Selected quad for the lemma: lord_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
lord_n aaron_n according_a know_v 94 3 3.6180 3 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A27353 Nehemiah the Tirshatha, or, The character of a good commissioner to which is added Grapes in the wilderness / by Mr. Thomas Bell ... Bell, Thomas, fl. 1672-1692.; Bell, Thomas. Grapes in the wilderness. 1692 (1692) Wing B1804; Wing B1803_PARTIAL; ESTC R4955 138,914 254

There are 24 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

of the Dispensations of GOD AND OF The pertinent Duties and Comforts of His PEOPLE in these Times WITH A Preface of the fulness of Scriptur sufficiency for Answering all Cases Hosea 9. 10 I found Israel like Grapes in the Wilderness Jer. 2 2. I Remember thee the kindness of thy youth the love of thine espousals when thou wantest after me in the Wilderness in a Land that was not sowen Numb 33 1. These are the journeyes of the Children of Israel which went forth out of the land of Egypt with their armies under the hand of Moses and Aaron 2 Verse And Moses wrote their goings out according to their journeyes by the Commandment of the Lord and these are their journeyes according to their goings out 1 Epistle of John 1 3 That which we have seen and heard declare we unto you Written in the Wilderness Edinburgh Printed by George Mosman and are to be Sold at his Shop in the Parliament-Close Anno Dom. 1692. THE PREFACE THE Jews have a Tradition of that Manna wherewith God fed Israel in the Wilderness fourtie years that the taste thereof was such and so various that it answered every mans Appetit and tasted to him of whatsoever food his soul desired And look how uncertain is that Jewish Tradition of the materiall Manna that was gathered off the Earth for the space of fourty years in the Wilderness of the land of Egypt So certain is this Christian Truth of the Spiritual Manna the word of God that bread of Heaven that Angels food wherewith God feeds his Church in all ages successively and every Child of his House the Israelite indeed respectively throughout the whole course of their life and travel in the World which is the great Wilderness that it hath in it a real supply of all their necessities and hath always in it a word in season to all persons at all times and in every condition To the Dead it is life to the living it is health to the weary it is refreshment to the weak it is strength to Babes it is milk to strong men it is meat to the hungry it is bread to the thirsty it is waters To the drooping soul and sorrowful heart it is wine to the faint it is apples and Pomegranats cinnamon safron spiknard Calamus and all spices of the merchant To such who love dainties it is marrow and fatness honey of the rock and droping from the honey-comb to the wounded it is the balme of Gilead to the blind and weak sighted it is eye salve and oyntment to annoint the eyes To such neat souls as love to be all Glorious within and to keep clean Garments it is a Crown chains of the neck braceless ear-rings pendents and Ornaments of all sorts and if they like to be in fashion and to go fyne in the court of a Heavenly Conversation and communion with God it presents them a bright large glass whereat they may dayly adorn themselves to purpose This Glass is no falsifying nor multiplying Glass but a just discovering and directing one here are also discovered not only all the obliquities of gesture and faults of feature and all spots upon the face or cloaths but likwise the very in most thoughts and intents of the heart with the most subtile imaginations of the mind are here manifested Here ye are directed to sit all your Soul-ornament in the fynest spiritual fashion and to compose your gestur and order your motion so as you may be able to stand in the presence of him who is greater than Solomon This large bright Glass doth stand in King Solomons bed-Chamber in the Pook of Canticles and in it you may see your self from head to foot There ye see the head beautiful with locks Cantic 4 There ye see the sweet comly Countenance of the Saint which the Lord is so much in love with that he is in continual desire to see it there you see those eyes that ravish his heart and so throughout even to the feet that are very beautiful with shooes Chap. 7. 1. For such as are destitute and unprovided the word of God is a portion to the poor it is Riches of treasure of choice Silver and fine Gold Here is that which dispelleth darkness cleareth doubts dissolveth hardness dissappointeth fears dischargeth cares solaceth sorrows and satisfieth desires Here is counsel and strength for peace and war Here is daily intelligence from Heaven And in a word here is the best Companion that ever a soul did choose And blessed they who can spiritually tone that short but high note Psal. 119. 98. Thy Commandments are ever with me And that they are not with the soul as a burden of idle attendants are with a man see what good offices they perform by their presence Prov. 6. 22. 23. They are as Hobab to Israel and David to Nabal Eyes and a Guard to us in the Wilderness In the World and chiefly in this World we change seats and Societies we shift conditions and habitations we go thorow the Wilderness of Baca from troop to troop we are driven from Temple Altar and Oracle and we are divided from our relations and dearest acquaintance whom we loved as our own Soul we are spoiled of our Companions with whom we took sweet counsel and went into the house of God But blessed that Soul who in all this can say I am not alone my good old friend the word of God the Bible the guide of my Youth hath not yet forsaken me it is with me yea it is in me in the midst of my heart and I bear about me daily a living coppy of those livly Oracles and they are more near me than my very self for my heart is within me and they are within my heart I may be separated from my self by death that parts the dearest Friends my heart may be pluckt from my breast and my Soul dislodged of my Body but my Companion the word of God and me shall nothing part Prosperity shall not cause me forget it And adversity will not cause it forget me I will never forget thy Precepts for with them thou hast quickned me Psal. 119. 93. As those who live upon the shoar have a very just diall of the measure and motion of the water which they can make use of without the sun so are the ebbings and flowings of our affections to the word of God the surest most universall and constant witnesses of our daily condition for albeit the darkness that is upon the face of our Souls may pretend that it is night with us yet if it be full sea in our affection to the word of God we may be sure it is noon day and when it is low water in our affection to the word sure then it is mid night and the sun was never seen at mid night Be sure it is ill with that Soul that is out of conceit with the word of God Now to say nothing of the malignant qualities of gross ignorants prophane
as thou livest and as thy soul liveth I will not do this thing It is time our loins were girded our shoes were on our sect our staff in our hand and our stuff and provision upon our shoulder for we must to the Wilderness and what if we go out in haste It is good to be in good Company it is better if Moses had any skill to suffer affliction with the people of God than to enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season Heb. 11. 25. They who will not suffer with the people of God may suffer with worse Company They who will not go forth with Lot unto the mountains may possibly sit still till they get brimstone and fire from Heaven and the smoak of Sodom about their ears for he that will save his life unlawfully shall loss it unhappily and he that will loss his life in Resolution may find it in Reality Even as a man doth in stepping of a Ditch with any thing that is either of weight or worth to him his Clock his Case of letters or Papers of concernment his heavy purse or the like lest he loss and indamnage himself and them both he casts all over before him and so coming over with the less trouble he lifts all again upon the other side and so losses nothing of that which he cast away but that he might keep it and himself both whereas if he had kept all about him he might have lost himself and all together but all is not ost that is in peril Let us then with chearfulness turn our face towards the Wilderness The second Use shall be for Information to all such of the Lords People as are either upon their way to the Wilderness or are already arrived there they would not think strange of such a condition it has been it is and it will be the lot of the Lords Children Cant. 8. 5. the high way to Christs mountain of Myrrh and hill of frankincense lyes thorow the Wilderness and there he comes forth to meet them and leads them up in his bosome leaning upon his own arms There doth no strange thing befall the Saints when the Lord brings them into the Wilderness for even as Moses Exod. 3. 1. led his flocks into the backside of the desart and was not that a presage of what followed when he led Israel as a flock through the Wilderness so doth the Lord oft times with his People albeit the Wilderness is a solitary unfrequented place where no foot of man cometh yet in it you may take up and trace the footsteps of the Lords flock who through much tribulation have entred into the Kingdome of God and there ye may follow them who through faith and patience have inherited the promises The Saints will find the footsteps of the flock in their greatest Wilderness and may be helped with the light of precedent Examples in their greatest darkness For now that the Lord through so many ages hath led his Saints to Heaven by so many different paths of Dispensations for there is but one common road of Religion the Kings high Way I doubt there is any untroden path remaining to be discovered by this Generation I only fear one difference which makes indeed a great odds in lots be found betwixt our case and the case of those that have gone before us and it is this That they were better men in as ill times for worse I would none But in that I pray whom shall we blame and know we not how that should be helped See that ye walk circumspectly as wise and not as fools redeeming the time because the days are evil Eph. 5. 15 16. If ill times find no good men let ill times make good men and good men will make good times or els bad times shall make good men better But of the Parity of cases I said much in the Preface The Third Use of the point shall be for Direction bsince the People of God may thus expect to be rought into the Wilderness it concerns them to take their directions for the Wilderness for our direction in such a condition I shall without insisting briefly hint at some things I to be avoided 2 dly some things to be endeavoured Things to be avoided by such as are brought into the Wilderness are I Unbelief Psal. 78. 22 23. the Israelites believed not God in the Wilderness and therefore he was provoked Heb. 3. 18 19. the Apostle tells us expresly that those who believed not their carcasses fell in the Wilderness and for their unbelief they could not exter into the land of promise 2 Discouragment would be avoided Numb 14. 1. the People through Discouragment cryed and weept for the report that the spyes gave them and frequently els-where they expressed their Discouragement upon the emergency of every new difficulty their cry was always that they should die in the Wilderness and in that they read their own fortune Numb 14. 28. for the Lord was provoked for their unbelief and other sins to do to them as they had said Beware of Unbeliefs bode-words for like the Devil's responses their accomplishments are always evil to those that take them In all the World I know no such ready way to Apostacy and utter forsaking of God as Discouragment Experience hath said so much to confirme this that I shall not need to bring reason into the field But this I must say have the experience of Discouragment who will they have it to their expences And if I were to die I would leave Discouragment this testimony that it is dear bought misery 3. Avoid Murmuring fretting discontentment with the Lords Dispensations with complaints of his unkindness Numb 14 2. all the Children of Israel murmured and Chap. 6 42. they murmured against Moses and Aaron But Moses could tell them what are we that ye speak against us nay but your words are against the Lord yea and Numb 21. 5. it is expresly said the People spoke against God and against Moses And still their tune was w●y have ye brought us up out of Egypt Just like many in our Generation why say they your Re●ormation your Covenant and your Ministers have served you well but verily their words are against the Lord for we owne his name in these and glorify him whom they dishonour When the Children of Israel murmured in the Wilderness they had forgotten how once they groaned because of their oppression in Egypt and in that they may be more excusable than we for the Red sea had ridd perpetual marches betwixt them and their oppressours but we get not leave to forget our oppression in the times of our former subjection to them who derive their power from her who is spiritually called Sodom and Egypt Revel n. 8. I mean Prelats who are indeed the house of the Elder brother but fallen back for that they have come short of the blessing and now hold of the Pope the younger who hath supplanted them handsomely and got betiwxt
Unjust Steward To make to them-selves Friends of the unrighteous Mammon that when they fail they may receive them into ever-lasting habitations Mat 6 19 20 Lay not up for your selves Treasures upon earth c. But lay up for your selves Treasures in Heaven The me● of the World have their portion in this life But as for me when I awake I shall be satisfied with thy likness Psal. 17. 14 15. Alas most me● first have so little desire for Heaven that next the● come to have as little hope of it and so at last and fain to take up with the World and for Ja●●● blessing must with Esau be content with the f●●ness of the earth Gen. 27 39. Or else what mea● the unhandsome unhallowed and unhappy Practises of catching gripping and inhancing which have prevailed so far that now mens Covetousness hath strengthned it self with Pride lest they should be reputed less witty for how do they boast o● such exploits But such boasting is not good and the● glory is their shame for they mind earthly things Phi● 3 19 And they have hearts exercised with covetou● Practises cursed Children 2 Pet. 2. 14. But alas I find● one great fault in most mens accounts that the● never count upon the Soul They count their thousands and ten thousands and hundred thousands and the Poor soul sayes how many count you me●● I stand Debter for ten thousand Talents upon your score Yea I am already destressed and what will you give in exchange for me Not a groat sayes the wretch while I havelife though after that he would give ten thousand Worlds So much there is betwixt market-dayes 5. It teacheth patience in well doing who by patience in well doing seek for Glory and Honour and immortality is eternal life to them Rom 2 7. Therefore my beloved Brethren be ye stedfast unmovable alwayes abounding in the work of the Lord for as much as ye know that your labour is not in vain in the Lord 1 Cor 15. last And this is the Conclusion of the Apostles vindication of the Resurrection and the life to come The Saints have a long and sore service in the World But God is not unrighteous to forget their labour of love a cup of cold water shall not be forgotten And for whatsoever any have forsaken they shall have a hundred fold in this life and in the World to come life everlasting And we reckon that the sufferings of this present life are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall be revealed in the Saints Therefore let us not be weary in well doing for in due Season we shall reap if we faint not Galat. 6 9. 6. It supporteth the Christians hope For if in this life only we have hope in Christ of all men we are most miserable 1 Cor. 15 19. It is certainly the interest of every good man to believe the Souls immortality and as much their Duty to live so as it may be their interest for it is not Reason and Judgement that prompt men to deny it but fear and and an evil Concience that tells them it will be ill for them The Souls immortality is the hope o● Israel that maketh them diligent in well doing patient in Tribulation and desirous of their change for we that are in this Tabernacle do groan being burdened not for that we would be uncloathed but cloathed upon that mortality might be swallowed up of life 2 Cor. 5. 4. The Third view of these words giveth this manifest Reflection That Communion with God is the Souls Sanctuary and Solace We have this Prayer of Nehemiah thrice Recorded in this Chap. and in the close of the 5 Chap besides frequent Addresses of the like nature such as that solemn Ejaculation Chap. 24. And that Chap. 6 14. and another in this same Chap. ver 29 Besides his ordinary attendance on publick worship and Solemn and extra-ordinary Fasting Chap. 9. By all which it is eviden● how Seriously and constantly Godly this renounced worthy was Like David who could say what tim● soever I awake I am with thee And truly the Soul is either sleeping or worse when not with God Affaires and weight of Business quickned their Devotion as much as it extinguisheth ours And the matter is they were not cool indifferent Latitudinarians in Religion but men of another Spirit serious Men. And if that be true which I hilosophers have said that that is not the Man which is seen Alas what Puppyes what Mock-men are we who can be any thing but Good and Serious This Observation proven by the experience of Saints in all Generations Who sat down under the shaddow of the Almighty with great delight and his fruit was sweet to their taste Cant 2. 3. will make it self good by the strongest Reason when we have seen a little what Communion with God is and wherin it consists And 1. It stands in Reconciliation the immediate result of Justification by faith Amos 3 3. ● Can two walk together except they be aggreed Rom. 5 1. Being justifyed by faith we have peace with God and 10. v. We are reconciled by the death of his Son This giveth access to God and bringeth us near who sometimes were far off This of Enemies maketh Friends even as Abraham believed and was called the Friend of God 2. In a mystical spiritual and Supernatural Union the product of Regeneration for he that is joyned to the Lord is one Spirit and is made partaker of the divine Nature This maketh us Sons and plant●th us in God John 1 12 13. To as many as received him to them gave he power to become the sons of God which were born not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man but of God 1 John 4 13. Hereby we know that we dwell in him and he in us because he hath given us of his spirit and v. 16. God is love and he that loveth dwelleth in God and God in him Iohn 17. 23. I in them and thou in me that they may be made perfect in one Iohn 15 5. I am the vine ye are the branches 3. In likness of natures compliance of minds and conformity of manners 2 Cor 3 last he that hath Communion with God is changed into the same ●mage and Colos. 3. 10. is renewed after the image of him that created him 1 Cor 15. 49. As we have born the image of the earthy so must we also of the heavenly Christ is the image of his Father and Saints are the image of Christ. And how much are they of one Humour pleased in and pleasing one another The Lord is a God to the Saints mind in Heaven or earth he sees nothing to him whom have I in heaven but thee Or who is a God like unto thee Nec viget quidquam simile aut secundum And the Saint is a David a man to Gods heart What is the book of Canticles but one continued proof of this matter What
