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A51842 One hundred and ninety sermons on the hundred and nineteenth Psalm preached by the late reverend and learned Thomas Manton, D.D. ; with a perfect alphabetical table directing to the principal matters contained therein. Manton, Thomas, 1620-1677.; White, Robert, 1645-1703.; Bates, William, 1625-1699. 1681 (1681) Wing M526A; ESTC R225740 2,212,336 1,308

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of our Interest in Eternal Life They differ in Effects Peace is an Approbation for the present Joy in the holy Ghost a pledge and beginning of that endless Joy we shall have hereafter 2 Cor. 1. 22. Who hath also sealed us and given the earnest of the spirit in our hearts And Rom. 8. 23. We our selves also who have the first-fruits of the spirit even we our selves groan within our selves waiting for the adoption to wit the redemption of our body Both together shew that there is no such solid Comfort as in the obedience of God's Commandments certainly more than in all the Pleasures of Sin yea more than in all the Enjoyments of the World whoever have proved them both will find it so Many have proved the Pleasures of Sin but never yet found what comfort is in mourning for Sin Many have proved the Comforts of the World but never yet proved what is the Joy of a good Conscience and the sweet Pleasure of a godly Conversation 2. There is a particular Experience when born out in the Confession of Truth in the time of tryal A Man that out of love to God's Commands hath endured Troubles and Tryals and hath overcome Temptations will see more cause to love these Commandments and to encrease his Obedience to them than ever before in ordinary Temptations Psal. 19. 11. Moreover by them is thy servant warned and in keeping of them there is a great reward When they see that Divine Truth is like to bear out it self and Man that doth confess it in such cases they feel the excellency of God's Truth and the Power of God sustaining them that confess it therefore embrace heartily the Lord's Commands and take pleasure in his Ways The Lord appealeth to this Experience Micah 2. 7. Do not my words do good to him that walketh uprightly Have not you found the Fruit answerable Therefore the Children of God value and esteem and look upon them as the greatest Means of their Safety and Comfort 6. Because of their love to God they have a value for every thing which cometh from God and leadeth to him Common Mercies point to their Author and their main end is to draw our Affections to him and enable us in his Service but these are apt to be a snare and are used as an Occasion to the Flesh But here is a greater Impression of God on his Word and Laws their use is more eminent to direct us to God therefore are valued above ordinary Comforts Iob 23. 12. I have not gone back from the commandment of his lips I have esteemed the words of his mouth more than my necessary food They are his Commandments therefore dear to us who hath obliged us so much in Christ whose Love they believe and have felt The Word is wholly appointed to maintain the Life of Grace in us Use 1. Is to shew us how to bring our hearts to the obedience of God's Commands 1. Love them if we would keep them Nothing is hard to Love An Esteem will quicken us to the Obedience of them 2. Delight in them for then all goeth on easily Delight sweetneth every thing though in themselves toilsom or tedious as Fowling Hunting Fishing Delight never mindeth Difficulties The reason why the Commands are grievous is want of Love and Delight Use 2. Sheweth of what kind our Obedience must be free and unconstrained when we are not forced to our Duty but do willingly delight in it and the Law that prescribeth it and do bewail our daily failings Many doe some external Works of Obedience but not with an inward delight but out of custom or compulsion God never hath our Heart till he hath our Delight till we willingly abstain from what may displease him and chearfully practise what he requireth of us when it is grateful to obey and all Pleasures to this are nothing worth SERMON LIV. PSAL. CXIX 48. My hands also will I lift up to thy commandments which I have loved and I will meditate in thy statutes IN the Morning we opened one Profession of David's Respect to the Word of God now follows another He would employ all his Faculties about the Commandments of God which is his last Argument His Mind for here is Meditation promised his Heart for here is Love asserted his Tongue for that is his original Request which occasioned all these Professions and here his Hands his Life My hands also will I lift up c. Observe 1. The Ground or Cause of his Respect to the Commandments of God in that Clause Which I have loved 2. A double Effect I will lift up my hands to thy commandments and I will meditate in thy statutes 1. Lifting up the Palms or Hands is a Phrase of various use 1. For Praying Psal. 28. 2. Hear the voice of my supplications when I cry unto thee when I lift up my hands towards thy holy oracle Lam. 2. 19. Lift up thy hands towards him for the life of thy young children c. Hab. 3. 10. The deep uttered his voice and lift up his hands on high Thence the Apostle 1 Tim. 2. 8. I will therefore that men pray every where lifting up holy hands without wrath and doubting 2. For Blessing others Aaron lift up his hands towards the people and blessed them Or for Praising or Blessing God Psal. 134. 2. Lift up your hands in the sanctuary and bless the Lord. So Psal. 63. 4. Thus will I bless thee while I live I will lift up my hands in thy name 3. For Swearing or Vowing Gen. 22. 14. I have lift up my hand to the most high God that is sworn So Rev. 10. 5. The Angel lift up his hand and swore So of God Psal. 106. 26. Therefore he lifted up his hand against them to overthrow them in the wilderness that is swore they should not enter into his rest 4. For setting about any Action especially of weight Gen. 41. 22. Without thee shall no man lift up his hand that is attempt or do any thing So Psal. 10. 12. Arise O Lord lift up thine hand forget not the poor that is Set to thine active hand for their assistance So Heb. 12. 12. Lift up the hands that hang down and the feeble knees that is Set actively and vigorously about the Christian Task To this Rank may be also referred what is said Mat. 6. 3. Let not thy left hand know what thy right hand doth The Hand is the Instrument of Action Now all these Sences might be applied to the present Place 1. Praying for God's Grace to perform them 2. Blessing God as we do for our daily food giving thanks for them 3. Vowing or promising under an Oath a constant Obedience to them But the Commandments are not the proper Object to which the Acts of Praying Blessing Swearing are directed but God It is not I will lift up my hand to God but thy commandments We ought indeed to bless God and praise God for the Blessings we receive by his
Prayers should be mingled with a thankful sense and acknowledgment of his mercies Psal. 4. 6. In every thing let your requests and supplications be made known with thanksgiving Do not come onely in a complaining way Col. 4. 2. Continue in Prayer and watch in the same with Thanksgiving They are not holy requests unless we acknowledge what he hath done for us as well as desire him to do more Nothing more usual than to come in our necessities to seek help but we do not return when we have received help and relief to give thanks When our turn is served we neglect God Wants urge us more than Blessings our Interest swayeth us more than Duty As a dog swalloweth every bit that is cast to him and still looketh for more We swallow whatever the bounty of God casteth out to us without thanks and when we need again we would have more and though warm in Petitions yet cold rare unfrequent in gratulations It is not onely against Scripture but against Nature Ethnicks abhor the ungrateful that were still receiving but forgetting to give thanks It is against justice to seek help of God and when we have it to make no more mention of God than if we had it from our selves It is against Truth we make many promises in our affliction but forget all when well at ease 3. God either takes away or blasts the Mercies which we are not thankful for Sometimes he taketh them from us Hos. 2. 8 9. I will take away my Corn in the time thereof and my Wine in the season thereof and I will recover my Wool and Flax why She doth not know that I gave her Corn and Wine and Oyl and gave her Silver and Gold Where his kindness is not taken notice of nor his hand seen and acknowledged he will take his benefits to himself again We know not the value of Mercies so much by their worth as by their want 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A thing too near the eye cannot be seen God must set things at a distance to make us value them If he take them not away yet many times he blasts them as to their natural use Mal. 2. 2. And if you will not hear and if you will not lay it to heart to give glory to my name saith the Lord of H●…sts I will even send a curse upon you and I will curse your blessings yea I have cursed them already because you do not lay it to heart The Creature is a deaf-nut when we come to crack it we have not the natural blessing as to health strength and chearfulness Acts 14. 17. or if Food yet not gladness of heart with it Or we have not the sanctified use it is not a mercy that leadeth us to God A thing is sanctified when it is à bono in bonum if it cometh from God and leadeth us to God 1 Cor. 3. 22 23. All things are yours whether Paul or Apollo or Cephas or the World or Life or Death or things present or things to come all are yours for you are Christs and Christ is Gods You have a covenant right an holy use 4. Bless him for favours received and you shall have more Thanksgiving is the kindly way of Petitioning and the more thankful for Mercies the more they are increased upon us Vapours drawn up from the Earth return in showrs to the Earth again The Sea poureth out its fulness into the Rivers and all Rivers return into the Sea from whence they came Psal. 67. 5 6. Let the People praise thee O God yea let all the People praise thee Then shall the Earth yield her increase and God even our own God shall bless us When Springs lye low we pour a little water into the Pump not to enrich the Fountain but to bring up more for our selves It is not onely true of outward increase but of Spiritual also Col. 2. 7. Be ye rooted in the Faith and abound therein with thanksgiving If we give thanks for so much Grace as we have already received it is the way to increase our store We thrive no more get no more victory over our corruptions because we do no more give thanks 5. When God's common Mercies are well observed or well improved it fits us for acts of more special kindness In the story of the Lepers Luke 17. 19. thy Faith hath made thee whole he met not onely with a bodily cure but a Soul cure Luke 16. 11. If therefore ye have not been faithful in the unrighteous Mammon who will commit to your trust the true riches When we suspect a vessel leaketh we try it with Water before we fill it with Wine You are upon your tryal be thankful for less God will give you more Means or Directions 1. Heighten all the Mercies you have by all the circumstances necessary to be considered by the nature and kind of them spiritual Eternal Blessings first the greatest Mercies deserve greatest acknowledgment Eph. 1. 3. Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Iesus Christ who hath blessed us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ Christs Spirit Pardon of sins Heaven the way of Salvation known accepted and the things of the World as subordinate helps Luke 10. 20. Notwithstanding in this rejoyce not that the Spirits are subject to you but rather rejoyce because your names are written in Heaven Then consider your sense in the want of Mercies what high thoughts had you then of them The Mercies are the same when you have them and when you want them onely your apprehensions are greater if affectionately begg'd they must be affectionately acknowledged else you are a Hypocrite either in the supplication or gratulation Consider the Person giving God so high and glorious A small remembrance from a great Prince no way obliged no way needing me to whom I can be no way profitable a small kindness melts us a gift of a few pounds a little parcel of land Do I court him and observe him There is less reason why God should abase himself to look upon us or concern himself in us Psal. 113. 6. He humbleth himself to behold the things that are in Heaven and in the Earth We have all things from him Consider the Person receiving so unworthy Gen. 32. 10. I am not worthy of the least of all the mercies and of all the truth which thou hast shewed unto thy servant 2 Sam. 7. 19. Who am I O Lord God and what is my house that thou hast brought me hitherto Consider the season in our greatest extremity is Gods opportunity Gen. 22. 14. In the mount of the Lord it shall be seen when the knife was at the throat of his Son 2 Cor. 1. 9 10. We had the sentence of death in our selves that we should not trust in our selves but in God which raised the dead who delivered us from so great a death and doth deliver in whom we trust that he will yet deliver us Consider the end and
he may be found in private Ordinances The Spouse sought him upon her bed then in every street of the city Isa. 55. 6. Seek the Lord while he may be found call upon him while he is near In prayer we come most directly to enjoy God and do more especially call him in to our help and relief there all graces are acted If you cannot find God in prayer look for him in the Supper and in the Word if he be not comfortably present in the Word seek him by Meditation Cant. 5. 6. My soul failed when he spake That is when I considered his speaking for his wooing was over my beloved was gone but when I thought of his speaking my soul failed David consults with Nathan but he could give him no clear answer what then 2 Sam. 7. 4. The word of the Lord came that night unto Nathan saying Go and tell my servant David c. So when we have been enquiring after God all day in publick Worship all this while the Oracle is silent but at night when going over these things again God may be found Act. 17. 12. it is said Therefore many of them believed How when they searched the Word though in the hearing they did not discern the impressions of God upon the Word but when they searched and studied going over them in private duties God appeared Heb. 11. 11. it is said She judged him faithful that had promised How so at first hearing No Sarah laugh'd when God promised her a Son for it was the Son of God that was in company with the Angels Gen. 18. but afterward when she considered of it She judged him faithful Thus we must follow God from Ordinance to Ordinance It argues a great deal of pride in carnal men if God doth not meet them presently they throw off all Now and then they will see what they shall have for calling upon God but if God do not answer at the first knock they are gone SERMON III. PSAL. CXIX 2. Blessed are they that keep his Testimonies that seek him with the whole heart USE 1. To press you to seek God The Motives are 1. It was the end of our Creation We do not live meerly to live but for this end were we sent into the world to seek God Nature is sensible of it in part by the dissatisfaction it finds in other things and therefore the Apostle describes the Gentiles to be groping and feeling about for God Act. 17. 27. God is the cause of all things and Nature cannot be satisfied without him We were made for God and can never enjoy satisfaction until we come to enjoy him therefore the Psalmist saith Psal. 14. 2. We are all gone aside and altogether become filthy Nature is out of joint we are quite out of our way to true happiness We are seeking that for which we were created when we seek and enquire after God 2. We seek other things that we want with great solicitude and care we are cumbred with much serving to obtain the world and shall any thing be sought more than God we can least spare him The chiefest good should be sought after with the chiefest care and chiefest love and chiefest delight nothing should be so precious to us as God It is the greatest baseness that can be that any thing should take up our time our thoughts and content us more than God When we come to God we are earnest for other things Hos. 7. 14. They howl upon their beds for corn and wine If any thing be sought from God above God more than God and not for God it is but a brutish cry 3. It is our benefit to seek God It is no benefit to God if we do not seek him The Lord hath no less though we have less He that hides himself from the Sun doth not impair the light We derogate nothing from God if we do not seek him He needed not the Creature he had happiness enough in himself but we hide our selves from our own happiness and our own peace But what benefit have we by seeking God a great deal of present benefit Psal. 22. 26. They that seek thee shall praise thy name You 'l have cause to bless God before the search be over God hath past his word there are a great many experiences we taste As they that continue in the pursuit of the Philosophers-stone find out many experiences which are a satisfaction to their understandings so one way or other we shall have cause to bless God The God of Iacob hath openly professed we shall not seek him in vain Isa. 45. 19. That is this is a truth God hath written as it were with a Sun-beam that something will come in seeking of God By seeking him in prayer we carry away a great deal of comfort and strength As we read of that Emperour that sent not away any one sad out of his-presence so neither doth God there is some comfort to be had in waiting upon him And as it brings present comfort and satisfaction so it brings an everlasting reward Heb. 11. 6. He is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him If you would have the fruit of your holy calling that which is the result of that Religion you do profess you must diligently seek him so that in effect we never seek our selves more than when we seek the Lord. Amos 5. 6. Seek the Lord and ye shall live It is the undoubted way to get eternal life to live for ever They that seek not his face here shall never see his face for ever With what diligence will men court an outward preferment which is yet very uncertain Prov. 29. 26. All men seek the rulers face but every mans judgment is of the Lord. What a deal of observance and waiting is there for the Rulers face and favour and yet God disposeth of every mans judgment it is uncertain whether they shall obtain it yea or no. But now if you seek the face of God in heaven you shall live for ever 4. If you do not sensibly find God yet comfort thy self that thou art in a seeking way and in the pursuit of him Psal. 24. 6. Gods people are described to be the generation of them that seek him This is the true mark of Gods chosen people they make it their business to get the favour of God and to wrestle through discouragements It is better be a seeker than a wanderer Though we do not feel the love of God nor have the comfort of a pardon have no sensible communion with him yet the choice and bent of the heart is towards him and you have the character of Gods people upon you 5. You have misspent a great deal of time already and long neglected God therefore now you should seek him Hos. 10. 12. It is time to seek the Lord until he come and rain righteousness upon you 'T is time that is 't is not too late while we are preserved and invited And again 't is
said Your brethren that hated me said Let God be glorious In Instruments of Musick the deeper the belly of the Instrument the sweeter the melody so Praise the more it comes from the heart the more acceptable to God 2 This uprightness implys the life as well as the heart Honour given to God in words is many times retracted and disproved by the dishonour we do to him in our conversations This is the carrying Christ on the top of the Pinacle as the Devil did with an intent he might throw down himself again so we seem to advance and carry him high in praises that we may throw him down in our lives Tit. 1. 16. They profess that they know God but in works they deny him Empty complements God accepteth not as long as there is blasphemy in their lives Our lives must glorifie him Mat. 5. 16. Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works and glorifie your Father which is in Heaven Use. It reproves us that we are no more hearty and serious in the praises of God In our necessities when we want then we can howl upon our bed our necessity doth put a shrill accent upon our groans and sharpen our affections in prayer but in praise how cold and dull are we surely we should be as warm in the one as in the other Then it may press you to live praises and shew forth the praises of him in your conversation 1 Pet. 2. 7. Hezekiah had been sick God recovered him he pen'd a Psalm of Thanksgiving Isa. 38. 9. yet it 's said he rendred not according to what he received c. 2 Chron. 32. because his heart was proud and lifted up If you do not walk more humbly and closely with God it is not praise with uprightness of heart it must issue and break out in our actions and course of our conversation SERMON IX PSAL. CXIX 8. I will keep thy statutes O forsake me not utterly THIS Verse being the last of this portion is the result of his meditation concerning the utility and necessity of keeping the Law of God Here take notice 1. Of his Resolution I will keep thy statutes 2. His Prayer O forsake me not utterly It is his purpose to keep the Law yet because he is conscious to himself of many infirmities he prays against desertion In the prayer there is a litotes more is intended than is exprest O forsake me not he means strengthen me in this work and if thou shouldst desert me yet but for a while Lord not for ever if in part not in whole Four points we may observe from hence 1. That it is a great advantage to come to a resolution in a course of godliness 2. Those that resolve upon a course of obedience had need to fly to Gods help 3. Though we flye to Gods help yet sometimes God may withdraw and seem to forsake us 4. Though God seem to forsake us and really doth so in part yet we should pray that it may not be a total and utter desertion The notion of Statutes I have opened and also what it is to keep them in mind heart and life That which we now are to take notice of is David's resolution Hence observe Doct. 1. That it is a great advantage to come to a resolution in a course of godliness Negatively let me speak to this point 1. This is not to be understood as if our resolutions had any strength in themselves to bear us out Peter is a sad instance how little our confidence and purposes will come to and therefore David here when he was most upright in his own resolution is most diffident of his own strength O forsake me not implying if God should forsake him all would come to nothing God must enable us to do what we resolve 2. Nor is it to be understood that it is in a man's power to resolve this would put grace under the dominion of our will It is by preventing grace that we are brought to a serious purpose Phil. 2. 