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A54870 Excellent encouragements against afflictions, or, Expositions of four select Psalmes the XXVII, LXXXIV, LXXXV, and LXXXVII, containing [brace] 1. David's triumph over distresse, 2. Davids hearts desire, 3. The churches exercise under affliction, 4. The great charter of the church / by the learned and laborious, faithfull and prudent minister of God's word, Mr. Thomas Pierson ... Pierson, Thomas, 1622-1691. 1647 (1647) Wing P2216; ESTC R33408 298,930 421

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of the Lord shall obtain joy and gladnesse and sorrow and mourning shall flee away I even I am he that comforteth thee who art thou that thou shouldest be afraid of a man that shall dye and of the sonne of man that shall be made as grasse and forgettest the Lord thy maker c. Adde hereto Jerem. 46.27 28. Fear thou not oh thou my servant Jacob for I will save thee I am with thee Obj. But we shall finde that the most godly do fear as David himself Psal 116.11 I said in my haste all men are lyars And 1 Sam. 27.1 I shall now perish one day by the hand of Saul Answ This comes from the weaknesse of their faith as Matth. 14.30 31. Peter feared though he had Christs word for his warrant through the weaknesse of his faith which may also be encreased by present guilt in some sin Obj. But the g●dly sometimes flye and fall before their enemies and so cannot but fear Answ All promises of temporall blessings such as freedome from humane fear is are to be understood with exception of the crosse that is must give way to Gods correction for sinne as in David 2 Sam. 12.14 and to Gods making triall of grace as in Job Chap. 2 3. The second Use for instruction Secondly here see the true ground of that difference which is between the wicked and the godly about slavish fead and godly boldnesse plainly testified by Solomon Prov. 28.1 The wicked flee when no man pursueth but the righteous is bold as a Lion This cometh hence The godly have the Lord with them and for them and that makes them bold but the wicked have the Lord against them and that strikes their hearts with fear and dread See the truth of this in instance Moses leades all the people of Israel boldly through the red sea Pharaoh followeth boldly for a while but at length he and all his hoste are affraid and flye away and are drowned Heb. 11.29 with Exod. 14 25. And at Christs resurrection the keepers are as dead men for fear but the women that sought Jesus are bid not to be affraid Matth. 28.4 5. The 1. Use for admonition For admonition it serves two wayes First to take notice that the true grounds of courage and boldnesse is this that a man hath the true God for his God that so whosoever would be comfortable and couragious in the evill day do labour for this estate to have the true God for his God It is not onely true that affliction followeth sinners so as evill shall hunt the wicked person to destruction Psal 140.11 but even the godly themselves are subject to many miseries as Psal 34.19 Through manifold tribulations we must enter into the kingdome of God Acts 14 22. Now unlesse God be for us the heart will fail when evils come as Nabals did 1 Sam. 25.37 And none indeed have the Lord for them but those that stand rightly in covenant with God which be such as repent of their sinnes believe in the Lord Jesus and walk in new obedience This is wholsome doctrine for souldiers in warre Mariners on the sea and for every one in evill times The second use for admonition Secondly those that have true courage and comfort in evill times must learn hence to give God all the glory For this is the Lords gift as David confesseth Psal 18.29 c. Vers 2. When the wicked even mine enemies and my foes came upon me to eat up my flesh they stumbled and fell The meaning of the words HEre David gives instance from his own experience of Gods powerfull preservation of him in extreme danger which no doubt he propounds as the ground of that great confidence professed in the former Verse as in like case he encouraged himself to encounter in fight with great Goliah because God had formerly strengthened him against a Lion and a Bear 1 Sam. 17.33 34 35. In the instance here made we have three things to note First the state and condition of David enemies they are wicked men Secondly their purpose and attempt against David they came upon him to eat up his flesh that is utterly to destroy him as the roaring lion devoureth a little sheep Thirdly the issue and successe of their attempt they stumbled and fell The first Observation For the first note Davids enemies and foes are wicked men Psal 3.7 Thou hast smitten all mine enemies on the check bone thou hast broken the teeth of the ungodly Ps 5.8 9 David praying for safety because of his enemies saith There is no faithfulnesse in their mouthes their inward parts are very wickednesse c. ●sal 6.8 Hee cals his enemies workers of iniquitie Psal 17.9 The wicked that oppresse him are his enemies and Verse 13. Deliver my soul from the wicked The Reason The reason whereof is the enmitie put by God himself between the seed of the serpent and the seed of the woman Gen. 3.15 which David found Psal 38.19 20. They that render evill for good are mine adversaries because I follow the thing that good is and our Saviour Christ Joh. 7.7 The world hateth me because I testifie of it that the deeds thereof are evill Who also fore-told his Disciples hereof Joh. 15.15 If ye were of the world the world would love his own but because ye are not of the world but I have chosen you out of the world therefore the world hateth you and John 16.33 In the world ye shall have tribulation This serves for instruction admonition and comfort The use for instruction For instruction it shewes plainly what the godly must expect and look for in this world at the hands of wicked men namely all bitter opposition and enmitie that may be as Christ Jesus told his Disciples ye shall be hated of all nations for my names sake and therefore tels them that he sent them forth as sheep into the midst of Wolves Mat. 10.16 Which thing David had found long before and thereupon complains My soul is among lions and I lye amongst the children of men that are set on fire whose teeth are speares and arrowes and their tongue a sharp sword Psal 57.4 And mine enemies workers of iniquitie lye in wait for my soul Psal 59.1 2 3. My soul hath long dwelt with him that hateth peace I am for peace but when I speak they are for warre Psal 120.6 7. This Paul likewise felt Acts 20.23 The holy Ghost witnesseth in every City that bonds and afflictions abide me See 2 Cor. 11.23 In stripes above measure in prison more frequent in death oft Yea it was the case of the rest of the Apostles as well as his I think saith he that God hath set us forth the last Apostles as it were appointed to death For we are made a spectacle unto the world unto Angels and to men 1 Cor. 4.9 The first Use for admonition For admonition it serves two wayes First to the wicked
and chastens Rev. 3.19 whom the Lord loveth he chasteneth and scourgeth every sonne whom he receiveth And he useth the rods of men to correct his children as 2 Sam. 7.14 Psal 89.31 32. The Use for comfort For comfort this makes greatly in opposition by many and mighty in the world for in David we may see that no strange thing befalleth us but such as appertaineth to man and God will give the issue as 1 Cor. 10.13 Let us say the servant is not above his Lord. Matth 10.24 25. Consider that if their opposition be for a good cause wee have great cause to rejoyce for we are made conformable to Christ and have fellowship with him in afflictions See 1 Pet. 4.12 13. 2 Cor. 1.7 The thing here expressed by David is this that God will now restore him to comfort and advance him to honour Where we may note two things The second Observation First that David knew that the time of comfort and honour was at hand for he saith Now shall my head be lifted up The Reason This he might do by speciall instinct being a Prophet for the spirit of God spake in him and by him 2 Sam. 23.1 2. It serves for instruction and for admonition The use for instruction For instruction see what God is able to do for his children he can not only bestow joy and honour but acquaint them with the particular time when they shall receive it So God revealed to Moses the delivery of Israel out of the bondage of Aegypt Exod. 3.7 8. and chap. 11.1 The Use for admonition For admonition to labour to bee followers of David for upright hearts and obedient lives as Psal 18. in the title he is stiled the servant of the Lord and verse 21. hee saith I have kept the wayes of the Lord I was upright also before him and unto such it is that God reveales his secrets Psal 25.14 Prov. 3.32 The third observation Secondly here note the phrase in which David expresseth his assurance of honour and comfort my head shall be lifted up wherein hee plainly makes himself a patient ascribing both honour and comfort unto God Psal 23.1 c. The Lord is my shepheard I shall not lack He maketh mee lye down in green pastures hee restoreth my soule c. to the end Psal 18.48 Thou liftest me up above those that rise up against me verse 35. thy right hand hath holden me up and thy gentlenesse hath made me great See Psal 121.1 2. with 1 Sam. 18.23 The Reason He knew Gods calling would be the best shelter against envy and opposition from which high places are seldome free as Jeremie in his calling doth comfort himself Jer. 17.16 As for me I have not hasted from being a pastour to follow thee And so David comforts himself against Eliabs reproach for making offer to encounter with Goliah 1 Sam. 17.29 The Use for reproofe This serves first for the reproof of the ambitious that by any sinister meanes will seek advancement a common sinne in all ages and a great evill in our times moving many to oppression bribery and sundry other ungodly courses The Use for admonition For admonition to be followers of David in receiving honour and dignity walk uprightly in our places till God advance us be sure of his calling before we stirre lest in time of trouble our consciences say unto us How camest thou hither See the danger of usurpation in the Iewish exorcists Acts 19.13 16. Therefore will I offer in his Tabernacle sacrifices of joy I will sing yea I will sing praises unto the Lord. Here David professeth his thankfull behaviour toward God for the honour and comfort which God would shortly vouchsafe unto him and it stands in the cheerfull performance of such religious service for thankesgiving as God required at the hands of his people when he bestowed his blessings upon them Hereof he mentioneth these two First reall sacrifices of joy whereby he meaneth sacrifices of thankesgiving over which the Priests sounded an alarm with their silver trumpets Num. 10.10 called the joyfull sound Psal 89.15 And this duty hee amplifieth by the circumstance of the place where he would perform it namely in Gods Tabernacle the place appointed for that solemn part of Gods service Deut. 12.11 12.13 14. There shall be a place which the Lord your God shall chuse to cause his name to dwell there thither shall ye bring all that I command you your burnt offerings and your sacrifices c. Secondly singing praises unto God which duty he promiseth with repetition or gemination to testifie his more certain resolution for the performance of it saying I will sing yea I will sing praises In this profession of thankfull behaviour note two things First the duty he will perform secondly the place where The fourth Observation For the first note When David receiveth from God honour and comfort then will he offer unto God sacrifices of thankesgiving with joy and rejoycing his sacrifices shall be sacrifices of joy and when he offers them he will sing praises unto God The like he shewed at the fetching home of the Ark of the covenant towards the city of David 1 Chron. 13.8 and 15.16 David spake to the chief of the Levites to appoint their brethren to bee singers with instruments of Musick Psalteries and Harps and Cymbals sounding by lifting up the voice with joy And upon his deliverance from the hand of Saul and other enemies Ps 18.1 c. Ps 116.12 13. The first Reason The reasons hereof are great as well in regard of God and of himself as also his brethren In regard of God First because he commands it Psal 100.1 and obedience is acceptable 1 Sam. 15.22 Psal 69.30 31. Secondly it is for his glory Psal 50.23 who so offereth praise glorifieth me The second Reason In respect of himself First it is pleasant and comely Psal 33.1 Psal 147.1 Secondly it is good and profitable for them that honour God will he honour 1 Sam. 2.30 Hence the Samaritan Leper returning to praise Christ for his cleansing received an assurance of an heavenly and spirituall cleansing Luke 17.15 19. Thirdly the omitting of it is dangerous to provoke Gods wrath being at least a shamefull neglect of Gods mercy See 2 Chr. 32.25 26. The third Reason In respect of others to whom David desired to do good Psel 34.11 Psal 51.13 His zeal for Gods glory would provoke many as Psal 34.2 3. My soul shall make her boast in the Lord the humble shall hear thereof and bee glad O magnifie the Lord with me and let us exalt his name together And if his example could not move them yet it would leave them without excuse under the censure and punishment of ingratitude as Jobs friends were Job 42.7 For it is a dangeeous thing to neglect good example as Jer. 22.15 16 17. Did not thy father eat and drink and do judgement
of the crosse that is so as God either for triall of grace or correction for sinne may deal otherwise as wee may see in good King Josiah who for the sinnes of the land that hastened Gods judgements fell by the hand of Pharaoh Nechoh This serves for instruction admonition and comfort The first Use for instruction For instruction see what a great blessing and priviledge it is to stand rightly in convenant with God whereby hee becometh light or salvation to a man or to a people and the strength of their life for so shall they finde extraordinary preservation in time of danger and strange deliverance beyond humane expectation as here David confesseth and the people of Israel found many a time as when they were pursued by Pharaoh at the red sea Exod. 14.10 ●3 so also when Joshuah wonne Jericho Josh 6.21 Ai Josh 8.28 and slew the five Kings of the Amorites who fought against Gibeon Josh 10.15 c. in which fight the Sunne stood still in the midst of heaven and hasted not to go down about a whole day vers 13. And afterward when divers other Kings with all their power came to fight against Joshuah with much people as the sand upon the sea shore for multitude with horses and chariots very many Joshuah discomfited them all Josh 11.1 2 5 6. And the Anakims against whom formerly none could stand Deut. 9.2 Yet Joshuah drave them out and destroyed them utterly and their cities Josh 11.21 22. The like we may see in the strange victories in the book of the Judges by Deborah and Barak against Sisera Judg. 4.15 c. By Gideon against the Midianites Judg. 7.22 c. By Jephtah against the Ammonites Judg. 11.32 33. By Sampson against the Philistims Judg. 15 and 16. chapters and so by Jonathan and his Armour-bearer against a garrison of the Philistims 1 Sam. 14.15 By Davids many victories over them before mentioned by Asa against the Ethiopians 2 Chron 14.9 c. Jehoshaphat against Moab Ammon and Mount Seir 2 Chron. 20.12 c. and Hezekiah against Sennacherib Is 37.36 The second Use for instruction Also here see the misery of those that be out of covenant with God for the Lords power is ever against them unlesse when he will use them as a rod and scourge to punish the rebellious as Is 10.5 6. and therefore wo unto them as Hos 9.12 with Deut. 32.30 The Use for admonition For admonition to give all diligence to be truly in covenant with God that so it may be with us as it was with David For which end in the profession of the true faith we must imitate the godly practice of David having a calling for that we do trust in God pray unto him and walk in obedience Also as we desire to scape the Lords hand in our overthrow let us beware of the state and properties of Davids enemies The Use for comfort For comfort to the godly fighting the Lords battles and yet overmatched If they be in covenant with God and follow David in the warrant of a good calling in affiance prayer and holy obedience they may say where is the God of David of Joshuah of Jehoshaphat c. as Elisha said where is the Lord God of Elijah 2 Kings 2.14 for he is without shadow of change Jam. 1.17 Vers 3. Though an hoste should encamp against me my heart shall not fear though warre should rise against me in this will I be confident The meaning of the words HEre the Prophet returnes to make mention of his courage and confidence against his enemies more fully expressing the same then he had formerly done by making supposall that with all their force and in their greatest fury they should set upon him saying though an hoste should encampe against me there is the supposall of their force and yet he would not fear and though warre should rise against me there is the supposall of their rage and fury yet in this will I be confident But what meanes he by in this The most take it demonstratively with reference to that he had said the Lord is my light yet it may be taken for a relative and referred to the warre made against him wherein he would be confident upon his having God for his light c. The first observation Here then we have two things to note the one implied or taken for granted The other expressed The thing implied is this that to be in fear and to be confident are here opposed as contrary affections of the heart David here professeth his heart was free from fear and that hee was confident And to clear the proposition it containeth two things First that fear and confidence are contrary affections this is acknowledged by the very heathen as a principle in naturall philosophy which none can deny that know the nature of these affections What fear is or feel the force of them For fear is the fainting or falling down of the heart upon the apprehension of evill either present or imminent as Luk. 21.26 Mens hearts failing them for fear What confidence is But confidence is the trust or perswasion of the heart to escape evill and to enjoy good as Psal 37.3.5 Secondly that these affections are seated in the heart is likewise acknowledged by naturall men and plain also in Scripture for fear see Luk. 21.26 as before and for confidence Psal 28.7 The Lord is my strength and my shield my heart trusted in him The Reason The reason hereof is the will of God Almighty the maker of mans heart as Psal 33.15 He fashioneth their hearts alike and he made this contrary to that Eccles 7.14 The use for instruction The application is twofold First for instruction see here that one of these two must needs possesse every one of our hearts for these affections are naturall and who will exempt himself from that which is mans naturall estate Elias was a man subject to naturall passions James 5.17 and said of himself I am no better then my fathers 1 Kings 19.4 Whether Adam by creation were endued with fear Quest Was Adam endued with fear by creation Answ Adams fear by creation was filiall of God but servile fear was not in him till he sinned against God Of this we may say as of shame Gen. 2.25 They were both naked the man and the woman and were not ashamed with Gen. 3.9 10. The Lord God called unto Adam and said unto him where art thou And he said I heard thy voice in the garden and I was afraid because I was reaked and I hid my self The Use for admonition For admonition that every one of us do consider the causes of these affections and as we desire to be freed from fear and endued with confidence so to give all diligence to be freed from the cause of fear and to be possessed with the causes of true affiance and confidence Now fear ariseth from the
