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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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work a great change in us A Christian should and in some measure doth carry an equal mind in all Conditions and keep the same pace whither he goeth up-hill or down-hill and have his heart fixed in God whatever falleth out Psal. 112. 7. He shall not be afraid of evil tydings his heart is fixed trusting in the Lord. But alas we are much discomposed oftentimes especially at the first onset by our outward estate when under great Afflictions it puts a damp upon our spirits and we cannot serve God so chearfully Levit. 10. 19. And Aaron said unto Moses Behold this day have they offered their sin-offering and their burnt-offering before the Lord and such things have befallen me and if I had eaten the sin-offering to day should it have been accepted in the sight of the Lord. So Hezekiah it is said of him 2 Chron. 32. 25. When Hezekiah was sick unto death and he prayed unto the Lord and he gave him a sign that Hezekiah rendred not again according to the benefit done unto him for his heart was lifted up We are too apt to be dejected and cast down with worldly Troubles or exalted and puffed up with worldly Comforts and both bring on deadness upon the Heart both worldly sorrow and carnal complacency It is not requisite that a Child of God should be without all sense of his condition and it cannot be supposed that this sense should always be kept within bounds and under the Coercion and Government of Grace considering our weakness and therefore a Christian receiveth some Taint from the changes he passes thorow as the water doth from the soil through which it runneth He is sometimes in Credit sometimes in Disgrace sometime Rich sometimes Poor sometimes sick and in Pain at other times in Health and firm Constitution of Body Now though it argueth small strength to faint in ordinary Afflictions Prov. 24. 10. and a light spirit to be puffed up like a bubble with every slight blast yet when Troubles are heavy and pressing Gods best servants have been ready to dye and faint and in a full estate it is hard to keep down carnal rejoycing By both the freedom of following Gods service chearfully may often be interrupted 4 Because we sin away our life and strength and by our careless walking contract deadness and hardness of Heart The Mind like the Eye is soon offended and out of Temper we forfeit the quickning influences of his Spirit upon which the activity of Grace dependeth To correct our sinful rashness and to teach us more Watchfulness and Caution God withdraweth Phil. 2. 12 13. Be the sin a sin of Commission especially if grievous and hainous as David found a shrewd abatement of Life and Vigor after his foul sin Psal. 51. 11 12. Or a sin of Omission when we neglect God or serve him slightly if we give way to deadness Isa. 64. 6. rest in the work wrought and are more willing to get a Duty over than to perform it with any Life and Vigor God suspends his quickning If you do not mind the work why should God quicken you in it 3. Reason Is taken from the Nature of Gods Dispensation They do often and earnestly ask quickning because God giveth out by degrees and would keep us in constant dependance In him we live move 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and have our being Act. 17. 28. both as Creatures and new Creatures There is a constant Concurrence of his motions and influences by their beings and operations God will indear his Grace to us by bringing us daily under new debt and therefore he doth not give us all our stock and portion in our hands lest we neglect him as the Prodigal did his Father By multiplyed and renewed Acts of Grace he doth more commend his love to us every day he must quicken us and in every Duty If so much Rain fell in a day as would suffice the Earth for seven years the Commerce between the Air and the Earth would cease Or if a man could eat so much at one meal as to go in the strength of it all his Life there would be no ground to pray for daily bread therefore God doth dispence his Assistances so as you must still wait upon him and be calling to him He keepeth Grace in his own hand that he may often hear from us Doctrine II. The main Argument which Gods Children have to plead in Prayer is his own favour and loving-kindness I shall shew I. That this is a Modest Humble and Pious Argument II. This is a Comfortable and Incouraging Argument I. 'T is a Modest Argument and 't were good if we could learn this modesty of David He was one much in Prayer diligent in keeping Gods Statutes abundant in all Acts of Devotion spent nights in Meditation and yet after all this placeth all his hopes in the Mercy and Loving-kindness of God and desireth onely to be heard according to mercy But in us there is a secret carnal notion of God as if he were our Debtor if we act for him or suffer any thing for him we carry it as if God were obliged to us Isa. 58. Wherefore have we fasted c. We cannot be at a Fast give a little Alms or make a Prayer but we think we have merited much at Gods hands Oh this is against all reason Alas what profit can we be to God Iob 35. 6 7 8. God is above the injuries and benefits of the Creature what miss had he of Angels and Men in those innumerable Ages of duration that went before any Created Being And as it is against Reason so it is against all the declarations God hath made of himself to us Ezek. 36. 32. Not for your sakes do I this saith the Lord of Hosts Be ashamed and confounded for your own wayes So Tit. 3. 4 5 6. But after that the kindness and love of God our saviour towards man appeared not by works of Righteousness which we have done but according to his mercy he saved us by the washing of regeneration and renewing of the Holy Ghost which he shed on us abundantly through Iesus Christ our saviour In short no worth in us or Righteousness of ours is that Merit and Righteousness by vertue of which we are accepted with God Our Works and Righteousness are not that Condition by which we receive and apply this Merit that 's Faith No Works or Merit are a motive or the first inducing Cause to move God to give us that Faith but all is from his Loving-kindness and readiness to do good to the Creatures Again 'T is contrary to the practice of the Saints and Children of God who though never so Holy and never so good yet still they plead Mercy and this by direction from him who knoweth what plea is fittest for Creatures to use to God Luk. 17. 10. As it is not the merit of one part of the Earth that it lyeth nearer the Sun than another onely the Creator would
if we have any faith in him faith will work by love Gal. 5. 6. The soul may reason and discourse thus with itself Do I believe Christ Jesus did thus willingly give himself for my soul how can I be backward in God's service and hang off from him O let me live to Christ who loved me and gave himself for me Gal. 2. 20. What shall I be more backward to do for God than Christ was to die for me To go to the Throne of Grace than Christ Jesus was to go the Cross Can I hang off from such pleasing Noble Service when Jesus Christ my Lord refus'd not the hard work of my Redemption If his Will was in it certainly so should be yours Doct. 3. The third Point That these free-will-offerings are accepted with God They shall come with Rams speaking of the conversion of the Gentiles in terms proper to the old legal dispensation and they shall come with acceptance Isa. 6. 7. And Mal. 3. 4. Then shall the offering of Iudah and Ierusalem be pleasant unto the Lord. Upon what grounds and what way our acceptance with God is brought about our works in themselves cannot please God they are accepted not as merits but as testimonies of thankfulness 1. Our persons are by Christ reconciled to God and in worship he delights This is the proper importance of laying the Peace-offering upon the top of the Burnt offering Lev. 3. 10. 2. Our infirmities are cover'd with his Righteousness for Christ is the Propitiation the Mercy-seat that interposeth between the Law and God's gracious Audience We come to the Throne of Grace when we come to God in and by him Heb. 4. 16. 3. By his intercession our duties are commended to God As Aaron was to stand before the Lord with his Plate upon his forehead wherein was writ Holiness to the Lord why That he might bear the iniquity of the people that they might be accepted of the Lord. All our acceptance comes from Christ's intercession and alas our Prayers and Praises are unsavoury Eruptations Belches of the Flesh as they come from us a great deal of infirmity we mingle with them we mingle Brimstone with our Incense and Sweet Spices therefore provoke the Lord to abhor and despise us but there 's an Angel stands by the Altar that perfumes all our Prayers and Praises How should this encourage us against the slightings of the world and discouragements of our own hearts and look after the testimony of our acceptance with God Doct. 4. The fourth Point That this gracious acceptance must be sought and valu'd as a great blessing Psal 19. 14. Let the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart be acceptable in thy sight O Lord. And it must be valu'd as a great blessing if we consider either who the Lord is or what we are or what it is we go to him for If we consider who the Lord is God all sufficient that standeth in no need of what we can do that cannot be profited by us he is of so great a Majesty that his honour is rather lessned than greatned by any thing we can do the great-Author of all blessings all our offerings come from himself first of thine own have we given thee And if we consider what we are poor impotent sinful Creatures will God take an offering at our hands And if we consider what we do nothing but imperfection there is more of us in it of our fleshly part in any thing we do yet that these things should be accepted with God SERMON CXIX PSAL. CXIX VER 109. My soul is continually in my hand yet do I not forget thy law IN this Verse and the next David asserts his Integrity against two sorts of Temptations and ways of Assault the Violence and Craft of his Enemies Their Violence in this Verse My soul is in my hand And their Craft in the next Verse They laid snares for me And yet still his heart is upright with God In this Verse observe 1 David's condition My soul is continually in my hand 2 His constancy and perseverance notwithstanding that condition Yet do I not forget thy law First Let me speak of the condition he was now in in that Expression My soul is continually in my hand The soul in the hand is a Phrase often us'd in Scripture it is said of Iephthah Judg. 12. 13. I put my life in my hands and passed over against the children of Ammon So Job 13. 14. Wherefore do I take my flesh in my teeth and put my life in my hand And when David went to encounter Goliah 1 Sam. 17. 5. it is said He put his life in his hand and slew the Philistines In exposing our selves to any hazard and dangers in any great attempt it is call'd the putting our life in our hand And the Witch of Endor when she ventur'd against a Law to please Saul and so had exposed her life this form of speech is used concerning her 1 Sam. 28. 21. I have put my life in my hand Briefly then By Soul is meant Life and this is said to be in his hand I go in danger of my life day by day as if he should say I have my Soul ready divorc'd when God calls for it it not only notes liableness to danger but resolution and courage to encounter it In a sense we always carry our Souls in our hands our life hangs by a single thread which is soon fretted asunder and therefore we should every day be praying that it may not be taken from us as the Souls of wicked men are Iob 27. 8. Luke 12. 20. but yielded up and resign'd to God But more especially is the Expression verifi'd when we walk in the midst of dangers and in a thousand deaths my soul is in my hand that is I am expos'd to dangers that threaten my life every day Secondly Here 's his Affection to God's Word notwithstanding this condition Yet do I not forget thy law There is a twofold remembrance of things Notional and Affective and so there 's a twofold forgetfulness 1 Notional We forget the Word when the notion of things written therein are either wholly or in part vanish'd out of our minds 2 Affectively We are said to forget the Word of God when though we still retain the Notion yet we are not answerably affected do not act according thereunto and this is that which is understood here I do not forget thy Law Law is taken generally for any part of the Word of God and implies the Word of Promise as well as the Word of Command As for instance 1. If we interpret it of the Promise the sense will be this I do not forget thy Law that is I take no discouragements from my dangers to let fall my trust as if there were no Providence no God to take care of those that walk closely with him Heb. 12. 5. when they fainted they are said to have forgotten the consolation which spake unto
he might dye and he said It is enough now O Lord take away my life for I am not better than my fathers 3. From the peevishness of fond and doting love 2 Sam. 18. 33. And the King was much moved and went up to the chamber over the gate and wept as he went thus he said O Absolom my son would God I had dyed for thee O Absolom my son my son like the Wives of the East-Indians that burn themselves to follow their dead husbands 4. From distrust and despair when the evil is too hard to be resisted or endured Job 7. 15. My soul chuseth strangling and death rather than my life In all these cases it is but a shameful retreat from the conflict and burden of the present life from carnal irksomness under the calamity or a distrust of Gods help There may be murder in a rash wish if it proceed from a vexed heart These are but froward thoughts not a sanctified resolution 2. Such desires of death and dissolution as are lawful and must be cherished come from a good ground from a heart crucified and deadned to the world and set on things above Col. 3. 1. If ye then be risen with Christ seek those things which are above where Christ sitteth on the right hand of God From a competent assurance of grace Rom. 8. 23. Even we our selves groan within our selves waiting for the adoption to wit the redemption of our body From some blessed experience of heavenly comforts having tasted the fruits clusters of Canaan they desire to be there So Simeon Luk. 2. 29. Lord now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace according to thy word for mine eyes have seen thy salvation The eyes of his faith as well as the eyes of his body Now Lord I do but wait as a Merchant-man richly laden desireth to be at his Port. A great love to Christ excites desires to be with him Phil. 1. 23. I am in a strait betwixt two having a desire to depart and to be with Christ which is far better Phil. 3. 19 20. For our conversation is in heaven from whence also we look for the Saviour the Lord Iesus Christ. They long to see and be where he is heart and head should be together Weariness of sin and a great zeal for Gods glory are powerful incentives in the Saints Rom. 7. 23. O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from the body of this death They would be in heaven that they may sin no more 3. You must look to the end not have a blind notion of Heaven and look for a Turkish Paradise full of ease and plenty a carnal heaven as the Iews looked for a carnal Messiah but for a state of perfect union and communion with the blessed and holy God 4. The manner must be regarded it must be done with submission Phil. 1. 24. otherwise we encroach upon Gods right and would deprive him of a servant without his leave A Christian will dye and live as the Lord willeth if it be the Lords pleasure a believer is satisfied with long life Psal. 91. 16. With long life will I satisfie him and shew him my salvation he will wait till the change come when God shall give him a discharge by his own immediate hand or by enemies God knoweth how to chuse the fittest time otherwise we know not what we ask 2. Now let me speak of the scope of our lives David simply doth not desire life but in order to service The Point is That if we desire long life we should desire it to glorifie God by obedience to his word Let me give you some Instances then Reasons 1. Instances Psal. 118. 17. I shall not dye but live and declare the works of the Lord. This was David's hope in the prolongation of life that he should have farther opportunity to honour God and this argument he urgeth to God when he prayeth for life Psal. 6. 5. For in death there is no remembrance of thee in the grave who shall give thee thanks It would be better for him to be with God but then the life is worth the having when the extolling of Christ is the main scope at which we aim So Paul Phil. 1. 20. According to my earnest expectation and my hope that in nothing I shall be ashamed but that with all boldness as always so now also Christ shall be magnified in my body whether it be by life or by death c. Paul was in some hesitation which he should chuse life or death and he determineth of both as God might be magnified by either of them and so was at a point of indifference if God should give him his option or wish he would give the case back again to God to determine as it might be most for his service and glory He was not swayed by any low and base motives of contentment in the world or any low and creature-enjoyments these are contemptible things to come into the ballance with everlasting glory it was only his service in the Gospel and the publick good of the Church that made the case doubtful Reas. 1. This is the perfection of our lives and that which maketh it to be life indeed Communion with God is the vitality of it without which we are rather dead than alive Life natural we have in common with the Beasts and Plants but in keeping the word we live the life of God Eph. 4. 18. Having the understanding darkned being alienated from the life of God To natural men it is a gloomy thing but to believers this is the life of life and that which is the joy of their hearts To encrease in stature and to grow bulky that is the life of Plants The greatest and biggest of the kind are most perfect To live and enjoy pleasures without remorse that 's the perfection and life of Beasts that have no conscience that shall not be called to an account To gratifie present Interests and to be able to turn and wind worldly affairs that 's the life of carnal men that have no sense of eternity But the perfection of the life of man as a reasonable creature is to measure our actions by Gods word and to refer them to his glory 2. 'T is the end of our lives That God may be served All things are by him and through him and to him Rom. 11. 36. Angels Men Beasts Inanimate creatures He expects more from men than from beasts and from Saints than from men and therefore life by them is not to be desired and loved but for this end Rom. 14. 6 7 8. He that regardeth a day regardeth it unto the Lord and he that regardeth not the day to the Lord he doth not regard it He that eateth eateth to the Lord for he giveth God thanks and he that eateth not to the Lord eateth not and giveth God thanks for none of us liveth to himself and no man dyeth to himself for whether we live we live unto the
