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A76798 Expositions and sermons upon the ten first chapters of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, according to Matthew. Written by Christopher Blackwood, preacher to a Church of Christ in the city of Dublin in Ireland. Blackwood, Christopher. 1659 (1659) Wing B3098; ESTC R207680 612,607 923

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darling sin and will not close with some duty Sauls covetous heart was loth to destroy so many good things as he could turn to his own gain so many oxen and sheep So Pharaoh and Balaam confest their sin yet Pharaoh would not let the people go and Balaam would still have cursed the people if God would have let him 5 The end of his shew of goodness is that he may seem good to others that so his wickedness may not be espied as Ananias Sapphira Herod Mar. 6.20 2 This takes in close hypocrisie which hath these properties 1 That he doth out of an overweening conceit take upon himself a shew of goodness so the Pharisee Luke 18.12 13. he thought he was in a good condition because he did some good things so do many looking upon their civility morality formality comparing themselves with others or themselves at present with themselves formerly 2 The end of close hypocrisie is that a man may seem good to himself Prov. 30.12 There is a generation pure in their own eys and yet are not washed from their filthiness So Paul in his Pharisaical estate See Acts 26.11 3 The close hypocrite harbours some secret sin Ananias and Sapphira were full of unbelief lest they should come to want hence they kept back part of the price The most refined hypocrite in the world lives in some sin 4 There is some duty the close hypocrite will not close with as to let go his estate for Christ The young man for all his forwardness startled at this and left Christ Mat. 19.20 21 22. In this sin of close hypocrisie many forward Professors live because there is some duty they will not close with There is some cross which because of the weight of it they will not take up for Christ Many a gross hypocrite is also full of this close hypocrisie as Saul 1 Sam. 15.13 Yea I have performed the Commandements of the Lord also v. 20. Yea I have obeyed the voice of the Lord and gone the way which the Lord hath sent me See how Saul though a gross hypocrite closely would bear himself in hand of his good estate Now before I come to give trials of hypocrisie I will lay down some cautions 1 That even Gods children have but too much hypocrisie in them 1 But they feel it bewail it mourn and groan against it to the Lord and make a continual resistance against it They cry out as August in another case why dost thou not put an end to this filthiness 2 They press daily towards and hunger after more sincerity so come under a promise of blessedness Matth. 5.6 3 They are enabled by the grace of God to do their actions with more and more sincerity The Disciples were first asking Who should be greatest After they become so sincere as to refer the matter wholly to God Acts 1.26 Lord shew whether of these two thou hast chosen 2 Virtues and vices do not denominate their subject unless they be therein in so high a degree as to prevail As we say it's light when the light is more then the darkness we say a thing is white when it partakes more of whiteness then of any other colour though it come short of perfect whiteness So he is a hypocrite in whom hypocrisie prevails as it doth in those who do not lament and bewail it He is sincere whose purpose is to be sincere and usually looks at God no condemnation to such Rom. 8.1 Because he walks after the spirit 3 That because of the remainder of hypocrisie in them even Gods children in time of temptation are apt to count themselves hypocrites 1 Because they do not feel their righteousness of justification as they do their corruption whereas that righteousness being in Christ and corruption in our selves we must not think to have a sensitive righteousness as to justification as we have a sensitive corruption 2 Because when the Apostle speaks of the fruits of the flesh he saith they are manifest but he doth not say so of the fruits of the spirit Gal. 5. Yea grace is called the hidden man of the heart 1 Pet. 3.4 3 Their little fruitfulness this should humble not discourage us 4 The mixture of by respects with duty to God but this may comfort that duty set thee on work and moved thee to do what thou didst though by-ends came crowding in 5 Thy feeling thy hypocrisie to be a burthen argues thou art no hypocrite Rom. 7.15 Psalm 119.80 6 Sincerity may stand with many evils though not with the allowing of any When we lament it be we not discouraged If thou art not fruitfull in a hundred fold yet be in thirty 4 A man may be an hypocrite and yet have many good things in him as 1 to God he may read hear pray come to ordinances See Esa 58.2 c. Herod did many things Mark 6.20 He feared John because he was a just man and an holy and heard him gladly and observed him and did many things yea he may write sermons and repeat them and shew countenance to the Preachers c. 2 As to men he may deal justly be a good neighbour Matth. 6.20 And as to himself he may escape the pollutions of the world 2 Pet. 2.2 5 Many Saints have been and are jealous of themselves least they should be hypocrites Psalm 139.24 Search me O God and know my heart try me and know my thoughts and see if there be any wicked way in me Psalm 119.80 Contrary some hypocrites are confident of their good estate Jer. 3.4 5. They call'd God father yet did evil as they could Jer. 42.4 5. Hypocrites call God to witness that they would do whatsoever God commanded by Jeremy and so consequently could not but think themselves sincere whereas they did the clean contrary to what they professed Jer. 43.2 3. 6 After examination of thy estate be not alwaies questioning whether thou be sincere or a hypocrite but be not too hasty in determining of either but when thy conscience hath given judgement of the truth of thy heart after several examinations thereof hold fast this conclusion that though thou hast many failings yet thou art not an hypocrite So Job c. 27.5 6. 7 Though it be very difficult to distinguish betwixt sincerity and hypocrisie because of the many counterfiets that look like grace but are not as the common graces in hypocrites yet is it possible to distinguish the one from the other else would not the word bid us to prove our own works Gal. 6.4 1 Cor. 11.28 Yea sundry Saints have found their hearts upright David Psalm 101.2 I will behave myself in a perfect way I will walk in mine house with a perfect heart Hezekiah Isa 38.3 Paul and other believers 2 Cor. 1.12 In simplicity and Godly sincerity we have had our conversation in the world 8 We must not from any observation of hypocrisie in our hearts deny any true work of grace in our selves and so bear false witness
maids question at such a time when if ever he should have stood for Christ he cast up all this and traced his heart and so wept Trace thy heart in thy dealings of buying selling c. with men and thou shalt finde much hypocrisie in thy pretences of love to thy friends in thy speaking of thine enemies How often dost thou in thy devotions seem if not what thou art yet more then thou art how oft dost thou among bad men seem worse then thou art and among good men seem better then thou art If thou thus tracest thy heart hypocrisie will not have a quiet abode in thy heart 5 Look upon Gods all-seeing eye Heb. 4.13 Prov. 5.21 He ponders all our goings as well of the inward man as outward man he knows every one of them Ezek. 11.5 Yea every thought Job 42.2 If a man lookt upon us we would not dally with him nor dissemble with him why dost thou deal hypocritically surely because thou more or less questions or forgets Gods omniscience 2 Cor. 2.17 Psalm 44.17 18 compared with v. 21. 6 Practise Godly jealousy from the known slipperiness of thy heart to be jealous over it in every company in every acting especially where there is any credit or profit coming towards you or on the other side any suffering is to be endured A man cannot think the number of the hypocrisies such temptations draw out above all be jealous of the itch of vain glory the heart is deceitfull above all things yea above the devil Jer. 17.10 Thou hast a watchfull eye upon thievish slippery servants have the same of thy theevish slippery heart If we be not jealous of our hearts hypocrisie will set up a throne there before we are aware no man so in danger of being overcome herein as he that is most confident Complain against thy hypocrisie before the Lord when thy heart at any time shall espie it in thee and tell thee of it do it with aggravations and make thy heart to ake therewith Esa 64.7 8. Psalm 51.10 8 Get faith not onely to receive the blood of Christ to wash thee from thy hypocrisie Heb. 10.22 but also to receive the spirit of Christ who leads believers into all truth John 14.17 Psalm 143.10 9 Repent of every known sin if there be one sin in thee unrepented of thou art an hypocrite Rom. 6.2 How shall we that are dead to sin live any longer therein q. d. How is it possible Such were Ezekiels hearers Ezek. 33.31 See it in Jehu 2 Kings 10.28 10 Consider what dishonour will come to God to thy brethren and to thy self in case thou shouldest be an hypocrite 1 to God Ezek. 36.23 When a Saint falls into a scandalous sin and violates his uprightness but in one particular how do the enemies of God blaspheme 2 Sam. 12.14 Much more if he were unsound in the whole and Gods people are much dishonoured for thy hypocrisie will be imputed to them Psalm 69.6 Such as is one such are they all will carnal men say and for thy self how wilt thou be ashamed shouldest thou be found an hypocrite See Matth. 24.51 Hence David praies Psalm 119.80 Let my heart be sound in thy statutes Why that I be not ashamed in the presence of God Angels and men Shall in no wise lose his reward Obs There is a certain gracious reward which Christ hath in store for his people that truly serve him Psalm 58.11 Verily there is a reward for the righteous Prov. 11.18 to him that soweth righteousness there shall be a sure reward Reas 1 For the encouragement of Saints in their obedience Psal 19.11 In keeping of them there is great reward Heb. 6.10 11. 1 Cor. 15.58 Earthly rewards do much draw endeavours how much more should the reward of glory 2 That Gods servants may see that God is a good Master Col. 3.24 Use 1 Reprehension of all merit because the reward is free and gracious When we have done what we can we are unprofitable servants Luk. 17.10 That a work may be meritorious there must be a proportion betwixt the work and the wages but there can be no proportion betwixt our service here and the crown of glory because our work is finite but the crown infinite 2 Exhortation 1 To believe there is such a reward Heb. 11.6 He that cometh to God next to the believing that God is must believe that God is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him Psal 58.11 If thou do'st believe this that there is such a reward then cast not away thy confidence which hath great recompence of reward Heb. 10.35 Concerning which reward consider 1 What it is 2 To whom it is given 3 When. 4 What assurance of it 1 What it is A. God himself God tells Abraham that he was his exceeding great reward Gen. 15.1 Besides there is a reward of inheritance Col. 1.24 Knowing that from the Lord ye shall receive the reward of inheritance Luk. 6.35 Great is your reward in heaven 1 Cor. 2.9 2 To whom it is given A. 1 Negatively not to lazy and slothfull souls Matth. 11.12 The Kingdome of heaven suffereth violence and the violent take it by force 2 Not to Merit-mongers nor to those who trust to their own righteousness Rom. 4.4 To him that worketh is the reward not reckoned of grace but of debt 2 Affirmatively It is 1 To those who believe the promise Heb. 10.36 37 38. 2 To those who patiently continue in well doing Rom. 2.7 8. 3 To those who love the appearing of Christ 2 Tim. 4.8 3 Quest When this reward shall be Answ This is in part when we die as to the Thief on the cross the fulness of it at Christs coming Matth. 16.27 When the Son of man shall come in the glory of his Father with the Angels then he shall reward every man according to his works Rev. 22.12 Behold I come quickly and my reward is with me to give every man according as his work shall be 2 Tim. 4.8 There 's a crown of righteousness which the Lord the righteous judge shall give me at that day yea to all that love his appearing This recompence is at the resurrection of the just See Luk. 14.13 14. Rev. 11.18 4 What assurance of this reward Answ Great assurance 1 From Gods promise Prov. 11.18 To him that soweth righteousness shall be a sure reward 1 Pet. 5.4 2 The believers knowledge 1 Cor. 15.58 Ye know your labour will not be in vain Col. 3.24 Knowing that from the Lord ye shall receive the reward of the inheritance 2 Exhort To look upon this reward So did Moses Heb. 11.26 He had respect to the recompence of the reward Though we must not do good onely for reward without conscience to duty and love to God for this were meerly mercinary and to eschew evil meerly for fear of vengeance were slavish yet may we look both to reward to excite us to good and to the punishment to deter us from evil
the good enjoyed A man doth not so rejoyce at the yeaning of a Lamb as when his Wife brings forth a Son There could be no greater joy than to hear and know the Messias of the World to be born We should rejoyce exceedingly in Christ and in the means that lead to him they did not so much rejoyce in seeing the Star which they had often seen before but that they had found Christ whom they sought As it was to them so should it be exceeding joy to us to finde Christ Song 1.4.3.4 Zacheus received Christ joyfully Luke 19.6 V. 11. And when they were come into the house they saw the young Childe with Mary his Mother and fell down and worshipped him and when they had opened their Treasures they presented unto him Gifts Gold Frankincense and Myrrh Here is their second testimony of Thankfulness in that they worship him And when they were come into the house Some have thought that the Tax which Augustus imposed was now ended and that Bethlem being now empty of Strangers Joseph had taken some Citizen's house to sojourn in but being the Tax continued a long time by reason of the accession of new Strangers therefore we may suppose the house to be no other than the Stable whereinto necessity had enforced Joseph by reason of the multitude of Strangers in the Inn Luke 2.7 She brought forth her first-born Son and wrapped him in swadling clothes and laid him in a Manger because there was no room for them in the Inn. All this was to teach us humility the Lord of glory laid in a Manger in stead of a Palace a Stable in stead of a Cradle of State a Beasts Cratch no Pillow it 's like but a Lock of Hay no Hangings but Dust and Copwebs he was in so low a condition 1. That all persons may have access to him Shepherds as well as others 2. To shew himself to be the Messias and Saviour of poor as well as rich 3. Because it was suitable to the rest of his Life which was spent in a great humility Men are apt to look for a Messias in State in a Crimson Mantle in a Cradle of Ivory and to have found him in the best house in Bethlem in the best Chamber there but we shall not finde him in any such place but in a Stable Learn we hereby to be lowly in heart Matth. 11.29 And fell down and worshipped him No doubt by divine instinct they knew the Divinity of Christ hence they worshipt him not onely with civil worship as one born King of the Jews but with divine worship which was it's like the outward gesture of reverence and kneeling and falling down for so the Greek words signifie They presented unto him Gifts Gold Frankincense and Myrrh It was usual for the Persians and for the whole Eastern People to go to their Kings with Gifts Gen 42.11 1 Kings 10.2 They brought the best things their Countrey afforded Myrrh grows in Arabia Frankincense among the Sabeans a part of Arabia Arabia Faelix brings Gold therefore the Kings of Arabia brought Gold to Solomon The Lord hereby would provide for Joseph and Mary and the Childe being speedily to go into banishment For the mystical sense it 's thought they offered to him Frankincense as God acknowledging his divine Nature Myrrh as man acknowledging his humane Nature that which they believe in their hearts they protest by their Gifts and that he should dy for the Salvation of Man for Myrrh was bestowed upon him at his Burial John 19.39 They offer to him Gold as acknowledging him their King and the King of all the earth Bernard acknowledges no Mystery herein but thinks they offered Gold to minister to his want Myrrh to strengthen the Members of the Infant Frankincense to take away the stink of the place But one end may be for the fulfilling the Prophesie Psalm 72.10 The Kings of Sheba and Seba shall bring Gifts Also v. 15. He shall live and to him shall be given of the Gold of Sheba Let us bring to this our King also three Gifts Gold that is Faith or a Heart by Faith purified for Frankincense devout and fervent Prayers that may come up like Incense for Myrrh let us bring Tears Mortification and Brokenness of Heart In that they bring not onely Gold to minister to Joseph and Maries wants but Myrrh and Frankincense it argues there is a Mystery lies hid herein V. 12. And being warned of God in a Dream that they should not return to Herod they departed to their own Countrey another way That neither the Wise-men nor the Childe Jesus should become a Prey to Herod's cruelty they are warned of God to go home another way There 's a secret Providence watches over not onely the Head but the Members Psalm 91.1 10. The Lord also hereby shewed what manner of a Kingdom this King should have he should have a Crown but it should be of Thorns a Kingdom but full of crosses exposed to the snares and persecutions of the mighty men of the World but also comforts them that he the Lord was able to disappoint the most artificial Projects of the most cunning Tyrants V. 13. And when they were departed behold the Angel of the Lord appeareth to Joseph in a dream saying Arise and take the young childe and his mother and flee into Egypt and be thou there until I bring thee word for Herod will seek the young childe to destroy him The 2d part of the Chapter in which are these things 1 The command the Angel gives to Joseph which was to take the young childe and flee into Egypt and be thou there until I bring thee word 2 The reasons of the command for Herod will seek the young childe not to worship him as he pretended to the Wise men but to destroy him if he tarry any longer in Bethlem All the commands of God are for the good of his people and are founded upon reason 2 A second reason to fulfil the prophesie I have called my Son out of Egypt v. 15. 3 Josephs obedience in both the branches of the command 1 In taking the childe and his mother and flying into Egypt 2 In his tarriance there he abode there till the death of Herod when word came to him for his return And when they were departed We see the changeableness of earthly comforts as it were yesterday the Wise men came but now they are departed See we Gods goodness when one comfort is taken away another comes The Angel appears when the Wise men were gone Flee into Egypt When we look on our afflictions remember Christ was afflicted from the cradle Obs It 's the duties of Masters of Families to take care of their relations 1 Tim. 5.8 2 Obs It 's a sufficient ground to flye when we know persons lye in wait for our lives but with this disposition that if taken rather we resolve in Gods strength to lose our lives then to deny the truth Flee into
Christ and the work of the sufferings of the Infants and therefore the Text says not There is a Reward to the Will but to the Work Of this sort are all such Infants which have been murdered for Christ and out of hatred to Christian Religion These Lambs were to be sacrificed because the Lamb of the World was to be crucified as Augustine saith Serm. 1. de Innocent In that then Christ suffered the Tyrant Herod to rage against these Infants it was not out of any careless respect unto them but in reference to their Crown and to let us see the watchfull providence of God how it 's able to dispoint the Projects of the greatest Tyrants and to let us see the frame of the hearts of tyrannous Princes that will do any mischief to get or keep a Kingdom The fourth part of the Chapter V. 19. But when Herod was dead behold an Angel of the Lord appeareth in a Dream to Joseph in Egypt In the remaining part of the Chapter we have three things 1 The Angels appearance to Joseph in Egypt v. 19. set down from the circumstance of time viz. when Herod was dead 2 The Angels Message to Joseph which was to take the young Childe and his Mother and to go into the Land of Israel amplified from the Reason For they are dead which sought the young Childe's life v. 20. 3 Joseph's obedience v. 21. He took the young Childe and his Mother and came into the Land of Israel v. 21. His faith is amplified 1 From some weakness that accompanied it v. 22. When he heard that Archelaus Herod's son did reign he was afraid 2 From the Victory over that Weakness and Fear being warned of God the second time in a Dream he came into Galilee and dwelt in Nazareth But when Herod was dead This Tyrant reigned seven and thirty years Joseph Antiq. lib. 17. cap. 10. Now he is dead but Christ lives Christ was now about four years old he went the year before Herod's death and tarried two years there in Egypt The Angel of the Lord appeareth to Joseph in a Dream God forsakes not his People in any place no not in Egypt No place so mean that Angels disdain to go into for the good of Saints Heb. 1.14 Here 's the perseverance of Joseph's faith he stirs not a foot till he was called back by the command of God V. 20. Saying Arise and take the young Childe and his Mother and go into the Land of Israel for they are dead which sought the young Childes life Here is the Angels command to Joseph backt with a Reason They are dead c. These words agree with that Exod. 4.19 Go return into Egypt for all the men are dead which sought thy life to shew some proportion betwixt the bringing of Israel out of Egypt by Moses and betwixt the Redemption of Mankinde from Sin and Death by Christ Fears are apt to startle us in our obedience hence the Angel removes the Danger that Joseph may not fear Go into the Land of Israel That the Childe might be brought up there lest he should seem to be an Egyptian and that Joseph might together with the Virgin enjoy the benefit of Ordinances whereof they had been long deprived and that their expence might be lessened which doubtless was not little being in a strange Land V. 21. And he arose and took the young Childe and his Mother and came into the Land of Israel Here 's Joseph's obedience Our obedience ought to be chearfull Psalm 119.32 I will run the way of thy Commandments Also present Psalm 119.60 I made haste and delayed not to keep thy Commandments 3 Universal as Joseph's was to go into Egypt to stay there to come out 4 Conscientious done out of a Command of God for God's Commands ty the Conscience such was Joseph's obedience here he moved from the Command the Angel gave him from God V. 22. But when he heard that Archelaus did reign in Judea in the room of his father Herod he was afraid to go thither notwithstanding being warned of God in a Dream he turned aside into the parts of Galilee But when he heard that Archelaus did reign Joseph hoped that now Judea would be brought into a Province of the Roman Emperour of whom he would have been less afraid than of petty Kings that are fearfull upon every suspition and therefore cruel and besides Archelaus was more cruel than the rest of his Brethren Herod had nine Wives by two of them he had no Issue by the other seven he had nine Sons and three Daughters Alexander Aristobulus and Antipater which three he put to death in his life-time Joseph Antiq. cap. 17. and lib. 1. de Bello Jud. cap. 17. Also he had Herod Archelaus Antipas Philip c. Now Herod made two Wills in the former he made Antipas the Heir of the Kingdom in the later he made Archelaus King of Judea and Antipas Tetrarch of Galilee and Philip Tetrarch of Trachonitis therefore Joseph thought either that no King would succeed Herod and indeed Archelaus was King onely by courtesie not by Caesar's appointment or if any King should succeed it should be Antipas according to Herod's first Testament but it proved otherwise hence Joseph was afraid and so much the more as Chemnicus observes because Archelaus was a bloudy man who commanding in his Horse among a Multitude of People slew and wounded three thousand persons against whom the Jews rebelled and Caesar nine or ten years after banisht him for his cruelty To free Joseph from this fear the Angel commands him to turn aside into Galilee and to dwell in Nazareth The causes why Joseph was afraid of Archelaus was lest as his Father so he should seek the Life of the Childe Christ being thus placed in Nazareth came not into Judea till he was about twelve years old because now Archelaus was banished and in Archelaus the Offspring of Herod ceased to reign in Judea and the Roman Governours ruled in his stead who probably had not so much as heard of Christ It will not be amiss to understand this History from the Egg as Cor. Lapide cites it out of Josephus Eusebius and Zonaras Herod being dead in the 37 year of his Reign his two Sons that remained Archelaus and Herod Antipas contended about the Succession of the Kingdom Augu-Caesar committed this Controversie to Caius Caesar his Nephew to be decided his Award was to judg the Kingdom to neither of them but dividing it into four Tetrarchies appointed it to be governed by four Tetrarchs he gave to Archelaus Judea to Antipas Galilee to Philip the third Brother Trachonitis and to Lysanias he gave Abilene as appears Luke 3.1 When therefore Matthew says Archelaus reigned it was not as King but onely as Tetrarch or Governour of a fourth part of the Nation after nine years of his Tetrarchy Archelaus was banished seven years before Augustus's death Archelaus being banisht Augustus placed three Presidents over Judea Coponius
