Selected quad for the lemma: knowledge_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
knowledge_n new_a put_v renew_v 1,817 5 9.7545 5 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A02178 The workes of the reuerend and faithfull seruant af Iesus Christ M. Richard Greenham, minister and preacher of the Word of God collected into one volume: reuised, corrected, and published, for the further building of all such as loue the truth, and desire to know the power of godlinesse. By H.H.; Works Greenham, Richard.; Holland, Henry, 1555 or 6-1603.; Hill, Robert, d. 1623. 1612 (1612) STC 12318; ESTC S120843 1,539,296 988

There are 12 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

themselues carnall cannot see themselues sold vnder sinne The Apostles knew grosse sinnes as well as they did to be the breaches of the law of God yea and the worldly wise Philosophers could confesse as much but he saw further that euery little thought rebelling against the spirit and fighting against the law was sinne which they neuer dreamed of And therefore Paul sifting his corruption so low thought himselfe euen as a slaue or dead man howsoeuer before he might haue thought himselfe and did account himselfe as vpright a man as the best of them If we likewise shall looke narrowly into the law seeing the good things commaunded and the euill things forbidden and both of them infinite then shall consider our selues to be infinite our affections not being angelicall but our whole nature corrupt and our whole will rebelling this will rid vs of all imagined righteousnes and will cause vs to cast off our hold of our owne perfection for finding the law commaunding good things so plentifully and forbidding euill things so manifoldly and then seeing our selues to doe so many euill things and to leaue vndone so many good things wee shall not onely be conuicted to be sinners but we will confesse ourselues to be most miserable sinners But why are not our affections moued with a sense of sinne as in iudgement we haue the sight of sinne because our eyes are still set on the things commaunded and forbidden and withall we looke not into the curses of the law and threatnings against them that commit the euill things and omit the good things FINIS THE SEVENTEENTH SERMON Galath 6. vers 15. For in Christ Iesus neither circumcision auaileth any thing nor vncircumcision but a new creature AS we haue spoken of the former fruite of the crosse of Christ which was that the Apostle was crucified to the world and the world crucified to him so now wee are to speake of the latter effect that is hee was made a new creature And here note by the way that though mention here bee not expressiuely made of the resurrection of Christ as was before of the crosse of Christ yet it is necessarily vnderstood and that according to the meaning and custome of the holy Ghost because as it is the vertue of the crosse of Christ that crucifieth sinne in vs so it is the power of his resurrection that raiseth vs to newnes of life and as Christ died for our sinnes so he rose againe for our iustification Rom. 4. and as hee died to cleanse vs from our sinnes so also to crucifie sinne in vs and as hee rose to impute righteousnes vnto vs so also to worke in vs righteousnesse and holinesse In that the Apostle speaketh here of a new creature as also hee doth 2. Corinth 5 27. If any man be in Christ let him bee a new creature c. we are taught that it is not sufficient to be crucified to the world but we must be also new creatures we must not onely put off the old man but wee must put on the new man and looke what wee detract from the one we must adde to the other it is not enough to die vnlesse we be borne again it is not enough to be corrupted vnlesse wee bee chaunged For as it was not sufficient for Christ to be crucified but hee ought also to rise againe so it is not sufficient for vs to bee freed from the guiltines and corruption of sinne which we receiued of Adam but we must also be clothed with that righteousnesse and bee made partakers of that holinesse which floweth from Christ so that as none of our sinnes shall bee laid to our charge likewise all Christ his obedience is as fully ours as we our selues had done it Now the better to conceiue what it is to be a new creature we must consider for the one part that which is Ephes. 4. 22. 23. 24. Cast off concerning the conuersation in time past the olde man which is corrupt through the deceiuable lusts And bee renewed in the spirit of your minde And put on the new man which after God is created in righteousnesse and true holinesse and for the other part that which is Coloss. 3. 9. Ye haue put off the old man with his workes 10. And haue put on the new man which is renewed in knowledge after the image of him that created him briefly the word importeth thus much that whatsoeuer wee lost in the first creation wee must receiue in the second and whatsoeuer we haue been depriued of by Adam we haue it restored in Christ. Adam not in substance but in qualities was made like vnto God and we are new creatures made partakers of the godly nature as witnesseth Peter not in things essentiall but in holy qualities to resemble the Creatour And as Adam in the beginning and we in Adam were made wise righteous holy and in perfit felicitie and both he and we through sinne haue lost this heauenly image for in Christ it is renewed so fully as he is our wisedome and taketh from vs ignorance hee is our righteousnes and acquiteth vs from our sinnes he is our holinesse and freeth vs from our corruption hee is our redemption and restoreth to vs our libertie And because we are then renewed when wee are a wise people righteous holy and waiting for the comming of Christ we must on our parts in some measure haue our earthly wisedome mortified spirituall wisedome renewed our earthly affections slaine godly affections quickened our old conuersation quelled our conuersation from hence-foorth in heauen we must not liue as we were wont but our liues must be changed to the obedience of the word which wee must testifie in thought word and deede Briefly then wee are renewed by faith in Christ when wee assuredly beleeue that 1. Cor. 1. 30 Christ Iesus is made of God vnto vs wisedome and righteousnes and sanctification and redemption and by the fruites of faith by Rom. 12. 2. not fashioning our selues like vnto this world but by being changed by the renewing of our minde and by Ephes. 4. 24 putting on the new man which after God is created in righteousnesse and true holinesse First therefore we must beleeue that Christ is made to vs wisedome because naturally Ephes. 4. 18. our cogitation is darkened and we are strangers from the life of God through the ignorance that is in vs. How blinde we are by nature and what neede wee haue of the Spirit of Christ to enlighten vs the Prophet Dauid euen in that image of a new creature Psal. 119. by his often praying for the same doth plentifully declare And when it shall please God thus to enlighten vs then must wee labour for a certificate in our consciences to haue our sinnes cleerely discharged in the death of Christ and to assure vs that Christ his righteousnes in his resurrectiō is as surely imputed vnto vs as if we had done all righteousnes and though we haue been sinners as others yet
will daunt vs but if we once can come to this that wee can make the word all in all that is our glorie our honour worship riches fame credit pleasure c. then shall wee bee soone brought to accompt these outward things as nothing so that wee may ha●e and enioy the benefit of the word and the comfort thereof Vers. 71. It is good for me that I haue been afflicted that I may learne thy statutes HE vttereth the same thing that he did before but hee addeth somewhat thereto First he saith that it was good for him that he had been afflicted noting the goodnes and mercie of God in taking riches health c. from him and giuing him affliction which turned to his good Riches health c. are the good blessings of God but ●ll manner of affliction as sicknesse pouertie c. of themselues bee euill because they are the ●agges of Gods curse and punishments of sinne How then can it come to passe that good things should become euill and euill things become good The good blessings of God when by our corruption they are abused to wantonnesse are made hurtfull vnto vs because they make our condemnation greater but these crosses when in the crosse of Christ they are sanctified vnto vs then are they good for as much as they worke a care in vs to keepe the commaundements Where he saith it is good that he hath been afflicted and not that I am afflicted it agreeth with that which is in the epist. Heb. 12. No affliction is ioyous for the present time for in pouertie there are no riches in sicknes no health c. wee must not then looke presently when any crosse comes to say it is good for this commeth afterward when we haue been so exercised with it as that we are more humbled vnder the hand of God and haue some greater ca●e to please him when I say wee haue been thus exercised then will the crosse bring the quiet fruite of righteousnesse and then shall we say it is good for vs that we haue been afflicted But if we be impatient or if the crosse make vs either more carelesse or no better than we were before that crosse is but a preparation to another c. I will learne c. Because there is none but he will vowe and promise amendment when the hand of God is on him but the children of God alone reape fruite afterwarde therefore in these words doth the Prophet seuer himselfe from the wicked and whereas he said before that he did keepe the commandements noting a present fruite of his affliction so he now moreouer addeth that he will keep them noting that the vse of his trouble should continue with him for euer Let vs then consider of this all of vs either at one time or other haue