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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

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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
Ruler Isay 3 6. Be thou our Ruler and let this ruine be under thy hand Nor can he love to have it recorded that in his dayes such evils prevailed unreformed it was when there was no King in Israel that every man did what was right in his own eyes If the health of the People be not recovered it sayeth there is no Physician there Ier 8 22. But a good Ruler scattereth the wicked and bringeth the wheel over them and he may say with David Psal 75 3. The earth and all the inhabitants thereof are dissolved I bear up the pillars of it he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 name and thing a Ioseph the Ston of Israel Such a one was Moses the Law-giver such was Iosua his successor such were the Judges of Israel such was Samuel such were all the good Kings of Judah such was Ezra the Scribe and such was Nehemiah the Tirshatha an eminent Reformer of Religion and state of Church and Kingdom For Religion in general Gods Holy Commandments were broken by all ranks of persons prophanity and iniquity prevailed and abounded that is solemnly confessed and amended Chapters 1. 9. In particular oppression reigned that is quashed Chap 5. and the People relieved false Prophets were hired by the enemy and bribed to compliance to weaken the Rulers hands and hinder the work of Reformation they are discovered and marked Chap 6. The ordinary worship of God and his Solemn Feasts were disused these are restored ch 8. For advancing and establishing the whole Reformation a Solemn Fast is kept ch 9. and a Covenant subscribed ch 10. The Holy Seed had mingled themselves and matched with strangers People of heathen abominations they separate themselves and that is amended ibid. The offerings of the Lord were neglected these are renewed ibid The Sabbaths were horribly prophaned That is strictly and with certification discharged and they not suffered to lodge about the walls Chap 10 31. and 13 15. and foreward The service of God was neglected by non-residence of the Priests through calamity and want that also is helped Chap. 10 11 12 13. ver 10. The orders and services of the Preists and Levits were confused these are cleared and they set to their charges as appointed by David Chap 7. 63 12. 45. and 13 30 Strangers uncircumcised had entred and defiled the Congregation of the Lord these are removed chap 13 3 Profane Persons of the Princes of the heathen had lodgings in the Lords house they are expelled and the Chambers cleansed Chap. 13. 8. 9. Some of the chief of the Preists had defiled the Covenant of the Preisthood by strange wives they are branded and that also is amended For the State the city the place of their Fathers sepulchres lay waste and the gates thereof were consumed with fire First these are repaired The people and their work are strongly opposed and sore reproached they are vindicated and their hands strengthened Chap. 2 4. When the City is built it is not manned therefore inhabitants and defendants are appointed Chap. 11. The People suffer sore by morgage the great sin of the oppressors belonging to the former head and calamity of the oppressed pertaining to this part that is redressed Chap 5. Open and secret enemies correspond and plot against the work and the Ruler these are discovered and disappointed Chap. 6. They are in great reproach and distress God is sought and means are used Chap. 4 and 6. They are poor husbandry and traffick is practised only the Sabbaths work and markets are discharged Oppression is born down and the People relieved of publick burdens Nehemtah the Governour and his brethren neither exacted the bread of the Governour nor bought Land nor refused to work as others O for such Rulers to a nation scattered and peeled a nation ●me●ted out and troden down whose land is spoiled Isay 18 2. Our Rulers if they had a mind have a fair occasion for I bs Gloriation Chap. 29. 13. The blessing of him that was ready to perish came upon me c. In this time are great decayes desolations abuses and unsufferable corruptions let it not be thought an Error proceeding from the Ruler And here People would be warned to enencourage and comply with Reforming Rulers not as they were in Hezekiahs and Josiahs times inveterate incureable and obstinate in their corruptions lest they hear that Hos. 10 3 4. A King can do them no good because they feared not the Lord and spake words swearing falsly in making a Covenant But this pertaineth to the Ruler That whatsoever is commanded by the God of Heaven be diligently done for the house of the God of Heaven lest there be wrath against the realm of the King and his Sons Ezra 7-23 And that Judgment run like a river and righteousness like a mighty stream That he take his pattern from the type and Antitype who also is the Archetype Ruler Psal. 72. So shall there be abundance of peace and also in Judah things shall go well 3. The good Ruler hath a natural Fatherly and tender care of the People Thus it s said I say 49. 23. Kings shall be nursing Fathers And in Israel they were wont to mourn for good Rulers with this expression ab my brother Ier 2● 18. Yea he is the breath of our nostrils Lament 4 20. by whom in the publick body we lead a quiet life and peaceable in all Godliness and honesty 1 Tim. 2. 2. He is pater patriae parens Reip. Nor can I see what should have moved those dissembling Emperours who in semblance refused the title of Lord to make so nice of the endearing name of Father of the Countrey but simply the conscience that they did as little deserve the name as they designed the thing But surely as a Rich man will never want an heir a good Ruler can never want Children nor needs he fear Coniahs fate Write ye this man Childless for if he have the heart of a Father he shall have the nameth 〈◊〉 better than sons and daughters We find not that Nehemiah was marryed yet his name flourisheth in the records of his eminent services more than if his line had continued uninterrupted to this day The righteous shall be had in everlasting remembrance Four things are proper to the care of a Father Affection Instruction Correction and Provision all which are evident in Nehemiah the Governour Great is his Affection Chap. 1 3 4. And how Sadly taketh he on for the reproach and affliction of his brethren he sat down and weept and mourned certain dayes and fasted and Prayed before the God of Heaven He cannot digest their grief Chap 8. 9 10. When the People Weept he said Go your way eat the fat and drink the sweet and send portions to them for whom nothing is prepared for this day is holy neither be ye sad for the joy of the Lord is your strength For Instruction he causeth the Priests read to them the book of the Law of
