to fix upon him as our end if he had not given us a Rule we could not find out our way But now God hath so exactly chalk'd it out That a Fool shall not err therein Isa. 35. 5. Such plain directions as makes wise the simple Psal. 19. 7. A plain Rule found out by the wisdom of God and so stated for all and peremptorily commanded to all that the most simple that will give up themselves to God's direction they shall find it Now who are wise they that walk in the way of their own hearts or they that will take God's direction in his Word Those that will live according to the counsel of God's Word or those that will fashion their lives according to the course of this World or according to the customs and examples of carnal Men like themselves Who is wiser they that will enquire after the mind of God who is wisdom itself and can best judge of wisdom and folly or they which shape their course according to the secular wisdom that prevails in the world and which hath often failed in its end who the wiser Man he that hath taken God's counsel and can never be deceived or those that walk according to the course of this world and find themselves wholly to be deceived Psal. 49. 13. This their way is their folly yet their posterity approve their sayings They will imitate that folly which hath been so fatal and so mischievous to others and think themselves happy Many carnal Men when they died they all-to-be-fooled themselves and lamented it that they had taken no more care to please God and walked no more closely with him that they had been more busie about worldly things than they had been for their precious and immortal souls therefore surely the children of God are wiser than their opposites that give up themselves to the vanity of carnal Pursuits 3 Wisdom lies in a vigorous prosecution of fit means to the best end without which all is nothing It is in vain to be sensible of our end and to be convinced of our way unless we mind to walk in it Many carnal Men will say that their happiness lies in the enjoyment of God that the Scriptures are the Word of God and his directions to attain that happiness but their folly lies in this that they have not a hearty consent to take this Word for their Rule and give up themselves to the directions thereof Prov. 17. 16. Wherefore is there a price in the hand of a fool to get wisdom seeing he hath no heart to it that is such means and such opportunities given them to be happy but that 's a price in the hands of a Fool his heart hangs off from the way and therefore here 's the great effect of wisdom when we do with all our hearts give up our selves to God that he may take his own way with us to make us happy for ever Wisdom lies in obedience Deut. 4. 6 7. Keep therefore and do them for this is your wisdom c. The World will say it is a simple course to be so nice scrupulous and precise but God tells you it is your wisdom and they that keep his statutes are a wise and understanding People The Devil fills us with all kind of prejudices against Religion To such as love ease he represents difficulty and the yoke of Christ to be a tedious yoke If they love honour he tells them of reproaches and disgrace If they affect wisdom he telleth them it is a low doctrine beneath the sublimity of their parts and abilities Now God assureth you this is your wisdom and understanding So Iob 28. 28. And unto man he said Behold the fear of the Lord that is wisdom and to depart from evil is understanding There 's an enquiry there in that Chapter where wisdom is to be sound and it is resolv'd that it is nowhere to be found but in a strict obedience not in the knowledge of the secrets of nature not in the crafts and policies of the world not in the plots and contrivances of the wicked not in dexterity to get wealth but in keeping God's Commandments with all preciseness and care Briefly this dextrous and effectual prosecution of the means which lead to our end lies in three things and so accordingly we may know wisdom all these are call'd wisdom in Scripture 1. In diligence and constant labour in the spiritual life When a Man makes Religion his work then he is a wise Man true to his end There are a company of notional Fools in the world that make Religion their talk but do not make it their work that can talk at as high a rate as others they have a naked approbation of the things of God but do not lie under the power and dominion
Both must be done with the whole Man or regarded both in heart and practice It is not enough to leave off evil but to hate it nor to do good but we must do it with a love and an affection Compare three places Isa. 1. 16. Cease to do evil learn to do well Amos 5. 15. Hate the evil love the good And it is exprest with a further emphasis Rom. 12. 9. Abhor that which is evil cleave to that which is good These places compar●…d together will shew that the outward act is not only to be regarded but the frame of the heart There should not only be an abstinence from the act of sin but mortifying of the love of it for there are many that outwardly forbear sin but yet do not inwardly hate it On the other side we are not only to do good but there must be a love to good for many may externally do good when the heart abhors it And on the other side if there be a love to good God passeth by many failings it should not be a bare hatred or a cold love but such as hath life and vehemency in it abhorring that which is evil and cleaving to that which is good the soul of Ionathan cleaved to David it must be a knitting love There is Haman's refraining and David's refraining Esther 5. 10. It is said Haman refrained himself when his heart boiled with rancor and malice against Mordecai and there 's David refraining in the Text I refrained my heart from every evil way His heart is engaged when the heart cleaves to him not easily to separate 3 Both are regarded and both with the whole man now the one is required in order to the other we must refrain from evil that we may do good and do good that we may refrain from evil mortification and vivification do mutually help each other The more lively grace is the more sin droopeth the more lively sin is the more is the new nature oppressed Without refraining our feet from evil there is no doing of good for vivification is increased according to the degree of mortification 1 Pet. 2. 24. That we being dead to sin might be alive to righteousness As long as we are alive to sin active and delighting in the commission thereof we are dead to righteousness But now as the love and life of sin is weakned in our hearts so is grace introduced and we are quickned and carried on with more strength in holy duties the strength and fervor of the soul is diverted and runs in another channel the same affections that are carried out to sin the same current and stream of soul that ran out towards our selves then is carried in a way of grace the same affections but carried out to other objects And so on the other side wherever there is an affection to good there will be a cordial detestation to evil the affection to the one will awaken and increase the hatred of the other for still the soul draws that way which our affections carry them 4 As the one must be done in order to the other so our care in the first place must be to avoid evil or to stand at a distance from every known sin he begins with that as necessary to the other first I refrained my feet and then that I might keep thy Law he was to be more exact in a course of obedience In planting of grace God keeps this method he roots up the weeds and then plants us wholly with a right seed and so far as we are active under God in the work we first put off the old man with his deceitful lusts and then put on the new man Eph. 4. 22. We put off the rags of sin before we put on the garments of salvation The Plants of righteousness they will not thrive in an unhumbled proud impenitent heart therefore God's first work is the destruction of sin and then the introduction of grace The heart is purifi'd for Faith as well as purifi'd by Faith first it must be purifi'd for Faith that being the work of the Spirit of God for Iohn 5. 44. How can ye believe that seek honour one of another As long as any fleshly lust remains unmortifi'd be it Ambition Vain-glory affecting Honour Reputation Esteem in the world the heart is not purifi'd 2dly the heart is purifi'd by Faith Acts 15. 9. more and more this corruption is wrought out And then the heart is purifi'd for fear I will give a new heart Jer. 32. 40. And then purifi'd by fear as Iob feared God Iob 1. 1. So the heart is purifi'd for love and by love for love Deut. 30. 6. And the Lord will circumcise thine heart and the heart of thy seed to love the Lord thy God with all thine heart and with all thy soul. A Believer is to be consider'd in the act of conversion and in the state of conversion in the act of conversion so first we turn from evil by a sound remorse true grace is first planted first purified for grace then purified by grace Iob feared God then eschewed evil preparing grace is implanted in us then it hath an exercise upon us for the weakning of sin more and more 5 Keeping at a distance from evil it must be as it is evil and contrary to the holy nature and will of God I observe this because David did not refrain his feet from evil upon any foreign and accidental reasons for fear of men or any sinister and by-respect but meerly out of tender love and respect to the Law of God to testifie his obedience to him I refrained my feet from every evil way And what was his motive That I might keep thy Word A Child of God hates sin as it is contrary to his drift and purpose If we do not love good for good-sake it is not good we love but some other thing that cleaves to it the temporal benefit that we think will come thereby so if we do not nate evil as evil but because of the loss and detriment that attends the practice of it it is not sin that we hate but inconveniences As Austin saith of the Eternal Reward There are many Non peccare metuunt sed ardere They are not afraid to sin but are afraid to be damned So a natural conscience may upon foreign and accidental reasons stand aloof off from sin as a Dog may forbear a morsel for fear of the Cudgel convinced Men may forbear sin out of horror of conscience and not out of any serious dislike of heart against it Briefly there is Custom Education Penalty of Law Infamy shame of the World difficulty of compassing Sin shame in practising these are but accidental reasons these may make us refrain they may breed a casual dislike but not a natural hatred for a gracious refraining must be upon a religious reason David gives an account not only of his practice but his motive I refrained my feet from every evil way And why
their hearts to chuse him for their Portion and to make his Will their only Rule and obey and serve him whatever it cost them They have such a taste of this sweetness as doth engage their hearts to a close and constant adherence to Christ. Carnal men have only a naked knowledge of these things weak and uneffectual notions and apprehensions about them and if the sublimity reasonableness and suitableness of these truths to soul necessities cause any taste it is but slight slender and unsufficient So indeed Temporaries and Hypocrites are said to taste the heavenly gift the good Word of God and powers of the world to come Heb. 6. 4. They have some languishing apprehensions but they do not so taste them as to relish and feed upon them They do not relish Christ himself but only some benefit which they hope to get by him upon slight and easie terms have not such experience and sweetness of God in Christ as that their souls should constantly cleave to him It may be their fancy may be pleased a little in a supposition and possibility of salvation by Christ or in some general thought of those large promises and great offers which God makes in the Gospel not as it enforceth duty and subjection to God well then it differs from a bare understanding of the goodness of God's ways 2. This constitutes a difference sometimes between a renewed man and himself as to some things his inward senses are not always alike quick and lively he is still like-minded as he was but yet not alike affected his sight is not so clear nor taste so acute nor his feeling so tender though he hath the same thoughts of things he had before yet his spiritual sense is benummed and is not at all times affected alike while he keeps his spiritual eye clear from the clouds of Lust and Passion he is otherwise affected with things to come than he is when his eye is blinded with inordinate passion and love to present things and while he keeps his taste how sweet and welcome is this to his soul the remembrance of Christ and salvation by him And so while he keeps his heart tender he is sensible of the least stirring of sin and is humbled for it and the least impulsion of grace to be thankful for it Those Instructions Reproofs Consolations which at sometimes either wound or revive their spirits at other times do not move them at all their senses are benummed not kept fresh and lively And thus in the general I have proved That there is such a thing as spiritual taste 2 Secondly What is this spiritual sense It is an impression left upon our hearts which gives us an ability to relish and savor spiritual things but it cannot be known by description so much as by these two questions 1. The use of it what doth this taste serve for 2. What are the requisites that we may have such a taste and relish of divine and spiritual things 1 What doth this taste serve for There is a threefold use of them 1. To discern things good and wholsom from things noxious and hurtful to the soul that 's the use of spiritual sense in general to discern things good and evil Heb. 5. 14. Iob 6. 30. Is there iniquity in my tongue Cannot my taste discern perverse things God hath given all sensitive Creatures a taste whereby they may distinguish between things pleasant or bitter sweet or sowr wholsom or unwholsom savory or unsavory that they may chuse what is convenient to nature so the new Creature hath a taste to know things things contrary to the new nature and things that will keep it in life Iob 12. 11. Doth not the ear try words and the mouth taste his meat or as it is more plain Iob 34. 3. For the ear trieth words as the mouth tasteth meat Spiritual taste distinguisheth between what is salubrious and profitable to us that which is the pure Word milk agreeable to the new nature and what is frothy garnish'd out with the pomp of Eloquence it is tasteless to a gracious soul if it suiteth not with the interests of the new nature they have a faculty within them whereby they distinguish between Mens inventions and God's message A Man of spiritual taste when reason is restored to its use he comes to a doctrine and many times smells the Man saith he This is not the breast-milk that must nourish me the pure milk of the Word by which I must grow in strength and stature and if he finds any thing of God he owns God he discerns what is humane and what is divine 2. The use of this taste is also to refresh and comfort the soul in the sweetness of spiritual things Cant. 2. 3. I sate down under his shadow with great delight and his fruit was sweet to my taste The taste of Christ's Fruit in the comforts of Redemption the Fruit that grows there is sweet and pleasant to the new nature when the love of God to sinners in Christ is not only heard but believed not only believed but tasted it ravis●…ieth and transports the soul with sweet delight and content that excels all the pleasures of the world 3. It serves for this use to preserve the vitality of grace that is to keep it alive and in action Omnis vita gustu duciter every life hath its food and the food must be tasted this grace quickneth us to look after that food it keeps the new creature free for its operations helps it to grow 1 Pet. 2. 3. As new born babes desire the sincere milk of the Word that ye may grow thereby if so be ye have tasted that the Lord is gracious The truths of the Gospel are as necessary and natural for the cherishing and strengthning the spiritual life as the milk of the Mother is to the new born Babe and taste is necessary that we may relish it They that have a taste have an appetite and they delight in the Word more than in any other thing whereas those that have no taste or appetite grow not up to any strength they thrive not 2 What is requisite to cause this taste 1. Something about the object 2. Something about the faculty 1. Something about the Object which is the Word of God eating or taking into the mouth that 's necessary before tasting for the tongue is the instrument of taste the outward part of the tongue that serves for meats the inward part towards the root for drink so for this spiritual taste there is required eating or taking in the Object therefore we read often of eating the Word of God Ier. 15. 16. Thy Word was sweet and I did eat it And Ezek. 3. 3. We read of eating the Roll it is interpreted spiritually I did eat it then follows his taste it was in my mouth as honey for sweetness So Rev. 10. 10. I took the little book and eat it and it was in my mouth as sweet as
