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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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Christ when foul Crimes were laid to his charge by his Slanderers they had charged him with complyance with Satan with Blasphemy and Sedition what doth he do the Apostle will tell you 1 Pet. 2. 23. He committed himself to him that Iudgeth Righteously There is the Faith of Christ and therefore God will try this Faith whether we can with confidence and willingness deliver over our selves to the will of our heavenly Father and Righteous Judge whether we can resign up our selves to him to be disgraced or honoured as he shall think fit when we commit and submit perfectly resign up our selves to the will of God in confidence of his Righteousness and Faithfulness in Christ then we behave our selves as Christians 3. God will try our Faith in the Eternal recompences whether we do so believe the glory of Heaven the glory which shall be revealed in us in the other World that we can be contented to be humbled and prepared for it by the Reproaches of the present World Mat. 5. 11 12. Blessed are ye when men shall revile you and persecute you and shall say all manner of evil against you falsely for my sake Why Rejoyce and be exceeding glad for great is your reward in Heaven O it s enough we shall have glory hereafter Your time is now to be tryed with Dishonour Reproach Contempt but hereafter to be honoured And the Heirs of Promise are described to be those who by patient continuance in well-doing seek for glory and honour and immortality eternal life A Christian is not destitute of natural affections he prizeth honour but he prizeth it at the lowest rate he looks for the glory honour and immortality that is in the other world not in the fleshly vain respects of this World and therefore now we are tryed whether it be enough to us that we shall have glory hereafter and here we are willing to take what the World will afford us Thus God will try our Faith 2. God will try our mortification and deadness to worldly credit The heart is never sincere with God untill it be so Hypocrites are proud self-conceited they must be honoured among men Now this is such an evil spirit that Christ makes it uncapable of Faith for Iohn 5. 44. How can ye believe that seek for glory one of another When we must have glory one from another else our hearts are exceedingly troubled O it shews we are not so dead at least as we ought to be to credit in the World to have the glory that comes from God only his Image implanted in us the testimony of his love to our souls all clear between God and our souls and he is not upright whose Peace and Tranquility of Spirit doth depend upon mans speeches and judgment rather than Gods For not he that commendeth himself is approved but whom the Lord commendeth 2 Cor. 10. 18. Men cannot defend thee if God will condemn thee they cannot condemn thee if God acquits thee They that run a Race regard not what the standers by say but the Aganotheles the great Judge of the sports he that was to give them the garland what he would determine and decide in the case so it is in your running working and striving no matter what the World saith their applause will not shelter you from Gods Judgment nor their Condemnations nor Reproach will not expose you to Gods wrath Look to the Judge of all things and we should be content with that He is approved whom the Lord approves 2 Cor. 1. 12. For our rejoycing is this the testimony of our Conscience What is the great matter of Joy to him The good word of men No he hath studied to approve himself to God therefore should not be troubled over-much Peace of Conscience is better than the applause of the World certainly a man is not fit to have so Divine a Plant grow in his Soul till he comes to live to his Priviledge He lives not to Opinion but lives to Gods approbation 3. Another thing God will try is our Patience We should prevent Reproaches as much as we can but by a holy Conversation may bear them when we cannot avoid them Psal. 109. 4. For my love they are my Adversaries But I give my self unto Prayer That was Davids exercise the reveng he took upon them to pray to God for them The Lord will try whether we have this meek humble Patience 2 Sam. 16. 7. When 〈◊〉 mei went about railing to the peril of his life Come out come out thou bloody man and 〈◊〉 man of Belial and reproached him for being treacherous to the house of Saul and Abishai would have taken away his head no saith David let him alone God hath bid him Curse A mad Dog that biteth another makes him as mad as himself Now it should not be so with Christians if they bark or bite at us yet we should possess our Souls with Patience It is a time of Reproach and Rebuke a time wherein God will humble his People therefore we should expostulate the case with the Lord and humble our selves before him and see what 's the matter God hath disposed this by his Providence We would revenge our selves of those that Reproach us if it were in our power but David had Meekness and Patience that would not permit it God will discover the Patience of his Servants say the Apostles 1 Cor. 4. 13. Being reviled we bless being persecuted we suffer it being defamed we intreat though we are set forth as the filth of the World and are the off-scouring of all things unto this day the word is the sweepings of the City that are fit to be carried out of the City to be swept away unfit to live among men in civil societies Christians there must be a season for the tryal of our Graces Now God makes this season for the tryal of Patience Such a time as this discovers the strength of Grace 4. Another thing God would have to be tryed is our Uprightness whether we can hold on our way through good report and bad report in honour and dishonour as the Apostle speaks 2 Cor. 6. 8. Still approve our selves faithful Servants of Christ. If you search into the Records of Time you shall find many have been discouraged in Christianity because of Reproaches that have been cast upon them for the Devil works much upon Stomach and Spleen When Tertullian was reproached by certain Priests at Rome he turned Montanist Now God will try our uprightness Look as the Moon shines and holds on her course though the Doggs bark so we should hold on our course let men talk their pleasure yet we should abide faithful with God Psal. 119. 22. Remove from me Reproach and Contempt for I have kept thy Testimonies David was not unsetled by contempt and reproach but still kept Gods Testimonies and adhered to his ways Some can be Religious no longer than they can be so with honour when reproaches come when their secular
satisfieth not And Ioh. 6. 27. Labour not for the meat that perisheth but for that meat which indureth to everlasting life And partly as it ingageth to Constancy in Obedience for it must last as long as our Rule lasteth You are eternally bound to love God and Fear him and Obey him We must not only begin well or serve him now and then in a good Mood but so love God as to love him for ever so cleave to him as never to depart from him For his Law is an eternal obligation you must never cease your work till you receive your wages and that is when you enter into Eternity Yea much of our work is wages Loving Praising God all Duties that do not imply weakness are a part of our Happiness Thus it hath a greater influence upon our Obedience then we were at first aware of 3. Because it conduceth much to our Comfort The Apostle telleth us that the Comfort of Believers is built upon two immutable grounds therefore 't is so strong Heb. 6. 18. Now this Everlasting Righteousness of Gods Testimonies is a comfort to us 1 In all the changes of Mens Affections towards us sometimes they smile and sometimes they frown but the Promises ever remain the same There is yea and nay with men but not with the Promises they are all yea and amen in Christ. 2 Cor. 1. 20. Times alter and change but the tenour of the Covenant is always the same 2 It Comforts us in the changes of Gods dispensations to us God may change his dispensations yet his purposes of Grace stand firm and are carried on unalterably by various and contrary means We must interpret Providence by the Covenant not the Covenant by Providence We know the meaning of his works best by going into his Sanctuary The World misconstrueth his work and dealing to his Children many times if it be rightly interpreted you will find Gods Righteousness is an Everlasting Righteousness Sometimes Gods Providence is dark but always just Psal. 97. 2. Clouds and darkness are round about him Righteousness and Iudgment are the Habitation of his throne Hab. 1. 12. Art not thou from everlasting O Lord my God That was the Prophet's support in those sad times when a Treacherous people were exalted when he was imbrangled and lost about Gods dispensations this was his comfort and support Gods Eternal Immutability in the Covenant He is always the same loveth his People as much as ever as faithful and mindful of his Covenant as ever only a vail of sense covereth our eyes that we cannot see it 3 It Comforts us against the difficulties of Obedience when it groweth Irksome to us The difficulty and trouble is but for a while but we shall everlastingly have the Comfort of it 2 Cor. 4. 17. For our light affliction which is but for a moment worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of Glory Then 't will be no grief of heart to us to have watched prayed striven against sin suffered continued with him notwithstanding all Temptations Rom. 2. 7. To them who by patient continuance in well-doing seek for Glory Honour and Immortality eternal Life 4 'T is a Comfort in Death We change and are changed but God is always the same the Righteousness of Christ will bear weight for ever Dan. 9. 24. to bring in an everlasting Righteousness The fruits of Obedience last for ever Psal. 112. 7. His Righteousness endureth for ever How Comfortable is this to remember that we may appear before God with this Confidence which he hath wrought in us that the Covenant of Grace is an everlasting Charter that shall never be out of Date nor wax old Use. Let it be thus with us let it be so deeply imprinted upon our Minds that it may leave an Everlastingness there upon the frame of our Spirits for then we are transformed by the Word and cast into the Mould of it Now who are they that have an Everlasting Righteous frame of heart 1. Such as Act out of an everlasting Principle or the new Nature which worketh above the World The Word ingrafted is called an Incorruptible seed or the seed of God 1 Pet. 1. 23. that abideth in us 1 Ioh. 3. 9. when there is a Divine Principle in us such a Principle as is the seed and beginning of Eternal Life when the Word hath rooted it self in our hearts 2. Such as by their constant progress towards an Everlasting estate are going from strength to strength serving God and cleaving to him in a uniform constant Course of Holiness not by fits and starts but unchangeably Act. 24. 16. to have always a Conscience void of offence Again when you are in such an estate wherein you can bear the Trial of those everlasting Rules Gal. 6. 8. He that soweth to the flesh shall of the flesh reap Corruption but he that soweth to the Spirit shall of the Spirit reap life Everlasting Rom. 8. 13. If ye live after the Flesh ye shall die but if ye through the Spirit do mortifie the deeds of the Body ye shall live In short If you have everlasting Ends 2 Cor. 4. 18. While we look not at the things that 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 Not making things Temporal our scope and aim that will not satisfie us when we are deeply possessed with the thoughts of the other World 1 Cor. 2. 12. We have not received the Spirit of the World and look upon all other things by the by and use the World as if we used it not 1 Cor. 7. 29 30. Secondly I come now to the Prayer Give me understanding and I shall live I. Here is the benefit asked Understanding II. The Person asking David Give me III. The Person from whom it is asked from God I. The Benefit asked give me Understanding that is the saving knowledge of Gods Testimonies Doctrine One great request that we have to put up to God should be for the saving knowledge of his Testimonies The Reasons why this should be our great Request to God First The necessity of Understanding that will appear 1. Because of our Ignorance and Folly which is the cause of all our sin Tit. 3. 3. We our selves were sometimes foolish and disobedient Therefore Disobedient because Foolish Every natural man is a Fool blind in spiritual things whatever understanding or quickness of Judgment he hath in other things In all things that relate to God and Heaven Blind and Foolish and cannot see afar off 2 Pet. 1. 9. He that lacketh these things is blind And you shall find that sinners are called Fools Prov. 1. 22. How long ye simple ones will ye love simplicity And scorners delight in scorning and Fools hate knowledge Psal. 75. 4. I said unto the Fools deal not foolishly and to the wicked lift not up the Horn. They follow their own Wit and Will to the
Precepts that we may order our Practise accordingly There must be an habitual Aim and Purpose to please God 3. Patience a resolute continuance till our service be over This is the way I have chosen and here will I stick until the great reward come in hand Rom. 2. 7. To them who by patient continuance in well-doing seek for honour and glory and immortality Eternal Life And Luk. 8. 15. The good ground brought forth fruit with patience That distinguished the good ground from all other grounds they had some little liking of it but never came to a serious choice but the good ground though there be several Weathers between Sowing and Reaping it cherisheth the Seed that it is ready at Harvest time so we pass through many Weathers before we come to our Harvest of Happiness and Rest. Doctrine II. That man which makes Conscience of Gods Commands is encouraged to seek help from him in straits First Such a one may be in great straits as David his own hand could not help him therefore he flies to God The Lord permits it that he may be trusted alone in his own hands he will break our carnal Dependancies and that his ways may be chosen for their own sakes and not for temporal Reward and that his Love to his own People may not be shewn too sensibly that the misteriousness of Providence may leave a room and place for Faith therefore doth God darken the Glory of the Godly with Afflictions and put them into straits that their own hand cannot help them Now in these straits those that make Conscience of Gods Precepts they are encouraged to seek help from Gods hand Why Partly because Integrity breeds a confidence so that a man which hath been faithful with God can look him in the face It breeds a confidence in Life 2 Cor. 1. 12. and in Death Isa. 38. 3. when they are sick weak and know not what to do they can fly to God And then Integrity also it entitles to Gods Protection all that heartily and sincerely depend upon God Prov. 10. 9. He that walketh uprightly walketh surely An upright plain-hearted Man that trusts himself under the shadow and protection of Gods Providence he hath no shifts and tricks this man shall walk safely God is engaged to defend him But the perverse that fly to their shifts God will disappoint them and shew them their folly Gen. 17. 1. I am God All-sufficient walk before me and be thou perfect Do you uprightly serve God and study to please him and you need not seek else-where for a Patron or for one to defend you and plead your Cause And partly too because they are exposed to the greater difficulties because they are faithful with God and trust themselves alone with his protection for so the Apostle 1 Tim. 4. 