vowed somewhat to the Lord let vs see if we be now carefull to keepe and performe it if we be not our affliction hath done vs no good we haue no profit by it Vers. 72. The law of thy mouth is better vnto me than thousands of golde and siluer HEre he noteth one fruite of his affliction that he was brought to make such account of Gods word as that hee preferred it to infinite numbers of gold and siluer And truly if we consider that it is the word of God that sustaineth vs in our trouble and is our comfort we cannot then chuse but make much of the word No number of goods can helpe vs in miserie and if the word doe that which al other things cannot doe very meet it is that the word should be preferred to all other things whatsoeuer PORTION 10. IOD Vers. 73. Thine hands haue made me and fashioned me giue me vnderstanding therefore that I may learne thy commaundements HE prayeth still for wisedome and vnderstanding Those men are beasts which being in ignorance loue it better than knowledge and darkenes better than light these men must be sent to the beasts to learne Esa. 1. The Oxe c. The heathen say that this is a naturall propertie to desire knowledge The Lord must teach these men with rods for they will not heare the voyce of the charmer charme c. He seeketh knowledge out of the word to make a difference betweene him and the heathen which by their knowledge get nothing but commendation but our wisedome must be out of the word Deut. 8. He desireth knowledge that he might practise it whereby he condemneth them that seeke knowledge and care not for practise and teacheth vs to seeke all knowledge onely to practise it Seeing he desireth to be taught he condemneth them that thinke they may come to this knowledge by their owne studie and diligence without the teaching of the spirit Dauid so well learned prayed thus earnestly and shall we be thus cold he so much to feele want and we to be without feeling for to be without knowledge is to be without desire of more and a little knowledge if men rest in it maketh proud How goeth it then with them that think they know all things seeing this man to whom they are inferiours prayeth thus This request was made before but he addeth a new reason So in the first part and second and third and fourth and fifth and almost in euery part this request is made and in euery place a new reason to moue the Lord to heare his prayer He putteth the Lord in minde of his former mercie that he might obtaine more and saith he is a creature euen a man with a soule and not a beast therefore giue knowledge c. wherein he confesseth that if the Lord giue not knowledge to him he were better be a beast and such are all those that are but onely men for all the pleasures in this life are not worthy the sorrow in the life to come Eccles. 11. Therefore if men haue not their reason sanctified by the word in faith and loue to serue God they are no better than beasts Seeing God hath giuen reason he will giue knowledge with this he is comforted Obiection But how can he hereby be comforted seeing others haue reason also Answere All mercies must be considered in Christ through whom they are sanctified and by whom we are sure that the Lord will crowne his owne gifts Another reason to teach vs when we haue the gifts of God sanctified vnto vs is when we are humbled in our selues and mislike our selues though we haue receiued more than others for we must thinke our selues vnworthy of them and desire that God will yet more sanctifie them to vs and giue vs the right vse of them then shall we and we may lay them before God as an argument to moue him that he would deale mercifully with vs and further continue and increase his mercie and good will towards vs because hereby we know that in Christ they are sanctified vnto vs. Vers. 74. So they that feare thee seeing me shall reioyce
and stopping such breaches that they lance deeper and roade further then any haue done before them Furthermore in all these exercises both publike and priuate both concerning faith and the duties of loue both with our selues and with others two things especially of vs must bee obserued First we must at night trie our hearts with what truth with what care and with what sinceritie we haue done these things because as God abhorreth hypocrisie in euery thing so especially he cannot abide it in his owne worship Secondly wee are to examine our selues with what profit either to our selues or to others with what comfort with what increase of good things we haue been conuersant in these dueties that wee rest not in the work wrought but that we may offer vp the fruits of our holy increase in a good conscience to the Lord. The first thing then is to trauaile with our hearts for sincerity because though generally all the cōmandements require spiritual obedience yet those more peculiarly which immediatly do binde vs to our God This we shall do if we do the duties of faith faithfully the exercises of repentance carefully the duties of loue louingly On this manner then may we expostulate with our selues Hath the Lords increase of mercie brought me a daies increase of holines how is my knowledge increased my affectiōs touched my faith strengthened my repentance renewed the loue of the Saints in me confirmed How did the word pricke my heart how were my affections quickned by prayer how much was my faith strengthened in the Sacraments Hath the Sabbath been our delight are we nearer to God in faith and repentance are we nearer our brethren in loue and beneuolence are wee better affected to the glorie of God is sinne more grieuous vnto vs than it hath been If it be giue God the glory in Christ if not let our losses cause vs to make some godly recouery in time to come These things little thought of is the cause why for the most part and almost generally we rest in the ceremoniall vse of the Sabbath Now let vs consider a little of the goodnesse of God in giuing so holy a varietie of good things the consideration whereof partly may humble vs and partly comfort vs. For in so rich and princely vicissitude though we doe many things yet some duties priuate or publike with our selues or with others may be left vndone if we doe the outward actions we faile in inwerd affections this ought to humble vs. Howbeit wee may here also sucke out some comfort to the more alluring of vs to these holy exercises in that though we be weary of one exercise we may refresh our selues with another if we profit not by one we may profit by another so that if we be altogether voide of delight and reape no profit at all we cannot but excuse the Lord accuse our selues For if we cannot thriue in priuate exercises we may gaine by the publike meanes if we can finde no delight by ourselues we may ioyne with others if we cannot profite by reading we may profite by praying if not by praying then by meditating if not by meditating then by conferring if not by conferring yet by singing if not by singing yet by viewing the creatures of God if not by these then by teaching admonishing and visiting of others if not herein by suffering our selues to be taught admonished and instructed of others Wherefore as in a solemne banket furnished with diuers meates the weakest stomacke not liking one dish may refresh it selfe with another vnlesse the appetite bee altogether gone so in this heauenly varietie the Lord hath prouided that the most weake may comfort his conscience if not with one spirituall daintie yet with another vnlesse it bee so sicklie that it is altogether gracelesse and voyde of hope of recouerie which the Lord in his mercie keepe from vs. And thus hauing shewed what is commanded let vs goe forward to those things which are forbidden The Sabbath wee say is broken either by generall impediments and lets whereby we cannot sanctifie the day or else by those euill fruits which follow the not keeping of the same For as there be two things commanded to wit rest and sanctification of the rest so two things are forbidden namely labour and trauaile so farre as either they hinder the sanctifying of the Sabbath and the prophaning of the Sabbath rest First of the impediments of sanctifying of the Sabbath which in their owne nature are indifferent wee must know that as the furtherances of this sanctification are commanded so the hinderances are forbidden and as rest is so farre commanded as maketh to the sanctifying of the day so our works are not simply forbidden but so farre forth as they be hinderances to the holy obseruation of the same And these be either lawfull workes or lawfull recreations and pleasures And therefore as wee say in the Commandement going before that all vaine light vsuall and accustomed othes are forbidden and yet affirme that all such othes are commaunded as are taken vp in the defence of God his glorie our brethrens welfare or in any other cases of weight and importance when the things must needs be knowne and otherwise than by an oth cannot be knowne so wee say in this precept all vsuall affaires on the Sabbath are here forbidden and we grant that if these fall out for the glory of God in the preseruation of his creatures necessarily to be done or so as they may enable vs the more to any duties of the Sabbath then they are not onely not forbidden but also more streightly enioyned vs. And therfore as no others creeping in vnder pretence are allowed but such as are weightie likewise we permit no works of pretended necessitie but such as in that they cannot be done the day before nor the day after are for the former considerations necessarily required And whereas the Lord doth not onely giue leaue to draw the Oxe or the Asse out of the ditch to preserue their liues but also to lead them to the water to make their liues more comfortable to them so we permit not only things needfull to the life of man but also things conuenient to the vse comfort of man as the dressing of conuenient meates whereby a man may be made more cheerfull in the duties of sanctification so that both in vsing them we refresh not oppresse our selues and in preparing them we vse the time before after or betweene the publike exercise But as God hath permitted this leaue so we on our parts are to take heede that we abuse not this libertie For when the Lord is so equall liberall and fauourable in granting and pardoning our necessitie and furthering our conueniences he will not doubtlesse leaue vnpunished the greedy gaine-feekers which vnder the forge of necessitie abuse their libertie his liberalitie The lawfulnes of which permission is taught vs by Christ himselfe
