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B08803 Several discourses concerning the actual Providence of God. Divided into three parts. The first, treating concerning the notion of it, establshing the doctrine of it, opening the principal acts of it, preservation and government of created beings. With the particular acts, by which it so preserveth and governeth them. The second, concerning the specialities of it, the unseachable things of it, and several observable things in its motions. The third, concerning the dysnoēta, or hard chapters of it, in which an attempt is made to solve several appearances of difficulty in the motions of Providence, and to vindicate the justice, wisdom, and holiness of God, with the reasonableness of his dealing in such motions. / By John Collinges ... Collinges, John, 1623-1690. 1678 (1678) Wing C5335; ESTC R233164 689,844 860

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Apostle tells us Rom. 11.11 12. They did not stumble that they might fall but through their fall salvation came unto the Gentiles for to provoke them to jealousie The Apostles upon their going out to preach to the Gentiles gives this account of it Forasmuch as you have judged your selves unworthy of eternal life that was by not receiving the Gospel we turn unto the Gentiles What shall I need say more there is no soul brought to Heaven but is an eminent instance of this If they had not sinned they would have no need of any pardon or justification from the guilt of sin no need of a Saviour or Mediator God suffereth the souls of his People to be concluded under the guilt of sin that he might have mercy upon them It is also an ordinary observation of Divines That God often suffereth people to fall into some gross and scandalous sins that he might take that advantage to awaken them to repentance and make use of their falls to a rising again to a new life and this is often seen in those that have lived civilly and might be prone to trust to their own Moral Righteousness But I shall inlarge no further in the Justification of so obvious an Observation It follows that I should shew you the reasonableness of this motion of Divine Providence 1. The truth is in the first place it is hard to conceive how otherwise some of Gods greatest works of Providence could have been produced What would the Revelation of a Covenant of Grace have signified to the world if the Covenant of Works had not first been violated by the first mans transgression How could else any man imagine that the salvation of the world should have been accomplished by the death of Christ if God had not made use of the wicked action of those who took him and by wicked hands crucified him The Apostle assureth us that in all they did against our Lord they did but execute what the counsel of the Lord had predetermined should be done If sin did not abound how should grace much more abound Rom. 5. In the pardon of sins the justification of a guilty soul the Scripture tells us That all are concluded under sin that the promise by faith in Jesus Christ might be given to them that believe What should we say to the great work of Providence in trying his Saints by afflictions and persecutions from the hands of violent men God maketh use of the sins of Persecutors to perfect his Saints by the exercises of their faith and patience it could not be without the sins of those who persecute others for righteousness sake 2. Again God by this getteth himself a great deal of glory I have spoke something to this under the seventh Observation but let me here add a little 1. He gets himself the glory of his power There is a fancy hath possessed the Philosophers of the world That metals of a baser nature may by art be turned into nobler metals brass c. into gold and they will tell you that some such thing hath been done and aboundance of time and money hath been spent by the vain and covetous Philosophers of the world to little purpose to find out this Philosophers stone as they call it but supposing such a thing possible yet there must be some similar quality to help or they will not pretend to any such thing no Philosopher ever yet pretended by all his Chymistry to fetch gold out of a dunghil But now in sin there is nothing of a similar quality to the glory of God there is nothing so opposite to the glory of God as the sins of men and women For God to fetch water out of a rock argued great power to raise up Abraham children from the stones of the field it must speak great power but yet not so much as for God to fetch his own glory out of peoples sins There is in sin an infinite opposition to the glory of God nothing so diametrically opposite to God's honour and glory as sin is Sampson put forth a riddle Out of the eater came forth meat and out of the strong came forth sweetness But what is this riddle to that which I am speaking of for the glory of God to come forth out of the dunghil the woful dunghil of the worst of mens actions for God to work out his own righteousness out of the vilest actions of men O it speaketh an infinite Power in God! it is a greater work to fetch light out of darkness I will saith God get me glory upon Pharaoh For God to get himself glory out of Pharaoh's hard heart was more than to get his people water out of an hard rock 2. God by it gets himself the glory of his infinite wisdom I told you in my former discourse that he is accounted the best Politician that can make the best use of all humours and serve his own designs even of his utter Enemies this is the top of a Politicians wisdom How great then must the Wisdom of God appear in this nothing hath such an enmity to God and his glory as sin hath Job speaketh it to the great glory and honour of God Job 5.13 He taketh the wise in their own craftiness and the counsels of the crafty are carried head long It speaketh the wisdom of a man that he can make use of the capacious quality of a bird or a beast to catch a prey for him thus the faulconer maketh use of the hawk the huntsman of the dog the fisher-man of a fowl to catch birds or beasts or fish for him This I say speaketh the wisdom of a man above other creatures O how it speaketh the admirable Wisdom of God that he can make use of the worst belchings of lusts in mens hearts the most vile and rebellious actions of men and out of them fetch his own glory 3. But in the last place God above all doth by this magnifie the riches and freeness of his grace This is that wherein the Lord delights to have glory he predestinated adopted us c. to the praise of the glory of his grace Eph. 1.6 If God had taken man out of a state of innocency into Heaven we should never have admired free-grace so much as now it marvellously affects the heart of a child of God to see God make use of his falls of his sin and corruption and manifold rebellions to make his free-grace exceeding glorious We should never so much admire free-grace and mercy if we were not so great transgressors This is it which maketh grace precious in our eyes when we cry out of the belly of hell and he heareth us Thus far I have shewed you that God maketh a very ordinary use and a very remarkable use of peoples sins But I also added that it was a spotless use and thus it must be if God maketh it For he that is of purer eyes than that he can behold iniquity must be of a purer will
VERA EFFIGIES IOHANNIS COLLINGS S.T.P. ANNO DOM 1678. AETATIS 55. Man 's but a shadow and a Picture is That shadow's shadow yet don't judge amiss Though here you onely on the shadow look What followes read The Substance is i'th'book R. White ad V●●um delin et sculp 167● SEVERAL DISCOURSES Concerning the Actual Providence OF GOD. DIVIDED INTO THREE PARTS The First Treating concerning the Notion of it establishing the Doctrine of it opening the principal ACTS of it Preservation and Government of created Beings With the particular Acts by which it so preserveth and governeth them The Second Concerning the Specialties of it the Vnsearchable things of it and several Observable things in its motions The Third concerning the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or hard Chapters of it in which an attempt is made to solve several appearances of difficulty in the motions of Providence and to vindicate the Justice Wisdom and Holiness of God with the reasonableness of his dealing in such Motions By JOHN COLLINGES D.D. LONDON Printed for Tho. Parkhurst and are to be sold by Edward Giles Bookseller in St. Andrews Parish in Norwich 1678. To the Right Honourable the Lady Frances Thompson MADAM I Beseech your Honour to believe me telling you that I have been these thirteen years ever since I had the happiness to know your Ladiship watching an opportunity as to let your Ladiship know the sense I have of the obligations you have been pleased to lay upon me so to let the world know the honour I have for your Ladiship growing up from my first observations of you which was in your Ladiships near approaches to and in your state of Widowhood I then observed Madam that your Ladiship like the child of so Honourable and pious Parents had very early entertained just noble and most honourable thoughts of the living God which had produced in you as early a choice of him as your God and of his ways as your ways with a zeal beyond the proportion which could be expected from your years Having therefore perfected the following Discourses I congratulated my self when I had thought of your Ladiship as a fit person to entitle to them and the rather because your Ladiship having not yet seen many years shall I hope have many days to observe the motions of Divine Providence both as to Polities and Persons and from thence both to conclude how true those few Observations are which I have made and to give some more eminent Divine many a subject more of this nature from your own observation Madam in the few years you have yet lived you have seen as many and as quick and inexpected rotations of Providence as the like number of years have at any time as yet produced or are like to produce and yet the wheel seems to run nimbly and a further multitude of years may add to your Ladiships wisdom in this thing I crave leave most humbly to recommend to your Honour as the observation of Issues so the confirmation of Divine Promises and Threatnings in the fulfilling of them I doubt not but your Ladiship will every day see that it is that God who cannot lye who hath commanded his Ministers at all times to say unto the righteous it shall be well with them for they shall eat of the fruit of their doings and to say Wo unto the wicked it shall be ill with them for the reward of their hands shall be given them If Madam the actual Providence of