the godly should smother their grief and not go to God with it their sorrow were able to choak them It is no small ease that we have a God to go to to whom we may freely open our minds Prayer hath a pacative virtue as Hannah 1 Sam. 1. 18. prayed unto the Lord and wept sore and mark the event the woman went her way and did eat and her countenance was no more sad c. An Oven stopped up is the hotter within but vent and utterance giveth ease to the heart if it be meerly by way of complaint to a friend without expectation of relief much more to go to God and lay open our case before him 2. To seek our comfort elsewhere from earthly things it is a vain and evil course 1. It is vain for God is the party with whom we have to do In many troubles the creatures may be instruments of our wo but the principal party is God Strike in with him and you stop the mischief at the head Pro. 16. 7. When a mans ways please the Lord he maketh even his enemies to be at peace with him In other troubles God hath a more immediate hand as sicknesses and terrors of conscience our business then lyeth not with the creatures in sickness not with Physicians first but with God In troubles of spirit we are not to quench our thirst at the next ditch but to run to the Fountain of living water not to take up with ordinary comforts that 's an attempt to break prison and to get out of the troubles before God letteth us out He is our party then whoever be the Instrument 2. It is evil that we refuse to come to God when he whippeth us into his presence and beateth us to the Throne of Grace Dan. 9. 13. All this evil is come upon us yet made we not our prayer before the Lord our God that we might turn from our iniquities and understand thy truth When men are ready to dye and will not so much as confer with the Physician they are either stupid or desperate Afflictions summon us into his presence God sendeth a tempest after us as after Ionah Now that trouble which chaseth us to God is so far a sanctified trouble 2. The hope of relief from God who alone can and will help us He put his mouth in the dust peradventure there is hope Lam. 3. 29. Now this hope is from God's Power and Will 1. His Power God can quicken us when we are as good as dead because he is the well-spring of life and comfort Other things give us life but as water scaldeth when it is the instrument of heat but God alone can help us God is the great quickner That I might trust in him that raised the dead and I am the resurrection and the life 2. His will When we are humble and tractable in our afflictions 1. It is some hope if we have nothing to bring before God but our grief and misery for be is pitiful A beggar will uncover his sore to move your bowels so many times all the reason that a poor pitiful afflicted person can bring for himself is lamenting his case to God how discouraged he is and apt to faint as David represents his case My soul cleaveth to the dust and elsewhere Psal. 69. 29. But I am poor and sorrowful let thy salvation O God set me up on high Justice seeketh a fit object but Mercy a fit occasion 2. It is a greater ground of hope when we are humbled under Gods hand and have a due sense of our condition that is are convinced of our emptiness weakness nothingness or emptied of self-conceit and carnal confidence Deut. 32. 36. For the Lord shall judg his people and repent himself for his servants when he seeth that their power is gone and there is none shut up or left Gods judgments are to break our carnal dependencies 3. Still the hope encreaseth when we acknowledg his Justice and Wisdom in all our troubles Levit. 26. 41. If then their uncircumcised hearts be humbled and they then accept of the punishment of their iniquity kiss the rod wherewith they are corrected be glad it is no worse and see that all this cometh from a Just and Wise God 4. There is farther hope when we can cast our selves upon his Faithfulness and Omnipotency in the face of all discouragements Christ's question to the man long possessed was Mark 9. 23. If thou canst believe all things are possible to him that believeth God's Power is exercised when glorified by faith and dependence 5. When we submit to whatmay be most for his glory Carnal prayers though never so earnest fail when we are too earnest upon our private end and the means which we fancy Psal. 115. 1. Not unto us O Lord not unto us but unto thy Name give glory for thy mercy and for thy truths sake USE In deep calamities run to God lay forth your case feelingly and with submission to the Justice of his Providence trusting to his Power and submitting to his wisdom without obtruding your model upon God but leaving him to his own course and this is the way to speed Take heed 1. Of a stupid carelesness under the Rod it is a time of seeking after God a summons to the creature to come before him Now if we think to sport away our trouble without looking after Gods comforts it is a desperate security Jer. 5. 12. They have belyed the Lord and said It is not he neither shall evil come upon us neither shall we see sword nor famine 2. Take heed of despondency The Throne of Grace is set up on purpose for such a time Heb. 4. 16. Let us therefore come boldly to the throne of grace that we may obtain mercy and find grace to help in time of need Psal. 50. 15. Call upon me in the day of trouble I will deliver thee and thou shalt glorifie me Open your case before the Lord. 3. Take heed of pitching too much upon outward things either as to the time or way of deliverance Lust is vehement but the more you seek the more comfortable will be the issue Psal. 51. 18. Do good in thy good pleasure unto Sion build thou the walls of thy Ierusalem 2. We come now to David's supplication or petition thereupon where observe 1. The Request it self Quicken thou me 2. The Argument According to thy word 1. The Request it self Quicken thou me which noteth either the renewing of comfort or the actuation of graces the restoring or putting life into his affairs 1. The renewing of comfort Quicken me revive me or restore life to me again and this either by outward deliverance so quickning is used Psal. 71. 20. Thou which hast shewed me great and sore troubles shalt quicken me again and shalt bring me up again from the depths of the earth where deep trouble is compared to the grave and deliverance a kind of resurrection or recovery from the dead or by
done and especially is this found by experience when great trouble comes upon us by reason of sin There is some sin at the bottom God will bring out and until they come to clearness and openness with God the Lord still continues the trouble they are kept roaring and do not come to their peace Iob 33. 26 27. When a man is under trouble and the sense of sin doth not fasten on the heart he is not prepared for deliverance but when it comes to this I have sinned and it profits me not then God sends an Interpreter one among a thousand to shew unto man his uprightness 3. It prevents Satans accusations and Gods judgments It is no profit to cover our sins for either Satan will declare them or God find us out and enter into judgment with us It prevents Satan as an Accuser and God as a Judg. 1. It prevents Satan as an Accuser Let us not tarry till our adversary accuse There is one that will accuse you if you do not accuse your selves He that 's a tempter is also an accuser of the brethren Now Confession puts Satan out of office When we have sued out our pardon Satan is not an accuser so much as a slanderer Rom. 8. 33. Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect The Informer comes too late when the guilty person hath accused himself and sued out his pardon And 2. It prevents God as a Iudg. It is all known to God Psal. 69. 5. O God! thou knowest my foolishness and my sins are not hid from thee It is a folly to conceal that which cannot be hid God knows them how God may be said to know things two ways Either simply with respect to the perfection of his nature and so he knows all things or by virtue of his office and so God knows things judicially as Judg of the world he takes knowledg of it so as to punish it unless you confess it But in this kind of knowledg he loves to be prevented he will not know it as a Judg if we confess it when there is process against sin in our own consciences 1 Cor. 11. 31. If we judg our selves we shall not be judged When we accuse and judg our selves then God's work is prevented God is contented if we will accuse arraign judg and condemn our selves then he will not take knowledg of our sins as a Judg. The end of God's judging is Execution and punishment but the end of our judging is that we may obtain pardon Now consider whether you will stand at the bar of Christ not as a Saviour but as a Judg or you will judg your selves in your own heart Better sit as Judg upon your own heart than God should sit as Judg upon you therefore deal plainly and openly with him Thus I have explained what it is to declare our wavs it is an act of dependence to take God's leave blessing counsel along with us an act of friendship as to lay open our case to God and an act of brokenness of heart as declaring our sins and temptations For the reasons why if we would speed with God we should unfeignedly lay open our case before him 1. It argueth sincerity A hypocrite will pray but will not thus sincerely open his heart to God Psal. 32. 1. Blessed is he in whose spirit there is no guile No guile it hath a limited sense with respect to the matter of confession that doth not deal deceitfully with God but plainly and openly declares his case Many ways men may be guilty of guile of spirit in confession of sin either when they content themselves with general or slight acknowledgments as thus We are all sinners but they do not declare their ways Generals are but notions and as particular persons are lost in a crowd so sins lye hid in common acknowledgments Or else men take up the empty forms of others You shall see in Numb 19. the waters of purification wherewith a man had been cleansed if another touched it he became unclean Confessions are like those waters whereby one hath cleansed himself Now to take up others Confessions and the forms of others without the same affection feeling and brokenness of heart doth but defile us the more when the heart doth not prescribe to the tongue but the tongue to the heart or else men make some acknowledgments to God but do not uncover their privy sore they are loth to draw forth the state of their hearts into the notice and view of conscience This guile of spirit may be sometimes in God's children Moses had a privy sore which he was loth to disclose and therefore when God would have sent him into Egypt he pleads other things insufficiency want of elocution that he was a stammerer that he had not utterance I but his carnal fear was the main therefore see how God touches his privy sore Exod. 4. 19. Arise Moses go into Egypt the men that sought thy life are dead Why Moses never pleaded that he mentions other things that were true that he was a man of slow speech and his brother Aaron was fitter but he never pleads carnal fear but the Lord knew what was at the bottom So it is with Christians many times we will confess this and that which is a truth and we may humble our selves for it I but there 's a privy-sore yet kept secret Therefore this open-dealing with God is very necessary to lay open before God whatever we know of our state and way for then God will be nigh to us Out of self-love men spare themselves and will not judg and condemn themselves therefore they deny excuse extenuate or hypocritically confess O! I am a sinner and the like but do not come openly 2. It argueth somewhat of the spirit of adoption to put in the bill of our complaint to our heavenly Father to draw up an Indictment against our selves to judg that 's irksome but to put in a bill of complaint to a Friend or Father that savours of more ingenuity To tell God all our mind notes freedom and familiarity not such as is bold rude nor a dress of words but such as is grave serious proceeding from an inward sense of God and hope of his mercy 1 Joh. 3. 21. If our hearts condemn us not then have we confidence towards God then we can deal with him as one friend with another and acquaint him with all our griefs and wants A man had need walk exactly that would maintain his freedom with God There is a freedom as men may call it such as is bold rude and wretchless in words only but that which proceeds from confidence in God and his mercy that 's a fruit of close walking we cannot have it in our hearts without it 3. It is the way to make us serious and affected with our condition When we open our whole heart to God then we shall be more earnest for a remedy we content our selves with some transient
heareth us and if we know that he hear us whatsoever we ask we know that we have the petitions that we desired of him Gods hearing of us his audience is a distinct thing from the answer of his Providence and therefore when he begets a confidence that we are heard and the soul begins to be quieted in God and look up for Mercy it is a sign of his accepting our Prayer though the benefit be not actually bestowed David found a change in his heart many times as if one had come and told him the posture of his affairs were altered it is otherwise with you than it was when you began to pray therefore you have him in the beginning of a Psalm come in with bitter complaints and groaning his eyes were ready to drop out with grief and presently he breaks out with thanksgiving as Psal. 6. 8 9. Mine eye is consumed because of grief it waxeth old because of all mine enemies presently Depart from me all ye workers of iniquity for the Lord hath heard the voice of my weeping So Hannah she had commended her request to God and was no more sad 1 Sam. 1. 16. That 's one way of answer when we have declared our selves to the Lord the heart looks out to see what will come of its Prayers it begins to rest and is quiet in God and look for some answer of the Mercy The Second Consideration That the outward mercy in his Providence is either in kind or in value God doth not always answer us in kind by giving us the thing asked but doth give us something that is as good or better which contents the heart by denying the thing desired and giving something equivalent Many times we ask Temporal Mercies Defence Victory Deliverance and God gives Spiritual we ask Deliverance and God gives Patience 2 Cor. 12. 8 9. Paul asked thrice that the thorn in the flesh might depart from him but Gad gives him sufficient grace God doth not answer us always according to our will but certainly according to our weal and profit many times he will give the blessing in kind but as other times he gives the value of it which is better God may give temporal Comfort in kind in anger but the value the blessing he never gives in anger but always in love when they asked meat for their lusts God gave it in kind in anger Psal. 78. and I gave them a King in my wrath Hos. 13. 11. when we are passionate and eager upon a temporal request God doth answer in wrath the Mercy is more when he gives us that which is better Thirdly God delays many times when he doth not deny for our exercise 1. To exercise our Faith to see if we can believe in him when we see nothing have no sensible proof of his good Will to us The woman of Canaan she comes to Christ and first gets not a word from him Christ answered her nothing afterwards Christ breaks off his silence and begins to speak and his speech was more discouraging than his silence she meets with a rough answer It is not meet to give the childrens bread unto dogs Then the woman turns this rebuke into an encouragement Lord the dogs eat the crumbs which fall from their masters table Then Christ could hold no longer O woman great is thy faith be it unto thee even as thou wilt Mat. 15. So many times we come to God and meet with a silent Oracle cannot get an answer but if we get an answer it may be we begin to think God puts us off as none of the sheep he is to look after O! but when we wrestle through all these discouragements and temptations then great is thy faith In short we pray for a blessing and sometimes though God love the Suppliant yet he doth not seem to take notice of his desires that he may humble him to the dust and may have a sense of his unworthiness and pick an answer out of Gods silence and grant out of his denial and faith out of these discouragements 2. To exercise our Patience Heb. 6. 12. Be followers of them who through faith and patience inherit the promises Our times are always present with us but Gods time is not yet come A hungry stomach would have meat before it's roasted or sod Impatient longings must have green fruit and will not stay till it be matur'd and ripened Now God will work us out of this impatience The troubles of the world are necessary for patience as well as faith 3. To try our Love Though we be not feasted with felt comforts and present benefits yet God will try the deportment of his children if indeed he be the delight of their hearts Isa. 26. 8. Yea in the way of thy judgments O Lord have we waited for thee When we love God not only when our affections are brib'd by some sensible experience or comfort but when we can love God in the way of his judgments A child of God is a strange creature he can love God for his judgments and fear him for his mercies When our heart is like lyme the more water you sprinkle upon it the more it burns our desires glow the more the more disappointments we seem to meet with We love his benefits more than we love God when we delight in him only when he doth us good But when we can delight in him even when our desires are delayed and nothing appears but tokens of Gods displeasure this is delight indeed 4. To enlarge our desires that we may have a greater income of his mercy As a Sack that 's stretched out holds the more God will have the soul more stretched out when he means to fill it up with grace Delays encrease importunities Ask seek knock Mat. 7. If God will not come at the first asking we must seek if seeking will not bring him we must knock be importunate have no nay Luke 11. 8. For his importunity sake he will arise The man is impudent he stands knocking and will not be gone Fourthly God may seem sometimes to deny a request yet the end of the request is accomplished for instance God's children they have an end in their requests we pray for the means with respect to an end Now many times God gives the end when he will deny the means Paul had grace sufficient though the thorn in his flesh were not removed 1 Cor. 12. 9. A Christian prays for the light of Gods countenance for sensible feeling of Gods love why to strengthen him in his way Now God denies him comfort because he will do it by the word of promise it shall not be by sensible comfort We pray for victory over such a lust the mortification of such a sin why that we may serve God more cheerfully God denies such a degree of grace because he will mortifie a greater sin which is pride in the heart And thus we miss the particular that we desire yet still we have the end of
and bountiful Providence because of our forfeiture by sin and the uncertainty of these outward Comforts and the continual necessity of his Providential influence and support the heart must still be exercised in the acknowledgment of God and his gracious hand over us and so the heart is not inticed by our outward comforts but raised by them Indeed in some cases it is harder to trust God with means than without when there are visible means of supply the heart is prone to Carnal Confidence Good Paul was in danger 2 Cor. 1. 9. We had the Sentence of Death in our selves that we should not trust in our selves but in God which raiseth the Dead But then in Adversity when kept bare and low then is a time to shew trust how hard soever our condition be grounds of Confidence are not lost Zeph. 3. 12. I will leave in the midst of thee an afflicted and poor People and they shall trust in the name of the Lord. Every man thinketh trusting in God easie when things go well with him but indeed he trusteth in other things he eateth his own Meat and weareth his own Apparel only God carrieth the name of it but now when we are without all Comfort and Incouragement from the Creatures as David when he was left alone Refuge failed me No man cared for my Soul I cried unto thee O Lord and said thou art my Refuge and Portion in the Land of the Living Psal. 142. 4 5. When men fail God never faileth when riches take wing and worldly friends forsake us then is a time for trust and dependance upon God It is the end of Providence that we should have the less Comfort in the Creature that we may have all in God Now we are to depend on God for whatsoever we stand in need of as at all times so for all all things Temporal and Spiritual Mercies for God will withhold no good thing from us he hath undertaken not only to give us Heaven and happiness in the next World but to carry us thither with Comfort that we may serve him without fear all the days of our lives Luke 1. 75. His Providence concerneth the outward and inward man and so do his Promises an whole Believer is in Covenant with Cod Body and Soul and he will take care of both But all the Difficulty is how we ought to depend on him for Temporal Supplies 1. It is certain that we ought not to set God a task to provide Meat for our Lusts. Psal. 78. 18. And they tempted God in their Heart by asking meat for their Lusts. Carnal affections and hopes do but make trouble for our selves though it be the ordinary Practice of Gods free Grace and Fatherly cares to provide things Comfortable and necessary for his Children whilst he hath work for them to do yet he never undertook to maintain us at such a Rate to give us so much by the Year such Portions for our Children and Supplies for our Families We must leave to the great Shepherd of the sheep to choose our Pastures bare or large and he that will depend upon God must be sure to empty his Heart of covetous Desires and be contented with our Lot if we would cast our selves upon his Providence Heb. 13. 5. Let your Conversation be without Covetousness and be content with such Things as you have for he bath said I will never leave thee nor forsake thee We do but ensnare and perplex our own Thoughts while we would reconcile the Promises with our Lusts and crave more than ever God meaneth to give 2. It is as certain that we ought not to be Faithless and full of Cares about these outward supplies Mat. 6. 23. Take no thought what ye shall Eat or what ye shall Drink or where withall ye shall be Cloathed because if we had no Promises there is a Common bounty and goodness of God which is over all his Works and reacheth to the Preservation of the smallest Worm decketh the Lillies feedeth the Ravens and the Fowls of the Air and certainly more noble Creatures such as men are may expect their shares in this Common bounty how much more when there is a Covenant wherein God hath promised to be a Father to us and temporal Blessings are adopted and taken into the Covenant as well as other Blessings Will not he give that to Children which he gives to Enemies to Beasts and Fowls of the Air You would count him a barbarous and unnatural Father that feedeth his Dogs and Hawks and lets his Children dye of hunger and can we without Blasphemy think so of God 3. As we ought not on the one Hand to think God will supply our Lusts nor on the other Hand distrust his Care of necessaries so we cannot be absolutely confident of particular Success in temporal Things For they are not absolutely Promised but with Exception of the Cross and as God shall see them good for us God reserved in the Covenant a Liberty both of shewing his Justice and his Wisdom his Justice in Scourging his sinning People Psal. 89. 33. He will visit their Iniquity with Rods and their Transgression with Scourges The World shall know God doth not allow Sins in his own Children Sin is as Odious to God in them as others yea more and therefore they feel the Smart of it The Liberty of his Wisdom Psal. 84. 11. The Lord God is a Sun and a Shield the Lord will give Grace and Glory and no good thing will he withhold from them that walk uprightly Psal. 3. 4. 9 10. O fear the Lord ye his Saints for there is no want to them that fear him The young Lyons do lack and suffer Hunger but they that fear the Lord shall not want any good thing They may want many Comforts but no good thing Good is not determined by our Fancies but Gods Wisdom Well then we cannot expect a certain Tennure of Temporal Happiness there is great Danger in fixing a deceitful Hope much of the subtlety of Satan is to be seen in it who maketh an Advantage of our Dis-appointments and abuseth our rash Confidence into a Snare and Temptation to Atheism and the mis-belief of other Truths 4. The dependence we exercise about these things lyeth in committing our selves to Gods Power and referring our selves to Gods Will. He is so able that he can secure us in his Work so good that we should not trouble our selves about his Will but refer it to him without hesitancy which if we could bring our Hearts to it would ease us of many burdensome Thoughts and troublesome Cares Pet. 4. 19. Wherefore let them that suffer according to the will of God commit the keeping of their Souls to him in well-doing as unto a faithful Creator Prov. 16. 3. Commit thy ways unto the Lord and thy Thoughts shall be Established Put your selves into Gods hands so trusting him with the issue of our affairs though we know not how it will fall 1 Cor. 19.
