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

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and so do the beasts yea many of the beasts excell us in the perfection of that kind of life Lions excell in strength Roes in swiftness Eagles in long age none of their pleasures are soured with remorse of conscience But the inward Spiritual life is called the life of God Ephes. 4. 18. 6. The inward life is the beginning of our life in heaven A glorified Saint and a Saint militant upon earth they both live the life of God and the life of grace is the same life for kind though not for degree and one that is glorified and one here upon earth differ but as a child and a man But now the life of sense and the life of grace differ as a Toad and a man not only in degree but also in kind 7. Yet further this is that great thing which God hath been at such great expence about to raise the being of the new creature John 6. 51. This is my flesh which I give for the life of the world The supports the strength of the inward man cost dearer than all other comforts whatsoever it must have nobler supports it must have the blood of Christ daily supplies from heaven but the other life is called the life of our hands Isa. 57. 10. We patch up to ourselves some conveniencies for the sensible life by labour and service here in the world Well then this is that which the children of God do mostly look after that the inward life may be kept free from annoyance and fit for the purposes of grace USE The Use of this is to chek our carnal and preposterous care for the outward man to the neglect of the inward How much are we for the outward man that it may be well fed and well cloathed well at ease as for the present life there 's all our care but not so careful to get the soul furnished with grace and strengthened and renewed by continued influences from Christ. Certainly if men did look after soul strength they would be more careful to wait upon God for his blessing You may know the disproportion of your care for outward things and for the inward man by these Questions 1. How much do you prize Gods day the means of grace opportunities of worship that are for the inward man The Sabbath day is a feast day for souls Now when men are weary of it it 's the most burdensome day of all the week round Amos 8. 5. When will the Sabbath be gone that we may set forth wheat It is a sign they are carnal when men count that day the only lost day as Seneca saith of the Jews they lost the full seventh of their lives speaking of the Sabbath day so carnal men think it is a lost day to them they look upon the Sabbath as a melancholy interruption of their affairs and business The Apostle Iames saith of those that are begotten by God Chap. 1. 9. that they are swift to hear certainly they that have an inward man to maintain another life than an outward and animal life must have the supply and will look after the comforts of it 2. Consider how differently we are concerned with bodily and soul concernments If the body be but a little diseased if we want an appetite to a meal or a little sleep in the night we complain of it presently we enquire what 's the cause and look for a remedy but what a wonderfull disproportion is there as to the soul 'T is a strange expression that 3 Epist. John 2. I wish that thy body prosper as thy soul prospers Alas we may say of the most O that their souls did prosper as their bodies as they flourish in the conveniencies of the outward man 3. What care have you for the inward man to adorn the soul to beautify it with grace that it may be of price and esteem with God or to fortify it with grace Now when all our strength and travel is laid out for that which doth not conduce to the inward life Isa. 55. 2. and we lay out our money for that which is not bread it is a sign we are wholly carnal We read in Ecclesiastical story of one that wept when he saw a wanton woman decking her self with a great deal of care to please her lovers saith he Have I been so careful to deck my soul for Christ Iesus 4. Do you take in spiritual refreshments even when afflictions abound 2 Cor. 1. 5. As the sufferings of Christ abound in us so our consolation also aboundeth by Christ then you are affected as the children of God whose heart and care runs out mainly for the inward man This in general Doct. 2. Secondly more especially observe He goes to God for strength Let me shew 1. What is this Spiritual strength 2. How it is given out 3. How God is concerned in it David goes to God Lord strengthen me First What Spiritual strength is It is Gods perfecting of his work Strength supposeth life therefore in general it is God's renewed influence when he hath planted habits of grace he comes and strengthens There is gratia praeveniens operans co-operans there is preventing-grace working-grace and co-working-grace Preventing-grace that is when God converts us when the Lord turns us to himself and doth plant grace in the soul at first Working grace that is when God strengthens the habit Co-working grace when God stirs up the act and helps us in the exercise of the grace we have First He plants grace into the heart then there 's a constant influence as the two Olive-trees in Zechariah were always dropping into the Lamps and then by excitation and co-operation he stirs it up Saith Austin Unless God gives us the faculties and unless he gives us the will we can do nothing and unless he concurs with the exercise of these faculties still we cannot work in the spiritual life as we ought to do and therefore first God infuseth grace and then strengthens grace first he worketh in us then by us First we are objects of his work then instruments To shew wherein the strength of the soul lies 1. There are planted in the soul habits of grace There are not only high operations of grace but permanent and fixed habits the seed of God that remaineth within us 1 Ioh. 3. 9. which cannot be the in-dwelling of the Spirit for this seed of God is some created thing Psal. 51. 10. Create in me a clean heart O God and it is something that grows 2 Pet. 3. 6. Grow in grace And therefore 't is evident there are habits of grace planted in the soul a good stock that we have from God at first called the good treasure of the heart Matth. 12. these habits of grace are called armour of God the shield of faith the helmet of salvation This is the strength of the soul. 2. But besides this there 's a continuance and an increase of these graces when the Lord confirms his work and perfects what
then 't is broad for its duration and continuance First 'T is broad for use A Man may soon see to the bottom of the Creatures but the wisdom and purity and utility of the Word of God and the Mysteries therein contained and the spiritual Estate that we have thereby you cannot see to the end of that it extendeth to all times places persons actions and circumstances of actions it hath an unconceivable vastness of purity and spirituality But you will say there is a set number of Precepts how say you then 't is exceeding broad Their use is large and 't is here put for the whole Word of God Adoro plenitudinem Scripturarum tuarum saith Tertullian Here are Remedies for every malady and a plentiful Storehouse of all comforts satisfaction to every doubt nothing pertaining to the holiness and happiness of Man is wanting nothing requisiter to direct comfort and support men in all conditions prosperity adversity health sickness life death what shall I say 'T is the Word that sanctifies all our comforts 1 Tim. 4. 5. 'T is the Word that maintaineth our lives Mat. 4. 4. 'T is the Word that fitteth us to an immortal being 1 Pet. 1. 23. We cannot easily express the comprehensiveness of it and the benefit that we have by it When all earthly things fail the Word will be a sure Comforter and Counsellor to us it doth not only tell us what we should do but what we shall be In short the Word of God describeth the whole state of the Church and the world and what shall become of it in the world to come There is a foolish curiosity that possesseth many in the world who desire to know their destiny and what is in the womb of futurity as the King of Babylon stood upon the head ways to make divination Now let this curiosity be turned to some profitable use nothing deserves to be known so much as this what shall become of us to all Eternity If the question were Shall I be rich or poor happy or miserable in this world it were not of such great moment for these distinctions do not out-live time but the question is of great moment Whether I shall be eternally miserable or eternally happy 'T is a foolish curiosity to know our earthly state the misery of which cannot be prevented by our prudence or foresight but it concerneth much to know whether we are in a damnable or saveable condition while we have time to remedy our case and this the Word of God will inform you of assuredly Well the Commandment is exceeding broad This is the Word that discovereth to you the nature of God and the holy Angels the souls of men the state of the world to come who is the Author of Scripture God thy Commandments the matter of Scripture God 't was not fit that any should write of God but God himself What is the end of this Word God Why was this Word written but that we might everlastingly enjoy the blessed God As Caesar wrote his own Commentaries so God when there was none above him of whom he could write he wrote of himself by Histories Laws Prophesies and Promises and many other Doctrines hath he set himself forth to be the Creator Preserver Deliverer and Glorifier of Mankind and all this is done in a perfect manner Men mingle their imperfections with their Writings though holy and laudable for their names yet they discover themselves in all they do their words and speeches are never so perfect but there is something wanting and here you can find nothing but God here God hath written a Book whose works are perfect nothing can be added nothing taken away To say there is an idle word in Scripture is great blasphemy saith Basil. We have no reason to run to humane inventions for the Word prescribeth every duty every thing that is to be believed and done in order to salvation Open the Gap once and there is no end one brings in one thing and then another and from hence comes all the Ceremonies that do abound in the Church 't is not only most perfect but most profitable and containeth all kind of learning Common Crafts will teach us how to get our Bread but this how to get the Kingdom of Heaven Law preserveth Estates the Testament of Men this the Testament of God the Charter of our inheritance Physick cureth diseases of the body this afflicted minds and distempered hearts Natural Philosophy raiseth Men to the contemplation of the Stars but this to the contemplation of God their Maker By History we come to know of the rise and ruine of Kingdoms States and Cities by this the Creation and Consummation of the world Rhetorick serves to move affection this to kindle divine love ●…oetry causeth natural delight this delight in God no writing like this Secondly As it hath a breadth for use so for duration and continuance 't is the eternal truth of God that shall live for ever Mat. 5. 18. Heaven and earth shall pass away but not one jot or tittle of the law shall fail So Mat. 24. 35. Heaven and earth shall pass away but thy Word shall not pass away But how doth the Word continue for ever Not the Word it self but 1. The Obligation and Authority of the Word continueth for ever 't is an eternal Rule of Faith and Righteousness to the Church that 's more stable than Heaven and Earth Let me shew you how the Doctrine is perpetual The original draught is in God himself the substance and matter of the Moral Law is perpetual viz. namely the perfect love of God and of our Neighbor but the form is not we shall have no need of precepts and prohibition and promises and threatnings in the light of Glory which we have need of in the light of Grace Fierce Horses need a Bridle and there is other kind of Discipline for Children when grown up than when young When they are young we correct their bodies but when they are grown up we correct and punish them by disinheritance The Prop is removed when the thing standeth fast upon its own Basis when we come to Heaven we have intuitive apprehensive knowledge we shall have no other Bible but the Lamb's face many things that are necessary by the way are not necessary when Faith is changed into Vision and Hope into Fruition Scripture is necessary as letters to the Spouse from her Beloved while absent when present there is no such need We need not a Bond when payment is made so Scripture is the Indenture between us and God here but when that is past we shall not need Scripture 2. 'T is eternal in the ●…ruit it bringeth forth the blessing of eternal life to them that keep it and obey it 2d Epistle of Iohn chap. 2. For the truths sake that dwelleth in us and shall be in us for ever So Iohn 8. 51. He that believeth in me shall never see death Why holy men dye as well