in the time to come not in time present in regard whereof the Prophet saith the silly fowles and birds of the ayre the Storke the Doue and others keepe their time but we neuer can finde our time to doe well in Beyond all this as all persons and times so all places are tainted with this euill Heauen it selfe hath not been voide of wickednesse for euen from thence fell the wicked Angels Paradise was not exempted the Temple was not free from notable hypocrisie the number exceeded euen in the actions themselues wherfore Dauid crieth out at the view of such a packe Lord who doth vnderstand the errors of this life Our daies may be numbred as wee see Psalm 90. but our sinnes are without number and therefore are compared to the sand of the Sea Then wee see in regard of the person time places and actions few doe good and therefore such is the complaint and question of the men of God in this behalfe The fruit which we are to reape by this is thus much that if we see occasion of offence and matter of grief be offered vs we see no more than Moses saw long agoe than Dauid Esay and Christ himselfe saw in their times before vs in comparison wherof we may make our aduantage that seeing the time of Moses was a time of affliction and the dayes wee liue in are daies of peace it is lesse marueile to see euill in the daies of peace than in the time of trouble and therefore Luther vpon this question who feares Psalm 90. maketh this answere no man before affliction shewing that affliction should specially leade vs to feare and being once affected with feare wee should either say Lord what shall I doe or with Dauid say What shall I repay vnto the Lord Seeing the Lord is faine to complaine of the smal number of such as feare him we must take order to mitigate this complaint that it fall not more iustly vpon vs. In the time of Moses at the least there was Iosua and Caleb in Christs time Simeon and Anna At the least we must looke there be one true worshipper as in Elias time and so doing we shall make the question vaine and surely if we desire to be such fewe will put vs by our desire for as our sinnes be well called an hereditarie sicknesse which if it were not so wee would purchase them fast enough so that knowledge and feare of God not being hereditarie are not withstanding cheapened of few men Great cause there is then why we should feare it is an act of the euerlasting Parliament that we must once die Hebrues 9. and Iob saith that our life is but short and doe wee not heare that all of all kindes are gone this way all wise men all men of pleasure no Patriarkes escaped it no Prophet was exempted our eares can testifie this doe wee not daily misse our friends when Gods wrath hath taken them away and the graue hath buried them in silence Doe we not daily in comming to the congregation passe ouer the graues of men sufficient monuments of the execution of the generall day Doe wee not vse as a generall prouerbe as sure as death and yet the seruants of God complaine that wee know not the wrath of God Surely wee doe not know this for all that which Moses Psalme 90. proues by two reasons first hee prayes to bee taught in it and if it were alreadie exactly knowne then should this prayer be superfluous againe he argueth of the effect that for so much as there followes no feare therefore there is no knowledge of the wrath of God for the want of feare sends a want of faith herein and were wee perswaded that Gods wrath were such a thing wee would feare and therefore we feare not because wee are not so perswaded of the wrath of God in it In naturall things wee will not easily runne into things feared nor feare those things which wee thinke not to be euill and therefore because we feare the fire will burne the water will drowne wee are hardly brought to runne into the fire or into the water much more should we so doe in things supernaturall if we did truly feare them wherefore though wee knowe in some part the wrath of God yet wee are not come to the perfect knowledge of it required at our hands Hitherto we must vnderstand it is one thing for man to determine of knowledge and another thing for God to iudge of it as Esay pronounced a difference betweene our esteeming of fasting and Gods iudging of it Esay 58. for that if wee see a man abstaine from meate we think he is a good deuout faster but the Lord determines otherwise so we may pronounce a difference betweene the valuation of knowledge in our eyes in the Lords eies It is nothing for vs to say this haue we quoted thus haue we read this haue I vttered and therefore I know this for this is nothing in Gods iudgement for as he determineth of the fast so will he determine of the knowledge of them that passe the auncient Rabbins of the Iewes and outreach the wise men of the Heathen And no maruel for as we say there is a wise kinde of ignorance a learned vnskilfulnesse so surely there is an ignorant knowledge a sottish kind of wisedome and this now possesseth the whole world And that wee may walke within our warrant we shal fetch our proofe from the sixt of Esay which place for the excellencie of it is oft repeated in the new Testament Matthew 13. Acts 28. and Rom. 11. where wee see there may be a seeing without seeing a kind of hearing and yet no hearing indeede Euen so there may be a knowledge and yet no knowledge before God the cause is for that the Lord accounts of no knowledge which comes not into practise and if we haue neuer so much knowledge and practise it not it is nothing in Gods booke And according as this is God his reckoning so it is our vsuall account for if wee haue taken paines to put precept vnto precept and to teach one that hath not profited by our paines how attentiue soeuer he seeme yet wee account him and accuse him as one that heard not at all Better is no candle than a candle vnder a bushell and the Lord accounts no light vnder a bushell for light Better to haue no eares than the eares of an Idoll And indeed they are no eares for they heare not so it is no knowledge that is separated from practise Wee doe beguile our selues in our accounts when wee thinke wee haue a great knowledge for that wee haue heard many Sermons whereunto because we haue not ioyned practise we may well blot out of the score many of those Sermons for such Sermons in Gods account be to vs as no Sermons We can say and cry that where there is a want of the meanes there is a great token of Gods curse and
we must learne that we set not our harts on these things so as our ioy in them should become either greater or equall with the reioycing in the crosse of Christ but rather that hauing wiues we be as though we had none buying as though we possessed not and vsing this world as though we vsed it not For otherwise the things of this world vanish away and therefore they are no such things as we should desire to stay our affections in them 1. Cor. 2. 2. the Apostle speaking of the like thing saith I esteemed not to know any thing among you saue Iesus Christ and him crucified purposeth not to shew that he knew not any thing else or that he would denie vnto men the knowledge of tongues learning or handicrafts for we know that he was a Pharisie brought vp in good learning at the feete of Gamaliel and how he reporteth of himselfe to speake as much in the tongues as any of the other Apostles and that he was a Tent-maker exhorting also in some of his Epistles men to get their liuings with some honest trade but his meaning is that he thought nothing worthie to be knowne or coueted no knowledge as excellent in respect and in comparison of the knowledge of Christ and him crucified And therefore whereas there were some among the Corinthians a people very famous for their learning and knowledge who pleased themselues in a conceit of their great gifts and sciences the Apostle not wanting these things protesteth vnto them that he neuer made this humane knowledge the full scope drift and foundation of his labours and that he neuer vsed them as the treasure of his heart although he could tell how farre to giue them their reuerence their due time and place in others but that he esteemed them in that measure as they stood him in stead the better to offer his seruice to Iesus Christ. Againe we must not here thinke that the Apostle knew not parents Magistrates and gouernours the gifts of men and the duties to be giuen to euery one of these but if he saw that men did glorie in themselues in their titles in their dignities then he knew them not in the flesh that is he did not esteeme them for those things but so farre he knew them in the spirit as he could reioyce that they were new creatures And therefore men must not think that for these gifts we are all in all but that the crosse of Christ is the marke we shoote at without the which all authoritie learning and knowledge is accursed of God Neuerthelesse we see it is the weaknes of iudgement to reiect all other things in themselues being the good gifts of God as our vnaduised friends haue done as though the knowledge and practise of Arts Sciences tongues and handicrafts did defile a man or as though a man were the more holie for not vsing these outward meanes But in our daies few labour of this disease of such superstitious