exchange of heart● are there What concentering of Affections What returns of Love What uniting Raptures ● What reflections of Beauty What Echo's of Invitations and Commendations with such likeness of voices that sometimes you shall hardly discern who speaks Moreover we find this complianc● universal in the Saint swaying all that was in him to the Lords Devotion his understanding is re-newed in knowledge after the Image of him tha● created him he understands with God from God and for God He can do nothing against the truth but for the truth He lighteth his Torch at the Su● and taketh his light from the Candlestick of t● Sanctuary the Law and the Testimony his fait● hath the image of Christ Iames 2. 1. It is th● faith of our Lord Jesus Christ the Lord of Glory And Christs Superscription Revel 3 ● These things sayeth the Amen the faithful and true witness And we have the mind of Chris● Conformably his will is swayed whether for acting Lord what wilt thou have me to do or for suffering Not my will but thy will be done he is an Orthodox Monothelit And for his affections he loveth and hateth as God doth and because he doth it And finally in his conversation he is Holy as God is Holy merciful as he is mercifull and perfect as his heavenly Father is perfect Hence the old Philosophers seeing thorow the darkness of nature have said That good men are visible mortal Gods and the Gods are invisible immortal men Which as it is litterally true of their fictitious fancied Gods so with respect to the true God it proveth Symbolically that the mystery of the Incarnation is no absurdity there being such a high affinity betwixt the Divine and Humane nature in its integrity for we are also his off-spring 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Acts 17. 28. 4. In mutual claim to and interest in the Persons and things of one another the result of mutual choice gift and Covenant contract My beloved is mine and and I am his I will be their God and they shall be my People All that is in God is God and all that is in God is for his People he is a God to Israel all that his People are or have or can is for him 1 Cor. 6. 19. 20. ye are not your own for ye are bought with a price Therefore glorify God in your body and in your spirit which are Gods And none of us liveth to himself neither doth any of us dy unto himself but whether we live we are the Lords or whether we dy we are the Lords And our Communion with God consisteth much in holding up a Trade and keeping a bank with God in getting from him and bestowing for him and though a man cannot profit God nor reapeth he where he sowed not yet he must have his own with the use Hath a man communion with God What hath he done what hath he given or what hath he forsaken that he had or refused that he might have had for God Numb 24. 11. Balak could say to Balaam Lo the Lord hath keept thee back from honour but we may say to some The Lord hath not keept thee back from Honour for like the Apostate Jews they love the praise of men better than God or the praise of God But Moses refused to be called the son of Pharaohs daughter esteeming the reproach of Christ greater riches than the treasures of Egypt Heb. 11. 24 26 The Apostles forsook all and followed Christ A good bargain a thing much prized by the spirits of our time a hundred fold in this present life and in the World to come life everlasting A man may forsake all for God but he can lose nothing for God Take Galeacius Caracciolus for a sufficient witness who proved the matter Italy the Garden of the World Naples of Italy Vicum of Naples farewell all for Christ freely But now if the son of man should come shall he find faith in the earth Who believeth indeed that He who snared not his own son will with him give us all things freely Are the consolations of God small with thee Thinkest thou so meanly of God and Christ the gift of God all the fulness of God the treasures of hope the earnest of the Spirit the Riches of saith the first fruits of the inheritance Didst thou ever sing Psal. 4 7. Thou hast put more gladness in my heart than in the time that their corn and their wine increased All these things have I given thee and yet I will do more for thee if thou canst but for goe a little for me Poor Soul mayst thou not spare it 5. In fellowship of converse And therefore in Scripture it s called a wal●ing with God before God in Christ a dwelling in his presence and walking in the light of his countenance Psal. 73 23. I am continually with thee Psal. 139. 18. When I awake I am still with thee 2 Cor. 16. 16. I will dwell in them and walk in them Rev. 21. 2. And I heard a great voice out of heaven saying behold the tabernacle of God is with men and he will dwell with them and they shall be his People and God himself shall be with them and be their God Men live together for mutual comfort and help of life his comforts delight the soul and he is the God of our life Men converse together for Counsel Counsel is mine sayeth the wonderful Counseller and ●e giveth his People Counsel and therefore the Godly Souls desire is to enquire in his temple Men ●onverse together for business and O how much ●ath the Soul to do with God! Who doth all things 〈◊〉 it Men pay visits to one another and what find visits pass betwixt God and his People Men ●ast and sup together I will sup with him and he with me Rev. 3 20. Prov. 9. 2. Wisdom hath killed her beasts she hath mingled her wine she hath also furnished her Table Psal. 23 5. Thou preparest a table for me in the presence of mine Enemies Isa 25. 6 A feast of fat things a feast of Wines on the Lees of fat things full of Marrow of Wines on the Lees well refined Cant. 4. last and 5. 1. Let my beloved come into his garden and eat his pleasant Fruits I am come into my Garden my Sister my Spouse c Ea● O Friend Drink yea Drink abundantly O Beloved Friends Converse in Presence and Correspond in Absence and at a distance The Godly Soul cannot endure Absence or Distance from God for the Light of his Countenance i● better than Life But if it fall at distance it keep● up a correspondence In my trouble I sought the Lord and my cry came before him ever into his Ears O ye Daughters of Jerusalem you see him whom my Soul loveth tell him I am Sick of Love When my heart was over whelmed within me thou knewest my way From the ends of the earth will I cry unto thee O when shall I come and
conceal his own purposes t● the opportunity And this is the Rulers prudence neither to let the evil approach him nor the good escape him nor ought he to say to the People come again another time when it is in the power his hand to do them good lest hind-bald occasion si● him and his power perish with the opportunity 1 Chron. 12. 32. The Children of Isachar we men that had understanding of the times to know w● Israel ought to do Tempu● nosce was the saying Pittacus of Mitylenae reckoned the first of t●● Greek sager To day if ye will hear his voice is 〈◊〉 saying of the only wise God and O that to haast known even thou in this t●●● day Was the w● and Lamentation of the consubstantial Wisdom God Be wise now therefore O ve kings be infirmed ye Judges of the earth Psal. 2 10. 9. The good Ruler is a person of courage a● valour a gallant Person In this Nehemiah was 〈◊〉 This is the main and only thing so much culcat by Moses upon Joshuah his successor Jos. 1. 7. Only be thou strong and very couragious This joyned with the former maketh Consilio animis a noble device for a Ruler and he who is born with those induements hath a horoscope more prognosticative of advancement than he who is born under the most Regnant Planets The Gallantry of the Ruler is evidenced in a resolute and inflexible observance of all God Holy Commandments maugre all opposition of his own lust and corruption He that is slow to anger is better than the mighty and he that ruleth his spirit than he that taketh a City Or of the example and insinuations of others or the scorn and threats and plots of enemies or the eminent degree of transgressors If morality and righteousness be the true measure of Gallantry surely the World hath many bastard ridiculous Gallants who dare do any thing but what is right and Godly But the courage of Nehemiah appeareth particularly 1. In his address to the King in behalf of his City that was desolate and his People that were in reproach and affliction It is no less unpardonable a reflection upon the Justice and Royal goodness of a King to be diffident in requesting of him what is just than to dare to ask unjustly Nehemiah when he is bid ask all his asking is for Jerusalem chap. 2. 6 7. 2. In that he can sustain the greif disple sure and scorn of malicious heathen enemies for the work of Reformation Ibid. 10 v. 3. In that he dare atcheive so desperat like a work as was the repairing of Jerusalems so vast desolations v. 17. 4. In his unconquered faith and confidence of Gods assistance 20. v. he was strong in the Lord and in the power of his might 5. In the atcheivment of a double employment building and fighting Chap. 4 17. A coward may build a City in peace and a slugard may defend himself in a strong City but a Worthy only can build with one hand and fight with the other 6. In his rebuking the Nobles and the Rulers for their oppression chap 5. 7. An act of native gallantry and an example for all that deserve to be in eminency the matter of Holy Iobs Gloriation chap. 31. 34. Did I fear a great multitude or did the contempt of families terrify me that I kept silence 7. In his rare generosity refusing because of the fear of God to eat the bread of the Governour or to bow to the example of those that had been before him who had been chargeable to the People The good Ruler dare be singular in vertue and accounts it his honour not to take evil but to give good example What an unexcusable incongruity is it for a man who should be examplary to others in good to submit to evil example And it is the voice of Roman gallantry discant al● potius nostro exemplo recte facere quam nos illorum peccare 8. In his inexorable resistance even to the fifth time of his enemies treacherous pretences for accommodation with a design to do him mischief 6. chap. wherein is no less manifest his singular wisdom 10. The good Ruler is a vigilant active and diligent person We find Nehemiah in continual motion acting himself and exciting others in their respective orders like a great Superior Orb winding the Inferior in their subordinate courses For it is the inseparable undenyable right of Supremacy to take inspection of all and put every one to his proper duty And as the Superior Orb moves not symmetrically in the place of the Inferior but moves in its place concentrically Just so is the case of the Ruler The slothful and soft Ruler is one upon the matter and if there be any odds a waking living Dog is better than a sleeping dead Lyon It was Nehemiah's Honour that neither the People nor his own servants nor the Princes and Rulers could be evil without a witness as they were not good without an example Whence 11. The good Ruler is a person of an examplary conversation alios quod monet ipse facit he practiseth the same that he commandeth by a leading example he goeth out and in before the People he walketh with a perfect heart within his house The World is Ruled by example A good life is as necessar as good Laws in a Ruler and an evil example more hurtfull than evil Laws for that a pernicious Law may quickly be repealed but bad example is not easily reformed Laws governed by righteousness and a life ordered by Law maketh the perfect Ruler Thus we see Nehemiah examplary in Religion in refraining and restraining oppression in wisdom courage vigilancy and all the forementioned vertues and this he hath left as a pattern to Rulers 12. The good Ruler is a constant person persevering and abounding in well doing he is fled fast unmoveable abounding alwayés in the work of the Lord knowing that his labour is not in vain in the Lord. Thus we see Nehemiah beginning with good designs and intentions going on with gallant interprises and good actions and ending conformably with a good conscience and Glorious expectation in the last act of his appearance Remember me O my God for good He remembreth that better is the end of a thing than the beginning thereof and that he who indureth to the end shall be saved and that he is crowned who striveth lawfully and therefore so runneth that he may obtain He knoweth Ezek. 18. 24. When the righteous turneth away from his righteousness and committeth unquity and doeth according to all the abominations that the wicked man doeth he shall not live all his righteousness that he hath done shall not be mentioned in his trespass that he hath trespassed and in his sin that he hath sinned in them shall he die He knows the quinquenmum Neroms and the misgiving pretences and appearances of Tiberius and others and he is better acquaint with Scripture than to be ignorant of the Apostacy
ingratitude and fate of Joash 2 Chron. 24. Whereby is manifest that this observation is large as useful as true concerning the Ruler But the path of the Iust is as the shining light which groweth brighter and brighter unto the noon-ti●e of the day And such a one is the good Ruler Now from this illustrat Character shine forth in so many bright beams 1. The Original 2 Dignity 3 Duty 4. Necessity 5. Usefulness and 6. ●arity of the good Ruler All which so rich a piece is Scripture may be easily deduced from one sentence of Psal 82 6. I have said ye are Gods and all of you are Children of the most high And because I know that both is evil manners to come ●athly into and go hastily from the presence of a Ruler I shall for a salutation shut up my view with this seasonable exhortation That in this Atheistical age the Ruler would do his Author the Honour himself the pleasure and a discontented unbelieving World the favour to shew forth so much of God in his person and administrations that those who will not believe may see and those who will not see may feel That there is a God that God judgeth in the earth and that by his vicegerent that he be unquestionably good himself an incourager of those that do well and a terror of evil doers that by the shaddow of Divinity in the Ruler the World if possible may be convinced of the body and substance and by the sight of the beautiful portrait may be enamoured of the original And you O Christian People consider Christ is not divided nor contrary to himself He is by nature and eternal Generation Lord of the World and God of policy and order as well as of the Church by pact and dispensation and it is more than probable that Rulers hold not Christ as Mediator Christianity received into the policy is not so untoward or unpleasant a Guest as to disturb its own quarter and Religion but getteth the medlers blow when it sendeth a sword or occasioneth division for of it 's own nature it is a harmless peace-pursuer and they were sworn enemies and slanderers of our Saviour who said he was an enemie to Casar for he taught his followers to give unto Casar the things that are Casars and unto God the things that are Gods Learn then of him to pay what we owe unto the Ruler How much are we indebted to so rare and excellent a creature as is the good Ruler We owe the Ruler 1. Honour in heart and behaviour 2 Subjection in lawful obedience or in humble submission 3. Information and assistance in our respective stations 4. Tribute and the bread of the Governour 5. And with all our owing we owe Prayer 1 Tim. 2. 2. 1. Sam. 24. 13. As saith the Proverb of the ancients wickedness proceedeth from the wicked But God forbid that the hand of any that fear God should be upon the Lords anointed A tender conscience so far exercised to Godliness as to flee from all appearance of evil cannot digest the least approach to or appearance of wrong to the Ruler Say I this as a man or sayeth not the Scripture the same also ibid. 5 v. Davias heart smot him because he had cut off Sauls skirt The 5th view of this useful piece presents to us the Exit and retreat of the Ruler Rulers like men upon a Stage walk much in a disguise or like Mercury and Aeneas in a cloud but here we have the Ruler going off with open face and with an eye to God to himself and to his reward Remember me O my God for good His eye is upon God 1. As a Witness for remembrance is of things known and Gods knowledge is by sight and Intuition He that can say with David Psal. 119 168. All my wayes are before thee may save the travel and shun the woe of those that seek deep to hide their counsel from the Lord and their works are in the dark and they say who seeth us and who knoweth it Isay 29. 15. And their turning of things upside down is as the potters clay they attempt more than they are able and presume where they have no power A proud Ruler may say to the Lords Messengers who made thee of the Kings Counsel But they would remember that Elisha the Prophet could tell the King of Israel the words which the Syrian King spoke in his bed-chamber and who told him but God that heard them Let Rulers learn in their time to put God upon their counsels and make him a witness of their practises left when they must goe off they find with Jacob that God was there though they knew it not nor called him to the Council 2. As a Friend O my God Happy he Ruler or other who can say with his Saviour I go to my Father and my God He may in the Apostles words proclaim a bold defiance to all adversity If God be with us who shall be against us He may meditat terrour with the greatest security Isay 33 18. Though the World should be shaken and suffer sack he may say with the Philosopher but upon better reason that he is sure to be no loser yea though Hell were poured upon him and heaven should seem to have forsaken him My God My God even then shall support him Every one seeks the Rulers favour and the Ruler would study to have a friend of his Superior They who court alliance and interest would be perswaded that this is the highest Bewar of that friend that makes God an enemy and of that gain where God is losed Luther pronounces him a Divine who can well distinguish the Law and Gospel and he is no less a Christian Ruler or other who can reconcile them in my God Wouldst thou either get or know an interest in God take the short and sure method of the Psalmist who also himself was a great Ruler in that golden Ps. 16 2. O my soul thou hast said unto the Lord thou art my Lord. 3. As a rewarder for his remember being a figure that putteth the antecedent for the consequent in proper speaking is reward me And shall not he render to every man according to his works Prov. 24 12. Ps. 62 12 And verily there is a reward for the righteous Fear not Abraham I am thy shield and thy exceeding great reward I fear the bad reward of some hath tempted others to do well to themselves in their own time but with greater reason I fear that those who are thus tempted have but a faint respect to the recompense of reward But God who is not unfaithful to forget the service and labour of any will sure be mindful of a good Ruler If Iehosaphat be reproved his faults remembred and wrath threatned yet his good deeds are not forgotten Nevertheless there are good things found in thee 2 Chron. 19. 2. 3. Most frequently throught the Scripture the saints petition for reward is presented in the