13. He giveth to will and to do Man's will is the toughest sinew in the whole Creation The very purpose and bent of the heart is the fruit of Regeneration Free-will hath its pangs its velleities which are like a little morning-dew that is soon dried up Hos. 6. 4. Our righteousness is as the morning-cloud and as the early dew it goeth away But the will and resolution that we are to understand here is the fruit of grace 3. Not as if the obligation to obedience did arise from our own purpose and promise rather than from Gods Command this were to set mans authority above Gods and to lay aside the Precept which is the surer bond and obligation and to bind the soul with the slender thread of our own resolutions When we purpose and promise obedience we do but make the old bond and engagement of duty the more active and sensible upon the soul so that it is not to justle out Gods Authority but to yield our consent However the obligation is the greater for to disobey after we have acknowledged an authority among men it is counted a more heinous crime than standing out against the authority it self A thing that is not due before yet when we have promised or dedicated it to God then it is not in our power as in the case of Ananias Act. 5. but now we are not free before the contract we have bonds upon us and the business of our promise and resolution is only to make our obligation more powerful upon the conscience 4. Not as if it were an arbitrary thing thus to do and practised by the Saints only for the more conveniencie of the spiritual life no but it is a thing required Act. 11. 23. He exhorteth them that with full purpose of heart they would cleave to the Lord. Positively 1. It is a course which God will bless he hath appointed Ordinances for this end and purpose that we might come to this resolution The promise is first implicitly made in Baptism therefore is it called 1 Pet. 3. 21. The answer of a good conscience towards God How so why the Covenant binds mutually on God part and on ours and so do the seals which belong to the Covenant It doth not only seal pardon and sanctification on Gods part but there is a promise and answer on our part an answer to what to the demands of the Covenant In the Covenant of Grace God saith I will be your God Baptism seals that and we promise to be his people Now our answer to this demand of God and to this Interrogatory he puts to us in the Covenant it is sealed by us in Baptism and it is renewed in the Lords-supper Look as in the old Sacrifices they were all a renewing of the Oath of Allegiance to God or confirming their purposes and resolutions you have the same notion to the sacrifice that is given to the Lords-supper for it is called the
begin to live upon our selves and our own stock and do not depend upon the free grace of God to carry us out in our work 3. When you go forth to any work or conflict without an actual renewing of your dependance upon God it 's a sign you lean upon the strength of your own resolutions or present frame of your heart The Ephraimites took it ill that Gideon would go to war and not call them into the field when they went out against the Enemy Iudges 8. 1. O may not God much more take it ill that we will go forth to grapple with the Devil and temptations and go about any business in our own strength Therefore still a sense of our weakness must be upon us that we may do all in the name of the Lord Iesus that is by help and assistance from him Col. 3. 17. 4. When we boast of our courage before we are called to a trial They that crack in their quarters do not always do most valiantly in the field Peter's boast Though all men should leave thee yet will not I came to very little And you know the story of Mr. Saunders in the Book of Martyrs Let not him that puts on his harness boast as he that puts it off A temptation will shew us how little service that grace will do us which we are proud of and boast of 2. To cure carnal confidence remember your work and your impediments 1. Consider your work A full view of duty will check our rash presumptions Can you deny your selves take up your Cross maintain and carry on a holy course to your lives end And 2. remember your impediments partly from a naughty heart you are to row against the stream of flesh and blood Satan will be sure to trouble you and will assault you again and again though he be never so fully foiled he will not give over the combate Luke 4. 13. He departed from Christ for a season he had a mind to try the other bout And the World will be your lett many discouragements and snares from the love and fear of it 1 Joh. 5. 3 4. He that loves God keeps his commandments and his commandments are not grievous and presently he saith And this is the victory that overcometh the world even our faith implying there is no keeping the commandments without victory over the world Now can you do all these things in your own strength The young man was forward in resolving in keeping the commandments but he went away sad for he had great possessions Mat. 19. 22. Therefore consider these things that you may flye to the Lord Jesus Doct. 3. Though we flye to Gods help yet sometimes God may withdraw and forsake us Here I shall speak of the kinds of desertion and then of the reasons First For the kinds take these distinctions 1. There is a real desertion and a seeming Christ may be out of sight and yet you not out of mind When the dam is abroad for meat the young brood in the Nest are not forgotten nor forsaken The child cryes as if the Mother was gone but she is but hidden or about other business Isa. 49. 14 15. Sion said The Lord hath forsaken me and my God hath forgotten me In the misgivings of our hearts we think God hath cast off all care and all thought of us But God's affectionate answer sheweth that all this was but a fond surmise Can a woman forget her sucking-child c. So Psal. 31. 22. I said in my haste I am cut off before thine eyes nevertheless thou heardest the voice of my supplications when I cryed unto thee We are never more in Gods heart many times than when we think he hath quite cast us off Surely when the heart is drawn after him he is not wholly gone We often mistake Gods dispensations when he is preparing for us more ample relief and emptying us of all carnal dependance we judg that that 's a forsaking as Psal. 94. 18. When I said My foot slippeth thy mercy O Lord held me up Sometimes in point of comfort we are at a loss and fill'd with distractions and troubles and all is that God may come in for our relief So in point of grace 2 Cor. 1. When I am weak then I am strong There is also a real desertion for God grants his people are forsaken sometimes Though I have forsaken you for a little moment Isa. 54. 7 8. And Christ that could not be mistaken complaineth of it and the Saints feel it to their bitter cost 2. There 's internal and external desertion Internal is with respect to the withdrawings of the Spirit Psal. 51. 11. Take not thy holy Spirit from me Now external desertion is in point of Affliction when God leaves us under sharp crosses in his wise Providence These must be distinguished sometimes they are asunder sometimes together And when they are together God may return as to our inward comfort and support yet not for our deliverance Ps. 1 38. 3. In the day when I cryed thou answeredst me and strengthnedst me with strength in my soul. David was in great straits and God affords him soul-relief that was all the answer he could get then support and strength to bear the troubles but not deliverance from the affliction Sometimes the ebb of outward comfort doth make way for a greater tide and influx of inward comfort 2 Cor. 1. 5. As the sufferings of Christ abound in us so our consolation also aboundeth by Christ. Cordials are for a fainting time When children are sick and weakly we treat them with the more indulgence God may return and may never less forsake us inwardly than when he doth forsake us outwardly 2 Cor. 4. 16. Though our outward man perish yet the inward man is renewed day by day God makes sickly bodies make way for the health of the soul and an aking head for a better heart When he seems to cast us off in point of our external condition it is to draw us into a more inward communion with himself that we might receive greater supplies of his grace 3. There 's a desertion as to Comfort and a desertion as to Grace The children of God may sometimes lose the feelings of Gods love Psal. 77. 1 2 3. My soul refused to be comforted I remembred God and was troubled My spirit was overwhelmed O what a word was that remembring of God revives the heart but to think of God and to think of his loss that was his great trouble Yet all this while God may hold communion in point of grace Psal. 73. 23. Nevertheless I am continually with thee thou hast holden me by my right hand He had been under a conflict lost his comfort yet he acknowledgeth supports God held him in his right hand Trouble and discomfort hath its use want of comfort makes way many times for increase of grace and therefore though a man may be deserted as to comfort yet he may have a
that goeth about with Spices to sell thence the word is used for one that wandreth from place to place uttering slanders as wares These Pedlars will always be opening their Packs Men fill up time by tatling and medling with others Thus have I heard of such or such an one 4. Or our discourse is wholly of worldly business not a word of God They are of the earth and speak of the earth Joh. 3. 31. The habituating our selves to worldly discourse together without interposing something of God it is a great disadvantage 5. Or vain jangling if we speak of any thing that hath an aspect upon Religion we turn it into a meer dispute about opinion we do not use Conferences as helps to gracious affections How many are there sick of Questions as the Apostle saith and dote upon strife of words 1 Tim. 6. 4. Thus if we did put our selves to question at night What have I spoken What good have I done What good have I received from such company it would make the Word more sensible and active upon our souls Use 2. To press us to holy Conference both Occasional and Set. 1. Occasional We are not left at random in our ordinary discourse to speak as we will but at all times and with all persons we should have an eye to the good of those with whom we speak Col. 4. 6. Let your speech be alway with grace seasoned with salt that ye may know how ye ought to answer every man In Visits Walks Journeys let your speech be always with grace we should ever be drawing to good discourse as remembring we must give account Iam. 2. 12. So speak as those that shall be judged by the law of liberty Certainly a gracious heart will thus do He that doth not want a heart will not want an occasion of interposing somewhat for God This was Christs manner Luk. 14. 