austeritie and in our carelesse times men are not so much ouerwise and benummed in iudgement in this behalfe but most men on the contrary reioyce either as much or more in these things than in the crosse of Christ and this is the euill wherewith most men haue surfeited this is the euill whereat the Apostle striketh For though men will graunt that Christ is to be reioyced in yet their workes doe shew that they reioyce in some thing more than in the crosse of Christ and if they shew any ioy to religion it is rather done to countenance their owne gifts than to gaine any credit to Christ. How many I pray you in our daies reioyce in open wickednesse as the adulterer in his lusts the wrathfull man in his reuenging the couetous man in his riches the enuious man in his emulation and the ambitious man in his honours Why doe men learne but to get preferment why doe men so labour but to attaine to profit why doe men take such paines but in the end to reape pleasure So farre are we off from reioycing in Christ crucified that men now reioyce in open sinnes and that so manifestly as couetousnes ambition creeping vnder the cloake of vertue pleade for abilitie and maintenance for place and countenance without which as they say a man cannot doe good But these men that thus labour more for promotion profit and pleasure than to find Christ crucified and cannot find the vncomparable ioy if they were new creatures may happily carrie the face of Christians but surely by outward calling as yet they belong not vnto Christ. And what are these outward things to be reioyced in Admit that a man had all learning authoritie riches and credit are they not common as well to the wicked as to the godly are they not so transitorie and insufficient that the more a man hath of them the more he may haue doe they make the possessor the better can they keepe euill from him can they minister comfort to the afflicted conscience can they make vs reioyce in the houre of death or can they saue vs from confusion before God his iudgement seate Surely this is not in wit eloquence learning friends glorie riches and authoritie all which the wicked know better to abuse than the godly to vse but in Christ which was accursed and in his crosse which was a blessing vnto vs. Seeing it is so well did the Apostle to reioyce in this aboue all For were a man neuer so good so glorious so learned so well brought vp of such authoritie he must stoope at God his iudgement seate and there fall like a miserable caitife vnlesse he vsed these things to God his glorie and aboue all reioyced in the crosse of Christ. But now let vs see what is meant by the crosse of Christ. Some vnderstand it of the afflictions which hee did suffer for the profession of Christ because the Apostle saith in another place how he did beare about with him the marks of his sufferings in his body But this sense were too hard to be brooked that we should reioyce in nothing but in affliction albeit this is a truth that we may reioyce in those afflictions which we suffer for Christ his sake Againe the crosse of Christ taken for affliction cānot be said to be a principal cause of the world crucified to vs or of crucifying vs to the world although in some respect it may be coūted an inferior cause Further if we compare this place with other places of the scriptures we shal find it to be vnderstood of the crosse which Christ suffered for vs rather than of the crosse which we suffer for him as 2. Cor 2 2. where the Apostle laboureth to know nothing as heere he reioyceth in nothing more than in Christ crucified as he calleth it in that place or in the crosse of Christ as he speaketh in this place The Apostle his meaning then briefely is this Be it farre from me that I should chiefely
in that he is the punisher of sinne and rewarder of goodnes we shall haue strength against the temptations which shall be offered to make vs thinke that sinne is not punished and that it is lost labour to serue God and of this argument are many of the Psalmes And this he did at midnight when all things are most fearefull and therefore a fit time to examine our selues in feare and this shewed that his faith was sound seeing he could now praise God His subscription to the righteousnes of Gods iudgements was an argument of his faith for the nature of flesh is to thinke they are rigorous Vers. 63. I am companion of all them that feare thee and keepe thy precepts TO receiue helpe from them and to be helpfull vnto them so Psalme 16. Then if we will make God our portion we will make much of good men for if Dauid did this how much more ought we It is an argument of pride to despise the company of others If thou want knowledge it is to make thee seeke it of them that haue it if thou haue more than others then oughtest thou to bestow it vpon others so that thou oughtest not either for the greatnes of thy knowledge or for the want of knowledge to withdraw thy selfe from the companie of them that feare the Lord. If he loued good companie he hated euill men Pro. 29. for they are abomination one to another as he saith I hate them that hate thee And this is the propertie of a good man Psalme 15 yet this must not stay vs from doing them good in our callings as the Magistrate to the subiect c. As the euill may be in good mens companie yet not companions to them so may the good be with the euill and yet not their companions for we beleeue onely the communion of Saints That feare Here is the description of Gods children first that they feare God which is the foundation of all Prou. 1. and then they that feare God rest not in the iudgement of men but approue themselues to God to doe or to leaue vndone any thing as it pleaseth or displeaseth God This feare bringeth foorth obedience and without this fruite it is but to boast of feare And these men are they that we must be companions vnto Vers 64. The earth O Lord is full of thy mercie teach me thy statutes THe same thing was in the second verse yet after another manner Though the whole earth be full of mercie yet he desireth onely the statutes of God and this is the eight argumēt So he saith shew me thy fauour teach me thy statutes part 9. 1● because he made this the chiefest signe of Gods fauour to knowe his word it is an argument that the Lord was his portion Let vs see how oft wee haue made this petition and how vaine our petitions are desiring riches c. he desired not his kingdome so much as this He was a Prophet yet he desireth it and this is it the more wee know the more we must desire to know and neuer make any stay He prayeth chiefly for the teaching of the Spirit without which hee should erre Hee differeth farre in desire from the men of this world for they craue many things before knowledge and if they haue knowledge they rest therein and neuer look nor aske for the teaching of the Spirit Secondly he confirmeth himselfe that the Lord will teach him because his goodnes is ouer all the world hee letteth his Sunne rise on the euill how much more will he graunt the good requests of his children When we would then pray to receiue we must remember all Gods goodnes and wee must desire the teaching of the Spirit so farre as agreeth with the word and not desire the reuelation of the Spirit without the word PORTION 9. TETH Vers. 65. O Lord thou hast dealt gratiously with thy seruant according vnto thy word HE putteth the Lord in minde of his former mercies and so comforteth himselfe For when hee had saide that the Lords goodnes was ouer the earth and that hee also had found the same hereby hee comforteth himselfe in that hee shall receiue more For God is not as man is but take we neuer so much from his treasure there is neuer the lesse and the more hee giueth the readier hee is to giue Hee knewe that Gods gifts are without repentance and that hee is not wearie of weldoing but will finish the thing hee hath begunne and nothing is more forcible to obtaine mercie than to lay his former mercies before him Here are two grounds first if he dealt with him well when he was not regenerate how much more will he now and secondly all the gifts of God shall bee perfectly finished And here is a difference betweene faith and an accusing conscience the accusing conscience is afraid to aske more because it hath abused the former mercies but faith assuring vs that all his benefits are tokens of his fauour bestowed on vs according to his word is bold to aske more accusing our selues of our vnworthines and labouring to come out of our sinnes When he asked according to Gods word he made the word a rule of his prayer which assured him that his prayer should bee heard we must not then abuse Gods mercies least they accuse vs but if wee accuse our selues then let vs see if they haue been giuen according to Gods word and then may we aske new Vers. 66. Teach me good iudgement and knowledge for I haue beleeued thy commaundements HE maketh this prayer oft but we doe not so and therefore the vanitie of our prayers is rebuked which so often aske other things and so seldome aske this Hee was the man of God regenerate therefore he maketh this spiritual request which though carnall men mislike because they cānot conceiue of the word yet it is a signe of faith He maketh this prayer though he beleeued because his knowledge was in generals but his practise in particulars therefore if God in the particulars did not direct him he should faile in doing Hereof commeth it that the learnedst men are deceiued in particulars because they rest in their generall knowledge Example of admonition we haue generall rules to teach vs to admonish but when we come to practise in particulars then must we either haue the new grace of God or else we shall faile in the practise If this man that beleeued prayed thus how much more ought they that beleeue not And they that beleeue generally must confesse their blindnesse in particulars and therefore they should pray for it Although ignorance be helped yet it is not altogether cured therfore haue we need to pray Secondly because our knowledge is in generals but practise is in particulars and therein must we haue a new assistance Therefore when wee haue not good successe in our busines wee must not as men are wont lay the fault on this or that but wee must see the cause in our selues