and justice and then it was well with him But thine eyes and thine heart are not but for thy covetousnesse Therefore thus saith the Lord c. This serves for instruction reprehension and admonition The use for instruction The instruction is from Davids example to all Gods people to shew them fitting behaviour towards God when they receive blessings and benefits from him namely to be thankfull unto God in praises and songs and that with joyfulnesse and gladnesse The Use for reproof For reproof it makes justly against all those that are unthankfull for Gods blessings and likewise dull and heavie hearted in Gods praises See Deut. 28.47 48. Because thou servedst not the Lord thy God with joyfulnesse and with gladnesse of hear for the aboundance of all things Therefore shalt thou serve thine enemies c. with Deut. 32.6 Do ye thus requite the Lord O foolish people and unwise The Use for admonition For admonition that every childe of God be a follower of David both for the duty it self and for the manner of performing it with cheerfulnesse and gladnesse Consider that David studied the art of thankfulnesse Psal 116.12 13. and that upon weighty grounds respecting God respecting himself and his brethren all which we should meditate on to stir us up to the cheerfull performance of this duty of thankfulnesse The fifth Observation The second point to be observed in Davias profession of thankfull behaviour is the circumstance of place where he will offer his sacrifices namely in Gods Tabernacle David will offer his sacrifices in Gods Tabernacle so 2 Sam. 6.17 David set the Ark in his place in the midst of the Tabernacle that David had pitched for it and David offered burnt offerings and peace offerings before the Lord meaning by the hands of the Priests as 1 Chron. 16.1 The first Reason This he observed First that he might have acceptance before the Lord in this service for in observing this circumstance of place he obeyed Gods ordinance Deut. 12.11 12 13 14. and so had title to the favour of acceptance as Is 56.7 The second Reason Secondly David knew there was danger in transgressing Gods ordinance as 1 Chron. 15.13 The Lord our God made a breach upon us for that we sought him not after the due order Therefore doth he observe the place appointed by God The Use for admonition This should teach us to be followers of David in respecting and observing Gods ordinance for the place of his service It is true difference of place in respect of holinesse is now in the New Testament taken away as John 4.21 23. and therefore Paul willeth that men pray every where lifting up holy hands unto God without wrath or doubting 1 Tim. 2.8 Yet where Christ hath said where two or three meet together in ny name that is by warrant from me I am in the middle Mat. 18.20 and go teach I am with you to the end of the world Matth. 28.20 therefore must we frequent diligently and reverently use Church assemblies Consider 1 Cor. 11.22 despise ye the Church of God That is the place where Gods people come together for his service Vers 7. Hear me O Lord when I cry with my voice have mercy also upon me and answer me The meaning of the words HEre David begins the second testification of his true affiance in God by humble and earnest prayer and supplication for sundry blessings whereof the first is for mercy in audience and answer to his earnest prayers in this verse Wherein the words being plain we may observe three things First what David prayed for Secondly in what manner thirdly his esteem of Gods audience to his prayers The first Observation For the first David prayes for audience and answer to his prayers Hear O Lord when I cry and answer me So Psal 4.1 Hear me when I call Psal 5.1 2. Give ear to my words hearken to the voice of my cry Psal 28.1 Vnto thee will I cry O Lord my rock be not silent to me lest if thou be silent to me I become like them that go down into the pit Hear the voice of my supplications when I cry unto thee Psal 61.1 Hear my cry O God attend unto my prayer and Psal 141.1 Qu. What needs this prayer for audience seeing God hears every word that is spoken Psal 139.4 and it is his property to hear prayer Psal 65.2 whereto hee hath bound himself by promise Psal 50.15 Matth. 7.7 Answ The audience which David prayeth for is not the bare art of hearing in taking notice of that hee said in prayer for he knew well that would never be wanting in God towards man But by hearing he meaneth Gods favourable act of audience testified by gracious answers as he saith in thy faithfulnesse answer me Psal 143.1 The Reason The reason why David here prayeth for this gracious audience is because he knew God did many times for just causes Why God doth sometimes deny to give gracious answers to the prayers of his servants deny to give such gracious answers even to the prayers of his servants As first when he would humble them and correct them for their sins Psal 66.18 If I regard iniquity in my heart the Lord will not hear me John 9.31 God heareth not sinners For sinne separates between God and us Is 59.2 makes God say Though ye make many prayers I will not hear Isa 1.15 So as his people complain that God seems angry against their prayers Ps 80.4 Secondly when he would stirre them up to more zeal and fervency in prayer then yet they have shewed See his dealing with the woman of Canaan coming to him for her daughter Matth. 15.22 23 c. and with the father of the childe possessed with a dumb and deaf devill Mark 9.18 Thirdly when he will exercise them under some affliction either for recreation for sinne or for triall of grace as Psal 22.1 2. My God my God why hast thou forsaken me O my God I cry in the day time but thou hearest not and in the night and am not silent That was true both in David the type and in Jesus Christ the truth yet herein that is verified which Christ said to Paul my grace is sufficient for thee 2 Cor. 12.9 being as good as direct audience in particular answer for it makes them willing and able to bear the crosse which is a gracious hearing to the prayer of the afflicted Heb. 5.7 This serves for instruction and admonition The use for instruction For instruction see that the best of Gods children may be denied audience for a time to their prayers for that which befell David in the type and Jesus Christ himself as the truth may befall any other childe of God for the servant is not above the master Matthew 10.24 25. The first Use for admonition For admonition two wayes First to beware of rash judgement either against our selves
in the originall signifieth to make sick or sorrie The reasons hereof are many and great First before this time the Lord God had begun a good work in Davids heart by his holy spirit and revealed himself so far forth to David that Davids heart was inamoured with the Lord as he notably expresseth Psal 84.1 2. O how amiable are thy tabernacles My soule longeth yea even fainteth for the Courts of the Lord My heart and my flesh cryeth out for the living God as Psal 42 1 2. and Psal 143.6 7. I stretch forth my hands unto thee c. Heare mee speedily my spirit faileth hide not thy face from me And that this was the cause of Davids seeking Gods face and favour see by the like Cant 5.4 My beloved put in his hand by the hole of the doore and my bowels were moved for him The Churches beloved is Christ the Lord his hand is his power shewed by the work of his spirit with the word as Acts 11.19 20 21. when this comes the bowels earne as Peters did upon the view of Christs glory Matth. 17.2 4. The second Reason Secondly David knew that God had speciall regard unto the heart above all the parts of man as 1 Sam. 16.7 and therefore cals for the heart of every one that is his childe Prov. 23.26 and would have this part begin all the actions of his service See for hearing the word Deut. 32.46 Prov. 4.20 21. and for prayer Hos 7.14 which when it is wanting he rejecteth the service Mat. 15.8 9. The third Reason Thirdly the excellency of the blessing drew his heart unto it for Gods face is Gods favour and loving kindnesse wherein is life Psal 20.5 nay it is better then life Psal 63.1 2 3. Thereupon Psal 4.6 Lord lift up the light of thy countenance upon us and Psal 80.3 7 19. cause the face to shine and we shall be saved The fourth Reason Fourthly he knew the seeking of the heart was true and sincere seeking such as God required Ps 51.6 and such as he will speed for this and all other blessings Jer. 29.13 Ps 24.3 c. the way to joy Ps 106.3 4. to blessednesse Ps 119.2 This serves for instruction admonition and comfort The first Use for instruction For instruction two wayes First it lets us plainly see the right ground and foundation of acceptable obedience unto God in every duty which he requireth namely a good heart an heart set for Gods glory therein for the heart is the fountain of the actions good or evill as Christ teacheth Mat. 12.34 35. Out of the aboundance of the heart the mouth speaketh A good man out of the good treasure of his heart bringeth forth good things and an evill man out of the evill treasure of his heart bringeth forth evill things which we are the rather to note because wicked men though they cannot justifie their actions yet they will plead for the goodnesse of their heart they have as good an heart to Godward as the best which if it were true Christ was deceived in the place aforenamed either make the tree good and his fruit good or the tree evill and his fruit evill as also Psal 78.8 36 37. the old Iewes were a stubborn and rebellious generation a generation that set not their heart aright they scattered him with their mouth and lyed unto him with their tongue for their heart was not right with him The second Use for instruction Secondly see in David a double property of the godly First to make particular application to himself of generall commands given to all Gods people as Psal 4● 7 So did Joseph Gen. 39.9 Secondly that the heart of the godly is set to seek the face of God to be made partaker of his grace and favour in Christ See Davids speech to Zadok when he brought out the ark 2 Sam. 15.25 26. But most plain it is in that of Paul Phil. 3.7 8 9. what things were gain to me those I counted losse for Christ c. The first Use for admonition For admonition two wayes First to get such an heart as doth minde the commandements of God and doth undertake for obedience thereto so did Davids This indeed none hath by nature for every imagination of the thoughts of mans heart is evill continually Gen. 6.5 meaning so long as the heart remaines naturall unsa●●ctified Therefore they that would have a good heart like David must wait upon God in the use of means ordained by him for the bettering of mans heart That it is Gods work is plain Ezek. 36.25 26. I will take away your stony heart and give you an heart of flesh and therefore is regeneration called a new creation 2 Cor. 5.17 which is a work proper to God Yet God is pleased to do it in the use of means enjoyned to men which when we use in obedience to God we have title to his blessing Now the means to get a good heart is to be exercised much in the word and prayer for in these ordinances in the spirit given which renewes the soule as for the word is plain Acts 10.44 Gal. 3.2 and for prayer Luke 11.13 Now the obedien●● manner of using the foresaid means is first to break of the course of sinne Prov. 1.23 for raigning sin and saving grace never dwell together 1 John 5.6 Secondly hunger and thirst after grace and mercy Is 55.1 and Is 44.3 Revel 21.6 Thirdly in the way of obedience unto that we know Acts 5.32 wait upon God in the foresaid means as the impotent people did at the poole of Bethesda Iohn 5.2 3 4. for they that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength Is 40.31 The second use for admonition Secondly learn of David to set the heart on work on every action wee performe to God yea let it begin the work This was Davids care as Psal 57.7 My heart is fixed or prepared O God my hedrt is fixed Consider the reasons before named The Use for comfort For comfort this makes greatly to the upright hearted when they are not able to expresse in words what they conceive or to performe for Gods glory what they desire Let them here observe that there is sweet intercourse between the Lord and an upright heart he knowes the meaning of the sighes and groans thereof Rom. 8.26 The heart can speak to God effectually without the help of the tongue as Psal 25.1 Nehem. 2.4 and the heart can answer Gods command as in this place Verse 9. Hide not thy face farre from me put not thy servant away in anger thou hast been my help leave mee not neither forsake me God of my salvation The meaning of the words HEre David according to his holy profession in the former verse makes humble and earnest suit unto God that he may not be denyed nor deprived of the comfort of Gods favour and the light of his countenance This suit he puts up in