I am afflicted very sore O Lord quicken me Doct. We must not give over Prayer though our afflictions be never so great and heavy Why because 1. Nothing is too hard for God he hath ways of his own to save and preserve his People when we are at a loss This was the glory of Abraham's Faith that he accounted God was able to raise up Isaac from the dead Heb. 11. 19. difficult cases are fit for God to deal in to shew his Divine Power When means have spent their allowance then is it time to try what God can do Psal. 142. 4 5. I looked on my right hand and beheld but there was no man that would know me refuge failed me no man cared for my soul. I cried unto thee O Lord I said Thou art my refuge and my portion in the land of the living When all things fail God faileth not 2. We must still pray Faith must express something above sense or else living by Faith and living by sense cannot be distinguished In desperate cases then is the glory of Faith seen Iob 13. 15. Though he should kill me yet I will trust in him In defiance of all discouragement we should come and profess our dependance upon God Use. To condemn those that despond and give over all treaty with God as soon as any difficulty doth arise whereas this should sharpen Prayer rather than discourage us This is man's temper when troubles are little and small then to neglect God when great then to distrust God A little head-ach will not send us to the Physician nor the scratch of a Pin to the Chyrurgion So if our troubles be little they do not move us to seek after God but we are secure and careless but when our troubles are smart sore and pressing then we are discouraged and give over all hopes so hard a matter is it to bring Man to God to keep an even frame neither to slight the hand of God nor to faint under it as we have direction to avoid both Extremes Heb. 12. 5. to cherish a due sense of our troubles with a regular confidence in God That he prays you have seen Now what he prays for He doth not say deliver me but quicken me Doct. Strength and Support under Afflictions is a great Blessing to be sought from God and acknowledged as a Favor as well as Deliverance 1. You shall see this is promised as a Favor Isa. 40. 31. They that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength That is shall not faint nor be weary but mount up as it were with wings as Eagles they shall have a new supply of grace enabling them to bear and hold out till the deliverance cometh They that wait upon the Lord do not always see the end of their troubles but are quickned comforted and strengthned in them they shall renew their strength 2. This is accepted by the Saints with thanksgiving and valued by them as a special answer of prayer they value it more than temporal deliverance itself many times as 2 Cor. 12. 9 10. Paul prays for the removal of the thorn in the flesh thrice when God only gives him this answer My grace is sufficient for thee saith Paul then I 'll rejoice in mine infirmities so I might have strength and support in grievous weaknesses reproaches and afflictions whatever they be So Psal. 138. 3. In the day when I cried thou answeredst me and strengthnedst me with strength in my soul. That 's noted as a special answer of Prayer How did he hear him with strength in my soul. Though he did not give him deliverance he gave him support so that was acknowledged as a very great mercy 3. There are many Cases wherein we cannot expect temporal deliverance then we must only go for quickning and support when by a lingring disease we are drawing down to the chambers of death and our outward strength is clean spent and gone then have we support that 's a great mercy Psal. 73. 26. when strength fail and heart fail God is the strengt●… of my heart and portion for ever That is to have his heart quickned by God in the languishing of a mortal disease So 2 Cor. 4. 16. Though our outward man perish yet our inward man is renewed day by day There are many troubles that cannot be avoided and therefore we are then to be earnest with God for spiritual strength Use. Well then you see upon what occasion we should go for grace rather than for temporal deliverance we should pray from the new nature not deliver me but quicken me and if the Lord should suspend deliverance why that will be our strength in time of trouble Psal. 37. 39. The salvation of the righteous is of the Lord he is their strength in the time of trouble But more particularly let us take notice of this Request Quicken me saith he Doct. Quickning Grace must be asked of God 1. What is quickning 2. Why asked of God 1 First What is this quickning Quickning in Scripture is put for two things 1. For Regeneration or the first infusion of the life of grace as Ephes. 2. 5. And you that were dead in trespasses and sins hath he quickned That is infused life or making to live a new life 2. It is put for the renewed excitations of God's grace God's breathing upon his own work God that begins life in our souls carries on this life and actuates it Now this kind of quickning is twofold spoken of in this Psalm there is quickning in duties and quickning in afflictions quickning in duties that 's opposite to deadness of spirit quickning in affliction that 's opposite to faintness 1 Quickning in duties that 's opposite to that deadness of spirit which creeps upon us now and then and is occasioned either by our negligence or by our carnal liberty that deadness of spirit that doth hinder the activity of grace 1. By our negligence and sloathfulness in the spiritual life when we do not stir up our selves Isa. 64. 6. There is none that stirreth up himself to take hold on thee When Men grow careless and neglectful in their souls An Instrument though never so well in tune yet if hang up and laid by soon grows out of order so when our hearts are neglected when they are not under a constant exercise of grace a deadness creeps upon us Wells are the sweeter for the draining Our graces they are more fresh and lively the more they are kept a work otherwise they lose their vitality A Key rusts that is seldom turned in the Lock and therefore negligence is a cause of this deadness 2 Tim. 1. 6. Stir up the gift that is in thee We must blow up the ashes There needs blowing if we would keep in the fire we grow dead and lukewarm and cold in the spiritual life for want of exercise 2. This deadness is occasioned by carnal liberty Psal. 119. 37. Turn away mine eyes from beholding vanity and quicken thou me
Providence This tenderness as it is wrought in them by Grace at the first so 't is encreased by their acquaintance with God and experiences of his love Familiarity with men breedeth contempt familiarity with God not so None are moved with reverence to the Lord more than they that know him best and are most familiar with him None rejoyce more than they when they find God is pleased and giveth out demonstrations of Grace to the world None fear more than they when God is angry Psal. 90. 11. Who knoweth the power of thine anger According to thy fear so is thy wrath The world think not of Gods anger till they feel the terrible effects of it but Gods Children that have a deep awe of God and observe him in all his motions have the greatest apprehensions of his displeasure Secondly It is the property of Gods Children when they look to any thing without them still to draw home the Providence and consider their own Case and to edifie themselves by that they see in others whether it be good or evil Electorum Corda semper ad se sollicitè videant saith Gregory When Uzzah was stricken How shall I bring the Ark of God home to me saith David 1 Chron. 13. 12. Will not God be as severe to me if I behave my self unreverently He observed how failing about holy things did much incense Gods wrath Gal. 6. 13. Ye which are spiritual restore such a one with meekness considering thy self lest thou also be tempted They that rigidly and uncharitably censure others are usually greatest strangers to their own hearts but a man that draweth all things home knoweth that if God should let loose temptations upon him he may be as bad as others A man that usually reflects upon himself will be afraid and will not reflect on the Judgments executed on others but tremble Nunquid ego tali c. was a good Question in a Heathen If God should visit my transgressions I have broken his Laws and deserve as great a punishment A spirit of application is a great advantage Our Lord telleth others Luke 13. 5. Ye shall likewise perish without repentance David was afraid lest he should be cast away with the dross because they love not Gods testimonies therefore he would not only love his testimonies but also fear his judgments Carnal men forget themselves when they are so bitter against others Thirdly The usefulness of this fear sheweth it is their duty 'T is very necessary 1. To stir up watchfulness and care for our own safety that we may not fall into like offences or do any thing that is displeasing to God lest we fall into his vengeance We are bidden to work out our salvation with fear and trembling Phil. 2. 12. We have to do with a just and holy God who is tender of his Laws Now this fear should be more active and lively when we see his Judgments executed for then God is ready at hand with a Whip to awaken us and to shew us he will not be dallied with and that danger attendeth us when we begin to straggle out of our Duty He that breaketh through an Hedge a Serpent shall bite him Fear is the great restraint of sin as the fear of man keepeth the Beasts from hurting him Gen. 9. 2. 't is their bridle The fear of you shall be upon the Beasts of the field So fear of God helps to keep from offending him or breaking his Laws 2. To humble us when we see that sin shall not escape unpunished Alas If God should enter into judgment with us who could stand Psal. 143. 2. Non dicit cum hostibus tuis sed cum servo tuo He doth not say if thou shouldest enter into judgment with thine enemy but with thy servant God is a just Judg and therefore when we see judgments executed upon others we may be afraid of his righteousness Every humble heart is conscious to himself of grievous offences and if God when he cometh to purge out dross should be severe with us what miserable wretched Creatures should we be This striketh an holy fear into our hearts and so helps us to humble our selves in his presence 3. To make us thankful for our mercies and gracious escape 'T is fear that maketh us taste the sweetness of the promise of free pardon when we see from what miseries we are delivered by the mercy of God when the Israelites had seen the Egyptians drowned in the water they saw they had cause to triumph in the God of their salvation Exod. 15. 1 2. The consideration of our defects is in part represented to us in the bitter experience of others there we may see what dangers we are liable unto were it not for his preventing Grace that we are not condemned with the world and left to perishin our sins 4. To quicken and sharpen our prayers God knoweth how to take vengeance on all iniquity even in his dearest servants Ioel 2. 17. Spare thy people O Lord and give not thine heritage to reproach Sparing is an act of Gods mercy withdrawing and moderating deserved Judgments Now the more our fear is encreased the more earnest and importunate will we be to keep off or get the Judgment removed Use. Is reproof of the greatest part of the world that pass by Gods Judgments and take no notice of them so as to fear and return to him Not his judgments upon others when the Arrows of God fly round about us we should fear for our selves and when wrath is making inquisition for sinners be the more earnest to be found in Christ. But a sensless stupidity possesseth most men they mind none of these things The Gibeonites were more wise and cautious Iosh. 9. 3 4. when they saw the Cities of Iericho and Ai destroyed and their inhabitants cut off by the sword they did not expect the coming of Ioshua but sent messengers to him and by a Wile struck up a Covenant with him before he came any further Or as that Captain when two before him with their fifties were destroyed by fire he fell upon his knees before the Prophet 2 Kings 1. 13 14. saying O Man of God let my life and the life of these fifty thy servants be precious in thy sight Behold there came fire down from Heaven and burnt up the two Captains of the former fifties with their fifties therefore let my life be precious in thy sight But Oh our blindness and stupidness though others fall under the Judgment of God we are as immoveable as rocks and do not fall down before the Lord to deprecate his anger Certainly if we had a due sense of our condition we are as worthy as they 't is by the mercy of God that yet we stand Therefore we should fear with an holy fear that we may bridle the flesh humble our selves before the Lord be thankful for our safety and be earnest in prayer this we should do when we see any others in
have Psal. 143. 2. Enter not into judgment with thy servant non dicit cum hostibus tuis He doth not say Enter not into judgment with thine enemy but with thy servant So here David that was Gods servant a man of singular holiness desireth that God would deal with him in mercy From first to last the Saints have no other Plea Theodoret on the Text observeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. so great a worker of righteousness beggeth to receive mercy and looketh for all his salvation by mercy And again 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He doth not challenge a reward but asketh favour and kindness Doctr. That Gods best servants have no other and no better plea than that God would deal with them in mercy 1. Because there is and can be no merit on the Creatures part towards God according to the rule of Justice Adam in innocency could impetrare not mereri 't was his Grace to covenant with the Creature when innocency and purity did adorn our Nature how much more since the Fall and the distance between God and us hath been so widened by sin What merits must be indebitum and utile It must be indebitum When our righteousness was perfect yet still due by virtue of our relation to God as Creatures and paying of Debts deserveth no reward The Lawyers tell us Nemo consequitur praemium quod facit ex officio debitum We are bound and do but our Duty but God is not bound to us All that the Creature hath and is and can do it oweth to God and hath received it from him and God is in such a degree of excellency above us that he cannot be obliged Where there is so great a disparity of Nature and Being there is no common right to make him obnoxious to make it Justice to any action of ours to reward us Aristotle denied Children could requite their Parents and merit from them and that the obligation of merit is only between Equals Certainly not between God and Men. There was nothing which bound him necessarily to reward his Creature but his free Covenant Again that which merits must be utile profitable to him from whom we challenge reward If we be never so righteous the benefit is ours not Gods He is not beholden to us useth us not out of indigence but indulgence not as if he needed any thing but we need his blessing Luke 19. 10. When we have done all we are unprofitable servants and Psal. 16. 2. Our goodness extendeth not to thee God giveth all receiveth nothing from us The Beam oweth all to the Sun the Sun nothing to the Beam 2. Because since the Fall there is no claiming but by the Covenant of Grace and mere mercy A Sinner cannot expect any thing but upon terms of mercy The Covenant of works supposed us innocent and holy and bound us so to continue Gal. 3. 20. so that the Law knoweth not how to do good to a Sinner Once a Sinner and for ever miserable it leaveth no room for repentance So that now there is no hope for the best according to the Rule of strict Justice but only according to the law of mercy In the new Covenant there are these special differences from the Law of Works First That there is not only Grace but mercy and Grace too In the first Covenant there was Grace but no Mercy Grace doth all things gratis freely but Mercy pitieth the Miserable therefore till sin and misery entered there could be no room for Mercy There was Grace in that Covenant for 't was of Grace that God did enter into Covenant with Man at all and of Grace that he did accept Mans perfect obedience so as upon performance of it to make him sure of eternal life But now in the New Covenant God doth shew Mercy and Grace too and Grace in the most rich and glorious manner Mercy and Grace too in this way of salvation in that there is hope for a sinner a plank cast out after shipwrack And Grace in the richest and most glorious manner Partly for the design and end that was driven at it was the glory of Grace Ephes. 1. 6. To the praise of the glory of his Grace and partly the ground of it was founded upon the infinite Mercy of God and the infinite merit of Christ. The infinite mercy of God Mercy is the infinite goodness of God flowing out freely to the Creature without any moving cause or worth on the Creatures part to expect it Rom. 9. 16. 'T is not of him that willeth nor of him that runneth but of God that sheweth mercy And the infinite merit of Christ Isai. 55. 3. I will make an everlasting Covenant with you even the sure mercies of David Isai. 42. 6. And give thee for a Covenant to the people And Isai. 49. 8. I will preserve thee and give thee for a Covenant to the people David that is Christ the seed of David all the mercies of the Covenant are exhibited in and by him in whom the Covenant is made with us and made good to us 2 Cor. 1. 20. And he is given for a foundation that is the foundation of a new and better Covenant And partly because of the terms wherein it is dispensed which is not unsinning obedience but a sincere owning of Christ unto the ends for which God hath appointed him So that in effect a thankful acceptance of a free discharge is all that we do for paying the Debt or to make way for our acceptance with God Rom. 4. 16. Therefore it is of Faith that it might be of Grace to the end the promise might be sure to all the seed And Ephes. 2. 8. Ye are saved by Grace through Faith and that not of our selves it is the gift of God By the Grace of Faith we lay hold upon or apply to our selves Christ and all his benefits and that Faith God giveth us by his mere Grace not exhibited by any work of others The whole work of salvation from its first step in regeneration to its last step in glorification doth intirely flow from Gods free Grace and not from any worth in us So that this being the end grounds terms of the new Covenant from first to last mercy doth all on which our hope dependeth We must claim by mercy 3. As there is no merit in the best Saints so there is much demerit and as there is nothing to induce God to be good to us so there is much to hinder him much that standeth in his way yet God will do us good Isai. 57. 17 18. I have seen his ways and will heal him I will lead him also and restore comforts to him He taketh motives from himself to pity when he might take occasion to punish There are many sins to be forgiven both before and after Conversion We are not only un-deserving but ill-deserving 'T was much that God would take us with all our faults when he first drew us into acquaintance with
