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A27165 No treason to say, Kings are Gods subjects, or, The supremacy of God, opened, asserted, applyed in some sermons preached at Lugarshal in Sussex by N.B. then rector there, accused of treason by James Thompson, Vicar of Shalford in Surry, and the author ejected out of the said rectory for preaching them : with a preface apologetical, vindicating the author and sermons from that false accusation, relating the manner of his ejection, and fully answering the narrative of the said Vicar, now also parson of Lurgarshal / by Nehemiah Beaton ... Beaton, Nehemiah, d. 1663. 1661 (1661) Wing B1568; ESTC R17272 43,029 53

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It is indeed a very stately and lofty expression of the greatness of God and vastness of his power that he hath gathered the wind in his fist Prov. 30. 4. And that is yet higher Isa 40. 12. Who hath measured the waters in the hollow of his hand and meted out the heaven with a span But methinks this exceeds them all that he holds the hearts of Kings in his hand and turneth them c. 2. As this should raise our apprehensions and esteem of God so should it teach us not to think of men no not of Kings more highly than we ought to think How commonly doth the outward splendour Majesty and glory of Kings and earthly Po●entates so dazle the eyes of poor Mortals that they mistake them for Deities and seeing them so high conclude there is nothing above them If Herod arrayed in Royal apparel sit upon his Throne and make an Oration to the people they are ready presently to cry out It is the voice of a God and not of a man Acts 12. 21 22. Well but now this Text and Doctrine understood believed and seriously weighed by us will prevent such horrid blasphemies and convince us that beside desperate wickedness there is sottish ignorance and much childish folly bound up in the heart of such sins For if the hearts of Kings even at that time when their glory and greatness do most amaze us be in the hand of the Lord alas how weak and contemptible then are they in comparison of Him They are not Masters of their own hearts they know not what they shall purpose think resolve or do the next moment as shadows they have no motion of their own Compare them indeed with men how great are they Whom they will they can slay and whom they will they can keep alive whom they will they set up and whom they will they put down Dan. 5. 19. All under them must obey them and comply with them But now compare them with God and they that thus command others are commanded by another what he willeth and determines that must they do yea when they transgress His Precepts they do but fulfill His purposes what therefore the Prophet saith to shame men out of the bruitish sin of Idolatry may we apply to this purpose He tells them that the best of their Idolls after it is most curiously carved and when they have lavish'd never so much Silver and Gold upon them yet even then are they not able to stir themselves They must needs be born because they cannot go Jer. 10. 5. The very same I say may we affirm of the mightiest Monarch in the World when he seemeth most formidable even such an Idoll is he compared with God not able to stir or move hand or heart of himself but must needs be born which way God will carry him that way must he needs go though therefore we must honour fear and reverence Kings as they are Gods Delegates as they bear the Sword from him for him yet must we still remember they are but men and if they command that which crosseth the command of God or if the consideration or fear of their greatness be like to draw us from our allegiance and obedience to the great God let us then call to mind and meditate on this truth and what we have heard this day and if they or any other shall say are not your Lives Estates and all outward enjoyments in the Kings hand Then let us consider and say yet is not my heart in the Kings hand and so he cannot force me to sin unless I will but the Kings heart is in the Lords hand and therefore he cannot cause me to suffer unless the Lord will 3. Is the Kings heart in the Lords hand then learn hence to whom the glory and praise of all the good that is in the heart of any King and of all that good that his hand findeth to do to whom I say the glory of it is due and to whom to pay it even to that God that thus gives him both to will and to do of his own good pleasure For though we must not defraud or rob the King of the honour and praise of his Graces Virtues or virtuous Actions as they are his as a second inferiour yet true cause of them yet must we be sure to give God the whole glory as the principal and first moving cause He is that Sun and Father of Lights from whom these glorious Stars receive and borrow all that light and good which they communicate to us And this brings me to the Occasion of this daies meeting and to move you to the great duty of the day The Reasons declared by Parliament for setting this day apart as a day of solemn thanksgiving are these That it hath pleased the King graciously