consider this prerogative professed by David in having God for his helper with reference to the end for which he doth here mention it which is to move the Lord not to hide his face from him c. because formerly he hath shewed himself gracious and favourable towards him and therein this is plain The fourth Observation That David makes his own experience of Gods help in former evils a ground of prayer for present favour in his renewed troubles When David was in the wildernesse of Judah flying from Sauls persecution Psal 63. the title in the 7. verse he pleadeth thus for mercy Because thou hast been my help therefore under the shadow of thy wings will I rejoyce Psal 77.2 5. In the day of my trouble I sought the Lord I considered the dayes of old Psal 89.49 Lord where are thy former loving kindnesses Psal 71.4 5 6. Deliver me O Lord out of the hand of the wicked for thou art my hope O Lord God thou art my trust even from my youth by thee I have beene holden up from the womb Vers 17 18. O God thou hast taught mee from my youth Now also when I am old and gray-headed O God forsake me not The reason hereof is plain David knew the true God was unchangeable and immutable The Reason not onely in his essence but also in his love favour and mercy towards his elect who are his redeemed in and by Christ Jesus with whom his covenant of grace is everlasting so as he will never turn away from them to do them good Jer. 32.40 Whereupon he saith I am the Lord and I change not and ye sonnes of Jacob are not confounded Mal. 3.6 For as much as he loved his own which were in the world to the end he loved them John 13.1 For though he repent of temporall gifts and blessings as of making of Saul King 1 Sam. 15.11 yet his gifts and calling which concerne salvation in Christ are without repentance Now Davids holy calling entituling him to this covenant hee might plead for the renewing of Gods favour in present troubles upon the sense and feeling thereof in former times This serves for instruction and for admonition The use for instruction For instruction learn here in David one notable way of comfort in time of trouble to wit search and try whether God hath been thine helper from under former evils for then thou maist with David plead for present help and comfort so doth the Church in their renewed troubles after their return from the captivitie of Babylon Psal 85.1 c. Lord thou hast been favourable to thy land thou hast brought back the captivitie of Jacob thou hast forgiven the iniquity of thy people wilt thou not revive us again shew us thy mercy O Lord and grant us thy salvation So Ps 44.1 9 23. We have heard with our ears our fathers have declared unto us what work thou didst in their dayes in the times of old But thou hast cast us off and puttest us to shame Awake why sleepest thou O Lord arise cast us not off for ever c. Isa 51.9 10 11. Awake awake put on strength O arm of the Lord Art thou not it which hath dried the Sea the waters of the great deep Therefore the redeemed of the Lord shall return c. and Isa 63.11 12 13 14. The Use for admonition For admonition this serves notably for every childe of God in time of trouble become a follower of David in observing Gods former mercy in helping us and so we shall be encouraged in renewed evils Did not David thus animate himself to fight with Goliah 1 Sam. 17.34 and St. Paul did so encourage himself against troubles 2 Tim. 4.16 17 18. At my first answer no man stood with me but all men forsook me notwithstanding the Lord stood with me and strengthened me and I was delivered out of the mouth of the lion And the Lord shall deliver me from every evill work Now no true childe of God can want experience of former help when he may strongly reason for his comfort from the greater to the lesse as David did Psal 56.13 Thou hast delivered my soul from death wilt thou not deliver my feet from falling So may the true childe of God say thou by thy holy calling to the faith hast delivered me from the power of darknesse in the bondage of sin and Satan as Col. 1.13 and wilt thou not deliver me from this or that carnall evill If God spared not his own sonne but gave him for us how shall he not with him him give us all things Rom. 8.32 Indeed the signes of Gods favour may be hid sometimes from Gods dearest servants as Psal 77.7 8 9. Will the Lord cast off for ever c. But we must then consider the cause which is either correction for sin or triall of grace in which the way to comfort is to repent of sinne and to labour for patience remembring that God doth help not onely when he gives deliverance out of evill but even when he gives strength of grace to bear it as 2 Cor. 12.8 9. Heb. 5.7 The third thing propounded by David to move the Lord not to hide his face from him nor forsake him is Davids title to the blessing of salvation from God by vertue of the covenant wherein he stood with God even for this blessing which he thus expresseth O God of my salvation where by salvation he meaneth the great salvation which is eternall life by Jesus Christ Heb. 2.3 and with it temporall preservation in this world therefore do not hide thy face do not forsake me The fifth Observation In this reason we have two things to note First the thing professed by David secondly the end for which he mentioneth it For the first the thing professed by David is his particular and personall claim unto salvation from God for himself O God of my salvation thou art unto me the God of salvation upon thee I relye both for life eternall in heaven and temporall preservation here on earth Psal 18.2 The Lord is my rock and my fortresse and my deliverer the horn that is the strength of my salvation Psal 25.5 Thou art the bed of my salvation Psal 51.14 Deliver me from blood guiltinesse O God thou God of my salvation Psal 62.6 7. He onely is my rock and my salvation In God is my salvation and my glory The first Reason The true reason hereof is First Gods meer grace and favour in Christ freely accepting of David into covenant with himself whereby he becomes the God of salvations unto him as the Church calleth God Psal 68.20 See Psal 89.3 21 36. I have made a covenant with my chosen I have sworn unto David my servant with whom my hand shall be established He shall cry unto me thou art my father my God and the rock of my salvation And hereupon David saith I am thine save me Psal 1●9 94 The
true repentance in forsaking all sinne in respect of dominion for Psal 119.155 Salvation is farre from the wicked 1 John 1.6 Then get the fore named graces of faith love and fear and certainly the covenant of grace in Christ shall be stable unto us Vers 10. When my father and my mother forsake me then the Lord will take me up The meaning of the words IN the former Verse the Prophet David prayed that the Lord would not leave him nor forsake him moving God thereto by this that God was the God of his salvation and here prosecuting the same matter he testifies his affiance and confidence in God for the enjoying of the blessing there prayed for which testimony he setteth forth by way of comparison preferring Gods tender care over him for his preservation before the care of his own parents both father and mother whom common nature bound to bee dearly and tenderly carefull over him saying when or although my father and my mother forsake me yet the Lord will gather or take me up Which words being plain we have in them two points to note the first implied the second expressed The thing implied is this The first Observation That Davids father and mother and so his dearest and nearest friends might leave him and forsake him in times of distresse Psal 38.11 My lovers and my friends stand aloof from my sore and my kinsmen stand afarre off Psal 88.8.18 Thou hast put away mine acquaintance farre from me thou hast made me an abomination unto them Lover and friend hast thou put farre from me and mine acquaintance into darknesse as if he should have said now I am in misery I cannot see them they will not see me The first Reason The reason hereof is twofold First their fear of Saul their King who was a furious bloody-minded man as may appear beside his inhumane carriage to David whose workes towards Saul were very good as 1 Sam. 19.4 5 10 11. by his barbarous dealing with the Lords Priests whom he put to the sword both men and women children and sucklings and oxen and asses and sheep without any just cause 1 Sam. 22.18 19. Yea further by his unnaturall dealing with his own sonne whom he did not onely shamefully revile but must unnaturally seek to slay for his love and kindnesse unto David 1 Sam. 20.30 31 33. Hereupon Davids friends might justly fear his cruell hands for they might say if he would not spare his own sonne for Davids sake what will he do to us if we shew David any kindnesse And hence no doubt it was that Davids father and mother and all their house went down to David when he was in the cave of Adullam that they might bee out of danger from Sauls fury 1 Sam. 22.1 3. The second Reason Secondly this might befall David by divine disposition for the triall of Davids faith and patience as in like case it befell Job Job 19.13 14 19. He hath put my brethren farre from me and my acquaintance are verily estranged from me My kinsfolk have failed and my familiar friends have forgotten me All my friends abhorred me and they whom I loved are turned against me This serves for instruction and for admonition The first Use for instruction For instruction two wayes First it shews most plainly how vain and uncertain the help of man is in time of need Psal 60.11 Give us help from trouble for vain is the help of man Psal 62.9 Surely men of low degree are vanity and men of high degree are a lye to be laid in the ballance they are altogether lighter then vanity A double ground of mans uncertainty The vanity and uncertainty of mans help stands upon a double ground in man first the mutability of his affection whose greatest favour may soon be changed into sore displeasure as Ahashuerus was towards Haman whom he highly honoured for a while Hest 3.1 2. but soon after caused him to be hanged upon a gallowes which Haman had prepared for Mordecai of 50. cubits high Hest 7.9 10. and in Ammon towards Tamar whose future hatred of her after he had ravished her exceeded his former love wherwith he had loved her 2 Sa. 13.15 Secondly upon the instability of his condition whereby in his best estate he is altogether vanity walking in a vain shew Ps 39.5 6. For what man liveth and shall not see death Ps 89.48 Now when death cometh he returneth to his earth in that very day his thoughts perish Ps 146.4 thē can he do nothing for himself lesse for others Secondly see in David what may be the case of Gods own dear children The second Use for instruction even to be forsaken of their nearest and dearest earthly friends in time of distresse Ps 68 9 20. I am becom a stranger unto my brethren and an alien unto my mothers children I looked for some to take pity but there was none and for comforters but I found none So Paul complains 2 Tim. 4.16 At my first answer no man stood with me but all men forsook me Holy Job saith To him that is afflicted pitty should be shewed from his friend but he forsaketh the fear of the almighty My brethren have dealt deceitfully as a brook and as stream of brooks they passe away Job 6.14 15. Yea this was the lot and portion of our blessed Saviour at his apprehension Matth 26.56 then all the Disciples forsook him and fled The first Use for admonition For admonition it serves two wayes First that seeing father and mother may forsake us we put not our trust in men be they never so near or dear unto us in nature This is Davids counsell Psal 146.3 Put not your trust in Princes nor in the sonne of man in whom there is no help remember his mortality there mentioned Vers 4. His breath goeth forth be returneth to his earth in that very day his thoughts perish And adde thereto the consideration of his mutability in affection before mentioned with the Lords threatning of a curse to him that trusteth in man Jer. 17.5.6 Indeed we may trust to men as the meanes but not as the foundation of our help The second Use for admonition Secondly that we be not dismaid when our friends do fail us we see by Job David and our Saviour Christ that it is no strange thing Reason as Christ doth Matth. 10.24 25. The disciple is not above his master c. and Luke 23.31 If they have done these things in a green tree what shall be done in the dry The second observation The second thing to be here observed is purposely intended that when Davids nearest and dearest friends forsook him then the Lord would gather him up Psal 142.4 5 7. I looked on my right hand and behold but there was no man that would know me refuge failed me no man cared for my soul I cried unto the Lord thou art my refuge thou wilt deal bountifully with
Lords day say the like of the solemne sanctification of it viz. it is a wearinesse and they snuffe at it Mal. 1.13 And so they deale about the rest of Gods holy Commandements in the transgression whereof their naturall hearts desire carnall liberty verifying the Apostles saying Rom. 8.7 The carnall mind is enmity against God it is not subject to the law of God neither indeed can be The Use for admonition For admonition to take speciall notice of the straightnesse of Gods paths as well to beat down our corruption when we find in our selves any untowardnesse and unwillingnesse to walk therein and if we be wise for our soules to know our own estate we shall find the flesh fighting against the spirit even strong corruption called a law in our members warring against the law of our minds which is renewed grace and leading us captive to the law of sin as Paul complaineth Rom. 7.23 And had we not need to fight against it by the sword of the spirit the word of God laying it to our soules by the hand of faith and by humble earnest prayer for the participation of Gods power to keep us in this straight wayes of God wherein is liberty Psal 119.45 For when the world and the flesh by cor●●ption draw us out of these paths we are taken captives as Paul confesseth and so loose our liberty See also 2. Tim. 2.26 As also to give all diligence to know the straight paths of the Lord and to walk therein This is the Lords commandement with comfortable encouragement so to doe Jer. 6.15 Stand ye in the wayes and see and ask for the old paths where is the good way and walk therein and ye shall find rest for your soules Luke 13.24 Strive to enter in at the strait gate and walk in the strait way that leadeth unto life Mat. 7.13 14. This was Davids behaviour as we may see by his prayer in this place and many other before quoted Consider the benefit of rest to the soule and of pleasantnesse and peace to be found in these wayes Prov. 3.17 And withall think ou their fearefull state and end that leave these straight wayes of God see Asts 13.10 they are enemies of righteousnesse children of the devill and are taken captive by him at his will till they repent 2 Tim. 2.26 and if they hold on in their crooked paths they shall never know peace Is 59.8 The Lord will lead them forth with the workers of iniquity Psal 125.5 even to the damnation of hell Psal 9.7 Mat. 7.23 For the man that wandereth out of the way of understanding shall remain in the congregation of the dead Prov. 21.16 The Use for comfort For comfort greatly to those that walk in Gods waies for they are wayes of peace with God and lead to glory eternall Psal 119.1 and Psal 128.1 2 Tim. 4.7 8. The third Observation Secondly here observe the thing intended and expressed David begs of God to lead him in a plain path Psal 5.8 Lead me O Lord in thy righteousnesse Psal 25.5 lead me in thy truth Psal 139.24 Lead me in the way everlasting This he doth upon the like grounds that he prayed to be taught the wayes of God As first The 1. reason upon the consideration of the inability of nature to walk at all in the straight paths of God for we are dead in sinnes and trespasses Eph. 2.1 and of no strength Rom. 5.6 and how can such walk And though Gods holy calling to the state of grace gave him spirituall life yet he had experience and so conscience of his own weaknesse in grace unlesse the Lord were still with him to uphold and lead him See Psal 30.6 7 8. I said in my prosperity I shall never be moved Thou didst hide thy face and I was troubled Psal 6.2 Have mercy upon me O Lord for I am weak Psal 38.17.21 I am ready to halt forsake me not O Lord. The second Reason Secondly David had knowledge of Gods gracious property in becoming a guide unto his children as Psal 77.20 Thou leadest thy people like a flock Psal 80.1 Give eare thou shepheard of Israel that leadest Joseph like a flock He led them with a cloudy day and a pillar of fire by night Ex. 13.21 Psal 78.14 Now being in covenant he layes claim to his favour and begs it by prayer The third Reason Thirdly David prayeth to be led by God for his safety and security against his enemies this reason is here rendered lead me in a plain path because of mine enemies for when God is for him he will not fear what can man do unto him Psal 118.6 when God leadeth him he will not fear though he walk through the very valley of the shadow of death Psal 23.2 4. This serves for instruction and for admonition The first Use for instruction For instruction two wayes First it lets us see the true ground of the perseverance of the godly in the state of grace it is not in themselves but in and from the Lord who is with them and leads them in the way everlasting he by his spirit ministers daily supply of grace and so keeps them from falling away See 1 John 2.20.27 John 14.16 17. 1 John 4.4 13. This spirit gives sap and juyce to the seed of grace so as they cannot sin unto death 1 Iohn 3.9 Ier. 32.40 Psal 125.1 2. These things we should mark to arme our selves against the uncomfortable doctrine of Papists and Arminians that say the true child of God may fall away from saving grace but Iohn 4.14 The water that I shall give him shall be in him a well of water springing up into everlasting life and John 10.27 28. The second Use for instruction Secondly Davids practise shewes the meeknesse of wisedome that is in those that be truly godly not to trust in themselves but humbly craving the Lords conduct and guiding in this world to put all their trust in the Lord. The use for admonition For admonition it serves notably to move every one to labour to be such as God will lead and guide in the paths of life for so shall they be sure to find rest for their soules as Ier. 6.16 What we must do that we may be such as God will lead Now that we may be such we must be carefull of foure things First that we stand rightly in covenant with God being indeed his people and having him for our God Deut. 32.9 10 11 12. The Lords portion is his people he found him in a desart land he led him about he instructed him he kept him as the apple of his eye so the Lord alone did lead him When David hath the Lord for his shepheard he assures himselfe he will lead him by the still waters Psal 23.1 2 3. Secondly we must be penitent persons breaking off the course of sin for God will not take the wicked by the hand Iob 8.20 they