They hatch Cockatrioe Eggs and weave the Spiders Web he that eateth of their Eggs dieth and that which is crushed breaketh out into a Viper Besides John hereby would not onely inform them of their poysonous malice and hypocrisie but would inform them of their natural pollution they bring into the world Who hath warned you to flee from the wrath to come As if he should say Ye live so securely as if there were no vengeance after this Life you Sadduces think there is no Hell and you Pharisees are so presumptuous that you think you need not fear Hell but who hath told you so It is your own carnal confidence 2 You were never brought to the sight of your sin and the punishment due for it why then will you come to my Baptism which is a sign of remission of sins 3 Some take it as a word of Admiration as if John should say I cannot be brought to think that you do repent though you profess it but if it be possible for you to escape it it must be by Faith and Repentance certainly that your Consciences may be awakened know there 's much difficulty herein Matth. 23.31 Serpents Generation of Vipers how can ye escape the Damnation of Hell From the wrath to come He means not destruction by the Romans but principally hell fire the other is not excluded wrath hath lain upon them sixteen hundred years of which Christ speaks Luke 23.28 29 30 31. Zach. 5.11 The Ephah or the full measure of the sins of the Synagogue were caried into the Land of Shinar that is they were scattered all abroad as the inhabitants of the earth were at the confusion of tongues in the Land of Shinar and the ephah was stablished upon her own base to signifie that by their new blasphemies against Christ and hardness of heart that all the world may look upon their banishment and misery as they do upon a pillar set upon a base or foundation without hope of deliverance till their conversion be accomplished Rom. 11.25 2 John means hell fire Matth. 23.33 which he opposes against the Kingdome of heaven v. 2. q. d. the Souldiers and Publicans and common people have come to me Luk. 3.12 13. What shall we do and what shall we do and I have shewed them a way to escape wrath but what shall I do with you you see not your sin and then how can you be healed and being not healed how can you escape wrath even hell fire Obs The judgements of God ought seriously to be applied to hardened and impenitent sinners Psal 11.6 7.68.21 Rom. 2.5 8. 2 Thes 1.8 1 Peter 4.17 V. 8. Bring forth therefore fruits meet for Repentance John layes down next after his reprehension an exhortation to the Pharisees and Sadduces to bring forth fruits that is to say Works worthy of Repentance Acts 26.20 He means not a worthiness of merit as if our Works could deserve any thing at Gods hand nor as if our Works of congruity or the moral Works of natural men could deserve so much of God that he should be bound to enable us to do Works of Repentance or condignity to deserve any thing from God but he means a worth of sutableness as a bountifull Lady is worthy of a liberal Lord or Gentleman that is she is sutable So bring forth Fruits worthy of Repentance that is sutable or declarative of your Repentance as if he should say Shew that you do not come with a counterfeit Repentance but let your outward signs of Repentance as care of pleasing God hatred of former sins good Works contrary to your former evil Works tears and sighs evidence the inward Repentance of your hearts and this is the way and means of escaping the wrath to come wherewith I have threatned you You O Sadduces repent of your Atheism you O Pharisees turn the pride of your own Righteousness into self-abasement your seeming sanctity into real sincerity your covetousness and griping to Alms and Restitution your secureness to godly fear let there be some sutableness though we do not enjoyn a Popish commensurate equality betwixt your Sorrow and Humiliation and your former sins as Peter for Denial wept bitterly Matth. 26.75 Not to give satisfaction to God which onely Christ his Bloud doth but to shew your turning away from sin and your grief for what is already done and to shew you earnestly wish it were undone and that you would not upon any terms do it were it to do again Besides Fruits worthy of Repentance implies a vehemency of affection for God as formerly we have had for sin a burning affection to God as formerly we have had to sin to yield our members weapons of righteousness as formerly they have been weapons for sin Rom. 6.13 19. Finally know Repentance is an inward Grace seated in the Heart but the Fruits of it are brought forth in the course of our Life V. 9. And think not to say within your selves We have Abraham to our father for I say unto you God is able of these Stones to raise up Children unto Abraham The words are a Discovery of the false rests these Phariand Sadduces had which the Baptist lays open in order to their repentance As whereas thou calls us a generation of Vipers we are Abrahams seed whereas thou exhorts us to repent we are a holy nation whereas thou threatens us with the wrath to come if any such thing be it belongs to Reprobates But we are the elect people of God if God should cast off us that are the sons of Abraham then his promise would take no effect Rom. 9.5 but he would be unfaithful To this John answers The Children of the promise are counted for the seed and not the children of the flesh Rom. 9.8 Birth priviledges may inright you to the Land of Canaan but it cannot inright you to the promise of spiritual blessings here nor glory hereafter You do not imitate the Faith and works of Abraham but the wickedness and treachery of your ancestors since Abraham therefore you are not the Children of Abraham nor an holy Nation but a generation of Vipers and in vain do you as many in these days do imagine the promises to belong to the carnal seed This still was the Jews foolish boasting that they were Abrahams seed Joh. 8.33 and thence thought themselves free and needed no other freedome when Christ at the same time tells them they were the Bond-slaves of sin till such times as he freed them and tells them v. 39. that if they were Abrahams children they would do the works of Abraham The words are as if John should say Though you Pharisees and Sadduces go to Hell the promise made to Abraham will not in the least jot be made void being it is not made to them that succeed in the flesh but to them that succeed in the faith and works of Abraham whether they be Jews or Gentils God is able of these stones to raise up Children unto Abraham
shoes Matth. 3.14 Luke 3.22 4 Spiritual conviction that the spirit let us see our worthlesseness Rev. 3.17 q.d. thou art but thou knowest it not that thou art poor and blinde and naked Joh. 16.10 he shall convince of sin so that as the sun gives a light whereby we behold as the gloriousnes of the sun so the loathsomness of the dunghil so the spirit convinces of our own vileness and his own fulness 5 Present to your selves abasing considerations as What was I before I had mercy how unprofitably spent I my time what will these glorious things of the world be in time to come wherein we are apt to be conceited when heaven and earth shall be on fire since we were called how have we discredited our profession how barren and watchless are we how short are we of that we might have been 6 Believe the promises made to souls poor in spirit I will look to him that is poor and of a contrite spirit Esa 66.2 Yea dwell with him and revive him Esa 57.15 yea Christ came to preach glad tidings of the gospel to such Luk. 4.18 Matth. 11.3 Rev. 2.9 I know thy poverty but thou art rich God will feed such souls with grace and comfort Zach. 11.7 Luke 1.53 yea God will be a strength to such in their distress Esa 25.4 Psal 69.33 7 Look upon thy own wants and weakness the more thou seest them the more wilt thou trust in God Zeph. 3.12 From heaven did the Lord behold the earth to hear the groaning of the prisoner Psalm 102.19 20. I am poor and sorrowfull let thy salvation set me up on high Psalm 69.29 For theirs is the Kingdome of heaven That is both kingdome of grace Esai 61.1 For the poor have the Gospel preached to them Mat. 11.3 but especially the kingdome of glory is meant Luke 12.32 Matth. 25.34 though such persons are beggarly in their own feeling being sensible of their lack of faith love joy hope yet have they an interest in the riches of grace and glory We may apply this to comfort the poor in spirit who are full of miseries inward and outward The worlds proverb is Blessed are the rich because theirs is the kingdome of the earth but Christ pronounceth Blessed are the poor in spirit for theirs is the kingdome of heaven V. 4. Blessed are they that mourn for they shall be comforted By mourning Christ means such mourning as is for offending God whether it be by sighs groans or an inward grief of heart such persons though they may seem miserable in the eys of the world yet are they blessed 1 God is wont to make comforts to abound according to their sorrows 2 Cor. 7.6 God comforts them that are cast down and this proportionable to our sorrows 2 Cor. 1.5 7. 2 God is wont to bottle all their tears and sorrows Psa 56.8 Psalm 55. Consider how I mourn in my complaint 3 There 's a time coming when God will turn the mourning of Saints into dancing and their sackcloth into gladness Psalm 30.11 John 16 20. Ye shall weep and lament but your sorrow shall be turned into joy There is not onely a fountain of justification set open for such mourners now but a state of glorification hereafter Zach. 12.10 11 12 13 compared with Chapter 13.1 Hence see 1 The mistake of the world who think happiness to be placed in delights and pleasures and shun those things which may procure any sorrow or cross as confession of persecuted truths against this Christ saith Mourners shall be comforted 2 It 's consolation for distressed consciences If thou canst truly mourn for thy transgressions thou shalt be comforted Let what ever distress come upon an afflicted heart yet if thou canst mourn for offending God thou shalt be comforted 3. It 's consolation to persons who have afflicted estates in this world there 's a day coming when comfort shall come provided that with mourning for thy miseries thou specially mourns for thy sin Luke 16.25 Now he is comforted and thou art tormented Though thy comfort come not yet yet in Gods time it shall come They are not blessed who mourn for the loss of their wealth or death of their friends but they who mourn for offending God 4 In all our confessions and professed humiliations see that you do not declare them onely historically but mourn for them Psalm 38.17 I will declare mine iniquities and will be sory for my sin When thou prayes let thy heart mourn in prayer Psalm 55.2 When thou speaks of sin speak mournfully of it Now to move us hereto consider 1 God hath the joy of the Holy Ghost in store for mourners Esa 61.1 2 3. The spirit of the Lord is upon me to give the oyl of joy for the spirit of mourning and heaviness Saints seldome finde such comfortable revivings as when they are most mournful 2 This mourning is more comfortable then the lowd laughters of the world Properties of Mourning 1 Let it be continued that length of time may not wear it out length of time eats out worldly griefs 2 Universal That King that was sory for his consent to Daniels death Dan. 6.14 was not sory for his denial of the truth in refusing to venture all in a good cause Herod was sory for Johns death but could rejoyce in Herodias 3 After conversion as well as before It 's a vain opinion to think we need not sorrow after conversion and that a Christians state is altogether a state of joy Joy and sorrow may stand together in the soul but not about one and the same object joy in God and sorrow for sin 4 Let thy mourning be not onely in regard of the damning power of sin but principally in regard of the contrariety thereof to the nature of God and to the nature of him that loves thee Luke 7.38 compared with v. 48. Mary having a sense of Gods love weeps bitterly and washes Christs feet with her tears 5 Let it be joyned with faith First Christ looks upon the soul and gives some testimony of his love to it and then the soul looks on Christ with a sad heart Matth. 26.75 Christ first lookt on Peter then he went out and wept bitterly It s the nature of faith to apply the wounds and sorrows of Christ unto it self Esa 53.5 thence follows mourning Zach. 12.10 6 This mourning for sin is the greatest hence resembled to the mourning for an onely son when dead Zach. 12.11 to the drawing of water 1 Sam. 7.6 as if it had been in buckets The ground whereof is because they apprehend sin as the greatest of evils 1 Because it is the cause of all evils Deut. 28. 2 It keeps off the greatest good 3 It cannot be purged away but with the greatest price even Christs bloud 4 There 's more evil in sin then in any thing hence followes 1 A resolution not to meddle with sin as Jehoshaphat when he had smarted by joyning with Ahab in sending out a
fleet he would not joyn with his son Ahaziah though sollicited When a man hath had a fall from a resty horse which had like to have broke his neck he will hardly come upon his back again 2 He will not be hired for any gain of sin against God he will not sell himself as Balaam did Tryals of thy Mourning 1 True mourning that comes from the spirit of grace looks at God who hath been dishonoured and at Christ who hath been crucified Psal 51.3 4. Mine iniquitie is ever before me against thee thee onely have I sinned Hos 6.1 Come let us return unto the Lord for he hath torn us and he will heal us Luke 15.18 Father I have sinned against heaven and before thee so it looks on Christ as crucified Zach. 12.10 They shall look upon him whom they have pierced In opposition to this there is a mourning flowing from the spirit of bondage which is a forced work this differs from the other as the motion of a clock from the motion of a living creature the one is moved from a principle of life the other from weights in the one a man is humbled in the other he humbles himself 2 True mourning hath a change of heart going with it Jer. 4 14. Luke 7.38 those eys that had been employd in wanton glancings now they weep those hairs that had been laid out to entangle now wipes Christs feet those lips that had kist wantonly now kiss Christs feet Hypocritical mourners have no change of heart they are like thievs who forbear stealing while in prison onely 3 If thy mourning for sin be right outward contents will not take it off David had the delights of a Court yet did not this take off his mourning Psalm 51.3.38.6 4 If thy mourning for sin be right it will be on this ground because it turnes away the face of God 2 Chron. 7.12 13. 5 Thou wilt mourn for secret sins as well as for open Psalm 19.12 Cleanse me from my secret sins as vain thoughts Jer. 4.14 c. 6 Thou wilt mourn especially for thy great sins as David doth for his adultery and murder Psalm 51 14. and Paul for his blasphemy 1 Timothy 1.13 7 Thy mourning will be especially for thy master sin Psalm 32.4 5. All Davids mourning was nothing till he came to touch upon this sin of murder to mourn for it 8 Thou wilt mourn for it not onely in times of extremity as Pharaoh Exod. 9.27 and Judas Matth. 27.4 but likewise in times of prosperity 9 True mourning looks at Gods face and favour 1 Sam. 7.3 Psalm 51.8 12. Ezek. 7.16 Hypocrites mourning is to have temporal judgements removed 1 Kings 21.27 and so Jehoram 2 Kings 6.29 30. and those who howled upon their beds for Corn and Wine Hos 7.14 Means to mourning 1 Urge the Lord with his Promise of taking away thy stony heart Ezek. 36.26 Zach. 12.10 God promises to pour upon the house of David and the Hierusalem of Jew and Gentile a spirit of grace and supplication and they shall mourn c. 2 Be frequent in self-examination Psalm 22.28 They shall remember themselves and turn to the Lord Lam. 3.39 Jer. 31.19 after Ephraim was brought to know himself he lamented 3 Keep thy heart under the powerfull dispensation of the Word Jer. 23.29 The Word is a Fire and Hammer Acts 2.37 4 Look often on Christ crucified Hard is thy heart if it mourns not when thou remembrest the dying of Christ Zach. 12.10 looking on him they pierced they mourned 5 Pray for the Spirit of grace to be poured upon thy soul Isai 32.15 When the Spirit is poured from on high the Wilderness will be a fruitfull Field that is those hearts that were like Wildernesses and Forests when the spirit was poured from on high became fruitfull Fields 6 Get assurance of thy interest in Christ crucified A man cannot mourn heartily for sinning against the Lord so long as he knows not but God may damn him in time to come but when Gods love is manifested there will be great sorrow 7 Mournfull considerations as that thou hast broken an holy Law thou hast offended a tender Father that thou hast lived an unprofitable life that thou hast sadded righteous men and gladded wicked men that thou hast been partaker with other men in their sins that thou hast often slidden back from God that thou hast been so dead-hearted in thy secret approaches to God 8 Consider the benefits of holy mourning as 1 Joy is wont to follow it Psalm 97.11.126.6 7. as a joyfull Harvest follows a weeping Seed-time when the poor Farmer mourns to cast away his precious Seed which his Family so much wants Luke 6.25 Isai 57.18 Isai 6.1 2 3. 2 Such persons are marked in an evil time Ezek. 9.4 Job 5.11 3 Such persons are not without blessedness though they be without comfort for Blessed are they that mourn Yea a time is coming when the Lord shall be thy everlasting Light and the days of thy mourning shall be ended Isai 60.20 4 This is one of the effects of Repentance 2 Cor. 7.7 Joel 2.12 5 Godly mourning is a special means to compose the dissoluteness and loosness of our affections which are apt to be scattered too much among carnal joys James 4.9 10. Be afflicted and mourn let your laughter be turned into mourning and your joy into heaviness 9 Practise duties as 1 Private admonition 2 Sam. 12.7 Psalm 141.5 2 Take a fit season for plowing up thy heart Jer. 4.3 when softened by outward trouble 3 Get a particular knowledg of thy evils 1 Sam. 12.19 We have sinned in asking us a King 2 The Reason why mourners are blessed For they shall be comforted here in part 2 Cor. 1.4 and hereafter fully in Heaven James 1.12 Apoc. 7.17 V. 4. Blessed are the meek for they shall inherit the earth Obs Meek persons are blessed 1 What meekness is 2 Why the meek are blessed 1 What it is it is a certain moderation of minde speech and gesture whereby a man becomes gentle and tractable towards those with whom he converses so that he is not sharpened unjustly at their follies and frowardness and smaller offences they commit against him 2 Why meek persons are blessed 1 Because Christ pronounces them blessed Psalm 149.4 The Lord taketh pleasure in his people he will beautifie the meek with salvation Psalm 147.6 The Lord lifts up the meek The meek shall increase their joy in the Lord Isai 29.19 2 Christ promises such persons rest Matth. 11.29 Learn of me for I am meek and ye shall finde rest for your souls Now what rest is this save the rest of grace and glory 3 A meek spirit is of high price in the sight of God 1 Peter 3 4. God exalts such souls in blessedness Hence Preachers are sent to preach good tidings to the meek Isai 61.1 Psalm 76.9 4 Let us learn this duty 1 We have the example of Christ herein Matth. 21.5 Behold thy
in the Life to come because their Reward is great in Heaven He means not the Reward of Merit but of Grace as if a King should give ten thousand pound a year for an hours service What I promise to give a man that is his reward though his service do not equal it as if I promise a man an hundred pound for making me a pair of gloves Now in merit there must be a proportion betwixt the work and wages for the recompence of merit is an act of righteousness now in all righteousness there must be equality when reward is promised to Gods children it is not to establish merit but to let Saints see that their labour will not be in vain Reasons against merit 1 God needs not any of our services nor gets no benefit by them Job 22.3 Can a man be profitable to God Job 35.7 8. If thou be righteous what givest thou to him or what receiveth he of thine hand Acts 17.25 He is not worshipped with mens hands as though he needed any thing 2 When we have done what we can we are unprofitable servants Luke 17.10 3 All good works are the workings of God in us and therefore reward is not due to our own works but God crowns his own grace in us so that Deus est debitor noster non ex commisso but promisso as Aug. saith God is our debtor not for any thing done by us but for his promise Matth. 10.42 So he promiseth to reward a cup of cold water given to a disciple 4 There is no proportion betwixt our sufferings and the crown of glory Rom. 8.18 2 Cor. 4.17 18. we ought to take heed herein because the Papists use it to destroy grace Seeing then there is a reward in heaven let us endure reproaches we endure bitter Physick and sharp cutting in hope of long health let us endure reproaches and other sufferings in hope of glory Heb. 10.34 Use Caution Render not reviling for reviling imitate Christ 1 Pet. 2.23 and Paul 1 Cor. 4.12 being reviled we bless Yea he took pleasure in reproaches 2 Cor. 12.10 Let us look to the reward in heaven as Christ did Heb. 12.1 2. 3 Things may comfort under these 1 That our heart is well affected to every man yea even such as rail against us Matth. 5.44 2 That in private prayer we can pray for such reproaches Psal 109.3 4. 3 That thou hast a God to make thy complaint unto in all revilings as Nehemiah did Nehem. 4.3 4. 4 Your great reward in heaven 2 Exhortation Carry patiently under revilings for else 1 Thou wilt disturb thine own peace 2 Hereby thou wilt by an impatient frame of spirit discover so much evil as may be a just cause of revilement 3 By impatiency herein we may make others think us to be guilty 4 By reviling again you harden others in their reviling 5 You show great weakness to think so as if there were no other means to deliver you from an ill name but by an ill tongue Psal 38.12.13 When Davids enemies spake mischievous things against him he was a man that is both deaf dumb yet must we not so neglect our names that we should neglect the crimes falsely objected to us and confirm the slanderers but we must say I have not a Devil also If I have spoke evil bear witness of the evil He that neglects his name is cruell a good conscience is necessary for us before God a good name before our neighbour Luth. Ob. But I am guiltless and innocent and they reproach me falsely Ans The more false the things are the more cause thou hast to rejoyce if they were true thou hadst cause to be confounded For so persecuted they the Prophets Here 's the second ground of rejoycing It 's no otherwise with you then with the ancient Prophets of God whom they persecuted with reproaches as David Psal 31.11 Who was a reproach among his neighbours Psal 41.10 Mine enemies reproach me saying Where is thy God So strange were his reproaches that his heart was as it were broken with them Psal 69.20 So Jeremy cap. 20 10. I have heard the defaming of many Report say they and we will report it Nay it hath generally been the lot of true Prophets to be persecuted Matth. 23.34 So that we may say Which of the Prophets have not your fathers persecuted W●●ness Eliah Micaiah Amos c. 7.13 Zachary Matth. 23.35 36. Yea the Disciples Matth. 10.23 So that we may ●●y Gal. 4.29 As he that was born after the flesh persecuted him that was born after the Spirit So it is now Gal. 4.29 V. 13. Ye are the salt of the earth but if the salt have lost its savour wherewith shall it be salted It is thenceforth good for nothing but to be cast out and to be troden under foot of men Ye are the Salt of the Earth Quest Doth Christ call Ministers the Salt of the earth or all believers Ans Christ calls believers whether preachers or others the Salt of the earth 1 Because Christ not onely taught the twelve but all the disciples 2 Because it is not appropriated unto preachers alone but unto all believers to season others with grace for not onely preachers but all believers have the means of seasoning others as 1 Savoury speeches Col. 4.6 Let your speech be always with grace powdered with salt 2 Savoury examples Luke 14. ult Have salt in your selves and peace one with another that is as you live together in peace so let there be savoury and holy examples earth is put for the inhabitants of the earth by a Metonymie salt for them that do the duty of salt by a Metaphor But if the salt have lost his savor wherewith shall it be seasoned It is good for nothing no not so much as for the dunghill because it causes barrenness as if Christ should say If other men be unsavory you may season them but if you be unsavory who shall season you Use To apply this see 1 How unsavory mans nature is unless it be seasoned by the word Psal 14.3 men by nature are altogether become stinking their throats are like open sepulchres Rom. 3.13 Like putrified flesh to mans taste 2 See the duty of Christians which is to season others This is done 1 By the word which like unto salt gives rellish Psal 119.9 Wherewith all shall a young man cleanse his way by taking heed unto thy word 2 By a holy and blameless conversation Scandalous practises make persons to stink Gen. 34.30 Simeon and Levi by their slaying the Sichemites made Jacob to stink among the inhabitants of the land Holy practises insensibly gain others 1 Pet. 3.1 Wives be subject to your husbands that if any obey not the word they may be won by the conversation of their wives let no man be led with vain glory because of present hearers let us live blamelesly among men and speak nothing for trifling sake but being much silent to answer to what