to declare his firm adherence to the Protestant Religion his tender love and regard to the Civill Liberties of these Nations his great esteem of and affection to Parliaments his gracious Pardon to all those that have in any kind offended him his declining Forraign assistance together with many other gracious and excellent expressions which his Majesties Declaration and Letter are full of Now as we must give unto Caesar the things that are Caesars have grateful dutiful and loyal apprehensions of his Princely goodness and have our affections raised and hearts engaged by it so must we be sure this day to give unto God the things that are Gods by looking farther and higher than the King even to the King of Kings that hath put this into his heart who could have so infatuated his understanding and hardened his heart that he should have been quite deaf to all moderate Councils and taken such rash and violent Courses as would have proved destructive to himself and these Nations O let us see and acknowledge the finger and hand of the Lord in all this and in the words and with the spirit of holy Ezra let us say Blessed be the Lord that hath put such things as these into the Kings heart Blessed be the Lord that hath so wonderfully exercised his dominion not only over his heart but on the hearts of Parliament Army and Navy to joyn as one man in bringing this about He that should this day twelvemonth have said that what we now behold should have been and that without the effusion of the least drop of bloud would not have gained credit in any place That an Army engaged by Oath and Interest against it an Army whose valour and success had quite dispirited the Nation should have their hearts so awed and their hands so held that either they will not or dare not interpose O this is the Lord 's doing and it should be marvellous in our eyes Well then let us not rob God of the glory of these mercies yea let him alone be exalted by us We should not defraud the King General Council or Parliament of that honour and praise they have severally deserved
bettered by reading them it would make me forget all the troubles and sufferings they have by no fault of theirs occasioned to Little Horstead Nov. 4. 1661. Their unworthy Author Nehemiah Beaton PROV 21. 1. The Kings heart is in the hand of the Lord as the Rivers of Water He turneth it whither soever He will COnsidering seriously with my self the late great and wonderfull Revolutions the restauration of not onely the Royal Family but even of Royalty it self my thoughts directed me to this Portion of Scripture as a most seasonable and suitable Subject to discourse of at this time And truly I do not know any Text in the whole Bible which may more profitably at present be handled in England than this Of which opinion I think you will all also be ere I have finished my Discourse from it Be pleased to observe in the Text these two Parts 1. A most plain and full Assertion of Gods absolute Soveraignty and Supremacy over the greatest and most potent persons and things in the world The Kings heart is in the hand of the Lord. 2. A most elegant Illustration of the truth of that Assertion As the rivers of water he turneth it whithersoever he will First I say this is most fully and plainly asserted for if Kings yea the hearts of Kings are subject to his Dominion then certainly no persons or things in the world are exempted 1. Among all creatures in the visible world none is so hardly rul'd as man though many other in strength excell him yet his strength match'd with so much subtilty and activity render him a most unruly creature S. James tells us James 3. 7 8. that his tongue one of the least of his parts is more hardly tamed than any other creature and yet see here in my Text this masterless and unruly creature tam'd and turn'd by God at pleasure 2. Yet higher as man of all creatures so Kings of all men are most difficultly govern'd they seem to most men above all government or controule do they things never so unreasonable or unjust who may say unto any of them What dost thou Eccles 8. 4. Against them there is no rising up Prov. 30. 31. Well but as great as they are and as absolute as they seem even they also are in the hand and altogether at the dispose of this great Jehovah He turneth them whither soever he pleaseth 3. Once more and yet higher not onely man the highest of visible creatures and Kings the highest of men but even the heart the most subtle absolute unruly part of man yea the heart of Kings which commands in chief and rules these rulers this also is in the hand of the Lord and he turneth it c. 4. Nay fourthly In that the Holy Ghost doth not barely affirm that God can rule and govern Kings but makes use of this notable metaphorical expression his having his heart in his hand we must not let it pass without observation and it seems to me purposely designed to prevent the excepting of that part viz. the Heart or Will from Gods dominion which wretched opinion though it have no countenance from any place in holy Scripture yet meets it not with so notable and plain a check in any as in my Text. For this expression imports these two things 1. The possibility of Gods ruling the heart or will What is certainly in our power to do we use thus to express It is in my hand such a ones life or estate are in my hand i. e. 