15. when he was eating bread in the Pharisees house he discourseth Blessed is he that shall eat bread in the Kingdom of God There will be a feast in Heaven when we shall sit down with Abraham Isaac and Iacob in the Kingdom of God So when Christ was at Iacob's Well Ioh. 4. 14. he discourseth of the Well of living waters which springeth up to eternal life still he draweth towards some gracious improvement of the occasion So Ioh. 7. 37. when he was at the Feast of Tabernacles and it was the custom there to fetch water from Siloa and pour it out upon the Altar of Burnt-offerings they were to make a flood of it Christ improves it If any man will come to me out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water He spiritualizeth the occasion If our hearts were as they ought to be we would have a gracious word more ready we would either be beginning or carrying on good conference where ever we come But Christians are to seek either through barrenness or leanness of soul they have not that good treasure or stock of knowledg in them or through the custom of vain speech And the great cause of all is the prevalency of an unsanctified and worldly heart this hindreth us from being more fruitful in our converse 2. It should press us to holy Conferences set There may be and should be some set time for mutual edification It is not the duty only of Ministers but also of private Christians keeping within the bounds of their station and the measures of their knowledg to teach and to instruct one another The Scriptures are full for this Col. 3. 6. Col. 1. 5 11. Heb. 3. 13. Iucle v. 20. Christians should often meet together for prayer and spiritual edification So Heb. 10. 24 25. Rom. 15. 14. I heap up these places because of the error of the Papists who will not have the Laity speak of Scripture or things pertaining to Scripture Whereas you see these injunctions are plain and clear and it is a great part of that holy Communion that should pass between Saints this mutual exhorting quickning and strengthning one anothers hands in the work of the Lord. These places are not to be understood of publick Communion of Church-societies but of private conferences by way of interchangeable discourse and mutual edification It is not necessary these Set-conferences should be always and all the members of the Church meet and confer together but a company of savoury Christians whose spirits suit best in commerce and most likely to help one another Though I am to love all the brotherhood and carry a respect to all in relation to me yet I am to single out for my advantage some of the most eminent or the most suitable for great regard is to be had to that Christ made a distinction in his little flock in his family shall I call it some he singleth out for more immediate converses as Peter Iames and Iohn in his Transfiguration in Mat. 17. 1. and in his Agonies these were the flowr the choice that he singled out for his special converse I speak not of publick meetings in publick societies but set conferences with gracious Christians with whom our spirits suit best and are likely to be of greatest help in maintaining of the spiritual life These set times the people of God have ever made conscience of It is a great comfort and refreshing to be conscious to the exercise of each others grace Rom. 1. 12. That I may be comforted together with you by the mutual faith both of you and me And it is a mighty strengthning in evil times Mal. 3. 16. Then they that feared the Lord spake often one to another and the Lord hearkned and heard it And you will find the benefit of the manifold graces of God that what one wants will be supplied by the help of another God doth not so give his gifts to one but that he needs others help Paul calls Aquila and Priscilla Fellows or helpers in Christ Iesus And Apollo a mighty man in the Scriptures had a great deal of help by Aquila and Priscilla Rom. 16. 3. 1 Cor. 12. 21. The eye cannot say unto the hand I have no need of thee nor the head to the feet I have no need of you The meanest have their use quickning and strengthning one another This mutual edification differeth from Ministerial or Church-society because the one is an act of Authority the other of charity the one in the face of the congregation the other by a few Christians in private and it may be improved to awaken each other to consider of God of the ways of God the word of God the works of Creation and Providence Redemption the Judgments he executes in the world mercies towards his people the experiments and proofs of his grace in your Christian warfare Psal. 66. 16. Come and hear all ye that fear God and I will declare what he hath done for my soul. Ferus speaks of some old Monks Conveniebant in unum audiebatur verbum Dei c. they were wont
ruine We have instances of a Council gathered against Christ Joh. 11. 47. Then gathered the chief priests and the Pharisees a Council and said What do we for this man doth many miracles They meet together and plot the ruine of Christ and his Kingdom and they were those that were of chief Authority in the place Another instance Acts 4. 27 28. For of a truth against thy holy Child Iesus whom thou hast anointed both Herod and Pontius Pilate with the Gentiles and the people of Israel were gathered together for to do whatsoever thy hand and thy counsel determined before to be done There is their agreement to put Christ to death In the Old Testament Pharaoh and his Nobles Exod. 1. 10. Come on 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 let us deal wisely with them lest they multiply and it come to pass that when there falleth out any war they joyn also unto our enemies and fight against us and so get them up out of the land And against Daniel the Princes of the Persian Empire consult how to intrap him in the matter of his God Dan. 6. 4 5 6 c. 2. For abusing the Throne of Judgment and Civil Courts of Judicature to the molestation of the Saints I shall cite but two places Psal. 94. 12. Shall the throne of iniquity have fellowship with thee which frameth mischief by a Law It is no strange but yet no small temptation that the oppression of Gods people is marked with a pretence and colour of Law and publick Authority and the mischief should proceed from thence where it should be remedied namely from the Seat of Justice so Mat. 16. 17 18. Christ foretelleth they shall have enemies armed with Power and Publick Authority Beware of men for they will deliver you to the Councils and they shall scourge you in their synagogues and ye shall be brought before Governours and Kings for my sake Not only subordinate but supreme Governours may be drawn to condemn and oppress the godly In so plain a case more instances need not Reasons of it on Gods part and on the part of the Persecutors First On Gods part he permitteth it 1. To shew that he can carry on his work though Authority be against him and that his people do not subsist by outward force but the goodness of his Providence and so have the sole glory of their preservation When the Christian Religion came first abroad in the world not many noble nor many mighty were called the Powers of the world were against it and yet it held up the head and was dispersed far and near Falshoods need some outward interest to back them and the supports of a Secular arm but Gods Interest doth many times stand alone though God doth now and then make Kings nursing fathers and Queens nursing-mothers according to his promise Isa. 49. 23. Oftentimes the Church is destitute of all worldly props Mic. 5. 7. And the remnant of Iacob shall be in the midst of many people as a dew from the Lord as the showers upon the grass that tarrieth not for man nor waiteth for the sons of men Yea the power of the world is against it and yet it subsists Thus it was in the primitive times there were only an handful of contemptible people that professed the Gospel yet it got ground daily not by force of arms or the power of the long sword but by Gods secret blessing Ambrose giveth the reason why God suffered it to be so Ne videretur authoritate traxisse aliquos veritatis ratio non pompae gratiâ praevaleret lest this new Religion should seem to be planted with power rather than by its own evidence and the authority of men should sway more with the world than the Truth of God There is a wonderful encrease without any human concurrence as the Lord saith The remnant of his people shall be as a dew from the Lord that tarrieth not for man nor waiteth for the sons of men Without mans consent or concurrence So that God alone hath the glory of their preservation 2. That the patience of his people may be put to the utmost probation When they are exercised with all kind of trials not only the hatred of the vulgar but the opposition of the Magistrate carried on under a form of Legal procedure In the primitive times sometimes the Christians were exposed to the hatred and fury of the people Lapidibus nos invadit inimicum vulgus At other times exposed to the injuries of Laws and persecutions carried on by authority against them There was an uproar at Ephesus against the Christians Acts 19. and there seemed to be a formal Process at Ierusalem Acts 4. This latter temptation seemeth to be the more sore and grievous because Gods Ordinance which is Magistracy is wrested to give countenance to malicious designs and because it cuts off all means of human help and so patience hath 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 its perfect work James 1. 4. There are some glory in suffering the rage and evil word of the Vulgar for they are supposed not to make the wisest choice but when men of Wisdom and Power and such as are clothed with the Majesty of Gods Ordinance are set against us then is patience put to the utmost proof and whether we regard God or man most and who is the object of our fear those that have power of life and death temporal or him that hath power of life and death eternal 3. That his people may be weaned from fleshly dependencies and doting upon Civil Powers and so be driven to depend upon him alone Psal. 94. 20 21 22. Shall the throne of iniquity have fellowship with thee which establish mischief by a Law they gather themselves together against the soul of the righteous and condemn the innocent blood But the Lord is my defence and my God is the rock of my refuge There would not be such use of faith and dependance upon God if our danger were not great It is harder to trust in God with means than without means We are beaten out when outward helps fail otherwise we are apt to neglect God and then a world of mischief ensueth When the Emperor of the Romans began to favour the Christians poyson was said to be poured into the Church and in the sun-shine of worldly countenance like green timber they began to warp and cleave asunder and what Religion got in breadth it lost in strength and vigour Gods people never live up to the beauty and majesty of their Principles so much as when they are forced immediately to live upon God and depend upon him for their safety 4. That their testimony and witness-bearing to Gods truths may be the more publick and authentick in the view of the world This testimony is either to them for their conviction and conversion Mat. 24. 14. And this Gospel of the Kingdom shall be preached in all the world for a witness unto all Nations or against them Mark 10.
