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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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be innumerable every days experience will furnish us with enough of this they that will not take the light of God's Word stumble upon dark mountains for God hath owned his Word to a tittle owned both the Tables R●…m 1. 18. The wrath of God is revealed from heaven c. from heaven by the effects of his wrath If men be ungodly and unrighteous they are punished nay not only in the general but in particular Heb. 2. 2. For if the word spoken by angels was stedfast why for every transgression and disobedience received a just recompence of reward By every transgression he means a sin of omission by every disobedience a sin of commission And as he will do so for sins against the Law so sins against the Gospel that place where the Gospel was first propounded smarted for the neglect of it 1 Thes. 2. 13. Wrath is come upon them to the uttermost for despising the Gospel And still God secures the certainty of our direction by new judgments those that will go contrary to the Word turn aside to paths of their own they perish in their devices 4 Let me prove it by Reasons that certainly the Word must needs be light that is a clear and sure direction I prove it from the Author the Instruments and Penmen and from the ends why God hath given the Word 1. From the Author of it it is God's Word Every thing that comes from God hath some resemblance of his Majesty God is light and in him there is no darkness at all 1 Iohn 1. 5. his Word is light If God would give us any thing to direct us it must needs be clear and sure it must have light As at first God gave reason to direct man 1 Ioh. 1. 4. That life was the light of men as it came from God before it was weakned by the Fall it was a full direction it discover'd its Author and now since the Fall still it discovers its Author Conscience which remains with us it is called the candle of the Lord Prov. 20. 27. From a glorious Sun now it is dwindled to a candle yet it is called the candle of the Lord It is a candle lighted by God himself The understanding and conscience that is privy to our most secret motions thoughts and actions though it may be maimed and lessened by sin it is sensible of some distinction between good and evil and acts God's part in the soul sometimes condemning sometimes approving accusing and excusing by turns Rom. 2. 15. But alas if we were only left to this light we should be for ever miserable The light of reason is too short for us now and there 's a double reason partly because our chief good and last end being altered by sin we shall strangely mistake things if we weigh them in the balance of the flesh which we seek to please Now our chief good is altered or rather we are apt to mistake it all our business is to please the flesh and to gratifie lust and appetite Psal. 49. 12. Therefore go to a man led by carnal and unsanctified reason he shall put light for darkness and darkness for light good for evil and evil for good Isa. 5. 20. He shall confound the names and natures of things so miserably grope in the dark and not find out the way to true happiness either stumbling dashing his foot against a stone or wander out of the way in a maze of a thousand uncertainties therefore it 's a blessed thing not to be left to this candle of reason the light within us for that will not guide us but God hath drawn a strait line for us to Heaven which if we follow we cannot miss Again partly because man's condition since the Fall is such that he needs a supernatural remedy before he can be happy he needs a Redeemer Now the gift of a Redeemer depending upon the free grace of God cannot be found out by natural light for that can only judge of things necessary and not of such things as depend upon the arbitrary love of God therefore this light cannot guide Iohn 3. 16. Well then because the candle of the Lord that is within us is not enough to direct us God hath set up a Lamp in the Sanctuary to give us light and to guide us in the pursuit of true happiness and that 's the Scripture Now if they have God for their Author surely they must needs be clear and full for nothing indited by his Spirit can be dark confused and inconveniently exprest either with respect to the things revealed or to the persons to whom this Revelation is made For if God should speak darkly here 's my Argument especially in necessary things it is either because God could not speak otherwise or would not The former is direct blasphemy he that made the Eye cannot he see and he that made the mouth cannot he speak plainly and intelligibly to his People so as to be understood by them And the latter cannot be said that God would not for that is contrary to his goodness and love to mankind Psal. 25. 8. Good and upright is the Lord therefore will he teach sinners in the way If this be true that God is a just good God he will teach us plainly the Psalmist infers it he is just and will not lead us wrong he is an upright God and he is a good God and therefore though we have fallen from the state of our Creation though the candle of the Lord burn dim in our hearts since the Fall yet he is a good God therefore he will shew us the way Now it is not to be imagined that there should not be light in the Word of God that that should be dark confused and unintelligible That the most powerful and wise Monarch and most loving of all that he should write a Book to teach men the way to Heaven and do it so cloudily that we cannot tell what to make of it therefore if God be the Author this Book must be true here must be light a clear and sure direction to guide us in all our ways 2. I prove it by reason again from the Instruments used in this work Shall I take those words for my ground-work 2 Pet. 1. 21. For the prophecy came not in old time by the will of man but holy men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost That is 't is not the fancies or dictates of men but the Word of God for they were holy men and holy men guided by the Holy Ghost and so guided as that they were moved born up by the special motion of the Spirit Let me reason thus those that God hath employ'd to deliver his mind to the world look either to the Prophets of the Old Testament or Apostles of the New and you will find them to be holy men burning with zeal for God and love to souls and it is not to be imagined that they would deliver God's
our best actions Gal. 6. 16. Peace and Mercy when we have done most exactly yea the very plea of servant excludeth all thought of merit for a servant ipso jure Ministerium Domino debet Luke 17. 9. Doth he thank that servant because he did the things that were commanded I trow not 2. 'T is not contrary to humility 'T is not we are thy Children we are thy Saints but we are thy Servants 'T is the meanest of relations it speaketh duty rather than perfection and pleads not property of the house but propriety and interest in God The best of us are but servants to the high God and therefore should not carry it proudly either to our Master or to our Fellow-Servants 'T is an humble claim 3. It speaketh comfort for God will provide for his Family and will give maintenance protection direction help and finally wages where he requireth and expecteth service for the present necessaries by the way for the future a blessed reward For the present we may depend on him as Servants on their Lord Psal. 123. 2. Behold as the eyes of servants look to the hands of their masters and the eyes of maidens to the hand of their mistress c. Servants had their Dole and Portion from their Masters the Males from the Master the Females from the Mistress therefore is the expression of looking here used First God will give direction In the Text David upon the account of being Gods Servant beggeth to know his will as all good servants study what will please their masters and will God appoint us work and not tell us what it is Psal. 143. 10. Teach me to do thy will for thou art my God thy spirit is good lead me into the land of uprightness God doth not only shew us what is good in his word but teacheth us also by his spirit and directs us in every turn and motion of our lives and we ask it of him as he is our God and Lord. Secondly Help and assistance God is no Pharaoh to require Brick and give no Straw his Grace is ready to help the endeavouring Soul Gal. 2. 12 13. Work out your salvation for God worketh in you both to will and to do He exciteth the first motions and still carrieth them on to perfection Thirdly Protection while he hath a mind to use us vers 122. of this Psalm Be surety for thy servant for good let not the proud oppress me Under the Law if a servant was hurt the Master was to take an account and satisfaction to be made to him for his servant Deut. 21. 32. so God taketh an account of the wrongs of his servants and will demand satisfaction Fourthly Maintenance 1 Tim. 5. 8. Every man hath a care devolved upon him to take care of his Family and provide for them as instruments of Gods Providence and will not God provide for his own And then for time to come Gods servants have good wages Heb. 11. 6. He is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him We need not seek another pay-master there is a sure reward Prov. 11. 18. But to him that soweth righteousness shall be a sure reward And a great reward Psal. 19. 11. And in the keeping of them is a great reward And a full reward 2 Iohn 8. But that we receive a full reward No desire remaineth unsatisfied Use. Is to perswade us to become the Servants of the Lord. 1. I will plead with you upon the account of right you ought to be so jure Creationis you were created by him As a man expecteth fruit from the Vine which he hath planted so may God expect from the Creature which he hath made yea you were made for this end If God had made us for another purpose our living to that end and purpose had been regular But this was his end that he might be served by us Let us lay these things together consider what an absolute power God hath by Creation no Lord hath such a right over his Slave or Servant as God over us The Slave or Servant is either taken in battel or bought and hired with our money but God made us out of nothing he that made a thing at his own pleasure hath a greater right than another can have by purchase yea greater right than a master over his Beast A master hath a greater right over his Beast than over his Servant the dominion over the Beast is more natural to us than over a Servant the Servant and Master have the same common Nature When he gave us dominion over the Beasts of the Field the one is founded in Gods original Grant the other is but a civil right founded in temporal accidents Something is due even to a Slave as our own Flesh. Yet a man cannot absolutely do with his Beast as he will the Law of God interposeth a good man is merciful to his beast God will not allow a cruel disposition nor give us the absolute disposal over the Creatures which we made not Nay more than a Potter over the Vessels which he hath framed or a Workman over his work he only giveth external shape or figure by art out of matter already prepared But God giveth the whole Being out of nothing nothing but what is his A Potter hath power over his work to dispose of it as he pleaseth here the Law interposeth not Surely if a Potter hath power to dispose of his Vessels God hath an absolute power to smite or heal lift up or cast down save or condemn none can say What dost thou He doth not fashion us out of matter prepared but out of mere nothing But this was his end that we should love and fear and serve and glorifie him Our business was not to eat and drink and please our selves and others and live a merry life All things act to the end for which they were created the Sun to shine by day and enlighten the World the Moon and Stars by night and they answer their end Their ultimate end is to serve God their next end to serve Man All things in the World are either subjected to our dominion or created for our use the Heavens though not under our dominion as Beasts yet are for our use the lower Heaven to give us breath the middle Heaven to give us light and heat the highest Heaven for our Dwelling Place the Sun runneth and hasteneth to give us light The Sun shineth for us the Wind bloweth and the Water Howeth for our use The Earth and Air are for our use the Earth to tread on the Air to breathe in and shall not we serve him that made the whole Course to serve us All the Creatures are at work for us day and night for a poor Worm of six foot long yea the Creator is at work for us My Father worketh hitherto and I work We complain if the Creatures do not serve us and shall not we serve God who gave us those Servants 2. A right
have hidden thy word in my heart and then with my lips have I declared c. And as it must be first in the heart so next in the tongue Joh. 7. 38. Christ speaks of him that believeth in him that out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water By the belly is meant the heart when there is true grace in the heart the sweet influences thereof will flow forth in their common discourse for the refreshing of others as a spring sendeth forth the streams to water the ground about it If the heart be full the tongue will drop what is savoury I say certainly if it be within it vvill break out The Word is to be hid but not like a Talent in a Napkin but like Gold in a Treasury to be laid out upon all meet occasions Thus referring it to the 11th Verse there may be a fair connexion Or if you refer it to the 12th Verse Blessed art thou O Lord teach me thy statutes teach me that I may teach others Our requests for knowledg are like to speed when we are willing to exercise this knowledg for the glory of God and the good of others Talents thrive by their use To him that hath shall be given Mat. 25. 29. that is to him that useth his talents Trading brings encrease and so it may be used as an argument to back that Petition Lord teach me for I have been ever declaring with my lips all the judgments of thy mouth Again none can speak of God with such savour and affection as he that is taught by God Teach me and I have or will declare it may be read either way all the judgments of thy mouth A Heathen could say Non loquendum de Deo sine lumine We must not speak of God without light The things of God are best represented with the light of his own grace David shews that he would perform the duty of a good disciple that he would teach others if God should teach him In the words two things are to be explained 1. What he will declare All the Iudgments of thy mouth 2. In what sense he will declare them First What he will declare Gods will revealed in the Scripture is called the judgments of his mouth His judgments I have shewed that v. 7. at large Briefly now I will add two Reasons First because it is the Rule according to which we must judg of all spiritual truth Isa. 8. 20. To the law and to the testimony if they speak not according to this word it is because there is no light in them Secondly it is the rule according to which we must look to be judged both here and hereafter Here I will chastise them or judg them as their congregation hath heard According to the sentence of the word so will the course of his Providence be and according to which we shall be judged hereafter John 12. 48. The word that I have spoken the same shall judg him in the last day Gods Providences are a comment upon the Scriptures The Scripture is not only a Record of what is past but a Calender and Prognostication of what is to come you may read your doom your judgment there for the statutes of the Lord are all called Judgments because of an answerable proceeding in the course of Gods Providence if men escape here they will not escape the judgment of the last day when the sentence of that God shall infallibly be made good Now the verdict of the word it is called the judgments of his mouth as if God himself had pronounced by Oracle and judged from heaven in the case and these judgments of his mouth the Psalmist saith shall be the matter of his discourse and conference with others Secondly In what sense it is said that he will declare all the judgments of his mouth In this speech David may be considered as a King as a Prophet or as a private believer 1. As a King so some conceive that whenever he judged or gave sentence upon the throne he would declare the judgments of Gods mouth that is decree in the case according to the sentence of the Law In favour of this sense it may be alledged 1. That certainly the King was bound to study the Law of God as you shall see Deut. 17. 18 19. When he sitteth upon the throne of his Kingdom that he shall write him a copy of this law in a book out of that which is before the priests the Levites and it shall be with him and he shall read therein all the days of his life Every King was bound to have a copy of the Law the Rabbies say written with his own hand carried about with him wheresoever he went in City or Camp 2. That the Kings of Iudah were bound up by the Judicials of Moses out of that which is before the Priests and Levites that is according to thy Iudicial Laws so will I pass sentence upon Malefactors 3. That proceeding according to this Rule their declarations in Court were the Judgments of Gods mouth 2 Chron. 19. 6. He said to the Iudges Take heed what ye do for ye judg not for man but for the Lord who is with you in the judgment If this sense did prevail we might observe hence That a godly man useth the word to season the duties of all his relations And again That a good Magistrate is so to judg upon the Throne that his Sentences there may be as the Judgments of Gods own mouth But that which caused this misconceit was the word Iudgments which is not of such a limited import and signification as those that pitched upon this Interpretation did conceive and therefore mistook the meaning of this place 2. David may be considered here as a Prophet and so as a pattern of all Teachers He asserts his sincerity in two respects 1. As to the matter of his doctrine it should be the judgments of Gods mouth such as he had received from God 2. As to the extent that he would declare all the judgments of his mouth 1. As to the matter of his doctrine it should be the judgments of his mouth That which should be declared and taught in the Church should not be our own opinions and fancies but the pure word of God not the vanity of our thoughts but the verity of his Revelations otherwise we neither discharge our duty to God nor to the children of God Not to God when we come in his name without his message Jer. 4. 10. Ah Lord thou hast greatly deceived this people saith the Prophet Ieremiah to God Thou thou hast done it because the false prophets had done it in his name The dishonour reflects upon him when his Ordinance is abused to countenance the fancies of our own brain Nor to the children of God whose appetite carrieth them to pure unmixed milk 1 Pet. 2. 2. As new-born babes desire the sincere milk of the word that ye may grow thereby 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
a Scholar by his own aversness from Learning or by the severity and imprudence of his Master by his morosity or unreasonable exactions hath no delight in his Book all that he learneth is lost and forgotten it goeth in at one ear and out at the other but this is the true art of memory to cause them to delight in what they learn Such instructions as we take in with a sweetness they stick with us and run in our minds night and day So saith David here I will delight in thy statutes I will not forget thy word Doct. 1. One great respect which the Saints owe to the word of God is to delight therein David resolveth so to do I will delight or solace or recreate my self in thy statutes this should be his refreshment after business David had many things to delight in the splendor and magnificence of his Kingdom as Nebuchadnezzar Dan. 4. 30. Is not this great Babylon that I have built for the house of the Kingdom by the might of my power and for the honour of my Majesty His great Victories which Aristotle saith are delightful to all 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It is an appearance of excellency Arist. Rhet. 1. cap. 11. Or in his Instruments of Musick as those Amos 6. 5. that chaunt to the sound of the viol and invent to themselves Instruments of Musick like David No this was not the mirth that he chose for his portion Wicked men throng their hearts with such delights as these lest an evil conscience flye upon them but I will delight my self in thy statutes He might take comfort in a subordinate way in these things but the solace of his life and the true sawce of all his labours was in the word of God As David so Ieremiah cap. 15. 16. Thy words were sound and I did eat them they were unto me as the joy and rejoycing of my heart That was the food and the repast of his soul and he felt more warmth and cherishing in it than any can in their bodily food So Paul Rom. 7. 22. I delight in the law of God in the inward man Not to know it only but to feel the power of it prevailing over his lusts that was his delight as to the better part of his soul So it is made a general Character of the blessed man Psal. 1. 2. that he delighteth in the Law of God and in that Law doth he exercise himself day and night Gods people will delight in his Law it is one of the greatest enjoyments they have on this side Heaven in the time of their absence from God It is the instrument of all the good that they receive Comfort Strength Quickning But now how do they delight in Gods Statutes 1. In reading the word The Eunuch returning from publick Worship was reading a portion of Scripture Acts 8. 28. It is good to see with our own eyes and to drink of the fountain our selves if it seem dark without the explication of men God that sent Philip to the Eunuch will send you an Interpreter 2. In hearing of the Word The Command is James 1. 19. Wherefore be swift to hear The Saints have had experiment of the power of it and therefore delight in it I was glad when they said Come and let us go up unto the house of the Lord Psal. 122. 1. You should be glad of these occasions of hearing not as with the Minstril to please the ear but to warm the heart Seeing is in Heaven Hearing in the Churches upon earth then Vision now Hearing 3. In conferring of it often What a man delighteth in he will be talking of so should you at home abroad Deut. 6. 7. Thou shalt be talking of them when thou sittest in thy house and as thou walkest by the way seasoning thy journey He that would have God to be in his journey as travelling and walking abroad should be speaking of divine things 4. In meditating and exercising his mind upon it Psal. 1. 2. He delighteth in the law of God and in that law doth he meditate day and night Delight causeth a pause or consistency of mind as the Glutton rolleth the sweet morsel under his tongue and is loth to let it go so a godly man's thoughts will run along with his delight Clean beasts chew the cud God's children will be ruminating going over the word again and again 5. In Practice This Delight is not in bare speculation so Hypocrites have their tasts and their flashes but in believing practising obeying Psal. 119. 14. I have rejoyced in the way of thy testimonies Delight breedeth obedience and is encreased and doubled by it 'T is not the delight which an ordinary beholder taketh in a rare piece of painting meerly to admire the Art but the delight which an Artist taketh in imitating it and copying it out Here in the Text it is in thy Statutes A gracious heart is alike affected with the Rule as the Promise not only with discoveries of Grace but discoveries of duty Now thus it must be ordinarily 1. The Duties of every day must be carried on with delight This must be our divertisement and the refreshment of our other labours that when tired out with the incumbrances of the world we may look upon reading meditating hearing as our recreation and the salt and solace of our lives that other things may go down the better The labours of the mind do relieve those of the body and those of the body those of the mind Ainsworth saith the word in the Text signifieth I will solace and recreate my self and Psal. 1. 2. His delight is in the law of the Lord and in that law doth he exercise himself day and night as was before cited 2. Especially upon the Lords day Isa. 58. 13. Thou shalt call the Sabbath a delight call it so that is account it so When our whole time is to be parted into Meditation and Prayer and Hearing and Conference then it is our advantage to lye in the bosome of God all the day long A Bell is kept up with less difficulty when it is once raised and when the heart is once got up it is the better kept up in an holy delight in God The Reasons of it are two 1. The word of God deserveth it 2. This delight will be of great use to them First The word of God deserveth it 1. In regard of the Author they delight in it for the Author's sake because it is the signification of his mind as a Letter from a beloved friend is very welcome to us Aristotle mentioning the causes of delight saith Rhet. 1. cap. 11. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lovers are mightily pleased when they hear any thing of the party beloved or receive any thing from them a Letter or a Token The Word is God's Epistle and Love-Letter to our selves it is the more welcome for his sake The contrary God complaineth of Hos. 8. 12. I have written to them the great things of
for which the new creature was made and they are ever tending towards that happy state wherein they shall grieve God no more 3. Hope was made for things to come especially for our full and final happiness God fits us with graces as well as happiness not only grants us a glorious estate but gives us grace to expect it Hope would be of no use if it did not lift up the head and look out for a better Estate than the world yieldeth Hope fastens upon Gods title in the Covenant I am thy God Now God could not with honour take this title and give us no better than present things Heb. 11. 16. Wherefore God is not ashamed to be called their God for he hath prepared for them a city Mark the Apostles reason Many expound these words so as if the meaning were but this That they did only express Gods condescension that he would take his title not from the Potentates of the world but from a few wandring Patriarchs that God was not ashamed to be called their God Alas the words have a quite other sense rather it expresseth an answerable bounty Unless the Lord would give them something answerable to their hopes more than was visible in the lives of the Patriarchs God would be ashamed to be called their God Do but look upon the slenderness of their condition if that he gave them in the world were all their reward what is this to own that magnificent title I am the God of Abraham c. No now he hath something better than all the honours and riches of the world now he may fitly be called their God Christ builds the doctrine of the resurrection upon the same argument God is the God of Abraham c. therefore they shall have a blessed estate in soul and body Matth. 22. 32. To be a God to any is to be a Benefactor and that according to the extent and largeness of an infinite and an eternal Power USE 1. Are you strangers and pilgrims David and such as he was that were of his stamp counted themselves strangers upon earth If you be so 1. You will always be drawing home and would not desire to stay long from Christ. A traveller would pass over his journey as soon as he can and be hastning homeward Phil. 1. 23. I desire to be dissolved and to be with Christ. Is there any looking longing waiting for your blessed estate It is no hard matter to get a Christian out of the world his better part is gone already his heart is there Do your hearts draw homeward Are your desires stronger and stronger every day after eternal life Natural motion grows swifter and swifter still as it draws nearer and nearer its center So certainly a Christian if he had the motions of the new nature he would be drawing homeward more every day 2. What provision do you make for another world if you are strangers Many bestow all their labour and travel about earthly things and neglect their precious and immortal souls They are at home all their care is that they may live well here O Christians what provision do you make for heaven A traveller doth not buy such things as he cannot carry with him as Trees Houses Houshold-stuff but Jewels Pearls and such as are portable Our Wealth doth not follow us into the other world but our Works do We are travelling to a Countrey whose Commodities will not be bought with gold and silver and therefore are we storing our selves for heaven for such things as are currant there Men that make a voyage to the Indies will carry such Wares as are acceptable there else they do nothing Do you make it your business every day to get clearer evidences for heaven to treasure up a good foundation 1 Pet. 6. 8. and do you labour every day to grow more meet for heaven Col. 1. 12. That 's the great work of a Christian to get evidences and a meetness for heaven These are the months of our purification we are now to cleanse our selves for the embraces of the great God When we grow more mortified strict holy heavenly then we ripen apace and hasten homeward Psal. 84. 7. They shall go on from strength to strength c. every degree of grace it is a step nearer and therefore do you grow more meet for this blessed estate 3. In the fulness of your worldly enjoyments do you mind your Country He that was going pilgrim to Ierusalem cryed out O! this is not the holy City So whatever enjoyments you have do your hearts call you off and say Soul this is not thy rest this is not that thou shouldst take comfort in thou art bound for heaven Do you miss your Countrey and your Parents The men of the world would have their portion here here 's their rest but when you have most of the world at will are you strangers 1 Cor. 7. 31. Using this world as not abusing it that is so making use of Gods bounty as expecting a greater happiness How do we use the world as not abusing it When we use it as a type as a motive and as a help to heaven As a kind of Type The enjoyment of temporal things should stir us up to a more serious consideration of heavenly as the Prodigals husks put him in mind of bread in his fathers house The company of your Relations puts you in mind of the company of God and Christ. The Cities of the Amorites their Walled Towns put the Patriarchs in mind of a City which had foundations Heb. 11. 26. If an earthly City be so glorious what 's the heavenly City These are the comforts of a strange place You abuse them when you forget home and therefore take heed If the creature be sweet heaven is better And when you use them as a Motive to serve God more cheerfully the more you find him a good Master 1 Tim. 6. 17. Trust in the living God who giveth us richly all things to enjoy To make you more earnest in good works 2 Sam. 17. saith David there I dwell in a house of cedar and the ark of God within curtains When you have such kind of reasonings stirr'd up within you What do I for God that hath enlarged my house here And when you use them as a Help your Worldly enjoyments as Instruments of piety and charity Here 's a man's tryal what he doth in a full condition whether his heart be for home still yea or no when he hath the world at will if then he be treasuring up a good foundation and encouraging himself to serve God faithfully 4. What is your solace in your affliction and the inconveniences that you meet with in your pilgrimages Doth this comfort you Home will pay for all Heb. 10. 34. Ye took joyfully the spoiling of your goods knowing in your selves that ye have in heaven a better and enduring substance Do you reckon upon a more enduring substance Though the World frown upon you as