of our Interest in Eternal Life They differ in Effects Peace is an Approbation for the present Joy in the holy Ghost a pledge and beginning of that endless Joy we shall have hereafter 2 Cor. 1. 22. Who hath also sealed us and given the earnest of the spirit in our hearts And Rom. 8. 23. We our selves also who have the first-fruits of the spirit even we our selves groan within our selves waiting for the adoption to wit the redemption of our body Both together shew that there is no such solid Comfort as in the obedience of God's Commandments certainly more than in all the Pleasures of Sin yea more than in all the Enjoyments of the World whoever have proved them both will find it so Many have proved the Pleasures of Sin but never yet found what comfort is in mourning for Sin Many have proved the Comforts of the World but never yet proved what is the Joy of a good Conscience and the sweet Pleasure of a godly Conversation 2. There is a particular Experience when born out in the Confession of Truth in the time of tryal A Man that out of love to God's Commands hath endured Troubles and Tryals and hath overcome Temptations will see more cause to love these Commandments and to encrease his Obedience to them than ever before in ordinary Temptations Psal. 19. 11. Moreover by them is thy servant warned and in keeping of them there is a great reward When they see that Divine Truth is like to bear out it self and Man that doth confess it in such cases they feel the excellency of God's Truth and the Power of God sustaining them that confess it therefore embrace heartily the Lord's Commands and take pleasure in his Ways The Lord appealeth to this Experience Micah 2. 7. Do not my words do good to him that walketh uprightly Have not you found the Fruit answerable Therefore the Children of God value and esteem and look upon them as the greatest Means of their Safety and Comfort 6. Because of their love to God they have a value for every thing which cometh from God and leadeth to him Common Mercies point to their Author and their main end is to draw our Affections to him and enable us in his Service but these are apt to be a snare and are used as an Occasion to the Flesh But here is a greater Impression of God on his Word and Laws their use is more eminent to direct us to God therefore are valued above ordinary Comforts Iob 23. 12. I have not gone back from the commandment of his lips I have esteemed the words of his mouth more than my necessary food They are his Commandments therefore dear to us who hath obliged us so much in Christ whose Love they believe and have felt The Word is wholly appointed to maintain the Life of Grace in us Use 1. Is to shew us how to bring our hearts to the obedience of God's Commands 1. Love them if we would keep them Nothing is hard to Love An Esteem will quicken us to the Obedience of them 2. Delight in them for then all goeth on easily Delight sweetneth every thing though in themselves toilsom or tedious as Fowling Hunting Fishing Delight never mindeth Difficulties The reason why the Commands are grievous is want of Love and Delight Use 2. Sheweth of what kind our Obedience must be free and unconstrained when we are not forced to our Duty but do willingly delight in it and the Law that prescribeth it and do bewail our daily failings Many doe some external Works of Obedience but not with an inward delight but out of custom or compulsion God never hath our Heart till he hath our Delight till we willingly abstain from what may displease him and chearfully practise what he requireth of us when it is grateful to obey and all Pleasures to this are nothing worth SERMON LIV. PSAL. CXIX 48. My hands also will I lift up to thy commandments which I have loved and I will meditate in thy statutes IN the Morning we opened one Profession of David's Respect to the Word of God now follows another He would employ all his Faculties about the Commandments of God which is his last Argument His Mind for here is Meditation promised his Heart for here is Love asserted his Tongue for that is his original Request which occasioned all these Professions and here his Hands his Life My hands also will I lift up c. Observe 1. The Ground or Cause of his Respect to the Commandments of God in that Clause Which I have loved 2. A double Effect I will lift up my hands to thy commandments and I will meditate in thy statutes 1. Lifting up the Palms or Hands is a Phrase of various use 1. For Praying Psal. 28. 2. Hear the voice of my supplications when I cry unto thee when I lift up my hands towards thy holy oracle Lam. 2. 19. Lift up thy hands towards him for the life of thy young children c. Hab. 3. 10. The deep uttered his voice and lift up his hands on high Thence the Apostle 1 Tim. 2. 8. I will therefore that men pray every where lifting up holy hands without wrath and doubting 2. For Blessing others Aaron lift up his hands towards the people and blessed them Or for Praising or Blessing God Psal. 134. 2. Lift up your hands in the sanctuary and bless the Lord. So Psal. 63. 4. Thus will I bless thee while I live I will lift up my hands in thy name 3. For Swearing or Vowing Gen. 22. 14. I have lift up my hand to the most high God that is sworn So Rev. 10. 5. The Angel lift up his hand and swore So of God Psal. 106. 26. Therefore he lifted up his hand against them to overthrow them in the wilderness that is swore they should not enter into his rest 4. For setting about any Action especially of weight Gen. 41. 22. Without thee shall no man lift up his hand that is attempt or do any thing So Psal. 10. 12. Arise O Lord lift up thine hand forget not the poor that is Set to thine active hand for their assistance So Heb. 12. 12. Lift up the hands that hang down and the feeble knees that is Set actively and vigorously about the Christian Task To this Rank may be also referred what is said Mat. 6. 3. Let not thy left hand know what thy right hand doth The Hand is the Instrument of Action Now all these Sences might be applied to the present Place 1. Praying for God's Grace to perform them 2. Blessing God as we do for our daily food giving thanks for them 3. Vowing or promising under an Oath a constant Obedience to them But the Commandments are not the proper Object to which the Acts of Praying Blessing Swearing are directed but God It is not I will lift up my hand to God but thy commandments We ought indeed to bless God and praise God for the Blessings we receive by his
and overflow of his Love 2. His Care for our Security For by his Promise he giveth his People an hold-fast upon him as he maketh himself a Debtor to them by his own Promise who was otherwise free before such Ingagement to poor Creatures Psal. 89. 34. My covenant will I not break nor alter the thing that is gone out of my lips The Word is gone out of his Lips not to be recalled nor reversed The Promises are as so many Bonds wherein he stands bound to us and these Bonds may be put in suit and his People have liberty and confidence to ask what he hath promised to them Austin saith of his Mother Chirographa tua injiciebat tibi Domine Lord she shewed thy own Bond and Hand-writing It is a mighty Argument in Prayer when we can plead that we ask no more than God hath promised 2. That there is usually some time of delay between making the Promise and fulfilling the Promise For therefore God promiseth because he meaneth to do us good but not presently And this delay is not for want of kindness or out of any backwardness to our good for so it is said he will not tarry Hab. 2. 3. Though it tarry wait for it because it will surely come it will not tarry nor out of ignorance as not knowing the fittest time to help his People for his waiting is guided by Judgment Isa. 30. 18. He waiteth that he may be gracious for he is a God of judgment he will take hold of the fittest season or occasion Not from forgetfulness of his Promise for he is ever mindful of his holy covenant Psal. 111. 5. Not from any mutability of Nature or change of Counsel for he is Iehovah that changeth not Mal. 3. 6. I am the Lord I change not therefore ye sons of Iacob are not consumed He hath a due foresight of all possible difficulties and needeth not to alter his Counsels Not from impotency and weakness as if he could not execute what he had promised as the Sons of Zeruiah were too hard for David 2 Sam. 3. 39. all things are at the beck and signification of his Will But 1. Partly with respect to his own Glory he will do things in their proper season Eccles. 3. 11. Every thing is beautiful in its time This is the wise Providence of God in the Government of the World that every thing is brought forth in its proper season and in the time when it is most fit God humbleth and God exalteth his People in the due time 1 Pet. 5. 6. Humble your selves therefore under the mighty hand of God that he may exalt you in due time So it is said of their Enemies Deut. 32. 35. Their foot shall slide in due time Summer and Winter must succeed in their seasons 2. With respect to us God will try our Faith whether we can stay on his Word and hug it and embrace it till the Blessing come As it is said of the Patriarchs 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 11. 13. They embraced the promises Psal. 56. 4. In God I will praise his word I have put my trust in the Lord I will not fear what flesh can do unto me During this time we may be exercised with divers Troubles and difficulties so that to appearance God seemeth to forget his Promises and this he doth 1. Partly to try our Faith to the utmost to see if we can trust and depend upon God for things which we see not nor are likely to see Faith in the general is a Dependence upon God for some thing that lieth out of sight Now when the Object is not onely out of sight but all that is seen and felt seemeth to contradict our Hopes and God seemeth to put us off and we meet with many a rebuke of our Confidence in stead of an Answer as the Woman of Canaan that came to Christ at first meeteth not with a Word then his speech more discourageth than his silence Mat. 15. 26. It is not meet to take the childrens bread and to cast it to the dogs she turneth this Rebuke into an Encouragement ver 27. Truth Lord yet the dogs eat of the crumbs which fall from their masters table Ver. 28. Then Iesus answered and said unto her O woman great is thy faith be it unto thee even as thou wilt Many times we come and pray for Blessings promised and the Oracle is dumb and silent though God love the Supplicant yet he will not seem to take notice of his Desires but will humble him to the dust Now to pick an Answer out of God's Silence and a gracious Answer out of his Rebukes sheweth great Faith Iob saith chap. 13. 15. Though he slay me yet I will trust in him Faith supports us under the greatest Pressures when God seemeth to deal like an Enemy yet even then trusts in God as a Friend and that his Dispensations will never give his Word the lie 2. To try our Patience as well as our Faith God's dearest Children are not admitted to the enjoyment of the Mercies promised presently Heb. 6. 12. Be not sloathful but followers of them who through faith and patience inherit the promises And Heb. 10. 36. Ye have need of patience that after ye have done the will of God ye may receive the promise We must first do and sometimes suffer the Will of God The Promises are to come and at a great distance and if we hope for that we see not and enjoy not then do we with patience wait for it Rom. 8. 25. But especially is Patience tried when we meet with Oppositions Difficulties Dangers many things done many things suffered before we can attain what we hope for Now quietly to wait God's leisure is a great trial of our Patience Our times are always present with us when God's time is not come An hungry Stomach would have Meat e're it be sodden or roasted and a sickish Appetite must have green Fruit But to wait like the Husbandman in all Seasons and Weathers till the Corn ripen and to persevere in hoping and praying that is that which God requires 3. Our Love though we be not feasted with felt Comforts nor bribed with present Satisfaction and Benefits in hand God will try the deportment of his Children whether they will adhere to him when he seemeth to cast them off It is not said In the way of thy mercies but In the way of thy judgments O Lord have we waited for thee the desire of our soul is to thy Name and to the remembrance of thee Isa. 26. 8. Love for himself without any present Benefit from him yea when kept under sore Judgments and deep Distresses 4. To inlarge our Desires that we may have the greater sense of our Necessities and value for the Blessings promised A Sack that is stretched out holdeth the more Delay increaseth Importunity Ask and ye shall have seek and ye shall find knock and it shall be opened unto you Mat. 7. 7.