God at any time seemeth to look another way it is but keeping your patient foot a while at the Promise and Providence like the Bee will come home to the word of Promise or Threatning bringing along with it a body laden with honey to reward the godly and righteous man and a sting to smite and pierce those through who have wrought wickedness and provoked a jealous God Our blessed Lord Madam tells us Joh. 17.3 That it is life eternal for men to know God and Jesus Christ whom he hath sent The promise or predication in the proposition of that Text makes it evident that by the knowledg of the Father and Jesus Christ is meant more than the bare comprehension of the nature and things of God in our understanding as indeed knowledg and most other terms of sense do ordinarily signifie in Scripture the Greek complying with its elder sister the Hebrew which hath a great penury of words so that to know God and Christ in the true sense of that text is not only in our understandings to comprehend what may be and is necessary to be known of God but to adore love fear him believe in him to chuse him for our God In short it comprehends all those acts of our minds which are either just consequents or may rationally be inferred as duties from a just understanding and due comprehension of him but in regard according to the workings of our reasonable natures those acts will not indeed cannot be exerted without a praevious apprehension of him proportionable to what he indeed is and so as to make him an adequate object for our affections a just comprehension of God in our understandings is necessary in order to those other acts of internal homage wherein the Creature standeth indebted to his great Creator So that Solomon Prov. 19.2 did but conclude rationally That the soul should be without knowledg is not good And the great Apostle of the Gentiles askt but a reasonable question Rom. 10. How shall they believe on him of whom they have not heard All Knowledg comes into the Soul either by the Exterior senses or by reasoning and discourse or thirdly by Divine impression and revelation The two former are the more ordinary the latter a rarer and more extraordinary means of knowledg in these latter days since God hath spoken to us by his Son I speak of Knowledg strictly taken for the comprehension of things in our understanding for if we take it in the large sense even now mentioned neither sense nor reason is a sufficient mean to it By sense we can directly comprehend nothing of God for who hath seen him at any time he is an Incorporeal immaterial substance and cometh not under the cognisance of any sense nor indeed can we so know any spiritual being but in regard the effects both of him who is the Father of Spirits and of spiritual beings that are creatures are sensible Our Senses afford us oft-times an auxiliary help from which our reason draweth just conclusions concerning God from Principles which it at first it establisheth by the help of sense For example That the World is and Man is are matters of sense Now Reason concludes Nothing unless a first being can be the cause of its own existence Hence it gathers there must be a God a first being and a first cause Again when Sense hath shewed us Man a reasonable creature Reason works and tells us He that made this noble Creature must needs be more noble
others preserving your lives your health blessing you in your relations and estates and trades prospering and succeeding you in your undertakings above all what he hath done for your souls more than for the souls of others plucking you as brands out of the fire snatching you as the Angels did Lot out of Sodom 3. Lastly This observation of special Providence will more eminently engage and quicken you to duty God expects it from you as you may see by Moses his discourse to the Israelites in the four or five first Chapters of Deuteronomy and you will find your hearts more enlarged in duty from the sense and apprehension of them But of this more under the next branch of Application Secondly Vse 3 This Doctrine of special Providence calleth upon all mankind in general that part of them which make up the Church of God more especially and yet more particularly those that fear the Lord for more special homage and duty to God those gradations you know I observed in special Providence The objects the general objects of it I told you were Angels and Men. I baulked the discourse of Gods special Providence in the preservation and Government of the good Angels as that the particulars of which we know little of so neither are they those to whom we are to preach neither do those blessed Spirits need any of our exhortations they spontaneously perpetually and without ceasing give honour and glory to God and do his will and this in a degree proportioned to that special Providence by which they are both preserved and governed We are bid to pray that we might be able on earth to do the will of God as it is done in heaven it is to men to the sons and daughters of men that I am to speak 1. Let all the sons and daughters of men then praise God and glorifie him in a degree proportioned to that special Providence which God exerciseth toward them in general You will say what is that I answer in the general It is more than that which God exerciseth towards any degree of creatures that is beneath them There are three orders of creatures beneath man 1. Such as have only Being no life as the Earth the Waters c. 2. Such as have Being and life but no sense as berbs and plants 3. Such as have Being and life and sense but no reason as beasts birds fishes creeping things of all these God taketh a care as I have before shewed you but doth God take care for Oxen saith the Apostle in my Text God exerciseth a more particular special Providence for all the children of men than for any of these Then certainly every man is obliged to honour and glorifie God more than these do There is none of these but glorifieth God in its kind The Heavens declare his glory The little Bee and Silk-worm glorifieth God as they are his workmanship and indued with excellent qualities which speak the infinite wisdom of God every spire of grass glorifies God as it sheweth it self to the world and challengeth all the art of men to make such a thing Nay these inanimate and brute creatures use all the faculties and qualities with which they were created to the end for which God indued them with them Alas the best of men come much short none liveth and sinneth not None lives who useth not some of the faculties which God hath given him for his honour and glory to his disservice and dishonour Wherein then can man live up to the special Providence that watcheth over preserveth and governeth him I answer In the voluntary directions of his words thoughts and actions to the glory of God This no creature but man can do they have no reasonable souls they act meerly ex necessitate naturae according to the necessity of nature imposed upon them by the Law of creation God indeed hath an honour from every man as he is created in the image of God and is a noble and glorious creature One man may more speak the praises of God than another as he is indued with a greater wit or wisdom hath more dexterity sagacity more excellent parts than another but while the poor creatures heart is not right-set and bent and directed to the glory of God wherein doth he more than an Element or a brute Beast that man only in this excelleth a Stone or a brute Beast that with purpose of heart out of choice and designedly honoureth God and quotus quisque est how rare is the man in the world that sets his heart to bring God glory by his manlike actions God hath indeed an accidental glory by most mens actions but it is rather to be said that God is glorified by them than that they glorifie God Now what a sad reflection this is for a wicked man to think that his horse more glorifies God than he doth There 's no man liveth but partaketh more of a special Providence than any other creature not of his order certainly God expects from all of you some service proportionable to this particular Providence Say to your selves sometimes What do I more for God than the flower of my Garden the grass in my field the beast in my stall and see if the answer of your souls to such a Question will not reflect a shame upon you O study your special Providences and live up to them remember that where God hath given much he expects much But rest not here do not only study the special Providences which you are under as men and which are common to all men with your selves or to the most of men with your selves but observe and study also the particular Providences that have followed you for which God expecteth a return It may be you have more wit more wisdom than others you have a greater dexterity in business God hath better provided for you given you a better estate more comforts in your relations c. Oh live up to these Specialties of Providence you will expect it from those to whom you have at any time done any good you are mistaken if you think that God doth not expect it from you 2. This more especially calleth to you who are the members of the visible Church for a more special consecration and dedication of your selves unto God You have heard that the Church is an eminent object of special Providence many ways many special Promises are made to it and that is the body of people of the world whom God careth for see then what a particular obligation lieth upon all professors all members of the visible Church to give God honour and glory You are the only people in the world to whom the Oracles of God are committed you are the pillar of truth you are those who do alone enjoy the Ordinances of God you are the people in the midst of whom God dwelleth upon whom the eye of God is from one end of the year to the other Certainly there lies an high obligation