cutting off some diseased member proceeds to cut it off So the Magistrate provides for the publick good by cutting off such evil doers Prov. 20.26 A wise King scattereth the wicked and bringeth the Wheel over them Object But God condemns Revenge Rom. 12.17 Avenge not your selves Answ Private Revenge is condemned but not publick Rom. 13.4 The Magistrate is a terrour to evil works he beareth not the Sword in vain he is a Revenger to execute wrath on them that do evil Object But by putting Murderers to death they are deprived of seasons of Repentance which is contrary to Charity Answ Private Charity must give way to publick by cutting the Murderer off the Magistrate provides for universal safety Object Christ did not command to stone the Woman taken in Adultery Answ Christ doth not disallow the Law of stoning such but onely mindes them of their guilt and hypocrisie besides Christ onely absolves her from her sins not from temporal judgment Object But are not Duels lawfull Answ No they are unlawfull whether to shun Reproach of Cowardize or for the trial of a secret or unknown thing or in case of slander 1 Strifes were appointed to be ended 1 By Oaths Heb. 6.17 or by Courts of Justice 2 There 's no Promise that God will succour the innocent in this case to give him victory 3 Such sin both against their Neighbour in killing him uncondemned how guilty soever and against themselves in exposing their own Lives to danger 4 Whether thou killest or be killed thou art a Murderer Quest Whether is it lawfull to make war Answ The Souldiers asking John what they should do in order to Repentance he bids them not cast away their Weapons of War and withdraw themselves from the calling of Souldiers but bids them be content with their Wages Luke 3.14 Cornelius converted did not change his Calling Paul Acts 23.17 took the Guard of men who were sent to guard him from the Jews fury in number four hundred and seventy Also 1 Cor. 9.7 Who goeth to warfare at his own charge 2 Tim. 2.4 No man that warreth entangleth himself with the affairs of this life that he may please him who chose him to be a Souldier Revel 17.14 The Babylonians make war with the Lamb and the chosen and faithfull who are with the Lamb overcome him which Souldiers who are on the Lambs part are commanded to burn her with fire cap. 18.6 7 8. Quest But what think you of a cruelty may a Christian use any such thing Answ No Magistrates are not to condemn persons to a greater Punishment than their Offence deserves Conquerours in War are not to use their Captives rigorously above the nature of their Offence Whereas David 2 Sam. 12.31 made the Ammonites to be put under Sawes and Harrows of Iron and made them pass through the Brick-kiln the cause was they shewed greatest unkindness to David for his great kindness besides they abused his Embassadours by cutting off one half of their Beards and shaving their Garments to the Buttocks 2 Sam. 10.4 besides by the Law of like for like as they had made their children to go through the Brick-kilns in honour of their Idols it was just to cast them into the same Fornace into which they had cast their chidren Yet some think onely their Governours were so served Junius reades it He cast them into the Fornace of Moloch For the cutting off Adonibezek's Thumbs and Toes it was a just Requital of like for like Judges 1.6 For Gideon's slaying the Elders of Succoth with Thorns and Brambles Judges 8.14 16. The persons thus punished were onely the Elders or chief Magistrates of the City who had refused not onely to give Bread unto Gideon and his three hundred men when they were faint but also gave slighting speeches to them for which Gideon threatens that he would tear their Flesh with Thorns and Briars Judges 8.4 5 6 7. Besides where Gods people have gone from a particular rule we must judge they either did it by a private motion or else they sinned in so doing V. 22. But I say unto you Whosoever is angry with his brother without a cause shall be in danger of the judgement and whosoever shall say unto his brother Racha shall be in danger of the counsell but whosoever shall say Thou fool shall be in danger of hell fire In this verse Christ explains fulfils and supplies the law of Thou shalt not kill and shews that not onely murther is forbid but also inward and outward wrath which breaks forth into reproachful speeches But I say unto you That is I ordain being as well a law-giver of the Evangelical as of the law natural Whosoever is angry with his brother without a cause Anger simply is not a sin it is ascribed to God it was in Christ Mark 3.5 Yea it was in man in Paradise onely inordinate anger desiring private revenge is forbid and also when it is in vain as 1 When it is without cause 2 When it is without measure against this Paul Eph. 4.26 Be angry and sin not let not the sun go down upon your wrath Shall be guilty of the judgement As if he should say You Pharisees exceed all measure in your anger and with a malicious heart rail upon the most innocent persons upon me and my disciples but I would have you take heed of this anger for you shall have a greater torment in hell for your anger then that which murtherers have here and if you adde railing to your anger you will have a more grievous punishment and if your railing be more ha●nous your torments will be greater you will be guilty of the judgement and of the counsel yea of hell fire The law of Moses did not threaten such kind of wrongs unless they had curst their parents or their Gods or magistrates Of the judgement By the judgement he means the counsel of the three and twenty men of which I spake before they had also a judgement of three men who judged of money matters though sometimes this counsell was called the Synedrion yet for distinction sake that same assembly of three and twenty was called the judgement because they judged of murthers and inflicted death and the other great counsel was called the Sanhedrim or Synedrion from the different degrees of punisments among the Jews Christ would show the degrees of punishment in another world according to the greatness of sin as if he should say Look as among you Jews there are different offences some are judged in your counsel of three and twenty and some in your great Sanhedrim and that with the highest punishment which you have to inflict that is to say burning so in the court of heaven some sins as rash anger are less sentenced others more sorely as when our anger shall break forth to railing Whosoever shall say to his brother Racha Racha is a Syriack word and signifies as Lapide and others collect from learned men 1 Empty as empty of
sinn'd he should dye 2 Renewed whereby we are angry at our own or other mens sins so Moses Exod. 32.32 he was so angry that he slew three thousand who were actors in the golden Calf Phineas slew Zimri and Cosbi Numb 25.7 8. so we may have a just anger when our own name or state or wife or life is violated 2 There is an unjust anger which is when we have a desire of revenge stirr'd up in us upon unjust causes Jon. 3. Now that thy anger may be just and not sinful consider 1 The properties of holy anger 2 The remedies against sinful anger 1 The properties of holy anger as 1 It must have a just cause Exo. 11.8 Moses went from Pharaoh in a great anger Lot was angry with the Sodomites 2 Pet. 2.7 2 It must be proportioned to the fault We must not bring a club to kill a flye nor set an house on fire to rost an egg Here Jonah fail'd who was so angry for a gourd and the Disciples who for a contempt would have had fire come down from heaven Luk. 9.53 3 With love of those with whom we are angry so Moses pray'd for Israel when he was so angry at their golden Calf Exod. 32.11 4 In matters of importance not for trifles There 's more justice then love in such a carriage 1 Cor. 13.5 6. 5 It must be short the Sun must not go down upon it lest it boyl up into malice Eph. 4.26 and so much the shorter as we see signes of repentance in the person offending Absaloms long retained anger turn'd into malice and in fine to murther 6 It must be moderate Not as Simoon and Levi who slew innocent as well as guilty Gen. 34.25 Some are like cruel hangmen who having a just cause to execute the office to wit the Judges command do in the execution thereof use all cruelty So persons being commanded to be angry with the sins of their brethren seem glad they have got such an occasion to show their fury though too many can swallow the same evil in a friend Remedies against unjust anger 1 Take heed we be not abused by false imaginations as to be angry for a man 's not saluting us when perhaps he never saw us or to think a man bears us no good will when he discovers no ill will against us To think a man loves us not because he comes not so oft to our house when perhaps his business will not permit or because we see a man laugh to think he laughs at us 2 Consider thy own vileness Carry meekly to others for thou wast as bad as they Tit. 3.3 Jam. 3.2 3 Consider Gods patience how many imperfections he patiently bears in us 10000 talents let us bear with pence Matth. 18. ult He is over thee as thou art over others 4 Avoid occasions of anger as contentious companions Prov. 22.24 drunken company Prov. 23.29 too much affecting any thing for when we lose it it will cause much anger As we keep gunpowder and tow far from fire let us avoid occasions of anger 5 Consider nothing befals thee but by the providence of God This kept David from anger when Shimei curst 2 Sam. 16. and Job c. 1.22 he raged not against the devil nor the Sabeans but lookt at God and quieted his heart and though you have not deserved it at their hands yet have you deserved much more at Gods hand Gen. 50.20 21. it was not ye but God sent me hither 6 Behold anger in another how odious it is Should a man see himself in a looking-glass when he is in a Bedlam fit how ugly would he look to himself 7 It makes us unfit to duties as to prayer 1 Tim. 2.8 Lift up holy hands without wrath to hearing receive with meekness the ingrafted word Jam. 1.21 to receiving 1 Cor. 11.17 18. to Church-communion 1 Cor. 1.10 to mutual edifying hence Paul and Barnabas parted companies Acts 15. 8 Angry men take that which is proper to God which is vengeance Rom. 12.19 Vengeance is mine and not thine An angry man makes himself to be Judge and would have God to be his Executioner 9 Interpose reason and deliberation without this the soul is like a ship without Compass or Pilot let reason teach thee not to be hasty in thy answers Theodosius was taught by Ambrose to take thirty days respit before he punisht any offence because in that space his anger might be asswaged and his judgement rectified It 's as absurd for passions to lord over reason as for an intemperate scold to justle out a reverend Judge It 's not comely to be angry for it is a kinde of madness but if it shall seize upon us let us so use it that it be for the correction and amendment of our neighbour he that uses it besides reason hates himself and his neighbour by troubling himself and grieving his neighbour Justin ad Zen. Seren. p. 395. 10 Consider the loveliness of a meek spirit both with God and man 1 Pet. 3.4 it 's an ornament of great price It 's the sinews of all delightfull societie and drawes like a Loadstone the iron the spirits of men to it 11 The scandal Every blinde man can see the evil of a waspish cholerick spirit this made Jacob and his sons to stink Gen. 34. ult 12 Get out of the company of those who have offended us as Jonathan did 1 Sam. 20.34 besides thou shalt hereby cover thy sin which moves thy adversary to scorn and laughter and thy friends to sorrow and pity Also hereby shalt thou appease thy anger by removing the object Prov. 12.16 13 Suffer not anger to lodg with you We cannot sometimes keep it from entering but from lodging Eccles 7.9 anger rests what in a wise mans heart no in the besome of fools though we be sometimes touchy let us not be heavily disposed as Absalom 2 Sam. 13.23 Let anger be like a fire of thorns quickly extinct A spark or coal of fire if it light on us it will not hurt us if it be presently shook off but if it lye still it causeth burning so will our anger if we let it alone we give place to the devil who will boil it into malice by amplifying the indignity done to us and the unworthiness of the person Usually the devil chuses an angry passionate heart to act his designes as we see in Saul and Cain Anger is a young twig envy is a tree and a great beam Luth. 14 Look on the bad effects in nature it casts into a fever dries up radical moisture hastens consumptions It makes the minde drunk In passion reason that should govern us is like a key to a lock that is jumbled it makes men to be angry with the bruits as Balaam with his Ass Num. 24.10 to throw things out of their hand which after they are forced to take up 15 Suppress anger in thine heart though it do not boil out many are like rivers which are most
be afraid of her discovering of him to have insolent carriage towards him what a slavery is this 5 The dignity of Christians their bodies are for the Lord 1 Cor. 6.13 are members of Christ v. 15. Temples of the holy Ghost v. 19. bought with a price v. 20. Remedies against Adultery 1 Let every man keep to his own wife 1 Cor. 7.1 compared with v. 9. this is the way to prevent burning Prov. 5.15 Drink waters out of thine own Cistern and running waters out of thine own well as if he should say When burning lust fires a man there is need of water to quench it the remedy which must quench it is compared to a cistern and a pit Now as every man had rather have waters within doors then fetch it abroad so let every man have his own wife to quench the burnings of his desires Whereas he nameth running waters he showes that remedy of quenching lusts by strumpets is like muddy water which is trodden with the feet of many beasts but the other is clear the effect hereof is ver 16. Let thy fountains be dispersed abroad and rivers of water in the street By fountains and rivers he means children flowing from his wife as a fountain or spring Besides ver 16. Thy children thou hast by her shall be thine own and not straugers whereas children begotten on strumpets are children of the people 2 Get a dear love to thy wife Pov. 5.19 20. q.d. If thy wife shall be as the loving Hind and pleasant Roe thou shalt never go after strumpets erre thou in her love how by overlooking a squint eye a hard visage a dull understanding which may seem deformities to others do thou overlook them 3 Believe the al-seeing eye of God beholds thee in every place Prov. 15.3 The eyes of the Lord are in every place beholding the evil and good Prov. 5.21 Heb. 4.13 This kept Job from this sin Job 31.4 and Joseph Gen. 39.10 This thought that God sees not emboldens many to this sin Job 24.15 The eye of the adulterer waiteth for the twilight saying No eye shall see me The more secretly thou doest this sin the more abhorred it is of God 2 Sam. 12.12 2 Kings 17.9 Many persons when they are in strange countries and secret places venture to commit this sin as I have known some who through horrour of conscience have confest adulteries committed far from home 4 Beware of venturing upon this sin upon hope of future repentance for few have repented of this sin Eccles 7.28 and those who have repented have had exceeding horrour in their consciences for this sin as we see in David Psal 51.8 None that go into her return again Prov. 2.19 Neither take they hold of the paths of life That is very few do return 5 Shun all occasions and provocations to this sin as dalliance wanton touches and embraces Prov. 6.27 28 29. As he that takes fire in his bosome must needs burn his garments so the wanton touching of a strange woman must needs fire the body and mind and as he that goes barefoot upon hot coals must needs burn his feet so he that goes in to his neighbours wife though not in away of adultery but in a way of private converse as walking talking together in secret especially if there be any kind of touchings without prayer and watchfulness will be apt to be fired in his fancy memory mind and will as Tow presently takes fire if the fire do but touch it so whosoever wantonly toucheth a woman shall not be innocent Women are to be honoured but there is danger in their company let us consider their endeavours in secret to swallow up their neighbours they judge of themselves whether they can make war against chastity Justin Martyr ad Zenam Joseph shun'd all occasions as being in private with his Mistress To accompany with persons noted for this sin is an occasion Psal 26.4 5. the attire of an harlot is an occasion also why women may be tempted to this sin Prov. 7.10 Hos 2.2 Let her take away her fornications from before her face and her adulteries from between her breasts The meaning is she wore the attire of an harlot in those parts There is a chastity of habit which much preserves the person that wears it from the assaults of aculterers a sign of wantonness held forth in apparrel or gesture emboldens laseivious persons 6 Beware of filthy talke as scurrilous jeasts filthy talking argues a filthy heart Matth. 12.34 35. rotten communication is condemned Ephes 4.29 Ephes 5.4 many make their tongues which should be their glory to be their shame If so much uncleanness come out of the tongue how much more is there in the heart An angry displeasing countenance though there were no other reproof were enough to silence such wicked tongues 7 Take heed of idleness it was the cause of Davids sin 2 Sam. 11.1 2. As the land until'd grows full of weeds and the standing pool of frogs and toads so will the idle soul corrupt it self When the mind is intent on business it hath no leasure to wander about lascivious objects 8 Read and study Gods word it s a preservative against this sin Prov. 2.10 11 15 16. Prov. 6.23 24. It preserves thee from her flatteries when she shall profess she loves none like thee and if it were not to thee she would not prostitute her self to any This word hid in the heart preserves the young man whose lust is strongest Psal 119.9 11. For persons that fare daintily live idly and pray and read rarely it s a rare thing for them to be preserved from this sin 9 Restrain thy thoughts from uncleanness Job 31.4 Job would not think upon a maid in any lascivious way But of the heart proceeds adultery Matth. 15.18 19. Ob. But there 's sweetness in this sin Answ The more present sweetness the more the future bitterness 2 Consider how much more sweet is peace of conscience Labour then to give an absolute denial to this sin when it is in the first motion if we cannot put it out when it is but a spark how can we put it out when it is in a flame 10 Take heed of an adulterous eye 2 Peter 2.14 Having Eys full of Adultery that cannot cease from sin When a City is besieged care must be had of the Walls and Gates Prov. 6.25 Let her not take thee with her Ey-lids as if he should say if thou wouldst not lust after her do not look upon her V. 28. But I say unto you whosoever looketh upon a Woman to lust after her hath committed Adultery with her already in his heart But I say unto you Christ here comes to correct the depravement of the Pharisees that they vvhich kept themselves from bodily Adultery vvere free from all guilt thereof But I say that whosoever looks upon a Woman to lust after her hath already committed Adultery with her in his heart Whosoever looks upon a Woman Not
accidentally or looks upon her by reason of occasion or company nor is it unlawfull for a Husband to look upon his Wife or a Suiter upon a Maid or Widovv he sues unto but looking upon a Woman in a lustfull vvay is condemned vvhich is contrary to the end of this Commandment vvhich is Chastity Concupiscence is the Mother of Lust and the Eys are the Windovvs to let it in and as Wrath is the Mother of Murder so is Concupiscence of Adultery James 1.14 15. Lust conceiveth and bringeth forth sin Hence pray Psalm 119.37 Turn away mine Eys from beholding vanity The Pharisees depraved this Command tvvo vvays 1 In that they did not understand it of invvard Concupiscence but of that vvhich broke out into touches kisses or bodily Adultery 2 That by this Lavv they thought vvas forbid the Concupiscence of another mans Wife but not of an unmarried Woman but Christ says that all lustfull thoughts of a Woman though she be not a Wife is unlavvfull Learn vve then Job's Lesson cap. 31.1 I have made a Covenant with mine Eys why then should I think upon a Maid Also Prov. 6.25 Lust not after her Beauty in thine heart neither let her take thee with her Ey lids What though she be beautifull yet is Beauty fading if she be honest she is none of thine if she be a Strumpet consider hovv filthy her soul is Besides remember hovv Abimelech vvas taken vvith Sarahs Beauty remember hovv Sichem vvas foil'd looking on Dinah Potiphar's Wife looking on Joseph David on Bathsheba Amnon on Thamar As our Mother Eve at first vvas foil'd by the Eye Gen. 3.6 seeing the forbidden Fruit vvas pleasant to the Eye she took it Sampson vvas also taken vvith looking upon Dalilah Therefore as the Sun on a sudden darts out Beams and the Clouds lightening so doth beauty and feature dart out the beams wherewith it shoots the arrows of love and desire into the hearts of persons therefore if at any time the Eys should go out let the minde call back the Eys as from nets and snares laid for the soul In other creatures there is a natural shiness of snares laid for them let there be so in us And what I say of wanton lookings we may apply to wanton listenings and touchings And also that wanton looking which is Adultery in Men towards Women is Adultery in Women who shall lustfully look upon Men. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 also signifies sollicitations Can. 4. Syn. Neocaesariensis Hath committed Adultery with her already in his heart Though men can neither see nor punish the Adultery of the heart yet God sees it Such a speech Job 31.7 If my heart have walked after mine eys and any blot he means of uncleanness hath cleaved to my hands then let me sow and another reap yea let my Off-spring be rooted out God looks into the heart he sees the mind and purpose which distinguisheth evil deeds a Thief is a Thief before he puts forth his hand to steal Wickedness is laid open by the doing but doth not then begin the mind becomes adulterous if it set before it the image of pleasure that might be had with such a party and shall desire it Tertul de poeniten The will is the beginning of the deed which is not then freed when some difficulty hinders the Commission of the thing will'd neither can the will in this case be excused by the inability of perfecting that which it wills For application 1 Be humbled for all your wanton lookings and lustings you had in the state of nature and ignorance as the prodigal in the return to his father Other sins are confest in prayer let this also 2 Admire the grace of God to converted souls that can look upon a woman without lusting after her Tertul. de Velandis Virg. A Christian looks upon a woman with safe eyes he is blinde in his minde toward lust 3 Caution of us for the guiding of the eye not to fix it on any object that may stir up lust neither lustful books nor pictures nor mixt dancers neither to fix our eyes upon the beholding the beauty of wanton women Beauty indeed may be beheld that as in other works God may be praised so in that and therefore when one ask'd a certain Philosopher what there was in beauty that it was so desired he told him it was a blinde mans question onely let us be wary herein that we dwell not too long on such objects lest our hearts should be carried after our eys and as restraint at all times should be upon our sight so especially when we come to worship God Eccl. 5.1 Look to thy feet when thou enterest into the house of God it 's a Syneedoche for all the affections of soul and members of body 4 Exhortation to cleanse our flesh and spirit from all unchaste and unholy lusts Jam. 4.8 Cleanse your hands and purifie your hearts from what Even from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit Thy body is the Temple of the Holy Ghost do not defile it 1 Cor. 6.19 Remedies against heart-lust through the eye 1 Beware of private conversing men and women together A Christian man is commanded to confer with a Christian woman with all chastity 1 Tim. 5.2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Call back your hearts from meditations of beauty and feature to better meditations The absence of holy thoughts causes the Lord to deliver us up to vain thoughts Psal 81.10 11. I gave them up to their own hearts lusts and they walked in their own counsel Rom. 1.24 26 28. As they liked not to retain God in their knowledge he gave them up to a reprobate minde to chuse things reprobated yea he gave them up to the lusts of their hearts 3 Be often eying Gods eye in all places Hebr. 4.13 There is not any creature which is not manifest in his sight Pro. 15.3 Psal 139.2 He knowes our thoughts far off 4 Be not greedy to hunt after beauties Remember one fit of an ague blurs it and how that beauty withers as grass Psal 39.11 Thou makest his beauty to consume away like a meth think what a change age and death puts upon it 5 Consider the eye is not satisfied with seeing Eccl. 1.8 but rather more unsatisfied whiles the more they behold the more are burning desires kindled in the soul 6 Use prayer that God would turn thy eyes from vanity Psal 119.31 and watchfulness that thou keep thy heart with diligence for out of it are the issues or goings out of life and death Prov. 4.23 V. 29. And if thy right eye offend thee pluck it out and cast it from thee for it is profitable for thee that one of thy members should perish and not that thy whole body be cast into hell V. 30 And if thy right hand offend thee out it eff and cast it from thee for it is profitable for thee that one of thy members should perish and not that thy whole body should be