10. For therefore we labour and suffer reproach because we trust in the living God Faith begets faithfulness their dependance is upon God and their faithfulness costs them dear and so they suffer reproach because they did trust themselves in Gods ways by Gods providence As you stand in need of Gods protection you shall have it God will not forsake us in our greatest needs as the World will but in our greatest extremities when all carnal dependencies fail us he will not then is the time for God to shew himself He hath still a Providence and Fatherly care over thee but his power is especially engaged at such a time If you will take care of your Duty he will take care of your safety for he will either keep you out of Troubles or sustain you under Troubles SERM. CLXXXVII PSALM CXIX VER 174. I haue longed for thy Salvation O Lord and thy law is my delight IN this Verse you have a twofold Assertion or Protestation First Of a Vehement desire of the Salvation promised I have longed for thy Salvation Secondly A great Love and Complacency in the Word of God and thy law is my delight This Verse may be understood either of Temporal Salvation or Eternal Salvation the Words may be accommodated to either sense The context would seem to limit it to the former and so an enforcing of the second request of this portion Verse 170. Deliver me according to thy word Many Interpreters both Iewish and Christian carry it for the other Iewish Rabbi David Kimchi expoundeth it thus thy Salvation soeculo futuro and the last Clause thy law quia medium est ad salutem Christian Chrysostom Theodoret Calvin and because these senses are not contrary but subordinate I shall insist upon both 1. Let me handle the words as they may be understood of Temporal Salvation and so the sense will be I have long expected thy deliverance and yet do desire and wait for it the Preterperfect Tense as Vatabilus noteth includeth also the present for a long time I have expected thy deliverance and do expect help from thee and the other Clause thy law is my delight though this help seemeth to be delayed yet thy counsel is my Consolation and perpetual Delight The Words thus understood yeild us two Points Doctrine I. That Gods people do look to God for deliverance and longingly expect the accomplishment of it Doctrine II. We should delight in the Promise before the Salvation cometh For the first Point That Gods people do look to God for deliverance and longingly expect it The Point shall be discussed in these Considerations I. What Longing for Gods Salvation implyeth II. The Encouragements and Reasons of it III. What singular thing there is in this longing Expectation since 't is natural to all to seek Deliverance out of Trouble I. What it Implyeth 1. A sense of our Impotency or Insufficiency to save our selves and help our selves out of Trouble by any ways and means that we can find out and use Psal. 3. 8. Salvation belongeth to the Lord. Ionah 2. 9. Salvation is of the Lord. Salvation and Deliverance of all kinds is Gods Prerogative Royal and Gods proper work none can save and give peace when he commandeth Trouble and when he will save his People none can let 'T is an evidence of mens neglecting a Deity when they would help and save themselves in all Conditions without depending or imploying a God Iob 40. 9 14. Hast thou an arm like God then I will confess unto thee that thine own right hand can save thee Alass if we look else-where how soon are we disappointed Man is a mutable Creature his Affections change or his power may be blasted an Arm of flesh is soon dried up besides the distraction and uncertainty that we have while we depend upon man and look to man we involve our selves in greater miseries and meet with a shameful disappointment at last Sometimes man will not if he can sometimes cannot if he would If he will and can yet he shall not help us without God for what can the Instrument do without the Principal Agent the sword without the man that weildeth
less upon the more infirm though alike faulty 5. Another comfort which the Scripture propounds is the help we shall have in affliction to bear it partly from the comforts of his spirit and partly from the supports of his grace 1. By way of Consolation The love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost at such a time Rom. 5. 3. Cordials are for those that are fainting In time of trouble we have most sensible experience of Gods love God deals with his children many times as Ioseph did with his brethren he calls them Spies and puts them in prison but at length he could hold no longer but tells them I am your brother Ioseph so God seems to deal roughly with his people and take away their dearest Comforts from them I but before the trouble be over he can hold no longer but saith I am your God your Father and exceeding great reward His bowels yern towards us and he opens his heart to us and sheds abroad his love in our consciences 2. Partly by the supports and influences of his grace Psal. 138. 3. In the day when I cryed thou answeredst me and strengthnest me with strength in my soul. When David was in trouble this was his comfort though he could not get deliverance yet he got support God is many times gone to appearance but he will never forsake us as to inward support and strength Heb. 13. 5. I will never leave thee nor forsake thee 6. From the fruit and final issue of all 2 Cor. 4. 17. This light affliction which is but for a moment worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory He that can find Christ in his afflictions and can see Heaven beyond it needs not to be troubled All the notions of Heaven are diversified why that they may be suited to those divers trials and many evils we have in the world Sometimes it is exprest by glory and honour to counterbalance the disgrace which Gods children meet with here that the reproach of men may not make us more sad than the eternal glory may make us comfortable Sometimes it is exprest by substance because sometimes Gods children are poor and suffer loss of goods Heb. 10. 34. Sometimes it is call'd our Redemption our Countrey to comfort us in exile and banishment for the name of Christ Heb. 11. 14 15. Sometimes it is called life eternal because we may be called to suffer even to blood Thus the word offereth this comfort against all the evils that befall us that we may counterbalance every particular trouble with what the promises hold forth concerning our blessed hopes USE Well then let us exercise our selves in the word of God and let all his promises be as so many Cordials to us To this end get an interest in these promises for the heirs of promise have strong consolation Heb. 6. 18. There is strong great real and pure comfort but it is to the heirs of promise So Rom. 5. 4. Not only so but we rejoyce in tribulation Who are those those that are justified by faith in Christ v. 1. To others afflictions are the punishments of sin and an occasion of despair not of rejoycing I but when we are interested in reconciliation with God then we take this comfort out of the word of God 2. It informs us of the excellency of Gods testimonies above all outward enjoyments When we have them to the full they cannot give us any solid true peace of conscience nor cure one sad thought Now beg of God that he will comfort you when all things else fail When the labour of the Olive shall fail I 'le comfort my self in the Lord my God Hab. 3. 18. I say when we are under any burden nay when we are under any sorrow for sin when afllictions revive stings of conscience or else the word hath awakened them yet there 's comfort to be had by running to the word of God 3. It shews us what is the property of believers to delight in the testimonies of God when all things go cross to them Temporaries when things run smoothly they have a comfort in the word O but when the afflictions of the Gospel fall upon them they fall a murmuring presently But a true believer can hold up his head and though he hath much affliction yet he can have much joy in the Holy-Ghost and a great deal of comfort from the word of God There follows another benefit Thy testimonies are my Councellors or men of my counsel From thence observe Doct. 2. That one great benefit we have from the word of God is counsel how to direct our affairs according to his will For the clearing of this let me lay down these Propositions 1. That our great interest is to keep in with God or approve our selves to him 2. Whoever would keep in with God needs counsel and direction in all his ways 3. The only good counsel we can have is from God in his word 4. The counsel God hath given us in his word is sufficient and full out for all our necessities Prop. 1. That our great interest is to keep in with God and approve our selves to him in all our actions for God is the scope and end of our lives and actions as the thing prest that we may walkworthy of God in all well-pleasing Col. 1. 10. God being our chiefest good must be our last end therefore in every action there must be an habitual purpose and in all actions of weight and moment there must be an actual purpose to please God Every ordinary affair must be carried forth in the strength of the habitual purpose but in all actions we would make a business of there must be an actual purpose And because his Authority alone can sway the Conscience which is under his dominion therefore it concerns us in all things to exercise our selves that we may have a good conscience void of offence both towards God and man Acts 24. 16. And again we are to approve our ways to God and to keep in with him because to him we are to give an account 2 Cor. 5. 9 10. There will a time come when every action of ours shall be taken into consideration and weighed in the ballance of the Sanctuary with all our principles and ends therefore we strive we are ambitious so the word signifies our great ambition should be living or dying to be accepted with God Again Surely it should be our business to approve our selves to God in every action because all the success of our actions depends upon his concurrence and blessing Now we shall find this is often asserted in Scripture When a man's ways are full of hazards likely to be expos'd to great opposition your great work is to keep in with God approve your hearts to him Prov. 16. 7. When a mans ways please the Lord he will make even his enemies to be at peace with him God hath a mighty power over the spirits
In its infancy there may be some reliques of Fear in a Christian as Iohn 19. 39. Nicodemus at first came to Iesus by night but a grown Faith counts it no loss of Honour or impeachment of Dignity to become vile for God 4. The eternal Recompence 1 Sam. 2. 30. Those that honour me I will honour 1 Pet. 2. 7 That your faith may be found to praise glory and honour at Christs coming On the other side if we are ashamed of Christ Christ will be ashamed of us for evermore Mark 8. 38. Whosoever therefore shall be ashamed of me and my words in this adulterous and sinful generation of him also shall the Son of man be ashamed when he cometh in the glory of his father with the holy angels The Eagle-eye of Faith can look through all the Pageantry of the World and the Mists and Clouds of Time to the Future state the Judgment that shall be made of things To a Believers eye all the Honour of the World is but a Fancy and vain Appearance a Scene in which a base Fellow acteth the part of a Prince 5. The Judgment of the World is not to be stood upon Why should we desire the applause of the blind ungodly World or make any great matter of their contempt and scorn Shall the scorn of a Fool be more to us than the approbation of God If they slight you who slight God and Christ and their own Salvation why should you be troubled They are incompetent Judges of these things 1 Iohn 3. 1. The world knoweth us not Use. See the strange perversion of Humane Nature Men are ashamed where they should be bold and bold and confident where they should be ashamed they glory in their shame but think it a disgrace to speak of God and own God not before Kings onely but before their Familiars and Companions Be ashamed to be filthy false proud but never be ashamed to go to a Sermon where you may profit in the Ways of God and the Knowledge of his Testimonies to be strict in Conversation to speak reverently of God though scorned by Men. None of God's Servants have reason to be ashamed of their Master SERMON LIII PSAL. CXIX 47. And I will delight my self in thy commandments which I have loved THE Man of God is giving Arguments to inforce his Request That the word of Truth might not be taken utterly out of his mouth 1. He could not bear it because all his Hopes of Felicity were built upon it ver 43. 2. He promiseth constancy of Obedience ver 44. 3. Liberty of Practice ver 45. 4. Liberty of Profession not hindred by Fear or Shame but should be born out with confidence in that Profession 5. He urgeth in the Text with what delight he should carry on the Work of Obedience and I will delight my self in thy commandments which I have loved In which observe 1. His great Pleasure and Contentment is asserted and professed I will delight my self 2. The Object of it in thy commandments 3. The fundamental Reason or bottom Cause of this Delight which I have loved Doct. A gracious heart doth love and delight in the Commandments of God The Godly are described by it Hence David makes it the Character of a Blessed man Psal. 1. 2. His delight is in the law of the Lord and in that law doth he meditate day and night And Psal. 112. 1. Blessed is the man that feareth the Lord and delighteth greatly in his commandments Paul asserts of himself as a comfortable evidence of his Sincerity in the midst of his Infirmities Rom. 7. 22. For I delight in the law of God after the inward man By the inward man he means the renewed part that is pleased with all things that please God if we have such a Delight as is above the Delight of Sense c. I will 1. Explain the Point as it lieth here in the Text. 2. Shew how the Heart is brought to this for corrupt Nature is otherwise affected I. To explain the Point 1. His Pleasure and Contentment is asserted I will delight my self A Christian hath his Joys and Delights but they are pure and chaste they delight in the Lord and in his Word and Ways Phil. 4. 4. Rejoyce in the Lord always and again I say Rejoyce He hath a liberty 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but onely in the Lord 1 Cor. 7. 39. not onely may but must it is his Duty Joy is a great part of his Work not our Felicity or Wages onely but our Work also Now I shall prove that all the Pleasures and Delights of the Earth are nothing to the Pleasures and Delights which the Godly do find in God and in an holy Life 1. These Delights are more substantial It is not a superficial Joy that they are delighted withal but a substantial Joy It must needs be so partly because these are better grounded not built upon a mistake and fancy but the highest Warrant and surest Foundation which Mankind can build upon the Word of the Eternal God which can never fail Whereas the Joy that is meerly built upon carnal Delights is built upon a fancy and mistake Both are represented by the Apostle 1 Iohn 2. 17. The world passeth away and the lust thereof but he that doth the will of God abideth for ever If they considered the shortness of their Pleasures and in what a doleful case their Wealth and Honour and fleshly Delights will leave them they would have little list to be merry till they had looked after a more stable Blessedness The World will be soon gone and the Lust and Gust thereof gone also but he that goeth on with the work of Holiness building on the Promise of another World layeth a sure Foundation Partly because they do more intimately affect the Soul Sensual Delights do not go so deep as the Delights of Holiness Psal. 4. 7. Thou hast put gladness in my heart more than in the time when their corn and their wine increased like a soaking Showr that goeth to the Root The other tickleth the Senses poor slight and out-side Comforts that do not fortifie the Heart against distresses much less against the remembrance of our Judge or the fears of an offended God or the serious thoughts of another World For these two Reasons the Joys of a Christian stirred up in him by the Conformity of his Will to the Will of God are solid substantial Joys A wicked Man may be jocund and jovial but he hath not the true Delight they may have more Mirth but the Christian hath the true Joy In the midst of mirth the heart is sorrowful It is easie to be merry but it is not easie to be joyful or to get a substantial Delight 2. These Delights are more Perfective a Man is the better for them Other Delights that please the Flesh feed Corruption but these corroborate and strengthen Graces They are so far from disordering the Mind and leading us to sin that they