he hath begun Phil. 1. 16. The Apostle most notably sets it forth 1 Pet. 5. 10. The God of all grace make you perfect stablish strengthen settle you All these words concern the habit or the seed of grace in the soul and to shew Gods concurrence towards our preservation in the spiritual state he useth these words Make you perfect that notes the addition of degrees that are yet wanting stablish you that notes defending that grace which is already planted in the heart from temptation and dangers and strengthen you that is give you power for action or ability for working and settle you that is to fasten the root more and more All may be represented in a Tree look as a Tree grown downward in the root is defended from the nipping of the weather and stablisht and strengthned against injuries from beasts and being fill'd with sap springs forth and becomes fruitful so the Lord settle you c. 3. There 's a concurrence of God to the act Grace in habit is not enough but it must be actuated and directed About the act there are two things The Holy Spirit actuates the grace that is implanted draws it forth into exercise so it is said Phil. 2. 13. It is God that worketh in you both to will and to do that is he does apply that grace in our heart set it awork and then there 's a directing or regulation of the soul to action 2 Thes. 3. 5. The Lord direct your hearts into the love of God c. Thus God plants grace in the heart by preventing us with his mercy and loving-kindness taking us into favour then he doth stablish us and perfect it root it in the soul more and more Then as to the act he doth excite and strengthen us Secondly The uses for which we have this strength from God It serves for three Uses for doing for suffering and for conflicting to bear us out in conflict as our necessities are many so must our strength be 1. Strength to perform duties Weariness and uncomfortableness will soon fall upon our hearts and we shall hang off from God if the Lord doth not put forth a new force and a new quickning upon our hearts therefore the Spouse saith Cant. 1. 4. Draw me and we will run after thee And here in this Psalm When the Lord shall enlarge my heart I will run the ways of his commandments If we would be carried on with any fervour and motion towards God we must go forth in the strength of God The soul is a tender thing and soon discomposed When we think to go forth and shake our selves as at other times as Sampson we shall find fetters and restraints upon our soul. Therefore God's work must ever be done in God's strength 2. Strength for bearing of burdens with patience that we may not faint under them Col. 1. 11. Strengthned with all might according to his glorious power unto all patience and long-suffering with joyfulness That we may not faint under our affliction Prov. 24. 10. If thou faint in the day of adversity thy strength is small God's children before they go to Heaven will have their tryals they will have many burdens upon them Heb. 6. 12. Be ye followers of them who through faith and patience inherit the promises There needs not only faith but patience There will be trouble Now a heavy burden need have good shoulders We pray for strength that we may break through difficulties and afflictions that we meet in our passage to heaven 3. Strength for conflicts that we may break through temptations A Christian is not only to use the Trowel but the Sword We cannot think to discharge duties or bear afflictions without a battel and conflict therefore we need the strength of the Lord's grace to carry us through Satan is the great enemy with whom we conflict he is the manager of the temptation This is the course of it the World is the bait the Flesh is the Traitor that works within men which gives advantage to Satan the Devil lyeth hidden and by worldly things seeks to draw off our hearts from God Now we are assaulted on every side sometimes by the pleasures of the world sometimes by the frowns and crosses of it so that a Christian needs to be fit for all conditions Phil. 4. 13. I can do all things through Christ that strengthneth me for every way will the Devil be inticing us to sin Now these Conflicts are either solicitations to sin or tend to weaken our comfort and in both respects we must have strength from God Satan's first temptation is to draw us to sin if he cannot weaken grace then to disturb our comfort if not to deny God yet that we may suspect our own estate and therefore he follows us with blasphemies and other temptations until he hath made our lives wearisome till we call our condition into question and therefore as grace is strengthned so is comfort Neh. 8. 11. The joy of the Lord is your strength Thus I have shew'd what is this spiritual strength and what we beg of God when we say Strengthen me And how this is given out in what manner God conveyeth this strength to the soul how sutable to our nature to our temper to our employment Thirdly How God is concerned in it David goes to God for this benefit Lord strengthen me From first to last he doth all We do not stand by the stability of our own resolutions nor stand by the stability of gracious habits in our selves unless the Lord supply new strength Not by the stability of our own resolutions for these will soon fail for David was under a resolution to keep close to God yet he saith My feet had well nigh slipt what upheld him Thy right hand upheld me I was mightily shaken all purposes of holding on of godliness were even gone but I am continually with thee Neither is it the stability of gracious habits in themselves for of themselves they are poor vanishing things faith love and fear of God of themselves will soon vanish Rev. 3. 2. Be watchful strengthen the things which remain that are ready to dye These are ready to dye therefore are only maintained by a renewed strength from God It is the power of God that is engaged in our preservation I might shew in what order we have this from God we are not only kept in general by the power of God through faith unto salvation 1 Pet. 1. 5. but all the persons work The Father his act is Judicial Eph. 3. 14. I bow my knees unto the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ that he would grant you to be strengthned with might in the inner man He issueth the grant that such souls coming in Christ's name and petitioning relief should obtain it And God the Son hath bought this strength for us and he intercedes for constant supply and therefore it is said Phil. 4. 13. I can do all things through Christ. Christ puts in
against covetousness brings in a carnal wretch singing lullabies to his soul Luke 12. 19. Soul thou hast much goods laid up for many years take thy ease eat drink and be merry He doth not wish for more but pleaseth himself with what he had already and yet in his language would Christ impersonate and set forth the dispositions of a covetous heart So we are cautioned Psal. 62. 10. If riches increase set not your hearts upon them When we set up our rest here and look no further we are guilty of this sin But now because we may delight in our portion and take comfort in what God hath given us let us see when our delight in temporal things is a branch of covetousness I answer when we delight in them to the neglect of God and the lessening of our joy in his service and our hopes of eternal life are abated and grow less lively when we so delight in them as to neglect God and the sweet intercourse we should have in him Therefore covetousness is called Idolatry Ephes. 5. 5. Col. 3. 5. as it robs God of our trust while we build upon uncertain riches as a stable happiness and the best assurance of our felicity Mark 10. 23 24. How hardly shall they that have riches enter into the Kingdom of God And when the Disciples wondred our Saviour answered How hard is it for them that trust in riches c. That is that set their confidence in them in that degree and measure as is only due to God Then it is called Adultery Iam. 4. 4. because out of love to worldly things we can dispense with our love to God and delight in him As the Harlot draws away the affection from the lawful Wife In short when we seek them and prize them with the neglect of better as spiritual and heavenly things are Luk. 12. 21. Mat. 6. 19 20 21 33. Next to the love of God we must love our selves and there first our souls Now we are besotted and inchanted with the love of the world so as to slight the favour of God and the hopes of Blessedness to come this is Adultery spiritual and sets up another chief good Secondly Let us come to the causes of it and they are two Distrust of Gods Providence and discontent with Gods allowance You have both in one place Heb. 13. 5. Let your conversation be without covetousness and be content with such things as you have These two distrust and discontent have a mutual influence upon one another distrust breeds discontent with our present portion and discontent breeds ravenous desires and ravenous desires breed distrust for when we set God a task to provide for our lusts certainly he will never do it I say we can never depend upon him that he should provide for our lusts For the first of these that is distrust or a fear of want together with a low esteem of Gods Providence which maketh us so unreasonably solicitous about outward provisions therefore when Christ would cure our covetousness he seeks to cure our distrust Luke 12. 29. And seek not ye what ye shall eat or what ye shall drink neither be ye of doubtful mind Do not hover like Meteors in the air antedating your cares making your selves more miserable by your own suspicions and your own fears what shall become of you and yours So Mat. 6. 34. Take no thought for to morrow sufficient for the day is the evil thereof I say this carking about future things makes us so impatient and earnest after present satisfaction God trained up his people to a waiting upon his Providence Manna fell from Heaven every day so sufficient for the day is the evil thereof Every day we need look no further Give us this day our daily bread But men fear future need and poverty and so would help themselves by their own carking So then diffidence of Gods promises is the latent evil which lodgeth in the heart Sordid sparing and greedy getting that's on the top but that which lies near the heart is distrust we incline to sensible things and cannot tell how to be well without them and so resolve to shift for our selves 2. Discontent Men have not so much as their rapacious desires crave though they are allowed moderate supplies to keep them till they go to Heaven And therefore every thing that they get serves but as a bait to draw them on further so they are always joining house to house and laying field to field Isa. 5. 8. When once men transgress the bounds of contentment prescribed by God there is no stop or stay Look as the channel wears wider and deeper the more water falls into it the water frets more and more So the more outward things increase upon us the more are our desires increast upon us No man hath vast and unlimited thoughts at first Men would be a little higher in the world and a little better accommodated and when they have that they must have a little more then a little more so they seize upon all things within their grasp and reach Whereas if we had been content with our estate at first we might have saved many a troublesome care many a sin many needless desires and many a foolish and hurtful lust that proves our bain and torment Be content with such things as you have now or you will not be content hereafter the lust will increase with the possession As in some diseases of the stomach purging doth better than repletion not to feed the humour but to purge away the distemper So here it is not more that will satisfie us but our lusts must be abated if we were better satisfied with Gods fair allowance we might be happy men much sooner than ever we shall be by great wealth Thirdly For the discoveries of this sin Aristotle as it is a moral vice placeth it in two things in a defect in giving and an excess in taking we may better express both in Scripture-phrase by greedy getting and an unmeet with-holding 1. Greedy-getting manifested either 1. By sinful means of acquisition as lying couzening oppression prophaning the Lords-day grinding the faces of the poor carnal compliances or any other such unjust or evil arts of gain Men stick not at the means when their desires are so strongly carried out after the end Prov. 28. 20. He that maketh hast to be rich cannot be innocent They leap over hedg and ditch and all restraints of honesty and conscience to compass their ends all their endeavours are suited to their profit and therefore consult not with conscience but with interest and so prove treacherous to God unthankful to Parents disobedient to Magistrates unfaithful to Equals unmerciful to inferiors and care not whom they wrong so they may thrive in the world 2. Though it go not so high as injustice yet it appeareth by excessive labours when endeavours are unreasonably multiplied to the wrong both of the body and the soul. To the wrong
such Errors are abroad and Divisions in the Church and the name of God is Blasphemed Now by these daily mercies doth God stablish his Word makes it good to your Souls Psal. 18. 30. The Word of the Lord is a tried Word there is more than Letters and Syllables God standeth to it it is a tryed word When you have challenged him you have found the Scripture fulfilled upon appeals to God and applications to the Throne of Grace When you have been pleading with God Lord is not this thy hand-writing the Promises thou hast made to thy people The Lord hath answered this from Heaven and said yea this is my Promise He hath given in an answerable Promise 2. It ingageth you to dependance and assurance of Faith Psal. 9. 10. They that know thy Name will put their trust in thee For thou Lord hast not forsaken them that seek thee Whosoever hath observed Gods dealings will see God is to be trusted he may be depended upon if he hath said any thing in his Word they that know thy name they that have acquainted themselves with God and the course of his dispensations The Promises will not lie by as a dead stock Psal. 116. 1 2. God hath heard my voice and my supplications therefore will I call upon him as long as I live This is that which will quicken you to rejoyce in God and to a holy thankfulness when you compare his Word with the effects of it when you see how it is made good Psal. 56. 10. In God will I praise his word In the Lord will I praise his word A single mercy is not so much nor so engaging upon our hearts to thankfulness as when observing the mercy hath been the fruit of a Promise This hath been the practice of Gods Saints Ioshuah takes notice of it Iosh. 23. 14. Not one thing hath failed of all the good things which the Lord your God spake concerning you 1 Kings 8. 56. There hath not failed one word of all his good Promises which he hath promised by the hand of Moses his Servant You will often find the very Letter of the Promise made good in the course of Gods dealings and if you would but observe his daily Providence you would be trained up in more waiting upon God for your final Blessings Secondly Let us come to the Person for whom he prayes Stablish thy Word but to whom to thy Servant Here note Doct. That Particular Application of general Promises is necessary This word which he would have to be established was most likely to be a Promise of Sanctification for in the former verse he had prayed for Mortification and vivification and now for Sanctification But be it any other Promise certainly that word which was made to others was likewise made to me as if he had been specified therein by name Thus must general truths be taken home by particular application that they may lye the closer to our hearts Psal. 27. The offer of Gods Favour is general seek ye my Face but the application is particular to himself Lord I will seek thy face David takes it as spoken to him in particular So Psal. 1●…6 15. Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of his Saints and then truly Lord I am thy Servant and the Son of thy handmaid The comfort concerned all Gods Children the life and death of the Saints is very precious in the eyes of God he hath a particular care over them and tells all their bones now Lord saith David let me have the comfort of this promise I am thy Servant So 1 Tim. 1. 15. This is a faithful saying c. whereof I am chief This holy Art should we learn of creeping under the covert of a Promise and working our selves by Faith into the comfort of it But rather Secondly you may observe the Character that he puts upon himself Thy Servant David was a King but at the Throne of Grace he stiles himself Gods Servant the fittest title that he could use when he prays for Grace Hence note Doct. He that is a Servant of God may seek and expect Grace from him Here I shall shew 1. Who is Gods Servant 2. Why we must use this Plea when we come to have promises accomplished First Who is Gods Servant I Answer He that dedicates himself to Gods use and he that lives under a sense and conscience of his Dedication 1. He that dedicates himself to Gods use We are Gods Servants by Covenant and voluntary Contract 'T is true our service is due to him upon other accounts but we enter into it by contract It is due by vertue of Creation for he made us out of nothing therefore we owe him all that we have and thus all Creatures were made for Gods Service Psalm 119. 91. They continue this day according to thine Ordinances for all are thy Servants Heaven and Earth and Sun and Moon and Stars and Beasts and every creeping thing and every Plant and Herb they all serve God according to the ends for which they were made But especially Men and Angels they were made for Gods use immediately Other things were made ultimately and terminatively for God Man immediately for God Psal. 103. 21. The Angels are his Ministers and so is Man Gods Servant And then by the right of Redemption we are bound to serve him as the Captive was to serve the Buyer He that bought another out of Slavery all his time and strength belonged to him 1 Cor. 6. 20. Ye are bought with a price therefore glorify God with your Souls and Bodies But this shews only de jure what we ought to be we ought all to be Gods Servants as he Created us and Redeemed us by the Blood of Christ. But de facto none are his Servants but those who resign and yield up themselves to his use Rom. 6. 13. Yield up your selves to the Lord God will have his right and title confirmed by our consent and therefore he that is a Servant of God one time or other hath entred into Covenant with God he hath consented to yield up himself to walk with God in a strict obedience All that thus yield up themselves to be Gods Servants they do it with Shame they are ashamed they did no sooner think of their Creator in their youth at their first coming to the use of Reason and think of him that bought them by his Blood 1 Pet. 4. 3. for the time past of our lives may suffice us to have wrought the will of the Gentiles c. They have too long dishonoured God destroyed their own Souls and kept their Creator out of his right And they do it too with a sense of Gods Love in the new title he hath by Redemption 2 Cor. 5. 14 15. For the Love of Christ constrains us c. 2. He is one that liveth under a sense and conscience of his Dedication not as his own but Gods When you have given up your selves to Gods
depending upon God and looking up to him it is our Life that which I live in the Flesh 2 Gal. 20. All that I live in the Flesh I live by the Faith of the Son of God well then the Law of God is always binding and every Operation of ours is under a Law and Grace should always be working 3. Gods Eye is always upon us he is alike every where therefore a Christian should be alike every where always like himself at home and abroad alone and in company 2 Phil. 12. As ye have always obeyed not as in my presence only but much more in my absence Many are devout abroad but carnal careless prophane if you follow them home to their Families When you are alone you are not alone God is there we have a heavenly Father that seeth in secret 6 Matth. 4. What you do in your Closets the doors made fast and all company shut out A man might allow himself in carnal liberty if he could go any where where God doth not see him but his eye is still upon us and therefore we should say with David I will keep thy Law continually Will he force the Queen before my face saith Ahasuerus We break Gods Laws before his face his Eye is always upon us and all our ways are before him 4. God is always at work for us 5 Iohn 17. My Father worketh hitherto and I work He sustains us every day hour moment and waketh for us watcheth over us by night and by day When we sleep the Devil is awake to do us mischief I but the God of Israel he that keepeth Israel neither slumbreth nor sleepeth but watcheth for our Good As soon as we arise his Compassions are new every morning 3 Lam. 22 23. Now can we offend him from whom we receive life and breath every moment If God should intermit his care but for one day nay but suspend it for one hour what would become of thee 5. All our Actions concern Eternity This Life is compared to a walk 2 Eph. 10. Every thing we do or speak is a step either to Heaven or Hell therefore to have an influence or tendency on that Action The more good we do the more we are acted with a fear of God and love of God to do all things to his glory the nearer heaven and the more evil the nearer hell We should not stand still or go back but always be getting ground in our journey 6. To be off and on with God will cost us much sorrow it will be bitterness in the end either it will cost us the bitterness of Repentance here or of weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth for ever either holy Compunction or everlasting Horror When you straggle from God there is no returning to your former Husband but by weeping cross 2 Hosea 14. and who would provide matter of sorrow for himself I say when you thrust your hand into Satans dish there is some sawce mingled with his meat and then everlasting Horror if not Compunction for that will be the end of them that are always unstable in all their ways 2 Iames 8. God will not always bear with them he may at first while they are Children poor weak Novices but will not always Eph. 4. 14. God expects that at length we should grow more constant and grow up to a radicated State of Grace therefore if we are always Children off and on with God then he will cast us off 7. By every intermission we may lose ground and possibly may never wholly if we recover it in part again We may lose ground for the way of the Lord is strength to the upright Prov. 10. 29. The more we continue in it the fitter we are to walk in it A Bell when once up is kept up with a greater ease than if we were to raise it a new A Horse warm in his geers is more fit for his Journey than at first setting forth and therefore keep up while you are in the way of God If it be hard to keep in with God it will be harder to recover when you are out of the way The only way to make Religion easie is to be still in it and to have our hearts still upon it and therefore you lose by your intermission And if you recover your selves after intermission it is not always to that degree of largeness of heart and fulness of Spiritual Comfort A Prodigal that hath rioted away his Estate if set up again is not trusted with the like Stock And after a great Disease though a man recovers yet it is not to the degree of his former health many times Therefore we should without intermission persevere in our duty to God To apply this part Use 1. It should humble us all that we are so fickle and inconstant in that which is good Our hearts are unstable as water In the space of an hour how are our thoughts changed from good to evil and from evil to good in a moment What a Monster would Man seem if his heart were visible in the best duty that ever he performed Our Devotion and Goodness it comes by pangs and fits now humble anon proud now meek anon passionate now confident then full of fear and anguish like men sick of an Ague sometimes well sometimes ill we do not seem to be the same men in a Duty and out of a duty nay sometimes in the same Duty we do not seem to be the same men are not carried on with the same largeness of heart and confidence in God and savouriness and spirituality Oh how changeable and fickle are our hearts this should humble us 2. It reproveth them that would have a Dispensation at times and take liberty to cast off all Christian Modesty and Gravity that think if they be serious sometimes they may be light and vain at others and therefore sometimes like Angels of light at other times like Fiends of Darkness sometimes we would take them for grave serious Christians at other times for loose Libertines and they cast the fear of God behind their backs Ezek. 33. 13. If he trust to his own Righteousness and commit Iniquity c. that is if upon Presumption that he hath been Righteous he dispenseth with himself and takes an indulgence from his former Duty to be light vain careless all his Righteousness shall be forgotten Such a dissimilitude is there between men now they seem to be grave and serious anon vain light and wanton so very uncertain and uneven are we in our Temper and Practice 3. It shews what need there is of a constant watchfulness that in all things we may behave our selves as Gods Children Sin is always at work Gen. 6. 5. The imaginations and thoughts of our heart are only evil and that continually and Satan is always at work espying advantages against us 1 Pet. 5. 8. to draw us off from God O then let Grace be in its continual exercise Live as knowing all the