it were in the ayr waiting for Gods command to fall down like an Eagle or Hawk upon the prey They went as swift in their sins as wilde Asses or Dromedaries but as the Ass is found in her-moneths in her silthiness when she is big that she cannot run men wait for her Jer. 2.23 24. so doth the rowl of judgement wait for other sinners in particular for perjured persons The length of this rowl was 20 cubits the breadth but ten signifying that it went over all Judaea which was twice as long as broad as Hierom observes the length of it from Dan to Beersheba was 160 miles the breadth from Joppa to Bethlem was 46 miles This rowl was writ on both sides on one side of it were curses for the thief on the other side curses for the swearer Lastly this curse is said to remain in the midst of his house and shall consume it with the timber thereof and the stones thereof This was fulfill'd Matth. 23.27 28.24.1 in that there was not left one stone upon another not onely the Temple destroyed but also every private mans house Luke 19.44 so that they were laid even with the ground and not one stone left upon another This sin is condemned Hos 10.4 Levit. 19.12 Zach. 8.17 Examples of persons punish'd for false swearing are Zedekiah Ezek. 17.16 17 18 19 20. the Lord threatens for the oath that Zedekiah swore to the King of Babylon and brake that he should dye Shimei was put to death for the oath he brake which he had sworn to Solomon 1 Kings 2.42 43 44 45. For Saul his breach of the oath which Joshua and Israel had sworn to the Gibeonites seven of his sons were hanged in the dayes of David 2 Sam. 21.1 to v. 10. Famous was Gods judgement on Ladislaus King of Poland who upon the Popes Counsel and dispensation broke his oath which he had sworn to Amurath the second Acts and Mon. vol. 1. p. 968. But shalt perform to the Lord thine Oaths An oath is the affirming or denying a thing with the calling on the name of God to witness and avouch the truth of the thing affirmed denied or promised that they to whom we swear may not doubt of the truth of our words 1 Oaths are lawful 1 Because practised by God and Christ Psal 95.11 Psal 110.1 Esai 45.23 and by Saints by Jonathan and David by Paul Rom. 1.9 2 Cor. 1.23 2 Cor. 11.31 Gal. 1.20 2 Oaths are of the Law of nature Gen. 21.23 24. Abraham and Abimelech or at least Phicol his Captain swore one to another 3 The useful need thereof as to bring forth a truth Exod 22.10 11. as if a man deliver a beast to keep and it be stole then was he that had the beast to keep to purge himself by oath and the owner was to accept his oath Also that things done privily may come to light Numb 5.19 so the Priest swore the woman suspected of incontinency to finde out whether she were guilty or innocent Properties in swearing 1 Look to a right call as 1 When the Magistrate ministers an oath to answer so far as Law requires otherwise non tencor respondere I am not bound to answer 2 When the glory of God and edification of his Church requires it 2 Cor. 1.23 Rom. 1.9 3 For mutual peace and ending of controversies So Jacob and Laban swore one to another Gen. 31.53 so an oath is an end of strife Heb. 6.17 2 Look to the thing thou swears that it be lawfull not as Herod's oath to Herodias nor as the forty who swore to kill Paul Such an oath was Davids who swore to destroy all Nabals house 1 Sam. 25.22 3 Look the thing thou swears be in thine own power It 's rashness to swear a thing that is not in thine own power as to swear to live a single life c. 4 Swear in truth judgement and righteousness 1 In truth which excludes all equivocation Words are to be taken as men commonly understand them An oath is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an hedge to signifie that when a man swears he sets an hedge about himself which he may not break this excludes all swearing of things we know not and things we doubt of 2 In judgement not lightly or rashly but weighing all due circumstances Eleazar Gen. 24.3 when Abram swears him not to take a wife of the Canaanites for his son but of his kindred before Eleazar swears he proposes his exceptions viz. What if the woman will not go with me To which Abram answers If the woman be not willing to follow thee thou shalt be free from this mine oath Eccles 5.2 Be not rash with thy mouth and let not thy heart be hasty to utter any thing before God None must swear save those who have judgement to discern what an oath is 3 In righteousness That you affirm nothing against conscience neither for malice nor favour as those sons of Belial did against Naboth who swore That Naboth blasphemed God and the King 1 Kin. 21.13 This property of an oath excludes all swearing for custome as many do that are chosen into publick places and are chosen into societies who swear not because they mean to keep their oaths but because else they cannot be enfranchised 2 Reprehension of prophane swearing which is so common for this sin God hath a controversie Hos 4.1 Lands mourn Jer. 23.10 and the sinner becomes guilty Exo. 20. Obj. But if I swear not men will not believe me Answ They would sooner believe thee if thou forbarest it He that hears thee make no conscience of swearing will think thou makes no conscience of lying besides better be suspected of men then condemned of God and conscience Obj. It 's a foolish custome I have got Answ This renders thee so much more guilty that it 's thy custome if a thief or murtherer at the bar should plead that it hath been his custome to thieve and murther would not this make him more guilty Object My oaths are small as by my faith and troth Answ Consider against what a great majesty they are committed If any sin seem little let hell fire seem great To use faith and truth cannot be less then an appearance of evill Object But I swear by a good thing Answ The goodness of a good thing aggravates the offence when abused as we see in wine and beer when abused to drunkenness Object All the country use it Answ We must not follow a multitude to do evil Exod. 23.2 the sinfulness of multitudes brought the flood upon the old World and fire upon Sodome Remedies against prophane swearing 1 Beware in those cases where men are apt to swear amiss as to gratifie a friend or to be revenged of an enemy 2 Use not an oath when the matter can be otherwise determined also if thou be a judge impose not an oath when not necessary nor upon men of no credit who make no conscience of it nor in
a will a desire and endeavour to love our enemies Rom. 7.18 God looks upon it as done when also we are troubled for the uncharitableness of our hearts v. 14. and cry to God against these risings 2 When God inables us in some good measure to do them good to feed them in their hunger Rom. 12.19 to humble our selves for them in their sickness Psal 35.11 12 13 14. David sought God by fasting and prayer for them that scoft at him Use to apply this it serves for reprehension of those who hate their enemies You say how do you know it Answ by thy unpeaceable speeches Josephs brethren hated him and could not speak peaceably unto him Gen. 37.4 2 By thy afflicting thine enemies with secret whisperings open slanders and false reports Prov. 26.28 A lying tongue hateth those that are afflicted by it 3 By thy unkind carriage when thou shalt passe by them in such offices of courtesie as they show to other neighbours 1 King 1.26 2 Exhortation to love your enemies naturally we hate them Tit. 3.3 Show your love to them 1 by not purposing to revenge your selves and by purposing not to revenge your selves Prov. 24.29 Say not I will do to him as he hath done to me 2 Desire not God to avenge your cause so Stephen Acts 7.59 3 By being sorrowful when any evill befalls thine enemy Psal 35.12 13. When Davids enemies were sick he humbled himself with fasting David was really sorrowful for Sauls death and declared it by putting to death him that slew him Prov. 24.17 18. Rejoyce not when thine enemy falleth nor let not thine heart be glad when he stumbleth why so 1 Least the Lord see it and it displease him 2 It will cause the Lord to turn away his wrath from him 4 By striving to forget the wrongs done by your enemies If we strive not to forget them we shall hardly forgive them 5 By striving to be at peace with him that is thy utterest enemy Rom. 12.18 If it be possible live peaceably with all Let him see that thou art not of an implacable spirit but ready to meet him on any reasonable terms 6 By looking on it as a cross when any man is so implacable that he will not be at peace with thee Ps 120.5 6 7. I am for peace but when I speak thereof they are for war woe is me that I am constrained to dwell with such persons 7 By thy willingness to do thy enemie good when it lies in thy power Exod. 23.4 5. If thou see the Ox or the Asse of thy enemie going a stray thou art to bring him home again or if he lye under his burthen thou shalt surely help him As God also spares his enemies in his long suffering and does them good in his providence not to strengthen them in wickedness but to lead them to repentance so ought we and as he puts his hook in their noses to bridle their malice so may we Motives to this duty 1 Vengeance belongs to God Gen. 50.15 19. who will revenge thy wrongs far more sharply then thou wouldest have him Psal 94.1 Into whose hands its a fearful thing to fall Heb. 10.31 He that doth wrong shall receive for the wrong that he hath done Col. 3.25 2 Consider what an enemy thou wast to God when he cast his love upon thee for all he was the party offended and stood no need of thee yet he sought unto thee Col. 1.21 1 Joh. 4.10 11 12. thou reasonest thou canst live without thy enemy so could God without thee thou saiest he hath done thee many wrongs so hast thou done to God 3 Either thy Enemie repents of the wrong done to thee or not if he do not repent of it God will punish him more sore then thou wouldest have him punished if he do repent of it what Christian spirit is there that will not pardon it This kept Christ from rendring reviling for reviling 1 Pet. 2.23 why he committed his cause to God who judgeth righteously It was the praise of Solomon that he desired not to have the life of his enemies 1 Chron. 1.11 4 Thou never suffers any wrong but God is first offended and more offended then thou art and takes thy wrong more heinously then thou thy self therefore revenge not thy self hear not that suggestion that it argues good mettal to be quick of touch 5 This is the way to overcome him Rom. 12.18 as contraries do overcome one another when they draw them into their own similitude when we are drawn by provocations to rage as wicked men do then they overcome us but when we refrain from revenge we overcome them as David did Saul 2 Sam. 24. Daven in Col. 3.13 Bless them that curse you Christ comes in three particulars to show our love to enemies which is 1 by blessing them that curse us so Paul 1 Cor. 4.12 being reviled we bless By blessing he means a speaking to him with kind words when he speaks cursed words to thee do thou speak kind words to him We pray for you and for all other men that are enemies to us that repenting with us you may not blaspheme and reproach him who for his works and miracles done in his name was without blame even Jesus Christ and believing on him may be saved at his glorious coming and may not be condemned of him to fire Just Mar. cont Triph. p. 196. Do good to them that hate you Second particular wherein to show our love to enemies viz. in doing them good Rom. 12.20 Elisha 2 King 6. ver 20. when his enemies were smit with blindness he prayes God would give them sight also ver 22. when the king of Israel would have smote them Elisha would not consent thereto but bids that bread and water be set before them and yet they were such as came to take away his life Do good then to their souls by endeavouring to bring them to repentance also to their bodies if you give alms to a company of poor people not to exclude two or three because they have hurt thee so lend to them also do good to their posterity Pray for them that despitefully use you The third particular is to pray for enemies when they are cursing thee pray God to forgive them when they are pained in their bodies pray God to ease them when decayed in their Estates pray God to supply them when they are damning their souls pray God to save them thus David to his enemies Psalm 35.13 and Stephen Acts 7.59 and Christ Luke 23.34 When thy Enemy by tale-carryings underminings disgracefull speeches uncharitable censures and slanderous accusations strives to work thee out of the affections of the godly or of those who may do thee good do thou pray for them not that they may have success in their wickedness but that they may acknowledg their evils and be pardoned This is the excellency of a Christian to do things above nature to pardon spitefull persons such prayers are not
are accompanied with holy affections and renewed desires of the same thing formerly in the same prayer requested Psalm 80.3 Cause thy face to shine upon us and we shall be saved this saying is thrice mentioned as v. 3. v. 7. and v. 19. So Psalm 67.3 5. this saying is twice mentioned Let the people praise thee O God let all the people praise thee 5 When used to stir up our dulness Psalm 107.8 15.21.31 Four times the Prophet saith O that men would praise the Lord for his goodness and declare his wonderfull works to the children of men Psalm 47.6 Sing praises unto our God sing praises sing praises unto our King sing praises There is twenty six times mention made of the Lords mercy enduring for ever Psalm 136.1 to the end 6 Sometimes the heart of a childe of God exceedingly runs upon some one desire and so he may vent it more than once in prayer without vain repetition So David Psalm 119. more than once Repetitions in prayer become sinfull 1 When affected as strains of eloquence and Rhetorick as he that cried Hyperbolical God thou that dwellest in the third Heaven of Hyperbolees 2 When empty frothy and impertinent wherein is no spiritual life or heat so those worshippers cryed from morning to noon O Baal hear us 1 Kin. 18.26 Not onely those that are directed to Idols but those directed to Saints as those in the Papacy Holy Paul pray for us holy Peter pray for us mentioning thirty or forty Saints in this manner yea even repetitions of this kind directed to God as in the common prayer book Lord have mercy upon us Christ have mercy upon us Lord have mercy upon us so in the Letany Good Lord deliver us is eight times mentioned and one and twenty times there is mentioned We beseech thee to hear us good Lord. 3 When men from want of holy notions of the word in their hearts through which the Spirit would convey it self are forced to use the same repetitions these in some measure disparage the spirit of praier and had need be humbled for their seldom reading of the word and meditation thereof from whence comes this strangeness and forcedness of repetitions 4 When men have an itch to pray as long as others that because an other hath praid an hour perhaps from a true enlargment they will pray as large as he hence some persons use vain repetitions when the spirit ceases from assistance and indisposition prevails it s our wisdom and humility to give out For they think they shall be heard for their much speaking Christ sets forth a ground why the heathens used vain repetitions because they thought they should be heard for their much speaking by gentiles he means the heathen or nations whereas the jews were called by the name of people and so they are contradistinguished twice Act. 26.17 23. These prophane nations thought that because they wearied themselves with the irksomness of a long prayer that therefore God would hear them because they would say many things they must needs say what is already spoken but when in prayer there is nothing spoken but that which is needful such an one ought not to be accounted a much speaker Quest Whether or no are long prayers and much speaking unlawful Answ 1 Long prayer may be upon extraordinary cases Moses continued a whole day in prayer Ex. 17.11 12. and Christ a whole night Luk. 6.12 nor are carnal men fit judges in this case who snuff at any small time spent in Gods service Mal. 1 13. crying When will the Sabbath be gone Amos 8.5 nor is the unregenerate part of Godly men a fit judge but before I answer hereto I must premise some things 1 The heart is not easily or suddenly gotten upon the wing yet in that doth the life of prayer consist it is a lifting up of the heart Psal 25.1 Many weights of dulness hardness heartlesness strangeness unbelief from whence arises dumbness discouragement and listlesness are upon the heart which are not easily removed now motion is a cause of heat hence to bring the soul to sensibleness there may be the longer essaying 2 If prayer have its due growth in the several parts of it con●ession petition intercession and thanksgiving it cannot be very short 〈◊〉 O● manifold wants to be supplied and benefits to be acknowledged import that our prayer usually cannot be very short But to answer 1 We are to abominate all long prayer which is performed for any carnal end or pretence whether to get an opinion to be men of parts or to seem religious and get applause or because others so pray The wicked scribes for pretence made long prayers Mat. 23.14 2 See that your length of prayer arise from a true enlargment of heart and from a gracious quickned frame which if it be your petitions will be free and not forced Powre out thy heart like water before the face of the Lord Lam. 2.19 that is thy petitions will come freely as water powred out thy lips will drop as the hony-comb which needs no squeezing Song 4.11 they will be also pat and seasonable according to occasion wherein the heart oft will be put into an holy melting frame After this manner Christ prayed Heb. 5.7 and such a frame of spirit is promised Zach. 12.10 these enlargements the people of God have more often in closet prayer then elsewhere because they can there more freely rip up their hearts and can most insist upon those petitions that will make the soul bleed and yern 3 In long prayers see that your hearts be able to hold out as well as your tongues Our worship must be with our spirit Joh. 4.23 Rom. 1.9 Paul served God with his spirit a short prayer made with servency and devotion prevails with God Jam. 5.16 more then long prayers which are but lip labour Esa 29.13 4 Gods people have upon extraordinary occasions usually used long prayer as Solomon at the consecration of the temple 1 King 8. so when under agonies and great troubles Psal 102.1 the overwhelmed soul powres out his complaint it comes like a flood so when the spirit comes to visit the soul with enlargement the soul in this case is wont to pray long and loth to let the Lord go Gen. 32.26 when we have the breathings of the spirit upon our hearts it s not our wisdom to give out Longa hora brevis mora Bern. God's long a coming and his tarryings are not long Shall we be watchful for winde and tyde and shall we not take the gales of the spirit moreover afflictions are wont to awake the soul hence the soul being awakened prayes with more earnestness and length Jacob when he feared death and destruction from Esau he cryed to God all night long Gen. 32. when the Church is in hazard of ruine also so Hester and the Church Act. 12.5 5 In long prayer we must have respect to them that joyn with us as to our selves when the mouth of
him that prayes is enlarged the rest are like to hold out the better yet we must have respect unto them and consider whether their hearts be like to hold out so long as thy heart who hast the enlargements of God upon thee As in preaching we must have respect to the hearers ability in bearing of it John 16.12 so must we in prayer Christ spent a whole night in prayer but it was not his usual wont 6 As there may be occasion of long prayer so may there be occasion for short prayer as in ejaculatory prayer also when we have but little time also when some prevailing business falls in which cannot be dispensed with onely herein pay the Lord another time for the time thou hast taken from him Sometimes a marvellous indisposition comes upon the soul occasioned by weariness in our callings sleepiness journeying Sometimes we want vital spirits in these cases we may be short And it 's wisedome usually so to pray with sick persons that they may not lay aside attention nor be weary of the duty Also in the closing of Church exercises when much time hath been before spent in prayer Onely let this shortness of prayer be upon due occasion and not usual 1 Because in these short prayers the soul can be but little drawn up to God 2 The soul in them gets little answer for assoon as the heart begins to be up the prayer is done 3 Short prayers argue either strangeness from God persons not using to hold long discourse with strangers or irreverence towards him in that being a God of such greatness we can so slightly take our leaves of him V. 8. Be ye not therefore like unto them for your Father knoweth what things ye have need of before ye ask him Be ye not therefore like unto them Two Reasons first from unprofitableness of such Prayers neither in unprofitable babbling and speaking superfluous things as in the Papacy who mumble over a great many prayers without any devotion thinking they are heard ex opere operato meerly for saying words so many Lords Prayers and Ave Maries This they do often with such volubleness of tongue that they cannot understand themselves and with such distraction of minde and irreverence of body that the Heathens dare not so call upon their gods nor mortals pray unto their Prince 2 Neither be ye like them in much speaking as if your God did not know your wants unless you told him of them and made long stories unto him For your Father knoweth what things ye have need of before ye ask him A second Argument why we should neither use Battology or vain speaking nor much speaking in prayer is from the all-knowledg and goodness of God he knows what we have need of therefore we need not tell him of them in many words Yea sometimes he prevents our prayers Yet this doth not hinder that we should not be sensible of our wants and from the sensibleness of our misery call on God The Heathens thought God did not understand their miseries unless they told him of them but your God knows your wants and knows how to help you and is ready so to do 1 Peter 5.7 casting all your care on him for he cares for you Deut. 4.7 What nation is there that hath God so near unto them as the Lord is unto you when you call upon him Isai 65.24 Before they call I will answer and whiles they are yet speaking I will hear Object But if God know our wants before we ask what need is there to tell our wants to him that knows them already Answ We do not call upon God as if he 〈◊〉 us or as if we would put him in minde of any 〈…〉 us for our prayers or as if we would move him of hard to become gentle but we come to him in the duty of prayer as an ordinance wherein he will be found and 〈◊〉 promised to convey good to us 2 Though he know our wants before ye● be will 〈◊〉 us sensible of them as in the case of the blinde man Mark 10.51 who Matth. 20.33 begged mercy of Christ but got none till he was sensible what mercy he lacked even the recovery of his sight which no sooner was he sensible of but Christ granted his Request 3 God will be called upon because he will have this glory given to him that he is the authour and giver of every good thing James 1.17 Every good gift comes from the Father of Lights 4 That we may unburden our cares into the bosom of 〈…〉 37 5.55.16 17. compared with v. 22. 5 That1 we may come into familiarity and acquaintance with God Job 22.21 Acquaint thy self with God and be at peace Psalm 73.28 It 's good for me to draw near to God 6 That we may better prize blessings when we have got them by prayer Psalm 116.1 2. I will love the Lord because he hath heard the voice of my supplication 7 For the venting of their holy affections they have to the Lord as faith in his faithfulness James 1.6 7. love to him for his goodness Song 4.16 desires and breathings after God Psalm 42.1 Joy in their interest and property in God Psalm 116.7 8 From the prevalence that praying Saints have with God as Moses Hezekiah Jehosaphat Object God hath in his eternal counsel determined what he will do for us which all our prayers cannot alter Ephes 1.11 Answ It 's a sign God hath determined to do us some good when he stirs up our hearts to be earnest for it Jer. 29.12 13. When the Lord was about to bring his people out of captivity he stirr'd up Daniel to be earnest to seek him Dan. 9.4 as God hath determined what to do for us so hath he determined to do it in the use of prayer Ezek. 36.37 We are not commanded to inquire into Gods secret counsels which cannot be found out but to his revealed will which requires us to seek him for every good thing and reproves the neglect hereof V. 9. After this manner therefore pray ye Our Father which art in Heaven After this manner pray ye Where we see 1 Prayer is a duty we ow to God 2 We must pray in a right manner 1 Prayer is a duty Call upon me in time of trouble Psalm 50.15 Ask and ye shall have 2 We must pray in a right manner Now that we may so pray 1 Pray in Christ's Name Whatsoever ye shall ask the Father in my Name he will give it you John 16.23 Our prayers are not heard for any excellency in them but for Christ's sake When a Servant comes for Wares in his own name the Merchant will not deliver them but if he bring a Ticket from his Master the Merchant will deliver what Wares the Servant asks for so when the soul comes in its own name it speeds not but if it come in the name of Christ it speeds It 's an Argument we come in Christ's Name when we come with a