useful and refreshing when used in the day but if kept all night it perished and was useless It was useful in the Wilderness but ceaseth when they came to Canaan Uses are many First comfort to the Godly for their own particular He is an eternal God that ordereth and guideth all things that he may bring them to their eternal felicity and will in time admit them into it Psal. 48. 14. For this God is our God for ever and ever and he will be our guide even unto death After death he will be their God still death doth not put an end to this relation for God is Abraham's God when he is dead Matth. 2●… 32. God is the same still both in himself and to those that believe in him he will constantly guide them all the days of their life and after death receive us to the everlasting enjoyment of himself and revive our dust Oh what a blessedness is this to have an interest in such an eternal God! 2. As to the Community and Society to which they do belong God's Eternity is the Churches stability and so 't is urged in Scripture Mal. 3. 6. For I am the Lord I change not therefore ye sons of Iacob are not consumed Psal. 102. 27 28. Thou art the same and thy years shall have no end The children of thy servants shall continue So when the flourishing of the wicked is spoken of when they spring as grass Psal. 92. 8. But thou O Lord art most high for evermore If they be high God is higher and they are but upstarts to him their power is of a late rise and short continuance So Psal. 93. 2. Thy throne is established of old thou art from everlasting God's Throne is as eternal as his Being So Lam. 3. 17. Thou O Lord remainest for ever and thy throne from generation to generation Is the life of thy Enemies long God endureth for ever Is their power great 't is but dependent God had power before them and will have power when they shall be no more Second Use Is Terror to the wicked Heb. 10. 31. It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God They may out-live other Enemies but they cannot out-live God who abideth for ever to avenge his quarrel against them and judge you if his Controversie against them be not just since they are such impious Fools and Brutes as that they prefer the creature before the Creator and chuse temporal things rather than everlasting and prefer Earth before Heaven and the satisfaction of their bodily lusts before the saving of their souls Can you blame God of any injustice in dooming them to everlasting misery What part of the punishment would you have relaxed the Loss or the Pain the Loss is double of God's favor or their natural comforts Would you have God admit those to the sight and everlasting fruition of himself who never cared for him Or return again to their natural comforts that they may eternally run Riot with them or abuse them to an occasion of the flesh Or is it the pain Would you have God take off that when the sin and impenitent obstinacy doth still continue since they preferred a temporal good before that which is eternal and would sell their birthright for one morsel of meat Heb. 12. 16. How just is it for God to make them everlastingly to lie under the fruits and effects of their own evil choice Third Use. Is to press us to seek after the everlasting fruition of this blessed and ever glorious God because many live as if they had never heard of things eternal most live as if they did not believe any such thing the best do not improve those things as they ought therefore I shall a little insist upon a quickening exhortation to stir you up to seek an eternal happiness in God 1. As we are reasonable Creatures we were made for Eternity for God hath given us an immortal spirit and there is no proportion between an immortal soul and temporal things it cannot be content with any thing that shall have an end for then we may survive our happiness if we had souls that would perish it would be more excusable to look after things that perish What will you do when your Souls shall be turned out of doors when ye fail Luke 16. 9. To what Region will the poor shiftless harborless Soul betake it self when you dye All your thoughts that concern the present world perish and if you did perish too it were no such great matter But you shall live and what will you have to comfort your selves if you have not an interest in the Eternal God in whose hands will you be if you have slighted him while you were upon earth and the eternal happiness he offereth to us and could not find enough in God and his Eternal Salvation to take off your hearts from the pleasures and vanities of the world Can you expect that he will favour you and be kind to you 2. Eternity is made known to us Christians and clearly set before us in the doctrine of the Gospel 2 Tim. 1. 10. he hath brought life and immortality to light through the gospel Nature hath but guesses at it the Law but shadows but here 't is clearly certainly and fully revealed You know that you have an Eternal God to please and an infinite and eternal reward to expect The whole drift of our Religion is to call us off from Time to Eternity from this world to a better Christ came not to settle us here in a state of prosperity nor to make this world our Rest and Portion but to draw us up to God and Heaven 3. The same Religion sheweth that we are already involved in an Eternal misery and stand under a sentence binding us over to the Curse and Everlasting wrath of God Ioh. 3. 18. He that beleiveth not is condemned already and this is the Condemnation that light is come into the world and men love darkness more than light because their deeds are evil God hath offered Life and Immortality to them who have so miserably lost it and involved their souls in Eternal death Therefore if we know what it is to be liable to the wrath of an eternal God and to be interessed in the hopes of eternal glory we should awaken and be more serious in a business of such concernment 4. You will shortly be summoned to give an account Luke 16. 2. You have received so much from me such Riches Honours Parts Sufficiencies such Invitations to draw you home to me what will you answer Nay there is not only a little time between you and Judgment but a little time between you and Execution nothing but the slender thread of a frail life which is soon fretted asunder and will you can you sleep in sin so near Eternity and laugh and dance over the brink of Hell you cannot soon enough flee from wrath to come 5. Consider what poor deluded
the Necessity 2. From the Congruity and Conveniency 3. From the Utility and Profit of it 1. The Necessity of it It must needs be so that Gods wayes must be taken up upon choice because there are several Competitors that bid for the heart of Man where there is but one thing there is no choice There is the Devil by the World through the Flesh seeks to get in and reign in your Hearts and there is God Christ and the Spirit Now there must be a casting out of one and putting in the other Look as in the 9. Prov. the whole Chapter there Wisdom and the foolish woman are brought in pleading to draw in the heart of unwary man to themselves Wisdom is pleading and the foolish woman is pleading In the beginning of the Chapter Wisdom tells what Comfort what Peace they shall have if they will take her Institutions Wisdom offers solid Benefits but Folly offers stolen waters and bread eaten in secret some carnal Mirth when Conscience is asleep ay and the dead are there too The intoxicating Pleasures of this World bring Death along with them when they can choak the sentiments of God that are in his heart Whoso is simple let him turn in hither saith Wisdom and who is simple let him turn in hither saith Folly As the Poets feign of their Hercules that Vertue and Vice appeared to him and the one shewed him a rough and the other a pleasant way Certainly as soon as we come to years of discretion we come to make our choice either to go on in the ways of death or to choose the ways of God either to give up our selves to the Pleasures of sin or else to seek after the comforts of the Spirit Now since there are two Competitors for the heart of man and his love cannot remain idle it must be given to one or another Love and Oblectation cannot lie idle in the Soul either it must leak out to the World or run out to God There is a necessity of a choice of renouncing the bewitching Vanities of the World that we may seriously betake our selves to the service of God 2. Consider the Congruity and Conveniency of it both to the honour of God and nature of Man that no man should ever be happy or miserable but by his own Choice 1. 'T is not for the Honour of God that a man should be Happy or have such great Priviledges setled upon him without his own choice such great benefits as Justification Sanctification and Eternal Glory On the other side that a man should be Miserable without his knowledge or against his will or besides his purpose and consent that God should give Eternal Life whether men will or no. It is not agreeable to the Honour of God to inflict Eternal Death upon them without their consent unless they choose the ways of death Mans Heart else would have a Plea against God Certainly the wise God will never make any happy without their own consent and never make any Miserable but their Destruction is of themselves Hos. 13. 9. 2. Neither will it agree with the Nature of Man who is a reasonable rational Creature or any agent capable of Election or Choice The Brutes are rul'd with a rod of Iron God guides all things by his Providence inanimate Creatures by meer Providence Brutes by their own instinct and Man as a free Agent capable of knowing and prosecuting his Chief End Now every Creature of God is governed according to the nature which is put into it and therefore since man is a free Agent God expects in submitting to his service the Creatures consent and choice and before we can submit to his service before he will admit us to the benefits there must be a choice and an actual will on our parts Rev. 22. 17. Whosoever will let him take the water of life freely The business is brought home to us and left with our will If we miss of happiness it is because we would not choose it and the way that leads to it The Lord chargeth it still upon mans Will Iohn 5. 40. Luke 19. 14. Matth. 23. 37. Psal. 81. 11. our Misery is from our wilfulness But in all that are brought into Grace there is a Will 't is true but God prevents them and inclines their Will Psal. 110. 3. Thy people shall be willing in the day of grace and power You have a grant and an offer of mercy from God and then he inclines and moves you to make a right choice So that of the good and bad it may be said they have their choice If you neglect and refuse holiness you choose your own destruction and neglect life your Hearts must tell you this Thou hast been the fault of it as Plutarch brings in one Apollodorus that dreamt one night that he was boyling in a Kettle of scalding Lead and that his heart cried out to him I have been the cause of all this This Heathen improves it to shew there is a Vengeance that attends sinners I mention it only allusively Now it was your own perverse Choice and Will that made your Hell thou hast but the fruit of thine own choice Indeed as to what is good if you have chosen the Precepts of God there God must have the Glory you must say not I but Christ as the Apostle Ay but there you come in there 's an Act of your Will but as disposed and rightly enclined by God You come both to the Duties and Priviledges of Religion by a choice also though not of your selves but of God 3. Let me reason from the Utility and Benefit A man that takes up the wayes of God upon Choice 1. He is able to justifie the wayes of God for he seeth a Reason for what he chooseth When Temptations come strong there will be many mis-giving thoughts ay but then Wisdom should be justified of all her Children Matth. 11. 19. A blind accidental Love is the fruit of chance but a Love that is grounded upon knowledge and Judgment that 's choice this is so grounded therefore he seeth Reason for what he doth Phil. 1. 9 10. I pray God that your love may abound in all wisdom and understanding That ye may approve things that are excellent They see a Reason for they took it upon choice The Lord hath shewed them the worth and excellency of his wayes therefore they can better justifie God against all their prejudices 2. Such will be more firm and stedfast The cause of all halting in Religion is is the want of a Choice of a purpose resolutely set A wavering double-minded man that is half off and half on will be unstable in all his ways Iames 1. 8. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a two-soul-man a man that seems to have a soul for God and a soul for earthly things and the heart hangs sometimes for one and sometimes for another A scoff or scorn or a little inconvenience a little fear a little enticement or stirring of
Alas if men were to sit brooding a Religion themselves what a strange business would they hatch and bring forth if they were to carve out the worship of God they might please themselves but could never please God Vain men indeed are ready to frame God like themselves and foolishly imagine what pleaseth them pleaseth him also they still conceive of God according to their own fancy And this was the reason why the wisest Heathens having no revelation no sense of Gods will but what offered it self by the light of nature they would imploy their wits to devise a Religion but what a monstrous Chimera and strange fancy did they bring forth Professing themselves wise they became fools Rom. 1. 22. Though they knew there was a great and eternal being by the light of nature yet the Apostle saith they became vain 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in their imaginations how this infinite being should be worshipped therefore what they carved out was not an honour but a disgrace they devised Gods and Goddesses that were Patrons of murder theft and all manner of filthiness and brought out Bacchus the God of riot and good-fellowship or the Patron of boon companions And Venus the Patroness of love and wantonness But now God hath shewed us his will he hath shewed us what is good and what he doth require of us Micah 6. 8. Now that the Gospel is a revelation from God it appears by the matter which is so suitable to the nature of God it hath such an impress of Gods Wisdom Goodness Power upon it that plainly it hath past God it is like such an infinite and eternal being as God is in the worship and duties prescribed it is far above the wisdom of meer man though very agreeable to those reliques of wisdom which are left in us So that this is that true Religion which surely will please God because it came from him at first and could come from no other And also besides the evidence it carrieth with it and the impress and stamp of God upon it we have the word of those that brought this Doctrine to us and if we had nothing else if they say Thus saith the Lord c. we are bound to believe them they being persons of a valuable credit that sought not themselves but the glory of him that sent them When the first messengers of it were men of such an unquestionable credit that had no ends of their own but ran all the extreme hazards and displeasures surely it cannot incline us to think they did seek God's glory by a lye Yea they did evidence their mission from God by miracles that God sent them surely this doctrine is from heaven I and still God in his Providence shews it from heaven both in his Internal government of the world he blesseth it to the comfort of the conscience or to the terrifying of the conscience for it works both ways Wicked men are afraid of the light lest their deeds should be made manifest Iohn 3. 20. and also to the comforting and setling the conscience that we may have great joy by believing in Christ. This for his Internal government And then his External government by answering of prayers fulfilling promises accomplishing prophecies Psal. 18. 30. As for God his way is perfect the word of the Lord is tried he is a buckler to all that trust in him Put God to the tryal by a regular confidence in an humble walking and he will make good his promises I and make good his threatnings When people are ripe for judgment God will fulfil the threatnings of his word and will accomplish what is spoken by the Prophets and Apostles and God will reveal his wrath from Heaven against all unrighteousness of men Rom. 1. 18. So that here are plain signs that this is a doctrine revealed from God and God can best tell us how he is to be worshipped and pleased Secondly Besides God's revelation it notably performs all that which a man would expect in a Religion and so suits the necessities of man as well as the honour of God Why 1. That is the true Religion which doth most draw off the minds of men from things temporal and earthly to things coelestial and eternal that we may think of them and prosecute them The sense of another world an estate to come is the great foundation upon which all Religion is grounded All its precepts and promises which are like to gain upon the heart of man they receive their force from the promise of an unseen glory and eternal punishments which are provided for the wicked and contemners of the Gospel The whole design of this Religion is to take us off from the pleasures of the flesh and the baits of this world that we may see things to come It 's the excellency of the Christian faith that it reveals the doctrines of eternal life clearly which all other Religions in the world only could guess at There were some guesses but still great uncertainty but obscure thoughts and apprehensions of such an estate But here life and immortality is brought to light through the Gospel 2 Tim. 1. 10. Alas there 's a mist upon it in all other representations they seem to see it yet see it not but this is brought to light in the Gospel it makes a free offer of it upon condition of faith in Christ Iohn 3. 16. it quickens us to look after it all its design is to breed in man this noble spirit by looking upon things that are above and not upon things on earth Col. 3. 1 2. and it endeavours with great power and perswasiveness that we may make it our scope that we may neglect all present advantages rather than miss of this and make it our great design that we may look not to the things which are seen but to the things unseen 2 Cor. 4. 17 18. This is the way of truth because we believe it will make the worshippers of it everlastingly happy which all men by nature have enquired about Now it is but reason that a man's work be ended before he receive his wages and if God will reward the vertuous that it should be in the other world for our work is not ended until we dye and we have a presagiency of another world there is another world which the soul of man thinks of Now this is that which Christianity drives at that we may look after our reward with God and escape that tribulation wrath and anguish which shall come upon every soul that doth evil 2. That doctrine which establisheth purity of heart and life as the only means to attain this blessedness certainly that 's the way of truth Psal. 24 3 4. Who shall ascend into the hill of the Lord and who shall stand in his holy place he that hath clean hands and a pure heart who hath not lift up his soul unto vanity There is no true holiness no subjection of heart to God but by the Christian
