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A85667 An exposition continued upon the sixt, seventh, eighth, ninth, tenth, eleventh, twelfth, and thirteenth chapters of the prophet Ezekiel, with useful observations thereupon. Delivered in severall lectures in London, By William Greenhill. Greenhill, William, 1591-1671. 1649 (1649) Wing G1854; Thomason E577_1; ESTC R206361 436,404 591

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and the wrath was but alittle as he cals it there because God was a Sanctuary unto them all the time and made them gratious promises at the beginning So then you may answer the question made Jer. 35. Will he reserve his anger for ever Will he keepe it to the end No God is gratious and will not alwayes be wrath VERS 18. And they shall come thither and they shall take away all the detestable things thereof and all the abominations thereof from thence GOd doth not only promise them that they shall returne to their owne Land but also tells them what they shall doe there Take away the detestable things and abominations thereof Detestable things The Septuagint renders it and so the word for abomination 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Aecol●mp spurcitias Tig. Lavat contaminationes Cast scelera Fr. Toutes ses in●ametes all things make infamous Vulgar Omnes offensiones Calvin Omnia idola And Idols are detestable things as I shewed when I opened the 5. Chap. 11. One thing I shall add and that is Shikku●ziru here rendered detestable by our Translators is the same word in Dan. 9.27.12.11 where i●s translated Abominations And Matth. 24.15 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Which some interpret of the Roman Souldiers prophaning the Temple with blood and brutish actions Others of Antichrist sitting in the Temple and worshipped as God and others of Idols brought in and set up there Abominations Flagitia Castal This word was largely opened in the 5. Chap. 9. Vers Notorious sinnes of all kinds are called in the Scripture sense Abominations things to be abhorred So Rom. 2.22 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Thou that abhorrest Idolls Idolls and Idolatries are abominable 1 Pet. 4.3 Obser 1. What the Lord promises that shall be performed he had sayd in the former Vers I will give them the Land of Israel And here he saith They shall come thither What obstructions soever may be in the way what power soever oppose yet the Lord having promised it he would make it good God is gracious in promising faithfull in keeping promise and powerfull in performing his promises You may see it made good Ezra 1.2 3. God stirred up the spirit of Cyrus to make a Proclamation for the Jewes to goe to their own Land and then he stirred up the spirits of the people to goe Vers 5. their spirits were downe they were heartlesse and hopelesse many of them but God raysed their spirits to goe up to Jerusalem the word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Evigilavit suscitavit they were asleep and God dealt with them as we with sleepy men they had their objections but God took them all away and raised their spirits above all difficulties and caused them to hasten to their Countrey and the worke he had for them God hath promised a new Jerusalem that he will dwell with men and be their God wipe away all teares from their eyes that there shal be no more death sorrow crying paine Revel 21.2 3 4. That the Nations of those are saved shall walke in the light of that City that Kings shall bring the glory and honour of the Nations into it that onely those which are written in the Lambs Book shall enter this will be a glorious time God hath promised it he is faithfull and able to performe it 2. When judgements and mercies are sanctified to a people they will produce answerable effects they had had sore judgements in Babylon for Seventy yeares and when they were brought out of that furnace into this pleasant Land which was a great deliverance when they were come thither what should they doe Take away the detestable things the abominations therein The fruit of that affliction and the deliverance out of it evidenced that their judgements and mercies were sanctified 1. They repented of their Idolatry and sinfull practises which had layd the Land wast which is supposed in the words They would never have taken away the detestable things had not their hearts been broken for them 2. They reforme when they come into the Land they take away the detestable things they are bitter against their master-sin and serve it as it served them their detestable things had taken them away out of the Land Jer. 44.22 and they fall upon the detestable things presently and take them away and what else they apprehended offended God not onely Idols did they take away but reformed also the marriage of strange Wives Ezra 10. in point of Usury Nehem. 5. and prophaning of the Sabbath Nehem. 13. 3. They shew themselves syncere in it they spare none but take away all detestable things all abominations Josh 24.14 It 's syncerity to put away false Gods and especially all of them 4. They endeavoured to worship God purely without any corruptions or mixtures of their owne They put away all detestable things all abominations they labour'd to have onely what was Divine and so what was pleasing to God They would not come to God with any impieties but in pure worship as Jacob Gen. 35.2 When he was to go up to Bethel he took all their strange Gods their earerings and what might be occasion of sinning that way and buryed them under the Oake out of sight and cleansed himselfe and Family and would serve God not with any mungrell but with pure worship so was it here when it s thus it s an argument judgments and deliverances are sanctified that mercies are well bestowed and well injoyed when corrections and mercies stirre us up to repent reforme to deale syncerely with God and to worship him purely its evident they came from Gods love and are sanctified unto us VERS 19. And I will give them one heart and I will put a new spirit within you and I will take the stony heart out of their flesh and will give them an heart of flesh IN the former Verses you heard opened sundry sweet promises of God made to his people he would be a Sanctuary to them in Babylon bring them thence to Sion purifie them from the pollutions in their owne Land all which were gracious but here he exceeds all given in before those promises concerned their outward conditions chiefly but these their inward and spirituall estate onely Some make this Verse to conteine the Covenant of grace which God made with his people Israel whom he had chosen above any people in the World but they forsook him fell to Idolatry and were now justly Captived for their sinne suffered much among their enemies and here God enters into a gracious Covenant with them and promises great things unto them In the words consider 1. The party promising I I I 2. The things promised 1. One heart 2. A new spirit 3. Taking away the stony heart 4. Heart of flesh 3. The persons to whom them 4. The manner of conveying these and it is expressed by Giving putting taking One heart The Septuagint is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 another heart They mistaking the H●brew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
bloody and bitter it were well there were no Sons of Esau in our days men bloody and bitter seeking the ruine of plaine hearted Jacobs If others by their rough speeches and dealings doe shew the hardnesse of their hearts let us by the softnesse of our tongues and bounty of our hands shew the tendernesse of our heart● Ephes 4.32 Be kind one to another tender hearted forgiving one another even as God for Christs sake hath forgiven you 8. It enterteines and reteines the motions and truths of Gods spirit a tender heart will not suffer the spirit to knock long at the doore Bereans received tke word with all readinesse of minde Acts 17.11 and then goe away grieved but it opens quickly and receives the message When the spirit came to Peter Acts 10.19 20. and bade him goe to Cornelius and Preach Christ unto him he went immediately When the Gospell was Preached to the Thessalonians in demonstration of the spirit it s sayd They received it with joy of the holy Ghost That joy of the holy Ghost may as well referre to the holy Ghost it selfe who rejoyced at their speedy receiving the word and spirit in it as to the Thessalonians who had joy wrought in them by receiving of the word 2 Cor. 3.3 the Corinthians had fleshy hearts and they are cald the Epistle of Christ and why because the spirit had writ the Gospell in them with ease Moses had much adoe to write the Law in the Tables of stone but the spirit did it easily in the fleshy Tables of their hearts those truths are written in the heart are held so fast that men will rather loose their lives then loose them Obser 1. A Tender heart is a choice and great mercy where this is the understanding is apprehensive of Divine things the Lord Christ who was without sin and so nothing but tendernesse was quick of understanding Isa 11.3 and the more free from sin our hearts are the quicker our understandings will be Mat. 13.15 Where there is a grosse and hard heart there is an un-understanding heart an unperceiving heart Mark 8.17 On the contrary where a tender heart is there is the clearest understand●ng The will is plyable to the truth of the Gospel Rom. 6 1● Yee have obeyed from the heart that forme of Doctrine which was delivered you and into which yee were delivered The conscience is awake and will not indure the guilt of any sin to lye upon it Peter had sin'd but he goes out and weepes bitterly The affections are lively and stir much towards God David had a tender heart and how strongly did his affections stir after God Psal 42.1.2 As the heart panteth after the water brooks so panteth my soule after thee O God my soule thirsteth for God for the living God when shall I come and appeare before God Psa 63.8 My soule followeth hard after thee and the zeale of thy house c. It s that the Lord intends to write his whol will in Jer. 31.33 I will put my Law in their inward parts and write it in their hearts first he will make them soft and then write in the Law and Gospell It receives discipline correction Jer. 5 3. Thou hast stricken them but they have refused to receive correction they have made their faces harder c. An hard heart doth not receive correction but a tender one doth 2. It is the gift of God he gives this tender heart unto us we can harden our hearts through sining but we cannot soften them being once hardned by any meanes we use Tendernesse of heart is a speciall grace so i● onenesse of heart newnesse of spirit and all these are from God who is stiled The God of all grace 1 Pet. 5.10 There is not any grace but what is from God he is the author of it In this case of an heart of flesh he puts his hand into the heart and pulls out the stone and puts in tendernesse He that can turne stones into children Mat. 3.9 is he that turnes stony hearts into flesh and this he doth freely there is no motive of his will Phil. 2.13 His working is of his good pleasure James 1.18 Of his owne will begat he us Not the pleasure of man or his will appeares in this worke God consults not with man about it but doth the work himself I will take away the stone c. It is exclusive and shuts out all Isa 44.3 I will poure floods upon dry ground hence those sweet promises Isa 41.18 I will open Rivers in high places and Fountaines in the mid'dst of the Valeys I will make the Wild●rnesse a poole of water and the dry Land springs of water I will plant in the windernesse the Cedar the shittah trees the mertle and the oyle tree I will set in the desart the firre tree the pine and the boxe tree together that they may see know consider understand together that the hand of the Lord hath done this and the holy one of Israel hath created it God softens the heart by dropping his word upon it Deut. 32.2 My doctrine shall drop at the raine c. By the blood of Christ by revealing his free grace c. VERS 20. That they may walke in my statutes and keepe mine Ordinances and doe them and they shall be my people and I will be their God c. HEre is the end of Gods grace and goodnesse towards them with an asserting of such to be his and his promise to be their God Obser God multiplies mercies when he is in a way of mercy when he is giving out promises he gives not one or two but many Jer. 31.33.34 There is an heape of promises so in Ezek. 36.25.26.27.28.29 There be eight or nine promises together Hos 14.4.5.6.7 Promise after promise is given out Isa 60. Is full of sweet promises one after another This is a sweet Subject to meditate upon but I come to open the words That they may walke Walking here is metaphoricall taken from the motion of the body moving by steps from place to place and is applyed to the conversation and life of man in a spirituall sense and imports progresse in the way of God Psal 119.1 In my statutes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Hebrew word Chukkim notes rites pertaining to the Ceremoniall Law cald also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and not onely ●o but Chukkim includes the whole Ceremoniall Law the Seaventie doe sometimes translate it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Commandement which Mitzuoth properly signifies containing the Morrall Law or Tenne Commandements and not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but Deut. 4.40 They render Mitzuoth by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and Chukkim by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ephes 2.15 Paul calls Chukkim 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Law of Commandements in Ordinances Mine Ordinances 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mishphatim 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Judgements these some refer to the outwa●d policie of Israel their civill estate but statutes and
2 Cor. 13.11 Rom. 12.16 Chap 15.5 And the Text saith Acts 4.32 That the Beleevers were of one heart and one soule they were so united that the Heathens were affected with their union and said ordinarily of the Christians Tertul. in Apol. Vide ut se diligant ut alter pro altero mori sunt parati There were many bodies not many soules nor many hearts amongst them There have been great differences and contentions amongst the Worthies of God Paul with Peter and Barnabas Basil with Eusebius Chrysostome with Epiphanius and Jerome with Ruffinus But their differences have been rather in judgement then affection Incolumi amicitia and differences there may be without breach of friendship Paul differed in judgement from the Jewes and other men yet he became all things to all he was wonderfull loving to all or if the difference came to their wills and affections yet it provoked to love rather then abated love 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pro salute animarum Heb. 10 24. Neither did they differ in the great things of Religion and had they yet there might have been harmony in their affections and practice The Thomists and Scotists the Dominicans and Jesuites have their controversies and differences so the Churches of Spaine and Italie have a great Controversie with those of France about the infallible judgement in matters of Faith The Italians and Spaniards affirme the Pope is that judge the French deny it and look upon him as lyable to errour with other men and subject to Schisme Heresie and Deposure by a generall Councell and yet they hold together in brotherly love and communion Obser 1 Mens hearts of themselves are divided multiplyed not one physically men have but one heart morally they have many according to the mumber of their lusts in the number of their hearts men have proud hearts froward hearts uncleane hearts covetous hearts malicious hearts bloody hearts c. Pliny saith L. 11.37 the Partridges of Paphlagonia have d●uble hearts and men have double and treble hearts Psal 12.2 With a double heart doe they speake Hebrew it with an heart and an heart they had diversity of hearts When the heart is separated from God it falls upon the Creatures and multiplies according to the objects it affects so that no man in his naturall condition taken in a morall consideration can have one heart but many hearts his heart is divided and as he hath no agreement with God so no●e with man or himselfe 2. Onenesse of heart is a great blessing it s the fruit of the Covenant of grace it s the first blessing here mentioned it s joyned with other great blessings I will shew you the good of it in some particulars 1. One heartednesse in Christians rej●yceth the spirit of Christ which is a spirit of love peace union and is grieved with what is opposite to them therefore Ephes 4.30 31. saith the Apostle Grieve not the spirit of God And how should that be p●evented Let all bitternesse and wrath and anger clamour and evill speaking be put away from you with all malice Where these be there are divisions and the spirit is grieved where these are not there is one heartednesse and that rejoyceth the spirit Spiritus res delicata where tender hearts are little breaches offend them Isa 63.18 They rebelled and vexed his holy spirit 2. It greatly sweetens and contents the heart of man when the will affections judgement and conscience are friendly and united the right way When anothers heart ●s as his owne Jonathan David had one soule its heaven in the soule Rom. 14.17 The Kingdome of Heaven is righteousnes peace and joy And Luke 17.21 The Kingdome of God is within you When the heart is divided then appear stormes and troubles in the soule When Christians are at variance divided and not united in their judgements affections and practice they have not that heavenly sweetnesse in them which otherwise they would have James 3 16. Where envy and strife is there is confusion 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unquietnesse unheavenlinesse 3. It makes the Communion one w●th another delightfull acceptable Psal 133.1 Behold how good and how pleasant it is for Brethren to dwell together in unity Where there is union of hearts there is sweet communion when the union is strongest the communion is sweetest as in the sacred Trinity Acts 4.32 The Beleevers were of one heart and of one soule And Chap. 2.42 They continued stedfastly in the Apostles Doctrine and fellowship and breaking of bread and prayers Communion of those are one hearted is a Box of precious and sweet oyntment without Flyes 4. It prevents all the evill comes by divisions and contentions which are great and many I will name some few 1. Much time is lost where contentions are in janglings brawlings and bitter expressions we have wofull experience of it in these dayes both in mens preaching printing reading conversing and disputings Time is pretious and the Apostle bids us redeeme the time Ephes 5.16 Where one heartednesse is there is prevention of this great losse Acts 2.46.47 The Christians there Continued dayly with one accord in the Temple praysing God 2. Where divisions are there is seeking the disgrace damage if not the ruine of one another there is plotting and practising to root out each other Scribes Pharises high Preists did not onely disgrace Christ and damage him severall wayes but were restlesse till they had his blood Gal. 5.15 Where strife is there is biteing and devouring one another But one-heartednesse prevents all these things it never disgraceth damnifieth or destroyeth any 1 Cor. 13. It s full of love and is kind not envying it doth not unseemly it thinketh no evill but beareth all things 3. They weaken much and hinder the doeing of much good therefore it s the pollicie of Satan and his instruments to make divisions in Kingdomes Armies Councells Citties families that so the good intended may not be accomplished When hearts and heads are divided hands are weakned and the good can never be done in a contentious way which may be done in a peaceable and loving way When men are divided their counsells their motions are oft destructive one to another When a great River is divided into many Channels her waters cannot carry such great vessels as before nor be so serviceable Where union is there is strength this made Antisthenes say Fratrum inter se concordiam quovis mur● firmius esse munimentum Agesilaus being asked why Lacedemon had no walls answered pointing at the Ctizens who were unanimous and one hearted Hi sunt Spartae maenia intimating that the agreement of Citizens is the greatest strength to a City And In Apoptheg regum Vulg. Prov. 18.19 Reads it thus Frater qui ad juvatur a fraire quasi civitas firma Plut tells of old Scylurus who had 80 Sonnes and he on his death bed gave them a bundle of Arrowes and bad them break them c. If you