of a sinner that feels not his sins because he doth not understand nor will the thing that he prays for Luth. Tom. 4.380 9 Fear repulse for thy careless cold and slothfull calling upon God and this will quicken up thy attention in the duty Fear is a very wakefull affection as being conversant about danger hence in our service we are bid to bring fear Psalm 2.11 Psalm 5.7 10 Get love to God this makes the soul follow hard after God Psalm 63.8 Quest Whether do distractions in Prayer nullifie the acceptation of it Answ There are two sorts of distracted Petitioners 1 Unregenerate men who voluntarily usually and contentedly admit roving thoughts in duty Prov 5.14 I was almost in all evil in the midst of the congregation and assembly Ezek. 33.31 These despise their ways and shall die Prov. 19.16 2 Regenerate men who groan under these distractions Rom. 7.15 16. these do not nullifie the fruit of Prayer to them regenerate men herein make usually resistance it matters not whence they come whether from Satan or corruption as it is a thing very difficult if possible to distinguish them provided we resist them and mourn under them they are not imputed to us Yet may even Saints sometimes pray so carelesly drowsily and distractedly that they may lose the comfort of this or that particular Prayer as when the distraction arises from sloth and carelesness But if the distraction arise from Satan bodily distemper or pain God is very pitifull in this case as a father to his childe Psalm 103.14 Quest Whether may not the Devil and corruption distract the soul in Prayer sometimes with unseasonable good motions I mean such motions as are for the matter good but not good at that time Answ Yes we see it in that Pithonesse Act. 16.16 17 when Paul and his company were going to prayer she cries out these men are the servants of the most high God which shew unto us the way of salvation this was a good motion but injected by Satan that his lyes might be believed and the Saints disturbed in prayer Zach. 3.1 Satan by these motions intends diversion or turning away the soul from what the soul is upon but motions that tend to further intention in the duty attentness and further inlargement are of God The spirit moves not to draw us out of the way but to put us into it and being in it to move us to keep on Rom. 8.14 15. Esa 30.21 These motions of Satan are like misplaced words and letters in a Printers press which spoil the sence 10 Let thy prayer be full prayer is a powring forth of the heart before God Psal 62.8 1 Sam. 1.15 yea we are to powr them out as water before the face of the Lord Lam. 2.19 It may be thou powrest out thy prayer like tarre out of a tarre box half sticking by the sides but when thou prayes thou must powr out all before God provided there be time and no hindrance powr out all thy wants be humbled for all thy evils when thou givest thanks remember all Gods benefits Psal 10● 2 Many men make quick dispatch because they are eager to be about their business hence they gallop over their prayers but thy prayer must have its full growth that is when convenient time affords we must powr out supplications confessing our sins petitions desiring pardon healing and new dispositions of heart intercessions to turn away judgements from others and thanksgiving for benefits on our selves and others 1 Tim. 2.1 11 Pray with frequency It s bad when the soul contents it self with seldome approaches to God If David Psal 55.17 and Daniel cap 6.10 could finde time to pray three times a day what shame for us who come so seldom before the Lord sometimes David praised God seven times a day Psal 119.164 Anna continued in prayer night and day Luk. 2.37 12 With assurance of obtaining whatsoever things ye desire when you pray believe that you receive them and ye shall have them Mark 11.24 Matth. 7.7 ask and ye shall have Matth. 21.22 Doubt not of your prayer but know when the word is gone out of your mouth your prayer is writ in the eyes of God so that that shall be done which is desired or its expedient not to be done The Lord is like a most bountiful king that signes all petitions with a fiat quod petitur Oratio sinelaude dei est thuribulum sine prunis Luth. Tom. 4.124 let that be done which is desired 13 Joyn praise with prayer Phil. 4.6 In every thing by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your request be made known unto God Prayers are the seeds of prayses when we have sown we may look to reap what we receive as a a fruit of our prayer is more sweet then what we receive of common providence Praise is that imployment we shall have in heaven when prayer shall be no more mean time joyn we them together whiles we are here on earth and so much more in that we have but a drop of affliction and a sea of benefits 14 Break through all hindrances and use all furtherances as 1 hindrance is multitudes of business what business so great almost but should give way to this 2 Brokenness in expressions why God hears sighs 3 Dumbness and barrenness if this come from unacquaintance with God be humbled for thy coldness and by stirring thou mayest get warmth if dumbness come from overwhelming temptations it 's no otherwise with thee then it was with Asaph Psal 77.3 4. Green wood with long blowing will be made dry and take fire so motion in prayer fits for the duty 4 Our own unworthiness Who acknowledged his own unworthiness more then Daniel Dan. 9.7 8. However thou art unworthy yet must thou pray for God hears thee not for thy own worth but of his meer mercy 5 Prayer will take up much of our time to this I say remember the comfort that will redound to the conscience in time so spent We think not long of the time spent in the refreshment of our bodies why should we think long in the time spent in refreshing of our souls of four and twenty hours can we not afford God one or two who took more time in prayer then David and Daniel and who did prosper better Time spent in this brings a blessing on our affairs 6 That many do well enough that never pray as those do that use to pray to this know they onely receive temporal things as the shining of the sun and the falling of rain Matth. 5.44 45. But the Saints receive the Spirit in prayer Luk. 11.13 Neither can prayerless men be sure to have earthly things when they want them nor to hold them when they have them Job 21.15 16. What profit is there that we should pray unto him seeing we have earthly things ver 16. Lo their good is not in their hand 7 Because the soul hath lately been in passion of anger
to this I say lay aside passion and then come 1 Tim. 2.8 Lift up holy hands without wrath pray for the party with whom lately thou hast been angry and that is a sign thou comes with a new disposition 8 Take heed of Satans temptations who will be ready to propose businesses then to hinder thee 2 Use furtherances for prayer as 1 when the spirit bespeaks prayer and puts the soul into a frame to long to be alone to vent it self to God when the wind and tide serves its good then to hoyse up sails Psal 27.8 Seek my face thy face will I seek 2 The second furtherance is when the soul is in tribulation Tribulation sets an edge on prayer hence Psal 50.15 we are bid to call on God in the time of trouble no better master to teach a man to pray next to the spirit then necessity In trouble the grace of prayer is much revived Esa 26.17 Lord in trouble they have visited thee they powred out a prayer when thy chastning was upon them Look upon Passengers in a storm and arrived at the haven look upon persons in prison and at banquets compare persons on beds of sickness and the same persons in strength of health and abounding with outward comforts in the one estate they are full of contempt of God and security in the other prone to cry earnestly for mercy Hezekiah when Sennacherib came against him very much given to prayer when he was delivered from his enemy ready to be lifted up David in adversity gave himself to prayer Psal 109.4 in prosperity falls to number the people 3 A third furtherance is calmeness of spirit when the spirit is neither in a hurry of passion nor a hurry of business for unfinished business is apt to run in the mind and to disturb at that time the soul having so many bussings in its ear can neither hear it self speaking to God nor hear God speaking to the soul 4 In Gods approaching to our soul Lam. 3.57 Thou drewest near in the day that I cryed unto thee thou saidest fear not Esa 55.6 call upon him while he is near Noble Princes in their progress are wont to grant petitioners their sutes its wisdom then to petition the Lord when near to us Psal 145.18 one time or other God's near to every holy heart therefore then call on him Psal 34.18 Quicken us and we will call upon thy name Psa 80.18 5 When promises are near fulfilling Psa 102.13 Thou shalt arise and have mercy upon Sion for the time to favour her yea the set time is come meaning of seventy years This is some good hope that Christs coming is near because the Saints are stirred up so generally to pray for it The reading of Jeremies prophecy Jer. 29.10 that God would visit his people after seventy years put Daniel upon praying for the accomplishment thereof Dan. 9.2 3 4. Object I would thus pray but I finde I am so straitened that I cannot pray Answ It is so with the best of Saints sometimes that their souls are bound up they are like poor Infants that feel pain but cannot tell where their pain lies hence Psal 51.15 Lord open thou my Lips By grieving the spirit we become straitened for when the spirit is withdrawn we are like Mills that want Winde or Water and cannot grinde In such times it is persons are backward to stir up their souls to take hold of God Isai 64.7 To help us against straitnings 1 Use holy motion Motion is the cause of heat motion brings a benummed member to feeling let us make essays even when deadness is upon us yea when most straitened a gracious heart is to stir up it self 2 Tim. 1.6 Stir up the gift of God which is in thee Exod. 35.21 They came every one whose heart stirred him up and every one whom his spirit made willing to bring the Lords offering 2 Complain of thy straitness say Lord I am in Prison and cannot come forth I would willingly display all my wants to thee but cannot weep over my unbelief but am not able Why withdrawest thou thy self Why art thou so far from helping me and from the words of my roaring Psal 22.1 2 Isai 63 17. 3 Beg enlargement of God Psalm 119.32 I will run in the way of this Commandment as well as other but when when thou shalt enlarge mine heart Isai 35.6 The tongue of the dumb shall sing when waters break forth in the wilderness 4 Take heed thou straiten not thy self neither for time nor place For time persons often causlesly put themselves into the compass of so little time that they cannot enlarge persons frequently inuring themselves to straitning in the end begin to like it well enough So for straitness of place they do not use their voices because they cannot use them without being heard of others let it be your wisdom to chuse such a place wherein you may not be straitned as to your voice or otherwise 5 Consider what a dangerous thing it is to 〈◊〉 taken with a Palsey in the tongue that a man cannot tell where his pain lies All Imprisonment is comfortless but this the worst in other Imprisonment we may perhaps have much access to God but not in this many men have enlargements of all sorts of blessings upon them as Liberty Estate c. onely as it was said of the Corinthians 2 Cor. 6.12 They are straitened in their own bowels for Prayer and Praise and yet little lay it to their hearts Such kinde of straitnings when they are long they are dangerous for persons that have lain long under straitnings are ready to lay aside endeavours for their liberty because they have often used it to no effect 6 Usually reade the word before thy closet prayer and meditate of it in the use whereof the fire kindles besides those good things which thou diddest reade out of the Word will remain in thy thoughts and conduce to season thine heart 7 Walk humbly under straitnings especially when they are of any long continuance so the Church Song cap. 5. v. 5 6. I sought him but I could not finde him I called unto him but he gave me no answer Job 30.20 Job cries out I cry unto thee but thou dost not hear me I stand up but thou regardest me not Quest But seeing Saints are sometimes straitned in Prayer as well as carnal men wherein is the difference Answ Godly persons though sometimes they have straitnings yet have they also enlargements now and then Lam. 3.44 compared with v. 57. One while the Church saith The Lord compassed himself with a cloud that her Prayer could not pass through anon she saith Thou drewest near in the day that I cried unto thee thou saidst Fear not Psalm 31.22 I said I am cast out of thy sight here was the Prophets straitning nevertheless thou heardest the voice of my supplications here was his enlargement see Psalm 6.1 compared with v. 8. Jon. 2.7 Carnal men they may
sometimes have enlargement of words in Prayer but never of holy affections as the face of God was hid from Cain Gen. 4.14 so from all carnal men As Haman's great misery was that he was covered from beholding the Kings face Esther 7.8 so it is with these 2 The godly mourn under their straitnings Isai 63.17 Why hast thou hardened our hearts Psalm 13.1 How long wilt thou forget me O Lord how long wilt thou hide thy face from me but wicked men are not sensible of their straitnings because they never had any holy enlargements 3 The godly are wont to rejoyce in the removing of their straitnings as a man that was a close Prisoner is glad when he gets his liberty Psalm 6.8 Carnal men never have them removed therefore they can never rejoyce therein Use For application 1 Be exhorted to pray 2 To pray in a right manner Motives to Prayer 1 The readiness in God to hear our Prayers Psal 65.2 and his readiness to help our wants Psalm 50.15 Call upon me in the day of trouble and I will deliver thee 2 The manifold relations Christ stands related to us he is our Advocate 1 John 2.1 He is the great Favourite of Heaven if we had a Brother so near related in a Princes Court we should be emboldened to present our Petitions to that Prince why Christ is our Brother and he appears at the right hand of God for us 3 The former speedings that our selves and others have had with the Lord as Jehosaphat Hezekiah c. 4 Our own wants A Beggar 's necessity makes him full of expressions Psalm 28.1.143.7 Luke 15.17 18.18.13 5 Our hope of speeding Where a Beggar hopes to speed he begs earnestly but if the Beggar be perswaded that he shall get nothing this blunts his begging and makes him give over his sute so will it do with the soul when it prays without hope as we see in Judas Matth. 27.5 Judas had no heart to pray for mercy because he thought it impossible to get it There 's a twofold Despair 1 Of extremity as a Souldier when he sees nothing but kill or be kill'd this makes him fight eagerly so when the soul sees its extremity that it is in the deeps Psalm 130.1 Out of the deeps have I cried that it must either get grace or be damned for ever this makes a man pray eagerly 2 There 's a Despair of Infidelity when a man becomes heartless in Prayer and thinks it 's all to no purpose this takes away endeavours this is a secret soul-murderer These discouragements are hideous cases in Prayer and a man may perish and go to Hell that hath them yet they are signs that a man doth look towards God a little else he could not know what they mean Nourish then your hope in Prayer Psalm 42.11 Let thy mercy be upon us according as we hope in thee Psalm ●3 22 onely know that sometimes gracious hearts may in temptation cry their strength and hope is perished from the Lord and yet after finde grounds for their hope as we see the Church did Lam. 3.18 compared with v. 21. 6 Prayer sets God awork for us and God sets all the Creatures awork I will hear the Heavens and the Heavens shall hear the Earth and the Earth shall hear the Corn and Wine and they shall hear Jezreel Hosea 2.21 Many when in trouble set their Friends to work and their wealth to work but few set Prayer on work Hezekiah gave to the King of Assyria three hundred Talents of Silver and thirty Talents of Gold to depart from the City of Jerusalem 2 Kings 18.14 yet did it not help him for in a short time he came and besieged it again but when he sought to God by Prayer God did utterly remove him 7 In the Ordinance of Prayer God is wont to meet his people both to the turning away of judgements and to the obtaining mercies To the turning away judgements Psal 106.23 Had not Moses stood in the breach to turn away his wrath he had destroyed Israel compared with Exod. 32.10 11. Ezek. 22.30 in Ezekiels time God sought for a man to stand in the gap and to make up the breach but found none therefore Gods wrath was powred on them So to the bestowing of mercies Jer. 33.3 Call unto me and I will answer thee and shew thee great and mighty things Philimo● 22. I trust through your prayers I shall be given to you Matth. 7.7 8. Psal 4.4 I sought the Lord and he heard me and delivered me from all my fears also v. 6. in prayer God gives the spirit Luk. 11.13 8 In prayer we have intercourse and communion with God If it be a priviledge to have communion with Princes what is it then to have communion with God Psal 73.28 9 The desperate cases wherein persons have been heard the Jews delivered from Hamans cruelty Peter brought out of prison Acts 12.5 Daniel brought out of the Lions den Jonah out of the Whales belly David when the pestilence raged very hot 2 Sam. 24.10 Jehosaphat when in great straits 2 Chron. 20.12 compared with v. 15 17. 10 The delight God takes in his peoples prayers Prov. 15.8 The prayer of the upright is his delight As Princes have their delights so God Song 2.14 he loves the voice of his own spirit in the hearts of Saints 11 We are worthy to miss good things if we will not ask them Spare to speak spare to speed When God bids us ask and have how unworthy are we if we will not ask 12 The dangers we expose our selvs to when we do not ask Such prayerless persons are fit objects for the vengeance of God Jer. 10.25 Powr out thy wrath upon the Nations that have not called upon thy Name Ezek. 23.30 There died 14000. of the Plague Numb 16 49. but had not Moses and Aaron stood betwixt the dead and living to intercede the whole Congregation had been consumed in a moment v. 45 46 47 48 49. 13 In the exercise of prayer our graces are exercised to send out a sweet smell in the nostrils of God our faith in eying Christ our love and desires in breathing after him our repentance in bewailing sin our thankfulness in acknowledging benefits our expectation in waiting for answers As sweet perfumes when rubb'd send out a fragrant smell then the spirit blowes upon the soul that the spices thereof may flow out Song 4.11 to the end especially v. 16. these graces are compared to the smell of sweet flowers in a garden and to the smell of perfumed garments and to the smell of oyl of Spik●nard Calamus Cynamon Frankincense trees Myrrhe and Aloes and all chief spices 14 Prayer is the way to be enabled to all other duties and to become successful in them Eleazar having first prayed prospered in getting a wife for his masters son 15 Prayer is the abridgement of divinity therefore to call fervently on the name of the Lord is to be a godly
condemn all forms seeing we read of sundry in Scripture as Psal 102. v. 1 c. Esai 63.15 to the end of cap. 64. ult Numb 6.24 Yet to use a form doth argue thou art a very babe who go by a form because they cannot go alone and to use a form when thou art able to powr out thine own heart more and better then any form can teach thee is to to offer to the Lord a corrupt thing when thou hast a male in thy flock Thou art a very babe till thou art able to express thy wants in conceived prayer what man is there that is sensible of his wants that cannot declare them to man and canst thou not declare them to God Christ hath given us this breviary of prayer as a looking-glass to see our wants Himself never used it nor could he in truth say Forgive us our trespasses seeing himself had none We never read the Apostles used this prayer but onely framed their petitions according to it Acts 1.24 Matth. 26.39 We ought then to look upon this as a pattern without which we might have wandred in our requests often asking things hurtful for us we ought then hence to draw the matter of our prayers This form or patern is usually divided into three p●rts 1 A Preface Our Father which art in Heaven 2 Petitions which are six or according to some of the Ancients seven 3 The Conclusion For thine is the Kingdom c. 1 The Preface Our Father which art in Heaven We call him Father 1 To shew that we are not to look upon him as a Tyrant or a Stranger that knows us not or as an hard Master but as a Father 2 To embolden us to come unto him 3 To shew his readiness to do you good Luke 11.13 If evil fathers will do good to their children will not our Father do good to his children 4 To shew that we believe our Election and Adoption 5 Assurance of his readiness and willingness to help us whereas formerly we durst not lift up our eys to Heaven Luke 15.18 Our 1 This word Our teacheth that however we believe for our selves yet Charity teacheth us to pray for others 2 To denote unto us a Communion of Saints how that they are so joyned together as if the want of one were the want of all 1 Cor. 12.26 If one member suffer all the members suffer with it 3 That we may not disdain the meanest Christian from being our Brother in Christ if God have adopted him for his Ephes 4.5 yet may a Christian in private say My Father Matth 26.39.27.46 4 To keep us from arrogating to our selves above others remembring we are of the company of sons On earth some Saints have more noble fathers than others but to the Father in Heaven all Believers are alike related 5 To encourage the weak that they may believe that God is no less their Father than the Father of Peter Paul c. 6 That we should not onely pray for our own necessities but also for the necessities of others James 5.16 applying in private Prayer that common Fatherhood to our selves And this Father we call upon we may look upon some times personally Ephes 3.14 1 Cor. 8.6 sometimes essentially for Father Son and Spirit so Christ is called the everlasting Father Isai 9.6 7 To teach us mutual sympathy 1 Cor. 12.26 If one member suffer all the members suffer with it Heb. 13.3 8 To teach us unity and agreement with our Brethren as members of the same body hence before we bring our gift we are to agree with our Brother Matth. 5.24 Which art in Heaven 1 To shew that how ever earthly parents have a good will to help their children yet want power yet our Father being in Heaven and being the God of all might hath power to do for us above all that we can ask or think Ephes 3.20 Psalm 115.3 2 To take away erroneous conceptions of God wherein carnal men are ready to think of him like earthly parents 3 To denote unto us his special presence he hath in Heaven there his power wisdom goodness do most shine forth and from thence are manifested to us Psalm 19.1 The Heavens declare the glory of God 4 That when we come before him we should come with reverence and lifting up of heart Lam. 3.41 Let us lift up our hearts with our hands to God in the Heavens where God is not circumscriptively as the body of man bounded by such a place nor definitively as the Angels but repletively filling all place for the Heaven of Heavens is not able to contain him 1 Kings 8.27 5 To shew to us that though God be every where Psalm 139.7 8 9. Whither shall I flee from thy presence If I ascend up into Heaven thou art there if I make my bed in Hell behold thou art there if in the uttermost parts of the Sea thou art there Amos 9.1 2 3. yet he is said to dwell in the Heavens Psalm 2.4 Hear from Heaven thy dwelling place 1 Kings 8.30 there his majesty and glory most shines forth Psalm 112.5.123.1 yet doth he dwell in humble and holy hearts Isai 57.15 1 Cor. 3.16 As the soul of man which is wholly in the whole and in every part yet is said to be in the head or heart more than elsewhere because there more than elsewhere it exerciseth his power and effects so though God be essentially every where and in all places wholly yet he works not grace and gifts equally in all parts but he works in Heaven more than in Earth in the godly more than the wicked and in one of his children more than in another in the Saints in Heaven 〈◊〉 than in the Saints on Earth and in the humane nature of Christ more than in any creature Hallowed be thy Name This is the first Petition and Christ his meaning is 1 That Gods glory be every where magnified it 's put in the first place because Gods glory must be preferred before all things Prov. 16.4 The Lord hath made all things for himself Thus must every one do that calls God Father So that if our credit or profit come in competition therewith we are willing to renounce not onely them but every thing else for the Lord. 2 That the Name of God which is God himself be magnified The Name of God is not so many Letters but God himself Holy and reverend is his Name Psalm 111.9 It was the speech of the men of Bethshemesh Who is able to stand before this holy Lord God 1 Sam. 6.20 God is glorious in holiness Exod. 15.11 The Trinity is said to be holy Isai 6.3 Holy holy holy Lord God of Hosts The Father is holy John 17.11 The Son holy Luke 1.35 Acts 4.27 The Spirit is holy Ephes 4.30 Grieve not the holy Spirit of God God is not onely holy but holiness in the very abstract Amos 4.2 The Lord hath sworn by his holiness that is by himself Saints are holy
doubtfulness of the success notwithstanding we use lawfull endeavours the Promise is In all thy ways acknowledg him and he shall direct thy steps Prov. 3.6 2 When earthly cares shall crowd in in holy duties Luke 8.14 The cares of the World choak the Word or cause us to neglect holy duties as in Martha Luke 10.40 3 When we shall be immoderately thoughfull for livelihood for us and ours so that our hearts become troubled with fear of want Use 1 Humiliation to Saints who have so many distracting cares upon them Would we compare our few cares for Heaven and our many cares for a livelihood how should we be cloathed with shame These seize on us in the morning and go to bed with us at night God takes care of thee who made thee who cared for thee before thou wast We care for our selves as if he that made us presently went away leaving us in our own hands Aug. 1 These dividing cares of thine arise from remainders of unbelief in thee for men of eminent faith have been little troubled therewith Dan. 3.17 We are not carefull to answer thee O King in this matter if it be so our God whom we serve is able to deliver us said the Three Children 2 Whatever burden thou hast thou art commanded to cast it upon God Psalm 37.5 Commit thy way unto the Lord trust also in him and he shall bring it to pass Thou art not to take Gods work from him thy work is dependance Gods work is provision Psalm 55.18 Cast thy burden on the Lord he shall sustain thee 3 The care and provision God makes for all creatures Psalm 104.10 to v. 31. he sends Springs into Valleys causes Grass to grow for Cattel makes Trees for Birds to nest in the Rocks and Hills a Refuge for Goats and Conies Lions seek their Meat from God v. 27 28. These wait all upon thee that thou mayest give them their Meat in due season that thou givest them they gather Psalm 147.9 He giveth to the Beast his Food and to the young Ravens which cry Matth. 10.29 30. 4 It 's Gods good pleasure to give you the Kingdom of Heaven much more will he give you things of this life Luke 12.32 Fear not little Flock it 's your Fathers good pleasure to give you the Kingdom 5 The vanity and mischief of distracting cares the vanity of them is seen because all our carking will not better our condition Do what thou canst thou shalt not be rich whom God will have to be poor Luth. Tom. 3.266 And their mischief is seen in that they surcharge the heart as Meat and Drink immoderately taken do the stomach Luke 21.34 2 Exhortation To endeavour the riddance of these sinfull cares Means 1 Commit all your endeavours to God in Prayer to be prospered and succeeded by him Phil. 4.6 In nothing be carefull but in every thing let your request be made known to him When you have commended the matter to God in Prayer then let the peace of God keep your hearts v. 7. Prov. 16.3 Commit thy work unto the Lord and thy thoughts shall be established 2 Exercise faith in the promises Heb. 13.5 I will never leave thee nor forsake thee 1 Tim. 4.8 3 Covet not multitudes of business for much business creates many cares and so much the more when thy charge is but little 4 Consider though God taketh care for all creatures Psalm 104.27 145.15 147.8 9. He giveth to the beast his food and to the young Ravens which cry yet his care for them not comparable to the care he hath for his children 1 Cor. 9.9 Doth God take care of Oxen Yes he doth but not comparatively See Deut. 11.12 5 The vanity and unprofitableness of all our carking cares which of you by taking thought can adde one cubit to his stature Matth. 6.17 Psal 127.2 It 's in vain to rise early and go to bed late Except the Lord build the house and except the Lord keep the city the watchman waketh but in vain 6 Consider the uncessancy of Gods care for us The Land whither ye go to possess is a Land of Hills and Valleyes and drinketh water of the rain of Heaven A Land which the Lord thy God careth for the eyes of the Lord thy God are alwayes upon it from the beginning of the year unto the end of the year Deut. 11.11 12. Psal 40.5 Thy thoughts which are to us-ward they cannot be reckoned up in order unto thee If I would declare and speak of them they are more then can be numbred 1 Pet. 5.7 Casting not onely some but all your care upon him why He careth for you V. 26. Behold the fowls of the ayr for they sow not neither do they reap nor gather into barnes yet your heavenly Father feedeth them Are ye not much better then they Here 's a second Argument to disswade from carking care from the less to the greater your Father nourishes the fowls much more will he nourish you Behold the fowls of the Ayre He makes a distinction betwixt poultry and house fowls which are cared for by men and fowls of the Ayr which are not cared for by men Psal 147.9 Job 39.3 Luke instanceth in the Ravens which men are so far from caring for that they hate them Luk. 12.24 Christ compares men not to Oxen but to Birds that he may teach us as birds to fly from earth to heaven They neither sow nor reap nor gather into barnes They neither sowing nor reaping are directed by the providence of God where there is food and they thrive more then those which are nourished by the care of man Yet is this no ground to patronize idleness that because the fowls neither plow nor sow therefore we must not for the proportion is not in this that they labour not but in this if God take care for more base creatures much more for those which are more excellent In all likelihood the fowls making no provision in summer should starve in winter yet experience teaches that they are fatter in winter then in summer Obs It s our duty now and then to look upon the creatures 2 It s no disparagement to the providence of God to have a care of the fowls of Heaven Matth. 10.29 30. 3 As the care of God reaches to the fowls of heaven so much more to his children for he that is their Creator is thy Father V. 27. Which of you by taking thought can adde one cubit to his stature Here is a third reason against carking care taken from the vanity of all such carking we by all our caring cannot adde any thing to the stature of our body no more can we adde any thing to the measure of our estates which providence hath appointed us to come to Besides men through their pride are ready to ascribe all their gettings to their care and diligence hence Christ shows that all our care without Gods blessing is as vain as if a dwarf should think to