the Promises and may justly lay hold upon them who are God's Servants they who apply themselves to obey his Precepts these onely can regularly apply his Promises None can lay claim to Rewarding Grace but those that are partakers of his Sanctifying Grace Clear that once that you are God's Servants and then these Promises which are generally offered are your own no less than if your Name were inserted in the Promise and written in the Bible Let us remember our Promises made to God and then desire him to remember his Promises to us The next part of the Qualification is if you be Believers and can wait and depend upon God though he seemeth to delay and forget his Promise Our eyes must wait upon the Lord until he have mercy upon us Psal. 123. 2. The benefit of some Promises droppeth like the first ripe Fruit into the mouth of the eater but others must be tarried for It is said Acts 7. 17. When the time of the promise drew nigh which God had sworn to Abraham the people grew and multiplied in Egypt The Promise is recorded Gen. 15. 5. of multiplying his seed like the stars of heaven Abraham was seventy five years old when the Promise was made an hundred years old when Isaac was born when Iacob went into Egypt they were but seventy Souls but at their coming forth they were 603950 Now if Faith wait Isa. 28. 16. He that believeth maketh not haste Lam. 3. 26. It is good that a man should both hope and quietly wait for the salvation of God Hos. 12. 6. Keep mercy and judgment and wait on the Lord continually God delayeth because he would have us make use of Faith Real Believers are such as have ventured upon God's Word denied themselves for the Hope 's offered therein 1 Tim. 4. 10. Therefore we both labour and suffer reproch because we trust in the living God Heb. 6. 10. God is not unrighteous to forget your work and labour of love which ye have shewed towards his name God's Servants must wait for his Promises with patience and self-denial Rom. 2. 7. To them who by patient continuance in well-doing seek for glory and honour and immortality eternal life Luke 8. 15. Those in the good ground are they which in an honest and good heart having heard the word keep it and bring forth fruit with patience 2. Then let us plead Promises let not them lie by us as a dead Stock but put them in suit and put God in remembrance When the Accomplishment is delayed it is a notable way of raising and encreasing our Confidence 2 Sam. 7. 25. And now O Lord the word that thou hast spoken concerning thy servant and his house establish it for ever and do as thou hast said So ver 28. And now O Lord thou art that God and thy words are true and thou hast promised this goodness unto thy servant So may we do with any Promise of Mercy and Grace which God hath made with his People in his Covenant SERMON LVI PSAL. CXIX 50. This is my comfort in my Affliction for thy word hath quickened me IN the former Verse the Man of God had complained of the delay of the Promise and that his Hope was so long suspended now in this Verse he sheweth what was his Support and did revive him during this delay and the sore Afflictions which befel him in the mean time The Promise comforted him before Performance came This is my comfort in my affliction thy word hath quickned me 1. Observe here The Man of God had his Afflictions for we are not exempted from Troubles but comforted in Troubles God's Promise and Hope therein may occasion us much Trouble and Persecution in the World Yet 2. This very Promise which occasioneth the Trouble is the ground of our Support for one great Benefit which we have by the Word is Comfort against Afflictions 3. This Comfort which we have by the Word is the Quickning and Life of the Soul The Life of our Soul is first received by the Word and still maintained by the same Word Iames 1. 18. Of his own will begat he us with the word of truth 1 Pet. 1. 23. Being born again not of corruptible seed but of incorruptible by the word of God which liveth and abideth for ever Doctr. That all other Comforts in Afflictions are nothing to those Comforts which we have from the Word of God David confirmeth it from Experience in his deepest Pressures and Afflictions his Soul was supported and enlivened by the Word of God The Apostle Paul Doctrinally asserts it Rom. 15. 4. Whatsoever things were written aforetime were written for our learning that we through patience and comfort of the Scriptures might have hope The general End of Scripture is Instruction the special End is Comfort and Hope Id agit tota Scriptura ut credamus in Deum Luther The business and design of Scripture is to bring us to believe in God and to wait upon him for our Salvation to hope either for eternal Life which is the great Benefit offered in the Scriptures or those intervening Blessings which are necessary by the way and also adopted into the Covenant The Reasons are taken 1. From the Quality of those Comforts which we have from the Word of God 2. From the Provision which the Word hath made for our Comfort 3. From the Manner whereby this Comfort is received 1. From the Quality of those Comforts which we receive from the Word of God 1. It is a divine Comfort Psal. 94. 14. In the multitude of my thoughts within me thy comforts delight my soul. In all the Comforts we have it is good to consider from whence it cometh is it God's Comfort or a Fancy of our own A Comfort that is made up of our own Fancies is like a Spiders Web that is weaved out of its Bowels and is gone and swept away with the turn of a Besom But God's Comfort is more durable and lasting for then it floweth from the true Fountain of Comfort upon whose Smiles and Frowns our Happiness dependeth Now God's Comforts are such as God worketh or God alloweth take them in either sense they come in with a commanding or overpowering Efficacy upon the Soul If God exciteth it by his Spirit who is the Comforter Psal. 4. 7. Thou hast put gladness into my heart There is little warmth in a Fire of our own kindling the Holy Ghost raiseth the Heart to an higher degree of a delightful sense of the Love of God than we can do by a bare natural Act of our own Understanding Or whether it be of such Comforts as God alloweth if we have God's Covenant for our Comfort we have enough No Comfort like his Comfort In Philosophy Man speaketh to us by the Evidence of Reason in the Scripture God speaketh to us by way of Sovereign Authority In his Commands he interposeth his Power and Dominion in his Promises he impawneth his Truth And therefore Scriptural
praying in the Holy Ghost Rom. 8. 26. Likewise the Spirit also helpeth our infirmities for we know not what we should pray for as we ought but the Spirit it self helpeth our infirmities with groanings which cannot be uttered Zech. 12. 10. I will pour upon you the Spirit of Grace and of Supplication yet it is little relished by them A slat dead way of praying suiteth their gust better Christ compareth the Duties of the Gospel fasting with Prayer in the Spirit to new wine which will break old bottles Matth. 9. 17. but the Duties of the Pharisees to old dead and insipid wine there is no life in them 6. Serious speaking of God and Heavenly Things is in the phrase of the World Canting Indeed to speak swelling words of Vanity or an unintelligible Jargon betrayeth Religion to scorn but a pure Lip and Speech seasoned with Salt and that Holy Things should be spoken of in a holy manner our Lord requireth 7. Faith of the future Eternal State is esteemed a fond Credulity by them who affect the Vanities of the World and the Honours and Pleasures thereof They are all for Sight and Present Things and Christianity inviteth us to things Spiritual and Heavenly Now to live upon the Hopes of an unseen World and that to come they judge it to be but Foppery and needless Superstition Thus do poor Creatures drunk with the delusions of the Flesh judge of the Holy Things of God 8. The Humility of Christians and their pardoning Wrongs and forgiving Injuries they count to be Simplicity or Stupidness though the Law of Christ requireth us to forgive others as God for Christ's sake hath forgiven us 9. Exact walking is Scrupulosity and Preciseness and men are more nice then wise which is a Reproach that reflecteth a mighty contempt upon God himself that when he hath made an holy Law for the Government of the World that the obeying of this Law should be derided by professed Christians the Scorn must needs fall on him that made the Law and gave us these Commands If he be too precise that imperfectly obeyed God what will you say of God himself who commandeth more then any of us all performeth Thus the Children of God are not onely reproached as Hypocrites but derided as Fools and it is counted as a part of wit and breeding to droll at the serious Practice of Godliness as if Religion were but a Foppery 2. The Reasons of this are these 1. Their natural Blindness 1 Cor. 2. 14. The natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God for they are foolishness to him neither can he know them because they are spiritually discerned They are incompetent Judges Prov. 24. 7. Wisedom is too high for a fool Though by Nature we have lost our Light yet we have not lost our Pride Prov. 26. 16. The sluggard is wiser in his own conceit then seven men that can render a Reason Though their way in Religion be but a sluggish lazy and dead course yet they have an high conceit of it and censure all that is contrary or but a degree removed above it From Spiritual Blindness it is that Carnal Men judge unrighteously and perversely of God's Servants and count Zeale and Forwardness in Religious Duties to be but Folly and Madness 2. Antipathy and prejudicate Malice The Graceless scoff at the Gracious and the Profane at the Serious there is a different course and that produceth difference of Affections Iohn 15. 19. The world will love its own but because I have chosen you out of the world therefore the world hateth you And they manifest their Malice and Hatred this way by Evil-speaking 1 Pet. 4. 4. speaking evil of you 3. Want of a closer View Christians complained in the Primitive times that they were condemned unheard 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without any particular inquiry into their Principles and Practices And Tertullian saith nolentes auditis c. they would not inquire because they had a mind to hate A Man riding afar off seeing people dancing would think they were mad till he draws near and observes the harmonious order They will not take a nearer view of the regularity of the ways of God and therefore scoff at them 4. Because you do by your Practice condemn that Life that they affect Iohn 7. 7. The world hateth me because I testify that their deeds are evil Noah Heb. 11. 7. by Faith being warned of God of things not seen as yet moved with fear prepared an ark to the saving of his house by the which he condemned the world Now they would not have their guilt revived and therefore since they will not come up to others by a religious Imitation they seek to bring others down to themselves by Scoffs reproaches and Censures 5. They are set awork by Sathan thereby to keep off young Beginners and to discourage and molest the godly themselves for bitter words pierce deep and enter into the very Soul II. It is a grievous Temptation it is reckoned in Scripture among the Persecutions Gal. 4. 29. As he that was born after the flesh persecuted him that was born after the spirit even so it is now He meaneth those bitter mockings that Isaac did suffer from Ishmael Gen. 21. 9. And Sarah saw the son of Hagar the Egyptian which she had born unto Abraham mocking When the Wicked mock at our Interest in God shame our Confidence the Church complaineth of it Psal. 123. 4. We are filled with the scorning of those that are at ease and with the contempt of the proud the insultations of those that live in full Pomp over the Confidence and Hope the Saints have in God So we reade Heb. 10. 33. that the servants of God were made a gazing-stock by Reproaches and Afflictions again of cruel mockings Heb. 11. 36. It is more grievous when they mock and persecute at the same time there is both Pain and Shame The parties mocked were God's Saints the parties mocking were their Persecutors and Enemies which proved sometimes to be their own Brethren of the same Nation Language Kindred Religion In short these mockings issue out of Contempt and tend to the disgrace and dishonour of the Party mocked they make it their sport to abuse them David saith Reproach hath broken my heart Psal. 69. 20. III. This should not move us either to open Defection or partial Declining for these Reasons 1. It is one of the usual Evils wherewith the People of God are tempted Now a Christian should be fortified against obvious and usual Evils Let no man that is truly religious think that he can escape the Mockage and Contempt of the Wicked Iesus Christ himself endured the contradiction of sinners Heb. 12. 3. and the rather that we might not wax weary and faint in our minds This is a part of his Cross which we must bear after him The Pharisees derided his Ministry Luke 16. 14. The Pharisees also who were covetous
Deceivers by some yet owned by others as Faithfull Dispensers of the Truth of God not esteemed and looked on by some by others owned and valued thus God dispenseth the lot of his Servants 8. A Christian should be satisfied in the Approbation of God and the Honour He puts upon him Iohn 5. 44. How can ye believe that receive honour one of another and seek not the honour that cometh from God onely If God hath taken him into his Family and hath put his Image upon him and admitted him into present Communion with him and giveth him the Testimony of his Spirit to assure him of his Adoption here and will hereafter receive him into Eternal Glory this is enough and more then enough to counterballance all the Scorn of the World and the disgrace they would put upon us If God approve us should we be dejected at the Scorn of a Fool is the Approbation of the Eternal God so small in our Eyes that every thing can weigh it down and cast the ballance with us Alas their scorning and dishonouring is nothing to the honour which God puts upon us 9. There is a time when the promised Crown shall be set upon our Heads and who will be ashamed then the Scoffer or the Serious Worshipper of Christ God is resolved to honour Christ's Faithfull Servants Iohn 12. 26. He that honoureth me him shall my Father honour He will honour us at Death that is our private entrance into Heaven but he will much more honour us more publickly at the day of Judgment when we shall be owned Rev. 3. 5. I will confess his name before my Father and before his Angels and Christ shall be admired for the glory he puts upon a poor Worm 2 Thess. 1. 10. when he shall come to be glorified in his Saints and to be admired in all them that believe The Wicked shall be reckoned with called to an account by Christ Iude 14 15. The Lord cometh with ten thousand of his Saints to execute Iudgment upon all and to convince all that are ungodly among them of all their ungodly deeds which they have ungodlily committed and of all their hard speeches which ungodly sinners have spoken against them yea judged by the Saints 1 Cor. 6. 2. Do ye not know that the Saints shall judge the world Psal. 49. 14. The upright shall have Dominion over them in the morning That is in the Morning of the Resurrection the Saints shall be assumed by God to assist in Judicature and shall arise in a glorious manner when the Earth shall give up her dead If this be not enough for us to counterballance the Scorn of the World we are not Christians Use. It is to perswade us to hold on our Course notwithstanding all the Scorns and Reproaches which are cast upon the despised wayes of God Now to this end I shall give you some Directions 1. Be sure that you are in God's Way and that you have his Law to justify your Practice and that you do not make his Religion ridiculous by putting his glorious Name upon any foolish Fancies of your own A man that differs from the rest of Christians had need of a very clear Light that he may honour so much of Christianity as is owned and may be able to vindicate his own particular way wherein he is ingaged The World is loth to own any thing of God and needless dissents justify their Prejudice I know a Christian is not infallible besides his general godly Course he may have his particular Slips and Errours yet because the World is apt to take Prejudice we should not but upon the constraining evidence of Conscience enter upon any wayes of Dissent or Contest lest we justify their general hatred of Godliness by our particular Errour 2. Take up the Ways of God without a Bias and look straight forward in a Course of Godliness Prov. 4. 