of another nature Prov. 12 18. The tongue of the wise is health others tongues are like the peircings of a Sword they wound but the spirituall wise they heale wounds make up breaches they pacifie wrath even the wrath of great ones Prov. 16.14 Men thinke themselves wise in these dayes but what is the wisedome of most is it not such James speaks of Earthly sensuall devilish because it s joyned with Bitternesse envying strife see James 3.14.15 And then he tells you the nature of spirituall Wisedome vers 17. That is from abov● first pure then peaceable gentle and easie to be intreated full of mercie and good fruits without partiality and hypocricy There is nothing in it but what tends to onenesse of heart its Pure there is no mixture of fleshly wisedome in it its Peaceable ave●se from contention studious of peace Gentle and easie to be intreated not harsh and selfe willed but pl●able to that is good Full of mercie and good fruits It s ready to helpe and doe for others in their necessities Without partiallity 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without wrangling judgeing Without hypocrisie its reall in what it doth 5. Humilitie where that is it drawes the heart of God to it Isa 57.15 God dwells with the humble spirit and surely it will gaine the hearts of men to it Prov. 29.23 A mans pride will bring him low Mat. 18.4 The humblest man is the greatest in the Kingdome of Heaven it will make God and man against him But honour shall uphold the humble in spirit both God and man will support speake well of do good to and close with him its pride onely cheifly that makes contentions Prov. 13 10. Mens lusts lift them up divide themselves and cause divisions among'st others therefore James 4.1 From whence come Warrs and fightings amongst you Come they not hence even of your lusts that war in your members Proud men have many lusts and much war and when they agree not with themselves how can they agree with others we should therefore purifie our hearts from such lusts Vers 8.10 and humble our selves in the sight of the Lord and then our hearts would close better It s mens proud lusts that dissolve union that make Warre and breed confusion blind mens eyes and ingage them in errours but the humble man that hath had his heart broken and hath let them out he is readyest to unite with others he stands not upon his will his credit he hath low thoughts of himselfe and high of others Hence Paul bids the Collossians put on bamblenesse of minde Chap. 3.12 1 Pet. 5.5 Peter bids them Be cloathed with humility that is the most becoming garment and least offensive of any The man walks with that garment on will not wrong any man in thought word or deed he judges not others but himselfe he beares the burden and infirmities of men and so gaines upon and gets interest in the hearts of others 6. Consider we are brethren cald and pres'd unto peace and mu●uall agreement in the Gospell Moses thought the name brethren sufficient to reconcile the t●o strugling Hebrews Acts 7.26 Sirs ye are Brethren what your harts heads and hands divided thinke how neare you are and how dear you should be one to another The word brethren should draw our hearts together and make us desirous of peace 1 Tim 6.1.2 Servants must not despise their Masters but count them worthy of all Honour because they are brethren And we should not desp●se and contend one with another because we are brethren indued with divine nature and brethren of Christ Heb. 2.12 The Prince of peace Isa 9.6 Partakers of the Gospell of peace Ephes 6.15 And are cal'd of God to peace 1 Cor. 7.15 Col. 3 1● And its peace that we are prest unto Rom. 14.19 Let us follow after the things that make for peace 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Tim. 2 2● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 12.14 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We sh●uld p●rsue peace with all men but especially with those are our brethren in Christ they make up the body of Christ in which the spirit of Christ lives therefore Ephes 4.3 Paul cou●sells them to K●●pe the unitie of the Spirit in the bond of peace the Spirit hath united men to Christ and its peace is the bond whic● keep●s the Spirit ●mo●g them When the Corinthians brake the bond of pea●e saying I am of Paul c. the Apostle told them they we●e carnall not spirituall Chap. 3.1 There should be no strife among Brethren but this Viz. Who should be most loving and peaceable Preservatives of One heartednesse 1. Looke much at the gifts graces and excellencies be in others not their weaknesses and imperfections let the b●ight side of the cloud be in your eyes not the black side and this will k●epe your hearts united Peter eyed the like pretious faith which was in the Christians with his and other Apostles 2 Pet. 1.1 And John takes speciall notice of the graces were in the Fathers young men little children in the elect Lady and Gaius and that kept his heart united to them when mens persons parts or graces are slighted it breaks the bond of peace divides hearts and spirits The Apostle bids us honour all men 1 Pet. 2.17 Esteeme them if their be any worth in them take notice of it and honour them answerablie if there be great sins and weaknesses in th●m are they greater then thine owne If they be or be not greive for them be not angry with them 2. Lay aside all provoking dividing names tearmes and speeches Those names of Petrians Paulians Johanites in the primitive times did hurt which Epiphanius observing would not give way that there should be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 any name added to the Christian name Those names of Lutheran Swinglian Calvinist bred divisions among the Protestants and surely discriminating names have made divided hearts among us so reproaching and bitter words have kindled a fire which might be put out if all men had such spirits as Calvin had who profest if Luther should call him Devill yet would he have a reveren'd esteeme of him and acknowledge him a worthy Servant of the Lords If we would have our hearts kept in a firme union we must use soft tongues and gentle words Prov. 15.1.12.25 3. Ever make the best construction of mens words and actions that will preserve peace and onenesse of heart when other interpretations are put upon the words and actions of men then were intended this sowes the seed oft times of bitter contentions and great evills John 2.19.20 with Mat. 26.61 Christ speakes there of the Temple of his Body the Jewes interpret it of the Temple that was 46. Yeares a building and bring it in against Christ as matter worthy of death If we shall force the words or acts of others and fetch senses intentions out of them which the Authors aim●d not at we shall never maintaine peace with any 4.
confiscations proscriptions and other most grievous punishments yet would not this good Emperour either force or punish the Arrians though he deadly hated them but granted unto both the Arrians and other the Catholicks their Churches and suffered them in every Towne to have two B●shops of either Religion one and though at the importunate suit of the Catholick Bishops he commanded certaine Edicts to be published against the Arrians yet he was contented to have the same held in suspense and not to be put in execution as his Letters to Ambrose declare Trade Arrianis Basilicam mei namque sunt omnia juris Theodorick King of the Goths though favouring the Arrians would not yet inforce the consciences of his Subjects nor have them tormented for their Religion lest under the pretence of impiety he should have seemed to have taken the spoyle of their goods to bend their minds which could by no threats or commands be constained to bend for thus he writes unto the Senate of Rome Religionem imperare non possumus quia nemo cogitur ut credat invitus He saith also No man is to be forced the private exercise of his Religion is to be yeilded if it cannot be publickly professed without Sedition otherwise men will become Atheists and so having lost the feare of God and trod under foot Lawes and Magistrates wil practice all impieties and villanies Mr. Forbes being sent for to the King of Sweden when he was victorious and asked by him what Government he should set over Lutherans Calvinists Papists whom he had Conquered his answer was You have Conquered their bodies with ease but you will find it a hard worke to conquer mens judgements and consciences What ill effects the forcing of mens spirits brought forth you may read in that learned and judicious Treatise of Sir Simon D' Ewes intituled The Primitive practice for preserving Truth You know who sayd it in things of the mind we look for no compulsion bu● that of light and reason He is not a loving Father but rather a step-Father who will compell his Children to eate of that meat is against their stomacks when there are variety of dishes to feed upon which are suitable to them Wise Physitians perswade doe not force their Patients to take Physick It s good to cure errours be in mens minds The conscience is not obstinate which useth meanes to know truth If God hide it from it liveth under the power of conscience and is not turbulēt and to save their soules but in Gods way James 5.19 by conversion not by compulsion by the power of the Word not the edge of the Sword this makes Hypocrites that Saints These things I speak not to make way for licentiousnesse that what ever opinions me● hold think say or practice they may be free but meerly that consciences truely tender may not be forced It s one thing to restraine mens practices which are Idolatrous blasphemous against pure worship the power of god inesse and peace of the State another to force men to that their judgement and consciences are against I pleaded not ever for a Toleration of all neither doe but onely that those whose lives are holy peaceable and differ in judgement from others in some things may not be forced to conforme or depart Ezek. 11.19 I will put a new Spirit within you The word Spirit notes sometimes the Soul Acts 7.59 saith Stephen Lord Jesus receive my Spirit 2 Cor. 7.1 Let us cleanse our selves from all filthinesse of flesh and spirit Sometimes for the heart and affections 1 K. 21.5 Why is thy Spirit so sad said Jezabel to Ahab that is why is thy heart so heavy Acts. 17.16 Paul his Spirit was stird within him when he saw their Idolatrie his affections mov'd him to speake and dispute with them Sometimes for the faculties of the soule Viz. Vnderstanding will and conscience 1 Thes 5.23 I pray God your whole Spirit and Soule and body be preserved blamelesse By whole spirit the understanding will and conscience may be meant Pro. 18.14 A wounded Spirit who can beare that is a wounded conscience Sometimes for the gifts and graces of the spirit Gal. 3.2 Received yee the Spirit by the workes of the Law or by the hearing of faith New Is in Scripture sometime that wich is totally new for matter Deut. 20.5 A new H●use Judges 15.13 New wayes 1 Sam. 6.7 A new cart 1 K. 11.29 A new Garment Sometimes for that is renewed 2 Chron. 20.5 Jehoshaphat stood before the new Court that is judged to be the Preists Court renewed in its building or use after some publique prophanation so it s cal'd a new Shipp or Garment that are altred and chang'd Sometime for that is excellent and admirable Mar. 1.27 What new Doctrine is this its admirable and excellent doctrine so the New Name Rev 2.17 Chap. 3.12 That is an excellent and admirable name Sometimes for that is diverse from what it was before especially in regard of q●alities Mar. 16.17 They shall speake with new tongues which Acts. 2.4 are cal'd other tongues tongues which had other gifts and graces in them By new Spirit here is not meant a new Soul or faculties for substance or the inward forme of it but the same soule altered in the frame renewed in the qualities thereof it hath other excellent qualities in it which it had not before even the gifts and graces of the spirit hence it s call'd the new birth or birth of the spirit John 3.6 The new man Ephes 4.24 The new creature Gal. 6.15 Not onely faith and love mentioned Gal. 5.6 But all divine qualities man is capable of are included in this new spirit 1. The understanding is enlightned with divine light which it had not before Acts 26.18 To open the eyes and to turne them from darknesse to light The Gentiles were blind before God gave them this new spirit which brought new lights unto their mindes Ephes 4.18 Having the understanding darkned beeing alienated from the life of God through the ignorance that is in them because of the blindnesse of their hearts but when they had put on the new man vers 24. in the next Chap. vers 8. Paul saith of them Yee were sometimes darknesse but now are light in the Lord the Lord by his spirit had brought in marvailous light into their understandings and scattered their darknesses this Paul calls Gods shining into the heart 2 Cor. 4.6 John Christs giving an understanding 1 John 5.20 and Luke an opening of the understanding Luke 24.45 all which phrases as they suppose oldnesse of dark●esse so a renewing of the understanding with newnesse of light and this light is the light of life John 8.12 brought into the soule by the spirit of wisedome and revelation Ephes 1.17 18. 2. This new spirit hath influence into the will and alters that which in it selfe is corrupt and carryeth the soule the wrong way John 1.13 Will of the flesh is put for the whole
him and threaten him with death 4. A stone hath a strong tendency downwarde Exod. 15.5 They sank into the bottom as a stone stons hasten downward to the bottome and they move not upwards at all if by force you throw a stone upwards it falls downe againe with swiftnesse such is the nature of a stony heart it moves not God or Christ-ward but sin and Hell-ward that is the proper motion of it being weighty and cannot but move downward Prov. 7.27 speaking of the Adultresse whose heart is hardened in wickednesse he saith Her house is the way to Hell going downe to the chambers of death Ephes 4.19 Being past feeling Prov. 2.18 they worke all uncleannesse with greedinesse There is a strong inclination to and greedinesse of committing sin and every sin is a step to Hell Prov. 2.18 Her house inclineth unto death and her pathes into the dead Ezek. 3.7 It s sayd All the house of Israel are impudent and hard hearted And Ezek. 6.9 Their heart is sayd to be whorish and why whorish because it leads to death and Hel as the whorish womans house doth A stony heart is an earthly heart and so an enemy to the Crosse of Christ Phil. 3.18 19. That is That is to all of Christ it looks not upwards Obj. It s sayd a stony heart is not yeildable teachable receives not impression of any thing did not the stony ground receive the Word Matth 13.20 If so how is it true which hath beene affirmed Answ 1. It s sayd by Matthew The seed fell upon stony places Chap. 13.5 and upon a rocke Luke 8.6 it fell not into the stones or into the rock but some fell not onely on the good ground as Luke hath it but into the good ground as Matthew relates it Chap. 13.8 2. There is a double reception of the word First a superficiall and secondly a solid reception of the word which the place holds ou● for that seed which fell into stony p●aces lacked moysture saith Luke had no deepness● no root saith Matthew It affected the naturall fleshinesse of the heart but the spirituall hardnesse in it suffered it not to root to enter abide the novelty and rationalnesse of the word caused them to rejoyce but the spiritualnesse of it was opposed by thei● stony hearts Secondly the solid reception is when there is a deep impression made upon the heart a thorow entrance into it so that it roots abides and brings forth fruit James 1.21 He calls it The ingrafted Word now it cannot be ingrafted into a stony stock there is no life no tendernesse in such a stock it may be propounded to such a heart it cannot enter unite and grow Out of their flesh Flesh is sometimes put for corruption or corrupt nature Rom. 7.18 In my flesh dwelleth no good thing so it s not taken here sometimes for the body of man Psal 38 3. There is no soundnesse in my flesh that is in my body sometimes for the whole man Rom. 3.20 By the Law shall no flesh be justified in his sight and so in Luke 3.6 All flesh shall see the Salvation of God and thus it s taken here out of their flesh it s out of them out of the whole man Obser 1 Mens hearts naturally are stony hard Some diseases are hereditarie even the stone in many persons this stoninesse is so in all not a man borne but hath a stony heart a stony spirit Ezek. 3.7 All the House of Israel are hard hearted young and old There is a naturall hardnesse of the heart and a contracted Originall sin Neh. 9.16 They dealt proudly and hardned their necks Heb. 3.13 Lest any of you bee hardned through the deceitfulnesse of sin which is common to all and comee with all makes the heart hard and actuall sins make the heart stony very hard every sin contracts more stonynes and where sin abounds there stonynesse abounds hence the Scripture speakes of hearts like Adamants Zech. 7.12 They have made their hearts as an Adamant by their sins they have brought their hearts to such a high degree of stoninesse Isa 48.4 I knew that thou art obstinate and thy neck an Iron sinew and thy brow brasse Which sets out the great hardnesse they had contracted by their sin is their any thing harder then stone Iron and brasse unto these are their hardned hearts necks and browes compared The spirituall hardnesse spreads it selfe into the understanding Rom. 11.7 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the rest were blinded blindnesse respects the minde the understanding and its such a blinding as hardens 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Est callosa durities a brawnie hardnesse their ignorance and unbeleife blinded and hardned them In the night we have the hardest frosts c. Hebrewes 5.11 The Apostle tells the Hebrewes they were dull of hearing they had beene long taught yet scarcely understood the principles of Religion Luke 24.25 O fooles and slowe of heart to beleive 2. Into the will and affection saith Christ you will not come to me that you may have life John 5.40 There was a stone stubbornenesse and obstinacy in their wills Did not Christ Preach powerfully spiritually did he not command threaten promise present strong arguments tender the greatest mercies beare with the greatest patience weepe over Jerusalem with the most patheticall and sacred tears saying most compassionately O Jerusalem Jerusalem yet Jerusalem would not Doe not the Ministers of Christ now beseech you in his stead to leave your sinfull courses and to come in yet c 3. Into the conscience Paul tells you of consciences seared with a hot Iron 1 Tim. 4.2 When any part of the body is seared with a hot Iron it growes hard and feeles nothing such were the consciences of men then and are now they are so brawny and stony that tell them of danger judgements death Hell eternall damnation that their sins are great grievous subjecting them every moment to all the vengeance of an infinite Deity they are not troubled at it tell them that all the curses in Gods Book due to sinners will come upon them their hearts faile them not their consciences are still c. Now this stoninesse of heart is a great evill its unthankfull what mercies soever it hath given in insensible of all spirituall good its unyeildable to any Ordinance it resists the truth Cor lapid eum adversus Deum omnino inflexibile est Aug. and spirit of truth Acts 7.51 Yee stiffe necked nad uncircumcised in heart and eares yee doe alwayes resist the holy Ghost as your Fathers did so doe yee It s contradicting and contending against the Lord his wayes its tending swiftly to destruction for its impenitent it neither will nor can repent Obser 2 It s the Lord that takes away the stony heart out of men I will doe it it s not in the power of man to remove the stone out of the heart he may get the stone out of the kidneys out of the Bladder but not