repentance for our sinnes and our saith in Christ Jesus so did the Jewes and found help for deliverance Judg. 10.10 15 16. So did Jehosaphat and was preserved 2 Chron. 20.3 c. This renewing of repentance and faith is for a Christian with ●od as the sounding an alarme on the silver trumpets was for the old Israelites when they went out to warre it causeth remembrance before the Lord that we may be saved from our enemies Numb 11.9 Lastly we must make conscience of new obedience and do that which the Lord commandeth then will he be an enemy to our enemies and an adversary to our adversaries Exod. 23.22 If herein we approve our selves the children of Abraham we shall receive from God the blessing of Abraham God will blesse them that blesse us and curse them that curse us Gen. 12.3 For false witnesses are risen up against me and such as breath out cruelty The reason of Davids former request that he might not be delivered to the will of his enemies drawn from their unconscionable behaviour and deadly hatred towards him Their unconscionable behaviour they rose up against him in false witnesse bearing their deadly hatred in breathing out cruelty or violence Both which may be referred to the same persons for a man that beareth false witnesse against his neighbour is as a mawle and a sword and a sharp arrow Prov. 25 1● all which are evidences of great violence Yet because these two sentences are in the originall in divers numbers for the latter is expressed in the singular number 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He that breatheth out cruelty therefore I take it in the latter he pointeth out Saul himself and in the former such as did falsly accuse him unto Saul For David elsewhere pointeth out Saul by the terme and phrase of a violent man Psalm 18.48 Thou hast preserved me from the violent man and Psal 140.4 Preserve me from the violent man Here then wee have to consider two grievous evills that befell David from his enemies the first from Sauls flattering followers the second from Saul himself The third Observation For the first false witnesses did rise up against David such as without all conscience accused him of evills whereof he was not guilty See Psal 35.11 False witnesses did rise up against me they layd to my charge things that I knew not Psal 56.5 Every day they wrest my words Ps 57.4 My soule is among lions I lye among them that are set on fire even the sonnes of men whose teeth are spears and their tongue a sharp sword Psalm 59.7 Behold they belch out with their mouth swords are in their lips Ps 64.3 They whet their tongue like a sword and bend their bowes to shoot their arrowes even bitter words Such a one was Cush the Benjamite of whom he complains to God Psal 7. see the title and such was Doeg the Edomite Psalm 52. the title The first Reason The reason hereof is two-fold First Gods divine providence disposing that under this affliction of sustaining false accusations David should be a type of Christ who was thus wronged Mat. 26.59 60. The second Reason Secondly this proceeded from the dominion of corruption in Davids enemies themselves who wanting the feare of God as Psal 54.3 and hating David without a cause Psal 59.3 4. even becavse he followed goodnesse Psalm 38.20 and knowing Saul desired to hear evill of David as 1 Sam. 22.7 8. that he might have some colour at least to put him to death to which purpose false witnesses served fitly as 1 Kings 21.10 therefore to please Saul and to procure Davids hurt did they thus beare false witnesse against him This serves for instruction admonition and comfort The use for instruction For instruction see in Davids enemies into what fearfull evills and horrible sinnes the corruption of nature will bring naturall men whom God doth leave to themselves even to bear false witnesse against their neighbour which is a most heinous and horrible sinne even against the light of nature which teacheth that men should not do to others what they would not have done unto themselves and the very heathen have most severely punished this sinne And the Word of God accounts false witnesses to be the children of the devill for who is meant by Belial 2 Cor. 6.15 but the devill So the Syriac renders the word by Satan Now false witnesse bearers are the children of Belial 1 Kings 20.10 Prov. 6.12 and 16.17 and 19.28 they do the lusts of the devill John 8.44 in a most horrible thing even putting upon God the person of the devill to be the patrone of a lye The Use for admonition For admonition to wicked men that dare be bold upon such ungodly practises consider the heinousnesse of this sinne as proper to the wicked and the dreadfull judgements it must needs bring upon them being so dishonourable to God and abhominable in his sight See Prov. 6.16 19. Psal 52.4 5. Thou lovest all devouring words O thou deceitfull tongue God shall likewise destroy thee for ever and root thee out of the land of the living The Use for comfort For comfort to the godly that are thus wronged it hath befallen better then thy self Christ Jesus David Stephen c. See Luke 23.31 and let the godly consider that the devill is the false accuser of the bretheren Rev. 12.10 if they can find that they have repented truly and doe rest upon Christ for pardon and walk in new obedience they may rest assured of mercy upon Gods promise Prov. 28.13 1 John 1.9 and so prove the devill a false accuser in their consciences as he was to Job chap. 13.16 For when God hath pardoned sinne he doth not behold it Numb 23.21 his sinne is covered Psalm 32.1 The second branch of the reason why David desires to be kept out of the hands of his enemies is because of their deadly hatred towards him The fourth Observation Saul Davids arch-enemy breathed out violence against him 1 Sam. 21.31 send and fetch him unto me for he shall surely dye therefore doth David so often stile him by the name of the violent man Psal 140.1 4. and means him and his followers when he saith mine enemies hate me with hatred of violence Psal 25.19 In heart you work wickednesse you weigh the violence of your hands in the earth Psal 85.2 Magistrates should dispense justice and mercy Psal 101.1 but Sanl and his counsell became the tradesmen of violence violence covered them as a garment Psal 73.6 The 1. reason The reason hereof in Saul was twofol First envy at Davids honour for when the women sang to his renown Saul hath slain his thousand and David his ten thousand Saul was very wrath and the saying displeased him and he eyed David from that day forward and shortly after cast a javelin at him to kill him 1 Sam. 18.7 9 10 11. plainly verifying that of Solomon wrath is cruell and
even fear where no fear is Ps 53.5 it makes the heart to faile Luke 21.26 Secondly that we are truly in covenant with God not only receiving the seales thereof for outward admittance and assurance as Baptisme and the Lords supper but humbly receiving and obeying the word of the covenant Christs holy gospell which when we do the Lord will say feare thou not for I am with thee he not dismaid for I am thy God I will strengthen thee yea I will help thee yea I will uphold thee with the right hand of my righteousnesse Is 41.10 Thirdly that by faith we rest and rely upon Gods mercy in Christ Jesus This is the ground of hope whereby we wait on God which hath the promise of being strengthened as when it is said that by faith some of weak were made strong Heb. 11.34 as Abraham was strong in the faith Rom. 4.20 This faith unites us unto ●od in Christ Gal. 2.20 and Gods promise is to strengthen such in the Lord Zech. 10.12 Fourthly that we be upright hearted towards God for the Lord makes himself strong for such 2 Chron. 16.9 This we may see by his promise and dealing with David who was upright before him Psal 18.23 and Gods hand was established with him his arme did streng then him Ps 89.21 The fourth observation The fourth and last point here to be noted is the repetition of the first duty here prescribed Wait I say on the Lord that is even after the Lord hath strengthened thine heart yet wait still on God and abide his leisure for thy full deliverance The like repetition we may see in the same case Jam. 5.7.8 Be patient therefore brethren unto the coming of the Lord behold the husbandman waiteth for the precious fruit of the earth Be yee also patient stablish your hearts for the coming of the Lord draweth neer The Reason The reason of such repetitions is to shew the necessity of this duty of waiting upon God in the time of afflictions for tribulations are like to continue to the godly in this world as Christ told his Disciples John 16.33 in regard of the malice of the devill and his instruments who being the seed of the Serpent do bear continuall enmity to the godly which are the seed of the woman The wicked ordinarily are many and mighty as David complaineth Psal 69.4 They that hate me without a cause are more then the haires of mine head they that would destroy me being mine enemies wrongfully are mighty So as the godly had need with the same prophet to say and do as Psal 59.9 Because of his strength will I wait upon thee for God is my defence The use for instruction This serves to justifie a profitable ministeriall practise in the zealous pressing of needfull duties by often repetition Many have itching ears ever desirous to hear novelties like the Athenians who spent the time in nothing else but to tell or heare some new thing Acts 17.21 But wisedome is justified of her children They that mind to be Christs Disciples are desirous to hear needfull things again and again as John 9.29 Wherefore would you heare it again and again will yee also be his Disciples Acts 13.42 The Gentiles besought that these words might be preached unto them the next Sabbath For which purpose Paul saith To Write to you the same things is not indeed grievous to me but for you it is safe Phil. 3.1 as his often practise of it plainly shewes in the same chapter verse 18. Many walk of whom I have told you often and now tell you weeping that they are the enemies of the Crosse of Christ Gal. 1.8 9. Though we or an Angell from heaven preach unto you any other gospell then that which we have preached unto you let him be accursed As we said before so say I now again If any man preach any other gospell unto you then that ye have r●ceived let him be accursed And our blessed Saviour about materiall duties took the same course as we may see in his often repeated woes against the Scribes and Pharisees Mat 23.13 14 15 16. c. and his pressing the duty of watching on his Disciples by this often repetition Mark 13.33 Take ye heed watch and pray verse 35. watch yee therefore 37. What I say unto you I say unto all men watch The Use for admonition Secondly this repitition of the duty shewing the importance of it must stirre up our diligence in the constant and conscionable use of such means as God hath ordained for the a taining of this vertue Which way and means is plainly prescribed in the use of admonition where this duty is handled in the beginning of the verse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 DAVIDS Hearts desire OR AN EXPOSITION Of the 84. Psalme By Mr. THOMAS PIERSON Late Pastour of Brompton-Brian in the County of Hereford LONDON Printed for Philemon Stephens at the gilded Lyon in Pauls Church-yard 1647. AN EXPOSITION of the 84. Psalme Psalme 84. To the chiefe Musician upon Gittith A Psalme for the Sonnes of Korah THis Psalme may not unfitly be called Davids hearts desire for though his name be not prefixed as it is to sundry others yet the matter of it being well weighed doth most fitly accord to his troublesome estate under persecution whereby he was debarred from safe accesse to the place of Gods solemn and publike service and most fully expresse his hearts desire after the house of God which was in him both frequent and unfeigned Psal 27.4 in regard of the blessings there to be enjoyed Psal 65.4 which is matter profitable for Gods children for that which being denyed will prove the hearts desire should being enjoyed become the hearts delight and that is the pure and holy publike worship of God In the handling of this Psalme we have first the Dedication of it in the title prefixed then the Psalme it selfe The Dedication The Dedication was to the chief Musician or Master of the Quier For 1 Chron. 16.4 David ordered a Quier to sing thankesgiving and penned Psalmes for that end which he delivered to the Master of the Quier vers 7. Of their ordering see 1 Chron. 25.1.7 Vpon Gittith Three Psalmes hath this word Gittith in the title viz. 8.81.84 the meaning whereof is difficult being much controverted amongst interpreters The Septuagint reads it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pro ●orcularibus which the a Euthymius August in Psal 8. ancients Allegorizing expound of particular Churches where Christ is the vine believers are branches and faith and other graces are grapes which yield that wine which cheereth God and man Iudg. 9.13 Others following the 72. yet referre it to the time of vintage thus celebrated The Chaldee Paraphrast b 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 takes it for a musicall instrument which David brought from Gath where he remained in his exile from Saul with King Achish Rabbi David Kimhi takes it to note and signifie that this Psalme
us to shame and goest not forth with our armies verse 9. The first Reason The reason is two fold First to shew themselves thankfull for blessings received for so God is honoured Psal 50.23 Who so offereth praise glorifyeth me which is very profitable as Luke 17.17 18 19. The second Reason Secondly to lay a ground of assurance of deliverance in present evills For hereby their hearts are setled in assurance of Gods power and further in the love of his mercy as appears by that of David 1 Sam. 17.34 c. The Lord that delivered me out of the paw of the Lyon and out of the paw of the bear he will deliver me out of the hand of this Philistine This serves for instruction and for admonition For instruction The use for instruction see a difference between the wicked and the godly under crosses and afflictions The godly we see here doth guide his affaires with discretion as hee looks with one eye on Gods present judgements so with the other he beholds precedent mercies See Job 1.21 The Lord gave and the Lord hath taken away blessed be the name of the Lord and Job 2.10 What shall we receive good at the hand of God and shall we not receive evill But the wicked are like Haman all his honour is nothing while Mordecai sits in the Kings gate Est 5.13 The godly are like David 1 Sam. 30.5 6. who when the people spake of stoning him encouraged himself in the Lord his God but the wicked like Nabal in distresse whose heart dyed within him and hee became as a stone 1 Sam. 25.37 or like Saul that when God would not answer him consulted with a witch 2 Sam. 28.7 Seek me a woman that hath a familiar spirit that I may go to her and enquire For admonition The Use for admonition labour to become followers of Gods Church and people in this godly behaviour We have just cause so to do in this land every true member of Gods Church Gods favour hath been great unto us in preventing the designs of our enemies and in withdrawing the heavy judgement of plague and pestilence from our bretheren and that not once alone but often the remembrance of which mercies no present judgements should be able to deprive us of Now particularly in the Churches acknowledgement of Gods great favour and mercy to them we have sundry things to note First the Prophet calls Judea wherein the people of Israel dwelt The second Observation Gods land Thou hast been favourable to thy land So Psal 10.16 The Lord is King for ever and ever the heathen are perished out of his land that is the Canaanites and the rest of the nations that once possessed it are now destroyed Jer. 2.7 Ye defiled my land and made mine heritage an abomination Ezek. 36.5 God is angry with all those heathen that appoint his land into their possession and verse 20. these are the people of the Lord and are gone forth out of his land and Ezek. 36.5 I will bring thee against my land Hos 9.3 They shall not dwell in the Lords land Joel 1.6 A Nation is come upon my land The first Reason The reason or ground hereof is threefold First God chose this land for his own people wherein he promised to dwell among them See Lev. 26.11 Psal 47.4 Psal 48.1 2 3. Psal 76.1.2 Ezek. 20.6 Ezek. 37.26 The second Reason Secondly he became King over this land Zechar. 14.9 Judah was his sanctuary and Israel his dominion Psalm 114.2 The third Reason Thirdly he undertook to be protector and blesser of this land and that in an extraordinary manner as Deut. 11.11 12. The land whither thou goest to possesse it is a land of hills and valleyes c. A land which the Lord thy God careth for the eyes of the Lord thy God are alwaies upon it Experience whereof may be seen by example 1 Sam. 7.10 11 12. 2 Kings 19.32 33. In these respects the land of Jurie was as it were Gods peculiar enclosure hedged in from his commons which was the whole earth This serves for instruction admonition and comfort The use for instruction For instruction it shewes plainly that some lands and people have a priviledge above others for sure title and interest unto the true God namely those that do receive believe and obey the word of the covenant as did the Jewes under the law and all Christian nations under the gospell It is true that by creation and common providence all lands and all people are the Lords as Psal 50.12 The world is mine and the fulnesse thereof yet they onely are his by bond of covenant and so entitled to his speciall mercies that truly receive believe and obey his holy word See Exod. 19.5 6. Deut. 10.14 15. Psal 65.1 The first Use for admonition For admonition it serves two wayes First to those that as yet are without not called nor brought into the bond of the covenant with God that if ever they desire true happinesse for their soules they labour to become rightly entitled to the true God by speciall covenant through Christ Jesus for happy are the people that have the Lord for their God Psal 144.15 Now for this end they themselves must seek unto Gods ministers and say as a man of Macedonia did unto Paul in a vision come and help us Acts 16.9 they must enquire of them as the ●unuch did of Philip I pray thee of whom speaketh the Prophet this Acts 8.34 Nay they must study in the word themselves and search the Scriptures daily by the example of the noble Bereans Acts 17.11 And above all they must desire of God that he will teach them to do that which is pleasing unto him as Psal 143.10 The second Use for admonition Secondly to us in this land who by our holy profession do entitle our selves to the true God and say as Psal 48.14 This God is our God for ever we must look unto it that we do truly and sincerely receive believe and obey the word of the covenant and take heed of those things which tend to separate between God and his people Amongst which we are most in danger of these two first the idolatry of Popery Secondly prophanenesse in Christianity Popery is a false faith and prophanenesse in the profession of the true religion argues a dead faith For Popery it is at this day amongst Gods people in comparison of true religion as the worship of the golden calves erected by Jeroboam at Dan and Bethel was to the true worship appointed by God himself at Jerusalem 1 Kings 12.26 28 29. c. For Papists worship God in images as they did now the danger thereof see 2 Chron 15.13 Israel without a true God and 2 Chron. 25.7 The Lord is not with Israel Therefore if we desire the continuance of this priviledge to have our land to be Gods land we must set our selves against Popery lament