25. Let thine eyes look right on and thine eye-lids straight before thee That is look not asquint upon any Secular incouragements but have thine Eye to the end of the Journey make God as thy Witness so thy Master and Judge 3. Take heed of the first Declinings God's Saints may decline somewhat in an hour of Temptation and yet be sincere in the main Now Evil is best stopped in the beginning Heb. 12. 3. Consider him that endured such contradiction of sinners lest ye be weary and faint in your mind Weariness is a lesser and Fainting an higher degree of Deficiency I am weary before I faint before the vital power retireth and leaveth the outward part senseless 4. Since the Proud scoff encounter Pride with Humility Mocking is far more grievous to the Proud who stand upon their Honour then to the Lowly and Humble Therefore be not too desirous of the applause of Men especially of the blind and ungodly World make no great matter of their Contempt and Scorn or Slander SERMON LVIII PSAL. CXIX 52. I have remembred thy Iudgments of old O Lord and have comforted my self THE Man of God had complained in the former Verse that the Proud had him greatly in Derision his help against that Temptation is recorded in this Verse where observe 1. David 's Practice I have remembred thy Iudgments of old 2. The Effect of that Meditation and have comforted my self The Explication will be by answering two Questions 1. What is meant by Mishphatim Iudgments The word is used in Scripture either for Laws enacted or Judgments executed according to those Laws The one may be called the Judgments of his Mouth as Psam 105. 5. Remember the marvellous works that he hath done his wonders and the Iudgments of his Mouth the other the Judgments of his Hand As both will bear the name of Judgments so both may be said to be of old His Decrees and Statutes which have an eternal equity in them and were graven upon the heart of Man in Innocency may well be said to be of old and because from the beginning of the World God hath been punishing the Wicked and delivering the Godly in due time his Judiciary Dispensations may be said to be so also The matter is not much whether we interpret it of either his Statutes or Decrees for they both contain matter of Comfort and we may see the ruine of the Wicked in the Word if we see it not in Providence Yet I rather interpret it of those Righteous Acts recorded in Scripture which God as a just Judge hath executed in all Ages according to the Promises and Threatnings annexed to his Laws Onely in that sense I must note to you Judgments imply his Mercies in the Deliverance of his Righteous Servants as well as his Punishments on the Wicked The seasonable interpositions of his Relief for the one in their greatest Distresses as well as his just Vengeance on the other notwithstanding their highest Prosperities 2. What is meant by Comfort Comfort is the strengthening the Heart against Evil when either 1. Faith is
as the little ones were able to bear so when the Temptation continued is like to doe us hurt either God will remove it 2 Thess. 3. 3. Faithfull is the Lord who will establish and keep you 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from the evil the persecutions of unreasonable men are there intended or else support them under it 2 Cor. 12. 9. My grace is sufficient for thee Use 1. Is to check and reprove divers evils which are apt to grow upon our Spirits in our Troubles 1. Murmuring and repining thoughts against God's Providence Why should we murmur and complain since we justly suffer what we suffer and 't is the Lord's condescention that he will make some good use of these Sufferings to our eternal Happiness that we may be capable of everlasting Consolation His Justice should stop Murmurings Lament 3. 39. Wherefore doth a living man complain a man for the punishment of his sins If he complain he can complain of none but himself that evil choice he hath made for his own Soul which it may be he would never have thought of but upon this occasion His Punishment here carrieth no proportion with his Offence 't is Punishment in the singular number Sins in the plural one Punishment for many acts of Sin and a living man on this side Hell what 's this to everlasting Torments Life cannot be without many Blessings to accompany it while living we may see an end of this misery or have time to escape those eternal Torments which are far worse The form of the words sheweth why we should thus expostulate with our selves Wherefore doth a living man complain why do we complain God hath not cut us off from the land of the living nor cast us into Hell 't is the punishment of Sin and 't is far less than we have deserved Again the Faithfulness of God checketh Murmurings God knoweth what way to take with us to bring us to glory therefore trust your selves in God's hands and let him take his own methods Commit your souls to him in well-doing as unto a faithfull Creatour 1 Pet. 4. 19. He is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as he is a Creatour he doth not love to destroy the work of his hands as he is faithfull in his Covenant he will take the best and safest course to bring you to Heaven 2. Let it check immoderate sorrow and uncomely dejection of spirit he is just in the Afflictions of his People but yet so that he is also faithfull he is a Father when he beateth and indulgeth when he smiles and when he frowns Afflictions do not make void our Adoption they rather increase our confidence of it Heb. 12. 5. Whatever we doe upon other reasons we should not suspect his Love because of our Afflictions God's strokes do not make void his Promises nor doth he retract his gift of Pardon when he chastiseth Mere Crosses and Troubles are not an argument of God's Displeasure but acts of his Faithfulness so that we have reason to give thanks for his Discipline rather than question his Love In the book of Iob 't is made a mark of his Love as in those words which are so frequent Iob 7. 17 18. Lord What is man that thou art mindfull of him that thou chastisest him every morning and tryest him every moment We are not onely beneath his Anger but unworthy of his Care as if a Prince should take upon him to forme the manners of a Beggers Child 't is a condescension that the great God should deal with us and suit his Providences for our good 3. This should check our fears and cares his Judgments are right and full of faithfulness he will bear us through all our Tryals and make an advantage of them and perfect that Grace which he hath begun and finally bring us to eternal Glory The Lords faithfulness in keeping Promises is often propounded as a strong Pillar of the Saints Confidence 1 Cor. 1. 9. Faithfull is God by whom ye are called 1 Thess. 5. 24. Faithfull is he that calleth you who also will doe it He dispenseth all things with respect to our eternal welfare But I am afraid of my self I have provoked the Lord to leave me to my self but the Lord will pardon weaknesses when they are confessed 1 Iohn 1. 9. If we confess our sins he is just and faithfull to forgive them speaking to reconciled Believers and when we fall the Lord hath ways and means to raise us up again that we perish not by checks of Conscience 2 Sam. 24. 10. And David's heart smote him when he had numbred the people Psal. 119. 59. I thought on my ways c. by the Word as Nathan roused up David Thou art the man God that foresaw all things hath ordered them so that nothing shall cross his eternal Purpose and Promise made to us in Christ. Use 2. Let us acknowledge God's Justice and Faithfulness in all things that befall us for Motives consider 1. 'T is much for the honour of God Psal. 51. 4. that under the Cross we should have good thoughts of God and clear him in all that he saith and doth see love in his rebukes 2. 'T is for our profit 't is the best way to obtain Grace to bear Afflictions or to get deliverance out of them When God hath humbled his People exercised their Grace he will restore to them their wonted Priviledges he waiteth for the Creatures humbling Levit. 26. 41 42. For means 1. You must be one in Covenant with God for to them the Dispensations of God come marked not onely with Justice as to all but Faithfulness Psal. 25. 10. All the ways of the Lord are mercy and truth to them that keep his Covenant 2. You must examine your selves the Lord complains of the neglect of this that when they were in Affliction they would not consider Ier. 8. 6. No man said What have I done If you would consider you would see cause enough to justify God Lament 3. 39 40. Wherefore doth a living man complain Let us search and try our ways and turn to the Lord. 3. You must observe Providence and your hearts must be awake and attend to it Psal. 107. 43. Whoso is wise and will observe these things even they shall understand the loving kindness of the Lord. Eccles. 7. 14. In the day of adversity consider 4. You must be such as value not your happiness by the increase or decrease of worldly Comforts but by the increase or decrease of Grace in your Souls 2 Cor. 4. 16. For this cause we faint not because though our outward man perish yet our inward man is renewed day by day If you value your selves by your outward Condition you will still be imbrangled you should more highly esteem of and be more solicitous about the welfare of your Souls in a time of Affliction than of all things else in the world and you will more easily submit and more wisely consider of his doing and the better understand
on the back of the righteous Psal. 125. 3. Therefore rouze up your selves and say as David Psal. 42. 5. Why art thou cast down O my soul and why art thou disquieted within me hope thou in God for I shall yet praise him c. Let us not always pore on our grievous miseries Observe the season when apt to be corrupted with ease and prosperity and to carry it negligently to God and proudly and oppressingly to Men There may come a change So when apt to faint seek out arguments of encouragement and hope that God will be good to us Psal. 56. 3. At what time I am afraid I will trust in thee That 's our business at such a time to strengthen our dependance for still we must oppose the prevailing corruption 2. Better Things That 's the true Christian Spirit that mainly looks after the world to come that hope is freest from snares An earthly hope maketh Men carnal often enticeth them to use ill means to get it accomplished Desires and hopes of temporal happiness that the world may smile upon us doth not breed so good a spirit This hope goeth upon surer grounds meeteth with fewer disappointments Well then hope for these things We shall hear of few in whom the former part of the Text is verified if understood of eternal salvation My soul fainteth for thy salvation This temper is very rare and few that have such a spirit as Paul had Phil. 1. 23. I desire to be dissolved and to be with Christ c. But all Christians should hope for eternal life and prepare for it and make this the great cordial and solace of their souls God's People do too much please themselves with thoughts of temporal happiness this is no good spirit The appetite of temporal honor wealth and peace is natural to us we should be at a greater indifferency about these things as not to be very solicitous about them V. DOCT. This Hope is bred or nourished in us by the Word of God 1. Because that is the Law of Commerce between us and God in the promissory part it sheweth what salvation and deliverance we may expect from him And in the mandatory part upon what terms and who are the persons qualified to receive this deliverance and without heeding of these things hope is a groundless presumption As if we expect things not promised or not in the way wherein they are promised We must have an eye both on the promises and the precepts The one to encourage us the other to direct us It sheweth our hope is of the right constitution Psal. 119. 166. I have hoped for thy salvation and done thy commandments Psal. 147. 11. The Lord taketh pleasure in them that fear him in those that hope in his mercy And Psal. 33. 18. Behold the eye of the Lord is upon them that fear him upon them that hope in his mercy As a Man that consulteth with his Charter and Conveyance is more assured of his Right and Title The Scripture is cast into the nature of a Covenant or a mutual Indenture drawn up between us and God There we find God hath deeply and strongly engaged himself to us and we to him This we have to shew under his hand 2. We should give such credit to the Word of God as to believe it when to sense there is no likelihood of the performance of it For what is impossible to appearance is not impossible to God and the certainty of the Promises doth not depend upon the probabilities of sense but the all-sufficiency of God Firmia dicta tanti existimantur quantus est ipse qui diceret If God promise any thing who is Almighty and who is Faithful it will be accomplished and we may rest upon it in the greatest Extremities Perplexities and seeming Impossibilities We must not confine God within the bounds of created power 3. God's Word should be as good as Deed For his Word and the beck of his Will doth all things Do not my words do good to him that walketh uprightly Micah 2. 7. Not say good but do good when 't is said it may be accounted done the performance is so certain 4. The best hold-fast we can have upon God is by his Word Whatever his dispensations be though he with-hold comfort and deliverance from us yet it will do well in time Therefore whether he smileth or frowneth his Word should be our support His Dispensations vary but his Word is firm USE Let the Promises of God strengthen and revive our hearts If God hath said any thing his People should believe him His Word is a Word of Truth Heb. 11. 11. Sarah's Faith was built upon this She judged him faithful who had promised His Word is a Word of Power for he is a God of all Power and Might Heb. 11. 17 18 19. so Abraham's Faith By faith Abraham when he was tried offered up Isaac and he that had received the promises offered up his onely begotten son Of whom it was said that in Isaac shall thy seed be called Accounting that God was able to raise him up even from the dead His Power as is his Being is infinite Therefore having his Word this should give us rest and contentment of Soul though there be no appearance of performance the Promise is Yea and Amen continueth in one invariable tenour Let not Faith dye SERMON XC PSAL. CXIX VER 82. Mine eyes fail for thy word saying When wilt thou comfort me IN this Verse the Man of God expresseth 1. His earnest expectation of the comfort of the Promises 2. His longing desire after it as Hope is wont to vent it self by serious thoughts intermixed with strong desires of the Blessing promised His earnest expectation is expressed in the first Clause Mine eyes fail for thy word His longing and strong desire in the following words Saying When wilt thou comfort me His earnest Hope and Expectation is first to be considered And here his Hope is described 1 By the effect his looking after the accomplishment of the Promise as Iudges 5. 28. when Sisera's Mother expected him She looked out at a window and cried thorow the lattesse Why is his charet so long in coming why tarry the wheels of his charets And Rom. 8. 19. The earnest expectation of the creature waiteth c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the lifting up or stretching out of the head as we use to do when we look for any thing to see if we can spy it a coming 2 By the incident weakness because of the delay of help Mine eyes fail for thy word He had looked and looked long till he was weary of looking what he said before of the soul here he speaketh of his eyes There the object was salvation here the word Observe first That Hope keepeth the eye of the Soul so fixed upon the Promise that it is ever looking for deliverance and salvation Hezekiah useth almost the same manner of speech Isa. 38. 14. Mine eyes fail with looking
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