Atheists and obstinate unbelievers who are habitually dissafected to the word of God nor yet to mention the willful groundless fits of pettish distempers in Saints who often times do even take up at their foot groundless and needless pleaes and discouraging apprehensions which they cannot so easily lay down again Psal. 42 5 Why art thou cast down O my soul and why art thou disquieted in me Psal. 77. 2. My sore ran in the night and ceased not my soul refused to be comforted To pass these I say as bearing no direct impeachment of the abovesaid commendation of the absolute sufficiency of the word of God to answer all cases There are three Things that in a time of tentation in an hour and power of darkness do readily concurr to diminish the Saints respects to the word of God The first is that their case seems odd unparalleled and unpracticable in Scripture they find no case equal with theirs in all respects that hath been cured 2 In their weakness they thereupon conclude that their case is really hopless and irremedable But 3 The saddest of all is that they find the word not only silent for them but to speak directly and aloud against them as they think smiting hewing and hammering them with sad and heavy threatnings and intimations of determined wrath rejection and ruine to come upon them from the Lord. In all these they err not knowing the Scriptures But that yet for all this there is hope and that the Scriptures are not to be casten out with as unkind and uncomfortable Companions in such cases Let these things be considered for vindication of the Scriptures to Souls thus exercised And 1. Be it granted as the truth is that a Souls case may be such for Circumstances that the Scriptures mention none Parallel with it in all points to have been cured the same is all along to be understood respectivly of Churches and Nations as of particular persons yet I am confidently perswaded that there is no case now incident to any whether Nation Church or Person but the Scripture holdeth forth some either as evil or worse whether for sin or suffering that have been helped There hath no temptation taken you sayes the Apostle 1 Cor. 10 13 but such as is common to man Is thy case sinful behold the Scripture tells us that he obtained mercy who once a day thought himself the chief of sinners 1 Timoth. 1 15. And that as an exquisite and rare piece of mercy is set forth in the Gospel for a pattern to all those who should afterwards believe in Christ to life everlasting Christ loves to have sinners change and for that he puteth forth his pattern as Merchants do their samplers of Rich Wares and sure he hath since that time put off many such pieces and yet the pattern stands forth shewing that their is more abundance to serve all that have need To say nothing of Paul's sin which sure was great enough nor of many who since his time may have thought themselves the chief of sinners as well as he did where I think I see a kind of strife among mercies Clients who shall be most beholding to free Mercy and free Grace This pattern makes it fully certain that there is mercy for the chief of sinners be who he will and that he whosoever he that supposes himself the chief of sinners is ●ot thereby warranted to despair of mercy but rather to plead the greatest interest of necessity and to look upon himself as the fittest subject for the Lord wherein to display his Glory Is thy Case afflicted And thy sufferings extraordinary See Job's desperate Case see Heman's distracted Case see that Case of the Church in the Lamentations in whose Case there is hope though it had not been done under the whole Heaven as had ●een done to Jerusalem Look to the cloud of Witnesses Look to Jesus Heb. 11. and 12. Chapters But here is the great Case of the troubled Soul Cleanly sufferings for the Exercise of my Grace ●● Job's or for the testimony of Truth and a ●ood Conscience as those of all the Witnesses and Martyrs I could well bear In these respects I ●ount it all joy to fall into diverse temptations and could count it my Honour and Mercy as well ●● suffer for Christ as to believe in him I could ●o with such sufferings as Job would have done with his Adversaries Books I could take them upon my shoulder and bind them as a Crowne to me and as a Prince would I go near unto him ●ut Alas I suffer with an evil Conscience my afflictions are to me the punishment of my ini●uity and the fruits of my folly This case indeed if any requireth the Tongue of the learned and a word in season to the Soul that is weary of ●● And if the word of God help me not here I have lost the Cause and come short of my Accounts But there is hope in Israel also concerning this thing Ezra 10. 2. And I find the Scripture clear in these particulars concerning this case 1. I find indeed a great odds betwixt cleanly suffering for righteousness and suffering meerly for i● doing The one is a thing thank-worthy and Glorifying of God in the highest manner actively the other is not thank-worthy but is the mans misery In the one a man hath a good Conscience and joy therefrom in the other a man hath an i● Conscience with terrour and sorrow proceeding therefrom The one gives a man good confidence of assistance and of the spirit of Glory and of God to rest upon him the other makes a man despon● and droop The one stops the other opens the mouths of wicked men Therefore sayes Peter Pet. 3 17. It is better if the will of God be so t●● ye suffer for well doing than for evil doing 2ly It is clear that we ought to bear such Afflictions with the more patience Micah 7 9. I will be● the indignation of the Lord because I have finned again him Nor ought any living man to complain who suffers meerly for the punishment of his iniquity La● 3 39. and if he must complain let him complain to God and bemoan his case in quietness to him It is far better for men to bear their yoke quieth and sit alone than to pine away in their iniquity Mourning one to another whilst they do not 〈◊〉 to the Lord. Too much whining and complaining to men will be found Labour which profitet not try it who will But as a man would complain to God so he would beware to complain of God he would leave his complaint upon him self Job 10 1. and lay the blame of his afflictions home upon himself Psal 38. 5. My folly makes is so 3. It is clear from the whole History of the Scriptures that most of all the Saints Afflictions whether conjunctly in the Body of a Church or Nation or severally in their own persons particularly have been the chastizments of their
mercy is here I will bid them look to the inner-si●● for we must not judge by appearance but we m●● judge righteous Iudgment There is a disappeari●● white threed of mercy on the innerside of all blackest and most afflicting lots of Saints and ●● any have not the faith to believe this in an h●● and power of darkness yet I shall wish them ●● patience to wait till they see the white threed ●yth again in its own place and till they find undenyable mercy that will not suffer it self to be mistaken tryst them upon the borders of that dark valley for mercy follows them all the days of their life Psal. 23. 6. and sometimes it will compass them round about Psal. 32 10. In a word all the very outfallings that are betwixt God and his People they are amantium irae that is but amoris redintegratio ●overs cast out and agree again and they cast not out but that they may agree again and so are God and his People mercy shall conclude all that passes betwixt them and that mercy is joyned with truth for God hath said it and he was never yet worse than his word to any but to many very oft much better You see here which confirms the point not a little what a wilde ●iece she is to whom the Lord does all this neither minding God nor his Covenant nor Commandments but courting her lovers and following her lightness and yet the Lord pursues her ●ight and litle worth as she is courts her and invites her to come home All this is strange and yet all this is but like God that the Holy One of Israel should thus like the Adullamite Judah 's friend Gen. 38. go to seek a Harlot by the way side But consider 1. That when the Lord Married her he knew all the faults that followed her and ●ook her with them all If God had not known before what she would prove it might be strange that thus he suits her but if there be any thing to be admired here it is his first love to her whom he knew to be such an one But 2dly consider where will the Lord do better Where is there any in the World that without his own undertaking would serve him otherwayes And therefore till the Lord find a better match he thinks and with all reason even as good hold him at his first choise Especially since 3. He knows of a way how to gain her And 4. sees her already rewing her courses and saying that she will return to her first husband And by all this 5. he will let it be seen that he is not so unstable and light as she is She could find in her heart to entertain others in his place and surely she was not ill to please that could take an Idol in his rooms but yet he will make it manifest to all the World that he is God and changes not and therefore he will mantain his old kindness to her and will remember the love of her espousals and the kindness of her youth For 6. Foolish as she was he had gotten more love of her in former times than he had gotten of all the World besides And thus the very case stands betwixt God and his deboarding Children and backsliding People unto this day III The third great Scripture truth that is here solemnly confirmed is this That Gods way will his People is not the manner of men 2 Sam. 7 19 Hosea 6 7. They like men transgress the Covenant and Chap. 11. 9. He like God and like himself and there is none like unto him for if any were like him he were not himself will not exe● cut the fierceness of his anger nor return to destroy them because he is God and not man Jer. 3 1. The● say if a man put away his wife and she go from him and become anothermans Shall be return unto her again ●●all not that land be greatly polluted but thou hast ●ayed the Harlot with many lovers yet return again ●nto me saith the Lord. Now that Gods way with ●is People is not the manner of men warrands them to expect from him things not ordinary ●or it was the greatness of his extraordinary kindness to David that made him say so of God yea ●● warrands them to expect above expectation Isai. ●4 3. Thou didst terrible things that we looked not ●●r Yea more it even warrands them to expect above admiration Zech. 8. 6. If it be marvelous ●● the eyes of the remnant of this People in these dayes should it also be marvelous in my eyes saith the Lord of Hosts And the Ground of all is Isai. 55 9. Because as the Heavens are higher than the earth so are ●●e Lords ways higher than our ways and his thoughts than our thoughts This is solemnly confirmed in ●he Text proposed where we have such a stupendious strange inference a Therefore that considering what hath been last said all the World cannot ●ell Wherefore a Therefore that if it had been left ●o all the World to supply what follows it considering what hath immediatly gone before I doubt it could have entered into any created heart to have once guessed it She went after her lovers and forgot me saith the Lord and therefore I will allure here and comfort her To this Therefore is well subjoined Behold which observation teacheth Admiration of what we cannot reach to satisfaction Only from all this let us consider whether the great sin of limiting God be not too ordinary and too litle abhorred an evil amongst us We frame to our fancy a litle modest God forsooth that must not take too much upon him and by those fancies we model our Prayers and returnes and pardons of sin and accounts of Providences and events of dispensations and all things And if that be not to have another God before the true God I have not read my Bible right nor do I understand the first Commandment But now after that I have wandered so long before though I hope not beside the purpose I am yet but entering the Wilderness SERMON Hosea 2 14 Therefore behold I will allure her and bring her into the Wilderness and speak Comfortably unto her A Wilderness is a land of darkness Ier. 2 31. and whilst I but look into the Wilderness I am surrounded with the darkness of a mysterious transition in the particle Therefore But when I begin to enter and while my foot standeth even upon the borders of darkness I see a light shining out of darkness Psal. 119. 130. the enterance of thy words giveth light it giveth understanding unto the simple This lights me over the border where being come I hear a voice which bids me Behold and beholding I see a strange Wherefore of this strange Therefore and it is this that by any means the Lord must have his Peopl's heart and be sole owner of their love without a Rival or partaker In the close of the former verse she forgot m● saith the
Lord that I cannot suffer and therefore will allure her Behold I will allure her She forgot me and could not tell wherefor except it was for my indulgence and that I spilt her with too much kindness as it is written for my love they are my enemies And I will pursue her love and follow her for her heart I will allure her and I will tell her wherefore not Not for your sakes do I this saith the Lord God be it known unto you Be ashamed and be confounded for your own wayes O house of Israel Ezek. 36 32. But I will not tell her wherefore but so it must be therefore I will allure her and if my former kindness and indulgence was a fault for the Prosperity of fools destroyes them Prov. 1. 32. that shall be mended I will bring her into the Wilderness For she is so wild that I must tyne her before I win her I must kill her before I make her alive I must loose her before I find her I must cast her down before I comfort her And therefore I will bring her into the Wilderness and I will speak comfortably unto her All this we are willed to Behold Therefore Behold c. In the words then we have these four things distinctly so be considered 1. The Note of observation Behold 2 The intimation of the Churches condition I will bring her into the Wilderness 3. The Lords great design upon his Church in this and all his Dispensations to her I will allure her which rules all the vicissitudes of her divers Lots as means depending in a due Subordination upon this high end whereinto they are ●ll to be resolved as into the last cause and reason This great design of God upon his People is as the Principles and fundamental propositions of Sciences which prove all particular conclusions whilst themselves only remain unproven by infe●ence as being received by evidence of all that ●re but acquaint with the terms For if it be asked wherefore God will afflict his Church and bring her into the Wilderness The answer is because he will allure her And wherefore will he comfort her Because he will allure her He must have her heart as I said before But if it be asked and wherefore will he allure her What sees he in her That thus he should Court her for her Kind ness That must answer it self that is the therefore that hath no wherefore but. Even so Lord for so it pleases thee 4. I shall consider the juncture and coincidency of her Afflictions and his Consolations I will bring her into the Wilderness and speak comfortably unto her Therefore behold FRom the first thing then the Note of Observation we have this Doctrine That it is our Duty and a weighty one well to consider the Lords wayes with his People and his Works towards them Therefore behold c. When God bids us behold it is sure we shall have something worthy of the seeing Now that this is a concerning Duty seriously to observe the Lords works and wayes towards his People is confirmed By these three things from the Scripture The 1. is Scripture Commands to this purpose such as the many Beholds that the Lord either prefixes or annexes to his works whereof we have one in this place and Psal. 37. 37. We are commanded to mark and behold the end both of the upright and of the transgressours And to the head of commands because I love not to multiply things without great necessity I refer all these things that are proper pertinents and pendicles of a command 1. Exhortations such as Ier. 2. 31. O generation see ye the word of the Lord. 2. complaints and expostulations such as Isai 26. 11. Lord when thy hand is lifted up they will not see 3. Promises such as Hosea 6. 3. Then shall ye know if ye follow on to know the Lord c. 4. Threatnings such as Psal. 28. 5. because they regard not the works of the Lord nor the operation of his hands he shall destroy them and not build them up with Psal. 50. 22. Consider this ye that forget God lest I tear you in pieces and there be none to deliver 5. Commendations such as Psal. 107 43. whoso is wise and will observe these things c Hosea 14. 9. And he that was a wise man and a great observer tells us Eccles. 2 14. that the wise mans eyes are in his head 6. We have also Discommendations and Exprobrations wherewith the Lord upbraids such as observe not his works and ways Isai 42. 18. they are deaf and blind that will not see yea Ieremy 4 22. calls them Sottish and the Psalmists call them Bruits Psal 92 6. So then by the command of God which is the undoubted determiner of Duty it is a necessary concerning duty to observe the Lords works and ways towards his People The 2d thing that confirmes the point is this That the Works of God are wrought before his People for that very end that they may observe them and he makes his ways known to men that all men may observe him take but one pregnant place for this Isai 41 20. That they may see and know and consider and understand together that the hand of the Lord hath done this and the Holy one of Israel hath created it The Holy one of Israel is no Hypocrite and yet he doth all his works to be seen of men The third thing that confirmes the point is the usefulness of the works of God There is never a work of God but it hath some excellent instruction to men that will observe them every work hath a word in its mouth There is something of use in every one God speaks no idle words every word of God is pure yea his words are like Silver tryed in the furnace seven times there is no dross nor refuse in the Bible the light of Israel and his Holy One works no unfruitful works like the works of darkness Gods works of Providence are an inlargement and continuation of his first piece of Creation and if the first edition of his works was all very good perfect and unreproveable how excellent to all admiration must the last edition be after so many But who is wise to understand these things and prudent to know them who hath these two useful volumes of the word and works of God bound in one and so makes joynt use of them in their dayly reading But howbeit many are unlearned and to many the book be sealed yet there are rare things in the book So then since the works of God are so useful it concerns us to observe them as things tending even as also they are intended to our great advantage And upon this very useful consideration we will find our selves obliged to observe seriously the Lords works and ways to his People except we can answer that question wherefore is there a price in the hand of a fool to get wisdom seeing he hath no heart