hearts but also as by it his people are more prepared for the receiving of mercy The Psalmist saith He prepareth the heart and then causeth his ear to hear their heart is prepared by their exercise of grace as of other grace so especially faith and patience they become more low in their own eyes they learn more to trust and depend upon God and to wait upon him in the way of his Judgments as the Prophet speaks Now all exercise of grace bringeth glory to God all of it is the fruit of his Spirit it is obedience to his Will it carrieth with it a recognition of the power wisdom goodness and Soveraignty of God The longer God deferreth a mercy the more time his people have to search and try their ways to humble themselves under the mighty hand of God to exercise their faith their patience c. the more he hath of his peoples prayers c. Fourthly I may yet add one thing more he hath by this means the glory of his Justice both from his own people and from wicked men By suffering his own people to be brought very low he proclaimeth to the World that he will not suffer the best of them to go unpunished but as to them he will approve himself a God of purer eyes than to behold any iniquity and by letting Sinners run on to the heighth before he pulleth them down their wickedness also becomes so exorbitant and conspicuous to the World that the neutral part of the World shall both acknowledg the righteousness of God in bringing them down to an utter destruction and delivering of his oppressed people out of their hands But this is enough to have spoken in justification of the Observation and giving you some reasonable account of it This in the first place may let us see Vse 1 how little means is considerable in the great effects of Divine Providence Humane means are by us to be used when Providence affords them but God ordinarily doth his works either without them or when there is but little of them to use Not by might nor by power but by my Spirit saith the Lord. The stone was cut out of the mountain without hands which smote the image on his feet which were part of iron and clay and brake them in pieces Dan. 2.34 and indeed if this Observation is true if God ordinarily delivers his people when they are at the lowest and brings down his Enemies when they are at the highest humane means must have but a little share in Gods works when men are at lowest there is least visible means to lift them up and when God's Enemies are at highest there is least appearance of humane visible means to pull them down Now this as you have heard is the time when God ordinarily works and therefore our eyes should be off the arm of flesh What is a Mountain before Gods Zorobabel How little of humane means did God use in bringing his people out of Egypt and Babylon There is never greater improbability of any great work of Providence than in the greatest probability of humane means Gideon's twenty two thousand were too many for God Let us then learn how to look upon how to use means Look upon them as signifying nothing without Gods efficacy use them as not trusting in them or to them Raise up no great hopes upon great probabilities in respect of them The people of God are never more deceived than in their judgments upon such appearances Many times the thing appears too probable to humane eyes for God to suffer it at that time to come to issue he should have little honour little glory from the effect if he should give it men would say that God had saved them by their own bow and sword and staff God will have it otherwise When he turneth again the captivity of Sion his people shall be like them that dream Psalm 126.1 He will so destroy his Enemies that they shall cry out Let us flee for God fighteth for the Israelites against the Egyptians Exod. 14.25 He will so bring to pass all his great works both of Judgment and mercy that they shall sing that Song Psalm 115. v. 1 Not unto us O Lord not unto us but unto thy Name be given the glory Hence learn in the second place Vse 2 That the Sinner can never be secure nay is then least secure when he judgeth himself most secure Gods people value themselves upon the Promises but wicked men value themselves upon Providences and judg of their security from their prosperity successes and interests They never crow but when they have made their nests in the Cedars and fixed their habitations on some strong Mountain which they think shall never be moved They are never less secure they are never nearer to ruin than now For when they shall say peace and safety then sudden destruction cometh upon them as upon a woman in travel and they shall not escape 1 Thes 5.3 When Babylon was given to pleasures and dwelled carelesly and said she should be as a Lady for ever she was and there was none besides her she should never sit as a widow nor know the loss of children then it was that God tells her that both these things should come upon her in one day both the loss of children and widowhood Isa 47.7 Dan. 4.30 When Nebuchadnezzar was in his Ruff walking in the Palace of the Kingdom of Babylon and saying Is not this great Babylon that I have built for the house of my Kingdom by the might of my power and for the honour of my Majesty Even then while the word was in the Kings mouth saith the Text ver 31 there fell a voyce from heaven saying O King Nebuchadnezzar to thee be it spoken the Kingdom is departed from thee A Sinner can be secure in no estate at no time If God hath lifted him up he hath reason to fear his ruin is near If God be pulling him down he hath reason to fear that he is sinking into Hell God delights to grapple with a prospering fortified interested Sinner and to let him then when he speaketh most proudly know that wherein he speaketh proudly he will be above him Let not therefore any Sinner trust to his prosperity Thirdly Vse 3 From hence we may learn much of our duty both with reference to the high and prosperous estate of Gods Enemies and with reference to God in the low and mean estate of his Church and people It is one of the great temptations which attend us in this life to see the wicked prospering and flourishing like a green bay-tree It troubled the most eminent Servants of God we read of in Scripture Job David Jeremiah Habbakuk We had need therefore learn our duty in such an hour You will say What is it I answer 1. Not to envy them 2. Not to fret and repine against God 3. Not to take part with them 1. Not to envy them It is what the Psalmist
and ungodly There is a time when the vilest are exalted and the wicked walk on every side This is their hour and the power of darkness as our Saviour saith Luk. 22.53 And there is a time again When ten men shall take hold out of all languages of the nations even shall take hold of the skirt of him that is a Jew saying We will go with you for we have heard that God is with you Zech. 8.23 There was a time when the seed of Jacob prospered in Egypt Joseph was advanced and he was a protection to them A while after the wheel turns and there arose a King that knew not Joseph and then the Israelitish spoke in the wheel of Providence was at the ground but in a little while up it gets again The Children of Israel go out of Egypt with colours flying and drums beating and Pharaoh and his Host were drowned in the red Sea This was now their hour But soon after the wheels turn again and they are almost devoured in the wilderness But as soon as they were on the other side of Jordan they were again in a prosperous state Soon after they were oppressed first by one Pagan Adversary and then by another but in Davids and Solomons time it was again an halcion-time with them And when they were in Canaan that party of them after Solomons time which adhered to God had their vicissitudes as they had good or bad Princes so it fared with them In the seventy years of the Babilonish Captivity they had a very sad time but when that was out they had again a kind hour and in the very time of the Babilonish Captivity they doubtless had great vicissitudes and the case was much different with them when the three Children were thrown into the fiery fornace from what it was when they were advanced to great honours or when Daniel was thrown into the den of Lyons from what it was when he was made the first president When they were come again into their own land it was not above fifty years before Ahasuerosh disturbeth their settlement Ezra 4.6 After a few years more they perfect the building both of the Temple and City Soon after they were oppressed first by the Grecians when it was a very sad time with them then by the Romans under whom they enjoyed more liberty till after the crucifying of Christ soon after which God said to them Lo ammi you are not my people The like observation might be made of the Christian Church-Catholick and the several parts of it God will not always chide nor keep his anger for ever Psal 103.9 The needy shall not always be forgotten Psal 9.18 he hath said He will not contend for ever neither will he be always wroth The same observation might be made of particular persons and parties fearing God Jacob had his time of hard service and his time of liberty Joseph one while is a prisoner another time the second man in the Kingdom David had a time when he was hunted like a partridg on the mountains and his time when he ruled happily and peaceably over all Israel and Judah 2. The second part of my Observation was that as to these good things the Actual Proridence of God ordinarily moveth to the seeming advantage of wicked men I say seeming advantage upon a double account 1. For first Wicked men have no real advantage from any good things they have their morsels are all dipt in wrath and they turn to their real loss and disadvantage as they draw out their lusts and aggravate their eternal condemnation 2. I much question whether they have that seeming advantage which they appear to have If we consider the disproportion in the numbers of such as fear the Lord and such as fear him not I believe we shall find God as to the things of this life do as much for his people as for wicked men It is true we see more wicked men than good men in places of honour and power we see more of them than of these prosper in the world and grow great and rich but therefore what disproportion is there betwixt the number of the one and of the other But however certain it is that the servants of God have many of them found this a rock of offence to them and have stumbled upon this temptation so did Job chap. 21. David Psal 73. Jeremiah Jer. 12.1 Habbakuk c. And this appearance hath been a temptation to others to deny or at least to dispute the Providence of God I shall therefore give you a more particular account of this when I come to open the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or hard Chapters of Divine Providence In the mean time I take notice of it only as matter for our observation and supposing that it is so I shall hereafter shew you that it is but a reasonable motion of Providence But truly upon a stricter observation I believe we shall find Divine Providence as to these things more circular in its motions and equal in its distributions than we usually judg it being deceived by not wistly observing the disproportion of each party in its numbers and that of Solomon Eccles 9.1 2. will hold that the love or hatred of God is not to be judged from what doth in this life happen unto men 3. But thirdly which I should have added to the observation and crave your leave yet to add it in the dispensations of special grace and those good things which are truly spiritual the Providence of God is inaccountable here the way of Providence is like the way of an Eagle in the air a Ship upon the S●● or a serpent upon a rock it cannot be tracked It is true our Saviour saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the poor receive the Gospel so I should rather translate it as in the passive voice then as our translation doth as if it were the middle voice The poor preach the Gospel and the Apostle telleth us That God hath chosen the poor of this world to be rich in grace and heirs of the kingdom And again you know your calling brethren not many rich not many wise not many noble c. yet the Providence of God doth deal out special grace to the rich as well as to the poor Abraham and Lot and Isaac and Job and David and Solomon Joseph and Daniel and Joseph of Arimathea were all rich men though as the number of the poor far exceedeth the number of them who are possessors of great Estates so the number of holy persons of mean estates bears the like disproportion to the number of such persons that are great and abound in this worlds goods neither doth the Providence of God deal out these riches of special grace as if they were inheritances Was not Jacob and Esau brethren yet the Lord loved Jacob and hated Esau You often in Scripture read of good men that had very bad children and of bad men that had very good children Jeroboam