in the first and sixt verses with prayer couched in the middest of the portion It is a marueilous strange thing that one thing should bee so often repeated as this to commend still Gods law and to pray still to be taught in the same This proceedeth from the comfort which he felt in the word and from the fight of the corruption of his owne heart and is commended to vs in writing to shew vs our corruption and to labour for the like fruite Wherfore seeing experience hath taught vs thus much we must learne that we can neither see the comfort of our seeking after God nor our calamitie and miserie to be deliuered out of it vnlesse we pray with the Prophet for the right knowledge of the law of God so that we are much to thanke our God that he giueth vs in another such a fight of our owne corruption As in the first verse there is a notable commendation of the word so is there also a singular declaration of his faith Thy word O Lord is a lantorne to my feete and a light vnto my path This seemeth to all men to haue been learned long agoe and belched out in time of Poperie and that it is no new thing but a saying very well knowne but when we looke into the seuerall practises of men which is the righteous iudge of all mens iudgements wee shall finde men to be farre from any inward faith shewed in such fruits This made the Prophet to sweare in that he saw on one side his happines so great in the word the corruption of his heart on the other side And in meditating day and night in Gods law and considering his righteous iudgements he saith in trueth Thy word is a lanterne c. If we will looke into our selues we shall finde that those things which seeme to be most easily beleeued are furthest from faith and that things most easie to be learned are furthest from practise True it is that euery man will say Who will not beleeue this what a beast were he that would denie the truth of Gods word But alas our carelesse reading our rare meditating our cold praying and praising of God for his word our seldome conference of the word will testifie against vs in time to come that we neuer truely beleeued We must first looke and note our selues and then we shall profit somewhat more The man of God opposeth here the word to mans wisedom which he had mētioned in the verse going before as light is contrarie to darknes For as in darknes we cannot goe safely without the light of a lanterne or such like euen so are we in ignorance and rebellion if we be not continually guided by the word of God and his Spirit This then is a further thing how durst blind bayards be so bold who liuing in the darknes of Egypt thinke they are in the light and being vnable to discerne betweene persumption and despayre betweene promises and threatnings betweene things streightly commanded voluntarily done suppose themselues to be sharpe sighted Nay we shall finde these fruites to be but in few It is said Matth. 22. 23. The light of the body is the eye if then thine eye be single thy whole body shall be light 23. But if thine eye be wicked then all thy body shall be darke Where our Sauiour Christ borroweth his speech from the senses of the body and translateth it to the powers of the soule For as euery part of the body is lightsome whilest the eye seeth so a man being inlightened with the word and the Spirit hauing his eyes alwaies to heauen hath his affections aright and on the contrarie as all things are lothsome to that bodie which for want of the eyes is wholy darkened so a man sitting in the darknes of ignorance hauing his mind wholy set on earthly things hath his affections disordered Now that there is no light in vs but all is darknes in our soules the Apostle Peter doth plainely shew it 2. Pet. 1. 19. We haue a most sure word of the Prophets to the which ye doe well that ye take heede as to a sure light in a darke place c. Where he commending the Christians for their care of the word sheweth that it is a light in the darke and teacheth vs that how much knowledge we haue so much we are in good affections Also Paul Ephes 4. 17. 18 saith I testifie in the Lord that ye henceforth walke n●t as other Gentiles walke in the vanitie of their minde 18. Hauing their cogitation darkened and being strangers from the life of God through the ignorance that is in them c. Where he sheweth that the man vnregenerate hath his minde vnderstanding and heart corrupt and blinde in that life which God liueth in his and that as the man which seeth being in darknes or in light the blind man gropeth vncertainely euen so all our doing are endlesse and headlesse which are without the light of knowledge Shall we thinke now that euery man beleeueth this to be true No for if they did they would doe otherwise If they felt this in affection in any measure would they not come out of their prison to the liberty of Gods saints would they not auoid the darkenesse to see the bright sunne What a follie were it for a man who hauing scales and gleamy diseases on his eyes might be cured and will not This is a double fault that when men may know they will lie in errours and ignorance and when they may be conuerted they will dwell still in Heresie Oh what a thing is this wilfullie to remaine in darkenesse and to sleepe at the hearing of the word when the Lord giueth them a lanterne for their feete and offereth knowledge and yet to be no better than the stockes they sit on If it pleased the Lord who giueth vnderstanding to the ignorant and draweth light out of darkenesse to reueale the light into their darke cōsciences they should know that when light came vnto them they refused it and that they are louers of darknes more than of light But he that worketh all things mightily i● all men must shew this light vnto their darkenes because they that are in hell thinke on none other heauen they that lie in vnrighteousnes thinke of no other righteousnesse and sitting in the vallies of death they remember none other life We must therefore pray that the Lords glorious light of the gospel may open the eyes of their consciences and let euery man examine his owne heart that he may pray to haue his iudgement cleared by the true knowledge of the word and his affections renewed to the due obedience of the same For how much knowledge wee haue so much light haue we and looke how much we lie in ignorance so much we lie in darknes Wee know but in part when we are at the highest in this life how great then is that darkenes
care herein as they do who neuer can content themselues in carking and caring when they are to bring in the fruites of the whole yeare in their haruest Many would thinke that this praier of the man of God is superfluous but if they truly knew their owne decaies of faith and shrinking in obedience they would not suspect this Psalme of any needlesse repetition but would acknowledge that it is the wonderfull wisedome and goodnesse of Gods Spirit so to prouide for our vnbeleefe and disobedience And as the holy ghost doth here set down the glasse of regeneration and teacheth vs how to pray for the continuance of our obedience and strength of faith so we must so behold our corruptions therein as from henceforth we may haue a greater iealousie of our selues in them both We learned in these two prayers how contrary to the doctrine of the Sophisters hee craued knowledge not of desert or merite but of grace and mercie Where we are to remember that when we are to craue of God any new mercie to be receiued or perseuerance in some mercy alreadie receiued we must say with the man of God Deale with thy seruant according vnto thy mercie Now in that he doubled as we may see his request he sheweth the great necessitie of it and that the mysterie of faith is great This is a thing that much deceiueth many when we thinke that we haue eyes and can see into matters as farre as other men we haue eares and can heare as much as another man can doe we haue as good wits and reason we can conceiue and iudge of a thing as soone and as well as other men commonly doe Here is a great iudgement of God that we cannot acknowledge our dulnes and deadnes and that we cannot attaine vnto the mightie power of the word as we ought to doe for wan● of this we become so fruitlesse in reading and in hearing because we cannot truly vnderstand what we reade or heare we gather one thing here and another thing there we gather many things falsely and often finde fault with the deliuerie of the word when the fault is in our selues in that we neuer suspect our selues our reason nor iudgement The children of God must be iealous ouer their owne affections must know that there is no such naturall thing in them but that all is the gift of God We are here then to learne continually to pray that our iudgement may be enlightened with the true vnderstanding of the word and our affections renewed into the due obedience of the same If we should see in how many things our reason erreth and our affections wauer in vs we should surely acknowledge that there are no superfluities in this Psalme For vntill we be fully acquainted with the dulnesse of our hearts we shall not see our necessitie in vsing the like prayers but he that seeth the blindnesse of his minde and corruptions of his heart and desireth nothing more than to become a new man in Iesus Christ and to learne nothing more than Iesus Christ crucified howsoeuer others perswade themselues of more mysticall knowledge without this in truth knowing nothing he will count all other knowledge but lothsome and as dung in respect of the doctrine of