confirmed 2. Love to God increased 3. Hope made more lively Now these Providences of God suited to his Word comforted David had more power and force to confirm and increase these Graces then all their Atheistical Scoffs to shake them for he concluded from these Instances that though the Wicked flourish they shall perish and though the Godly be afflicted they shall be rewarded and so his Faith and Hope and Love to God and Adherence to his Wayes was much incouraged Comfort is sometimes spoken of in Scripture as an Impression of the Comforting Spirit sometimes as a result from an Act of our Meditation as here I comforted my self These things are not contrary but subordinate It is our Duty to meditate on God's Word and Providence and God blesseth it by the Influence of his Grace and the Spirit may be said to comfort us and we also may be said to comfort our selves Doctr. That the Remembrance of Gods former dealings with his People and their Enemies in all Ages is a great Relief in distress The Man of God is here represented as lying under the Scorns and Oppressions of the Wicked What did he doe to relieve himself I remembred thy Iudgments of old and have comforted my self So elsewhere this was his Practice Psal. 77. 5. I considered the days of old the years of ancient times again in the 11 and 12 Verses I will remember the works of the Lord surely I will remember thy works of old I will meditate also of all thy works and talk of thy doings Yet again Psal. 143. 5. I remember the days of old I meditate on all thy works I muse on the works of thy hands Thus did David often consider with what Equity and Righteousness with what Power and Goodness God carried on the work of his Providence toward his People of old The like he presseth on others Psal. 105. 5. Remember the marvellous works which he hath done his wonders and the Iudgments of his mouth Surely it is our Duty and it will be our Comfort and Reliefe I shall dispatch the Point in these Considerations 1. That there is a Righteous God that governeth the World All things are not hurled up and down by Chance as if the Benefit we receive were onely a good hit and the Misery a meer misfortune No all things are ordered by a Powerfull Wise and Just God his Word doth not onely discover this to us but his Works Psal. 58. 11. So that a man shall say Verily there is a reward for the Righteous verily there is a God that judgeth the Earth That is many times there are such Providences that all that behold them shall see and say that Godliness and Holiness are matters of Advantage and Benefit in this World abstracted from the Rewards to come and so an infallible Evidence that the World is not governed by Chance but administred by an Almighty All-wise and most Just Providence So elsewhere Psalm 9. 16. The Lord is known by the Iudgments which he executeth By some eminent Instances God sheweth himself to be the Judge of the World and keepeth a Petty Sessions before the day of General Assizes Upon this account the Saints beg the Lord to take off the Vaile from his Providence and to appear in protecting and delivering his Children and punishing their Adversaries Psalm 94. 1 2. O thou Iudge of the Earth shew thy self He is the Supreme Governour of the World to whom it belongeth to doe right 2. This Righteous God hath made a Law according to which he will govern and established it as the Rule of Commerce between him and his Creatures The Precept is the Rule of our Duty the Sanction is the Rule of his Proceedings so that by this Law we know what we must doe and what we may expect from him Man is not made to be lawless and ungoverned but hath a Conscience of Good and Evil for without the knowledge of God's Will we cannot obey him nor can we know his Will unless it be some way or other revealed No Man in his wits can expect that God should speak to us immediately and by Oracle we cannot endure his Voice nor can we see him and live Therefore he revealed his Mind by the Light of Nature and by Scripture which giveth us a clearer and more perfect Knowledge of his Will Certainly those that live under that Dispensation must expect that God will deale with them according to the Tenour of it The Apostle telleth us Rom. 2. 12. As many as have sinned without the Law shall perish without the Law and as many as have sinned in the Law shall be judged by the Law God hath been explicite and clear with them to tell them what they should doe and what they should expect 3. In the Course of his Dispensations he hath shewed from the beginning of the World unto this day that he is not unmindfull of this Law that the observance of this Rule bringeth suitable Blessings and the Violation of it the threatned Judgments Rom. 1. 18. The wrath of God is revealed from Heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men The Impious and the Unrighteous are breakers of either Table and the Wrath of God is denounced and executed upon both if there be any notorious Violation of either For in the day of God's Patience he is not quick and severe upon the World Heb. 2. 2. every Transgression and Disobedience received a just Recompence of Reward thereby his Word is owned Execution we say is the Life of the Law it is but Words without it and can neither be a ground of sufficient Hope in the Promises nor Fear in the Comminations When Punishments are inflicted it striketh a greater terrour when the Offenders are punished the Observers rewarded then it is a sure Rule of Commerce between us and God 4. That the Remembrance of the most Illustrious Examples of his Justice Power and Goodness should comfort us though we do not perfectly feel the Effects of his Righteous Government 1. I will prove we are apt to suspect God's Righteous Administrations when we see not the Effects of it when the Godly are oppressed with divers Calamities and the Wicked live a life of pomp and ease flourishing in Prosperity and Power according to their own hearts desire they are apt to think that God taketh no care of Worldly Affairs or were indifferent to Good and Evil as those profane Atheists Mal. 2. 17. Every one that doth evil is good in the sight of the Lord and he delighteth in him or where is the God of Iudgment as if God took pleasure in Wicked men and were no impartial Judge or had no Providence at all or hand in the Government of the World Temptations to Atheism begin ordinarily at the matter of God's Providence First Men carve out a Providence of their own that God loveth none but whom he dealeth kindly with in the matters of the World and if his Dispensations be cross to their apprehensions
sheweth that we are all Strangers here for if here we do not live for ever and yet we have Souls that will live for ever there must be some other place to which we are tending The Body is dust in its Composition and Resolution Eccles. 12. 7. Then shall the Body return to the Earth as it was Nature may teach us so much but Faith that assureth us of the Resurrection of the Dead doth more bind this Consideration upon us We are Mortal and all things about us are liable to their Mortality and therefore here we must be still passing to another Place 2. Here we have no Rest Micah 2. 10. Arise and depart hence for this is not your Rest that is hereafter Heb. 4. 9. There remaineth therefore a Rest for the People of God Our Home we count the place of our Repose Now there is no Rest and Content in this World which is a place of Vanity Misery and Discomfort Yea to the Children of God there are stronger Motives than Crosses to drive them from the World daily Temptations and our often falling by them Crosses are grievous to all but Sin is more grievous to the Godly and nothing makes them more weary of the World then the constant indwelling and frequent outbreaking of Corruption and Sin Rom. 7. 24. Oh miserable Man that I am who shall deliver me from the body of this death The Apostle was exercised with many Crosses but this doth make him complain in the bitterness of his Soul not of his Misery but of his Corruption which he found continually rebelling against God Many complain of their Crosses that complain not of Sin to loath the World for Crosses alone is neither the Mark nor Work of Grace a Beast can forsake the place where he findeth neither Meat nor Rest but because we are sinning here whilst others are glorifying God this is the trouble of the Saints 3. They believe and look for a better Estate after this life is over 2 Cor. 5. 1. We know that if our earthly House of this Tabernacle were dissolved we have a building of God an House not made with hands eternal in the Heavens No Man can be a right Sojourner on Earth who doth not look for an abode in Heaven for that which doth most effectually draw off the heart of Man from this World is the Expectation of a far better State in the World to come 2 Cor. 4. 18. While we look not at the things which are seen but at the things which are not seen for the things which are seen are temporal but the things which are not seen are eternal Heathens could call the World an Inn but they had onely glimmering Conceptions of another World A Christian that believeth it and looketh for it on God's Assurance he is onely the joyfull Stranger and the Pilgrim Common Sense will teach us the necessity of leaving this World but Faith can onely assure us of another they are Believers and Expectants of Heaven 4. They do not onely look for it but seek after it We reade of both looking and seeking Heb. 11. 14. They declare plainly that they seek a Country Heb. 13. 14. Here we have no continuing City but we seek one to come Seeking implyeth Diligence in the Use of Means all the Life of a Christian is nothing but the seeking after another Country every day advancing a step nearer to Heaven and therefore their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 their Conversation is said to be in Heaven Phil. 3. 20. This is their great business upon Earth to doe all to eternal Ends all other Works and Labours are but upon the bie and subordinate to this Their main care is to obtain this blessed Condition therefore they use Word Sacraments that they may grow in Grace Faith Repentance New obedience Every degree in Grace is another step towards Heaven Psal. 84. 4. Blessed is the man whose strength is in thee in whose hearts are the ways of them vers 6. They goe from strength to strength every one of them in Zion appeareth before God Some of the Sains are in Patria others in Via still bending homeward 5. Because they are so the Children of God are dealt with as Strangers Difference of scope and drift will procure alienation of Affection 1 Pet. 4. 4. Wherein they think it strange that you run not with them to the same excess of Riot speaking evil of you And Iohn 15. 19. If ye were of the world the world would love its own but because ye are not of the world but I have chosen you out of the world therefore the world hateth you Other cannot be expected but that the Servants of the Lord should be ill-rewarded and treated here not onely out of the Worlds Ignorance they know not our birth breeding expectations hope 1 Iohn 3. 2. Beloved now are we the Sons of God but it doth not yet appear what we shall be but we know that when he shall appear we shall be like him for we shall see him as he is but Enmity as the different Carriage of the one puts a disgrace upon the course of Life which the other do affect the one fixeth their home here the other looketh for it elsewhere and the World is sensible this is an Excellency and therefore those that are at the bottom of the Hill envy and malign those that are a-top Use. Are we thus minded There are two sorts of men in the World the one is of the Devil and the other is of God for all men seek their Rest and Happiness on Earth or Rest in Heaven Naturally Men were all of the first Number for the Rational Soul without Grace accommodateth it self to the Interests of the Body but when sublimated and transformed by Grace the World cannot satisfy it and it can find nothing there which may finally quiet its desires for the new Life infused hath other aimes and tendencies As Saints are new born from Heaven so for Heaven and therefore the new Nature cannot satisfy it self in the injoyment of the Creature with the absence of God The Apostle saith while at home in the Body we are absent from the Lord 2 Cor. 5. 6 7. In this Life we are not capable of the glorious Presence of God it is not consistent with our Mortality And our being present with him in the Spirit is but a Tast that doth provoke rather then cloy the Appetite Rom. 8. 23. Our selves also which have the first-fruits of the Spirit even we our selves groan within our selves waiting for the Adoption to wit the Redemption of our Body These Tasts do but make us long for more they are sent down from Heaven to draw us up to that place of our Rest where this Glory and Blessedness is in fullness Now which sort are you of the City of God or under the Dominion of Sathan and the power of worldly Lusts 1. There are some that take up here and never consider whence they are nor whither they are
coming to them by chance They not onely say good in general but who will shew me c. As they look after uncertain Blessings so they look after an uncertain Authour as they fall out in the course of second Causes if they have these they bless their Hearts and content themselves To convince these Men of the baseness of their Choice and make them bethink themselves their Choice is part of their punishment There cannot be a greater Punishment than that they should have what they choose that they should be written in the Earth Ierem. 17. they shall have this and no more That God should say to them Silver and Gold you shall have but in this matter no Lot nor Portion Act. 8. Their Bellies shall be filled with hid Treasure they shall have gorgeous Apparel dainty Fare Substance enough to leave to their Babes but be deprived of Heaven It 's the greatest Misery that can be to be condemned to this kind of Happiness That we should thus degrade our selves and sit upon the Threshold when they might sit upon the Throne and lick onely the dust of his Footstool But wicked Men will not be sensible of this now but one day they shall of the Misery of this their foolish Choice at death usually Ier. 17. 11. At his latter end he shall be a fool Then his Heart will rave against him O Fool Mad-man that thou wert not as carefull to get the Favour of God as to get this worldly Pelf when he must goe into another World and he is launching out into the great gulph of Eternity And in Hell they will be sensible Luke 16. 25. Son remember that thou in thy life-time receivedst thy good things c. The Conscience of their foolish Choice is a part of their Torment when their Heart shall return upon them and say This was because thou wouldst look after temporal Things when Snares and Brimstone and an horrible Tempest is poured out upon them what Thoughts have they of their Portion when they are cast out with the Devil and demned Spirits Carnal Men think the difference between them and others will ever hold out when they glitter in the World O but the time is coming when Death will undeceive them And at the day of Judgment they will be sensible of it when they shall be refused as the Out-casts of the World and when the Saints shall have their Portion when the Lord shall take the Godly to himself receive them into his Bosome and welcome them to Heaven and call them to his Right hand and they shall be banished out of his presence with a goe ye cursed when they shall become the loathing of God the scorn of Angels and blessed Spirits when it shall be said as in Psal. 52. 7. Lo this is the man that made not God his strength but trusted in the abundance of his riches and strengthned himself in his wickedness O then how will Conscience return upon the wretchedness and folly of their Hearts and be exercised upon it this will vex and gaul them in Hell with anxious thoughts of it to all Eternity As by the fire that never shall be quenched is signified the Wrath of God so by the Worm that never dies the violent working of Conscience upon the folly of choosing perishing Vanities Use 2. It exhorts us to this necessary Duty to choose God for our Portion It is not a slight thing but that upon which your eternal Happiness doth depend it 's the fundamental Article of the Covenant of Grace and the Question God puts you to is whether you will choose him for your Portion therefore he begins the Commandments with this Thou shalt have no other Gods before me God is not your God unless he be set uppermost in your Souls he cannot be your Portion unless he be your chiefest Good There is no possibility of entring into Covena●…t with God unless you subscribe to this main Article Again as 't is a very necessary Work so 't is an Evidence and Fruit of God's Election if a Man would come to know the Thoughts of God concerning him before all the World what his Destiny is God's Election or Choosing of you is manifested by your Election or your choosing of God for all God's Works leave an Impression upon the Creature he chooseth us that we might choose him I will say you are my People and you shall say I am your God Again you must have something for your Portion There 's no Man hath a sufficiency in himself The Soul is like a Spunge always thirsting and seeking of something from without to be filled a Chaos of Desires Man was made to live in dependance Now of all Portions in the World there is none worth the having but God himself nothing else can make you compleatly blessed and satisfy all the Necessities and all the Capacities of Soul and Body When you have outward things what have you for your Conscience If these things could fill up your Affections they bear no proportion with Conscience your Sore will run upon you and your inward Griefs will not be cured But this is such a Portion that besides internal Grace there shall be a competent measure of outward things God will provide for you Psal. 23. 1. The Lord is my Shepherd what then I shall not want This Interest will give you temporal Things and the Comforts of this Life so that you have the Fountain of all other Mercies While others do but drink of the Streams and of Streams where they are muddy where they partake of the Soile through which they run you goe to the clear Fountain Alas others do but pluck the Leaves and Flowers but you have the Fruits and very Root it self the perpetual Fountain and Well-spring of Comfort and Root of all the blessedness the Heart can wish for Again all other Comforts grow upon this Interest and when all other things are lost this can supply you again All worldly Things when we have them yet they have not a Root but you have the Root so that when other things faile this will yield you all manner of Supplies Yea this is that which seasons and makes all other things comfortable when we have them and the Love of God with them This Man of God had a Kingdom and a great deale of Wealth he was a Victorious King as we may see by his Offering 1 Chron. 29. what Cart-loads of Gold and Silver he offers to God yet in the midst of all this fulness he saith Thou art my Portion Other Portions may turn to a Man's hurt as they are occasions of Sin as they expose to Envy and Danger many a man is undone both here and hereafter by making the Creature his Portion but never any man was undone by making God his Portion It was the end of our Creation God passing by all other Creatures set his Heart upon Man He made all things for Man and Man for himself All other things were
the flowr and freshness of your Youth and God onely have the scraps and fragments of the Devils Table when we are good for nothing else then to think we are good enough for God and the business of Religion which requires all our might and all our strength When we are spent is it a time to begin our Warfare or in our youth 4. There is this the just suspicion which is upon a late Repentance it is seldom sound it is no true Repentance which ariseth merely from horrour and fears of Hell It may be but the beginnings of everlasting despair And their desires may be but offers of self-love after their own ease All men seek the Lord at length but wise men seek him betimes The difference is made on some in time on others out of time upon their death-beds The most prophane would have God for their Portion when they can sin no more and enjoy the world no longer how can we tell this is a sound work it seems tobe a very questionable thing meerly proceeding from self-love and natural desires of happiness in all men When we begin with God we begin out of self-love we come for our ease and interest that we may be safe and happy afterwards we come to a delight of Spirit in his Service and having opportunity show in our works the power of our affection to God and manifest the soundness of our conversion It is possible a Death-bed repentance may be true but it is very doubtful There is but one Instance which is that of the Thief upon the Cross. The Scriptures are a History of 5000 years yet all that while we have but one instance of a man that repented when he came to dye and in that one instance there 's an extraordinary conjunction of Circumstances such as will never fall out again Christ was at the Thiefs right hand in the height of his Love drawing Sinners to Salvation and probably this man had never any such call till then Some may at the eleventh hour be converted because they were not called till then Every one came when they were called Therefore there being so great and just a suspicion that lies against a late Repentance certainly we should not delay Reason 5. The Reasons for delay are very inconsiderable Solomon saith Prov. 26. 16. That the Sluggard thinks himself wiser than seven men that can render a reason Mark as Solomons fool is not to be taken Litterally but Spiritually so Solomons sluggard is not to be taken Morally but Spiritually They that are sluggish and slow of Heart in the things of God They think they have a great deal of reason on their side and will not be perswaded on the contrary but they shall do well enough for all that and they can argue against the calls and injunctions of God yet how little can they say for themselves See what reasons may be said for delay I mean not that they plead and argue but it is that which sways them that which lies next the Heart is this why they keep off from God and are satisfied with their present Estate 1. The pleasures of sin are sweet and they are loth to forgoe them and to engage their Souls in the severities of a strict obedience Here 's the bottom reason this is that which sways them I will not speak to this plea as it lies against Conversion it self but onely as it makes men to delay If I were to plead for conversion it self I would tell these Carnallists of higher Pleasure that their delights shall not be abrogated but preserv'd their delight shall be transplanted from Egypt to Canaan that it may thrive and prosper in a happier Soyl that they may have purer contentments and those chast and happy satisfactions of enjoying Communion with God But I shall onely deal with them as it relates to the delay of Conversion Therefore I thus argue These pleasures of sin must one day be renounced or you are for ever miserable and if you must one day why not now For mark sin will be as sweet hereafter as now it is and Salvation is always dispensed upon the same terms you cannot be saved hereafter with less adoe or bring down Christ and Heaven to a lower rate and therefore if this be a Reason now it will ever lie as a reason against Christ and Religion then you will never tend to look after the ways of life if you are loth to part with sin now you will never part with it The Laws of Christianity are always the same God will not bate you any thing of Repentance and your heart is not like to be better but worse that 's the summ of it and therefore this reason signifies nothing when it comes to be tried in the ballance of the sanctuary and yet this is the main reason 2. They can plead other things hope God will be merciful to them hereafter though they indulge themselves a little longer in sin he will at length save them I answer you cannot bend his Mercy and make it save it is a meer uncertainty peradventure he will peradventure not Would you take poison out of hope that afterward you may meet with an Antidote And this is the very case between God and us I answer further there are shrewd suspicions that God will not be merciful to those that run such a desperate adventure For who ever delays his Repentance doth in effect pawn his Soul with the Devil and leaves it in his hands and says here Satan keep my Soul if I fetch it not again by such a day 't is thine for ever and can you think mercy will bring it out Again there are great causes of fear because there is such a thing as judicial hardness of heart by a Sentence of obduration There are some that God gives up to their own ways and counsels and God inflicts this Sentence upon those that continue in sin notwithstanding conviction of their hearts to the contrary Prov. 1. 24. Ye have set at naught all my Counsel and would none of my reproof I will also laugh at your calamity and mock when your fear cometh There are thousands in Hell meerly upon this account that have forfeited the benefit of God's Mercy and tenders of his grace and have been shut up by hardness of heart by Gods Sentence of obduration the most dreadfull punishment that can light upon a Creature on this side Hell 3. I but we are willing and would turn to the Lord now but we have no leisure and have not those conveniencies that we shall have hereafter for then we shall get things into a better frame and posture Oh no no it is meer hypocrisy to think you are willing when you delay for there is nothing hinders but a want of will and a lothness to comply with the commands of God When we dare not flatly deny then we delay Non vacat that's the sinners plea I am not at leisure but non placet there
's the reality Matth. 22. 7. They which were invited to the Wedding varnished their denial over with an excuse Delay is a denial for if they were willing there would be no excuse To be ridd of importunate and troublesome Creditors we promise them payment another time and we know our Estate will be more wasted by that time it is but to put them off So this delay and putting off God is but a shift Here 's the misery God always comes unseasonably to a carnal heart It was the Devils that said Matth. 8. 29. Art thou come to torment us before our time Good things are a torment to a carnal heart and they always come out of time Certainly that 's the best time when the word is prest upon the heart with evidence light and power and when God treats with thee about thine eternal peace Reason 6. There are very urgent reasons to quicken us to make has●…e 1. The state wherein we are at present is so bad and dangerous that we can never soon enough come out of it The state of a man in his Carnal condition is compared in Scripture to a Prison Rom. 11. 32. God hath concluded or shut them all up in unbelief And mark it is a Prison that is all on fire Oh when poor Captives are bolted and shut up in a flaming Prison how will they run hither and thither to get out So should we run and strive to get out of this flaming Prison You cannot be too soon out of the power of the Devil or from under the curse of the Law the danger of hell fire and the dominion of sin Matth. 3. 7. Who hath warned you to flee from the wrath to come He doth not say to goe nor to run but to flee Fleeing from wrath to come that 's the truest motion And so Heb. 6. 18. They which had the avenger of blood at their heels fled for refuge to take hold of the hope set before them If there be poyson in our Bowels we think we can never soon enough cast it out If fire hath taken hold of a building we do not say we will quench it hereafter the next week or next moneth but think we can never soon enough quench it Or if there be a wound in the Body we do not let it alone till it 〈◊〉 and rankle Christians you may apply all this to the present case here the danger is greater There is no Poyson so deadly as Sin which hath infected all Man-kind no wound so dangerous for that will be the death of Body and Soul no fire so dreadfull as the wrath of God therefore we cannot soon enough come out of this condition 2. We cannot be happy soon enough for the state we make after is the arms of God the bosome of Iesus the hopes of Eternal Life we cannot soon enough get within the compass of such priviledges Oh shall Christ lie by as a dead Commodity or breaded ware It shews we know not the gift of God Iohn 4. If we had a due sense and value of his Excellency we would take the morning Market and let not Christ Iesus with all his benefits lie by as a Commodity that may be had at the last at any time of the day we would look upon him as the quickest ware in the Market and flock to him as Doves to the windows Isa. 6. You would force your way that you might get into his heart you would count all things but dross and dung that you might gain him It will be sweet to be incircled in the embraces of Iesus Christ to have his left hand under your head and his right hand to embrace you Cant. 2. 6. and will you delay when he stands offering himself and stretching out his hands all the day long to receive you SERMON LXVIII PSAL. CXIX 60. I made haste and delayed not to keep thy Commandments I Come now to the Application Use 1. Is to reprove the dallying with God which we are conscious to in the work of Conversion which is so common and natural to us We are apt to put off God from time to time from Child-hood to Youth from Youth to Mans-age from Mans-age to Old-age from Old-age to Death-bed and so the Devil steals away one hour after another till all time be past I shall 1 speak of the causes of this delay 2 represent the hainousness of it that you may not stroke this sin with a gentle censure and think lightly of the matter I. Of the causes of this delay 1. Unbelief or want of a due sense or sight of things to come If men were perswaded of Eternal Life and Eternal Death they would not stand hovering so long between Heaven and Hell but presently engage their hearts to draw nigh to God But we cannot see afar off 2 Pet. 1. 9. Nature is purblind to carnal hearts there 's a mist upon Eternity they have no prospective whereby to look into another World therefore it hath no influence upon them to quicken them to more speed and earnestness If we had a due sense of Eternal Death surely we would be sleeing from wrath to come no motion should be earnest and swift enough to get from such a danger If we had a due sense of Eternal Life we would be running to take hold of the hope that is before us Heb. 6. 18. 2. Security If men have a cold belief of Heaven and Hell if they take up the currant opinions of the Country yet they do not take it into their serious thoughts they put far away the evil day Amos 6. 3. Things at a distance do not startle us as a clap of Thunder afar off doth not fright us so much as when it is just over our heads in our own Zenith We look upon these things as to come so put off the thought of them Next to a want of a sound belief the want of a serious consideration is the cause why men dally with God If we had the same thoughts living and dying our motions would be more earnest and ready When Death and Eternity is near we are otherwise affected than when we look upon it as afar off One said of a zealous Preacher he Preacheth as if Death were at my back Oh could we look upon Death as at our back or heels if men did but consider that within a few dayes they must go to Heaven or Hell that there is but the slender thread of a frail Life upon which they depend that is soon fretted asunder they would not venture any longer to be out of a state of Grace nor dally with God But we think we may live long and time enough to repent by leisure we put far off the day of our change and so are undone by our own security 3. Aversness of heart from God That which makes us desirous to stay longer in a way of Sin doth indeed make us loth to turn at all and what 's that Obstinacy and unsubjection