that hath my Commandments and keepeth them to him will I manifest my self so in the 23. Verse If a man love me and keep my commandments my Father will love him and we will come to him and take up our abode with him These are taken into sweet fellowship and Communion with God and the blessed Trinity will take up their abode in his heart But pray mark Christ that is so tender and willing to communicate the influences of his Grace yet standeth upon his Sovereignty ●…nd therefore still insisteth upon keeping his Precepts if they would partake of his Comforts Fifthly Protection in their Work They are under the special care and conduct of his Providence while they keep his Precepts He keepeth them as in a Pavilion Thou shalt hide them in the secret of thy presence from the pride of men Psal. 31. 20. And who are they that are kept Those that fear him and trust in him Verse 19. Pray mark when they had no visible defence when they seemed to be left open as a prey to the oppressions and injuries of their potent adversaries yet there is a secret guard about them and they are kept the World knoweth not how God's Favour and Providence is their sure guard and defence whatever contentious and proud men design and threaten against them yet they never have their full will upon them Many a Child of God have ridden out the storm and may come and say This I had because I kept thy Precepts This 't is to keep close to God and hold fast our integrity Elsewhere the Lord expresseth himself to be a wall of fire round about his people Zech. 2. 5. which should affright at a distance and consume near at hand In those Countrys when they lay in the Fields they made Fires about them to keep off the wild Beasts so God when he seeth it fit to excuse his People from Trouble he can in the most unsafe Times and when they are weakest protect them by his secret Hand bridling their Enemies and making their Attempts ineffectual Satan is sensible of this privy guard Iob 1. 10. Hast thou not made a Hedge about him and about his house and about all that he hath on every side The World seeth not this invisible guard but the Devil seeth it There is no gap open for mischief to enter and break in upon them This can God doe when he pleaseth and a Man that holdeth fast his Integrity and goeth on in his Duty referring himself to God's keeping shall have experience of it and when the danger is over say This I had because I kept thy Precepts Sixthly In publick and common Judgments God maketh a difference and some of his choise ones are marked out for Preservation and are as Brands plucked out of the burning whilst others are consumed therein This is done oftentimes I cannot say always the Iews have a Proverb that two dry sticks may set a green one on fire a good Man may perish in the common Judgment that is the meaning of the Proverb And sometimes their Condition may be worst as Ieremiah the whole City was besieged and he in the Dungeon Chaff and Corn is threshed in the same flour but the Corn is grinded and baked But this is the best way we can take to be hid in the common Calamity though there be not an absolute Certainty for the Comfort is but propounded with a possibility Zeph. 3. 2. Seek Righteousness seek Meekness it may be ye shall be hid in the day of the Lords anger Though God hath a peculiar eye to the Godly yet their Temporal safety is not put out of all doubt it may be or it may not be but their Eternal Comforts are sure and safe yet strict and humble walking is the onely way and in some cases God sheweth that there shall be a distinction between his People and others and when others are overwhelmed they shall be preserved As Eccles. 8. 12. Surely I know it shall be well with them that fear the Lord which fear before him But it shall be ill with the Wicked And Isa. 3. 10. Say unto the Righteous it shall be well with him for they shall eate of the fruit of their doeings but say unto the Wicked it shall be ill with them for the work of his hands shall be given to him And Ier. 15. 11. Verily it shall be well with this Remnant I will cause the Enemy to treat them well in the day of Evil and Affliction All these Places speak of delivering them from trouble or moderating the trouble to them If there be an uncertainty in the thing yet a probability but whenever it is done it is a singular favour and we must own it as the fruit of Obedience This I had because I kept thy Precepts We must expect the temporal Reward of Godliness with much submission and venture upon his Providence Seventhly So much of sanctified Prosperity as shall be good for them Matth. 3. 33. First seek the Kingdom of God and the Righteousness thereof and these things shall be added God will cast them into the bargain and though he may keep them low and bare yet no good thing will he withhold Psal. 84. 2. so that a Child of God surveying all his Comforts may say this and that and the other Mercy I had from the Lords Grace these Comforts and these Deliverances came in because I kept thy Precepts 3. The next thing is to shew you what connexion there is between these two Obedience and this Good or the reason of the Lords dealing thus God doth it partly out of his general Justice as he is Governour of the World his holy Nature doth delight in Holiness and therefore 't is requisite ut bonis bene sit malis male that it should be well with them that doe well and evil with them that doe evil and such dealing a Man should have from God as he dealeth out to God Psal. 18. 25 26. With the mercifull thou wilt shew thy self mercifull and with the upright thou wilt shew thy self upright and with the pure thou wilt shew thy self pure and with the froward thou wilt shew thy self froward In the general that it should be well with the Righteous and ill with the Wicked there is an argument in the governing Justice of God but then to come to particulars that it should be so ill with the Wicked here is exacta ratio justi but that it should be so well with men imperfectly Righteous this is moderate Justice mixed with undeserved Mercy 2. There is his gracious Promise and Covenant Heaven and Earth are laid at the seet of Godliness 1 Tim. 4. 8. Godliness hath the promise of this life and that which is to come Something during our Service in this World The Second Point is That 't is of no small benefit to see and observe what good we have by obedience to God 1. It will increase our esteem of his Grace That the little
and slender Obedience that we yield to his Law should have such respect and acceptance with him as to be recompenced with so much Peace and Comfort and Protection and so many Blessings Lord what am I and what is my Fathers House Oh what a good Master have we When the Saints are Crowned they cast their Crowns at the Lambs Feet Revel 4. 10. We hold all by his Mercy Luke 17. 10. When we have done all we are unprofitable Servants not in complyment but in truth of heart we are unprofitable Servants That God should respect us 't is not for the dignity of the Work but merely for his own Grace 2. 'T is of use that we may justify God against the Reproaches and Prejudices of carnal Men who think God is indifferent to Good and Evil and that all things come alike to all that 't is in vain to be strict and precise that there is no Reward to the Good Mal. 3. 14. 'T is in vain to serve God and what profit is it that we have kept his Ordinances Yea the Temptation may befall God's own Children and be forcibly born in upon their Hearts Psal. 73. 13. Verily I have cleansed my hands in vain We think all is lost labour Now to produce the sweet Consolations of God and his temporal Supplies and the manifold Blessings bestowed upon us 't is a good stay to our Hearts and inables us to justify God against the Scorns and Reproaches of the World 3. 'T is of use of check our Murmurings If we indure any thing for God we are apt to repine and pitch upon that evil we receive from his hand passing over the good A little evil like one Humour out of order or one Member out of joint disturbeth the whole Body so we by poring upon the evil we endure pass over all his other Bounty Mal. 1. 2. Wherein hast thou loved us God cannot indure to have his Love suspected or undervalued and yet People are apt to doe so when Dispensations are any thing cross to their desires and expectations But now 't is a great check to consider that if we have our Troubles we have also our Consolations and we should rather look upon the good that cometh to us in pleasing God than the temporal and light Afflictions we meet withall in his Service Iob 2. 10. Shall we receive good at the hands of God and not evil 4. 'T is an encouragement to us in well-doing the more proofs and tokens we have of his Supportation We are wrought upon by the Senses as Ier. 2. 19. Thine own wickedness shall correct thee and thy backslidings reprove thee see what an evil and bitter thing it is to forsake the Lord and 23 verse See thy way in the valley and know what thou hast done As Parents when their Children smart for eating raw diet they upbraid them with it It is for eating your green Fruit So doth the Lord come to his People Now you see the evil of your doings So on the contrary it doth ingage us to strict walking to see how God owneth it So doth God appeal to us by experience Have I been a Land of darkness to you or a barren Wilderness Jer. 2. 31. And Micah 2. 7. Do not my Words doe good to them that walk uprightly Look about you survey all your Comforts did Sin procure these Mercies or Godliness have you not found sensible benefit by being sincere in my Service Object But is this safe to ascribe the Comfort and Blessings that we have to our own Obedience is it not expresly forbidden Deut. 9. 4. Say not in thy heart for my righteousness hath the Lord brought me to possess the Land Answ. 1. David doth not boast of his Merits but observeth God's Mercy and Faithfulness in the fruits of Obedience There is his Mercy in appointing a Reward for such slender Services Gal. 6. 16. As many as walk according to this Rule peace and mercy be upon them All the Comfort we have is from Mercy yea undeserved Mercy Those that walk according to this Rule stand in need of Mercy Their Peace and Comfort floweth from Mercy they need mercy to cover the failings they are conscious to in their walkings And then consider his Truth and Faithfulness the Reward of well-doing cometh not by the worthiness of the Work but by virtue of God's Promise His Word doth good to them that walke uprightly Micah 2. 7. God hath made himself a debtor by his Promise and oweth us no thanks for what we can doe 't is onely his gracious Promise Answ. 2. David speaketh not this to vaunt it above other men but to commend Obedience and to incourage himself and invite others by remembring the Fruits of it There is a great deale of difference between carnal boasting and gracious observation Carnal boasting is when we vaunt of our personal worth gracious observation is when for God's Glory and our Profit we observe the fruits of Obedience and the Benefits it bringeth along with it That God never gave us cause to leave but to commend his Service and by what we have found to invite others to come and taste that the Lord is gracious The Use is to incourage us in the Wayes of the Lord and keeping of his Precepts 't is no unprofitable thing before we have done we shall be able to say This I had because I kept thy Precepts Two things God usually bestoweth upon his People a tolerable passage through the World and a comfortable going out of the World which is all a Christian needeth to take care for here is onely the place of his Service not of his Rest. 1. He shall have a tolerable passage through the World A Child of God may have a hard toilsome Life of it but he hath his mixtures of Comfort in his deepest Afflictions he hath peace with God that keeps his Heart and Mind and this maketh his passage through the World tolerable because God is ingaged with him 1 Cor. 10. 13. Faithfull is he that hath called you who will not suffer you to be tempted above what you are able to bear He is freed from Wrath and hath his discharge from the Curse of the Old Covenant he is taken into favour with God and hath as much of temporal Reliefe as is necessary for him his Condition is made comfortable to him 2. A comfortable passing out of the World Isa. 38. 3. Remember O Lord saith Hezekiah I have walked before thee with an upright heart When you lie upon your Death-beds and in a dying hour how comfortable will this be the remembrance of a well-spent and well-imployed Life in God's Service They that wonder at the zeal and niceness of God's Children when they are entring into the other World they cry out then oh that they had been more exact and watchfull oh that they might die the death of the Righteous They should live so Men then have other Notions of Holiness than ever they had before
Recreations when and how to pray what time for our Callings what for Worship when to speak when to hold our peace when to praise and when to reprove how to give and how to take when to scatter when to keep back or withhold and to order all things aright requireth a sound Judgment that we carry our selves with that gravity and seriousness that exactness and tenderness that we may keep up the Majesty of Religion and all the World may know that he is wise by whose Counsel we are guided But alas where this sound Judgment and Discretion is wanting we shall soon offend and transgress the Laws of Piety Charity Justice Sobriety Piety and Godliness will not be orderly we shall either be guilty of a prophane neglect of that course of Duty that is necessary to keep in the Life of Grace or turn Religion into a sowre Superstition and rigorous course of Observances Charity will not be orderly we shall give to wastfulness or withhold more than is meet to the scandal or prejudice of the World towards Religion Not perform Justice we shall govern to God's dishonour obey to his wrong punish with too much severity or forbear with too much lenity our Reproofs will be Reproaches our Praises Flattery Sobriety will not be orderly we shall deny our selves our necessary Comforts or use them as an occasion to the Flesh either afflict the Body and make our selves unserviceable or wrong the Soul and burden and oppress it with vain Delights In short even the higher Acts of Religion will degenerate our Fear will be turned into Desperation or our Hope into Presumption our Faith will be a light Credulity or our search after Truth will turn into a flat Scepticism or Irresolution our Patience will be Stupidness or our Constancy Obstinacy we shall either slight the hand of God or faint under it so that there is need of good Judgment and Knowledge to guide us in all our ways 2. Why this is so earnestly to be sought of God the thing is evident from what is said already but farther 1. Because this is a great defect in most Christians who have many times good Affections but no Prudence to guide and order them they are indeed all Affection but no Judgment have a Zeal but without Knowledg Rom. 10. 3. Zeal should be like Fire which is not onely fervidus but lucidus hot but bright a blind Horse may be full of Mettle but he is ever and anon stumbling Oh then should we not earnestly seek of God good Knowledge and Judgment the Spirit of God knoweth what is best for us in the Scriptures he hath endited Prayers Phil. 1. 9. This I pray that your Love may abound more and more in Knowledge and in all Iudgment That our Love and Zeal should have a proportionable measure of Knowledge and Judgment going along with it And Colos. 1. 9. That ye may be filled with the Knowledge of his Will in all Wisdome and spiritual Understanding And again Colos. 3. 16. Let the word of God dwell in you richly in all wisdome These places shew that it is not enough to have warm Affections but we must have a clear and a sound Mind 2. The Mischief which ariseth from this Defect is so great to themselves to others and the Church of God 1. To themselves 1. Without the distinguishing or discerning act of Judgment how apt are we to be misled and deceived they that cannot distinguish Meats will soon eat what is unwholsome so if we have not a Judgment to approve things that are Excellent and disapprove the contrary our Fancies will deceive us for they are taken with every slight appearance as Eve was deceived by the Fruit because it was fair to see to Gen. 3. 6. with 2 Cor. 11. 3. For I fear lest by any means as the Serpent beguiled Eve through his subtilty so your minds should be corrupted from the simplicity that is in Christ. Our Affections will deceive us for they judge by Interest and profit not Duty and Conscience The Affections are easily bribed by those bastard goods of Pleasure Honour and Profit 2 Cor. 4. 4. In whom the God of this world hath blinded the minds of them which believe not The consent of the World will deceive us for they may conspire in Errour and Rebellion against God and are usually the opposite party against God Rom. 12. 2. And be not conformed to this world but be ye transformed by the renewing of your minds Good men may deceive us true and faithfull Ministers may erre both in Doctrine and Manners as the old Prophet seduced the young one to his own Destruction 1 Kings 13. 18. He said unto him I am a Prophet also and an Angel spake unto me by the word of the Lord saying Bring him back with thee into thy house that he may eat bread and drink water But he lied unto him In what a wofull plight then are Christians if they have not a Judgment and a Test to tast Doctrines and try things as the Mouth tasteth Meats how easily shall we take good for evil and evil for good condemning that which God approveth and approving that which God condemneth 2. Without the determining Act of Judgment how fickle and irresolute shall we be either in the Profession or in the Practice of Godliness Many Mens Religion lasts but for a pang it cometh upon them now and then it is not their constant frame and constitution For want of this purpose and resolute peremptory decree for the Profession of Godliness there is an uncertainty levity and wavering in Religion Men take up Opinions lightly and leave them as lightly again Light Chaff is carried about with every wind Eph. 4 14. That we henceforth be no more Children tossed to and fro and carried about with every wind of Doctrine by the slight of men and cunning craftiness whereby they lie in wait to deceive If we receive the Truth upon the credit of men we may be led off again and we shall be ready to stagger when Persecution cometh especially if we see those men from whom we have learned the Truth fall away if we have not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a stedfastness of our own 2 Pet. 3. 17. Beware lest ye also being led away by the errour of the wicked fall from your own stedfastness Men should have a stedfastness proper to themselves not stand by the stedfastness of another the examples of others the countenance or applause of the World or the Opinion of good men but convincing Reason by which their Minds may be inlightened and their Judgments set for God So for Practice we are off and on unstable in all our ways why because we content our selves with some good Motions before we have brought our hearts to this Conclusion to choose God for our Portion and to cleave to him all in hast they will be religious but suddain imperfect Motions may be easily laid aside and given over by contrary