Providence His special goodness in the channel of Redemption and Renovation by Christ. 1. He is a Benefactor to all Men he hath given them an immortal spirit that shall abide for evermore Eccles. 12. 7. The dust shall return to the earth as it was and the spirit to Godthat gave it There is an immortal Soul that dwelleth in a mortal Body The Body was made of corruptible Principles was Dust in its composition 't is true God can annihilate it but the Soul as it is a Spirit hath no corruptible Principles in it it is a thing that cannot be killed or destroyed by any created power Now this divine spark which cannot be quenched is a pledge and effect of God's Eternity for he that giveth Immortality certainly is Immortal himself Nothing can give what it hath not And besides because our Souls are immersed and sunk into matter and forget their divine original therefore God by the blessings of his Providence seeks to raise them up to look after this supreme and spiritual Being and giveth us all kind of comforts and mercies whose creatures we are that we may seek the Lord if haply we may feel after him and find him Acts 17. 27. That we may own him as the first Cause or Father of Lights by whom this spark was kindled in us or seek him as the chief good in whom alone this restless soul of ours can find contentment and satisfaction 2. He is a Benefactor in a way of grace and recovery by Christ. This also sets forth his Eternity the first rise and bottom cause of all this grace and favor that stirred and set all the causes on work which concurred to it was God's everlasting love Iohn 3. 16. And Christ saith Prov. 8. 31. I was set up from everlasting and this grace was given us in Christ before the world began 2 Tim. 1. 9. Before the foundation of the world was laid this business was transacted with Christ for our benefit and then the way how 't was brought about it was by an everlasting Redemption Heb. 9. 12. of an eternal force value and efficacy and the grace wrought in us 't is called incorruptible seed 1 Pet. 1. 23. There is an eternal principle in our hearts and that is the reason why a Believer is so often said to have eternal life abiding in him because of the beginning seed and principle of it that is sown in his heart and the comfort and fruit of it that we have here is called everlasting consolation 2 Thes. 2. 16. He hath loved us and given us everlasting consolation and good hope thorough grace 'T is not bottomed on any poor fading thing but on matters of an eternal Duration the happiness itself is the eternal fruition of the ever blessed God 1 Thess. 4. 17. We shall be ever with the Lord. So that we are made eternal also both in body and soul whence you see how abundantly God discovereth his Eternal Being in all his gifts and graces by Christ. 5 When the Creatures are spoken of as eternal it must be understood it is a communicated dependant half-eternity and so no derogation to this perfection which is proper to God First 'T is communicated to us for originally God only hath Immortality 1 Tim. 6. 16. We have it by derivation God hath it originally in himself and from himself God dispenseth and measureth out the duration and continuance of all other things their Races and Stages when they shall begin and when they shall end And that Immortality which the Angels and the Souls of Men have 't is ascribed to us by participation we have it from God because he was pleased to give it to us 2dly 'T is a dependant Eternity for every moment we depend upon God if he take away his Spirit we are gone Man or Angel We assert the Immortality of the Soul because it hath not the principles of corruption in it as the body hath but yet we cannot must not cut off the dependance upon the first Cause Fountain of Being in his hand is the breath of all living and he is often called the God of your life and the God of the spirits of all flesh 'T is but an half-eternity we sometimes were not God is from everlasting to everlasting but we are appointed to eternal life and time was when we lay in the womb of nothing we are but of yesterday poor upstarts that had but an existence and a new Being given us of God if he will lengthen it out and continue it to all eternity 't is not such an eternity as he hath but an half-eternity not an eternity without beginning but only without ending 6. This Eternity of God is not seriously and sufficiently enough thought of and improved till it lessen all other things in our opinion and estimation of them and affection to them Two things should especially be lessened the time we spend in the world and the things that we enjoy in the world First The time we spend in the world Alas what is this to God's Eternity Psal. 39. 5. Behold thou hast made my days as an hand breadth and mine age is nothing before thee Whether our days be spent in prosperity or adversity they are but short an hand breadth a meer nothing compared with God's Eternity Psal. 90. 4. A thousand years in thy sight are but as yesterday when it is past or as a watch in the night A thousand years compared to Eternity are but as a drop spilt and left in the Ocean or as time insensibly past over in sleep Forty Fifty or Seventy years seemeth a great time with us yet with God who is infinite Ten thousand years is no considerable space but a very short and small duration 2dly As time so the things of the world 2 Cor. 4. 18. The things which are seen are temporal but the things which are not seen are eternal They are short as to continuance and use As to continuance he calleth the honours and delight of Pharaoh's Court. Heb. 11. 25. The pleasures of sin for a season Whatsoever is temporal a Man may see the end of it be it evil a Man in the deep waters is not discouraged as long as he can see banks but in Eternity there are neither banks nor bottom if good Psal. 119. 96. I have seen an end of all perfection The most shining glory will shortly be burnt out to a snuff it wasts every day Eternity maketh good things infinitely good and evil things infinitely evil If it be temporal whatever paineth us is but a flea-biting to eternal torments Whatever pleaseth or delights 't is but a may game to eternal joys so for use too 't is but for a season Deut. 23. 24. the Law gave an indulgence to eat of his Neighbors grapes for refreshment but thou shalt not put any in thy vessel 1 Tim. 6. 7. For we brought nothing into this world and it is certain we can carry nothing out The Manna was
Wretches who are in that everlasting estate would give if they might be trusted with a little time again that they might provide for Eternity how happy would they think themselves if God would but try them once more if careless Creatures would but anticipate the thoughts of another world how soon would they discern their mistake how miserably will you bewail your selves when you have lost Eternity for poor temporal Trifles What comfort will it be to you that you have been merry here lived in pomp and ease when you must endure the wrath of God for evermore and wish for any allay of your torments Luke 16. 24. Father Abraham have mercy on me and send Lazarus that he may dip the tip of his finger in water and cool my tongue for I am tormented in this flame 'T is better to believe than try provide against it than try 6. If you be Christians indeed you have not the spirit of this world Christianity as 't is acted by us is but the exercise of Faith Hope and Love Now the eternal fruition of God is the matter that all these graces are conversant about Faith believeth that there is an Eternal Being and that our happiness lieth in the fruition of him Heb. 11. 6. Love is that which levelleth and directeth all our actions to this blessed end that we may see God and enjoy him as our portion and felicity Psal. 73. 25. Whom have I in heaven but thee and there is none upon earth I desire beside thee Our desires are after him our delights in him 't is our work to please him our happiness to enjoy him The truth of his eternal Being is the object of our Faith so the apprehension of him as our chief good and felicity is the object of our love so as he is capable of being enjoyed and our participated Eternity is the object of our Faith this is the end of all our desires and labors and the expectation of this fortifieth us against all the difficulties of our pilgrimage and so directeth us what to mind be and do 2 Cor. 5. 9. Therefore we labor that whether present or absent we may be accepted of the Lord. Directions What shall we do Direct 1. Meditate often and seriously of Eternity There is a great deal of profit gotten by this Meditation nothing doth more promote the great ends of the Gospel than this Meditat on 1. For Christ nothing makes Christ precious but serious thoughts of Eternity he being the onely means to deliver us from wrath to come which is the great evil of the other state and procure for us the eternal enjoyment of God which is the good of that estate Psal. 84. 11. He is a sun and a shield and no good thing will he with-hold from them that live uprightly You can make a shift without Christ in this world you are by ordinary means well provided against the evils of this life and well fortified with the good things thereof but in death Christ will be to thee gain and advantage 2. It would promote the great change What will make a proud man humble a vain man serious a covetous worldling heavenly a wicked man a good man let him think of Eternity where only the humble the heavenly are favoured and accepted 2 Cor. 3. 11. 3. What would check Temptations either from the Pleasures Riches or Honors of the world these are not eternal Riches nor eternal Pleasures nor eternal Honors transitory things are not our business nor our scope Heb. 11. 25. 4. What would quicken diligence and put life into our endeavors but the meditation of Eternity Every thing should be laboured for that hath an everlastingness in it the travel of your souls should be laid out upon those things Isa. 55. 2. Wherefore do you spend your money for that which is not bread and your labour for that which satisfies not So John 6. 27. Labour not for the meat that perisheth but that which endureth to life everlasting Surely serious diligence is necessary Shall I trifle away that time which I am to improve for Eternity Direct 2. Let the enjoyment of an Eternal God be your end and scope 2 Cor. 4. 18. While we look not to things which are seen but to things that are not seen for the things which are seen are temporal but the things which are not seen are eternal When you have set eternal things before you then make your choice on the one side there are eternal joys on the other eternal torments Now vain pleasures lead to the one solid godliness to the other By the neglect of God you run the hazard of a miserable Eternity By the choice of God for your Lord and portion you get an interest in a blessed Eternity only let me warn you 1. To chuse End and Means together Mat. 7. 13 14. Enter ye in at the strait gate for wide is the gate and broad is the way that leadeth to destruction and many there be that go in thereat Because strait is the gate and narrow is the way that leadeth to life and few there be that find it They must be coupled both quicken each other the intention of the end quickens to a diligent pursuit and an earnest use of means and the use of means will sooner give you to understand what your condition will be than a bare reflection upon the End 2. Do not confound principal and subordinate Means so as one should justle out the other The primary means of going to the Father is Christ. John 14. 6. Iesus saith unto him I am the Way and the Truth and the Life no man cometh to the Father but by me The secondary means is holiness Heb. 12. 24. Without holiness no man shall see the Lord. Direct 3. Be resolvedly true to your End which is the enjoyment of God and that will quicken you the more and direct you for the End is both our measure and our motive In short do all things from eternal Principles to eternal Ends the eternal Principle is the grace of the Spirit the eternal End is the pleasing glorifying and enjoying of God Philip. 1. 11. Being filled with the fruits of righteousness which are by Iesus Christ unto the praise and glory of God Actions carried on from eternal Principles according to an eternal Rule for an eternal End cannot miscarry SERMON XCIV PSAL. CXIX VER 89. Latter Clause Thy word is setled in heaven THis will bear two senses 1. Relating to God's Decree made in Heaven 2. That an Emblem of its Constancy is in Heaven 1. It may be referred to God's Decree Thy word is setled in Heaven in thy Mind and Will The words of temporal Kings are on Earth and therefore their Laws and Edicts are subject to many changes and are often revoked and altered either by themselves or by their Successors but the Word of God is above all changes and alterations as being decreed in Heaven 'T is preached on earth believed on earth
they are unable to sanctifie themselves and look after a better and spiritual estate But let us not grieve the spirit of God by our unteachableness in so plain a point when we are told of the frailty and slipperiness of worldly comforts we shake our heads and confess it to be true but improve it not at best conceive some weak and faint resolutions but they soon vanish and we are as wor'dly and carnal as ever we were and therefore pray as David Psal. 90. 12. So teach us to number our days that we may apply our hearts to wisdom You have seen the first part of the text here is perfection all perfection then all perfection hath an end and this is to be seen 't is liable to sense and it should be improved by grace if all creature perfection hath an end Use 1. Let it moderate our desires for who would court a flying shadow especially when these pursuits hinder us from looking after better and eternal things Ionah 2. 8. They that seek lying vanities forsake their own mercies That is they might have been their own if they had chosen them Within a while the world will be but a stale jest and the laughing fit is over and then our sorrow cometh the feast will be at an end and then we begin to feel the gripes of a surfeit Use 2. Let it moderate our sorrows and fears Our sorrows when these things befall us 't is no strange thing 1 Pet. 4. 12. 't is no more strange than to see the night succeed the day or to see a shower to come after Sun-shine 't is no wonder to see a light thing move upward nor a heavy thing to move downward So our fears when the power and strength of the world is turned upon us there will be an end of all our evils but not of the word of God We shall everlastingly find the effects of his truth and promise though our enemies excel in worldly pomp and seem to be grounded upon an immutable foundation but as powerful as they seem to be they shall at length come to an end Iob 5. 3. I have seen the foolish taking root but suddenly I cursed his habitation when the foolish that is the wicked seem'd to get rooting then I cursed not by way of imprecation but by way of prediction Use 3. It serves to moderate our delights No day so pleasant but the night puts an end to it no summer so fruitful but a barren winter overtaketh it The Philistines were sporting on their holy day but their banqueting house became their grave and place of Burial And Ionah's Gourd was soon withered and dryed up Worldly riches serve men as long as they live and after death do some service in conveying their bodies to the grave by a pompous funeral but there it leaves them But the word of God supports us against all temptations while we live and conveyeth us to death with comfort and the fruit of it abideth with us after we are dissolved the soul immediately hath benefit by it and afterwards at the resurrection the body We do not hold worldly things durante vita during our life nor quam diu bene se gesserint as long as we shall behave our selves well in our places but only durante beneplacito as long as God pleaseth How often is the most shining glory burnt into a snuff turned into Ignominy and honour into contempt and our fulness into the want of all things A Cobweb that has been long a spinning is soon swept down Yea the time will come when the lust of these things shall be gone 1 Iohn 2. 17. and the time will come when we shall take no pleasure in them as soon we have the Creatures many times we are weary of them 2 Sam. 13. 8. as Amnon hated Tamar when he had satisfyed his lusts And David longed for the waters of Bethlehem and when he had it he would not drink it when we come to consider these things the imperfections that before lay hid are discovered by fruition Secondly let us now come to the Antithesis but thy commandments are exceeding Broad Before I come to discuss the words in particular I observe first that the stability of the word of God is often opposed to the vanity of the Creature Isa. 46. 8. The flower fadeth and the grass ●…ithereth but the word of God abideth for ever So 1 Pet. 1. 25. All flesh is grass and the glory of man is as the flower of grass but the word of God liveth and abideth for ever And 1 John 2. 17. The world passeth away and the lusts thereof but he that doth the will of God abideth for ever So Luk. 10. 2 last verses Martha thou art careful and troubled about many things but one thing is needful and Mary hath chosen the good part which shall never be taken away from her Now what doth this teach us but that when we see the vanity of earthly things we should be informed what better things to set our hearts upon The hearts of men cannot be idle their oblectation must be upon something when pleasures and riches and honours are found vain and perishing there is a more enduring substance to be looked after Secondly That these better things are discovered by the word of God now life and immortality is brought to light through the Gospel 2 Tim. 1. 10. and he that doth the will of God shall increase his knowledge he that doth the will of God shall know what doctrine is of God This doth direct us in making our choice the independent heart of man will choose some thing to adhere to Now in the word of God we have direction what to choose The use of all things present is temporal but the use and benefit of the word is everlasting this will do us good another day all things visible have their own perfection in their kind and do extend some of them to one temporal use and some to another But the word of God extendeth in its kind to all uses as godliness is profitable to all things it bringeth blessedness in this life and in the world to come 1 Tim. 4. 8. A man may satisfie himself in the contemplation of any truth and virtue that is visible But here are unsearchable riches such deep wisdom such rich comforts perfect directions that we cannnot see to the bottom of them every perfect thing in the world hath an end but the word endureth for ever Secondly more particularly in this Antithesis I observe 1. The subject or thing spoken of Thy Commandment that is the whole Word of God 2. The Predicate or Attribute what is said of it 'T is broad 3. The Amplification of this Attribute 'T is exceeding broad you cannot easily understand the use and benefit of it 1. The subject or thing spoken of Thy Commandment is exceeding broad This breadth must be spoken of with respect to the former clause 't is broad for its use and