Law but by the Preaching of Faith Gal. 3.2 and that spirit made their hearts tender When Job was in his great afflictions they softened not his heart but he sayth God made soft his heart Job 23.16 that was by his spirit Easily admitting or receiving this is the formall intrinsicall nature of this tendernesse that its like Wax taking in impressions the stony heart yeilds not but resists this resists not but yeilds like Gideons Fleece it drunke in the dew as fast as it fell Judges 6. Like the soft earth which drinkes in the raine not like the Rocks and Mountaines which shoot it off Heb. 6.7 Hence sayth Moses Deut 33.3 speaking of Saints who have tender hearts and sit at Gods feet Every one shall receive of thy words And Paul speaking of a naturall man 1 Cor. 2.14 he sayth The naturall man receives not the things of the spirit his heart is stony not tender and so without a capacity of receiving what ever spirituall things are propounded its ready to say as Samuel Speake for thy servant heareth 1 Sam. 3.10 Let God or any from God offer any spirituall things unto a tender heart its ready to receive them Acts 9.6 sayth Saul Lord what wilt thou have me to doe propound what thou pleasest unto me Discoveries of this tendernesse 1. It s affected with and mournes for that hardnesse remaines in it that it is not more tender and wrought upon by the mercies Ordinances judgements of God David was sensible of his hardnesse and deadnesse and therefore cryes oft to God for quickning Psal 119.154 Quicken me according to thy word 156. Quicken me according to thy judgements 159. Quicken me according to thy loving kindnesse 2. It feeles the least sins and rysings of corruptio● as some bodies are so tender that they discerne any distempers stirre in them presently others are hardy and discerne little till it come to some dangerous disease It s not so here a heart spiritually tender is sensible of the least sinne Davids heart smote him for cutting off c. the least moat in the eye crumme in the windpipe are troublesome to them and so the rysing of corruption the very being of sin in the heart is troublesome to a tender heart Paul saw and felt the Law in his members warring against c. 3. It hearkens and yeilds to reproofes Salt will not enter into a stone but into flesh seasons it and makes it savory Reproofes are Salt they enter into fleshy and tender hearts Prov. 17.10 A reproofe entereth more into a wise man then an hundred stripes into a foole Vatablus hath it Descendit in cordatum increpatio his heart is tender and a reproofe presently makes impression the doore opens and it goes in whereas the heart of a foole will not be beat open with many stripes Nec credit nec cedit but the tender hearted wise and godly beleeve and yeild David Psal 141.5 Let the righteous smite me it shall be a kindnesse and let him reprove me it shall be an excellent oyle Reproofes soften tender hearts harden stony ones Proverbs 29.1 4. It hath a lively sense of Gods dishonour and the Saints wrong 1. Of Gods dishonour Psal 119.136 Rivers of water run downe mine eyes because they keepe not thy Law When David saw Gods worship corrupted heard his name blasphemed beheld his Law openly violated his tender heart bled with●n him melted into teares and wept abundantly that the infinite holy glorious great God should be so dishonoured by sinfull dust and ashes And Psal 69.9 The reproaches of them that reproached thee are fallen upon me David reproved men that reproached God by their lips and lives and they reproached him for it Lots righteous soule was vexed at the filthy c. 2 Pet. 2.7 2. The Saints wrong and Churches suffering 2 Cor. 11.29 Who is offended and I burne not When any member of the Church suffered Paul was afflicted grieved as a man burnt with fire and the more tender the flesh is the greater is the paine and so in the heart the tenderer that is the greater sense and paine hath it of others sufferings especially the Churches read the 79. and 80. Psalmes and you shall see how greatly Asaph was afflicted for the miseries of the Church the Saints suffered m●ch without and he suffered much within they were broken in their states and comforts and he was broken in his heart and spirit so Jer. 9.1 O that my head were waters and mine eyes a fountaine of teares that I might weep day and night for the slaine of the daughter of my people Acts 12.5 When Peter c. As Christ was tender of the Sain s when persecuted by Saul Acts 9. So every member of Christ participating of his tendernesse feeles in his degree the injuries done to the rest 5. It trembles at the word of God Isa 66.2 Contrition of spirit and trembling at the word doe goe together there is such Majestie authoritie holynesse severitie and glory in the word that a tender heart trembleth at it 2 Chron. 34.27 Josiahs heart was tender he trembled and humbled himselfe before the Lord when the Law was read before him And those in Ezra trembled at the words of the God of Israel Chap. 9.4 6. It s obedient unto the call and will of God its Cor ●equax morem gerens domino let the Lord call it saith here I am what wilt thou have me to doe whether shall I goe I am ready for it Abraham had a tender heart and when God cal'd for his Isaac and bad him goe and offer him upon mount Moriah Gen 22. he had a tractable heart he yeilded presently to the Lord without any dispute or delay a tender heart is an obedientiall heart J siah was tender he●rted and he did the will of God most throughly of any of the Kings of Judah none of them did reforme so as he did 2 Chron 35.18 David was a man of a tender spirit and he fullfil●'d all the wills of God Acts 13.22 7. It s tender towards o he●s a tender heart hath a tender tongue and a tender hand the man hath such an heart speaks evill of none doth harme to none such an one is mercifull to his Beast much more to men he pities those are in a perishing way and would pull them out of the fire ahe Law of kindnesse is in his lips and actions of love are in his hands Jobs heart was soft Job 23.16 and you may finde what his words and actions were Chap. 29 11 12 13 15 16. When the eare heard me then it blessed me he spake such comfortable words to them gave them such good counsell that they blessed him for it and his actions were delivering the poor and fatherlesse helping the blind and lame and making the Widowes heart to rejoyce Tendernesse of heart breeds tendernesse towards others Its sayd of Esau he was red all over like a hairy Garment Gen. 25.25 hee was red and rough
provoke God greatly 354 355 D Dayes of trouble 45 Death some comfort to die in a mans own Countrey 352 353 Decree no devices can frustrate Gods purpose 341 Degenerate Those doe so goe on to an height of sinning 271 Delay delays make God angry 156 Desart what it notes 519 Desertion a forerunner of judgements 224. God unwilling to leave a people 226. 323. 469. When God leaves comforts leave 323. 470. Men are to take notice of Gods departure 324 God may leave a people 469 Designe those are upon great designes should begin with God 218 219 Device devising mischief what it means 332. men never wanting to devise mischief 337 338. no devices can null Gods counsell 341 D●blath 29 Difficult things difficult easie to God 393 Displeasure of God very grievous 537 538 Divination 498 499 Division is Abaddon Apollyon 225. the evills of division 407 408. prejudices the growth of grace 409. a disparagement to Christ 410. glories at others sufferings 411 Doing they doe not what they know shall not know what to doe 126. what it implies 454. it evidences the man 455 Dove a fearfull and mourning creature 68 E Eares eares to heare and heare not how meant 475. wicked men heare not judgements 476 Earth the Lord hath forsaken the earth the phrase in this Prophet onely and but twice 266 Eating and drinking with trembling what it sets forth 488 Enemie T is dreadfull to have God against one 536. whom God is against his hand is upon 537. the fruits of it very grievous 537 538 Errour loves darknesse 167. when God visits for error he opens a doore for truth 211 Estates abused bring the wrath of God upon them 112. how to prevent it ibid. Example Princes not to be patterns in point of Religion 176. Ringleaders to sin ringleaders in punishment 251 252 Excellencie Good men not able to beare divine excellencies 282 Eyes instruments of evill 15. of great evill 21. The eye is for two things 238. Eye not sparing what 244. 273. Eye of the Lord upon his people 392. Eyes to see and see not how meant 475. wicked men see not Gods judgements 476. their not seeing is in hemselves ibid. Ezra what that name signifies 389 F Face of God what it signifies 98. they are miserable from whom it s turn'd 99 100. covering of the face when used 478 479. to set the face against any one in Scripture sense what 554 Faith the eye of the soule 153 Falling on the face what 256 Feare what sinners feare the Lord brings upon them 250 251. Feare makes men tremble 488 Feeblenesse threefold 70 Fire Christ likend to it 142 Firmament why so call'd 278 Flattering originally is smoothing 500. undoes men 502. causes security 503 Flesh what it is put for 442 Free-will Two Questions about free-will resolved 436 437 G Gate Magistrates were wont to sit at the gate to heare causes 330 Gathering what it meanes 387 Gilgal observable things of it 191 Glory glory of God what is understood by it 222. 467. his glory went to the threshold and why 223. the signes of Gods presence are the glory of God 224 Divine glory usually hidden in cloudy darknesse 291. the glory of the Lord who 292. the way Christ goes glorious 293. glory of God standing upon the mountaine how meant and to what end 468 469. sight of Gods glory a great priviledge 153 God shews mercy sometimes when severe judgements are deserved 18. if God be wrath all preparations are in vaine 63. God a God of glory 152 153. sees what ever are the thoughts 167. there is power in his commands 210 211. his presence with his Church 223 224. Signes of his presence 224 225. God hath a care of his when judgements destroy others 232 237. how this appeares 233. slow to execute judgement 282. lookes after the wayes of men 285. why stiled the God of Israel 325. God knowes men and their wayes 336. overpowers all 341. knoweth the heart 347. is mindfull of his threats 384. assists us by his grace 456. I will be their God it imports much 459. to 462. God is above all God against one vid. enemie 468 Godly but a few 232. God owns them in the worst times 235. the lives and comforts of the godly deare to God 51 conscious of their unworthinesse 260. God sollicitous for them 275. revives them ibid. secures them 276. is with them in every place and condition 392 393. the godly comply not but sigh for the wickednesse of the times 236 237. their sighing what and how great 237 238. why they sigh 238. God takes notice of their wrongs 372 Grace is free in respect of persons place and time 17. Grace wrought up by degrees 419. Grace in the heart will appeare in the life 456. where God gives grace be lookes for progress 457. tis freegrace that chuses a people 463. God does not equally dispence his grace ibid. Guilt when guilt is there is feare 350 and security 373 H Haggalgal of that word 313 Hand stretching out the hand to and upon a people differ 30. God smites sinning hands 131. hand of God what it notes 531 Happiness wherein it consists 462 Head recompensing their wayes upon their own head what 272 Hearing the same things againe no dammage 320 Heart such as that is such will the senses be 22. Ill thoughts goe out thence 245. its severall acceptions 399. oneness of heart what opposite unto 400 401. mens hearts of themselves are divided 406. Stoninesse of heart what 438. and what it notes 438. to 441. a stony heart may receive the Word and how 441 442. the heart naturally is stony ibid. this stoninesse spreads 442 443. stoninesse a great evill 443. its the Lord takes away the stony heart 443 444. not totally 444. the stoninesse in the godly and the wicked differenced 445. fleshly heart what it implyes 446. a double tendernesse ibid. a description of it ibid. discoveries of tendernesse 447. to 450 tendernesse of heart a choice mercy 450 451. t is the gift of God 451. heart for what t is sometimes put 464. the heart of the godly and wicked contrary 466. God observes how the heart stands affected ibid. a corrupt heart swells being opposed 494. is prone to elude truths 507 Heathens how they honour'd their Gods 178 Hebruismes 32 Hedge what the bedge of Church and State is 522 Helpe God can make helps helpless 486 High places when they might sacrifice there when not 4 Holy men must be lift up and above themselves to participate of divine things 148 Honour they that honour God God will honour them 235 236. to honour God how 236. honour quickly laid in the dust 362 Hope God oft destroys sinners hopes 59 60 Humilitie the humblest is the greatest 414 House meeting in houses antient and warrantable 138. honour'd by God 139 I Jaazaniah what that name signifies 163 Jarash signifies contraries 108 Idolls are stinking defiling things 6 Idolatry got in is not easily got out 8
preserved they being under heavy pressures from God and man yet they are brought to know God to loath themselves and their former wayes these were times wherein they had no sacrificing little or no helpe for their soules but lay in darknesse and notwithstanding all this God shewed mercy neither their sinnes nor the sinnes of the place both which were great nor the time of wrath they were under for so it s cal'd Isa 54.8 could obstruct the free grace of God but some he spares some he touches with the lively sense of their sins and puts into a state of grace in the midst of enemies of sins of judgements God could shew mercy in Babylon as well as Zyon let the holy Land holy City holy Temple holy Altar holy Sacrifices and all the holy things be layd waste and persons be brought to the greatest improbabilities of finding mercy be as great sinners as any living as these were and in Babylon yet God is free can will doth shew mercy even to such in such a place and at such a time when his wrath is powring out Manasseh was a great sinner a Murtherer an Idolater a Sorcerer carryed into Babylon and in the eye of all in a hopelesse condition yet there God visits him his spirit breaths and blows upon him 2 Chron. 