't is in my power to deprive them of it There are many things which we cannot do not so much for want of strength as because we cannot come to touch or reach them with our hands The heart though it be a thing that no creature can come at yet God can touch it and turn it with his hand 2. The Facility and Easiness of it alas how easily can we turn our hand about and that with it which we can well hold in it as easily as we can turn our hands can God turn the hearts of Kings which he hath and holds in his own hand Secondly This truth so plainly and fully asserted is most clearly illustrated by an apt and elegant Comparison As the rivers of waters c. That is either 1. As Rivers are in Gods hand and are by him easily turned this way or that way so also are Kings hearts turned and guided by him 2. Or rather thus As Rivers which have a motion of their own and are of themselves carried in this or that channel with great violence as these by the skilfull and industrious hand of the Husbandman by Trenches and other Artifices are turned and carried this or that way as may best serve his profit so the hearts of Kings violently inclined this or that way are yet by the skilfull and Omnipotent hand of God frequently turned and forced to alter their resolutions and do that which shall most conduce to his own Honour and Glory The Words thus opened this great Truth lies obvious in them That God hath and exerciseth such a Soveraignty over and absolute dominion on the hearts even of Kings that they must do what and can do nothing but what he pleaseth Confirmation by other Texts of Scripture this Doctrine needeth not it being but the Text in other words nor is it necessary to spend much time in the explication of terms there being but one word that requires it that is the heart By which to omit tedious and impertinent Discourses of the several acceptations of the word in Scripture I conceive with Aquinas the Will principally intended in my Text yet I dare not say onely intended and Aquinas his potius sheweth him to be of the same opinion and therefore lest we should miss the sense of the Holy Ghost in this place to any part of it we shall take in the Understanding and Affections for each of which the heart is most frequently put in holy Scripture And in so doing we shall observe that rule given by great Divines That words of Scripture are to be expounded in the largest sense they admit of and the place will bear By the heart of the King then we suppose meant his 1. Understanding 2. Will. 3. Affections And then our next work will be to shew how God hath exercised his Dominion over each of these Of these in their order and first of the First The Understanding of Kings Thus God hath and doth exercise his Dominion over them and that 1. In a way of Mercy furnishing them with that Wisdom Spirit of Government and those excellent Endowments of minde which the difficulties uncertain accidents and dangers of Government make absolutely necessary for a Prince Solomon telleth us Eccles 10. 10. that in mechanical imployments wisdom is profitable to direct and we see for the meanest and easiest handicraft seven years apprenticeship to learn is thought but sufficient Surely King-craft as King James was wont to call
the Prince of the Eunuchs 2. He can cause them mortally to hate whom they have before most loved and do●ed upon Whom over night they feasted as special Favourites the next morning they shall adjudge to the gallows Esth. 7. What a strict League and Friendship was between Abimelech and the Schechemites they help him to his Kingdom and are therefore the onely men with him but God will break the League and turn this Kings love into hatred Judg. 9. 23. Then God sent an evil spirit between Abimelech and the men of Shechem 3. Their Courage and Valour without which however otherwise furnished they are altogether unmeet for the Regal Office this God can furnish them with or deprive them of He can make the feeblest King as David and the House of David as the Angel of the Lord Zech. 12. 8. On the other side He can cause the heart of the King to perish and the heart of the Princes Jer. 4. 9. And cause the heart of these mighty ones to be as the heart of a woman in her pangs Jer. 49. 22. I have but one thing more to do e're I come to Application to give you the Reasons and Grounds of this Point which are four 1. God hath a most absolute Dominion over Kings yea the hearts of Kings For even they as well as any others are his Creatures and nothing can be more ridiculous and absurd than to imagine that the Creator should not be able to rule his Creature that he should make a Creature which he cannot master Kings and rich men as well as Subjects and poor men are Gods Creatures The poor and rich meet together and the Lord is the Maker of them both Prov. 22. 2. Yea the hearts of Kings Psal 33. 