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A35945 A brief explication of the other fifty Psalmes, from Ps. 50 to Ps. 100 by David Dickson ... Dickson, David, 1583?-1663. 1653 (1653) Wing D1396; ESTC R19237 330,684 408

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to wit as God incomprehensible every where present and to be sought in heaven and adored in a spiritual manner for the Temple and Ark were but as his footstool 1 Kings 18. 27. Exalt the Lord our God and wors●…ip at his footstool 4. Holinesse is the Lords property he is holy in himself holy in his appointing of his ordinances and holy in his receiving of worship rejecting all worship But what he commandeth and calleth for and he will be acknowledged holy by all that worship him and worthy is he so to be esteemed of for He is holy and this is the first reason Ver. 6. Moses and Aaron among his Priests and Samuel among them that call upon his Name they called upon the LORD and he answered them 7. He spake unto them in the cloudy pillar they kept his Testimonies and the ordinance that he gave them The next reason is from the example of holy men of God Moses and Aaron Priests or chief Officers and Samuel a Priest Prophet and Ruler of the Lords people who all of them subjected themselves to the Ordinances of God and worshipped him to their own great utility and advantage also of them with and for whom they prayed unto God and worshipped him Whence learn 1. The examples of holy men of God commended in Scripture unto us do serve for inducement and encouragement unto us to beleeve in God to worship and to obey him Moses and Aaron among his Priests or chief Officers and Samuel among them that call upon his Name 2. Because the holiest men of God that ever were in the Church stood in need of the ordinary meanes of grace and worship and subjected themselves unto Ordinances the Lord will have none of his people to neglect Ordinances or lift themselves above Ordinances for Moses Aaron and Samuel were among them that call upon his Name 3. Whoever worship God and obey his Ordinances uprightly are enrolled in the catalogue with the chiefest Saints worshippers of God Moses Aaron and Samuel among them that call upon his Name 4. The prayers of the faithfull are not frustrated but have a good answer and the answer of the holiest supplicants is set forth to encourage the meanest of believers to call upon God also as the impartial hearer of the prayers of all that call upon God in truth for he is no accepter of persons and to shew this it is said here They called upon the Lord and he heard them 7. The more evidences we have of Gods presence and the more familiarly he condescendeth to teach us the more humble and observant should we be of his Ordinances and Commands He spake unto them in the cloudie pillar they kept his testimonies and the Ordinances which he gave them Ver. 8. Thou answeredst them O LORD our God thou wast a God that forgavest them though thou tookest vengeance of their inventions The third reason to move all to the duty of worship and obedience is from the example of the mercy of God toward sincere worshippers on the one hand and justice toward them that followed mens inventions in Religion in the wildernesse or afterward on the other hand Whence learne 1. The same God the same Mediator the same Covenant of grace belong to the true Church both in former latter ages Thou answeredst them O Lord our God 2. Albeit the Lord give fo●…th his Ordinances most holy and perfect to direct men in their worshipping yet so perverse is mens corrupt nature as from time to time they are devising devices and following their own inventions as here is imported 3. As the Lord is very merciful to his people when they continue in his fear so is he just to correct them when they pollute Religion Thou tookest vengeance of their inventions 4. Penitent sinners although plagued for their sin yet were never refused forgivenesse of sin when they prayed and sought unto God for it Thou wast a God that forgavest them though thou tookest vengeance of their inventions 5. Plagued inflicted for sin upon Gods people are not punishments satisfactory unto justice but means of correction serving to drive men to repentance and to seeking of mercy and may well stand with forgivenesse of sins for G●…d can both plague sinners to drive them to repentance and forgive their sin when they do repent Thou wast a God that forgav●… them though thou tookest vengeance of their inventions Ver. 9. Exalt the LORD our God and worship at his holy hill for the LORD our God is holy The fourth exhortation to glorify God wherein he doth expound what he meaneth by the footstool of the Lord spoken of ver 5. to wit mount Sion the holy hill where the Ark was adding the same reason of the exhortation which was was before because the Lord our God is holy Whence learn 1. It is a part of our exalting of the true God to joyne with his true Church and to offer unto him with others such worship as he doth prescribe Exalt the Lord our God and worship at his holy hill 2. The Lords holinesse requireth of all men the exaltation of his Name and subjection to his Ordinances neither can his holinesse suffer any other worship then what he himselfe doth appoint Worship at his holy hill for the Lord our God is holy 3. The holinesse of God and the untainted glory of all his attributes is both the glory and comfort of his people who are in Covenant with him and a motive also to them to invite all men to the fellowship of his service with themselves Exalt the Lord our God for the Lord our God is holy PSAL. C. A Psalme of praise THe title of the Psalm sheweth the sum and scope thereof to be for stirring up of the whole Church to praise God cheerfully unto which duty all are exhorted once ver 1 2. for three reasons First because he is God Secondly because we are his creatures Thirdly because we are his covenanted people or members of the visible Church whereof he taketh care as a Pastor doth of his own flock ver 3. And again all are exhorted to thank praise and blesse him ver 4. And that for his goodnesse mercy and truth ver 5. Ver. 1. MAke a joyfull noise unto the LORD all ye lands 2. Serve the LORD with gladnesse come before his presence with singing From the first exhortation to praise God Learne 1. The d●…y of the Church visible in all her particular meetings in every place how largely soever God shall extend it is to accept the offer of the grace of God joyfully and to acknowledge the glorious riches of the graee of God which he offereth unto them in the Gospell Make a joyfull noise unto the Lord all ye lands or all the earth 2. As we ought to accept of the offer of the grace of God joyfully't so should we also dedicate our selves to Gods service heartily as he calleth for it because according to the Gospel our persons and service are
he exhorteth all to acknowledge the Lord as they who are worshippers of him and who are taught by his Word should do Whence learn 1. It was foretold that as the Church of Israel was taught by the Lords Word to know him so should the Gentiles be so taught also for Give unto the Lord the glory due to his Name presupposeth and importeth that they should have his Name set forth in his Word and ●…hould be instructed to know him and how to worship him acceptably 2. Whatsoever point of glory the Scripture giveth unto God it may not be withdrawn from him nor communicated to any other be●…de him for it is his own proper due Give unto him the glory due to his Name 3. It is the manner of the Scriptures of the Old Testament to expresse the spiritual service of the Gospel in the termes of the service of the Law Bring an offering and come into his courts 4. Albeit bodily sacrifices and oblations and the material Temple of Ierusalem be taken away yet the moral duties shadowed forth in them are still necessary to be done we must not come for fashion empty and vaine before God but with the calves of our lips offering up our selves in a living sacrifice holy and acceptable to him Bring an offering unto hm 5. The Church of the Gentiles make up one Church with the Jewes and are of the same incorporation and holy society and partakers of the priviledges of the Church with them Bring an offering and come into his courts Ver. 9. O worship the LORD in the beauty of holinesse feare before him all the earth In the third branch he exhorteth more particularly all the Gentiles to worship and feare the same God with the Church of the Jewes Whence learn 1. True Converts must submit themselves absolutely unto Christs Government in soul and body for O worship the Lord importeth so much 2. Then is a mans worship and submission sanctified and made acceptable when it is offered in and through Christ and in society with his Church represented by the Sanctuary here called the beauty of holinesse Worship the Lord in the beauty of holinesse 3. Among all Gods works nothing so beautiful as his ordinances rightly made use of in his Church Worship the Lord in the beauty of holinesse 4. All our worship must be seasoned with fear lest we swerve on either hand from the rule prescribed by God Fear before him all the earth Ver. 10. Say among the heathen that the LORD reig●…th the world also shall be established that it shall not be moved he shall judge the people righteously 11. Let the heavens rejoyce and let the earth be glad let the sea roare and the fulnesse thereof 12. Let the field be joyfull and all that is therein then shall all the tre●…s of the wood rejoyce 13. Before the LORD for he cometh for he cometh to judge the earth he shall judge the world with righteous●…esse and the people with his truth In the fourth place he exhorteth the Lords Ministers his called messengers every where to proclaime Christ King in his own Church and to declare the benefits of his reigning in special these three 1. The putting of all things which are in disorder and confusion in the world by sin into their own order again and setling all things to the perpetual benefit of his subjects 2. Christs righteous governing and de●…ending of his subjects 3. The unexpressible joy which Christ doth bring to his people for setting forth whereof all the reasonable and understanding creatures are unable Whence learn 1. Wheresoever the Gospel is preached there without injurie to Magistrates Christ may and should be declared King sovereigne Lord and Law-giver in all the matters of Religion and whatsoever concerneth the salvation of men and service of God Say among the heathen that the Lord reigneth 2. Before Christ come to a people men neither know God nor themselves nor what is their profit nor what is their losse for before Christ reveale himself to a man things earthly and temporall are put in the room of things heavenly and everlasting the creatures and lusts of men are put in the room of God and the sinner is made a slave to his own lusts and unclean spirits but when Christ cometh who is the light of the world and the life of men and convin●…eth men of sin and righteousnesse and judgement then is the sinner humb●…ed and God exalted and every thing is put in its own place and a solid state of grace and glory is ●…ounded by his Word and working and is setled by his decree for the benefit of the world of his Elect and Regenerate people for by Christs governing the world also shall be established 3. The Kingdom of Christ is a Kingdom which cannot be moved and they who are his Subjects do receive this Kingdom in title and right and begun possession which cannot be taken from them again The world also shall be established that it cannot be moved 4. The government of Christs Kingdom is so well and wisely carried by him as right is done to God and man to friends and foes and no injury to any party is allowed and course is taken to give effectually to every man according as his work shall be He shall judge the people righteously 5. There is no true rejoycing for sinners in heaven or earth except in and through Jesus Christ alone all joy of sinners without him is madnesse and in him men have cause of rejoycing whatsoever condition they shall be in Let the heaven rejoyce and let the earth be glad let the sea roare and the fulnesse thereof 6. The joy which Christ bringeth to his people is such that men and Angels are not able to expresse it and if all the dumb creatures had mindes and mouthes to set it forth it were a taske and more for them to undertake it Let the heavens rejoyce and the earth be glad let the sea roare and the fulnesse thereof c. 7. As all the creatures are in a sort of bondage and subjection unto vanity through the sins of men so have they their own redemption freedom from vanity in relation to Christ and the service which they do unto the Saints who make right use of them and at length the creature shall be fully delivered from the bondage of corruption and in its owne kinde have cause of rejoycing Let the heaven earth sea and fields rejoyce c. 8. All the creatures are at enmity with man before he be reconciled to God in Christ but when peace is made by Jesus Christ they look upon man all of them with another countenance as servants unto and children of their Lord who is Father of the reconciled and governour of all for their good Let the fields be joyful and all that is therein then shall all the trees of the wood rejoyce They shall look upon a reconciled man walking in the light of Gods countenance as a
A BRIEF EXPLICATION Of the other fifty Psalmes From Ps. 50. to Ps. 100. BY DAVID DICKSON Professour of Divinity in the Colledge of Edenburgh Blessed is the man whom thou chusest and causest to approach unto thee that he may dwell in thy Courts we shall be satisfied with the goodnesse of thy house even of thy holy Temple Psal. 65. 4. Imprimatur Iuly 16. 1653. EDMUND CALAMY London Printed by T. R. E. M. for Ralph Smith at the Bible in Cornhill near the Royal Exchange 1653. TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE The EARL of EGLINGTON Mercy and Peace through Iesus Christ. My right Noble Lord THE reason of my sending forth of this piece under your Lordships name is that by this means I may pay home before I die the old debt which I owe to your Lordship and to the whole noble family for countenancing and encouraging me openly in my Ministery all the while I was in Irwin near your Lordship full twenty yeares And the reason why I do confesse my debt now and go about to discharge some part of it at this time of your Lordships restraint in England is because when I call to minde the time of my restraint about some thirty yeares ago when the High Commission Court of Prelates procured my confinement within a little village in the North beyond Aberdein in regard I could not give them satisfaction by receiving the yoak of some Popish ceremonies imposed then upon the Ministery I cannot forget how comfortable your Lordship was to me then and what paines and travel you endured summer and winter without wearying untill they who at that time had power to loose me from my confinement being made sensible some of them of the iniquity and all of them of the inexpediencie of keeping me in bonds I was restored to the free and full use of my Ministery Wherefore I do esteem it a part of due gratitude to do what in me lieth to be comfortable to your Lordship in this your present condition and do heartily pray to God that your exercise and trouble may prove a meanes of your happinesse It is true indeed that happinesse without this meanes were to be wished if so it were Gods pleasure but unto God onely in whose hands alone it is to make men blessed and in whose friendship and favour through Christ only men are really blessed it doth belong as to choose the man to whom so also to choose the meanes whereby and the manner how he will communicate the right and possession of true blessednesse If happinesse were at mens wish and carving no man would choose God for his chief good nor Gods way to bring his felicity about for the multitude of men do say Psal. 4. 6. Who will shew us any good The good which God doth shew unto them and the way how by reconciliation with himself and walking humbly and uprightly before him they may have God to be their rich reward is not the thing they love to have but corn and wine and oile and whatsoever may best please their fleshly fancie is their desire And of this the Lord doth complain Psal. 81. 11. My people saith he would not hearken to my voice and Israel would none of me And what was it which they did preferre unto God they loved to have their own will in this world whatsoever should befall them after death they loved rather to have their own earthly desires satisfied then to have the friendship of God and their choice was given unto them to their owne destruction So saith the Lord I gave them over to their owne hearts lust and they walked in the counsell of their owne heart Few when they look upon the course which the world doth runne after yea very few do preferre the fellowship of God reconciled to them in Christ before riches honour and sensual pleasure For Who will shew us any good is that which many do say Psala 4. 6. bu●… Lord lift thou up the light of thy countenance upon us is the petition of the few opposed to the multitude and even those few godly would wish to go to heaven with ease and to be free from trouble in their journey if it were the Lords will as we may see in the prayer of Iabez 1 Chron. 4. 10. Who called on the God of Israel saying Oh that thou wouldest blesse me indeed and enlarge my coast and that thine hand might be with me and that thou wouldest keep me from evill that it may not grieve me But our loving and wise God who knoweth perfectly what is fittest for every man doth crosse and correct those natural desires of his children And howsoever he will now and then possibly grant the prayer of Iabez to some of his people yet he hath appointed this to be the ordinary road-way to heaven which the Apostle pointeth forth to us Acts 14. 22. We must through much tribulation enter into the Kingdom of God And this course of carrying of Gods children through many afflictions doth no wayes hinder their happinesse for how many soever their crosses be yet this holdeth alwayes fast Psal. 65. 4. Blessed is the man whom thou choosest and causest to approach unto thee If therefore by plurality of chastisements the Lord shall draw and drive them to seek remission of sinnes and reconciliation with himself and the renewed sense thereof through Christ and shall by the rod hedge them within the way of walking with him in a friendly communion they lose nothing except their lusts and do gain eternal blessednesse And certain●y there is so much reliques of natural corruption so strong inclinations unto sinne so many actuall outbreakings and grosse transgressions to be found in the most precious Saints that there is no wonder the Lord should visit their trespasses with the rod and their iniquity with stripes but all the wonder is that he will not take his loving kindnes utterly from them There is also so great need of loosing their affections from what seemeth love-worthy in this world so great need of raising the hearts of the heires of Salvation unto the seeking of a Kingdom which cannot be shaken and of a crown uncorruptible as all reason doth call for the mixture of troubles with earthly comforts lest the sweetnesse of temporary vanities should prove unto them poysonable Moreover the experience of the Saints set down in Scripture and especially in the Psalmes doth make it manifest that by the variety of outward and inward troubles the faith of Gods children hath been tried and trained to farther strength Their love hope and patience and all other spiritual graces in them have been so fostered and augmented as they have been made joyfully and thankfully to subscribe this truth Psal. 94. 12. Blessed it the man whom thou chastenest O Lord and teachest him out of thy Law This is the language of the Lords present dispensation toward his people and the lesson which his Providence doth recommend to us all that we may learn it
yet will they be forced to feign submission unto him Through the greatnesse of thy power shall thy enemies submit themselves to them 5. Over and above what is already accomplished of this prophecie concerning the conversion of the Gentiles a higher measure is yet to be expected in the bringing in of that number of them which the Scripture calleth the fulnesse of the Gentiles and the making all the Kingdomes of the earth to become the Lords and his Sonne Christs for this word in a greater measure then yet is come to passe must be fulfilled All the earth shall worship thee they shall sing unto thee they shall sing unto thy Name Which word doth import the revealing of the glad tidings of Jesus Christ unto them and their joyful acceptation of the Gospel and glorifying of God for it 6. As it is the Lords glory to have many praising him so should it be the joy of all that love him now to foresee the successe of Christs Kingdome as well as it was of old when it was the Churches song All the earth shall worship thee Ver. 5. Come let us see the works of God he is terrible in his doing toward the children of men 6. He turned the sea into dry land they went through the flood on foot there did we rejoyce in him 7. He ruleth by his power for ever his eyes behold the nations let not the rebellious exalt themselves Selah He pointeth out in special the Lords works already wrought for his people Whence learn 1. Albeit the Lord doth work for the delivery of the Church and his own glory yet men are so carelesse to observe his works that they can neither make use thereof for their own profit nor for Gods praise so that there is much need to stirre up our dulnesse to observe them and make right use thereof Come and see the works of God 2. Whosoever do observe the works of God which he hath wrought for his people they shall be forced to fear and admire his wonderful Acts for them and his respect unto them He is terrible in his doing toward the children of men 3. The work of redemption of his Church out of Egypt is a work one for all worthy to be made use of to the end of the world and sufficient to shew that if need be God will invert the course of nature for the good of his people and for their delivery out of difficulties He turned the sea into dry land 4. As the Lord will work wonders for the delivery of his people out of misery so will he work wonders for performing of promises to them and for bringing them to the possession of what he hath given them right unto for the drying of the river Iordan that his people might go in to possesse the promised land was a pawn and evidence of this his purpose for all time coming They went through the flood on foot 5. As all the people of God are one body and that which is done in one age to one generation doth concern all and every one to make use of it in their generation so every one in after-ages should reckon themselves one body with the Lords people in former ages and make use of Gods dealing with them as if they had been present then with them as here the Church in the Psalmists time joyneth it selfe with the Church in Ioshuahs time rejoycing in God with them at their entring into Canaan There did we rejoyce in him say they 6. Whatsoever the Lord hath done for his people in any time by-past he is able and ready to do the like for his people in any time to come He ruleth by his pouer for ever and for this cause his former Acts are perpetual evidences and pledges of like Acts to be done hereafter as need is 7. Nothing is done in any place which the Lord is not witnesse unto no plot or motion against his people which he seeth not His eyes behold the Nations 8. Albeit there will be from time to time a generation who will not submit themselves to this sovereign Ruler but will stand out against him and maligne his Church yet shall they not long prosper nor have cause of gloriation in their rebellion Let not the rebellious exalt themselves ver 8. O blesse our God ye people and make the voice of his praise to be heard 9. Which holdeth our soul in life and suffereth not our feet to be moved 10. For thou O God hast proved us thou hast tried us as silver is tried 11. Thou broughtest us into the net thou layedst affliction upon our loines 12. Thou hast caused men to ride over our heads we went through fire and through water but thou broughtest us out into a wealthy place In the second part of the Psalm the Psalmist exhorts the Church in his time to praise God for preserving them from extirpation in the time of their fiery trial and sore affliction under the tyranny and oppression of their enemies Whence learn 1. The Lords people in every age besides all the reasons they have to praise God for his former works want not their own particular reasons for his care providence and kindnesse to themselves in their own time to stirre up one another to blesse his Majesty O blesse our God ye people 2. It is the Churches proper priviledge and her glory above all other incorporations and societies beside to have special interest in God as her own O blesse our God 3. It is not sufficient that the Lords people acknowledge inwardly the mercies of God to themselves but it is their duty in an orderly way to bring others on to the knowledge of God and to shew to others how praise-worthy he is make the voice of his praise to be heard 4. Albeit the Lord takes many things away from his people when he is pleased to exercise them yet he keeps life in their soul some sweet communion of spirit between himself and them and doth not suffer all his people to be extirpate and rooted out from the earth Which boldeth our soul in life 5. It is great mercy to be kept from desperate courses in the time of sad calamities and to be supported under burdens that we sink not and to be prevented from denying of God or of his truth in time of persecution He suffereth not our feet to be moved 6. One end of the troubles of the Church among others is the trial of the graces of his people and purging them from their corruptions for which cause the Lord useth to bring on one trouble after another as mettal is put in the fire oftner then once For thou O God hast proved us thou hast tried 〈◊〉 as silver is tried 7. When God doth bring his Church into trial there is no escaping we must look for affliction and not dream of declining it by our own wit or skill Thou broughtest us into the net thou layedst affliction upon our ●…ines 8. It is wisdome