28. When God will immediately and in a fuller latitude communicate himself to his Creatures and there will need nothing besides himself to make us happy Here we enjoy God but not fully nor immediatly We enjoy him in his creatures but it is at the second or third hand the Creature interposeth between him and us Hosea 2. 21 22. And it shall come to pass in that day I will hear saith the Lord I will hear the Heavens and they shall hear the earth and the earth shall hear the corn and the wine and the oyle and they shall hear Iezreel In Ordinances it is but a little strength and comfort that we get such as is consistent with pain and sorrow it is not full because it is not immediate A Pipe cannot convey the whole Fountain nor the Ordinances the Full of God in Christ only a little supply either as we need or are able to receive but then God will be all in all he will do his work by himself The narrowness of the means shall not straiten him nor the weakness of the vessel hinder him to express the full of his Goodness in full perfection II. How is his Goodness manifested to us 1. In our Creation in that he did raise us up out of nothing to be what we are and form us after his own Image God made us not that he might be happy but liberal that there might be creatures to whom to communicate himself our Beings and Faculties and Powers were the fruits of his meer goodness When God made the world then was it verified He is good and doth good Gen. 1. For as the goodness of his nature inclined him to make it so his work was good after every days work there cometh in his approbation behold it was good and when he had made Man and set him in a well furnished world and compared all his works together then they were very good v. 31. That he still fashioneth us in the womb and raiseth us into that comely shape in which we afterwards appear it is all the effect of his Goodness 2. In our Redemption therein he commendeth his Love and goodness in providing such a Remedy for lost sinners There is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Tit. 3. 4. But after that the Kindness and Love of God our Saviour towards man appeared In creation he shewed himself 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Redemption 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God is brought nearer to us as subsisting in our Nature 1 Tim. 3. 16. Great is the mystery of Godliness God manifested in the flesh And so God had greater advantages to communicate himself to us in a more glorious way by the Redeemer that we might for ever live in the admiration of his Love 3. In daily Providence so the goodness of God is twofold 1. Common and general to all Creatures especially to Mankind Psalm 145. 9. The Lord is good to all his tender Mercy is over all his works Upon all things and all persons he bestoweth many common blessings as natural Life Being Health Wealth Beauty Strength and supplyes necessary for them There is none of God's Creatures but tast of his bounty and have sufficient proof that a good God made them and preserveth them the young Ravens Psalm 147. 9. He giveth to the beast his food and to the young Ravens which cry 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so the wicked Mat. 5. 45. He maketh his Sun to shine on the evil and on the good and sendeth rain on the just and on the unjust Acts 14. 17. Nevertheless he left not himself without witness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in that he did good and gave us rain from Heaven and fruitfull Seasons filling our hearts with food and gladness These common Mercies argue a good God that giveth them though not always a good People that receiveth them This Goodness of God sheweth it self daily and bountifully 2. Special God is good to all but not to all alike So he is good to his People whom he blesseth with spiritual and saving Benefits So Lam. 3. 25. The Lord is good unto them that wait for him to the Soul that seeketh him So Psalm 86. 5. For thou O Lord art Good and ready to forgive and plenteous in Mercy unto all them that call upon thee For this kind of Goodness a qualification is necessary in the receiver Satan will tell you God is a good God but he leaveth out this to those that Love and Fear him and wait upon him This peculiar Goodness yieldeth spiritual and saving Blessings such as pardoning of Sins Isa. 55. 7. Let the wicked forsake his way and the unrighteous man his thoughts and let him return unto the Lord and he will have mercy upon him and to our God for he will abundantly pardon Instruction in the ways of God in the Text thou art good and dost good teach me thy statutes And in short all the means and helps that are necessary unto everlasting Glory 2 Thess. 1. 11. Wherefore also we pray always for you that God would count you worthy of this calling and fulfil all the good pleasure of his Goodness and the work of Faith with power Once more to the objects of his peculiar Love common Blessings are given in Love and with an aim at our good Psalm 84. 11. No good thing will he withhold from them that walk uprightly So that the ordinary favours which others enjoy they are sanctified to them They are from Love and in bonum for Good God is ready to help them onwards to their everlasting hopes and that estate which they expect in the world to come where in the Arms of God they shall be blessed for evermore III. Why ought those that come to God to have a deep sense of this First What is this deep Sense 1. It must be the fruit of Faith believing God's Being and Bounty or else it will have no force and authority upon us Heb. 11. 6. He that cometh to God must believe that he is and that he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him If we have but cold Notions or dead Opinions of the Goodness of God they will have little power on us It is Faith sets all things a-work there must be a sound belief of these things if we would practically improve them 2. It must be the fruit of constant Observation of the effects of his Goodness vouchsafed to us so that we may give our Thanks and Praise for all that good we do enjoy Careless Spirits are not sensible of the hand of Providence never take notice of good or evil therefore the Psalmist saith Psalm 107. 8. Oh that men would praise the Lord for his goodness and for his wonderfull works to the Children of Men He repeateth the same verse 15. and verses 21 31. and concludeth all verse 41. Whoso is wise and will observe those things even they shall understand the loving kindness of the Lord. We are more backward to the observation of the
6. Though the Lord be high yet he hath a respect to the lowly and the proud he knoweth afar off Partly as he is the Portion of the afflicted and oppressed Psal. 140. 12. I know the Lord will maintain the cause of the afflicted and the right of the poor When Satan stirreth up his Instruments to hate those whom the Lord loveth the Lord will stir up his power to protect and defend them So Psal. 10. 14. Thou hast seen it for thou beholdest mischief and spite to requite it with thy hand the poor committeth himself to thee thou art the helper of the fatherless When they have layed forth their desires poured forth their heart before the Lord they quiet themselves 'T is God's office practice nature to relieve poor helpless Creatures that commit themselves to his custody 3. Innocency giveth confidence in Prayer when we are molested and troubled without a cause The testimony of Conscience giveth boldness towards God and men 2 Cor. 1. 12. and Heb. 13. 18. Pray for us for we trust we have a good conscience in all things willing to live honestly If God's Children would carry it more holily and meekly they might cut off occasion from them that desire occasion and in their addresses to God experience more humble confidence But is not this a revengeful Prayer Answ. No First Because directly they pray for their own deliverance that they may more freely serve God by consequence Indeed by God's shewing mercy to his People the pride of wicked ones is suppressed Psal. 119. 134. Secondly As it concerneth his Enemies he expresseth it in mild terms That they may be ashamed that is disappointed their counsels hopes machinations and endeavors And therefore it is not against the Persons of his Enemies but their Plots and Enterprises and shame and disappointment may do them good They think to bring in the total suppression of God's People that would harden them in their sins Therefore God's People desire he would not let their innocency be trampled upon but they disappointed that the Proud may be ashamed in the failing of their attempts Thirdly The Prayers of the Faithful for the overthrow of the Wicked are a kind of Prophecies so that in praying David doth in effect foretell that such as dealt perversly should be ashamed as a good cause will not always be oppressed Isa. 66. 5. But he shall appear to your joy but they shall be ashamed They met with despiteful usage at the hand of their Brethren for their loyalty and fidelity to God Fourthly Saints have a liberty to imprecate vengeance but such as must be used sparingly and with great caution Psal. 71. 13. Let them be confounded and consumed who are adversaries to my soul. Malicious Enemies may be expresly prayed against SERMON LXXXVII PSAL. CXIX VER 78 79. But I will meditate in thy precepts Let those that fear thee turn unto me and those that have known thy testimonies WE now come to David's Resolution But I will meditate in thy precepts The word Precepts is not taken strictly but largely for the whole Word of God DOCT. It is a blessed thing when the Molestations we meet with in the World do excite us to a more diligent study of the Word of God and a greater mindfulness of spiritual and heavenly things I. I shall shew what advantages we have by God's Word and Precepts for the staying and bettering of our hearts II. How this cometh by deep and serious meditation III. How Afflictions and Troubles in the Flesh do quicken us to it 1 In the Word of God there are notable Comforts and Supports as also clear directions how to carry our selves in every condition I shall shew what good thoughts do become as a ground of comfort and support and direction 1. That God hath a fatherly care over us Be once persuaded of that and Trouble will not be so grievous and hard to be born This our Saviour opposeth to worldly cares and fears Matth. 6. 32. Your heavenly Father knoweth that you have need of these things And Luke 12. 32. Fear not little flock it is your Father's good pleasure to give you a kingdom There are two Notions and they are both Christian which are the great support of the heart under any Trouble Adoption and particular Providence The Heirs of Promise are cared for in their Non-age And by the way once be persuaded of this and it will allay our distrustful cares Carking and shifting is a reproach to your heavenly Father as if your Child should beg or filch God knoweth our wants is able to relieve them willing to supply us this God is my Father 2. That the humble Soul which casts it self into the arms of God's Providence shall either have a full and final deliverance or present support Isa. 40. 31. They that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength To wait on the Lord is with patience and tranquility of spirit to expect the performance of the Promises Now these shall have what they wait for or a supply of strength yet enabling them to bear up or hold out when they seem to be clean spent Psal. 123. 2. Behold as the eyes of servants look unto the hand of their master and the eyes of a maiden unto the hand of her mistress so our eyes wait upon the Lord our God until he have mercy upon us 'T was in a time when they were filled with the contempt of the Proud let us be patiently submissive to God's dispensations there is hope of help 3. That God doth wonderfully disappoint the designs of wicked men Psal. 37. 12 13. The wicked plotteth against the just and guasheth upon him with his teeth The Lord shall laugh at him for he seeth that his day is coming Haman's Plot was destroyed so was the Conspiracy of them that would have killed Paul There is no wisdom nor counsel nor understanding against the Lord Prov. 21. 30. What is God now a doing in Heaven but defending his own Kingdom Psal. 2. Wherefore doth Christ sit at his right hand but to promote the affairs of his Church and to blast the devices of the wicked Mat. 18. The gates of hell shall never prevail against it 4. That the Proud are near a fall Prov. 16. 5. Every one that is proud in heart is an abomination to the Lord Though hand join in hand they shall not go unpunished Sometimes they seem to be supported by such combined Interests so woven in the Laws and Constitutions of a Nation but who can keep up him whom God will pull down Pride is a sure note and forerunner of destruction Prov. 16. 18. Prov. 15. 25. The Lord will destroy the house of the proud but he will establish the border of the widow Weak and oppressed Innocence standeth upon surer terms than the Proud though they excel in Wealth and Opulency 5. That God will never leave us wholly destitute and to difficulties insupportable Heb. 13. 5. I will never leave thee
patience continue in well doing and then we may lift up our Souls to it Our Reward is sure The second Point Is from the incident weakness because of the delay of help Mine eyes fail for thy word He had his eyes fixed upon the Promise till they were quite wearied II. DOCT. Though his People wait for him yet God may so long delay and suspend the performance of the Promises till they count it an hopeless business First Suspend The Reasons are these 1. Not because he is unwilling to give but because he will have us better prepared to receive Psal. 10. 17. Thou wilt prepare their heart thou wilt cause thine ear to hear We understand it usually of preparing the heart for Prayer to ask the mercy but it is also meant of preparing the heart to receive the mercy 2 Chron. 20. 35. The high places were not taken away because the people had not yet prepared their heart to the God of their fathers They were not fit to have a thorow Reformation accomplished in their days The Baker watcheth when the Oven is hot and then puts in the Bread At another time it went on roundly for God had prepared the People 2 Chron. 29. 36. When we are in a posture mercy will not be long a coming Heaven the great mercy is not given us till prepared as Heaven is prepared for us so we for it Rom. 9. 23. That he might make known the riches of his glory on the vessels of mercy which he had afore prepared unto glory And Col. 1. 12. Giving thanks unto the Father which hath made us meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the saints in light So other mercies our unpreparedness lieth as a block in the way and hindreth the free passage of God's mercy to us till he send his work before him c. Is. 40. 10. Behold the Lord God will come with strong hand and his arm shall rule for him Behold his reward is with him and his work before him 2. To awaken fervency of Prayer and that the Blessing may be the more earnestly sought after and highly valued A thing easily come by doth not stir up such a desire after it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We despise easie gotten Favors but that which is long and earnestly sought is the dearer to us Therefore the Lord to commend his Favors to us and to set a price upon them will have us pray much and long 1 Sam. 1. 27. For this child I prayed and the Lord hath given me the petition which I asked of him 3. God doth it to prove and exercise our Faith Many of his servants have gone to the Grave and his Promises not yet accomplished and yet have gone to the Grave in hope Heb. 11. 13. These all dyed in the faith not having received the promises that is things promised But having seen them afar off were persuaded of them and embraced them Then is Faith tryed when we can wait for the fulfilling of the Promises when we have no present enjoyment and know not when we shall have yea likely never to see it in our days The Patriarchs lived and dyed Believers Delay and non enjoyment did not break their hearts nor could Death it self extinguish their Faith Death might bereave them of their Friends and their temporal Estate and all their earthly comforts but of Faith it could not 4. That Patience may have its perfect work It is marvellous Patience that can yet wait for the Word when it will yield us the expected comfort though our eyes fail in waiting Then is the greatest discovery of its perfection when difficulties are many hope long delayed It hath but a part of its work before to still the mind under lesser or shorter evils The perfection of a thing is never discovered till it be put to a full tryal Patience is seen in waiting as well as suffering To bear a little while is but the imperfect work of Patience some lesser degree of it as to know a letter or two in the Book is but an imperfect kind of reading but to bear much and long that 's the perfect work To lift up some heavy thing from the ground argueth some strength but to carry it for an hour or all day is a more perfect thing 5. God delayeth the accomplishment of his Promises because many times the frame of his Providence requireth it All God's works have their appointed hour and time and God will not disturb the order of causes or work sooner or later but as the beautiful frame of his Providence doth permit John 2. 4. Woman what have I to do with thee mine hour is not yet come Our time wherein we would have him work and his time wherein he will work are often very different For he will not manifest his help when it will please us best but when his glory in working may be best seen John 7. 6. My time is not yet come but your time is always ready II. The other Branch is That God may delay so long till they be disheartned and give it over as an hopeless business David saith His eyes failed for the word When a man is disappointed of the things he looketh for then his eyes are said to fail So the captive Iews complained Lam. 4. 17. As for us our eyes have yet failed for our vain help in our watching we have waited for a Nation that could not save us 1. God may delay so long till his Enemies wax high and proud as if above the reach of all evil and God had forgotten them or approved their ways Psal. 50. 21. I kept silence and thou thoughtest I was altogether like thy self So long till all their fears are over Job 21. 9. Their houses are safe from fear neither is the rod of God upon them And their oppressions are multiplied Psal. 10. 5 6. His ways are always grievous for he hath said in his heart I shall not be moved 2. God may delay so long till a Land be wasted by sundry successive common Judgments that light upon good and bad Ier. 12. 4. After the complaint of the prosperity of the wicked the Prophet subjoineth How long shall the land mourn and the herbs of the field wither When they relent not the Land may fare the worse for them and the Godly among the rest suffer in these general Calamities God may plague the Nation with Dearth and Famine Plague and Pestilence War and Sword Fire and Burning And all this while no ceasing of their iniquities or oppressions 3. God may delay so long till his People be strangely perplexed and know not what to make of his Providence They wonder how his Justice can endure it Jer. 12. 1. Righteous art thou O Lord when I plead with thee yet let me talk with thee of thy judgments Wherefore doth the way of the wicked prosper wherefore are all they happy that 〈◊〉 treacherously Hab. 1. 12 13. Art thou not from everlasting O Lord my God
any thing for something cannot come out of nothing therefore we must stop in some first Cause and Eternal Being 3. That Eternity belongeth to God is to be seen in all his Attributes for if God be Eternal his Wisdom Power and Goodness are Eternal also First His Wisdom is Eternal for all things are present to the knowledge of God Things come to our knowledge successively some before and some after We see and know things according to their duration and existence We compute by days and years yesterday to morrow last year and next year one Generation passeth and another cometh but in God's understanding there is no succession of before and after Known to God are all his works from the beginning Acts 15. 18. God that doth all things in time knew them all before time otherwise his knowledge was not infinite and eternal they are all present to his understanding Hence is that expression 2 Pet. 3. 8. One day is with the Lord as a thousand years and a thousand years as one day All those differences of Duration which to the Creatures are longer or shorter are all alike to God for all things are constantly present to God and under his view and prospect Indeed the Lord is pleased to condescend to our shallow capacities and to give us leave to express his Duration in our own terms whil'st he calleth himself yesterday to day and for ever Heb. 13. 8. And Rev. 1. 4. From him which is which was and which is to come Yet in proper speaking God always is I am is his Name and all things to him are present either past present or to come Time hath no succession to him he beholdeth at once what is not at once but at several times there is nothing past to him to come to him but all present He knoweth the end of all things before he giveth them a beginning 2dly His Power is Eternal Therefore 't is said Rom. 1. 20. that his Eternal Power and Godhead is clearly understood from the Creation of the world and seen in the things that are made how could else so many things be educed out of nothing and still kept from returning into their original nothing if there were not an infinite and eternal power then and still at work So Isa. 26. 4. Trust ye in the Lord for ever for in the Lord Iehovah is everlasting strength We may depend upon him for his Arm is never dried up nor doth his Strength fail there is no wrinkle upon the Brow of Eternity God is where he was at first he continueth for ever a God of infinite power able to save those that trust in him 3dly His Goodness and Mercy they are Eternal Psal. 136. 't is often repeated For the mercy of the Lord endureth for ever 'T is true à parte antè his mercy did not begin of late but was towards us before we or the world were from all Eternity we were thought upon that he might do us good himself 'T is said With an everlasting love have I loved thee and therefore with loving kindness I have drawn thee Jer. 31. 3. Whomsoever God draweth to himself in time he loved them before all time and à parte post it holdeth good his love and affection continueth the same and shall do for ever he is not weary of doing good nor is his mercy spent you have both Psal. 103. 17. The mercy of the Lord is from everlasting to everlasting upon them that fear him The mercy was decreed and prepared before the beginning of the world and we shall have the fruits and effects of it when the world shall be no more 'T was from everlasting for God foreseeing the Fall of Adam provided us a remedy in Christ and having all lapsed Mankind in his prospect and view did out of his free love chuse some whil'st others are passed by to life and salvation by Christ. That God did from Eternity decree and purpose this is manifest because he doth in time effect it otherwise he should not work all things according to the counsel of his will Ephes. 1. 11. or else his Will would be mutable willing that in time which he willed not from Eternity whereas in him there is no variableness or shadow of turning And that his mercy is to everlasting appeareth because he doth in time convert and sanctifie them and so brings them to glory and blessedness for the eternal God will make his people eternally happy with himself 4. That God sheweth himself as an Eternal Being both as a Governor and Benefactor First As a Governor His Eternity is seen in his Government in threatning eternal misery to the wicked and appointing eternal happiness to the godly Mat. 25. 46. These shall go away into everlasting punishment and the righteous into life everlasting The joys of the blessed are everlasting there shall never be a change of nor an interruption in their happiness but after millions of years they are to continue in this life as if it were the first moment Thy Crown will be thy Crown for ever Thy Kingdom thy Kingdom for ever This Glory will be thy Glory for ever Thy God will be thy God and thy Christ for ever We affect the continuance of this life though it be a life of pain and misery Skin for skin and all a man hath he will give for his life Oh! how much more valuable should this eternal life be which is a life of uninterrupted joy and felicity On the other side the punishment is everlasting the loss is eternal the wicked are everlastingly deprived of the favor of God The Disciples wept when Paul said Ye shall see my face no more Oh! how much more terrible will it be to be banished everlastingly out of God's presence Mat. 25. 41. Besides the pain will be eternal as well as the loss This worm never dieth this fire shall never be quenched Mark 9. 44. Neither Heaven nor Hell hath any period or end either of them are eternal Now this way God ruleth and governeth the creature as becoming his infinite and eternal Majesty The Laws of Kings and Parliaments can reach no further than some temporal punishment their highest pain is the killing of the Body their highest Reward is some vanishing and fading Honour or perishing Riches but God's Law concerneth our everlasting estate our eternal well or ill being eternal life or eternal death is wrap'd up in these Commandments These are Rewards sutable to the Eternal Majesty of the Law-giver And if thou do evil there is an eternal loss of Heaven and an eternal sense of the wrath of God If you believe and obey the Gospel there is eternal salvation provided for you for Christ is the Author of eternal salvation unto all them that obey him Heb. 5. 9. 2dly As a Benefactor he sheweth himself also an Eternal Being There is a double beneficial goodness of God common and special His common goodness runneth in the channel of Creation and common