will serve the Lord whatever others do Iosh. 24. 15. And if it seem evil unto you to serve the Lord chuse you this day whom you will serve whether the gods which your fathers served that were on the other side of the flood or the gods of the Amorites in whose land ye dwell but as for me and my house we will serve the Lord. If he meet with reproaches and scorns 2 Sam. 6. 22. And I will yet be more vile than thus and will be base in mine own sight If inticed by evil Company Psal. 119. 115. Depart from me ye evil Doers for I will keep the Commandments of my God If threatned Acts 4. 19. But Peter and Iohn answered and said unto them Whether it be right in the sight of God to hearken unto you more than unto God judge ye Thus they stood by a self-denying resolution whereas the unresolved man Iames 1. 8. is unstable in all his ways is turned like a Weather-Cock with every Wind fitteth his Religion to every interest God biddeth us thus unmoveably to fix our selves Ier. 15. 19. Thus saith the Lord Let them return unto thee but return not thou to them A man that would live quietly must either bring himself to the times or expect the times should come over to him A resolved man stayeth Gods leisure doth not serve his Conscience to fit the times but waiteth till God fit the times to his Conscience 7. A true sight of the worth of spiritual things above carnal This in the Text More than Gold yea fine Gold Till a man cometh to this his Conscience will not be guided by his Religion but his interest and give up all for the worlds sake 2 Tim. 4. 10. Demas hath forsaken us and loved the present world Phil. 3. 19 20. Whose end is destruction whose God is their Belly whose Glory is in their shame who mind earthly things For our conversation is in Heaven from whence also we look for the Saviour the Lord Iesus Christ. Loth to suffer turn themselves into all shapes God doth not command them but themselves II. The degree of his affection whence this Doctrine Doctr. We ought not only to love the word but to love it above all worldly things whatsoever 1. Let me explain the grounds of our love to the Word 2. Speak of the degree of it 1. Let me explain the grounds of our love to the Word We love the Word as it is the Charter of our hopes and the rule of our duty We have both respects in this Psalm as the Charter of our hopes ver 111. Thy testimonies have I taken for an heritage for ever for they are the rejoicing of my heart As a rule of our duty ver 14. I have rejoiced in the way of thy testimonies as much as in all riches And ver 140. Thy word is very pure therefore thy servant loveth it So that First To love and esteem the Word as the Charter of our hopes is to love and esteem spiritual priviledges such as the favour of God pardon of sins peace of Conscience taking away the stony heart and eternal life To have a deep sense and value for such things is the fruits of faith It is true some loose velleities and general inclinations men as men have to their own happiness but being but weakly perswaded of these things they are but slightly affected with them and the promises that reveal them Men that have no faith but altogether live by sense know nothing more excellent than Gold or Riches which do all in the World If God would let them alone here to have their portion in Paris they would part with their share in Paradise Such dunghil-souls have they let God keep spiritual things for whom he will so they may live at ease in the World they never mind communion with God or enjoyment of God but gracious hearts love the Word as offering and revealing these things Secondly To love the Word as a rule of Duty is in effect to love holiness loving things as suitable to our necessities and as suitable to our dispositions I love thy Commandments saith David in the Text as urging and directing us to our Duty This is also proper to gracious souls to them all outward things are but toys and trifles for our senses to play withal The least Grain of Grace seemeth better to them than a mountain of Gold They have a spiritual discerning and love things according to the nature and worth of them The things themselves are not to be compared together so should not our affections to them Secondly The degree of it More than all Riches Therefore I love thy Commandments above Gold yea above fine Gold Take Riches as Riches in that Notion as the word implies happiness abundance contentment The Word of God containeth the true Riches both in the promises and precepts of it First In the promises to us are given 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 exceeding great and precious promises 2 Pet. 1. 4. There the great Controversie is decided about the true happiness and salvation God or the Creature there you have the unsearchable riches of Christ Ephes. 2. 7. That in the Ages to come he might shew the exceeding riches of his grace in his kindness towards us through Christ Iesus The riches of the glory of the Saints inheritance Eph. 1. 18. That ye may know what is the hope of your calling and what the riches of the glory of his inheritance in the Saints These are things that make us truly rich Rev. 3. 18. I counsel thee to buy of me Gold tryed in the fire that thou mayst be rich He is not rich that floweth in wealth and plenty but he that hath Christ and an interest in his benefits They are possessors of all things though they have nothing 2 Cor. 6. 10. As having nothing yet possessing all things A little serves the turn they have the good things purchased by Christ happiness enough if he can make them happy So Secondly in the precepts they are means to work Grace the least Dram of which is more worth than all things in the world He is rich enough that is rich in Faith Iames 2. 5. Hearken my beloved Brethren hath not God chosen the poor of this world rich in faith and heirs of a kingdom in Paradise which he hath promised to them that love him It is more precious than the tryal of Gold 1 Pet. 1. 7. That the tryal of your faith being much more precious than of Gold that perisheth though it be tryed with fire might be found unto praise and honour and glory at the appearing of Iesus Christ. The smallest measure of saving faith or love to God or fear of God or repentance is of more worth than what is most precious The word of God does more enrich a man and true benefit is to be preferredbefore counterfeit Reasons for the degree of our love 1. From the worth of the Word the reward and those benefits
by mourning for this Carnal men are hot in their own cause cold in Gods Gods Children are quite otherwise cold in their own cause and hot in Gods Therefore they are deeply sensible when Gods honour is weakned Moses was the meekest man upon Earth yet he brake the Tables How doth this agree The injuries that were done to himself he could look upon with a meek quiet spirit easily put them up but when he saw the people bring dishonour to the name of God then he hath a high and deep affection They cry out Iosh. 7. 9. Lord what wilt thou do for thy great name So Psal. 115. 1. Not unto us O Lord not unto us but unto thy name give glory They go to God not to advance our faction and interest we are brought very low yet the wrath of man shall praise thee Thy name is dear and precious they are sorry to see any prophane it God hath abundantly provided for their respect he hath bid all men love them when he bid us love one another So that in effect all the respects of the world are devolved upon one person And they would have all men love God and honour God Secondly It comes from their compassion and pity and love to men O it grieves them to see so many that do not grieve for themselves and their eyes are wet because yours are always dry I tell you weeping saith Paul Phil. 3. 18. Compassion over the miserable estate of such Teachers and those that are led by them they and whole Droves run after fancies that endanger their souls False Teachers and their Proselytes should not only fall under our indignation but our pity They are Monsters in nature that want Bowels much more in Grace Religion doth not harden the heart but mollifie it Jesus Christ was made up of compassion and all Christians partake of Christs spirit Phil. 1. 8. God is my record how greatly I long after you all in the bowels of Iesus Christ. Pray mark Paul had got some of Christs bowels and let me tell you they were tender ones Compassion towards others and weeping over their sins is somewhat like the love of Jesus Christ. He would take our burthen upon himself when he was not interested so the spirit of Christ worketh in all his Members he hath distributed his bowels among them and therefore they cannot but long for the salvation of others yea their heart is broken and mollified with Christs compassion to them and therefore long for fellows in the same Grace Though they have received personal and private injuries yet they pity their case and mourn for them 'T is matter of humiliation and lamentation 2 Cor. 12. 21. When I come again I fear my God will humble me among you and that I shall bewail many which have sinned already and have not repented of the fornication uncleanness lasciviousness which they have committed It is matter of grief to see so many thousands perish or in a perishing condition Thirdly This disposition cometh from the antipathy and zealous displeasure that is in their hearts against sin They know what sin is the greatest enemy that God and Christ and their own souls have in the world It was sin that made Angels become Devils it was sin that blew up the sparks of Hell fire it was sin that opposed God that crucified Christ it is sin that grieves the Spirit of God and therefore they mourn when sin gets Proselytes A man cannot endure to see a Toad or Viper near him your hearts rise when you see them creep upon another so do the hearts of the Children of God rise that their enemy and Gods should find such respect and entertainment in the world It is said of the Church of Ephesus Rev. 2. 2. That she could not bear those which were wicked And David saith Ps. 101. 3. I hate the works of them that turn aside They know this will grieve the spirit of God that this will press him as a Cart is pressed with sheaves and shall God be pressed and burthened and they not troubled It cannot be They that love the Lord will hate evil Psal. 97. 10. both in themselves and others Fourthly This disposition comes out of a sagacity of faith and serious foresight of the effects of sin They know what sin will come to and what is the danger of it therefore when they see sin encreasing Rivers of water run down their eyes Wicked men tremble only at the Judgment of God but good men tremble at his Word and therefore they mourn when others fall into danger of the threatning When Ezra plucked his beard and was in such a zealous indignation against the sins of the people bewailing them before the Lord Ezr. 9. 4. Then were assembled unto me every one that trembled at the words of the God of Israel At fasts others are sleight and obdurate they look on threatning as a little mock Thunder they are not sensible of the danger I may set forth this by that allusion 2 Kings 8. 11. The Prophet Elisha wept when he saw Hazael that he looked wishly on his face till he blushed The man of God wept and Hazael said Why weepeth my Lord And he answered Because I know the evil thou wilt do unto the Children of Israel their strong holds wilt thou set on fire and their young men wilt thou slay with the sword and wilt dash their Children and rip up their women with child and Hazael said But what is thy servant a Dog c. So when the Children of God look upon sin they know by the complexion of it what will be the dreadful effects This will be bitterness in the issue in time this will produce pestilences famine fire sword and all other mischiefs and judgments and expressions of the angry indignation of the Lord. They foresee a Storm when the Clouds are but a gathering therefore they tremble when they see them This is the sagacity of faith Now carnal men on the other side look upon the threatnings of Scripture but as words of course used as in way of policy that God only would awe and scare them but doth not purpose to condemn them But Faith is sagacious Look as to the promises Faith is the substance of things hoped for the evidence of things not seen So as to the threatnings the same evidence of things not seen The Apostle doth not only instance when he had given the general description of the objects of hope for the recompence of reward but he instances in the threatnings Noah being moved with fear prepared an Ark c. They know however men sleight the word of God one day it will be found true and therefore when they see men add sin to sin they are troubled The Word is as sure as execution and works upon them accordingly They have all things in a near view the nearer the objects of our faith are in our view the more they stir up our affections Dangers and death