dead in regard both of the purity of Doctrine and Worship and of the multiplication of persons converted unto Christ in all places God shall blesse us saith he then and what more And all the ends of the earth shall fear him PSAL. LXVIII To the chief Musician A Psalm or song of David THis Psalm is very suitable to that time when David having gotten the victory over his enemies round about did assemble all Israel and carried the A●…k of God now returned from the land of the Philistines triumphantly out of the house of Obed-Edom into the City of David as a type of Christs ascension after the work of Redemption in the world In which P●…lm after the manner that Moses prayed unto God or to Christ who was to be incarnate when the Ark did march David prayeth here first against the Lords enemies ver 1 2. And then for the Lords people ver 3. In the next place he exhorteth all the Lords people to praise God ver 4. and giveth twelve or thirteen reasons for it First because of his mercy to the desolate and afflicted ver 5 6. Secondly because of his wonderfulnesse and terriblenesse in delivering of his people out of bondage as appeared in his bringing of his people out of Egypt and through the wildernesse ver 7 8. Thirdly because of his fatherly care to entertain his redeemed people as did appear in his nourishing of his Church in Canaan ver 9 10. Fourthly because of the victories which he giveth usually to his people when their enemies do invade them ver 11 12. Fifthly because of the delivery which he will give to his people out of their most sad calamities as he hath oftentimes given proof ver 13 14. Sixthly because his Church is the most glorious Kingdome in the world being compared therewith ver 15 16. Seventhly because Christ the King of the Church hath all the Angels at his command to serve him and having ended the work of Redemption was to ascend gloriously for sending down gifts to his Church and ruling of it ver 17 18. Eightly because of Gods bounty to his people in daily renewed mercies till he perfect the work of their salvation ver 19 20. Ninethly because of his avenging of himself upon all his enemies ver 21. Tenthly because God hath undertaken to work over again in effect as need shall require what he hath done in bringing his people out of Egypt and in giving them victory over the Canaanites ver 22 23. whereof the experience of his power already manifested for Israel was a proof and pledge sufficient ver 24 25 26 27. Eleventhly because it was decreed by God to establish his Church and to make her strong by making Kings to become converts ver 28 29. and that partly by treading down some of her enemies ver 30. and partly by making others even some of her greatest enemies to seek reconciliation with God even her God ver 31. Twelfthly he exhorteth to praise God because of his omnipotent power in conversion of Kingdomes ready to be let forth for the defence of his people ver 31 32 33 34. and ready to overthrow their enemier and all for the strengthening of his Church for all which he exhorteeh all to blesse the Lord ver 35. Ver. 1. LEt God arise let his enemies be scattered let them also that hate him flee before him 2. As smoke is driven away so drive them away as waxe melteth before the fire so let the wicked perish at the presence of God 3. But let the righteous be glad let them rejoyce before God yea let them exceedingly rejoyce In Davids prayer against his enemies and for Gods people Learn 1. Such prayers as the Spirit hath endited unto the Saints in Scripture it is lawful and expedient for strengthening of our faith to use the same or the like words in the like case for David prayeth here as Moses prayed at the marching of the Ark Numb 10. 35. Let God arise c. 2. As the Ark was amongst the Israelites so is Christ amongst his people and what ground of confidence the Church had because of that pledge of Gods presence at t●…e Ark we have the same and a more sure ground of confidence in Christs incarnation represented thereby that upon every appearance of his beginning to stirre against the enemies of his work we may say Let God arise 3. The enemie of the Church are the enemies of God and esteemed haters of him because they are haters of his people with whom albeit the Lord doth be●…r for a while yet will he take order when he pleaseth it will not cost him much labour on●…y Let God arise and let his enemies b●… scattered 4. Although all the enemies of God make head against his people yet will they not prevaile when God appeareth they will turn back Let them also that hate him flee before him 5. Whatsoever strength of forces or number the enemies of Gods people have in appearance it is nothing before God but like smoak before the winde and waxe before the fire As smoak is driven away ●…s waxe melteth before the fire so let the wicked perish at the presence of God 6. Albeit the Lord exercise his people with affliction and with grief for a while yet he alloweth unto them comfort and joy whatsoever become of their enemies But let the righteou●… be glad 7. The only true matter of the Saints joy is God himselfe and his manifested presence and he will not be pleased except his children lift up their hearts and comfort themselves in him above and against all grief and sense of whatsoever enemies opposition Let them rejoyce before God yea let them exceedingly rejoyce Ver. 4. Sing unto God sing praises to his Name extoll him that rideth upon the heavens by his Name JAH and rejoyce before him From his exhortation of the Church to praise God with the joyful voice of singing Learn 1. Vocal singing of praises unto God is a moral duty and a part of his holy worship frequently called for in Scripture Sing unto God sing praises to his Name 2. Our thoughts of God should not be base but high and heavenly lifting his Name up above the most glorious creatures all they bei●… but his servants as he pleaseth to make use of them Extoll him that rideth upon the heavens 3. The Lord is onely and properly wo●…thy of praise because he onely hath his being of himself and giveth be●… to all things which are beside himselfe His Name is JAH 4. The Lords praises are his peoples advantage and the true matter of their confidence and joy Sing praises to him and rejoyce before him Ver. 5. A Father of the fatherlesse and a Iudge of the widowes is God in his holy habitation 6. God setteth the solitary in families he bringeth out those that are bound with chaines but the rebellious dwell in a dry land From the first r●…on of the exhortation to praise God Learn 1. The Lords
put to confusion yet it shall not be for ever if they do not take shame unto them by distrust they shall never have cause to be ashamed Let me never be put to confusion Ver. 2. Deliver me in thy righteousnesse and cause me to escape incline thine eare unto me and save me The second petition is more special for safety and delivery from his enemies Whence learn 1. The righteousnesse of God is a pawne unto the godly that their lawful petitions shall be granted and specially when they seek delivery from their ungodly adversaries Deliver me in thy righteousnesse and cause me to escape 2. When the Lord giveth a heart to a beleever to pray he will also grant him audience and a good answer Incline thine eare unto me and save me Ver. 3. Be thou my strong habitation whereunto I may continually resort thou hast given commandment to save me for thou art my rock and my fortresse The third petition is that the Lord would shew himself to him in effect what he hath engaged himself to be unto beleevers according to the Covenant Whence learn 1 What the Lord is to his people by Covenant he will be to them the same effectually and in deed as their need shall require and as they shall imploy him Be thou my strong habitation 2. The goodnesse of God covenanted to his people is not for one good turn but for every good which they need not for one day but for daily use making and constant enjoying of it Be thou my strong habitation where ●…to continually I may resort 3. As the Lord hath all means all second causes all creatures at his command being Lord of hostes to execute whatever he doth give order for to be done so hath he really set his active providence on work to accomplish what he hath covenanted to every believer Thou hast given commandment to save me for thou art my rock and fortresse he giveth his believing in God who is his rock as a reason of his saying that God was about to save him Ver. 4. Deliver me O my God out of the hand of the wicked out of the hand of the unrighteous and cruel man 5. For thou art my hope O Lord God thou art my trust from my youth 6. By thee have I been holden up from the wombe thou art he that took me out of my mothers bowels my praise shall be continually of thee The fourth petition for delivery is strengthened by reason taken from the wickednesse of the enemy ver 4. from his own confidence in God ver 5 and from his long experience o●… Gods kindnesse unto him in time past ver 6. Whence learn 1. It is a great advantage to be a Confederate with God when we have to deal with his enemies and ours in any debate Deliver me O my God saith he out of the hand of the wicked 2. The integrity of the beleever in a good cause and the iniquity of their adversaries in their ill cause are good tokens of the beleevers victory over them Deliver me out of the hand of the unrighteous and cruel man 3. Confidence in God avowed against all tentations in Gods presence and specially when it is of long standing is so strong an argument of being heard in a lawful petition that it may perswade the beleever he shall speed Deliver me for thou art my hope O Lord God thou art my trust from my youth 4. True thankfulnesse will not passe by common benefits and true faith will reade special love in common and ordinary favours and make use thereof amon●… other experiences for strengthening of faith By thee have I been holden up from the wombe thou art he that took me out of my mothers bowels 5. The forming of us in the belly and the common benefit of birth and bringing forth quick into the world is a smothered wonder and so glorious a work of God that he deserveth perpetual praise from us for that one work Thou art he that cook me out of my mothers belly Ver. 7. I am as a wonder unto many but thou art my strong refuge 8. Let my mouth he filled with thy praise and with thy honour all the day The fifth petition is strengthened with reasons taken from his hard condition and from the opportunity of Gods having glory by his delivery out of it Whence learn 1. The exercise of the Lords children is sometimes so strange to the beholder as the world doth wonder at them I am as a wonder unto many 2. Knowledge of Gods Word and wayes and faith in his Name maketh a believer not think strange whatsoever fiery trial come upon him but to rest on Gods will whatsoever befall him I am as a wonder unto many but thou art my strong refuge For faith doth not judge of it self as the world judgeth but as God hath judged and spoken of it in his Word 3. The more strange the exercise of the godly be the more glorious is the Lords upholding of them in it and delivering of them out of i●… and for the hope of the glory which shall redound to God by such exercises the hardship should be the more patiently born and the delivery sought and expected more confidently that it shall come when it may be most for Gods praise I am a wonder unto many let my mouth be filled with thy praise and with thy honour all the day Ver. 9. Cast me not off in the time of old age forsake me not when my strength faileth 10. For mine enemies speak against me and they that lay wait for my soule take counsel together 11. Saying God hath forsaken him persecute and take him for there is none to deliver him The sixth petition is strengthened with reasons taken from his own old age and weaknesse and from his enemies malice Whence learn 1. Such as have been the Lords servants in their youth may be sure to find God a good and kind Master to them in their old age Cast me not off in the time of old age 2. Infirmities in Gods children shall not move loathing and casting off but pitying and cherishing of them that they may be supported in their weaknesse Forsake me not when my strength faileth 3. The world conceiveth that God doth cast off his children when he doth bring them under any sad calamity and by this means do think that they have not to do with Gods children when they persecute his dearest servants yea and they encourage themselves to persecute them the more that God doth afflict them Mine enemies speak against me and they that lay wait for my soul take counsel together saying God hath forsaken him persecute and take him for there is none to deliver him 4. The misconstructions of the world their plots and conspiracies against the godly their evil speeches of them their resolved cruelty to undo them are so many arguments of good hope that God shall deliver them Forsake me not for mine enemies speak against me c.
exact any thing of his subjects but that which he offereth to furnish and enable them to discharge he lets none be tempted above his strength he taketh small beginnings in good part he spareth the rod in a great measure mitigates the correction and in midst of wrath he remembereth mercy He shall spare the poor and needy whatsoever hard exercise he put them to he will give them their soul for a prey They shall not perish who in the sense of their need depend upon him He shall save the souls of the needy ver 14. The sixteenth benefit and commendation of Christs Kingdome albeit the Lord suffer his subjects to be tried with heresies and seducers by oppressors and persecutors yet he will assist them in the trial and bring them out of it He shall redeem their soule from deceit and violence and if for his own glory he put any of them to lay down their life for his cause it shall be a point of special honouring of them as of precious sonnes whom he esteemeth much of both living and dead Precious shall their blood be in his sight v. 15. The seventeenth benefit and commendation of Christs government is from his everlasting indurance albeit other Kings die and leave their kingdom to their successor yet it is not so with Christ he indureth for ever his death for paying the ransom of our sins did not interrupt his reign but made way for his more glorious reigning after his resurrection he hath life in himselfe as in the fountain He shall live he shall live conquering and bringing in moe subjects who shall pay tribute unto him To him shall be given of the gold of Sheba The eighteenth benefit and commendation of Christs Kingdom is this Christ shall be well beloved of all his subjects whose exercise it shall be to wish and pray for the prosperity of his Kingdome Church and mystical body and who shall commend and praise his glorious and lovely Majesty Prayer also shalll be made for him continually and daily shall he be praised v. 16. The nineteenth benefit commendation of Christs government is that a little seed of his precious Word sowen among men of whose conversion there might be least hope like a handful of corn sowen upon the mountaines or most barren ground shall have a glorious increase of the conversion of many notable Saints like as corn in a barren place should grow up like Cedar-trees There shall be an handful of 〈◊〉 in the earth on the top of mountains the fruit thereof shall shake like Lebanon and this blessing of the Gospel he can make it to be without prejudice of the manured land of Churches already planted which are as cities inhabited those he can blesse and will blesse at his pleasure with the abundant growth of grace amongst them And they of the City shall flourish as the grasse of the earth ver 17. The last commendation and benefit of Christs government summeth up all that can be said in these foure generals 1. That Christs Name fame and honour shall be perpetuated from one generation to another for the running of his benefits to his subjects and for the course of his judgements on his enemies His name shall endure for ever his Name shall be continued as long as the Sun 2. His Gospel shall spread further and further among men to deliver his own from the curse due for sin to make them partakers of the blessing of full felicity Men s●…all be blessed in him 3 It shall be in vain to seek blessednesse any where except in him only who is the procurer applier and maintainer of true blessednesse the way whereunto is to come to God in and through Christ In him men shall be blessed And 4. Such a fulnesse of converted Gentiles at length shall be brought in that the blessednesse of the Gospel of Christ and of spiritual communion with him and the riches of his goodnesse and grace shall generally be acknowledged in all the world All Nations shall call him blessed Ver. 18. Blessed be the LORD God the God of Israel who only doth wonderous things 19. And blessed be his glorious Name for ever and let the whole earth be filled with his glory Amen and Amen After this gracious answer of the Churches prayer in so glorious a prophecie of Christ thanksgiving and praise is endited unto the Church to be offered up to God for this mercy Whence learn 1. When the heart hath beleeved what the eare hath heard of the blessedness to be found in Christ the mouth should be opened to praise and blesse God Blessed be the Lord God the God of Israel 2. As the keeping of the race of David till the coming of Christ distinct from other families in so many revolutions of affairs as were between Davids reigne and Christs coming is very wonderful so the enlarging of the Kingdome of Christ since he came is full of wonder also whether we look to the King o●… to the subjects converted or the way of converting them by the preaching of his Word or the preservation or continuing of Christs Kingdome in the world amongst so many Devils and wicked adversaries all his subjects being so weak and sinful as they are It is a matter of great wonder indeed Blessed be the God of Israel who onely doth wondrous things There are no wonders like the wonders done in the Redemption of men by Christ 〈◊〉 yea there is no other who can work any wonders but Christ alone 3. As the blessings of Christ are everlasting so should the thanksgiving for them be and no lesse can content the heart of a true beleever who the more he thinks of Christ the more glory seeth he in him and blessed be his glorous Name for ever saith he 4. Before Christ do put an end to his work and give up the Kingdome to the Father his glory shall shine in all the parts of the world for the prayers endited to the Church are not vanishing wishes but reall promises and certaine prophecies ●…et the whole earth be filled with his glory 5. As faith sets so its seal unto the truth of Gods Word in special what concerneth the salvation of men and the glory of God in Christ so love to both the glory of God and salvation of souls se●…s to its seal also or both faith and love do subscribe the same truth of God in both respects again and againe Amen and Amen Ver. 20. The prayers of David the sonne of Iesse are ended This clos●…e of the Psalm is added by the Psalmist David himself and is a part of the text serving first to shew that this was the last of the Psalmes endited by the Spirit to him a little before his death when Solomon was now reigning howsoever in the order of providence it be not in the hindmost place of this book of the Psalmes And next it serveth to shew that in this answer made to his prayer set down in this Psalme all his