33.11 12 13. he humbles his soule greatly prayes effectually is returned to Jerusalem and knowes the God of his Fathers Nothing could keep off God from shewing mercy God tooke Abraham the Father of the Faithfull from Vr of Chaldaea he found favour among Idolaters and God shewed mercy to his Posterity Gen. 6. Acts 2. even in that Land When all flesh had corrupted its wayes yet mercy was showne to Noah Yea those put Christ to death had their hearts pricked To the Gentiles that had lived in abominable Idolatries God granted repentance unto life Acts 11.18 There is nothing in man in any place or time that can impede God from shewing mercy that is an act of his will nothing in us moves him to it nothing in us hinders him from it I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy and I will have comp●ssion on whom I will have compassion Rom 9.15 Obser 3 3. That often God shews the choisest mercy when he hath cause to execute the sharpest judgement they shall remember me because I am broken with their whorish hearts had they broken Gods heart he had cause to have broken their bones and destroyed them utterly but the Lord would deale graciously with them and in stead of destruction cause them to remember him to loath themselves and to come in to feare and serve him They would not feare remember and honour God in Zyon where they had the Prophets the Ordinances of God and mercies of all sorts but provoked God to plague them and when they were ripe for destruction and nothing to be expected but severity even then doth God deale graciously with them Isa 57.17 18. saith God For the iniquity of his covetousnesse was I wroth and smote him I hid me and was wroth and he went on frowardly in the way of his heart He adds sin to sin in a presumptuous manner and what could be looked for now but destruction Doth the great and glorious God smite and doth man sin more Yes he doth and God sees it and what then I have seene his wayes and will heale him Not wound him more not destroy him but I will heale him I will lead him also and restore comforts to him and to his mourners Isaiah 43.24 25. Thou hast made me to serve with thy sinnes thou hast wearyed me with thine iniquities And what then I even I am hee that blotteth out thy transgressions for mine owne sake and will not remember thy sinnes Gods thoughts are not as mans that which is argument of death in mans apprehension is argument of mercy and life in Gods Psal 25.11 David knew it therefore presseth God with an argument might have undone him in the judgement of reason O Lord pardon mine iniquity for it is great God might have said therefore will I not pardon thee because thy sinne is great I have suffered much by thee by thy murther and adultery and thinkest thou that I will pardon such great sins Is this an argument to come to mee withall I have as great wrath as thou hast sins thou art a man of death for what thou hast done thou shouldest dye by the Law for thy murther and dye for thy adultery and thou hast given the sentence thy selfe The man that hath done this shall surely dye and bound it thou hast with an Oath as the Lord liveth 2 Sam. 12.5 and therefore dye thou must thou shalt Such language as this might David have looked for but he heares of pardon and that from the mouth of a Prophet and when he mov'd God with the argument of the greatnesse of his sinnes he did it in the judgement of faith knowing it would be much for the honour of God to pardon great sinnes that he was as ready to shew mercy as his sinnes had made him ripe for judgement Hosea 2.13 14. Israel followed Baalim and forgate God had hee not now cause to destroy her It was Gods way to destroy such Psal 73.27 Yet it follows Therefore behold I will allure her and bring her into the Wildernesse and speake comfortably unto her Because shee had fo●got God God would remember her because shee had been drawne away by Idols God would allure her from Idols because shee had vexed God he would comfort her Here God lets out choise mercy when he had cause to execute severe wrath When Peter had denyed Christ thrice and forswore him and the knowledge of him was there not cause that Christ should have renounced him smitten him with some great Judgement Matth. 26.72 74. and made him an example for Selfe-confiders and Christ-denyers to the end of the World Surely Christ had cause enough and the opportunity for it was faire before him but Christ turned and look't upon Peter and in stead of ruining him rayses him Obser 4 4. False worship doth most afflict God I am broken with their whorish heart Their Idolatries Superstitions and corruptions did not simply displease or grieve God but oppressed afflicted broke the heart of God great injuries enter deep worke strongly eate up the spirits of any they are done unto and what greater wrong can be done to God then to set at naught his counsels to forsake his Worship to withdraw from his Government and to proclaime to the World that there are better ways then his and better Gods then himselfe Those are Idolatrous and worship God a false way they doe so by God therefore Jer. 3.5 it s sayd of them that they did speak and doe evill as they could men cannot doe more to breake God then to worship Idols wrong gods or the true God a wrong way Such sins breake Gods Covenant Deut. 31.16 This
people will goe a whoring after other Gods forsake mee and breake my Covenant They breake Gods silence Jer 2.12 Bee astonished Oh yee Heavens c. They breake Gods patience Isa 43.24 Thou hast wearied mee with thine iniquities And here they break even God himselfe I am broken with c. The heart should be onely for God and his ways as the Wife should be for the Husband and his commands and when God sees the heart which is his by Creation by command by purchase and by desert to be after false ways base inventions and giving that honour to them is onely due unto himselfe this pricks him at the heart and is taken extreamly evill it makes Gods soule to abhorre a people Levit. 26.30 To loath Zyon Jer. 14.19 Bring any thing to one that hath an Antipathy against it and that thing afflicts him grievously it makes him feare sweat faint and sometimes swoone away God hath a true Antipathy and great against all false ways of Worship when any therefore is brought neare him it s that puts the Lord more to it then any thing Levit. 26.11 I will set my Tabernacle amongst you and my soule shall not abhorre you That is I will delight in you while my Tabernacle and Ordinances are with you Amos 5.26 27. But when the Tabernacle of Molock is amongst them when they set up ways of their owne then God abhorres them and will send judgements upon them Let not us reteine any thing that tends that way no Names no Ceremonies no Gestures Obser 5 5. The workes of men in Gods worship steale away the hearts of the Worshippers They had Idols Altars Groves Images and High places and whatever pretences they had to colour over things with their hearts went a whoring after these and departed from God There is much yea all in false worship that suits with carnall hearts therefore that which is of God being spirituall above the reach of flesh yea contrary to corruption its burthensome and neglected and that which is of men being suitable unto man is closed withall In Popery you see how their hearts are taken with that which is from Popes Prelates Councels their Musick Vestments Perfumes Pictures Images c. have their hearts and let them pretend they doe help their Devotion with these help up their hearts more to God it s not so these steale away their hearts from God they are more delighted with these then with the pure worship of God Be they Idols or Images made use of in worship it s all one that distinction will not heale a Papists Idolatry nor fetch back his whorish heart to God for the Hebrew word Pesel is in Scripture used promiscuously for both 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and put for an Image Isa 44.9 10. and Imagery superstition draws away the heart from God as well as Idolatry Were not men affected lately with Innovations and that so much that the Ordinances of God were layd by what the heart affects that goes up what it sleights that goes downe as in Isa 29.13 when the hearts were removed farre from God then the precepts of men had interest in Gods worship and what men commended to them their hearts advanced Obser 6 6. That being in pure worship is being with God While they kept to Gods Ordinances and were hearty in them they were with God but when they corrupted them then they departed from God Obser 7 7. That mens eyes are Instruments of great evill They had whorish eyes they were the inlets of Idolatrous and sinfull motions which firing inflam'd the heart after Idols No sense doth more mischiefe to the soule then the eye it s an imperiall ranging sense and fetches in farre and neare matter of danger into the bosome Prov. 17.24 The eyes of a foole are at the end of the Earth The Scripture makes mention of a mocking eye Prov. 30.17 an offensive eye Matth. 5.29 a beamish eye Mat. 7.3 an evill eye Prov. 23.6 a lofty eye Psal 13 1.1 a wanton eye Isa 3.16 a painted eye Ezek. 23.40 ad●●terous eyes 2 Pet. 2.14 and here whorish eyes they are the windows at which sinne creeps in the Prince of darknesse convays many works of darknesse by the eyes the Serpent deceived Eve by the eye Gen. 3.6 Achan saw a goodly Babylonish Garment and a wedge of Gold and so was snar'd Josh 7.21 Sampson saw an Harlot and was taken with her Judges 16.1 It s the colour of the Wine invites the Drunkard to excesse Prov. 23.31 Ahab saw Naboths Vineyard lay commodiously for him and so was set on worke to cover it 1 Kings 21.2 The eyes open the doores first and soonest to let Idols into the heart and when they are in the heart sets the eyes on worke to delight in them Ezek. 18.6 They lift up their eyes to behold Idols they were delectable things to them Isa 44.9 Great use doth Satan make of the eye by corruption that is within us and the Creature that is without Job knew it and therefore makes a Covenant with his eyes and would not onely not see but not thinke of a Maid Job 31.1 and if he did see any object that pleased and stirr'd corruption he would not let his heart walke after his eye Verse 7. David would not set any wicked thing before his eyes Psal 101.3 He prayes unto God to turne away his eyes from beholding vanity Psal 119.37 And mine eyes are ever towards the Lord Psal 25.15 and not onely should we have care of our eyes but of our hearts also for such as our hearts are such will our eyes and other senses be if the heart be whorish the eyes will be whorish if the heart be covetous the hand will be covetous if the heart be froward the tongue will be froward Therefore Solomon adviseth to keep the heart with all diligence Prov. 4.23 Obser 8 8. That true penitents have their hearts affected for their sinnes and loath themselves for the evils of their wayes They shall remember me Ut voluntatis complacentia ad peccandum sic voluntatis displicentia ad contritionem requiritur nā unumquodque ut ait Chrysost per quascunque causas nascitur per easdem dissolvitur whom they have broken with their sins be affected with it and loath themselves for the evils they have committed in all their abominations Repentance is not a sudden or sleight sorrow but that which goes deep and enters into the heart as the word here imports such sorrow as should make them loath themselves sigh and groane smite yea cut their faces The Scripture expressions touching repentance and godly sorrow are of like nature and shew the heart is deeply wounded therein Zach. 12.10 It s set out by mourning as for an onely Sonne and being in bitternesse as for the losse of a first borne its drawing of water and powring it out before the Lord 1 Sam. 7.6 It s the breaking of the heart contrition of the spirit Psal 34.18 The
compasse of a few years But thy Commandement is exceeding broad it goeth beyond the terme of these perishing things it 's not for a hundred or thousand years and so to expire but it abides for ever Obser 2 2. God will premonish before he doth punish a sinfull people he comes not upon them unwarned he tels them before hand what they must looke for If a generall destruction be decreed ready to be executed he will hint it to his Prophets they shall declare it to the people that those that are the Lords may be awakened brought to repentance be secur'd from eternall ruine if not the temporall and that the rest may be convinced of their own evill ways and may justifie the proceedings of the Lord. Vers 3. 3. Now is the end come upon thee They having the common sicknesse of mankind in them to put off judgements and the day of evill when threatned as if there were no such thing or at a great distance The Lord brings the judgement home to them and cuts off all their shifts Now is the end upon thee now is the finall destruction and for Thee not for others that live among the Nations not for thy Posterity that comes after thee Not for the Tribes are carryed away but for thee that art secure and fearest not Now is the end it s very nigh some yeares were to passe before the end came it was now the sixth yeare of their Captivity and Zedekiah that succeeded Jehoiachim was upon the sixth yeare of his Reigne at Jerusalem and the ninth yeare the tenth month began this finall destruction 2 Kings 25.1 Then came Nebuchadnezzar with all his Forces into the Land and besieged Jerusalem and in the eleventh yeare the fourth and fifth moneths it was accomplished Vers 2 3 4 8 9 10. So that here was three or four years before this end came five and upwards before it was fulfilled yet it s sayd Now is the end come upon thee Things future in Scripture are spoken of as present or past Isa 1.8 The daughter of Zyon is left as a Cottage in a Vineyard Chap. 24.10 The Citie of confusion is broken downe every house is shut up that no man may come in There is a crying for Wine in the streets This is spoken as present and it was yet to come Chap. 42.22 This is a people robbed and spoyled Revel 18.2 Babylon is fallen is fallen and is become the habitation of Devils John 3.18 Hee that beleeveth not is condemned already These Scriptures speake of things as past and were then to come the Lord useth to speak so in his word of things future sometimes as present sometimes as past because with him is no difference of times and for that they are as certainely to take place as if they were doing or done God looks not upon time as we doe that is future we thinke to be at a great distance that is to come 2 3 7 20 or 100. yeares hence that we apprehend very remote and hath little influence into us or operation upon us but God looks upon things at little and great distances as present Now is the end come upon thee 70 yeares he calls a present little moment Isa 54.7 8. 1 Pet. 4.7 The end of all things is at hand 1 John 2.18 It is the last houre It is about 1600 yeares since the spirit of God spake thus by Peter and John and yet the end of all things is not come the last hour is not out times future are present with God and so propounded to us that they might worke the more strongly upon us cause us to feare God more to be sober and watch unto Prayer I will send mine anger upon thee God had formerly delt sparingly with them now and then chastised them with rods now he would be more severe and chasten them with Scorpions he had kept in his wrath formerly but now he would send it forth in strength they should not have gentle corrections but terrible Judgements he would send out wrath and not mercy Anger here is put for the effects of anger punishments judgements by a metonymie of the efficient Will judge thee according to thy wayes Judging is sometimes put for sentencing of persons or things Rom. 2.16 In the day that God shall judge the secrets of men That is passe a sentence upon them sometimes for punishing Heb. 13.4 Whoremongers and Adulterers God will judge That is punish And so here I will judge thee First I will punish and least it may be thought God in his anger should exceed measure in punishing it s added According to thy wayes not according to my wayes but thine which in the judgement of any or all must be equall looke what thou hast done and deserved by it that thou shalt have the word Wayes is metaphoricall and notes mens manners actions courses of life Prov. 21.2 Every way of a man is right in his owne eyes so Psal 1.1.6 Mens owne devises Judges 2.19 Custome Jer. 10.2 And in this place their actions and conversations are cal'd wayes because their affections the feet of the soule are in them and they lead unto some place as wayes doe all actions have a tendencie to Heaven or Hell This phrase is expounded by that in Hos 4.9 I will punish them for their wayes They have done evill and shall suffer for it And will recompence upon thee all thine abominations The Hebrew is I will give or put upon thee c. The Vulgar is Ponam costra te I will put against thee all and others have it I will repose or turne back upon thee all thine abominations hitherto thou hast put them upon me Reponam Juni and I have borne them now I will returne them and lay them upon thy selfe God would now reward them for their abominations Hos 4.9 I will punish them for their wayes and reward them for their doings Their reward shou'd returne upon their owne head Obad. 15. Obser Gods Judgements prevent sinners expectations they are nearer men then they conceive Now is the end come the Prophet in Babylon sees it but they at Jerusalem apprehended it not none would beleive that destruction should come upon Jerusalem Lam. 4.12 Yee put farre away the evill day Amos 6.3 they put it farre from their thoughts hearts if it came in at all they looke upon it as comming in after Generations and not in theirs Ezek. 12.22 It was come to a Proverbe in Israel the dayes are prolonged and every vision faileth Vers 27. The vision that hee seeth is for many dayes to come and hee prophesieth of the times that are afarre of they grew secure fear'd not the threatnings put upon them at a great distance and what lay in them nul'd the Prophesies and therefore in the 28 Verse God saith There shall none of my words be prolonged any more God would hasten the punishment of them and they should suddainely overtake them Isa 29.1 5 6. Woe to Ariel
contritio aedificemus igitur domus and so Vatablus onely igitur he leaves out Contrition destruction is not near let us therefore build houses this interpretation we condemn not Montanus goeth that way The Sept. have it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and addes contritio in the margent Nonne neviter aedificatae sunt domus are not houses lately or newly built The Heb. is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is not near to build houses here is an infinitive put for an imperative to build for let us build or let houses be built It is not near what is not near the desolation threatned that they said was not near Jer. had told them of the Lords wrath and that a sore captivity was at hand and because God had forbade him to marry and beget children because they should be destroyed as you have it Jer. 16.2 3. Thou shalt not take thee a wife neither shalt thou have sonnes or daughters in this place For thus saith the Lord concerning the sonnes and concerning the daughters that are born in this place and concerning their mothers that bare them and concerning their fathers that begat them in this land they shall dye of grievous deaths they shall not be lamented neither shall they be buried but they shall be as dung upon the face of the earth and they shall be consumed by the sword and by famine and their carkasses shall be meat for the fowls of heaven and for the beasts of the earth These sad tidings had Jeremy made known as being given not only for himselfe but others and hereupon he writ to the captives in Babylon that they should build houses plant gardens Non prope est construantur domus Castal Procul absunt qua minantur vates Idem take wives to themselves and sonnes that they might encrease and not diminish as they were like to doe at Jerusalem Jer. 29.5 6. Because of these things the people were full of feares refused to build and plant hereupon these Princes of the people counselled things contrary to God and the Prophet and said it is not neare what Jeremie threatens or any other Prophet those things they speak of are far off according to that in Ezek. 12.22 The dayes are prolonged and every vision faileth And v. 27. Hee prophecieth of the times that are afar off therefore fall a building plant multiply and increase there is no such danger as you dream of Some carries i● thus houses are not to be built in nearnesse to the City and so make it military counsell as if these Princes would not have any Suburbs or neighbouring villages which might advantage the enemy if hee should come and take them and so shut up the City therefore they conceive these words import thus much houses are not to be built neare that is they are to be pull'd downe and the rubbish removed This Citie is the cauldron and we be the flesh These words have their difficulty in them If you take the last sense of the former words