first laid in his Everlasting Decrees The Terms of Life and Salvation held forth in the New Covenant are to continue for Ever no change to be expected From the beginning of the World to the end thereof the Covenant of Grace cannot cease The Obligation still continueth men are for ever bound to love God and their Neighbour There shall no time come when the Law of loving God and our Neighbour shall be Reversed and out of Date The Covenant is essentially the same under all the diversity of Administrations And as the Priviledges so the Duties are of an Eternal Obligation Among men 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is just at one time that is not just at another Law givers cannot alwayes live to see their Laws executed and men cannot foresee all occasions and inconveniences and therefore often repeal their Laws but God is wise he hath made an unchangeable Law and he forbiddeth things intrinsecally Evil and commandeth things intrinsecally Good 2. As to the Effects of it in case of Obedience or Disobedience In case of Disobedience Eternal Wrath lighteth on them that reject this Covenant that walk contrary to it they shall be Eternally Miserable 2 Thes. 1. 9. Who shall be punished with everlasting Destruction from the presence of the Lord. Not a Temporal but an Everlasting Destruction and Mark 9. 44. The worm shall never die and the fire shall never be quenched An Eternity of Torments because they despised Everlasting Mercy and rejected the Authority of an Everlasting God Having offended an Infinite God their punishment abideth on them for ever If they will stand out their day 't is fit their recovery should be hopeless 2dly The Benefits are Eternal in case of Obedience There is Everlasting Grace Everlasting Comfort and Everlasting Life 1 Ioh. 2. 17. The World passeth away and the lust thereof but he that doth the Will of God abideth for ever The Spirit is given as a Comforter that shall abide for ever Iohn 14. 16. and 2 Thes. 2. 16. God who hath loved us and given us everlasting Consolation and good hope through Grace And 't is fit it should be so because 't is built upon Gods unchangeable Love and Christs Eternal Merit and Intercession Gods Love is an Everlasting Love Ier. 31. 3. The efficacy of Christ's Merit never ceaseth Heb. 13. 8. His continual Intercession ever lasteth Heb. 7. 25. and Rom. 8. 39. Nothing shall separate us from the love of Christ. He liveth for Ever by which we continue for ever in the Favour of God and the Covenant standeth firm between him and us the Fountain of Comfort is never dryed up Use Is to Inform us of the difference between the Laws of God and the Laws of Men There are many differences some of which I shall touch by and by this Expression offereth two 'T is Righteousness and Everlasting Righteousness First 'T is Righteousness Men have and do often decree wickedness by a Law not only in the first Table where man is most blind but also in the second not only in their Barbarous Worship their sacrificing of men but also in their humane Constitutions The Lacedaemonians held it lawful to steal if he were not taken 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the very Act. In Cyprus they held it lawful for their Virgins if they were poor to Prostitute themselves to get a Dowry or Portion By the Law of the 12 Tables a man might kill his Wife if she smelt of Wine or Counterfeited his Keys And among the Romans if a slave had killed his Master all his fellow-slaves were put to death with him though never so Innocent By the same Laws a Father might thrice sell his Child they might tear their Debtors in pieces if they were not solvent Thus blind were men in their own concerns and what made for humane Commerce Much more in the way of pleasing God and the Interest of the World to come Bless God for this righteous Law Again Secondly 'T is Everlasting Righteousness not only Righteous at the first giving out but Righteous in all Ages and Times and should we slight this rule that will hold for ever In the World new Lords new Laws Men vary and change their designs and purposes Priviledges granted to day may be repealed to morrow but this word will hold true for ever Our Justification by Christ is irrevocable that part of Righteousness is Everlasting Be sure you are Justified now upon terms of the Gospel and you shall be Justified for ever your Forgiveness is an Everlasting Forgiveness and your Peace is an everlasting Peace Ier 33. 34. I will remember your sins no more So the other Righteousness of Sanctification 't is for ever Approve your selves to God now and you will approve your selves at the Day of Judgment 2. Use is Exhortation 1. Let this take us off from seeking things that have no Continuance in them The Everlastingness of the Word is opposed often to the Transitory Vanities of the World 1 Pet. 1. 23 24. All flesh is grass and the glory of man as the flower of grass The grass withereth and the flower falleth away but the Word of the Lord indureth for ever Why should we hunt after that glory that soon fadeth So 1 Ioh. 2. 17. The World passeth away and the lust thereof but he that doth the Will of God abideth for ever All these things Change and move up and down by divers Circumrotations we sit fast and loose in the World but in the Covenant of Grace all is sure 2. Let us choose this Word to live by that we may be partakers of that Everlasting Good which cometh by it Oh let us regard it Eternity is concerned in it If the Righteousness of God be Everlasting let us begin betimes to get interested in it and persevere in it to the end Let us begin betimes for we have but a few dayes to live here in the World and so either to express our thankfulness or lay a foundation for our eternal hopes Therefore let us set about the work the sooner And let us persevere our care to keep this law must be perpetual not like Temporaries many will carry themselves well and godly for a while but afterwards fall off this doth not become an Everlasting Law there is the same goodness in Gods Law that there was at first 3. Let us comfort our selves with the Everlastingness of the Priviledges offered to us in Gods Word The redeemed of the Lord should have an Everlasting joy Isa. 35. 10. And the Ransomed of the Lord shall return and come to Zion with songs and everlasting joy upon their heads Let other things end and change as they will our right by the new Covenant changeth not Sometimes we are in request in the World and sometimes in disgrace but Gods love is everlasting and sure We are not in with him to day and out to morrow he hath dealt with us upon sure and unchangeable terms nay when you die you may comfort
Indeed men that wholly forget God in Prosperity will not find his Word a delight in Adversity Psalm 30. 6 7 8. In my prosperity I said I shall never be moved Lord by thy Favour thou hast made my Mountain to stand strong Thou didst hide thy face and I was troubled I cryed unto thee O Lord c. 2. They prepare us for them The sweetness of the Word is best perceived under the bitterness of the Cross God and his Word are never so sweet to the Saints as in Adversity Psalm 94. 19. In the multitude of my thoughts within me thy comforts delight my Soul And 2 Cor. 1. 5. As the sufferings of Christ abound in us so our consolation also aboundeth by Christ. Use. Let no Calamity drive you from the Commandements for there you will find more delight than trouble can take from you 1 Ioh. 3. 1 2. Shall the Reproach of Men have more power to make us sad than the Honour of being Gods Children hath power to make us Joyful Let us be ashamed that we can delight no more Iames 1. 2. My Brethren count it all Ioy when yee fall into divers Temptations Matth. 5. 12. Rejoyce and be exceeding glad for great is your reward in Heaven For so persecuted they the Prophets which were before you And 1 Thes. 1. 6. Yee became followers of us and of the Lord having received the Word in much Affliction with Ioy of the Holy Ghost SERMON CLXI PSALM CXIX VER 144. The Righteousness of thy Testimonies is Everlasting give me Understanding and I shall live IN these Words First The Excellency of the Word is again acknowledged The Righteousness of thy Testimonies is Everlasting Secondly A Prayer is thereupon grounded give me Understanding Thirdly The Fruit and Benefit of being heard in that Prayer and I shall Live Because the Righteousness of the Word is Everlasting therefore we should beg Understanding and this sound Understanding maketh way for Life First He beginneth with the Praise of the Word the Righteousness of thy testimonies The Word of God is contemned by none but such as know not the Excellency of it both in its own nature and the fruits of it The sum of the whole Octonary is here repeated Doctrine That the Righteousness and everlasting Righteousness of Gods Testimonies should be deeply imprinted on our Minds and often thought of by us This stuck so in Davids Mind that he could hardly get off from the Meditation Here I shall shew you I. Wherein the Everlasting Righteousness of Gods Testimonies consisteth II. What it is to have them deeply imprinted upon our Minds and when they are so III. Why they should be deeply imprinted upon our Minds I. Wherein the Everlasting Righteousness of Gods Testimonies consisteth Answer In two things in the Tenour of them and in the Effects 1. In the Tenour And In that those Terms which God dealeth with us are never Repealed but stand in force to all Eternity 'T is an Everlasting truth that he that believeth in Christ shall be saved and that without Holiness no man shall see God The Moral part of the Word is unchangeable and shall never be altered the same Duties and the same Priviledges do alwayes continue Our Lord telleth us Matth. 5. 18. Till Heaven and Earth pass away one jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the Law till all be fulfilled The truth of the Doctrine of the Law and Prophets is more firm and stable than the frame of Heaven and Earth Heaven and Earth may be dissolved and made void but his Law shall never be made void both in that part wherein he comforts us by his Promises and that part wherein he sets down our Duty we are Eternally obliged to Obedience and God hath Eternally obliged himself to Reward and Bless There is an Everlasting and Unchangeable Ordinance by which we are bound to God and he hath bound himself to us We should not change and God will not having past his Word to us The Everlasting Obligation on us dependeth on Gods Authority the Everlasting Obligation on Gods part dependeth on his own Truth and Veracity And though we are poor changeable Creatures God hath interposed his Authority Mal. 3. 6. I am the Lord I change not Iam. 1. 17. In him there is no change or shadow of turning God would change if his truth was changed but that is Everlasting 'T is not in the Power of men to annihilate and change the Law they may break the Law but they cannot annihilate and change the Law Though it be not fulfilled by them yet it shall be fulfilled in them and upon them And God will not Annihilate the Law for God cannot change or deny himself in those things wherein he hath ingaged his Truth to the Creature he is Immutable and Infallible Another Expression is Ier. 33. 20 21. If you can break my Covenant of the day and my Covenant of the night that there shall not be day and night in their Seasons then may also my Covenant be broken with David my Servant the one shall not fail no more than the other God compareth the firmness of his Covenant with those things that are most unalterable the standing of Heaven and earth the constant Course of Night and Day The Ceremonial Law was not abrogated till fulfilled in Christ. This is Gods last Will the Terms of Life and Salvation are still the same other Conditions are not to be expected 2. In regard of the Effects These Testimonies endure for ever both in a way of Grace and Glory In a way of Grace the Word worketh in the Heart an Eternal principle and carries us beyond Temporal things 2 Cor. 4. 18. 1 Pet. 1. 23. Being born again not of corruptible Seed but incorruptible the Word of God which liveth and abideth for ever The Word worketh in us an Eternal Principle which will abide with us as the root of Everlasting Blessedness They that have served God faithfully shall not be deprived of Eternal Glory Now in Glory the Word abideth for ever for though the Souls of men are Immortal yet they have not in them a principle of Blessed Immortality Sin is the root of Eternal Perdition but Grace of Incorruption and Eternal Happiness The Wicked though the substance of their Soul and Body shall not be annihilated but upheld unto all Eternity by the mighty Power of God in the midst of Eternal Torments yet all their Glory and Pleasure shall be consumed and they themselves shall ever languish under the Wrath of an highly provoked and then irreconcilable God 1 Ioh. 2. 17. He that doth the will of God abideth for ever The wicked shall indure by the Word of God 't is a living death in regard of the execution of Eternal Wrath upon them that reject it and the performance of Everlasting Blessings which are promised to them that receive and obey it this will abide when other things fade The Word of God keepeth the Godly and
Trouble and I will deliver thee and thou shalt glorifie me So Col. 4. 2. Continue in Prayer and watch in the same with thanksgiving We are to gather up matter of Praise to God we should not be so barren in gratulation if we did observe more of these experiences You would not only be glorifying God by way of invocation but Commemoration you may Commend him to others from your own experience Psal. 34. 8. O taste and see that the Lord is good 1. Use. Is to reprove them that throw away their Prayers and never look after them that play with such a Duty as this as Children that shoot away their Arrows and never look where they light Surely this argueth great Contempt and low Thoughts of God Formality in prayer and Stupidness of Heart It bespeaks low thoughts of God and of his Providence for if they did believe such a particular Providence reacheth to all persons and things they would study to produce some of these Experiences to be able to say I was in such a streight and God delivered me Psal. 34. 6. This poor man cryed unto the Lord and he heard him Great Formality in Prayer for if we pray not out of Course but in good earnest we cannot but hearken after the speeding of our requests Great stupidity of Spirit hearts that have any sense of life in them are observing Gods dealings and suit their Carriage accordingly Lively Christians are putting Cases 2. Use. Is to press us to hearken after the Answer of our Prayers Gods Children do so and get much Comfort thereby and Evidence of his Love Psal. 66. 18 19. But verily God hath heard me he hath attended to the voice of my Cry 't is no small favour and respect we have from Gods love to us 't is a great owning of our Persons our Mercies are the sweeter there is a double lustre and beauty put upon them when they come in the way of prayer out of the hand of God not by a Common Providence but by Covenant and by vertue of the Covenant put in suit by us as well as granted by God which is a pledge of God's respect to us To this End 1. Be perswaded that God will hear you and answer you when you pray according to his Will 1 Ioh. 5. 14. And this is the Confidence that we have in him that if we ask any thing according to his Will he heareth us This is absolutely necessary for all that will pray aright and mind what they do for none can come to God aright but those that are perswaded they shall be the better for coming to him Iames 1. 5. Pray in Faith nothing wavering There must be a relying upon God if indeed we pray to him He that expects little in Prayer will neither be much in it nor serious about the answer of it 2. This Answer must be heedfully observed Careless Spirits will not easily discern it Psal. 130. 5 6. I wait for the Lord my soul doth wait and in his Word do I hope My soul waiteth for the Lord more then they that watch for the Morning I say more then they that watch for the Morning As those that watched in the Temple for the dawning of the day this earnest waiting is an happy Token when we make much of prayers they are not lost Therefore as they watched for the Word Brethren so must you wait upon God for some discovery of his Love by a gracious answer and return unto your Prayers 3. Sometimes God giveth an answer presently sometime it may be after some competent space of time 1. Sometimes presently as Cornelius in the time of Prayer and while the duty is a doing God giveth in some tokens of Acceptance as an Angel was sent to Cornelius at the ninth hour which was the hour of prayer to assure him that his prayers were heard and duties accepted Acts 10. 3. Peter and Iohn went up to pray at the ninth hour Acts 3. 1. So Daniel Whilst I was speaking and praying and Confessing my sin yea whilest I was speaking in prayer the Man Gabriel was caused to fly swiftly The Lord is ready to answer the prayers of his servants in the very instant of their praying So Acts 4. 3. While they prayed they were filled with the Holy-Ghost The Cases brought are singular and extraordinary as to the token and manner of Assistance but as to the substance of the Blessing 't is the common practice of Gods free Grace Isa. 58. 10. When they call I will answer while they are yet speaking I will hear Acts 12. 12 18. A Company was met together in Prayer when Peter in Prison heard of the time of his Deliverance 2. Sometimes a good while after the prayers are in Gods book Mal. 3. 16. Now these must be waited for My God will hear me Mich. 7. 7. We cannot say assoon as the prayer is made for he saith I will wait for the God of my Salvation Paul prayed thrice for the removal of the Messenger of Satan 2 Cor. 12. then God said My grace is sufficient for thee We must knock again and again God heareth assoon as the prayer is made but he taketh his own time to dispatch an answer Abraham prayeth for a Child but many years pass over till he hath him in his Armes 4. When God giveth an Answer own it as an Answer sometimes we will not take notice of what is before our Eyes out of deep distress of Spirit 't is said Iob 9. 16. Though I had called and he had answered yet would I not believe that he had hearkned to my Voice Thus we mis-interpret Gods dealings in our troubles that we will not own Gods work as an Answer 5. Consider the several ways how God giveth Answer to his Peoples prayers 1. Extraordinarily as in Ancient time so an Angel was sent to Cornelius to tell him his Prayers were heard So to Daniel so to Abel Heb. 11. 4. probably by Fire from Heaven by Vision to Abraham by Voyce or visible token to Moses and the High-Priest in the Tabernacle of the Congregation from above the Mercy-seat But these returns were proper to those times 2. Ordinary and this several wayes 1 Either by granting the Mercy prayed for as to Hannah 1 Sam. 1. 27. For this Child I prayed and the Lord hath given me the Petition I asked of him So to David Psal. 21. 2. Thou hast given him his hearts desire and hast not with-holden the request of his lips So often to his People when they have humbly sought to him Sometimes instantaneous at the very praying 1 Sam. 7. 9 10. And Samuel cryed unto the Lord for Israel and the Lord heard him and as Samuel was offering up the burnt-offering the Philistines drew neer to Battel against Israel and the Lord discomfited the Philistines Or by degrees when God is preparing Instruments before he giveth Consummate deliverance Acts 7. 34. I have heard their groanings and I will send thee into Aegypt Their