〈◊〉 enemies yet must we not quit the least relation no not of 〈◊〉 external Covenant between God and us but make use of it for supporting of our faith in him as here Why doth thine anger smoake against the sheep of thy pasture that is thy Church and people the care of whom thou hast taken as a shepherd over his flock 5. The Believers asking Why is no quarrelling nor is any speech of the Saint●… unto God a quarrelling which endeth or resolveth in petition and supplication as this doth wherein after their asking Why they turn themselves to supplication and do pray Remember thy congregation 6. Let the Lord do to his people what he pleaseth they must pray unto him and make use of all the b●…nds between him and them as here the Church doth pleading 1. That they are by outward Covenant his Church consecrated unto him Remember thy congregation And 2. That they are his purchase by paying price and conquest Thy congregation which thou hast purchased And 3. That they have been in his possession for a long time Which thou hast purchased of old And 4. That the Lord had taken them into manuring as a piece of land measured out by line or rod and his inheritance not to dispose or put away The rod of thine inheritance And 5. That he had granted deliverances out of straits before The inheritance which thou hast redeemed And 6. That he had taken up house amongst them in his publick ordinances This mount Sio●… wherein thou hast dwelt Ver. 3. Lift up thy feet unto the perpetual desolations even all that the enemy hath done wickedly in the sanctuary 4. Thine enemies roare in the midst of thy congregations they set up their ensignes for signes 5. A man was famous according as he had lifted up axes upon the thick trees 6. But now they break down the carved work thereof at once with axes and hammers 7. They have cast fire into thy sanctuary they have defiled by casting down the dwelling place of thy Name to the ground 8. They said in their hearts Let us destroy them together they have burnt up all the synagogues of God in the land 9. We see no●… our signes there is no more any prophet neither is there among us any that knoweth how long In the complaint he desireth the Lord to come and see and to take order with the desolation made by the enemies in his land and specially in the Temple ver 3. What insolent domineering of them was over his people yea over God himselfe so farre as their listed up banner against him could do ver 4. Each of them thinking it as great matter of commendation to them to throw down the Temple as ever it was for any man to build it or prepare materials for it ver 5 6. How they had burnt and demolished the Lords house ver 7. with a resolution to root out his people according as they had burnt all their Synagogues in the land ver 8. And how there was no appearance of comfort or delivery from this calamity ver 9. Whence learn 1. All the evils which the enemy doth unto Gods Church proceed from the Lords desertion of and departing from his people who have provoked him to wrath for this prayer Lift up thy feet or come and see doth import his departure and leaving his people naked without his protection 2. Albeit the Lord doth seem to turn his back depart far away from his own people when they do provoke him to anger and to let their enemies do unto them what they please yet will he be entreated by his people to come again and see and pity the desolation brought upon them and punish the instruments of it Lift up thy feet unto the perpetual desolations that is Lord come speedily and see what desolations thy enemies have made amongst us and pity and relieve us by thy manifested presence 3. Among all the calamities of Gods people nothing doth afflict them so much as the ●…nsolent profa●…ation of the worship and Name of God among them for here in the first petition they lament the abusing of the Temple Even all that the enemies have done wickedly in the Sanctuary and then do insist most upon this 4. When the wicked are le●… loose upon Gods people they are most insolent cruel and savage in their carriage toward them Thy enemies roare in the midst of thy congregations 5. It will not suffice the enemies of the Church to insult over Gods people but they will insult over their way of religion and over God whom they worship They set up their ensignes for signes they display their banner upon the ruines of the Temple as signes of their victory over that religion which is professed there and over Gods worship there 6. When Gods people do abuse religion and do mock God in their profession of worship and do dishonour him by their carriage and conversation it is justice with God to give over his people and all the meanes of religion into the hands of his enemies to be abused by them rather then to suffer his own people to mock him continually as in this example is to be seen 7. It is a matter of a mans commendation to contribute any way to the setting up of Gods worship and ordinances in a land A man was famous according as he had lifted up axes upon the thick trees that is as he had cut down timber out of Lebanon Wood to build the Lords Temple withall 8. When the Lord is provoked by his peoples evil carriage towards him no wonder he let the work of edification or reformation of religion go as fast down amongst them as ever it rose up as the Church of the Jewes did feel by experience when now the enemies did break down the carved work of the Temple at once with axes and hammers much more speedily then it was builded They have cast fire into the Sanctua●…y they have defiled by casting down the dwelling place of thy Name to the ground This the Lord chused to permit rather then to suffer his people still to mock religion and still to abuse the Temple and make it a shelter for them to trust in against all Gods threatnings so long as it did stand 9. Albeit the Lords minde be onely to correct his people by letting them see their provocation in the judgements brought upon them yet the enemies whom he useth as instruments in their correction do minde their utter destruction and the rooting of them out of the world They said in their hearts Let us destroy them 10. When the enemies of religion cannot kill all the worshippers of God yet will they labour to mar the means of their assembling for publick worship so farre as they can for after they have said Let us destroy them together it is subjoyned They have burnt up all the Synagogues of God in the land that is all the houses built for the weekly assembling of the people unto
drink from the flinty rock in the wildernesse Thou didst cleave the fountain 7. The Lord can and will remove all difficulties and impediments out of the way of his people which may hinder them from the possession of promises as he did to Israel Thou didst cleave the fountain and the flood thou driedst up mighty rivers 8. Faith is so thrifty as not to let the works of creation and common providence passe by without use-making thereof The day is thine the night also is thine c. 9. As God hath appointed vicissitudes of day and night light and darknesse summer and winter so hath he no lesse resolvedly wisely and graciously appointed vicissitudes of dangers and deliverances of grief and consolation to his people for their good The day is thine the night also is thine thou hast prepared the light and the Sun 10. As the Lord hath set bounds to the sea bounds and borders to every Kingdome to summers heat and to winters cold so can he do and so hath he done and so will he do unto all the troubles of his owne to all the rage power plots and purposes of their enemies Thou hast set all the borders of the earth thou hast made summer and winter Ver. 18. Remember this that the enemy hath reproached O Lord and that the foolish people have blasphemed thy Name 19. O deliver not the soul of thy turtle-dove unto the multitude of the wicked forget not the congregation of thy poor for ever 20. Have respect unto the covenant for the dark places of the earth are full of the habitations of cruelty 21. O let not the oppressed return ashamed let the poor and needy praise thy Name 22. Arise O God plead thine owne cause remember bow the foolish man reproacheth thee daily 23. Forget not the voice of thine enemies the tumult of those that rise up against thee increaseth continally In the third part of the Psalm he returneth to prayer and redoubleth his requests for delivery to the Church taking arguments Frst from the injuries done to God by the enemy ver 18. Secondly from the danger and weaknesse of Gods people ver 19. Thirdly from covenanted help in time of need ver 20. Fourthly from the Lords interest in his own quarrel against the growing insolency of his despightful enemies ver 22 23. Whence learn 1. Although sins especially persecution of Gods people and blasphemy against God be not presently punished yet shall they not be forgiven Remember this that the enemy hath reproached O Lord. 2. All sins but in special blasphemy of Gods Name are aggravated by the naughtiness of the sinner and excellency of God The foolish people have blasphemed thy Name 3. The Church of God in comparison of her many and strong enemies is like a solitary weak desolate turtle-dove harmlesse meek lowly patient in desolation and easing her griefe by sighing and exposed to a multitude of ravenous birds O deliver not the soule of thy turtle-dove 4. How weak soever the Church be and how many and strong soever the enemies be yet cannot they all devoure the Church except the Lord should deliver his Church over into their hands against which evill the Church hath ground of confidence to pray O deliver not the soule of thy turtle-love unto the multitude of the wicked for he hath given his Church wings and a hiding place too as the comparison importeth if he please to give her the use thereof also 5. The Church is the Lords hospital where his poor ones are sustained upon his provision and furniture and he will not neglect them O forget not the congregation of thy poor for ever 6. Albeit the Lords people deserve to be secl●…d many times from the Covenant of grace yet the Lord will never debare them from their right unto it when they in their need draw near to him and plead for the benefit of it Have respect saith he to the Covenant 7. Such places as want the light of the Lords presence in his Ordinances are but dark and uncomfortable places where there is no lesse hazard for the people of God to remaine then for sheep to be in the midst of the dennes of cruel lions and ravenous beasts And when it pleaseth God to cast his people by captivity or exile in such places there is much need to make use of Gods Covenant for preservation Have respect unto the Covenant for the dark places of the earth are full of the habitations of cruelty 8. The emptied supplicant coming to God especially when over-loaden with troubles shall finde comfort and shall not bee disappointed of his hope O let not the oppressed return ashamed 9. The sense of need and emptinesse is the best disposition for prayer and best preparation for praises also and such as are poore in their prayers shall be rich in their praises Let the poor and needy praise thy Name 10. The Churches cause is the Lords cause for the wicked do not maligne the godly for their sinnes but for righteousnesse and so the quarrel is the Lords which he will and must maintain though he seem to sit still a while Arise O Lord plead thine owne cause 11. The Lords enemies are all foolish men for they beat out their braines upon the Churches bulwark because the Lord forbeareth for a time they go on to blaspheme him daily to his face but shall finde at length that God hath all their reproaches upon record Remember how the foolish man reproacheth thee daily 12. Every sinne and in special enmity against God and his Church is fearful but open gloriation therein is worse which God will take knowledge of and punish for so much is imported in this prayer forget not the voice of thine enemies 13. Sinne and in special persecution gloried in doth grow daily more and more and the growing of sinne and in special of persecution doth hasten the delivery of the godly and the destruction of the enemies The tumult of those that arise against thee increaseth continually PSAL. LXXV To the chief Musician Al-taschith A Psalme or Song of Asaph THis Psalm doth well agree with the time of Davids entry into the Kingdom after Sauls death before he was established King over all the tribes wherein he with the Church First doth thank God for bringing him wonderfully to a begun possession of a part of the Kingdome ver 1. Secondly he promiseth that when the Lord shall give him the rest of the Kingdom in possession to imploy his power for righteous governing and setling of it after it shall be put once in a right frame ver 2 3. Thirdly he begins to triumph over the wicked that followed Saul bringing to their minde the advertisement he had given them not to be proud in their places ver 4 5. partly because God had the disposing of preferments in his own hand ver 6 7. and partly because albeit God gave to all his own children a taste of troubles as he saw fit yet the dregs of
wrath were reserved for the wicked ver 8. Fourthly he promiseth to praise God continually for casting down the wicked and exalting of the godly ver 9 10. Ver. 1. VNto thee O God do we give thanks unto thee do we give thanks for that thy Name is neare thy wonderous works declare From his thanksgiving Learne 1. The Church of God should take out of his hand every beginning of mercies and deliverances with affectionate and frequent thanksgiving Unto thee O Lord do we give thanks unto thee do we give thanks 2. As the Lord is described in his Word so will he be found in his works to wit near at hand and ready to help his people as they stand in need We do give thanks because thy Name is near for this is the neernesse of Gods Name when his powerful gracious selt presence is answerable to what is said of him in his Word 3. Whensoever the Lord doth shew himself for his Churches comfort he doth it in some wonderful means in one respect or other that is a farre other way then any could have expected That thy Name is near thy wondrous works declare Ver. 2. When I shall receive the congregation I will judge uprightly 3. The earth and all the inhabitants thereof are dissolved I be are up the pillars of it Selah From Davids undertaking to govern the Kingdom well when it came all in his power Learne 1. Possession in part of promises made to us doth give good hope to have the whole of what is promised in possession also for When I shall receive the Congregation presupposeth his certain hope and expectation to have it 2. He that is advanced to a civil Kingdom consisting of people in Covenant with God he hath gotten charge to nourish the Church and to procure whatsoever a King civilly can procure to a Church that his subjects may be all of them Gods Church therefore David saith not When I receive the Kingdome but when I receive the Congregation or the Church 3. Foresight of a charge whereunto a man is likely to be called should make him prepare himself and resolve before-hand for doing the duties of that calling as David did before he was possessed in the Kingdome When I shall receive the Congregation I shall judge uprightly 4. When a land is destitute of godly and gracious Governours the whole countrey is left loose both in the matter of Religion and of civil Justice as was seen in Sauls time before David was setled The earth and all the inhabitants thereof are dissolved 5. Kingdomes and Common-wealths have their pillars whereupon they should stand to wit religious and righteous government for I will judge uprightly in the second verse is as good as I will heare up the pillars thereof in the third verse 6. Those that minde the reformation of a land should be sensible of the desolation of it and have not only will but also skill and place of power to 〈◊〉 matters in a right frame as here the Psalmist after saying The land and all the inhabitants thereof are dissolved addeth I bear up or shall beare up the pillars of it And here whatsoever David speaketh or could say was but a shadow of what is to be found in Christ of whom he is a type For the Kingdom and Countrey is ill guided where Christ doth not reign but wh●… people do subject themselves to him he sets the Kingdom o●… Countrey upon true pillars and sustaineth all by his power Ver. 4. I said unto the fooles Deal not foolishly and to the wicked Lift not up the horne 5. Lift not up your horne on high speak not with a stiffe neck In the third place he calleth to minde his own prophecy of the change of affairs and advertisement given by him before to his adversaries not to behave themselves so insolently as they did Whence learn 1. Even in time of trouble the godly by the light of Gods Word may be enabled to foresee and prophecie of the overturning of the wicked from the top of their preserment I said unto the fools Deal not so foolishly saith the Psalmi 2. When the prophecie u●…ed according to Gods Word is like to take effect it is no small comfort for beleevers to call to remembrance acts of their beleeving before-hand what they do see in their own time I said to the foolish Deal not so foolishly is a sort of triumph over his enemies here 3. Such as are acquaint●…d with true wisdom do justly account all wicked men to be fooles forsakers of Gods teaching and followers of their owne wit and will to the ruine of their own bodies soules houses and same I said unto the fooles 4. The fruit of a wicked mans prosperity is pride vain-glory audacious boasting against the godly wherein they grow more and more insolent against all warnings of Gods Word as this reproof importeth Deal n●… foolishly lift not up the horn list it not on high speak not with a stiffe neck Ver. 6. For promotion cometh neither from the East nor from the West nor from the South 7. But God is the Iudge he putteth down one and setteth up another From the first reason of his admonition unto the wicked Learne 1. As the cause of mens pride in a wicked course is t●… forgetting of God and of his government in the world on the one hand and a strong con●… of their own ability to co●… 〈◊〉 designes by their own w●… power and industry o●… the 〈◊〉 the●… hand so the way of wisdom to remedy the evil is to consider that God doth govern the world and that men are nothing but what he pleaseth to make of them Promotion cometh neither from the East nor from the West nor from the South that is howsoever or from whence soever preferment to places of power in the world seemeth to come yet the disposing of places is from a higher hand 2. Places of power and preferment are disposed of only by the wise and righteous pleasure and determination of the supreme Ruler of the world But God is Iudge He opposeth God the Judge his determination unto all the appearances from second causes 3. As God hath a minde for the glory of his grace to try or to correct or to comfort and imploy some men in his service so he putteth them down or setteth them up and as he hath a minde to have the glory of his justice on other some so he setteth them up or putteth them down God is Iudge he putteth down one and setteth up another Ver. 8. For in the hand of the Lord there is a cup and the wine is red it is full of mixture and he poureth out of the same but the dregs thereof all the wicked of the earth shall wring them out and drink them From the second reason of the admonition given to the wicked Learn 1. As the Lord doth wisely distribute his benefits and temporal comforts among men to testifie his goodnesse to his creatures so
inspiration and that the holy Writers spok●… 〈◊〉 they were moved by the holy Spirit for here it is not cer●… whether Asaph was the name of the Writer of it or whe●… Asaph be the name of the order of such of Aarons posterity 〈◊〉 were 〈◊〉 unto the Church and had the charge 〈◊〉 the Musick to whom this Psalme was committed for 〈◊〉 Churches use as many more Psalmes in Davids time and ●…ter it also were A Psalme or Song of Asaph or to Asaph 〈◊〉 words may beare both alike Ver. 1. IN Iudah God is known his Na●… great in Israel 2. In Salem also is his Tabernacle and his dw●…ling place in Sion From the summe and scope of the Psalme s●… down 〈◊〉 Learne 1. Albeit God be in some sort known in all the 〈◊〉 because of the works of Creation manifesting some way t●… visible excellencies of God yet is he most of all made manifest to his visible Church where his Word doth sound and his Works are best interpreted In Iudah God is known 2. Where the knowledge of Gods Name is most revealed there should he of duty be most glorified for albeit Israel many times did not understand did not acknowledge him but were more ignorant and neglective of him then the oxe or asse were of their Owners and Masters crib yet daily among them he manifested his great majesty and sometime he made them all acknowledge it and of duty alwayes they should have magnified his majesty and so his Name is great in Israel 3. The Lord doth provide alwayes a place where his Church may visibly professe his Name and worship him he will not want a place where he hath a people in Covenant-bond unto him In Salem is his Tabernacle 4. It is a great glory to the place where God is worshipped for there also doth he make his residence In Salem also or Ierusalem is his Tabernacle and his dwelling place in Sion 5. It is not for the worthinesse of any people or place that the Lord is among them or manifested there but it is his own free choice among whom and where he will reside The place where the vile Canaanite had been and the place longest possessed and abused by the Canaanite will he choose for his chief dwelling he will turn the Canaanites Salem to be Ierusalem and the strong hold of the Jebusites to be the place of his Temple therefore saith he In Salem rather then Ierusalem is his Tabernacle and his dwelling place in Sion Ver. 3. There brake he the arrowes of the bow●… the shield and the sword and the battel Selah The first reason of Gods praise is taken from the Lord fighting at Ierusalem against the enemies of the Church and discomfiting of them Whence learn 1. The greatest overthrow given to armies will be found in their fighting against God Church There in special manner brake he the arrowes of the bowe c. 2. In the deliverance of the Church the Lord will be seen to do all the work There brake he the arrowes 3. As there is no meanes or instrument fit to destroy men which the enemie will not make use of against the Church so there is no weapon formed against her which shall prosper when she doth reli●… on her Lord There brake be the arrowes of the bowe the sh●…ld and the sword and the battel Ver. 4. Thou art more glorious and excellent th●… the mountains of prey The second reason of Gods praise is because he is more glorious then all the Kings and Kingdomes of the world wherein the cruel and beastly raging enemies of his Church have their strength and strong h●…los Whence learn 〈◊〉 Those Kingdomes and Powers which do not subject themselves to God or Christ the King of Saints are to be esteemed of as mountains where wilde and ravenous beasts do lie every one of them according as they are more mighty oppressing the weaker for they are called here Mountains of prey or Powers maintaining all oppression as mountains give shelter to ravenous beasts which live upon prey 2. Whatsoever excellency is to be found in the Kingdomes of the world wherein men do glory as wisdom riches strength multitude courage or what else can be imagined is all nothing to the matter of gloriation which the Church hath in God Thou saith the Psalmist unto God art more glorious then the mountains of prey Ver. 5. The stout-hearted are spoiled they have 〈◊〉 their sleep and none of the men of might have found their hands 6. At thy rebuke O God of Iacob both the chariot and horse are cast into a dead sleep The third reason of Gods praise is because he did evacuate and make of no use unto the enemie whatsoever they did put their confidence in Whence learn 1. Whatsoever strength courage wit or any other point of perfection any man hath God who gave it can take it away when he pleaseth yea can make it a meanes of hardening his heart in carnal confidence to engage him in a businesse for a mischief to him that he may lose all whereunto he leaned The stout-hearted are spoiled they have slept their sleep and none of the men of might have found their hands that is God hath made the couragious and strong to be found feeble and weak and unable to save their own goods or lives 2. Albeit the Church hath no strength in her self yet the Lord can with a word of his mouth do all her work and defeat her enemier At thy rebuke O God of Iacob they are ca●… in a deep sleep 3. The more powerful wise and stout the enemies of Gods Church be the more should the Church relie upon God and the more glory doth the Lord get in overthrowing them Therefore the stout-heartedmen of might ch●…ariots and horse are here mentioned Ver. 7. Thou even thou art to be seared and who may stand in thy sight when once thou art angry The fourth reason of Gods praise is because he is so terrible that none can stand before him when he is angry Whence learn 1. When the Lord doth smite the wicked he doth wa●…n his own people to stand in awe therefore doth the Church make use of what is set down before Thou ●…ven th●… art to be feared 2. Only God is to be feared lest we offend him and no mans anger is to be feared in comparison of provoking God to anger Thou even thou art to be feared and no regard unto nor mention of any other to be feared in comparison of him 3. Man against man may stand and wicked men in the time of Gods patience may stand but when the time cometh of Gods judging and letting forth his wrath upon his enemies none can escape his hand Who may stand in thy sight when on●…e thou art angry 4. The terror of the Lord against his ●…oes is the comfort of his people and the matter as of his praise so of their singing and rejoycing as here is to be seen Ver. 8. Thou didst