then you may understand these thus wee are threatned to be boil'd in the siege of this City by the Chaldeans as flesh is boil'd in a cauldron but we will take a course to prevent that we will pull down all the houses without the walls of the City and near hand so that the enemy shall not come neare us and then we shall see what truth is in it that this City is the cauldron and we the flesh Had they such an opportunity to sit downe in the houses they would besiege us streightly presse us with famine be as a fire to this City and consume us to nothing Others think these words spoken scoffingly against Jeremiah who Chap. 1.13 had said I see a seething pot it 's the same word is here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and here it 's 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the cauldron the seething pot Jeremie had prophecyed that the enemy sh●uld come from the North and besiege them in the City that they should be as flesh in a cauldron boiled with the Chaldean fire till they were consumed this they mock at This City is the cauldron and we are the flesh saith that false and lying Prophet for you see wee are as before we ne●d not fear Chaldeans A cauldron 1. is made of strong materials as brasse or the like 2. It will endure the fire many yeares before it be consum'd 3. It conteins the flesh put into it and that is not to be taken out till it be throughly boyl'd Hence upon these grounds they scoffed at Jeremie If the City be the cauldron it 's a strong City and hath brazen walls it will endure the fire let the Chaldeans come as thou sayest if we be a cauldron their fire will not melt us and though they doe boile us yet we shall not be taken out of this cauldron to be eaten before we are throughly boyl'd till old age death it selfe take us out of it Thus did these Princes prophane that Prophesie bred security in the hearts of the people fed them with hopes of liberty and long life Or thus you may take it if this Citie be the cauldron and we the flesh we will rather be boyled in it then be destroyed by the sword we wil rather dye in the fire be boyl'd to death then fall into the hands of our enemies we will rather dye here then yeeld our selves into their hands be slain out of the City or be carryed into Babylon but we feare no such thing Thus these Princes eluded the Propheticall threats hardned the people in their ill waye and ripen'd them for destruction Our Prophet was acted in these visions by the Spirit Obser 1. sometimes it entered into him sometime it fell upon him and sometime it lifted him up Chap. 2.2 Chap. 3.24 The spirit entered into me Chap. 1.3.8.1 The hand of the Lord that is the Spirit came upon me fell upon me and Chap. 3.12 The spirit tooke mee up and here the spirit lift me up The Spirit had much to doe with our Prophet and so with all the Prophets they were acted by the Spirit in all their visions and prophesies they were lift up above themselves and out of themselves when they were to have cognizance of Divine things 2. The Spirit is God it knows men and their ways it discoverd them unto the Prophet Here the Spirit took notice of these men what devises they had in their heads what counsell they gave and acquainted the Prophet with them so before in the 8. Chap. the Spirit shewed him the Image of Jealousie the 70. men that were offering Incens● to the Idolls the women that wept for Tammuz the 25. men that worshipped the Sunne and put the branch to their nose as it 's said of the Sun Psal 19.6 there is nothing hid from the heate thereof So much more of the Spirit there is nothing hid from his knowledge 1 Cor. 2.10 The spirit searcheth all things all in heaven
and all in earth all things in the closets in the heart Psal 139.7 Whither shall I goe from thy Spirit David could not hide himselfe from the sight and presence of Gods spirit neither can we Let us looke well therefore unto our wayes the spirit may make them known to the Prophets and servants of God 3. That men chiefe in dignity and place are for the most part corrupt Here were the 25. who bare the sway in the City and had great power all confederate in wickednesse Isa 1.10 he calls their Rulers rulers of Sodome because of their extream wickednesse and he excepts none they were generally such so Neh. 13.11 I contended with the rulers and said why is the house of God forsaken They kept away the portions of the Levites and therefore they left the house of God so vers 17. The Nobles of Judah they prophaned the Sabbath day and brought wrath upon Israel 2 Chron. 24.17 28. The Princes of Judah were all idolatrous and led Joash into idolatrous practises but they were quickly after all slain for it v. 23. John 7.48 Have any of the Rulers believed in him They were so wicked even all of them that they could make their boast have any of them believed in him No no they are not for Christ and his wayes Jer. 5.5 I will get me unto the great men and will speak unto them for they have known the way of the Lord and the judgement of their God but these have altogether broken the yoke and burst the bonds The Prophet thought the great ones who had great obligations upon them to honour God who knew what pertein'd to worship justice that they would hearken to h●m but they cast off all respect subjection and obedience to the law of God they followed their owne wills lusts humours they regarded neither equity nor honesty they were farre worse then the poorer sort whom the Prophet had tryed also Luke mentions but one Judge and he was an unjust one Are not too many of the great ones among us corrupt loose and enemies to Christ and his Kingdome 4. It 's matter of mourning when those are set over others to be punishers of the wicked countenancers of the godly examples of piety vertue and should seek the good of the publique prove cleane otherwise and are actors and patrons of wickednesse the Spirit here is affected with it and affects the Prophet Sonne of man these are the men that doe so these pervert obstruct justice these encourage evill doers these sad the hearts of the godly these hinder good designes these are the men that seeke themselves that cry give give and love to have it so these be the men that pretend the good of the estate and people but are the ruine of both This was matter of griefe to heaven and earth Isa 1.10 when the Prophet had tearm'd them rulers of Sodome he complains vers 23. saying Thy Princes O Jerusalem are rebellious and companions of thieves every one loveth gifts and followeth after rewards they judge not the fatherlesse neither doth the cause of the widow come unto them They sought themselves not the good of particulars or the publique and this troubled the Prophet and not only him but the Lord also for it follows in the next vers Therefore saith the Lord the Lord of hasts the mightie one of Israel Ah I will ease me of mine adversaries and avenge me of mine enemies God had beene wearied a●d grieved with them a long time and though they were many and mighty yet hee was the Lord of Hosts c. This argument did affect God much and hee was oft upon it Isa 3.12 As for my people children are their oppressors and women rule over them O my people they which lead thee cause thee to erre and destroy the way of thy path they destroyed Justice and Religion 5. There will never be wanting in any place men to devise mis●●●●●● In Jerusalem there were men whose hearts heads and tongues were at worke Dan. 6.7 All the Presidents of the Kingd Governours Princes Councellors Captains devised a plot against Daniel In the 8. Chap. he tels you of the 70. Antients of the 25. who had all devised and were practising mischiefe In Shushan was not wanting a Haman to devise mischiefe against the Jewes Est 8.3 Pharaoh and his Courtiers devised mischiefe against the Jewes Exod. 1. There were those devised to take away Davids life Psal 31.13 They imagined a mischievous devise Psal 21.11 No City no Kingdome was ever free from men of deceitfull wicked and mischievous devices and no time ever abounded more with such men and such devices then our times if I should say no place more then this Kingdome I should not much fail Who can reckon up the mischievous devices have been against the Estates Lawes Liberties Religion and Consciences of the people of this Kingdome Ship money was a cunning devise to dry up their estates Prerogative was cryed up to bring the lawes and liberties of the Subject downe Innovations and new Cannons were Prelaticall devices to rid you of your Religion and Consciences to make way for Popery What wicked devices have been against the Parliament against this Citie against this Kingdome what ever hath been devised for the good of all hath met with Anti-crosse devices There be those devise as strongly and speedily to ruine us as any doe to relieve us The device against Ireland was a bloody and mischievous device and bloody devices are in mens heads against us but here is the comfort Job 5.12 God disappointeth the devices of the crafty so that their hands cannot performe their enterprize They devise to undoe all but they cannot Mic. 2.1 Woe to them that devise iniquity God hath threatned and though they cannot accomplish their devices yet he will accomplish his threats Prov. 12.2 A man of wicked devices will be condemn Many of wicked devices have been amongst us and hath not the Lord condemn'd them 6. Men in place being evill they make others evill they doe not only devise mischiefe but communicate mischiefe they give and obtrude ill counsell upon others These that were in place especially Jaazaniah and Pelatiah the Princes they gave out ill counsell to the people They and such men doe the greatest hurt their power honour estates examples are prevalent with the people and when they counsell corruptly their counsell takes and infect a multitude quickly Jeroboam tels the people it was too much for them to goe up to Jerusalem that was a long journey would be very chargeable and might prove dangerous therefore he had taken a better course for them he had made Calves set them up for gods at Dan and Bethel and now they should neede to goe no further for to worship this counsell took Balack being advised by Balaam counsels the Moabitish women to entice the Israelites to folly which tooke and they drew them both to whoredome and idolatry Numb 25.12 with
Chap. 31.16 Ill counsell from great ones doth great mischiefe Nah. 1.11 There is one come out of thee that imagineth evill against the Lord a wicked Councellour It 's spoken of Nineveh concerning Senacherib Wee have many come out of us that are wicked Councellors and prevaile with the people to doe what they counsell Did not Prelates Judges Nobles Princes lately give ill counsels and were not the people too forward to hearken All counsels that seeme good are not alwayes safe men should therefore examine others counsels whethey they be such as agree with the word of God are really for the good of Church or State before they approve or entertain th●m Take heed what counsels you take from great ones that are corrupt this hath endangered Cities Churches whole Kingdomes Take counsell of the great God who dasheth all wicked counsels and establisheth his owne Psal 33.10 11. He brings the counsels of men to nought but the counsell of God endures for ever 7. That great ones are greatly secure they put the evill day far from them It is not neare They are lavish to entertain thoughts that may disquiet their hearts or shake their foundations Honours pleasures ●ecular affairs take them up so that they feare not changes they consider not the evill day they are as quiet as men that are in Covenant one with another Isa 28 14 15. Those rul'd the people they said Wee have made a covenant with death and with hell are we at agreement When the overflowing scourge shall passe through it shall not come unto us The great ones were Covenanters such as rul'd the City but with whom did they covenant with Death and Hell and now fear'd not any threatnings of them by the Prophets Although the Prophets threatned Death Hell to them it was as nothing they feared not Some think they being Idolatrous sacrificed to Pluto fatum Atropos those gods they conceived had power over Death and Hell and so had them their friends and liv'd without fear Amos 6.3 Hee tels you of some put farre away the evill day but who were they Men of place and power they were such as caused the seate of violence to come near that lay upon beds of Ivory that stretched themselves upon their couches and did eate the lambs out of the flocks and Calves out of the midst of the stall they were dauncers drinkers and such as anointed themselves wi●h the chiefest oyntments These are men setled on their lees as Zeph. speaks Chap. 1.12 They were like wine in vessels not emptied from vessell to vessell but setled in their sinfull security and not only great ones are secure but Zach. 1.11 The Angell told the man among the myrtle trees that all the earth sate still and was at rest Security is an epidemicall disease 8. See the impiety and prophanesse of these men 1. They oppose God and give contrary counsell to what he had given by Jeremie that they should not build houses in that place but in Babylon Jer. 29.5 6. and that because of the great judgment was comming upon them but they say it is not neare let us build houses there is no danger or if the enemy should come we had need build and strengthen our selves thus they counsell contrary to the Prophet and to God 2. Their prophanesse they scoffe at the word of God This Citie is the cauldron we are the flesh Jeremie had told them that God would bring the Chaldeans upon them and boyle them in that City like flesh in a Cauldron This they scoffe at strengthening their malice and prophanenesse from abuse of the word of God This made Jer. say I am in derision daily every one mocketh me the word of the Lord was made a reproach unto me and a derision daily Jer. 20.7 8. There is such corruption in the heart of man that it turnes the best things of all into bitternesse Isa 28.14 15. Heare the word of the Lord yee scornefull men The Hebrew is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 viri derisionis they mock'd and scoffed at what was prophecyed what ever the Prophet threatned they derided it therefore vers 22. Be not mockers lest your bands be made strong lest you have double fetters double judgements 2 Chron. 36.16 They mocked the messengers of God and despised his words all his threatnings And Peter 2 Pet. 3.3 4. tels us there shall come scoffers walking after their own lusts saying where is the promise of his comming Those under the law scoffed at the threatnings these under the times of the Gospell scoffe at the promises Those of Christs comming of the resurrection last judgement the end of all and life eternall such as these walk after their own lusts they bring a Citie into a snare Prov. 29.8 The Sept. translates the word scornfull Psal 1.1 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pestes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because such men are pestilent men the very plagues of Church and State contemners of God men Jude said it long since that there should be mockers in the last time and we have found it true there be as prophane bitter scoffers amongst us as ever were even the truths of God are scorn'd and scofft at 9. No devices counsels attempts of men can null or frustrate the purposes of God They devise mischief give ill counsell scoffe at the truths of God put the people upon contrary designes yet all this would not doe desolation was neare the Chaldeans came they were besieged in that Citie boil'd in it as flesh in a Cauldron and Gods counsels truths threats tooke place notwithstanding all their counsels and endeavours to the contrary Balaam was hired by Balack to crosse Gods designe in cursing of his people he attempted to doe it but God overpowred him he could not do or speak ought to their prejudice Numb 23.38 therefore he professed Chap. 23.23 Surely there is no inchantment against Jacob neither is there any divination against Israel according to this time it shall be said of Jacob and of Israel what hath God wrought Man would have wrought mischief but could not what hath God wrought he hath wrought and none could hinder therefore Isa 14.27 it s said the Lord of Hosts hath purposed and who shall disannul it not Balack or Balaam not Jaaz●niah or Pelatiah not the 25. Rulers in Jerusalem his hand is ●tretched out and who shall turn it back It 's not in the power of Princes no not the Prince of darknesse to let his worke to alter his counsels what God hath determined shall so come to passe as he hath determined v. 24. Surely as I have thought so shall it come to passe and as I have purposed it shall stand and all his pleasure shall be done Isa 46.10 so that there is no wisdom nor understanding nor counsell against the Lord Prov. 21.30 VERS 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12. Therefore prophesie against them prophesie O Son of man And the Spirit of the Lord fell upon me and