the World too Here 's the difficulty how a Christian that hath not a Foot of Land yet should be Heir of all the World All things are theirs saith the Apostle 1 Cor. 3. 21. And it is said of Abraham who was the Father of the Faithful and whose Blessing comes upon us that through the righteousness of Faith he became Heir of the World He was re-established in the right which Adam had before the Fall that whereever God should cast his portion he should look upon it as made over to him by Grace as a sanctified portion belonging to the Covenant and in this sence he was Heir of the whole World All Creatures are sanctified to a Believer and the comfortable enjoyment of them fall to our lot and share and therefore 1 Tim. 4. 5. it is said commanding to abstain from meats which God hath created to be received with thanksgiving to them that believe and know the truth Mark Believers only have a Covenant right to Meat Drink Land Money and the things that are possess'd in the World to make use of the good Creatures God hath bestowed upon them Others are not Usurpers I dare not say so all men have a Providential right it is their portion God hath given them in this world but they have not a Covenant right Whatever of the World falls to their share comes to them in a regular way of Providence that shall be sanctified and truly without this Covenant right if we had all earthly possessions it would be a mere nothing and no Blessing Once more Providence is theirs even those things which are against us afflictions death not only life but death 1 Cor. 3. 22. as part of their portion Ordinances are theirs all the gifts of the Church Paul Apollos Cephas all for their benefit and Graces are theirs the righteousness of Christ and the Graces of the Spirit they are all a part of their portion made over to them by virtue of Gods testimony As to the righteousness of Christ It is said of Noah Heb. 11. 7. that he became an Heir of the righteousness which is by Faith The great Legacy which Christ hath left is his righteousness As Elijah when he went to Heaven left Elisha his Cloak or Mantle so when Christ went to Heaven he left the Garment of his righteousness behind him as a Legacy to the Church in confidence whereof we appear before God Look as Fathers leave Lands to their Children and such as they have so Christ hath left us what he had In the outward Estate we are despicable Silver and Gold he hath not left us that 's no solid portion but he hath left us his righteousness and obedience as a ground of our acceptance with God No Monarch in the World can leave us such a portion it cost Christ very dear to purchase it for us Then the Graces of the Spirit we have Grace enough to maintain our expences to Heaven and carry us on till we come to the full enjoyment of our portion Thus God in Covenant Heaven Earth whatever is great and magnificent the Ordinances of the Church the Graces of the Spirit all these belong to our heritage 't is a full portion 2. It is a sure portion both on Gods part and ours On Gods part there we have his Word and that 's better than all the assurance in the World He hath magnified that above all his name Psal. 138. 2. If we had but Gods single word that 's enough for God is very tender of his word more than of Heaven and Earth and all things he hath made Heaven and Earth shall pass away but my word shall not pass away Then we have it confirmed with an Oath Heb. 6. 6 7. God thought our heritage could never stand upon terms sure enough therefore he condescended to give us an Oath over and above his Word An Oath is given in a doubtful matter But now because Unbelief possibly might not be satisfied with Gods bare word he hath interposed by an Oath and pawned all his Holiness and Glory laid them at pledge with the Heirs of promise that they might have strong consolation for that 's the effect of Gods Oath when the Lord swears As I live saith the Lord as if he should say Take my life in pawn count me not an excellent glorious holy God if I don't accomplish this for you I will make good this promise There is no inheritance in the world so sure as this made over to the Heirs of promise And then on our part there 't is made sure God will maintain our right to this inheritance we should imbezil our inheritance lose it every hour if it were wholly committed to us but mark Thou art the portion of mine inheritance thou shalt maintain my Lot O Lord Psalm 16. 5. An heritage is either wasted by the prodigality of the Owner or else wrested from us by the violence and cunning of others Now for the prodigal disposition of the Owner Indeed we should spend our patrimony apace soon imbezil our portion if we had the sole keeping of it for we are Prodigals But mark under the Law Exod. 25. 23. an Israelite though he might alienate his inheritance for a while till the year of Jubilee came yet God forbids him to sell it away for ever So we blot our Evidences often we cannot read our Title there 's an interruption of Comfort a kind of Sequestration from the priviledges of the Covenant for a while but Jesus Christ is our Guardian to look after them that take the promises for their heritages And then it cannot be wrested from us by the violence of others All heritages in the world are liable to violences Princes have been driven from their Kingdoms and Men from their Heritages but this is a Heritage God will maintain he hath engaged his own power Iohn 10. 28. No man is able to pluck them out of my hand It shall not be wrested from us by any Pleas in Law The Devil would soon pick a flaw in our Title there are so many temptations and accusations but now God will maintain our right and possession of the priviledges of the Covenant He is deeply engaged to maintain their right whose hearts depend upon him they may take away life but not the favour of God 3. It is a most lasting and durable inheritance as being eternal I have taken thy testimonies for my heritage for ever You know all estates are valuable according as they last a Lease for years is better than to be Tenant at will an Inheritance is better than a Lease Our inheritance lasts for ever and ever All other heritages determine with life but then ours begins this heritage of Gods testimonies A worldly portion may crumble away and waste to nothing before we dye but these testimonies will give us a good Estate when all things else fail A Believer when he is stript of all and reduced to bare promises is a happy man and when
he that builds upon the Sand when the winds blow and beat upon the House down it falls Earthen Vessels when they come to be scowred the varnish and paint wears off Or by some scandalous fall for that which is lame will soon be turned out of the way Heb. 12. 13. This deceitfulness 1. Is contrary to God who is a God of truth Psal. 31. 5. the Authour of truth Ephes. 4. 24. Created after God in righteousness and true holiness and a lover of truth Psal. 51. 3. Thou desirest truth in the inward parts So that it is a great affront to God when men deal falsly Ier. 5. 3. O Lord are not thine eyes upon the truth Is not that the thing thou lookest after in all the works of men This is all in all with God 2. It is contrary to Justice Charity and common ingenuity it destroys the Commerce between man and man Ephes. 4. 25. Put away lying speak every man truth with his Neighbour for ye are members one of another It is unnatural and monstrous by lying and deceit to circumvent one another it is as for one part of the Body to destroy another It is a sin not only unseemly for a Christian but it tends to the overthrow of all humane Society fidelity and mutual trust being the ground of all commerce Now God will pour out his Judgments upon them Use. Let this teach us to carry it sincerely both to God and men for craft will not always succeed The more real worth in any the more openly and fairly they carry it But for Motives 1. You will never else have true solid comfort until you are real without dissembling before God and men 2 Cor. 1. 12. For our rejoycing is this the testimony of our Conscience that in simplicity and godly sincerity not with guile and fleshly wisdom we have had our conversation in the world Truth breeds joy and comfort of heart when a man is sincere and acts according to his Conscience 2. You will never hold out without it your Mask will fall off Iames 1. 8. The double minded man is unstable in all his ways wavering unconstant up and down off and on with God A Hypocrite is compared to a Rush that grows in the mire Iob 8. 12. pluck it up it soon withers they are like Reeds shaken with every wind And you can have no approbation and acceptation with God God likes those that are sincere Behold an Israelite indeed in whom there is no guile Who are those who have pardon of sin sealed up to their Souls O blessed is that man that can say his sins are forgiven him Who is that man In whose spirit there is no guile that is without dissimulation fraudulency and guile this man enjoys acceptance with God pardon of sin justification before God And the contrary will certainly bring down an heavy Judgment SERMON CXXX PSAL. CXIX VER 119. Thou puttest away all the wicked of the Earth like dross therefore I love thy testimonies IN these words we have 1. Gods dispensation 2. The effect it had upon David's heart In the first branch we have 1. The Character by which they are described All the wicked of the earth 2. The esteem God hath of them they are dross 3. A suitable Providence dealt out to them intimated thou puttest them away like dross Note I. That the wicked are men of the earth There are common reasons why we are all men of the earth Our original is earth made of the dust of the ground Gen. 2. 7. they are but a little Earth or red Clay fashioned into the form of a man an handful of inlivened dust Our abode and service is here Iohn 17. 4. I have glorified thee upon Earth and at our end and dissolution we are turned into Earth again Eccl. 12. 7. Then shall the dust return to the Earth as it was Psal. 146. 4. his breath goeth forth he returneth to his Earth Princes as well as others must look to be dissolved into dust again But in an especial respect are wicked men said to be of the Earth and that in contradistinction to the people of God Rev. 13. 10. Gods witnesses tormented the dwellers upon earth that is those that are out of the true Church in Antichrists Kingdome so Revel 13. 8. And all that dwell upon the Earth shall worship him whose names are not written in the book of life of the Lamb. As on the contrary they that dwell in the Church are said to be in Heaven Revel 13. 6. And he opened his mouth in blasphemy against God to blaspheme his name and his tabernacle and them that dwell in heaven So Rev. 18. 20. Rejoyce over her thou heaven and ye holy Apostles But why are they thus characterized Because here they flourish Ier. 17. 13. Their names shall be written in earth grow great and of good reckoning and account here Iudas had the Bag they prosper in the world Psal. 73. 12. Behold these are the ungodly who prosper in the world Here they are respected 1 Iohn 4. 5. They are of the world and speak of the world and the world heareth them Here their hearts and minds are Matth. 6. 19 20. It is their natural frame to be worldly they only savour the things of the world preferment honour greatness 't is their unum magnum here is their pleasure and here is their portion their hopes and their happiness A Child of God looketh for another inheritance immortal and undefiled Use 1. Is to wean us from present things which the wicked enjoy more than the righteous and which certainly are but poor things in comparison of our happiness Set your affections on things above not on things in the earth Col. 3. 2. affect them not as your happiness and last end Psal. 17. 14. Their portion is in this life affect them not in competition with heavenly things but in subordination Matth. 6. 33. affect them not inordinately but so as to part with them when God will Iob 1. 21. Naked came I out of my mothers womb and naked shall I return thither the Lord gave and the Lord hath taken away blessed be the name of the Lord affect them not so as to use unlawful means to get them Prov. 28. 8. He that by Usury and unjust gain encreaseth his substance he shall gather it for him that will pity the poor affect them not so as to put your selves upon the temptation of getting or keeping them by unjust means 1 Tim. 6. 9. But they that will be rich fall into temptation and a snare and into many foolish and hurtful lusts which drown men in destruction and perdition Prov. 28. 20. He that maketh haste to be rich shall not be innocent affect them not so as to be backward to good works But whoso hath this worlds goods and seeth his Brother have need and shutteth up his bowels of compassion from him how dwelleth the love of God in him 1 Iohn 3. 17. 1 Sam. 25.