have passed by them but yet he came with an intent to appease the storm and help them Christ taketh notice of the distresses of his People but they shall not know so much but delayeth to help till all their patience be spent and yet then seemeth to pass by for their thorough Trial and exercise and to move them more earnestly to pray Sometimes he giveth them a seeming contrary Answer and Rebuke instead of an expression of favour he seemeth to pursue us in Anger God is the main Party against us we have to do with an offended God but yet we should not quit him but follow him when he seemeth to forsake us and fly to him when he is pursuing us in hot displeasure Such is the admirable power of Faith that it dares call on an angry God and follow him when he goeth away from us and lay hold on him when he smiteth and cast itself into his Arms in the midst of his Rebukes and Frowns Ionah 2. 4. Then I said I am cast out of thy sight yet will I look again towards thy holy Temple God seemeth to cast us off as those he will not favour or care for which is a great trouble to a Child of God who liveth by his favour and valueth that above all things else now for such an one to be rejected by God in his own sense and feeling it goeth near his heart yet in such a case we should not cast away our Confidence nor give over all addresses to God but yet look to him and wait upon him 5. Whether God answereth or no it is the duty of Faith to answer it self The Answer of his Providence is not so sure as the Answer of his Word and that Faith hath to do with See Psal. 6. 4. Return O Lord deliver my soul save me for thy mercies sake Compare 8 9. verses The Lord hath heard the voice of my weeping the Lord hath heard the voice of my supplications the Lord will receive my prayer When trembling for fear of wrath yet in prayer his heart groweth confident as if it had received news of an Answer from Heaven Psal. 55. 2. Attend unto me and hear me compared with verse 19. My God shall hear and afflict them He is confident of it that the Prayer should not miscarry So Psal. 53. 1 2. Deliver me from mine enemies O my God defend me from them that rise up against me deliver me from the workers of iniquity and save me from bloody men Verse 10. The God of my mercy shall prevent me God shall let me see my desire upon mine enemies Faith sees its own deliverance in the Promise and All-sufficiency of God when we have prayed according to Gods will we should take our prayer for granted and leave it lying at Gods feet 1 Ioh. 5. 14. And this is the confidence that we have in him that if we ask any thing according to his Will he heareth us Gods delay is not always an Argument of his hatred but some more glorious purpose which is to be helped on by prayer Iohn 11. 5 6. When he had heard therefore that he was sick he abode two dayes still in the same place where he was I observe again that he not only repeateth his Prayer but reneweth the Promise of Obedience to shew that it was no vanishing Notion but a settled Conclusion As Christ maketh Peter profess his love thrice to ingage him the more Iohn 21. So David I will keep thy Statutes and again I will keep thy Testimonies as if he had said indeed Lord I will it is the settled purpose of my heart to return to thee in the sincere Obedience of my whole Life The Note is Doctrine 2. That Purposes and Promises of Obedience should not be slightly made but with the greatest advertency and seriousness of Mind I. Because we are usually too slight in devoting our selves to God Deut. 5. 27 28 29. Go thou near and hear all that the Lord our God shall say and speak thou unto us all that the Lord our God shall speak unto thee and we will hear it and do it And the Lord heard the voice of your words when you spake unto me and the Lord said unto me I have heard the voice of the words of this People which they have spoken unto thee they have well said all that they have spoken O that there were such a heart in them that they would fear me and keep all my Commandments alwaies that it might be well with them and with their Children for ever The Israelites again when Ioshua puts them to the question whether they would serve the Lord or other gods Ioshua 24. 18 19. We will serve the Lord for he is our God Ioshua said unto them ye cannot serve the Lord for he is an holy God What is the Reason men are so slight Partly because they measure their strength by the present pang of Devotion that is upon them not considering the latent principle of sin and that proneness to transgress that is in their hearts Partly they take up duty by the lump and the general bulk and view of it without sitting down and counting the charges as Christ advises Luk. 14. whether they can be content to bear difficulties renounce lusts crucifie the flesh with the affections and lusts thereof A foolish builder doth not think of stormes Matth. 7. if his building stand for the present he is satisfied Partly because men will promise God fair to be rid of the present Anguish and Troubles yield to any thing to be out of the present danger but when they are out they seldom regard the Vowes of their distress as those Psal. 78. 34. to 37. made great Promises but their heart was not right with God neither were they stedfast in his Covenant Partly too when they are out of a Temptation and lusts are not stirring they are other men then when in Temptation and so think all will be easie 2. Because the nature of the work calleth for advertency and seriousness because it is a work of the greatest moment and so must be done with the greatest deliberation This devoting our selves to God both intitleth us to all the Comforts of Christianity and engageth us to all the Duties of it It entitleth us to all the Comforts you enter your selves Heirs to the Covenant of Grace when you enter into the bond of the holy Oath or give your hand to the Lord to be his people 1 Cor. 3. 22. All things are yours because you are Christs and Christ is Gods If you have owned Christ as your dearest Saviour and Soveraign Lord with Love Thankfulness and Subjection and given him the supream command of your Souls then you are Christs and God is yours and all things yours Glory and Salvation shall be yours in the World to come Grace Help Maintenance Ordinances and Providences shall be yours in the present World and Death as the connection between the two Worlds as the
draw us to the same Fountain of Grace for Pardon and Life to our selves These Examples do more than the Doctrinal declaration because they do not onely shew that Mercy and Grace may be had but that it hath been attained unto by those who in all respects did judge themselves and were really unworthy of it as unable to lay hold of it and to make good use of it afterwards as we our selves The Ice is broken the Ford ridden before us therefore we may venture our Salvation and Acceptance with God upon the same Grace 3 His former love to our selves At first he took us with all our faults and betrothed us unto himself in Loving-kindness and tender Mercy Hosea 2. 19. and therefore he will still do us good freely and bountifully And so we may answer all Objections from Gods wonted goodness towards us When he hath entred into Covenant with us out of his Love and Bounty we may well expect that upon the same terms he should keep Covenant The continuance is more easily believed and asked than the beginning and first grant Psal. 36. 10. O continue thy loving-kindness unto them that know thee and thy righteousness to the upright in heart When by Experience we have found what it can do for unworthy creatures we may the better expect it should help us upon all occasions 4. The End why God exerciseth it which is his Glory even the glory of his Grace and Loving-kindness That that might be acknowledged and exemplified by those that are partakers of it even to be altogether glorious Eph. 1. 6. To the praise of his glorious grace wherein he hath accepted us in the beloved That it may be owned and esteemed as free and liberal and working of its own accord We only cross Gods End when we do not plead it admire it and esteem it highly and improve it for our Comfort for this is Gods End in the whole business of our Salvation from first to last that Men and Angels might be excited to set forth the praises of his rich Mercy and free Grace And here is a new incouragement to ask gracious supplies of God according to his Loving-kindness or upon the account of that Attribute even that his Grace may be more esteemed and exalted in our hearts Psal. 109. 21. But do thou for me O God the Lord for thy names-sake because thy mercy is good deliver thou me It concerneth him in point of his chief honour and glory to do good to his People that he may be known and owned to be a good and a gracious or loving God Use Well then If this be the great plea of the Saints 1. Let us meditate often of the Loving-kindness of God of his pitying and pardoning and lovingly intreating poor sinful and broken-hearted creatures that come to him This should be our daily Meditation bonum est primum potentissimum nomen Dei saith Damascene It is the first-born and chiefest name of God We cannot conceive of God by any thing that concerneth us so much as his Goodness by that we know him and for that we love him We admire him with Reverence for his other Titles but this doth first insinuate with us and command our respect to him The first Temptation that ever was in the World was to weaken the conceit of his Goodness in the heart of the creature as if God were envious harsh and sowre in his restraints still it is a great Temptation yet God is good to Israel Psal. 73. 1. Oh let us fortifie our Hearts with frequent thoughts of his Goodness and Loving-kindness As we should do this every day so especially upon the Sabbath day Psal. 92. 2. I will shew forth thy loving-kindness in the morning and thy faithfulness every night We should do this with all the advantage we can use more especially when we are in his presence conversing with him and ministring before him Psal. 48. 9. We have thought of thy loving-kindness O God in the midst of thy Temple We should often and seriously think when we come to God surely now we have to do with a loving and gracious God whether we wait upon him in Prayer or the Word or Sacraments if any prayer to make or comfort to expect 2. Observe the fruits and effects of it and value them They that are Students in Providence shall not seek long before they find God to be a God full of loving-kindness and tender Mercy Psal. 107. Whoso is wise and will observe these things even they shall understand the loving-kindness of the Lord. Few regard it or look after it but they that do pry into the course of his dealings shall not be without many instances of Gods love and free favour to them now when you have found it out value it Psal. 63. 3. Because thy loving-kindness is better than life my lips shall praise thee You shall have rich experiences such as will fill you with joy unspeakable and glorious to be esteemed above all comforts whatsoever 3. Praise God for it This should be a lively motive to praise him Psal. 138. 2. I will worship towards thy Temple and praise thy name for thy loving-kindness and for thy truth These two are the cause of all we have 't is without any deserving of ours only because we have to do with a gracious and faithful God Isa. 63. 7. I will mention the loving-kindness of the Lord and the praises of the Lord according to all that the Lord hath bestowed on us and the great goodness towards the house of Israel which he hath bestowed on them according to his mercies and according to the multitude of his loving-kindness The Prophet speaketh as if he could never find words enough or pregnant enough to express his sense of Gods gracious dealing so bountifully had he dealt with his People 4. Let us improve this loving-kindness and readiness of Gods Mercy to help penitent Supplicants 1. In a way of Trust the least degree of which is enough to keep the sinner from running away from him how grievous soever his offences and demerits be yet come to him say as David Psal. 51. 1. Have mercy upon me O God according to thy loving-kindness according unto the multitude of thy tender mercies blot out my transgressions Yea make it a ground of confidence and support Psal. 69. 16. Hear me O Lord for thy loving-kindness is good turn unto me according to the multitude of thy tender mercies 2. In a way of Fear that we may not interrupt the sense of it or stop the current of his good will Psal. 26. 3. Thy loving-kindness is before mine eyes and I have walked in thy truth 'T is the ground of all our Confidence lose not that the Lord taketh notice of them that trust in his goodness Nahum 1. 7. The Lord is good a strong hold in the day of trouble and he knoweth them that trust in him There is one word yet undiscussed According to thy Iudgment Some
greenness and not cut down it withereth before any other herb so are the paths of all that forget God and the Hypocrites hope shall perish A wicked Man cannot lift up his head above others for want of Gods favour to uphold him as the Rush or Flag cannot grow without mire or water the Prosperity of wicked Men when it is most green and flourishing yet wants its sustenance which is Gods Blessing This is the condition of wicked Men in the opinion of the good But what is it in his own opinion Take him in his serious and sober Moods he always liveth Miserably and expecting a Change as knowing that God oweth him an ill turn Iob 15. 21. A dreadful sound is in his ear in his prosperity the destroyer shall come upon him He trembleth secretly as if danger were alwayes near therefore cruel and mischievous against whom they fear that shut the door against their own danger for every thing that is fearful will be cruel 2. If he fall into Adversity in their Troubles they have not a God to go unto nor Promises to build upon therefore it is said Prov. 15. 29. The Lord is far from the wicked but he heareth the prayer of the Righteous Gods Children have ready access to a sure Friend and are assured of welcome and audience when they come but they are at their Wits end know not which way to turn Iob 15. 22. He believeth not that he shall return out of darkness and he is waited for of the sword that is full of Terrors of Conscience and distracting disturbing Fears hath no hope to be delivered but lives as if he had a sword hanging over his head Use. I. To shew us the Reason why the people of God when they grow wicked are often disappointed in that Salvation which they expect Isa. 59. 11. We look for judgment but there is none for Salvation but it is far from us Why because they had exceedingly sinned against God and scandalized their profession there was an horrible depravation of the People of God in those times and therefore all their Prayers and Fasts and Seekings of God could not prevail for a Deliverance Use. II. Comfort in a good Cause wherein the Godly are opposed by the Wicked there is a double Comfort 1. Because the Prosperity Power and Pride of the Wicked is not to be regarded for though they flourish for a while and all things flow in upon them according to hearts desire yet Salvation is far from them God is ingaged both for the rectitude of his Nature the quality of his Office as Judge of the World and the tenour of his Covenant to employ his Power and Terror for their Ruin and though he may for a while spare them and they take occasion from this indulgence to do more and more wickedly yet you should not be dismayed if you see them ingaged in wayes or courses that are naught and wicked you may say I know they cannot prosper in them when they are lifted up in the prosperity of their Affairs you should lift uy you hearts by Faith see a worm at the root of their happiness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. 2. Because by the Rule of Contraries if Salvation be far from the Wicked that seek not Gods Statutes then Deliverance is near to the Godly that fear God and desire to be faithful with him how hard soever their Condition seemeth to be for the present Psal. 85. 9. Surely his salvation is nigh unto them that fear him You should be confident of it they that please God cannot be always Miserable it is nearer than we think of or can see for the present there is a surely or a note of averment put upon it It is better be with the Godly in Adversity then with the wicked in Prosperity when they are men appointed as sheep for the slaughter yet there is a way of Ransom and Escape but the Wicked at their best are in the appointment of God as the stalled Oxe or as Swine fatted for Destruction when fattest then nearest to Destruction and Slaughter Secondly As to Eternal Salvation so they are in a dangerous Case 1. The Phrase here used by the Psalmist seemeth to be used to obviate their vain Conceit they think they shall do well enough and have as much to shew for Heaven as the best it is near in their Conceit but far indeed 1 Cor 6. 9. Be not deceived know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the Kingdom of God Thoughts of impunity are natural to us those that are in the ready way to Hell are apt to think they shall get Heaven at last as if God would turn Day into Night but alas it is an eternal Truth Salvation is far from the wicked 2. There is somewhat of a Meiosis in the expression less being said than is intended the Man of God saith that Salvation is far but he implyeth that Damnation is near certainly the one it doth imply the other Hab. 6. 8. The ground that beareth bryars and thorns is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nigh unto cursing They are upon the borders of Hell and ready to drop into those Eternal Flames which shall consume Gods Adversaries 3. Once again The longer they continue Wicked the further off is their Salvation every day farther off from Heaven and nearer to Hell A Godly Man the more progress he maketh in Vertue the nearer he is to his Salvation Rom. 13. 11. Now is your Salvation nearer then when ye first believed Not only nearer in point of time but nearer in the preparation of their hearts not because older but because better and so by consequence wicked men go farther and farther off and therefore they are said to treasure up Wrath against the day of Wrath Rom. 2. 5. Every Sin they commit puts them a degree further off from Salvation as every degree of Grace is a step nearer Heaven Reasons 1. The inseparable connection that is between Priviledges and Duties the Gospel offereth Salvation conditionally if we fors●…e the Condition we fall short of the Priviledge and therefore if we be wicked salvation is far from us When God took Abraham into Covenant with him he doth not tell him only what Priviledge he should enjoy but also bindeth him to walk suitably Gen. 17. 1. I am God Almighty walk before me and be thou perfect God will take care of our Safety if we will take care of our Duty the Covenant is called a Bond Ezek. 2●… 37. I will bring you into the bond of the Covenant because it hath a tye upon us as well as upon God we are not at our own Liberty to walk as we list there are bonds upon us not vincula carceris the bonds of a Prison Gins and Fetters but vincula nuptiarum the bonds of Wedlock Now they that cast away these bonds from them as the wicked do Psal. 2. 3. Let us break their bands asunder and cast away their cords from us and