corruption of nature Ephesians 2.3 Fulfilling the desires of the flesh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The wills of the flesh Paul acknowledgeth nothing to be in the wills of men naturally but fleshly corruption and whatsoever that put them upon that they did and with delight fulfilling the wills of the flesh but when this new spirit comes it alters the will breakes the principle of stubbornnesse in it purges the pollution and corruption out of it and makes it plyable unto the will of God Ezek. 36.27 I will put my spirit within you and cause you to walke in my Statutes Gods spirit will so alter our spirits so transforme and renew them that they shall be inclined to and carryed on in the obeying of Divine Statutes Before they went on in the wayes of sin with strength constancy and delight now they move with new strength constancy and delight in that which is good this new spirit bowes the will to the Law of righteousnesse so that it obeys and commands well 3. The affections are renewed Ezek. 36.26 A new heart also will I give you That is your affections which are now corrupt and inordinate shall be changed and regulated they shall of sinfull be made holy of earthly be made heavenly of unrighteous become righteous Ephes 5.9 The fruit of the spirit is in all goodnesse righteousnesse and truth When the spirit of Christ comes and makes our spirits new there is truth for the understanding goodnesse for the will and righteousnesse for the affections and Gal. 5.22 23. the fruits of the spirit referre most to the affections as Love joy long-suffering gentlenesse meeknesse temperance Now the old affections and lusts of the flesh are crucified Gal. 5.24 and the new affections are set on things above Col. 3.2 4. The conscience is renewed before it s defiled and acts according to that false or dimme light is in the understanding but when this new spirit comes in the conscience is awakened purged and acts upon Divine grounds Heb. 10.22 Having our hearts sprinkled from an evill conscience the holy Ghost like water which washeth away the filth of the body cleanseth the conscience from the blindnesse impurity and deadnesse which are in it so that it being indued with new qualities becomes a pure 2 Tim. 1.3 and good conscience 1 Tim. 1.5 and acts new not in a naturall but sanct●fied manner 5. The memory is renued and made able to reteine good things before like a Streiner it lets the Milke goe and kept the haires and draffe like a Boulter it let the fine flower goe and keepes the bran but having a new quality in it its retentive of good 1 Cor. 15.2 Yee are saved by the Gospell if you keep in mem●●y what I have Preached they had memories in●bled to doe it many a poore soule that is converted when it comes to practice remember truths better then those of able memories These renewing and refining qualities make up the new man and here are cal'd a new spirit Spirit 1. Because they are from the spirit that is the authour of them John 3.6 That which is borne of the spirit is spirit It hath the qualities and graces of the spirit the spirit begets its owne likenesse in the soule as a Father doth in the body 2. In opposition to the flesh these new qualities are contrary to those of corrupt nature which the Scripture calls Flesh and therefore fitly cal'd Spirit Gal. 5.17 The flesh lusteth against the spirit and the spirit against the flesh 3. For that they make us spirituall they have such operations in us and honours us with such a denomination 1 Cor. 2.15 He that is spirituall judgeth all things 4. Because they are chiefly seated in the most spirituall part of a man the soule and faculties of it are the subject thereof New 1. In opposition to the old corruptions were in man before which the Scripture cals the Old man Ephes 5.22 Put off the old man which is corrupt And Vers 23. Be renewed in the spirit of the mind and put on that new man which after God is created in righteousnesse and true holinesse Here it s called the new man which is the same with the new spirit in oppoisition to the old man 2 For that it comes a new way into man had not Adam sinned we should not have needed such Ordinances as now we have to worke this new spirit in us it s not by generation but regeneration it s not from nature art afflictions Ordinances but the spirit in Ordinances 3. Because it s wrought anew in us no man hath ought of this new spirit in him naturally but an old and contrary spirit Rom. 8.7 The wisedome of the flesh is enmity to God This is totally new wrought and therefore is called a Creation Ephes 4.24 4. From the effect it makes us new 2 Cor. 5.17 If any man be in Christ he is a new creature 1 Pet 2.2 These indued with this new spirit are cald new borne babes 5. Because it s ever vigorous fresh and lively not decaying so I finde the words new interpreted by a late Divine and apply'd to the new man and he thinks the new Heavens and the new Earth spoken of Mr. Balls in his Covenant of grace p. 195. Isa 65.17.66.22 Rev. 21.1 Whatsoever is meant by them that the title new seemes to import the admirable excellencie and continuance thereof never to alter or decay but to remaine before the Lord. Quest Whether was this promise fullfilled among the Jewes or in times of the Gospell Answ Many of the Fathers refer the fullfilling of it unto the times of the Gospell but it being primarily made unto the Jewes we have just cause to thinke that it was in part fullfilled amongst them after their returne from Babylon so gracious a promise beeing given out by God made knowne by Ezekiel it s not likely they would neglect having bin so soarly afflicted in Babylon but would improve and presse the Lord for the accompl●shment of it and without dispute many of them had this new spirit for after they came againe to Jerusalem they had such a hatred of Idols and love to truth that they stood out to death for the law and religion of their God as it recorded in the Maccabee Quest 2. Whither is this new Spirit given or wrought all at once Answ This new spirit consists in those new qualities which are put into man and the severall qualities are wrought in at once but they are wrought up by degrees A man hath all graces at once in semine radice habitu and this grace is call'd The Law in the minde Rom. 7.22 the Law written in the heart Hebr. 8.10 The Divine nature 2 Pet. 1.4 Christ formed in us Gal. 4.19 The inward man Rom. 7.23 Seed 1 Joh. 3 9. Now this seed this inward man this Christ this Divine nature are growing this law receives addition 2 Pet. 3.18 Grow in grace and in the knowledge of our
so that the worke shall proceed The Arminians hold that the operation of God in the conversion of a sinner or putting in this new spirit is Moralis suasio not Realis efficientia That he doth not worke immediately upon the minde and will causing us to beleive to come to Christ to live holily but onely propounds truths which is sufficient that the understanding and affections are renewed with such power of God and his grace as cannot be withstood But the will is quickned Resistibili modo that however it is sometimes renewed in the affectionate part of it yet it continues unrenewed in the willing and nilling part thereof Secundum modum libertatis That the grace of God doth nothing but accompany the will consenting that all things supposed on Gods part needfull to the co-working this new spirit and regenerating the heart yet a man may goe without it and still be as he was That this new spirit and worke of conversion depends not upon any necessary causation or infallible event from the intention or operation of God but meerly upon the will of man and so is wholly contingent and uncertaine all which are erroneous The Papists also hold that there is free will in man before he hath this new spirit which doth concurr and cooperate with God in the putting in this new spirit as an efficient cause thererof and they pronounce him Anathema Sess 6. de Justif Can. 4. in the councell of Trent that sayes the will is meerly passive in this worke Our divines hold it and not onely they but the Lord himselfe John 15.5 Without me you can doe nothing therfore al is from Christ and if it be his judgement how impious is that Cannon which puts an Anathema upon the Lord. Wee cannot make our spirits new nor any part of them Deus est causa totius entis of this new spirit of every qualitie in it and every degree of every qualitie Phil 2.13 It is God which worketh in you both to will and to doe of his good pleasure The will to have this new spirit is not from mans will but from the grace of God and that grace when it is working and entring into the will though the will of it selfe oppose it and rejects it yet because of the mighty power of God in the work and strong intention of God to effect such a worke it cannot impede the introduction and forming of this new spirit it s cal'd the circumcision of the heart and is attributed to God Deut. 30.6 It s not in the power of man to circumcise his own heart God only doth it and that he acts powerfully in this work of a new spirit see Ezek. 36.27 I will put my spirit within you and cause you to walke in my Statutes and yee shall keepe my judgements and doe them Though Satan the God of this World have got possession of a man fortified himselfe in the strong holds be in man yet the Lord will bring in his spirit throw out Satan throw downe his holds and cause a man by the power of his spirit and grace to walke in contrary wayes to what he did Man in Scripture is sayd to be dead and dead men neither desire nor worke their owne resurrection John 5.25 The dead shall beare the voyce of the Sonne of God It must be a mighty and powerfull voyce which reacheth to a dead soule and fetcheth it out of that condition and when God speakes and workes efficaciously to that purpose the soule can no more withstand it then Lazarus could the call and power of Christ therefore sayth Christ John 6.37 All that the Father giveth me shall come to me They shall not prevent it by the liberty of their wills the event is infallible the causation necessary otherwise Gods election should be frustrate for if man by his free will could keep out this new spirit and null all the operations of God about the working of it what should become of his Elect his giving of men to Christ would be to no purpose Quest Whereas they say Propound suitable objects and men will take them as propound honey to a Bee Grasse or a greene Bough to a Sheep and they will receive them so let man have fit objects propounded to his understanding and will and he will then close with them and this is all is done in the worke of grace Ans 1. See how derogatory this is to the Lord that no more is given to his spirit in working then is given to Satan he propounds objects suitable to the Sons of Men and if the spirit propound Divine objects so doth Satan Gen. 3.5 Yee shall be as Gods knowing good and evill If the Devils objects be received or refused at the pleasure of mans will so shall the spirits 2. What suitablenesse is there betweene our carnall heart and the spirituall high things of God 1 Cor. 2.14 The naturall man receiveth not the things of the spirit of God for they are foolishnesse unto him men must be made spirituall before they can discerne or close with spirituall things Honey is the proper food of a Bee and grasse of a Sheepe but spirituall things are not the proper food of a Carnall heart New wine is not for old Bottles 3. If suitable objects would do it Christ propounded as suitable truths as ever any did yet the Jews were not taken with them John 6.44 not any man be he never so rationall have he never such rationall objects propounded that wil hear or can come Quest Is it not in mans power to doe ought towards the working this new spirit in himselfe it seems otherwise for the Lord saith Ezek 18 31. Make you a new heart and a new spirit Answ 1. Such phrases in Scripture import not liberty and power in man to doe such things but shew his dutie and misery that he cannot doe them Man having fallen should set himselfe in the condition God placed him first in he should cast away his si●s regaine that Image of God he hath lost yet all his endeavours will not reach it A man may with as much facilitie make a new sunne a new Heaven a new Earth a new World as a new heart and new spirit within himselfe David knew it and therefore pray'd Psal 51. Create in mee a cleane heart c. 2. Neyther is this command of God in vaine for the Lord gives what he commands Make you a new heart and a new spirit saith God here 's his command and in the Verse we are on it s said I wil put a new spirit within you so that when a thing is commanded us to doe which we cannot doe we are to look at the Lord to doe it who hath therefore made gratious promises to his for that purpose man is commanded to feare God Ecles 12.13 Isa 8.13 1 Pet. 2.17 and God hath promised to put his feare in his Peoples hearts Jer 32.40 I will put my feare in their hearts and they shall
not depart from mee Hose 3.5 They shall feare the Lord and his goodnesse Prov. 4.5.7 Wee are bid to Get wisedome and understanding Isa 1.17 Learne to doe well And the promise is Isa 54.13 All thy Children shall be taught of God 2 Pet. 3.18 We are commanded to Grow in grace but we can no more make grace to grow in our hearts then the Gardiner can make the tree to growe in the Orchard Therefore the promise is Psal 92.12.13.14.15 The righteous shall flourish like the Palme-Tree he shall growe like a Cedar in Lebanon Those be planted in the House of the Lord shall flourish in the Courts of our God They shall still bring forth fruit in old age they shall be fat and flourishing to shew that the Lord is upright Col. 3.5 Mortifie your members which are upon the Earth that 's the command and Micha 7.19 He will subdue our iniquities 3. Make you a new heart that is declare you have a new heart wrought in you Saith Junius God makes the new heart 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 man doth it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by manifestation I will take the stony heart out of their flesh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cor lapidis The word heart hath been opened formerly and by it we comprehend and meane the understanding will affections and conscience Stony Or stone heart or stoninesse of heart It s a metaphoricall expression taken from the nature of a Stone and notes out the spirituall stoninesse and hardnesse is in the heart Aug. 1 A Stone is senslesse and stirres not Exod. 15.16 They shall be still as a stone Such is a stony heart it s Cor fine sensu as in Nabal Pro. 23.35 They have stricken me and I was not sick they have beaten me and I felt it not 1 Sam. 25.37 His heart dyed within him and he became as a stone senslesse A stone feeles no weight lay the heaviest burden upon it smite the hardest stroakes it s not sensible of any let a stony heart have a world of sin and guilt in it lying upon it yet no feeling of it Ephes 4.19 Who being past feeling have given themselves over unto lasciviousnesse to worke all uncleannesse with greedinesse They had lost all sense of evill in sin and w●nt on without any check let men sweare lye deceive whore c. they feele no evill in it let them be upon the Pikes like the young man in the seventh of the Proverbs going as an Oxe to the slaughter as a Bird to the snare they know not that it is for their lives tell such of danger they are not sensible The Jewes had stony hearts and see how senslesse they were Matth. 13.15 This people is waxed grosse and their eares are dull of hearing and their eyes have they closed lest at any time they should see with c. This is five times more mentioned in the New Testament Mark 4.12 Luke 8.10 John 12.40 Acts 28.26 Rom 11.8 fetch'd all from Isa 6.9 Hence those expressions The unjust knowes no shame Zeph. 3.5 they cannot blush Jer. 6.15 They are impudent Children Ezek. 2.4 Their brow brasse Isa 48.4 2. It s hard and yeilds not strike a stone oft it yeilds not to the stroke In Job 41.24 speaking of the Leviathan he saith His heart is as firm as a stone yea as hard as a piece of the nether c. Brasse Arrows Darts and Speares are as stubble and straw to him they will not enter So is it with a stony heart nothing enters Zech. 7.11 They refused to hearken and pulled away the shoulder and stopped their eare that they should not heare yea they made their hearts as an Adamant stone and that is Lapis indomabilis it will not yeild at all No reproofes threatnings afflictions judgements did prevaile with their stony hearts therefore Isa 1.5 saith God Why should you be stricken any more yee will revolt more and more Cor lapideum est cor indocile immorigerum an unteachable an intractable heart no prayers no teares no truths no arguments no mercies no judgements will conquer it its inexorable Isa 26.10 Let favour be shewed to the wicked yet will he not learne righteousnesse Hence two things 1. Tenacity of opinions principles and conclusions though never so false and corrupt Jer. 8.5 They hold fast deceit Chap. 4.14 O Jerusalem how long shall thy vaine thoughts lodge within thee They thought their worship was right that God was pleased with their inventions and additions that the Lord would not depart from the Temple c. 2. Obstinacy in their ways continuance in their old practises Jer. 17.23 They obeyed not neither inclined their eare but made their neck stiffe that they might not hear nor receive instruction Ch. 5.3 They have made their faces harder then a rock they refused to returne Judges 2.19 They ceased not from their owne doings nor from their stubborne way 3. It resists Lam. 3.16 He hath broken my teeth with gravel stones While a m●n thinks to breake the stones with his teeth they co●q●er by their hardnesse and break the teeth Adamants and other stones repell the force of the stroake and oft breake the instrument which strikes them so doe stony and hard hearts Matth. 23.37 O Jerusalem Jerusalem thou that killest the Prophets and flonest them that are sent unto thee how often would I c. When Christ Preached unto them they yeilded not to his Doctrine but resisted and sought the ruine of his person Luke 4.28 29. All th y in the Synagogue when they heard these things were filled with wrath and rose up and thrust him out of the City and led him unto the brow of the Hill that they might cast him down headlong Here was the stonynesse of their hearts made evident fully they would not receive Christ but kill him such hearts make men possessed with them 1. Contradict●ry to the truth their tongues are busie Rom. 10.21 The Jewes are called a disobedient and gainsaying people they contradicted the Prophets 2 Chron. 36.16 They mocked the M●ssengers of God So Jer. 44.16 As for the word which thou hast spoken unto us in the name of the Lord we will not hearken unto thee but we will certainly doe whatever c. 2. Contentious Rom. 2.8 Vnto them that are contentious and obey not the truth Hard hearts yeild not to the truth but contend against the truth the Pharisees and others did not onely cavill at Christs Doctrine but plotted acted and contended against it and him John 11.47 48. The chiefe Priests and Pharisees gathered a Councell and sayd What doe we if we let him thus alone all men will beleeve on him c. Vers 53. From that day they tooke counsell together to put him to death God told Jeremiah that the Jewes should fight against him Jer. 1.19 and Chap. 26.8.9 You shall find it made good when he had Prophesied against their carnall confidence in the Temple they were gathered together against him lay hands upon