24. 5. given to the children of men Psal. 115. 16. Here God will shew his bounty to all his creatures to beasts and all kind of men 't is sometimes the Slaughter-house and Shambles of the Saints They are slain upon earth Rev. 18. 24. a receptacle for elect and reprobate therefore here they have not their blessing our inheritance lyes elsewhere 3. There are all our kindred Ubi pater ibi patria where our father is there our Countrey is Now when we pray we say to him Our Father which art in heaven There are we strangers where we are absent from God Christ and glorified Saints and while we are here upon earth we have not such enjoyment of God There 's our Father it is his house Heaven is called our Fathers house and there 's our elder brother Col. 3. 1. Set your hearts upon things above where Christ is sitting at the right hand of God And there 's the best of our kindred and Family They shall sit down with Abraham Isaac and Iacob Mat. 8. 20. Well then the children of God they count themselves to be strangers here because their kindred are elsewhere 4. There they abide longest That we account our home where we abide An Inn cannot be called our home where we come but for a night and away but now there we are for ever with the Lord. Here we are in motion there is rest The world must be surely left If we had a certain term of years fixed yet it would be very short in comparison of Eternity All the time we spend here it is but a night but a moment in comparison of Eternity We live longest in the other world and therefore there 's our home Mic. 2. 10. Arise depart hence this is not your rest God speaks it of the Land of Canaan when they had polluted it with sin It is true of all the world Sin hath brought in death and there must be a riddance it is but a passage from danger Israel dwelt first in a wandring Camp before they came to dwell in Cities and walled Towns and the Apostle alludes to that Here we have no abiding City we look for one to come As the Israelites did look for walled Towns and Cities of the Amorites to be possest by them so here we have but a wandring Camp we look for a City And mark as it was with them in their outward estate so in the mysteries of their Religion they were first seated in a Tabernacle and then in a Temple in a Tabernacle which was a figure of the Church then in a Temple which was a figure of Heaven for you know as in the Temple there were three partitions the outward Court the Holy place and the Holy of holies so there are three Heavens the third heaven Paul speaks of the heaven of heavens and there 's the Starry heaven and the Airy heaven the outward Court This life being so frail so fickle we cannot call our abode here our home What is your life saith the Apostle it is but as a vapor Jam. 4. 14. a little warm breath turn'd in and out by the nostrils Job 7. 1. Is there not an appointed time for man upon earth his days are as the days of an hireling A hired servant you do not intend should live with you for ever you hire him for a day or two and when he hath ended his work he receives his wages and is gone so all our days are but a little while we do our service and then we must be gone Actors when they have finished their parts are seen no more they go within the Curtain so when we have fulfilled our course God furnisheth the world with a new Scene of Acts and Actors 5. The necessary exercise of their graces doth make them count their lives here but a pilgrimage and themselves but strangers upon earth viz. Faith Love Hope 1. Faith shews the truth and the worth of things to come Faith will make them strangers Heb. 11. 13. They saw these things and were perswaded of them and they counted themselves pilgrims and strangers O! were we perswaded of things to come we would be hastning towards them We cry home home we talk of heaven and eternity but we do not believe them Sense and reason cannot out-see time nor look above the clouds and mists of the lower world afar off in the Apostles phrase 2 Pet. 1. 9. but Faith shews the truth of things to come We that are here upon earth when we look to heaven the Stars seem to us but so many spangles O! but when we get into heaven and look downward the world then will seem but as a mole-hill that which now to sense seems such a glorious thing will be as nothing 2. The Love of Christ which is in the Saints makes them to account themselves as strangers A child of God cannot be satisfied with things here below because his love is set upon God Two things the heart looks after as soon as it is awakened by grace and Love puts us upon them both viz. a perfect enjoyment of God and a perfect obedience to God 1. That they may be with God and Christ. The Saints have heard much of Christ read much of him tasted and felt much of him they would fain see him and be with him Phil. 1. 23. If they had the choicest contentment the world could afford this will not satisfie them so much as to be there where Christ is and to behold his glory The Apostle thinks this to be motive enough to a gracious heart to seek things above for there Christ is at the right hand of God Love will catch hold of that Col. 3. 1. The place is lovely for Christs sake Love will not suffer them to count this to be their home Though Christ is present with them now spiritually while they are here yet the presence and nearness is but distance but a kind of absence being compared with what is to come and therefore this very presence doth not quench their desires but kindle them and sets them a longing for more All the presence the communion the sight of Christ they get now it is but mediate through the glass of the Ordinance 1 Cor. 13. 12. and it is frequently interrupted his face is many times hidden Psal. 30. 7. and it is not full as it shall be there Psal. 16. 11. But now in Heaven there it will be immediate God will be all in all and there it will be constant they shall be ever with the Lord and there they shall be satisfied with his likeness Psal. 17. 15. then they enjoy his presence indeed So that Love upon these considerations sets them a longing and groaning 2. As Love makes them desire the company of Christ so intire subjection to God they would have perfect grace and freedom from sin therefore are ever groaning O when shall we be rid of this body of death Rom. 7. 23. There is a final perfect estate
were many false Gods worshipped The controversie about Religion mainly lay at first between the Iews and the Pagans the Pagans had their Gods and the Jews had the Lord God of Israel the only true God Yea among the Pagans themselves there was a great diversity every man will walk and sometimes a hot contention and many times there were hot contests which was the better God the Leek or the Garlick When Religion which restrains our passions is made the fuel of them and instead of a Judg becomes a party men give themselves up headlong to all manner of bitter zeal and strife and persuasion of truth and right which doth calm men in other differences are here inflamed by that bitter zeal every one hath for his God his service and party and the difference is greater especially between the two dissenting parties that come nearest to one another We read afterward when this difference ●…y more closely between the Iews and the Samaritans and Christ decides that Salvation was of the Iews The Iews were certainly the better party John 4. 20. Our father 's worshipped in this mountain and ye say that in Ierusalem is the place where men ought to worship Mount Sion or Mount Gerizim which was the Temple of the true God one or the other Then we read afterward among the Iews themselves in their private sects who were very keen against each other Pharisees and Sadducees and Paul though an Enemy to them both and was looked upon as a common adversary yet they had rather joyn with him than among themselves Acts 23. 8 9. Afterward you find the scene of Contention lay between the Iews and Christians Acts 14. 4. But the multitude of the city was divided and part held with the Iews and part with the Apostles There it grew into an open contest and quarrel And then between the Christians and the Pagans which was the occasion of that uproar at Ephesus Acts 19. I and after Religion had gotten ground and the way of truth had prevailed in the world then the difference lay betwixt Christians themselves yea while Religion was but getting up between the followers of the Apostles and the School and Sect of Simon Magus those impure Libertines and Gnosticks who went out of them because they were not of them 1 Iohn 2. 19. And afterwards in the Church-story we read of the Contentions between the Catholicks and the Arians the Catholicks and the Pelagians the Catholicks and the Donatists and other Sects And now last of all in the dregs of time between the Protestants and the Papists that setled party with whom the Church of God is now in suit As the rod of Aaron did devour the rods of the Inchanters so the word of God which is the rod of his strength doth and will in time eat up and consume all untruths whatsoever but for a great while the contests may be very hot and sharp Yea among those that profess a reformed Christianity there are the Lutherans and the Calvinists And nearer to us I will not so much as mention those invidious names and flags of defiance which are set up under which different parties do encamp at home Thus there ever have been and will be contests about Religion and disputes about the way of truth yea different opinions in the Church and among Christians themselves about divine truths revealed in the Scripture The Lord permits this in his holy and righteous Providence that the godly may be stirred up more to embrace truth upon Evidence with more affection that they may more encourage and strengthen themselves and resolve for God for when all people will walk every one in the name of his God we will walk in the name of our God for ever Micah 4. 5. And the Lord doth it that he may manifest the sincere that when Christ calls who is on my side who that are willing to stick to him whatever hazards and losses they may incur 1 Cor. 11. 19. There must be heresies among you that they which are approved may be made manifest among you I and that there may be a ready plague of strong delusion and lies for them that receive not the truth in the love of it 2 Thes. 2. 11 12. for damnable Errors are the dungeons in which God holds carnal souls that play the wantons and trifle with his truth and never admitted the love and power of it to come into their hearts Prop. 2. True Religion is but one and all other ways are false noxious and pestilent Eph. 4. 5. One Lord one faith one baptism There are many ways in the world but there 's but one good and certain way that leads to salvation So much the Apostle intimates when he saith He will have all men to be saved How would he have them saved 1 Tim. 2. 4. For there is one God and one Mediator between God and men the man Christ Iesus which text implies that salvation is by the knowledge of the truth or knowledge of the true way others tend to destruction And so God promiseth Jer. 32. 39. That he will give all the elect one heart and one way Though there be differences even in the Church of God about lesser truths yet there 's but one true Religion in the essence and substance of it I mean as to those truths which are absolutely necessary to salvation To make many doors to heaven is to set wide open the gates of hell Many men think that men of all Religions shall be saved provided they be of a good life and walk according to their light In these later times divers unsober Questionists are grown weary of the Christian Religion and by an excess of charity would betray their faith and while they plead for the salvation of Turks and Heathens scarce shew themselves good Christians The Christian Religion is not only the most compendious way to true happiness but it 's the only way John 17. 3. This is life eternal to know thee the only true God and Iesus Christ whom thou hast sent There 's the sum of what is necessary to life eternal that there is one God Father Son and Holy Ghost to be known loved obeyed worshipped and enjoyed and the Lord Jesus Christ to be owned as our Redeemer and Saviour to bring us home to God and to procure for us the gifts of pardon and life and this life to be begun here by the spirit and to be perfected in heaven This is the sum of all that can be said that is necessary to salvation certainly none can be saved without Christ for there is no other name under heaven whereby we can be saved but by Iesus Christ Acts 4. 12. and none can be saved by Christ but they that know him and believe in him If God hath extraordinary ways to reveal Christ to men we know not this is our Rule no Adults no grown persons can be saved but they that know him and believe in him And now Christ hath
Luke 11. 8. Though he will not rise and give him because he is his friend yet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because of his importunity he will rise and give him as many as he needeth And things promised being asked and at length obtained are the more valued 4. That if we yet continue our Faith and heartily believe God upon his Word it is a great encouragement in waiting for the thing promised for to believe is a Qualification There are in the Word of God Promises that we may believe and then Promises because we do believe Promises to invite Faith and Hope and then Promises because we believe in God and hope in his Word Promises for Faith and to Faith As for instance God hath promised to be a Defence unto his People Zech. 2. 5. I the Lord will be unto her a wall of fire round about her and will be the glory in the midst of her Now see how David pleadeth Psal. 57. 1. Be merciful unto me O God be merciful unto me for my soul trusteth in thee yea in the shadow of thy wings will I make my refuge until these calamities be overpast When once we believe then we have a claim Isa. 26. 3. Thou keepest him in perfect peace whose mind is stayed on thee because he trusteth in thee Trust giveth us a fresh Claim or new Interest Psal. 86. 2. Oh thou my God save thy servant that trusteth in thee God will not disappoint a trusting Soul An ingenuous Man will not fail his Friend if he rely on him We count this the strongest Bond we lay upon another to be faithful and mindful of us I trust you that you will do this for me How much more will God do so 1. For his own Honour to shew himself faithful willing and able to succour his People in their Distresses This is the Reproch cast upon the Worshippers of Idols That they call upon those things which cannot help them nor relieve them in their Straits Iudges 10. 14. Go to the gods whom ye have chosen let them deliver you in the day of tribulation When you trust God the Honour of his Godhead lieth at stake by Trust you own him for a God Ionah 1. 5. Then the mariners were afraid and cried every man upon his God By making good your trust he sheweth himself to be a God that they do not seek to a vain help 2. With a condescension to his People Nothing goeth so near their hearts as a disappointment of their Hope in God This will mightily damp their Spirits when God spits in their Faces and seemeth to reject their Prayers Psal. 25. 