fulfilled on earth but decreed in Heaven fixed and setled there by God's unalterable Purpose and Will 2. That in Heaven there is an Emblem of it 'T is usual in Scripture to set forth the stability and constancy of God's Word by this similitude as Psal. 89. 2. Mercy shall be built up for ever thy faithfulness hast thou established in the very heavens So when 't is compared with the Covenant of day and night Jer. 33. 20 21. Thus saith the Lord if you can break my Covenant of the day and my Covenant of the night that there should not be day and night in their seasons Then may also my Covenant be broken with David my servant So Ier. 31. 35 36 37. This sense I incline to because in the next Verse 't is compared with the stability of the earth Well then his Word is setled in Heaven partly because the Heavens stand fast by the same Word by which they were first made Gen. 1. 3 6. And God said Let there be light and there was light Let there be a firmament in the midst of the waters and divide the waters from the waters and it was so So Midrash Tillim And partly because the Being and Order of Heaven sheweth the setledness of God's Word as the Heavens were created and setled in a course which they constantly observe in their motions and this duration and equability in the motion is so exact that men can foresee Eclipses long before they happen therefore the Psa●…st saith Psal. 114 19. The Sun knoweth his going down that is keepeth so to the just Po●…ts of his Compass as if he were an intelligent Agent and knew the exact time when to set and rise Now when we lift up our eyes to Heaven and see how punctually and exactly the Order is observed which is once setled by God's Will even from the beginning of the world to this day no remarkable change hath been observed the heavenly bodies keep their tenour and course and by their constant motions distribute their light and influence to the world and this from their first Creation and all because he hath said It shall be so in the strength of his Word they abide This continuance of the Heavens sheweth the permanency of his Word DOCT. That God's Word is of an Eternal Truth and Immutable Constancy By his Word is principally meant the Gospel Covenant It is said by the Prophet Isaiah Chap. 40. ver 8. The grass withereth and the flower fadeth but the word of our God shall stand for ever And the Apostle Peter quoting and improving the same place saith The word of God is the Gospel preached unto you 1 Pet. 1. 24 25. And more especially the promise of eternal life for that is opposite to the fading glory of the present life and is the eternal effect of the Word of God abiding in our hearts when all other things fade and decay this blessed estate offered in and conveyed by the Gospel will not fail us 1. I shall give you the Reasons 2. The Emblem and Representation 3. The Profit and Usefulness of this Meditation 1. The Reasons In every Promise that it be certain and firm three things are required First That it may be made seriously and heartily with a purpose to perform it Secondly That he that hath promised continue in his purpose without change of mind Thirdly That it be in the power of him that promiseth to perform what he hath so promised Now of all these things there can be no doubt 1. Certainly God meaneth as he speaketh when he promiseth to give eternal life to those that believe and obey the Gospel There is no question but he is so minded when he hath written a Book to assure the world of it for what need God to cour●… the Creature with an imaginary happiness or to tell them of a glorious Estate which he never meant to bestow upon them Yea why should Amen the faithful Witness come from Heaven farther to assure us of it by his Doctrine dye the death to purchase it for us and afterward rise again and enter into that happiness which he spake of That our faith and hope may be in God 1 Pet. 1. 21. Why should he as soon as he was ascended give gifts unto men send forth messengers into the world to preach this doctrine and give notice of this blessed Estate to be had upon these terms and attest it by divers signs and wonders partly to alarum the drowsie world to regard it and assure the incredulous world of the truth of this salvation Heb. 2. 3 4. Not to believe that God is serious in all this is to make him a Lyar indeed yea to establish a Lye and Falshood with great Solemnity 2. That God doth continue his purpose is no doubt if we consider his eternal and unchangeable Nature Mal. 3. 6. For I am the Lord I change not therefore ye sons of Iacob are not consumed And James 1. 17. With him is neither variableness nor shadow of turning And what should alter his purpose Doth he meet with any thing that he foresaw not and knew not before God doth never repent and call back his Grant that he hath by this Act of Grace ensured Eternal Happiness to the Saints on such terms 1 Sam. 15. 29. For the strength of Israel will not lye nor repent for he is not a man that he should repent Psal. 110. 4. I have sworn and will not repent thou art a Priest for ever after the order of Melchisedech Christ is instated in full power of entertaining and blessing his faithful Servants which shall never be retracted To take off all doubt he hath given us double assurance his Word and his Oath Heb. 6. 17 18. God being willing more abundantly to shew to the heirs of promise the immutability of his counsel confirmed it by an oath That by two immutable things wherein it was impossible for God to lye we might have strong consolation who have fled for refuge c. God hath ever been tender of his Word above all that is famed or believed of God this is most conspicuous Psal. 138. 2. Thou hast magnified thy Word above all thy Name Now this needed not for an Oath is interposed in a doubtful matter but it sheweth God's extraordinary care for our satisfaction his good will is seen in the Promise his solicitude in the Oath In short God would never be so fast bound but that he doth continue his purpose 3. That he is able to perform it Mat. 19. 26. With God all things are possible Rom. 4. 21. Being fully persuaded that what God had promised he was able to perform Phil. 3. 21. According to the working whereby he is able even to subdue all things to himself He is able to find out a way whereby sinners may be reconciled sanctified subdued by his Spirit whereby his Interests may be preserved in them against the assaults of the Devil the World and the Flesh finally able to
waters were appointed to break out and overwhelm the earth yet God hath firmly promised that they shall never be so again wherein his Truth is also verified and applied to the Covenant of Grace Isa. 54. 9. For this is as the waters of Noah to me for I have sworn that the waters of Noah shall no more go over the earth so have I sworn that I would not be wrath with thee nor rebuke thee The Covenant of Grace is as sure as the Covenant made after the deluge so that we cannot look upon this Earth but as an Emblem of those Attributes which confirm our Faith in waiting upon God till his Promises be fulfilled to us Use. Let us be then more firmly persuaded of God's Faithfulness that we may depend upon it both for his preserving the Church and our selves in the way of our duty till we enjoy our final reward 1. For the preservation of Christ's Kingdom God's Faithfulness chiefly appeareth in the Government of his Church or spiritual Kingdom and this is a Kingdom that cannot be moved when all things else are shaken Heb. 12. 28. Having received a kingdom that cannot be shaken Christ cannot be an Head without Members a King without Subjects And we are told Mat. 16. 18. That the gates of hell cannot prevail against it Many disorders happen but let us depend upon the faithful God The world was well guided before we came into it and other Generations have had experience of God's Faithfulness though we complain that we see not our signs nor any tokens for good 2. For the preservation of our bodies to the heavenly Kingdom we have many discouragements within and without but while we persevere in our duty God will not fail us his word is as sure as the earth 2 Thess. 3. 3. The Lord is faithful who shall establish and keep you from evil God hath promised not only to give us our final reward but to secure and defend his people by the way that they be not overcome by the evils they meet with in their passage SERMON XCVI PSAL. CXIX VER 91. They continue this day according to thine ordinances for all are thy servants THE Prophet is proving the Immutability of God's Promises from the conservation and continuance of the whole course of Nature he had spoken of it by parts now conjunctly apart first of the Heavens ver 89. of the earth v. 90. Now both together They continue c. In the words we have two things 1. An observation concerning the continuances of the courses of Nature They that is the Heaven and the Earth Heaven doth continue in its motion and Earth in its station according to the Ordinance of God that is by vertue of that Order wherein he placed things at first Psal. 148. 6. He hath established them for ever and ever he hath made a decree which shall not pass As he ordained at first by his powerful decree so Heaven and Earth is still continued God's Laws are fixed for the government of all Creatures and in the manner and to the end for which God appointeth them they stand and continue 2. The Reason For all are thy servants The Reason saith more than the Assertion and therefore doth over and above prove it not only the Heavens and the Earth but all things which are contained therein from the Angel to the Worm they all serve God they attend upon him as their supreme Lord and Master every moment DOCT. That it is a great help to Faith to consider God as the Omnipotent Creator Preserver and absolute Governor of the World disposing of all things as he pleaseth This is the Meditation which the Psalmist produceth and exposeth to our view in this Verse His Creation is implied in that Thine Ordinances when God first setled the course of Nature by a wise and powerful Decree His preservation in those words They continue this day The course of Nature is so setled that it doth not fail to go on according to God's Decree every thing standeth or falleth according to God's command and the Order first setled by God still obtaineth his Decree is not yet out of date His being the absolute Governor of the world in these words For all are thy servants which implieth his Sovereign Dominion and Empire over all the Creatures as his servants who are at the beck of his will To evidence this to you more fully consider there are in God two things Power and Authority Might and Right First By Power we mean a liberty and sufficiency in God to do whatever he will With God all things are possible Mat. 19. 26. or take the Negative which bindeth it the stronger Luke 1. 37. With God nothing shall be impossible 2dly Authority or Dominion or a Right over all things to dispose of them at his own pleasure In this Right there are three Branches 1. A Right of making or framing any thing as he willeth in any manner as it pleaseth him as the Potter hath power over his own clay to form what vessel he pleaseth of it this Right God exercised in his Creation Rev. 4. 11. Thou hast created all things and for thy pleasure they are and were created This was his absolute freedom and sovereignty to create all things according to his own pleasure 2. A Right of having or possessing all things so made and framed by him for God is owner and possessor of whatever he made since he made it out of nothing Heaven ●…is his Earth is his so Angels Man Beasts Gold Silver all things he challengeth as his right Psal. 115. 16. The heaven even the heavens are the Lords 'T is the Lord's to dispose of not only the lower but the highest Heavens which he hath provided for his own Palace and Court of residence So the earth is the Lords and the fulness thereof Psal. 24. 1. This whole lower world is his by right of Creation and providential preservation and so are all the sorts of Creatures with which he hath replenished it it was by him produced at first and every moment continued and preserved And so the Angels are his they are called his Ministers or Servants Psal. 104. 4. He maketh his angels spirits his ministers a flame of fire Though he is able to do all things by himself or administer the whole world as he at first created by a word by saying and it was done yet he pleaseth to make use of the ministry of Angels who some of them in subtle bodies of air others of fire come down to execute his commands upon earth Men are his creatures and his possession we are not Lords of any thing we have neither life or limb nor any thing Our bodies and our souls are his 1 Cor. 6. 20. Christ had power to lay down his life and take it up again but no meer man hath he is accomptable to a higher Lord who hath an absolute uncontroulable Right to dispose of us according to his own pleasure He killeth
Arms of an Almighty God whom he hath made his refuge our tryals are many and grace received is small in the best but our God is great he that made all things and sustaineth all things and governeth all things and possesseth all things is our God surely his grace is sufficient for us 2 Cor. 12. 9. and his arms can bear us up Deut. 33. 27. The eternal God is thy refuge and underneath are the everlasting arms He can recover us from our falls and lift us over all our difficulties if we could but rest upon his Word and lean upon his Power why should we be discouraged Oh let us rejoice then not only in the goodness but greatness of that God whom we have chosen for our portion 2. We see here that God is an unchangeable God in goodness They continue this day according to thine Ordinance The stability of his works sheweth how stable the workman is Heaven and Earth continue by vertue of his word That man may have the use and benefit of it from generation to generation that the continual vicissitudes of day and night may be continued that man may have light to his labour and darkness drawn about him as a covering for his rest and also that there might be a constant succession of Summer and Winter to prepare and ripen the fruits of the Earth Now if God forsake not the World will he forsake his people for the benefit of Mankind he preserveth the courses of Nature and keepeth all things in their proper place for their proper end and use and will he not keep one way with his children Shall there be a failure in the Covenant when there is not a failure in common Providence as if he would satisfie the expectation of Heathens that look for a constant succession of day and night and Summer and Winter and would not satisfie the expectation of his children when they look for a blessed morning after a dark night of trouble and conflict and the light of his countenance after the storms of temptation Secondly For Subjection which I made to be double 1. Submission to his disposing Will God's appointment giveth Laws to all there is not the least thing done among us without his Prescience Providence and wise disposal to which all things in the World are subjected The Lord's Will and Pleasure is the onely Rule of his extending his Omnipotency and is the sovereign and absolute cause of all his working for all is done in Heaven or in Earth according to his Ordinance and no creature can resist his Will therefore let us submit to this Will of God if God take any thing from us let us bless the Name of the Lord he doth but make use of his own 'T is the Lord let him do what seemeth him good 1 Sam. 3. 18. 'T is none of ours but Gods and let him do with his own as it pleaseth him God is the disposer of man as well as other creatures and must chuse their condition and determine of all events wherein they are concerned We usually dislike God's disposal of us though it be so wise and gracious but consider his Sovereignty you cannot deliver your selves from the Will of God and get the reins into your own hands And alas we are unfit to be disposers either of the World or our selves as an Idiot is to be the Pilot of a Ship therefore let God govern all according to his own pleasure say Lord not my Will but thine be done We are safer by far in God's hands than our own 2. Obedience to his commanding Will. All creatures do serve God as his Word hath ordained so should we do we have Law and Ordinances too Shall man only be eccentric and exorbitant and transgress his bounds Winds and Sea serve him onely Man made after his Image disobeyeth him They serve God for our benefit the Heavens continue their motion to convey light heat and influence to us and the Air to give us breath and motion and the Earth to be a sure fixed dwelling place When all things are created and continued for our use shall not we serve our bountiful Creator We are sensible of the disturbance of the course of nature when these Confederances are dissolv'd when the Floods increase or Rains fall in abundance Oh! bemoan rather thy own irregular actions which are a greater deformation of the beauty of the Universe In short No creatures are sui juris they are subject to God by whose word and commandment they must rule their actions surely none of us are too great or too good to submit to God Angels enjoy Immunities yet are not exempted from service The creatures have acted contrary to their common Nature for God's honour let us obey God though contrary to our own wills and inclinations SERMON XCVII PSAL. CXIX VER 92. Unless thy law had been my delights I should then have perished in mine affliction IN the Verses before the Text David meditateth upon the constancy of the course of Nature whereby is represented God's constant fidelity in performing all his promises to his people Now he produceth his own experience and sheweth That all this had been matter of most pleasant meditation to support him under his afflictions when all other comforts failed he found sufficient consolation in the Word of God Unless thy Law had been c. In which words observe 1. David's Condition he was afflicted 2. His bitter sense of that Condition he was ready to perish in his Affliction 3. His Remedy the Word of God 4. The way of Application it was his delights 1. For his Condition Though he was a man after God's own heart yet he had his troubles Psal. 132. 1. Remember David Lord and all his afflictions 2. For his sense and apprehension I should then have perished Then that is long since if you suppose him now under trouble probably he should have sunk under the weight of it or if out of trouble he remembreth from experience what did comfort him when he was ready to perish But how perished It may be understood 1. Either as given over to the will of his Enemies if he had not confided in God for all humane help and comfort was cut off and then did divine help appear 2. Dyed for sorrow for worldly sorrow worketh death 2 Cor. 7. 10. We are apt to despond and despair in great and sore Troubles Affliction worketh heaviness 1 Pet. 1. 6. and heaviness dryeth the bones and wasteth our strength What kept him 3. His Remedy was the Word of God for he saith Unless thy Law had been my delights Some take the word Law strictly for the Precepts of the Law which keepeth us from sin which doth involve us in danger But rather it is taken for the whole Word of God and chiefly for the promises of support and deliverance I had despaired if I had not consulted with thy Word He doth not here speak of direction but of support elsewhere he found
it so it is hear it and know thou it for thy good 1 A sound belief for it is reality that will work upon us Affection is always according to the strength of the persuasion 2 There must be application All kind of operation is by the touch The nearer the touch the greater the vertue so the more close they are upon the heart and touch and concern us the more they work upon us 3 There must be consideration we must seriously revolve these things in our mind and debate with our selves as for instance what a strict and precise account we are to give at the day of Judgment the inexpressible pains of hell and ineffable joys of Heaven generally we do not believe these things If we were persuaded there were a Heaven and Hell if we did think of them with application and say soul thou must one day go either to Heaven or Hell thou must one day appear before God and be put under a sentence of everlasting death or receive a sentence of everlasting life If we did consider them with serious and with inculcative thoughts is it indeed so then let me consider what I must do This reasoning and debating and whetting these truths upon the heart would work upon us and we should sooner see the fruit As Elisha stretched himself often upon the Shunamite's Son and kept stretching himself till the child began to wax warm and sneezed and then he opened his eyes So we should spread truth upon the heart till affection begin to quicken it Use 1. Reproof and that of three sorts of Persons 1. Those that go musing of vanity all the day and never can find a thought for God for Christ for the Covenant or for the great truths of the Word They have thoughts and to spare for other things Do those love the word of God and never spend a thought about it Prov. 6. 21. If the Word were bound upon us as a Jewel and chain then when thou goest it would lead thee when thou sleepest it would keep thee and when thou awakest it would talk with thee The word would ever be running upon our minds if we had any hearty affections to it Christians think with your selves have you thoughts for other things and none for God Christ Heaven and everlasting glory would you count him to be a charitable man that should throw away his meat and drink into the kennel rather than give him it that needs and asks it So would you count him to be a godly man one that hath a sincere love to God that hath thoughts he knows not what to do with but casts them away upon every idle toy and base inconsiderable thing and not a thought for God to suffer his thoughts to run waste yea run riot in envious repinings or unclean glances or revengeful or proud imaginations that can have thoughts for such trifles and never a thought for God and forget him days without number Ier. 2. 32. Have these affections to the Word of God 2. It reproves those persons to whom good thoughts are looked upon as a burden and melancholy interruption and when they rush into their minds are thrown out again like unwelcome guests These seem to be described by those words Rom. 1. 28. They did not like to retain God in their knowledge When men like not to entertain thoughts of God if they fasten upon our hearts we soon grow weary of them Christians to a gratious heart one that loves God and his Word thoughts of God and holy things are very comfortable and sweet Psal. 104. 34. My meditation of him shall be sweet But when they are so unwelcom and seem so troublesom to your souls have you a love to them To be weary of the thoughts of God it is to degenerate into Devils for it is part of the Devils torment to think of God They believe and tremble The more explicite thoughts they have of God the more is their horror increased If it be so with you judge whether you have this affection 3. Those that read and hear but do not meditate in order to affection and practice This duty must have its turn too if you will ever manifest affection and increase affection you must take some time to meditate and season your thoughts Iames 1. 24. For he beholdeth himself and goeth his way and straightway forgetteth what manner of man he was They lay aside thoughts of what they hear and read and so go into their old course again When you hear or read any thing of the Word of God the greatest part of the task is yet behind you are to meditate to exercise your thoughts therein When men hear and do not meditate it is like the seed which fell upon the path way Matth. 13. The fouls of the air came and picked it up When you do not labour to cover it to get it into your heart by deep and ponderous thoughts the Devil comes and takes it away again when you work it not into your souls Bare hearing leaves but little impression unless we debate and revolve it in our minds God spake once and I heard it twice saith Iob. He had it not only at the first delivery but at the rebound he went it over again in his thoughts Use 2. Information It informs us why we are so backward to meditate it is for want of love Oh how love I thy Law and then 't is my meditation all the day You think 't is want of time and want of parts and abilities I tell you 't is want of Love It is but a vain boasting and the greatest hypocrisie to say we love the Law of God and never exercise our minds therein For where there is love it will command our thoughts and if once you have found a heart you will find time abilities and thoughts to bestow upon holy things Love sets all the wheels of the Soul a work and therefore the great reason why meditation is so difficult is we have not such strength and such ardor of affections to the things of God The difficulty doth not lye in the duty it self but in the auckardness of our hearts to the duty you can muse upon other things why not muse upon that which is holy Use 3. To press you to shew love to the word of God this way by often meditating upon it Meditate upon the Doctrines Promises threatnings Man's misery Deliverance by Christ Necessity of Regeneration then of a Holy life the Day of Judgment Fill the mind with such kind of thoughts and continually dwell upon them A good man should do so and will do so He should do so Iosh. 1. 8. and he will do so Psal. 1. 2. O do not begrudge a little time spent this way for hereby we both evidence our love to the Word and increase it But to quicken you hereunto 1. The more the heart is replenisht with holy meditation the less will it be pestered with worldly and carnal thoughts The
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
mind so darkly that no body could understand their meaning Christians they were not men that were to act a part oftheir own upon the stage of the world not men that aimed at ostentation of wisdom and curiosity of science but they were holy men they were free from ambition and envy and other such vile affections which are wont to make Writers to affect obscurity therefore in all simplicity of stile plainness of heart and faithfulness to their message they minded their Master's honour and the Peoples good they renounced pomp of words and lofty speculations minded that People might understand the mind of God published by them As they were holy men so they were acted by the Spirit of God now the Spirit of God is not a Spirit of darkness but a Spirit of light which gives understanding to all men therefore they spake luminously and clearly Nay they were not only acted by the Spirit but they were born up by the Spirit carried by the Holy Ghost while they were employed in this work publishing the mind of God to the Church they were carried beyond the line of their natural spirits by an extraordinary impulse infallibly born up so that they could not err and miscarry Now from such holy men that were not sway'd by ambition and private aims so guided so acted by the Spirit what can be expected but what is sure clear and plain 3. I argue and reason again from the end of God in giving us the Scriptures all which doth clearly infer that here 's a sure and plain direction that will lead you to Heaven There 's a fourfold end wherefore God hath given us the Scriptures 1. That by this means heavenly doctrine might be kept free from corruption that men might not obtrude Articles of Faith upon us and fancies of their own brain that heavenly doctrine might be put into a stated course and kept pure from corruption When mankind sate in darkness and in the shadow of death it was necessary that one way or other they should have light that God by some way or other would reveal his mind to them either by word of mouth or by writing Now God did it by Oracles and extraodinary messages at first while there were but few truths revealed and such as did not much burden the memory and while men were long-lived and so could a great while avouch their message from God and while they were of great simplicity and the Church was confin'd to a few men to a few families within a small compass of ground not liable to those miseries and changes now in latter days Before Christ came it was fit God should send his messengers but now in these latter days when he hath spoken to us by his Son Heb. 1. 1. it is fit the Rule of Faith should be closed up It is not for the honour of the Son of God that after him should come any extraordinary Nuncio or Ambassador from Heaven as if he had not fully discovered his Fathers mind Well then therefore God hath put all his messages into writing for the use of after-ages and for this end that there might be some publick standard for trying of things by now God's end would not be accomplished if this writing were not clear Here 's the Argument the world would be left at great uncertainties far more than in old time and so this end for preserving truth for the use and direction of the Church would be wholly lost Well then if God will make a writing serve instead of extraordinary messages which brought their own evidence with them certainly he will not put it into words liable to mistake but that are intelligible Wisdom saith Prov. 8. 9. They are all plain to him that understandeth and right to them that find knowledge Certainly they that come in simplicity of heart with a mind to learn God's Will not to cavil they may know 2dly God's end in setting forth the Scripture was that it might be read of all Ages and of all Sexes as the Book of the Law was to be read in the Congregation before the Men Women little Ones and Strangers Deut. 21. From day to day it was read in the Synagogue Acts 15. 21. And God would have them teach their children Deut. 6. 6. And Timothy is commended for reading the Scriptures from his youth 2 Tim. 3. 5. And the Apostles do express themselves to be debters both to the wise and unwise to Greeks and Barbarians Rom. 1. 14. To speak wisdom to the wise and plainness to the simple And St. Iohn he writes to children and young men and fathers 1 Iohn 2. 3. Well then here 's my Argument If God would write a Book to be read by men women children all sorts surely 't is that all might understand not that they might repeat it by rote and toss the words of it in their mouths as Parrots do words they understand not surely then they are compiled to profit all 3dly God's end in giving the Word was for converting of men or leaving them without excuse Now take either end and it shews there must be a plain direction If for converting of men then it must be so plain that it may be understood by them for there is nothing gets to the heart but by the understanding After I was instructed I smote upon my thigh And all influences are conveyed by light and if God gains any heart it is by teaching and by light Or if it were for leaving them without excuse it must be by a clear revealing of his Will otherwise they might pretend obscurity The Apostle pleads this 2 Cor. 4. 2 3 4. saith the Apostle There is such plain truth in the Gospel that every man's conscience may take it up if he will and if he cannot see the Majesty of God in this doctrine they are blinded by Satan the fault is not in Gospel-light but in their own eyes they cannot complain of God but of themselves 4th End is that it might be a rule of faith and manners by which all doctrines are to be tryed A rule of faith Isa. 8. 20. To the law and to the testimony if they speak not according to this Word it is because there is no light in them And Acts 17. 11. They received the Word with all readiness of mind and searched the Scriptures daily whether these things were so So to be a rule of manners Gal. 6. 16. As many as walk according to this rule c. There are many actions which God requireth of us that expose us to great difficulty and hazard now before the heart be gained to them we had need have a plain proof that it is the Will of God For who will venture his all unless he have a clear warrant that knows whither he goes and whither to look for amends if he suffer the loss of all things Thus there 's light in the Word Secondly But now 't is a full direction for David speaks it of his