iniquities and the Rods of men that is such corrections as men use upon misdemeaning Children I find this true of publik Affliction of a whole Church or Nation 4 It is clear that the Lords Rods whether publick or personal upon his sinful People ●ow from love in the fountain are mixed with ●ove in their course and run forth into love in the ●ssue If this seem strange to any let him remember that he who spareth his Rod hateth his Child ●ut he that chasteneth him betimes delivereth his ●oul Gods thoughts concerning his People are thoughts of peace and not of evil to give them an expected end Jer. 29. 11. And in the midst of wrath he will remember mercy Habbac 3. 2. Gods love to his People is very consistent with anger though that be even servent to the Degree of wrath but not with hatred and hatred not anger is lov 's opposite an angry love is ofttimes most profitable Heb. 12. 10. Let none therefore be so weak and Child-witted as to eonclude I am sharply scourged and sore smitten for my folly herefore my Father hath cast me off and cares not for me And yet we find Affliction that makth a wise man mad raising such apprehensions oft●●s in the wise heart of strong David I do not here speak how the Lord causeth his People to pass under the rod and bringeth them within the bond of the Covenant Ezek. 20 37. and how he chooses them in the furnace of Affliction Isai 48. 10. and that was an Affliction for sin and sadly deserved Rod And yet the Lord when he would pick out a piece of the finest mettal goes neither to Coffer nor Cup-board where the glistering of Peace and posterity dazle the eyes of undescreet behold ers but he goes to the smoak and Soot of the furnace and there he pitcheth upon the rare● Saints of the last refine The Lord goeth down to the Land of Affliction and to the house of Bondage to visit his People and there he falls in love with them there he wooes them and there he wedds them in their mourning Garments For the get not the oil of joy nor the Garment of Praise till the second day of the Marriage and then the● rise from the Dust and shine their light cometh and the Glory of the Lord ariseth upon them See Isai 48. 10. cited Hos. 2 14. and foreward Isai 61. 3. and 60. 1. In fine the Scripture is full o● rare and satisfactory Expressions of Gods love to his People even under sufferings which their own wickedness hath procured whereof it will apper tain to speak more particularly in the sequel of ou● ensuing Discourse 5thly It is clear from Scripture that there is difference to be put betwixt sin procuring and bringing on Sufferings and bitter Afflictions and sin discovered in and by suffering Let God ca● a Holy Iob in the furnace and it will discover scum that will cause him say My Transgressions are infinit And yet the Lord himself sustains Iob's Plea that it was not for sin that he was pursuing him 6. It is clear that there is a great difference often times betwixt the Righteousness of God and the Righteousness of Men Afflicting his People as we see frequently in David's Cases Yea I find an excellent rare comfortable Dispensation of God to his People that he will sometimes scourge them with the Golden Rod of Martyrdom and correct their faults in an Honourable way and chastile them soundly and yet never let the World know what is betwixt him and them The Lord loves not to proclaim and blaze the bemoaned faults of his People nor to make them Odious to the World which hath a bad enough Opinion of them alwayes But if I must correct my Child saith he I will stay till the World and he fall out in some point of Conscience in Faith or manners wherefore he must suffer and then in my Gracious Wisdom I will shew a rare Conjunction or meeting of these three Planets in one house 1. The correction of my Child 2. His Glory and 3. His acceptable Duty and I will let him earn a reward of thanks and Glory in that very suffering wherein I shall visit his iniquities and he shall give Testimony for me God can go many Earauds at once and sold up many Projects in one piece of Providence the Lord will finish the whole work and cut it short in Righteousness because a short work will the Lord make upon the earth Rom. 9. 28. The Lord is good at dispatches If the Question be then whether God will ever Honour a Man with whom he hath a Controversie to suffer for Righteousness I Answer Yes and I confess I should hardly have been of that Judgment if I had not found clear Divine truth going before me in it comparing the whole tenor of the 38 Psalm with the 20. verse thereof where at once the Psalmist is suffering from men for that which is good and from God for his foolishness and iniquity Verses 4 5 and 18. Here it is fit to remember Luther's seasonable warning that when David in his Prayers speaketh of his Righteousness we would refer it to its true correlative to wit towards men his enemies he was Righteous but towards God that is his Language Be merciful to me O God be merciful to me in the multitude of thy tender mercies blot out my iniquities Psal. 51. The accuser of Gods Children will be ready to carry ill reports betwixt him and them and to keep up an ill understanding betwixt them if he can and in times of suffering for their Duty he will not be idle he will tell them a thousand Stories of their own sins to weaken their hands and cause them believe that God will never accept service of them but that they shall come foul off with all their fair Essayes Ye have heard of Gods Gracious Wisdom and now these are the Devil 's malicious wyles but a Syllogism or Argument framed of one premise of Gods and another of the Devil 's will never infer a Conclusion of Faith and that can claime ●iducial assent Wherefore in such a mixed case which I desire may be remembred to be every caseable let a man freely declare his iniquity 〈◊〉 God and be sorry for his sin Psal 38. 18. Let him repent and mean himself to God who as I have said loves to keep his People's Counsel and to keep their faults sub sigillo confessionis and under the rose that is he will be to them a good Secretary but ●●t them cleave to that which is good and incourage themselves in a good matter and beware of failing in present Duty in a discourageing sense of former iniquities for one fault will never ●end another and yet that is even the best method that Satan useth to offer in such cases But the Lord that hath chosen Ierusalem rebuke him for troubling his poor afflicted People who are as ●rands plukt out of the fire I have
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
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
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
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
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