2. Oh my God I trust in thee let me not be ashamed yea let none of them that wait on thee be ashamed but let them be ashamed which transgress without a cause To have Hopes fail which were invited and drawn forth by Promises is a great Temptation 3. With respect to their Enemies who will be sure to cast this in their teeth if the God in whom they trusted should not send help from his Holy place You will find God's servants often mocked for their trust Psal. 22. 18. He trusted in the Lord let him now deliver him seeing he delighted in him Christ himself was not free from the lash of profane tongues he was mocked for his dependence on his Father Mat. 27. 43. He trusted in God let him deliver him now if he will have him The World counts Faith but a Fancy now if God should deny the things promised to his People it would seem to countenance the slanders of their Enemies Wherefore do the Children of God expose themselves to difficulties and all manner of hard usages but because of their hope in God 1 Tim. 4. 10. Therefore we suffer reproch because we trust in the living God for that reason because they look for great things from God therefore God hath a great respect for them that trust in him 5. This Trust must be pleaded in Prayer 1. Because Prayer is one of the Means by which God hath decreed to fulfil his Promises and therefore we must obtain Mercies in his own appointed way God saith I will do thus and thus for you Ezek. 36. 37. But I will be enquired after by the house of Israel for this very thing God will do it but Prayer must give a lift he will be sought to Ier. 29. 11 12. I know the thoughts which I think towards you saith the Lord thoughts of peace and not of evil to give you an expected end that is such an end as your selves hope for and desire then shall ye call upon me and go and pray to me and I will hearken unto you that is you must address and set your selves seriously to this Work When the Promise is urged by the Believer it will be performed by God So when Daniel understood by the Books and Writings of the Prophets that the time was come wherein God had promised to deliver his People then he falleth a praying in a serious manner Dan. 9. 3. When God hath a mind to work then he sets the Spirit of Prayer awork for he will have all things accomplished in his own way 2. Because he hath put this Office upon his People that they are to be his Remembrancers at the Throne of Grace Isa. 62. 6. Ye that make mention of the Lord keep not silence it is in the margin Ye that are the Lords remembrancers whose Office it is to be constantly minding God and solliciting him in the behalf of his Church Publick Remembrancers are the Officers of his Church but every Christian is a private Remembrancer to put God in mind of his Promise Not that God is subject to forgetfulness as Man is who hath need of such Minders but he will be sought and sollicited for the performance of his gracious Promises We have an Advocate in Heaven but there are Remembrancers upon Earth We come as David here Remember thy word unto thy servants on which thou hast caused us to hope 6. We are the more encouraged Because God that made the Promise doth also give the Faith for he pleadeth two things the Grant of the Promise and the Gift of Faith Reasons 1. God would not deceive us Would he raise a Confidence to disappoint us in such a case we might say as the Prophet Ieremiah chap. 20. 7. Thou hast deceived me and I was deceived the words seem to intrench upon the Honour of God In the general I answer They were spoken by the Prophet in a Passion Others soften them by another Rendring and Interpretation Thou hast perswaded me and I was perswaded that is to undertake the Prophetical Office of which I was nothing forward of my self but averse thereunto yet found it more troublesom than I expected But put it with a supposition If I be deceived thou hast deceived me there is nothing inconvenient God had told him he would make him as a Brazen Wall God had raised a Faith and
that are comfortable though they have things sparingly though they have of the meanest yet they have that which is good for them So Psalm 84. 11. No good thing will he withhold He may keep us low and bare feed us Cibo extemporali as Lactantius but that is good for us If it were good for us to have larger revenues and incomes we should not want them The true and absolute ground of all submission is to think that which God sendeth is good be it prosperity or adversity the having or wanting Children or other comforts 2. The next measure is this that Good is to be determined by its respect to the chief Good or true Happiness Now what is our chief Happiness but the Injoyment of God Our Happiness doth not consist in outward comforts Riches Health Honour civil Liberty or comfortable Relations as Husband Wife Children but in our Relation to and Acceptance with God other things are but additional Appendages to our Happiness Matth. 6. 33. Affliction taketh nothing from our Essential solid Happiness rather helpeth us in the Enjoyment of it as it increaseth Grace and Holiness and so we injoy God more surely That is Good that sets us nearer to God and that is Evil which separateth us from him therefore Sin is Evil because it maketh an estrangement between us and God Isa. 59. 2. But Affliction is good because many times it maketh us the more earnestly to seek after him Hosea 5. 16. In their Afflictions they will seek me right early Therefore every Condition is Good or Evil as it sets farther off or draweth us nearer to God that is Good that tendeth to make us better more like unto God capable of Communion with him conduceth to our everlasting Happiness So It is good that a man ●…ear the Yoke from his Touth Lam. 3. 27. that he be trained up under the Cross in a constant obedience to God and subjection to him and so be fitted to entertain Communion with him In Afflictions conduce to this end they are good for then they help us to ●…joy the chief Good 3. That Good is not always the Good of the flesh or the Good o●… outward prosperity and therefore the Good of our condition is not to be determin●… by the interest or the Flesh but the welfare of our Souls If God should bestow upon us so much of the Good of the outward and animal life as we desire we could not be said to be in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●…tion if he should deny us Good Spiritual We should lose one half of the 〈◊〉 of the Co●…nt by doating upon and falling in love with the rest the flesh is import●… to be p●…sed but God will not serve our carnal turns We are more concerned as a Soul 〈◊〉 a Body Heb. 12. 10. He verily for our profit that we may be partakers of his holiness Certain it is God will chasten us for our Profit What do we call Profit the good things of this world the great Mammon which so many worship if we call it so God will not he meaneth to impart to us Spiritual and Divine Benefit which is a participation of his own Holiness And truly the People of God if they be in their right temper value themselves not by their outward Injoyments but their inward by their improvement of Grace not the injoyment of worldly Comforts 2 Cor. 4. 16. For this cause we faint not but though our outward m●…n perish our inward man is renewed day by day A discerning Christian puts more value upon Holiness wrought by Affliction than upon all his Comforts So that though Affliction be Evil in it self 't is good as sanctified 4. A particular Good must give way to a general Good and our personall benefit to the advancement of Christ's Kingdome The good of the Church must be preferred before our personal contentment Paul could want the Glory of Heaven for a while if his continuance in the Flesh were needfull for the Saints Phil. 7. 24. To abide in the Flesh is more needfull for you We must not so desire Good to our selves as to hinder the Good of others All Elements will act contrary to their particular for the conservation of the Universe That may be Good for the Glory of God which is not Good for our personal contentment and ease Now the Glory of God is our greatest Interest if it be for the Glory of God that I should be in pain bereft of my comforts my sanctified subjection to the will of God must say 't is Good Iohn 12. 27 28. there you have expressed the innocent inclination of Christ's humane Nature Father save me from this hour and the overrulling sense of his duty or the obligation of his office but for this cause came I to this hour We are often tossed and tumbled between inclination of Nature and conscience of Duty but in a gracious Heart the sense of our duty and the desire of glorifying God should prevail above the desire of our own Comfort Ease and Safety and Welfare Nature would be rid of trouble but grace submits all our interests to God's honour which should be dearer to us than any thing else 5. This Good is not to be determined by present feeling but by the Judgment of Faith Affliction for the present is not pleasant to natural sense nor for the present is the fruit evident to spiritual sense but 't is good because in the issue it turneth to good Rom. 8. 28. All things work together for good While God is striking we feel the grief and the Cross is tedious but when we see the end we acknowledge 't is good to be afflicted Heb. 12. 11. No affliction for the present seemeth joyous but grievous but afterwards it yieldeth the peaceable fruits of righteousness A good present is the cause of joy and an evil present is the cause of sorrow but there are two terms of abatement the sorrow is from the present sense and the conceit of the sufferer When we are but newly under the Affliction we feel the smart but do not presently find the benefit but within a while especially in the review 't is Good for me 't is matter of Faith under the Affliction 't is matter of sense after it Good Physick must have time to work that which is not good may be good though it be not good in its nature 't is good in its seasonable use and though for the present we see it not we shall see it Therefore Good is not to be determined by seeling but by Faith The Rod is a sore thing for the present but the bitter root will yield sweet fruit If we come to a person under the Cross and ask him what is it good to feel the lashes of God's correcting Hand to be kept poor and sickly exercised with Losses and Reproaches to part with Friends and Relations to lose a beloved Child sense will complain But this poor Creature after he hath been Exercised and Mortified and gotten
will not fear what man shall do unto me And Psal. 121. 4. Behold he that keepeth Israel shall neither slumber nor sleep In both there is a negative Gradation his Eye-lids try the Children of Men the Lord waketh for us all Secondly That usually he doth protect his People against the Plots of the Proud and bringeth the Mischief they intend to others upon their own heads Job 15. 35. They conceive mischief and bring forth vanity and their belly prepareth deceit But to keep the Notion of the Text. Psal. 7. 15. He made a pit and digged it and is fallen into the ditch which he made Psal. 9. 15 16. The Lord is known by the judgment which he executeth the wicked is snared by the work of his own hand They are sunk down into the pit they digged in the net which they hid is their own feet taken So Psal. 35. 7 8. For without cause have they hid for me their net in a pit which without cause they have digged for my soul. Let destruction come upon him at unawares and let his net that he hath hid catch himself into that very destruction let him fall And Psal. 10. 2. Let them be taken in the device they have imagined And Psal. 57. 6. They have prepared a net for my steps my soul is bowed down they have digged a pit before me in the midst whereof they are fallen themselves All these places shew how usual it is that their devices do not succeed yea that the wicked cannot take a nearer course to ruine themselves than to seek the overthrow of God's Church and People All their Machinations turn to their own loss and the Mischief they design to others falls constantly on themselves As a Stone thrown up or an Arrow shut up against Heaven returneth upon the head of him that throweth it Their Acts and Attempts of hurting others are converted to their own ruine and destruction seizeth upon them by that very means by which they thought to bring it upon other Men. This God doth partly as they are proud as they despise God and his People Psal. 10. 4. The wicked through the pride of his countenance will not seek after God God is not in all his thoughts They are so confident of all they design that they will not so much as call upon God for a blessing this is so firmly laid that all things shall succeed They will not seek after God through the pride of their countenance or suppose they should pray 't is but as Balaam offering sacrifice to entice God to curse his own people The Lord tells us Prov. 21. 27. The sacrifice of the wicked is an abomination how much more when he bringeth it with a wicked mind Partly because of God's care and respect to his People The poor committeth himself unto thee thou art the helper of the fatherless Psal. 10. 14. He trusts his All with God who is the Patron of the innocent and oppressed USE To direct us to carry the Cause to God as David in the Text. Psal. 83. 2 3 4. For lo thine enemies make a tumult and they that hate thee have lift up the head They have taken crafty counsel against thy people and consulted against thy hidden ones They have said Come and let us cut them off from being a Nation that the name of Israel may be no more in remembrance You must make the Lord the Party still against the wicked So Psal. 37. 12. The wicked plotteth against the just and gnasheth upon him with his teeth The wicked plotteth but do the just countermine him No the Lord interposeth he laugheth at him 'T is a mighty support to the soul to oppose his Justice to their wickedness his Omnipotency to their power his Wisdom to their craft his Love to their enmity They are in God's hands and cannot stir without him as if one designed to poyson me but cannot do it without my Fathers consent Wicked men are full of their boasts but their brags and threats are but as the brags of a man on the Scaffold who is ready to be executed Their day is coming 2dly When God doth so it must be acknowledged with thankfulness and praise yea though an old mercy Micah 6. 5. The Godly are preserved though there be Pits digged for them surely such experiences ought much to engage his Peoples hearts to him for it sheweth how mindful he is of their safety and welfare Blessed be God that yet we subsist that their devices are disappointed and their designs brought on them what they had projected against others Fourth Point That God's Law forbiddeth all Ungodly Treacherous Designs Attempts and Actions As contrary to Justice To design mischief and treachery against the life of any is the guise of wicked men As contrary to Sincerity and Godly Simplicity 2 Cor. 1. 12. For our rejoycing is this that in simplicity and godly sincerity not with fleshly wisdom but by the grace of God we have had our conversation in the world and more abundantly to you wards Crafty and subtile dealings consenteth not with those that profess to direct their ways by the Word of God As contrary to Charity and Mercy which we owe to all men How God hath guarded the life of the innocent by his Precepts and what a base perverse spirit is it to dig Pits for them USE Here is some plea for Religion 'T is not Feralis Superstitio Tantum Religio potuit suadere malorum It is not a false unnatural unkind Superstition when men under pretence of it commit such evils digging Pits laying Mines and Barrels of Gunpowder that Religion should persuade a●…l this The world thinks that Religion is a sowr superstition that it makes men ill natur'd no it is the peaceable and meekest thing that can be A false Religion indeed efferates the mind begets a bloody spirit Jud. 11. Gone in the way of Ca●…n in the way of blood and murther They that have either a false Religion or are false in the true Religion indeed they are ill-natured and possest with a rough spirit unfit for humane society The true Religion which God hath established in his Law is the meekest thing in all the world Fifth Point That the Innocent should not be much troubled to be maligned and hated by them who contemn Gods Laws Why For their Wickedness Fraudulency and Cruelty is a certain Prognostick of their ruine The more their sins are aggravated their judgment cometh the sooner God's Law is wronged as well as our Interest endangered 'T is a great ease to the Conscience of the Godly that they dig Pits for us without a cause Psal. 35. 7. The most Godly and Innocent may have Pits digged for them It enencourageth us in our Addresses to God that we have no Enemies but those who are Enemies to God also and his ways and the most wicked men are most violent against God●…s people Who was it first raged against the Christians but Nero and what a Beast