done and especially is this found by experience when great trouble comes upon us by reason of sin There is some sin at the bottom God will bring out and until they come to clearness and openness with God the Lord still continues the trouble they are kept roaring and do not come to their peace Iob 33. 26 27. When a man is under trouble and the sense of sin doth not fasten on the heart he is not prepared for deliverance but when it comes to this I have sinned and it profits me not then God sends an Interpreter one among a thousand to shew unto man his uprightness 3. It prevents Satans accusations and Gods judgments It is no profit to cover our sins for either Satan will declare them or God find us out and enter into judgment with us It prevents Satan as an Accuser and God as a Judg. 1. It prevents Satan as an Accuser Let us not tarry till our adversary accuse There is one that will accuse you if you do not accuse your selves He that 's a tempter is also an accuser of the brethren Now Confession puts Satan out of office When we have sued out our pardon Satan is not an accuser so much as a slanderer Rom. 8. 33. Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect The Informer comes too late when the guilty person hath accused himself and sued out his pardon And 2. It prevents God as a Iudg. It is all known to God Psal. 69. 5. O God! thou knowest my foolishness and my sins are not hid from thee It is a folly to conceal that which cannot be hid God knows them how God may be said to know things two ways Either simply with respect to the perfection of his nature and so he knows all things or by virtue of his office and so God knows things judicially as Judg of the world he takes knowledg of it so as to punish it unless you confess it But in this kind of knowledg he loves to be prevented he will not know it as a Judg if we confess it when there is process against sin in our own consciences 1 Cor. 11. 31. If we judg our selves we shall not be judged When we accuse and judg our selves then God's work is prevented God is contented if we will accuse arraign judg and condemn our selves then he will not take knowledg of our sins as a Judg. The end of God's judging is Execution and punishment but the end of our judging is that we may obtain pardon Now consider whether you will stand at the bar of Christ not as a Saviour but as a Judg or you will judg your selves in your own heart Better sit as Judg upon your own heart than God should sit as Judg upon you therefore deal plainly and openly with him Thus I have explained what it is to declare our wavs it is an act of dependence to take God's leave blessing counsel along with us an act of friendship as to lay open our case to God and an act of brokenness of heart as declaring our sins and temptations For the reasons why if we would speed with God we should unfeignedly lay open our case before him 1. It argueth sincerity A hypocrite will pray but will not thus sincerely open his heart to God Psal. 32. 1. Blessed is he in whose spirit there is no guile No guile it hath a limited sense with respect to the matter of confession that doth not deal deceitfully with God but plainly and openly declares his case Many ways men may be guilty of guile of spirit in confession of sin either when they content themselves with general or slight acknowledgments as thus We are all sinners but they do not declare their ways Generals are but notions and as particular persons are lost in a crowd so sins lye hid in common acknowledgments Or else men take up the empty forms of others You shall see in Numb 19. the waters of purification wherewith a man had been cleansed if another touched it he became unclean Confessions are like those waters whereby one hath cleansed himself Now to take up others Confessions and the forms of others without the same affection feeling and brokenness of heart doth but defile us the more when the heart doth not prescribe to the tongue but the tongue to the heart or else men make some acknowledgments to God but do not uncover their privy sore they are loth to draw forth the state of their hearts into the notice and view of conscience This guile of spirit may be sometimes in God's children Moses had a privy sore which he was loth to disclose and therefore when God would have sent him into Egypt he pleads other things insufficiency want of elocution that he was a stammerer that he had not utterance I but his carnal fear was the main therefore see how God touches his privy sore Exod. 4. 19. Arise Moses go into Egypt the men that sought thy life are dead Why Moses never pleaded that he mentions other things that were true that he was a man of slow speech and his brother Aaron was fitter but he never pleads carnal fear but the Lord knew what was at the bottom So it is with Christians many times we will confess this and that which is a truth and we may humble our selves for it I but there 's a privy-sore yet kept secret Therefore this open-dealing with God is very necessary to lay open before God whatever we know of our state and way for then God will be nigh to us Out of self-love men spare themselves and will not judg and condemn themselves therefore they deny excuse extenuate or hypocritically confess O! I am a sinner and the like but do not come openly 2. It argueth somewhat of the spirit of adoption to put in the bill of our complaint to our heavenly Father to draw up an Indictment against our selves to judg that 's irksome but to put in a bill of complaint to a Friend or Father that savours of more ingenuity To tell God all our mind notes freedom and familiarity not such as is bold rude nor a dress of words but such as is grave serious proceeding from an inward sense of God and hope of his mercy 1 Joh. 3. 21. If our hearts condemn us not then have we confidence towards God then we can deal with him as one friend with another and acquaint him with all our griefs and wants A man had need walk exactly that would maintain his freedom with God There is a freedom as men may call it such as is bold rude and wretchless in words only but that which proceeds from confidence in God and his mercy that 's a fruit of close walking we cannot have it in our hearts without it 3. It is the way to make us serious and affected with our condition When we open our whole heart to God then we shall be more earnest for a remedy we content our selves with some transient
strength that is he observes all our temptations our conflicts how weak we are and he intercedes with God night and day he stands at God's right hand to get out this strength and the Holy Ghost applies it to our heart in the Ordinances for so it is said Eph. 3. 16. To be strengthned with might by his Spirit in the inner man USE To press us to be dealing with God for this strength what shall we do 1. Be weak in your own sense and feeling The way to be strong is to be weak 2 Cor. 12. 10. When I am weak then am I strong The Bucket if we would have it fill'd with the Ocean must first be empty Saith Austin Nemo erit à Deo firmus nisi qui seipsum sentit infirmum God strengthneth those that are weak in their own feeling and sense of their own nothingness Heb. 11. 34. Out of weakness they were made strong out of weakness felt and apprehended 2. There must be a full reliance upon God's strength alone Psal. 71. 16. I will go forth in the strength of the Lord God And Eph. 6. 10. Be strong in the Lord and in the power of his might And 2 Tim. 2. 5. Be strong in the grace that is in Christ Iesus Whatever is in God and in Christ is for our use it is forth-coming for our encouragement and help We have firm grounds for this reliance the infinite power of God and the merit of Christ which is of infinite value What cannot the power of God do the strength of God is ingaged for our relief and succour 3. Use the power that you have and then it will be increased upon you The right arm is bigger than the left why because of Exercise it 's fuller of spirits and strength To him that hath shall be given Mat. 13. 12. and he shall have abundance The more we exercise grace the more we shall have of it Prov. 10. 29. The way of the Lord is strength to the upright The more we walk with God the more strength 4. Use the means for they that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength Isa. 40. 31. Because God doth all O it 's the greatest engagement that can be to wait upon God in the use of means that we may draw out treasures of grace in Gods way Phil. 2. 12. Work out your salvation for it is God that worketh in you c. See that you keep not off from God why for he doth all 5. Avoid sin that lets out your strength as bleeding lets out the spirits of the body When you grieve the Spirit of Christ which is to strengthen you you cast away your strength from you Let us then wait upon God for help for when all things fail God faileth not II. I now come to the Argument Strengthen me according to thy word Gods word binds him to relieve his people in distress There are two promises one is 1 Cor. 10. 13. God will not suffer you to be tempted above that ye are able A good man would not over-burden his beast certainly the gracious God will not suffer temptations to lye upon us above measure Another promise is in Isa. 57. 15 16 17. To revive the spirit of the humble and to revive the heart of the contrite ones He hath promised comfort and relief to poor broken-hearted sinners you are called by name in the promise it is spoken to people in your case Again Upon such a word and promise of God is Davids prayer grounded A Prayer grounded upon a promise is like to prevail you may put an humble challenge upon God plead his Word to him It is strange fire else you put in the censer when you beg that which God never undertook to grant David often saith according to thy word Again The word of God is the only cure and relief for a fainting soul. When David was languishing away under deep sorrow then Lord thy word did bring strength 1. This is the proper cure Natural means cannot be a remedy to a spiritual distemper no more than a fine suit of apparel to a sick man or a posy of flowers to a condemned man Natural comforts carry no proportion with a spiritual disease nothing but grace pardon strength and acceptance from God can remove it They that seek to quench their sorrows in excess and merry company take a bruitish remedy for soul-diseases Oh foolish creatures that think to sport away or drink down their troubles it is as foolish a course as to think that to sew up a rent in the garment will cure a wound in their body And 2. it is an universal cure we have from the word life comfort strength It is the word that must guide us and keep us from fainting quicken us and keep us from dying This is a full remedy in conjunction with the power of God and makes the sore joyful in the midst of outward troubles Psal. 56. 10. I will rejoyce in God because of his word Lastly This word must be applied to the conscience by God himself Strengthen thou me according to thy word He goes to God that he would apply his word that it might be for his strength for we can neither apprehend nor apply it further than we receive grace from God The word is Gods instrument and worketh not without the principal Agent SERMON XXX PSALM CXIX 29. Remove from me the way of lying and grant me thy Law graciously THERE are two Parts of Christianity destructive and adstructive the destructive part consists in a removing of sin the adstructive part makes way for the Plantation of Grace there 's eschewing evil and doing good We are carried on in a forward earnestness in the way of sin but there 's a great backwardness and restraint upon our hearts as to that which is good The one is necessary to the other we must come out of the ways of sin before we can walk in the ways of God In this prayer David respects both 1. In the first he instanceth in one sin the way of lying not only lying but the way of lying as being conscious to himself of his too often sinning in this kind Now he would not have this setled into a course or way therefore he beggeth remove it the guilt the fault of it 2. As to the adstructive part for the regulating of his conversation he begs the favour and grant of the Law and that upon terms of grace David had ever the book of the Law for every King of Israel was to have it always by him and the Rabbies say written with his own hand But grant me thy law graciously that is he desires he might have it not only written by him but upon him to have it imprinted upon his heart that he might have a heart to observe and keep it That 's the blessing he begs for the Law and this is begged graciously or upon terms of grace meerly according to thine own favour and good pleasure