I tell you that he will avenge them speedily This serves for instruction admonition and comfort The first Use for instruction For instruction two wayes First this their admiration doth presuppose their good and commendable information in the knowledge of God for his gracious disposition towards his children and the truth of his promises assured in covenant with them else they would never have thought it strange it should be otherwise with them And therefore men should take heed how they lay claime to be Gods people and yet be ignorant of his properties and promises 1 Cor. 15.34 Some have not the knowledge of God I speak this to your shame The second Use for instruction Secondly their admiration shewes plainly that there is a justice and wisedome in God even in the course of his providence over the state and wayes of men which many times surpasseth the reach of Gods children to discern and finde out till it please God of himself to reveal the reason and cause of his dealing as Jer. 12.1 2. Righteous art thou O Lord when I plead with thee yet let me talk with thee of thy judgements wherefore doth the way of the wicked prosper c. Who can but admire that the wicked Benjamites should twice prevaile in fight against their brethren that came for the execution of justice upon the sonnes of Belial that had committed villany with the Levites concubine Judges 20.18 c. The Use for admonition For admonition it serves very fitly to move us to godly behaviour under long affliction that we carefully suppresse in our selves all thoughts of hard or unjust dealing in God towards us therein bringing ou● hearts to this resolution with Jeremy that God is righteous even then when his dealing seems most strange unto us Qu. How shall we be able so to do Answ By evincing our hearts of four things in God justice soveraignty wisedome and power First of justice to do right to all and wrong to none This is so essentiall in God that he may as soon cease to be God as not to do right Gen. 18.25 Psal 145.17 Jer. 12.1 Job 34.10.23 And therefore the godly under affliction must not be worse than Pharaoh who confesseth Exod. 9.27 I have sinned The Lord is righteous I and my people are wicked Secondly we must lay to heart God soveraignty whereby he may do with his own what he will he may exercise his under the crosse not onely for correction for sin but also for triall of grace as he did Job Job 2.3 We grant this liberty to men over their goods and cattle which are the gifts of Gods providence unto them and shall we deny it to the Lord over man who hath absolute soveraignty over him both by creation and providence Thirdly we must bethink our selves of Gods wisedome which indeed is infinite Psal 147.5 and therefore may in himself perfectly discern that that affliction which he continues upon his children is most for his own glory and best for their good though they conceive the contrary as children do under the rod in the hand of their parents Lastly consider his Almighty power he can bring light out of darknesse 2 Cor. 4.6 and so he useth to do to his children Psal 112.4 so as they shall confesse it is good for them that they have been afflicted Psal 119.71 And indeed whosoever considereth the end which God brought unto Job to David and the rest whom he exercised under great affliction will confesse no lesse These things well considered will make us know our duty and acknowledge that repining against Gods correction continued is ever a fruit of corruption which reigneth in naturall men and maketh them to blaspheme under Gods judgments Rev. 16.9 The Use for comfort For comfort it makes greatly to Gods children under long affliction to consider that such an estate may continue upon his own children and servants by the rule of his justice soveraignty wisedome and power and therefore they need not to murmure or despair when nothing befals them but that which hath befaln their betters in grace as Job David c. That thy people may rejoyce in thee The reason propounded by Gods Church to move the Lord to hasten their deliverance out of misery and the removall of their afflictions namely because thereupon they should be justly occasioned to rejoyce in God as plainly discerning this to be a fruit of his mercy and loving providence over them The third Observation Here then note that when Gods people are delivered from affliction they rejoyce in God as well by receiveing it as from Gods hand as Psal 126.3 The Lord hath done great things for us whereof we are glad as by giving all the honour and praise thereof to God alone as Moses and Aaron did for their deliverance at the red sea Exod. 15.1 c. and as Deborah and Barak did Judges 5.1 c. David also Psal 118.1 c. and Jehoshaphat and the people 2 Chron. 20.26 27. The Reason The reason hereof is that though means bee used by Gods people yet they know that the blessing is not in the meanes but in the Lord who doth prosper the same Psalm 44.6 7 8. For I will not trust in my bowe neither shall my sword save me But thou hast saved us from our enemies and hast put them to shame that hated us In God we boast all the day long and praise thy name for ever This serves for instruction and for admonition The Use for instruction For instruction it shews us a plain difference between Gods children and naturall men in the fruition of temporall blessings and so gives evidence of nature and grace in the dayes of peace For meer nature looks at outward meanes and at second causes and so men either glory in themselves as Dan. 4.30 or sacrifice to their nets as Habak 1.15 16. But the godly though they use means yet they first look at God and give the chief praise to him and look to the means in the second place as 1 Sam. 25.32 The use for admonition For admonition it serves effectually to move every childe of God to conform himself to this profession and practise of the godly even for every blessing whether of deliverance from evill or fruition of good to rejoyce in the Lord. This was Davids ordinary practise Psal 34.1 2 4. This also we shall do if we be carefull of three things First to see Gods hand of mercy in every thing wherein we rejoyce as Psal 118.15 16 23 24. The voyce of rejoycing and salvation is in the tabernacles of the righteous the right hand of the Lord doth valiantly c. Secondly to give him praise and thanks for every blessing thus God is honoured Psal 50.23 therefore David stirreth up his soul hereunto Psal 103 1 2. Blesse the Lord O my soul and all that is within me blesse his holy name Blesse the Lord O my soul and forget not
his example in the particular branches of the Psalm The time when this Psalm was penned may probably be guessed by the matter of it to have been when he was persecuted by the hand of Saul and his followers of whose cruelty he complaines vers 2. and prayes against them vers 12. The scope The chief matter of it is a notable expression of affiance and confidence in God in his greatest dangers commending the same by the notable fruits and effects thereof and generall division of the whole Psalm His godly affiance he testifieth three wayes First by plain and expresse profession thereof in sweet variety of phrase and gracious application by sundry remarkable fruits and effects thereof to be seen in his godly behaviour in the sixe first verses Secondly by humble prayer and supplication for audience mercy favour instruction and preservation vers 7 c. to 13. Thirdly by a godly provocation of his own soul upon good ground still to wait upon God vers 13 14. For the first Vers 1. Davids affiance and confidence in God is very elegantly in sweet variety of phrase plainly testified in the first verse when he calleth the Lord his light and his salvation and the strength of his life and there also is amplified by a notable effect of godly security in freedome from servile fear propounded by way of interrogation and also twice repeated for better assurance The meaning of the words Metonymia effecti In all the three titles which he gives to God there is a sacred trope the effect is put for the efficient For to speak properly God was the authour and fountain of light salvation and of strength and not the things themselves Likewise in the first word there is another trope a Metaphor Metaphorae for light is taken in a translate and borrowed sense for joy and gladnesse as Esther 8.16 which is to the heart a pleasant thing as light is to the eye Eccles 11.7 So as his meaning is to encourage his heart against the reproach of his enemies that would bid him be packing to hide himself in mountains and deserts as Psal 11.1 seeing the King himself did seek his life Why saith David I have Jehovah the true God for the authour of joy and gladnesse to my heart the giver of safety to my person and of strength unto my life whom should I fear Should I be afraid of Saul or any other man when as the Lord is my comfort by undertaking my safety and girding me with strength as Psal 18.32 In the words thus understood note two things First what God was to David secondly what benefit David reaped thereby For the first The first Observation The true God is unto David the fountain of gladnesse to his heart the Authour of safety to his person and the giver of strength and might for the preservation of his life For light of comfort see Psal 18.28 Thou wilt light my candle that is encrease my small comfort the Lord my God will lighten my darknesse that is give me comfort and joy instead of misery and sorrow Hence he cals God his exceeding joy Psal 43.4 And that he was the Authour of his safety see Psal 3.3 Thou Lord art a shield for me and Psal 4.8 Thou Lord onely makest me dwell in safety For giving him strength and might see Psal 18.2 The Lord is my rock and my fortresse and my deliverer my God my strength Vers 32. It is God that girdeth me with strength Vers 39. Thou hast girded me with strength unto the battle The Reason The reason or ground of this happinesse is Davids being in covenant with God as God himself testifieth of David calling him his servant whom he anointed with his holy oyl and promising that his faithfulnesse and mercy shall be with him yea his mercy will he keep for him for ever and his covenant shall stand fast with him He shall cry unto me thou art my father my God and the rock of my salvation Psal 89.20 21 24 26 28. And David himself layeth claim to this covenant with God Psal 119.94 I am thine save me and Psal 23.1 The Lord is my shepheard and in very many Psalmes he calleth the Lord his God as Psal 7.1 O Lord my God in thee will I put my trust and Vers 3. O Lord my God The first Use for instruction This serves for instruction admonition and comfort For instruction two wayes First touching Gods all-sufficiency in himself for all his children for whatsoever they want or need else David would never have said with assurance that God became so many great blessings unto him as here he doth and in many other places as Psal 18.2 and Psal 144.1 2. My strength my goodnesse my fortresse my high tower and my deliverer my shield c. This point the Lord taught Abraham plainly Gen. 17.1 I am God All-sufficient or Almighty The second Use for instruction Secondly this shews plainly the happy estate of those that stand rightly in covenant with God as David saith Blessed is the nation whose God is the Lord Psal 133.12 For God being in himself all-sufficient becomes all in all to those that be his people by covenant Psal 103.17 18. The mercy of the Lord is from everlasting to everlasting upon them that fear him and his righteousnesse unto childrens children to such as keep his covenant His eyes runne to and fro throughou● the whole earth to shew himfelf strong in the behalf of them whose heart is perfect towards him 2 Chron. 16.9 He will make all his goodnesse passe before them Exod 33.19 He will blesse them in their basket in their dough within the house and in the field De●t 28.1 2 c. to 15. Hereupon David saith he shall not lack Psal 23.1 and the Church saith she will not fear having God for her refuge and strength Psal 46.1 2 5. with Is 33.21 The first Use for admonition For admonition this serves three wayes First seeing this was Davids great happinesse in his troubles that he could say The Lord is my light and my salvation c. That we should search and try whether God be that to us which he was to David And this may be known of every childe of God at this day How we may know that God is our light For first if God be the light of grace and comfort to thy soul in Christ Jesus he will be the light of joy and gladnesse in his providence to thy heart and if he be spirituall salvation in Christ Jesus he will not deny thee temporall preservation and if he be the strength of thy soul in grace he will become the strength of thy life in nature In this case thou maist reason as David did Ps 56.13 Thou hast delivered my soul from death wilt thou not deliver my feet from falling Now the evidence of these heavenly and spirituall blessings from God is this First that he becomes the
may get the sure shelter against it which is onely this to have God for them as Psal 118.6 The Lord is on my side I will not fear what can man do unto me For he is the safe keeper Psal 121.4 5. whereon David assures himself of safety Psal 3.3 6. and Jeremiah Jer. 20.15 Now he is ours by covenant and continues for us while we keep fast to him in uprightnesse of heart See 2 Chron. 15.2 The Lord is with you while ye be with him and Chap. 16.9 The eyes of the Lord runne to and fro throughout the whole earth to shew himself strong in the behalf of them whose heart is perfect towards him Now a perfect heart is discerned by an obedient life Isa 38.3 I have walked before thee in truth and with a perfect heart and have done that which is good in thy sight with Job 1.1 That man was perfect and upright and one that feared God and eschewed evill The third Observation The third thing to be noted here is the issue and successe of the cruell attempt of Davids enemies against him They did not onely fail of their purpose against David but even themselves stumbled and fell See this plainly both in his particular combate with Goliah 1 Sam. 17.44 49. who said he would give Davids flesh to the fowles of the ayr and to the beasts of the field but it fell out otherwise Also in manifold battles that he fought against the Philistims wherof he saith in generall Psal 118.10 12. All nations compassed me about They compassed me about like Bees they are quenched as the fire of thornes The truth thereof see 1 Chron. 