out of the heart We may all say Who shall roll away this stone as they sayd Mark 16.3 and the answer must be Not an Angell not any Creature but onely the Lord God tels them that They should take away all the detestable things out of the Land but he would take away the stone out of their heart and the stony heart out of them It s the worke of free grace nothing is in a stony heart to move God to take it away but enough to move God to destroy it and him that hath it it s meerly good will puts him on to doe it It s the worke of omnipotent power to doe it some read it auferam some removebo some extrabam I will draw out of you intimating there must be a mighty power to doe it when you would remove a great stone you bring a strong Teame and tacklings to draw it out of its place so here It s a great mercy to have this stone removed the stone in the heart is a great plague yea greater then all the plagues of Aegypt Pharoahs hard heart was worse then all them the removall therefore of it is a greater mercy then the removall of all those judgements It s an heart incapable of reproofe that profits not by the meanes of grace whatsoever that is not kindly affected with the greatest mercies or judgements it s an heart that hates holinesse and the power of godlinesse an heart that pleaseth it selfe in the wayes of wickednesse it s an heart the Devill lives in and workes his will by Quest Whither doth God remove the stone totaly out of the hearts of his People at first conversion or while they are in this life Answ God doth this worke gradually it s not all done at once the Apostles were converted yet all hardnesse was not out of their hearts Mar. 6.52.8.17 Stones are digg'd out of the Quarres by degrees and Rocks hewne in peices in time So is it here God breakes and seperates the stoninesse of the heart some one day some another day and its doeing all a mans life As a man subject to the stone and gravell voids some one day some another and is not perfectly cured till death so in this spirituall stonynesse Neither let any say then the heart is stony still and in the same condition it was before Not so for though there be some stonynesse in it yet is it not stony There is softnesse introduced and the denomination is from that I will give them a heart of flesh Quest If there be stonynesse in the hearts of these be in Covenant with God how shall I know the difference betweene the stonynesse in the godly and that in the wicked Answ 1. The stonynesse of the wicked growes greater and greater every day they are more stony L●pi● obs●●matus 2 Chron. 28.22 they grow worse and worse 2 Tim. 3.13 But the stonynesse in the godly growes esse and lesse they use all means to abate it in the one its incurable in the other its curing 2. That in the Saints is rather accidentall then essentiall an externall crustinesse rather then an intrinsecall hardnesse it s an ycecinesse not a true stonynes water may become yce but not stone it will thawe and melt againe it freezes and thawes oft not so with a stone or iron they hav intrinsecall essentiall hardnesse 3. The godly feele the stone in their hearts complaine and cry out of it as a greivous evill but the wicked feele it not in them it reignes is in full power and strength Ephes 4.19 They are past feeling 4. The stonynesse in the godly is rather a stonynesse against sin then a stonynesse of sin he is facile to good but obstinate to evill Gen 39 9. How can I doe this great evill and sin against God Psal 119.115 Depart from me yee evill doers for I will keep the Commandements of my God He had strong temptations to sin from the wicked but he would not be drawne by them but it s otherwise with the wicked they are obstinate to good and prone to evill They worke sinne with greedinesse Eph. 4.19 and cease not from their stubborne way Judges 2.19 So the Samaritans who were fallen to false worship sayd In the stoutnesse and pride of their hearts the Bricks are fallen downe but we will build with hewen stone Isa 9.9 10. Mal. 3.13 their words were stout against God and Saul a wicked King it s sayd Counsell of God Luke 7.13 He rejected the word of the Lord 1 Sam. 15.23 The builders who had stony hearts rejected Christ the corner stone Mat. 21.42 Lawyers rejected the counsell of God Luke 7.30 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cor Carnis And will give them an heart of flesh We have opened the word Heart before at the beginning of the Verse and shewed it comprehended understanding will affections and conscience Flesh Here it s set in opposition to stony and differs from the word Flesh mentioned immediately before there flesh implyed substance their persons here it implyes a quality tendernesse softnesse flesh is in it selfe a tender thing sin hardens it and makes it stony but God would take out the stonynesse hardnesse thereof and make it tender soft There is a double tendernesse spoken of in Scripture 1. A naturall tendernesse 2 Chron. 13.7 When Rehoboam was young and tender hearted and could not withstand them he was not hardened in wickednesse but being young had a naturall tendernesse which made him facile and yeeldable to the onsets of others but this is not the tendernesse wee are to speak of 2. A spirituall tendernesse Ephes 4.32 Be yee kind one to another tender hearted 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 full of tender bowels A Mother hath naturall tendernesse and bowells to her Childe have you answerable spirituall bowels such as are in the Lord who is sayd to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Full of pitty and tendernesse James 5.11 and this is the tendernesse here meant This spirituall tendernesse is a gracious disposition of the heart wrought by the spirit easily admitting or receiving what ever spirituals are propounded unto it It s a gracious disposition not naturall nor morall neither Parents nor education convey ought unto it grace is a tender thing and makes tender Luke 1.78 it s cald tender mercy of God and that makes a tender heart a gracious disposition in it like it selfe Wrought by the spirit it s not the Law workes it that may break the heart into pieces as a Hammer doth a stone but not melt it and make it tender it s the Gospell and fire of the spirit in it which produceth that effect not the Plow but raine which softens the ground David saith Psal 65.10 Thou makest it soft with showers The Galatians received the spirit The Corinthians hearts were not Tables of stone but fleshy Tables the spirit had made them such and written the Gospell in them 2 Cor. 3.3 not by the Preaching of the
Ordinances are used promiscuously And here by them I conceive is ment the whose Law of God revealed This walking in his statutes is set out in holy writ by such expressions as these Viz. Walking after the Lord. Deut. 13.4 Walking before God 1 Kings 9.4 Walking in the light of the Lord. Isa 2.5 Walking in the truth John Epist 3. Vers 4. Walking in the name of the Lord Micah 4.5 Walking according to rule Gal. 6.16 And Walking with God Gen. 6.9 Keepe mine Ordinances Keeping imports 1. Remembring Luke 2.51 Mary kept all these sayings in her heart 2. Holding fast 2 Tim. 1.14 The good thing committed to thee keep that is hold fast here we must take in both remembering and holding fast but in order to doeing men may know remember and hold fast the mind of God but not doe the same Deut. 5.1 Heare O Israel the statutes and Judgements which I speake in your eares this day and keepe and doe them the Hebrew is keepe to doe them Doe them Doing implies 1. The performing and practice of them Psal 15.5 Facere ●st exacte custodire decenter quicquam operari He that doth these things shall never be moved 2. Fullfilling of things required 1 Kings 5.8 Saith Hiram to Solomon I will doe all thy desire that is fullfill thy desire both may be understood here not simply to doe but to doe exactly Obser 1. The end of Gods giving us temporall and spirituall mercies is that we should be obedient unto him He gathered them out of Babylon planted them in Canaan gives them onenesse of heart newnesse of spirit c. And why that they might walke in his statutes and keepe his Ordinances God hireth us with mercies to doe his will Psal 105.43.44.45 He brought forth his People with joy and his chosen with gladnesse and gave them the Lands of the Heathen and they inheritied the labour of the People that they might observe his statutes and keepe his Law 2 Sam. 12.7.8.9 David was obliged by Gods bountie to obedience why did God so much for his Vineyard Isa 5.2 but that it might bring forth Grapes the end of all mercies and meanes offorded us were to make it fruitfull in obedience All in Gods works in his word are so many inducements to obedience God hath given us the Earth and fullnesse of it and the end is to provoke us thereby to walke in his statutes He hath given us his good word choyce O●dinances Heavenly Councells pretious promises profitable commands holy examples and his end in all these is to quicken us up to obedience It s the end of Election 1 Pet. 1.2 It s the end of Redemption Luke 1.74.75 It s the end of our new Creation Ephes 2.10 Paul beseeches the Romans By the mercies of God to present their Bodies a living sacrifice holy and acceptable unto God Our mercies should prevaile with us we are Planted in a good Land we have the dewes of Heaven and fatnesse of the Earth God hath done great things amongst us and for us we have had wonderfull Deliverances and shall not we be incouraged thereby to walke in the statutes of our God Deut. 11.7.8 Your eyes have seene all the great Acts of the Lord which he did therefore shall you keepe all the Commandements which I command you this day Let the great things we have seen and heard put us upon obeying the Lord and so obeying him that our obedience may be 1. Generall God requires you should walke in all his wayes Deut. 10.12 2. Heartie yea with the whole heart Deut. 26.16 3. Constant Deut. 4.9 Gal. 6.9 4. Willing chearfull Phil. 2.14 Deut. 28.47 5. With strength and courage Josh 23.6 If we doe not walk in the statutes of the Lord and keepe his commands we know not God 1. John 2.3.4 We doe not love God 1 Joh. 5.3 Nor Christ Joh. 14.15 Our prayers will be unfruitfull and succeslesse 1 John 3.22 2. Note that walking in Gods statutes keeping his Ordinances and doing his will doe evidence the worke of grace in the heart and what the man is God would give them onenesse of heart newnesse and tendernesse of spirit that they might walk keepe doe c. If then they did so this declared what was within Luke 1.6 Zacharie and Elizabeth were both righteous before God walking in all the Commandements and Ordinances of the Lord blamelesse their w●lking witnessed their righteousnesse see 1 John 3.10 2 Chap. 29. Luke 6.44 What ever the fruit is such is the Tree Figgs doe not grow upon thornes nor Grapes upon brambles where you finde Grapes it is a Vine and not onely doth God and Christ know them but Mat. 7.16 you shall know them by their Fruits not by their leaves but their fruits not some few actions but by a dayly observat●●n of them sometimes delay and times alwayes attention is required to discerne them 2 Tim. 3.5 Having a form of godlinesse c. this may be discerned for vers 9. Their folly shall be manifest to all men James 2.18 Works ●re the glasse picture Child of faith Adam begat a Sonne after his Image and faith begets Children after its owne Image Abrahams offering of his Sonne dec●a●ed his faith Heb. 11.17 Works justifie faith and faith justifies the man Some doubt whether works will prove grace whether sanctification will evidence justification But John tells us there is a witnesse of Water as well as of blood and of the spirit 1 Joh. 5.8 if the Law written in Bookes may be knowne and the sense of it evidenced by Commentaries surely the Law written in the heart may be knowne and evidenced by works 3. Grace in the heart will appeare in the life if there be a new spirit a tender heart there will be walking in the Statutes A new spirit cannot be imprisoned within but it will breake out into action when the seed is sowne in good ground it will not lye long under ground but spring forth Marke 4.20 Grace is light and that will manifest it selfe vers 21.22 God hath determined that hidden things shall bee manifested grace cannot alwayes be hid 1 Pet. 2.9 Such vertue will out 1 Thes 1.5.6.7 The Coritnhians were the Epistle of Paul written in his heart read and knowne of all men The Romans faith was spoken of throughout the World Rom. 1.8 That was in all the Churches of the World So their obedience Chap. 16.19 There be diverse things cannot be hidden as the light fire life the wind a spring and of this nature is grace which is all those its light and fire John was a burning and shining light Its life Luke 15.24 It s the wind of the spirit Cant. 4.16 Joh. 3.8 It s a Spring Joh. 7.38 A good Tree cannot bring forth evill fruit and it cannot but bring forth good fruit Acts 4.20 We cannot but speake the things we have heard and seene Paul when converted presently said Lord what wilt thou have me to doe He would not be idle
Sam. 12.22 When Heaven and Earth shake the Lord will be the hope of his people Joel 3.16 The Hebrew is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the place of repaire or harbour 3. It is free grace and favour that God doth take any people to be his and becometh a God unto people chuse not God he saith They shall be my people and I will be their God We are vile in our natures wicked in our works no lovelinesse or profitablenesse is in us or by u● Ezek. 16.5.6 When thy person was loathed and thou wast polluted in thy blood I sayd unto thee live There is nothing in a Nation that sets his heart a work to doe a people good it was not their greatnesse moved him Deut. 7.7 They were the fewest of all people nor their goodnesse for what was their father Abraham Josh 24.2.3 Terah Abraham and Nachor were idolaters they served other Gods saith the text and I took your Father Abraham so when God tooke his seed in Aegypt they were idolatrous Ezek. 20.5.6.7 There is no righteousnesse in people to moove God neither can any sin in them hinder God from putting forth acts of his free grace D●u 32.10 Speaking of Israel he found him in a desart Land and in the wast howling Wildernesse to which some allusion may be Cant. 8.5 God found out and tooke this people in a wicked lost distressed condition and brought them out by his power and made them his people by his grace 1 Sam. 12.22 It pleased the Lord to make them his people 4. God doth not equally dispense his grace and favour some are his people and he is their God others are not many Nations were left when the Jewes were taken yea all other Nations Amos 3.2 You onely have I knowne of all the Families of the Earth The Lords favour fell upon the Jewes and not others Some infer from Gen. 22.18 In thy seed shall all Nations of the Earth be blessed that God loves all equally at that time he did not the words are a promise of what should be not of what was neither is it so now for if he l●ves all alike why doth he deny the means of grace to many Nation why doth he not blesse and make the same effectu●l equally to al where they are Besids such an opinion over ●●ow Election Gods dominion over the Creatures and his freedome in dispensation of grace and mercy John 10.26 Acts 13.48 5. Those are the Lords have a strong ground to plead with God in prayer for any mercy Where is relation and intrest there is encouragement to aske if God be ours and we his surely we may plead with him for great things in our prayers The people of God did so of old Jer. 14.9 Psal 80.4 Isa 64.9 Deut. 9.26 2 Chron. 20.12 Chap. 14.11 VERS 21. But as for them whose heart walketh after the heart of their dteestable things and their abominations I will recompence their way upon their owne heads saith the Lord GOD. THis Verse is a threatning to those should persist in their evill wayes yet a comfort to the godly that the Lord would judge them and ease them of them Detestable things and abominations These words have been opened in the 18. vers and Chap. 5.11.7.20 Quorum cor ambulat ad cor Heart of their detestable things Hebrew is their heart going to the heart of their detestable things Aprez le desire de leur infametes Idolls have an interpretative desire to be worshipped Heart is sometimes put for the midst of a thing Exod. 15.8 The heart of the Sea Which is cald Ezek. 27.4 The midst of the Sea So their heart was in the midst of their Idols or amongst their Idols what was delightfull in them that was as the heart of the Idoll and their hearts were carryed thereunto Or thus you may take the words they conceiv'd some deity to be in their Idols and they labourd to please and doe those things delighted the heart of that deity Those rites ceremonies wayes whereby they worshipped their Idolls may be cald the heart of their detestable things It was a law among the Heathens that every God should be worshipped as he thought good and the way prescribed by him of worshipping was as the heart and life of the Idoll and the Idolatry I will recompence their way upon thtir owne heads Of these words see what hath been said Chap. 9.10 Chap. 7.3.4.8 That when the Lord makes gracious promises to a people Obser 1. they doe not refer to and fetch in all This Observation rises from the two former Verses this laid together God promises to give them onenesse newnesse tendernesse of heart he promiseth that he will be their God and they shall be his people These promises were absolute yet made good unto some of the Captives not unto all But as for them whose heart walketh after c. They should not come within the compasse of them Many promises of the Lord are delivered indefinitely without restriction and absolutely without condition and yet are made good onely to some even those are given of the father unto Christ many of these after the Captivity never had these promises made good unto them yet God was faithfull in that some had the fruit and comfort of them 2. Tares Hypocrites and naughty ones will be in the Church alwayes some had new spirits tender hearts and walkt in Gods Statutes others had old spirits hard hearts and walked after detestable things some threw away all abominable things and others there hearts went after them They comming out of Babilon and laying the foundation of a new Church it was probable that none but choice ones should have been of it or in it but their were Usurers Sabbath-breakers and such had mingled themselves with strange Wives Nehem. 5. 13. C ham was in the A●ke Judas among the Apostles the Church abounded with Hypocrites in Christs dayes Matth. 13.30 there will be Tares among the Wheat to the end of the World 3. Afflictions great and long doe not sanctifie they were to be in Captivity and that seventy yeares yet after their returne the hearts of many would be carryed to their detestable things It s granted that after they came out of Babylon they never fell to Idolatry that is the body of them did not but doubtlesse some particulars did their hearts went to the heart of their detestable things when they saw some of the old Idols or relicks of them they were affected with them Affl ctions of themselves purge not out corruption nor take the heart off from evill things 4. Mens hearts are in false wayes and worship they take pleasure in superstitious and idolatrous practices Things invented by men and brought into the worship of God are pleasing to humane senses to carnall reason mens corruptions and so take their hearts when the Calfe was made Exod. 32.19 they were greatly affected with it and danced about it 1 Pet. 4.3 Lasciviousnesse