was a wicked man one that made Israel to sin yet in Abijam his son there was some good thing found towards the Lord. Abijam the King of Judah was a man that walked in all the sins of his Fathers 1 King 15.2 Yet ver 11. Asa his son did that which was right in the sight of the Lord. Jehoshaphat the son of Asa was a very good man but Jehoram his son walked in all the ways of the Kings of Israel 2 Chron. 21.5 so did Ahaziah his son Jonathan was a good man 2 Chron. 27 but Ahaz his son walked in the ways of the Kings of Israel and made images for Baalim yet the son of Ahaz Hezekiah was an excellent man Manasses his son was a very wicked man the greatest part of his life indeed 2 Chron. 33.13 14 15 being carried into Babylon and bound in fetters he besought the Lord and the Lord was intreated of him and then the Scripture telleth us That he knew the Lord was God and he began something of reformation ver 15. Ammon his son was a very wicked Prince but Josiah his son an excellent man but we read no good of any one of his sons Thus as to the dispensations of saving-grace we see the Providence of God is not to be tracked sometimes given to the son of a good father at another time denied to the seed of those in Covenant with God and given out to the children of most vile and wicked parents and this is no more than we yet see every day in the dealings of God But it is time that I should shew you the reasonableness of these motions of Divine Providence 1. Why the Providence of God moveth in such a circular motion in the distribution of the good things of this life It will appear reasonable to you 1. If you consider both Gods general relation to all his creatures and also his special kindness and the demonstration of it to his people together with his faithfulness to his promises 1. I say his general relation to all his creatures they are his creatures he their Creator they by Creation his children and he their father It is true they are undutiful children and do not answer the law of their Creation God may say to them If I be your father where is my honour But yet children they are God intends them not the inheritance and therefore God doth by them as Abraham by the children he had by Keturah Gen. 25.5 To whom he gave portions and sent them away A father hath many children some elder some younger some more dutiful whom he loveth with a more peculiar love but he hath something of a fatherly affection for them all he giveth them all portions more or less Some have their portion in this life as David speaketh Psal 17. Son remember saith Abraham to Dives thou hadst thy good things in this life thy good things So Lazarus had a right to a childs portion Joseph sent all his brethren a mess though to Benjamin he sent seventimes as much as to the rest 2. But besides this some wicked men have another relation to God as servants in some special service none of them are universally Gods servants but in some special service many wicked men are Gods servants And no man shall serve God for nothing This was Jehu's case which procured him the Crown for four generations for the service he did God against the house of Ahab Then if we consider 1. Gods special kindness to his people declared so often in Scripture and the reasonableness that God should make some demonstration of it that all the world may know that God will honour those that honour him and how impossible it is that the men of the world should take notice of this and be convinced of it meerly from spiritual rewards of which they have no certain cognisance or from eternal rewards you will see it but reasonable that God in his Providence should dispose even of the goods of this life unto his own people though not to all yet to many of them and that they should have their turns in these distributions of Providence and not be always or all of them poor and needy or vile and contemptible in the eyes of the world Especially seeing that as the Apostle saith Godliness hath the promise as well of this life as of that which is to come And our Lord hath commanded us to seek the kingdom of heaven and the righteousness thereof upon the encouragement of a gracious promise that the things of this life shall be added to them Further if there should be no circulation of Providence in these distributions how should those Scriptures be fulfilled wherein God hath told us Psal 30.5 That the rod of the wicked shall not always rest upon the lot of the righteous that he will take care that the spirits should not fail before him nor the souls that he hath made that his anger endureth but for a moment that sorrow comes for a night but joy shall come in the morning c. And those many other promises for the good things of this life which are made to the People of God in Scripture though they are not to be interpreted into an extent of that latitude as if they should be the constant portion of the Church and People of God or of every child of God Yet how should they be made good if there were not some circulation of Providence in the distribution of the good things of this life if it should not go sometimes well as well as sometimes ill with the Church and People of God 2. The reasonableness of this motion of Divine Providence will appear to you from Gods love and zeal to Justice Justice lyes in giving to every one their due God must be just and his Justice must be declared to the world that all may know that the God of Heaven is a righteous God Now this Justice of God requireth such a circulation of Providence as I have commended to your observation If you will but consider that as the whole life of wicked men is a life of rebellion and disobedience So God never had a Church in the world nor any particular Saint but had their corruptions and were guilty of many miscarriages which subjected them to the vindicative Justice of God Now for the People of God if I may so speak with holy Reverence God hath tyed up his own hands he cannot punish them with eternal punishments he hath accepted a price a satisfaction for them so as now There is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus But he hath a controversie even with Judah and he must punish Jacob according to his ways and according to his doings he must recompence him Hos 12.3 This can be no otherwise than by denying of them some good things in this life either such spiritual enjoyments as the denial of is yet consistent with their enjoyment of the eternal inheritance or those
to a daily communion with God all the grace all the glory of God is theirs Think this reward enough for the cleansing of thy heart and the washing of thy hands and seeing the swearers and blasphemers and even the worst men of the world are Gods Creatures and some of them though they mean not so yet do God service sometimes do not judg it unreasonable that God should give them a portion in this life But I forbear knowing that it will fall in my way hereafter when I shall come to open the hard Chapters of Divine Providence to speak more fully to the reasonableness of this motion of Divine Providence 2. This calleth unto the People of God if at any time they be in a prosperous state to look for an hour of adversity The Circulations of Divine Providence admonish Gods People of this no man reasonably saith in the morning that the Sun shall set no more in his Horizon nor in the Summer that he shall never feel the cold or see the storms of another Winter he considers the Ordinances of nature and the Circulation of these natural motions It is as unreasonable to promise our selves stated and uninterrupted felicity in this life to say as David In our prosperity I shall never be moved Be rather thinking what you shall do if God should bring you into such a condition 3. Nor do you despond in adversity Say to the Enemies of Church and Gospel as the Church in Micah Mic. 7.8 Rejoyce not against me O mine enemy when I fall I shall rise when I sit in darkness the Lord shall be a light unto me It is as unreasonable for any to conclude at midnight that there shall never be a morning as in the morning to fancy there shall never be a midnight more you have not it may be in this life those full measures of the good things thereof which others have But saith David Psal 17. when I awake I shall be satisfied with thy likeness Some interpret it of an awaking at the resurrection that is sure enough Some of an awaking out of his afflicted state God in this life is not always smiting not always grieving the children of men The rod of the wicked shall not always lye upon the back of the righteous Do not build too much upon these hopes remember that God hath better things for his people than riches and honours and earthly power Heaven is their portion but yet even as to this life do not cast away your hope 4. But lastly Be patient under all the frowns of Divine Providence This is the method of Providence the sinner must have his hour and that hour to the People of God will be the very power of darkness The beasts that are nearest the slaughter usually have the fattest pastures God hath far better things reserved for them that love him and even in this life He will not leave you comfortless he will come unto you if not to the rescue of your bodies yet to the