14.8 c. when the Philistims came up against him two severall times in great abundance and brought their Gods with them which he burnt with fire at Baal-Perazim Vers 12 c. See also Psal 37.14 15. The wicked have drawn out the sword and have bent their bowe to cast down the poor and needy and to slay such as be of upright conversation Their sword shall enter into their owne heart and their bowes shall be broken The first Reason The reason or cause hereof was in God who for just causes stood for David and set himself against Davids enemies God stood with David for these causes First hee found him out and chose him to do him service in that place and state wherein he was so mightily opposed by his enemies See Psal 89.20 21. I have found David my servant with my holy oyl have I annointed him With whom my hand shall be established mine arm also shall strengthen him c. as Acts 13.22 I have found David the sonne of Jesse a man after mine owne heart Psal 78.70 Hee chose David his servant and took him from the sheepfold The second Reason Secondly David trusted in God and so was holpen Ps 62 1 2 3. Truly my soul waiteth upon God from him cometh my salvation He onely is my rack and my salvation he is my defence I shall not greatly be moved How long will ye imagine mischief against a man ye shall be slain all of you as a bowing wall shall ye be and as a tottering fence Psal 21.7 8. The King trusteth in the Lord and through the mercy of the most high he shall not be moved c. Psal 91.1 2 9. He that dwelleth in the secret place of the most high shall abide under the shadow of the Almighty c. The third Reason Thirdly David prayed unto the Lord and so was preserved Psal 56.9 When I cry unto thee then shall mine enemies turn back this I know for God is for me Ps 34.4 I sought the Lord and he heard me and delivered me from all my feares Vers 6. This poor man cried and the Lord heard him and saved him out of all his troubles This duty hath Gods promise Psal 50.15 Call upon me in the day of trouble I will deliver thee and thou shalt glorifie me The fourth Reason Fourthly David made conscience of sinne and walked in in obedience Psal 18.21 24. For I have kept the ways of the Lord and have not wickedly departed from my God Therefore hath the Lord recompensed mee according to my righteousnesse The fifth Reason Now for his enemies God would not be with them for these causes First they were not called of God nor sent by him against David Psal 10.2 pride malice and covetousnesse stir up the wicked The sixt Reason Secondly they were wicked men workers of iniquity as Vers 1. with whom God will not joyn for help and assistance Job 8.28 God will not cast away a perfect man neither will he help the evill doers Psal 94.20 Shall the throne of iniquity have fellowship with thee which frameth mischief by a Law Psal 5.4 5 6. Thou art not a God that hast pleasure in wickednesse neither shall evill dwell with thee c. Psal 56.7 Shall they escape by iniquitie The seventh Reason Thirdly Davids enemies did neither regard Gods word nor Gods works and so could not prosprr For neglect of Gods word see Psal 119.126 It is time for thee Lord to work for they have made void thy law Psal 50.16 17. Vnto the wicked God saith what hast thou to do to declare my statutes c. seeing thou hatest instruction and castest my words behinde thee And for his works Psal 28.5 Because they regard not the workes of the Lord nor the operation of his hands he shall destroy them and not build them up The eight Reason Fourthly Davids enemies trusted in their own might and outward means Psal 3.2 Many say of my soul there is no help for him in God 2. Sam. 17.12 Therefore I counsell c. We will light upon him as the dew falleth on the ground and of him and of all the men that are with him there shall not be left so much as one Psal 21.7 8. Some trust in chariots and some in horses but wee will remember the name of the Lord our God They are brought down and faln but we are risen and stand upright Object Yet sometimes this is otherwise as the Psalmist complaineth Psal 89.38 39 43. But thou hast cast off and abhorred thou hast been wrath with thine annointed Thou hast made void the covenant of thy servant thou hast prophaned his crown by casting it to the ground Thou hast also turned the edge of his sword and hast not made him to stand in the battle The like complaint see Psal 44.9 10 c. But thou hast cast off and put us to shame and goest not forth with our armies Thou makest us to turn back from the enemy and they which hate us spoyl for themselves Answ Here we must consider the nature of Gods promises for though such as concern redemption and salvation in Christ be most sure and certain yea and Amen 2 Cor. 1.10 Yet the promises of temporall blessings are conditionall and must be understood with the exception
as the joviall fellowes of the world do who delight in doing evill and sport themselves in the frowardnesse of the wicked as Prov. 2.14 then certainly our case is wofull we are not so near the state of grace as were Cain and Judas who were touched with legall remorse upon the conscience of their heinous sinnes as we may see Gen. 4.13 14. Mat. 27.3 The second Use for admonition Secondly Gods children may hence learn not to be dismaid for the temporary hiding of Gods face or sustaining of his anger for nothing herein befals them but that which appertains to man even to Gods dear children 1 Cor. 10.13 As we may see in Jod David Ethan the Ezrahite Ps 88.1 2 c. How Gods children must behave themselves when he hides his face from them Herein let us follow their godly practice which was this First to consider their wayes Psal 119.59 that so they might finde out their sinnes that bring the foresaid evils Secondly with sorrow and grief of heart to confesse against themselves Psal 32.4 5. Job 42.6 Thirdly to cry earnestly for mercy as for life and death Psal 51.1 2. Psal 143.1 2. Fourthly walk in new obedience Psal 119.8 16. I will keep thy statutes O forsake me not utterly I have sworn and will perform it that I will keep thy righteous judgements Lastly in the use of Gods ordinances the word and prayer to wait for comfort as Psal 42.5.11 Psal 43.5 Read hear and meditate on Gods word as Psal 119.13 c. yea also watch and wait in prayer Col. 4.2 and if the fear be great humble thy soul with fasting as Psal 35.13 Limit not the holy one of Israel for time or measure of any blessing as the carnall Israelites did Psal 78.41 but with Job wait all our life long Job 14.14 Say with the Church Mich. 7.7 8 9. I will look unto the Lord I will wait for the God of my salvation my God will hear me When I fall I shall rise when I sit in darknesse the Lord shall be a light unto me I will bear the indignation of the Lord because I have sinned against him untill he plead my cause and execute judgement for me Hee will bring me forth to the light and I shall behold his righteousnesse The reasons propounded by David to move God to vouchsafe his favour and not hide his face c. are three The first is implied in the title servant wherewith David stiles himself in the second branch of this petition put not thy servant away in anger Where in Davids judgement this is plain The second Observation That to be Gods servant is a good ground and step towards the attainment of Gods favour it is that which gives title to mercy in time of trouble inward or outward Psal 31.15 16. Deliver me from the hand of mine enemies make thy face to shine upon thy servant save me for thy mercies sake Psal 69.17 Hide not thy face from thy servant for I am in trouble Psal 86.4 Rejoyce the soul of thy servant Isa 65.13 14. Thus saith the Lord God Behold my servants shall eat but ye shall be hungry Behold my servants shall drink but ye shall be thirsty Behold my servants shall rejoyce but ye shall be ashamed Behold my servants shall sing for joy of heart but ye shall cry for sorrow of heart The Reason The reason is plain Every true servant of God is certainly in covenant with God by an holy calling 1 Cor. 7.22 He that is called in the Lord being a servant is the Lords free-man likewise also he that is called being free is Christs servant so that whether he be bond or free by his holy calling he belongs to God Now being thus in covenant with God he is entituled to all Gods blessings in Christ and so to the fruition of Gods favour Psal 89.4 20 21 24. I have made a covenant with my chosen I have sworn unto David my servent I have found David my servant with my holy oyl have I anointed him with whom my hand also shall be established my faithfulnesse and my mercy shall be with him my mercy will I keep with him for ever and my covenant shall stand fast with him This serves for instruction and for admonition The first Use for instruction For instruction two wayes First that it is a blessed and happy thing to be Gods true servant Consider what the Queen of Sheba said of Solomons servants 1 Kings 10.8 Happy are these thy servants c. Now Christ Jesus is greater then Solomon Matth. 12.42 and so a better Master Good earthly Masters will honour good servants as Pro. 27.18 He that waiteth on his Master shall bee honoured Prov. 17.2 A wise servant shall have a portion or inheritance among the brethren But how ever some earthly Masters may be Nabals and Labans yet God will not be so John 12 26 Where I am there shall also my servant be If any man serve me him will my father honour See Luke 12.37 The watchfull servants are blessed their Master will make them to sit down to meat and will come forth and serve them as Matth. 25.21 23. Well done good and faithfull servant thou hast been faithfull in a few things I will make thee ruler over many things enter into the joy of the Lord. The second Use for instruction Secondly here see the great errour of naturall men that judge it a vain thing to serve God as Mal. 3.14 Job 21.15 which to bee the common thought of most men their behaviour doth plainly bewray for mark their cariage for diligence in Gods service on the Lords day compared with the pains and pleasure also they take about worldly comodities in the week day their behaviour saith aloud that their heart thinks Gods service is a vain thing else they would take more pains and pleasure therein undoubtedly they do not conceive of nor believe the testimony of God touching the prosperity of his servants for God taketh pleasure therein Ps 35.27 else he would never undertake for their direction in the way they ought to walk for their provision for all needfull blessings for their protection from all hurtfull evils and for their remuneration both here and for ever as the Scripture saith he doth The first Use for admonition For admonition it serves first to the wicked to beware of wronging Gods servants and to refrain from that course See Acts 5.38 39. Gamaliels counsell to the rulers of the Jews about the Apostles and his reason lest they be found even to fight against God as Christ said to Saul Act. 9.4 5. why persecutest thou me c. see Numb 12.8 wherefore then were ye not afraid to speak against my servant Moses and Ps 105.14 15. Zech. 2.8 And if ever they desire the priviledges of Gods servants they must labour to get into covenant with God doing as Saul did Acts 9.5 6. First desire to know Christ then
subject themselves to his holy will and wait in prayer for grace and mercy See Acts 9.9 11. The second Use for admonition Secondly Gods children that have entred covenant with God must be carefull to shew themselves Gods servants for profession without practice is nothing but hypocrisie making us like the Church of Sardis who had a name to be alive The properties of good servants but was dead Rev. 3.1 Therefore wee must get the certain and infallible properties of good servants which are partly inward and partly outward The inward are good affections which are specially three First fear and reverence Mal. 1.6 Psal 2.11 Secordly conscionable obedience to his revealed will Reason from Eph. 6.5 6 7. and from the Centurions confession Matth. 8.9 as from the lesse to the greater Without this none are acknowledged for servants Luke 6.46 This must be seen both in eschewing evill and doing good as God saith of his servant Job Job 1.8 9. yea we must shew our well-doing in improving our Masters talents Matth. 25.23 25. in fighting for him and for the faith John 18.36 Jude 3. in waiting for his coming Luke 12.36 And in all these we must be servants in ordinary not onely retainers that serve God by fits Thirdly wee must patiently suffer his corrections Heb. 12.9 10. Reason from 1 Pet. 2.18 c. as from the lesse to the greater Fourthly we must praise God for his mercy Psal 134.1 Psal 50.23 Psal 119.175 The second reason which David useth to move the Lord not to hide his face c. is plainly expressed drawne from his own experience of Gods former mercies in times of trouble saying Thou hast been my help that is when as heretofore I have been in distresse and danger thou hast holpen me and therein shewed thy favour toward mee Now hereupon saith David knowing thee to be unchangeable I appeal unto thee for like mercy that I have formerly felt In this reason we have two things to note First the thing confessed by David simply considered by it self Secondly with reference to the end for which David here propounds it For the first the thing confessed by David simply considered is this The third observation That God was Davids helper and so had been Psal 54.4 Behold God is mine helper Psal 3.3 Thou Lord art a shield for me my glory and the lifter up of my head Psal 30.10 Hear Lord and have mercy upon me Lord be thou mine helper The first Reason The reason hereof is threefold First Gods free grace and mercy receiving David into covenant and therein undertaking to become his helper and deliverer Psal 89.3.21 22. I have made a covenant with my chosen I have sworn unto David my servant with whom my hand shall be established the enemy shall not exact upon him c. And this is answerable to that which God saith to his people in generall Psal 50.5.15 The second Reason Secondly David put his trust in God whereby he was intituled to Gods help in trouble Psal 28.7 The Lord is my strength and my shield mine heart trusted in him and I am helped for indeed to such God becomes an helper Psal 37.39 40. Psal 33.18 19. The third Reason Thirdly David walked before God in conscionable obedience which gave him title to this blessing to have the Lord to be his helper Psal 18.16 17 18. Hee sent from above he took me he drew me out of many waters He delivered me from my strong enemy and from them which hated me they prevented me in the day of my calamity but the Lord was my stay c. ●ers 21. For I have kept the wayes of the Lord c. which was answerable to Gods generall promise Deut. 28.1 2 7 and Psal 81.13 14 15 16. This serves for instruction and for admonition The use for instruction For instruction in that which David professeth we may see a notable priviledge of the godly who be in covenant with God do love and fear God and trust in him and testifie the same by conscionable obedience these have this prerogative that the true God is their helper which to be a great blessing is plainly affirmed with very significant illustration Psal 146.3 4 5. for Princes are potent earthly helpers but vain is their help without the Lord for their breath is in their nostrils but the God of Jacob is the living God who doth neither slumber nor sleep Ps 121.1 2 3 c. and so is the best helper as we may see at large Psal 91. thoroughout especially vers 9.14 15. whence he is by way of excellence stiled the deliverer Rom. 11.26 because as Nebuchadnezzar said none can deliver as hee doth Dan. 3.28 29. which is plain also by Daniels delivery from the Lions den Dan. 6. which made Paul to say though we be compassed about on every side yet we are not in a strait c. 2 Cor. 4.8 for the way of help is never shut to the prayer of faith Psal 50.15 Nay mans extremity is Gods opportunity and therefore hath God lessened outward means for the plainer evidence of his own power Judg. 7.4 The first use for admonition For admonition it serves two wayes First to labour diligently to get into our selves the grounds of this prerogative in having the true God for our helper as David had The way hereto we may see in David First get truly and rightly into covenant with God and rest not in the outward title of profession having onely the outward seals thereof for so far went the foolish Virgins Matth. 25.2 3. and Judas and Simon Magus but as Paul said of the Jews Rom. 2.28 29. their outward circumcision did not make them such no more doth our outward baptisme as 1 Pet. 3.21 Therefore we must get the ingrafting grace of true faith which purifies the heart Acts 15.7 wherein stands true inward baptisme for where God establisheth the covenant of grace he writes the law in the inward parts Heb. 8.10 12. Then professing this estate of being in covenant with God get the inward saving graces of love and fear and from them bring forth the fruits of new obedience as David did and the prerogative of having God for our helper shall be assured unto us for he hath said I will not fail thee nor forsake thee Heb. 13.5 The second Use for admonition Secondly to watch carefully and constantly against that thing which will deprive us of this priviledge and that is sinne for it is a work of darknesse wherewith God will have no society Psal 94.20 1 John 1.6 It separates between God and us Isa 59.2 Whereupon the Lord said to his own people the Jews he would deliver them no more out of the hands of their enemies Judg. 10.13 14. Therefore with David we must hide Gods sayings in our hearts that we may not sinne against him Psal 119.11 and so strive to keep our selves from our iniquity Ps 18.23 Secondly