mind and the freest from restraint Isai. 32. 8. The liberal man deviseth liberal things The unclean man is devising unclean things the earthly man is always talking with himself about building planting trading these things take up his mind You cannot judge of a Fountain by the Current of Water at a distance six or seven miles off it may receive a tincture from the Channel through which it passeth but just at the Fountain where it bubbles up there you can judge of the quality whether sweet or bitter water so you cannot judge of the Soul by things that are more remote and where by-ends may interpose Matth. 15. 19. Out of the heart proceed evil thoughts murthers adulteries fornications c. Evil thoughts come first other things come from the heart but not so immediately therefore thoughts being so considerable we should make conscience of them Thirdly They are considerable from their kind here are the roots of all evils Every thing that we do every deliberate act that is done by a reasonable Creature argueth some foregoing thought every temptation is fastened upon the heart by some intervening thought Before sin be formed brought forth and becomes a compleat sin there are musings which are as it were the incubations of the Soul or fitting abrood upon the temptation Isai. 59. 4. They conceive mischief and bring forth iniquity The mind sits abrood upon sin It is thoughts that bring the heart and object together First men think then they love then they practise Beating the Steel upon the Flint makes the Sparks fly out so when the understanding beats and knocks upon the will by pregnant thoughts by inculcation that stirs up the affection These are the Bellows which blow up those latent sparks of sin that are in our Souls therefore if you would make conscience of acts you should make conscience of thoughts It is the greatest imprudence that can be to think to do any thing in reformation when we do not take care of our thoughts See when God adviseth us to return to him Isai. 55. 7. he saith Let the wicked forsake his way and the unrighteouus man his thoughts In vain do we lop off the Branches and let the Root live If we would forsake our way we must first forsake our thoughts When certain Fowl pestered a man he asked How he should be rid of them The answer was The Nest must be destroyed and they must be crusht in the Egg so here 's the best way of crushing the Egg by dashing Babylons Brats against the Wall so much is implyed in that place Ier. 4. 14. Wash thine heart from wickedness that thou mayest be saved how long shall vain thoughts lodge within thee Wash thy heart begin there Medicines applied to the outward parts will do no good unless the inwards be cleansed and purged so until the soul be cleansed and purged from these evil thoughts outward reformation will be to no purpose Fourthly They are considerable in regard of their number they are most numberless acts of the Soul Isai. 57. 20. The Sea is always working so the heart of man is always casting forth mire and dirt Gen. 6. 5. Every imagination of the thoughts of mans heart is only evil continually There is a Mint in us that is always working towards that which is evil This is a means to humble us The Lord knows the best of our thoughts are but vain this is that which raiseth the account in Gods Book of remembrance which makes us more admire the riches of his Grace even to the very last Let him forsake his thoughts Isai. 55. 7. What then I will multiply to pardon Certainly if thoughts be sins God must not only pardon but multiply to pardon Use 1. To humble us all the best of us from first to last Vanity of heart sticks to us O how many carnal thoughts haunt us where ever we go As thou walkest in the streets up and down whereupon do thy thoughts run The common vain thoughts should be laid to heart Have we not a God a Christ to think of sweet and precious promises Heaven and Glory and the great concernments of our souls and yet with what Chaff do we fill our minds We go thinking of every toy and trifle grinding Chaff instead of Corn every day O how do we throw away our thoughts rather than God should have them upon every vain thing It is very irksome a little to retire and recollect our selves and think of God Christ and Heaven but what a deal of vanity do we take into our minds If our hearts were turned inside outward and all our thoughts liable to the notice of men as they are to the notice of God what odious Creatures should we be and have we no reverence of the Great God The Lord knows our hearts he knows we have thoughts enough and to spare more than we know what to do withal and he knows we are backward to exercise them upon him and things that lead to Communion with him These thoughts are aggravated from the time as upon Gods Day for then we are not to think our own thoughts Isai. 58. 13. A Christian is then to sequester himself only for God Nay our vain heart bewrayeth it self in solemn Duties a man cannot go to prayer but the vanity of his thoughts will trouble him and run about him when he is hearing the Word how do we course up and down like Spaniels hither and thither Yea to humble our selves because of our wicked thoughts our desperate thoughts against the Being of God Psal. 14. 1. The fool hath said in his heart there is no God Though we cannot open our eyes but the Creature presently doth shew us something of God and call upon us whether we look upward or downward yet how do we vent this thought if there were no God then we could live as we lift without check and restraint Thoughts which arise within us against the truth of the Gospel as if it were but a well devised Fable Thoughts against the purity of Gods Laws that we need not be so strict that it is but nice folly that we shall do well enough without repenting believing minding the work of our salvation Yea we have thoughts against the light of Nature filthy unclean thoughts such as defile and stain the heart Of earthly thoughts how natural is that in musing upon that esteem honour greatness that we shall have in the World How do carnal thoughts haunt us and this not only when we are in our natural condition but even after Grace And Christians are mistaken that do not think those thoughts evil though there be no consent of the will I confess there are thoughts cast into the mind by Satan but these not resisted these cherished fostered they become ours though they are Children of Satans getting and may be cast in as the tempting of Christ was by injection of thought but then we entertain these things as Weeds thrown over the Wall
but a slight and superf●…cial hope that grows upon us we know not how a fruit of ignorance and incogitancy when they are serious they begin to feel it a foolish kind of presumption upon which no account can be given 1 Pet. 3. 15. How can they give a reason of their hope But gracious souls the more they consider their warrant and the promise of God the more their hope is encreased Thirdly It is a dead and a cold hope not a lively hope 1 Pet. 1. 3. They have no taste no groans no ravishing thoughts about the happiness which they expect no strong desires after the thing hoped for Rom. 12. 12. Rejoyce in hope saith the Apostle they have but cold apprehensions of such great things And the hope that we expect is so excellent that it should stir up the greatest longings the greatest waiting and put us upon earnest expectation Fourthly It 's a weak inconstant hope a loose fond conjecture a guess rather than a certain expectation 1 Cor. 9. 26. I therefore so run not as uncertainly not at randome but upon sure and solid grounds A Child of God hath a due sense of the difficulty yet withal an assurance of the possibility and of the certainty of it and therefore it continues he presseth on if it be possible he may attain to his great hopes the resurrection of the dead Fifthly It 's a lazy loytering hope Carnal men would have Heaven and happiness but they make no haste towards it they give no diligence to make sure of it it is but a devout sloth Whereas he that hath a true hope is pressing forward Phil. 3. 13. and hastening and looking for the coming of Christ 2 Pet. 3. 12. But then there is a true hope in God both for final deliverance present support and present mercy that will never leave us ashamed Psal. 22. 5. They that hope in thee are not confounded and Psal. 25. 2 3. Let none that wait on thee be ashamed O my God I trust in thee let me not be ashamed What is a true Christian hope It may be discovered by the grounds of discouragement but most sensibly by the effects 1. By it the heart is drawn from Earth to Heaven earthly desires and hopes abated Phil. 3. 20. For our conversation is in Heaven whence also we look for the Saviour the Lord Iesus Christ they live as those that within a few days expect to be with God Christ in Heaven hath a Magnetick Virtue to draw up the hearts of Believers thither as a man that hath looked stedfastly upon the Sun can for a great while see nothing else 2. By it the heart is enlivened in Duty and quickened with diligence in the business of salvation Hope apprehends the difficulty as well as the excellency and possibility of salvation therefore what a man truly hopes for in this kind he make it his business to get it and look after it Phil. 3. 13. This one thing I do forgetting those things which are behind and reaching forth unto those which are before they mind it seriously and not superficially by the bye 3. It engageth the heart against sin 2 Pet. 3. 11. We that look for these things What manner of persons ought we to be in all holy conversation and godliness holiness implies purity and godliness dedication to God Now a false hope is consistent with the reign of sin suffers a man to be vile carnal careless neglectful of God full of malice envy pride but without any serious and solid ground it is but a lying presumption Now this hope that is thus fixed upon God will never disappoint us For First The fruition will ever be more than the expectation God doth for us above what we can ask or think Ephes. 3. 20. When the Prodigal Son came and said Make me as an hired servant the Father brought forth the fatted Calf and put a Ring on his F●…nger c. Solomon asked wisdom and God gave him riches honour and great abundance But much more in the World to come will the fruition be above expectation for Prophecy is but in part we are not now capable to know what we shall then enjoy we have but childish thoughts of things to come as a Child comes short of the apprehensions of a man 1 Cor. 13. 9 10 11. Secondly This hope cannot be abated with the greatest evil To a worldly man Death is the King of terrours and to a godly man 't is his last end though it vanquish his Body it doth not vanquish his Soul Prov. 14. 32. The wicked is driven away in his wickedness but the righteous hath hope in his death When other mens hopes vanish his hopes go down with him to the Grave Psal. 16. 9. as in a Bed of ease they shall sleep until the waking time Use. O be not deceived with false promises we must expect Blessing according to the tenour of the Covenant only things promised and no otherwise than they are promised temporal things with a limitation as good for us and with the exception of the Cross spiritual blessings their essence rather than degree of Grace And take heed of false hope that is groundless and fruitless Groundless the warrant of true hope is the Word of God I hope in thy word Psal. 130. 5. Hope that is without a warrant will be without effect when men please themselves they shall do well enough contrary to the Word of God Deut. 29. 19. And it 's fruitless it doth not fill the heart with gladness and quicken to holiness and stir up to walk with God And take heed of false experiences that is building upon temporal blessings and bare deliverances out of trouble Men are not so much preserved as reserved to further trouble many are spared but for a time it is but a reprieve I proceed to the 117th Verse Hold thou me up and I shall be safe and I will have respect unto thy Statutes continually Here observe 1. A repetition of his request for sustaining Grace 2. A renewing of the promise of obedience conceived before Verse 115. 1. A repetition of his request for sustaining Grace Hold thou me up and I shall be safe Where observe The request Hold thou me up and The fruit and effect promised to himself I shall be safe First The Blessing asked Hold thou me up a Metaphor taken from those that faint or those that slide and are ready to fall Secondly The fruit of it I shall be safe Before he had said Uphold me according unto thy word that I may live now he promiseth himself more from the Divine assistance safety By safety he means either the safety of the outward or inward man Why not both I shall be safe from those warpings and apostasie and all dangers and mischiefs that do attend it Turning aside from our duty doth not procure our fafety but perseverance in our duty Gods Children when they have failed have run themselves into much temporal inconveniencies as
the course of second Causes when things are fortified and backed with a strong interest to reason 't will be a long time 'T is not so long as sense would make it though we count the years the winter is over and the spring is come and yet we are not saved and can say 't is thus long yet this is not long in comparison of eternity 2 Cor. 4. 17. 'T is not long to faith for to the eye of faith things future and afar off are present Heb. 11. 1. Not long to love Gen. 29. 20. seven years are as a few days they that believe an eternity and have any love to God will say 't is short But a short Walk is a long Journey to the sick and weak the impatience of our flesh makes it seem long 4. When the time is come God will make speedy work Isai. 60. 22. The Lord will hasten it in his time Luke 18. 9. Shall not God avenge his own Elect Rev. 18. 7. Her plagues shall come in one day Isai. 66. 8. A Nation born in a day All these places shew and 't is a comfort to us that no difficulty shall hinder when the season calls for it He that produced Heaven and Earth at once what cannot he do We are dismayed when we consider an evil party fortified with combined interests strength of opposite factions force of Laws and worldly powers but God can make a Nation be born in one day 'T will be quick work when God once begins III. Third Consideration This time is usually when the impiety and insolency of wicked men is come to an height Indeed there are other notes as when his peoples hearts are prepared to receive and improve deliverance when Gods Glory calleth for it But this is the season mentioned in the Text therefore I shall shew you 1. That this is a season 2. Enquire when iniquity is come to an height 3. Why then God doth usually interpose 1. That this is a season Gen. 15. 16. The sins of the Amorites are not yet full God shewed his patience to that wicked people till the measure of their sins were filled up So wrath came upon the persecuting Jews when they had filled up the measure of their fathers Matth. 23. 32. While the enemies Cup is a filling God delayeth and we must wait So Dan. 8. 23. When the transgressors are come to the full Once more Ioel 3. 13. Put ye in the Sickle for the Harvest is ripe come get ye down for the Press is full the Fatts overflow for their wickedness is great The Lord compares sinners to a field of ripe Corn ready to be cut full Fatts and Wine-presses to be trod out When sin is ripe the execution of vengeance will not be long forborn 2. When doth iniquity come to an height I answer Their iniquities may be considered as to the two branches of it their rebellion and disobedience to God and their injuries and vexation of the Saints First Their disobedience and contempt of God First When this is general All orders and ranks of persons have corrupted their way as the Sodomites compassed the house Gen. 19 4. both young and old all the people from every Quarter Usually in making a judgment upon the state of a people you will find it thus If any part be right it keeps off the judgment from the rest if a zealous Magistracy though a corrupt people or an unsavoury Ministry and a praying mourning people God holds his hand and will not proceed to judgment They are the Salt of the Earth Matth. 5. 13. And Isai. 6. 13. The holy seed shall be the substance thereof But when all join in one in a neglect of God and common enmity to his ways then I say the Judg of the Earth will do his work then wrath breaketh out Secondly When it groweth impudent and outragious as if they would obliterate and extinguish the Law of God or take away all force and authority from it by their perverse actions and pernicious examples They do not obliquely and under the shew of divers pretences break Gods Laws but openly set themselves against him and break a Commandment without any shame Isai. 3. 9. They declare their sin as Sodom and hide it not yea they glory in their shame Phil. 3. 19. as if they would out-face Heaven and Religion at once and all honesty and ingenuity by their debaucheries Bold-fac'd sin doth not go long unpunished Thirdly Desperate incorrigibleness All remedies are unprofitable and hope of amendment taken away Ier. 6. 3. Ezek. 24. 13. When God would have purged them they would not be purged He tryeth them with several conditions he hath a love for them as they are his Creatures Judgments and Mercies they had yet they are no Changelings but go on as wicked as ever God tryeth Key after Key one Providence after another yet not a whit the better or wiser but are like men that have slept still abuse his patience and defeat all the methods of his Grace shew the same corruption they did before Fourthly When they run into unnatural sins and the corruption of humane Society is endangered Levit. 18. 27 28. For all these abominations have the men of the land done c. When men are so wicked and filthy that a man needs to be a Criminal to be acceptable to them they think it strange that others run not into the same excess of riot 1 Pet. 4. 4. Certainly then God needeth to strike in that vertue may be upheld in some kind of reputation Secondly Their violence and vexation of the Saints 'T was Bede's observation Odium in Religionis Professores c. that hatred of the Professors of Religion was that undid his Countrey God is angry when his people are wronged the world is kept up for their sakes Were it not for the Elect to be gathered time would be no more for their sakes Kingdoms and Churches are preserved they are the staff and stay the Chariots and Horsemen of Israel God is tender of them as the Apple of his Eye therefore when they are wronged and men are not only evil themselves but haters of those that are good and do not only break Gods Laws themselves but would force others to do so God will hold no longer as their violence encreaseth so doth their ruine hasten Rev. 12. 12. When they abuse their power to such an end though God may bear with them for a time till they have done their work yet he will reckon with them Zech. 1. 15. I am sore displeased with the Heathen that are at ease for I was a little displeased and they helped forward the affliction God will not forget his relation to his sinning people and will not suffer them to be abused out of measure When they would destroy and root out whom God would only correct and purge 't is a sign of their approaching ruine Now these things should be considered by us to a good end not to feed an
the Scriptures were written not for Ministers or professed Students God speaketh to all sorts of men in the Scripture and therefore would have all understand them He wrote the Scripture that it might be read of all young and old Deut. 30. 11 12. This Commandment which I command thee this day is not hidden from thee neither is it far off It is not in heaven that thou shouldest say Who shall go up for us to heaven and bring it to us that we may hear it and do it c. Rich and poor the King was to read in it all the days of his life Deut. 17. 18 19. It shall be that when he sitteth upon the Throne of his Kingdom he shall write him a Copy in a Book out of that which is before the Priests the Levites and it shall be with him and he shall read therein all the days of his life Every good man is to meditate in it Psal. 1. 2. His delight is in the Law of the Lord and in his Law doth he meditate day and night Deut. 6. 6 7. These words which I command thee this day shall be in thy heart and thou shalt teach them diligently unto thy Children and shalt talk of them when thou sittest in thy house and when thou walkest by the way and when thou liest down and when thou risest up The Apostles wrote Epistles to the whole Church spake to old men youth little Children 1 Iohn 2. 13. I write unto you Fathers because ye have known him that is from the beginning I write unto you young men because ye have overcome the wicked one I write unto you little Children because ye have known the Father To Kings Judges Men Women Husbands Wives Fathers Children Masters Servants was it written for their use nor must it be taken out of their hands nor is it above their reach 3. The end why it was written to be a sure and infallible direction to guide us to eternal life and make us wise unto salvation 2 Tim. 3. 15. And that from a Child thou hast known the holy Scriptures which are able to make thee wise unto salvation through faith which is in Christ Iesus Not only so but it is our food and means of growth 1 Pet. 2. 2. As new born Babes desire the sincere milk of the Word that ye may grow thereby Every life hath food convenient for it It is our weapon in temptation Ephes. 6. 17. And take the helmet of salvation and the sword of the Spirit which is the word of God To be read by all in this spiritual warfare they are all engaged in It is Gods testament therefore should be viewed by his Children the Epistle of the Creator to his Creatures therefore to be read by them to whom it is sent Gods Letter must not be intercepted upon all these reasons There is enough to make wise the simple in Scriptures But is there nothing difficult in Scriptures Answ. Yes to subdue the pride of mans wit to quicken us to wait and depend upon him for knowledge to prevent contempt to exercise our industry and diligence and to fasten truths on our minds There is some difficulty but not such difficulty as that the people neither can nor ought to read them with profit which is the dispute between us and Papists There is no difficulty but what is conquerable by that Grace that God ordinarily dispenseth and the means of explaining or applying not a whole loaf but a dimensum his share for it distributes to every man his portion Use 1. For the confutation of them that forbid the simple the use of the word The Papists say Gods Word is dark and hard to be understood therefore they lock it up from the people in an unknown tongue as if none could profit by it but the learned sort Yea many among us are ready to say What should simple men do with Scripture and think all the confusions and troubles of the world come from giving people this liberty Answ. Though in the word there are mysteries to exercise the greatest Wits yet there are plain truths to edifie the simple This Text is a notable proof against them It is good to have a Text against every errour of theirs They are injurious to God as if he had revealed his mind so darkly or his word that it were so doubtful and harmful that there were danger in reading it injurious to the Scriptures while they tax them with obscurity injurious to the people of God while they despise those whom the Lord inviteth with their Pharisaical pride Iohn 7. 49. But this people who know not the Law are cursed hinder them of their comfort The simple have souls to save therefore have need to see with their own eyes to consider Gods Charter They pretend they do it in mercy to the people lest by their mistakes they should ruine themselves and introduce confusion into the world They should as well say All must be starved and deny meat and drink because some surfeit But certainly they do it for their own interest they have false Wares to vend and to keep the people from discovering the errours they impose upon them they would conceal the Scriptures from them Ignorance is a friend to the Devils Kingdom The blind go as they are led They are afraid of the Scriptures as a Thief of a Candle or the light which would discover his villany and hinder his design Iohn 3. 20. Use 2. Of encouragement to poor Christians that have a sense of weakness Before Plato's School was written Let none but the learned come in hither but Christ inviteth the simple that none might be discouraged he speaketh to all sorts Prov. 8. 4 5. Unto you O men I call and my voice is to the sons of men O ye simple understand wisdom and ye fools be of an understanding heart That which is spoken to all is thought to be spoken for none Christ speaketh to men under their several distinctions noble base young or old rich or poor If any earthly profit be offered to any that will take it who will exempt themselves None are so modest But in spiritual things persons are more stupid Let none be discouraged by weakness of parts all are invited to learn and here they may be taught of any capacity Oh! but how many will say I am so weak of understanding that I shall make no work of such deep mysteries as are contained in the Scriptures Answ. 1. Many times this objection cometh from a sluggish heart to ease themselves of the trouble of a duty as meditation or prayer they pretend weakness they would have a rule that would make knowledge 2. If it be serious God is able to interpret his own Book unto thee He must indeed open the door or we cannot get into the knowledge of truths there If you had better parts you would be but groping about the door He that hath not the right Key is as far from entring the