relief support and satisfaction of your souls Wherefore comfort your selves with these words SERMON XXVII Psal CVII 43. Whoso is wise and will observe these things even they shall understand the loving-kindness of the Lord. WE take notice in the world that Wisdom is not so much the daughter of study as of experience It is a practical habit directing the ordering of mens conversations to their best advantage which is not so well acquired from our poring on books and making conclusions from connate principles or maxims of others as from the observation of what we see in the world Hence we observe what Job said Job 12.12 with the Auncients is wisdom Elihu said Job 32.7 Days shall speak and multitude of years shall teach wisdom There must indeed be supposed a foundation in nature and that is a good faculty of judgment and a foundation in art for wisdom dwelleth with knowledg but neither nature nor art and study will make a morally wise man Observation contributes more than either and this is the reason that wisdom is with the Auncients and that multitude of years teacheth it The reason of this is the inequal distribution of reason to reasonable creatures and the prevalence of passion above it in the most of men from this it is that we can better conclude what is like to be done in the world from what hath been done than from any rational principles which will tell us what one would think reasonable men should do Spiritual Wisdom likewise is much gained by observation this is that which we call experience by which we understand not always what our selves have felt but what we have seen with our eyes what we have remarked in Gods dealings And the reason of this is our imperfect understanding of what God hath revealed in his word which lets us see that we stand in need both of the Spirit and of the Providence of God to be our interpreters and the oneness and immutability of God gives us a far better advantage to gain wisdom from the issues of his Providence then the variable passions of men will allow us to gain from what we see in their actings whose methods oft-times vastly differ one from another so as the policies of one age have no cognation with those of another The reason also of which is because there is a wheel within these wheels though the fools and blind men of the world see it not governing these sensible wheels to the designs of his eternal counsels Hence it is that he who is wise will observe and he who would be wise must observe the motions of Divine Providence which though it hath many secret and unsearchable motions yet also hath many certain and uniform motions which will fall under the science and understanding of the soul that giveth up it self to the study and observation of them I have already offered to you twelve Observations upon the motions of Providence I yet proceed and shall at present offer you some further things chiefly relating to the motions of Divine Providence in the executing of Divine Justice and Judgment and that as well in the rewarding of the righteous as in the punishment of the sinner Two great works of Divine Providence about which indeed it is mostly taken up it goeth to and fro the world doing this work every day let us see how far we can track it or make any judgment from the prints of its feet where or what we are like to meet with from it meet it we must at every turn of our lives our business is to make up a judgment what we are like to meet with from it whether it be like to say unto us Hast thou met me O my friend or as Ahab to Elijah Hast thou met me O mine enemy The next Observation I shall commend to you is this Observ 13. The reward of the righteous man and also of the sinner is always certain and constant though not always sensible and
against him he adviseth him to do this by breaking off his tyrannical oppression and shewing mercy instead of that cruelty with which the former part of his reign had been stained Now mark the argument If saith he it may be a lengthning of thy tranquillity I know your margents tell you it may be read It shall be an healing to your error about which some less judicious Papists make a stir but their own great Arias Montanus reads it it shall be a prolongation of thy peace Their vulgar Lat. reads it perhaps he will pardon thy sins the septuagint 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 perhaps God will bear long with thy sins c. However though indeed in that sense it doth not so sute my present purpose there is no doubt but restitution is an healing of the error of injustice and oppression amongst men though it be impossible that it should remove the guilt of sin before God But I have digressed too far Let my counsel be acceptable now to every sinner that hath any interest in the world any talent of riches or honour power or interest which he might improve in the doing of any thing which God hath commanded If he be one that hath no regard to his soul but meerly to his interest in the world it is the best improvement that he can possibly make of it If a man had set his heart against the God of Heaven and designed never intentionally to serve and honour him but to make the world and his belly his God without any belief of or regard to an eternal well-being yet it were his greatest policy to do things materially good in order to the obtaining of that portion in this life for him and his posterity upon which he is wholly intent 2. But secondly This observation speaketh aloud to all to take heed of blessing themselves upon their worldly circumstances It is a thing that we are very prone to to conclude to the acceptation of our persons and our works from our outward prosperity They neither signifie any thing to us as to the perfect goodness of the work nor yet as to any eternal reward no nor a lasting reward in this life We use to say Bonum ex causis integris malum ex quolibet defectu a work is made evil by any defect in it the least fly maketh the Apothecaries box of oyntment to stink the action must be formally as well as materially good not only what God hath required but it must be done with a true heart designing the glory and service of God and in a true manner according to that rule which he hath given us for the performance of it or it cannot be acceptable to a pure and holy God nor do these rewards signifie any thing as to our eternal reward and recompence A man may for a work be rewarded in this life and yet damned in the world to come he hath had his reward I remember Christ saith so of the Pharisees prayers and fastings Mat. 6. They have their reward the disciples of Christ that act sincerely they shall be recompenced in the resurrection of the just Hypocrites have their reward in the honour and applause they have in the riches and honour which God giveth them God is out of their debt No nor secondly which possibly to them is more terrible these kind of recompences are but temporary things for a little time Jehu had taken out all his payment from God for his service against the house of Ahab in four generations Assyria and Babylon had taken out their rewards for their services much sooner Vse 4. In the next place This Observation may be of very great use both for the comfort and incouragement of such whose hearts are right with God For their comfort as to what they have done for their incouragement to go on yet in their motions and designs for God 1. For their comfort It must be laid down for a substratum to the following part of my discourse upon this Theme That no man can be called a child of God but he who doth not serve God by the by tanquam aliud agens in the mean time eying some other design and setting up to himself some other end but he who in his actions sets himself with a full purpose of heart to seek and honour and glorifie God he may miss his mark either through the mistake of his eye or his hand but his face is thitherward that 's the white at which he aims he hath set the honour and glory of God before him as his mark and towards it it is that he presseth forward he may mistake as David did thinking something will be for the honour of God which will not or come short as to the issue not being able to bring his design to a desired issue but he taketh his aim right and setteth up his mark right Now failers in these cases when once discerned by the souls of Christians prove oft-times causes of great trouble and exceeding sad reflexions to them and nothing can be thought of as more proper to give them relief than what I have been at this time discoursing of That when God doth not cannot allow of the action as integrally good and perfect yet he will reward the good intention the design and purpose in the childs of Gods heart Methinks in this case it is a sweet text they are the words of Solomon upon the dedication of the Temple which he had builded 1 King 8.18 And the Lord said unto David my father Whereas it was in thine heart to build an house unto my name thou didst well that it was in thine heart Nevertheless thou shalt not build the house but thy son that is come out of thy loins he shall build the house unto my name There are in that text these things remarkable 1. David had an intention to build God an house 2. He did not build this house 3. God did not allow of the action God sent him word by Nathan he should not do it as you have heard before Yet 3. God accepted his good design his general good intention Thou didst well saith God that it was in thine heart 4. God did not only accept this good design and intention but he also rewards it Nevertheless saith he thy son that is come out of thy loins he shall build me an house thou shalt not have the honour of it but thy son shall have the honour of it David was undertaking a matter in the worship of God without any special direction God upon this createth an institution and legitimateth the action for his son I say it is an admirable text if it be well digested to relieve the spirits of the People of God under their troubles for their imperfect performances A Christian prays he sanctifieth a Sabbath he setteth himself to seek the Lord in any piece of instituted worship when he reflecteth upon it and compareth it with the perfect rule he sits down wonderfully