Fornication 1 Thess. 5. 8 9. But let us who are of the day be sober putting on the breast-plate of Faith and Love and for an helmet the hope of Salvation For God hath not appointed us to wrath but to obtain Salvation by our Lord Iesus Christ. 1 Pet. 2. 15. For so is the will of God that with well-doing ye may put to silence the ignorance of foolish men Certainly no private respect desire of our own pleasure and profit should hinder us but we must respect one Command as well as another otherwise our Obedience is partial A quatenus ad omne valet consequentia if we believe the Commandments we must believe all Where a Disposition is allowed to break any one of God's Laws the heart is not right God's Sovereignty once acknowledged is alike potent to restrain every Inclination to Acts displeasing to God and contrary to our Duty one as well as another Secondly The Text may be considered Relatively with respect to the matter in hand and so it may be conceived as a Reason of asking or as a Reason of granting 1. As a Reason of asking 1. It giveth a Character of them that believe they that believe God's Commandments will desire to know them more to be more accurate in knowing their Duty and the weight and consequence of it they are willing to practise all that it requireth and so are willing to prove what is the acceptable will of the Lord. Eph. 5. 17. Wherefore be ye not unwise but understanding what the will of the Lord is they would not doe any thing doubtingly Rom. 14. 23. He that doubteth is damned if he eat because he eateth not of Faith for whatsoever is not of Faith is Sin nor according to the Wills of Men Gal. 1. 10. For do I now perswade men or God or do I seek to please men for if I yet pleased men I should not be the Servant of Christ. They would avoid all appearance of evil 1 Thess. 5. 22. occasions to evil Rom. 13. 14. Make no provision for the flesh to fulfill the lusts thereof They know the weight and consequence of these things 2. It giveth us an intimation of the necessity of growth none believe so much but they may believe more 1 Iohn 5. 13. These things have I written unto you that believe on the name of the Son of God that ye may know that ye have eternal life and that ye may believe on the name of the Son of God and they may obey more embrace the Word more David beggeth he may doe so always there is some new thing to be learned in the Scripture 3. That Faith planted in the heart is nourished and increased by more Knowledge and Understanding 2 Pet. 1. 5. Add to your Faith Vertue to Vertue Knowledge there is an implicite and an explicite Faith ●…rtet discentem credere swallowing Pills not chewing them 2. As a Reason of granting believing God's Commandments is a Disposition that hath a Promise of more Knowledge to be communicated 1. God by one act of Grace maketh way for another First he giveth this first Favour of receiving the Word by Faith as Divine worthy to be believed and obeyed then to understand it and apprehend it more perfectly Discretion and Judgment to goe about Duties wisely 2. God giveth according to the Creatures receptions they that are dutifull and docile and willing to comply with their Duty already known shall know more The Use is If we expect more Illumination let us believe as much as is manifested already to us with a mind to practise SERMON LXXVI PSAL. CXIX 67. Before I was afflicted I went astray but now have I kept thy Word IN this Verse you may observe two things 1. The evil of Prosperity Before I was afflicted I went astray 2. The good of Adversity but now have I kept thy Word Before wandring but now attentive to his Duty Or if you will here is the Necessity of Afflictions and the Utility of them 1. The Necessity Before I was afflicted I went astray Some think that David in his own person representeth the wantonness and stubbornness of all Mankind if it should be so yet the person in whom the instance is given is notable if this were the disposition of the Prophet and Man of God and he needeth this Discipline we much more If he could say it in truth of heart that he was made worse by his Prosperity we need always to be jealous of our selves and were it not for the scourge we should forget our Duty and the Obedience we owe to God 2. The Utility and Benefit of Afflictions but now have I kept thy Word Keeping the Law is a general word the use of God's Rod is to bring us home unto God and the Affliction driveth us to make better use of his Word it changeth us from Vanity to Seriousness from Errour to Truth from Stubbornness to Teachfulness from Pride to Modesty It is commonly said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the Apostle telleth us that Iesus Christ himself learned obedience by the things which he suffered Heb. 5. 8. And here David was the better for the Cross so should we Or rather you may in the words observe three things 1. A Confession of his wandring I went astray 2. The Course God took to reduce him to his Duty I was afflicted 3. The success or effect of that Course I have kept thy Word Theodoret expresseth this in three words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I was sick I was cut or let bloud I was well or recovered my health again 1. The one giveth us the cause of Afflictions they are for Sin I went astray Wherein there is a secret acknowledgment of his guilt that his Sin was the cause of the Chastisement God brought upon him 2. The true notion and nature of Affliction to the People of God the Cross changeth its nature and is not poena a destructive Punishment but remedium delinquentium a medicinal Dispensation and a means of our cure 3. The end of them is Obedience or keeping God's Word The summ of the whole is I was out of the way but thy Rod hath reduced me and brought me into it again Aben Ezra conceiveth that in this last Clause he intimateth a desire of deliverance because the Rod had done its work rather I think he expresseth his frame and temper when he was delivered and accordingly I shall make use of it by and by I might observe many Points but the Doctrine from the whole Verse is Doctr. That the end of God's afflicting is to reduce his afflicted and straying People into the right way I shall explain the Point by these Considerations 1. That Man is of a straying nature apt to turn out of the way that leadeth to God and to true Happiness We are all so by nature Isa. 53. 6. All we like sheep have gone astray Sheep of all Creatures are exceeding subject to stray if not tended and kept in the better
heavy upon the Soul go humble your selves before the mercifull God and sue out his favour and reconciliation with you as David doth Psalm 51. 1. Have mercy upon me according to thy loving kindness according to the multitude of thy tender Mercies blot out my Transgressions You know not what a mercifull God may do for his underserving and ill-deserving People And partly when God is upon his judicial process and calleth a people to an account for their sins he still retaineth his mercifull nature Hab. 3. 2. In the midst of wrath he remembreth Mercy his wrath and indignation doth not so far transport him as that he should forget his mercifull nature and deal with his afflicted people without all moderation When God is justly angry for sin 't is a special time wherein to plead for Mercy Secondly he beggeth that it may come to him Let us see the meaning of the request and then what may be observed upon it Coming to him noteth a personal and effectual application 1. A personal Application as in the 41 vers of this Psalm Let thy mercies come to me also even thy Salvation according to thy word David would not be forgotten or left out or lost in the throng of mankind when mercy was distributing the blessing to them 2. Effectuall application that noteth 1. The removing of obstacles and hindrances 2. The obtaining the fruits and effects of this Mercy First The removing of obstacles Till there be way made the Mercy of God cannot come at us for the way is barricadoed and shut up by our sins as the Lord maketh a way for his Anger Psalm 78. 50. by removing the hindrances eating out the staff and the stay taking away that which letteth so the Lord maketh way for his Mercy or Mercy maketh way for it self when it removeth the obstruction sin is the great hindrance of Mercy We our selves raise the mists and the clouds which intercept the light of God's Countenance we build up the partition wall which separates between God and us yet Mercy finds the way Secondly The obtaining the fruits of Mercy The effects of God's tender Mercies are common or saving We read Psalm 145. 9. The Lord is good to all his tender Mercies are over all his works not a Creature which God hath made but the Lord pitieth it and supplyeth its wants But there are spiritual effects of the Lord 's tender Mercy his pardoning our sins restoring us to his grace and savour and repairing his Image in us Eph. 1. 3. Who hath blessed us with spiritual blessings in Heavenly places in Christ such Spiritual blessings as are a sure effect of God's favour never given in anger Riches may be given in anger so may also temporal deliverance but pardon of sin is never given in anger nor the spirit of the Lord Iesus to dwell in us Of spiritual blessings some are comfortable to us others honourable to God some fall in with our Interest others suite with God's end as pardon is of the first sort and the subjection of the Creature to God of the latter We are willing to be pardoned and freed from the curse of the Law and the flames of Hell but to be renewed to the Image of God and quickened to the life of Grace and put into a capacity to serve our Creator and Redeemer that we are not so earnest for and yet these are the undoubted pledges of the special mercy of God to us and absolutely necessary to the injoyment of the other relative benefits we must suppose David to intend both in his Prayer Let thy Mercy come unto me Once more these spiritual benefits may be considered as to the effects themselves and the sense that we have of our injoyment of them our safety dependeth upon the saving effects and fruits of God's special mercy and our peace joy and comfort upon the sense of them both are comprised in th●…t petition Let thy tender Mercies come unto me This being stated as the full meaning of the words let us observe 1. That 't is not enough to hear of somewhat of God's saving Mercies but we should beg that it may come unto us be effectually and sensibly communicated unto us that we may have experience of them in our own Souls the hearsay will do us little good without experience the hearsay is the first Incouragement we have heard the Kings of Israel are mercifull Kings that moved them to make the address in an humble and submissive manner for their life and safety 1 Kings 20. 31. Let us I pray thee put on sackcloth upon our loins and ropes upon our heads and go to the King of Israel We may reason at a better rate concerning the God of Israel we have heard that the God of Israel is a mercifull God that he delights in mercy but then let us try what he will doe for us Upon the participation of the saving effects and benefits of his mercy our comfort and Interest beginneth 1. We shall never have such admiring thoughts of mercy as when we have felt it our selves then we know the Grace of God in truth Col. 1. 6. A man that hath read of hony or heard of hony may know the sweetness of it by guess and imagination but a man that hath tasted of hony knoweth the sweetness of it in truth So by hearing or reading of the Grace and mercy of God in Christ we may guess that it is a sweet thing but he that hath had an experimental proof of the sweet effects and fruits of it in his own heart and all that is spoken of Gods pardoning and comforting of sinners is verified in himself this giveth him a more sensible demonstration of the worth and value of this priviledg then more admiring thoughts of Mercy when he can say as Paul 1 Tim. 1. 13. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I was saved by mercy 2. We shall more love God Phil. 1. 9. I pray that your love may abound in all sense the Spiritual gust maketh love abound 3. We cannot speak of it with that fullness life sense and affection to others nor so movingly invite others to share with us as when the effects of his goodness are communicated to us Psal. 34. 8. O taste and see that the Lord is good a report of a report is a dead cold thing but a report from experience is lively and powerfull well then let it come to me 3. The sense or participation of God's saving Mercies is to believers the life of their lives the heaven they have upon Earth the joy and comfort of their Souls and the want of this is a kind of death to them for so David expresseth himself Let thy tender mercies come unto me that I may live The reasons are taken partly from the object and partly from the subject from the thing it self and from the disposition of a renewed heart 1. From the thing it self from the object and there first the value of this priviledge
set him in safety from him that puffeth at him 'T is the Pride of the Oppressor which God taketh notice of his puffing scoffing and mocking at the hopes of God's despised ones he never dreameth of any checks from any but despiseth and contemneth all And partly because of the insulting over their misery and low estate Zeph. 2. 10. This shall they have for their pride because they have reproached and magnified themselves against the people of the Lord of hosts But God taketh notice of it and will call them to an account in due time Prov. 3. 34. He scorneth the scorners but giveth grace unto the lowly Psal. 14. 6. You have shamed the counsel of the poor because the Lord●… is his refuge i. e. mocked at a man because he is resolved to trust in the Lord laughed at those that made conscience of their duty that consulted whether lawful or unlawful not whether danger and profit not whether safe or unsafe but whether pleasing to God or not They trust in the Lord that in conscience of their duty venture upon hazards expecting their security from Heaven these thoughts seemed foolish to worldly wisdom you shamed his counsel scoff at it Isa. 51. 7 8. Fear ye not the reproach of men nor their revilings For the moth shall eat them up like a garment and the worm shall eat them like wooll Those that make reckoning of the ways of God need not be discouraged with their spiteful vaunts USE Let us take heed of Pride the Lord that hated the Pride of Moab doth also hate the Pride of Iacob Amos 6. 8. 1. Take heed wittingly and willingly of opposing any Command of God Psal. 119. 21. Thou hast rebuked the proud that are cursed which do err from thy commandments Nehem. 9. 16. But our fathers dealt proudly and hardned their necks and hearkned not to his commandments so ver 29. These proclaim a War with the Lord of Hosts especially when not reclaimed by grievous Judgments Isa. 26. 19. I will break the pride of your power And this is that we should lay to heart at this day Ier. 13. 17. But if ye will not hear my soul shall weep in secret places for your pride When a People will not be brought to any serious consideration of God's Judgments nor abate their haughty minds he would bewail their foolish arrogancy and the miseries ensuing thereupon This standing out against God is the greatest Pride 2. Take heed of murmuring against his Providence Entertaining Crosses with anger and Blessings with disdain are sure Notes of unmortified Pride when God's dispensations still displease and the heart swelleth against his Sovereignty First To entertain Crosses with anger 2 Kings 6. 33. This evil is from the Lord why should I wait any longer upon the Lord Words of desperate distrust and murmuring Secondly Blessings with disdain Mal. 1. 2. I have loved you saith the Lord and they said Wherein hast thou loved us As if God owed them more than others and were a kind of Debtor to them Habak 2. 4. Behold his soul which is lifted up is not upright in him but the just shall live by his faith The lofty and unsound are distinguished from the just who can tarry God's leisure those mens souls are lifted up who cannot acquiesce in their lot and portion assigned by God but censure his way of proceeding and are loth he should have the disposing of them at his pleasure 3. Take heed of despising any of Christ's little ones and scorning and mocking at those that fear the Lord. The 51 verse of this Psalm The proud have had me greatly in derision To make a mock of others upon any account is a sign of Pride though they be meaner in Gifts though differing in Judgment though walking in a lower Dispensation but especially to scorn at them because more godly 2 Tim. 3. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Despisers of those that are good This is to reflect upon God himself whose Image in his Saints is made a by-word and a strict obedience to his Will matter of scorn and derision If a Slave should mock a Child because he is like his Father would this be well taken so the jealous God will not long endure this horrible indignity that his Image should be scorned in his children Isa. 63. 9. In all reproaches he is reproached But they will say 't is not their Holiness but their demure Hypocrisie and affected Preciseness which they reproach and scorn but God seeth the heart 't is as if a Leper did upbraid others with Pimples The Infirmities of the Godly do not justifie your contempt of Godliness and because of their Faults you must not scorn at their Holiness and expect Indempnity 4. Take heed of Moral Pride which consists in a lofty conceit of our selves joined with a contempt of others This was the Pharisees sin Luk. 18. 9. He spake this Parable unto certain which trusted in themselves that they were righteous and despised others And 't is notably personated in the Pharisee and Publican who went up to pray and is daily seen in them who are speaking of their own things boasting of their own excellencies elevating their own but extenuating the gifts of others Most men are too great and too good in their own esteem Self-love representeth our selves to our selves in a feigned shape and likeness much more wise and holy and just than we are it maketh us loath other mens Sins rather than our own to extenuate other mens Gifts and Graces and cry up our own but this should not be Philip. 2. 3. Let each esteem another better than themselves Humility is content to sit in the meanest place Ephes. 3. 8. Who am the least of all the Saints 1 Tim. 1. 15. Christ came to save sinners of whom I am Chief We know our own weakness better than others and they may have secret excellencies which we see not this Moral Pride discovereth it self in three things First In disdain of Inferiors or contempt of those who are of meaner gifts or rank and place in the world Every member hath its use in the body the toe as well as the head neither can one say to another I have no need of thee 1 Cor. 12. 21. All Christians have their peculiar gifts by which they are rendered acceptable and useful to the body as every Countrey hath its proper Commodities for the maintaining of Trade and Commerce between all parts of the world or as to the beauty and use of the Universe there is need of Hills and Vallies so all Ranks of Men contribute to the beauty use and service of the whole The strong should not despise the weak nor the weak prescribe to the strong Now 't is impossible to keep all in their due order and proportion unless every one consider their own weakness and want and the usefulness of others As among Christians some are useful to preserve order others to keep afoot the life and power of godliness