desire should always continue in some degree yet there are some seasons when it is more vehement and more notably stirred and raised In some degree it should always continue for our necessities and work are ever the same and if it be only a Qualm or Fit it is not right Psal. 119. 20. My soul breaketh for the longing it hath unto thy Iudgments at all times Appetite followeth life but at special times it is more notably raised as when we are to meet with God in solemn Duties it is whetted when disappointed and stirred upon some restraint or delay when we meet not with what we expected that light and comfort and strength that we looked for but are kept off from satisfaction When some deep distress makes spiritual comforts more seasonable or in some great affair or temptation we need more than ordinary strength or in some doubt we need light and direction in all these Cases spiritual desire is more stirring and a strong affection is kindled in us David panted as an Hart Psal. 42. 1. As the Hart panteth after the water-brooks so panteth my soul after thee O God It was when he was in some distress So Psal. 63. 1. 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 Oh the sighs and groans that are sent up at such a time Troubles will sharpen our appetite and rowze us out of security We cannot always subsist under strong affections they are very mutable yet something of them should continue Use 1. For reproof 1. Many are acquainted with the passionateness of sin but know little of the passionateness of spiritual desire 1 Thess. 4. 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not in the lust of concupiscence Some think it should rather be rendred thus Not in the passion of lust Many times lust groweth to violence men neigh like fed Horses after their Neighbours Wives they feel an ardency and a burning heat in their evil passions and lusts but none of this gasping and panting for spiritual refreshings and the comforts of the soul. They are acquainted with passionate wrath and fury passionate envy and spightfulness passionate lust and filthy desires passionate covetousness as Ahab after Naboth's Vineyard the boilings of sin they know but were never acquainted with these gaspings after Grace as Amnon lusted for Tamar Rom. 1. 27. They burned in lust one towards another When any sin groweth so headstrong as to admit of no restraint but men are wedded to their own inclination That is the passionateness of sin 2. Some that have affectionate desires for worldly things and their souls are pained and grieved and are sick within them if they have them not These differ from the former for there the object was sinful but here the object is lawful but the desire is irregular they are sick of pleasures their hearts run on them and they cannot refrain As the fool's heart is in the house of mirth Eccl. 7. 4. All their longings are for Balls and Dancings and Plays and merry meetings these are suitable entertainments to the hearts of Fools vain and sottish Epicures that know no higher delights than the tickling of the senses their love runneth that way and their hearts are wholly estranged from God So some sick of riches and wealth they gape and gasp for them with an impatient longing 1 Tim. 6. 9. They that will be rich fall into temptation and a snare and into many foolish and hurtful lusts that drown men in destruction and perdition The more they have the more they covet as the laying on of more Fewel encreaseth the Flame they are impatient making hast to be rich run themselves yea their Consciences out of breath to overtake the Prey The World is their Element out of which they cannot live but spend their time wit strength of their souls upon it They are sick for honour credit esteem as Mordecai's stiff Knee cast Haman upon his Bed Esth. 3. 5. And when Haman saw that Mordecai bowed not the knee nor gave him reverence then was Haman full of wrath Chap. 6. 12. Mordecai came again to the Kings Gate but Haman hasted to his house mourning and having his head covered How do men tire their spirits waste their strength to compass honour and esteem in the world and if they find it not how are they troubled Ambition is a restless thing how doth Absolom court the people sick for Rule and Government 3. It reproveth them that have only a cold approbation but no earnest affection to the things of God Oh how this instance should shame us that we have no more affection David speaketh of longing and panting we thirst not we pant not their fervency reproveth our lukewarmness we are indifferent whether we have this light comfort and Grace yea or no. Gods Children thirst for it as dry Ground for Rain We have some loose and stragling thoughts about holy things or weak and ineffectual glances of desire some lukewarm motions but for these strong affections admire them we may feel them we do not Wicked men may have sleight apprehensions of spiritual things which may produce some sleight desires and wishes which yet are so feeble and weak that every carnal desire overcometh them Use 2. Information why the people of God press through so many difficulties to enjoy his Word They are urged and pricked on by a strong desire they would fain enjoy more of God and therefore press after the means where it is most clearly and powerfully revealed Iohn 11. 12. From the days of Iohn the Baptist until now the Kingdom of Heaven suffereth violence and the violent take it by force Where the Gates of Heaven stand open they will break through hindrances to get in Use 3. It should quicken our dulness and exhort us to get this affection If the heart were as it should be a little bidding would serve the turn 1 These good desires discover a good f●…ame for a man is as his desires are Such motions when they are in their strength and liveliness are Signs of heroical Grace when your hearts are sick of love yea in a more temperate degree where there are strong and prevailing desires they shew truth of Grace where there is such an affection as is industrious and unwearied and keepeth us hard at work Acts 26. 7. Unto which promise the twelve Tribes instantly serving God day and night hope to come Such an affection as is troubled when we are interrupted in our main design of bringing the heart into compleat subjection to God or being capable of the fruition of him Prov. 13. 12. Hope deferred makes the heart sick but when the desire cometh it is a tree of life If you come for Grace and are troubled and grieved when you are interrupted if you are refreshed when you have tasted any thing of Gods Graciousness any encrease of light and Grace is as welcome
immediate antecedent they are usually the inletts of sin we are first taken by the eye and then by the heart She saw the fruit that it was good and then eat of it But I rather suppose it is to be referred to men The Hebrews many times do not express a general antecedent More particularly his enemies Saul and his Courtiers for so he saith verse 139. My zeal hath consumed me because mine enemies have forgotten thy Word And again verse 158. David saith I beheld the Transgressors and was grieved because they keep not thy Word I have brought these places because parallel with the Text and principally that you may not think David was troubled because of any injuries done to himself but because of offences done to God Keep not thy Law Keeping of the Law is to observe it diligently not only to maintain it but to retain it in our eye and practice It might be matter of grief to David that they of whom he specially speaketh being persons of power and place did not maintain the Law and keep it from incroachment and violation but suffered abuses to pass unpunished but he speaketh here of retaining the Law in their hearts and practice For it is an expression equivalent with that which is used Verse 139. Because they have forgotten thy Word The Point which I shall observe is this Doctr. That it is the duty and property of a godly man to mourn bitterly even for other mens sins Here we have David's instance and it may be suited with the practice of all the Saints Ieremiah see Ier. 13. 17. But if ye will not hear my soul shall weep in secret places for your pride and mine eyes shall weep sore and run down with tears There you have described the right temper of a good Prophet first to entreat earnestly for them and in case of refusal to weep bitterly for their obstinacy Mark it was not an ordinary sorrow he speaks of there but a bitter weeping Mine eyes shall weep sore and run down with tears Not a sleight vanishing sigh not a counterfeited sorrow soul and eyes were both engaged and this in secret places where the privacy contributeth much to the measure and sincerity of it Now this is a fit instance of a Minister of the Gospel We cannot always prevail when we plead with you and shall not be responsible for it God never required it at the hands of any Minister to work grace and to save souls but to do their endeavours But alas we do not learn of Ieremiah to go and mourn over their ignorance carelesness and obstinacy of those committed to our charge The next example that I shall produce is that of Lot in Sodom 2 Pet. 2. 7 8. Who vexed himself and was vexed from day to day in seeing and hearing their unlawful deeds Not with Sodom's injuries but with Sodom's sins It was matter of constant grief to his soul the commonness did not take away the odiousness My next instance shall be our Lord himself we read very much of his compassion I shall produce but two instances of it One is in Mark 3. 5. Christ looked upon them with anger and was grieved for the hardness of their hearts They gave him cause of offence but it doth not only exercise his anger but grief In our Saviours anger there was more of compassion than passion He was grieved to see men harden themselves to their own destruction So when he came near to Ierusalem a City not very friendly to him yet it is said Luke 19. 41. When he came near and beheld the City he wept over it and said If thou hadst known even thou at least in this thy day the things that belong to thy peace but now they are hid from thine eyes Our Lord Jesus was made up of compassion he weepeth not only for his friends but his enemies as a righteous God he inflicted the Judgment but as man he wept for the offences First he shed his tears and then his bloud Oh foolish careless City that will not regard terms and offers of peace in this her day He bewailed them that knew not why they should be bewailed they rejoyced and he mourned Christs eyes are the wetter because theirs were so dry And now he is in Heaven how doth his free Grace go a mourning after sinners in the entreaties of the Gospel But that I may vindicate this Point more fully I shall give I. Some observations concerning mourning for the sins of others II. Give you the reasons of it The Observations are these Five 1. I observe That it is an absolute duty to preach this Doctrine not only some high and raised effect of Grace When we produce these instances and examples of the Word David Lot Ieremiah and Christ many think these are rare and extraordinary instances elevated beyond the ordinary line and pitch of Christian practice and perfection No 't is a matter of Duty lying upon all Christians When God goes to mark out his people for preservation who are those that are marked The Mourners Ezek. 9. 4. Go through the midst of the City and set a mark upon the foreheads of them that sigh and cry for all the abominations that are done in the midst thereof None are marked out for mercy but the Mourners The great difference between men and men in the world is the Mourners in Zion and the Sinners in Zion so that it lyeth upon all if we would have Gods mark upon us And the Apostle reproveth the Corinthians for the want of this mourning 1 Cor. 5. 7. Ye are puffed up when ye should rather have mourned Possibly many of the converted Corinthians disliked the foulness of the fact but they did not mourn and solemnly lay it to heart therefore the Apostle layeth a charge upon them In all the examples that have been produced that of Jesus Christ only is extraordinary and yet we are bound to have the same mind in us that was in Jesus We must have the same mind though we cannot have the same measure of affection Christ had the Spirit without measure but we must have our proportion If David can speak of Flouds certainly we should at least be able to speak of Drops Somewhat of David's and Christs Spirit Nay the example of Christ in this very thing is propounded by the Apostle Rom. 15. 3. For even Christ pleased not himself but as it is written The reproaches of them that reproached thee fell on me The Apostle speaketh there of bearing one anothers burthens Christ would bear the burthen of all the world He was moved with a zeal for the dishonour done to God and compassion to men and so undertook the burthen upon him not to please himself or seek the ease and safety of the natural life Well then it is not some raised effect of Grace but a necessary duty which concerns all a frame of heart which all the Children of God have If you love God and love your Neighbour
draweth Light out of Darkness is able to revive our Credit and Esteem if not in this World yet in the World to come we shall be glorious though our condition be never so contemptible here Our reward is not in this Life When we die the Beggar is carried into Abrahams bosom would you be in Dives his condition or Lazarus To wallow in Ease and Plenty and go to Hell and be cast out with the Devil and Damned Spirits or to be poor and despised here to be carried by Angels into the presence of God hereafter So at the day of Judgement Matth. 10 32. Whosoever therefore shall confess me before men him will I confess also before my Father in Heaven we shall be publickly owned 8. Great contempt shall be poured upon those that now contemn you When H●…non offered injury to Davids Servants he took severe Revenge of it God will require an account of all the Wrongs and Affronts are put upon his Servants The wicked shall be made the Scorn of Good Men and Angels Psal. 52. 6 7. The Righteous also shall see and fear and laugh at him Lo This is the Man that made not God his strength but trusted in the abundance of his Riches and strengthned himself in his wickedness But I am like a green Olive Tree c. 3. Doctrine That though our Condition be small and despicable yet we should be still faithful in our respects to God and his Word 1. The Temptation will not excuse us esse bonum facile est ubi quod vetat esse re●…tum est our Tryal is expresly mentioned in the promise as necessary for our Crowning Iam. 1. 12. When he is tryed when the Temptation is over the Tryal is past 't is no praise for a woman to be chast that hath no Suitors Adam was tempted by Eve and Eve by Satan yet both bore their burden Si taceret Deus ●…queretur Satan c. why should we hearken to Satans Suggestions rather than Gods Admonitions 2. God observeth what we do in our Trouble Psal. 44. 20 21. If we have forgotten the Name of our God or stretched out our hands to a strange God shall not God search out this for he knoweth the secrets of our hearts If we slacken our service to God or fall off to any degree of Apostacy the Judge of hearts knoweth all God knoweth whether we have or would deprave and corrupt Doctrine Worship or Ordinances or whether we will Faithfully adhere to him to his Word and Worship and Ordinances whatever it cost us 3. God and his Law are the same and therefore though our condition be altered our Affections should not If we love the Word of God upon intrinsick Reasons there is the same reason we should adhere to it with Love still as to embrace it out of Love Ver. 142. Thy Righteousness is an everlasting Righteousness and thy Law is the Truth Among men that may be just to day which is not so to morrow because they and their Lawes alter but Gods Law is the Eternal rule of Righteousness that never alters 4. In our poor and despicable condition we see more cause to love the Word than we did before because we experiment supports and comforts which we have thereby Rom. 5. 3. Knowing that Tribulation worketh Patience c. 2 Cor. 1. 5. For as the sufferings of Christ abound in us so our consolation also aboundeth by Christ. God hath special consolations for his afflicted and despised people And makes their consolation by Christ to run parallel with and to keep pace with their sufferings for Christ. 1. Use. Carry your Duty still in Remembrance The first step of defection is to forget what God hath commanded There is an oblivion and a darkness for the present on the Mind so that a man knoweth not what he knoweth as Hagar saw not the Well that was before her till God opened her eyes therefore revive the grounds of your Adherance if you would constantly adhere to God The Temptation cometh afresh upon you every day with all the inticing Blandishments so should the reasons of your Duty It helpeth our perseverance to consider how strong and cogent they are and what wrong we should do to God and Religion to consent At first a man beholds Temptations with Horrour but being familiarized our thoughts are more reconciled to them therfore recollect your selves and remember the Reasons you first had to put you upon your Duty and if you duly consider them they will be strong and cogent to repel the Temptation that would take you off from it 2. Use. It sheweth who are Lovers of the Word and who not On the one hand some love the precepts of God when they are in Honour and Esteem have many to joyn with them and they see peace and plenty follow the Profession of it But rather than they will indure trouble and contempt forsake it The Samaritans would be Iewes when the Iewes were favoured but in the time of Antiochus Epiphanes when the Iews were in trouble they would be called Sidonians 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dedicating their Temple not to Iehova but Iupiter Iosephus These never received the Love of the Truth On the other side when a Man loveth it alike in all times and in all conditions when Rich when Poor in Liberty and in Bonds when the wayes of God are countenanced or when despised 't is all one to him they love it not for outward Respects but internal Reasons SERMON CLIX. PSALM CXIX VER 142. Thy Righteousness is an Everlasting Righteousness and thy Law is the Truth IN this Verse the Word of God is set forth by a double Notion of Righteousness and Law accordingly two things are predicated of it as it is Righteousness 't is said to be an Everlasting Righteousness and as it is Law 't is said to be the Truth Both imply our Duty as there are Truths in the Word 't is mans Duty to Believe them as there are Commands 't is Mans Duty to Obey them I shall treat First of the Notions Secondly of the Predications 1. The Notions And there the Word is first called Righteousness thy Righteousness Gods Righteousness is sometimes put for the Righteousness which is in God himself as Verse 137. Righteous art thou O Lord. Psal. 145. 17. The Lord is Righteous in all his ways And sometimes for the Righteousness which he requireth of us as Iam. 1. 20. The Wrath of Man worketh not the Righteousness of God That is the Righteousness which God requireth of us and here in the Text. Once more that Righteousness which God requireth of us in his Word 't is sometimes taken in a limited sense for the Duties of the second Table and so usually when 't is coupled with Holiness Luk. 1. 75. Eph. 4. 24. The new Man is Created after God in Righteousness and true Holiness Holiness giveth God his due and Righteousness giveth man his due Sometimes 't is taken in a more general sense as
Indeed men that wholly forget God in Prosperity will not find his Word a delight in Adversity Psalm 30. 6 7 8. In my prosperity I said I shall never be moved Lord by thy Favour thou hast made my Mountain to stand strong Thou didst hide thy face and I was troubled I cryed unto thee O Lord c. 2. They prepare us for them The sweetness of the Word is best perceived under the bitterness of the Cross God and his Word are never so sweet to the Saints as in Adversity Psalm 94. 19. In the multitude of my thoughts within me thy comforts delight my Soul And 2 Cor. 1. 5. As the sufferings of Christ abound in us so our consolation also aboundeth by Christ. Use. Let no Calamity drive you from the Commandements for there you will find more delight than trouble can take from you 1 Ioh. 3. 1 2. Shall the Reproach of Men have more power to make us sad than the Honour of being Gods Children hath power to make us Joyful Let us be ashamed that we can delight no more Iames 1. 2. My Brethren count it all Ioy when yee fall into divers Temptations Matth. 5. 12. Rejoyce and be exceeding glad for great is your reward in Heaven For so persecuted they the Prophets which were before you And 1 Thes. 1. 6. Yee became followers of us and of the Lord having received the Word in much Affliction with Ioy of the Holy Ghost SERMON CLXI PSALM CXIX VER 144. The Righteousness of thy Testimonies is Everlasting give me Understanding and I shall live IN these Words First The Excellency of the Word is again acknowledged The Righteousness of thy Testimonies is Everlasting Secondly A Prayer is thereupon grounded give me Understanding Thirdly The Fruit and Benefit of being heard in that Prayer and I shall Live Because the Righteousness of the Word is Everlasting therefore we should beg Understanding and this sound Understanding maketh way for Life First He beginneth with the Praise of the Word the Righteousness of thy testimonies The Word of God is contemned by none but such as know not the Excellency of it both in its own nature and the fruits of it The sum of the whole Octonary is here repeated Doctrine That the Righteousness and everlasting Righteousness of Gods Testimonies should be deeply imprinted on our Minds and often thought of by us This stuck so in Davids Mind that he could hardly get off from the Meditation Here I shall shew you I. Wherein the Everlasting Righteousness of Gods Testimonies consisteth II. What it is to have them deeply imprinted upon our Minds and when they are so III. Why they should be deeply imprinted upon our Minds I. Wherein the Everlasting Righteousness of Gods Testimonies consisteth Answer In two things in the Tenour of them and in the Effects 1. In the Tenour And In that those Terms which God dealeth with us are never Repealed but stand in force to all Eternity 'T is an Everlasting truth that he that believeth in Christ shall be saved and that without Holiness no man shall see God The Moral part of the Word is unchangeable and shall never be altered the same Duties and the same Priviledges do alwayes continue Our Lord telleth us Matth. 5. 18. Till Heaven and Earth pass away one jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the Law till all be fulfilled The truth of the Doctrine of the Law and Prophets is more firm and stable than the frame of Heaven and Earth Heaven and Earth may be dissolved and made void but his Law shall never be made void both in that part wherein he comforts us by his Promises and that part wherein he sets down our Duty we are Eternally obliged to Obedience and God hath Eternally obliged himself to Reward and Bless There is an Everlasting and Unchangeable Ordinance by which we are bound to God and he hath bound himself to us We should not change and God will not having past his Word to us The Everlasting Obligation on us dependeth on Gods Authority the Everlasting Obligation on Gods part dependeth on his own Truth and Veracity And though we are poor changeable Creatures God hath interposed his Authority Mal. 3. 6. I am the Lord I change not Iam. 1. 17. In him there is no change or shadow of turning God would change if his truth was changed but that is Everlasting 'T is not in the Power of men to annihilate and change the Law they may break the Law but they cannot annihilate and change the Law Though it be not fulfilled by them yet it shall be fulfilled in them and upon them And God will not Annihilate the Law for God cannot change or deny himself in those things wherein he hath ingaged his Truth to the Creature he is Immutable and Infallible Another Expression is Ier. 33. 20 21. If you can break my Covenant of the day and my Covenant of the night that there shall not be day and night in their Seasons then may also my Covenant be broken with David my Servant the one shall not fail no more than the other God compareth the firmness of his Covenant with those things that are most unalterable the standing of Heaven and earth the constant Course of Night and Day The Ceremonial Law was not abrogated till fulfilled in Christ. This is Gods last Will the Terms of Life and Salvation are still the same other Conditions are not to be expected 2. In regard of the Effects These Testimonies endure for ever both in a way of Grace and Glory In a way of Grace the Word worketh in the Heart an Eternal principle and carries us beyond Temporal things 2 Cor. 4. 18. 1 Pet. 1. 23. Being born again not of corruptible Seed but incorruptible the Word of God which liveth and abideth for ever The Word worketh in us an Eternal Principle which will abide with us as the root of Everlasting Blessedness They that have served God faithfully shall not be deprived of Eternal Glory Now in Glory the Word abideth for ever for though the Souls of men are Immortal yet they have not in them a principle of Blessed Immortality Sin is the root of Eternal Perdition but Grace of Incorruption and Eternal Happiness The Wicked though the substance of their Soul and Body shall not be annihilated but upheld unto all Eternity by the mighty Power of God in the midst of Eternal Torments yet all their Glory and Pleasure shall be consumed and they themselves shall ever languish under the Wrath of an highly provoked and then irreconcilable God 1 Ioh. 2. 17. He that doth the will of God abideth for ever The wicked shall indure by the Word of God 't is a living death in regard of the execution of Eternal Wrath upon them that reject it and the performance of Everlasting Blessings which are promised to them that receive and obey it this will abide when other things fade The Word of God keepeth the Godly and