will be their own men and walk by their own Will have no Title to the Priviledges that accrue by the Marriage such licentious Spirits are at liberty but to their own wo they have a liberty to go to Hell and undo their own souls It was the Wisdom of God to bind us to displeasing duties by the proposal of Comfortable priviledges every man would desire to be saved and to be happy for evermore but corrupt nature is against Holiness now without Holiness there is no Happiness The conditional Promise doth more bind and draw the heart to it when we lay hold of it by yielding to perform the Condition required then may we groundedly expect the priviledge promised We would have Salvation but we cannot unless we submit to Gods terms for Christ came not to gratifie our selfish desires but to subdue us to God we would have sin pardoned we would be freed from the Curse of the Law and the flames of Hell but this can never be while we walk in our own ways and are averss to Holiness of Heart and Life for God would ever sweeten Duties by Felicities 2. Because of the prefect contrariety between the Temper of Wicked Men and this Salvation so that they are wholly uncapable of it 1. They care not for God who is the Author of this Salvation he is not in all their Thoughts Words and Wayes Psal. 10. 1. The wicked through the pride of his countenance will not seek after God God is not in all his thoughts They are far from him though he be not far from every one of them he is within them and round about them in the effects of his Power and Goodness but they never think of him nor take care to serve and please him that is the Reason in the Text they seek not thy Statutes If they seem to draw nigh to him at any time in some cold and customary Duties they do but draw nigh to him with their Lips but their hearts are far from him Isa. 29. 13. This people draw near to me with their mouth and with their lips do honour me but have removed their heart far from me and their fear toward me is taught by the precepts of men Or as it is in another Prophet Ier. 12. 2. Thou art near in their mouth but far from their reins They profess to honour God with a little outward and bodily service but have no Love and Affection at all to him 2. They slight Christ who is the procurer of this Salvation however they could like him as their Saviour they like him not as their Guide and Governour So he complaineth Psal. 81. 11. My people would not hearken to my voice and Israel would no●…e of me And Luk. 19. 14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 His citizens hated him and sent a messenger after him saying we will not have this man to reign over us Men cannot endure his Bonds and Yokes Psal. 2. 3. Let us break his bands asunder and cast away his cords from us that they should deny themselves their own Wisdom and Will and wholly give up themselves to the Conduct and Will of Christ. It is his spiritual Kingdom that is most contrary to our Carnal Affections for if there were no King in Israel then every man might do what is best in his own eyes They would not be crossed in their Licentiousness of Life and therefore when Christ bringeth his Bonds and Cords with him they set him at nought 3. They despise the Word in which we have the offer of this Salvation and Counsel and Direction given us how to obtain it There God calleth upon us to be saved 1 Tim. 2. 4. He will have all men to be saved and to come unto the knowledge of the Truth but most slight his Voice and thereby put all hope far away from themselves See Acts 16. 26. compared with the 48 verse in the 26 verse To you is the word of this salvation sent Mark first he calleth the Gospel the word of salvation because there we have the way and means set forth how it was procured for us there we have Counsel given us what we must do on our parts that we may be interessed in it there also we have the Promise and Assurance on Gods part that so doing we shall obtain it Mark again he saith this word of Salvation was sent to them he doth not say brought but sent The preaching of the Gospel is governed by Gods special Providence When Salvation is offered according to his Mind and in his Name we must look upon it as a Message from Heaven directed to us for our good not by the Charity or good Will of Men but the Grace of God Now if you despise this what will be the Issue see Verse 46. Since ye put away the Word of God from you and judge your selves unworthy of everlasting life that is by this Obstinacy and Perverseness you become uncapable of receiving benefit by it That Phrase ye judge your selves is very notable there is a judging our selves unworthy that maketh way for the applying of the Gospel unto us rather than taking it from us as the Publican judged himself and went home justified but an humble self-judging is not meant here but an Obstinate Contemptuous refusal of Eternal Life All Unconverted men are unworthy of Eternal Life but they that refuse Grace offered judge themselves unworthy of Eternal Life put it out of all question clear God if he thus judge them by their Fact declare their Condemnation just 4. They refuse the beginnings of this Salvation and foregoing Pledges which God vouchsafeth in this World by way of taste and earnest Grace is the beginning and pledge of Glory to be turned from Sin is a great part of our Salvation Mar. 1. 21. He shall save his people from their sins It is not only salvation when freed from Misery but salvation when freed from Sin not only from evil after Sin Hell and Punishment but from the evil of Sin from a proud lazy self-loving Heart He hath saved us by the washing of water Tit. 3. 5. When the power of Sin is broken and the life of Grace is begun in the Soul then do we begin to be saved the Spirit of holiness is the Earnest of our Inheritance and an Earnest is part of the sum Eph. 1. 13 14. In whom ye also trusted after that ye heard the word of truth the Gospel of our salvation in whom also after that ye believed ye were sealed with the holy spirit of promise which is the earnest of our Inheritance until the redemption of the purchased possession to the praise of his glory Therefore holiness is a part of Eternal Salvation now without this we cannot have the other part They that slight holiness shall never see God 5. They despise the Salvation it self rightly understood partly because they only value it under a fleshly Notion as a state of Happiness and Ease not as a state of immaculate
whether with such scrupulous observation of hours is not certain Secondly The subject-matter thy Righteous Iudgments whereby is meant 1. God's most Righteous Laws and Precepts called the Ordinances of Judgment and Justice Isaiah 58. we cannot sufficiently bless God for the benefit of his Word 2. The dispensations of his Providence suiting therewith whether they concern us or others The Word is fulfilled in the punishment of the wicked and in giving the promised reward to the Righteous All Gods dealings are Righteous Judgements and matter of praise is still offered to us from the comforts and blessings of his Providence there is no question of that the smallest of his mercies should not be overlooked though notable mercies should be continually remembred Psal. 68. 19. Not only dayly benefits but great deliverances are a standing ground of Thanksgiving Psal. 66. 2. Sing forth the honour of his Name make his praise glorious shew forth his Salvation from day to day especially now the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ and the great Salvation is more clearly revealed we should never think of it nor read it nor hear of it without some considerable act of Joy and thankfulness 2dly So for the dispensations of God to others in protecting his people in punishing his Enemies 'T is a great confirmation of Faith to see Promises and Threatnings fulfilled on others how punctually God maketh good his Word to all that trust in him Psal. 18. 30. On all those that reject it and despise it as we have heard so have we seen Psal. 48. 8. They that believe the Word of God and do mark what is foretold in the Word shall find the event and work of Providence suitable to the prediction 3. Gods Righteous Judgments afflicting of us doth also yield matter of praise as they work together for good to such as Love him Rom. 8. 28. and the saddest corrections afford necessary and profitable instructions Psal. 94. 12. Blessed is the man whom thou chastenest and teachest him out of thy Law Psal. 119. 71. It is good for me that I have been afflicted that I might learn thy Statutes though not barely for the afflictions themselves yet for their fruit and issue that our souls are bettered and humbled by them and as we see the faithfulness of God in them Doctrine That the People of God should never cease lauding and magnifying the name of God because of his Righteous Iudgments David was never weary of praising God every day he praised God and often every day Love sweetned it to him We shall praise him evermore in the world to come there it will be our sole Imployment but even in this World we should not count it a burden but praise him yet more Psal. 71. 14. I will yet praise him more and more still magnifying his greatness Here I shall speak 1. Of the Duty that we should praise God 2. Of the Continuance that we should not cease praising God 3. The Grounds of it in the Text because of thy Righteous Judgements First The Duty Secondly The Motives to it First The Duty and there we have 1. The Nature of it 2. The Grounds of it 3. The Formality 4. The Fruit of it 1. The Nature of it There are three Words used in this matter blessing praising giving thanks Sometimes they are used promiscuously at other times there is a distinctness of notion to be observed blessing is used Psal. 103. 1. Bless the Lord O my Soul blessing relateth to his benefits it respects the works of God as beneficial to us his mercy Love and kindness to us we bless him who hath blessed us Eph. 1. 7. praise relateth to his excellencies as we may praise a stranger for his excellent endowments though we are not benefited by them Psal. III. 1. 2. Praise ye the Lord I will praise the Lord with my whole heart in the assembly of the upright and in the Congregation The works of the Lord are great sought out of all them that have pleasure therein 'T is a great part of our work to praise the Lord not that he at all needeth it for he is infinitely perfect but he deserveth it and by this means we testifie our love and reverence of him and strengthen our own dependance on him and gain others to him when we speak good of his name The other Word is Thanksgiving Psal. 107. 1 O give thanks unto the Lord for he is good This differeth from the two former because praise may be expressed in Words gratitude and thankfulness in Deed also it hath respect to Benefits as well as Blessings but we shew our Gratitude by Obedience but these are often co-incident Indeed there is a mixture of all in the true praising of God Excellencies and Benefits are to be acknowledged with Heart Mouth and Life 2. The Grounds of it Faith and Love must be at the bottom of our praise if we would not have it slight and formal For the more lively apprehensions we have of Gods Perfections which is the work of Faith and the more sensible of his Goodness and Mercy which is work of love the better is this service performed Therefore unless these praises flow from a Believing Loving soul they are but an empty prattle and a vain sound Faith is necessary that is the Eye of the soul to see the invisible one Heb. 11. 27. It giveth us an apprehension of the Lords excellencies in order to Love and Trust So also in order to praise Faith sets us before the Throne and doth withdraw the vail and sheweth us the Eternal God who liveth and reigneth for ever Dispensing all things powerfully according to his own Will that 's all the sight we have of God in this Life a nearer vision is referred to our future glory here we see him by Faith 2dly Love or a deep sense of the goodness of God which inlargeth the heart towards him and forceth open our lips that our mouths may shew forth his praise Psal. 51. 15. There he meaneth Gods giving a sweet and renewed sence of pardoning Mercy Psal. 63. 3. Because thy Loving kindness is better than Life my Lips shall praise thee an intimate sence of the Lords love sets the Tongue a work to speak of it praise then is the result of Faith and Love None else do it seriously delightfully but where these Graces reign and prevail in the Heart 3. The Formality of it is an acknowledgment of the Divine Vertues Benefits and Perfections manifested to us in his Word or Works or both these must be acknowledged by some outward Expression Words whereby we express our inward thoughts and apprehensions Our Tongues are called our Glory Psal. 57. 8. Awake up my glory Psal. 16. 9. My heart is glad and my glory rejoyceth When that Scripture is quoted Acts 2. 26. 't is said My tongue is glad 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So the Septuagint So called not only as speech is our Excellency above the Beasts but because God is