red sea so soon as he manifests himselfe it will get out of the way as affrighted at his Majesty The waters saw thee O God the waters saw thee they were afraid the depths also wre troubled 4. The commotions which God hath made in heaven by rain hailstone thunder fire and lightning when he would shew himselfe for his people and against their enemies do testify sufficiently what God can and will do for his own children who draw near unto him and how he will rebuke every adversary power which is against them The clouds poured out water the skies sent out a sound thine arrowes went abroad the voice of thy thunder was in heaven the lightnings lightened the world the earth trembled and shook Whether we referre these words to what God did in plaguing Egypt before he brought out his people or after when he shewed his anger in pursuing the Egyptians in their flight when they were seeking to escape out of the red sea or to what the Lord did in fighting for his people against the Canaanites they teach the same doctrine to us ver 19. Thy way is in the sea and thy path in the great waters and thy footsteps are not known 20. Thou leddest thy people like a flock by the land of Moses and Aaron He closeth his meditation with two observations one is that the Lords wayes are past finding out and this he insinuateth by making a way through the red sea where never one went before and never one could follow after The other observation is that God can save his people by how few and weak instruments he pleaseth Whence learn 1. The Lord draweth deep in the working out of the delivery and salvation of his own people bringing them first unto extremity of danger and then making a plain and clear escape from all their straits Thy way is in the sea where no man can wade except God go before him and where any man may walk if God take him by the hand and lead him through 2. What God is in working when he engages his children in dangers and which way he is going when he leads them into overflowing troubles and deep waters they cannot understand till he hath done his work Thy path is in the great waters 3. A particular reason of every thing which God doth can no man find out for the which cause the Lord craveth submission of all his children in their exercises as he did of Iob Thy footsteps are not known 4. Whether men do see reasons of Gods dealing with them or not the Lord hath a care of his weak and witlesse people as a shepherd hath of his flock and is a gracious leader of his people that follow him Thou leddest thy people as a flock 5. The Lord hath his meanes and instruments of whose ministery he maketh use and those albeit they be few and weak yet shall he do his greatest works by them according as he doth imploy them Thou leddest thy people as a flock by the hand of Moses and Aaron PSAL. LXXVIII Maschil of Asaph IN this Psalm the Lords Spirit doth stirre up his people to make a right use of the Lords works of justice and mercy set down in holy Scripture and to this end he giveth account of Gods dealing very mercifully with his people and never in justice but when mercy was abused and he sheweth also the peoples dealing with God unthankfully deceitfully whether he dealt mercifully or in justice with them The Psalm may be divided thus After a Preface to prepare the hearer for attention and observation of what he was to deliver ver 1 2 3 4. he bringeth forth first the evidence of Gods gracious care he had of his people in giving them his blessed Word to teach unto them faith and obedience ver 5 6 7 8. Secondly the evidence of Gods judgement against his people who were put to flight before their foes when they did not believe the Lord and did not make use of his works among them ver 9 10 11. Thirdly he setteth down how great things God did for them in Egypt and in the wildernesse ver 12 13 14 15 16. Fourthly how they made no better use of these mercies then to tempt God and provoke him to wrath ver 17 18 19 20. Fifthly how for their tempting of God he was angry at them for their unbelief and notconsidering of the miraculous feeding of them with Manna v. 21 22 23 24 25. and how in wrath he satisfied their lust by sending quailes for them to eat flesh their fill ver 26 27 28 29. Sixthly how because they repented not of their provocation the Lord did plague them and they went on in their misbeliefe and disobedience 〈◊〉 and God went on in the course of multiplying judgements on them and cutting off multitudes of them ver 30 31 32 33. Seventhly how they at last made a fashion of repenting and seeking of God but proved in effect nothing but flattering dissemblers and hypocrites unconstant in the Covenant ver 34 35 36 37. Eighthly how the Lord in mercy pitied and spared them many a time notwithstanding all their provocations of his justice against them ver 38 39 40 41. Ninthly he setteth down the prime cause of all this their sinne and misery because they marked not or made no use of the difference that God put between the Egyptians and them nor how for their cause he had plagued the Egyptians with plague after plague ver 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51. And brought their fathers safely out of Egypt when their enemies were drowned before their eyes ver 52 53. Tenthly he setteth down how the Lord perfected their journey to Canaan and brought them to the possession of it thrusting our the Canaa●…ites that they might have place ver 54 55. Eleventhly how they for all this provoked God to anger with their idolatry and superstition ver 56 57 58. Twelfthly how the Lord for this their oft repeated provocation did miserably vex them in the dayes of Eli and Samuel giving over his Ark into the Philistines hand and plaguing their countrey with variety of plagues ver 59 60 61 62 63 64. Thirteenthly how God of his free mercy put his enemies to shame and restored Religion and Liberties to Church and Kingdom ver 65 66. And last of all how he brought them to a setled condition under David who was a type of Christ ver 67 6●… 69 70 71 72. Ver. 1. GIve eare O my people to my Law incline your eares to the words of my mouth 2. I will open my mouth in a parable I will utter dark sayings of old 3. Which we have heard and known and our fathers have told us 4. We will not hide them from their children shewing to the generations to come the praises of the LORD and his strength and his wonderful work that he hath done In the Preface the Spirit of the Lord calleth for attention unto the doctrine which he is
set down to wit overturning of the outward face of Religion destruction of their lands cities and estate killing of them in abundance and want of burial when they are dead 3. As not by outward prosperitie so also not by outward calamities is the love of hatred of God to be known the same sort of outward dispensation may befall both The dead bodies of thy servants they have given to be meat to the fon●…es of heaven 4. No tempered wrath hot calamities whatsoever can separate the Lords children from Gods love and estimation of them nor untie the relations between God and them for here albeit their carcases fall be devoured with the fowls of the heaven and beasts of the earth yet remaine they the Lords servants and Saints under these sufferings The dead bodies of thy servants c. the flesh of thy Saints 5. The slaughter of the Lords people and the scattering of such as escape of them may be so great when his anger is kindled against them that none may be found to bury the slaine but the dead may lie unburied Their blood have they shed like water round about Jerusalem and there was none to bury them 6. Nothing is to be expected of Gods enemies towards Gods people when they fall in their hands but savage cruelty and barbarous inhumanity for which they are to answer unto God to whom the complaint of the living and the cry of the blood of the slaine doth call for vengeance as the experience of the Lords people in this place doth teach Ver. 4. We are become a reproach to our neighbours a scorne and derision to them that are round about us From the third part of the complaint and lamentation Learn 1. In the day of Gods displeasure against his people yea in the day of the trial of the faith and patience of his people no wonder that such as should most pity our calamity and be comfortable unto us rejoyce to see us in misery yea and make our calamity a matter of reproach to us a matter of scorne and derision of us for here it is said We are become a reproach to our neighbours a scorne and derision to them that are round about 〈◊〉 2. When God doth afflict his people all their priviledges and the Religion which they professe do become contemptible and ridiculous to the ungodly who do not esteem either of Gods ordinances or of his people but when they are adorned with outward prosperity The Lords people were seared and honoured by them that were about them when God did fight for them and countenanced them but now they lament We are become a reproach to our neighbours a scorne and derision to them that are round about us 3. To be mocked in misery and specially of them by whom we should be comforted is amongst the saddest passages of our affliction Therefore here is this part of their lamentation set down after the formerly mentioned misery as a load above a burden and that which did imbitter their sorrow most of all because it did reflect upon their Religion their faith their interest in God as if all had been ridiculous Ver. 5. How long LORD wilt thou be 〈◊〉 gry for ever shall thy jealousie burne like fire From the fourth part of the lamentation Learn 1. The Lords displeasure and anger against his people is more heavy to them then all the calamities which have lighted on them How long wilt thou be angry putteth the capstone on their prison-house 2. Guilty consciences cannot but apprehend wrath when their plagues are heavy yea they cannot escape a conflict with the fear of everlasting wrath when his hand doth lie long upon them How long Lord Wilt thou be angry for ever 3. When Gods people do fall from their matrimonial Covenant with God and their heart and eyes do go a whoring after idols no wonder the Lord be jealous and his wrath for this be most hot and be like to devour unto utter destruction Shall thy jealousie burne like fire 4. Whatsoever hath been our calamity whosoever have been the instruments of our misery yea how great soever our provocation of Gods anger hath been it is wisdome as to expound all the malice and cruelty of men to be the effects of Gods anger and jealousie and that his anger and jealousie is kinled by our sinnes so to runne to God and lament the whole matter before him and deprecate his wrath as the Church doth here How long Lord Wilt thou be angry for ever Ver. 6. Poure cut thy wrath upon the heathen that have not known thee and upon the kingdomes that have not called upon thy Name 7. For they have devoured Iacob and laid waste his dwelling place In the latter part of the Psalme is their prayer and first for justice and vengeance on their enemies Whence learn 1. Albeit it be not lawful for us in our own quarrel to pray against our enemies yet in the Churches quarrel in the Lords quarrel it is lawful to pray in general against the incorrigible and desperate enemies of God and his people as here the Church is taught 2. Albeit temporal judgements may overtake Gods visible Church when the open enemies of Gods people and of his true worship are spared yet at length the fulnesse of wrath is reserved for the ungodly one and all Poure out thy wrath upon the heathen that have not known thee 3 Prayer to God and invocation of his Name upon all occasions as Gods honour and mens necessities and duties publick private and secret do call them to come before him is a mark differencing Gods people from the ungodly whether professed or real heathens and a mark of such as shall finde mercy distinguishing them from the object of Gods wrath Poure out thy wrath upon the Kingdomes that have not called on thy Name 4. Unto the tight worshipping of God the true knowledge of God is required for how shall men call upon God in whom they believe not whom they know not or whom to know they care not Therefore such as are strangers from God here are described by this They have not known thee they have not called on thy Name 5. The members of a visible Church may be scattered one from another that they cannot in one place joyntly and professedly enjoy publick Ordinances as here Iacob is devoured and his dwelling place laid waste 6. The heaviest article in the ditty of the ungodly is their being either accessory to or active in the overthrow of Gods people Poure out thy wrath on them for they have devoured Iacob and laid waste his dwelling place Ver. 8. O remember not against us former iniquities let thy tender mercies speedily prevent us for we are brought very low 9. Help us O God of our salvation for the the glory of thy Name and deliver us and purge away our sinnes for thy Names sake 10. Wherefore should the heathen say Where is their God let him be knowne among the
heathen in our sight by the revenging of the blood of thy servants which is shed 11. Let the sighing of the prisoner come before thee according to the greatnesse of thy power preserve thou those that are appointed to die Secondly they pray for pardon of their sins and delivery from the misery which their sins had procured unto which Petitions sundry reasons are added for strengthening of the faith of the Church Whence learne 1. The sense of sin maketh the afflicted to be patient and submissive unto God without murmuration and their lamentation for their misery doth resolve in prayer and in a prayer for remission of sin O remember not against us former iniquities 2. The onely right way to remedy a miserable condition is to sue for remission of sins and for the renewed evidence of reconciliation for before the Church here do ask any thing for their outward delivery they pray O remember not against us former iniquities 3. A peoples long continuance in sin doth furnish ground of fear of the long continuing of begun wrath and judgement upon them and therefore they pray for the forgetting of their sin that the quarrel being the judgement may be removed O remember not against us our former iniquities 4. When warth and justice are like to consume us and quickly make an end of us a refuge is open to us in Gods tender mercies who cannot destroy utterly a sinner fleeing to his mercy Let thy tender mercies speedily prevent us for we are brought very low 5. When the Lords people are brought low let them not look for a lifting up or reliefe except from God onely therefore say they here Help us O Lord. 6. Such as have laid hold on God for salvation promised in the Covenant may also look for particular deliveries out of particular troubles as appendices of the main benefit of salvation Therefore Help us O God of our salvation say they 7. When men do ask any thing the granting whereof may glorify God they may confidently expect to have it and in speciall when God may be so glorified as his people may also be preserved and comforted Help us say they for the glory of thy Name and deliver us 8. As the conscience of sin useth to step in oftner between us and mercy so must we call oftner for remission of sinne for earnest affection can double and treble the same Petition without babling Deliver us and purge away our sins 9. It is the glory of the Lord to forget sin and when remission of sinnes is prayed for according to Gods promise the Lords glory is engaged for the helping of faith to obtain Purge away our sin for thy Names sake 10. Idolaters are ready to insult over Gods people and their religion and over God also when the Church is afflicted and this dishonour of God true Saints cannot endure Wherefore should the heathen say Where is their God 11. Howsoever the Lord will punish his own people for their sins in the sight of the heathen yet will he not suffer the heathen long to insult over his people or over the true religion but by shewing kindnesse to his people will have the heathen to know that he is their God who will answer for himself and for his people and their religion also Wherefore should the heathen say Where is their God 12. As it doth belong ●…o Gods honour to deliver his people in their distresse so also to punish the persecutors of his Church and blasphemers of his Name Let him be known among the heathen in our sight by avenging the blood of thy servants 13. It is a comfort and encouragement of living Saints to see God avenge the blood of dead Saints slain by their enemies Let him be knowne in our sight by avenging the blood of thy servants 14. As it is no wonder to see griefe and sighing to be the cheer of Gods people when the Lord hath scattered them and they are captive prisoners under their oppressors so may we be sure their tears and sighing shall not be misregarded by God Let the sighing of the prisoner come before thee 15. Albeit it seem impossible to deliver Gods people when they are as condemned prisoners destinated by their enemies unto destruction yet saith seeth delivery very possible to Gods omnipotency According to the greatnes of thy power preserve thou those that are appointed to die Ver. 12. And render unto our neighbours seven-fold into their bosome their reproach where with they have reproached thee O Lord. 13. So we thy people and sheep of thy pasture will give thee thanks for ever we will shew forth thy praise to all generations In the last place they pray for vengeance on their wicked neighbours who mocked them and their Religion in the time of their calamity and thus they close their prayer with a promise to praise God for the granting of their petitions Whence learn 1. Such as rejoyce at the calamity of Gods people and mock them in their misery especially neighbours who should be most comfortable as they are in some respect more guilty then open oppressors so shall they be most severely plagued of God for their cruelty Render unto our neighbours seven-fold into their besom their reproach 2. The mocking of Gods people in their misery especially for their Relgion is the mocking of God and reproaching of him whose servants they are Render them the reproach wherewith they have reproached thee O Lord. 3. When God taketh vengeance on the enemies of the Church then is it seen what interest God hath in that despised company for the Church here is confident that then their relations unto God and Gods care of them shall be evident So we thy people and sheep of thy pasture shall give thee thanks that is we shall come out of distresse and gather our selves together and professe our selves to be thy people and chosen flock and shall praise thee 4. The troubles of the Lords people and their mourning are but temporal and of short endurance but their deliverance and comfort when their troubles are ended is everlasting and no lesse then everlasting duration can suffice them to praise God and thank him for his kindnesse So we thy people shall give thee thanks for ever 5. As the Lords work for his distressed people calleth for thanks at their hands so also doth it call for praise at their hands who shall hear of it and they whose duty it is to give thanks ought also according to their power to stirre up others to praise God with themselves and to stirre up also the posterity in all succeeding ages as the Church here promiseth We will shew forth thy praise to all generations PSAL. LXXX To the chief Musician upon Shoshannim Eduth A Psalm of Asaph THis Psalm given to the Church to be made use of is of the like sad subject with the former and may be applied to the time of carrying away the ten tribes out of the holy land while
is a quickening which giveth spiritual life to those that a e●…t dead in their sinnes and trespasses and a quickening which giveth strength and comfort to the weak disconsola●…e and discouraged souls of Gods children for the first sort of quickening every regenerate man should pray in behalf of all the elect in the visible Church who are not as yet converted and for quickening in other respects they should pray in behalf of themselves and other afflicted spirits of the godly as here the beleevers do pray Quicken us 2. The honouring of God in spiritual worship should be the end of our petitions which we do make for any good to our selves Quicken us and we shall call upon thy Name 3. Albeit the work of calling on Gods Name and worshipping of God in Spirit and tr●…h be the work of the regenerate man yet the spiritual life and the motion or stirring up of the regenerate man unto this work the enabling of the man unto it and in it and the cheering up of his heart to do it affectionately is the work of the Lord for these doth the P●…lmist here distinguish first he sets down Gods part Quicken thou us and then o●…r part And we shall call upon thy Name From the third request ver 19. repeated now the third time Learn 1. In what respects soever the Church of the Jewish Nation may seem to be alienated from God yet the●…e is hope of their repentance and returning and reconciliation unto God for there is a petition of the Lords enditing standing he e thrice repeated in their favour to be granted in due time by God to whom nothing is hard and here in this third repetition of this prayer the Name of God Jehovah whereby he told Israel that he would be known to them to be the performer of promises is added expressely Turn us again O Iehovah God of hostes 2 Albeit we our selves do breed the mist and clouds which do hide from us the shining of Gods favour towards us and we do build the partition walls we do raise up mountains of transgressions which separate between God and us vet it is the Lord himself only who of his own free grace and by his own power doth dissolve these clouds and remove these impediments out of his own way towards us Turn us again and cause thy face to shine 3. So oft as we are burdened with the same pressure and straitened with the same necessity as oft we may and should have recourse to God for relief by prayer for this staffe hath God put in faiths hand to help the believer in every stop of his journey till he come home to the Lord and be past all perill Turne 〈◊〉 again cause thy face to shine 4. As the sight of our distance from God and sense of his displeasure and fear of perdition do serve to be a spurre to our prayer so desire of reconciliation desire and purpose of repenting and hope of salvation ●…o serve to encourage us to persevere in prayer till we have what we ask perfected to us Turn us again cause thy face to shine so shall we be saved PSAL. LXXXI To the chief Musician upon Gittith A Psalme of Asaph THis Psalm was appointed to be sung in their solemn seasts new moones and feast of tabernacles in special for a testimony of Gods gracious and bountiful dealing with his people on the one hand and of their provocation of God on the other hand moving him to change his dispensation toward them and to withhold many benefits from them which otherwayes they might have had if they had not rejected Gods counsel and had chosen their own wayes that by this Psalme his people might learn to be wiser The parts of the Psalme are three The first is a Preface wherein there is a mutual stirring up of the Church-members to keep the solemn feasts and blowing of trumpets ver 1 2 3. and a reason or this mutual exho●…tation taken from Gods institution of this ordinance when he brought his people out of Egypt from the service of strangers ver 4 5. In the second part is set down how God delivered them from bondage in Egypt and from troubles in their journey ver 6 7. and how reasonable commands the Lord did give unto them which commands are all summed up in this one That God should be their God alone ver 8 9 10. In the third part is set down First how they rejected God and his counsel ver 11. Next how therefore they were plagued by being given over to their own lusts ver 12. Thirdly how they deprived themselves of Gods benefits which by following Gods counsel they might have enjoyed ver 13 14 15. Ver. 1. SIng aloud unto God our strength make a joyful noise unto the God of Iacob 2. Take a Psalm and bring hither the timbrel the pleasant harp with the psaltery 3. Blow up the trumpet in the new Moon in the time appointed on our solemn feast-day From their mutual stirring up of one another to rejoyce in God commanded here by the Psalmist in the Lords Name Learn 1. That whatsoever may be our own private condition it is our duty ever and in all things to give glory to God to rejoyce in him to professe and avow his Name Sing aloud unto God 2. The Lords people have the fulfilling supplying and supporting of their emptinesse wants and weaknesse in God whose sufficiency they ought to make use of and rejoyce therein Sing unto God our strength 3. It is the Covenant of grace whereby God becometh our God which doth intitle us and giveth us interest in and right unto his all-sufficiency which we should entertain joyfully in our communion with God praising him and thanking him for it and delighting in his presence because of it Make a joyful noise unto the God of Iacob for God was Iacobs God because God was by Covenant Abrahams and his childrens God whose children also we are who are Christs Gal. 3. 29. From the use and variety of musical instruments called for Ver. 2 3. Learn 1. Albeit the external melody of musical instruments in the Lords publike worship with the rest of the paedagogie and shadowing dark figures of the Ceremonial Law be abolished now when the Lord the Sunne of righteousnesse is come yet the moral duties represented by them are still to be acknowledged and followed by us to wit that the praises of the Lord are unexpressible by us and that we are unsufficient of our selves to set forth the same that we have matter of unspeakable joy in God our Redeemer and should stir up all the powers of our soul to this part of his spiritual service for this did those musical instruments teach Take a Psalm and bring hither the timbrel the pleasant harp with the Psaltery 2. We ought to acknowledge the stately magnificence of our exalted Lord and our dulnesse and slownesse to praise him and what need we had to be stirred up and to stirre up