regeneration whereby he is become a new man in Christ. For it is a greater blessing where this knowledge doth abound and other gifts are in lesse measure than where this is but small though in many other gifts we doe abound For euery man must not be learned euery man is not to trauell in the profound mysteries of the Scriptures but euery one had neede to be humbled and we being all destitute of grace had neede to be taught of God as children that being spirituall we may iudge our selues that the Lord will not iudge vs and howsoeuer we thinke of our selues now when the Lord shall take from vs the darknesse of our hearts and the mists of our affections we shall espie our dulnes and blindnes to be very great Vers. 126. It is time for thee Lord to worke for they haue destroyed thy law AFter the man of God in the verses going before had praied for himselfe now he commeth to pray against his enemies after he had prayed for ease of his trouble which he had amōgst his enemies when he himself in the meane time had deserued well of them and had prayed that his knowledge might be ratified both in the law and Gospel of God he now commeth sheweth a reason why he would the Lord should so do with him euen because of the generall flood of iniquitie and vniuersall corruption both in religion and maners as knowing that it was now high time to keep and to be taught the statutes testimonies of the Lord to be confirmed both in obedience faith because happy were they that now could beleeue the law and keep the couenants when on no side one might finde examples of the one or of the other His meaning then briefly is this O Lord seeing there is no further place left for prayer for them seeing I haue executed iudgement and iustice euen to the failing of mine eyes seeing for all that I can do or say they wax worse worse and whereas before they had some reuerence of thy iudgements and now they are growne to the contempt and confounding of thy law seeing mercy will not preuaile with them but the longer thou bearest with them the more they are hardned but iudgement must be vsed it is time O Lord to put to thy helping hand The man of God we see breaketh not out suddenly into this prayer but vpon the great neede which vrged him thereunto We are here to learne first that though at all seasons it be needfull to pray to be guided in the true vnderstanding and due obedience of Gods word yet then especially when through the generall floods of iniquitie all without that especiall grace of God all are like to be carried away For as common and vniuersall floods sweepe all away before them with their swift and violent course so in the common floods of corrupt religion and manners euery man thinkes that the best religion which most men doe hold and that those things are most lawfull which are most vsuall But this is a peculiar and speciall grace of God to be exempted from that generall corruption as was Enoch who was preserued to walke before the Lord in that corrupt age Noah reserued when all flesh had corrupted his waies and Lot who liued a iust man euen among the filthie Sodomites If then we shall be preserued from corrupt religion when religion is vsed but of custome and not of conscience when it is vsed coldly and there is no heate in it if when mens manners are generally become corrupt so that there is no humilitie no mercie no pitie no chastitie no puritie no righteousnesse no true dealing no care of our neighbours credit we
by lying in some grosse sinne Here is then a touch stone for them that can say I trust I feare God if I feared not God how should I hope to prosper or how should I liue for if their feare be tried by the word and their feare of the word be tried by particular sins they will soone bewray themselues Againe many there be who will say they feare God whilest sicknesse pouertie or some crosse lieth vpon them but when affliction is past ouer and prosperitie commeth let the Lord strike vpon their hearts neuer so hardly and they will not feare Wherefore the Prophet Esay saith chap. 28. 15. Because ye haue said we haue made a couenant with death and with hell we are at agreement though a scourge runne ouer vs and passe thorow it shall not come at vs. And 18. The couenant with death shall be disanulled and your agreement with hell shall not stand when a scourge shall runne ouer you and passe thorow then shall you be troden vnder by it And though sometimes we feare with Pharaoh the present tokens of Gods wrath as the thunder the lightning the earthquake and such like yet we make them scarsely as the wonders that last nine da●es neither feare we the word of God In stead of all the plagues whereof we reade in the old Testament as of the opening of the earth of the ouerflowing with waters of fire comming down from heauen we heare but one named in the new Testament namely that they that doe such things for which those plagues did come shall not enter into the kingdome of heauen which one doth so terrifie Gods children that they had leauer beare all the afflictions of Iob and all the plagues of Egypt than that one for all those are but forerunners of this one iudgement and this is the full heape of all other threatnings In that he saith my heart standeth in awe he sheweth his feare was not couertly as in the vngodly For at one time or other the Lord may shake the vilest villaine in the world with feare of his iudgements and sometimes to feele terrour but this kinde of feare soone vanisheth away and sinketh not into the heart how much soeuer it be striken into the head For we see whilest God lyeth ●ore vpon vs by some terrible iudgement of thunder lightnings or earthquakes how euery prophane man can be content to pray and for the time will be very godly and religious so long as the plague lasteth but when that is once ouer their feare is also ouer The most desperate feare but it sitteth not it dwelleth not long vpon their hearts but as a flash of Lightning suddenly striketh the face and suddenly is gone So a flashing sight of Gods Maiestie striketh their hearts and suddenly is departed Wee must not then haue an ouer-hearing of Gods threatnings nor an ouer-fearing of his iudgements For many will like the word because they like it in iudgement or for that it increaseth their knowledge but few loue it in heart because it renueth their affections For though our iudgement hee wrought vpon yet the heart is not wrought on which is Gods place wherin if he by the ministerie of his word once take sure hold it wil forthwith go to the eye eare and hand the whole body and wil be effectuall Now what is a more effectuall bridle against sinne then still to thinke that we are in the presence of God For if all men in the world should bid a man do any thing contrary to the will of God though in doing he might be next the King or in not doing with Daniel haue his bodie giuen to the Lyons yet would he not doe any thing against Gods lawes Neither did Daniel suffer all this because hee would not be an Idolater but for that he would not denie the worship to the true God but professed the same openly in setting open his windowes and manifesting his true religion for the space of three dayes And why did he thus euen because the feare of God did so touch his heart that the feare of man did nothing dismay him so that neither the gaine nor promotion which hee might haue had by the King on the one side nor the danger and losse which was layd vnto him on the other side could make him at all to displease God And as the feare of God hath these effects in God his children that the poorest creature shall stand in great courage before the face of a King so where this feare of God is wanting the mightie Prince shall stand in awe of his poorest subiect 1. Sam. 15. When Saul had a flat commaundement from the Lord who from a meane stocke and base parentage was aduanced to the kingdome to destroy the King he contrarie to the Lords commaundement saueth Agag yea and a great while stoutly iustifieth his sinne before Samuel but when he had streightly charged his conscience hee added the feare of the people moued me to doe it as if he should haue said I was afraid that the people in ●o doing would haue gone from me and haue denied me the honour which they were wont to yeeld vnto me Thus we see a poore soule and with Gods feare feareth not a Prince and a mightie King without this feare feared the poore people This feare of God also keepeth the godly that in all their distresses they dare not open their mouthes to any foule speech or corrupt language When Iob was spoyled of all hee had and wicked men had taken it from him he saith in the humblenes of spirit and feare of his God the Lord giueth and the Lorde taketh blessed be the name of the Lord He durst not chase against the Chaldeans although he was in this miserable perplexitie for the feare of God so gaged his heart that he durst not nourish any euill thoughts or breake out into euill words to displease the Lorde Contrariwise where this feare is not wee shall see great murmuring and grudging because Leuit. 20. the Lord saith If any man turne after such as worke with spirits and after southsayers then will I set my face against that person Let him keepe his sinne as close as he will and hide it as much as he can yet I the Lord wil finde it out In vaine then wee see doe words fl●e out brutishly from wordly men who say they feare and loue God when they neither belieue his promises nor feare his threatnings nor loue that which he commandeth no● hate that which he forbiddeth Well runne they in the last day whither they will yell they neuer so much to haue the rockes to couer them and the hills to hide them the word will iudge those worldlings heretikes and scorners But they will thus say wee aske not counsell of the diuell as you charge vs yea but God his word so saith that hee that goeth to witches and wizards goes to aske counsell of the diuell Againe as wee said before