not temporal things alwayes in specie in kind but sometimes in value for these things may be recompensed and made up another way but no recompense can be given us for Eternal Life The Apostle speaketh with submission as to his Temporal Case but is peremptory as to his Eternal State 2 Tim. 4. 17 18. Notwithstanding the Lord stood with me and strengthned me that by me the preaching might be fully known and that all the Gentiles might hear and I was delivered out of the mouth of the Lion And the Lord shall deliver me from every evil work and preserve me to his heavenly Kingdom Again though we are not to neglect the meanest Promise yet our hearts should run more upon the things of another World A Christian honoureth God by his Faith about Temporal things when he will not cast away his Hope in the deepest Calamities but much more when the concernments of the World to come are of the greatest force with him and his Heart is wholly taken up about them Looking for the blessed hope Titus 2. 13. there is the Character of a Christian. Peace and freedom from Trouble in the World is not the main thing that we should look after but perfect Conformity to God and full Fruition of him God is the Chief Good and the fruition of him as Promised is the utmost happiness of the Creature a true Christian hath a greater indifferency to the things of this life all his business is to get an assurance of a better he can look through the troubles of the World and see sun-shine behind the back of the storm Psal. 42. 11. Why art thou cast down O my Soul why art thou disquieted within me hope thou in God for I shall yet praise him who is the health of my Countenance and my God But chiefly his Hope is layed up for him in Heaven Col. 1. 5. his portion is layed up for him and kept safe for his use in a sure place Here he knoweth he must be exercised with temptations and crosses In short Temporal things are desired for the sake of Spiritual and Eternal but Eternal for themselves a Traveller desireth an horse not for himself as for the conveniency of his journey so he expecteth temporal things as helps in his way and passage to Heaven Well then Salvation is the object of this hope temporal Salvation in order to eternal that we may have opportunities to glorifie God here and may not faint and be overwhelmed with incident Crosses This sentence is borrow'd from good old Iacob Gen. 49. 18. I have waited for thy Salvation O Lord. 'T is notable Iacob speaketh this when prophetically blessing his Children and when he cometh to Dan the good old man seemed to be carried beside his Purpose breaking out this of a sudden but in Spirit foreseeing the Miseries and Calamities which his Posterity should fall into for their Idolatry for Dan was the first Tribe that made defection therefore he opposeth his Hopes to his Fears We are told in the General Lam. 3. 26. It is good that a man should hope and quietly wait for the salvation of God that is for deliverance out of Troubles 't will be of great use to us in our Troubles to look to the issue of them The Lord doth not wholly cast off his People when he seemeth to break down the Hedge and Fence of his Providence and leave them in their Enemies hands he hath Salvation for a hoping People But mark 't is thy Salvation 't is good to come out of trouble upon Gods terms in Gods way and in Gods time others break Prison Psal. 62. 1. My soul hopeth in God from him cometh my Salvation Expect it from God and him alone 2. The Act of Grace I have hoped Hope in the general is the expectation of some future good as 't is a grace 't is some good thing promised by God Psal. 130. 5. I wait for the Lord my soul doth wait and in thy word do I hope I am judged for the hope of the promise saith Paul Acts 26. 6. So that Hope is the expectation of Good things promised Faith and Hope do both work upon the Promise but yet they are distinct Graces they differ in their Object The object of Faith is larger the whole Word of God is the object of Faith We believe things past present and to come but hope for things to come only among things to come we believe both Promises and Threatnings but the object of hope is only things desireable We believe the torments of Hell but do not hope for them in the Promises Faith believeth the promise and hope looketh for the thing promised Faith looketh to the Authority of the Promiser and Hope to the goodness of the thing promised Faith begets Hope and then Hope strengthens Faith Faith holdeth the Candle to the Soul whereby we see things invisible and to come and Hope maketh this light comfortable and ravishing to us We have comfort in Believing because hopes of Injoying to believe Eternal Life if we had not hopes to attain it were a comfortless thing Faith is before hope and leadeth us to the object and Hope followeth as Faith leadeth Faith assents to and applyeth the promise and Hope waiteth for the Accomplishment There are several sorts of Hope 1. There is a Vain and Groundless Hope the dream of a waking Man As if a Beggar should hope for the Succession of a Crown so there are some that dream of peace and safety and sudden destruction cometh upon them as travail upon a woman with child 1 Thess. 5. 3. This is an irrational thing 2. There is rational and probable hope but yet not so firm and certain it is likely it will be so but we have no absolute certainty 2 Cor. 9. 10. He that ploweth ploweth in hope and he that thresheth is partaker of his hope This is necessary for the carrying on of all humane Actions that a man should have probable hope of success for without it there is no labour or rational attempt 3. There is a firm and certain hope when we have assurance of the things hoped for so in the Commerce between us and God he giveth us assurance in his Promises by his Word and Oath that our Consolation might be the more strong when we fly for refuge to the hope that is set before us Heb. 6. 17. 18. There is a blessed and glorious Estate reserved to be injoyed in the Heavens this is set before us propounded as a prize in the view of the World Now when we take hold of this gain a right and title to it God would have our Consolation the more strong by the Assurance he hath given us in the Covenant made with us in Christ. Well then Christian hope is not a Conjecture or Probability but an Assurance many times all kind of Probability is contrary to Gods Assurance Rom. 4. 18. Abraham believed in hope against hope Credidit in spe gratiae contra
Reasons with us but a strong inclination of heart to hold us to it else we shall be off and on with God Neh. 4. 6. The building went on because the people had a mind to the work Nothing else will do it but this 3. The Utility We shall have more comfort in the sincerity of our Affections than we can ever have in the perfection of our Actions The People of God that cannot plead the perfection of what they do plead the reality of their Love Iohn 21. 17. Lord thou knowest all things and knowest that I love thee 4. Ex debito We owe so much love to God that every thing that he requireth should be welcom to us for Gods sake they are his Testimonies therefore your souls should love them and bind them upon your hearts and the rather because we are to do our Duty not as Servants but as Friends Ioh. 15. 14. Ye are my friends if ye do whatsoever I command you not ye are my Servants Between Friends there is a perfect harmony and agreement in Mind and Will to do a thing for loves sake to his Friend this is an Act of Friendship Not by servile constraint but to keep them as they are his we are to do what Christ commandeth because he commandeth it and that is to do it in love Otherwise we break the Commands when we keep them Besides the outward Act there must be a ready inclination and delight in our Work Carnal Men the good they do they would not do that obedience is not worthy the name of obedience that is extorted from us men had rather live ungodly if they durst for fear of Punishment 'T is but a slight kind of Religion when Fear prevaileth more than Love they do somewhat God willeth but they had rather leave it undone a man is never firmly gained to God till he prefer Service before Liberty and loveth holiness as holiness But how must we shew this Love By two things by being Aweful and Cheerful Grieved when we offend him Glad when we please him Aweful in avoiding what he forbiddeth and Cheerful in performing what he requireth 1. Aweful you dare not break with God in any one point but are very chary and tender of the Commandments keep them as the Apple of his Eye Prov. 7. 2. that's offended with the least dust or keeping of Jewels Prov. 6. 24. Bind them continually upon thy heart tye them about thy neck as Iewels Choice of them 2. By being Cheerful Ready and Forward to every good Work Psal. 110. 3. A willing People You need not stand urging and pressing the inclination of their hearts swayeth them A Man is hardly kept from that he loveth 1 Ioh. 2. 5. He that keepeth my word in him is the love of God perfected Secondly The Degree I love them exceedingly Doctrine Our Love to the Law must be an exceeding Love First In the General It noteth the height and intensiveness of our Love not a cold Love as Children love things but are soon put out of the humour but an high strong Love that will not easily be broken or diverted such as doth deeply affect the heart Psalm 119. 97. Oh how I love thy Law 't is my meditation all the day We that are so coldly affected to spiritual things do not understand the force of these Expressions An high and strong Love will break forth into Meditation Operation make us sedulous and serious in obeying God Psal. 119. 48. My hands will I lift up to thy Commandments which I have loved 1 Ioh. 2. 5. He that keepeth my Word in him is the love of God perfected Lift up our Eyes to the receiving our Ears to the hearing our Hands to the doing of thy Commandments this argueth Love Secondly The Prevalency Not only high and strong but to a prevailing Degree 1. Such as prevaileth over things without us This is such a Love as is greater than our Love to all other things Wealth Honour Credit Estate yea Life it self For if any thing be loved above out duty to God it will soon prove a snare to us Matth. 13. 44. Sold all to buy the field wherein the treasure was hid All for the Pearl of price a Believer seeth such a treasure in the Word of God that he maketh no reckoning of any Wordly thing in comparison of it But will part with whatever is pleasant and profitable to him to enjoy it rather than be deprived of his Grace if any fleshly sensitive Good or Interest lyeth closer to the heart than the Word of God it will in time prevail so as to make Gods Will and Glory stoop to it rather than this Interest shall be Renounced or Contradicted There is no talking of serving God till you have this prevailing Love and hate all things in comparison of your Duty to God Luk. 14. 26. If any man hate not Father and Mother 2. Such as doth prevail over Carnal Desires and evil Affections within us if it be not a Love that doth eat up and devour our Lusts within us if the bent of your hearts be not more God than for Sin See Baxter page 273 274 275 to 279. in his directions about Conversion There will be Evil in the best and some Good in the worst the critical difference lieth in the prevalent bent of the heart when your dislike of sin is greater than your love then you may say Rom. 7. 20. It is not I but sin that dwelleth in me There must be a renewed self that prevaileth above corrupt self Well then Rest not in some General approbation of the ways of God or inclination to Good but this prevailing Affection that Justleth Sin out of the Soul SERM. CLXXXIII PSALM CXIX VER 168. I have kept thy precepts and thy testimonies for all my ways are before thee DAvid still goeth on in his Plea he had spoken of his Faith and Love and now of his Fear We must 1. Labour for Faith to believe the Promises The Man of God beginneth there I have hoped for thy salvation 2. This Faith must work by Love that is his next step My soul loveth thy Testimonies exceedingly And 3. Love must breed in us a Reverend fear of Gods Majesty and a care to please him in all things This is the third part of the Plea mentioned in the Text I have kept thy precepts and thy testimonies c. In which words First His Integrity is again asserted Secondly The Reason and Incouragement of it First His Integrity is Asserted I have kept thy precepts and thy testimonies Where 't is Notable the Object of his Duty is expressed by two words Precepts and Testimonies Mandatis adjungit testimonia saith Calvin ut ostendat se non tantum agere de regala bene vivendi sed complecti totum salutis foedus He addeth the word Testimonies to that of Precepts to comprize the whole Covenant of Salvation Precepts signifyeth the Moral Law and Testimonies Doctrines of Grace Secondly The moving cause
do ill agree together but when God hath framed our hearts to Obedience then is praise comely in our Mouths Use. II. Is to direct us 1. How to pray for spiritual Grace if we would obtain it the Glory of God is the end of all Grace vouchsafed to us with this end must pray to God for it The end of our Petitions and Requests to God should be that we may be inabled to praise God then we seek God for God much more when we ask spiritual grace To ask temporal benefits to consume upon our Lusts is very bad and the ready way to bespeak our selves a denial Iames 4. 3. Ye ask and receive not because you ask amiss that you may consume it upon your lusts much more to ask spiritual gifts for our Lusts sake to beg God to open our Mouths to shew forth our own praises rather than his or knowledge to advance our selves as 't is a greater indignity to void our Excrements in a Cup of Gold for a Princes own drinking than in a Common Utensil Besides it sheweth our value of the Benefit to think of praise before we have obtained is Eph. 1. 6. To the praise of his glorious grace wherein he hath made as accepted in the beloved 2. It must be used and improved to that end when we have obtained we must not be proud of any spiritual gift but lay our Crown at Gods Feet 1 Cor. 4. 7. Who made thee to differ and what hast thou that thou hast not received We pervert the end of the end when we are puffed up and give shrewd suspition that 't is a common gift not saving grace when we are puffed up with it Use. III. Is Exhortation to press you to glorifie God and praise him if he hath given you any knowledge of himself and of the way of Salvation 1. This is Gods end in bestowing his Grace that in word and deed we should be to the praise of his glorious grace 1 Pet. 2. 9. That ye should shew forth the praises of him who hath called you out of darkness into his marvelous light 2. You were as indocile and unteachable as others only God made the difference Iob 11. 12. For vain man would be wise though man be born like the wild asses colt Ier. 31. 18. Like a bullock unaccustomed to the yoke And therefore the Glory must intirely redound to him You might have perished as a witless Fool and gone to Hell as others do but that God gave you Counsel 3. 'T is the way to increase it Col. 2. 7. Rooted and built up in him and established in the faith as ye have been taught abounding therein with thanksgiving Thanksgiving for what we have received is an effectual means to make us constant grow and abound in every grace Let the people praise thee O God yea let all the people praise thee Psal. 67. 3. Look as the Vapours go up so the showers come down Experiences of former Mercies thankfully acknowledged draweth down more Mercy 4. Prayer necessarily inferreth praise Phil. 4. 6. In every thing by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God Blessing God for Favours already received is necessary to be joyned with Prayer 't is disingenuous to be alwayes Craving and never give Thanks be thankful and depend for more not alwayes pore upon wants but take a survey of your Mercies and that will not only enlarge your hearts in thankfulness but even invite God to bestow further Mercies SERMON CLXXXV PSALM CXIX VER 172. My tongue shall speak of thy Word for all thy Commandments are Righteousness THE Man of God had spoken in the former Verse how his lips should praise God here is his second Promise that he maketh of holy Conference with others In the words we have First Davids Resolution My tongue shall speak of thy Word Secondly The Reason because it contained matter that deserved to be spoken off For all thy Commandments are righteousness 1. He speaketh of the whole Word of God all thy commandments 2. In the Abstract are righteousness altogether Righteous and Faithful First From the first branch Davids Resolution My tongue shall speak of thy Word Observe Doctrine The Subject of a Believers ordinary Discourse should be the Word and those spiritual and heavenly matters contained therein I. Not that they are alwayes talking of these things there is a time for all things the business of our Calling will sometimes take us up and sometimes our Recreations but yet there should be generally a difference between us and others the People of God should be observantly different as to their words and discourse from other People Cant. 4. 11. Thy lips O my Spouse drop as the honycomb The Lips of Christs Spouse should flow with matter savory and useful So Prov. 10. 20 21. The tongue of the just is as choice Silver but the heart of the wicked is little worth The lips of the righteous feed many but fools die for want of wisdom Where the speech of the righteous is compared to silver of the wicked to Dross For because their heart is little worth their Discourse will be accordingly and then the good man is compared to one that keepeth open house that feedeth all those that resort to him but Fools do not only not feed others but perish themselves by their own folly So Prov. 15. 7. The lips of the wise disperse knowledge but the heart of the foolish doth not so Men usually Discourse as their hearts are a man of a frothy spirit will bring forth nothing but vain and frothy Discourse but a gracious man will utter holy and gracious things for the Tap runneth according to the Liquor with which the Vessel is filled One place more Psal. 37. 30 31. The mouth of the righteous speaketh wisdom and his tongue talketh of judgment the law of God is in his heart none of his steps shall slide All mens Discourses are vented according as their hearts are busied and affected A man that hath the Word of God rooted in his heart and maketh it his work to suit his Actions thereunto will also suit his Words thereunto and will edifie those that he speaketh unto Thoughts Words and Actions are the genuine Products and Issues of the Heart Grace in the Heart discovereth it self uniformly in all holy Thoughts holy Words and holy Actions otherwise their Conversation is not all of a piece All these places shew that a Christians Discourse will differ from other mens but alas our Conference is little different from ordinary mens II. More Particularly I shall shew you that we are not left to run at random in our ordinary discourse as if our Tongues were our own to speak what we please This I shall shew 1. Negatively 2. Positively 1. Negatively no Prophane no Idle Discourse 1. No Prophane Discourse Eph. 4. 29. Let no corrupt communication proceed out of your mouth Christians are accountable for their Words as well as Actions Quest.