not in his wayes If Israel had walked in my wayes the haters of the Lord should have submitted themselves or lied unto him as the Word will bear 5. There is no means to perpetuate a visible Church in any place but to walk in the Lords wayes If Israel had walked in my wayes c. their time should have endured for ever 6. Obeying the voice of God that is the embracing of the offer of grace and reconciliation with God through the sacrifice of the Messiah Christ and studying to walk holily as persons reconciled is the only way of coming by true felicity the only way of being furnished with all things necessary for life and salvation the onely way of having large allowance from God of sweet and satisfactory food for entertaining of spiritual life and communion with God promised here under the similitude of earthly food He should have sed them with the finest of the wheat and with the honey out of the Rock should I have satisfied thee PSAL. LXXXII A Psalme of Asaph THis Psalme agreeth with the time of Davids persecution by Saul and his Counsellors the Peeres of the land wherein the Psalmist comforteth himselfe in Gods supremacy and his Judging of all Judges on the earth for exercising whereof God cometh unto their meeting ver 1. Then challengeth them for their injustice and oppression ver 2. Thirdly readeth the law and rule of their duty unto them ver 3. 4. Fourthly condemneth them as guilty ver 5. Fifthly pronounceth sentence of doom upon them ver 6 7. And then the Psalmist closeth the Psalm with prayer ver 8. Ver. 1. GOd standeth in the congregation of the mighty he judgeth among the gods From the Lords presence in the Assembly of Judges Learn 1. The name of a Congregation or Church is given in Scripture in the orderly meeting of Rulers and Governours met for the execution of their office as here God standeth in the Congregation or Church of the mighty 2. No Judge is absolute Lord over a people but in subordination to God who is Judge above all Judges and will judge of all the decrees of Judges under him God standeth in the congregation of the mighty he judgeth 3. God doth put his Name upon civil Magistrates and hath clothed them with honour that as their eminency is a part of his image so their decrees should be such as God will owne He judgeth among the gods Ver. 2. How long will ye judge unjustly and accept the persons of the wicked Selah From the Lords challenging of them for their partiality and injustice Learne 1. Men in honour and power readily do forget God their Master and Sovereign Lord and do neglect to do justice according to their office the splendour of their power doth make them forget their duty to God above them and to their subjects under them as the instance of the Rulers of I●… sheweth who had Gods expresse law in stead of Acts of Pa●… ment and God dwelling in the midst of them in a wonde●… manner for direction in extraordinary cases even they 〈◊〉 judge unjustly 2. Corrupt Judges are inclined to shew 〈◊〉 only to the wicked and are partiall when the cause of the wicked cometh before them Ye accept the persons of the wick●… 3. Albeit the Lord keep peace for a while yet will he no al●… be silent but at length will call them to an accompt How 〈◊〉 will ye judge unjustly Ver. 3. Defend the poor and fatherlesse do justice to the afflicted and needy 4. Deliver the poor and needy ridde them out of the hand of the wicked From the rule of justice which is set to Magistrates Le●… 1. The touchstone of Magistrates justice is in the causes and cases of the poor fatherles afflicted and needy who are not able to attend long their suits of law have no friends nor money to deal for them to whom therefore the mighty should be eyes to direct them and a staffe to their weaknesse to support and helpe them to their right Defend the poore and fatherlesse is justice to the afflicted and needy 2. As the poor and afflic●… have need of the Judges help to clear their right when they seek justice so also when they are unjustly drawn to the 〈◊〉 or any way oppressed the mighty or Judges should interpose for their reliefe and rescue the oppressed from the oppressour Deliver the poore and needy rid●… them out of the hand of the wicked Ver. 5. They know not neither will they understand they walke on in darknesse all the foundatio●… of the earth are out of course From the condemnatory sentence for their guiltinesse L●… 1. It is a great fault in a Judge not to know the duty of his office or not to acquaint himself with the solid rules of justice for upon this ground are they here pronounced g●…ty They know not 2. It is a great fault when a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to refuse instruction information and direction ●…ed from the Lords Word as here Neither will they under●… 3. It is yet most culpable of all for any man but to ●…ges in special to go on still in a sinful course They walk on 〈◊〉 darknesse 4. When justice and judgement-seats are corrpted and Judges do not mind justice in their places then the ●…ars of that land or kingdome must stagger and all matters 〈◊〉 to ruine or a perillous alteration All the foundations of the 〈◊〉 or of the land are out of course saith the Lord where the foresaid injustice or faults in Governours are found Ver. 6. I have said Ye are gods and all of you are children of the most High 7. But ye shall die like men and fall like one of the princes From the sentence of doome pronounced against them Learn 1. Princes Magistrates chief Rulers and Judges have allowance from God of honour power and strength tribute and revenues for the better discharge of their office under him I have said Ye are gods and all of you are children of the most High that is I have put the image of my superiority on you and given you preheminence of place power and gifts over others in my Name 2. Great places among men do not exempt any man from Gods power justice and judgement but all men great men no lesse then others must die and come to judgement as hath befallen others before them A Prince among Gods people who doth not execute justice as becometh Gods servant shall be punished as profane persons are who rule without the pale of Gods Church But ye shall die like men and fall as one of the Princes 3. The meditation of death and judgement following on it is a pressing motive unto amendment of life for this is 〈◊〉 before men of high place who do not stand in fear of their subjects Ye shall die like men and fall as one of the Princes Ver. 8. Arise O God judge the earth for thou ●…lt inhert all nations From the close of the Psalme by this
of wrath except Christ Jesus who is really the only compleat salvation of God only able to answer fully to that name who was known to the Church before his coming in the flesh by that name as we may understand Luke 2. from the words of Simeon who was waiting for the consolation of Israel and had a promise that he should not see death before he had seen the Lords Christ ver 25 26. And when he had Christ in his armes he saith Lord now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace according to thy word for mine eyes have seen thy salvation ver 30. There is the name whereby Christ was of old known to the Church among many other titles he is Gods salvation as he is called here 3 Consolation and deliverance and salvation in Christ is neer-hand to every upright afflicted beleever whether the afflicted do see it comfortably for the time or not Surely Gods salvation is near them that fear him 4. What land the true Church of Christ the Saints and they that feare God do dwell in there doth glory dwell there God there Christ by his Spirit bringing righteousness and salvation to such a society is glorious and for his presence the people are glorious and the land glorious above all other lands whatsoev●… 〈◊〉 Surely his salvation is 〈◊〉 them that fear him that glory may 〈◊〉 in our land This commendation for many reasons the ●…d of Iudea might claim farre above all other Ver. 10. Mercy and truth are met together righteousnesse and peace have kissed each other 11. Truth shall spring out of the earth and righteousnesse shall look down from heaven The third effect of mercy is the grace of Christ unto justification and the fruits thereof bestowed upon them that are justified by faith There are here three conjunctions or couples sweetly agreeing together one is of mercy and truth another it of righteousnesse and peace and the third is of truth and righteousnesse For the first couple mercy and truth may be either referred to God bestowing something on his people and so Gods mercy doth pity spare and pardon his sinful people and his truth doth perform all the good things which in his Word he promised and this couple indeed did most eminently meet when Christ the salvation of God came in the flesh for Christs coming is the highest manifestation of mercy that ever was heard tell o●… when God out of love and pity and mercy did give his Sonne to redeem sinners and this also was the most glorious performance of the richest and the noblest promises that ever was made to man for in the sending of Christ promised all the promises are made Yea and Amen for the way is made sure now to perform all the rest of the promises or mercy and truth may be referred the one namely mercy to God and the o●…her to wit truth may be referred to men to whom God will shew mercy and in this consideration we are given to understand that as a merciful God and misbeleeving sinners are separated do stand at a great distance he one departing more and more from the other so a merciful God and a beleever are surely reconciled and do quickly meet together for God in Christ holdeth forth mercy to the sinner and mercy doth bestow faith upon the redeemed and faith layeth hold on mercy and so mercy and truth are met together mercy calleth for faith and createth it and saith calleth for mercie and so this couple do meete together As for the second couple of righteousnesse and peace they are both of them the effects of the meeting of mercy and truth together or of mercy and of faith saying Amen to mercies offer for faith laying hold on mercy bringeth down from God rig●…teousnesse or justification by faith and we being justified by faith have both peace with God and our own consciences at least in the point of right and priviledge albeit sense and possession of the sense of this peace may be interrupted Whence learn In whomsoever mercy or the offer of grace and faith receiving the offer do meet justification also or imputed righteousnesse and peace with God do meet Then righteousnesse and peace have kissed each other The third couple is of truth or true faith in man on earth and righteousnesse from God in heaven faith springing out of the earth as the plantation of mercy in the sensible fruits thereof that is in the true effects of sincere love to God and man and the righteousnesse of God from heaven shining down as the Sun for nourishing and protecting his own plantation and performing all promises to the beleever Whence learn As mercie in God and true faith in man meeting together are followed with righteousnesse of justification and peace with God so true faith in man is followed with fruits for it cannot be idle but must be operative in bringing forth the effects of faith or truth Truth shall spring out of the earth and righteousnesse from heaven is followed with active influence upon springing faith for defending and encreasing and blessing of it as the Sunne fostereth and refresheth the fruits of the ground Truth shall spring out of the earth and righteousnesse shall look down from heaven Ver. 12. Yea the LORD shall give that which is good and our land shall yield her increase The fourth fruit of mercy is of giving temporal benefits to the beleever and blessing the land where beleevers do dwell Whence learn 1. The things of this life are Appendices of the chief mercies of the Gospel which reconciled people may expect to receive of God as their need and good doth require Yea the Lord shall give that which is good 2. As the place or land where the Lords people do dwell beareth the tokens of Gods displeasure when they provoke God so shall the land be sensibly blessed when his people are reconciled unto him And our land shall yield her increase Ver. 13. Righteousnesse shall go before him and set us in the way of his steps The fifth fruit of mercy is the grace of Christ for directing and furthering of Believers in the way of sanctification Christ shall bee their leader and righteousnesse imparted unto Believers from Christ in the grace of conversion or holy inclination and of perfect direction by his Word and Spirit shall make Believers to follow Christs wayes and go on in the paths of his obedience Whence learn 1. Christ is the Captain of his redeemed and reconciled people or the shepherd of his purchased flock for he and his people here are walking in one way wherein he goeth before his people that they may follow his steps and behinde them also to bring them up and set them forward in the way that none do fall off as the similitude doth import 2. As Christ is the leader of his people so righteousnesse is the preparer of his people to follow him First in the work of conversion or regeneration wherein the minde
is illuminated to behold and the heart inclined to follow righteousnesse Secondly in the work of daily direction by his Word and Spirit Righteousnesse shall go before him 3. As the way that the Believer must walk in is that which is prescribed by the Lord his leader so the effectual mover of the Believer unto sanctification is the grace of righteousnesse or sanctification which Christ the leader doth send forth into his peoples heart to make them follow the direction given unto them For Righteousnesse shall go before him and set us in the way of his steps PSAL. LXXXVI A Prayer of David THis Psalme agreeth well with the time when David was in trouble being persecuted by Saul The summe of it is a prayer for reliefe consisting of 7. Petitions some of them more generally some of them more particularly expressing his trouble and his desire of relief all which Petitions have reasons joyned unto them serving to strengthen the faith of the supplicant Ver. 1. BOw down thine eare O LORD heare me for I am poore and needy The first Petition is for audience and the reason of his hope to be heard is because of his necessity to be helped Whenc●… learn 1. When a believer hath any Petition to present unto God he may expect accesse unto God and audience and acceptation of his person and prayer O Lord hear me 2. Albeit the supplicant be on earth and God to be found in heaven albeit the supplicant be mean and base both in his own eyes and in effect and God be the high and lofty one that inhabi●…h eternity yet will he humble himselfe to take notice of the supplica●…ion of 〈◊〉 believing supplicant Bow down thine ear O Lord. 3. Of that whereof misbelief would make use unto discouragement and desperation faith maketh a ground of hope to be helped for affliction and weaknesse and want of all help and comfort from man is the Lords forerunner to advertise the believer that the Lord is coming O Lord hear me for I am poor and needy Ver. 2. Preserve my soul for I am holy O thou my God save thy servant that trusteth in thee The second Petition is for protection of his life and the reasons of his hope are taken from the qualities of such a person as hath right to expect Gods protection Whence learne 1. The bodies and soules of Gods children have snares l●…id for them by enemies bodily and spiritual from which they cannot deliver themselves except they do commit the custody thereof u●…o God as the Prophet doth saying Preserve my soul our wit our prudence our power our fighting our fleeing or whatsoever means we can use under heaven are litle worth if God do not preserve us 2. That man hath a ground of hope to be preserved by God who being pursued for his life by malicious persecutors for falsely alledged wrongs done by him can attest God for his innocency in the particular whereof he is charged as here David doth Preserve my soule for I am holy that is free from the fault whereof I am charged or I am a favourite of thine or a man who hath been bountifull in doing good to him that pursueth me for thus much also will the word bear 3. The conscience of studying to please God is very sweet in time of trouble and especially when trouble falleth on for Gods service O my God save thy servant 4. Innocency in a particular cause is not sufficient to bear us out not yet the conscience of out good service done to God but we must make use of the Covenant and put our trust in Gods goodnesse whensoever we do expect any good from God O my God save thy servant that trusteth in thee Ver. 3 Be mercifull unto me O Lord for I cry unto thee daily The third Petition is for mercy and forgivenesse of sin and the reason of hope is because he is a daily supplicant Whence learn 1. Innocency in our carriage toward men and the goodnesse of the cause which we defend may leave us in the mire in time of trouble because of our sinnes whereof we are guilty in other respects except we flee to Gods mercy Therefore when sin is objected mercy must be our refuge and plea Be mercifull to my O Lord. 2. Assiduity and instance in prayer doth promise certainly a good answer after asking seeking and knocking Be mercifull to me for I cry unto thee daily Ver. 4. Rejoyce the soule of thy servant for unto thee O Lord do I lift up my soule 5. For thou Lord art good and ready to forgive and plenteous in mercy unto all them that call upon thee The fourth Petition is for comfort the reasons of his hope are because he seeketh his comfort no where else but in God Next because God is gracious to all supplicants When●…e learne 1. As the Lord doth burden his own children sometime with affliction and sorrow for their humiliation and trial of faith so will he also comfort them in due time and give them cause of joy in himselfe for the strengthening of their faith and they may pray for this and expect it Rejoyce the soule of thy servant 2. He that would have comfort from God must set himselfe to seek it in him onely and not look after it elsewhere under the heaven and in this way he may oray for it and expect it as the Psalmist doth here For I lift up my soul unto thee O Lord. 3. The knowledge of Gods goodnesse and mercy is the ●…ife of ●…aith the fountain of consolation and ground of prayer Rejoyce t●…e 〈◊〉 ●…f thy servant for thou O Lord art good 4. Whatsoever evill the sinner doth finde in himselfe there is a remedy in God for it if he 〈◊〉 any good thing God hath it and is ready to communicate it For thou Lord art good If the sinner be smitten with the conscience of sin and deserving of wrath The Lord is ready to forgive If a mans sins do seem so many and heinous as he dare not approach The Lord is plenteous in mercy 5 He who desireth to partake of Gods goodnesse and mercy must resolve to worship the Lord to believe in him and to pray unto him and whosoever taketh this course whatsoever he be without exception he shall finde the Lord to be good and ready to forgive and plenteous in mercy to all them that call upon him Ver. 6. Give ear O LORD unto my prayer and attend unto the voice of my supplications 7. In the day of my trouble I will call upon thee for thou wilt answer me 8. Among the gods there is none like unto thee O Lord neither are there any worke like unto thy works 9. All nations whom thou hast made shall come and worship thee O Lord and shall glorifie thy Name 10. For thou art great and dost Wondrous things thou art God alone The fifth Petition is for reliefe and deliverance out of his present distresse propounded in the general termes