15. He fashioneth their hearts alike No wonder then that they can do nothing without God who were made out of nothing by God 2. Kings are preserved and upheld by God and can do nothing without his concourse 't is in him they live move and have their beings Acts 17. 28. They cannot move or act according to those Natures and Properties bestowed on them in Creation without Gods immediate concourse so that every action of theirs is from God as the first and themselves as the second Cause Must not He then be able to govern them and their hearts in all their Motions and Operations seeing they cannot move or stir but as moved and acted by him Suppose an Artist should make a Clock and not by weights but with his own hand should turn the wheels about is not he able to make it move more fast or slowly or hinder its motion by taking off his hand God fashioneth the heart and with his own hand causeth and ruleth its motion Certainly then it cannot think or purpose any thing without him 3. The truth of this Doctrine may be demonstrated from the Omnipotency of God Were the heart of any Prince or Monarch too subtle stiff or stubborn for him to turn or rule here were something he could not do and so we might say of his Power Hitherto it can reach but this it cannot do Matth. 19. 26. is notable to this purpose With man this is impossible but with God all things are possible The occasion of those words briefly was this Christ had affirmed it impossible for a rich man to be sav'd v. 24. which exceedingly amazeth the Disciples v. 25. and they cry out Who then can be saved Why saith Christ with man this is impossible that is if men have riches left to themselves they will certainly love and set their hearts upon them and the heart thus set cannot by all the power of men be taken off and turned to God so that with men this is impossible that such an one should ever be saved but with God all things are possible that is he is able to turn their hearts from Riches to himself 4. Were not God able to turn and rule the hearts of Kings how could he know and reveal what they will do before they have any thoughts or purposes of doing any such things yea long before they have a being God tells Moses before hand what entertainment his Message will finde and what Pharaoh will certainly do Exod. 4. 21. He revealeth what a good King Josiah shall be how zealous against Idolatry before Josiah was born 1 Kings 13. 2. 1. Learn hence to admire and adore this glorious Power of the great Jehovah When the Mariners saw Christ command and govern the Winds and Sea they cannot but worship him and wonder at his mighty power that was able to master and rule such ●oysterous and unruly things and cry out with admiration What manner of man is this Matth. 8. 26 27. Behold here a greater wonder the heart of a King much deeper and more hardly fathom'd than that great Deep the Will and Resolutions of that Heart more heady and hard to be turned than the swiftest course of the mightiest waters the Affections and Passions of a King more furious and boysterous than the highest and fiercest winds searched and sounded turned and changed quieted and allayed without the least labour and toyle by the great God of Heaven This is one of the greatest discoveries of the great and infinite power of the most high God and therefore requires our most heedfull observation and highest admiration For though as S. James saith of the Tongue it be but a little Member though the Heart seem but a small and contemptible part yet is it more hardly rul'd than any other part of man or creature whatsoever You may far more easily hold the hand tame the tongue stop the foot and govern all other parts than this Sooner may the least child conquer the fiercest Lion and strongest Goliah than the greatest King yea the mightiest Angel turn the heart of the weakest woman The arm of a Sampson may serve to rend a Lion but it requires the Almighty Arm of an Infinite God to rend the heart of man When you hear therefore God in Scripture saying I will make them a new heart I will give them another heart Can you forbear wondring at this power It is observable that that proud and haughty King Nebuchadnezzar who had seen the wisdom of God in revealing his secrets to him Dan. 2. 47. who had observed the mighty power of God in preserving his Servants in the midst of the fire which greatly astonisheth him Dan. 3. 29. yet neither of these raise him to so high a pitch of admiration as when he saw and felt God exercising this power and dominion over his heart What humble Confessions what notable expressions doth this extort from him Dan. 4. throughout especially v. 3. How great are his signs How mighty are his wonders His kingdom is an everlasting kingdom c. Let us give then unto God the glory of this his mighty power and look upon this as indeed it is one of the most glorious discoveries of that power