of the spiritual Shepherd and this comforts us when we are in the shadow of death in our crosses in confusions and difficulties when we have nothing else left but the promises this is a reviving to the soul. 2. It is a comfort and refreshing to us in spiritual troubles that arise from the guilt of sin and want of the sense of God's love Isa. 50. 10. Who is among you that feareth the Lord that obeyeth the voice of his servant that walketh in darkness and hath no light let him trust in the Name of the Lord and stay upon his God What shall he do Shall he compass himself about in his own sparks O how miserable are we then no but let him depend upon God according to his promise The Word of God is a great part of his Name let him stay his heart upon the Word of God when he walketh in darkness and seeth no light Now that the Word of God is such a light such a sure and clear direction I shall 1 give a direct proof of it from Scripture 2 Some Types of it 3 Prove it by experience 4 By Reason 1 For the proof from Scripture you have the Notions of the Text So Prov. 6. 23. The commandment is a lamp and the law is light It is that which keeps us from stumbling So 2 Pet. 1. 19. We have also a more sure word of prophecy whereunto ye do well that ye take heed as unto a light that shineth in a dark place The world is a dark place ay but now here 's a light that shines in a dark place and that 's the Holy Scripture the sure word of prophecy it sheweth us our way to Heaven and prevents us from stumbling into Hell 2 To prove it by Types Two Types I shall mention one is Israel being directed by the Pillar of a Cloud the other is the lamp of the Sanctuary 1. The Type of Israel's being directed by the Pillar of the Cloud by day the Pillar of Fire by night till they came into the Land of Canaan Exod. 13. 21. still they moved up and down hither and thither as the Pillar of Cloud and Pillar of Fire went before them thus our whole course is to be ordered by God's direction See how this Type is exprest Neh. 9. 19. The pillar of the cloud departed not from them by day to lead them in the way neither the pillar of fire by night to shew them light and the way wherein they should go Mark when they were in the wilderness the Pillar of Cloud and Fire shewed them the way where they were to go this is an Emblem of the safe conduct the Church may expect from Christ Jesus in all Ages God's Pillar departed not from them by night nor day so while we are travelling in the wilderness of this our Pilgrimage his Word and Spirit is continued to us When they entred into Canaan that was a Type of Heaven then this Pillar of Cloud was removed It is notable Iosh. 14. when Israel passed over Iordan we do not read the Pillar went before them but the Ark of God was carried before them so when the Church comes to Heaven the resting place then this conduct ceaseth the Word hath no more use Jesus Christ as the great Shepherd leads his Flock into their everlasting Fold 2. The other Type was the Lamp of the Sanctuary we read of that Exod. 27. 20 21. There was a great Lamp hung upon the Vail to distinguish the Holy of Holies from the other part of the Tabernacle and was fed with pure oil-olive and this lamp was prepared and trimmed up by the Priest daily Now what did this Lamp signifie mark the application this pure oil-olive signifi'd God's pure Word without the mixture of Humane Traditions this hung up in the Vail shin'd in the Church and every day it was prepared furnished set forth by them that are called thereunto for the use of the faithful 3 Let me prove it by experience that the Word is such a sure direction 1. Because natural men have a sense of it and upon that account fear it see Iohn 3. 20 21. Every one that doth evil hateth the light neither cometh to the light lest his deeds should be reproved Natural men will not come to the Word they fear it as discovering and therefore never feel it as refreshing Evil doers hate the light they are afraid of the Word lest it should convince them and discover them to themselves therefore they stand off and shun all means of closing with it there is such conviction in the oar a secret jealousie of the searching power that is in the Word of God 2. Godly men do find a great deal of comfort and satisfaction from this light as to all the doubts and fears of the soul. Psal. 19. 8. The statutes of the Lord are right rejoicing the heart the commandment of the Lord is pure enlightning the eyes All their scruples vanish here 's an apt and fit doctrine accommodated to the heart of man A man hath never true and rational delight till he is fully satisfi'd in point of Religion till he can have rest for his soul and commodious notions of God Now if you would have rest for your souls Ier. 6. 16. here it is the children of God find it There 's a fair compliance in this doctrine with all those natural principles and ingrafted notions within us concerning God and his Will they find satisfaction in it to Conscience though not to fond curiosity the one is necessary the other dangerous and unprofitable Christians there 's a great deal of difference between these two satisfying Conscience and satisfying Curiosity as much as between quenching the thirst of a sober man and satisfying the lust and appetite of a Drunkard Here 's enough to satisfie Conscience a fair accommodation of excellent truths to a reasonable nature truths becoming God truths suiting with the heart of man and therefore here they find it to be light that is a sure direction The wicked feel the discovery of it and the Saints feel the impression of it 3. We have this external and outward experience to assure us of our rule and light that shines in the Word of God because those that go against this light and direction do sensibly miscarry and are sure to split themselves upon some Rock or other Our first Parent Adam when he hearkned to the voice of the Serpent rather than the voice of the Lord destroyed himself and all his Posterity As long as he obeyed the Word of God he remained in a blessed estate in Paradice but when he gave heed to other counsels he was cast out of Paradice and rendred liable to many sorrows yea eternal death So all that walk in the imagination of their own hearts and have not light from the Word they presently run themselves into sundry mischiefs The young Prophet is an instance of this 1 Kings 13. 21. To go to particular instances would
benefit that we have by his Reign is this ver 10. compar'd with ver 1. he preserveth the souls of his Saints that is their lives he delivereth them out of the hand of the wicked there is an over-ruling a secret and invisible Providence by which they are kept and hidden as in a Pavilion so they have often experience of wonderful preservation in the midst of all their Troubles 2 God shews his Power for over-ruling all these Accidents for the increase and benefit of his Church and People When the Believers were scatter'd and driven up and down when exposed to hazards and inconveniences it is said Acts 11. 21. The hand of the Lord was with them and a great number believed and turned unto the Lord. God can make their loss turn to their increase Christ often gets up upon the Devils shoulders and is beholden more to his Enemies than to his Friends in this sense because that which would seem to stop his course and to obscure his glory doth advance it so much the more Phil. 1. 12. The things which hapned unto me have fallen out rather unto the furtherance of the Gospel The Gospel was not extinguish'd by Paul's imprisonment but propagated I say Paul's sufferings were as necessary as Paul's preaching that the truth might gain and that it might be known and heard of God over-rules all these actions for his glory and for the benefit of his Church Use 1. First If we be not in this condition let us look for it and prepare for it Religion is a Stranger in the World and therefore it is often ill entreated we have a stable happiness elsewhere and here we must expect changes All the comforts and hopes of the Scriptures is suited to such a condition a great part of the Bible would be needless and would be but as bladders given to a man which stands upon dry land and never means to go into the waters the comforts and provisions God hath made for us in the Word would be useless if such things did not befal us why hath God laid in so many supports if we think never to be put to distress and troubles Oh then think of these things before-hand and make them familiar to you The evil which I fear is come upon me saith Iob. When the back is fitted the burden will not be so dreadful think of these things before-hand that you may provide and prepare for them Now that you may not be strange at such kind of Providences consider four things 1. The World will be the World still There 's a natural Enmity between the two seeds which will never be wholly laid aside between the seed of the Woman and the seed of the Serpent Gen. 3. 15. as natural an Enmity as between the Wolf and the Lamb the Raven and the Dove 1 John 3. 12. Cain was of that wicked one and slew his brother and wherefore slew he him because his own works were evil and his brothers righteous Separation and Estrangement in course of life is a provoking thing Men that live in any sinful course are loth any should part company with them that there might be none to make them ashamed therefore when they draw from their sins and do not run with them into the same Excess of Riot they think strange your life is a reproof to them Iohn 7. 7. The world hateth me because I testified of it that the works thereof are evil And Heb. 11. 7. Noah condemned the world being moved with fear prepared an Ark. Strictness is an object reviving guilt Every wicked man loves another Velut factorem adjutorem excusatorem sui Criminis as one that favors his Actions and helps to excuse his Actions One wicked man doth not put another to the blush It is no shame to be black in the Countrey of the Negroes But when there 's a distinction some walk with God humbly and closely certainly your life is a reproach to others that do not so therefore they will hate you 2. This Enmity hath ever been working the Prophets and holy men of God have had experience of it Abel was slain by Cain Gen. 4. 18. Isaac scoff'd at by Ishmael Gen. 21. 11. which Example the Apostle alledgeth Gal. 4. 29. He that was born after the flesh persecuted him that was born after the spirit So it was then so it is now and so it will ever be to the worlds end Ever it hath been the lot of God's children to suffer hard things from the men of this world though they are related to them in the nearest bonds of kindred and acquaintance Iacob because of the blessing and birthright was pursu'd to death by Esau and driven out of his fathers house Gen. 27. Moses driven out of Egypt by his unkind Brethren Acts 7. 25 26 27. David hunted up and down like a Partridge upon the Mountains Iezabel sought Elijah's life Micaiah thrown into Prison and hardly used Elisha pursu'd by Iehoram for his head Instances are endless of this kind ever there hath been an Enmity and ever will be 3. Persecutions are more greater and longer in the New Testament than in the Old why partly because the Old Testament Church were under Tutors and Governors Gal. 4. 1 2. Neither for light of knowledge nor ardor of zeal to be compar'd with the New Testament Church when the kingdom of heaven suffers violence Mat. 11. 11. Look as Christ spar'd his Disciples until they were fit for greater troubles till fit for the new Wine Mat. 9. 17. so God spar'd that Church the Church then had troubles but for the most part they were not for Religion but for defection from God for their sins and partly too because the Church of the Old Testament was not so dispersed but confined within the narrow bounds of one Province or Countrey not mix'd with the profane Idolatrous Nations nor expos'd to their hatred contradiction and rage But of Christians the Apostle tells us this Sect is everywhere spoken against and partly because Satan then had quiet Reign over the blind world for a long time but now when Christ comes to dispossess him to turn out the strong man the goods were in peace before and now he hath but a short time he hath great wrath Rev. 12. 11. When Christ came to seize upon the world it was quick and hot work his force and violence was greater Again Temporal Promises were more in the eye of the Covenant where all things were wrap'd up in Types and Figures when Prosperity signifi'd Happiness and Long Life signifi'd Eternity there were not such Exercises and Trials then But now All those that will live godly in Christ Iesus must suffer persecution 1 Tim. 3. 12. But since Christ hath set up his Church and brought light and immortality to the world now Troubles are greater 4th Consideration Persecutions from Pseudo-Christians will also be hot and violent Rev. 14. 13. Write from henceforth saith the Spirit Blessed are the dead