life as they can I say which way soever men will consider themselves or whatsoever they will place their ultimate felicity in whether it be in the enjoyment and vision of God to eternity or in living long and happy Still it is their highest wisdom both in their personal capacities and in their relative capacities as they stand related to others in their political or oeconomical relations as Princes Subjects Husbands Wives Parents Children Masters or Servants to govern them according to the rules and by the square of the word of God Now the observation I say of these ordinary dispositions of Divine Providence must therefore be exceedingly conducive to the increase of spiritual wisdom in our souls 2. This Observation will also teach us to understand the loving kindness of the Lord. The glory of God is by all Christians confessedly the end of mans creation and ought to be made the end of his action but herein appeareth the transcendent goodness of God That no man can act for his glory but he must also by the same actions consult his own good and be wise for himself So that in truth there is no man serveth God for nothing but in the same action by and in which he obeyeth God he also consulteth his own life health riches success in business and whatsoever can contribute not only to his eternal felicity but to his felicity and happiness in this life Now how wonderfully doth this speak the love of God to the children of men Every mans reason will tell him that there is a duty of homage and honour which is due from man unto God God is our Creator we are his creatures In him we live move and have our being and equally depend upon him for our preservation and sustentation from his Providence as derive from him as our Creator and the first Author of beings to us Now as it is in the power of any man in the cause to prescribe the honour and homage which shall be grateful and acceptable to him so undoubtedly it was in the power of God and free to him to have prescribed us an homage and service that should have impeached and prejudiced or some way disadvantaged us as to our external felicity and the accommodations of this life which should make it sweet to us But in this see the great loving kindness of the Lord That no man can possibly at more advantage serve himself and the good of his Family or City or Country than by serving God and indeavouring to square his whole converse to the rule of Gods word governing himself by the Scriptures and the rules of life which it gives nor doth God require any thing of us that is ungrateful to that true Reason which is in every man All the commands of God do but pinch us in the exercise of our Lusts and Passions the exercise of which if they have their liberty and were not by a Divine Law restrained would have no better an effect from their natural tendency than the imbittering of our lives by aches and pains and grievous diseases by the rebellion crosness and undutifulness of our relations by a liberty to injustice fraud deceit and oppression This is a great demonstration of Gods loving kindness that in his rules for the government of us he hath twisted our interest with his own and made it necessary for those who most consult his honour and glory most to consult their own good and happiness and that not only as to a life to come but as to this life also Vse 2. We may learn from hence the true reason why the most of men are cursed with the want of temporal blessings I say the most of men for what I told you before must be remembred that from these general rules we must always except those particular causes where God either for the punishment of some sins in his people or for the trial of their faith and patience having reserved a better portion for them in the world to come doth think fit to exercise them with the denial of the sensible blessings of this life But setting aside those cases the general cause is their not living up to that conformity or square to the Divine rule to which they ought to live but either failing in the duties of piety and exercise of Religion to which the Divine law bindeth them or in the duties of probity and moral honesty justice temperance sobriety unity and amity which the same Law doth require of them What wonder is it to see the lazy sluggard poor Hath not God said to him Prov. 6.9 How long wilt thou sleep O sluggard when wilt thou arise out of sleep v. 11. So shall thy poverty come as one that travelleth and thy want as an armed man Or to see Oppressors and Gripers of their neighbour-poor God hath told them Prov. 10.15 The destruction of the poor is their poverty Or to see the penurious man grow poor hath not God told us That to withhold more than is meet tendeth to poverty Prov. 11.24 What wonder is it to see Drunkards and Gluttons poor Hath not God said The Drunkard and Glutton shall come to poverty and drousiness shall cloth a man with rags Prov. 23.21 what wonder is it to see those that are companions of leud persons drunkards adulterers Gamesters c. grow poor Hath not God again said Prov. 28.19 That he who followeth after vain persons shall have poverty enough O Israel saith God by the Prophet Hoseah Thou hast destroyed thy self but in me is thy help Hos 13.9 it is true as to mens eternal ruine but the Prophet there primarily speaks of mens destroying themselves by being the causes of punishments in this life to themselves men destroy their own lives healths bodys by drunkenness gluttony uncleanness their estates by sloth and luxury the comforts of their own lives by giving an unbridled liberty to their lusts and passions indulging the lustings of their flesh The righteous God is not to be accused for any of these things He hath given men a righteous law which to their reason approveth it self to be holy spiritual just and good but they are carnal sold unto sin slaves to their appetites to their sensual faculties and either ruine themselves by their irreligious or immoral behaviours and doing those things over which if God had not by his severe threatnings in his word hung a sword of Divine Vengeance yet in themselves and of their own nature they have a tendency to destroy life health to wast and consume estates and to deprive them of all those good things which may accommodate their lives and make them sweet and pleasant to them and in the day of their affliction they must lay the fault upon themselves and excuse God in the motions of his Providence acknowledging that it hath but fulfilled his word and brought to pass the just threatnings of his word nay not so only but that it hath only brought natural things to
more than its own iniquity Arminius I remember telleth us that he can see no reason but that Children may be equally punished eternally for the sins of their Parents as well as the whole posterity of Adam for his sin but certainly there is a vast difference the first Adam was a publick person with whom God made a Covenant for life or death for himself and for his posterity and he had a power as well to have conveyed life as death to all his posterity but surely none will assert this as to any Parent since his time 5. Consider how much comfort there is laid for parents mourning in that speech of our Saviour for of such is the kingdom of God Men that have large Gardens and Orchards have places for slips and Inlays as well as for old Stocks Nurseries for Plants as well as places for full-grown fruit-trees God hath his garden of Grace that is his Church and he hath his garden of Glory to both belong Nurseries The Children of believers are though imperfect members yet members of his Church and they may be heirs of Glory though they go out of this world under age as to any earthly inheritance Yet they may be of full age for the inheritance that is immortal incorruptible and which fadeth not away they will be of age in that Country where is no infant of days nor old man of years The possibility of little Childrens entering into the Kingdom of God yea the probability that the seed of such as fear God dying in infancy are so entred ought to be a wonderful relief to Godly parents mourning upon this account Some Mothers only people the earth with sinners God puts an honour upon thee if thou stockest Heaven with Saints and bringest forth to the kingdom of Glory 6. Consider Thou canst never lose a Child with more hope than in its infancy Some have thought that the death of Christ hath as to all expiated the guilt of Adams sin both the Socinians and Arminians seem so to judge Others think that by vertue of the New Covenant the water of Baptism washeth away original sin Augustine was called Durus pater infantum an hard Father to Infants because he thought all unbaptized Infants were damned by which it seems he deferred much to Baptism but I do not remember that I ever read in him or heard from him that he held that all baptized Infants should be saved if dying in infancy I durst not fix the comfort of mourning Parents upon these foundations But yet this is certain the Infant within the pale of the Church the Child of the believing the true believing Parent especially is in Covenant with God It hath not yet been defiled with wilfull presumptuous sinning we cannot say so of our Children when they are grown up to years A godly Parent can never lose a Child with more hopes of its eternal Salvation than in its infancy 7. Again Possibly what God hath done he hath done in mercy to thee to thy soul that thy affections may be more entirely upon him God knew thy heart better than thy self it may be by such a stroke he hath secured thy heart more unto himself it may be in mercy as to the comforts of thy life Zedekiah could better have followed his Children in their infancy to their grave than have seen them slain by a barbarous enemy before his face Thou knowest not what evil is coming upon the world 8. Lastly consider That for those that keep the Lords Sabbaths and chuse the things that please him and take hold of the Lords Covenant God hath Isa 56.45 promised a better name than that of sons and daughters even an everlasting name which shall never be cut off But I shall digress no further on this Argument 4. Lastly Having stilled thy impatience what hast thou to do but to fulfil the Lords will and ends under such a dispensation Let those do it that are patients under such providences Let us all do it who are spectators of them Are any of us patients under such Providences let us fulfil the Lords ends in them You will say what are they I Answer 1. Submission to his good will is doubtless one thing God by all afflictions of his people designeth to humble and to prove his people that he may do them good in the latter end Such dispensations are the rod of God upon us and his rod hath a voice and we are bound to hear his rod. God is now trying thy obedience Abraham's trial was a greater trial he had but one Child him a Son the Child of the promise God required him to kill him with his own hand he submitted and the Lord accepted his will for the deed Thy hearing the voice of one rod may prevent the Lords taking of another to scourge thee with 2. Humiliation for those sins which thou suspectest to have been the provoking