over your thoughts that the best and dearest of them you can imploy for God with great Fervency and Continuance other matters do not find better welcom nor so easily justle them out of doors By all this it appears 't is a most profitable duty Doctrine II. That a gracious heart will take all occasions to set itself a-work on holy things and sometimes in the Night David did frequently rowse up himself in the Night to solace his Soul with thoughts of God this was a frequent and cheerful exercise and imployment to him First I shall prove this argueth a gracious frame of Spirit Secondly Shew you some Reasons why we should meditate sometimes in the Night First It argueth a gracious frame of Heart to take all occasions to set our minds a-work on holy things for there are three things in it 1. Plenty of Divine Knowledge the Heart is well stocked and can entertain it self without help from abroad Psal. 16. 7. I will bless the Lord who hath given me counsel my reins also instruct me in the night season He had laid up a great deal of truth in his Reins or inward parts and when sleep fled from his eyes out it came So Prov. 6. 21. Bind them continually upon thy heart and tye them about thy neck to be always ready and present with us 'T is an excellent thing to have a good treasure in our hearts Matth. 12. 35. A good man out of the good treasure of his heart bringeth forth good things Many a mans heart is stuffed with vanity and then he is vain in his thoughts and vain in his discourses and vain in his actions yea the Word of God doth not dwell in him richly Col. 3. 16. Then your thoughts are very scant and barren as he that hath more brass farthings in his pocket then Gold or Silver will more easily pull them out at every turn Our leanness of soul and difficulty to Meditate cometh from the want of a stock of Knowledge 2. It argueth Spiritual delight and strong love Psal. 1. 2. But his delight is in the law of God and in that lawdoth he meditate day and night Did we find such Comfort as David did we would break our sleep for that end He that delights in the Word is much Conversant in it for ubi amor ibi animus All the time his necessities can spare he will spend it in these private and spiritual exercises Many mens time hangs upon their hands they do not know how to spend the Summer day nor the Winter night but one that hath a strong Affection to holy things he rather wants time such is his solace and delight in God He beginneth his heaven upon earth and all the time he can get he is spending this way but if we find no such comfort and repose of Soul in Meditation no wonder that we are so averse from it Our thoughts follow our Affections delight will set the mind a-work when others are sleeping securely he mindeth his Salvation 3. It argueth sincerity Psal. 17. 3. Thou hast proved mine heart thou hast visited me in the night thou hast tryed me and shalt find nothing In the night when darkness concealeth me from the eyes of men then I exercise my self in spiritual thoughts Many put on Religion as a disguise in the day in publick actions they personate a Zeal and act a devout part but that is to be sincere when God hath a great share in our closest privacies and retirement Secondly Sometimes take the Night as a special occasion Psal. 63. 6. When I remembred thee upon my bed and meditate on thee in the night watches Psal. 77. 6. I call to remembrance my song in the night There is a double help for Meditation in the Night 1. Solitude then we are alone and therefore fittest to Meditate when no body disturbs us 2. The silence of the night is also an help when nothing is heard or seen to distract attention Use. What Use shall we make of this We cannot lay a burden upon your Consciences and by way of absolute necessity exact these Nocturnal Meditations from you only in the General 1. As much as our strength and natural necessities will permit we should be meditating Night and Day it may be a shame to us that many Tradsmen are up afore day to follow their callings and that they should excel us The Christians had their morning Hymns to Christ in the times of Persecution 2. We may press you to the Affection though not to the Season to be stored with good matter and to have a strong delight in this work and sincerity to make Conscience of private Duties 3. If we wake in the Night and our rest is broken off then to exercise our selves in holy thoughts many times it falleth out that we cannot sleep now we should spend the time in Meditation and prayer not in vain thoughts or entertaining our selves with carnal musings or perplexing and anxious thoughts about the troubles that we are under 4. If David waked in the night how much are they to blame that snort and sleep in the day even in the time of Worship when others are entertaining Communion with God surely if they had earnest Affections this could not always be The Example of Eutychus should deter these Act. 20. And there sate in the window a young man named Eutychus being faln into a deep sleep and as Paul was long preaching he sunk down with sleep and fell down from the third loft and was taken up dead Matth. 26. 40. What could not ye watch with me one hour Doctrine III. That Meditation of the Promises is very seasonable when the answer of our Prayers is denied For this is very powerful to support our fainting hopes and to cheer and revive our drooping spirits There is support in the Word and comfort in the Word therefore we should much Meditate on the Promises at such a time The best holdfast that we have of God is by his Promise Whatsoever his dispensations be this will give satisfaction enough though you cannot find what you would his word is certain though no appearance of performance his Word is sure enough to fasten upon The grounds of Faith are more sweet and satisfactory the more they are examined and lookt upon SERMON CLXVII PSALM CXIX VER 149. Hear my voice according to thy loving-kindness O Lord quicken me according to thy judgment IN these Words you have I. Davids Prayer II. The grounds of his support or his Incouragements in asking I. His Prayer is double 1. General for Audience Hear my voice 2. Particular for Quickening Quicken me II. His Incouragements and grounds of Confidence in asking are also two 1. Gods Loving-kindness 2. His Judgment Both together imply the Loving-kindness of God manifested in the Word or expressed and ingaged in the Promises The Points are Three Doctrine I. One Blessing which the Children of God do see a need often and earnestly to ask of God is
greenness and not cut down it withereth before any other herb so are the paths of all that forget God and the Hypocrites hope shall perish A wicked Man cannot lift up his head above others for want of Gods favour to uphold him as the Rush or Flag cannot grow without mire or water the Prosperity of wicked Men when it is most green and flourishing yet wants its sustenance which is Gods Blessing This is the condition of wicked Men in the opinion of the good But what is it in his own opinion Take him in his serious and sober Moods he always liveth Miserably and expecting a Change as knowing that God oweth him an ill turn Iob 15. 21. A dreadful sound is in his ear in his prosperity the destroyer shall come upon him He trembleth secretly as if danger were alwayes near therefore cruel and mischievous against whom they fear that shut the door against their own danger for every thing that is fearful will be cruel 2. If he fall into Adversity in their Troubles they have not a God to go unto nor Promises to build upon therefore it is said Prov. 15. 29. The Lord is far from the wicked but he heareth the prayer of the Righteous Gods Children have ready access to a sure Friend and are assured of welcome and audience when they come but they are at their Wits end know not which way to turn Iob 15. 22. He believeth not that he shall return out of darkness and he is waited for of the sword that is full of Terrors of Conscience and distracting disturbing Fears hath no hope to be delivered but lives as if he had a sword hanging over his head Use. I. To shew us the Reason why the people of God when they grow wicked are often disappointed in that Salvation which they expect Isa. 59. 11. We look for judgment but there is none for Salvation but it is far from us Why because they had exceedingly sinned against God and scandalized their profession there was an horrible depravation of the People of God in those times and therefore all their Prayers and Fasts and Seekings of God could not prevail for a Deliverance Use. II. Comfort in a good Cause wherein the Godly are opposed by the Wicked there is a double Comfort 1. Because the Prosperity Power and Pride of the Wicked is not to be regarded for though they flourish for a while and all things flow in upon them according to hearts desire yet Salvation is far from them God is ingaged both for the rectitude of his Nature the quality of his Office as Judge of the World and the tenour of his Covenant to employ his Power and Terror for their Ruin and though he may for a while spare them and they take occasion from this indulgence to do more and more wickedly yet you should not be dismayed if you see them ingaged in wayes or courses that are naught and wicked you may say I know they cannot prosper in them when they are lifted up in the prosperity of their Affairs you should lift uy you hearts by Faith see a worm at the root of their happiness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. 2. Because by the Rule of Contraries if Salvation be far from the Wicked that seek not Gods Statutes then Deliverance is near to the Godly that fear God and desire to be faithful with him how hard soever their Condition seemeth to be for the present Psal. 85. 9. Surely his salvation is nigh unto them that fear him You should be confident of it they that please God cannot be always Miserable it is nearer than we think of or can see for the present there is a surely or a note of averment put upon it It is better be with the Godly in Adversity then with the wicked in Prosperity when they are men appointed as sheep for the slaughter yet there is a way of Ransom and Escape but the Wicked at their best are in the appointment of God as the stalled Oxe or as Swine fatted for Destruction when fattest then nearest to Destruction and Slaughter Secondly As to Eternal Salvation so they are in a dangerous Case 1. The Phrase here used by the Psalmist seemeth to be used to obviate their vain Conceit they think they shall do well enough and have as much to shew for Heaven as the best it is near in their Conceit but far indeed 1 Cor 6. 9. Be not deceived know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the Kingdom of God Thoughts of impunity are natural to us those that are in the ready way to Hell are apt to think they shall get Heaven at last as if God would turn Day into Night but alas it is an eternal Truth Salvation is far from the wicked 2. There is somewhat of a Meiosis in the expression less being said than is intended the Man of God saith that Salvation is far but he implyeth that Damnation is near certainly the one it doth imply the other Hab. 6. 8. The ground that beareth bryars and thorns is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nigh unto cursing They are upon the borders of Hell and ready to drop into those Eternal Flames which shall consume Gods Adversaries 3. Once again The longer they continue Wicked the further off is their Salvation every day farther off from Heaven and nearer to Hell A Godly Man the more progress he maketh in Vertue the nearer he is to his Salvation Rom. 13. 11. Now is your Salvation nearer then when ye first believed Not only nearer in point of time but nearer in the preparation of their hearts not because older but because better and so by consequence wicked men go farther and farther off and therefore they are said to treasure up Wrath against the day of Wrath Rom. 2. 5. Every Sin they commit puts them a degree further off from Salvation as every degree of Grace is a step nearer Heaven Reasons 1. The inseparable connection that is between Priviledges and Duties the Gospel offereth Salvation conditionally if we fors●…e the Condition we fall short of the Priviledge and therefore if we be wicked salvation is far from us When God took Abraham into Covenant with him he doth not tell him only what Priviledge he should enjoy but also bindeth him to walk suitably Gen. 17. 1. I am God Almighty walk before me and be thou perfect God will take care of our Safety if we will take care of our Duty the Covenant is called a Bond Ezek. 2●… 37. I will bring you into the bond of the Covenant because it hath a tye upon us as well as upon God we are not at our own Liberty to walk as we list there are bonds upon us not vincula carceris the bonds of a Prison Gins and Fetters but vincula nuptiarum the bonds of Wedlock Now they that cast away these bonds from them as the wicked do Psal. 2. 3. Let us break their bands asunder and cast away their cords from us and
Sin Oh that men did regard this as they ought considering that to despise Commandments is to despise the Lord himself and what it is for poor Worms to despise the God of Heaven and Earth Nay that God that is our Judge He hath power to cast both Body and Soul into Hell Fire the God whom we are bound by so many Ties to Obey 2. When swayed by Delight and Profit against the Course of our Duty Esau sold his Birth-right to keep him alive yet despised it Gen. 29. 31. And Heb. 12. 16. 3. The Case is more aggravated when we cast a Precept behind our Backs for a light Pleasure or small Profit the greater is our Contempt to break with God for a little Trifle sell the Righteous for a pair of shoes Use. II. Is to press us to get this blessed frame of heart to stand in Awe of the Word 1. 'T is a great curb in actual Temptations Gen. 39. 9. How then can I do this great wickedness and sin against God 2. 'T is a great help in Reading and Hearing Acts 10. 33. Now therefore we are all present before God to hear all things that are commanded thee of God 3. A great help in Humiliation and suing out our Pardon Psal. 130. 3 4. If thou shouldest mark iniquity who could stand but there is forgiveness with thee that thou mayest be feared For Means to get this Awful frame of Heart 1. Faith is necessary sundry Articles of Religion have influence upon it Gods Power Matth. 10. 28. Fear not them that can kill the body but fear him that can cast both body and soul into hell fire God's Providence that he observeth humane Affairs and accordingly doth Reward and Punish Hos. 7. 2. And they consider not in their hearts that I remember all their wickedness now their doings have beset them about before my face And Heb. 2. 2. And every transgression and every disobedience received a just recompence of reward A day of Judgment Rom. 2. 5. But after thy hardness and impenitent heart treasurest up wrath against the day of wrath and the revelation of the righteous judgment of God Eternal recompences of Heaven and Hell or the state of the World to come Those who believe not these things are bold and venturous and out of a daring Confidence will put it to the Trial whose Word shall stand Gods or theirs Ier. 44. 28. And all the remnant of Iudah that are gone into the Land of Egypt to sojourn there shall know whose word shall stand mine or theirs which shall be fulfilled or made good Heb. 11. 8. By faith Noah being warned of God of things not seen as yet being moved with fear prepared an ark to the saving of his house 2. Love is necessary for Reverence ariseth from Love David was afraid to displease so good a God to whom bound by so many Ties Surely Love breedeth a greater tenderness than a bare sense of danger Hos. 3. 5. Fear the Lord and his goodness That which maketh a wicked man presumptuous maketh a Child of God Awful he hath to do with a good God and therefore would not offend him nor cross his Will 3. An humble penitent Spirit is necessary for this frame of Heart Iosiah when he heard the words of the Law he rent his Clothes 2 Kings 22. 11 19. Because thy h●…rt was tender and thou humbledst thy self before the Lord when thou heardest what I spake against this place I have heard thee saith the Lord. And 2 Chron. 34. 27. Because thy heart was tender c. Troubled at Gods Anger to some nothing is of less Consideration with them 4. A good stock of Knowledge or frame of Divine Truths Psal. 119. 11. Thy word have I hid in my heart that I might not sin against thee Prov. 6. 21 22. Bind them continually upon thy heart and tye them about thy neck when thou goest it shall lead thee when thou sleepest it shall keep thee and when thou wakest it shall talk with thee A Treasure of knowledge not only got by heart but impressed on us by his Spirit the great New-Covenant-blessing Heb. 8. 10. is Gods Law written upon the Heart by the finger of the Spirit as before on Tables of stone on the directive and imperative powers the Heart and Mind and this maketh us conformable to it in Heart and Life Gods Law is said to be in the Heart of the Godly that maketh them willing to obey Psal. 40. 8. His law is in my heart Tender to offend Psal. 37. 31. The law of God is in his heart none of his steps shall slide He loveth what is commanded and hateth what is forbidden he hath a sense of it to keep from usual guilt 5. Advised Consideration and Watchfulness Let thine eyes look right on and thine eye-lids streight before thee ponder the path of thy feet and let all thy wayes be established When you are about to do any thing examine and consider it whether God alloweth it yea or no Will it please or displease honour or dishonour God If he disallow forbear how safe profitable or comfortable soever it be if he allow it then engage this holy Fear must never be laid aside Phil. 2. 12. Work out your salvation with fear and trembling 1 Pet. 1. 17. Pass the time of your sojourning here in fear SERMON CLXXVI PSALM CXIX VER 1●…2 I Rejoice at Thy Word as one that findeth great Spoil IN the Text First An Assertion or Declaration of his delight in the Word I Rejoice at Thy Word Secondly An Illustration of it by a Similitude taken from those who have gotten some notable Prey and Booty as one that findeth great Spoil First The Similitude is very expressive taken from the joy which a Conquerour in Battel doth find in the Spoil of his defeated Enemies The same similitude is used Isaiah 9. 3. They joy before thee according to the joy in Harvest as men rejoice when they divide the Spoil He speaketh there of the highest joy in a time of Peace joy of the harvest is the greatest joy In a time of Warr victory obtained after an hazardous Fight and rich spoil and booty gotten to heighten that joy several circumstances concur 1. Deliverance after a doubtful conflict No man goeth to War but carryeth his life in his hands and the event is very uncertain now when 't is unexpectedly determined on our side there is great rejoycing 2. The joy of victory especially to be victorious in a Battel 3. There is Booty and Spoil whereby men are enriched and so profit as well as pleasure 4. The joy of Honour and Triumph over faln Enemies 5. Peace and Ease from toil All these make the joy of victorious men in a Battel to be a great joy Secondly 'T was a fit similitude for David to use who was a great Warrior and so a man not unacquainted with the joy of victory A gracious heart spiritualizeth every occasion that falleth out in their ordinary
we can bring our knowledg to act and have it for our use upon all occasions it urgeth us to practice Jam. 1. 25. Being not a forgetful hearer but a doer Most of our sins are sins of forgetfulness and incogitancy Peter would never have been so bold and daring and done what he did if he had remembred Christs prediction The Text saith Luk. 22. 61. When he remembred he wept bitterly A bad memory is the occasion of much mischief to the soul. When we do not call Truths to mind in their season and when fit occasion and opportunity is offered Memory is an handmaid to Understanding and Conscience and keeps Truths and brings them forth when called for USE is to press us to Caution Let us not forget the Word Helps to memory are 1. Attention Men remember what they heed and regard Prov. 4. 21. Attend to my sayings keep them in the midst of thy heart Where there is attention there will be retention Oh lay up truths with much earnestness and care Sensitive memory is seated in the hinder part of the head as one would say in a Chamber backward from the noise of the street Now oh lay up Truth safe and lay it out when ever you have need But Rational memory lyeth near the Understanding and Conscience in the midst of thine heart Reverence in the admission of the word helps us in the keeping of it Heb. 2. 1. Let us take heed to the things which we have heard lest at any time they slip from us If we did receive it with more heed we would retain it with more constancy lay them up keep them choicely 2. Affection that is a great friend to memory VVhat we esteem most we best remember Omnia quae curant senes meminerunt An old man will not forget where he laid his bag of gold Delight and Love will renew and revive the object upon our thoughts Here in the Text we have this Truth asserted I will delight my self in thy statutes I will not forget thy word Affection to Truths cometh from the application In a publick Edict a man will be sure to carry away what is proper to his case 3. Meditation We must be often viewing and meditating of what we have laid up in the memory It availeth not to the health of the body to eat much but to digest what is eaten Tumultuary reading and hearing without Meditation is like greedy swallowing much meat When little is thought on it doth not turn to profit This concocteth and digesteth what we have heard The more a thing is revolved in the mind the deeper impression it maketh 4. Beware of inuring the mind to vain thoughts for this distracts it and hindereth the impression of things upon it The face is not seen in running-waters nor can things be written in the memory unless the mind be close and fixed Lead is capable of engraving because it is firm and solid but Quicksilver because it is fluid will not admit it An inconsistent wandering mind reapeth little fruit from what is read or heard 5. Order is an help to memory Heads of Doctrine are as Cells wherein to bestow all things that are heard from the word He that is well instructed in the Principles of Religion will most easily and firmly remember Divine Truths Methodus est catena memoriae to link Truths one to another that we may consider them in their proportion 6. Get a lively sense of what you hear or read and you will remember it by a good token Psal. 119. 93. I will never forget thy precepts for by them thou hast quickned me They that are quickned by a Sermon will never forget such a Sermon 7. Holy Conference the speaking often of good things keeps them in the heart and the keeping of them there causeth us to speak to those that are about us 8. Get the memory sanctified as well as other faculties and pray for the Spirit for that faculty is corrupted as well as others SERMON XVIII PSAL. CXIX 17. Deal bountifully with thy servant that I may live and keep thy word IN the former part we heard of the virtue and excellency of the word and therefore how much the Saints desire to understand it meditate of it speak of it and transfer it into their practice Now whosoever will resolve upon such a course will necessarily be put upon prayer for mark how David's purposes and prayers are intermingled I will and I will and then presently prayeth again Deal bountifully with thy servant that I may live and keep thy word In this request observe 1. It is generally expressed together with his own relation to God Deal bountifully with thy servant 2. It is particularly explain'd wherein he would have this bounty expressed 1. In the prorogation of his life that I may live 2. In the continuance of his grace And keep thy word The one in order to the other David doth not simply pray for life but in order to such an end and the general request concerneth both parts yea rather the latter than the former That whilst I live I may keep thy word as counting that to be the greatest benefit or argument of Gods bounty to have an heart framed to the obedience of his will I might observe many things as 1. What a great honour it is to be Gods servant David a great King giveth himself this title Thy servant And Constantine counted it a greater honour to be a Christian than to be Head of the Empire 2. That all we have or expect cometh from Gods bounty to us So doth David express himself Deal bountifully with thy servant as intimating not only the measure but the rise and source of what he expected from God 3. That among all the benefits which we expect from the bounty of God this is one of the greatest To have an heart to keep his word 4. Gods word must not only be understood but obeyed for this is the meaning of keeping the word Joh. 14. 21. He that hath my commandments and keepeth them c. hath implyeth knowledg we must have them before we can keep them but when we have them we must keep them and do what we know But omitting all these points which will be more fitly discussed elsewhere I shall only point out two Lessons 1. The Cause of life and that is Gods Bounty 2. The End and Scope of Life Gods Service 1. The Cause of life Deal bountifully with thy servant that I may live Observe The prorogation of our lives is not the fruit of our merits but the free grace of God 1. Long life is in it self a blessing and so promised though more in the Old Testament than in the New when Eternity was more sparingly revealed That it is promised as a blessing is evident Prov. 28. 16. He that hateth covetousness shall prolong his days And in the fifth Commandment Exod. 20. 12. That thy days may be long in the land of the living So Psal. 91.
16. With long life will I satisfie him and shew him my salvation not only heaven hereafter but long life here It is in it self a benefit a mercy to the godly and the wicked To the godly that they may not be gathered till ripe for God hath set a mark upon it Prov. 16. 31. The hoary head is a crown of glory if it be found in a way of righteousness It is some kind of resemblance of God who is the Ancient of days It was a title of honour Paul the aged It giveth many advantages of glorifying God and doing good to others It is no small benefit to those that employ it well To those that are in a state of sin the continuance of life is a mercy as it affords them time to repent and reconcile themselves to God And the contrary is threatned as a curse Eccles. 8. 13. He shall not prolong his days because he feareth not God For wicked men to have the Sun go down at noon-day and to be cut off before their preparations or expectations and so thrown headlong into Hell by a speedy death is a great misery 2. It is such a mercy as we have by Gods gift He is interessed in it upon a double account 1. There is a constant Providential influence and supportation by which we are maintained in life and without which all creatures vanish into nothing As the beams of the Sun are no longer continued in the air than the Sun shineth or as the impress is retained no longer upon the waters than the Seal is kept on When God suspendeth his Providential influence and supportation all doth vanish and disappear Heb. 1. 3. He upholdeth all things by the word of his power as a weighty thing is held up in the air by the hand that sustaineth it or the vessels of the house hang upon a nail in a sure place God that made all things by his Word upholdeth all things by the same Word A Word made the World and can undo the World So Acts 17. 28. In him we live and move and have our being We cannot draw breath without him for a moment as the pipe hath no breath but what the Musician puts into it We can neither see nor hear nor eat nor drink without this intimate support and influence from him The Scripture sets it out by a mans holding a thing in his hand Job 12. 10. In whose hand is the soul of every living thing and the breath of all mankind Now if God do but loosen his hand his Almighty grasp all cometh to nothing Job 6. 9. Let him loose his hand and cut me off Life and the comforts of life depend upon God in every kind 2. There is a watchful eye and care of his Providence over his people whereby their life is preserved against all the dangers wherewith it is assaulted God taketh care of all his creatures Psal. 36. 6. He preserveth man and beast but man much more 1 Cor. 9. 9. Doth God take care of Oxen He dealeth bountifully with his Enemies but much more doth he preserve the feet of his Saints 1 Sam. 2. 9. The care of his Providence hath its degrees it is more intensively exercised about things of worth and value and most of all about the life of his Saints When Satan had a commission to exercise Iob first his person was exempted Job 1. 12. Upon himself put not forth thy hand Next his life Job 2. 6. Behold he is in thy hand but save his life A godly man hath an invisible guard and hedg round about him we are not sensible of it but Satan who is our Enemy he is sensible of it when he would make his assault he cannot find a gap and breach till God open it to him Both these notions are sufficient to possess us how much God is interessed in prolonging our lives 3. The next thing is That we have it by the meer bounty and free grace of God It is not from his strict remunerative Justice but his kind love and tender mercy The air we breathe in we have it not by merit but by grace Lam. 3. 22. It is of the Lords mercies that we are not consumed because his compassions fail not The Reasons are two 1. We deserve nothing at his hand 2. We deserve the contrary 1. We cannot merit of God Job 22. 2. Can a man be profitable to God as he that is wise is profitable to himself Job 35. 7. If thou be righteous what givest thou him or what receiveth he at thy hand Whatever God doth for creatures he doth it freely because he cannot be obliged or preingaged by us In innocency Adam could impetrare but not mereri obtain it by Covenant not challenge by desert Therefore God conferreth as freely as he createth 2. If God would deal with us upon terms of Merit we cannot give him a valuable compensation for temporal life Gen. 32. 10. I am less than the least of all thy mercies None of Gods Mercies can simply be said to be little whatever cometh from the great God should be great in our value and esteem as a small remembrance from a great King Yet in comparison between the blessings one may be said to be least the other greatest Temporal life with its appendages compared with spiritual and eternal is in the rank of his least mercies God giveth life to the Plants to the Trees to the Beasts of the field and yet when we and our deservings come into the ballance we are found wanting I am not worthy c. all our righteousness doth not deserve the air we breathe in It is so defective if a man were to pay for his life it could not merit the continuance of it 2. We have deserved the contrary we have put our selves out of Gods protection by sin death way-layed us when we were in our Mothers womb and as soon as we were born there was a sentence in force against us death came upon all for that all have sinned Rom. 5. 12. and still we continue the forfeiture and every day provoke God to cut us off so that it is a kind of pardoning-mercy that continueth us every moment Of this we are most sensible in case of danger and sickness when there is but a step between us and death for then the old bond beginneth to be put in suit and God cometh to execute the sentence of the law and deliverance in such a case is called forgiveness and remission and that even to the wicked and impenitent as Psal. 78. 38. And he being full of compassion forgave their iniquity and destroyed them not it is called a remission improperly because it was a reprieve for the time from the temporal judgment it was not an executing the sentence or a destroying the sinner presently and that not from any thing in the sinner but from Gods pity over him as his creature But now a godly man hath a true pardon renewed at such time and he is