Conference is empty unsavory barren may much divert our hearts from Heaven and do us a great deal of mischief The Apostle tells us Heb. 10. 24. we should consider one another to provoke unto love and to good works Our dulness and backwardness is such that we need the most powerful helps 3. Of all evil Company the Company of Seducers those that cause divisions and offences in the Church and broach novel opinions ought to be avoided Rom. 16. 17. Mark them which cause divisions and offences contrary to the Doctrine which ye have learned and avoid them 2 Iohn 10. If any man bring another Doctrine receive him not into your house neither bid him God speed 1 Tim. 6. 5. And men that are given to perverse disputings from such withdraw thy self Errour is more catching than Vice and more spreading It is more catching the face of it being represented with the loveliness of some pretence or other whereas foul actions are found hateful and more contrary to natural Conscience And besides it is more spreading Vice is like a Duel it killeth but one Errour is like a War that destroys many at once therefore we should not be familiar with these Erroneous apprehensions in Religion carry a marvellous compliance with a mans natural thoughts 4. It is not enough to avoid bad Company but we must chuse that which is good A man must have friends the use of them in this life is very great Man is a sociable Creature as Aristotle speaks Company and friendship we must have Christ himself was not without his peculiar friends there was Peter Iames and Iohn that were the flower of the Apostles that were conscious to his Transfiguration and his Agonies We must have our friends and our Society so that the advantage of good Company is very great Prov. 13. 20. He that walketh with wise men shall be wise their example will allure and excite to holy emulation and their counsel and instruction will be a great help in the business of Religion Even Saul being among the Prophets had his raptures 1 Sam. 19. 23. so living in the Company of godly men and seeing hearing and conferring with them of good things leaveth some impression 2. Some Helps and Considerations First Consider what is our chiefest good This is Principium universalissimum The last end or chiefest good is the principle which doth influence all our actions And certainly if men fix their last end aright it will have an influence upon all they do our company our business our recreation our holy Duties Well now consider What is your chiefest good and your last end If pleasure were our chiefest good and if we had nothing else to do but to pass away the time and to get rid of melancholy there would need no great care in the choice of our Company But enjoying the blessed God that is our last end and chiefest good every thing must be answerable to help you to Heaven Secondly A sincere resolution to walk with God to keep in with God firmly set for here David saith Depart from me ye evil doers for I will keep the Commandments of my God His resolution was set therefore he shakes them off When Ruth's resolution was set Naomi left off perswading When Paul's Company saw his resolution that he went bound in the spirit they ceased saying The will of the Lord be done Acts 21. 14. So this will fortifie against all suggestion they will be discouraged from haunting you more when you are resolved Thirdly Our Company will be a great part of our happiness in Heaven Heb. 12. 22. We are come to the heavenly Ierusalem and to an innumerable company of Angels to the general Assembly and Church of the first-born which are written in Heaven And Matth. 8. 11. They shall sit down with Abraham and Isaac and Iacob in the Kingdom of Heaven Company will be a great part of our happiness and for the present it will be a great hinderance or a great furtherance therefore when we think of this it will make us chuse those with whom we shall converse to all eternity that we may say Now I shall change places but not my Company I shall but go from Saints to Saints 4. Bad Company can yield you no comfort hereafter when trouble of Conscience comes When your heart begins to wound you they cannot or will not help Mat. 27. 4. What is that to us see thou to that If they draw you to inconvenience when it comes upon you they will yield you no relief or comfort Well he that considers he is to dye and give an account will not displease God to please men SERMON CXXVII PSAL. CXIX VER 116. Uphold me according to thy word that I may live and let me not be ashamed of my hope IN the former Verse David had bound himself by a firm resolution to keep the Commandments of his God now presently he turneth to Prayer Lord uphold me according to thy word that I may live and let me not be ashamed of my hope Our purposes and resolutions will not hold out without Gods confirming Grace David that would have the wicked depart from him there would have God draw nigh to him here Both are necessary if we would keep the Commands The company of the wicked as a great impediment must be removed Depart from me ye evil doers and then the assistance of God must be entreated Uphold me according unto thy word c. Two things he begs of God in this Verse I. Confirmation in waiting II. The full and final accomplishment of his hope In the first request there 's 1. The Blessing pray'd for Confirmation or Sustentation Uphold me 2. The ground or warrant of asking According unto thy word some Translations have it by thy word making it the instrument of his support 3. To what end That I might live In the second request an argument is intimated That frustration or disappointment of his hope would bring shame I begin with the first the Blessing pray'd for Sustentation and support Uphold me David speaketh not this with respect to his outward man as if God should keep him alive maugre the rage of his enemies Indeed God doth uphold his Creatures in that sence by his outward Providence and Divine maintenance But he speaketh this of his inward man the support of the soul that God would support him in a way of faith and comfort In Verse 114. Thou art my hiding place and my shield I hope in thy word Now Lord that I might live keep up the life of this hope And Verse 115. I will keep the Commandments of my God And now he desires God would support him in a way of courage and obedience Hence observe Doctr. Sustaining Grace is necessary to the Saints Confirmation in a state of Grace is as necessary to them as Conversion to it There is a twofold Grace which God gives habitual and actual either he works upon us per modum habitus infusing
So Isa. 26. 9. With my soul have I desired thee in the night and with my spirit within me will I seek thee early A man that hath an earnest desire after God he will be at it night and day when others are taking their Rest their seeking of God is early and earnest but where such strong desires are not God is little minded and regarded and of all businesses Prayer seemeth that which may be best spared That I may fully Commend Davids Practice to you I shall observe in this his Diligence I. That it was a Personal Closet or Secret Prayer I cryed I alone with thee in Secret II. That it was an early Morning Prayer I prevented the dawning of the Morning III. That it was a Vehement and Earnest Prayer for 't is expressed by crying which as Chrysostome saith noteth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys. in Psal. 5. He proveth it by that of God to Moses Wherefore criest thou unto me Exod. 14. 15. And when Moses was silent yet he cryeth for crying noteth the Affection of the Mind not extension of the Voice Where I shall note that it was an earnest prayer though private and earnest though as yet he could get no Answer IV. That it was the Prayer of a Publick Person of a King and a King intangled in Wars whose Calling exposed him to a Multitude of business and distractions yet he had his times of Converse with God take all this together and the pattern will be more sit to be commended to your Imitation I. It was a Personal or Secret Prayer I cryed I alone and without Company Our Saviour that doth in Matth. 18. 19 20. incourage us to publick Prayer by the blessed effect of such Petitions where two or three do agree to ask any thing of God in the name of Christ he doth suppose that his Disciples will make Conscience of personal and solitary prayer and therefore giveth directions and Incouragement about it Matth. 6. 6. But when thou prayest enter into thy closet and when thou hast shut thy door pray to thy father which seeth in secret and thy father which seeth in secret will reward thee openly He taketh it for granted that every one of his Disciples is sufficiently convinced of being often with God in private and pouring out his heart to God alone T is not if but when as supposing they will be careful of this 't is not plurally and collectively when ye pray but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 when thou prayest elsewhere the Context speaketh of publick prayer or the Assemblies of Saints and of Family Worship but here he speaketh of personal prayer Church prayer hath a special blessing when with a combined force we besiege Heaven as the Petition of a Shire and County is more than a private mans Supplication but yet this is not without its Blessing God is with you in private pray to thy father in secret and he that seeth in secret observeth the carriage and posture and frame of thy spirit all thy fervour and uprightness of heart is known to him that which is the Hypocrites fear that God seeth in secret is the Saints Comfort that God seeth in secret it bindeth Condemnation upon the thoughts of wicked men 1. Iohn 3. 21. but is their support Iohn 21. 17. Rom. 8. 27. He that searcheth the heart knoweth the mind of the Spirit He knoweth the brokenness or unbrokenness of the Heart he can pick out the very language of thy sighs and groans know where thou art and how thou art imployed Acts 9. 11. Arise and go into the street which is called streight and inquite in the house of Judas for one Saul of Tarsus for behold he prayeth In such a street in such an house in such a Chamber of the house there is one a praying a notable place to express Gods seeing in secret where we are what we do and how affected And then his reward is another incouragement he will reward thee openly grant thee what thou prayest for or bless thee for the conscionable performance of this duty Openly either by a sensible Answer of thy prayers as Dan. 9. 20 21 22. or with an evident Blessing as Abraham Isaac and Iacob in the eyes of the World God highly favoured them a secret prayer hath an open blessing or in convincing the Consciences of men Pharaoh sendeth for Moses and Aaron when in distress the Consciences of wicked men are convinced that Gods praying Children have special Audience with him no Magicians sent for then but Moses and Aaron Thus God may reward them openly 1 Sam. 2. 30. Those that honour me I will honour But chiefly at the day of Judgment Luk. 14. 44. He shall be recompenced at the resurrection of the just Then is the great reward of Christians and most publick then shall every man have praise of God 1 Cor. 4. 5. Thus you see how our Lord incourageth us to Closet Prayer but let us see other Arguments to engage us to this Duty 1. All the precepts of Prayer do include Closet-prayer Continue in prayer and watch in the same with Thanksgiving Col. 4. 2. Pray without ceasing 1 Thes. 5. 17. First Gods precepts fall upon single persons before it falleth upon Families and Churches for God considereth us first as persons apart and then in our several Combinations and Societies in joyning with others the Duty is rather imposed upon us then taken up by Voluntary choice and that only at stated times when they can conveniently meet If we are to continue in prayer and to pray without ceasing we are to make conscience our selves of being often with God Every person that acknowledgeth a God that hath a Father in Heaven must come and profess his dependance upon him 2. The Example of Christ which beareth the force of a Law in things Moral We read often of Christs praying Mark 1. 35. He went out into a solitary place to pray And Matth. 14. 23. And Luke 6. 12. we read he prayed a whole night to God now let us improve this Instance Christ had no such need of Prayer as we have the Godhead dwelt in him bodily nor such need of retirement his Affections were alwaies in frame yet he went out from the company of his Disciples to pray alone to God This Pattern is very ingaging for if we have the Spirit of Christ we will do as Christ did and very encouraging for by submitting to this Duty he sanctified it for all his steps drop fatness and left a blessing and vertue behind him And it assureth us of his Sympathizing with us he is acquainted with the heart of an earnest supplicant and 't is some Comfort against our imperfections when we are with God and our hearts are as heavy as a log 't is a Comfort to think of this particular part of his Righteousness by which our defects are covered 3. I shall urge it from Gods End in pouring out the Spirit that we may pray apart and mourn apart