your selves in your father's anger when he seemeth to go cross to our prayers and hopes and gives to wicked men advantages against us Numb 12. 14. If her father had but spit in her face should she not be ashamed seven days When God doth not make good the confidence of his people rather the contrary the confidence of their enemies does as it were spit in their face then it is time to take shame to themselves and humble themselves before the Lord. SERMON XXXIV PSALM CXIX 32. I will run the way of thy Commandments when thou shalt enlarge my heart IN these words there are two parts 1. A supposition of strength or help from God When thou shalt enlarge my heart 2. A resolution of duty I will run the way of thy Commandments Where 1. observe that he resolves I will 2. The matter of the resolution the way of thy commandments 3. The manner how he would carry on this purpose intimated in the word run with all diligence and earnestness of soul. The Text will give us occasion to speak 1. Of the benefit of an enlarged heart 2. The necessary precedency of this work on God's part before there can be any serious bent or motion of heart towards God on our part 3. The subsequent resolution of the Saints to engage their hearts to live to God 4. With what earnestness alacrity and vigor of spirit this work is to be carried on I will run First Let me speak of the enlarged heart the blessing here asked of God The point from hence is Doct. Enlargement of heart is a blessing necessary for them that would keep God's Laws David is sensible of the want of it and therefore goes to God for it 1. I shall speak of the nature of this benefit 2. The necessity of it First As to the nature what this enlargement of heart is There 's a general and a particular enlargement of heart 1. The general enlargement is at regeneration or conversion to God when we are freed from the bonds of natural slavery and the curse of the Law and the power of sin to serve God cheerfully then is our heart said to be enlarged This is spoken of in Scripture Joh. 8. 36. If the son shall make you free ye shall be free indeed There are two things notable in that Scripture that this is freedom indeed and that we have it by the Son 1. That this is the truest liberty then are we free indeed How large and ample soever our condition and portion be in the world we are but slaves without this freedom As Austin said of Rome that she was Domitrix gentium captiva vitiorum the Mistriss of the Nations and a slave to Vices so vicious men are very slaves how free and large soever their condition be in the world Ioseph was sold as a bond-slave into Egypt but his Mistress that was overcome by her own lust was the true captive and Ioseph was free indeed 2. The other thing observable from this Text is That we have this liberty by Christ he purchased it for us this enlargement of heart from the captivity of sin cost dear Look as the Roman Captain said Acts 25. 28. With a great sum obtained I this freedom They were tender of the violation of this priviledg of being a Citizen of Rome a free-born Roman because it cost so dear and when the liberties of a Nation are bought with a great deal of treasure and blood no wonder that they are so dear and precious to them and that they are so willing to stand for their liberty Certainly our liberty by Christ was dearly bought One place more I shall mention Rom. 13. 2. For the law of the spirit of life in Christ Iesus hath made me free from the law of sin and death The Covenant of grace is there called the law of the spirit of life in Christ Jesus and the Covenant of works is called the law of sin and death To open the place The Covenant of grace that 's accompanied with the law of the spirit the Covenant of works that 's the law of the letter that only gives us the letter and the naked knowledg of our duty Lex jubet gratia juvat 't is the law of the spirit and not only so but the law of the spirit of life which is in Christ Iesus because it works from the spirit of Christ and conforms us to the life of Christ as our Original pattern Well then this law of the spirit of life in Christ Jesus it makes us free This freedom though purchased by Christ yet is applied executed and accomplished by the Spirit The spirit makes us free and from what from the law of sin and death that is from the law as a Covenant of works which is therefore called a law of sin and death because it convinceth of sin and bindeth over to death it is the ministry of death to condemnation to the fallen creature Let us see what this general enlargement and freedom is from these places It consists in two things A freedom from the power and from the guilt of sin or the curse and obligation to eternal damnation The first sort of freedom from the power of sin is spoken of Rom. 6. 18. Being then made free from sin ye became the servants of righteousness There is a freedom from sin and a freedom for sin or a freedom from righteousness as it is called v. 20. When you were the servants of sin saith the Apostle you were free from righteousness To be under the dominion of sin is the greatest slavery and to be under the dominion of grace is the greatest liberty and enlargement Then is a man free from righteousness when he hath no impulsions nor inclinations of heart to that which is good when righteousness hath no command over him when he will not be held under the restraints of grace when he hath no fear to offend or care to please God But on the other side then is a man free from sin when he can thwart his lust always warring against it cutting off the provisions of the flesh when he hath no purpose and care to act his lust but it is always the bent and inclination of his heart to please God and this is our liberty and enlargement The other part of this liberty and enlargement is when we are freed from the bondage of conscience or fears of death and hell Every Covenant hath a suitable operation of the spirit attending upon it The Covenant of works hath an operation of the spirit of bondage the Covenant of grace hath an operation of the spirit of adoption I say the Covenant of works rightly thought of produceth nothing in the fallen creature but bondage or a dreadful sense of their misery it is called the spirit of bondage and every one which passeth out of that Covenant hath a feeling of it Rom. 8. 15. You have not received the spirit of bondage again to fear You had it
our works for us Isa. 26. 12. Now this actual help is necessary 1. Partly to direct us Psal. 74. 24. Thou shalt guide me with thy counsel and afterward receive me to glory We need not only a principle within and a rule without but need also a guide Though we have grace in our hearts though we have the Law of God to direct us yet we need also a guide upon all occasions the Rule is the Scripture and the Guide is the Spirit of God 2. Partly to quicken and excite us by effectual motions The heart of man is very changeable and it is like the eye easily discomposed and put out of frame Deadness creeps upon us and we drive on heavily in the work of God Psal. 119. 37. Quicken thou me in thy way God doth renew the vigor of the life of grace upon all occasions 3. Partly to corroborate and strengthen that which we have received and make it encrease and grow in the soul and more firmly rooted there Eph. 3. 16. The Apostle prays That God would strengthen you with might by his spirit in the inner man the inward man the frame of grace that we have received needs to be strengthned encreased and be more deeply rooted in the soul. So 1 Pet. 5. 10. The God of all grace make you perfect stablish strengthen settle you Many words are used to shew how God is interested in maintaining and keeping a foot the grace he hath planted in the soul. 4. Partly in protecting and defending them against the incursions and assaults of the Devil The regenerate are not only escaped out of his clutches but appointed to be his Judges which an envious and proud spirit cannot endure therefore he maligneth assaulteth and besiegeth them with temptations daily therefore Christ prays Joh. 17. 11. Keep through thy own name those whom thou hast given me When a City is besieged fresh supplies are sent in they are not kept to their standing-provision so it is not the ordinary power of God that doth preserve and keep us from danger there 's new relief and fresh strength We are kept by the power of God through faith unto salvation 2 Pet. 1. 5. Now we experience the help we have from God partly by the change and frame of our heart when we are acted by him and when we are not When God by the impulsions of his grace doth quicken and awaken our hearts we are carried on with a great deal of earnestness and strength but at other times we seem to be much bound and have not those breathings from the Spirit of God to fill our sails and carry us on with the same life and strength Yea in the same duty how is a Christian up and down carried out sometimes with a great deal of zeal and warmth but if God withdraw that assistance before the duty be over how do the affections flag So that we are like the wards of a Lock kept up while the key is turned but fall again when the key is turned the other way While the work of grace is powerful we are kept in a warm and heavenly plight Thus as to duties we need spiritual relief Likewise in temptations when we are ready to fall into such a sin with great proneness of heart and the Lord quickens and excites us by his grace It is often with a Christian as with David Psal. 73. 2. My feet were almost gone my steps had well nigh slipt even carried away by the violence of Satan and importunate motions of our own lusts then the Lord gives grace to help in a time of need Heb. 4. 16. in the Original it is no more but this seasonable relief God vouchsafeth Object I but are we to do nothing when we are indisposed This case is often traversed in this Psalm 1. The Precept of God falls upon us as reasonable creatures and doth not consider whether we are disposed or indisposed and God's influence is not our rule but our help We are to stir up our selves the Lord complains Isa. 64. 7. There is none that stirreth up himself to take hold of me And Timothy is bid to stir up the gift of God which is in him 2 Tim. 1. 6. God's assistance will be best expected in a way of doing Up and be doing and the Lord will be with thee 2 Chron. When we stir up our selves and set our selves to the work in the conscience of our duty we can better expect God's help and assistance 2. In great distempers there may be some pause Elisha would not prophesie when he was under a passion of anger therefore he calls for a Minstrel to sing a Psalm 2 King 3. 13 14 15. and as he plaid upon an Instrument the Spirit of the Lord came upon him He was under a passion offended with the King of Israel therefore he would not prophesie until his spirit was composed Certainly we are not to run head-long upon duties in the midst of these distempers Sailing is more safely delayed in time of an extreme storm When the heart is put into some great disorder in a great storm of spirit the distemper should first be mourned for and prayed against The Reasons why that from first to last he must make us to go in the way of his Commandments 1. God keeps this power in his own hands that his grace might be all in all and 't is the glory of his actions always to set the crown upon graces head Not only those permanent and fixed habits which constitute the new man but those daily supplies without which the motions and operations of the spiritual life would be at a stand are for grace When the Lord reckons with his servants about the improvement of their talents he doth not say My industry but Lord thy pound Luke 19. 18. He puts all the honour upon grace So 1 Cor. 16. 10. Not I but the grace of God So Gal. 2. 20. I live yet not I but Christ liveth in me So that still they are giving the glory to grace Acts are more perfect than habits therefore if we had only the power from God and acts from our selves we should not give all to God That acts are more perfect than the power is clear it is more perfect to understand than to have a power to understand power is in order to the act and the end is more noble than the means 2. This is a very great encouragement to us to set upon the exercise of grace in the midst of weaknesses and several difficulties and temptations wherewith we are encompassed because God will enable and assist us he will not leave us to our standing strength but he concurs Phil. 2. 12 13. Work out your salvation with fear and trembling why for it is God that worketh in you to will and to do of his good pleasure When God will concur to the will and to the deed to both when we have wind and tide he is very lazy that will not take his