is the Lord. Psal 144.15 The Use for admonition For admonition it serves effectually to move every one that desires this comfortable state that when dearest and nearest friends do forsake him yet then the Lord may take him up to give all diligence both to get and preserve those graces in his soul and also to testifie that behaviour in life which did entitle David to this happy estate as namely to get truly into covenant with God to trust in the Lord and to shew the truth hereof by new and true obedience Men in the world will serve hard Prentiships for temporall and worldly freedomes in corporations and priviledged places how much more should wee take paines for this great priviledge of the citizens of Sion to have the Lord for our God The Use for comfort For comfort this makes greatly to the godly in times of distresse they must call to minde this property in God to be more firm and faithfull to those that be his then naturall parents are to their dearest children For which besides this text see Isa 49.14 15. Sion said the Lord hath forken me c. with Luke 11.13 If ye then being evill know how to give good gifts unto your children how much more shall your heavenly father give the holy spirit to them that ask him Let us make sure that we be rightly in covenant with God and then we may say with David The Lord is on my side I will not fear what can man do unto me Psal 118.6 The Lord is my shepheard I shall not want Yea though I walk thorovgh the valley of the shadow of death I will feare none evill for thou art with me Psal 23.1 4. Vers 11. Teach me thy way O Lord and lead me in a plain path because of mine enemies Vers 12. Deliver me not over to the will of mine enemies for false witnesses are risen up against me and such as breath out crueltie The meaning of the words IN these two Verses the Prophet David returnes again unto prayer and begs of God both instruction and direction in regard of his enemies Vers 11. and also preservation out of their hands in regard of their unconscionable dealing and cruell minds towards him Vers 12. For instruction and direction thus he prayes Teach me thy way O Lord and lead me in a plain path because of mine enemies For the meaning Gods way in Scripture is taken diversly sometime for his own administrrtion and doing or working as Job 26.14 Lo these are part of his wayes having spoken of many of his marvellous workes in the former verses 7 8 c. as afterward Behemoth is called the chief of the wayes of God that is of his works Job 40.19 Psal 77.19 Thy way is in the sea and thy path in the great waters thy footsteps are not known which hath reference to Vers 14 15. Thou art the God that dost wonders c. Psal 103.7 He made known his wayes unto Moses his acts unto the children of Israel Otherwhile and most commonly Gods way is that wherein he would have man to walk that is the course of life and dealing which he would have men to take as Jethro saith to Moses Exod. 18.20 Thou shalt teach them ordinances and laws and shalt shew them the way wherein they must walk and the work that they must do See Jer. 42.3 Herein David desires to be instructed of God Yea further hee would have God not onely to teach him the way but to lead him in a plain path that is such a path as is right and strait without any crookednesse and such is the way of Gods word the course and behaviour which God there prescribes them as Pro. 8.6 The opening of my mouth shall be right things 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the same word which is here used further expounded Vers 8 9. All the words of my mouth are in righteousnesse c. And this favour he desires because of his enemies that is of such as did observe and watch him for advantage to doe him hurt The first Observation In the words thus understood note two things First his double request made to God secondly the reason of them both For his requests the first is this David beseecheth God to teach him that way of his wherein he would have him to walk So Psal 5.8 Lead me O Lord in thy righteousnesse make thy way plain before my face Psal 25.4 Shew me thy wayes O Lord Psal 143.8 Cause me to know the way wherein I should walk Psal 86.11 Teach me thy way O Lord. The reasons hereof are three First in regard of God The 1. reason to glorisie him by seeking unto him for this blessing for God undertakes to teach the godly that be in covenant with him as it is written in the Prophets and they shall be all taught of God John 6.45 Psal 32.8 I will instruct thee and teach thee in the way which thou shalt go Prov. 4.11 I have taught thee in the way of wisedome The second Reason Secondly in regard of himself sundry wayes First because of his own inability of himself to know them without Gods teaching for the light of nature is but darknesse in the wayes of God Matth. 6.23 For the naturall man receiveth not the things of the spirit of God they are foolishnesse unto him he cannot know them meaning of himself because they are spiritually discerned This is manifest by the Eunuch Acts 8.30 31. Vnderstandest thou what thou readest saith Philip to him he answers by deniall How can I except some man should guide me Secondly for his better enabling to obedience for knowledge goes before doing John 13.17 If yee know these things happy are ye if ye do them Josh 1.8 This book of the Law shall not depart out of thy mouth but thou shalt meditate therein day and night that thou maist observe to do according to all that is written therein Thirdly for his spirituall joy and comfort for knowledge is a spirituall light 2 Cor. 4.6 and so very pleasing and comfortable to those that without it are in darknesse as Eccles 11.7 Truly the light is sweet and a pleasant thing is it for the eyes to behold the Sunne Hence we reade that many have greatly rejoyced when they have been taught the knowledge of Gods wayes Nehem. 8.12 All the people went their way to eat and to drink and to make great mirth because they had understood the words that were declared unto them So the Eunuch went his way rejoycing after he had been instructed and baptized by Philip Acts 8.39 and there was great joy in Samaria after they were converted to the faith by Philip Acts 8.6 8. The third Reason Thirdly because of his enemies as here he saith in plain words for in Gods wayes there is safety here Gods Angels have charge to keepe the godly Psalm 91.11 When thou goest in this way thy steps shall not be straightned and when
their enemies under the power of their distressors plainly by the bondage of Israel in Egypt for a long time Gen. 15.13 with Exod. 1.9 10 11 13 14. The three servants of God were thus cast into the fiery furnace Dan 3.20 21. and Daniel himself into the Lyons denne Dan. 6.16 Jeremie felt this evill Jer. 26.14 yea Christ himself by the wicked hands of the Jewes was taken crucified and slain Acts 2.23 which we are to mark to prevent rash judgement as well against others as also against our selves in this case A fault in which the godly themselves may fall as well against others Job 4.7 Remember I pray thee saith Eliphaz to Iob who ever perished being innocent as also against themselves Is 49.14 Sion said the Lord hath forsaken me and my Lord hath forgotten me Psal 22.1 My God my God why hast thou forsaken me But if we mark every mans deserving by sinne and Gods soveraignty over the best it will stay our hearts and tongues from the sinne of rash judgement The second Use for instruction Secondly this petition shewes that if the godly fall into the hands of the wicked it is by Gods permission and dispensation for a sparrow lighteth not on the ground without the will of God Mat. 10.29 therefore Christ saith to Pilate thou wouldest have no power over me at all except it were given thee from above John 19.11 and the Church saith unto God thou hast given us like sheep appointed for meat thou sellest thy people for nought Psa 44.11 12. Paul saith I think that God hath set us forth the last Apostles as it were appointed to death Which is a thing very observable as the only ground of true patience Psal 39.9 with 2. Sam. 16.10 11 12. and also of sweet comfort in the greatest persecution for he hath said I will not leave thee nor for sake thee Heb. 13.5 Ps 91.15 I will be with him in trouble Psal 66.10 11 12 Thou O God hast proved us thou hast tryed us as silver is tryed Thou broughtest us into the net thou laydest affliction upon our loynes Thou causedst men to ride over our heads we went through fire and through water but thou broughtest us out into a wealthy place Mark the comfortable end of the troubles of the godly as Iob 23.10 He knoweth the way that I take when he hath tryed me I shall come forth as the gold And so the story shewes Job 42.12 So God blessed the latter end of Iob more then the beginning The third Use for instruction Thirdly see here that prayer is a sanctified means to obtain of God safety and preservation from the hands of those that desire our hurt Thus the Jewes escaped from the bloody designe of Haman Eph. 4.16 17. and 7.3 4. c. Thus Jehosaphat escaped in battaile when the Captains of the Chariots beset him about 2 Chron. 18.31 And thus were he and his people preserved from three Kings that came against him 2 Chron. 20.3 4. c. And thus was Hezekiah preserved from the great Army of Senacherib Isaiah 37.21 33 34. And no marvaile for as God requires the duty so he hath made the promise which he will perform Psal 50.15 Psalm 91.15 The use for instruction For admonition it serves effectually to stirre up every child of God to become a follower of David in the performance of this duty to be much and earnest with God in prayer for the preservation of himself and the Church of God out of the hands of their enemies A most needfull duty in these evill times wherein the enemies of Gods Church do band themselves like Edom Moab Geball Ammon Amalek and the rest Psalm 83.3 4. c. to root out Religion to cut off Gods people that the name of Israel be no more in remembrance Consider the good successe of this duty in this case by the former examples How prayer is prevalent with God against enemies for it is not as naturall men do think a vain thing to serve the Lord unprofitable to pray unto him Mal. 3.14 Iob 21.15 experience shewes that this duty is prevalent with God one of these three wayes at all times Either it prevents their attempts as the former examples shew fully and plainly or else it procures deliverance out of the enemies hands after some time of triall and correction by them as it did for Peter when he was kept in prison by Herod with purpose to put him to death Acts 12.5 6. c. and for Israel to procure their deliverance out of Egypt Exod. 2.23 24. or at least it procures strength of grace to bear the violence and the cruelty of the enemy though he proceed to inflict upon them most violent death as we may see in Steven Acts 7.59.60 and in the Saints of God that would not be delivered that they might obtain a better resurrection Heb. 11.35 For indeed when the godly do sincerely perform this duty though the outward man perish yet the inward man is renewed daily 2 Cor. 4.16 and in death it self the child of God is more then conqueror Rom. 8.37 Let us not therefore be weary of this duty the effectuall fervent prayer of a righteous man availeth much Jam. 5.16 while Moses his hands were lifted up Joshuah prevailed but when they were let down Amalek prevailed Exod. 17.11 God is much moved by prayer it stayes the wrath of God against his people as Exod. 33.10 11. c. Psal 106.23 Deut. 9.18 19 20. And therefore when God is resolved to bring a judgement he forbids Jeremie to pray for the Jewes Jer. 7.16 and 11.14 and 14.11 Qu. Is this all we have to doe to pray in time of danger Answ No we must likewise serve Gods providence in the use of ordinary means and withall use prayer for Gods blessing thereon So Moses did for Joshuah when he fought against Amalek and Mordecai prayed for Esther when she went unto Ashuerus in the behalfe of the Jewes And besides these we must have due regard to our estate and behaviour when we perform this duty and pray and namely first we must see that we stand rightly in covenant with God and be his people through faith in Christ for then we have a promise of protection as Psal 89.3 ●0 21 22 and of audience in time of trouble 2 Chron. 7.13 14. which encouraged the Church in adversity Is 63.19 we are thine thou never bearest rule over them they were not called by thy name And Jeremiah herewith moveth God to mercy Jer. 14.8 9. O the hope of Israel the saviour thereof in time of trouble why shouldest thou be as a stranger in the land as a man that cannot save yet thou O Lord art in the midst of us and we are called by thy name leave us not Secondly if we have failed by transgression for in many things we sinne all Jam. 2. then we must be carefull to renew covenant with God by renewing our
found to be true by good experience Psal 40.1 2. I waited patiently for the Lord and he inclined unto me and established my goings according to the Lords promise Is 40.30 They that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength The first Reason The reason hereof is plain First to wait on the Lord and to encourage our selves in affliction are notable actions of faith as is shewed before Now the grace of faith doth surely intitle us to the participation of Gods power 2 Chro. 20.20 Believe in the Lord your God so shall yee be established The second Reason Secondly in waiting on the Lord and encouraging our selves in time of affliction are the right improving and employing of the talents which the Lord hath left with us for in so doing we set faith a work And this behaviour hath title to encrease for to every one that hath it shall be given Mat. 25.28 29. It is said of Paul that he encreased in strength Acts 9.22 and the way and means thereof is shewed by himself 1 Cor. 15.10 I laboured more abundantly then they all This serves for instruction and for admonition The first Use for instruction For instruction two wayes First see here plainly that Gods gracious gifts and works in our hearts are vouchsafed though not for yet in and upon our endeavour in obedience to his will in the use of those means wherein he is pleased to work the same as here encrease of strength from God is promised upon our obedience in waiting on the Lord and encouraging our hearts so to do So Is 55.3 Heare and your soule shall live for faith comes by hearing Rom. 10.17 and he that believeth in me saith our Saviour shall never dye John 11.26 A most needfull point worthy of all observation because the corruption of nature is such that we willingly yeeld to the contrary conceit which is to hope for good from God though we neglect the means wherein God is pleased to work the same and therein separate the means from the end as the Jewes looked to have eternall life in the word and yet would not search to find therein what it testified of Christ John 5.39 They would have life but they would not come to Christ to have it in him verse 40. As on the other side we easily perswade our selves we shall escape damnation though we make bold upon sinne the meritorious cause thereof to live therein The second Use for instruction Secondly here see the true fountain of al● that courage and boldnesse which in all ages Gods children have shewed for Gods glory and for the maintenance of his truth even to the amazement of their adversaries as in David against Goliah 1 Sam. 16.32 34. Psal 3.6 and 23.4 in the three servants of God before Nebuchadnezzar Dan. 3.16 17. in the Apostles before the rulers of the Jewes Acts 3.13 and in many thousand Martyrs before their persecutors whereof the Ecclesiasticall histories give plentifull testimony Surely they had it from the true God who did strengthen their hearts and this the godly have confessed as David often calling the Lord his strength as Psal 18.1 2. Psal 144.1 and Paul 2 Tim 4.17 This Lord stood with me and strengthened me The first Use for admonition For admonition it serves First to observe the wayes and means whereby God doth strengthen the hearts of his children that so we may therein wait upon God in the day of affliction for encrease of strength and courage in our soules Gods wayes for this end are of two sorts some extraordinary as the touch of Christs hand vouchsafed to Daniel How God doth strengthen the hearts of his Children Dan. 10.10 16 18. and the laying on of his right hand vouchsafed to Fohn Rev. 1.17 Others are ordinary and that of two sorts outward and inward Gods ordinary outward wayes of strengthening the heart are foure First and chiefly his word spoken either by God himself as Josh 1.6 7 9. or by his servants in the ministery thereof as Heb. 12.12 Lift up the hands that hang down Is 40.1 2. Comfort yee comfort yee my people speak yee to the heart of Jerusalem Hence David saith ●his is my comfort in mine affliction for thy word hath quickened me Psal 119.50 and Jerem. 15.16 Thy word was unto me the joy and rejoycing of my heart A good weapon in a mans hand puts courage in his heart against an enemy now Gods word is the sword of the spirit Eph. 6.17 yea the sword of Gods mouth Rev. 2.16 nay sharper then any two edged sword Heb. 4.12 Secondly the works of his providence wherein we have had experience of his goodnesse in former deliverances Thus Davids heart was strengthened to encounter with Goliah by the experience of Gods power and providence in killing the Lyon and the Beare 1 Sam. 17 34 35 36 37. yea the remembrance of Gods power and mercy unto others in like case puts life and courage into the hearts of God children in distresse Psal 22.4 5. Our Fathers trusted in thee and thou didst deliver them They cryed unto thee and were delivered Here thou maist say as Elisha did at the waters of Jordan where is the God of Elijah 2 Kings 2.14 Thirdly the company of the godly puts courage into the distressed Acts 28.15 When Paul saw the bretheren in his dangerous voyage he thanked God and took courage Prov. 27.9 17. O intment and perfume rejoyce the heart so doth the sweetnesse of a mans friend by harty counsell Iron sharpeneth iron so a man sharpeneth the countenance of his friend Fourthly and lastly prayer to God as well by our selves as by others in our behalf Thus the Apostles sought courage and boldnesse when they were threatned by the rulers of the Jewes Acts 4.24 29. and Paul for this end intreated the Ephesians to pray for him Eph. 6.19 Gods inward way of strengthening the heart is by the work of his spirit for that is the comforter John 14.16 17. and the spirit of strength Is 11.2 of power and of a sound mind 2 Tim. 1.7 By the assurance of the abode of this spirit among them the Lord encourageth Zerobabell Jehoshuah and the people Hag. 2.4 5. Now these being some of Gods speciall wayes whereby he strengtheneth the hearts of his children we must stirre up our selves to wait for his work of mercy for the strengthening of our hearts when terrour and fears take hold upon us The second Use for instruction Secondly we must labour to be such both in state of soule and behaviour of life as to whom God will vouchsafe the blessing of strength of heart in evill times This requires besides the duties here named of waiting upon God and encouraging our hearts in evill times that before hand in the dayes of peace First we beware of sinne and break off the course thereof by true repentance for guilt of sinne brings a trembling heart and great astonishment as Deut. 28.65 66.