Wherefore we must needes see and confesse that either hee was very vile and wee very holie or he most holie and we very vile Shall we hope to attaine this without vsing the like meanes Did not hee attaine to Knowledge without so many meanes and shall wee attaine to it with vsing of no meanes Shall wee thinke the Lord will be more partiall with vs than he was with his beloued Prophet Did not the man of God obtaine without asking often and shall we obtaine without asking at all Shall he crie and call pray and complaine watch and wake to get vnderstanding and shall wee slugge and doe nothing Or did it more appertaine to him to doe these things or doe they lesse concerne vs seeing he did them for our instruction The holy Ghost hath for no other end blessed the commendation of so good men to vs then for a type of godlines which we must follow and wherby he vouchsafeth as it were to open heauen gates for vs and to giue vs accesse to the treasures of heauen Surely it was not for any profit of the Prophet himselfe who did it but for all posteritie to come to put vs in minde of our corruption to shew how we should striue against it Wherefore it standeth vs in hand more carefully more frequently more feruently to vse prayer if euer wee will hope for the like graces For the Lord hath promised that if wee knock on this sort the doore of knowledge shall be opened if we seeke wisedome on this sort wee shall surely finde her if wee craue vnderstanding with this affection and ala●●●●e we shall receiue plentifully We must then in our behalfe know that wee must knocke and that instantly we must seeke and that carefully we must aske and that diligently with an holy importunitie Away then with our old drowsines God will not bestow his hidden secrets his treasures his mysteries his iewels vpon them who vouchsafe not to aske them For seeing the things which he promiseth in his word be no small things but such as the eye hath not seene the eare heard tongue expressed nor heart conceiued shall we thinke to come to them by shutting our eyes by making dull our eares by closing vp our mouthes and hardning our hearts Surely no. Behold then this vehement praying of the man of God for a president for vs to follow But why should the man of God here pray for vnderstanding had he not often prayed for it before was he a nouice in knowledge being a Prophet doth not our Sauiour Christ reprehend repetitions and babling in prayer True it is our Sauiour Christ doth reprehend that babling which is without faith and knowledge and a feeling of our wants but he speaketh not against these serious and often repetitions which proceede from a plentifull knowledge abundant faith and liuely feeling of our necessities Againe although it cannot be denyed but he was a man of God and had receiued great graces yet God giueth knowledge to his dearest Saints in this life but in part and the most which we see and know is the least thing which we see not nor knowe Besides when wee haue knowledge and knowledge must be brought into practise wee shall finde such difficulties such wawardnes such forgetfulnes such wants that although we haue had with the Prophet a very good direction in the generall things of the word which are vniuersall and few yet we shall finde many distractions in our practises which must bee particular and many and wee shal either faile in memorie by forgetfulnesse or in iudgement by blindnes or in affection by dulnes So easily may we slippe when wee thinke we may hold our iourney on Wherfore the man of God through that examination which he tooke of his heart and affections seeing those manifold streights and difficulties prayeth in the verse following not for the renuing of men in generall troubles but for the hindring of his particular estate and condition Vers. 170. Let my supplication come before thee and deliuer me according to thy promise WEl now if we only cōsider those former causes we shal see that here is no vaine repetition and that in nothing this prayer was made too often For besides that as we said we know here but in part we forget also that which we know and wee cannot practise that which we remember so that it is a rare thing to haue a good iudgement but rarer when wee haue a good iudgement to haue a good affection and most rare when wee haue a good iudgement and a sound affection to haue them still For wee haue not in vs any indwelling righteousnes Againe as it had not been sufficient for vs to haue had light heretofore and not to haue it now or hauing it now vnlesse we haue it hereafter so it is requisit for our life which we hold in Christ that we haue not onely had iudgement heretofore vnlesse we haue it now and it is not sufficient to haue it now vnlesse we haue it hereafter For they that thinke their iudgement is perfit enough and their affections holy had no need to haue Christ to be their schoolemaster who teacheth the simple and ignorant they that are whole need him not to be their physition who came not to cal the righteous but sinners to repentance But God his children seeing their ignorance and corrupt affections euen by experiēce the schoolemistresse of schooles know how needful it is daily to craue knowledge and continually to labour for a good conscience On the contrary part who so bolde as blinde bayard who so loftie as hee that vnderstandeth least who so proud as hee that hath but slender knowledge But surely the children of God who are conscious still of their deadnes dulnes in heauenly things would euen haue despaired had they not seene the same in the Saints of God before them and had they not receiued from God this holy Psalme both for a patterne of godlines to their instruction and also for an example how they might be rid from their ignorance deadnes dulnes and how they might be comforted when after much striuing and shaking them off they returne to them againe to their consolation For when we see that the Saints of God before vs haue had such fightes not onely with corruptions of ill iudgement and corrupt affections which they had of nature but after they haue beene renued by knowledge and therewithall consider that by prayer alone they haue bene reuiued we are assured and comforted that if wee continue and renue our prayers GOD will continue and renue his graces in vs. Thus we see as well to our consolation as instruction that the Saints of GOD were not onely not safe from presumptuous sinnes but also they laboured to see the errors of this life and also desired to bee rid from the daungerous and sluggish sinnes of prophane professors who will see nothing at all According to thy Word These wordes will beare
a double interpretation for either the meaning of them is giue me vnderstanding which is according to the prescript truth of thy holy Word or else according as thou hast promised in the Worde to them that by prayer aske it of thee But because this latter sense comprehendeth the former I more willingly embrace the latter For if God helpe vs according to his promise it is doubtles according to his word for hee promiseth nothing which is not agreeable with his word Besides this may be pr●ued by that wich is added in the verse following where hee saith according to thy promise Now in that he repeateth the same thing he sheweth that certainly God hath promised to helpe and relieue his necessitie Neither must we thinke that this promise was made to Dauid alone who alone had not such infirmities but hee speaketh as a member of the Church for the promise appertaineth to the Church to all in the Church vniuersally Howbeit looke what the Lord had promised to all generally he applieth to himselfe particularly For we may see both in this Psalme Port 17 2. The entrance into thy word sheweth light and giueth vnderstanding to the simple as also Psal. 19. 7. The testimonie of the Lord is sure and giueth light to the simple that the promise is generall and as well appertaineth to vs as to him So that the meaning of this latter part is nothing else but this as thou hast promised to giue knowledge to them that seeke it so Lord giue it mee for I thus seeke it Thus we see how needfull it is to haue knowledge of God his word seeing none obtaine but they that pray according as God hath promised in his word according to that Ioh. 5. 4 This is the assurance that we haue in him that if we aske any thing according to his will hee heareth vs. Ye aske saith S. Iames cap. 4. 