putting Joab to death who had murthered two or three persons he could not well do it being Joab was General of Davids Army hence he gives Salomon command concerning him 2 Buckle on all thy Christian armour Eph. 6.10 especially uprightness of heart and so shalt not thou be afraid of evil tydings Psal 112.4 6 7. 3 Be clear in the assurance of remission of sins Psal 32.6 4 Go to God to hide thee Psal 27.5.32.7 He hath chambers to hide in Esai 26.20 Come my people enter into thy chambers 5 Build upon the rock even on Christ resolving in Gods strength that no storms and tempests shall separate betwixt Christ and thee neither sin nor suffering Rom. 8.33 to the end of the Chapter 6 Get looseness of affection to earthly enjoyments so those worthies Heb. 10.34 that took joyfully the spoiling of their goods in a storm of persecution 7 Get patience hereby Job's heart was quieted when storms took away his children stock and servants Job 1.21 8 Store up the witness of a good conscience against such a time See Paul Acts 16.25 27.23.24 3 Obs That man that means to stand amidst the storms and tempests of inward and outward temptations must be sure to lay a good foundation Sooner or later God will discover the hypocrisie of unsound men 1 Tim. 5.24 25. They that are otherwise cannot be hid Q. But what foundation must we lay A. There 's a threefold foundation 1 The foundation of satisfaction Esai 28.16 1 Cor. 3.12 Acts 4.12 Secondly the foundation of revelation or publication or manifestation so the doctrine of the Apostles is called a foundation Eph. 2.20 Rev. 1.14 Heb. 6.1 1 Cor. 3.10 3 The foundation of evidence 1 Cor. 2.12 1 Tim. 6.19 Use 1 Comfort for thee against Storms when thou hast laid a good Foundation and built upon a Rock Storms and Temptations do not make those that are good to become bad but onely tries what every one is Fire doth not make Gold leave the purity but onely tries it When David built upon a Rock see how comfortable Psalm 23.4 27.1 46.1 2 3. 61.2 so will it be with thee What if a Nation be ready to go together by the ears What if Invasions come What if thy Family be afflicted with infectious Diseases What if the Pilots of the Common-wealth be at their wits end What if Exilement for Religion what if sudden fears come yet to those that build upon a Rock it shall be well with them Isai 3.10 What if Devils rage they cannot pluck such out of Christs arms John 10.28 29 30. 2 Trial whether thou builds upon the Rock 1 Some time or other God will try thee with Storms 2 Tim. 3.12 but in what kinde thou knowest not 2 In such times of trouble the conscience is apt to be awakened so Josephs brethren when in Egypt Gen. 42.21 3 How wofull will thy condition then be to be without Christ Isai 10.3 Hos 9.5 6 7. Being without Christ and being without hope are put together Ephes 2.12 Properties or if you will Trials of a man that builds upon a Rock 1 The Gates of Hell or Death or Courts of men which were kept in the Gates cannot prevail against such a man habitually to make a false confession of Christs truth Matth. 16.18 Upon this Rock I will build my Church and the Gates of Hell shall not prevail against it 2 He that builds on a Rock cannot be undermined nor blown up so a Christian that builds on Christ will not be blown up with preferments and proffers that shall be made to him in secret Act. 8.20 Thy money perish with thee said Peter to Magus 3 A Rock is a sure foundation to build upon so is Christ Esa 28.16 1 Pet. 2.6 For trials of a Christians estate to Godward see at large in my Catechism 4 When no weight or pressure of the fabrick will make the foundation to give way Let Christians have never so many pressures lying upon them yet doth the Rock Christ uphold them Eph. 3.16 Phil. 4.13 Where the foundation is a Rock the building in every part is held up V. 26. And every one that heareth these sayings of mine and doth them not shall be likened unto a foolish man which built his house upon the sand Here are the second sort of hearers such which hear and do not which is the formalist who builds upon the sandy foundation of an outward profession An outward powerless profession is like unto sand 1 As sand is moveable so such a profession 2 Tim. 1.15 4.16 2 As sand is scattered with the wind so such a profession both by the wind of Hereticks Eph. 4.14 Carried about with every wind of doctrine and the wind of persecution Matth. 13.21 In general also is meant all confidence in creatures whether Princes Honour Riches which are not props to uphold the soul in trouble Psal 146.3 Psal 62.8 Obs There are some hearers that hear the Word unprofitably they hear but they do not Causes hereof are 1 Carelesness of what is spoken Mark 4.24 Take heed what you hear 2 Forgetfulness of the word Jam. 1.24 25. in hearing full as a sieve in the water but after all is forgot 3 Unbelief Heb. 4.2 The Word profited not because not mixed with faith 4 Want of meditations Meditation doth as it were cover the seed that the fowls pick it not up Prov. 6.21 Bind them continually upon thy heart Deut. 32.46 5 The badness of the ground Where the ground is not good let the best seed be sown it comes not to any good where the ground was good there the seed grew up and brought forth fruit Luk. 8.15 6 Want of preparation of heart there must be preparation of the ground before seed be sown Jer. 4.3 Break up your fallow grounds and sow not among thorns 7 Want of rain from heaven and want of the Lords blessing Esa 53.1 Lord who hath believed our report to whom is the arm of the Lord revealed One profits not another because God manifests himself to him Joh. 14.22 and not to the other 1 Cor. 3.5 6 7. Act. 11.21 When the unbeliever was convinced God was in the Prophets 1 Cor. 14.24 25. 8 Misapplication We apply that to others which belongs to our selves This is as if we should apply the food and Physick which is given to us to another Johns hearers did otherwise who cryed What shall we do Luk. 3.13 13. 9 The not heeding God in the preacher but looking onely on the weak instrument Act. 10.33 Cornelius tells Peter We are all here before God to hear all things that are commanded us from God Cornelius to breed awful reverence in himself and other his fellow hearers looks upon all the commands as coming from God and so must we do not onely with the commands but with the promises and threatnings The Thessalonians received the Word of God not as the word of men but as the Word of God 1 Thess 2.13 10 The not
understanding the Word Matth. 13.19 Such were the way-side hearers from whom the wicked one catched away that which was sown Hence preachers must preach words easie to be understood 1 Cor. 14.9 Many seeing see not Matth. 13.15 They have not an eye given them to see an ear to hear nor an heart to understand Deut. 29.4 In order to the Disciples profiting by the word Christ opens their understandings Luk. 24.46 Matth. 13.23 11 Cares of the world and immoderate pursuit of riches choke the Word Matth. 13.22 12 Filthiness and superfluity of naughtiness Jam. 1.19 Lay aside all filthiness and superfluity of naughtiness that is all filthiness of soul yea every kind of sin which like so many weeds possesse the field of our hearts hindring both the rise and increase of the good seed It s a Metaphor from husbandmen who gather out of their fields to be sown or already sown all weeds stones and stuff Use Exhortation Labour to hear for thy good Job 5.27 Pity so much of the precious Word of God should fall to the ground That thou mayest be a profitable hearer observe these rules 1 Ponder and weigh the words that are spoken Luk. 2.19 Mary kept all those things which she heard and pondered them in her heart Deut. 11.18 2 Come with a purpose to obey every thing commanded from God Act. 10.33 Else thou art no better then Ezekiels hearers Ezek. 33.31 3 Call over the truths you have heard by repetition that your hearts may not be leaking vessels to let truths slip Heb 2.1 There was a great growth in the families of professours in times past when this was done Deut. 6.6 7. These words which I command thee thou shalt teach them diligently unto thy children and shalt talk of them when thou sittest in thine house This would make children and servants be attentive in hearing as being to be called to give account 4 Bring a wakeful spirit and herein be sober in the use of meat and drink drowsy hearts let many precious truths slip away A spirit of slumber in hearing is threatned as a sore judgement Rom. 11.8 God hath given them the spirit of slumber eyes that they should not see and ears that they should not hear Yea it 's a judgement to have the heart made heavy in hearing Esa 6.9 10. Make the heart of this people fat and make their ears heavy 5 Have a love to the preacher 1 Thess 5.12 13. Where prejudice and want of love is what is heard how sound soever is but too much slighted I know there may be degrees of love as there are diversities of gifts and as a ministry is blest to conversion in general and to your conversion in special yet must we have a love to all in order to profit by all Rom. 10.15 How beautiful are the feet of them that preach the Gospel of peace and bring glad tydings of good things and beware we do not admire and prayse one to the dis-respect slighting and contempt of another 1 Cor. 3.21 22. Let no man glory in man for all things are yours whether Paul Apollos or Cephas 6 Come with a desire to be informed so Cornelius Act. 10.33 Carnal men they desire not the knowledge of Gods Laws Job 21.13 14. And this will lye one day heavy upon them that they would not hear Matth. 10.15 7 Hear with attention Luk. 4.20 The eyes of all that were in the Synagogue were fastned upon Christ when he preacht Prov. 4.13 Take fast hold of instruction It was the praise of Lydia that she attended to the things which were spoken by Paul Act. 16.14 The ears of all the people were attentive to the book of the Law when Ezra expounded it Neh. 8.3 See Job 57.2 Prov. 4.1.20 Luk. 19.48 8 Hear with discretion and examine doctrines whether they agree with the Scriptures so the Bereans Act. 17.11 They searched the Scriptures whether those things were so It s no disparagement to the ablest preacher to have his doctrine tryed 1 Thess 5.21 Prove all things hold fast that which is good that is prove all the doctrines spoken by the Prophets of whom he spake ver 20. and whatsoever is agreeing to wholsom doctrine hold that especially when any new doctrines are brought by the preachers which have not been tryed 1 Joh. 4.1 this will make us boldly to stand to the truth both in persecuting times and in time of temptation yea beget a good opinion of the Teacher finding what he speaks to be truly alleged 9 Desire satisfaction in things wherein you are not clear See for this John 16.19 Christs Disciples were desirous to ask him about his Doctrine and he encourages them in it so the Disciples Matth. 13.36 Declare unto us the Parable of the Tares of the field See cap. 19.10 Benefits hereby 1 It would make Preachers very cautelous in what they deliver 2 Tim. 1.15 Jer. 23.28 knowing that their words in comparison of Gods are as Chaff to Wheat where they leave the Word of God Titus 2.8 2 It was no other than was practised by Christ himself Luke 2 46. Christ sate in the midst of the Doctours in the Temple both hearing them and asking them questions 3 It was practised of Christs Disciples to him Matth. 17.10 4 It tends to the clear Information of the hearers being hereby doubts will be cleared up and questions cleared 5 Hereby we may witness against destructive Doctrines if any such shall be delivered and we not be guilty of silent denial of Christ 6 Hereby we shall be guiltless of the seducement of a whole congregation whiles too oft gross errours are swallowed down all being silent 7 As the Preachers lips should preserve knowledg so should they herein seek the Law at his mouth Mal. 2.7 8 For the want of this duty people are apt to go away and mis-report Doctrine Rom. 3.8 Object But if there be such Reply made it will set all the Congregation in a Tumult Answ Such Tumults arise partly from the pride of Teachers who will not have any thing they deliver questioned and yet Christ in his Ministry permitted it partly from the ignorance of rude multitudes who think the examination of Doctrine to be an affront to the Preacher and to the Word which is onely duty 1 John 4.1 partly from the passionateness and pride of Protessours and Church-members who possibly may in a masterly way call in question upon pretence of Liberty the clearest Truth James 3.1 My brethren be not many masters 2 If any such Tumults shall be it 's the duty of Elders to silence it Rules in replying For this Doctrine will through pride c. Be apt to be abused 1 Let it not be in Circumstantials but in Fundamentals either of faith or practise So when Peter walked not with a right foot but dissembled Paul opposed him before all the Church of Antioch Gal. 2.11 14. 2 Let it not be in such points which the Preacher shall cite as doubtfull wherein he
his own power Matth. 8.3 4. but the Apostles did what they did by the power of Christ Acts 16.18 2 Christ had this power at all times to heal whensoever he would so had not they Heb. 2.4 for then would not Paul have left Trophimus sick at Miletum 2 Tim. 4.20 3 The miracles the Apostles did were sometimes for the hurt of men as Peter in the destruction of Ananias and Sapphira and Paul in the smiting Elymas with blindness but all Christs miracles and cures tended to the benefit of men Obj. But Christ bade the devils go into the Gadarens Hogs Answ It was onely a permission whereby Christ kept back the power that was able to hinder them not a command This should embolden us in all our maladies to come to Christ He that had such bowels on earth is not without bowels in heaven he that would do so much for Malchus one of them that came to take him Luk. 22.51 who set on his ear and healed him when Peter cut it off will he not do as much or more for his children in their maladies V. 17. That it might be fulfilled which was spoken by Esaias the Prophet saying himself took our infirmities and bare our sicknesses Here is the final cause to wit the fulfilling the prophesie of Esaias He took our infirmities and bare our sicknesses 1 The diseases of our soul to which Esaias hath respect Esai 53.4 He bore our griefs and carried our sorrows 1 Pet. 2.24 He himself bore our sins in his own body on the tree Esai 53.6 John 1.29 He takes away the sins of the world Col. 2.14 2 The diseases of our body which flow from sin Christ bore these not by taking them upon him for Christ was never sick he took not the passions which were proper to this or that man but those which were common to the whole nature Christ was never sick sicknesse arises from the unfit or unequal temperature of the humours or from intemperance of labour study but none of these were in Christ he had no sin and therefore no sickness so that Christ took not our sins by taking them upon him but out of compassion he took them away and restored the sick to health The end why Christ cured the bodily diseases of persons as Matth. 9.2 was that they might seek to him for the healing of their souls as in the blinde man John 9.5 6. So that as the living Goat had the sins of the children of Israel laid upon him and carried them into a Wilderness and land not inhabited Levit. 16.21 22. So Christ took our sins and the punishments flowing from them and carries them into a Land of forgetfulnesse In that Christ took our weaknesses learn 1 To bear the weaknesses of others 1 As in journeys strong Travellers bear the burthens of the weak so should we Rom. 15.1 We that are strong ought to bear the infirmities of the weak 2 All infirmities are burthens to a gracious heart Gal. 6.2 let them be part of thy burthen also 3 Many infirmities may be in a dear childe of God Cant. 5.2 Mark 9.23 as passion in Jonas unbelief in Thomas fearfulnesse in Peter to keep us from admiration of their persons 4 As thy brother is overtaken to day so mayest thou be to morrow Gal. 6.1 As often as we behold sinners we had need to bewail our selves in them because we have fallen or may fall into the like if God leave us God hath suffered many great men to fall from Adam to this day to shew mans weaknesse and that they might not become lovers of their name 5 If envy did not blinde thee thou mightest see many good things in him as well as infirmities 6 If any man shall raise his comfort from other mens failings to seem to himself holy because he sees imperfections in his brethren this will be no true comfort in a day of trial Gal. 6.4 7 Beware of having a mean and base esteem of any of the Saints of God because of their infirmities so as to set them at nought Rom. 14.10 No man casts away his nose because it abounds with impure flegme and is as it were the sink of the brain so the weak in time of weakness are part of Christ's Kingdom who therefore are not to be cast away but to be healed and raised up Luth. in Psalm 90. 2 See the goodness and mercy of Christ that took our infirmities Psalm 130.3 If thou Lord shouldest be extreme to mark what is done amiss who should stand but there is compassion that he may be feared Matth. 12.20 He will not break the bruised Reed nor quench smoaking Flax. The Principle of grace in the soul doth not waste corruption all at once but by degrees John 15.2 2 Cor. 4.16 Hence God is gracious in purging the soul to bring forth more grace and less sin and renewing the inward man every day 3 Trial whether thy sins be Infirmities as 1 When they are committed against the purpose of the heart so Peter in his denial of Christ what hope had we if Peter had not denied Christ and all the Apostles been offended if Moses Aaron David had not fallen by these Examples God comforts sinners If thou hast fallen return the gate of mercy is open for thee thou that knowest no evil by thy self do not presume but let both trust in my grace and mercy Luth. in Gen. 38. 2 When we disallow the evil we do and groan under it Rom. 7.15 when others hearts are hardened under evil thine is sensible 3 When though thou fallest into sin thou walkest not in any sinfull course Rom. 8.4 though there be many Imperfections in holy Duties and sudden breakings out of the heart into evil yet is it not allowed 4 When a soul is fallen into sin and hath lost Gods countenance he cannot be quiet untill the Lord return with the sense of his love Psalm 51.8 12. there can be no sins of infirmity properly but where grace is for the sins of unregenerate men are Presumptions Good men having tasted the sweetness in God they will not change their portion nor rest content without God Saints infirmities as Davids sins complaints fears more comfort me than their heroical actions as his killing Goliath the Bear and Lion I cannot imitate these but the other greatly comfort me Luth. in Gen. 28. 4 Comfort to Saints under Infirmities There are some invincible Infirmities cleaving unto Saints in this World as dulness forgetfulness privy pride self-seeking unprofitableness wandrings in duty backwardness to Christian provocation inordinate care hardness of heart vain fears slightness in Gods service Saints partly from divine light shining in them which like the light of the Sun shews the smallest mote partly from tenderness of conscience renewed smiting them for the smallest sin are upon sight of their infirmities apt to be discouraged Now to comfort thee remember Christ took thy infirmities all thy self-sufficiency crookedness of heart failing in holy
James 1.10 3 Rest content in thy condition so Christ here and Paul 1 Cor. 4.11 Phil. 4.13 If at any time we are taken by poverty let us rest contentedly therein living in abundance take heed ye fall not by proud boasting and living in want take heed ye be not supplanted with sorrow of heart one and the same countenance appearing Just Mart. ad Zenam p. 391. V. 21. And another of his disciples said unto him Lord suffer me first to go and bury my Father V. 22. But Jesus said unto him follow me and let the dead bury their dead Suffer me first Here is another of Christ his Disciples who would follow Christ but it must be when his father was dead Christ here shows that nothing should be put before the observation of his commands as being a matter of eternal concernment nor must we use delay herein See Exod. 22.29 Psal 119.60 Nor must we preferre service to relations as probably this man might pretend to serve his Father while he lived or to bury him now dead for some think his Father was now dead and Christ comes to him at this time to comfort him in the want of that relation However Christ called him to follow him Luke 9.59 and he makes this excuse some think his father was old and it would not be long first before he were dead It was a moderate request to go and perform the last office of love but Christ knew others could do it and then matters of salvation are to be preferred before matters of comliness and decency But Jesus said unto him Follow me That is let thy love be so to thy relations that if Christ call thee thou mayest leave all for him Matth. 4.22 Matth 10.37 The end why he followed Christ was ●o preach the Gospel Luk. 9.60 And let the dead bury their dead By dead in the former place he means those who are dead in sins Eph. 2.1 5. Eph. 5.14 1 Tim. 5.6 Bury their dead Christ doth not condemn burying their dead friends who if godly are buried in hope of a comfortable resurrection but hereby tells us that whatsoever hinders us from a right course savours nothing but death and that the unbelieving Jews who were dead in sins might serve to bury this man when he was dead he had some brethren or kindred who might do it also Obs When God calls us to do duty we must not use delayes Gen. 22.2 3. Many sinners are like him that cryed a little more slumber Prov. 6.6 7 8 9 10. To day if ye will hear his voice harden not your hearts Heb. 3.7 8 13. Prov. 27.1 2 Service to relations is not to be preferred before service to Christ 3 Every unbelieving man is no other then a dead man Joh. 5.24 Rom. 5.6 Not like the man that fell among the thieves dangerously wounded but quite dead dead we are by the sin of our first parents not onely temporally Rom. 5.12 but spiritually as unable to do spiritual actions as dead men are to do the actions of living men Col. 2.13 As in natural death there is a separation of the soul from the body so in spiritual death there is a separation of God from the soul For the seat of this spiritual death It is in the understanding John 1.4 5. Eph. 5.14 It is in the will Rom. 6.13 It 's in the conscience Heb. 9.14 It 's in the affections Obj. But if men be naturally dead why do you preach to them Answ 1 The word spoken is a mean to bring them to life Joh. 5.24 When the Spirit of Christ accompanies it the ministry of the word is appointed to turn persons from darkness to light Acts 26.18 2 Though men be naturally dead yet 1 Are they not without reason to consider what is spoken and upon what grounds 2 Though they be dead yet they may offer themselves to the means Obj. But there are some inward workings in the hearts of natural men as sence of sin fear of punishment thoughts of deliverance wishes for heaven therefore they are not dead Answ These and much more may be in natural men yet are they dead As in the generation of man there are many fore-going dispositions which go before the induction of the form so there are many fore-going actions preceding spiritual regeneration as we see in those converts Acts 2.36 37 38. Obj. Man hath some reliques of knowledge how then is he dead Answ Every knowledge doth not suppose life but that onely which affects the heart with affiance and love John 17.3 The devils know much remaining devils still Besides mans natural knowledge makes him inexcusable not salvable Obj. Natural men have many excellent virtues in them therefore they are not dead Answ As the evil actions of good men redound not to their persons to make their persons evil so the good actions of evil men redound not to their persons to make them righteous Good works do not make a good man but a good man makes or does good works evil works do not make an evil man but an evil man makes evil works So that it behoves the person always to be good before all good works and good works come from a good person Luth. Tom. 1 Cat. fol. 469. Their vertues are like pictures without life There are many natural men fine Schollers and Gentlemen too good to go to hell yet not good enough to go to heaven for they being in the flesh cannot please God because they are not good trees they cannot bring forth good fruit all their virtues are like flowers upon a dead mans carkasse that may adorn it and keep off the stink thereof but cannot give life thereto As in the flesh of a beast some part of it is sold at a great price other of it is cast away or little regarded yet all is flesh so some works of the natural man are abhominable and some are commendable but all are but flesh There are several sorts of madnesse some light and foolish some more sober and solemn yet all is but madness so in spiritual madness the lives of some natural men are sober grave serious the lives of others are wilde and ranting yet all are dead and mad Obj. Natural men are not dead because they have some signes of Gods image in them Answ There 's a twofold image 1 Natural standing in immortality immateriality mentioned Gen. 9.6 He that sheds mans blood by man shall his blood be shed for in the image of God made he him 2 A supernatural image consisting in righteousness and holiness Col. 3.10 You have put on the new man which is created in knowledge after the image of him that created him The former image may be in natural men not the latter Use Try two things 1 Whether thou art dead 2 Whether thou art alive Tryalls of a man dead 1 When he lives in sin Rom. 6.2 How shall we that are dead to sin live any longer therein 1 Joh. 3.6 He that abides in