in their wearisome way to be set upon the comfort of Gods grace and favour wherewith in his holy worship hee plentifully refresheth their soules as a plentifull rain doth the dry ground in them we may plainly note and observe three things two expressed and the third necessarily implyed The two things here expressed are first their gracious thoughts and meditations in their wearisome way secondly the esteem and accompt they make of Gods grace and favour The thing implyed or presupposed is the means and place wherein they make account to enjoy the same For the first 3. Observation The godly Jewes that dwelt far from Jerusalem in their wearisome way to Sion do set their hearts to think upon the sweet and plentifull refreshing of Gods grace and favour which shall be showred upon their soules in his holy worship We are now say they parched and scorched with heat in this dry and barren wildernesse but when we come before the Lord our soules shall be plentifully refreshed with the showring down of his grace we shall be satisfied with the goodnesse of his house even of his holy Temple Psal 65.4 This they do to strengthen and hearten themselves Reason to endure the toyle and paines of their wearisome way even as in nature Merchants do hearten themselves by the hope of gain to endure the toyle and terrour of the troublesome Seas and husbandmen by the hope of harvest do readily undertake the labour of seed-time This serves for instruction admonition and comfort For instruction two wayes First it lets us see plainly the right way to sound comfort Vse 1 and so to true patience in any outward distresse or bodily misery which is a great matter to Gods children who through manifold tribulations must enter into the Kingdome of heaven Acts 14.22 namely to bring the heart to feel and feed upon Gods spirituall and heavenly blessings and graces which be contrary to our misery as in worldly poverty and want to set thy meditation upon the heavenly treasure and riches of Gods grace in Christ Mat. 6.20 Col. 1.27 whereby the poorest in the world may by true faith be made rich to God Jam. 2.5 for by it thou purchasest the field wherein the treasure is his Mat. 13.44 45. and buyest the pearle of price and so art rich to God Luke 12.21 So in imprisonment of body by faith to meditate on our Christian liberty and enlargement from spirituall bondage by Christ Jesus In banishment and exile from our friends and country on earth to meditate upon our heavenly home and consider that our heavenly father is with us leading us Ps 107.4.7 In bondage to hard masters to remember we are Christs free-men 1 Cor. 7.22 In danger to remember Gods presence and providence Psal 118.6 7. In sicknesse to meditate on the health of the soule in the pardon of sin in Christ as Mat. 9.2 In blindnesse to meditate on the spirituall light and sight of grace which Christ gives Luke 4.18 Yea in death it self either naturall or violent both which be the losse of life to meditate upon our spirituall life in grace and of eternall life hid with Christ in God Col. 3.4 And so for any worldly want or hurt or losse we may see there is a spirituall and heavenly supply Mat. 19.29 Luke 18.29 30. Thus we shall see Gods servants have done in former times Abraham Isaac and Jacob Heb. 11.8 9. by faith they so journed in the land of promise as in a strange country looking for a City whose builder and maker is God Thus Job did in his losses consider Gods providence and hand Job 1.22 and in deepest distresse meditates on the resurrection to life Job 19.19 20 21 25. Thus did David Ps 27.13 I had fainted unlesse I had believed to see the goodnesse of the Lord in the land of the living And hereupon in distresse he stirs up his soule to wait upon God Psal 42.11 Psal 43.5 and prayes to God as Psal 116.3 4. The sorrowes of death compassed me the paines of bell gate hold upon me Then called I upon the name of the Lord yea he saith Psal 94.19 In the multitude of my thoughts within me thy comforts delight my soule and Ps 23.4 Though I walke through the valley of the shadow of death I will feare none evill for thou art with me thy rod and thy staffe comfort me Therefore see Zech. 11.7 Thus did the godly under the persecution of Antiochus Heb. 11.35 2. Mac. 7.7 Thus did Paul 2 Cor. 4.16 17 18. and chap. 5.1 yea the son of God in our nature did thus Heb. 12.2 Vse 2 Secondly this lets us see the true reason or ground of the different behaviour and carriage of Gods children from naturall men in two things First in times of danger wherein the righteous are bold as a Lyon but the wicked flee when none pursueth Prov. 28.1 As we may see in David at Ziklag 1 Sam. 30.6 and Nabal hearing of a danger past 1 Sam. 25.37 Surely the godly have an heart indued with grace which is as an hand to lay hold on Gods mercy and providence and so have hope even in death whereas the wicked is driven away in his wickednesse Prov. 14.32 The wicked are men without hope 1 Thess 4.13 Now hope is the anchor of the soule sure and stedfast Heb. 6.19 Secondly about Gods worship and service they greatly differ Gods child takes great delight in pains about Gods service as here we see and Psal 122.1 and in cost also as 1 Chron. 29.9 the people rejoyced at their great gifts and David rejoyced with great joy and 2 Sam. 24.24 yea though it cost them their lives Acts 20.24 and Phil. 2.17 But the wicked count it a wearinesse Mal. 1.13 and with the Gaderens had rather want Christ and his gospell then their hogs Mat. 8.32.34 And no marvaile for they think it a vain thing to serve God Mal. 3.14 Vse 3 For admonition it serves two wayes First with these religious Jewes to give our selves to meditate and think upon the true and sweet comfort which the blessings of grace bestowed in Gods holy worship will bring to our soules for certainly herein is plentifull spirituall supply to all wants as is implyed Luke 4.18 whereof if we were resolved we would watch at the posts of wisedome Prov. 8.34 and hang upon this ordinance as the impotent persons did at the poole of Bethesda John 5.3 4. The want hereof causeth contempt of Gods worship in some Mal. 3.14 and formall usage in the most as John 4.11 Acts 28.22 Vse 4 Secondly labour for that estate in grace whereby wee have stay and comfort for our soules in times of distresse The way is to get and practise true faith in Christ for thereby we shall live in want Phil. 4.12 13. in persecution Heb. 10.38 yea resist the Devill 1 Pet. 5.9 and quench all his fiery darts Eph. 6.16 But know it works by love Gal. 6.5 purging the heart Act.
15.9 and reforming the ife Act. 19.19 Vse 5 For comfort this practise of the godly shewes plainly that the child of God is never left of God in misery without true ground of stay and comfort God may hide his face and we may be troubled Psal 30.7 and 69.2 3. but as Ps 43.5 wait for Heb. 13.5 he hath said I will never leave thee nor forsake thee and consider 2 Cor. 4.8 9. Wee are troubled on every side yet not distressed we are perplexed but not in despaire persecuted but not forsaken cast downe but not destroyed verse 16. Though the outward man perish yet the inward is renewed daily while wee look not at things that are seen but at things which are not seen The second thing to be noted here 4. Observation is the high esteem and account which the godly Jewes did make of Gods blessings of grace to be received in his holy worship namely that they are to their soules as the rain of blessings that covereth that is as a plentifull raine which abundantly refresheth the dry and thirsty land This may be seen in Davids desire and acknowledgement answerable to the matter in hand Psal 63.1 2. My soule thirsteth for thee my flesh longeth for thee in a dry and thirsty land where no water is To see thy power and thy glory so as I have seen thee in thy Sanctuary What benefit should David reap by this ver 5. My soule shall be satisfied as with marrow and fatnesse for Christ in grace comes downe into mens hearts as rain upon the mowen grasse as showers that water the earth Psal 72.6 In his dayes shall the righteous flourish verse 7. So Hos 6.3 Reason 1 Now thus they expresse their esteem of Gods grace partly because the remembrance hereof did notably serve to cheer up their soules in their dry sandy and wearisome way as is said before Reason 2 And principally because they knew out of Gods word and by experience in themselves having tasted formerly of Gods good work of grace that Gods graces were to mans soule that which plentifull seasonable rain is to the dry ground which is evident by the state of the soule as well wanting grace as being endued therewith In the want of grace what is the soule but as dry barren ground without raine or water Jer. 17.5 6. Hee whose heart departeth from the Lord shall be like the heath in the desart and shall not be seen when good cometh but shall inhabit the parched places in the wildernesse in a salt land and shall not abide 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But the soule stored with grace is like a field which the Lord hath blessed with plentifull rains viz. both fruitfull in it self and pleasing and profitable to the owner see Ps 72.6.16 When Christ comes downe like showers there shall be an handfull of corne upon the top of the Mountaines the fruit thereof shall shake like Libanon and they of the City shall flourish like grasse of the earth Ezek. 34.26 I will make them and the places round about my hill a blessing I will cause the shower to come downe in his season there shall he the showers of blessing and the tree of the field shall yeeld her fruit and the earth shall yeeld her increase This serves for instruction for admonition and comfort Vse 1 For instruction two wayes First see in this resemblance the absolute necessity of grace to the welfare of the soule for so is the moisture of rain or water to the earth that it may be fruitfull and so pleasant and profitable unto man as we may see by the cursed vineyard Is 5.6 and by the Mountains of Gilboa whereon Saul and Jonathan fell 2 Sam. 1.21 which is a most materiall point for every mans heart to be resolved of Vse 2 Secondly this resemblance doth plainly and sweetly illustrate this materiall and weighty point in Christian Religion viz. that saving grace to the soule is a supernaturall gift of God neither is it in the power of man of himself to get saving grace see John 3.27 A man can receive nothing except it be given him from heaven as before verse 3. Except a man be born from above he cannot see the Kingdome of God with verse 7.8 Can the earth be fruitfull without moysture and can it of it self cause the clouds to drop downe raine upon it No such thing Vse 3 For admonition it serves notably to move every one to set his heart to think seriously on this resemblance as Deut. 32.46 with reference to verse 2. that so wee may labour to bring them to be affected to Gods saving graces as dry ground is toward rain and moisture which we see doth chop and gape after moysture and so in its kind cry to the clouds for showers This was in David Ps 143.6 with 63.1 But alas this thirst is rare to be found Worldly thirsts there are in many the drunkards thirst Deut. 29.19 the worldlings thirst Hab. 2.5 the Epicures thirst whose belly is his God Phil. 3.19 the ambitious mans thirst Diotrephes 3 John 9. and the malicious mans thirst the blood-thirsty Psal 5.6 Thirst after these things doth keep away this thirst after grace without which we shall never escape Dives thirst in hell Luke 16.24 If we have a godly thirst it will appear by diligence in frequenting the place and means of grace Prov. 8.34 bruit beasts for want of water will break thorow hedges and grace-thirsty soules will make their wayes thorow all incumberances to come where they may have satisfaction secondly we will delight herein as David did Psal 4.7 thirdly we will receive satisfaction and shew it Vse 4 For comfort it serves to encourage them that find themselves so affected to the blessings of grace as the Jewes did here viz. to esteem them as the rain of blessings they may assure themselves that they likewise shall find the like fruit and effect of them to be covered that is to be abundantly refreshed by them The third point to be noted here is implyed 5. Observation viz. the place and meanes wherein they assure themselves of these blessings namely in the holy worship of God which he ordained in his Tabernacle which made David to long and to thirst after them verse 2. see Is 2.3 Let us goe up to the Mountain of the Lord to the house of the God of Jacob Psal 65.4 Blessed is the man whom thou choosest c. The reason hereof is Gods sacred ordinance Reason who hath here assured the blessing and life for 1 Kings 9.3 his eyes and his heart are there perpetually and so as elsewhere it is not to be had Zech. 13.17 18. Now the gospell preached is to us Gods tabernacle Rev. 21.3 as Acts 15.16 This serveth for instruction and that two wayes Vse 1 First see one main cause of the want of grace in mens soules they do not love Gods house nor wait upon him in his ordinances but count them a
Lord bee thou my helper The first Reason The reason hereof is twofold First their partaking of Gods mercy was necessary for the removall of the cause of their misery which ordinarily is sinne that brings death and all evils that before-runners thereof Rom. 5.12 Now there is no way to have sinne removed but through Gods mercy in Christ as David shews Psal 51.1 2 14. The second Reason Secondly mercie and kindnesse in God is properly the moving cause of his saving us both temporally in this world and eternally in the world to come for preservation which is temporall salvation see Psal 6.4 David being sick and weak prayes thus O save me for thy mercies sake and so when he was in danger of his life by enemies he makes the same prayer O save me for thy mercies sake Psal 31.16 Psal 44.3 Their own arm did not save them but thy right hand and thine arm and the light of thy countenance because thou hadst a favour unto them This the people say of Gods dealing with their fore-fathers bringing them out of Egypt into Canaan and thereupon being in misery they flye to the same ground of help verse 26. Arise for our help redeem us for thy mercies sake so David as a type of Christ in his passion prayes Help me O Lord my God O save me according to thy mercie And for salvation eternall it is wholly founded on Gods mercy in Christ Tit. 3.5 Not by workes of righteousnesse which we have done but according to his mercy he saved us c. Psal 141.4 Lord bee mercifull unto me heal my soul for I have sinned against thee This serves for instruction for admonition and for comfort The first Use for instruction For instruction two wayes First they that have no good title to Gods mercy can have no good assurance of Gods salvation either temporall or eternall A point very considerable of wicked men that hate instruction as Psal 50.17 and encourage themselves in a wicked course as Deut. 29.19 20. blessing themselves in their hearts saying we shall have pence c. such the Lord will not spare see Prov. 1.25 26. Hereupon Psal 119.155 salvation is farre from the wicked It is true wicked men flatter themselves in their own eyes with this O God is mercifull But who so is wise will consider whose word shall stand Gods or theirs as Jer. 44.28 The second Use for instruction Secondly see here the true Church seeking Gods salvation pleads mercy not merit and so did Paul professe and teach 1 Cor. 4.4 Phil. 3.9 Tit. 3.5 So Psal 115.1 Isa 64.6 The first Use for admonition For admonition two wayes First to all that look for Gods salvation temporall or eternall to make sure they stand rightly entitled to Gods favour and mercy for salvation followes mercy Now Gods mercy is onely had in and thorough faith in Christ Jesus whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his bloud c. Rom. 3.25 The second Use for admonition Secondly in the use of lawfull meanes for preservation to renew our title to Gods mercy The want hereof hinders many times the fruition of Gods blessing as in Asa 2 Chron. 16.12 In his disease he sought not to the Lord but to the Physitians and so died But the practise of it by Hezekiah procured the reversing of the sentence of death Isaiah 38.2 c. The Use for comfort For comfort to those that are truly entitled to mercy and yet lye under affliction they may assure themselves of a better deliverance as Heb. 11.35 Gods mercy shall be magnified in them whether by life or death Phil. 1.20 If deliverance be good they shall have it if they want deliverance their affliction shall be sanctified unto them The fourth Observation The second thing to be noted in this last petition is what kind of salvation or deliverance the people of God do desire when they are in misery namely that which comes from God Gods people in misery desire the deliverance which is of Gods sending Psal 60.11 Give us help from trouble for vain is the help of man Psal 20.7 Some trust in charets and some in horses but we will remember the name of the Lord our God verse 9. Save Lord Psal 106.47 Save us O Lord our God The first Reason First they know that salvation belongs unto him Psalm 3.8 He is the God of salvation Psal 68.20 with him is plenteous redemption Psal 130.7 The second Reason Secondly they know that without him the strongest helps do faile as Job 9.13 If God will not withdraw his anger the proud helpers do stoop under him and Isaiah 30.1 c. Woe to the rebellious children c. They were all ashamed of a people that could not profit them nor be an help c. The third Reason Thirdly they know that deliverance is easie unto him when distresse and danger is most grievous Jer. 32.27 there is nothing too hard for him He can save with many or with few 1 Sam. 14.6 with weak meanes Judges 7.20 without means Isaiah 63.5 by his bare command Psal 44.4 as Mat. 8.3 I will be thou clean Yea by destroying meanes as Israel thorough the red sea Exod. 14.26 c. and the three servants of God in the fire Dan. 3.25 27. The fourth Reason Fourthly they know that God stands bound by promise in the covenant which he makes with his people to deliver them out of misery and distresse when they humble themselves and pray See Psal 50.5 15. 2 Chron. 7.14 This serves to discover their impiety which use unlawfull means to help themselves from under miseries and afflictions as the help and direction of witches and wizards like to Saul 1 Sam. 28.7 and to Ahaziah 2 Kings 1 2 3. forbidden Lev. 20.6 Isaiah 8.19 Also theft oppression bribery perjury lying c. This is not the practise of Gods people help and deliverance by such means as these is not of God but of the devill and such persons should think of Christs speech to the Jewes John 8.44 You are of your father the devill for the lusts of your father you will do The Use for admonition Secondly to admonish us in all miseries to imitate Gods people in seeking only that help and deliverance which comes from God Consider herein the practise of the godly that would not receive deliverance by unlawfull means Heb. 11.35 alluding to 2 Machab. 6.23 30. Verse 8. I will heare what God the Lord will speak for he will speak peace to his people and to his Saints but let them not turn again to folly The meaning of the words IN this verse and those which follow to the end of the Psalme is contained the third and last part thereof shewing the Churches godly behaviour after she had made her complaint and prayer in promising to wait upon God for a gracious answer whereof she layes down sufficient