3 and receiue not because ye aske amisse We must not pray then for euery phantasie and for euery grace that commeth into our minds but for those things for which we are taught to pray according to the word But how can we doe this without knowledge how should we pray to him in whom we haue not beleeued or how should we beleeue in him whom we haue not knowne Whosoeuer then will pray aright must pray in faith and he that will pray in faith must also pray in knowledge Againe we are heere to obserue thus much that whosoeuer he be that will be directed in singular actions he must acquaint himselfe with the particular knowledge of the word Wherefore let vs learne to vse often reading hearing and meditating of the word and with often reading hearing and meditating let vs vse often praying applying and examining of our selues that we may both seeke vnderstanding in knowledge and the obedience of it in our affections For often reading hearing and meditating bring ripenes of iudgement often praying applying and examining our selues bring quicknes of our affections We shall see then for often praying the Lord will driue vs to it with often giuing of his graces with the giuing of his graces he will giue necessities with the giuing of necessities he will often giue occasions to set forth his glorie How shall we pray now without iudgement or how shall we meditate without knowledge Wee must often heare for knowledge sake we must often meditate for conscience sake For as we cannot haue profit in the generall knowledge of a thing without particular meditating of it so can wee not meditate without some troubling of our minde vnlesse we doe it of iudgement no more then not hauing knowledge we can pray without great turmoyling and troubling of our minde Thus we must ioyne all meanes together as first by conference wee must labour for knowledge to make our knowledge more effectuall wee must ioyne meditation and that both knowledge and meditation may be sanctified we must vse prayer Let my supplication come before thee and deliuer me according to thy promise Here he prayeth to bee rid from these streights and encombrances which did hinder this vnderstanding of the word which hee desired For whereas some vnderstand it of outward and common troubles I thinke by those things which goe before and comparing it with those things that follow after that he meaneth that deliuerāct which might rid him from those things which are contrarie and preiudiciall to the things before prayed for that so both being enlightened with true knowledge and deliuered from all blindnes hee might praise God more freely and liberally both for his vnderstanding and for the escapes of those distresses perplexities doubts and ignorances of his mind And thus considering that he prayeth to obtainē the good things and to be deliuered from the contrarie euill things let vs consider of that which followeth According to thy promise If wee will obtaine any thing of the Lord wee must first vow thankfulnes and as we be suiters we must be thanksgiuers as we be suppliants wee must be plentifull in prayses to the Lord. For this is the end of our creatiō this is the end of our redemption this is the end of our sanctification this is the end of all our praying and obtaining euen plentifully to praise the name of our good God Vers. 171. My lips shall speake praise when thou hast taught me thy statutes AS wee learne now that the end of all Gods blessings is thanksgiuing and vnlesse wee purpose and will performe this we must neuer looke to obtaine any thing in fauour so we are also to learne that before God teacheth vs from aboue we are as tonguetide and cannot pray before he by his spirit doth instruct vs we cānot once speake of his word This he sheweth both in the first portion and seuenth verse I will praise thee with an vpright heart when I shall haue learned the iudgements of thy righteousnes and in the second portion where after he hath prayed to be taught in the statutes he promiseth with his lippes to tel the iudgements of the Lord. We cannot then blesse God before he instruct vs. When the Lord rectifieth our knowledge with cleere iudgement and renueth our hearts with holy affections wee are most readie to praise the Lord according to that in the Psalme Lord open thou my lippes and my mouth shall shew thy praise And Rom. 8. 29. The spirit helpeth our infirmities for wee knowe not how to pray as we ought c. Wherefore if wee liue to eate to drinke to sleepe and not to praise God we liue no better than bruit beasts or rather worse for they praise God in their willing seruing of mans necessities and according to their kinde in their waies But man to whom the Lord hath giuen eyes to looke to heauen eares to heare his word speech to sound his praises a mind to conceiue his glorious works and blessed word seeing he hath these gifts aboue beasts it is certaine there must
wisedome personage or blood that he shall think it a disgrace to consecrate all his life to the ministery of the Gospell Can flesh puffe vp it selfe so farre aboue the Saints aboue the Angels aboue the Lord himselfe or if he doe shall he not be rewarded Yes surely for if the Lord would keepe silence the very creatures themselues would be reuenged of him 7 We must desire that which is truely good for there are many kindes of good There is Isachars good Genes chap. 49. Isachar an Asse of great bones couching downe betweene two burthens sa●e that which was good and was content to beare Howsoeuer many big-boned Asses lay them downe betweene a paire of burthens for ease hastning onely to auoy de the burthen and the heate of the day There is Demetrius his good the siluer-smith Sirs yee know that by this craft we haue our goods For we know that the labour is nothing so great now as it hath beene and that in these daies a clus●er of the common or ciuill lawe is worth an whole vintage of diuinitie There is Balaacks good Numb chap. 22. I purpose to doe thee good to promote thee There is Peters good Be good to your selfe ●or we knowe if he dare say to the King thou art impious he may carrie Iohn Baptists reward for his labour and send his head for a second course And yet there is a better good For we must not saith Syracid Aske of a woman touching whom she is ●ealous nor of an ambitious man touching thankefulnesse nor of an●ireling for the finishing of ● worke nor of the men of the world touching the things pertaining to God for the world is a great fauourer of the heresie of the Libertines and if we fall to counsell with flesh and blood we may doe to the booke of God as Ieconiah did to the Prophecie of Ieremiah cutte it in peeces with a pen-knife and cast it into the fire for the wisedome of this world is foolishnesse with God 1 Cor. 1. 8 Whatsoeuer is written for vs it is written and if it be written for vs and for our sakes Let me heare saith Dauid what the Lord will say concerning me and so we must attend to heare the Lord what he will say concerning vs. As for me although I doe but sitte and mend my nettes and haue no part nor fellowship in this businesse being vnworthie to be matriculated into the high calling of the Ministerie yet feeling my soule hath chosen the tabernacle of the Lord for his portion and seeing the day may come that I may keepe a doore in the same as the Lord liueth before whom I speake he knoweth that in his feare I speake to this end that by mine owne mouth I may be stirred vp to prepare my selfe to this calling and that all you as Augustine said in his case when it was as mine is now hearing what my desire and purpose is may pray to God for me that I may haue power and strength giuen me to performe it 9 In prouiding for the Ministerie good men would be preferred God can doe much they say he may make them able It is like Saunders argument God is omnipotent Ergo there is transubstantiation Nay he hath enabled diuers well In the wildernesse when meate could not be gotten he rained quailes but in Canaan when they were in case to prouide for themselues that prouision ceased Many simple men at the first comming of the Gospell were stirred vp when the Vniuersities were the greatest enemies of his truth but now when he hath restored to vs the plentie of Canaan we must know that the date of that extraordinarie calling in our daies is expired Yet he may doe well True he that casteth blindfold may hit the marke but yet no wise man will lay any wager on his head If I might see a fierie tongue sit on his head I would say somewhat After his receiuing vp into glorie whē he ascended vp on high then he gaue gifts vnto men such gifts as on their Coronation daies Kings are wont in great abundance to scatter among the people The Conduits ranne with wine and all the cocks with rose water and his Missilia new coyne of gold siluer by handfuls were throwne amongst them Such were the gifts of tongues prophecying healing all knowledge and other graces Now although he giue vs all things liberally yet he cōtinued not his largesse daily as at his inauguration We must not looke alwaies to haue the like MAN for gathering it vp but returne to our occupations and let vs remember the Lords steward must be fraught with all store new and olde fitte to entertaine the sonne and daughter of the great King of heauen Prophecying the signe of learned men Numb 11. 25. Euen poore Bez●●●l and A●oliab before they could make curtaines and worke in blew silke yet for so much as it belonged to the Lords tabernacle they were filled with the Spirit of God in these mechanicall hand●-workes Esay 6. 7. his mouth was touched with the hotte cole then sent verse 8. ●erem 1. 9 his mouth is tou ched with the Lords hand and he was bidden goe and crie chap 2. 1. of Christ this question was asked Iohn 7. 15. How knoweth this man the Scripture their testimonie is of him Ioh. 7. 46. Matth. 7. 28. he speakes with power and what this exceliencie is may appeare by his disputation with good schollers as it was likely Luke chap. 2. verse 46. by his Hebrew Ephathah whereas their vulgar speech was Syrian by his perfect and often quoting of the Scriptures and the Thalmud in discourse of the traditions of Corban and the other of the gold of the temple c. by Herods great expectation and questioning with him of many things Luke chap. 23. verse 9. by Sadduces and Scribes putting ●●●th hard questions as of the woman hauing seuen husbands of paying tribute and his stopping their mouthes and by teaching by Parables which was the learning most accounted of in these times and as yet amongst the Iewes best thought of by the desire that the Greekes had to see him which came vp to the seast Iohn chap. 12. verse 21. by the counsell of his brethren that he should get him abroad and shew himselfe to the world thought to be famous By his owne testimonie Behold a wiser than Salomon is here by Nicodemus Iohn chap. 3. verse 2. which confesseth him to be a Teacher sent from God M●tth chap. 13. verse 51. The Apostles daily taught by Christ the best Schoolemaster for three who eyeere together and yet more were commaunded to tarrie and waite for the promise of the ●ather the Comforter to be sent Apollos through his learning a great helpe to the Apostles Act. chap. 18. verse 24. and 28. Paul was brought vp at the feete of Gam●l●●l a per●●ct Pharisie Act. chap. 21. vers 3. an expoūder of the law though