to it Prov. 17 16. I shall not here mention that which is if not a strange confirmation yet a clear illustration of the Doctrine and it is the practice of Saints in Scripture who have been diligent students of all the works of God universally and particularly of his ways to his People and some have been such proficient by their observations that they have been able to leave us a perfect Chronicle with a diurnal account of events in their time as the Scripture-Historians others have searched so deep by the special assistance of him that searcheth all things even the deep things of God that they have been able to frame us certain and everlasting Almanacks of the state of future times as the Prophets But to pass these as being acted and assisted by an extraordinary motion and measure of the Spirit of God Look we thorow all the Scriptures how Religious observers of the works of God and his ways whether in general to his People or to themselves in particular we find even ordinary Saints and extraordinary persons in their ordinary conversation to have been Now being convinced that it is our concerning Duty to observe diligently the works of God and his Dispensations to his People Two great Questions require to be answered for our further satisfaction and better instruction in this Duty 1 VVhat are we specially to observe in the works of God and his Dispensations to his People 2. How are we to observe the works of God To the first Question then be it presupposed 1. That there is no work of God nor any thing in any work of God how common and ordinary soever that is not excellent and Glorious and worthy to be searched out Psal. 111. 2 3 4. But 2. Of all the works of God some are more Glorious and observable than others and of every work of God some things are more excellent and searchworthy than others 3. That we are not able to observe or take up fully any work of God far less all his works Eccles. 8 17. Whereupon it follows in all reason 4. that we are to apply our selves to the observation of some things especially in the works of God Otherwise as by a perpetual endless divisibility of the least continuous body according to the principles of Peripatetick Philosophy a midges wing may be extended to a quantity able to cover the outmost Heavens so the observation of the meanest work of God may abundantly furnish discourse deducable to perpetuity But then what shall come of short-breathed man whose days are an hand breadth in the attempt of an impossibility he mustly by the gate and leave the rest as Italians do their chess playes to be told by his posterity Wherefore I shall but hint compendiously at these four things chiefly to be observed seriously in the works of God and his ways towards his People 1. We would consider and observe seriously the works themselves with all their circumstances and this is a part to know the times to know what the Lord is doing to his people in the times none would be such strangers in Ierusalem as not to know the things that happen there in their days Luke 24 18. David Psal. 143 5. can say I meditat on all thy works I muse on the work of thy hands We might think him a bad Mariner who being at sea should not be able at any time to tell from what airth the wind did blow and we may think him a litle better Christian who can give no account of the times nor of the Works of God in the times and knows not it may be cares not how the wind blows upon the Church and People of God Every one that would be worthy of their roome in the time would study to be acquainted with the accidents of divine Dispensations in the time not out of Athenian curiosity but Christian inquiry But if it be asked how far is it betwixt Antioch and Athens or plainly what difference is there betwixt Christian inquiry and Athenian curiosity it may not be amiss as Paul inpassing by beheld their devotion Act. 17. 23. by the way to take notice out of Act 17. 19. 20. 21. of these three properties of Athenian curiosity which difference is from Christian inquiry 1. It runs all upon new things Even the Ancient truths of the Gospel and the best things in Gods dispensations if once they become old and ordinary do not relish with curiosity 2. Curiosity satisfies it self with telling and hearing of those new things it hears to tell and tells what it hears and tells that it may tell and nothing els as the Text says it is taken up with the report of things more than with the things it is an empty airy thing 3. It is a time spending thing they spend their time so sayes the Text Curiosity like nigards can spend well upon another mans purse and give liberally of that which is none of its own let no man trust his time to Curiosity which will be sure to give him a short account of All spent But for further satisfaction in the difference betwixt Athenian curiosity and Christian Inquiry let all that be considered which rests to be answered to both the Questions proponed before upon a particular survey whereof we shall be able to give a more distinct judgment in the case of this difference Only as it is kindness not curiosity that makes men inquire how their friends do so where there is true kindness to the People of God it will kyth in a solicitous inquiry concerning their state in all things But as the man asked Christ who then is my neighbour so may the Church and People of God justly ask But who is my friend she sees so many as the Levite pass by on the other side who never turn aside so much as once to ask how she does and to whom all is as nothing that she suffers Lament 1. 12 Is it nothing to you all ye that pass by c Let it be remembred then that the works of God themselves with all their circumstances be duely considered The 2d thing to be observed in the works of God is the Author and hand that worketh these works This the Saints have observed in the works of God Psal. 39 9. this they will that others may observe Psal. 109 27. This all may and ought and shall in the end see Psal. 9 16. Isai 26. 11. who ever be the Amanuensis or what ever be the instrument Gods works as Pauls Epistles are all given under his own hand with this inscription all these have my hands done The Scripture hath diverse expressions to this purpose of the finger of God the hand of God the arme of the Lord and God himself appearing in his works intimating the gradual difference of manifestations of a Providence appearing sometimes more darkly sometimes more clearly in the works and dispensations of God And yet even the smallest character of providence if men had on
that make the true use of every dispensation that it requires that lament when the Lord Mournes that dance when he Pipes that tremble when he Roares that hearken when he teaches that answer when he calls and thus every Godly Soul is an Eccho to the voice of God The spirit says come and the Bride says come The Lord says return and the sinner says behod we come He says seek ye my face and the Soul says thy face will I seek O Lord. But as Christ says it is only he that hath an ear who will hear and as the Prophet Micah says it is only the man of wisdom that will see Gods name and hear the Rod. And I take him to have a bad ear and little skill in discerning voices that cannot give the Tune of God's present dispensations to his People in these Nations But it will appertain to the answer of the next question to give the particular notes of this tune and to hold forth the proper uses of present dispensations to the Church and Saints of God The 2d Question proponed was how are we to observe the Works and dispensations of God To the Question I answer that we are to observe the dispensations of God 1. with selfdenyal and humble diffidence of our own wisdom and understanding There is 1. so much of mystery in th● dispensations of God Verily thou art a good that h●est thy self O God the Saviour of Israel Isai 42 15 And 2dly So many even good observers Godly men have verily mistaken so far in their apprehensions of Divine dispensations Witness Job and his freinds who darkned counsel by words without knowledge Iob 38. 2. and 42 3. whereupon the Lord poses ●ob in the former place and which he freely confesses in the latter That it is needful in this point if in any to hearken to instruction Prov 3 5 7. lean not to thine own understanding be no wise in thine own eyes Humble David though wise David who for his discerning was as an Angel ●● God 2 Sam 14. 17. would not exercise himself ●● matter too high for him Psal 131 1. whereof the dispensations of God are a high part which h● acknowledges to be too hard for him to understand Psal. 73. 16. And his Son Solomon whose wisdom is so renowned taxes all rash and unadvised inquiry into the works of God Eccles. 7 10. There is no safe nor true discovery of the Works of God but through the prospect of his Word Psa● 73. 17. We must ●o to the sanctuary with Gods Works the Word will let us see that wicked men are se● upon slippery places even when they seem to stand surest Psal. 73. 18. And when their roots are wrapped about the earth and they see the place o● Stones while they lean upon their House and holy it fast While they are in their greenness they are cut down and as the rush they wither before any other herb Iob. 8. 11. and foreward Yea whilst the Saints look not upon their own state and Gods dispensations to them according to the Word they are ready to mistake right far I said in my prosperity my mountain stands strong and I shall never be moved thou didst hide thy face and I was troubled And upon the other hand when I said my foot slippeth Thy mercy Lord it held me up Wherefore let us ay be ready to hearken to better information in our apprehensions of Divine dispensations and particular events remembring that all men are lyars But for the general issue of things we may be well assured without all fear of mistake That it shall be well with the righteous and ill with the wicked for this is the sure word of Prophesie Isai 3. 10. 11. Yea not only shall it be well with the Righteous in the end but every thing how cross soever in the way shall conduce and concurr to work his wellfare And this is a truth that shall never fail and wherein there is no fear of mistake Rom. 8. 28. And the Scripture abounds with Noble instances of this truth But by the contrary all things how prosperous soever that fall to the wicked in his way shall in the end redound to his woe and turn to his greater misery of this likewise there are in Scripture instances not a few Learn we then to observe dispensations of particular events with humility and submission to a better Judgment 2dly We must observe the works of God with Patience if we would know the Lords going forth we must follow on to know Hosea 6. 3. In our observation of dispensations we must not conclude at a view nor upon their first appearance There is I so much of surprisal in many dispensations that often they escape our first thoughts verily says Jacob God was in this place and I knew it not Genes 28 16. when the Lord brought back the captivity of Zion sayes the Church we were as men that dreame Psal. 116 1 When the Angel delivered Peter he wist not whether that it was true that was done but thought he saw a vision Act. 12 9. There is 2 oft times much Error in our first thoughts of things that needs to be corrected by second thoughts 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 second thoughts are the wiser I say ays David I am cut off from thine eyes but I said it over soon I said it in my haste I took no leasure throughly to consider the matter And therefore I will look again toward thy Holy temple I looked but I must look again I said but I must say again The Scriptures gives many instances of the Saints mistaks and errors in the first thoughts of Gods dispensations and in these pat●untur aliquid humani they are but like men Somtimes again 3 the Lord goes thorow in his dispensations by a method of contraries he brings his People into the dark before he cause light shine out of darkness he brings them as the Text says into the driery Wilderness and there he comforts them he wounds before he heal he kills before he make alive he casts down before he raise up And therefore there is need of Patience to observe the whole course of dispensations and their connexion for if we look upon them by parts we will readily mistake in our Observation I find likwise 4. In many Dispensations a reserve the Lord keeping up his mind as it were to bait and allure his People to observe Verily thou art a God that hidest thy self O God the Saviour of Israel Isai 45. 14. O Lord we cannot see what thou wouldst be at what I do thou knowest not now sayes Christ but thou shalt know afterwards Like a man if he see his hearers slack their attention to a serious discourse he breaks off and pauses a little to reduce them to a serious attention so does God in his works to gain us to a diligent Observation Threfore in our Observation of Dispensations we would be like Abraham's Godly servant Genes 24 21.
he held his peace to wit whether the Lord had made his journey prosperous or not Moreover 5. in some Dispensations the Lord uses a Holy simulation and makes as if he would do that which he hath no mind to do Sometimes he makes to take leave of his People before he tell his Erand Let me go says he to Jacob when Iacob was but yet beginning to know that it was he and ere ever there was a word of the blessing which he came to leave with Iacob for his encouragement in his encounter with his Brother And Christ made as if he would have passed by his Disciples at Sea and the like semblance he made Luke 24 28. Now if we can have the patience to observe we will sometimes see the Issue of Dispensations other than it appeared And for patient Observation of Dispensations 1. respice finem a good advice Behold the end Psal. 37 37. It is the end that we are bidden mark and behold a● I said above We must not conclude of Dispensations neither by appearances nor parts We must wait till we see every part do its part for all works together Rom. 8. 28. And 2 respice usque finem Behold or observe to the end is an other direction necessary to the practice of the former whose would see the end must behold with patience to the end Daniel 12 8. enquires concerning the end of things and he observes till the time of the end he looks thorow all interveening times of the accomplishment of these events manifested to him so albeit none of us hath a prophetical Spirit to lead us thorow future times yet the Faith and Patience of Saints teaches us to wait all our appointed time In our patient Observation of Dispensations we must be like the Prophet Isai 21 8. where he saith I stand continually upon the watch tower in the day and I am set in my ward whole nights My soul waits for the Lord sayes David more than the watch waits for the morning Psal. 130. 6. I say more than they that wait for the morning and by such patient Observation he had seen many a foul night have a fair morning Sorrow may be at night but joy comes in the morning Psal 30 5. 3dly We should observe the Lords Dispensations with Search and Secrutiny Psal. 77. 6. my spirit made diligent search 1. We should search the Lord's affection in Dispensations and whether they be in mercy or in wrath many get their will and asking in wrath Psal. 78. 30. 31. some are rebuked and chastened but not in wrath nor displeasure as David Prayes for himself Psal. 6 1. Therefore the question would be Ier. 14. 19. hast thou rejected ●udah hath they soul loathed Zion 2dly We would search the Reasons and procuring causes of sad Dispensations Iob 10 2. shew me wherefore thou con●endest with me 3dly We would search and inquire ●nent the event of Dispensations wilt thou not revive us again that thy People may rejoice in thee Psal. 85. 6. We are allowed likwise 4thy to search and enquire anent the continuance of Dispensations to this purpose we read in Scripture many a how long Lord In sad Dispensations likwise 5ly we should search for solid grounds of comfort and for this we should remember bygone times and remember the kindness we have tasted of in them Psal. 89. 49. Lord where are thy former loving kindnesses Psal 77. 10. I will remember the years of the right hand of the most high But in the Observation of Dispensations our search would be 6ly chiefly about our Duty our main question would be Lord what wilt thou have me to do Act 9 6. And our great Petition with David must be lead me O Lord in they righteousnes because of mine enemies make thy way straight before my face Psal. 5. 8. teach me thy way O Lord and I will walk in thy truth unite my heart to fear thy name Psal. 86. 11. 4. We should observe the Dispensations of God with Regard the challenge is Isai 5. 12 that they regard not the work of the Lord. This Regard is a due judgment and estimation of the works of God with reverence becoming the Majesty worth and excellency of the worker and the works and that leaves an impression of Piety and Religion upon the heart of the Observer according to that pathetick exclamation Rev. 15 4. who shall not not fear thee O Lord and glorify they name for thou art Holy for all nations shall come and worship before thee for thy judgments are made manifest Due Observation of the works of God is a great curb to Atheisme and Prophanity and Atheisme and Prophanity are as great enemies to due Observation of divine Dispensations Put men in fear O Lord that they may seek thy name 5ly We should observe the Lord Dispensations with Affection Lament 3 51. mine eye affecteth mine heart the Prophet's Observation of Dispensations made him cry my bowels my bowels my heart is pained within me Jer. 4. 19. I reckon him a savage person and one that hath vicera fera triplex circa pectus robur the bowels of a tygar or bear and that his heart is brass oak or stones who is not affected with the Dispensations of our times who grieves not for the afflictions of Joseph Amos6 6. and who cryes not alas for the day for none is like it It is the day of Jacob's trouble Jer. 30. 7. 6. We should observe the Lords works with Memory in our Observations of things present we should reflect upon these that are past in former times I remember the days of old Psal. 153. 5. And likwise we would lay up in memory our present Observations for the time to come Psal. 48. 12 13. Mark ye well that ye may tell it to the generation following We have both joined together Psal 78 3 4. that which we have heard and known and our fathers have told us we will not hide from their children ●hewing to the generations to come the praises of the Lord and his strength and his wonderfull works that he hath ●one The Psalmist says Psal. 111. 4. The Lord hath made his wonderful works to be remembred O! then ●t not the memory of the Lords Works go down ●n our days Let us comfort our selves with what ●s remembred and let us transmit the memory of the Lords Works to succeeding Generations that they may share of the same comforts And I believe the People of God in this time have much to ●o with their memory we hear not what we were wont to hear nor see what we were wont to see We are now left to gather up the Fragments of former enjoyments by the hand of a Sanctified memory One says O I shall still think well of Christ He shall be to me as the Apple tree alongst the trees of the Wood for the day was then I sat down under his shaddow and his fruit ●as sweet to my taste Cant. 2. 3. Another