as others but they have a being in the world to come and therefore the Word of God is called the Word of eternal life John 6. 68. that is the end and use of it it maketh them capable of eternal life that obey it So 1 Pet. 1. 25. The Word of God abideth and continueth for ever 'T is the seed and principle of eternal life 't is the Charter of their everlasting priviledges they shall enjoy in the world to come But how doth the Word endure for ever 'T is not meant subjectively but effectively because it assures us of eternal life upon obeying it and threatens eternal death to all that reject it Use 1. Oh then let us be much in hearing reading studying and obeying this Word that makes us everlastingly happy if the commandment be so exceeding broad why do we make no more use of it 1. Let our hearts be more taken up about it that should be our main care wherein to busie our selves day and night Psal. 1. 1. Our delight should not be in vain Books and empty Histories but in the Law of God we should often look into the Charter of our great hopes 2. Be directed by the Word of God 't will direct you in every business Psal. 119. 105. Thy Word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path Here is direction for you in prosperity and adversity 3. Study it that you may be sanctified by it Iohn 17. 17. Sanctifie them by thy truth thy Word is truth This is the great benefit that we have by the Word 't is the instrument of sanctification 4. Be much in the study of the Word that you may be assured by it that you may make out your own qualification to the Kingdom of Heaven Acts 13. 46. Since you put away the Word of God from you you judge your selves unworthy of eternal life When you let God's Book lie by neglected and never hear it nor read it nor mediate on it the thing is past all question you judge your selves unworthy of eternal life Use 2. Let this commend the Word of God to us that eternal life is in it other writings and discourses may tickle the ears with some pleasing eloquence but that is vanishing like a Musician's voice other writings may represent some petty and momentary advantage but how soon shall an end be put to all that so that within a little time the advantage of all these Books shall be gone The Statutes and Laws of Kings and Parliaments can reach no farther than some temporal reward or punishment their highest pain is killing of the body their highest reward is some vanishing and fading honour or perishing riches but God's Word concerning our everlasting estate our eternal well or ill being eternal life and death is wrapt up in these Laws and Commandments these are rewards and punishments suitable to the Eternal Majesty of the Lawgiver Here is life and immortality brought to light and offered to them who have so miserably lost it and involved their souls in an eternal death therefore let us have a precious esteem of the Scripture which shews us the way of escaping that misery into which we have plunged our selves and a way of obtaining eternal blessedness Do not then go to a wrong Guide and Rule nothing more necessary to be known than what our End is and the way that leadeth to that End The most part of men walk at random and run an uncertain Race they have neither a certain scope nor a sure way Mens particular inclinations and humors are an ill ill Guide for they incline us to please the flesh and so we shall miss of everlasting blessedness and wander in a bie-path that leadeth to destruction Naturally Man is more addicted to temporal things than spiritual and to worldly vanities than to spiritual enjoyments and it is in vain to persuade Men to look after better things till the carnal affections be mortified and one way and great means to mortifie carnal affections and inclinations is to consider the vanity of the Creature and when our affections are weaned from the world we must look after some better things to set our hearts upon That good which satisfieth all the desires and capacities of Man had need to be an infinite and an eternal good Now these better things are only discovered in the Word of God the Word of God discovers that there is such an estate as everlasting glory and blessedness The Word telleth us plainly and peremptorily who shall go to Heaven and who to Hell well then if you would have this comfort you must see whether you have embraced it with that reverence faith and obedience which the importance of it doth require SERMON CI. PSAL. CXIX VER 97. O how love I thy law it is my meditation all the day IN this Psalm you have a perfect character of a Regenerate Man what he is and what he ought to be in his Meditations his Exercises his Affections and all this recommended to us from the frame of David's heart and example and course of his way Men of spiritual experience can best judge of these affections for as face answereth face in a glass so doth the heart of one Believer to another In these words you have 1 His love asserted 2 Demonstrated from the effect 1. His love asserted O how love I thy Law 2. Demonstrated from the effect of it It is my meditation all the day This is an effect for we are wont to muse upon what we love therefore David loving the Law of God is always thinking of it First For the Assertion Observe the matter asserted and the vehemency of the Assertion The matter asserted is love to the Law The vehemency of the Assertion O how I love thy Law It is an Admiration with an Exclamation David is not contented with a naked affirmation I love thy Law but useth a pathetical protestation of it How love I thy Law The Interrogation expresseth wonder How I love thy Law And the Exclamation O how that gives vent to strong affection as if he had said It is more than I am able to express The Law is taken for the whole Scripture as often in this Psalm Secondly For the demonstration of this affection It is my meditation all the day that is I do often meditate thereof and can spend whole days therein The words may signifie frequency of such thoughts they were not such as did come now and then but all the day his heart was working on holy things as the blessed Man is described Psal. 1. 2. that is every day he is working something out of the Word of God Or 't is my meditation all the day it may note the depth and ponderousness of these thoughts his mind did not run out upon the Law with slighty sallies but he had such thoughts as were solid and serious and did abide with him The Points from hence are two 1. That God's People have a great love to his
good evidence of the new nature it is a sign you have gotten that other heart that new spirit which must have new comfort new supports 1 Pet. 2. 3 4. As new born babes you desire the sincere milk of the Word If so be you have tasted that the Lord is gracious Hereby we may know the new man by his appetite and savor Life is known by this as much as by any one thing else 2. This will give you a more assured knowledge of the truth and worth of spiritual and heavenly things whereas otherwise we shall but talk of them by rote until we experiment the comfort and sweetness of them in our own souls then we will see there is more than Notions in promises the Word of God is not a well devised Fable and golden Dream for our taste will be our confirmation The greatest demonstration is from the senses 1 Iohn 5. 10. the Believer hath a testimony of the truth of Religion within himself in his own heart O! it is a great advantage to have our remedy there where our danger lies in the heart where Atheism and Disbelief lurks to have spiritual sense there when you have a real experience of them then Satan cannot have such advantage and atheistical and unbelieving thoughts such advantage for you have felt the benefit of spiritual things It is a great advantage against temptation when you have had a sense when you do not only know by hear say and guess that the Word is sweet but you have had a taste as a man that hath been at the fire knows it warms when we can not only say with him we have heard the Kings of Israel are merciful Kings but with the men of Samaria we have seen him our selves 3. The life of grace mightily depends upon it all your liveliness in grace depends upon this taste therefore get it When you have no taste you lose your appetite and when you lose your appetite you lose your strength and when you lose your strength all goes to ruine in the soul sin prevails and deadness increaseth upon the soul. All the strength comfort and vitality of your lives depend upon your taste 4. It is this taste that will make you more useful to others That which we have seen heard and tasted that we commend to others A report of a report and tradition it may be or not that 's a cold thing this is not a valid testimony Ay but when you can speak of that which you have felt and tasted your eyes have seen and hands handled of the Word of Life 1 Iohn 1. 1. When it is matter of sense then we can speak boldly and affectionately as the Apostle 2 Cor. 1. 4. That we might comfort them which are in trouble by the comfort wherewith we our selves are comforted of God When we our selves are comforted of God and that which we speak is the result of our own experience it makes us more useful in our Christian converse The Prophet Ezekiel was to eat his own Prophesies and St. Iohn to eat the Book the meaning is they must digest it What we communicate to others we must digest it our selves that finding it sweet we may speak the more effectually for God 2 Do not lose this taste O it 's a sad thing to lose these spiritual senses Hypocrites their taste doth lightly come and lightly go they have a little vanishing sweetness now and then but it 's soon gone it 's a sad thing to lose our spiritual taste It may be lost in a great measure sometimes a Christian hath it and sometimes he hath it not at least not in such a degree as formerly Experience shews it may be lost too too often all the business will be to discern the first tendencies of this evil when we begin to lose our taste and spiritual senses This may be discerned with respect to the three fold object of this taste heavenly Gift the good Word of God and Powers of the World to come 1. Heavenly Gift that 's Christ Jesus When we do not so highly value the love of God in Christ and prize his blood and the precious effects of it when we do not so earnestly beg pardon of sin and hunger and thirst after his righteousness when we have not that former earnestness and strength of desire to enjoy Christ time was when thou thoughtest no terms too dear for him when thy heart made hard pursuit after him but now thou art grown cold and careless and so pass him by lightly as a full stomach with meat with which it is cloy●…d when you are not so earnest and zealous for Christ it 's a sign you have lost your taste 2. Your tasting of the good Word of God When you slight the Word either in not reading hearing meditating in it so frequently as you were wont to do oh time was when you could say No honey or honey-comb so sweet as this to my poor soul Psal. 19. 10. when you could hardly call off your thoughts now you are more unfrequent in these godly exercises or else if conversant about it not with that life and that affection in a more customary manner you can read of the love of God and sufferings of Christ Jesus without any love to him again can read the Promises and they seem to be but like dry Chips and wither'd Flowers and not yield that marrow and fatness to you You can read the promises of eternal life and have not that joy thankfulness and blessing of God You could hardly contain your selves before but cry out Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Iesus Christ and blessed be God that hath visited and redeemed his people Now your affections are more flat and cold and have not that relish in holy conference sweetness in hearing and that contentment of soul in meditating 3. You may lose your taste in the Powers of the World to come when you grow more mindless of God and eternal blessedness when you have not such fresh and warm thoughts as you were wont to have when your desires hopes expectations of the life to come is abated you have not that lively hope 1 Pet. 3. 3. to quicken you for the attaining of eternal blessedness While this taste is fresh upon the hearts of Christians they are for Heaven for God carried on with vigor and strength in the way of holiness but when your hearts are carried out to worldly vanity and you relish more the honour applause fulness of estate worldly increase and you are grown more cold in heavenly things you have lost this taste of the Powers of the World to come Heb. 6. 4. The causes of this One is want of a due esteem not an esteem in an Idea naked or abstract notion from those thoughts out of a temptation No man is so unreasonable but if he be a little enlightned with Christianity will say The favor of God is better than all things Ay but want of that