of his People may be tryed and yet his Enemies reckoned with 3. He hath Love enough God doth concern himself in all our Affairs 1 Tim. 4. 10. We trust in the living God who is the Saviour of all men especially of those that believe A protector and deliverer yea 't is said he saveth Man and Beast Psal. 36. 6. The object of his providence is very large all Creatures have their Being and Preservation from him much more Man much more his Children they are allowed to believe a special providence and the more they depend upon him the more is his care assured to them 1 Pet. 5. 7. Cast all your care upon the Lord for he careth for you The Lord is free from all passions of Care and Sorrow but we shall find no less proof of his keeping off danger or delivering us from danger than if we were solicitous for our selves surely our Father is not unmindful of us 3. Because there is no difficulty that can fall out to check this Confidence which is built upon Gods undertaking and sufficiency to make it good 1. Not any danger from men though of never so dreadful an appearance 2 Cor. 1. 10. Who hath delivered us from so great a death and doth deliver in whom we trust that he will yet deliver us The danger was Trouble in Asia a great danger pressed above measure and above strength great Trouble was at Ephesus where the people in an Uproar were ready to tear him in pieces so that he received the sentence of Death in himself yet God found a way and meanes to save and he came off safe and sound 2. Not any appearance of Anger from God himself Iob 13. 15. Though he slay me yet I will put my trust in him Sometimes Trouble may represent God as the party dealing with us yet Faith can take him for a Friend when he seemeth to deal like an Enemy and we must resolve to adhere to God and his wayes and trust his power with submission to his good will and pleasure and believe that he hath more respect and care over us than is seen in the present dispensation III. 'T is natural to all to seek deliverance out of Troubles Isa. 51. 14. The captive exile hasteth that he may be delivered and that he should not die in the pit How then is it any part of Grace to Long for Gods Salvation I Answer 'T is proper to the Godly to love no Deliverance but what God sendeth by his own Means in his own Time and to wait for it in Gods way 1. There is somewhat of Grace in it that they look for Salvation from God alone as the Author and are resolved to take it out of his hands whencesoever it cometh Man naturally would be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 live upon himself be sufficient to his own happiness and so they are vexed when they are left upon God and put upon dependance and submission and waiting upon him for they think it little worth to wait upon God as long as any other shift will serve the turn As Ahaz when troubled with the fear of Rezin and Pekah and the Prophet assureth him of Gods Salvation and biddeth him ask a sign Isa. 7. 11 12 13. I will not tempt the Lord. I will not trust the Lord he meaneth though he useth that pretence his expectation was fixed on the friendship of his Confederates if he had asked a sign of God he must wait for the issue in Gods way now Ahaz could not indure to trust God alone he depended on the Assyrian●… and not on Gods Salvation he believed nothing the Prophet spake but counted it vain and frivolous and was resolved to go another way to work 2. Gods salvation as to the means not by our shifts that maketh a breach upon our sincerity Gen. 17. 1. I am God almighty walk before me and be thou upright A man that doth not trust God cannot be long true to him you go off from God to the Creature by distrust and unbelief Heb. 3. 12. this is making more hast than good speed Isa. 28. 16. it plungeth us in sin 't is the greatest Hypocrisie that can be to pretend respect to God and shift for our selves 't is to break prison to get out of Trouble before God letteth us out 3. In his own Time thy Salvation they resolve to wait till he sendeth it carnal men when other means and expectations fail will seek to God they are beaten to him but if their expectation in waiting upon God be delayed they wax weary and faint as that King put on Sackcloth for a while 2 King 6. 30. afterwards said This evil is from the Lord why should I wait on the Lord any longer They give it over as an hopeless service 4. That in the height of Trouble they still go to God and will not cast away their confidence and dependance come what will come Isa. 26. 8. In the way of thy Iudgements we have waited for thee our desires are to thee and to the remembrance of thy name They still look to him and though often disappointed will seek Salvation from no other they still cleave to Gods way Psal. 44. 17. All this is come upon us yet have we not forsaken thee nor dealt falsely in thy Covenant They persevere in prayer Psal. 88. 13 14. Unto thee have I cryed in the morning my prayer shall prevent thee Lord Why castest thou me off why hidest thou thy face from me They will not give over but shew their vehement Longings after God whereas wicked and carnal men when great Troubles continue are driven to despair and give over all hope Use. In times of Trouble let us look to God and continue looking all the time that God will exercise our Faith and Patience and express our Longings and Desires of Gods salvation in humble and earnest prayer 1. 'T is no time to look else-where for God will shew us that vain is the help of man by many disappointments Isa. 48. 11. I even I am the Lord and besides me there is no Saviour He will break all Confidences till we come to this he shall be my salvation As Iob resolved when God brake him with his Tempests and pursued him with his Waves and was ready to slay him as he thought In all extremities this should be our fixed ground of Faith that Salvation and Deliverance is to be expected from God only Ier. 3. 23. Truly in vain is Salvation hoped for from the hills and the Mountains truly in the Lord our God is the Salvation of Israel God will teach us this Lesson e're he hath done with us Usually there is no serious dealing with God till we find the vanity and inability of all other dependancies looking to the Hills and Mountains strength of situation Forces all these will fail us 2. 'T is no time to dally with God and his service any longer for when Troubles come close and near the spirit of Prayer should
him 5. when Gods Dispensations seem to tend towards a removing of the Gospel p. 540 Suffering Condition has its peculiar allowances p. 593 Sufferings are not to be drawn upon our selves p. 884 Suitableness of the heart to Gods word p. 863 Suitableness of the word to our Conditions causeth us to remember it p. 600 Suitableness to the Soul p. 97 Superiority of God the Greatest on what Accounts p. 130 131 Superstitious Holiness contrary to Scripture Holiness p. 4 It pleases the flesh it consists in a Conformity to outward Rites and external Mortifications after the Commandements of men p. 4 It makes men ill natured p. 565 139 Superstition and Profaneness are two extremes p. 451 Lords Supper herein we renew our Covenant p. 344 Supper of the Lord. 1. to commemorate Gods goodness 2. to get a renewed taste of it 3. to stir up our love to God p. 476 477 Suppression of Religion plotted by the wicked The means how to suppress it 1. by denying the advantages of Learning 2. by vexing the Profession of Religion p 561 562 Support to be prayed for under affliction as well as deliverance p. 717 why ibid. Supreme Power has two branches Legislation and Iurisdiction p. 877 Surety the notion of a Surety what it implies p. 819 820 God is a sufficient Surety p. 819 820 Surety two fold 1. by way of Caution 2. by way of Satisfaction p. 820 821 Sure●…iship for men dangerous unto men p. 821 822 Surfeit of the Gospel discovers it self by five marks 125 126 Suspension of promised mercy 1. that we may be better prepared for it 2. that prayer may be awakened 3. to exercise Faith 4. that patience may have its perfect work p. 548 v. Delays Suspension of promised Deliverance causeth the godly not to suspect the truth of Gods word but their own darkness and unbelief p. 844 Sustaining Grace the safety of Gods people p. 790 Sympathy a Duty though there be no Idiopathy p. 145 v. Fellow-feeling Synonimous words encrease the signification p. 881 T. TAking Occasions to employ ones self about holy things a sign of a gracious heart p. 931 932 Talking of Gods word a Duty why p. 174 Talents encrease by using p. 76 Taste of Gods Love whets the desire and love after more p. 905 Tastes spiritual that it is what it is p. 671 672 673 There is a three-fold use of spiritual taste 1. discerning 2. comforting 3. preserving p. 674 Spiritual Taste its main blessing requires something 1. about the object 2. about the faculty p. 674 675 Teacher Supreme or Subordinate p. 41 841 Teachers have need to be taught of God p. 73 Teacher not needful to make us sin but necessary to make us obedient p. 172 229 Commandements of God make us wiser than our Teacher p. 646 Teachers corrupt and found p. 646 647 Teachings of God inform our Reasons and move the will p. 42 They make Gods word effectual p. 43 841 928 Gods teaching what it is the necessity and benefits of it p. 841 74 75 669 670 it s the ground of Constancy p. 670 It gives Clearness Certainty Efficacy to what is taught p. 1061 We must be taught of God if we would learn Gods Statutes so as to keep them p. 74 111 841 226. God teacheth 1. by common illumination 2 special Operation p. 669 670 Arguments to press us to go to God for his Teaching p. 542 226 229 230 They that would have Covenant-mercy must submit to Gods teaching p. 844 Tears are not absolutely necessary to express mourning for sin p. 929 930 Temporary Grace wherein defective p. 530 1. in the Root 2. in its predominancy over Lust p. 531 Temporary Professors endure but for a while p. 875 Temper of Saints to mourn for the sins of others p. 931 Temporal life a great mercy p. 101 102 Temporal Blessings may be prayed for Reasons p. 922 Temporal Losses should not make us forsake our Duty p. 414 Qu. How we ought to depend on God for temporal supplies p. 322 323 Temporal Deliverances why great Comforts p. 551 Spiritual welfare often concern'd in our temporal p. 922 Temporizing reproved p. 214 Temporal things two reasons why we are addicted to them 1 from corrupt nature 2. Custom p. 249 Temporal good promoted by temporal loss p. 510 Temptations of one kind foil some and those of another kind foil others p. 780 Temptations violent drive from God p. 1104 Temptations arise from good as well as evil things p. 552 Temptations from loss of goods for the words sake ought to be prepared for p. 417 We are not to expose our selves to Temptatious p. 782 Temptations excuse not Cowardise p 871 Temptations to draw us from constant Obedience p. 666 667 They raise Clouds and Mists in the Soul p. 836 The first Temptation of the Devil was to weaken their opinion of Gods loving kindness p. 939 Tenderness of Conscience much impaired by Prosperity p. 462 Tender mercy of God what p. 515 It is the spring of all Comsort and Happiness p. 116 Terms of Salvation not impossible to Grace p. 577 Terrors and Allurements of the world draw us from God p. 1031 Terrors of Conscience bring nigh to the Grave p. 156 Tertullian's Complaint of those Qui Platonicum Arist totelicum Christianismum procudunt christianis p. 889 Testimonies they that keep close to Gods Testimonies are blessed p. 8 Word of God call'd his Testimonies why p. 8. 741 The end of Gods Testimonies is to direct us how to seek God and to bring home the wandring Creature p. 11 Testimonies of God when throughly understood are wonderful in what Respects p. 879 880 881 882 883 Testimonies of God are of everlasting stability c. 1. from the Author 2. their Foundation 3. Use p. 956 957 Thankful Carriage under mercy suitable p. 840 Thankfulness stirred up by the fear of God p. 811 It regards Gods Truth as well as Goodness p. 447 Thanksgiving a special Duty of Gods Children how it differs from praysing God and what it is the objects of it p. 419 It is a Duty 1. necessary 2. profitable 3. delightful p. 420 421 445 446 Publick thanksgiving for private mercies p. 503 Thoughts are the noblest and eldest ofspring of the Soul p. 91 They fall under a Law as well as Actions p. 33 762 Thoughts Words and Actions all judged by the Word p. 39 Thoughts vain expressed by 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Musings 2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Devices 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Discourses p. 757 How to be prevented p. 634 They are to be abhorred p. 756 Thoughts of wicked men usually taken up with some of these sins 1. Uncleanness 2. Revenge 3. Envy 4. Pride 5. Covetousness 6. Distrust p. 759 Conscience to be made of vain thoughts why p. 93 760 Threatnings none can threaten like God p. 24 Throne of Justice Grace and Glory p. 954 Throne of Grace threefold ibid. Times for converse with God must be chosen p. 925 What time