good Company when they shew their goodness in Company so that they may do good to the Company and therefore though it may seem a Paradox yet it is too true that we cannot always say we have been in good Company when we have been in the company of Good Men. Let Good People keep fellowship and company let the evils and vanities of good People be discharged the Company let Good People do good in Company and so Good People shall be Good Company But as often as we miss good Company let it mind us that we are in the Wilderness And be it here added because I love not to multiply that it is no small part of the Saints Wilderness to be vexed and intested with evil Company The Scripture descrives a Wilderness to be the place of Owls Ostriches Wolves Lyons Serpents Satyres Devils Dragons and all evil Beasts and doleful Creatures And as it is said of Christ literally Mark 1 13. that in the Wilderness he was with the wild Beasts so Christians are mystically neighboured with the like in their Wilderness their righteous Souls are vexed with hearing and seeing daily their doleful and detestable practises besides their Persecutions whereof it follows to speak particularly 4. The Wilderness importeth a Wandering and unsetled Condition Psal. 107. 4. they wandered in the Wilderness in a solitary way they found no City to dwell in Heb. 11. 37 38. those of whom the World was not worthy wandered about in desarts and in mountains and in Dens and Caves of the earth We read in the History of Scripture how Israel wandered and how many seats they changed in the Wilderness of Egypt fourty years We read of the Patriarchs Psal. 105 13. how as strangers in the land of Promise they went from one Nation to another from one Kingdome to another People We read in the 1 Sam. of David's wandering from one Wilderness to another and amongst the rocks of the wilde Goats which he ●esents with Tears Psal. 56. 8. Thou tellest my wanderings sayes he put thou my Tears into thy bottle are they not in thy Book And this is even the wilderness-condition of the Saints and Servants of God this day in these Nations How many driven from Station and Relations and put to seek Lodging amongst Strangers What strange Unsettlings are there among us By Outing Confinement Banishment denouncing Fugitive and all these by Laws and Acts so contrived as if they meant only to grant the Lords Servants Ieremys deploring wish Ier. 9 2. O that I had in the Wilderness a lodging-place of waysaring men that I might leave my People and go from them And all these are beside all the particular wanderings of the Lords scattered flocks whose Condition we may see Ezek 34. 6. and throughout my sheep wandered through all the mountains and upon every high hill yea my flock was scattered upon all the face of the earth and none did search nor seek after them 5. The Wilderness importeth a Condition of Tentations Matth. 4 1. Christ was led into the Wilderness to be tempted Psal. 95 8. 9. Israels time in the Wilderness is called the day of Tentation I know it is there meant Activly of these Tentations as is clear from the 9th verse Your fathers tempted me proved me and saw my works ●ut when I look back upon Moses who himself ●as with the Church in the Wilderness and well ●ew their case I find him reckoning it a time ● Passive Tentations also such I mean wherewith ●●ey were tryed and tempted Deut. 8. 2. And thou shalt remember all the way which the Lord thy God led thee these fourty years in the Wilderness to humble thee and to prove thee to know what was in thine heart whether thou wouldst keep his Commandments or not It is ●ar 1. from Jam. 1 15. that God tempteth no ●n 2. It is a great question whether Satan ●●th a hand by tentation in every sin of man ●t 3dly I judge that Satan hath not such a hand every sin as some are ready to say and think ●he Devil is not so ill we say as he is called nor ● ugly as he is painted many men father those ●s upon the Devil that have their own hearts ●th for Father and Mother and many sin with●●t a Tentation ab extra or from without Yet the 4th place it is manifest from Iam. 1 14. 15. at a man is tempted at least by his own lust as often the sins And thus there is no sin without some ●nd of tentation either from another or from the ●ner himself and where there is much sin and ●ovocation as was amongst the Israelites in the ●ilderness there is much Tentation Let the ●ords People then expect to find their Wilderness place of Temptation And are not Tentations ●awed thick in the way of Gods People in these ●es Is there not a ne●t spread upon mount Tabor may we not say with the Psalmist P● 142. 3. in the way wherein I walked have they la●● snare for me Is not the cass now you must either do thus or thus as men who because they have ●● Conscience of their own therefore care not ● yours shall please to command or els do other wa● upon your perill And when things might therways be better ordered and established a● not Laws and Acts contrived so as occasions 〈◊〉 be sought against those against whom like Da● Chap. 6 5. there can be found no occasion except the matters of their God Is not this the hou● temptation Rev. 3. 10. But when enemies h● given over and done their worst in come 〈◊〉 friends who as Peter to Christ Matth. 16. 23 〈◊〉 a temptation to us O say they look to your self and play not the Fool. And when all the prevail not yet in comes Carnal Worldly 〈◊〉 believing Grudging and disquieting though● from our own hearts and these as in a refer guard give the last and most dangerous assault ● specially if the force of our spirits be any w● daunted or disordered by the foresaid attempt and therefore James 1. 14. looking over t● former as it were tells us that then a man is tem●ed when he is led away of his own lust and enti●e and then it is high time to look to our selves wh● our enemies are those of our own house Ma● have born the force of outward attempts who h● much ado to sustain the impetuous assaults of th● own disquieted and disquieting hearts Psal. 42 and 43 5. Why art thou cast down O my se●● and why art thou disquieted in me And therefore Iames pronounces him the blessed man Chap. 1. 12. that endureth tentation The Tentations of an afflicted lot is the great Affliction of our lot and therefore in Scripture Afflictions are called Tentations and they that escape the Tentations of Affliction have got above all hazard of Affliction otherwise for Tentations being the snare of Affliction when that is once broken the strength of it is spent and it's force
a Wilderness may easily understand this and there is reason for it because a man is there deprived of any thing that may chear his Spirit and of all gladening Objects besides that he is possessed with fearful apprehensions of evils that may befal him and his spirit in the very entry is amused with the uncouth and solitary nature of the place To say no more of this the very Countenances of of the Lords People in these times look like a Wilderness and s●d cause why we see many things to make us sorry little to make us glad We see such things as we nor our Fathers have not seen the like And if there were no more and albeit for our own particular we had no occasion of grief and though like Nehemiah we were serving the King with Wine and were of as jovial an humor as he who was not wont afore time to be sad yet if any should ask the Kings Question Nehemiah 2 2. Why is thy countenance sad seing thou art not sick This is nothing els but sorrow of heart may we not sadly reply with him in the 3 d verse Why should not my Countenance be sad when my City the place of my fathers Sepulchres lyeth waste and the Gates thereof are consumed with fire That is when the Church of God is laid desolate But I suspect there are few that truly love God or are kindly sons of Zion but they have their own particular grievances in these times wherein they share of the common lot of the Church their Mother that sits in the dust and ●● is good it be so For wo to them that are at ease ●● Zion Amos 6. 1. The particular grievances of Saints and their pressures serve well to keep them mindful of the Churches common lot for fellowship in calamity is such a pregnant incentive to sympathy that even Jesus himself was made the more compassionat for what he himself suffered being in all points tempted as we are yet without sin he cannot but be touched with the feeling of our infirmity Heb. 4. 15. And does it not well suite all the Children to go in Mourning when the Mother sits desolate and afflicted as a Woman forsaken E● how could they expect to be comforted with her if they do not Mourn for her Solomon that great Master of Religion Nature and Reason hath determined Eccl. 7. 2 3. that it is better to go to the house of mourning than to the house of feasting And that sorrow is better than laughter for that by the sadness of the Countenance the heart is made better and he who is greater than Solomon who himself often weept but never that we read once laughed pronounceth them blessed that mourn for that they shall be comforted Matth. 5. 4. 9. This Wilderness importeth a Condition of Weariness and fainting This yet follows naturally from all that hath been said Psal. 107. 5. those that wander in a Wilderness their soul fainteth in them Psal. 63. 1. Davids Wilderness was a thristy or as the Original hath it a weary Land and Isai 32 2. it is expresly rendered a weary Land The Saints case in their Wilderness is often like that of the Egyptian 1 Sam. 30. 11 12. who was so outwearyed that he fell off from his company and sunk in the Wilderness David often complaineth that he was weak that his spirit failled his soul fainted this throat was dry his eyes failed whilst he cryed upon the Lord and waited for him And no wonder it is that the Saints so often weary and faint by the way but a great wonder it is that any of them should hold up to the end They have such long stages in the Race that is set before them and those in a thirsty Wilderness where hardly they can drink of the brook by the way and they must run it so oft about with fresh parties whereof possibly the worst comes last upon them when they are already so much exhausted that there is great reason for him that would wager upon their heads to ask whether they have so much confidence remaining as to answer that Question Jer. 12. 5. If thou hast run with the footmen and they have wearied thee then how canst thou contend with horses and if in the land of peace wherein thou trustedst they wearyed thee how wilt thou do in the swelling of Jordan But the Lord that makes the Question must answer and one Prophet must Answer another and how Jeremy could do all that Isaiah can tell Chap 40. from the 28 verse to the end the everlasting God the Lord that created the ends of the earth fainteth not neither is weary c. Let the people of God in their Wilderness expect to have their hands full of it and as much as shall put them to a strict necessity either to believe or utterly to give it over Psal 27. 13. I had fainted unless I had believed to see the goodness of the Lord in the land of the living Now this is the Wilderness and thus is answered the first thing in the point What is the Wilderness II. The second thing to be considered in the point is Wherefore doth the Lord bring his People into the Wilderdess The Scripture sheweth that for one or more of these five Reasons the Lord doth this 1. He doth it for their sin and that in these five Respects 1. to convince them of sin It is long many a time ere the Lords sinful People will see or acknowledge their sin yea they will say they are innocent when their transgressions are most evident Jer. 2 23. and therefore verse 35. I will plead with thee because thou sayest I have not sinned Such as are kindly Melancholians may know by experience what effectual impressions the change of places hath to the changing of mens minds and for this it is necessary often times that men be sent to learn that in the Wilderness which they could not it may be they would not see at home in a land inhabited Jer. 22. 21 22. I spoke unto thee to thy prosperity but thou saidest I will not hear and therefore thou shalt go into captivity Affliction is quick-sighted and necessity is wise and Ingenious affliction according as it is blest or not blest of God hath very contrary effects upon men Solomon tells us that affliction makes a wise man mad and he that is greater than Solomon tells us that affliction sometimes makes a mad man wise Luk. 15 17. it brought a distracted Prodigal to himself Many men think it a piece of Wit and Gallantry to mantain their sinful courses in a Day of prosperity and if he be a beneficed person or one in place he is ill worthy either place or benefice who is so scant of Discourse that he cannot if this our craft be in danger to be set at nought Act. 19. 27 make an Oration in defence of Diana and at least cannot say to his Companions with more truth than Wit though
yet with more Wit than Honesty Sirs ye know that by this Craft we have our wealth ib. verse 25. Yea if the Lord by his servants plead with some men in Prosperity for their iniquities anon he shall have a reply till he bring forth his Rod which is sitted for the back of fools and is the only cogent argument with such persons Take two instances shortly one is Isai. 31. 2. those people were bent upon Idolatry and when they were reproved and threatned for that by the Lord then they were confident in the assistance of Egypt and when yet they were taxed for that no doubt they would tell the Prophets Self-defence was not unlawful and many such witty stories till the Lord concludes the dispute with that yet he also is wise and will bring evil and will not call back his words but will arise against the house of the evil doers and against the help of those that work iniquity And now let those great Wits and grand Disputers say to it Jer. 13. 21. What wilt thou say when he shall punish thee Say to that Gallants or you have said nothing The next instance is Ezek. 17. from 11 verse to the end Zedekiah had given an Oath of fealty and subjection to the King of Babylon he Rebells against the King of Babylon and breaks his Oath the Lord pleads with him for that O! might he say mark you the Language of our times it was a forced Oath made against his will yea may be it was an unlawful Oath for him to subject himself and the Lords People to Heathens by a bond and therefore why might not he take his occasions to break it if once he had but strength to maintain the breach And may be as Papists think that Faith ought not to be kept to Hereticks so they call Protestants he thought neither ought it to be kept to Heathens But ● mark from the place 1. against the Popish whimsy that it is called significantly the King of Babylons Oath in the 16 verse I mark 2. In the same verse against other Covenant-breakers That whatever by Zedekiah was or might be alledged it was all but a prophane despising of the Oath for untill once it be lawful to take Gods Holy and fearful name in vain it shall never be any thing els but Prophanity and Perjury to break Covenant upon interest I mark 3. from the 20 verse against all Patrons of Perjury and such as teach Rebellion against the Lord the Lords great Argument which usually he reserves to the Conclusion of such Debates well says the Lord in the 19 verse he hath sworn an Oath and hath broken it but I will let him know what an Oath is I will Swear another and will keep it as I live saith the Lord surely I will recompense it upon his own head And in the 20 verse I will spread my net upon him and he shall he taken in my snare and I will bring him to Babylon and will plead with him there for his trespass that he hath trespassed against me And this was performed 2 Kings 25. 6 7. and 2 Chron. 36. 20 21. Prosperity to many is as the day light to Owles and Batts it daz'ls their eyes and blinds them that they do not see their Errors till it be too late Zedekiah saw not his faults till he saw them without his eyes at Riblah in the Land of Hamath To say no more of this if other Arguments will not convince men that are guilty of Perjury there is a necessity they must go to Babylon for Instruction As the Lord lives they are the words of God and it is their meaning Perjury shall get a convincing stroak It is a Scots Proverb As sore greets the Child that is beaten after noon as he that is beaten before noon The Church of God and his Saints in these Nations have gotten a forenoons correction but wo to them that get the after-noon stroaks See the Parables Ier 24 throughout To conclude this reason then Let us not seek conviction of our sin the length of the Wilderness nor at the rate of bitter Affliction but let us all take the Councel Ier. 6. 8. Be thou instructed O Jerusalem lest my Soul depart from thee lest I make thee desolate a land not inhabited The 2d Account whereupon the Lord brings his People into the Wilderness for sin is for the vindication of his Glorious and Holy Name from all appearance of connivance at or partaking with his peoples Sins Numb 14. 21. As truly as I live sayes he all the earth shall be filled with the Glory of the Lord that is with the Glorious manifestation of his Justice against his Peoples Sins And he often threatens that those who profane his Name and make it to be Blasphemed he will return their shame upon their own Faces If any of us hath a Friend who is leud and dissolute and debauched we are ashamed of him because his Faults reflect upon us And therefore we hold our selves obliged for our own Vindication to testify our displeasure against him And so it is with the Holy one of Israel and his sinful People The 3d. Account is to imbitter sin to them Jer. 2. 19. Know therefore and see that it is an evil thing and a bitter that thou hast forsaken the Lord thy God and that his fear is not in thee As Abner said to Ioab of the war so I say to every one of their sin 2 Sam. 2. 26. Knowest thou not that it will be bitterness in the latter end Prosperity sweetens sin to Sinners which of it self is sweet enough to their corrupted Palate But the Gall and Wormwood of affliction gives it its own kindly relish The 4th Account is that he may put a stop to his People in their course of Sin Thus Hosea 2. 6. I will hedge up thy way with Thorns and make a wall that she shall not find her Paths and verse 7 She shall not overtake nor find her Lovers Many in prosperity are so engaged by custom to courses of Iniquity which nothing but affliction can interrupt and put a stop to and they must take their march into the Wilderness to divert them off the Paths of Wickedness O that all who are in Affliction and in the Wilderness would take this advantage of their impetuous over-hailing Lusts and Idols and had Wisdom to improve such a good occasion of a perpetual Divorce and Separation from the sins that were wont easily to beset them and as easily to prevail with them It is not time when people are in the Wilderness to rush every one to their course as the Horse rusheth into the Battel never once asking what is this I am doing But it is then seasonable Daniel 4. 27. To break off our Sins and Iniquities Least we go further on than that we can safely retire our selves The 5th Account is that they may truly repent and throughly return from Sin to God In the 7 verse of