of granting his supplication The first reason of his hope to be heard is because he is resolved to make use of the Lords promise that he will answer when one calleth on him in trouble ver 7. The next reason is because there is not a God beside God and he alone 〈◊〉 able to work wonders ver 8. The third is because the Lord is to let all nations know him and to gain them in to his worship by his great power and wonderful working as the onely true God ver 9 10. And therefore able and willing to give him a new experience of his power Whence learne 1. When God delayeth to answer supplicants they must not faint in prayer but continue instantly and be importunate Give ear O Lord to my prayer saith he now over again 2. Albeit the supplicant do meet with doubts whether his Petition be regarded or not ye●… must he not yield to them but pray directly against them as here we are taught Attend unto the voice of my supplication 3. Every man should so make use of and apply to himselfe the general command of God to call upon him in trouble w●… a promise of deliverance as his faith may be most strengthened by it for so the Psalmist doth here In the day of my trouble I will call upon thee for thou wilt answer me And this relateth to that which is said Psal. 50. 15. Call upon me in the day of thy trouble 4. He that hath found the fruit of true Religion and hath experience of the gracious work of God upon his own spirit will set at nought all Idolatry and false Religion Among the gods there is none like unto thee O God 5. The works of God working according to his Word are such as may prove him to be the true God with whose works no creatures works can be compared Where is such a work of power as the creation of the world and preservation of it Where is there such a work of grace as the work of Redemption And who can work any thing like unto the least of the works of the Lord in his making and upholding of the meanest creature Neither are there any works like thy works 6. The consideration of the largenesse of Gods grace and power which he hath manifested in the conversion of Nations and is to manifest yet more and more in his own due time may encourage any man to come and worship God and expect grace from him for his own particular he will not refuse almes to any begger who is about to gather all poor beggers to receive of his almes All nations shall come and worship before thee O Lord and glorify thy Name Whatsoever is already done for accomplishing of this prophecie more is to be done ere the Lord close the course of time and whatsoever shall be done by way of conversion before the last day we are sure that at least by way of conviction and extorted acknowledgement all this shall be done at the last day for the Lord hath sworne that every knee shall bow to him and every tongue shall confesse to his Name 7. It is the cognizance of a kindly subject of Gods Kingdome to delight in the increase and glory of it and he that findeth in his heart to love the enlargement of Gods glory may expect the benefit of a kindly subject as the Psalmist doth here 8. The omnipotency of God and the wondrous works which God hath already done may loose all doubts about the accomplishment of all his promises how great soever All nations shall come and worship before thee for thou art great saith he and doest wondrous things 9. All Idols and Idolatry must at length be defaced and he found to be vanity and God 〈◊〉 length must be known to be the onely true God All N●… shall glorifie thy Name for thou art God alone Ver. 11. Teach me thy way O LORD I 〈◊〉 walk in thy truth unite my heart to feare thy N●… The sixth petition is to be kept from following any sinfull course specially now in this his triall and tentation 〈◊〉 11. And this he hopeth shall be granted to Gods glory ver 1●… First because he had experience of Gods mercy before ver 1●… Next because he had to do with proud and godlesse enemies ver 14. Thirdly because God was exceeding gracious and merciful ver 15. As for the petition to be saved from all sinfull courses it hath two branches one is to be instructed in Gods way the other that his heart may be made to follow that way and to stand 〈◊〉 awe to offend Whence learn 1. The Lords children under trouble and persecution are in danger to be driven by rentation to some sinfull course and this they should pray against and be no lesse feared for it then for any bodily trouble as heare the example of David teacheth us 2. It is necessary for eschewing sinne to know how God useth to deale with his own children lest we think that some strange thing hath befallen us when we fall into trouble and it is necessary to know also how we ought to carry our selves in every passage of our trouble and triall le●… we neglect our duty or do contrary to it Teach me thy way O God 3. Beside the information of the minde concerning the duty in generall which God giveth by the ministery of his Word and common operation of his Spirit there is a more speciall lively efficacious teaching of a man whereby he is fitted to make particular practicall application of the generall rule 〈◊〉 particular circumstances of time and place and for this we must pray to God also after we are taught to know the duty in generall Teach me thy way O Lord. 4. No man must count 〈◊〉 way to be of Gods teaching but that which is warranted by his Word and no man can walke safely except he that followeth the Lords truth Teach me and I will walk in thy truth 5. Whosoever would have God to informe them of his will must first resolve sincerely to follow his will when he hath shewn it for so doth David Teach me thy way and I will walke in thy 〈◊〉 6. To make instruction effectuall not onely must the minde 〈◊〉 informed but the heart also must be wrought upon and framed ●…to obedience Unite my heart 7. It is the naturall disease of sinfull mens hearts to be loosed from God and scattered and distracted about variety of vaine objects which are offered unto it to follow and this disease onely God can cure Unite my heart 8. It is not sufficient for a man once to resigne over his heart ●…nto God in his conversion but this resignation of the heart must be renewed upon all occasions into Gods hand that he may 〈◊〉 the affections to himself and to his holy Law and reclaime the heart from ranging and going a whoring from him after sinfull objects for this prayer for uniting the heart is Davids prayer who long
before was converted 9. Then is the heart united and fixed when the fear of God doth rule it that is when after it is informed of Gods will it feareth to omit what he commandeth and to do what he forbiddeth Unite my heart to feare thy Name Ver. 12. I will praise thee O Lord my God with all my heart and I will glorifie thy Name for evermore 13. For great is thy mercy toward me and thou hast delivered my soul from the lowest hell Here David hopeth to be heard and promiseth praise to God both for his by-past and also for his fore-seene deliverance flowing from the greatnesse of Gods mercy to him Whence learn 1. He who prayeth according to Gods will may promise to himself satisfaction and unto God thanks for granting his requests I will praise thee O Lord my God 2. The thanksgiving of the godly especially when the heart is enlarged is very hearty joyned with great delight and constant purpose of glorifying of God constantly I will praise thee O Lord my God with all my heart and I will glorifie thy Name for evermore 3. When a man seeth his sinnes great his deserving great his danger and delivery great he must also see Gods mercy toward him great and his obligation to thanksgiving great I will glorifie thy Name for evermore for great 〈◊〉 thy mercy toward me 4. Preventing mercy keeping us from the evill we were in danger to fall into is to be esteemed of by ●…s as delivering mercy bringing us out of the evill wherein we were lying The Lords keeping of us from falling into hell should he accounted by us no lesse mercie then if we had been 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and had been brought back out of it by him Thou hast de●… 〈◊〉 my soul from the lowest hell The same may be said of 〈◊〉 particulars and when our eyes are open to see the evils 〈◊〉 which the Lord hath kept us when we were in danger of them 〈◊〉 shall be forced so to judge Ver. 14. O God the proud are risen against 〈◊〉 and the assemblies of violent men have sought af●… my soul and have not set thee before them 15. But thou O Lord art a God full of compassion and gracious long-suffering and plenteous in mercy and truth Here are other reasons of his hope to be delivered taken 〈◊〉 the pride and oppression of the godlesse enemy and from 〈◊〉 pity and compassion Whence learn 1. Proud violent cruell and godlesse men are the readiest instruments which can be found unto Satan for persecuting Gods children Such were the enemies of David a type of Christ and an example of his persecuted followers The proud are risen against me 2. Whatsoever wicked man pleaseth to make head against the godly he will readily finde multitudes to follow him The proud are risen against me and the assemblies of violent men have sought after my soul. 3. When men do reject the fear of God there is no wickednesse so great which they will not commit They have sought after my soul and have not set thee O God before th●… that is they neither fear thy judgements nor care for what may please thee 4. The more violent cruell prophane and ungodly our persecutors are the more hope is of Gods pity towards us as the Psalmist reasoneth But thou O Lord art a God full of compassion 5. Whatsoever objections may arise from our unworthinesse from our former sinful provocations of God and the multitude and greatnesse of our former sins to hinder our hope that God shall pity us in our affliction they are all answered and taken away by consideration of the unspeakable greatnesse of Gods goodnesse for in God is compassion he is full of compassion a God full of compassion that is infinitely compassionate and as it were affected wi●…h our misery he is gracious though we be unworthy he is long-suffering although we be given to strife and provocation of him and how great soever our misdeferrings have been he is plenteous in mercy and howsoever we have forfeited our interest in his promises yet he will not follow the forfeiture but will keep up our right unto his promises still he is plenteous in truth great is his faithfulnesse who keepeth promises albeit he might justly reject them Ver. 16. O turne unto me and have mercy upon me give thy strength unto thy servant and save the son of thine handmaid 17. Shew me a token for good that ther which hate me may see it and be ashamed because thou LORD hast helpen me and comforted me The seventh pe●…ition is for strength to stand out till such a clear delivery should come to him from God as might put his enemies to confusion when they should see it Whence learn 〈◊〉 Whosoever do consider well the riches of Gods grace and goodnesse may confidently pray for a proof of it in the changing of a miserable condition into a better even when God seemeth angry and ●…erse Thou art plenteous in mercy and truth O turne unto me and have mercy upon me 2. It is no small mercy to have strength from God to subsist under troubles till the delivery come and for this strength the man emp●…ied of self-confidence may call and should be content with supporting strength till the Lords time of deliverance come Give thy strength unto thy servent 3. The longer course the kindnesse of the Lord hath had toward us and the more relations are between God and us we may expect the more confidently for further effects and fruit of his kindnesse for our deliverance for David here reckoneth from his being born within the Covenant borne as a domestick as a childe of the Church who belonged to Gods protection and care as the son of the handmaid belonged to the care of the master of the family Save the son of thy handmaid 4. As the wicked delight to see the godly in misery that they may insult over godlinesse so the go●…ly desire deliverance that in their person godlinesse may not suffer nor wicked men be heartened in their insolenci●… Shew me a token for good that they who hate me may see it 5. The good successe and delivery of some of the Saints out of their troubles and 〈◊〉 is a good token both to themselves and to all other godly persons of a blessed event unto them from all their troubles Therefore David prayeth for it Shew me a ●…oken for good 6. As the good event of the godly from their troubles is a matter of 〈◊〉 and gloriation unto the godly so is it also the matter of shame and confusion to the wicked who do hate them Shew me a t●…ken for good that they who hate me may see it and be ashamed because thou Lord hast holpen me and comforted me PSAL. LXXXVII A Psalme or song for the sonnes of Korah WHen God loosed the captivity of the Jewes by Cyrus son of them did returne from Babylon the work of repuration of Church and S●…ate Temple and City had
of the mighty can be likened unto the Lord Ver. 7. God is greatly to bee feared in the assembly of the Saints and to bee had in reverence of all them that are about him A third reason to confirme his faith is this God is terrible and to be stood in awe of by all his people and it were a fearfull injury for his Saints not to give him the glory of his power and sidelity Therefore will he say I have reason to believe what he hath promised concerning the Kingdome of Christ. Whence learne 1. Holy Angels and sanctified men of all creatures have nearest accesse unto God and are most like to the domesticks and Courtiers of a King who attend him daily and wait upon him for they are here said to bee about him 2. The feare and reverence of God imprinted on Angels and Saints doth evidence the greatnesse of Gods power excellency and majesty God is greatly to be feared in the Assembly of the Saints 3. The terriblenesse of Gods holy Majesty and the reverence due to him from all his Saints should make us afraid to misbelieve his Word and Promises for this is made a reason of the Psalmists believing the Lords Word God is greatly to be feared in the Assembly of the Saints and to be had in reverence by all them that are about him Ver. 8. O LORD God of hosts who is a strong LORD like unto thee or to thy faithfulnesse round about thee A fourth reason to confirme his faith is this GOD is LORD of Hosts and incomparable in strength and faithfulnesse whereby he is compassed on all hands round about therefore will he say I have reason to believe his promise concerning Christs Kingdome Whence learn 1. As the Lord only knoweth persectly his owne Omnipotency and his own Excellency in all perfections so we know GOD b●…st when we come to him and acknowledge that he only knoweth himself fully and do give unto him this glory as the Psalmist di●…ecting his speech to GOD immediately doth t●…ach us O LORD God of hosts who is a strong LORD like unto thee 2 The same power which serveth to humble a man by afflicting of him serveth also to comfort him and strengthen his faith in affliction when he doth draw neare unto God for the Psalmist maketh use of the same stile here both to direct his saith and to keep down his pride his s●…etting and repining against God saying O LORD God of hosts 3. As the Lord is as it were compassed about on all hands with power and is incomparably strong in all difference of time past present and to come above all his creatures so also first and l●…st in all difference of time he is incomparably faithfull above all his creatures O LORD God of hosts who is a strong Lord like unto thee or to thy faithfulnesse round about thee Ver. 9. Thou rulest the raging of the sea when the waves thereof arise thou stillest them A fifth reason to strengthen his faith is The LORD who doth rule the raging Sea is able to suppresse and compose all tumults and troubles whatsoever are raised or shall be raisd against his Church Therefore I have cause will he say to believe his promise concerning Christs Kingdome Whence learn That the power of GOD in ruling and calming the raging Sea may strengthen the faith of his children amidst all the tumults of people against Christs Kingdome Ver. 10. Thou hast broken Rahab in pieces as one that is slaine thou hast scattered thine enemies with thy strong arme The sixth reason is this GOD hath done as much already for delivering his Church by destroying Rahab or the Egyptians and scattering of his enemies from time to time as may assure me both what he can and what he will do for his people therefore I may be quiet Whence learne 1. Faith may and should make use of every example of GODS working for his people in all times after and in speciall the overthrow of the Egyptians as a perpetual pawne of GODS promise to tread down and destroy all the enemies of his Church and Kingdome for Thou hast b●…oken Rahab in pieces is here and else-where frequently called to rememb●…ance for this end 2. It is as easie for GOD to dest●…oy a Nation of enemies were they never so many or powerful as to wound or kill one man Thou hast broken Rahab in pieces as one that is slain thou hast scattered thine enemies with thy strong hand Ver. 11. The heavens are thine the earth also is thine as for the world and the fulnesse thereof thou hast founded theu Ver. 12 The North and the South thou hast created them Tabor and Hermon shall rejoyce in thy Name The seventh reason for confirmation of his faith is Heaven and earth and all creatures in all corners of the world are the LORDS work sustained by him and cared for by him and there is not a mountaine or hill greater or lesser such as Tabor or Hermon which do bear grasse or corne or herbs or trees or whatsoever may make them look as it were chearfully and rejoyce but it is by the power of GODS Name Therefore I may be sure GOD will much more care for his Church and for the stability of the Kingdome of Christ. Whence learn 1. The heaven and earth and fulnesse thereof belongeth to the LORD by due right and are cared for by him as his own possession The heavens are thine the earth also is thine as for the world and fulnesse thereof thou h●… 〈◊〉 sounded them 2. The making and governing of the world which was made and is governed for the use of man may give assurance that his Church and people for whose cause especially all was made shall be continued from age to age to long as heaven and earth do remaine and shall be more particularly cared for then any other part or piece of his workmanship for to this end doth the Psalmist make mention of other creatures appointed to serve man 3. Seeing the Lord maketh the hills and mountaines after Winter-blasts of frost and snow to change their countenance and as it were look joyfully and rejoyce we may be perswaded that his Church after troubles shall much more change its countenance and reioyce in Gods Name For to this end is it said that these mountaines Tabor and Hermon shall rejoyce in thy Name Ver. 13. Thou hast a mighty arme strong is thy hand and high is thy right hand The eight reason is taken from the exceeding great power of GOD to do more then ever he hath done for his Church Whence learne If a greater work then the making and upholding of the world or if a greater work then any thing which is done by GOD hitherto were needful to be done for the good of the Church there is power enough infinite power in GOD to effect it Thou hast a mighty arme strong is thy hand and high is thy right hand Ver. 14. Iustice and judgement are
the habitation of thy throne mercy and truth shall go before thy face The ninth reason for strengthening his faith taken from the properties and attendants of GODS Kingdome is this Justice and judgemet are the supporters of his throne and mercy and truth are his officers preparing way for the LORD when he is about to do justice in favour of his people therefore I need not fear that the promise of Christs Kingdome shall faile Whence learn 1. Whatsoever oppression or desolation the Lords people may be under the unalterable tighseousnesse of GOD cannot f●…ile to execute justice and judgement for punishing of the oppressour and relieving of his people for Iustice and judgement are the habitation of his throne or the base whereupon his throne is setled 2. Albeit the sinnes of the Lords people might stop the way of relief coming to them or prejudice them of having any benefit from justice yet mercy and truth are ready at hand to prepare the way by pardon of their sins and performing all promises unto them Mercy and truth shall go before his face Ver. 15. Blessed is the people that know the joyful sound they shall walk O LORD in the light of thy countenance 16. In thy Name shall they rejoyce all the d●…y and in thy righteousnesse shall they be exalted 17. For thou art the glory of their strength and in thy favour our horne shall be exalted 18 For the Lord is our defence and the holy One of Israel is our King The tenth reason for strengthening of his faith is taken from the blessednesse of Believers in GOD whose properties and priviledges are set ●…own in order six all of them proving GODS people to be blessed Whence learn 1. Whatsoever are the afflictions of the LORDS people and in what danger and difficulty soever they be in yet are they certainly blessed Blessed is the people that know the joyful sound 2. Those are to be accounted GODS people who with a good heart joyne with others at GODS command in the worship and service of GOD Blessed is the people that know the joyful sound for the joyful sound was the sound of the silver trumpets which were blowne at the joyning in battel in their warres or for their journeys or gathering of Assemblies or intimation of solemne feasts and at the offering of the sacrifices of Israel Psal. 81. Numb 10. Ioel 2. And the knowing of this joyful sound signifieth the alacritie of Gods people to serve and obey the Lord as he in his Ordinances should warne direct and guide them 3. The properties and priviledges of B●…lievers in GOD make sure proof of their blessednesse for they live in grace and favour with GOD whether they do sensibly feell it or not as their persons so also their carriage in faith and upright endeavour to please GOD are alwayes acceptable to GOD And this is the first priviledge of GODS people They shall walke O LORD in the light of thy countenance 4. Believers have matter and just cause to rejoyce in GOD for their interest in him what soever be their present condition In thy Name shall they rejoyce all the day This is another priviledge of Gods people 5. The joy of Believers is underpropped and enlarged when they consider that Gods righteousnesse which is by faith in Christ is imputed unto them and Gods righteousnesse in performing his promises is set on work for their direction encouragement reformation and defence And in thy righteousnesse shall they be exalted This is the third priviledge of Believers 6. Albeit the godly finde no power in themselves either to do or suffer no power either to defend themselves or oppose their enemies yet they want not strength either imployed for them or furnished as they need unto them by God in a glorious manner as they will see if his helping them be rightly looked upon For thou Lord saith he art the glory of their strength wherein they may glory in their weakest condition And this is the fourth priviledge of GODS people 7. The free grace and love of GOD graciously tendered to Believers is the ground of their strength comfort confidence and gloriation because it is the fountaine of all their felicity and well-spring of life to them to look unto this that they are in favour with GOD And in thy favour our horne shall be exalted And this is the fifth priviledge of the LORDS people 8. Albeit B●…lievers be destitute of help from men yet they are neither left without protection nor without government because God or Christ who is God is the Churches King to protect guide and governe her for The Lord is our defence or shield and the holy One of Israel is our King the O●…iginal also will bear of and to The Lord is our defence of and to the holy One of Israel is our King whereby what may be said of the typical King David and of the true King Christ considered as man may give assurance that God would be their defence and King because David ann Christ as man were Gods Kings and Kings for Gods service and honour authorized of God and devoted to him And this is the sixth priviledge of GODS people All which priviledges are so many proofes of the blessednesse of the Believers in whatsoever condition they are 9. It is wisdome for every Believer when he is about to reckon the riches of GODS people and to set forth their priviledges to make application thereof to himself in amongst the rest of that number as the example of the Psalmist here doth teach us who in the later part of this computa●…ion doth so In thy favour our horne shall be exalted the Lord is our defence our King Ver. 19 Then thou spakest in vision to thy holy One and saidst I have laid help upon one that is mighty I have exalted one chosen out of the people 20. I have found David my servant with my holy oile have I anointed him In the second part of the Psalmist for the further comfort of the Church in her saddest condition and to strengthen yet more the godly in their troubles 1. He expoundeth the Covenant of Grace made with Christ represented typically by David because he must be looked upon only as the shadow but Christ as the chief party and as he in whom the reall substance is accomplished perfectly Therefore shall we speak of both as the word doth relate unto the one or unto the other or to both in severall respects And first of the circumstances of the Covenant and then of the several Articles thereof for the Psalmist marketh 1. The time of revealing of the Covenant They to wit when it pleased God to let it be known that he purposed to take a course for the comfortable governing of his Church and People 2. He observeth the way of revealing it which he sheweth to be by vision he spake to his holy servant to wit Samuel or Nathan 3 He commendeth the man who was to rule as fit