Prince 1 Sam. 12. 25. If ye will still do wickedly the people are there spoken to ye shall be consumed both ye and your King As Subjects suffer many times through the folly and for the faults of their King so do Kings frequently suffer and fall for the wickedness of their People Suppose some Forraign Prince had gotten our King into his hands and having secured him in some strong Castle from whence it were utterly impossible his Subjects by force could rescue him should declare that if his Subjects here in England would but for one moneth forbear all Acts of Hostility he would safely restore him to them but if any of them upon any pretences whatsoever should attempt any thing of violence he would forthwith certainly put him to death In this case should not he and would not he be accounted a Traytor to the King that under pretence of affection should go about by open force to rescue him Surely you are all ready to pass sentence on such an one You may very easily apply it The King of Kings that hath the heart life and happiness of our King in his hand hath expresly declared That if we will walk in waies of sin and rebellion against him if we will do wickedly we shall not only destroy our selves but pull down the Judgments of God upon our King May we not then safely conclude them enemies to the King that do that for the very doing of which God hath threatned him You therefore that boast of your loyalty and affection to the King if neither the fear of God nor love of your own souls will prevail with you yet let the consideration of the great damage and danger your sins threaten the King with cause you to leave off your prophane and wicked practices 6. If the Kings heart be in Gods hand c. then certainly we may by parity or rather superiority of reason infer that all other mens hearts are in his hands also Kings have an inward natural liberty equal with others and an outward liberty belonging to their condition above others if therefore God can govern and rule them we may well conclude that no other man is exempted from his dominion which conclusion though it do not so much as shake the freedom of the will yet doth it quite overturn free-will as the Pelagians understand and assert it they think it not enough that the will be acknowledged under God a self-determining power unless we exempt it from his dominion with them it is not free at all unless altogether free from Gods Rule and Government nay though it be yielded them that God never exerciseth this dominion in such a way as is destructive to the natural liberty of the will yet will not this satisfie them they are guilty of Cicero his crime Qui sic homines voluit esse liberos ut fe●it sacrilegos counting it no robbery to make men equall with God as a first and independent cause Surely heaven or hell will shortly teach these men more humility and modesty What can an infinite and Almighty God only entice and perswade can he not infallibly and irresistibly turn the will of his Creatures Is it as some have dared to affirm in the power of our Wills when God hath done all he can to refuse what he would have us choose What is this but in other words to deny what Solomon in the words of my Text affirms Can he be said to have our Wills in his hands and to turn them whither he please that cannot turn it unless man please Let us beware of this dangerous errour let our hearts by this Text be established in this present truth the belief and consideration of which is of unspeakable use and comfort especially to two sorts of men 1. To those that have long mourned because of the hardness and stubbornness of their hearts the contrariety of their wills to the whole will of God they have spent much time and labour in the use of many means for their softening and changing and still as they fear they remain hard and unchanged Oh wretched men that they are who shall deliver them had they ten thousand Worlds they would exchange them all for a heart softened and savingly changed but alas they fear they shall never get such an heart well let all such believe and meditate on this Doctrine though Men nor Angels cannot yet God can make them willing in the day of his power he can make them such as he requires them to be wait then on him resolve to lye and die at his footstoole and to give him no rest till he have taken the heart of stone out of thy flesh and given thee an heart of flesh 2. Gods heart-changing power may exceedingly comfort and incourage those Ministers whose lot providence hath cast amongst a stubborn and rebellious people who do alwaies resist the Holy Ghost who entertain all their messages from the Lord with contempt and scorn and with the Leviathan in Job laugh at the shaking of the spear Oh how is the heart of such a Minister ready to sink under this burden the hope of converting souls was that which engaged him in that difficult employment but now alas he mourns as without hope he plows and sows as without hope the more he preacheth the worse his People grow and therefore he is ready to give over and say with the Prophet I will speak no more in his name Well here is encouragement and comfort for such this Doctrine tells them that with God this is possible even the conversion of those that are Gods and their most resolute enemies even of these stones can God raise up children unto