nothing but Mercy can help them out all deliverance is the fruit of Mercy pitying our misery but some Deliverance especially is the fruits of Mercy Pardoning our Sin I shall give you some special Cases both as to Danger and Sin 1. In all cases as to Danger it is Mercy which appears partly because Gods great Arguments to move him is the misery of his People it is his great Argument Deut. 32. 36. The Lord will repent for his People when he seeth that all their power is gone and none shut up and left no manner of defence but exposed as a Prey to those that have a mind to wrong them It is the only Argument Psal. 79. 8. Let thy tender Mercies speedily prevent us for we are brought very low Mercy relents towards a sinful People when they are a wasted People Partly because when there are no other means to help Mercy unexpectedly findeth out means for us We are at an utter loss in our selves God finds out means of Relief for us Psal. 57. 3. He shall send from Heaven and save me from the Reproach of him that would swallow me up Selah God shall send forth his Mercy and Truth When we want help on Earth Faith seeketh for help from Heaven and Mercy chuseth means for us when we cannot pitch upon any thing that may do us good In these cases doth Mercy discover it self as to danger 2. More eminently in special cases when their sins have evidently brought them into those streights Many afflictions are the strokes of Gods immediate hand or the common effects of his Providence permitting the Malice of men for our Tryal and Exercise but some are the proper effects of our own sins We run our selves into inconveniencies by our Folly and even then Mercy findeth a way of escape for us Two ways may our sin be said to bring our Trouble upon us Meritorie Effective 1. Meritoriè When some Judgment treadeth upon the heels of some foregoing sin and Provocation As David When he had offended in the matter of Uriah see Psal 3. Title A Psalm of David when he fled from Absalom his Son and the two first Verses Lord how are they encreased that trouble me many are they that rise up against me many there be that say of my Soul there is no help for him in God Selah David was deserted of his own Subjects chased from his Palace and Royal Seat by his own Son Absalom he had defiled Uriahs Wife secretly and his Wives were defiled in the face of all Israel and he driven to wander up and down for safety God will make all that behold the scandalous sins of his People see what it is to provoke him to Wrath. See how he complains ver 1. Lord how are they increased that trouble me many are they that rise up against me You shall find in 2 Sam. 15. 12. The People increased continually with Absolom A multitude against him and the rest durst not be for him their hearts were hovering And in another place 2 Sam. 17. 11. All Israel gathered to him from Dan to Bear-sheba In what a sorry plight was David when all was against him and the World thought God was against him for so it followeth verse 2. Many there be which say of my Soul there is no help for him in God Selah The World counted the case desperate and insulted over him now God hath left him but they mistook Fatherly Correction for vindicative Justice this was a sad condition but David goeth to God to fetch him off though he had drawn this Judgment upon himself yet he deals with him for Relief in such cases Mercy is seen That Pit must be very deep when the line of Grace doth not go to the bottom of it in the face of the Temptaion David maintaineth his confidence in God see verse 3. But thou O Lord art my Shield my Glory and the lifter up of my head God is counter-Comfort to all his troubles he was in danger God was his shield his Kingdom was at stake God was his Glory he was under sorrow and shame God would lift up his head to the unarmed a shield to the disgraced Glory to the dejected an incourager or the lifter up of his head thus when his case was thought desperate doth Mercy work for him 2. Effectivè When we our selves run into the snare and be holden with the cords of our own Vanity Prov. 5. 22. His own iniquities shall take t●… wicked himself and he shall be holden with the cords of his sins When we have been playing about the Cockatrice's hole and have brought mischief upon our selves Sometimes Gods Children have been guilty of this they have been the causes of their own Troubles as David when his unbelief drove him to Gath where he was in danger of his Life and escaped by his dissembling Psal. 34. entitled a Prayer of David when he changed his behaviour before Abimelech who drove him away and he departed And Iosiah put himself on a War against Pharaoh Necho and other such instances then if they be saved it is certainly Mercy 2. Again Observe It is not Mercy but Mercies the expression is Plural 1. To note the Plenty and Perfection of this Attribute in God God is very merciful to poor Creatures see in how many notions Gods mercy is represented to us a distinct consideration of them yieldeth an advantage in believing for though they express the same thing yet every notion begetteth a fresh thought by which Mercy is more taken abroad in the view of Conscience this is that pouring out Gods name spoken of Cant. 1. 3. Thy Name is as Oyntment poured forth Oyntment in the box doth not yield such a fragrancy as when it is poured out God hath Proclaimed his Name Exod. 34. 6. The Lord the Lord God Merciful and Gracious long suffering abundant in Goodness and Truth God hath given this description of himself and the Saints often take notice of it Psal. 103. 8. The Lord is merciful and gracious slow to Anger and of great kindness Joel 2. 13. Turn to the Lord your God for he is merciful and gracious slow to anger and of great kindness and repenteth him of the evil Ionah 4. 2. I knew that thou wert a gracious God slow to anger and of great kindness and in divers other places What doth the Spirit of God aim at in this express Enumeration and Accumulation of names of Mercy but to give us an help in Meditation and to inlarge our Apprehensions of Gods Mercy 1. The first Notion is Mercy which is an Attribute whereby God inclineth to favour them that are in Misery it is a Name God hath taken with respect to us the love of God first falleth upon himself God loveth himself but he is not merciful to himself Mercy respects Creatures in Misery Justice seeks a fit Object Mercy a fit Occasion Justice looketh to what is deserved Mercy to what is wanted and needed 2. The next Notion
Deceivers by some yet owned by others as Faithfull Dispensers of the Truth of God not esteemed and looked on by some by others owned and valued thus God dispenseth the lot of his Servants 8. A Christian should be satisfied in the Approbation of God and the Honour He puts upon him Iohn 5. 44. How can ye believe that receive honour one of another and seek not the honour that cometh from God onely If God hath taken him into his Family and hath put his Image upon him and admitted him into present Communion with him and giveth him the Testimony of his Spirit to assure him of his Adoption here and will hereafter receive him into Eternal Glory this is enough and more then enough to counterballance all the Scorn of the World and the disgrace they would put upon us If God approve us should we be dejected at the Scorn of a Fool is the Approbation of the Eternal God so small in our Eyes that every thing can weigh it down and cast the ballance with us Alas their scorning and dishonouring is nothing to the honour which God puts upon us 9. There is a time when the promised Crown shall be set upon our Heads and who will be ashamed then the Scoffer or the Serious Worshipper of Christ God is resolved to honour Christ's Faithfull Servants Iohn 12. 26. He that honoureth me him shall my Father honour He will honour us at Death that is our private entrance into Heaven but he will much more honour us more publickly at the day of Judgment when we shall be owned Rev. 3. 5. I will confess his name before my Father and before his Angels and Christ shall be admired for the glory he puts upon a poor Worm 2 Thess. 1. 10. when he shall come to be glorified in his Saints and to be admired in all them that believe The Wicked shall be reckoned with called to an account by Christ Iude 14 15. The Lord cometh with ten thousand of his Saints to execute Iudgment upon all and to convince all that are ungodly among them of all their ungodly deeds which they have ungodlily committed and of all their hard speeches which ungodly sinners have spoken against them yea judged by the Saints 1 Cor. 6. 2. Do ye not know that the Saints shall judge the world Psal. 49. 14. The upright shall have Dominion over them in the morning That is in the Morning of the Resurrection the Saints shall be assumed by God to assist in Judicature and shall arise in a glorious manner when the Earth shall give up her dead If this be not enough for us to counterballance the Scorn of the World we are not Christians Use. It is to perswade us to hold on our Course notwithstanding all the Scorns and Reproaches which are cast upon the despised wayes of God Now to this end I shall give you some Directions 1. Be sure that you are in God's Way and that you have his Law to justify your Practice and that you do not make his Religion ridiculous by putting his glorious Name upon any foolish Fancies of your own A man that differs from the rest of Christians had need of a very clear Light that he may honour so much of Christianity as is owned and may be able to vindicate his own particular way wherein he is ingaged The World is loth to own any thing of God and needless dissents justify their Prejudice I know a Christian is not infallible besides his general godly Course he may have his particular Slips and Errours yet because the World is apt to take Prejudice we should not but upon the constraining evidence of Conscience enter upon any wayes of Dissent or Contest lest we justify their general hatred of Godliness by our particular Errour 2. Take up the Ways of God without a Bias and look straight forward in a Course of Godliness Prov. 4. 25. Let thine eyes look right on and thine eye-lids straight before thee That is look not asquint upon any Secular incouragements but have thine Eye to the end of the Journey make God as thy Witness so thy Master and Judge 3. Take heed of the first Declinings God's Saints may decline somewhat in an hour of Temptation and yet be sincere in the main Now Evil is best stopped in the beginning Heb. 12. 