Lord will give the Spirit of supplication to the beleever and also a satisfactory answer unto his prayer for as when 〈◊〉 man giveth way to misbelief he cannot pray any more so when he entertaineth faith it maketh him eloquent and instant in prayer till he receive what he seeketh He shall call on me and I will answer him 7. As it is not to be expected that the man who beleeveth in God shall want trouble so the beleever may be sure that God who exerciseth him with trouble shall bear him company in his trouble shall direct him how to behave himself in it strengthen support and comfort him under it and give him delivery out of all his trouble and not only put respect upon him in the sight of them who did behold his exercise but also at last shall glorifie him before men and Angels and this is the fourth promise I will be with him in trouble I will deliver him and honour him 8. While others do either want submission unto God at Gods pleasure to live in trouble or do want submission to die at Gods pleasure if they be not in trouble the beleever only hath satisfaction in the length of his life to die or live as the Lord liketh and he only departeth contentedly and entereth into a life everlasting With long life will I satisfie him and this is the fifth promise 9. When the beleever hath received of God satisfaction in the length of life in this world God will enter him into the possession of blessednesse of everlasting salvation in the world to come which is worthily called the salvation of God With long life will I satisfie him and what then shall become of him And I will shew him my salvation and this is the sixth promise Above all which promises what can be more added to induce a soul to embrace the free offer of g●…ace in Christ tendered in the Gospel to sinners or to move him to entertain friendship with God by still beleeving in him and resting on him PSAL. XCII A Psalme or Song for the Sabbath-day THis Psalm is intituled A Psalme for the Sabbath-day wherein the Church is stirred up ●…o praise God by sundry reasons ver 1 2 3. but specially for these three causes First for the great work of creation sust●…ntation and wise governing of the creatures ver 4 5. The second cause is for his wisdom and justice in punishing the wicked ver 6 7 8 9. The third is for his grace and goodnesse toward beleevers ver 10 11 12 13 14 15. From the Inscription Learn 1. The Lord hath had a special care of sanctifying the Sabbath as the appointing of this Psalme for that day may amongst other things give evidence A Psalme a Song for the Sabbath-day 2. For the sanctification of the Sabbath it is not sufficient to rest from our own bodily servile distractive works bot we must rest and cease from our own works and be imployed in religious service and worship and exercises suitable for that day whereof singing of Psalmes to the honour of God is one This is a Song for the Sabbath-day 3. God hath appointed that the Church should have solemn meetings on the Sabbath wherein God may be publickly by his own ordinances honoured and the Congregation edified in their most holy faith for this Psalme is given to the Church with this title and Inscription A Psalme or Song for the Sabbath-day to be sung in the Assemblies Ver. 1. IT is a good thing to give thanks unto the LORD and to sing praises unto thy Name O most High 2. To shew forth thy loving kindnesse in the morning and thy faithfulnesse every night 3. Upon an instrument of ten strings and upon the Psaltery upon the Harp with a solemne sound From the exhortation unto praising of God and thanksgiving with the reasons thereof Learn 1. Albeit we be daily receiving mo and mo benefits from God yet are we flow to acknowledg this or to give thanks unto him and have need to be stirred up to the duty as this exhortation importeth 2. Not onely do we discharge a piece of our duty in thanksgiving unto God but we also receive a new benefit by doing of this duty It is a good thing pleasant to God and profitable to us and others to give thanks unto the Lord. 3. Albeit we cannot give thanks unto God as we desire or as he deserveth yet to acknowledge and confesse to God our debt and what we have received of him shall be accounted thanksgiving for the word in the o●…ginal doth give ground for this 4. Approving of our selves to God in sincerity of affection when we are about the Lords praises is no lesse profitable to us then it is pleasant to God It is a good thing to sing praises to thy Name O most High 5. It is not enough to praise God in and with the Church publikely assembled but also it is a duty to be performed daily by every family and person according to their place and power as fit occasion is offered morning and evening It is good to shew forth thy kindnesse in the morning and thy faithfulnesse every night 6. The matter of Gods praise and our rejoycing is chiefly the Lords mercy and truth in pitying and pardoning and lovingly entreating of sinfull men and performing the promises of the Covenant to his people contrary to their deserving It is good to shew forth thy loving kindnesse and thy faithfulnesse 7. As it is the duty of every one to study to observe and to beleeve and to be sensibly affected with the Lords mercy and truth so also to expresse their beliefe and sense thereof cheerfully and joyfully according as the signification of typicall ceremonie of musicall instruments under the pedagogie of the Law did require It is good to shew forth thy loving kindnesse c. upon an instrument of ten strings and upon the Psaltery upon the Harp with a solemne sound Ver. 4. For thou LORD hast made me glad through thy work I will triumph in the works of thy hands 5. O LORD how great are thy works and thy thoughts are very deep The Psalmist descendeth more specially to the works of creation and common providence which is the first special matter of Gods praise and of the worshippers joy wherein he setteth forth the glory and greatnesse of Gods works and deepnesse of his wisdome and counsell Whence l●…arn 1. One of the parts of the well-spending of the Sabbath is the looking upon and conside●…ation of the works of creation I will triumph in the works of thy hands 2. The consideration of the Lords works is a matter full of sweet refreshment and joy when God blesseth our meditation which blessing as we should call and look for at his hands so should we acknowledge it thankfully when we finde it bestowed on us and lift up our hearts in his way being so encouraged Lord thou hast made me glad by thy works I will triumph in
exhortations thereunto do intimate so much unto us O come let us sing unto the Lord let us make a noise let us come before him 2. Every one but specially the Lords Ministers should stirre up their people and others also to this duty to discharge it not only in secret but also publickly in their Congregations and that with chearfulnesse with heart and voice whatsoever shall be their private grievances and burdens Let us come before his presence with thanksgiving and make a joyful noise unto him with Psalms 3. Whatsoever evil or grief do trouble us there is reason of joy and praise and thanks when we look to Jesus Christ and his benefits Make a joyful noise unto the Rock of our salvation From him is our full deliverance and upon him lieth our victory over sin Satan death hell and all enmity founded as upon a Rock 4. It is time to come before God for mercy to prevent justice while yet we are spared and he is not come to us in judgement for so the Word in the original giveth ground signifying coming speedily and with prevention Let us speedily come before his presence or preoccupy his presence 5. He that cometh to God in Christ meeteth with his reconciled face for the coming to the Tabernacle the Ark and mercy-seat did signify and promise so much and therefore it is said Let us come before his presence or before his face 6. Singing of Psalmes should be done as a matter of honouring God and not as a matter of pleasing our own eares or the eares of others Let us come with thanksgiving or confession and praising and make a joyfull noise unto him with Psalmes Ver. 3. For the LORD is a great God and a great King above all gods Another reason of praising Christ is his greatnesse and supremacie above all Rulers and above all imaginable excellency Whence learn 1. He that hath a minde to praise God shall not want matter of praise as they who come before Princes do who for want of true grounds of praise in them do give them flattering words For the Lord is a great God for power and preheminency for strength and continuance 2. Except we put all things that bear the name of excellency under Gods feet whethe●… they be Angels or Princes or whatsoever the world maketh their god we do not give him his due honour He is a great King above all gods Ver. 4. In his hand are the deep places of the earth the strength of the hills is his also A third reason of his praise is this he is strong sustaining by his power sea and earth and all things of weight Whence learn 1. Whatsoever is most secret and remote from mens power or from our sight and knowledge God hath it at his disposing for he sustaineth it and maketh it subsist In his hand are the deep places of the earth 2. There is nothing of any strength among all the creatures which hath not its strength borrowed from God The strength of the hills is his also Ver. 5. The sea is his and he made it and his hands formed the dry land 6. O come let us worship and bow down let us kneel down before the LORD our maker A fourth reason of Christs praise is because he is the Creatour of all things and to be worshipped of us as our Creatōu●… That Christ as God or God to be incarnate one with the Father and holy Spirit is here intended appeareth by the command given to the worshippers to present themselves in the Temple and to kneel down toward the place of the A●…k before God dwelling between the Cherubims that is before Christ God to be incarnate Whence learn 1. All things were made by Christ whether high or low Coloss. 1. 16. And it was meet that our Saviour should be no other then he by whom sea and dry land were made so great is the work which the Mediator hath in hands The se●… is his and be made it and his hands formed the dry land 2. Christ as he is one with the Father and holy Spirit in greatnesse and power in respect of his Godhead and divine nature so is he one with the Father and holy Spirit in the capacity of divine honour O come let us worship and show down 3. Religious kneeling is a part of divine worship whereby we testify our absolute submission unto and highest giving of honour to God in soul and body and this honour is incommunicable to any creature Come let us worship and bow down let us kneel before the Lord our maker Ver 7. For he is our God and we are the people of his pasture and the sheep of his hand to day if ye will hear his voice The fifth reason of Christs praise is because he is our God and Pastor of his Church by office of his Mediatorship Whence learn 1. God deserveth praise of all the world but specially of his Church because of the near relation of Covenant between God and his Church Let us worship and bow down for he is our God 2. The good shepherd of the Church who layeth down his life for his sheep the great Doctor and Prophet of the Chuech the Mediator of the Covenant of grace and covenanted spouse of the Church is very God and was knowne believed on and worshipped as very God before his incarnation He is our God and we are the people of his pasture 3. Christ the Make●… the God the Mediator and Pastor of the Church doth not only effectually feed his people by teaching but also effectually governeth and defendeth his Church by his omnipotent power We are the people of his pasture and the sheep of his hand whom his Almighty hand and power governeth and protecteth in all ages Ver. 8. Harden not your heart as in the provocation and as in the day of temptation in the wildernesse 9. When your fathers tempted me proved me and saw my work 10. Fourty years long was I grieved with this generation and said It is a people that do ●…re in their heart and they have not knowne my wayes In the latter part of the Psalme which beginneth in the former verse To day if ye will hear his voice harden not your heart 〈◊〉 he giveth another exhortation to his Church visible to believe and obey the voice of our great Prophet Jesus Christ as the Apostle Heb. 3. 7 8 9 10 11. teacheth us to expound it The main argument to enforce the exhortation is lest the curse of God should overtake the disobedient and they should be debarred from heaven and happinesse as the misbelieving Israelites were secluded from Canaan and from heaven signified by it the history may be seen Exod. 17. Whence learue 1. The voice of God in the Scriptures in the Gospel appointed to be preached by sent Ministers is the voice of God the Father God the Son and God the holy Spirit one God in three persons for all who do grant the Scriptures to
judgements which have been executed upon disobedient unbelievers of Gods Word are mercifull and fatherly warnings of Gode children to eschew such ●…ns as carefully and really as they abhorre the punishment inflicted for them for the Lords making use of his wrath against the misbelieving and disobedient Israelites here doth teach us so much PSAL. XCVI WE fin'e 1 Chron. 16. 23. a part of this Psalm sung at the bringing up of the Ark to Sion to be in substance and almost in words al●…o one and the same with this which is here for as there so here the Prophet foreseeth in the Spirit the spreading of the Kingdome of Christ among the Nations And therefore first he exhorteth all people heartily to receive Christ and propagate his glory ver 1 2 3. And giveth reasons for it ver 4. 5 6. Then he repeateth and inlargeth the exhortation to glorifie God and to rejoyce in him because Christ was indeed to come among the Gentiles to reign among them righteously ver 7 8 9 10 11 12 13. Ver. 1. O Sing unto the LORD a new song sing unto the LORD all the earth 2. Sing unto the LORD blesse his Name shew forth his salvation from day to day 3. Declare his glory among the heathen his wonders among all people From the exhortation given to all Nations to rejoyce for Christs coming among them Learne 1. As sadnesse and sorrow misery and mourning is the condition of all people till Christ the true Ark of the Covenant come unto them so Christs coming among them is the matter of the greatest joy that ever sinners did hear of for upon this ground are all here exhorted to rejoyce O sing unto the Lord. 2. As the matter of ●…oy in Christ is everlasting and shall never decay so the reason of praising of God for salvation in him is everlasting also new and fresh matter being alwayes offered of joy to us and praise to God which shall never vanish nor wax old Sing unto the Lord a new Song 3 All the earth hath interest in this Song and is obliged unto the duty of joy and praise because out of all people tongues and languages God is to gather a people to be saved Sing unto the Lord all the earth 4. We have ●…eed again and again to be stirred up to joy in Christ to praise him for we are dull and the work excellent and no man doth discharge the duty sufficiently therefore is it said the third time Sing unto the Lord. 5. The grace offered in Jesus Christ is a perpetual reason of declaring the goodnesse of God and that Christ is the fountaine of all blessednesse to them who do receive him for Blesse his Name doth import so much 6. The salvation which cometh through Christ ought to be commended as Gods salvation indeed because he devised it he purchased it and he it is that doth apply it to us and maketh us partakers of it Shew forth his salvation 7. The doctrine of salvation by Christ is the common good of mankinde and ought not to be concealed but set forth to all preached and proclaimed and spoken of by all according to their vocation and ability Shew forth his salvation from day to day 8. It is a part of the Commission given to the Ministers of the Gospel not only to teach their Congregations concerning Christ but also to have a care that they who never did heare of him may know what he is what he hath done and suffered and what good may be had by his mediation Declare his glory among the heathen 9. Nothing so glorious to God nothing so wonderful in it self as is the salvation of man by Christ to behold God saving his enemies by the incarnation sufferings and obedience of Christ the eternal Sonne of God Declare his glory among the Heathen his wonders among all people Ver. 4. For the LORD is great and greatly to be praised he is to be feared above all gods 5. For all the gods of the nations are idols but the LORD made the heavens 6. Honour and majesty are before him strength and beauty are in his sanctuary The reasons of the exhortation are because God is sovereign above all ver 4. and all other gods beside God are idols ver 5. and whatsoever is glorious is to be found in him only ver 6. Whence learn 1. None can praise God till they consider his excellencie and that his wisdom power and empire is above all created or imaginable greatnesse for The Lord is great and greatly to be praised 2. As the Lord is praise-worthy for his goodnesse and readinesse to communicate of his riches to all his creatures and most of all to his servants so is he able to punish his adversaries and all that contemn his Authority which no creature is able to do He is to be feared above all gods 3. Whosoever do not submit themselves to God and worship and obey him shall be found to serve idols and vanities whereby they can have no good but disappointment of hopes for All the gods of the Nations are idola 4. The framing of heaven and earth and the upholding and governing of all the creatures proveth that the Maker thereof is God alone and that there neither is nor can be any beside him all others who have the name of gods are idols All the gods of the heathen are ●…dols but the lord made the Heavens 5. Before a man can come to the knowledge of God he must first meet with the shining beams of his honour and majestie in his Word and in his Works for these are Apparators and Harbingers going before him Honour and majesty are before him 6. The power and glory of God is not rightly seen either to Gods praise or a mans salvation except by his own ordinances in his Church where he himself is both teacher and the substance also of what is taught Strength and beauty are in his Sanctuary Ver. 7. Give unto the LORD O ye kindreds of the people give unto the LORD glory and strength Here he repeateth and dilateth the exhortation in foure branches In the first he exhorteth to acknowledge that glory and power belong to God both in decreeing wisely and in executing timously and powerfully his own decrees in special the work of Redemption and Conversion of the Gentiles by Christ. Whence learn As it is the sinful sicknesse of natural men to take to themselves or to give unto the creatures the glory of every excellent work which is properly due to God alone so is it the part of a renewed soul to give the glory of every thing which is praise-worthy unto God alone which glory God expecteth and shall have it of the Gentiles being reconciled and instructed by the Gospel Give unto the Lord O ●…e kindreds of the people give unto the Lord glory and strength Ver. 8. Give unto the LORD the glory due unto his Name bring an offering and come into hi●… courts In the second branch
accepted imperfections pitied our sins pardoned and our holy endeavours are graciously rewarded Serve the Lord with gladnesse 3. Our joy should be stirred up and expressed by singing of Psalmes especially when we come to the assemblies or publick meetings wherein the Lord hath promised to give his presence with his own Ordinances Come before his presence with singing Ver. 3. Know ye that the LORD he is God it is he that hath made us and not we our selves we are his people and the sheep of his pasture From the reasons of this exhortation Learne 1. Such is our natural Atheisme that we have need again and again to be instructed that the Lord is God of whom and through whom and for whom are all things Know ye that the Lord he is God 2. If we did consider well that we are Gods creatures it were a forcible motive unto us to employ in Gods service whatsoever we have of God life motion being and gifts and to beware to make any thing we have of God a weapon of unrighteousnesse for fighting against him and of this consideration we have need to be put in minde and to be stirred up to the duty He it is that hath made us 3. The glory of our regeneration or new creation belongeth unto God no lesse then the glory of our creation and natural birth and it is no lesse madnesse to ascribe the work of our regeneration to our own power then to ascribe our first ●…tion to our selves for in both respects here it is said that 〈◊〉 is ●…e that made us and not we our selves 4. As the Lords people should stirre up themselves to more thankful service unto God as their relations unto God and obligations to him as their King and Pastor are joyned so may they expect from God for their encouragement whatsoever is needful to a people or a flock to have●… from a good King and faithful Pastor We are his people and sheep of his pasture Ver. 2. Enter into his gates with thanksgiving and in into his cours●… with with praise be thankeful unto him and blesse his Name From the repetition of the exhortation Learne 1. It is our duty in our approaches unto God specially for any solemne service to consider what rich benefits we have from him that thereby we may be stirred up unto the more hearty acknowledgement of his favours Enter into his gates with thanksgiving 2. ●…s the Lords benefits to us should be looked upon in our address●…s unto him so also his glorious attributes and his workes answerable thereto should be considered whereby we may be the better disposed to give unto him glory in all respects Enter into his co●…s with praise 3. The more we look upon Gods praises the more shall we see our own riches and the solidity of our blessednesse in him and the reasons to move us to thank and blesse him Be thankfull unto him and blesse his Name Ver. 5. For the LORD is good his mercy is everlasting and his truth endureth to all generations From the reasons subjoyned to the second exhortation to praise the Lord Learne 1. It is a matter of perpetual praise of God and of thanksgiving and blessing of him that as he is alsufficient in himselfe so he is also communicative of his riches unto his creatureas and unto us his own people most of all Blesse his Name for the Lord is good 2. Albeit we be sinfull and deserve to be cut off in justice from the benefits which Gods goodnesse might bestow upon us yet the course of his pardoning mercy renewing the remission of sin to us as oft as we come to him in his Christ doth keep the channel of his goodnesse open and clear to us that it may run toward us for ever His mercy is everlasting 3. The Covenant of grace set down in the Scriptures of the Old and New Testament with the legacie of so many rich Promise●…erving to strengthen the faith of every weak believer doth make the matter of Gods praise and of his peoples joyes so sure that how sad soever our spirits may be when we look to our selves yet we shall have matter of praising thanking and blessiug God when we look to his goodnesse and mercy and to what he hath for our comfort said in the Word of his everlasting truth Be thankfull unto him and blesse his Name for the Lord is good his mercy is everlasting and his truth endureth to all generations Amen FINIS