upon God Job 13. 15. Though he slay me yet will I trust in him And Psal. 23. 4. Yea though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death I will fear no evil for thou art with me thy rod and thy staff they comfort me Many of his Children are reduced to great straits there may be no meal in the Barrel nor oil in the Cruse before God helpeth them There may be many mouths to eat little Food Iohn 6. 5 6. when there was a great deal of company and little provision Christ asketh one of his Disciples Whence shall we buy bread that these may eat And this he said to prove him for he himself knew what he would do So many a poor Believer is put to it Children increase Trading groweth dead Supplies fail What shall they do They pray and God giveth no answer This he doth to prove them 'T is a strong Faith which can hold out in such straits and difficulties 2dly To awaken our Importunity Luke 18. 1. And he spake a parable to them to this end that men ought always to pray and not to faint compared with Luke 11. 8. with the Parable ensuing So again an instance in the Woman of Canaan she turneth discouragements into arguments When Christ said It is not meet to take the childrens bread and to cast it to dogs She said Truth Lord yet the dogs eat of the crums which fall from their masters table Mat. 15. 26 27. So the blind men Mat. 20. 31. the more they were rebuked cryed the more rather than his People shall neglect Prayer or grow formal in it God will cast them into great Afflictions as Christ suffereth the Storm to continue till the Ship was almost overwhelmed that his Disciples might awaken him Mat. 8. 25. 3dly To make us sensible of our weakness as Paul 2 Cor. 1. 9. But we had the sentence of death in our selves that we should not trust in our selves but in God which raiseth the dead We are much given to self-confidence therefore God will break it and e're he hath done with us make us trust in him alone There is a twofold strength Natural and Spiritual 1. Natural which ariseth from that Courage that is in Man as he is a reasonable Creature This will hold out till all probabilities be spent Prov. 18. 14. The spirit of a man will sustain his infirmity but a wounded spirit who can bear Till a Man be struck at the heart his reason will support him 2. Spiritual Faith Hope Patience These may be spent when the Affliction is deep and pressing and God's help is long delay'd Faith is the strength of the Soul as Faith decayeth or is tired the Soul faints Faith may be damped and give up our case for gone Psal. 116. 11. Psal. 31. 22. They throw up all and think it is in vain to wait any longer Thus will God discover our weakness to our selves the weakness of our Reason the weakness of our Faith I remember Solomon saith Prov. 34. 10. If thou faintest in adversity thy strength is small Grievous or long Afflictions discover our strength or weakness Some are of a poor spirit give up at first assault before their strength faileth them before the probabilities which Sense and Reason offereth are spent They are lazy and love their ease Some are negligent do not make use of the helps of Faith but when evils continue long and sit close the strongest Faith is seen to be too weak God by this will humble us 4thly God doth this for his own glory and that his work may be the more remarkable and conspicuous John 12. 6 7. Iesus loved Lazarus and when he heard that he was sick he abode two days still in the same place where he was Little love in that you will say a Man would hasten to his dying Friend Christ may dearly love his own and yet delay to help them even in their extremity till the fit time come wherein the mercy may be the more conspicuous 'T is said Eccles. 3. 11. God hath made every thing beautiful in his time Before its time God's work seemeth harsh and rough as a Statue when it is first hewn out but in its time t is a curious piece of workmanship God in his own time and way knoweth best how to comfort his People 2. 'T is the Devil's design to tire and weary out the People of God and therefore stirreth up all his malice against us Luke 22. 31 32. Simon Simon behold Satan hath desired to have you that he may sift you as wheat But I have prayed for thee that thy faith fail not The Devil if he might have the shaking of us and liberty to do his worst he would drive us from the faith of Christ and all hopes by him 3. Men are unreasonable in their oppositions and will not relent nor abate any thing of their rigor Zech. 1. 15. I was a litte displeased and they helped forward the affliction They are still adding to the Churches trouble and would destroy those whom God would only correct and purge as the Slave layeth on unmercifully Till God restrain it their wrath never ceaseth Well then 1 USE Let it not seem strange to us That Godly Men in their Afflictions though they flie to God and implore his Mercy are not presently delivered nor always at the first instance God hath many discoveries to make much work to do Would you have Faith rewarded before it be tryed or the beautiful frame and link of causes disturbed for your sakes Faith is not tryed to purpose till the thing we believe is not seen nor have any probability that ever we shall see it yea till we see nothing but the contrary and hope against hope we must stay till the mercy be ready for us and we ready for it an hungry Stomach would have the Meat e're it be roasted our times are always present with us when God's time is not come 2. Let us prepare for grievous and tedious Sufferings We would turn over our hard Lesson before we have sufficiently learned it we love the case of the flesh would have no Cross or a very short one Things will not be so soon or so suddenly effected as we imagine We make greater provision for a long Voyage We should be strengthned to long-suffering Col. 1. 11. as for all sort of Crosses so for long and tedious Crosses 3. If our Affliction be long observe your carriage under it Doth Faith and Hope keep you alive still Heb. 6. 12. Be not slothful but followers of them who through faith and patience inherit the promises Do you keep up your prayerful affections Rom. 12. 12. Continue instant in prayer We pray as Men out of heart for fashions sake and with little life rather satisfying our Consciences than expressing our hope and confidence A damp on the Spirit of Prayer is an ill Presage Can you love God though you be not feasted with Self-comforts and present Benefits
quickned me O! when a child of God is even dead and hath many damps and discouragements upon his heart when he goes to the Word there he hath quickning reviving and is encouraged to wait upon God again All our discomfort comes from forgetting what God hath spoken in his Word Heb. 12. 5. Ye have forgotten the exhortation which speaketh unto you as unto children There 's abundant consolation in the Word but we forget it and do not carry it always in our mind and then we lie under much dejection of heart if we do not study it discomfort will come upon us In the Word there 's a remedy for every malady and an ease for every smart and therefore this is that which makes it precious to the children of God II. Secondly The Saints readily yield this love to the Word Why 1. Because their hearts are suited to the Word The Word is every way suited to the sanctified nature and the sanctified nature is suited to it for that which is written in God's Book is written over again upon their hearts by the finger of the Spirit while we are in our natural state there is an enmity to the Law of God For we are not subject to the law of God neither indeed can be Rom 8. 7. I but when they come to be written upon the heart and mind then our affections are suited to the Word Carnal men do not love the Word why because it is contrary to them as Micaiah to Ahab He prophesieth nothing but evil to me it only rubs their sores and discovers their spots to them and that 's grievous and proud spirits think it to be a simple plain doctrine Worldly spirits love it not for it draweth them off wholly to think of things to come but they whose hearts are suited to it they have a mighty love to it 2. They have tasted the goodness of the Word therefore they love it 2 Pet. 2. 3. As new born babes desire the sincere milk of the Word why If so be ye have tasted that the Lord is gracious if you have felt any benefit Ier. 15. 16. Thy words were found and I did eat them and thy Word was unto me the joy and rejoycing of mine heart When they come to taste digest and have experience of the benefit in comforting changing supporting their own hearts then they love the Word of God that hath been the instrument of it Iam. 1. 18. He hath begotten us by the word of truth then what follows Be swift to hear If a man be begotten if he hath felt the benefit of the Word then he will be taking all occasions to delight himself and refresh his soul in the VVord of God in reading hearing meditating because he hath found sensible benefit Use 1. To shame and humble us that we are so cold in our love It is an admirable and an incredible affection David here speaks Consider who it was that speaks thus David he that was incumbred with the employments of a Kingdom he that had so many Courtly pleasures so many great businesses to divert and draw him aside yet all his employment could not with-hold him from delighting himself in the VVord of God It was David that was a King and mark how he doth express himself he doth not say I endeavor to keep thy Word but I love thy Word Nay he saith more he speaks of it as a thing he could not express How I love thy Law No great wonder that we cannot express the excellency of the Word but that our affections which are so finite that these should not be exprest this is wonderful Then he speaks of it with Exclamation too O how I love thy Law and he speaks this to God the Septuagint read it Lord how have I loved thy Law He makes God himself to be Judge not only of the truth of his love as Peter makes Christ the Judge of the truth of his love I have many failings I have fallen foully of late but Lord thou knowest all things thou knowest I love thee but he makes God the Judge of the strength of his love Lord how do I love thy Law Have we any thing answerable Heart should answer heart Are there such affections wrought in us as David expresseth to be in himself This should shame us for we have more reason there is more of the VVord of God revealed to us more of the counsel of God discover'd the Canon of Scripture being enlarged more discover'd than ever was to David yet our affections so cold SERMON CII PSAL. CXIX VER 97. Oh how love I thy Law c. I Come now to a second Use. To press us to get this Love Take three Arguments 1. This will wean us from sinful delight that is apt to insinuate with us and take our hearts it will draw us off from carnal pastimes curious studies vain pamphlets if you had this Love here would be your recreation in the word of God Castae deliciae meae sunt Scripturae tuae saith Austin here are my chaste delights thy holy Scripture to be ruminating and meditating there Here you will be employing your time and strength of your thoughts There are two things mightily concern us to make Religion our business and recreation our business in regard of the seriousness and our recreation and delight in regard of the sweetness Now if you have a word from God here will be your delight you will be exercising your selves contemplating the height depth and breadth of God's Love in Christ Jesus and turning over this blessed book Iob 23. 12. I have esteemed the words of thy mouth more than my necessary food Your very food for sustentation of your bodies will not be so sweet to you as the word of God for the comfort and refreshing of the Soul when the promises are as dry breasts and withered flowers when men have little or no feeling of the power of it upon their hearts no wonder they are besotted with the pleasures of sin Mans mind must have some pleasure and oblectation but their harts are chained to carnal delights so that they cannot mind the business of their souls 2. Your hearts will be more stable and upright with God more constant in the profession of godliness when you come to love the word and love the truth for the truths sake 2 Thes. 2. 12. Because they received not the truth in the Love of it therefore God gave them up to strong delusions that they might believe lyes The Lord hath seen it sit ever to continue this dispensation in the course of his Providence to suffer seducing spirits to go forth to try how we have received the truth whether only in the bare profession of it or received it in the Love of it Many have received the truth in the light of it that is compelled by Conscience and by humane tradition and currant opinions and custom of the country to profess it but they do not love it therefore they
matter how comes this deadness upon me Isa. 63. 17. Why hast thou caused us to err from thy ways and hardned our heart from thy fear Enquirew hat●…s the cause of this deadness that grows upon me that you may humble your selves under the mighty hand of God The Argument only is behind According to thy Word David when he begs for quickning he is encouraged so to do by a promise The question is where this promise should be Some think it was that general promise of the Law If thou do these things thou shalt live in them Lev. 17. 5. And that from thence David drew this particular conclusion that God would give life to his people But rather it was some other promise some word of God he had to bear him out in this request We see he hath made many promises to us of sanctifying our affliction Isa. 27. 9. The fruit of all shall be the taking away of sin of bettering and improving us by it Heb. 2. 11. of moderating our affliction that he will stay his rough wind in the day of the east-wind Isa. 27. 8. That he will lay no more upon us than he will enable us to bear 1 Cor. 10. 13. He hath promised he will moderate our affliction so that we shall not be tempted above our strength He hath promised he will deliver us from it that the Rod of the wicked shall not always rest on the back of the righteous Psal. 105. 3. That he will be with us in it and never fail us Heb. 13. 5. Now I argue thus If the People of God could stay their hearts upon God's Word when they had but such obscure hints to work upon that we do not know where the promise lies Ah how should our hearts be stay'd upon God when we have so many promises When the Scriptures are enlarged for the comfort and enlarging of our Faith surely we should say now as Paul when he got a word Acts 27. 25. I believe God I may expect God will do thus for me when his Word speaks it everywhere Then you may expostulate with God I have thy Word for it Lord as she when she shewed him the jewel ring and staff whose are these so we may cast in God his promises whose are these according to thy Word And mark David that was punctual with God I have sworn and I will perform it and quicken me according to thy Word Sincere hearts may plead Promises with God Isa. 38. 3 Lord remember I have walked before thee with an upright heart These may look up and wait upon God for deliverance SERMON CXVIII PSAL. CXIX VER 108. Accept I beseech thee the free-will-offering of my mouth O Lord and teach me thy judgments IN this Verse two things are asked of God God's Acceptance then secondly Instruction First He begs Acceptation Therein take notice 1 Of the matter object or thing that he would have to be accepted The free-will-offerings of my mouth 2 The manner of asking this Acceptation Accept I beseech thee O Lord. In the former you may observe the general nature of the thing and then the particular kind they were free-will-offerings and yet more express they were free-will-offerings of his hands not legal sacrifices but spiritual services free-will-offerings of his mouth implying praises our praises of God are called the calves of our lips Hos. 14. 2. rendred there by the Septuagint the fruit of our lips and accordingly translated by the Apostle Heb. 13. 15. The fruit of our lips giving thanks to his Name He was in deep affliction wandering up and down the Desart he was disabled to offer up to God any other sacrifice therefore he desires God would accept the free-will-offerings of his mouth he had nothing else to bring him Secondly He begs of God instruction in his way Teach me thy judgments By Misphalim judgments are meant both God's Statutes and God's Providences If you take them in the former sense for God's Statutes so he begs grace to excite direct and assist him in a course of sincere obedience to God practically to walk according to God's Will If you understand it in the latter sense only for the accomplishment of what God had spoken in his Word for God's Providence for his corrective dispensation Teach me he begs understanding and profiting by them I shall begin with his first Request which offereth four Observations 1. That God's people have their spiritual offerings 2. That these spiritual offerings must be free-will-offerings 3. That these free-will-offerings are graciously accepted by God 4. That this gracious acceptance must be earnestly sought and valued as a great blessing I beseech thee accept c. Doct. 1. First That God's People have their spiritual offerings I shall give the sense of this Point in five Propositions 1 That all God's People are made Priests to God for every offering supposeth a Priest so it is said Rev. 1. 6. That Christ Iesus hath made us Kings and Priests All Christians they have a Communion with Christ in all his Offices whatever Christ was that certainly they are in some measure and degree Now Christ was King Priest and Prophet and so is every Christian in a spiritual sense a King Priest and Prophet for they have their anointing their unction from the Holy One and he communicates with them in his Offices So also they do resemble the Priesthood under the Law in 1 Pet. 2. 5. they are called a holy Priesthood to offer sacrifices to God And 1 Pet. 2. 9. they are called a royal Priesthood They are a holy Priesthood like the sons of Aaron who were separated from the People to minister before the Lord and they are a Royal Priesthood in conformity to the Priesthood of Melchisedec who was King of Salem and also Priest of the Most High God There is a mighty conformity between what is done by every Christian and the Solemnities and Rites used by the Priests under the Law The Priests of the Law were separated from the rest of the People so are all God's People from the rest of the World The Priests of the Law were to be anointed with holy oil Exod. 28. 41. so all Christians they receive an unction from the holy one 1 John 2. 20. By the holy oil was figured the holy Spirit which was the Unction of the Holy One. by which they are made fit and ready to perform those duties which are acceptable to God After the Priest was thus generally prepar'd by the anointing to their services before they went to offer they were to wash in the great Laver which stood in the Sanctuary door Exod. 29. 4. Lev. 8. 4 5. So every Christian is to be washed in the great Laver of Regeneration Tit. 3. 5. And when they are regenerated born again purged and cleansed from their sins then they are Priests to offer Sacrifices to God for till this be done none of their offerings are acceptable to him For they that are in the flesh ●…annot