this chapter when by affliction she is put to a stand in her course of sin it is yet intended further that she return to her first Husband and this is brought to effect Hos chap. 6. verse 1. Come sayes she and let us return unto the Lord For he hath torn c Simple cessation from sin without true conversion in time of affliction may put a person or People to Pharaoh's Expences of multiplyed Rods and Plagues one after another with the hazard of utter destruction in the end Learn we then in the Wilderness to say as is meet to be said unto God Iob 34. 31 32. I have born Chasitsement I will not offend any more That which I see not teach thou me if I have done iniquity I will do no more Let us turn throughly from all iniquity and that with all our Heart And thus to the first reason and its several respects Why the Lord brings his People into the Wilderness It is their sin 2. The Lord brings his people into the Wilderness for their Tryal and Exercise Deut. 8. 2. The Lord did all that unto thee to prove thee to know what was in thine heart whether thou wouldest keep his Commandments or not Rom. 5. 3 4 5. Tribulation sets all graces on work in the Saints Thus the Lord dealt with the Church Psal. 44. from the 17 verse to the 23 and Psal 66. 10. Thus he dealt with Iob. The Lord is come to these Nations with his fan in his hand he is winnowing us as Wheat and he will throughly purge his floor Matth. 3 12. and who may abide the day of his coming and who shall stand when he appeareth for he is like a refyners fire and like fullers sope and he shall sit as a refiner and as a purifyer of silver and he shall purify the sons of Levi and purge them as Gold and Silver that they may offer unto the Lord an offering in righteousness Malach 3 2 3. Now the secrets of many hearts are discovered now we ●ee the ground of mens stomachs and what corruption and rotten stuffe hath been lurking under ●he beauty of untryed profession Would not some have said am I a dog if that which they have how done had been told them a few years ago Now it is seen Daniel 11. 34. that many did cleave to the Covenant with flatteries but the next verse being the 35. says further That some of them of understanding shall fall to try them and to purge and to make them white even to the time of the end because it is yet for a time appointed Therefore blessed is he that endureth to the end And let him that standeth take heed lest he fall The strange discoveries the great stumbling and many off fallings ●f men in these times afford me the serious and confirmed thoughts how few there are that shall ●e saved and how hardly these few Malachie's ●efiners fire comprehends both all the tryals of a present time and also and specially the great and solemn last tryal of the Judgment of the great day when many a mans work shall be burnt up and himself shall be saved yet so as by fire 1 Cor. 3. 15. ●hen shall all the sinners and hypocrits in Zion be affraid and surprized for that they cannot dwell ●●th devouring fire nor with everlasting burnings Isai. ●3 14. There will be many amissing that day in the Congregation of the righteous that here ha●● sitten chief in the Assembly In general this is th● verity but towards the particular persons of ●● ther 's I must walk with Charity as toward ●● self with fear and humble Jealousie This o●● all would remember that they who cannot endu●● the wide sieve of larger tryals in a present time wi●● never be able to abide the narrow search of a stri●● judgment at the end of time But as the Lord will have his People tryed so he will have the●● likwise Exercised and their Graces imployed Idleness is a hateful and unhappy evil in People We fa● an idle man must always have something to work he that ceaseth to do well will soon learn ●● do ill To prevent that the Lord puts work 〈◊〉 his Peoples hand for he hath not given the● Graces and Talents to hide in a napkin under th● earth but to be imployed and improven to use and therefore he appoints affliction as a ta●● master to call forth all their Graces to work● and to receive the Tale of every mans Work that it may be known what profit they make Th● time of affliction should be a bussy time like Eating time and Harvest to the People of God But alas to many may be said in truth that which Pharaoh said to the Israelites in cruel scorn ye ●● idle ye are idle Exod. 3 17. Only his inference and mine run very contrary ye are idle says he and therefore ye say let us go and do sacrifice to the Lord But ye are idle say I and therefore ye say no● let us go and do sacrifice to the Lord Now if the Lord bring his People into affliction for their Exercise hence it is consequentially inferred that if their Afflictions do not Exercise them to purpose they are not like to come out of them in haste I fear many but play with their Afflictions and look upon all the sad sights they see in the Wilderness but as so many farleyes fit to entertain their curiosity and to cause them gaze And I exhort all to be serious with their Afflictions 3. The Lord brings his People to the Wilderness that they may be the more fit to receive the impressions of his will and communications of his Goodness Thus we see throughout this Chapter the Lord designes jointly her Reformation and Consolation by all these bitter threatnings and afflicting Dispensations And Chapter 5 15. of this ●ame Prophesy of Hosea I will go says the Lord and return to my place till they acknowledge their offence and seek my face In their Affliction they will seek ●e early And as the whole have no need of the Physician but the sick they now finding the disease of their Affliction to purpose and so being the better fitted for the Communications of the Lords goodness in their deliverance return to him in this confidence that he who hath torn will heal them c. and that his coming to them verse 3d shall be as the rain to the earth which being parch●d with drought is well ready for a showre People ●n Prosperity readily are not so fit to receive either the impressions of Gods will for then speak to them and they will not hear Jer. 22. 1. Or the Communications of his Goodness for then they an say we are Lords and we will not come to thee Jer. 2. 31. But Affliction fits them better both for the one and for the other In prosperity as in the noise of a City every thing is heard but nothing is hearkened to and the common noise swallows
times The plague of a general defection which as the Pest doth other deseases hath engrossed all abominations is now so common that except it were with Aaron Numb 16. 48. to stand between the dead and the living with the incense of much intercession that if it be possible the plague may by stayed I should think him a person of that stoutness which they call rashness and of a pretty well confirmed if not of a much hardned heart who otherwise could gladly come into the Company of or mix himself with the men of this Generation We say when all freits fail fire is good for the farsey if God cure this Generation of one Plague by another I shall think it no more than is necessary for Psal. 14. 3. generally they are all gone aside they are altogether become filthy there is none that doth good no not one And now I think I hear a voice from Heaven saying of this Generation as that other Rev. 18. 4 said to Iohn of Mystical Babylon come out of her my people that ye may not be partakers of her sins and that ye receive not of her Plagues And there is another great mischief that the Lord leads his People out of its way in bringing them into the Wilderness and it is the Plagues that come upon wicked men and all Gods enemies The People of God want not their own visitations but they are not like the Plagues of the wicked their enemies Isai. 27. 7. hath he smiten him as he smote those that smote him or is he slain according to the slaughter of those that are slam by him Yea the Saints Afflictions are excellent Antidotes and preservatives against the Plagues of their enemies who are not as but indeed are the Ungodly and the Wicked We see the properity of the Saints Afflictions Psal. 94. 12 13. Blessed is the man whom thou chasteness O Lord and teachest him out of thy law that thou may est give him rest from the days of adversity till the pit be digged for the wicked A strange thing a mans motto to be perussem nisi perussem I had perished if I had not perished and that chastisment should hide a man from the day of adversity But both the History of Scripture and the Saints experience from time time in all Generations do yeeld abundance of particular instances in confirmation of this General assertion It appears by Lots slowness to depart that he took it as a grief to go out of Sodom filthy as it was and yet the Lord by that is sending him out of the midst of the overthrow It is no doubt a grief and great Affliction to many of the Saints and Servants of God that they are removed from their people and place But when judgements come upon aplace better to be away than in place And in the judgment of judicious and great Divines it prognosticats no good to a place when the Saints and Servants of God are driven out thereof Let any read Muscuus upon Math. 24. Alas then for her that bare me and whose Breasts gave me suck for the City the place of my Nativity and education for the word that is past upon her and the Prophesy When it shall be said to faithful Ministers of the Gospel go here or go there go to the south or go to the north but go not to Edinburgh then wo to thee O Edinburgh These are the words and Prophesy of Mr. Robert Rollock which are to be seen in Print before the translation of his book upon the Colossians And is not this the time spoken of 5. The Lord brings his People into the Wilderness to Humble them that they may know of whom they hold mercies and learn afterwards in prosperity to carry soberly When Israel was upon the entry of a land flowing with milk and honey Moses insists wisely throughout the book of Deuteronomy upon the Memory of their case in the Wilderness and tells them plainly Chap. 8. verse 2. The Lord did all that to humble thee To this end it was that the Lord commanded the pot of Manna to be kept by the Ark and for this was institute the feast of Tabernacles Prosperity is an insolent Piece and will readily cause men forget their maker that hath done all these things for them and came a free-hold of mercies we are Lords say they and therefore we will come no more unto thee Jer. 2. 31. Or els they will give the Glory of their mercies unto Idols in this same Hosea 2. 5. I will go after my lovers says she who give me my bread and my water my wool and my flax mine oil and my drink and therefore the Lord is concerned for the mantainance of his right to put them out of possession till they make a legal entry by a humble acknowledgment to him their righteous superior and be repossessed by a novo damus as is clear from this Chapter And many other ways the insolency of Prosperity is expressed to the dishonour of God and damnage and hurt of our neighbours by Prophanity Presumtion carnal Confidence Intemperancy Oppression and the like and therefore sayeth the Lord Zeph. 3. 12. 13. I will leave in the midst of thee on afflicted and poor People and they shall trust in the name of the Lord and the Remnant of Israel shall not do iniquity He that knows how he has gain'd his Estate should know how he imploys it and they that come to mercies hardly should use them well and humbly If ever God bring his Church and People again to good days and Prosperity O! Let it be remembred that once we were in the Wilderness And thus to the second thing in the point viz. Wherefore doth the Lord bring his People into the Wilderness Follows the Use which is the 3d thing in the point The first Use is of warning and I would sound an alarme and proclame a march into the Wilderness to all the People of God Our Leader and Commander Iesus Christ the Captain of our Salvation hath long since taken the field and is gone out on our head Heb 13. 12 13. Let us then who have taken the Sacrament and Military Oath of Christ and have given our names unto him go forth unto him without the camp bearing his reproach The cloud is now lifted up from over the Tabernacle and therefore it is time for the Children of Israel to set forth yea the Ark of the Lord his Ordinances and his People with the best of their Leaders are already in the fields and are suffering hardship as good souldiers Let us not then for shame lunch at home let us learn the Religious Gallantry of Uriah the Hittite that valiant man 2 Samuel 11. 11. And Uriah said unto David the Ark and Israel and Iudah abide in tents and my Lord Joab and the servants of my Lord are incamped in the open fields shall I then go into mine house to eat and to drink and to ly with my Wife
in Intimate and more than ordinary fellowship with God as I cited of Moses before we would enter the Clouds and go up into the Mount to God and we shall be no homlier than welcome Cant 4 8 invites us to this We never find David higher upon it than in the Wilderness We owe that sweet 63 Psalme to the Wilderness of Iudah in the 8 verse where of it is said my soul followeth hard after thee thy right hand upholdeth me and in the 5 verse my soul shall be satisfied as with marrow and fatness and my mouth shall praise thee with joyfal lips If a Soul make a visit to God from the Wilderness they may expect Joseph's Brethrens entertainment they may resolve to Dine with him at noon Our Lord Jesus learned this of his Father This is a desart place says he and we cannot send the People away fasting lest they faint by the way Yea and after they may have that sweet Musick my soul shall be satisfied as with marrow and fatness and my mouth shall praise thee with joyful lips and Psal 57. 7 8. my heart is fixed O God my heart is fixed O Lord says he I am now well at my heart I will sing and give praise Awake up my Glory awake Psaltery and harp I myself will awake early and that was also a Wilderness Psalme We owe the 4 Psalme to the Wilderness likwise and the 84 whereof more anone Take we then the direction that the times of our affliction be times of more than ordinary Communion with God 5. In the Wilderness we would be diligent to seek good occasions and means for the relief of our Afflictions and supply of our wants Need must make vertue with us Psal. 84. 5 6. Blessea is the man in whose heart is the ways of them who passing thorow the vally of Baca make it a well We must not like the unjust Steward refuse in this case both to dig and beg we must use all means lawful both spiritual and natural with God and men we must with Nehemiah both Pray to the Good God of Heaven and supplicat the King Nehemiah 2. 4 5. The day has been when the Nobles and Estates of Scotland and our Courtiers would have suted and courted the King for a Commission to build the City of the Lord and of their Fathers Sepulchers the Church owning that Faith wherein their Fathers Died who have left there to Posterity the Sepulchers and lasting Monuments of their Fidelity Zeal and Religious gallantry when a Great man would have pleaded for a liberty and protection to a faithful Minister Then Israel and the Lords People in their bounds in commendation of their Zeal and Diligence sang that song Numb 21. 17 18. Spring up O well sing ye unto it the Princes digged the well the Nobles of the People digged it by the direction of the Law-giver with their staves But now since our Princes and Nobles turned herdmen to the Philistines and servants to Prelates their work hath been to stop and take away and strive for Isaac's wells to deprive the People of God moe ways than one of those occasions of pure and plentiful Ordinances which they had digged and drunk of had with labour provided and with refreshment enjoyed See the case in ane Allegory Gen. 26. from the 17. verse to 23. I fear when this generation is gone and if carcasses fall not in the Wilderness if God make not a clean field if he do not root out and make a speedy riddance of this evil Generation from the face of the earth wiser men than I are much deceaved that Nigrum theta or black mark shall be found written upon the Sepulchres of most of our Nobles Nehemiah 3. 5. that the put not their necks to the work of their Lord. And when it is come to that then who knows but the sons and little ones of our Nobles may be Well-diggers And as it was in the case of the drought Ier. 14. 3. may come to the waters and to the pitts may be such as shall seek out and labour for the means of their Souls refreshment The Lord may bring the little Ones of those transgressors whose carcasses fall in a Wilderness into a land flowing with milk and hony Numb 14. 31 32. Mean time let us be digging in the Wilderness let us seek occasions for our Souls and where we do not find them let us make them 6. In the Wilderness we would thankfully receave and improve thriftily all offers of accidentall occasions that providence layes to our hand Psal 84. 6. the rain also filleth the Pools that is the Lord will now and then be giving his out-wearyed People some unexpected means of present relief and refreshment which they must acknowledge and use till they get better and more lasting occasions Rain water in a Pool is neither so good nor so enduring as a spring or fountain of living Water and yet the former is good where the latter cannot be had for to the hungry Soul every bitter thing is sweet and little will do a poor man good If God give us an occasion of a good Sermon or a Communion or make any other good means to drop upon our heads as unexpectedly as the rain falls from the Heaven or if we have the benefit of the neighbour-hood of a faithful Minister for the time these things howbeit for their nature and vertue they be fountain water yet herein the best of them is but like a Pool that they are of an uncertain endurance For such is the condition of these Wilderness-times that where one day you have a fountain the next day you have nothing or an empty cistern nor is there throughout all the land so much as one Rehoboth Gen. 26. 22. one well that the Philistines do not strive for Therefore we must drink for the drought that is to come we must hear for the time that is to come Isai. 42. 23. we must make the best we can of every occasion that remaines or accidentally offers for the time and we must feed upon the little Oyl in the cr●ise and the handful of Meal in the barrel till there be plenty in the Land 7. In the Wilderness we would make use of good Company yea we would make much of it where ever we can have it Psal. 84 7. they go from sirength to strength as our Translation reads it but the Original hath it They go from company to company or from troop to troop Indeed solitude and want of good Company is not the least of the evils of the Wilderness as I shewed above in the description of the wilderness and I believe the People of God in these times will bear me witness in this But we would seek good Company and make use of it Mal. 316 the fearers of God that were then in the Wilderness spake often one to another But wandering and unsettlment another great mischief of the Wilderness will not let the Saints lodge