by our prayers Psal 93.3 4. And there was a great calm See the obedience of the mightiest creatures to God how will this condemn our disobedience See how windes yield obedience Psal 107.26 compared with 29. See the seas obedience Jer. 5.22 Let not the winde and sea overcome you in overcoming the storms of the minde V. 27. But the men marvelled saying What manner of man is this that even the wind and sea obey him Here 's a fifth circumstance they reason thus He whom winds and seas obey must be greater then all mortalls but they obey this man therefore he is greater then all men This should stir us up to confidence in the Son Joh. 14.1 Let not your hearts be troubled ye believe in God believe also in me q. d. I am God as well as my Father therefore believe on me So that as it is said of the Lord Psal 89.9 Thou rulest the raging of the sea when the waves thereof arise thou stillest them so also doth Christ at this time The creatures are Gods executioners to punish man for sin when they exceed herein the Lord reproves them as a father doth a schoolmaster when he sees him unmeasurably to chastise his son The greatness of which miracle which made it more admirable was that whereas usually in storms when the wind ceases the sea is not calm till a good while after but here both wind ceases and the sea is calm together in an instant showing it came from a miracle not from nature For the calm was called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies to laugh to note that the weather and sea smiled on them with a clear countenance All expositors make the Church an arbitrary Antitype of this tossed ship as this ship was poor a mean fisher boat not to be compared to the great Merchant ships and men of war so the poor Church is not to be compared for outward glory with the kingdoms of the world And as when the proud Scribe leaves Christ the poor disciples accompany Christ through the sea so when rich and great men leave Christ the poor disciples accompany Christ through the troublesome sea of this world Again as this ship was in danger so hath the Church been oft in Egypt Babylon in the ten persecutions and Popish Tyranny ready to be swallowed up of waves but the Lord seasonably appears either by cutting off Tyrants as he did Pharaoh Exod. 14.25 and Herod Act. 12.23 Or by putting a hook in their nostrils as he did to Sennacherib 2 King 19.28 or by turning the hearts of persecutors whereby the Churches have rest as he did Paul Act. 9.31 This Church so tossed is not the Roman Church as the Papists paint the Pope to be the steers-man sitting at the helm and the Cardinals Bishops and Priests to be the Mariners but it s a company of Saints who because they will live godly suffer persecution 2 Tim. 3.12 With these it is that Christ is present in the signes of the covenant and in the word of promise and with his supporting presence in time of storms they pretend they have no schismes nor contentions but perfect unity but this proves them not to be the true Church because the ship wherein Christ was was exposed to storms and Christ came not to bring peace but a sword Matth. 10.34 And if unity among them might prove them a Church then might it prove the Turks and Jews to be Churches who have more of unity then they V. 28. And when he was come to the other side into the country of the Gergesenes there met him two possessed with devils coming out of the tombes exceeding fierce so that no man might pass by that way In these words to the end of the Chapter is set down what befell Christ when he was gone from Capernaum over the lake of Genezareth into the country of the Gerasens 1 He is met with two men possessed with devils The devils are described 1 That they came out of the tombes 2 By their exceeding fierceness that no man might pass that way 2 The complaint they make which is twofold 1 Disclaiming their interest in Christ What have we to do with thee Jesus thou son of God ver 29. Thou art the saviour of men not our Saviour 2 Their fear of a present torment Art thou come to torment us before the time ver 29. 3 Their petition If thou cast us out suffer us to go into the herd of swine v. 31. 4 Here 's Christ permission of them to enter the hogs he said unto them Go v. 32. 5 Here 's the devils execution of their mischief having once obtained a permission the devils entering into the swine the whole herd went down a steep place and perished in the waters v. 32. 6 The report hereof that was brought to the city v. 33. 7 The issue and effect the Gadarens being offended for the loss of their hogs desired him to depart out of their coasts And when he had come to the other side into the country of the Gergasens Matthew calls them Gergafens Mark and Luke Gadarens but there 's no difficulty for Gergessa or Gerasa and Gedara were towns near thereto Joseph lib. 2. de bello cap. 2. mentions both Gerasens and Gadarens These were the remainders of the Canaanites as Grotius writes and as it appears Gen. 10.16 The remainders of the people whose Land was given to Israel Deut. 7.1 supposed to be the Geshurites and Maacathites Jos 13.13 There met him two possessed with devils Mark and Luke mention onely one but the answer is easie the one was more famous then the other being possessed of a whole legion of devils Mar. 5.9 Luk. 8.30 and so was more cruel Mark and Luke prosecuting the history of the man possessed with a legion of devils do omit the mentioning the other Demoniak Coming out of the tombes They came out thence and abode there to affright men with fear of death their abode and dwelling was among the tombs Mark 5.3 Luk. 8.27 Now they might easily dwell in the tombs because they were hollow places digged out of a rock as Christs Sepulchre was Matth. 27.60 whereinto John and Peter entered Joh. 20.6 and those three women that brought spices Luk. 24.3 or else they were made of stone or brick and covered over Now if it be askt why they dwelt there it was because one of the Demoniaks being possest with a cruel devil or rather a legion of them no man would receive them to their house they being excluded from humane society resided in old Sepulchres One of these Demoniocks ware no clothes and was bound with chains and sometimes broke them Luk. 8.27 29. Matthew addes they were exceeding fierce and that they were so troublesome to passengers that no man might pass by that way Mark addes that no man could tame him and that he was day and night in the mountains and tombs crying and cutting himself with stones
Jesus knowing their thoughts said Why think ye evil in your hearts Jesus knowing their thoughts Here was one note of his God-head to know the thoughts 1 Cor. 2.11 What man knows the things of a man save the spirit of man which is in him He must needs be God which did this 1 Joh. 2.24 25. Jesus did not commit himself to them because he knew all men and needed not that any should testifie of man for he knew what was in man He did not know their hearts by outward gestures as by whispering laughing but he knew their hearts without signes when they sat quiet and still nor did he know them by the revelation of another as the Prophets did 1 King 14.3 4. as the Prophet Ahiah did the wife of Jeroboam but by his own power as being the searcher of hearts which God onely is And needs must he know the thoughts because he created the heart Psal 94.10 11. besides else how should he make manifest the counsels and secrets of the heart Rom. 2.16 1 Cor. 4.5 Why think ye evil in your hearts That is false malitious and blasphemous things as if I were onely a man when I am God These thoughts were evil 1 coming from the devil and their wicked hearts 2 In respect of matter as being derogatory to the majesty of Christ From this two observations 1 The thoughts of men are known to Christ 2 The consideration of this that our thoughts are known to Christ should be a check unto us from thinking evil in our hearts Obs The thoughts of men are known to Christ 1 Because he is God now all thoughts are known to God Gen. 6.5 God saw that every imagination of the heart of man was onely evil continually Job 21.27 I know your thoughts and the devices which ye wrongfully imagine against me Job 42.2 No thought can be withholden from thee yea God perceives and knows the inward thoughts of the heart Psal 49.11 Their inward thought is their houses shall continue Amos 4.13 he declares unto man his thought Psal 139.23 Try me and know my thoughts Psal 50.22 1 Cor. 3.20 2 Because he is the searcher of the heart Rev. 2.23 All the Churches shall know that I am he that searcheth the reins and the heart now the thoughts being a great part of the heart he must needs know them Luke 9.47 When the Disciples were thinking which of them should be greatest Jesus perceiving the thought of their heart took a little childe and set him before them Matth. 12.24 25. 3 Because he hath discovered to men their thoughts as here to these Scribes and to Judas before he acted any treason Luke 5.32 Luke 24.38 when the Disciples were affrighted Christ says Why do thoughts arise in your hearts The woman of Samaria John 4.29 He told me all that ever I did Use 1 To confirm unto us the God-head of Christ why because he knows our thoughts 2 Beware 1 Of vain thoughts which is 1 For matter when we shall think on foolish things Prov. 24.9 The thought of foolishness is sin 2 For manner when we shall think of God and good things in an unholy manner either irreverently or idolatrously Psal 50.23 Thou thoughtest I was such an one as thy self 3 For order when we shall think of good things disorderly If a Printer print never so well yet if one word stand where another should it will quite spoil the book 4 For end when we shall be thinking of good things for a bad end as to be thinking of the Scriptures how to colour over some sin to be thinking of God in extremities that he might deliver us out of this or that trouble resolving still to follow our lusts 2 Beware of wicked thoughts Prov. 30.32 If thou hast thought evil in thy heart lay thy hand upon thy mouth Esai 55.6 7. Let the righteous man forsake his thoughts Acts 8.22 Repent of this thy wickedness and pray God if perhaps the thoughts of thy heart may be forgiven thee 5 Though they think of God they delight not to think of him Rom. 1.28 they think of God but they know not how to shun it Obj. But thoughts are free Answ In Courts of men they are because man cannot make a Law that can reach the thoughts but not in the Court of heaven Jer. 6.19 I will bring upon them the fruit of their thoughts Obj. But we cannot hinder wicked and vain thoughts from arising in the heart Answ We cannot hinder them from being but we may hinder them from lodging in us Jer. 4.14 We cannot hinder persons from coming to our house but we can hinder them from lodging in our house we cannot hinder a Bird from flying over our heads but we may keep it from making a nest in our hair Q. Whence come these wicked thoughts in the heart Answ 1 From Satan who inspires and injects evil motions These sometimes are discerned by the suddenness coming like a flash of Lightning by their violence It 's a sad thing to have the devil Lord of our imagination as in Judas John 13.12 By their strangeness being thrown in as Josephs cup in Benjamins sack By their unnaturalness tending to destroy so to Christ Cast thy self down Thus Satan suggested to David to number the people 1 Chron. 21.1 Some think it more sad for the devil to run away with our thoughts then estates 2 From corruption Matth. 15.19 Out of the Heart proceed evil thoughts Jam. 1.14 15. Now whether they come from Satan or corruption they shall not be imputed to us if we disallow them Obj. I disallow them Answ If thou doest they will be burdens to thee and thou wilt complain to God in prayer against them and strive to turn thy imagination from them to God that the thoughts of God may be the possessions of thy heart 3 Try what thy thoughts are whether they be good or bad Trials 1 When they come from a good principle within A good man hath a good treasure in his heart Matth. 12.35 and from thence he brings forth good things hence his purposes are onely good Prov. 11.23.12.5 2 When good thoughts are not onely cast into the soul but we study them Many think because they have some thoughts of death judgement heaven and hell of repentance God and Christ therefore their hearts are good but these thoughts are onely the hauntings of the spirit to leave them more inexcusable Contrarily godly men strive to study good thoughts Psal 119.59 3 Whether are the good thoughts thou hast transient or permanent and abiding Gen. 6.5 The Lord saw all the thoughts of mens hearts were vain Obj. They had some good thoughts how could this be Answ They were vain for want of duration 4 Whether are thy thoughts brought forth into act Godly men act the good they think of Psal 119.59 I thought upon my wayes what then followed I turned my feet into thy testimonies Luke 15.18 The Prodigal thought of his misery what followed
he hath an implicite liking to the sin If inclining to pride in apparel wear plain cloaths if to vain-glory speak not any thing that may redound to your praise if to lying tell no doubtfull stories if to whispering speak sparingly of other mens actions especially of your Enemies 10 When we are affraid of sinning in secret Lev. 19.14 Thou shalt not curse the deaf nor put a stumbling block before the blinde but shalt fear the Lord thy God The deaf man could not hear the curse the blinde man cannot see the block thou layest Oh! but God sees and his fear must keep thee and me from secret iniquities See Job 31.22 23 26 27 29 30. 11 A reverend carriage both outward and inward in the worship of God Psalm 5.7 In thy fear will I worship towards thy holy Temple Eccles 5.2 God is in Heaven and thou on Earth therefore let thy words be few and as in prayer so in hearing Eccles 5.1 Look to thy foot when thou goest into the house of God Gods fear in Cornelius made him reverend in hearing Peter Acts 10.2 compared with v. 33. We are all here present before God to hear all things commanded us from God Jacob saith Gen. 28.16 17. The Lord is in this place and I was not aware of it how dreadfull is this place Deut. 6.13 Thou shalt fear the Lord thy God and serve him as if he should say The fear of the Lord is the best spur to holy service Heb. 12.27 28. Psalm 5.7 3 Exhortation to labour after Gods fear Where wicked men are most fearless Saints are most fearfull to wit in sin and where Saints are most fearless as in calamitous times wicked men are most fearfull Most men are like little children that fear and cry at things not to be feared as at Bull-beggars c. but do not fear things that are to be feared to wit Water Fire Knives c. so most men fear those things which are shadows of grief as Poverty Disgrace but do not fear that which will bring astonishment and endless misery if not repented of Means to Gods fear 1 God must put it into our hearts Jer. 32.40 and man must teach it Psalm 34.11 Come ye children hearken unto me I will teach you the fear of the Lord. We are ready to scatter our fear as well as other affections where it ought not to be as on great persons Prov. 29.25 on worldly troubles hence it's Gods work to place our fear on a right object hence David prays Psalm 86.10 Unite my heart to fear thy Name 2 Apprehend Gods love to thy soul and thou wilt be affraid to offend him Hosea 3.5 They shall fear the Lord and his goodness Psal 130.3 4. There is mercy with thee that thou mayst be feared 1 Pet. 1.17 If you call upon the Father that is look upon him as your Father see that you spend the time of your sojourning here in fear 2 Cor. 6.17 18. Touch not the unclean thing and I will be a Father unto you 3 Be perswaded of Gods Omniscience and Omnipresence We would fear to do evil if the eye of a man were upon us much more when Gods eye beholds us Psalm 44.17 18. Though God smote his people into the place of Dragons and covered them with the shadow of death yet they apprehending and believing God to search into the secrets of the heart they durst not lift up their hands to a strange God v. 20 21. What made Job fear to sin See cap. 31.4 Doth not he see all my ways and count all my steps 4 Look upon and believe the greatness of his power Isai 40.12 Who hath measured the waters in the hollow of his hand and meted out Heaven with the span and comprehended the dust of the earth in a measure and weighed the mountains in scales and the hills in a ballance All Nations compared with him are as a drop of a Bucket compared with the Ocean or as the small dust in a ballance compared with the greatest weights put therein all Nations are before him as nothing v. 11 17. Hence the Lord saith Jer. 5.22 Fear ye not me will ye not tremble at my presence who have placed the sand for the bound of the sea c. Psalm 76. v. 5. to v. 10. Thou even thou art to be feared thou didst cause judgment to be heard from Heaven the earth feared and was still Especially behold Gods power in casting the soul into Hell Job 41.10 Leviathan or the Whale is set down to be a terrible creature Job saith Shall not even one be cast down at the sight of him v. 9. also v. 10. None is so fierce that dares stir him up who then can stand before me If thou art notable to stand against one of Gods creatures in thy sins how wilt thou be able to stand before God himself Besides all other he hath one power to convey an invisible Horrour into thy Conscience to make thee a terrour to thy self and others Jer. 20.4 See it in Judas Matth. 27.4 5. if thou wilt venture to go on in sin 5 Believe Gods threatnings against sin Who would venture upon such a sin did he believe the threatnings against it Heb. 11.7 Noah by faith being moved with fear to wit of Gods drowning the World prepared an Ark c. Eve contrarily mincing the threatning Gen. 3.3 when God had said In the day that thou eatest of it thou shalt surely dy Gen. 2.16 17. she changed it thus God hath said Ye shall not eat of it neither shall ye touch it lest ye dy The threatning being thus lessened she was drawn away to ruine her self and posterity There are terrible threats against sinners See Deut. 29.18 19 20 21. Psalm 11.6 Col. 3.6 1 Thes 4.6 2 Thes 1.8 9. 1 Pet. 4.17 These and many more unless they be believed they will not preserve us from sin Quest But seeing there is a filial and son-like fear and a servile or slavish fear of God how shall we know what our fear is Answ 1 Slavish fear drives from God Gen. 3.8 Adam and Eve when they heard the voice of the Lord hid themselves from the presence of the Lord. The reason is rendered v. 10. because they were affraid Is 33.14 The sinners in Sion are affraid they look upon God as devouring fire and as everlasting burnings So the Devils believe and tremble James 2.19 Contrarily filial fear brings us nearer to God Psalm 86.11 2 Slavish fear leaves the nature filthy as in the Devils James 2.19 and wicked men Heb. 2.15 through fear of death they are all their life subject to bondage Contrarily filial fear cleanseth Psalm 19.4 The fear of the Lord is clean 2 Cor. 7.1 Let us cleanse our selves from all filthiness both of flesh and spirit perfecting holiness in the fear of God Holy persons serve without slavish fear in holiness and righteousness all their life Luke 1.74 75. 3 Slavish fear hath torment of heart 1 John 4.17
18. We see it in Devils who believe and tremble Matth. 8.29 Contrarily filial fear hath quiet of heart joyned with it The heart is never in so good a temper as when it is most fearfull of sin Acts 9.31 The Churches walking in the fear of the Lord walked also in the comfort of the Holy Ghost Mal. 4.2 Unto you that fear my Name shall the Sun of Righteousness appear 4 Those that have slavish fear would fain be rid of it 1 Kings 22.26 Zedekiah goes from chamber to chamber to hide himself the wicked in fear of Gods judgment call to mountains and hills to hide themselves Revel 6.16 Contrarily Saints would still have the fear of God continue upon them nay if they finde it decaying they complain Isai 63.17 Lord why hast thou hardened my heart from thy fear 5 Slavish fear is from 1 The sting of a guilty conscience Deut. 28.65 66. The Lord shall give thee a trembling heart and thou shalt fear day and night Saul 1 Sam. 13.7 when he was near the battle all the people followed him trembling Hypocrites in Sion looking on God as devouring fire fearfulness surprized them Isai 33.15 Paul preaching to Faelix of righteousness temperance and judgement to come he living an unrighteous and an intemperate life trembled to think of the judgement to come and was so stung with it that he was driven to make Paul leave off his preaching 2 From the expectation of future wrath Heb. 10.27 they have a certain fearfull looking for of judgement and fiery indignation Contrarily filial fear 1 Ariseth from faith Heb. 11.7 By faith Noah was moved with fear Isai 50.10 Or 2 From godly sorrow 2 Cor. 7.11 Fear was one effect that godly sorrow wrought in the repenting Corinthians the soul having felt much inward sorrow for the evils it hath done is affraid to do the like evils again 3 From love to God we are affraid to offend those whom we love an husband fears to offend his wife a good childe fears to offend his father so the soul that loves God fears to offend him Motives to this Godly fear 1 Gods fear is a perpetual duty Some duties are but for a time and then at an end but this is perpetual Prov. 23.17 Be thou in the fear of the Lord all the day long Yea We are to pass the time of our sojourning here in fear 1 Pet 1.17 Psal 19.9 The fear of the Lord endureth for ever Hence this duty is practised by glorified Saints who in heaven know evil as well as good but by the fear of God in them their wills are eternally determined to the choice of good 2 It 's a principal duty lying upon Saints above all people in the world Psal 34 11. Fear the Lord ye his Saints for God is wont to punish them more sorely then other men in this world when they sin against him Exod. 23.21 Provoke him not for he will not pardon your iniquities Deut. 32.19 Amos 3.2 As men that have more to lose then others are affraid to offend Princes so the Saints that have more to lose then the rest of the world should be affraid to offend the King of heaven they may in case they sin lose Gods face Isai 50.10 the peace of their consciences and be smitten with temporal strokes 1 Cor. 11.32 3 It 's an honourable Character to be a man fearing God 1 Kings 18.12 It 's said of Obadiah That he feared the Lord from his youth Job 1.1 Job was a man fearing God and eschewing evil Hananiah Neh. 7.2 Cornelius feared God and all his house feared God Yea a woman that feareth the Lord she shall be praised Prov. 31.30 4 The children of God have found much comfort in this grace Neh. 1.11 Let thine ear be attentive to thy servants that desire to fear thy Name Yea when they finde no other grace in their hearts but this grace yet are they commanded to stay their hearts herein Isai 50 10. Contrarily they have been much troubled if they have found either a want or a decay of this grace 5 Gods fear as at other times so especially in evil times is a principal treasure to good men Isai 33.6 The fear of the Lord is his treasure The meaning of the place is from Gods fear arises all prosperity to supply us as out of a treasure arises money to supply our needs 6 Gods fear is the most watchfull affection as being conversant about danger How often would temptations captivate us were it not for this in-dwelling grace in Saints Jer. 32.40 This grace doth as it were stand Centry for the soul Psal 119.11 7 The attributes wherein God stands related to us 1 His power and justice Job 37.23 24. He is excellent in power and judgement and plenty of justice men do therefore fear him 2 The pitifull affection or disposition God bears to them that fear him Psal 103.13 As a father pities his children so the Lord pitieth them that fear him Psal 147.11 The Lord taketh pleasure in them that fear him in what ever Nation such Saints be God being no respecter of persons they are accepted of God with a favourable respect Acts 10.35 8 The relations wherein we stand ingaged to the Lord 1 Of servants If earthly servants must have a fear of their masters according to the flesh Eph. 6.5 ought not we to the Lord Hence the Lord expostulates Mal. 1.6 If I be a master where is my fear 2 Of children What dutifull child stands not in fear of offending his father Heb. 12.9 We gave earthly parents reverence shall we not much rather be in subjection to the Father of Spirits and live 9 Gods fear sweetens a low condition Prov. 15.16 Better is a little with the fear of the Lord then great revenues and trouble therewith that is then great revenues got with a wounded and troubled conscience Psal 37.16 10 Such men as fear God are blessed Prov. 28.14 Blessed is the man that feareth alwayes They are often blessed in this world especially when a delight in Gods law is joyned therewith Psal 112.1 Blessed is the man that feareth the Lord his seed shall be mighty upon earth wealth and riches shall be in his house c. Also in the world to come they are blessed Rev. 11.19 When the time comes that the dead shall be judged there is a reward to be given to all that fear Gods Name both small and great Come we to the second thing viz. The true fear of God where it is eats out the fear of men we see it in Moses parents Moses himself in the Mid-wives Exod. 1.19 in Shadrach Meshech and Abednego Psal 27.1 3 The third point is God is able to destroy soul and body in hell This is called the second death Rev. 20.6 called a double destruction Jer. 17.18 The bodies of all that are in the graves shall come forth John 5.28 They that have done evil to the resurrection of damnation death and grave gives them