himself and intrust us with a stock of Grace but after he hath done that we 〈◊〉 are faulting and sinning Rom. 8. 1. Yet now there is no condemnation to them that are 〈◊〉 Christ notwithstanding the reliques of corruption and its breaking out 4. From the temper of the Saints their humility None have such a sight and sense of sin as they have because their eyes are anointed with spiritual eye-salve They have a clearer insight into the Law Ier. 31. 19. After I was instructed I smote upon my thigh They are enlightened by Gods Spirit the least Mote is espied in a Glass of clear Water None are so acquainted with their own hearts and ways as they who often commune with their own hearts and use self-reflection Others that live carelesly do not mind their offences but they that set themselves do more consider their ways none have a more tender sense of the heinousness of sin She loved much wept much because much was forgiven her Luke 7. Some are of a more delicate constitution the back of a Slave is not so sensible of stripes as they that have been more tenderly brought up The Beams of the Sun shining into a house we see the Dust and Motes in the Sun-Beams which we saw not before They profess as Iacob I am not worthy of all the mercy and truth thou hast shewed me They groan as Saint Paul Oh wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from the body of this death Use 1. Is information We learn hence that we should not be discouraged when our hearts are touched with a deep remorse and sense of our failings and are desirous to break off our sins by repentance that mercy which is freely vouchsafed in the Covenant which all Gods servants have so often experienced which the best make their only plea and ground of hope will find out a remedy for us If you have an heart to give up your selves to Gods service and so to get an interest in the promises and blessings of the Covenant you may come and sue out this mercy for God desireth to exalt his Grace God saith Return to the Lord your God and I will heal your backslidings and love you freely Hos. 14. 'T is the delight of Grace to do good notwithstanding unworthiness The worst of sins do not hinder Gods help are not above his cure There is hope for such as are convinced and see no worth in themselves why God should do them any good God needs not will not be hired by the Creatures to do it Use 2. How inexcusable those are that reject the offers of Grace If they have any liking to the blessings of the Covenant they have no ground to quarrel and differ with God about the price Isai. 55. 1. Ho every one that thirsteth let him come to the Waters and drink freely without money and without price You have no cloak for your sin if you will not deal with God upon these terms Nothing keepeth you from him but your own perverse will Use 3. What reason there is the best of Gods servants should carry it thankfully all their days From first to last the mercy of God is your only plea and claim No flesh hath cause to glory in his presence there being no meritorious cause in the Covenant of Grace no moving and inducing cause no co-ordinate working cause Not for your sakes do I this Ezek. 36. 32. And in the 1 Cor. 7. 4. 't is said Who maketh thee to differ We paid nothing for Gods love nothing for Christ the Son of his love nothing for his Spirit the fruit of his love nothing for sanctifying Grace and Faith the effects of his Spirit dwelling and working in our hearts nothing for pardon we have all freely nothing for daily bread protection maintenance and shall pay nothing for Glory when we come to receive it Iude 21. Looking for the mercy of God unto eternal life 'T is all without our merit and against merit we should regard this especially when we are apt to say in our hearts This is for our righteousness as Haman thought none so fit for honour and preferment as himself Esth. 6. 6. Haman thought so in his heart So proud-hearted self-conceited Sinners say in their hearts God seeth more in them than in others Alas you are not only unworthy of Christ the Spirit Grace and Glory but the Air you breathe in and the Ground you tread upon What did the Lord see in you to judge you meet for such an Estate Gen. 32. 10. I am not worthy of the least of all thy mercies and all thy truth Did not you slight Grace neglect Christ as well as others and doth not sin break out and make a forfeiture every day Use 4. That we should carry it humbly as well as thankfully The best of Gods Children should most admire Grace and glorifie Mercy set the Crown on Mercies head Consider First What was the first rise of all Gods love what set all a stirring in Gods bosom Iohn 3. 16. There was no cause beyond this In other things we may rise higher from his Power and Wisdom to his Love but why did he love us There is no other cause to be given he loved us because he loved us 'T was love first moved the business in the ancient counsel of Gods will Gods love is the measure of its self Secondly When he came to apply it he found us in our blood 'T was a great mercy that God would take us into his service with all our faults We were his Creatures but quite marr'd not as he made us We are not what we were when first his as we came out of his hands we were pure and holy but since the Fall quite spoiled Ier. 2. 21. I had planted thee a noble Vine wholly a right seed how then art thou turned into the degenerate plant of a strange vine unto me Strangely changed and altered If a Servant run from his Master and is become altogether blind deformed and diseased will his Master look after him or care for him or take him again This was our case Thirdly What is spoken already is common to others you your selves knew what you were Tit. 3. 3. Every man is soundly affected more sensible of his own case seeth particular reasons why God should refuse him yet you are as brands plucked out of the burning who did resist such powerful means such fair advantages you dallied with God You know the case of others by ghess your own by feeling You lay not only in the common polluted Mass but had your particular offences Fourthly When taken in a fault that God will pity our weakness and infirmities in his service Mal. 3. 17. I will spare them as a man spareth his Son that serveth him that is he will continue his favour and good-will to them that serve him So surely they that have a Conscience and are privy to their manifold infirmities and failings will admire this Fifthly
dispensation As thou usest to do to those that love thy name The Word is I. According to the Law and Right II. According to the use and custome According to the mercy promised and usually bestowed upon those that love thee Both sences not improper I. The first sence According to the Law and Right Prout est jus diligentium nomen tuum so some The Vulgar Secundum judicium Amyraldus glosseth thus Pro illa misericordia quam inter te timentes nomen tuum constituisti Others Secundum Ius Foedus illud Take it thus and it beareth a good sence for there is the obligation of Justice and the obligation of Grace a Judgment of righteousness and a Judgment of mercy This merciful Judgment the Saints appeal unto I cannot exclude this for otherwise this Verse would not have one of those ten Words which express the Word or Law of God Doctr. That there is a gracious way of right established between God and his people according to which they may expect mercies This will be best understood by comparing the two Covenants their agreement and disagreement not in all things but such as are pertinent 1. Let us see how the two Covenants agree First They agree in their Author God appointed both and man is only to accept or take hold of what is offered Man was not thinking of any such thing when God instituted the first Gen. 2. 17. But of the Tree of Knowledge of good and evil thou shalt not eat of it for in the day thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely dye or revealed the second Gen. 3. 15. It shall bruise thy head and thou shalt bruise his heel For God to enter into a Covenant with the Creature either of Works or Grace was an act of condescension and who is he that could bid the Almighty humble himself and prescribe Conditions and Laws of Commerce between God and us but only God alone Man did not give the Conditions or treat with God about the making of them what they should be but only was bound to submit to what God was pleased to prescribe In the Covenant of Works God gave forth the Conditions of life and a Law and a penalty and in the Covenant of Grace man is bound to submit to the Conditions without disputing They are not left free and indifferent for us to debate upon and to modifie and bring them down to our own liking and humour but to yield to them and take hold upon them not to appoint them Isai. 56. 4. Thus saith the Lord unto the Eunuchs that keep my Sabbaths and chuse the things that please me and take hold of my Covenant Rom. 10. 3. For they being ignorant of Gods righteousness and going about to establish their own righteousness have not submitted themselves unto the righteousness of God Secondly They agree in the moving cause which in both was the Grace of God The first Covenant it was Grace for God to make it It was the Grace of God to accept of mans perfect obedience so as to make him sure of eternal life on the p●…rformance of it Though the last Covenant hath the honour by way of eminency to be styled the Covenant of Grace yet the first was so though the condition of it was perfect obedience and the reward had respect to personal righteousness It was of Grace also that God would at all covenant and enter into Bonds with man who was not his Equal and give his word to any of the works of his hands It was Grace that endowed man with original righteousness and fitted him and enabled him to keep that Covenant His absolute Soveraign owed him no more than the rest of the Creatures which he had made Grace engaged the reward there was no more merit in Adam's obedience than in ours Luke 17 10. So likewise ye when ye shall have done all those things which are commanded you say We are unprofitable servants we have done that which was our duty to do Nor did his work bear proportion to the eternal reward Thirdly They agree in the Parties God and man in both Covenants not any other Creatures superior or inferior to man rational or irrational the principal contracting parties were publick persons Adam Iesus Rom. 5. 18. Therefore as by the offence of one man judgment came upon all to condemnation even so by the righteousness of one the free gift came upon all men unto justification of life 1 Cor. 1. 15. 47. The first man is of the earth earthy the second man is the Lord from heaven The first and second Adam for them and all their Heirs Fourthly That God giveth sufficiency of strength in both these Covenants to the parties with whom he made them to fulfil the Conditions thereof To Adam Eccl. 7. 29. Lo this only have I found that God hath made man upright but they have sought out many inventions To Adam natural to us supernatural strength Ezek. 36. 27. And I will put my spirit within you and cause you to walk in my Statutes and ye shall keep my Iudgments and do them Heb. 8. 10. This is the Covenant that I will make with the house of Israel after those days saith the Lord I will put my Laws into their mind and write them in their hearts Fifthly In both God kept up his Sovereignty and by his condescension did not part with any thing of his dominion over man In the Covenant of Works he ruled by a Law written on mens hearts Rom. 2. 15. Which shew the work of the Law written in their hearts their Consciences also bearing witness and their thoughts the mean while accusing or else excusing one another So by Grace the Believer is not freed from the Law of Nature which being almost obliterated and blotted out of the heart of man and become very unlegible it pleased God to set it forth in a new Edition and to write it over again in the heart of a renewed man Heb. 8. 10. I will put my Law into their minds and write it in their hearts Ephes. 4. 24. And that ye put on the new man which after God is created in righteousness and true holiness Though God admitted us to new Conditions of favour yet he still requireth subjection on our part and that we owne him as Lord and Sovereign requiring obedience and service at our hands or else he taketh a liberty to visit our transgressions with Rods Psal. 89. 31 32. If they break my Statutes and keep not my Commandments then will I visit their transgression with the rod and their iniquity with stripes Sixthly In both Covenants there is a mutual obligation on both parties this ariseth from the very nature of a Covenant Contractus est consensio ad constituendam obligationem quâ alter alteri sit obnoxius In every Covenant there is a tye on both sides and some reason of right There is no obligation of debt between God and us but an obligation of Grace Deus non
Promises with a qualification Rom. 2. 7. To them who by patient continuance in well-doing seek for glory honour and immortality eternal life God hath not simply promised Blessedness but the Promise requireth a qualification and a performance of Duty in the Person to whom the Promise is made and therefore before we can have a certainty of Hope we must not only look upon the Assurance on Gods part but make out our qualification So Psal. 1. 1 2. Blessed is the man that walketh not in the counsel of the ungodly nor standeth in the way of sinners nor sitteth in the seat of the scornful But his delight is in the law of the Lord and in his law doth he meditate day and night So Psal. 119. 1 2. Blessed are the undefiled in the way who walk in the law of the Lord Blessed are they that keep his testimonies and seek him with the whole heart and many such places which intimate that blessedness belongeth to such as are of an holy Heart and intirely give up themselves to an holy Course that doing the Commandments uprightly and in a Gospel Sense is a necessary Condition to qualifie those Persons which shall be saved And therefore they that live in any sin against Conscience may take notice how fearful their Estate is for the present and how needful it is to begin a good course before they can have any hope toward God 2. And Partly Because true hope is operative and hath an influence this way There are two parts in Sanctification Mortification and Vivification and true Hope hath an influence upon both Mortification 1 Ioh. 3. 3. And every man that hath this hope in him purisieth himself as he is pure that when we see God we shall be like him he that hopeth for such a pure and sinless Estate either to see God will he appear before him in his filthy Rags Ioseph washed himself when he was to come before Pharaoh so when to appear before God what with this wanton vain unclean heart We are to be like him is this to be like Christ where there is such a disproportion between Head and Members And if this hope be fixed in our hearts it will set us a purifying more and more So for Vivification it urgeth and incourageth to Obedience Tit. 2. 12 13. For the grace of God that bringeth salvation hath appeared to all men teaching us that denying ungodliness and worldly lusts we should live soberly righteously and godly in the present world Look backward or forward it urgeth the heart to Obedience Why backward to the duties of Holiness shall we be Lazy in his work when we expect such a great Reward 3. Because there is no such thing to damp Hope and weaken our Confidence as Sin We cannot trust him whom we have offended freely and without restraint and therefore while we please the flesh we break our Confidence Sin will breed shame and fear and 't is impossible to hope in God unless we serve him in love and seek to please him if we feel it not presently we shall feel it sin that now weakeneth the Faith which we have in the Commandments will in time weaken the Faith that we have in the Promises Every part of Gods revealed Will cometh to be tried one time or another our Confidence in Gods Mercy is not earnestly and directly assaulted till the hour of Death or the time of extraordinary Trial When the evil day cometh then the Consciousness of my own sin whereunto we have been indulgent will be of like force to withdraw our assent from Gods Mercies as the delight and pleasure we took was to cause us to Transgress his Commandments 1 Cor. 15. 56. The sting of death is sin and the strength of sin is the law 4. Because our hope is increased by our diligence in the holy life This fostereth and augments it Heb. 6. 11. And we desire that every one of you doth shew the same diligence to the full assurance of hope unto the end It must needs be so for since there is a qualification the more clear our qualification is the more full is our assurance of hope and so far as a man neglects his duty and abateth in his Qualification so far doth his Assurance abate To look on one side of the Covenant is a groundless presumption 2. None do and can keep the Commandments but they that hope for Salvation This is plain from the order of the words in the Text first I hoped for thy Salvation therefore done the Commandments implying that thereby he kept the Commandments without this none can have an heart nor hand to do any thing for God Peccator saith Bernard nihil expectat indique peccator est quod bonis presentibus Non modo delectus sed etiam contentus nihil in futurum expectat He that looketh for nothing from God can never be diligent in his service nor faithful and true to him Hope 't is our strength Lam. 3. 18. And I said my strength and my hope is perished from the Lord we first begin continue and go on with God upon the hope he offereth to us Use. I. It reproveth those that hope well but take no care to do any thing for God Every one will say they must hope in God but none looketh after this lively and operative hope their hope is barren and unfruitful who are they that can make Application of the Promises 2 Tim. 4. 8. Use. II. Is to perswade us to the coupling of these two when this Conjunction is founded then are we in a right frame if we would keep the Commandments we must hope for the Salvation of God if we would hope for the Salvation of God we must keep the Commandments This is most acceptable to the Lord Psal. 147. 11. The Lord taketh pleasure in them that fear him and hope in his mercy Such as believe and fear to offend him they have acceptable Communion with him 'T is for your Comfort Acts 9. 31. 't is for the honour of Religion on the one side to avoid the carnal Confidence of Papists on the other the cold Profession of Protestants if you hope for temporal Deliverance They that make no Conscience of obeying God cannot hope for Deliverance from him for his Salvation must be expected in the way of his Precepts Psal. 37. 3. Trust in the Lord and do Good so shalt thou dwell in the land So Wait on the Lord and keep his way and he shall exalt thee to inherit the land when the wicked are cut off thou shalt see it Then we may commend our selves and all our Affairs to Gods care and trust it becometh them that look for Salvation and to be helped out of their troubles to be more earnest than others in keeping his Law If you would enjoy the comfortable Assurance that you shall be saved at length live so as you may never mar your Confidence 1 Pet. 1. 13. Be sober and hope to the end Live