they be spiritual sanctuary mercies that we miss then remember Ezek. 11. 16. Although I have scattered them among the Countreys yet will I be to them a little Sanctuary in the Countreys where they shall come Remember and sing 84 Psal. already cited with Psal. 63. and 42. If they be remporal earthly mercies that we desiderat then remember Psal 24. above cited with Deut. 8. 2 3. the Lord led thee through the Wilderness and humbled thee with hunger and gave thee Manna that he might make thee know that man doth not live by bread only but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of the Lord doth man live I leave it to every one to try what is in God and in the blessing of God And in the mean time let us learn to take more upon trust with God There is no waste ground in God meet his People with scant where they will they will meet with none in him Jer. 2. 31. have I been a Wilderness unto Israel sayes God they could not say he had Even as Christ said to his Disciples Luk. 22. 35. when I sent you without purse and scrip and shoes lacked ye any thing and they said nothing why many truely of the Saints and servants of God in these times who cannot boast of much wealth yet do not speak of want many wonder how they live and yet they are both living and Life-like And for one I shall say that first and last once and again God hath cast my lot more to satisfaction than I could have chosen with most deliberation hereby teaching me that which I have taken for my Lesson and till I can say it perfectly by his grace I shall still be learning to choose nothing for my self and though I shall not say with Leah Gen. 30. 18. God hath given me my hire yet I may be excused to think that God hath given me a hire for albeit Moses's respect to the recompence of reward Heb. 11. 26. and it may be not that either but rather a free love and respect to the name of God hallowed be that great and precious Name Rev. 2 3 give the chief determination in all an upright Mans most serious deliberations nor would he as he shall not be reckoned with those men Math. 6. 2. who have their reward yet my present satisfaction with my condition outvyeth till it is envyed of the lot of those who have sought a fortune by moe turnes Let Ravens hunt and catch and rugg and Prey and croack over what they have gotten and cry from more I judge him happy Cui Deus obtulit Farcà quod satis est manu That hath enough and finds no want Tho his allowance be but scant And I have learned 2 Kings 5. 26. that this is not a time to receive Money and to receive Garments and olive-yards and vineyards and sheep and oxen and men servants and maid servants I fear something worse than the Leprosie of Na●nian cleave to the Gehazi's of this time If God will give me my life for a prey in all places whither I go by his grace I shall not seek great things for my self for I fear he will bring evil upon all flesh and will break down what he hath built and pluck up what he hath planted even the whole land Ier. 45. 4 5. I love tacitus pasci a morsel be it of green herbs with quietness and I hope I have learned Philip. 4. 11. in whatsoever state I am therewith to be content Yea and I am the more content that I find my case somewhat common in the time To confirme it I give you a story A vapouring Time-divine who hath changed his gang twice already and possessed two honest mens Churches one after another seeking a fatter Pasture lately met accidentally with an honest deprived Minister of his old acquaintance and seeing him in case better than wont asked confidently ha sir how is it that you look so well upon it in this World The other a Notable Man gave him a Notable Answer why thus it comes said he we go in God's common Gods common is better pasture than the Worlds inclosure and what wonder if we who go i● Gods common look better on 't than you who go in the Devils inclosure At this the petulant man kept silence and iniquity stopt her mouth I Remember it is said Psal. 112. 10 the wicked shall see it that which befalls the righteous to his satisfaction and honour and be grieved he shall gnash his teeth and melt away the desires of the wicked shall perish Now as we would by faith take God for all things els in the Wilderness so in the case of fainting and weariness which as I shewed in the description is the last and not the least evil of a Wilderness-condition we would take him for our strength Psal. 48. 5 Blessed is the man whose strength is in thee Psal. 73. 26. my flesh and heart faileth but God is the strength of my heart Cant. 8. 5. The Church coming up out of the Wilderness l●aneth upon her beloved Isai. 12 2 The Lord Iehovah is my strength and my song Isai. 33. 2. be thou their arm every morning Haback 3. 19. the Lord God is my strength and he will make my feet like hindes feet and he will make me to walk upon my high places to the chief singer on my stringed instruments if strength quite fail and be exhausted he makes the weary to renew their strength if strength be weak and the Soul drives heavily and comes up with a slow pace in Duty then he shall run if when they winn to that they fear it shall not last nor they be able to continue at that rate then they run and weary not they walk and do not faint Isai. 40. 31. 10. And lastly In the Wilderness we would long and haste much to be through and press with importunity for a delivery This we see in David Psal. 42. Psal. 63. Psal. 84. and Psal. 107 6. those who wandered in a Wilderness cryed unto the Lord in their trouble And Moses who had been long in the Wilderness was very earnest to have gone over Jordan to see the good Land though for his fault at Meribah it was denyed him Deut 3. 25. 26. This direction is nothing so strange as is the disposition of those to whom it is meant For I begin to observe many who have seen the Lords Glory and Power in the Sanctuary but too modest not to say worse be it from desponcency or from some worse quality in their Suits for a restoration of these Mercies Either the length of our affliction hath put us so far out of memory or the deepth of it hath put us so far out of hope of better dayes that as if there had never been nor never should be better dayes we content our selves with the present Truly it astonishes me to see such a Spirit of slackness possess many as if the Lord had said
to us Ier. 29. 5 6 7 10. Build ye houses and dwell in them c. For thus saith the Lord that after seventy years be accomplished in Babylon will I visit you and form my good word towards you in causing you to return to this place Our disposition looks like those that were to have a seventy years affliction and long continued Captivity And indeed considering Daniel 9. 13. All this evil is come upon us yet made we not our Prayer before the Lora our God c. I observe that Security and a slack disposition is the attendent or rather the presage and fore-runner of a continued Affliction And by the contrary a Spirit of restless importunity is a comfortable Prognostick of a speedy delivery See it confirmed in the instances of Daniel Nehemiah Ezra who upon the very point of the deliverance were stirred up and with themselves stirred up the People by Prayer and Fasting to ask Mercies of their God Take then the direction Isa. 62. 6 7. Ye that make mention of the Lord keep not silence and give him no rest till he establish and till he make Jerusalem a praise in the Earth And thus with patience I have got through the Wilderness and considered the intimation of the Churches condition which is the second thing in the words of the Verse In conclusion be it minded only that all that hath been said to this point doth alike concern the Church in general and Saints in particular For neither I nor any other who from this mount of contemplation do view the Wilderness at a distance can expect to have it said to us as was said to Moses of the Land beyond Iordan Thou shalt not go over into it but rather as was said to Abraham All the Land which thou seest shall be thine Arise and walk through the Land for to thee will I give it Not to speak of what we have had or at the time have none of us can promise in the Life of our Vanity that we shall not have if not at once yet successively one after another all the described parts of the Wilness for our Lot I will allure her THe third thing in the words is The Lords Design I will allure her Hence the Doctrine is That the Lords great Design in the vicissitudes of all Dispensations to his People is to gain them to himself that he may have more of their Kindness and Service The point is confirmed 1. From the account Scripture gives of Gods various Dispensations to his People Take but this Chapter for an instance he both afflicts her and comforts her and all that he may have her heart 2 From the first and greatest Command in the Law of God which is That we love him with all our Heart c. As the Law is understood to be the mind of the King so the greatest Command of God is the surest Evidence of his Will concerning this That we abide only for him and do not play the Harlot nor be for another man Chap. 3. 3. It is easie courting where we may command And in this the Lord hath he advantage of all other Lovers The Soveraignity of his Propriety in us bears him to challenge our Heart and Service without once asking our consent and to resent every repulse and refusal not simply as a displeasure but really as a wrong in defrauding him of what is his own by a just Title of many respects antecedent to our voluntary consent 2. The Lords design is so manifest in his kind way with his People that as it cannot be hidden so it seems he would have it known that every one may think him a Suter Even as when a man frequents the House of his Beloved presently by his frequency and other circumstances of his Carriage the meanest Servant of the House discovers his design Yea and the Lord is not ashamed here expresly to tell his Errand I will allure her Some men if they intend a match with and have a design upon a person they set their designs abroad either in Policy to further them and thereby to know how the person intertains such Reports that accordingly they may behave themselves in their intended Address or else in vain Glory to vaunt of them So the Lord causes the Report go loud of his blessed purpose that it may be seen he is both serious in the matter and glorious of it to have sinners love him Now the Lord allures either Morally and Externally or Internally and effectually Morally and Externally while he courts Souls with Arguments and Motives fit to take with rational and ingenuous Spirits Effectually and Internally when by the Power of Grace he makes such fit Motives and Arguments have their due weight and work upon Hearts According to this division for explication of this Blessed Design of the Lords alluring his People I shall first touch upon some of the chief Motives that are fitted to this purpose for to reach them all I presume not 2 dly I shall treat of the inward Power of Grace that makes these Motives effectual upon the Soul And 3dly shall conclude the point with Use. 1. Of motives the first is his own Glorious Excellency outshining every shadow of likness let be equality Who is a God like unto thee And that I am now upon a love designe and upon the imployment of Eleazer Abrahams servant Gen. 24 to seek a Wife to my Masters Son I am concerned as a Friend of the Bridgroome to express my self in the proper termes of such a Subject And O that my heart could indite good matter that I might speak the things that I have made concerning the King Let it then be condescended what is required by any but willing to be satisfied to commend a person to the heart of his beloved and in him you have it 1. for his Dignity and Descent he is the King and the Kings son 2. For his Induements in him are hidd all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge yea and he is full of grace and truth and if you speak of a Spirit a great Spirit Isat 11. 2. 3. the spirit of the Lord resteth upon him the spirit of wisdom and understanding the spirit of Counsel and might the spirit of knowledge and of the fear of the Lord and shall make him of quick understanding in the fear of the Lord c. 3. For his Beauty he is white and ruddy the chief among ten thousand and fairer than the sons of men 4. For his Disposition and Humour he is tender compassionat loving meek condescending kind and Gracious O but the Soul may have many a good day and much sweet contentment in his Company 5. For his Estate and Fortune he is the possessor of Heaven and earth the heir of all things and there is no lack to those that have him and they have him that love him 6. For his Use and Vertue he is all and in all and in him we are compleat 7. For his
accordingly in this Chapter the Lord allures this whoorish Church with Gifts So verse 15. I will give her her vineyards from thence and the valley of Achor for a door of hope A Gift is a tempting and inticing thing and therefore the Lord hath forbid Iudge the taking of Gifts For a Gift blinds the Eyes of the Wise and perverts the words of the Righteous And therefore Isai 33. 15. He is a rare man That can shake his Hands from holding Bribe● And the more strange it is that men can take so largely from God and not be thereby enticed after him Solomon sayes A mans gift make room for him and whithersoever it turneth it self it is so prosperous that Every one is a Friend to him that giveth Gifts Prov. 18 15. and 19. 6. But let us consider Gods Gifts His Gifts are 1. Free Gifts And what is freer than a Gift For if it were not free it were not a Gift None of us can earn the east benefit at Gods hand For who hath given to the Lord and it shall be recompensed to him again But of him and through him and for him are all things to whom be Glory for ever Rom. 11. 35. 36. 2. His Gifts are good gifts he is the giver of all good and from him every good and perfect gift descendeth he will with-hold no good from him that walketh uprightly I confess That sore evil unde● the Sun Eccles. 5. 13. may be seen in all other Gifts as well as Riches That they are often keepea for the 〈…〉 hereof to their hurt But God never gave men that Gift they have it of the Evil One by abuse to turn good Gifts into evil for themselves 3. His Gifts are Rich and rare Gifts Grace and Glory and every good thing yea himself For the Covenant Gift is I will be their God yea our Selves and our Souls He gives Life and Breath Act. 17. 25. ●er 38. 16 He gave us this Soul 4. His Gifts are large Gifts Act. 17. 25. He gives all things and 1 Cor 47. What hast thou that thou didst not receive And here I observe what a great advantage in his alluring us the Lord hath of us all by his Gifts If we possess and keep still his Gifts we cannot handsomly refuse his sute for our kindness and service for no ingenuous Woman will possess or retain that man's Gift whom she minds not to entertain But if any should presume disdainfully to return the Lords Tokens to him and to send back his Gifts then he hath yet the greater advantage For if we send back all his Gifts and return all to him that ever we had of him then must we needs with all send back and return our selves and our Souls and all that we are or have or can For he gave all these and he requires no more than what he gave So that of necessity we must either be all for God or we must be nothing or else we must be most base in being anything that we are not for God and in retaining his Tokens when we have rejected himself And now let wild ungracious sinners look how the● shall come handsomly off And this I would recommend especially to such as claim to more ● a Spirit and Breeding than ordinary if there be any Gallantry here is the opportunity to shew themselves men 5. His Gifts are frequently renewed or rather continually heaped Gifts He loadeth u● daily with his 〈◊〉 He is still giving and daily sending variety of ●●● Mercies and he is still heaping Benefits upon us and these if we intertain th● Giver and give him our Consent we are to take tokens for good and an earnest of greater things to be enjoyed For the Valicy of Achor is a door of hope The Fifth chief Motive wherewith the Lord allures his People is his Carriage and Demeanor towards them A goodly Deportment a quair Behaviour with an obliging Carriage is very taking Davia's and Daniel's Behaviours did much to allay if not to vanquish the fury and malignit● of their malicious Enemies The Carriage of 〈…〉 Vespasian the Emperour was such that thereby he was and was called deliciae generis humani the darling of mankind But O how transporting is the Lords way and Carriage towards his People Secular Lovers use to frame their Carriage as well as their Cloathes into the best fashion and dress and they study to make their entries 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with all their Sailes up and would seem to be rather what they should be then what they are and indeed be They put on their best Behaviour with their best Sute only at Shows and Solemnities for as they do not wear their best Cloaths ●o neither practice they the best Manners always at home But as the Lords Carriage to his People is alluring at his first appearing and in his first address to their Souls so they may expect to have it always the same For He is God and changes not and all that is but his ordinary But behold his Carriage I pray you with much Patience he waits upon his Peoples consent as if their Love were worth the waiting upon and indeed it it be not so it is enough that he account it so in much mercy he overlooks many faults in them and puts the best construction upon many of their unhandsome and unkind Actions In much kindness he makes them many a visit With much earnestness he invites them with much respect he intreats them calling them by all their best names in discretion fitting their Titles to his design In much condescendence and tenderness he complyes with them and applyes himself to them and all this he doth so equally constantly and faithfully that they must say if they be ingenuous that all his wayes to them are Mercy and Truth And for all this he is content so ●ar to condescend as to submit himself to their reasonable and impartial Consure O Israel what iniquity hast thou found in me and wherein have I wearted thee testify against me Micah 6. 3. Surely if ever I did any thing below my self it was in matching with thee ●f I had insisted upon particulars in this and the Motives already mentioned where had my rest been But of Gods Carriage and Way with his People this is the sum that it is not the manner of Men. And I think the Lords ravishing conversation with his People would easily pass into Admiration with him who professed ●●ov 30 19 that he could not know matters much more easie O that the secular Courtier might after many changes o● shapes and fashions at last be turned into a seraphick lover And that the ingine and wit which is thrown where it evanishes into the Air of vanity were employed to court the Uncreated Beauty of that ever blooming flower of Eternity The Sixth chief Motive wherewith the Lord allures his People is the Example of others who have led them the way in loving choosing and commending him Example is