please God Rom. 8. 8. And the sacrifices of the wicked are an abomination unto the Lord Prov. 15. 8. Thus you see in all these correspondences and in many more Christians they are Priests What the Priests of the Law were to God that is every Christian now to God to offer spiritual Sacrifices to Christ Jesus our Lord. 2 They have their Offerings The great work of the Priest was to offer Sacrifice and this is our employment to offer Sacrifices to God What Sacrifices do we offer now in the time of the Gospel not sin offerings but thank-offerings A sin-offering can be offer'd but once Heb. 10. 14. By one offering Iesus Christ hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified And there needs no more of that kind that was but to be once offer'd Heb. 7. 27. and therefore there remains nothing more to be done by us but the offering of thank-offerings and this is to be done continually Heb. 13. 15. By him therefore let us offer the sacrifice of praise to God continually that is the fruit of our lips giving thanks to his Name 3 These Offerings must be spiritual thank-offerings Under the Law the thank offering was that of a Bea●…t but now under the Gospel we offer spiritual Sacrifices therefore the Apostle saith 1 Pet. 2. 5. Ye are built up a spiritual house an holy priesthood to offer up spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God by Iesus Christ. The Sacrifice must suit with the nature of the Priesthood The Priesthood is spiritual and not after the Law of a carnal Commandment and not by an external Consecration but the inward anointing of the Holy Ghost And herein we differ from the Priests of the Law because the very nature and substance of our Worship is more pleasing to God than the nature of theirs for Moral Worship is better and more suited to the nature of God than ceremonial God is a Spirit and will be worshipped in Spirit Joh. 4. 24. And therefore when ceremonial Worship was in force they that rested in external Ceremonies and did not look to the spiritual intent and signification of them were not accepted by God though the Ceremony was perform'd with never so much pomp though they came with their flocks and herds yet praying to God and praising God with a willing mind which was the soul of their offering was that alone which was acceptable to God therefore it is said Psal. 69. 30 31. I will praise the Name of God with a song and will magnifie him with thanksgiving This also shall please the Lord better than an ox or bullock that hath horns and hoofs That is which is perfect and exact according to the Institutions of the Law for there was to be no blemish in the Sacrifice of the Law yet calling upon the Name of God and praising him is better than the Service perform'd with the exactest conformity to Legal Rites Psal. 50. 13 14 15. Will I eat the flesh of bulls or drink the blood of goats Offer unto God thanksgiving and pay thy vows unto the most high and call upon me in the day of trouble I will deliver thee and thou shalt glorifie me The Lord draws them off from Ceremonies to the spiritual service it is more becoming the nature of God and it is more reasonable service The offering of a Beast hath not so much of God's nature nor of man's nature in it only God would keep it up for awhile therefore now these are the great Offerings 4 The two great Sacrifices requir'd of us Prayer and Praise there are many other but they are implied in these To instance under the Gospel there is this thank-offering presenting our selves to the Lord dedicating our selves to the Lord's use and service Rom. 12. 1. I beseech you brethren by the mercies of God that ye present your bodies a living sacrifice holy acceptable unto God which is your reasonable service 2 Cor. 8. 5. They first gave their own selves to the Lord and unto us by the will of God And then there 's Alms Heb. 13. 16. To do good and communicate forget not for with such sacrifices God is well pleased And when the Philippians had made contribution to Paul's necessities he saith it was a sacrifice of a sweet smelling savor unto God Phil. 4. 18. Ay but now both these are included in the other two namely as they are Evidences of our thankfulness to God and the sense of his love and favor which we have receiv'd by Christ. The great and usual offerings are the fruit of our lips the calves of our lips here call'd the free-will-offerings of our mouth Prayer and Praise That Prayer is a Sacrifice see Psal. 141. 2. Let my prayer be set before thee as incense and the lifting up of my hands as the evening sacrifice The daily offering was accompanied with incense and he mentions the evening sacrifice because then was a more perfect atonement for the day therefore when the Evening Sacrifice came it was to ●…e understood they were perfectly reconcil'd to God And then that Praise is a Sacrifice see Psal. 54. 6. I will freely sacrice unto thee I will praise thy Name O Lord for it is good And in that o●…her place where the Lord rejects the flesh of Bulls and blood of Goats Praise is substituted Will I eat the flesh of Bulls and blood of Goats No Psal. 50. 14. Offer to me thanksgiving and pay thy vows unto the most high So Psal. 116. 17 18. So that Prayers and Praises are the Oblations which we offer unto God under the Gospel either acknowledgments ●…or ●…ormer mercies or petitions for future deliverances These are the two duties which contain the substance of the Ceremonies under the Law and are daily and constantly to be perform'd by us 5 Whatever was figur'd in the old Sacrifices it must be spiritually perform'd in the duty of Prayer and Praise In those legal Rites there was an Evangelical Equity or something that was moral and spiritual for us still to observe As first in Prayer Truth was the inward part of the Sacrifice for the meer external oblation was of no significancy with God There were three things wherein it symbolizeth with Prayer in Prayer there is requir'd brokenness of Heart owning of Christ renewing Covenant with God 1. One thing that was required in Sacrifices was brokenness of Heart for when a man came to present his Beast before the Lord he was to consider this Beast was to be slain and burnt with fire and to consider all this was my Case I might have been consum'd with his wrath and ●…e burnt with fire and so come with a compunctionate spirit with brokenness of heart to bemoan his case before the Lord therefore it is said Psal. 51. 17. The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit a broken and a contrite heart O God thou wilt not despise This is requir'd in every one that comes to Prayer brokenness of heart that is a sensibleness of his
worthy to be believed The Summ is God hath his Testimonies extant their Authority is inviolable and their Justice and Truth immutable Some read Praecepisti Iustitiam Testimoniorum tuorum fidem valde Thou hast highly charged and earnestly commanded the righteousness and faithfulness of thy Testimonies as referring to our Duty But most Translations agree with ours Our duty indeed may be inferred but I shall not make it the formal interpretation of the place In the Texture of the Words in the Hebrew these Attributes are given to the Word it self Doctr. They that would profit by the word or rule of faith and manners which God hath commanded them to observe should look upon it as righteous and very faithful So did David here and elsewhere Psal. 19. 9. The Iudgments of the Lord are true and righteous altogether I shall make good the Point by these Considerations Prop. 1. That our faith and obedience must be well-grounded or else they will have no firmness and stability The want of a foundation is the cause of many a ruinous Building Men carry on a fair and lofty Structure of profession but when the Winds of boisterous temptations are let loose upon them all is blown down because they build upon the Sand and not upon the Rock They take up this profession without sound evidence and conviction in their Consciences and so they are not grounded or setled in the faith Col. 1. 23. not rooted and grounded in love Ephes. 3. 7. They take up Religion sleightly not looking into the reasons of it upon Tradition or vulgar esteem they are not undoubtedly perswaded that it is the very truth of God The good Seed withered that fell upon the stony ground because there was no depth of Earth Matth. 13. 5. no considerable strength of soil to feed faith Prop. 2. Faith and obedience cannot be well-grounded but on such a Doctrine as is true and righteous for who can depend on that which is not true or who can obey that which is not righteous Truth is the only sure foundation for faith to build upon and righteousness for practice Faith considereth truth Ephes. 1. 13. In whom ye trusted after that ye heard the word of truth the Gospel of your salvation And that righteousness is that which bindeth to practice we may gather from Psal. 119. 128. Therefore I esteem all thy Precepts concerning all things to be right and I hate every false way The Word commandeth nothing but what is just and righteous Prop. 3. This true and righteous Doctrine must be backed with a strong and powerful Authority not only recommended to us but strictly and severely enjoyned for two reasons First Because otherwise it will not be observed and regarded but be lookt upon not as a binding Law but as an arbitrary direction There is difference between a Law and a Rule A bare Rule may only serve to inform our understandings or to give direction but a Law is a binding Rule a Rule with a strong Obligation The Word of God is not his counsel and advice to us only but his Law that men may examine and regard it with more care and diligence God hath interposed his authority Psal. 1. ●…9 4. Thou hast commanded us to keep thy precepts diligently And in the Text Thy Testimonies which thou hast commanded God hath commanded us to believe all truths revealed to obey all duties required and if God commandeth there is good reason why he should be obeyed Secondly Divine authority is one means to evidence the righteousness and truth of what is to be believed and obeyed The righteousness for if God who is my Superior and hath a full right to govern me according to his own pleasure doth command me any thing it is best that I should obey it without reply and contradiction yea though I see not the reason of it Acts 17. 28. For in him we live and move and have our being All Creatures have their Being not only from him but in him and therefore sometimes God giveth no other account of his Law but this I am the Lord Lev. 22. 2 3. Speak unto Aaron and to his Sons that they separate themselves from the holy things of the Children of Israel and that they prophane not my holy name in those things which they hallow unto me I am the Lord. Say unto them Whosoever he be of all your Seed among your Generations that goeth unto the holy things which the Children of Israel hallow unto the Lord having his uncleanness upon him that soul shall be cut off from my presence I am the Lord. Therefore it gives rules of practice to be embraced with all the heart as holy just and good Gods authority is founded upon the total dependance of all Creatures upon him and upon his infallible Wisdom Truth and Goodness by which he hath right to prescribe all Points of Faith to be believed and assented to upon his own testimony without contradiction 1 Iohn 5. 9. If we receive the testimony of man the testimony of God is greater A man that would not deceive us we believe him upon his word though he may be deceived himself but God doth not deceive nor can he be deceived by the holy God nothing can be given but what is holy and good and thereupon I am to receive it Prop. 4. This Divine authority truth and righteousness is only to be found in Gods Testimonies which he hath commanded or in Gods Word First There is a God-like authority speaking there and commanding that which it becometh none but God to command who is the universal King and Sovereign For it speaketh to the whole World without respect of persons to King and Beggar rich and poor Male and Female without reservation of Honour or distinction of Degrees The Word looketh on them as standing before God on the same level Iob 34. 19. He accepteth not the persons of Princes nor regarded the rich more than the poor for they all are the work of his hands And speaketh to them indifferently and equally Exod. 20. 3. Thou shalt have no other Gods but me Which is not the voice of any limited and bounded Power but of that which is supreme transcendent and absolute And by these Laws he bindeth the Conscience and the immortal souls of men Psal. 19. 7. The Law of the Lord is perfect converting the soul. Men may give Laws to the words and actions because they can take cognizance of them but the Word giveth Laws to the thoughts Isai. 55. 7. Let the wicked forsake his way and the unrighteous man his thoughts Matth. 5. 28. Whosoever looketh on a woman to lust after her hath committed Adultery with her already in his heart And the internal motions and affections of the heart how we should love and fear and joy and mourn 1 Cor. 7. 30. They that weep as though they wept not and they that rejoyce as though they rejoyced not Of these things God can only take notice the power
three concurr in Elijahs speech Kings 1. 19. 10. I have been very jealous for the Lord God of Hosts there 's his zeal why for the Children of Israel have forsaken thy Covenant there 's his Truth perverted they have thrown down thy Altars there 's his Worship overturned they have slain thy Prophets with the Sword there his Servants are wronged So that zeal mainly is concerned when God suffers loss in any of these things if his Truth be perverted his Worship overturn'd his Servants be despitefully used vexed and grieved then zeal presently shews it self in opposing these things or in grieving for them 1. Zeal seeks to preserve the Truth of God inviolable Truth is a precious depositum Trust and Charge which God hath committed to the keeping of his People and without zeal to defend and propagate and maintain it though with the greatest hazard it will never be kept and you will never be faithful to God We are a kind of ●…offees for the present age and Trustees for the future and the charge of Gods Truth is put into our hands and we must see it be transmitted to the World pure and undefiled therefore Iude ver 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We must contend earnestly for the Faith which was once delivered unto the Saints When others would violate the Truth we must contend with them Ier. 9. 3. They are not valiant for the Truth A Christian needs not only the labour of an Ox that he may be diligent but the valour of a Lion that he may appear for God in defence of his Truth when it is invaded and in●…roached upon and especially doth this concern the Officers of the Church this zeal they should have for the word Titus 1. 9. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 holding fast the faithful Word The word signifies to be good at holding and drawing that is when others would wrest it out of our hands we should hold it fast as a staff that an other would take out of our hands we hold it faster and wrestle with him so should we wrestle contend and hold fast the truth when others would draw it from us And Phil. 1. 27. Striving together for the Faith of the Gospel O! we should not let one dust of truth perish This is to be zealous for the Truth standing to and striving for the defence thereof in our way and place If God had not raised up zealous Instruments in every Age to plead for his Truth what a sad case would the Church have been in Truth would have been buried under a great heap of prejudices and Christs Kingdom have been crusht in the very Egg and Religion strangled in the cradle But there 's a cloud of Witnesses gone before us in every age God sets up some of all Sexes Ages Conditions that have owned his despised and oppugned Truths and have not counted their lives dear so as they might give their testimony to the Truth of God Rev. 12. 11. and have more greedily embraced Martyrdom then Others honours and dignities in the Church as Sulpitius Severus observes they have with greater desire affected the glory of Martyrdom and Suffering for the Truth that they might be faithful to God and the Souls of Men in future Ages and to preserve Gods Truth inviolate they have greedily sought this honour to suffer for God And Ignatius he could say come saith he I desire the Beasts that are prepared should be let loose for me it is better to dye for Christ then to command the ends of the Earth And Basil when the Arrian Emperour threatned those that did oppose his Religion should dye the Death the wild Beasts let them be let out would to God it were so that I had the honour to dye for the Truth of Christ This was notably for the encrease of Christs Kingdom and thus the Lord hath inspired his people with a Holy Love and Zeal 2. For his Worship that that may not be corrupted but his Institutions kept Pure Zeal is conversant about that too Exod. 20. 5. Thou shalt not bow down thy self to them nor serve them for I the Lord thy God am a jealous God In the first Commandment God forbids a false God in the second he forbids the false Means of Worship as before the false Object Now because the Means of Worship are apt to be perverted the Lord shews how jealous he was for his Worship I am a jealous God if the Institutions of God be perverted then I will visit the iniquity of the Fathers upon the Children unto the Third and Fourth Generation of them that hate me The Children are considered in that Commandment because usually the interest of Families is our great snare when an Idol is set up or a false means of Worship the chiefest false worship is an Idol and the greatest sin is put for all the rest before an Idol the Imagination or Invention of men when that is set up The Lord speaks of the interest of Families because men are apt to think they shall undo them and their Families if they contend in this matter Now be you zealous of my worship for I will visit the iniquity of the Fathers upon the Children That the interest of Families might not abate our zeal the Lord takes the Family into the Curse for the violation and likewise into the Blessing for zeal for his Institutions And so Christ saith Iohn 2. 17. The zeal of thy house hath eaten me up We should be zealous for Gods Worship Ministers they should Preach zealously and Magistrates govern zealously to purge Gods house and Christians pray zealously every one of us as far as the bounds of our calling will permit should be zealous for Gods Worship Quis comeditur zelo Domus Dei saith Austin Who is he that is eaten out with the zeal of Gods house He that desires that no humane invention may be blended and mixed with Gods Worship and would fain amend what 's amiss This zeal is the only right and acceptable Principle of Reformation our great indignation against all false worship whatever I remember the story of Valentinian who was afterwards Emperour when according to the duty of his place being Captain of the Guard to Iulian the Apostate and Emperour he was engaged to attend him into the Heathen Temple of Fortune and the Priests were to sprinkle the lustrating and holy-water for that Ceremony was common to the Heathens with the Papists and a drop of it lighted upon Valentinian he struck the Priest that did it and said thou hast defiled me thou hast not purged me he thought his garments to be contaminated and not his body sanctified and he tore off his Belt renounced his honour rather then he would do any thing that should be contrary to his Religion and for this Iulian sent him into banishment and within a year and few Months the story tells us that he received the reward of his holy Confession and owning of Christ the Roman Empire For the