through the red sea for his peoples delivery is an evidence and pawn once for aye of his power and purpose to make a way for his owne to escape how great soever their straits shall be He divided the red sea and caused them to p●…sse through 6. The Lords causing the liquid waters to stand as a wall heaped up contrary to the nature therof is a pawn of his power and purpose to make the creatures which by nature should deyoure to be not only harmlesse but helpful also to this people as need requireth He made the waters to stand as an heap 7. The Lords bringing of his people both out of Egypt and out of the sea is a pawne of his power and purpose to bring his people through all hazards whatsoever wherein others shall perish He caused his people to passe through 8. The Lords leading on of his people night and day is a pawn of his constant love to his own people and of his power and purpose never to leave nor forsake such as love to have his guiding and conduct In the day-time also he led them 9 The Lords covering of the hoste of his people with a coole and comfortable cloud all the day long to keep them from the scorching heat of the Sun in the dry and hot wildernesse is a pawne of his kinde care of his people and constant purpose to give refreshment in the time of persecution or whatsoever troubles they shall be exercised with In the day-time also he led them with a cloud 10. The Lords making of a pillar of fire to burn and shine all night for tempe●…ing the cold of the night and directing of Israels steps when they were to march in the night is a pledge of his love power and purpose to furnish the light of direction and consolation unto his own people as they have need He led them all the night with a light of fire 11. As the Lords people wanting of water in the wildernesse through which their way did lie doth teach us that we may be redacted to great straits in this life both bodily and spiritual so the Lords furnishing unto them drink doth teach that the Lord both can and will furnish his people in their necessities bodily and spiritual He clave the rocks in the wildernesse and gave them drink as out of the great depths he brought streames also out of the rock and caused waters to run down like rivers Ver. 17. And they sinned yet more against him by provoking the most High in the wildernesse 18. And they tempted God in their heart by asking meat for their lust 19. Yea they spake against God they said Can God furnish a table in the wildernesse 20. Behold be smote the rock that the waters gushed out and the streams overflowed can be give bread also can he provide flesh for his people In the fourth place he setteth down how the people made no better use of the foresaid mercies then to tempt God and to provoke him to wrath by seeking satisfaction to their carnal lusts and questioning whether or no God was able to satisfie their desires Whence learn 1. Unrenewed nature is strongly inclined to meet the Lords goodnesse with more and more ingratitude and to sin over and over again the same sins when new benefits and old faults being well considered might teach more wisdom and thankfulnesse They sinned yet more against him 2. We are so foolish in our sinning that we do not consider what we our selves are how great a majesty we offend and what may be the consequents thereof They sinned yet more by provoking the most High O how unreasonable uncircumspect undiscreet and blinde fools are men in their sinning 3. Albeit we have no outward enticements albeit the place of our sojourning here should warne us as strangers and pilgrims to abstain from fleshly lusts albeit we have the Word works of God as witnesses of God and evidences of his beholding of us yet so pregnant are we in wickednesse so beastly passionate in our carnal affections and so grosse in Atheisme that naturally we run on in our own wayes as the horse rusheth into the battell They provoked the most High in the wildernesse 4. When God giveth sufficiently to supply necessities and we seek to satisfie our lusts when God hath said and done abundantly already for evidencing his power justice truth and care of our welfare and we will not rest on him except he give such other new and extraordinary proofs of his properties as we do prescribe then do we tempt God and highly provoke him by seeking thus to subject him to our direction will and carnal affections And they tempted God in their heart by asking meat for their lust 5. When the sinful motions of the minde and heart are not controlled the sin will break forth openly to outward acts tending to Gods dishonour and to the evil example of others They tempted God in their heart and then they spake against God 6. Words of misbelief not disputing against tentations but in effect calling in question Gods truth power care of us or his good will to us are in effect slandering of God and bearing false witnesse against him They spake against God they said Can God furnish c 7. The carnal ungodly man hath no estimation of God or any of his spiritual benefits but doth set him a task of satisfying of his fleshly conceits and affections which if God do not answer he misregardeth God They said Can God furnish a table in the wildernesse 8. Albeit the unbeleever be convinced of Gods power and goodnesse to his people by his works for time past yet 〈◊〉 he not the wiser afterward when it cometh to the giving credit unto God in another work yea the work which God hath wrought is esteemed by him as nothing except God do father as the unbeliever shall prescribe Behold say they be 〈◊〉 the rock that waters gushed out but can he give brea●… 〈◊〉 so can he provide flesh for his people Ver. 21. Therefore the LORD heard this and was wroth so a fire was kindled against Iacob and anger also came up against Israel 22. Because they beleeved not in God and trusted not in his salvation 23. Though he had commanded the clouds from above and opened the doores of heaven 24. And had rained down Manna upon them to eate and had given them of the corne of heaven 25. Man did eate Angels food he sent them meat to the full In the fifth place he setteth down how God was wroth for their unbelief for their not having a due estimation of the miraculous feeding of them with Manna Whence learn 1. Sins continued in and in special expressions to the dishonouring of God flowing from misbeleef have a loud cry in Gods eares and he taketh notice of them for executing of judgement Therefore the Lord heard this and was wroth 2. When God is openly dishonoured the Lord by open judgement will sanctifie
his own Name on the sinner whatsoever be his priviledge and though he were never so neer to God in external priviledges So a fire was kindled against Iacob and anger also came up against Israel 3. Misbelief is a more grievous sin then men do esteem of it for it calleth Gods truth mercy goodnesse power constancy and all in question and even his justice amongst the rest which if the misbeleever did consider he would not provoke justice against himself by this sin Wrath came up against Israel because they believed not in God 4. They do not believe in God who study not to depend upon him for salvation and for whatsoever is necessary to them for salvation yea they who do not believe that the Lord shall bring them out of every strait in a way most serving to their welfare and for his own honour do not believe in him for salvation so solidly as he requireth of them They believed not in God saith he and trusted not in Gods salvation 5. The more meanes encouragements helps and props to support a mans faith are furnished of God the greater is the sinne of unbeliefe in him As the Israelites misbelief was the greater for Gods miraculous bringing of water out of the rock and Manna from the clouds as here the Israelites misbelief is aggravated thus They trusted not in his salvation though he had commanded the clouds and rained down Manna 6. Man liveth not by bread but by the efficacious Word of God It is so easie for God to rain down victuals out of the clouds as to make them grow out of the ground let him say the Word and it is done He commanded the clouds and opened the doores of heaven and rained down Manna on them to eat 7. The Lord doth provide well for his own redeemed people what the earth doth not yield unto them he maketh the heaven one way or other furnish unto them as when the Israelites wanted the corne of the earth the Lord gave them of the corne of heaven so that man did eat Angels food not that there is corne in heaven or that Angels do eat any corporal food but manna is so called for the excellency of the food that it might have served for food to Angels if they had any need of food 8. The more excellent the benefit is which God giveth the greater is the ingratitude of him who doth not esteem of it and make use of it as becometh as we see in Israels sinne who did not esteem of Manna as they should have done had the Lord sed them with dust of the earth or roots of grasse be any other m●…n thing they should have had no reason to complain but when he giveth them a new food created every morning for their cause sent down from heaven as fresh furniture every day of such excellent colour taste smell and wholesomenesse what a provocation of God was it not to be content now in special when he gave them abundantly of it He sent them meat to the full Ver. 26. He caused an East-win●… to blow i●… 〈◊〉 heaven and by his power he brought in the So●… winde 27. He rained flesh also upon them as dust and feathered fowles like as the sand of the sea 28. And he let it fall in the midst of their cam●… round about their habitations 29. So they did eat and were well filled for he ga●… them their own desire Here the Lord being tempted by a murmuting and unthankfull people to refute their suspicion of his power sendeth the●… the most delicate flesh that could be found in the world quail●… in abundance till they were all filled Whence learn 1. T●… Lord that he may shew what regard he hath to satisfy good and lawful desires doth sometime grant unto men their unlawfull and unreasonable desires that holy desires may be the better entertained and constantly followed till they be granted as appeareth by the Lords granting of the unreasonable desire of the Israelites after flesh 2. The Lord hath the Commandement of the windes to make them blow from what aire and in what measure he pleaseth He caused an East-winde to blow in the heaven and by his power he brought in the South-winde 3. The Lord can gather so many creatures as he mindeth to make use of at his pleasure he can gather birds and fowles and make their flight longer or shorter as he pleaseth and make them light and fall where he pleaseth and can bring near to mans hand what he hath a mind to give unto him He rained flesh also upon them as dust and feathered fowls like as the sand of the sea and he let them fall in the midst of their camp round about their habitations 4. As the Lord doth grant lawful desires in mercy so also doth he grant sinful desires in wrath So they did eat and were filled for he gave them their own desire 5. When the carnal heart doth meet with the object of his lust he falleth upon it as a beast doth without fear of God or moderation of affection They did eat and were well filled for be gave them their own desire Ver. 30. They were not estranged from their lust●… but while their meat was yet in their mouthes 31. The wrath of God came upon them and sle●… the fattest of them and smote down the chosen m●… of Israel 32. For all this they sinned still and believed not for his wondrous works 33. Therefore their dayes did he consume in vanity and their yeares in trouble In the sixth place he setteth down their impenitency continued in and the Lords judgements poured out one after another upon them Whence learn 1. Sinful lust is unsatiable even when the body is overcharged with the service of it To lust sinfully is a snare but to continue in the slavery of lust is a felling of a mans selfe and a wedding of him unto that lust such was the sin of the carnal Israelites They continued in their lusting and repented not albeit they ●…t time to repent they and their lust did not discord They were not estranged from their lust 2. When men will not be enemies to their own sinful lusts they do provoke the Lord to become enemy to them and to poure wrath on them in the very act of their sinning While their meat was yet in their mouthes the wrath of God came upon them 3. Such as are most head-strong in sinne and take to themselves most liberty to sin and do give example most unto others to sin shall be most notoriously punished High places and eminency in power as it doth not lessen sin but aggravate it so doth it not exempt from judgment but procu●…eth that it should be augmented rather as is to be seen here in the punishment of the Nobles and great men in the camp of Israel The wrath of God came upon them and slew the fattest of them and smote down the chosen men of Israel 4. Such is the perversenesse of
and this is the fif●…h comfort of the favoure●…s of the Chu●…ch in the time of trouble Ver. 6. The LORD shall count when he writeth up the people that this man was borne there Selah The sixth comfort is from Gods estimation which he hath of every one of the true Citizens of his Church Whence learn 1. As all the elect all the regenerate are taken notice of by God no lesse particularly then if their names were all written up in a book one by one so there is a time when he manifeste●…h his enrolling of them partly to themselves by his witnessing unto them that they are his children par●…ly to the world by sustaining them in their trials and troubles and 〈◊〉 by a full delivery of them and confessing their names before men and Angels at the great day The Lord shall count when he writeth up the people that is in his owntime when he seeth it fit to manifest his respect to his own 2. The Converts among the Nations shall be reckoned up among the C●…nverts of the Lords people of the Jewes The Lord shall count when 〈◊〉 ●…riteth up the people that this man was born there that is whatsoever man he be who is converted out of any countrey tongue or language he shall be counted a member of the Church of Israel Ver. 7. As well the singers as the players on instruments shall be there all my springs are 〈◊〉 thee The last comfort is from the joy spiritual and the everlasting springs fountains and causes of joy which God doth furnish and will furnish to his Church Whence learn 1. As the Church is subject to her own griefs in the world so also is s●… sure of ahundant consolations to be had and laid up in store for her expressed here in the termes of typical joy appointed in solemn festivals As well the fingers as the players on instruments shall be there 2. The causes of the joy of the Saints are everlasting comparable to wells and springs of living water All my springs shall be in thee 3. Such Saints as have had their senses exercised are able to subscribe the truth of promises by their own experience and in special that there is no joy or comfort no gift nor grace no refreshment nor delectation worthy to be named except that which they have by Church-priviledges and communion of Saints as here the Psalmist doth confesse All my springs are in thee saith he speaking to the Church or to God dwelling in his Church PSAL. LXXXVIII A Song or Psalme for the sonnes of Korah To the chief Musician upon Mahalath Leannoth Maschil of Heman the Ezrahite THis Heman the Ezrahite was one of those foure wisest men in all Israel next after Solomon who is preferred above them all 1 Kings 4. 31. The exercise of this wise and holy man is set down here under the heaviest condition of a wounded spirit of any that we read of wherein first he prayeth for comfort to his soul now afflicted under the sense of sad wrath and long desertion ver 1 2. In the second place he poureth out his soul to God and layeth before him a most pitiful lamentation of his distressed condition ver 3 4 5 6 7 8. In the third place he wrestleth by faith in his prayer to God for comfort ver 9 10 11 12 13 14. And lastly finding no comfort he reneweth his lamentation leaveth his prayer before the Lord and writeth it for the edification of the Church in all time coming as the matter of a joyful Song From the Inscription Learn 1. David was not the only man acquainted with sad exercise and affliction of spirit for here is another to wit Heman the Ezrahite as deep in trouble of spirit as he or any other beside 2. They are not all men of ●…eak mindes and shallow wits who are acquainted with trouble of spirit and borne down with the sense of Gods wrath for here is Heman one amongst the wisest in all Israel and inferiour to none for wisdom except to Solomon alone under the heaviest exercise we can imagine possible for a Saint 3. When it pleaseth God to exercise a man of parts of great gifts and graces he can make his burden proportionable to his strength and give him as much to do with the difficulties he puts him to as a weaker man shall finde in his exercise as appeareth in the experience of Heman 4 Wise men in their trouble must take the same course with the simpler sort of men that is they must run to God as others do and seek relief only in his grace who as ●…e distributeth the measures of trouble can also give comfort ●…se and deliverance from them as the practice of Heman doth ●…h us 5. What trouble of a wounded spirit some of Gods children have felt in former times others dear to God may finde the like in after ages and all men ought to prepare for the like and should not think the exercise strange when it cometh but must comfort themselves in this that other Saints whose names are recorded in Scripture have been under like affliction for the Psalm is appointed to give instruction it is Maschil of Heman 6. What is at one time matter of mourning to one of Gods children may become matter of joy and singing afterward both to himself and to others as this sad anguish of spirit in Heman is made a song of joy unto Gods glory and the comfort of all afflicted souls labouring under the sense of sin and felt wrath of God to the worlds end It is a Song a Psalm for the sons of Korah 7. Such as are most heavily afflicted in spirit and do flee to God for reconciliation and consolation through Christ have no reason to suspect themselves that they are not esteemed of and loved as dear children because they feele so much of Gods wrath For here is a Saint who hath drunken of that Cup as deep as any who shall read this Psalm here is one so much loved and honoured of God as to be a Pen-man of holy Scripture and a patern of faith and patience unto others even Heman the Ezrahite Ver. 1. O LORD God of my salvation I have cried day and night before thee 2. Let my prayer come before thee incline thine eare unto my cry In the first place he fasteneth his faith and resolution to pray constantly to God till he receive answer and requesteth for comfort now at last Whence learn 1. Whosoever have fled to God for grace and have received the offer of reconciliation made to the Church in the Messiah are entered in Covenant with God for their everlasting salvation and ought to stand fast in the holding of this Covenant whatsoever hard condition they may fall into as Heman doth here saying to God O Lord God of my salvation 2. When'a soul hath received the offer of grace made to the Church in the common tender of the Covenant of grace he is entered into Covenant
with God so particularly as if the Indenture were past between God and that soul by name so that the beleever may reade his own name in Gods everlasting stiles and titles and may reade in himself the mark of Gods interest unto him and the mark of his interest in God for evermore for O God of my salvation importeth no lesse 3. When a beleever hath laid hold on eternal life he may by the same right ask and expect comfort in and deliverance out of every trouble as an Appendix of the great salvation which is coming unto him as here Heman doth 4 God can love a man and keep him in faith and exercise of prayer a long time without a comfortable answer and all in love wise love I have cried day and night before thee saith Heman and the answer is not come yet 5. There is a difference of the lamentation of the worldly man and of the beleever The worldly man sighes and cries and he knows not to whom but the godly do present themselves in their lamentations to God I have cried day and night before thee as his d●…lour did cleave unto him or was renewed upon him so he had his recourse to God at all times 6. Albeit our prayer being presented before God do seem to us ●…ot to have been admitted yet must our bill lie still and be put up to God again and again till it be received to our sense and knowledge Let my prayer come before thee 7. The beleevd may be sure to have a good answer at length but he must be instant and deal still with God for it and presse it hard and patiently wait for it as Heman here doth Incline thine eare unto my cry Ver. 3. For my soule is full of troubles and my life draweth nigh unto the grave In the second place he layeth out his trouble before God in nine degrees thereof each of them superadding something to the former under which he is not only wonderfully upheld but also he maketh use of this lamentation and long catalogue of miseries as a ground of his hope to have a gracious answer at last which came to passe as the turning of this lamentation into a Song to the comfort of others in the Church that should feel the like in any measure thereafter doth shew for his condition he setteth it down under the name of trouble soul-trouble more troubles then one or two and the first degree thereof is that his soul is ful●… of troubles replenished so as it can hold no more Whence 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Albeit we h●…d nothing to bring before God but our grief and miserie we want not matter of confidence to finde favour from our pitiful God as this example teacheth us Incline thine eare for my soul is full of trouble●… 2. If the godly should sm●…ther their grief and not go to God with it then sorrow were able to ch●…ke them but this is no small ease to them that they have God to go unto to whom they may freely vent their minde as here we see 3. Soul troubles are the most pressing troubles and with those readily will the Lord exercise his children when he mindeth to trie their faith making their spirits to smart with trouble after trouble with a number of troubles which they are neither able to reckon nor to beare My soul is full of troubles 4. The dolours of the minde are able to waste away the body which cannot but shrink and pine away when the soul is sick with anguish My life draweth near to the grave saith he and this is the second degree of his trouble Ver. 4. I am counted with them that go down into the pit I am as a man that hath no strength The third degree of his trouble is that in the judgement of them who knew his condition and possibly lamented i●… he was counted a lost man yea and he himself did finde no strength to beare out or to recover himself Whence learn 1. It is no small tentation and vexation of spirit to the godly beleever to be in the judgement of beholders a lost man because of the seeming desperate condition of his soul and yet it may befall a dear childe of God I am counted with them that go down in the pit 2. Albeit God hath by grace severed death from hell unto the believer yet the connexion of these two if justice were not satisfied in the Redeemer should never be forgotten as the Scriptures giving the same name to death grave and hell may teach us I am counted with them that go down to the pit or grave or hell 3. Whatsoever strength of soul or body a man hath in his possession shall be soon emptied when God putteth him in distresse except new furniture be supplied unto him and that no losse then unto the weakest I am as a man that hath no strength Ver. 5. Free among the dead like the slaine that lie in the grave whom thou remembrest no more and they are cut off from thy hand The fourth degree of his trouble is that he is like the Leper in the law shut out from the living and put among the dead and no more fit for any duty of the living which teacheth us that the beleever in God may at some time be so burdened with trouble of spirit as he can neither think nor speak nor go about any duty of the living for a time I am or I am counted saith he as one free among the dead or shut out and separate among the dead The fifth degree of his trouble he is a man whose life is violently pluckt from him who gets not liberty to die at leasure or in peace but is thrust out of the world suddenly with a deadly wound and such may the condition of a soul dear to God seem to it self to be I am like the slaine that lie in the grave The sixth degree of his trouble is he seemeth to be deprived of the comfortable vicissitude of the common benefits of life and of those changes which ordinarily Gods visitations do make as if he were left under the power of death there to lie without a change of that condition for ever and such may the case of a beloved Saint seem to be both to himself and to others I am as one in grave whom thou remembrest no more yea the beleever at a time may lose the sight of everlasting promises and seem to himself to be rejected of God I am as they that are cut off from thy hand Ver. 6. Thou hast laid me in the lowest pit in darknesse in the deepes The seventh degree of his trouble he seemeth as a man already condemned and possessed of the torment of hell in the extricable misery of the damned deprived of all light of consolation in the gulfe of desparation wherein a man cannot finde ground nor deliverance from it Whence learn 1 That this also may be the case of a beleever in his own sense Thou hast