cause of such a dispensation that 's another end which thou maist probably think that God aimeth at Afflictions are to humble us and to prove us 3. God calleth aloud to thee to take thy heart off thy creature-comforts Thou seest what gourds what blossoms they are what shadows they are which thou huggest what lyes thou hast in thy right hand he calls now to thee to fix thy heart and thine eyes upon him alone and to make him alone thy portion to fix all thy delight upon him For us that are spectators of such Providences let us also by them learn wisdom 1. By taking heed of such sins as may provoke God to such dispensations we stand concerned if we love our children to love God and to fear him to walk closely with him the wicked life of a Parent may shorten the life of a Child for that God in judgment may write him childless a man who shall not prosper nor his name out-live a present generation Take heed of those particular sins which may provoke God to such a stroke Take heed of murmuring at the blessing of a numerous off spring and distrusting the Providence of God as to a providing for them Take heed if Children be given you that you do not set your heart upon them Look upon them as fading flowers and such flowers as never fade sooner than while they are worn too near your heart Take heed of sins by which the enemies of God shall be made to blaspheme David for such sins lost his new born Child from his beloved Bathsheba 2. More especially take heed of neglecting your children Neglect not the ordinance of Baptism as to them I do not think that is damnable but I do think it is provocative of God I remember God met Moses in the Inn and was about to kill him for his omission of Circumcision Circumcision was in it self a pitiful thing but it was Gods ordinance it was his Covenant in the flesh with the seed of Abraham We are not upon a Divine institution to say To what purpose is it or what good
Lord of life It is a dispensation that hath often put the servants of God into unseemly passions James and John would have had fire come down from Heaven as in Elijahs time to have destroyed the Samaritans Peter was out of patience to see the Informer come with a company with Swords and Staves to take his Master and in his passion draweth a Sword and with it cuts off the ear of the servant of the high priest David himself when God offered him the choice of three Judgments desired rather to fall into the hands of God than into the hands of men I say it is and hath often been a very sore temptation advantaged partly from Nature partly from some Religious reflections That which in humane nature advantageth this temptation is 1. The disdain every man naturally hath to suffer an injury from one beneath himself when Gideon would have had his Son Jether have fallen upon those two Eastern Princes Zeba and Zalmuna they said rise thou up and fall upon us men have a natural disdain and scorn to suffer from their inferiours we see it in every days experience Now although every child of God is low in his own eyes and in honour preferreth every Saint before himself yet as St. Paul sometimes magnified his office against the false Apostles and counterfeits of his age though he judged himself the least of the Apostles and unworthy of that great Name so they cannot but magnifie themselves in comparison of open profane miscreants that are the scum and off scouring of the place in which they live such as are common drunkards lyars swearers Sabbath-breakers and guilty of other debaucheries the very scabs of the body politick and spots of the Assemblies to which they are united 2. Every man naturally hath a regret at the receiving of injuries from those from whom he hath deserved no such thing Now the People of God are persons of innocence who have done no wrong to their worst Enemies they have loved their Enemies prayed for them been ready to do any offices of love to them and know not how to bear an injury from those to whom they have done no wrong This was that which troubled Davids Spirit Psal 35.12 13. They rewarded me evil for good to the spoiling of my Soul but as for me when they were sick my cloathing was sackcloath I humbled my Soul with fasting and my prayer returned into my own bosom I behaved myself as though he had been my friend or brother I bowed down heavily as one that mourned for my mother But in mine adversity they rejoyced and gathered themselves together yea the abjects gathered themselves together against me and I knew it not yea they did tear me and ceased not with hypocritical mockers at feasts they gnashed upon me with their teeth Lord how long wilt thou look on Rescue my Soul from their destructions 2. This temptation is likewise advantaged from some Religious reflections 1. From a reflection upon the purity and holiness of God O Lord saith our Prophet in my Text thou art of purer Eyes then to behold iniquity How a just and pure and holy God should look on and hold his peace to see a company of vile wretches tearing and devouring his own people this is a knowledg at first view too wonderful for them 2. From a reflexion upon the promises and threatnings of God they look into the holy word of God and find that full of promises of good to Gods People of threatnings of wrath and vengeance to wicked men instead of this they see vile men building up Palaces to themselves upon their ruins and adorning themselves with their Ornaments the houses of the profane furnished and adorned with that which is not theirs instead of the wicked mans preparing garments and the just mans putting them on as Job speaketh they see good and righteous men preparing garments and leud and ungodly men put them on they see the spoil of such as fear the Lord in the tents of leud and ungodly men 3. From a reflexion upon the Decrees of God O Lord saith our Prophet thou hast ordained them for destruction O mighty God thou hast established them for correction they consider leud and wicked men as men whom God by a fixed act of his Will hath ordained to judgment as persons who by the established counsel of God are to be destroyed and they cannot expound the Providence of God into a consistency with his eternal purpose when they see them not only live prosper and grow old but also live by the death of such as fear God and build their nests on high with feathers which they have plucked from their wings From these and other causes ariseth this trouble and coil in the spirits of Gods people Fluctus est Tentatio est as Augustine saith it is a great wave a great temptation and trouble and even Gods own people here are ready to think they see a knot in the thred of providence a stone of stumbling and a rock of offence in the even ways of the Lords dealing Let me indeavour in a few words to unty this knot to remove this stone Four or five things I shall speak one or other of which or all together will make this way of the Lord plain to every sober and understanding Christian 1. How is God to his people more hard or unrighteous in such a dispensation than he was to the son of his dearest love Our blessed Lord hath taught us That the Disciple is not above his Master nor the servant above his Lord it is enough for the Disciple that he be as his Master and the Servant as his Lord Matt. 10.24 25. 'T is true the chief Informer against our Lord was one of his hoshold Judas but he was a son of perdition the only ill member of all the 12. Who were his witnesses but a company of perjured wretches who could not agree in their testimony Who mockt him and scourged him Herod a monster for all manner of wickedness Who were they that spit upon him that cried out crucifie him crucifie him that gave him Gall and Vinegar to drink were they not the abjects of the people Thou art not able to conceive of Gods righteousness in giving thee over and thy estate over to a Renegado an apostate from his former profession to wretches who make no conscience what they say what they swear what they do How was he righteous in giving over the Son of his love to such wretches We are never so like to our Lord and Master as when we are betrayed by a Judas informed against and testified against by false and perjured wretches mockt and abused by the abjects and off scouring of the people If God might be a just and righteous God in suffering these things to be done to the green tree surely he may suffer them to be done unto us who are dry trees Thou art troubled that God should suffer profane scoffers to call thee
dispensations all discontentment at their own low estate all displeasure at Gods dealings with others all accusations of God of injustice or hard dealings with his people whatsoever as a fruit or indication of any of those passions is certainly here forbidden us under the notions of fretting being angry or envious Let me now press this negative or prohibitive part of your duty upon you by some few arguments 1. I beseech you to consider the exceeding sinfulness of it when God said to the Prophet Jonah Dost thou well to be angry it is certainly implyed that he did not well It is in this Psalm twice forbidden us twice in the Book of Proverbs at least Envy is by the Apostle reckoned up as one of the fruits of the flesh now certainly if no more could be said than this It is the will of God that if thou seest the wicked prosper grow rich and great thou shouldst not be displeased at God nor envy them c. This should be enough to engage the people of God to take heed to their Spirits in this thing and indeed we had need watch for we shall find our Souls under very great temptations in the case and that it is a very hard thing for a good man to look with a good Eye upon the prosperity of wicked men 2. But I shall shew you that it is a sin which receiveth more than ordinary aggravations 1. As first it is against the express letter of the Divine Law 1 Kings 11.9 10. It is said that the Lord was angry with Solomon because his heart was turned from the Lord God of Israel who had appeared to him twice and had commanded him concerning this thing that he should not go after other Gods God hath commanded us concerning this thing this particular thing and hath been pleased to make it the matter of a precept many times repeated If God had commanded us some great thing should we not have obeyed him in it How much more in the forbearing of a little Iust or passion It is not concluded a sin meerly from consequence of Scripture or to be concluded from some precepts that are laid down there it is the express letter of Scripture he that runs may read the will of God concerning this 2. Again by how much the more precepts are violated by any sinful action by so much the sin is greater you have heard this