Abraham as fast as they are now running to hell he can stop and turn them and cause them to run the waies of his Commandments though then we have toiled all night and caught nothing yet let us not give over we know not what the next Sermon may do let us sow our seed in the morning and in the evening let us not hold our hand we know God can prosper both but we know not which he intends to bless 7. Hath God the hearts of Kings in his hands Then what an honour what an happiness is it to be his Favourites Kings usually have their Favourites though many are loved and respected by them yet usually there is some one singled out by them whom they delight to honour whom they are not ashamed to call their friends and use as if they were their equals they may request nay command any thing from them only in the Throne will they be greater than they David had his Favourite 2 Sam. 15. 37. Hushai the Kings Friend And Zabud the Son of Nathan is stiled 1 King 4. 5. Solomons friend the King of Kings hath his Favourites though the meanest Saint have an interest in his favour yet are they not all his Favourites there is but one Disciple that leaned on Chriss besome every one of his
people are loved by him but they are not all men so greatly beloved as Daniel God reckons up Noah Daniel and Job as three Favourites that could do far more with him than other ordinary Saints Ezek. 14. 14. Now my Text and Doctrine will resolve whether of these are the most honourable and happy as far as God is exalted above the King in my Text so far is the condition of the Favourites of heaven advanced above the condition of the Favourites of earthly Kings but alas the blind World judgeth otherwise What will men do nay what will they not do to procure the favour of Princes Which when at last they have obtained they bless themselves and think now they are arrived at the top of honour and happiness nor are they alone in this folly and madness the generality of men admiring and envying their condition enquire of them after such an one how he doth and you shall have this or such an answer Alas how can he do amiss he hath the Kings ear and is the only Favourite at Court but as for Gods favour that 's not counted worth the looking after Many say Who will shew us any good But it is David only and some few such as he that cry out Lord lift up the light of thy countenance upon us Well thus it is in the World but if you compare the conditions of these two sorts of Favourites together you will find that as far as the heaven is above the earth so far is the happiness of Gods Favourites above the happiness of those that are most highly in favour with earthly Kings I shall only present you with those advantages which the former have above the latter which naturally flow from my Doctrine 1. Then suppose a man as high as possible in a Kings favour let him have all the assurances the King can give him that he will never cast him off yet is this Favourites high place a slippery place because the King hath not his heart in his own hand but it is in Gods who can in a moment turn the stream and cause him to hate him more violently than ever he loved him and then all the advantage he hath by his former happiness is this that it hath made him capable of a greater fall Whereas Gods Favourites are sure that whilst they walk in his waies and choose the thing that pleaseth him neither Principalities or Powers shall be able to separate them from his love having loved his own he loveth them to the end 2. He that hath most of the Kings heart may at that very instant be the object of Gods hatred and what King can interpose and turn away the wrath of a jealous God from him whereas the Favourites of heaven because they are Gods Favourites shall certainly either enjoy the favour of Princes or be secured from any real hurt by their displeasure Rom. 8. 31. If God be for us who can be against us Oh then whilst others are greedily hunting after the favour of Princes let us seek after the favour of that God whose Creatures they are who is all and hath all and doth all in heaven and earth Quest But what must we be what must we do to be Favourites of the King of Kings Answ 1. You must get into Christ you cannot see the face or enjoy one drachme of the favour of God whilst you are out of Christ 't is only in the Beloved that we are or can be accepted Imbrace then Christ as tendred in the Gospel and be assured that the more cordially you close with him the more highly you prize him and the more sincerely you obey him the more shall you have of the heart and love of God Joh. 16. 26. The Father himself loveth you because you have loved me 2. You cannot be the Favourites of heaven till cured of the leprosie of sin we read indeed of a King in Scripture that had a Favourite Naaman a great man but a Leper 2 Kin. 5. 1. But the King of heaven hath no such Favourites whilst then you are in an unregenerate unconverted estate whilst you are under the raign and dominion of sin know assuredly 'tis utterly impossible thou shouldst enjoy the favour of God Rom. 8. 