of Hosts 5. Want of Faith Matth. 11. 28. Come unto me all ye that Labour and are heavy laden and I will give you rest The Woman of Canaan that would take no denial Christ saith O woman great is thy Faith The blind man cryed after the Son of David as we run to a Rich man that is Charitably disposed for an Alms. If we were perswaded that we should be the better for coming to God we should not be so slight and careless in our approaches to him 2. Use. Is to press you to this crying or Holy vehemency in Prayer The Apostle biddeth us to continue instant in Prayer 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 continue with all your might in Prayer Col. 4. 12. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Labouring fervently in Prayer for you The word signifieth to be striving in a Battel and in an Agony for them It hath life in it But what is it 1. When the Heart worketh in prayer as before 2. When you follow the suit and will not give over praying Luk. 18. 1. He spake a Parable to them to this end that men ought always to pray and not to faint Luk. 11. 8. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Because of his Importunity he will rise c. The Prophet telleth God plainly what he would do Isa. 62. 1. For Zions sake will I not hold my Peace and for Ierusalems sake I will not rest c. So Iacob Gen. 32. 26. I will not let thee go unless thou Bless me Absque te non recedam 3. When deaf to disappointments and discouragements from without from within from himself from God himself 1 Sam. 12. 23. God forbid that I should sin against the Lord in ceasing to pray for you c. Notwithstanding the many Objections in his heart what God would do to a Rebellious People So Elijah when the Heavens were as Brass and the Clouds as Iron And blind Bartimeus Mark 10. 48. Many charged him that he should hold his Peace but he cryed the more a great deal thou Son of David have mercy on me When God seemeth to cast out prayer to give no answer or a contrary one So Daniel when forbidden to pray Dan. 6. 10. When Daniel knew that the writing was signed he went into his House and prayed three times a day as afore-time He doth not make one suit the less or abate one Jot of his Zeal To cleave to God when he seemeth to Thrust us from him Iob 13. 15. This is an Holy Obstinacy very acceptable unto God The Woman of Canaan standeth fending and proving with Christ till he giveth her satisfaction Then be it unto thee as thou wilt When we turn discouragements into arguments and motives of believing and draw near to Christ the more he seemeth to drive us from him however God wrestle with such for a while it is with a purpose to give Faith the Victory and to yield us himself to do for us what our Souls desire of him You pray and God keepeth silence He answered her not a word Matth. 15. 23. 'T is not said he heard not a word but he answered her not a word these two differ Christ often heareth when he doth not answer his not answering is indeed an answer and speaks this Pray on and continue your Crying still the Door is kept bolted that you may knock again afterwards a Rebuke First he answereth not a word then giveth an answer to the Disciples not to the Woman I am not sent but to the lost sheep of the House of Israel and then it is not meet to take the Childrens bread and to cast it to dogs But she turned the discouragement into an Argument And she said Truth Lord yet the dogs eat of the Crumbs which fall from their Masters Table 4. Holy fervency and vehemency will be argumentative and plead with God as Abraham Gen. 18. 25. Shall not the Iudge of all the earth do right So Iacob Gen. 32. 9. Iacob pleadeth Gods promise Return unto thy Fathers house I will deal well with thee Lord I undertook not this Journey but upon this incouragement The little honour God hath by the Churches Calamities Psal. 44. 12. Isa. 52. 4 5. The Praise God will have from his People Psal. 142. 6. do it as David in the Text I will keep thy Statutes The chief Arguments are Gods Covenant Psal. 74. 22. Arise O God plead thine own Cause remember how the foolish man reproacheth thee daily Have respect to thy Covenant The Merits of Christ. Lord hear for the Lords sake Desire is witty to find out Arguments and Reasoning to enforce the things we sue for But how shall we get it 1. Have a sincere desire to the things asked we will cry for what we value and earnestly desire Prov. 2. 3 4. If thou cryest for knowledge and liftest up thy voice for understanding if thou seek for her as for silver and searchest for her as for hid Treasures Then shalt thou understand the fear of the Lord and find the knowledge of God 2. Be perswaded of the Lords willingness to hear and power to help A Rich and Bountiful person a Beggar will not let him go if he see onely a Rich man Matth. 8. 2. Lord if thou wilt thou canst It is in the power of your hand to help us But is not God willing also Suppose it be an uncertainty yet cry mightily unto God who can tell that he will not repent Ionah 3. 8 9. If there be but a possibility yet try what importunity will do Psal. 57. 2. I will cry unto God most high unto God who performeth all things for me He hath heard once and will again 3. Beg the Assistance of the Spirit our necessities are not sharp enough to quicken our Affections they need the secret influence of Grace it is his work to set us a groaning and crying to God How well are we provided for with an Advocate and Notary Rom. 8. 26. Iude 20. 4. Let us rowse up our selves Isa. 64. 7. There is none that calleth upon thy Name that stirreth up himself to take hold of thee Psal. 57. 8. Awake up my glory awake Psaltery and Harp I my self will awake early We must 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 stir up the gift of God which is in us 2 Tim. 1. 6. 5. Let us take heed we do not Quench the Spirit 1 Thes. 5. 19. bring deadness on our Hearts by carnal liberty So much enlarged as we are to the Flesh so much streightned in the Spirit where desires are after other things there will be little delight in Prayer 6. The way to be fervent is to be frequent and often with God A Key seldom turned rusts in the Lock The fire of the Sanctuary was never to go out by great interruptions we lose what we have wrought The way of the Lord is strength to the upright but destruction shall be to the Workers of Iniquity Prov. 10. 29. I come now to the Second Qualification With my whole Heart
indeed then is a Believer tryed and exercised 2 Cor. 1. 9. But we had the sentence of death in our selves that we should not trust in our selves but in God which raiseth the dead We are much given to self-confidence while our mountain standeth strong and we are intrenched within the security of Worldly Advantages and Props we scarce know what Faith and dependance upon God meaneth now saith God I will make you trust in me e're I have done and to live alone upon my all-sufficiency you may think your Reputation will bear you out but I will load you with Censures that you may trust in me you think Friends shall help you but Friend and Lover shall be afar off you think to shelter your selves under common Refuges but they shall all fail and cease that I may see whether you trust in me or that the common Justice and Equity of your Cause shall bear you out but I will send against you those that are maliciously resolved contrary to all justice and gratitude that shall approach and endeavour to mischief you Who would think that Paul should be in danger of Self-confidence a man so exercised as he was so tossed to and fro so often whipped scourged exposed to danger Alass we can hardly see with other eyes than Nature hath or depend upon invisible help we look at present things and laugh at danger upon the confidence of outward probabilities If we can get a carnal pillow and bolster under our heads we sleep and dream many a Golden dream of ease and safety now God that is jealous of our Trust will not let us alone and therefore will put us upon sharp Tryals 'T is not Faith but Sense we live upon before that 's Faith if we can depend upon God when they draw near that follow after Mischief Psal. 3. 6. I will not be afraid of ten thousands of the people that set themselves against me round about A danger at a distance is but imagined it worketh otherwise when 't is at hand Christ himself had other thoughts of approaching danger than danger at a distance Ioh. 12. 27. Now is my soul troubled this Vessel of pure water was shaken though he discovered no dregs 2. To Quicken to prayer Ionah that slept in the ship falls a praying in the Whales Belly A drowsie Soul is awakened in case of extream danger Psal. 130. 1. Out of the depths have I cryed unto thee Now an ordinary prayer will not serve the turn not to speak a prayer but to cry a prayer we do but act devotion before and personate the part of the Supplicant then we exerciseit Now rather than Gods Children shall neglect prayer he exposeth them to great hazards Matth. 8. 25. Master carest thou not that we perish What careless dead and drowsie prayers did we perform when all things went on fairly and we are well at Ease Moses cried when Israel was at a loss Exod. 14. 15. the Sea before the Egyptians behind ready to tread upon their heels Mountains on each side 3. That the deliverance of his People may be more glorious partly because there is more of his Power and Care discovered when our streights are great Israel may now say we had been swallowed up quick Psal. 124. Rescues in extremity of Dangers are more glorious Psal. 118. 13. Thou hast thrust sore at me that I might fall but the Lord helped me So Psal. 27. 2. When the wicked even mine enemies and my foes came upon me to eat up my flesh they stumbled and fell In great dangers to be overtaken by his Enemies God doth some way suffer his People to be brought near Destruction but he doth always prove their Friend and Helper Davids Strength and Courage was seen in that he plucked a Lamb out of the Lions Mouth 1 Sam. 17. 34 35. And partly because these great streights and troubles are a means to open our eyes and waken our stupid senses Deliverance is all one to God whether from great Exigences or in ordinary Cases but is more endeared by extremity of danger 'T is as easie to save an hundred or a thousand but it maketh a fuller sound we are more sensible of our weakness to help our selves to be sure without his Assistance Use. Be not offended if God cast you into great dangers 't is no Argument of Gods Hatred to destroy you but of his love to try you and to prepare you for the greater Comfort that we may have a more glorious sight of his Salvation Many after Confidence expressed have been put to great Tryals The three Children were delivered but put into the Fire first and the furnace made seven times hotter Pauls Company suffered Shipwrack before the promise of their safety could be fulfilled Moses and the Israelites were delivered yet pursued and shut up the Egyptians behind and the Seas before and steep Mountains on each side Psal. 118. 18. The Lord hath chastned me sore but he hath not given me over to death Things at the worst begin to change though it come to such a desperate pass as it must be speedy Help or speedy Ruin such Exigences do mightily conduce to the glory of God and the bettering of his People Whatever weakneth our Confidence the greatness of Danger should not for in such Cases God is there Use 2. Let us use the more Prayer 't is a time to put Promises in suit 2 Chron. 20. 12. O our God wilt thou not judge them For we have no might against this great company that cometh against us neither know we what to do but our eyes are unto thee The fittest season to treat with God about help for when the Creatures are at a loss that is the time for God to help when Danger is near call upon God for help acquaint him with it 't is time for him to be near also Verse 151. of this Psalm Thou art near O Lord. The less help of mans Mercy the more hope of Gods help Use 3. The greater the Danger the more thankfully should we acknowledge the Deliverance The Woman of Sarepta when her Son was restored to Life 1 Kings from the 17. verse to the end said By this I know thou art a man of God and that the word of the Lord in thy mouth is truth So Israel may now say If the Lord had not been on our side men had swallowed us quick Secondly A Description of those from whom this Danger was feared they are far from thy law that is they do not regard it This Clause may be added 1. To Amplifie or Aggravate the Danger As if he had said Lord having opprest them they Contemn thy Law and all Restraints of Conscience and Duty The farther the Enemies of the Godly are from Gods Law the nearer to do Mischief So Psal. 54. 3. Oppressors seek after my soul they have not set God before them So Psal. 86. 1. Violent men have sought after my foul they have not set thee before them They
are Fugitives as well as Exiles we hang off from God and are loth to make use of the offered opportunity therefore the imprecation of our liberty is not only to be considered but also the Application of this grace to our Souls which is done by the Spirit of Christ. Certainly as to God he considereth us as united to Christ before he will be near to us Eph. 2. 13. But now in Christ Iesus ye who were sometimes afar off are made nigh by the blood of Christ. It was purchased by the blood of Christ but it is not actually bestowed and applyed to the Elect until they be united to Christ and in him by saving Faith as branches in the root not only through Christ but in Christ something for us and something in us as to our selves overcome our averseness to set our hearts to seek the Lord. Nemo te quarere potest nisi qui prius invenerit vis igitur inveniri ut quaeraris quaere ut inveniaris potes quidem inveniri non tamen praeveniri None can be afore-hand with God we cannot seek him till we have found him he will be sought that he may be found and found that he may be sought he draweth nigh to us by his preventing grace that he may draw nigh to us by further grace and inclineth us to do what he requireth that he may Crown his own work Use. 1. To perswade us to enter into this state of nearness by taking hold of God's Covenant It is an excellent thing in the general all will grant it that it is good to draw near to God but it is not only good but good for you all things considered Psal. 73. 28. It is good for me to draw near to God it is our only blessedness the practical Judgment must be possessed with this Truth and then determine it so that it may have the Authority of a Principle and then the heart must be ingaged to draw nigh to God by an hearty resolution to come unto God till the heart be ingaged we are too easily inticed away from God now the engaging the heart is by Covenant yield your selves to the Lord 2 Chron. 30. 8. All Gods servants they are his by Covenant Ezek. 20. 37. I will cause you to pass under the rod and bring you into the bond of the Covenant as sheep to pass one by one out of the Fold God doth not Covenant with us in the lump and body but every man for himself must engage himself to live according to the Will of God It is not enough that Christ ingaged for us as our surety Heb. 7. 22. Iesus was made the surety of a better Testament something is to be done personally if we would have benefit by it It is not enough that the Church ingage for us as a visible political body professing Faith in Christ Ezek. 16. 7. but every man must ingage his own heart It is not enough our Parents did engage for us in behalf of little ones avouch God to be their God Deut. 29. 10 11 12. Ye stand this day all of you before the Lord your God your captains of your Tribes your elders and your officers with all the men of Israel your little ones your wives and the stranger that is in thy Camp from the hewer of wood to the drawer of thy water that thou shouldest enter into Covenant with the Lord thy God and into his Oath which the Lord thy God maketh with thee this day We must ratifie their Dedication and Covenant in our own Persons 2 Cor. 9. 13. by a prosessed subjection to the gospel of Christ. This Covenant and Oath of Allegiance you eat at God's Table to shew that God and you are agreed and entred into a strict Union and Fellowship one with another 2. Let us live as in a state of nearness to God let us fear him and love him and walk with him as Enoch did Gen. 5. 24. or set the Lord always before us as David did Psal. 16. 8. How so in point of Reverence in point of Dependance 1. In point of Reverence that we may not displease God with whom we walk Mich. 6. 8. to walk humbly with thy God Thou shalt humble thy self to walk with God it is not a fellow-like familiarity or the intimacy of equals but the common subjection of inferiours the Obedience of Children diligently taking heed lost a breach fall out betwixt God and them Deut. 23. 14. For the Lord thy God walketh in the midst of thee to deliver thee and to give up thine Enemies before thee therefore shall thy Camp be holy that he may see no unclean thing in thee and turn away from thee God threatens to leave them if he saw any filthiness among them if we sin against God we may find him near as a Judge to punish not as a Father to protect us Besides it is for the honour of God that a People near and dear to him should study to please him in all things and that they should walk worthy of God with whom they profess to be in Covenant and whose friendly presence they enjoy The nearer you are to God the greater your sins if you be the Spouse of Christ your sins are Adultery if you be the Children of God your sins are Rebellion and Parricide if you be the Friends of God Christ hath the more cause to complain Psal. 55. 12 13. For it was not an enemy that reproached me then I could have born it neither was it he that hated me that did magnifie himself against me then I would have hid my self from him but it was thou a man mine equal my guide and mine acquaintance Your sins are the injuries of a false Friend if you be of the houshold of God after you had eaten his bread will you lift up the heel against him Psal. 41. 9. Yea mine own familiar friend in whom I trusted which did eat of my bread hath lift up his heel against me It is Treachery of an unfaithful Domestick and Servant Men will endure injuries from Strangers better than from nearer Relations Those that do not belong to God that are not so dear and near to him their sins are not so grievous In short if you be the People of God whom God will own in the World you should take care to live to his Honour 2. In point of Dependance did we believe more firmly that God were so near and so ready at hand to comfort support deliver and bless us this would stay our hearts in all our troubles Is God near us what should we be afraid of Psal. 23. 1 2. The Lord is my shepherd I shall not want he maketh me to lie down in green pastures he leadeth me beside the still waters God admitteth you to his Table to assure you of his Bounty and Liberality he gives you this Supper as a sign of Reconciliation with you that God and you are Friends Now 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Especially let it