upon us yet made we not our Prayer before the Lord our God You defeat the Dispensation now you should make up your former Negligence when we are pressed hard on all hands it should put an edge upon our Prayers otherwise our Afflictions will turn to a sad account When God sendeth a Tempest after us and this will not bring us back to him we are summoned to make our Appearance and will not come Ioab would not come till Absalom set his Barley Field on fire Use 2. To encourage us to come to God in our Afflictions now is a time to put the Promises in suit to begin an Interest if we have none to make use of it if we have any then our weakness and nothingness is discovered that we may more apply our selves to God and a time of need will be a time of help Psal. 46. 1. God is a refuge for us a very present help in Trouble that is when Trouble is Trouble indeed then therefore we should call for it most earnestly a necessitous Creature is a fit Object for Mercy You expound Providences amiss if you think Afflictions are a casting off no they are Gods Voice calling you nay his Hand pulling you to him Blessed seasons to bring God and us together then Gods aim is accomplished Hos. 5. 15. I will go and return to my place till they acknowledge their offence and seek my face in their affliction they will seek me early Isa. 26. 16. Lord in trouble have they visited thee they poured out a Prayer when thy chastening was upon them Afflictions do not work thus simply for then they would work upon all but as accompanied with some drawings of the Spirit every condition is blessed when it bringeth you nearer unto God though Crosses be great Trials to any yet if they chase us to the Throne of Grace God is not wholly gone but hath left somewhat behind him to draw us to him It is Desertion in point of Felicity but not in point of Grace Doctrine III. One great request of the Children of God in Prayer is that he would Consider their Affliction This David promiseth in the first place So elsewhere Psal 132. 1. Remember David O Lord and all his afflictions he beggeth God to take notice of his Person and Condition So also Psal. 25. 18. Look upon ●…p affliction and my pain and forgive all my sins he beggeth that his groanes might not be passed over So Hezekiah Isa. 37. 17. where many words are used to this effect Incline thine ear O Lord and hear open thine eyes and see and hear all the words that Senacherib hath sent to reproach the living God If God would but take notice hear and see all would be well And as for personal Calamities so in Publick and Church cases Psal. 80. 14. Return we beseech thee O Lord God of Hosts look down from heaven and behold and visit this Vine If God will but come and see it is enough So in the Lamentations Chap. 1. 9. O Lord behold my affliction for the enemy hath magnified himself So again ver 11. See O Lord and consider for I am become vile Yet again ver 20. Behold O Lord for I am in distress Thus do the Children of God lay open their Miseries before him in Confidence of his Pity But why do the Children of God press this point so earnestly as if they did doubt of his Providence and Omnisciency God knoweth all things and can forget nothing I Answer 1. Though God be not ignorant and unmindful of our Condition yet we are to put him in Remembrance Isa. 62. 6. Ye that make mention of the Lord keep not silence and give him no rest till he establish and till he make Ierusalem a praise in the earth Christ is the Advocate we are Solicitours and Remembrancers for others and humble Supplicants for our selves indeed in so doing we do not put God in mind but put our selves in Mind of the Providence of God which is most graciously conversant about us in our aflicted Condition which is a great Comfort and Support to us The moving of God to Consider begets Faith in us that he will Consider and so we wrestle with God that we may catch an heat our selves 2. The sight of Misery is a real Argument it is clear that we are to use Arguments in Prayer for God dealeth with us as rational Creatures and as such we are to deal too with him Now among Arguments our Afflictions and Miseries are real ones they have a Voice to work upon his Pity and to move him to have Mercy upon us he being inclined to Compassion his eye doth affect his heart as a Beggar to move pity will not only plead with his Tongue but uncover his sores so do the Saints lay open their Misery and unfold their Estate before the Lord for God so loveth his People that the very show of their Miseries moveth him to help them Thus God saith that he would shew mercy to his People for I have seen with mine eyes Zech. 9. 8. God seeth our Case and every degree of our Trouble is marked by him which bringeth it the nearer to his heart yea Gods People themselves are comforted under their saddest sufferings by the Lords seeing and marking thereof Psal. 10. 14. Thou hast seen it for thou beholdest mischief and spight to requite it with thy hand it is enough to them thou hast seen it So Psal. 31. 7. I will be glad and rejoyce in thy mercy for thou hast considered my trouble and known my soul in adversities It is a mighty comfort that God hath an eye upon them in particular and hath friendly Affections towards them 3. The Lord is said to consider when he doth in effect declare his not forgetting or remembring us for good and therefore though God cannot but see and consider our Trouble yet we cannot rest satisfied with it till by real effects he maketh it evident that we may know and all the World may know that he doth consider us and regard our condition and this is that which Saints beg so earnestly that he would by some act or work experiment the Truth or make it appear that he hath heard and seen and taken notice of our sorrows Though the Saints believe his omnisciency and particular Providence yet they cannot rest satisfied til they feel it by some effect by giving real support or help in need according to Covenant and so must all the places before mentioned be interpreted Use. When we or the Church of God or any of the People of God are in any distress 1. Let us go to God and beg that we may see and the World may see that he hath regard to us in our sorrows and doth not wholly pass us over To this end impress upon your hearts the belief of these two things the Eye of his Pity and the Arm of his Power 1. The Eye of his Pity which is more then bare omnisciency it
the Word Scripture Faith and Scripture Repentance are still fed by the Word It teacheth us how to believe and how to repent and how to pray and how to live especially the Heavenly Life and there can be no true Comfort and Peace without the Word Rom. 15. 4. That ye through Patience and Comfort of the Scriptures might have hope 2. Use. We should consider the Truth of the Word partly in the general for the strengthening and settling of our Faith and to make it more clear and solid and certain Eph. 1. 13. In whom ye trusted after that ye heard the Word of Truth When boisterous Temptations would carry us to some evil which God hath forbidden and severely threatned that the point of the sword of the Spirit be put to the bosome of it Deut. 29. 19 20. 2. When you are settling your souls as to the main point of Acceptance with God 1 Tim. 1. 15. This is a faithful saying and worthy of all Acceptation that Iesus Christ came into the World to save sinners of whom I am chief The Word will never deceive them that seek Righteousness there 3. When difficulties arise that oppose the promise or expectation of relief according to the promise you should urge the truth of the word in the very face of difficulty thy law istruth Take Pauls instance Act. 27. God by Promise gave all that sailed with Paul in the Ship their lives yet how many difficulties came to pass At first when they were in the Adriatique Sea for so many days and nights and had neither seen Sun nor Stars they knew not where they were nor whether they should go here was little appearance of Gods making good his word to Paul Another Difficulty fell out they feared they were near some Countrey they sounded and found they were near some land but what land they could not Conjecture and were afraid of being split in pieces against the Rocks but the Shipmen that knew the danger of these Seas they must go out of the Ship they would make use of their long Boat and so they were ready to miscarry in the sight of the land but Paul prevented them And after 't was day the men were spent because of long fasting and conflicting with the Waves they could not ply the Oar. Another difficulty they were where two Seas met they run the Ship a ground and resolved to kill Paul and the rest of the Prisoners lest they should swim to land but the Captain willing to save Paul prevented that purpose And so at length they came all to shore though followed with difficulty upon difficulty God made good his Promise to a tittle ver 44. Pray observe how Paul urged Gods Promise against the greatest difficulties as sufficient ground of encouragement to expect relief ver 25. for I believe God that it shall be even as it was told me SERMON CLX PSALM CXIX VER 143. Trouble and Anguish have taken hold of me yet thy Commandments are my delights IN the Words we have I. Davids Temptation Trouble and Anguish have taken hold of me II. Davids Exercise under that Temptation thy Commandments are my delight III. The Benefit of that Exercise notwithstanding the greatness of the Temptation Yet 'T is propounded with a non obstante I. The Temptation was very great for he speaketh of Trouble and Anguish The joyning of Synonymous Words or words of a like import and signification increaseth the sense and so it sheweth his affection was not ordinary Yea both these words have their particular use and emphasis Trouble may Imply the outward Tryal and the difficulties and streights he was in Anguish Inward Afflictions the one the Matter of the Trial and the other the sence of it The other expression also is to be observed have taken hold of me in the Hebrew have found me so the Septuagint renders it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the Vulgar Latin out of them tribulatio et angustia invenerunt me have found me that is come upon me as the expression intimateth Troubles are said to find us because they are sent to seek us out and in time will light upon us We should not run into it but if they find us in our duty we should not be troubled at them Sometimes in Scripture we are said to find trouble and sometimes trouble to find us We are said to find trouble David said Psal. 116. 3. I found trouble And so now here in the Text Trouble and Anguish found him There is no difference or if any the one noteth a surprize Trouble findeth us when it cometh unlooked for our finding it noteth our willingness to undergo it when the Will of God is so especially for Righteousness sake II. Davids Exercise under this great Temptation thy Commandments are my delights Where we have 1. The Object thy Commandments The Commandment is put for the Word in general which includeth Promises as well as Precepts the whole Doctrine of Life and Salvation However the property of the form is not altogether to be overlooked even in the Commandments or the Conscience of his Duty he took a great deal of Comfort 2. The Affection Delight He had said before that he did not forget Gods statutes when he was small and despised ver 141. now he delighted in them This was his great love to the Word that he could find sweetness in it when it brought him trouble such sweetness as did allay all his sorrows and overcome the bitterness of them 3. The Degree Delights in the plural number He did greatly delight in it Omnis oblectatio mea saith Iu●…ius Thy Commandments to me are instead of all manner of delights and pleasure in the World III. The next is the Opposition of this Exercise to that temptation yet 'T is not in the Original but necessarily Implyed and therefore well inserted by our Translators to shew that the greatness of his Streights and Troubles did not diminish his Comfort but Increase it rather The Points are these First God ●…th it necessary sometimes to exercise his People with a great deal of Trouble Secon●…●…his Trouble may breed great Vexation and Anguish of Spirit even in a gracious ●…rt Thirdly Notwithstanding this Trouble and Anguish gracious Hearts will manifest their graciousness by delighting in the Word Fourthly They that delight in the Word will find more Comfort in their Afflictions than Troubles can take from them or such sweetness as will overcome the sense of all their Sorrows This was alwayes Davids help to delight in the Word and this brought him Comfort though in deep Troubles For the First Point That God seeth it necessary sometimes to exercise his People with a great deal of Trouble Though they are highly in Favour with God yet they have their share of Troubles as well as others This is true if you 1. Consider the People of God in their Collective Body and Community which is called the Church 'T is the Churches name Isa. 54. 11 12. Oh
thou afflicted and tossed with tempest Names are taken a notioribus things are known and distinguished by their name 't is one of the Way-marks to Heaven Act. 14. 22. Through many tribulations enter into the Kingdom of God As the way to Canaan lay through a howling Wilderness If we were told before that we should meet with such and such marks in our Journey to such a place if we found them not we should have cause to suspect we were out of our way From the beginning of the World the Church hath always been bred up under troubles and innured to the Discipline of the Cross Psal. 129. 1. Many a time have they afflicted me from my youth may Israel now say The spirit of enmity wrought betimes The first Family that ever was in the World yielded Abel the Proto-Martyr and Cain the Patriarch of Unbelievers While the Church kept in Families the outward estate of Gods People was worse than their Neighbours Abraham was a Sojourner though owned and blessed by God when the Canaanites were possessors and dwelt in walled Towns Iacob's Family grew up by degrees into a Nation but Esau's presently multiplyed into many Dukes and Princes And as they grew up they grew up in Affliction Egypt was a place of retreat for them for a while but before they got out of it it proved an house of Bondage Their deliverance brought them into a Wilderness where Want made them murmur but oftner Wantonness But then God sent fiery Serpents and broke them and afflicted them with other Judgments After forty years wandring in the Wilderness they are brought into Canaan a Land of Rest but it afforded them little rest for they forfeited it almost as soon as they Conquered it it flowed with Milk and Honey but mixed with Gall and Wormwood Their story as 't is delivered in the Book of God acquaints you with several varieties and intermixtures of Providence till wrath came upon them to the utmost till God saw fit to inlarge the pale and lines of Communication by treating with other Nations Now if the old Testament Church were thus afflicted much more the new God discovered his approbation and improbation then more by temporal Mercies and temporal Judgements The Promises run to us in another strain and since Life and Immortality was brought tolight in the Gospel we must not expect to be so delicately brought up as never to see an evil day he hath told us 2 Tim. 3. 12. We must be conformed to our head Rom. 8. 29. And expect to pledge Christ in his bitter Cup and our condition must inform us that our hopes are not in this World 1 Cor. 15. 19. In the Gospel-dispensation God would deal forth temporal Blessings more sparingly and spiritual with a fuller hand the experience of all Ages verifieth this When Religion began first to fly abroad into all Lands the Pagans first persecuted it and then the Pseudo-Christians the holiest and best People were Maligned and Bound and Butchered and Racked and Stoned but still they Multiplied 'T were easie to tire you with various Instances in every Age those that went home to God were those that came out of tribulations and had washed their Robes and made them white in the bloud of the Lamb Rev. 7. 14. There is always something set a-foot to try God servants and in the latter times the roaring Lion is not grown more gentle and tame rather more fierce and severe Rev. 12. 12. For the Devil is come down unto you having great wrath because he knoweth that he hath but a short time Dying Beasts struggle most As his Kingdom beginneth to shake so he will be most fierce and cruel for the supporting of it 2. As to particular persons The whole Creation groaneth Rom. 8. 22. and Gods Children bear a part in the Consort they have their share in the Worlds Miseries and Domestical Crosses are common to them with other Men in the World Yea their condition is worse then others Chaffe and Corn are threshed in the same floor but the Corn is grinded in the Mill and baked in the Oven Ieremiah was in the Dungeon when the City was besieged The World hateth them more than others and God loveth them more than others The World hateth them because they are so good and God correcteth them because they are no better There is more care exercised about a Vine than a Bramble God will not let them perish with the World Great receipts call for great expences first or last God seeth it fitting sometimes at first setting forth as the old Germans were wont to dip their Children in the Rhine to harden them so to season them for their whole Course they must bear the yoke from their youth or first acquaintance with God Heb. 10. 