out therefore do the virgins love thee yea he ●an give a Soul-charming vertue to the very words of his name and cause the very naming of him kindle a flame of love in the Soul that many waters cannot quench thy name is as ointment that is powred forth He can open with his finger the ●stest lock that is upon the heart of any sinner Cant. ● 4. my beloved put in his hand by the hole of the ●●or my bowels were moved for him and if it ●o not open freely he can drop a litle mirrhe from is finger upon it that shall make it easy ● rose ●● to open to my beloved and my fingers droped myrrhe verse 5 and 6. yea without once asking liberty he ●an ravish a sinners heart and when ever he comes ●pon such a design he coms rideing in King So●●mons Chariot the midst whereof is paved with love ●● the daughters of Ierusalem Cant. 3. 9. 10. and after the Kings Chariot follows a large train the Chariots of Aminadab waiting to convoy and bring ●p his willing people Cant. 6. 12. and if once the ●●ul is got up into the Chariot the King bids drive the 13 verse return return O Shulamite return ●urn and then farewell thy Fathers house Psal. 5. 10. forget thine own people and thy fathers house ●ow the Chariots of Aminadab the Chariots of the ●ords willing People run upon these four wheels ● plain termes the inward power of Grace where●● the Lord allures sinners and gains them to himself consisteth and is carryed on of these Four ●1 A sound and clear Information of the understanding and Illumination of the mind as it is ●●ten in the Prophets and they shall be all taught of God John 6. 45. out of Isai. 54 13. with Ier. 24. 7. and I will give them an heart to know me 1 John 5. 20. he hath given us an understanding that we ma● know him that is true If a man by nature and study were never so judicious and learned yet ere he b● converted and effectually allured to ingage throughly in Covenant with God he hath need to be taught of God that the eyes of his understanding being opened he may know that which passes knowledge Otherways it may seem a strange saying but it is that which is noted in the Scripture of truth and the Scripture expressions of opening the eyes giving an understanding and the like make it clear That the meanest Saint and convert hath more knowledge of Christ and seeth somewhat in him that the most Subtile Seraphick Resolute or Angelick Doctor unconverted cannot see So that whatever differences there be betwixt Saving and Common knowledge there is certainly a difference even in regard of the intensive degree 〈◊〉 clearness or if it be not so let any man tell 〈◊〉 what such expressions mean 2 Cor. 4. 6 that God who commandeth the light to shine out of darkness hat● shined in our hearts to give the light of the Glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ and verse 3 and the Gospel is hid from those that perish for Satan hath blinded their mindes and no doubt many of these had more natural judgment and learning with more of the means also than some of the● that believed To conclude there is greater odd betwixt a Saint and a Rabbi than betwixt a Ra●●● and an Idiot for the last two I now suppo● them unconverted are neighboured in Nature but Grace separats the first from them both 2. The inward power of Grace consisteth in a powerful inflection and Bowing of the Will. Psal. 110. 3. thy People shall be willing in the day of thy power the Lord findeth sinners Unwilling he worketh on them not willing and he makes them Willing The Will as I said before is the strongest hold of the Soul and the most wilful piece of the man command the Will and you command the man the New Will say Divines is the New Man and therefore the Lord is concerned to possess the Will and this he doth wherever he savingly allures a Soul for he scorns any should say that they serve and follow him against their will all his Souldiers are Volunteers his People are a Willing People I find a Godly Man once saying and all such must say it often the good which I would that I do not Even as by Conversion oft times the greatest sinner becomes the greatest Saint so the Will before Conversion the most obstinate and unplacable enemy doth afterward become the most kind and trusty friend to God for in the midst of many exorbitancies of affections and irregularities of Practice and Conversation the Will retains its loyalty and persists in its duty to the Lord and when the whole Soul is in an uproar and confusion like that of the City of Ephesus Act. 19. 32. a most lively Representation of a Soul in Perturbation wherein some cryed one thing some another for the Assembly was confused and the more part knew not wherefore they were come together All this while the Will is at ready to protest for the Lord as the superstitious Ephesians were for their Diana And when in a disorder all plead liberty I consent unto the Law says the will Rom 7. 16 and 25 with the mind I serve the Law of God 3. The inward power of Grace consists in a sweet Inclination of the Affections Deut. 30. 6. The Lord thy God will circumcise thine heart and the heart of thy seed to love the Lord thy God with all thine heart and with all thy Soul The Psalmist Prayes Psal. 119. 36. incline mine heart unto thy testimonys and Psal. 141. 4. incline not mine heart to any evil thing The Affections are ticklish things By much working and subduing with frequent turnings they become as ductile and formable as the potters clay whereof he makes a vessel as it pleases him Like those we call Good Natures they are sweet Companions but not so sure And as readily you do not leave them as you found them so you shall hardly find them where you left them nor know you when you have them or when you want them They are primi oc●upanti● they can refuse no body They welcome all comers follow all Counsels comply with all Companies And in a word they are compleat Conformists And they are courted by so many Lovers that it is much if they turn not common strumpets to the dishonour and grief of this concerned chaste Suter Who is broken with such whorish Hearts Ezek. 6. 9. Again they are like an Instrument with many Strings they make sweet Melody in Gods Service but with the least wrong touch you Mis-tune them Indeed the Saints have their affections frequently to Tune and it requires a time to do it This causes that the Affection of Grief which is the Basse of the Soul is oftest in Tune and keeps in Tune longest with the Saints Psal. 57. 7 8. When David's Heart was fixed his Harp was out of Tune when his
Faith had got footing his Affections were to seek The Case is common and too well known to the People of God In Preaching Hearing Reading Meditating Praying Praising or any other Duty of our Life the Affections oft times do not answer But Grace hath a skilful hand and is a Musician so expert that if the Tenor of the Will be but well set and the Base of Godly sorrow record well ordinary failings in the other parts shall not be much discerned 4. The inward power of Grace making outward Motives effectual consists in a Cheerful Ready Motion of the Locomotives and an actual up-stiring of all that is in a man by an Act Elicitive of the Imperated Acts of the Understanding Will and Affections So the Schools express it But to speak plainly it is Grace causing us to perform indeed and with our Hand that which it hath caused us to know will and Love with our Heart For sayes the Apostle It is God that worketh in us both to will and to do of his good Pleasure Philip. 1. 13. And if Grace assist not in this as well as in the rest this to do may make much adoe and cause even an Apostolick Spirit have a hard pull of Duty Rom. 7. 18. To will is present with me but how to perform that which is good I find not And by this their defectiveness and short coming in the point of doing the best of Saints may be convinced that of themselves they fall as far short in the other points and that it they cannot go the least step without Christs hand holding them up they could far less have walked the whole length of their Duty The Apostle's inference is remarkable to the purpose I know sayes he that in me that is in my 〈◊〉 dwelleth no good thing for to perform that which is good I find not albeit that to will is present with me So that he who of himself cannot do neither of himself can he know will or love that which is good Fail in one fail in all This consideration of it self may refute the whole and half P●●agian Popish Lutheran and Arminian Crot●hets in the point of Grace And this shortly is the method of Graces work Converting a Soul and alluring a Sinners heart The Understanding sayes Gods will is true the Will sayes it is good the Affections say it is sweet the Practice and whole Man sayes it is done Thy will he done and if it be thy will to save me and have me to thy self then Lord I am thine save me for I seek thy Precepts Psal. 119. 94. But in the Natural Birth we know not how the Bones do grow in the Womb of her that is with Child far less can we reach to Perfection the Mystery of Regeneration and if we know not the time when the wild Goats of the Rock bring forth nor can mark when the Hindes do Calve how shall we be able to Cast the Nativity of the Sons of God For Iohn 3. 8. The Wind bloweth where it listeth and thou hearest the sound thereof but canst not tell whence it cometh or whither it goeth So is every one that is born of the Spirit If we know not the way of a man with a maid Prov. 30. 19. how short may we well be judged to have come in our Accounts of the Lords method of courting and making Love to the Souls of his People and yet we are instructed from the Word of God to give of all these an account sufficient to Salvation with all necessary instruction and comfort And the like account the Saints are to expect from the Spirit of God which searcheth all things even the very deep things of God 1 Cor. 2. 10. The Use of this point I dispatch in these few words of Instruction 1. We are taught from this that sinners naturally are very untoward and untractable to that which is good they must be allured enticed and as it were beguiled and deceased unto that which is equally there Duty and Mercy Ier 20. 7 O Lord thou hast deceaved me and I was deceaved 2 Cor. 12. 16. The Apostle who was as a deceaver and yet true being crafty caught the Corinthians with guile It is indeed a pia fraus a Godly beguile to beguile a Soul to Heaven and to God I wish moe were thus beguiled and that many such deceavers may enter into the World nor can I say in this deceit whether the deceiver i● the Honester Man or the deceived the Happier 2. This teacheth Ministers the Art of Preaching They must be both serious and dexterous as friends of the Bridgroom and Ambassadors for Christ they must be so well acquaint with the laws of love as to be able a Divine blessing concurring to allure the wildest and most froward Soul A Minister would be a Seraphick lover one of the order of Peter Peter lovest thou me Lord thou knowest all things thou knowest that I love thee Peter feed my lambes feed my sheep If our way with sinners be not the most taken way let it be the most taking way and so we shall not mistake the way Many Ministers are but cold Suters for Christ and why they are troubled with an error of the first concoction they erre concerning the end they seek their own things and not the things of Christ they serve not our Lord Jesus but there own belly they eat the fat and cloath themselves with the wooll but they feed not the flock put them to tryal and it will be found they cannot read the Bible they lisp like the men of Ephraim for Shibboleth they say Sibboleth give them but to read that short text 2 Cor. 12. 14. they read it I seek not you but yours and if they read right I seek not Yours but You they are the greatest of lyars In a word they are like many in our days and those are even like them who court the fortune more than the person in this age a rich man needs not want Children let him make Images of his Silver and these shall not want matches such who for their generosity deserve as often they get the reward of a silver crucifix But as he that findeth a wife though he find her in her shirt findeth a good thing and obtaineth favour of the Lord Prov. 18. 22. So he that winneth Souls though he win not a penny with them is wise Prov. 11. 30. Truely the alluring way of preaching is ars longa a thing not soon learned but where God doth give the tongue of the learned This art hath many precepts which I am fitter to be taught than to teach and till God send the time of teaching I take this for the time of learning who are these that come up from the Wilderness both better men and better Ministers 3. We see this in the point That Religion is an alluring thing It deservs to be written in Gold Lord write it upon my heart it hath that in it which may abundantly
Then they need consolations and then they come in season Prov. 30. 6. Wine should be given to those that are of heavy hearts When I said my foot slippeth thy mercy Lord held me up This was a mercy that came in good season 3. Their fitness As then they most need consolations so then are they fittest to receive and intertain them The Lord will not have his Consolations to run by and be spilt by pouring them out into full vessels But Blessed are they that hunger and thirst for they shall be filled I spoke before upon the second part of the Text how afflictions fits for consolations and that therefore God sometimes brings his people into the Wilderness that thus he may fit them Most sweet are the Consolations wherewith the Lord trysts his people in their afflictions 1. He draws forth to them the bowels of ●ost tender compassions In all their affliction he is afflicted Isa. 63. 9. Jer. 31. 20. Since I spoke against him I do earnestly remember him still therefore my bowels are troubled for him Zach. 2. 8. He that toucheth you toucheth the apple of his eye It is a very acceptable consolation to an afflicted person to mourn with them and to be touched with their condition And the Lord cryes alas at every touch of affliction that comes upon people Nor need they fear he shall forget them For whatever is a mans pain it will not fail to put him in mind 2. He ownes them and takes notice of them when others sight them and care not for them Psal. 31. 7. He knows their Soul in Adversities Psal. 142. 4 5. I looked on my right hand and beheld but there was no man that would know me refuge failed me No man cared for my Soul I cryed unto thee O Lord I said thou art my refuge and my portion in the land of the living Jer 30. 16 17. and forward The Lord promises with great Mercies to owne his Church because in the 17 verse They called her an out-cast saying this is Zion whom no man seeketh after Lament 1. 12. It was nothing to those that passed by to see all that she suffered But her desire is frequently throughout the Chapter Behold O Lord for I am in distress Yea and he will behold For his eyes behold the things that are equal Act. 7. 34. I have seen I have seen the affliction of my people which is in ●gypt and I have heard their groaning This is a time wherein there be few to Resent the wrongs done to the Church of God and his Saints and Servants and fewer there be to right them And therefore that Prayer is good Psal. 17. 2. Let my Sentence come forth from thy presence Let thine eyes behold the things that are equal And the Saints may have justice for the asking For he Beholds mischief and spight to requite it with his hand Ps. 10. 14. 3. He vouchsafes them a more special presence Ps 91. 15. I will be with him in trouble Psal. 23. 4. In the valley of the Shaddow of death thou art with me Isai. 43. 2. When thou passest through the Waters I will be with thee c. The Lord is ever near to those that fear him but in affliction he goes very near them They have alwayes his special presence Ps. 140 13. The upright shall dwell in thy presence But in trouble they have a more special presence His presence is either a secret supporting presence whereby his people are held up they know not how For many a time when the Saints look back upon those times wherein they said their strength and their hope is perished from the Lord and see the way that they have come they wonder how they have win through But God was with them whilst they knew it not Or else his presence is a manifest comforting presence and that the Scripture calls his visiting of his people 4. Then the Lord vouchsafes his afflicted people many a kind visit And in those visits 1. He salutes his people with Peace He will speak Peace unto his people and to his Saints in the world ye shall have trouble sayes he but in me ye shall have Peace 2. He gives a hearing to all his peoples Confessions Complaints and Petitions Lord thou hast heard the desire of the humble 3. He speaks his mind to his people both concerning their Duty and the issue of their lot The times of the Lords visits to his afflicted people are the times wherein he communicates most of his secrets to those that fear him The Soul that goes through manyfest afflictions is ordinarily the wisest and most experienced Soul Heman the Ezrahit who was so sore afflicted even from his youth was one of the wisest men in his time Speculation speaks of cases like a Geographer Experience speaks like a Traveller That sayes that which our ears have heard this sayes that which our eyes have seen declare we unto you 4. In his Visits he gives his people tokens for good He comes never empty-handed to them But gives them such things whereof they may say in their straits when he seems to have forgotten them Lord whose are these 5. And further as the original hath the words of the Text he speaks to his peoples heart He satisfies them concerning his Dispensations and convinceth them of the equity and kindness of his dealing with them He gives them such rational accounts of his dispensations as makes them say he hath taken the best way with them and makes them sing thou hast dealt well with thy Servants Ps. 119. 65. And by convincing them that good is the Word of the Lord Isai. 39. 8. He makes them say from their Heart that if variety of lots were in their offer they would choose the present O but that speaks well I will speak to her heart I will even speak as she would have me Thus he comforts by his kind visits 5. He comforts his people in affliction by being all things to them and doing all things for them Thus we find the Saints in their afflictions making applications to God with Titles suted to their condition And it is God faith the Psalmist that doth all things for me He is the Shepherd of Israel If they be scattered he gathers them if they go astray he leads them if they want he feeds them and makes them Lie in green Pastures by the still waters If they be in hazard He is their refuge Are they sad He is the Health of their countenance Are they weak or weary He is their strength and with him is everlasting strength Are they sinners and guilty He is the God of their Righteousness Is Law intended against them He pleads their cause and stands at their right hand Is the judge an unfriend to them He is their judge and their Sentence cometh forth from his presence Do Kings or others command them to be Afflicted Fined Beaten Imprisoned Confined Banished Then Psal 44. 4. Thou art my King O God command deliverances for Jacob Have they no Friends nor any to do for them He that is the kind Lord can cause men shew them the kindness of the Lord That which the Scripture calleth the kindness of the Lord. 1 Sam. 20. 14. hath as much in it as may shew us that the Lord makes men Instruments at his pleasure to shew kindness and do a good Office to his people And when the Saints and Servants of God come to count kindness I hope there will be found more of the kindness of the Lord than of men in Courtesies that are done them I am so little a Patron of unthankfulness That I shall thank him kindly and pray as our Scots Proverb is The Lord reward him that doth me good whether with his will or against it But truly when from men I meet with less kindness where I might have expected more and more where I might have expected less The Meditation of this Scripture expression To shew the kindness of the Lord hath taught me the more earnestly to ask mercies of my God and to leave the expressing and dispensing of it to himself by Means and Instruments of his own choosing He can make a Babylonian Enemy to 〈…〉 his own Servant Ieremiah well 6. To add no more for that hath all The Lord comforteth his afflicted People by Christ ●esus 2 Cor. 1. 5 This is the Saints unchangeable Consolation in all changes of Dispensations and truly our Consolations will come to a poor account if Christ be not the sum of them all in all Cases and Conditions Christless comforts will leave us comfortless Christians The Use of this point shall be for strong Consolation to the Saints in their greatest afflictions The Lord hath laid it straitly upon us to comfort his People in their afflictions Isai. 40. 1. 2. and here he takes it upon himself to be their Comforter He hath given this Name and O shee to his Holy Spirit The Comforter and shall not the afflicted People of God with these words be comforted and comfort one another But according to the rule of Scripture Comforts and Duties must be matched together Nor must we expect in the event a Separation of those things that God hath joyned in the intimation Wherefore if we would have much of the Lords heart Let us give him much of ou●s If we would have him comfortable to us we must be kind to him If we would have him speak comfortably to us we must give our consent to him If we would have him speak to our Heart we must be to his Heart for so the Text runneth Therefore behold I will allure her I will bring her into the Wilderness and I will speak comfortably unto her Now to the God of all Consolation Father Son and Holy Ghost be ●ll 〈◊〉 and Dominion and Praise for ever and ever Amen Written in the Wilderness 1665 FINIS See Grenhams directions for reading the Scriptures See the fulfilling of the Scriptures Remark how the Plague followed in London the next year 1660.