is a Sin against both Tables a sin against the duty which we owe unto God and the duty which we owe to our Neighbour that which we are forbidden in many Scriptures those so plain that he who runs may read them 3. Again Some sins are in their own nature more heinous than others amongst others the sin of Murther is a very great transgression Solomon saith Prov. 6.32 Men do not despise a thief if he stealeth to satisfy his Soul when he is hungry but v. 32. whoso committeth adultery with a woman lacketh understanding he doth injury to his neighbour of an higher nature But now Murther that is an higher transgression St. John tells us no Murtherer hath eternal life Our Saviour reduceth Anger and Envy under the commandment Thou shalt not kill and makes him that is angry with his Brother without a cause no less than a Murtherer 4. Further yet a sin that breaketh out at the lips in sinful words or in the conversation by irregular actions is greater than that which is only in the heart defiling that Now it is a very hard thing for men to keep the fire of anger and envy within the chimney of their corrupt hearts Even the best men have not been able to keep it in 5. Finally by how much any sin is more the mother of Sin and brings forth more sins by so much the greater it is This fretting and envying at the prosperity of sinners besides the discontent and impatience of the Spirit which constantly attendeth it bringeth forth a world of sin at our lips and in our conversation reviling speeches detracting words spightful thoughts words and actions c. 2. Again this sin receiveth an aggravation from the persons offending In that Text 1 Kings 11.4 9. I observe two aggravations of Solomons sin of Apostacy The first that he did it when he was old so had he great experiences of God v. 9. there 's another expression it was after God had appeared to him twice for men that know not God nor have had any experience of his ways to fret and vex that others have more of the world than they have is not such a guilt as for the people of God to do it They are called the Children of Light and that not only in respect of grace and mercy which may be compared to light of which they are Children but with respect to knowledg they are a people who know better things than others and should know the riches the honours all the good things of the world are not worth valuing now for you after that you have been thus far enlightened still to be so enamoured upon them as to fret vex and be envious because others have more of them than you have must be a great transgression Especially to consider that you are the Children of God hears of grace yea and of glory too Thus I remember the Father of the Prodigal rebuked his Son fretting for the fatted Calf slain for his Brother Son saith he remember thou art always with me and all that I have is thine for those whom God hath made the heirs of grace and glory the heirs of the Kingdom to whom God hath said All that I have is thine I say for these to fret vex and repine that wicked men prosper in this world and have a little of this worlds goods must be a great provocation And to this there are not many of Gods people but in one degree or other have had an experience of the incertainty and vanity of all these things enough to depretiate them and render them invaluable to any good and gracious heart Further yet what doth any man get by fretting vexing or being envious at the prosperity of sinners as our Saviour said of thought-fulness none can by thinking add one cubit to his stature So I may say none by fretting vexing or envy can either detract a cubit from the stature of a sinner in prosperity nor add a cubit to his own it is a sin that can end in nothing but murmurings and repinings against God in tormenting and macerating of our selves and in the discomposure of our Spirits To shut up this discourse by how much any sin is more causeless by so much the greater it is there is neither so much good in the highest prosperity a sinner is capable of nor so much evil in the lowest and most afflicted estate of the people of God as to give a reasonable ground or occasion for a Child of God to give himself the disturbance so much as of one hour or to wile his
1. A silence from passion mourning within our selves fretting vexing c. a man breaketh this silence when he is overborn with fear or grief or anger These three ways the Soul is disturb'd and maketh a noise under the dispensations of God which breaketh this Religious silence 1. By Anger fretting fuming and vexing himself at Gods dispensations This was Moses and Aarons failing at the waters of Meribah and Jonas his error when the Gourd failed him as to its shelter But of this I have spoken fully already when I handled the Negative part of a Christians duty under Gods dispensations of nature 2. Fear Immoderate fear is another passion that spoileth this silence of the Soul fear maketh an Earthquake within us and causeth great unquietness in our Spirits The Soul that is overborn with fears never keepeth silence 3. A third passion is immoderate grief this also breaketh the Souls silence and quiet Psal 42. Why art thou cast down O my soul why art thou disquieted within me So as that Soul that under Gods dispensations of this nature either fumeth vexeth or fretteth at God because of them or is overwhelmed with immoderate or unreasonable fears or is overwhelmed or drowned in immoderate grief that Soul doth not keep silence but that Soul only keepeth a due silence to God which under such Providences abideth in a calm and quiet temper neither shaken with fear nor overcome with immoderate grief or sorrow This is now silentium animae the silence of the Soul before and unto God 2. But there is also a silence of the Tongue this is a piece of this Religious silence this is opposed to murmuring cursing and blaspheming of God to speaking hardly of God as if he were an hard Master and did not deal justly or equally with us to any speaking which is derogatory to the honour and glory of God all this now falleth under the first general duty by which I open a silent waiting for God which I call a free and voluntary submission to the good will and pleasure of God without any disturbance of passion or any sinful expressions of our Tongues 2. A Second thing wherein this duty lyeth is A steady dependance upon God for the fulfilling of his Promises made to his people in such a condition he that hath nothing to depend upon or trust to will not wait so as there can be no patient waiting where there is no secret trust and dependance This is indeed the proper exercise of Faith I have spoken fully to it when I opened the life of Faith in such a time 3. A Third thing in which this duty lies is in the Souls expectation and looking out for God Early in the morning saith David Psal 5.3 I will direct my prayer unto thee and will look up Thus when Habakkuk in the first Chapter of his Prophecy had put up his Prayer to God he saith Chap. 2. that he would go up to his watch-Tower A man goeth up to a Tower or to some high place to see whether a friend or an enemy be coming yea or no It is a piece of our duty in our waiting upon God under his dark dispensations of Providence while we are waiting to be also looking up and living in the expectation of the fulfilling of those promises which we have discerned and fixed our souls by Faith upon and which we have been praying for Our hearts should not be dead we must take heed of saying I look for no good the heart is dead when it comes to that The Soul that waits upon God under dark Providences must be looking for good and confident in its expectations of it from God 4. Lastly This waiting must be in the use of such means as God hath appointed us for the obtaining of the mercy design'd and promised and therefore Psal 37. v. 34. they are put together wait upon the Lord and keep his way Now you have this duty of silent waiting upon God opened to you The Sum of it is this It is the duty of a child of God under these Providences to keep his Soul from being overmuch shaken and overcome with fears or drowned in grief from fretting fuming and vexing at Gods dealings to keep his tongue from all murmuring all foolish and unadvised speaking with his lips to keep his Soul in a quiet dependance upon God for the fulfilling of his word daily looking up for him after the use of such means as he by the Law of Nature or in his revealed will hath appointed for the obtaining of the mercy or good thing which is the matter of our desires and he hath made the Subject of his Promise and consequently the Object of our Faith You have heard your duty Now give me leave to plead with all you that hear me this day for the Practice of it I have in this Discourse been exhorting to several duties of a child of God under dark dispensations of Providence when wicked men have been set up high increased in riches honour every way prospered and the people of God are kept in low despised afflicted states and conditions I remember the Apostle calls to us to add to our faith knowledg to both vertue to vertue temperance c. Do you also add to your not fretting not being angry and envious a steady exercise of Faith and dependance on God to your dependance on God and trusting in him an universal departing from evil and doing that which is good and to that a patient quiet waiting for God I shall in order to your better performance of this offer some counsel and then press it with some arguments and so shut up this Discourse 1. In the first place There are three things which in order to your fulfilling this point of duty I shall commend to you to get a through acquaintance with 1. Be acquainted with Gods name It is David's expression Psal 52.9 I will wait upon thy name for it is good before thy Saints It is the Name of God which we wait upon now it is reasonable in order to our waiting upon his name that we should know his name for as the Psalmist saith They that know thy name will put their trust in thee and truly they that do not know the Lords name will never wait upon him Well you will say What is his name I answer whatsoever he hath revealed and made himself known by or to be that is his name I might instance in many particulars His name is God allsufficient Gen. 17.1 I am the Almighty God His name is I am the unchangeable God His name is Jehovah the soveraign Lord God and therefore we ought to wait upon him His name is The Lord the Lord Gracious Merciful c. they that know the Lords name that are throughly acquainted with the nature of God as he hath in his word made himself known to us they will wait upon God they will see it a reasonable thing that they should wait upon God 2. In the