32. Sometimes God lets them alone while they are young and raw and of little experience as we are tender of Trees newly planted as Iacob drove as the little ones were able to bear 1 Cor. 10. 13. He will not suffer you to be tempted above what you are able They are let alone till middle age till they are of some standing in Religion Heb. 11. 24. Moses when he was come to years 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sometimes let alone till their latter time and their season of fighting cometh not till they are ready to go out of the World that they may die fighting and be crowned in the Field but first or last the Cross commeth and there is a time to exercise our Faith and Patience before we inherit the Promises I will not inlarge in the common place of Afflictions and tell you how necessary the Cross is to subdue Sin which God will do in an accommodate way to weaken Pride to reclaim us from our Wandrings to increase Grace to make us mindful of heavenly things these are discussed in other Verses to make us retreat to our great Priviledges to stir us up to Prayer c. Tribulatio tam nobis necessaria quam ipsa vita immo magis necessaria multoque utilior quam totius mundi opes dignitates saith Luther We think Wealth is necessary for us Dignity and Esteem is necessary for us no Affliction is necessary for us 1 Pet. 1. 6. If need be you are in Heaviness c. Use 1. Let us look for Troubles and provide for them we shall not alwayes have a life of ease and peace the Times will not alwayes be friendly to Religion Then had the Churches rest Acts 9. 31. Halcyon dayes the enmity of wicked men will not always lye asleep we would gather rust and grow dead therefore look for them If because you are Christians you Promise your selves a long lease of temporal Happiness free from Troubles and Afflictions 't is as if a Souldier going to the Wars should promise himself Peace and continual Truce with the Enemy Or as if a Mariner committing himself to the Sea for a long Voyage should promise himself nothing but fair and calm
Pressures 1. The Suitableness they are suited to this happiness wrought for this very thing 2 Cor. 5. 5. Every thing hath a propension to the place for which God framed it 't is the Wisdom of God to put all things in their proper places as every Creature is placed in that element which is suitable and answerable to its Composition and Frame as Fishes in Water Fowles in the Air. Gods Children are framed for this very thing therefore have an inclination and a tendency thither As Heaven is prepared for them so in some measure they for it Rom. 9. 24. aforehand prepared unto Glory And Col. 1. 12. Made meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the Saints in light They grow more dead every day to the Interests and Concernments of the Animal Life and have a greater agreeableness to this happiness 2. Experience Rom. 8. 23. We that have the first fruits of the Spirit groan wit hin our selves waiting for the Adoption to wit the redemption of our body A Christian here is unsatisfied and longeth for a better and purer state of Bliss and Immortality Light Life Peace Joy one dram of Grace is more precious than all the World but yet it setteth them a longing for more the first fruits sheweth us what the Harvest will be and a tast what the Feast will prove here we get a little knowledge of God a sight of him in the Ordinances a Twi-light discovery of Christ a Look through the Lattice Cant. 2. 9. a little Glance of his Face when neither doth he let the Believers in to him nor doth he come out to them this Glance maketh them long for more So that in effect they send up the same Message to Christ which his Mother and Brethren did because of the press thy mother and thy brethren stand without desiring to see thee Tell him thou standest here without but desirest to see him So for the Communion we have with Christ 't is but a tast 1 Pet. 2. 3. If so be ye have tasted the Lord is gracious but that tast is very ravishing and delightful Here we get a little from him in an Ordinance but that little is as much as we can hold but there he is all in all here our holiness is not perfect the seed of God remaineth in us but there it groweth up to perfection as every spark of Fire tendeth to the Element of Fire 3. Our Pressures and the Miseries of the present Life 2 Cor. 5. 4. Being burdened we groan We are pressed under an heavy weight burdened both with Sin and Misery and both set us a groaning and a longing as men in a Tempest would fain be set ashoar as soon as they can 1. Sin to a waking Conscience and a tender Gracious Heart is one of the greatest burdens that can be felt Rom. 7. 24. Oh wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from this body of death If any had cause to complain of Afflictions Paul much more he was Whipped Imprisoned Stoned in perils by Land and Sea but Afflictions did not sit so close to him as sins the body of Death was his greatest burden and therefore did he long for Deliverance If others go away silently under their load the Children of God cannot as light and love increaseth so sin groweth a greater burden to us They cannot get rid of this cursed inmate and therefore are longing for their final Estate when sin shall gaspe its last they long for the parting day when by putting off the Flesh they shall put off sin and dwell with God 2. Miseries the Children of God have not divested themselves of the feelings of Nature are not grown sensless as stocks and stones The Apostle telleth us Rom. 8. 20 21 22. that the whole Creation groaneth because 't is under Misery and Vanity 'T is a groaning World and Gods Children bear a part of the Consort they groan and desire earnestly their full Deliverance Few and evil are the days of the years of my Pilgrimage said holy Iacob Gen. 47. 9. Our dayes are Evil therefore 't is well they are but few that in this Shipwrack of mans Felicity we can see Banks and Shores and a landing place where we may be safe here is our Travail but there is our repose we would sleep too much here and take up our rest if sometimes we did not meet with Thorns in our bed III. Reason The End and Use of this Longing and Desiring 1. 'T is an earnest Desire it maketh us industrious and stirreth up and keepeth up our endeavours after another World Phil. 3. 20 21. But our Conversation is in heaven from whence we look for a Saviour the Lord Iesus Christ who shall change our vile body that it may be fashioned like unto his glorious body according to the working whereby he is able to subdue all things unto himself Where there is a lively expectation there men drive on a Trade for another Country Desire is the Vigorous bent of the Soul and so beareth us out under all the difficulties of Obedience If we do not desire we will not labour nor seek it in the first place and if our desires be weak and feeble they are controled by every Lust abated upon every difficulty whatever gets your heart that will command your endeavours for as a mans desire is so is he 2. To make us Constant notwithstanding Troubles Reproaches Persecutions Matth 11. 12. The violent take it by force They will have no nay they must have it whatever it cost them though sore Troubles and Persecutions yet if we may get Heaven and Glory at last 't is enough but where a thing is coldly and carelesly desired every thing puts us out of the humour IV. The State and Condition of the present World 't is called Gal. 1. 4. The present World The Pleasures of it are meer dreams and shadows and the Evils of it are many and real Gods Children are Pilgrimes here and hardly get leave to pass thorough as Israel could not get leave to pass through Edom Sometimes they meet with such bitter and grievous Persecutions which make them weary of their lives as Elijah requested for himself that he might die 1 King 9. 4. or as the Spirits of the Israelites were filled with Anguish because of their hard task Masters God will give his People Rest hereafter but before the Rest cometh they are sorely Troubled 1 Thes. 1. 6 7. And ye became followers of us and of the Lord having received the word in much Affliction with joy of the Holy Ghost so that ye were ensamples to all that believe in Macedonia and Achaia Nay the Company that we go with to Heaven are apt to fall out by the way and to deal perversly one with another Unministering Unchurching Unchristianing one another Impaling inclosing the Common Salvation and justleing one another out of the way to Heaven so that the Church which should be Terrible like an Army with Banners Marching to
Heaven in order in one whole Body is like an Army in Rout and most are forced to get home in straggling Parties Now every tender Soul should Long for Gods Salvation to get up to that Counsel of Souls who with perfect Harmony are Lauding and Praising God for evermore Heb. 12. 23. Use. I. Is to reprove them that are loth to leave this woful Life and do not long and prepare for a better God driveth us out of the World as he did Lot out of Sodom yet we are loth to depart as if it were better to be Miserable apart from God and Christ then happy with them Surely they are far from the Spirit of true Christians who would live alwayes here are at home in the World and cannot endure to think of a remove There are two Causes of this 1. An Unmortifyed Heart 2. An Unsettled Conscience 1. An Unmortified Heart they are not yet weaned from the World their Hearts are set upon satisfying the Vile Lusts of the Body carry it as if their Portion lay in this World Psal. 17. 14. sucking yet upon the Worlds Dugg they have no longing nor desire for that Happiness and Glory which God hath provided for them that love him they desire no other Portion than what they have in hand 2. And the other cause is an Unsettled Conscience some fear the state of the other World rather than desire it and long for it there are two degrees notknowing for certain it shall go well with us and not knowing for certain but that it shall go ill with us both suppress this desire especially the latter Use. II. Is to Rowse up our languid and cold Affections that they may more earnestly be carryed out after heavenly things that we may seek after them with more Fervency and Constancy and Self-denial The Motives to press us are these 1. God giveth Heaven to none but to those that Look and Long for it Men may go to Hell against their Wills but none go to Heaven against their Wills In a Punishment there is a force offered to us but not in a Reward We suffer what we would not as Christ saith to Peter another shall gird thee and carry thee whither thou wouldst not Ioh. 21. 18. But happiness must be imbraced pursued and sought after Well then let the concernments of the other World more take up our Hearts and Minds and stand as at heavens Gate expecting when God will open the door and call you in Christ will appear to them that look for him Heb. 9. 28. 2. The Children of God Long to see God in his Ordinances Psal. 27. 4. One thing have I desired of the Lord that will I seek after that I may dwell in the house of God all the dayes of my Life to behold the beauty of the Lord and to enquire in his Temple And Psal. 42. 2. My Soul thirsteth for God for the living God when shall I come and appear before God Psal. 63. 1 2. O God thou art my God early will I seek thee my soul thirsteth for thee my flesh longeth for thee in a dry and thirsty land where no water is to see thy power and thy glory so as I have seen thee in the Sanctuary Now if there be so Great and Longing a desire to see the glory of the Lord in a Glass wherein so little of his Glory is seen with any comfort and satisfaction how much more to see him immediately face to face if a Glimpse be so comfortable what will the immediate Vision of God then be surely if this be Salvation every one of us should long for this Salvation 3. If it be not worth our Desire 't is little worth the Estate being so excellent such a compleat Redemption from all our Troubles so perfect and so full an happiness in Body and Soul will not you send a groan or an hearty Act of Volition after it 't is great ingratitude that when Christ hath procured a great state of blessedness for us at a very dear rate we should value it no more he procured it by a life of Labour and Sorrow and the Pangs of a bitter Cursed death and when all is done we little regard it surely if we choose it for our happiness there will be longing and looking for it No man will fly from his own happiness a mans heart will be where his Treasure is Math. 6. 21. if you prize it you will sigh and groan after it the Apostle saith Phil. 1. 23. I desire to be dissolved and to be with Christ which is far better 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 If you count it better to be there than else where you will be desiring to be there and longing to be there for we are always longing for that which is better chiefly for that which is best of all there is the best estate the best work the best company all is better if you count it so it will be no difficult thing to bring you earnestly to desire it 4. All the Ordinances serve to stir up this longing after Heaven and to awaken these desires in us the Word is our Charter for Heaven or Gods Testament wherein this rich Legacy is bequeathed to us that every time we Read it or Hear it or Meditate upon it we may get a step higher and our Hearts more drawn out after Heavenly things In Prayer whether in Company or Alone 't is but to raise and act these heavenly Desires there we groan and long for Gods Salvation In the Lords Supper we come solemnly to put our selves in mind of the new Wine we shall drink in our Fathers Kingdom Matth. 26. 29. to put a new heavenly Relish upon our Hearts 5. The Imperfection of our present Estate We are now imperfect and streightened like a Fish in a Pail or small vessel of Water which cannot keep it alive it would fain be in the Ocean or swiming in the broad and large Rivers So we are pent up cannot do what we would there is a larger Estate when filled up with all the fulness of God that Holiness we have now maketh us look for it and long for it and surely Holiness was never designed for our Torment 6. We are hastning into the other World apace and therefore we more desire it Natural motion is in principio tardior in sine velecior the nearer to fruition the more impatient of the want of it When a Man is drawing home after a long Journey every Mile is as tedious as two We are drawing nigh to the other World let us leave this willingly not by force let not Trouble chase us out of it but Love and Desire draw us out of it God doth loosen our Roots by little and little that we may now be sit for a Remove the Pins of our Tabernacle are taken down insensibly and by leisurely Degrees Now as fast as we are going out of this World we should be going into another the inner Man Renewed day by day