he waits is bountifull and would with his goodnesse and long suffering draw sinners to repentance Let others be like God a Minister should be patient not strive be gentle towards all men not bitter nor cursing in meekenesse instructing c. 2. Prophets must venture though the successe of their endeavours be uncertaine goe prepare stuffe for removing remove and from place to place It may be they will consider Prophets and others should look at Gods will not successe Divine pleasure is warrant sufficient for any to act let the issue be what it will Ministers Magistrates Parents must doe their duty it may be good will come of it It may be they will consider it s not a word of doubting but of hope and encouragement Thou shalt bring forth thy stuffeby Day in their sight The reason of this was that so all might see Princes Nobles and People and be inexcusable if they did not take warning Goe forth at even This was to shew the stealing away of the King Nobles and men of war by night as it is 2 Kings 25.4 The City was broken up and all the men of war fled by night by the way of the Gate between two walls which is by the Kings Garden and the King went the way towards the plaine Jer. 39.4 They fled and went out of the City by night even Zedekiah with the rest .. Dig through the wall c. To shew what great streights they should be in all gates should be beset all knowne passages stopt and they necessitated to breake through the wall and vers 7. Ezekiel saith he did it with his owne hand I dig'd through the wall with my hand In eminent danger any shift will men make pull stones out of walls c. Thou shalt beare it upon thy shoulders To shew that the People and Princes should carry away their pretious things upon their shoulders Thou shalt cover thy face that thou see not the ground Covering of the face was in use among the Jews and others 1. In case of disappointment and shame they did it Jer. 14.3 Their Nobles have sent their little ones to the waters they came to the pits and found no water they returned with the vessells empty they were ashamed confounded and covered their heads 2. In case of sorrow and mourning 2 Sam. 19.4 When Absalom was slain David covered his face and cryed O Absalm my Sonne so in the 15 Chap. 30. David and the people had their heads covered and wept when they went up Mount Olivet 3. In case of guilt ●nd punishment for it Esther 7.8 When Haman was accused by Esther and to suffer for his villanous plot against the Jewes they covered his face as not worthy to see the sunne or earth here the Prophets covering was typicall and was to shew not onely what a darke moonelesse night Zedekiah should chuse to flie in but what a darke condition he should be in when his eyes should be put out therefore those words That thou see not the ground are added intimating that though he were carryed into Babylon yet he should not see that Land For I have set thee for a signe to the house of Israel And in the 11 ver I am the signe The word in Hebrew is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Portentum from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifyeth somthing beautifull specious drawing to admiration here it s put for a strange or wonderfull thing That might be pleasing to the eye but sad in effect and heavy to the heart and is the same with Oth and is rendered a signe in this place and others as in 2 Chron. 32 24. Isa 8.18 I and the Children thou hast given me are for signes and wonders There are both the words and point out the same thi●g and that is Signum or portentum quo futurus rerum eventus design●tur as Isa 20.3.4 His going naked and barefoot was a signe and wonder upon Aegypt and Ae hiopia and our Prophets digging the wall carrying out his stuffe and covering of his face made him a signe to the house of Israell they would not beleeve that they should goe into cap ivi●y but this was a lively signe to convince them of it The Lord carryeth on his desi●ne in the World oft times Obser by foolish weak ridiculous means the Prophet must dig through the wall carry out his stuffe upon his shoulder remove from place to place and cover his face that he see not the ground these things seem'd childish and foolish unto the Jewes they thought him a silly or mad man so Chap. 4. He must take a Tile picture Jerusalem upon it he must build a sort cast a Mount set a campe and battering Rams against it he must also set an Iron pan for a wall between him and the City lye upon his left side and then upon his right side drinke water by measure a●d b●ke his bread in dunge c. All which seem'd poore ridiculous things in the eyes of the people but there was weight in them And I did as I was commanded I brought forth my stuffe by day as stuffe for captivity c. In this Verse is the obedience of the prophet to the type commanded and in the two next preparation to the application of the type Obser From the sixt Verse its mans duty readily to obey the Lord in whatsoever he commands be they things of such nature as to seeme ridiculous unworthy a man such as will expose him to scorne disgrace c. yet he is bound to doe them Our Prophet did as he was commanded he stuck not at the doing those things would make him a signe and fable in all Israel VERS 8 9. And in the morning came the word of the Lord unto me saying Sonne of man hath not the house of Israel the rebellious house said unto thee What doest thou GOD had appointed the Prophet to doe those typicall things in their sight and now he comes to inquire what the people did or sayd upon his so doing and such was the blindnesse and stupidity of this people that they did not so much as inquire of the Prophet what these typicall passages meant The words in the 9. Verse are an interrogation and import a negative not an affirmative thus Hath not the rebellious house said unto thee what do●st thou No I know it hath not they dreamt rather of their owne returne out of Captivity then thought of their Brethrens coming into captivity who were at Jerusalem they rather derided the Prophet for those strange acts then consulted what they meant The Lord looks after his Messengers and messages Obser sent by them and will have an account what entertainment they have The Lord commanded Ez kiel to goe and doe such things which he did and here he comes and inquires what was the effect of those typicall actions whether the people apprehended his meaning in them or made inquirie after them have they come to thee have
Vers 25.28 What is that Proverbe which you have in the Land of Israel I shall open the Word Proverbe unto you 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifying to beare Rule to Reigne to Excell and so a Proverbe is some notable speech which excels others and beares rule amongst men New Wine is not for old Bottles Doe men gather Grapes of Thornes Little Leaven leavens the whole lumpe Mashal signifies 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Lordly authentick sentence as the Proverbs of Solomon and such as these Viz. the Axe layd to the root of the tree Where the treasure is Sermo ad exhortationem aptus cujus per universum vitae curriculum utilitas dimanet Mich. Apostol Hesych in Lexic 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Basilius the heart will be also No man can serve two masters c. Or it s from the same root signifying to speake Similies or Parables Adagie● or witty sayings Hence the Septuagint renders it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 What is the Parable which you have in the Land The Gospell express●s a Proverbe by the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 John 16.25 2 Pet. 2.22 And the Learned thinke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And Scaliger L. 3. Poet censet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dici 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because its a sentence goes up and downe by the way its common amongst men or thus it may rather be so called because its praeter viam besides the common way of speaking having something mysterious darke and difficult in it The Graecians say its 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a speech usefull for this life 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because cast amongst the people for their use 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Plut. in Camillo Paraemia est oratio obscura quae per aliam d●scuram significatur Suidas in Collect. having much good and moderate darknesse in it They say also its 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a speech vaild light in a darke Lanthorne Some Proverbs are obscure and signifie somewhat else then the words seeme to expresse As the Dog is turn'd unto his owne vomit againe and the Sow that was wash'd to her wallowing in the mire 2 Pet. 2.22 So that in Ezek. 18.2 The Fathers have eaten sowre Grapes and the Childrens teeth are set on edge Some are more plaine and easie as 1 Sam. 24.13 Wickednesse proceeds from the wicked So that among us truth begets hatred flattery friends Some were wicked and false and such had this people among them that in Ezek. 18.2 The Fathers c. And that in this place are wicked Proverbs The dayes are prolonged and every vision fayleth Herein lyes the evill of this Proverbe When the Prophets at the command of God prophesied sad things threatned destruction to Jerusalem Captivity to the people c. They not willing to heare of such things All those Visions they say they have had touching the Chaldaeans comming and laying us wast they are dreames fansies they have no weight no worth no truth in them put off all by this Proverbe thus If that the Prophets prophesie be true it s not for our dayes but the dayes of those are long after for the next the second or third Generation after as the dayes are prolonged say they or if they be false as its likely what need we feare or care every vision faileth they come to nothing they are words winde and thus wickedly they put off Propheticall threats and deluded their owne soules they layd not to heart their sinnes they used not any meanes to divert Divine wrath or to secure their owne soules and that because sinfully they prolong'd or disanul'd the Prophesies That men very wicked are very secure they look for peace liberty and long life Obser 1. even when they have greatly provoked the wrath of God against them what if we have find by violence in the land by corruptions and false worship in the Church and the Prophets have thundered against us with threatening judgements yet The dayes are prolonged we shall have peace walke at liberty and fill up the number of our dayes so in Chap. 11.3 It is not neer desolation is threatned by t●e Prophets from Chaldea but is not near let us build houses for our delight and dwell in them secur●ly and take a course with Jeremiah and those of his st●eine which thinke to trouble us Jer. 7.9.10 They did Steal murder commit adultery sweare falsely burne Incense to Baal yet came and stood in the house of God and said We are delivered to d●e all these abominations the meaning is though we have done such things and have been greviously threatned for them by the Prophets yet we are delivered from their threats and are well safe without fear or danger and shall goe on in our old wayes when Gods threatnings are deser'd out of mercy that men may consider repent and prevent them they thinke they will never come and so grow more secure and more sinfull Eccl 8.11 Because sentence against an evill worke is not executed speedily therefore the heart of the sons of men is fully set in them to do evil they go on more freely with more delight this makes the Lord oft to mind sinners of the dayes of his wrath Amos 4.1.2 Heare this word yee Kine of Bashan that are in the Mountaine of Samariah which oppresse the poore which crush the needy which say to their Masters bring and let us drinke They were secure and like Kine goared trod under the poorer sort and what must they heare this The Lord God hath sworn by his holynesse that loe the dayes shall come upon you that he will take you away with hookes and your posterity with fish-hookes so Zeph. 1.14 The great day of the Lord is neare it is neare and hasteth greatly 2. Such is the corruption of man that beeing opposed it swells higher and vents it selfe oft times blasphemously the Prophets reproved them for their sins threatned the soarest judgements for them and how did they entertaine those threatnings Because men feel not Gods hand they thinke his threatnings winde their hearts boyld against the Prophets and their Messages and they uttered it with their tongues every vision fayleth there is no truth in the Prophets nor in their visions they are lyars and their visions lyes This was not onely contumelious to the Prophets but blasphemous against the Majestie of God and the truth of his word men that live under the word if their corruptions and lusts be not weakned and mortifyed they are ripen'd strengthen'd and grow to an insufferable height Jer. 17.15 They say unto me where is the Word of the Lord let it come now Thou tellest us of the word of the Lord but it s thine owne dreame if it be the Lords let it come now and we will believe it but if not it s thine and thou art a deceiver to tell us so 2 Pet. 3.3.4 In the last dayes
oppression in Scripture sense is murther 348. layes a Land desolate 490 Ordinances are the ornaments and glory of a people 89 90. Men may have them without God in them 158. Keepe mine Ordinances of that phrase and what it imports 453 P Paines must be great to finde out great evills 164 Parents sins ruine children 251 Patience The Lord will not alwayes beare with sinners 204. his patience exceeding great 271. 477 Peace what it notes 540. wicked men are peaceless 114. it may be sought too late 115 Pelatiah of the name 330. his death and Questions resolved concerning him 355. 360 People They shall be my people what the words implie 458 459. God marries a people to himselfe 462. great happines to have God ours ibid. t is free grace any are his 463. those are Gods have encouragement to askes 464. People easily misted 528 529 Pithom and Pethah what they expresse 360 Pitty arguments of pitty 249 250. God deales gently with his 268 269 Place God oft smites sinners in the place where they sin'd 253 Pompe 108. not to be confided in 110 Prayer forced is faithlesse 199. Prayer for others 261. Sinnes may be such as God will not heare prayer 267 268 and why 268 269 Preparations endeavours not seconded by God come to nought 63 Presence it s a great evill when God takes away the signes of his presence 123 Pride precedes destruction 51 52. the cause of mans going from God 167 Princes are chiefe Rulers 330. are to ease burdens 483. else God hath burdens for them 484. cannot escape judgements 485 486 Priviledge no priviledge exempts a sinning people from judgement 37. 61 Priviledges no plea. 288 Promises of God shall be performed 396 505. onely to some 465 Prophets they are prayed sued to in streights 122. 137. if not heard when men are at ease they shall miss of help from them in trouble ibid. Prophets privie to what God does 288. acted by the Spirit 335 336. prophesie why twice mentioned 343. for new acts of prophesie now influx of Spirit 345 346. Prophets were to deale particularly with sinners 346 347. Of Ezekiels prophecying some doubts cleered 355. to 360. God lookes what entertainment they have 401. God puts them oft upon troublesome service 489. Prophets were to make knowne dark things 490. False Prophets have cunning wayes to prevaile 501. their visions false and flattering 501 502. make men secure 503. events distinguish Prophets 503. Prophecying of their own hearts what it is 510. false Prophets why called Prophets ibid. judgement denounced against them 511. false Prophets described 511 512. false Prophets in the Churh no new thing 512 513. who are true Prophets who false 513. what comes from false Prophets is worthless 514. the folly of false Prophets ibid. wee is their portion 515. liken'd to Foxes from 515. to 519. a sad judgement when Prophets become Foxes 519. its a griefe to heaven 520. Prophets are to stand in the gap 523 524. failing in their dutie makes people fall 526 true Prophets had two things 527. the impudency of false Prophets 528. they seduce people 528 529. the Lord is against them 535. severall things that make the Lord against them 536. Prophets true in mens esteeme may be false in Gods 538. false Prophets liken'd to Masons Carpenters 452. A doubt Cleer'd out of Jer. 4.10.544 to 546. false Prophets seed people with vaine hopes 346. to please men an argument of false teachers 546 547. their Proph●●●es seem to have much strength 547. false Prophets strengthen each other 548. Prophets what is their own is weake 548 549. their work is to make known truth 549 550. God will try their works 550. by variety of wayes ibid. false Prophets cannot avoyd judgements ibid. what they deliver shall come to nought 551. and themselves discovered 551 552. women of old prophesied 554 555. Satan troubled the Church us with false prophets so with false prophetesses 560 those are false that flatter 561. false Prophesies are snares ibid. false Prophets cannot performe what they promise ibid. they profane Gods Name ibid. make merchandize of truth ibid. they curse whom God blesses 562. Gods proceeding against them ibid. Women and men Teachers are subtill to seduce 563. Gods people may be taken with their errours 563 564. their doctrines prejudice both the godly and wicked 564. God hath his times to deliver his people from them 565 Providence acts in all things 303. dubiously 306. much glory and beauty in the works of providence 310 Proverb the word opened 492 493 Purpose intentions to please God oft prove provocations 183 Punishment God punisheth in the things men sinne 75. God punisheth because men doe wickedly 354. God Just in his punishing 467 R Rebellion rebellious house what 475 Regeneration see New Spirit Religion to be fetcht from Christ and the Apostles 176. not to be forced 422. to 424 Remembring of God what is in it 12 13. to be put in minde of the s●me things an advantage 320 Repentance true penitents are affected with and loath themselves for their sinnes 22. Scripture-expressions concerning repentance 22 23. notes of true repentance 23 24 Repetitions are not in vaine 32. they awaken 43 Robbing 99 Rod. 48 49 Ruine of things in themselves 52 53 the neerer d●struction the more all things are out of order 155 Rulers for the most p●rt wicked 366. its matter of mourning 337. being evill make others evill 338 339. secure ibid. S Sackcloath 73 Saints are C●rists treasure 233. God their Sanctuary 385. shewes them kindnesse in all places 386. seeming Saints will be discovered 538 Salvation Few saved 231 Samenes how a thing like may be called the same 317 Sanctum Sanctorum 174. Sanctuary 247. 378. the holinesse of a place averts not Gods wrath 253. Sanctuary a place of refuge 379. Gods presence there 380. acceptance there ib●d helpe from thence 381. why cald a little Sanctuary 381 Saphire whence derived and what it notes 279 Scoffing provokes God greatly 343. examples of sc●ffers 343 344. 361. their judgements momentaneous 360 Scripture sh●ns multiplying of words 345. vid. Word Season Things done in season are acceptable to God 299 Secret of God is amongst his people 532 Secure Great ones greatly secure 339. Security an epidemicall disease brings judgement impartially 484 Seduction what 540. seducing of the people provokes God 549 Segullah what it noteth 641 Self a great let to divine things 148. self-seeking matter of mourning 337. selveishness undoes 413 Seperation what justifi able 373 374 Shame what 73 ●●es two things 74 Sig●e● G●d manifests his pleasure by signes 291 when ●isits with judgements gives signes 293. set thee for a signe what sign fies 479 Sin the evill in i● 24. it weakens 60. its the life of the wicked 61 Sinners smitten in what th●y off●nd with 131 there are degrees of sins 158. sin discover'd by degrees 159 Crl●sh sin in the conc●ption 175 sin to be measured not by man but Gods account 179 sin no light