8. They that are in the flesh cannot please God nor is it enough that you are washed from your filthiness but you must be adorned with the graces of Gods Spirit these are the attractives of his love 3. Would you be men and women greatly beloved of God Do you desire not only reconciliation but a large share of Gods heart and love You must walk with God that is as men that have God in their eye whose whole conversation shews they believe him present with them Enoch walked with God and had this Testimony He pleased him Heb. 11. 5. And then what an high honour and special mark of favour did God put upon him in his translation Be then sincere and uniform in your obedience and have respect to all Gods Commandements for a man fulfilling all his wills is a man after Gods own heart Acts 13. 22. The upright in the way are his delight Prov. 11. 20. 4. If you desire to be high in Gods esteem you must be low in your own eyes the high and lofty one delights to dwell and converse with lowly and humble spirits Isa 57. 15. Princes Favourites usually wear something given them by their Lord as a mark of his favour whoever wears this livery whoever is cloathed with humility that man which God hath adorned with this grace he is the man whom this King delights to honour 5. They are most highly in Gods favour that are most zealous and active for him God himself is a pure act and the more active we are in good the more like are we to him and the better liked are we by him Kings love them most whom they see most busie to promote their Interest Solomon tells us Prov. 22. 29. That if we see a man deligent in his business 't is a sign that man shal stand before Kings 'T is most certain that if we are not sloathful in business but fervent in spirit serving the Lord we shall stand before and be in favour with the King of heaven 6. Those that stick close to God in prophane places or times of danger and general Apostacy these are alwaies his special Favourites you heard before how highly Noah Daniel and Job were in Gods favour and I pray observe this of them all three Job lives in the Land of Uzz amongst a most barbarous people and at a time when Satan boasts that God hath not any visibly to own him and yet Job in this place and at this time is a perfect man fearing God and eschewing evill Job 1. 1. Daniel keeps close to God in the Babylonish Court Noah when all flesh had corrupted his way he remains upright in his Generation Gen. 7. 1. If then when others turn aside from following the Lord we fulfill after him or follow him fully we shall certainly be most highly in his favour 7. The more strong we are in faith the more stedfast we are in believing the more shall we have of Gods heart the more we act faith on Gods Al sufficiency when we can leave our own Country and Kindred sacrifice our Isaacs and against hope believe in hope then do we highly honour God Abraham was most eminent for this grace and see what an high honour God puts upon him Isa 41. 8. Abraham my friend 8. Lastly This Doctrine is full of consolation to the people of God be their condition never so sad their sufferings never so great here is enough to support them yea to fill their hearts with joy and gladness that God who hath taken them into Covenant with himself who is not ashamed to be called their Friend and Father whose love to them passeth the love of women in a word who is as tender of them as the apple of his own eye 'T is that God who hath an absolute soveraignty dominion over all persons and things in the World there hath been nothing done to them but by his permission he hath the heads hearts and hands of their most potent Adversaries in his own hand In the greatest storms and tempests their Father sits at the Stern and can command a calm when he pleaseth If then they are assured of his love and know he will not hurt them they may be assured that others cannot for they cannot go beyond the Word of the Lord to do more or less here is that which in the midst of the thoughts of our hearts is sufficient to refresh our spirits When therefore we hear sad news when those that bring evill tidings like Jobs messengers overtake one another and the last alwaies brings the worst news then remember and retire to this Text and Doctrine which publish peace and bring good tidings of good which say unto Zion thy God raigneth FINIS a Convitia probra quibus Christianos toto hoc tempore Draconicolae obruebant Objicientes eis homicidia conjurationes in Principes M●de in loc b Isid Pel. l. 2. Epist 229. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. c Quasi apud lapsos profanos esse aliud possit nisi mens prava fallax lingua odi● venenata s●crilega mendacia Cypr. ad Flor. Pupian Epist 69. a Chrys Hom. 12. in Act. Ap. c 5. Tom. 3. d Vid. vitam Chrys per Pallad Dacon Script operibus ejus praefix p. mihi 9. Bishop Sanderson Serm. 1. ad populum on 3 King 21. 29. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cap. 15. e 2 Thes 3. 2. Vid. C. a Lap. Sclat in loc ☜ Observ Cordis nomerad voluntatem potius quam ad intellectum hoc loco pertinet Aquin Reasons Applicat * One that hath since sworn against me