in preaching the receiver shall have the same degree of glory the Prophet had For the measure of glory hereafter will answer to our measure of love here for as in humane Laws the Receiver of a Thief and Robber and Traitour incurs the same punishment with the Thief so the receiver of a Prophet shall receive the same reward with the Prophet The Elm that upholds the Vine is respected of us as well as the Vine without which the Vine could not bring forth fruit he that tarried with the stuff and he that went down to the battel did alike share in the spoil 1 Sam. 30.24 so he that nourishes a Prophet for to preach when by reason of poverty else he could not shall receive the same reward with the Prophet according to the proportion of assistance and love wherewith he assists that Prophet And some think in like manner they that receive comfort and nourish the Martyrs of Christ shall receive the same Crown with them that suffer Martyrdom such as were companions of those who were made gazing-stocks for Christ are taken notice of Heb. 10.33 We may hence see how much God esteems his Prophets in that he promises not onely a reward but such a reward to them that receive them as of old he valued Prophets and righteous men Psalm 105.15 Touch not mine Anointed and do my Prophets no harm so doth he now not onely forbid harming them but commands to do them good with a promise of reward And he that receiveth a righteous man By this Christ means godly men Obs The Saints of God are truly and properly righteous men There is a twofold Righteousness 1 Imputative Righteousness of Justification Psalm 32.1 2. Blessed is the man to whom the Lord imputeth not iniquity This consists in having Christs righteousness imputed unto us and our sins imputed unto him 2 Cor. 5.21 He was made sin for us that we might be made the righteousness of God in him Paul knew that at the day of Christ he was to be found in a righteousness or else he was undone and therefore he saith May be found in him not having mine own righteousness which is of the Law but the righteousness of Christ by faith that I may know him and the power of his Death and Resurrection c. This is one of the first Articles of the Faith wherein the Jews being ignorant did endeavour to make their own righteousness to stand The word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but it was no otherwise than if we should set a dead man upon his legs who presently falls down Rom. 10.3 4. 2 There is a righteousness of sanctification or the righteousness of uprightness whereby there is a bent or inclination of soul to all the commandments of God without reserving any way of wickedness Deut. 6.25 It shall be our righteousness if we observe to do all these commandments as he hath commanded us This because it is wrought in our own persons is called inherent Job 27.5 6. Till I dy I will not remove my integrity from me my righteousness I hold fast and will not let it go Integrity consisting in an universal bent of heart to all Gods commands is here called by the name of righteousness Luke 1.6 it 's said Zachary and Elizabeth were both righteous before God But how did it appear why they walked in all the commandments and ordinances of the Lord blameless Of this Job 29.14 I put on righteousness and it cloathed me my judgment was as a robe and a diadem Godly walking or the Righteousness of Sanctification did adorn him before men as brave Apparel doth those that put it on Revel 19.8 The fine Linnen are the righteousnesses in the Plural 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of Saints he means as the righteousness of him who is the Lord our Righteousness Jer. 23.6 adorns us in the sight of God and answers divine Justice Gal. 3.10 1● so doth the Righteousness of Sanctification adorn us in the sight of God Rom. 4.1.2 and of men Moses his mouth is full of wormwood the beginning of salvation is that that thou believe for that a new life ought to follow that belongs not to satisfaction but to obedience Luth. Tom. 4.198 As there is a two-fold righteousness so there is a two-fold acception of justification 1 For an absolution in judgement in opposition to condemnation Prov. 17.15 He that justifieth the wicked and he that condemneth the just even they both are alike abomination in the sight of God Matth. 12.37 By thy words thou shalt be justified and by thy words thou shalt be condemned so that by considering what condemnation is we may know what justification is Condemnation is the sentence of a righteous Judge adjudging a malefactor to death for some capital crime whereof he is found guilty in judgement Absolution is the sentence of a righteous Judge acquitting an innocent person his righteousness appearing in judgement Thus we are justified by Christs righteousness Rom. 8.33 34. Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect or frame an inditement against them the word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 seeing it is God that justifieth who shall condemn It s Christ that dyed yea rather that is risen again who is even at the right hand of God As if he should say through Christ his dying and rising we are acquitted from all guilt and punishment we believing on him 2 Justification is taken for the infusion of habitual righteousness whereby there is not onely a throwing down of the reign of sin in the soul but there is also a setting up of a new frame of grace in the purpose and intentions of the heart Dan. 12.3 They that justifie many shall shine as the stars as Junius reads it they that turn many to righteousness This is nothing else but sanctification if we take the word in a grammatical sence of justus and facio Seldom is the word thus taken and when it is so taken it doth not alwayes signifie an habitual effect in the subject of that quantity or quality the epithite denotes with the driving away of the contrary as in glorifie magnifie sanctifie c. vve glorifie and sanctifie God not by making him of vile and prophane to become glorious and holy but by declaring him to be such Mary magnifies the Lord not by making him of little to become great but by declaring him to be great The Peripatetics say that by doing just and temperate things vve are made just and temperate but it s not so for being made just and temperate vve do just and temperate things Luth. Tom. 2 lat Now the justification in the Court of heaven vvhereby vve stand righteous must be a righteousness vvhereby vve stand perfect in all parts and degrees This is two-fold 1 The Righteousness of the lavv so if vve perfectly fulfill the Lavv in every point vve are saved from hell by it Rom. 10.5 Moses describeth the righteousness of the Law that the man that
recompensed me according to my righteousness Look upon the Kings of Judah from David and so along whose hearts were perfect with God and see how God made their Kingdoms prosper witness Asa Jehoshaphat Hezekiah c. 6 Sincere souls may be comforted against all disasters whatsoever Art thou being sincere reproached Job being so comforted himself cap. 16.19 Behold my witness is in heaven and my record is on high Job 23.10 He knoweth the way that is with me so the Margin Joseph doubtless had comfort when his Mistress slandered him 1 Cor. 4.3 4. When sundry at Corinth censured Paul saith he I regard not mans day or mans judgement I know nothing by my self So in time of sickness and death great will the comfort of sincerity be Isai 57.2 He shall enter into peace they shall rest in their beds each one walking in his uprightness Mark the perfect man the end of that man is peace Ps 37.37 The having the loyns girt about with truth is part of a Christians armor in an evil day Eph. 6.14 Job saith c. 27.5 6. Till I dye I will not let my integrity go from me my heart shall not reproach me so long as I live It will be a matter of comfort in death to write down some of the great actions or turnings of our lives wherein we have acted uprightly Hypocrites in prosperous times are very confident but when an evil time comes their hope is as the giving up of the Ghost but sincere souls when God shall ask them By conscience lovest thou me They can return this answer Thou knowest all things thou knowest that I love thee John 21.15 It was a speech of a godly woman when she came to die that she had nothing to comfort her but poor sincerity her name was Mrs. Juxon Quest But what is this sincerity which is so comfortable and whereunto you so exhort us Answ It is to do what we do unto God having a bent of heart to all Gods commandements with an earnest desire to avoid the contrary out of conscience to God and from faith and love 1 Kings 9.4 If thou wilt walk before me as David thy father walked in integrity of heart and uprightness to do according to all that I have commanded thee 1 See uprightness and integrity consists in having a bent to do all God commands The contrary is unsoundness See Matth. 19.21 22. Col. 4.12 Perfect and compleat in all the will of God q. d. where there is one the other will be 2 It must be done unto God or out of conscience to God Isai 38.3 Noah was perfect in his generations how doth that appear Why Noah walked with God Gen. 6.9 that is in his actings he made himself present with God and God present with him else to part with any thing as with life and goods to give the body to be burned and all a mans goods to the poor and so consequently to do any command for these two are the hardest commands would not argue sincerity unless what we do be done out of conscience to God 3 It must be from faith and love 3 Use Trial. Try thy sincerity 1 At whose eye do you look in all your services Psalm 16.8 I have set the Lord ever before me Hypocrites in some particular actions may set God before them as Abimelech Gen. 20.6 Those that kill'd the Apostles thought they did God service in it John 16.2 The Jews in opposing Christs righteousness had the zeal of God in it that is they lookt at God in it Rom. 10.2 But sincere persons have a desire to and purpose for to set God ever before them yea if any by-ends come in they are troubled at it 2 From whom do you expect a reward hence a conscientious Preacher preacheth with all his strength though people be not gathered Esa 49.4 5. Hence that Servants may be sincere they are bid to expect their reward from God Col. 3.23 24. Why for ye serve the Lord Christ Hence a Christian doth good to unthankfull yea to enemies Psalm 35.12 13. Luke 6.35 36. Hence a sincere soul doth duty when it hath no reward with men nay contrarily shame and blame 3 The doing good and avoiding evil in secret They do good in secret Job 31.18 19. Esa 38.3 Hypocrites will do good where there are many eyes to behold them Matth 6.2 Matth. 23.5 but very seldom do they any good in secret but sincere souls do good in secret Their alms prayer and fasting they strive that it may be in secret Matth. 6.1 c. So on the other side they avoid evil in secret Joseph durst not come near his Mistress though none but he and she were in the house Job durst not lift up his hand against the fatherless though he saw his help in the gate Job 31.21 He eschews hellish thoughts and groans under them crying Cleanse me Lord from secret sins then shall I be upright Psalm 19.12 13. Contrarily hypocrites and wicked men will venture to do evil in secret all their care is to cover it from the eye of man Hence they stick not to plot mischief in secret Psalm 64.2 4. They will slander in secret Deut. 27.24 Moses calls it a smiting their neghbour secretly They do secretly accept persons Job 13.10 In a word it s a shame to speak of the things that are done of them in secret Eph. 5.12 Yet may they refrain from open and scandalous sins and live and dye without any such though usually God leaves them to fall into some open sin that so their name may rot Prov. 10.7 4 The singling out God from all other objects that come what will come they will not leave the Lord. Gal. 6.14 God forbid that I should rejoyce in any thing save in the cross of Christ Rom. 8.35 Who shall separate us from the love of Christ He means both active and passive love which the Lord hath to us and we to the Lord. Hypocrites on the other side are double minded their hearts are divided betwixt God and some lust James 1.8 A double minded man is unstable in all his wayes Sometimes they are for God sometimes for the world hence where any soul sincerely turns to God he purifies himself from double mindedness James 4.8 9. 5 Sensibleness of and groaning under inward distempers Rom. 7.15 23. Troubled under hardness of heart Isa 63.17 Unbelief Mark 9.23 Privy pride 2 Cor. 12.7 8. From a principle of tenderness of conscience they have received and a blessed light God hath set up in their hearts they are sensible of such evils as the world counts nothing yea they are more troubled for these then wicked men are for grosse evils they complain of themselves for not striving with God to keep off his judgements for their close hypocrysie heaviness in the service of God dulness Isa 64.7 There 's none that stirs up himself to take hold of thee A sincere soul though he do duties outwardly plausible yet is he not contented
unless he finde his heart doing of them as well as his outward man so though his outward carriage be blameless yet is he not satisfied if there be distempers of pride revenge earthliness c. within till he have in some good measure pray'd down these distempers Psalm 19.12 saying Cleanse me Lord from my secret sins Contrary unsound men make clean the outside of the cup and platter Matth. 23.25 But the inside is full of rapine and excess Their chief care is to have a smooth carriage to the world 6 Sincerity is moved by a command Other men are moved by credit profit but sincere men might they have never so much credit or profit yet having a contrary known command they will not move contrary where they have a plain command though they have no secondary motives of favour credit profit yet are they moved to act thereby as we see in Queen Hesters case who went unto the King Abraham Heb. 11.8 Compared with Gen. 12.1 Yea though to tell a Prince of Gods wrath as Micaiah to Ahab John Baptist to Herod Gad and Nathan to David Therefore forasmuch as Saints out of the sight of their indwelling corruption are ready to condemn themselves and so walk heavily and Satan labours if he cannot take their uprightness from them yet to take the comfort of it from them they may by these and such like signs know their uprighness which faithfull Preachers are to declare unto them It is indeed far more dangerous to hope without a cause then to fear without a cause yet when an upright soul counts it self not upright there are many inconveniences thereby as he can neither rejoyce in living nor think comfortably of dying he is backward to prayer he can hardly give thanks for any thing because he knows not but God may be his enemy in time to come and may damn him he cannot long for the coming of Christ nor delight himself in the contemplation of the good things laid up in heaven hence though these fears may be let in by God to beat down our pride yet are they apt to hinder us in our course 7 When a man hath an open heart to receive every truth of God though such a truth may prove prejudicial to his outward advantage When any truth of God whispers to an unsound man something that may be contrary to his temporal being or may bring him to hazard he doth as Herod did with the Baptist first puts it in Prison and after kills it Contrarily sincere men are like Cornelius Acts 10.33 We are here to hear all things that are commanded us from God so far as they can be convinced herein But unsound men apprehending the truth will part them from some lusts they are not willing to leave that it will be a bar to advantage and a companion of persecution especially in such times and places that it will lose them friends and procure them enemies They say to the Seers See not and to the Prophets Prophesie not Isai 30.9 10. Though they perhaps said not so in words they said so in their carriage Unsound men keep at a distance from truth as Travellers do from persons whom they suspect comes to rob them 8 Universal obedience Thou art no better than an Hypocrite till thou findest that every Truth thou readest or hearest in the Word hath an authority and power over thy will let the command be for doing or suffering yet art thou not sincere but shalt one day be ashamed if thou hast not respect thereto Psalm 119.6 Matth. 7.24 In something or other the Hypocrite discovers himself if not to the observation of others yet to the conviction of his own conscience The Prophet proves himself upright that he did not spare his sin Psalm 18.23 which he was most inclined to Psalm 119.3 compared with v. 1. Upright men they do no iniquity that is not wittingly and knowingly Isai 56.2 Acts 23.1 Hebr. 13.18 To do some good things the Master requires doth not argue a good Servant 9 A sincere man makes conscience of small sins No Hypocrite almost but makes conscience of gross and notorious evils but they hate preciseness in smaller matters They count such preciseness hypocrisie which indeed is so if it be in things not commanded of God Matth. 15.5 6. or if it be commanded of God we shall make more conscience of them than we do of the weightier points of the Law When a man makes conscience onely of the great things of the Law it may be a question whether conscience to God or credit to men be a mover herein Hence sincere men set themselves not onely against Murder but also causless anger not onely against Adultery of body but against looking upon a woman to lust after her The sons of Jehonadab did not onely refrain drunkenness but also tasting of Wine Jer. 35.6 not onely they forbear false witness in a Court of Justice but also jeasting Lyes he keeps himself not onely from thieving but from deceiving a penny or two They do not onely refrain from the more abominable and full-mouth'd oaths but from faith and troth not onely from abjuring Gods truth before a Magistrate but from being ashamed thereof 10 A suffering out of conscience towards God Hypocrites may suffer out of praise of men as some think Alexander did Acts 19.33 Ananias and Sapphira parted with their goods but sincere men 1 They do not onely suffer which seldom Hypocrites come to but they suffer out of conscience to God 1 Peter 2.19 This is thank-worthy if a man for conscience towards God endure grief suffering wrongfully As a man will venture the losing of a member for the saving of his life so will a sincere man lose all for the saving of his conscience as we see in Queen Hester John Baptist those Worthies Heb. 11.35 Daniel cap. 6.10 11 An habitual intention to confess the truth of God though with the loss of all Matth. 19.17 Matth. 10.32 Contrarily Hypocrites have an implicite intention to deny Gods truth rather than to own it with sufferings sincere persons will stick to Gods truth notwithstanding mocks and scoffs as David before Michal and Nehemiah notwithstanding the mocks of Tobiah Nehem. 4.1 2 3 4. Hypocrites may sometimes stand for Justice and be a while importunate for it yet be overcome as that King that would fain have delivered Daniel and stood for him to the going down of the Sun Dan. 6.14 16. and Pilate would fain have delivered Christ John 19.12 but when he saw if he stood any further for him that he must be counted an Enemy to Caesar then he delivered up Christ The stony ground entertained the Word with joy but when tribulation and persecution arose for it they were offended Matth. 13 21. Contrarily sincere men they have a purpose to own Christ though to loss of life Heb. 11.35 others were tortured not accepting deliverance they know the danger of the contrary that if they deny Christ he will deny
against our selves to cause us to walk heavily The beholding of any truth of heart in our selves should make us go on with joyfulness chearfulness thankfulness being sure God will perfect the good work he hath begun how small soever Phil. 1.6 Trials of an Hypocrite 1 To look mostly at the eye of man in what he doth All his care is to have mens observation of the good he doth Matth. 6.2 If there be no observation of man his endeavours flag so his care is to keep his naughtiness from man but makes little conscience of sinning in secret Many will say Have we not writ many books preached many sermons built Hospitals but the Lord will say Thou didst so but it was to thy praise and credit not out of love to me nor zeal of my glory Contrary sincere souls in what they do desire to seek the glory of God not their own glory John 7.18 2 Cor. 4.5 2 A going on in dead and liveless duties and not feeling his deadness a burthen he counts them a task a penance and were it not conscience would fly in his face he would leave them quite off he counts Gods service a weariness and snuffs at it Though Gods Saints too oft perform dead and liveless duties by fits yet the deadness of hypocrites differs in two particulars 1 The hypocrite hath a voluntary careless admission of rovings in duty Prov. 5.14 I was almost in all evil in the midst of the congregation and Assemblies So Ezekiels hearers Ezek. 33.31 When they were at hearing their hearts ran after their covetousness 2 The hypocrite sees not the face of God in duty Job 13.16 He onely is my salvation saith Job how proves he that Why because a hypocrite shall not come before him Job means into his special presence for into his omnipresence all creatures come yea the devils the dwelling in and enjoying of Gods special presence is determined to the upright Psalm 140.13 See also Psalm 11.7 His countenance doth behold the upright Psalm 97.11 Light is sowen for the righteous and joy for the upright in heart Possibly upright men may so formalize and post over duty that they may see no face of God therein but when they pray with life and quickning and strength of affection then they see the face of God 3 Note Though a hypocrite hath many good things in him yet the bent of his heart is not for God he doth sundry good acts but he hath no good habit or inclination Hos 7.16 They return but not to the most high they are like a deceitfull bow q. d. as an archer when he shoots though he aim never so well at the white yet the bow being deceitfull he cannot come near it so these hypocrites who howl upon their beds they pretend to return but it is not in the purpose of their hearts it is not to the most High Their prayers for corn and wine are onely as the cryes of a hog when he is pinched or the howling of a wolf when he is hungry yea even a hypocrite when he most forbears sin the bent of his heart is for it See it in Balaam when for fear he should be destroyed he durst not curse yet how did he thirst after it how did he love the wages of unrighteousness and see whether God that would not let him curse Israel at one time would let him curse them at another Herod when he heard John gladly yet the bent of his heart was for Herodias All the while Demas was with Paul yet the bent of his heart was for the world As the bent of the dogs appetite is after the porrige pot or dripping pan though he stand quietly by it or the bent of the wolves appetite is after the sheep though for fear of the shepheards staff he dare not touch them so the bent of a hypocrites heart is to some sin which he will not leave though by some respects he may be restrained from it so that habitually he doth the evil which actually he forbears This is called an inclining to wickedness in the heart Psalm 66.18 A committing sin 1 John 3.8 a working of iniquity Matth. 7.23 Contrarily the upright have the habitual bent of their heart for God Psal 119.6 also v. 10. With my whole heart have I sought thee Their hearts stick to Gods testimonies v. 31. Refraining the feet from every evil way v. 101. Upright men are not so much descerned by their good actions as by this bent of heart See 2 Chron. 19.3.30.18 19. It 's called a not departing from Gods judgements v. 102. a keeping of Gods precepts v. 106. an inclining of the heart to perform Gods statutes unto the end v. 112. Isai 26.8 The desire of my soul is to thy name and to the remembrance of thee That the bent of upright hearts is for God appears in their readiness chearfulness and delight they have in doing such things as God requires So Paul Lord what wilt thou have me to do As we see a ship that hath winde and tide with it bends more and more to the haven 4 Censoriousness of other mens actions when thy self lives in gross sins When a man can see motes in another I mean sins of infirmities to which the holiest are liable and cannot see beams in himself strain at a gnat in another and swallow a Camel Matth. 23.24 So the Ruler of the Synagogue Luke 13.13 14. whom Christ therefore called hypocrite censured Christ for healing a daughter of Abraham on the Sabbath when on that same day every one of them would lead their Ass to watering The way to make themselves even with the best men is either to grow higher which their lusts will not suffer them or to pull others lower hence they censure the best men and even motes in such sins of ignorance and infirmity yea many times that which is no sin as the Pharisees taxed Christs Disciples for eating with unwashen hands when mean time their own hearts were unwasht for plucking a few ears of corn when their own houses were full of rapine Contrary upright men are most censorious against themselves 2 Sam. 24.17 These sheep what have they done let thy hand be against me and against my fathers house His subjects doubtless had much provoked God yet he had more to say against himself then against all his subjects So Nehemiah c. 1.6 7. Would we judge our selves we should have less time and more compassion to judge others 5 Partiality in obedience The hypocrite will onely do some or many things not all as Herod Mark 6.20 Jehu 2 Kings 10.28 If thou suffer thy self to be drawn to some good things not all and withdrawn from some evils not all and that for thy own credit profit or ease sake and not Gods sake onely or principally thou art a plain hypocrite Let there be one idol in our hearts of which thy heart upon deliberation will or must say thou wilt rather leave the Lord then it thou