3. Consider him that endured such contradiction of sinners lest ye be weary and faint in your mind Weariness is a lesser and Fainting an higher degree of Deficiency I am weary before I faint before the vital power retireth and leaveth the outward part senseless 4. Since the Proud scoff encounter Pride with Humility Mocking is far more grievous to the Proud who stand upon their Honour then to the Lowly and Humble Therefore be not too desirous of the applause of Men especially of the blind and ungodly World make no great matter of their Contempt and Scorn or Slander SERMON LVIII PSAL. CXIX 52. I have remembred thy Iudgments of old O Lord and have comforted my self THE Man of God had complained in the former Verse that the Proud had him greatly in Derision his help against that Temptation is recorded in this Verse where observe 1. David 's Practice I have remembred thy Iudgments of old 2. The Effect of that Meditation and have comforted my self The Explication will be by answering two Questions 1. What is meant by Mishphatim Iudgments The word is used in Scripture either for Laws enacted or Judgments executed according to those Laws The one may be called the Judgments of his Mouth as Psam 105. 5. Remember the marvellous works that he hath done his wonders and the Iudgments of his Mouth the other the Judgments of his Hand As both will bear the name of Judgments so both may be said to be of old His Decrees and Statutes which have an eternal equity in them and were graven upon the heart of Man in Innocency may well be said to be of old and because from the beginning of the World God hath been punishing the Wicked and delivering the Godly in due time his Judiciary Dispensations may be said to be so also The matter is not much whether we interpret it of either his Statutes or Decrees for they both contain matter of Comfort and we may see the ruine of the Wicked in the Word if we see it not in Providence Yet I rather interpret it of those Righteous Acts recorded in Scripture which God as a just Judge hath executed in all Ages according to the Promises and Threatnings annexed to his Laws Onely in that sense I must note to you Judgments imply his Mercies in the Deliverance of his Righteous Servants as well as his Punishments on the Wicked The seasonable interpositions of his Relief for the one in their greatest Distresses as well as his just Vengeance on the other notwithstanding their highest Prosperities 2. What is meant by Comfort Comfort is the strengthening the Heart against Evil when either 1. Faith is
him according to his declared Will We continually depend upon him every moment In him we live and move and have our being Acts 17. 28. and surely Dependance should beget Observance and therefore Men should be loth to break with God or carefull to reconcile themselves to him on whom they depend every Moment Acts 12. 20. Herod was highly displeased with them of Tyre and Sidon but they came with one accord to him and having made Blastus the Kings Chamberlain their Friend desired peace because their Country was nourished by the Kings Country Therefore it is extreame Unthankfulness Stupidity and Brutishness for them to carry themselves so unthankfully towards God who giveth them Life and Being and all things The Bruites themselves who have no capacity to know God as the first Cause of all Being yet take notice of the next hand from whence they receive their Supplies Isa. 1. 3. The Ox knows his Owner and the Ass his Masters Crib and in their kind express their Gratitude to such as feed them and make much of them but Wicked men take no notice of the God who hath made them and kept them at the expence and care of his Providence and hath been beneficial to them all their days but as they slight their Law-giver so they requite their great Benefactour with unkindness and Provocation 4. It is a disowning of his Propriety in them as if they were not his own and God had not power to doe with his own as he pleaseth The Creature is absolutely at God's dispose not onely as he hath a Jurisdiction over us as our Law-giver and King over his Subjects but as a Proprietary and Owner over his Goods A Prince hath a more absolute Power over his Lands and Goods then over his Subjects God is not onely a Ruler but an owner as he made us out of nothing and bought us when worse then nothing and still keepeth us from returning into our original nothing and shall those who are absolutely his own withdraw themselves from him and live according to their own Will and speak and doe what they list what is this but a plain denyal of God's Propriety and Lordship over us as those Psalm 12. 4. Who have said With our Tongues will we prevaile our Lips are our own who is Lord over us surely it should strike us with horrour to think that any Creatures should thus take upon them Sin robbeth God of his Propriety in the Creatures If we consider his natural Right Sin is such an Injury and Wrong to God as Theft and Robbery if we consider our own Covenant as we voluntarily acknowledge God's Propriety in us so it is Adultery breach of Marriage Vow and with respect to the devoting and consecrating our selves to him so it is Sacriledge 3. It is a contempt of God's glorious Majesty What else shall we make of a plain contest with him or a flat contradiction of his holy Will for whilst we make our depraved Will the Rule and Guide of our Actions against his holy Will we plainly contend with him whose Will shall stand his or ours and so justle him out of the Throne and pluck the Crown off his Head and the Scepter out of his Hands and usurpe his Authority and so slight the Eternal Power of this glorious King as if he were not able to avenge the wrong done to his Majesty and we could make good our party against him 1 Cor. 10. 22. Do we provoke the Lord to Iealousie are we stronger then he Isa. 45. 9. Woe to him that striveth with his maker let the Potsherd strive with the Potsherds of the Earth surely they that strive with their Maker will find God too hard for them Now all these and many more Considerations should make a Serious Christian sensible when he considereth how God is dishonoured in the World 2. Their Punishment This relateth to the Sanction by Penalties and Rewards They that forsake the Law have quite devested themselves of all Hope and cast off all dread of Him The Law offereth Death or Life to the Transgressors and Observers of it Deut. 30. 15. Behold I have set before you Good and Life Death and Evil. Now this is as little believed as the Precept is obeyed and thence cometh all their Boldness in sinning and Coldness in Duty 1. God allureth us to Obedience by Promises of this World and the next which if they were believed Men would be more forward and ready to comply with his Will As to the Promises of the next World he hath told us of Eternal Life Surely God meaneth as he speaketh in his Word he will make good his Word to the Obedient but the Sinner thinketh not so and therefore is loth to undergoe the Difficulties of Obedience because he hath so little Sense and Certainty of fulfilling the Promise The Apostle telleth us Heb. 11. 6. That without Faith it is impossible to please God for he that cometh to God must believe that he is and that he is a rewarder of those that diligently serve him implying that if the Fundamental Truths of God's Being and Bounty were believed we could not be so careless as we are not so barren and unfruitfull as we are but Unbelief lyeth at the botton of all our Carelesness 1 Cor. 15. 58. Be ye stedfast unmoveable always abounding in the work of the Lord forasmuch as you know that your labour is not in vain in the Lord. They that know what a Reward is prepared for the Righteous cannot but be serious and diligent themselves and pity others and be troubled at their neglect Oh what a good God they deprive themselves off and throw away their Souls for a Trifle But because the Lord knoweth how apt we are to be led by things present to Sense that work strongly upon our Apprehensions and that things absent and future lie in another World and wanting the help of Sense to convey them to our Minds make little impression upon our Hearts therefore God draws us to our Duty by present Benefits Even Carnal Nature is apt to be pleased with these kind of Mercies Protection Provision and worldly Comforts Psal. 119. This I had because I kept thy Precepts Matth. 6. 33. Seek ye first the Kingdom of God and the Righteousness thereof and all these things shall be added to you 1 Tim. 4. 8. Godliness is profitable to all things having the promise of the Life that now is and of that which is to come But alas the naughty Heart cannot depend on God for the Effects of his common Goodness Men distrust Providence and therefore take their own Course which is a grief and trouble to a gracious Heart to see they cannot depend on God for things of a present Accomplishment 2. The other part of the Sanction are his Threatnings and Punishments Now in what a direfull Condition are all the deserters of God's Law besides the loss of Heaven there is Eternal fire which is the portion of the Wicked
Songs to him in the House of his Pilgrimage in the Night the Name of God was his Meditation I have remembred thy Name O Lord in the night and have kept thy Law In which Words observe 1. David's Exercise I have remembred thy Name O Lord in the night 2. The Effect and Fruit of it and have kept thy Law The one may be considered as the Means the other as the next and immediate End Remembring and thinking is but a subservient help and means to promote some higher work 1. In the first Branch you have 1. The Act of his Soul I have remembred 2. The Object about which it was conversant Thy Name O Lord. 3. The Season In the Night 1. For the Act of his Soul I have remembred Remembrance is an Act of Knowledge reiterated or a second Agitation of the Mind unto that point unto which it had arrived before Or more plainly Remembring is a setting Knowledge awork or a reviving those Notions which we have of Things and exercising our Thoughts and Meditations about them 2. The Object was God's Name That is either God himself as Psal. 20. 1. The Name of the God of Iacob defend thee or that by which God is known His Wisedom Goodness and Power especially those Notions by which he hath manifested himself in the Word 3. The Season In the Night Some take the Night metaphorically for the time of Trouble and Affliction It is often a dark time with the People of God a very dark Night and then it is comfortable to them to think of his Name according to that of the Prophet Isa. 50. 10. He that walketh in darkness and hath no light let him stay himself upon the Name of his God I think it is meant literally that the Man of God took such Pleasure in the Name of God that what time others gave to Sleep and Rest he would give to the Contemplation of his Glory In the Solitude and Darkness of the Night he sustained and supported his Spirit with the thoughts of God and thereby took up a Courage and Constancy of Resolution to keep his Law 2. The other Branch I have kept thy Law That is with a good and sincere heart set himself to the keeping of it this is spoken partly to intimate his own Seriousness in this Work and partly God's Blessing upon his Endeavours therein 1. His Seriousness and Sincerity in the Work There is a twofold Remembrance of things 1. Notional and Speculative 2. Practical and Affective The Notional and Speculative Remembrance of things is when we barely think of them without any further Profit or Benefit But the Practical Powerfull and Affective Remembrance is to be affected with matters called to mind as the nature of them doth require as when we Remember God so as to Love him and Fear him and Trust in him and make him our Delight and Cleave to him and Obey him And we are said to Remember his Commandments when our hearts are set upon the Practice of them Verba Notitioe connotant Affectus we must not think of God indifferently and by the bye but we must be answerably affected and act accordingly Thus did David I remembred thy Name and kept thy Law 2. God's Blessing upon his Endeavours for he presently addeth in the next Verse This I had because I kept thy Precepts Our Heavenly Father who seeth what is done in secret will reward it openly Matt. 6. 6. And the blessing of Time well spent in secret or a few serious thoughts of God in the night will publickly appear in their Carriage before Men. If we be frequently and seriously with God when we are Solitary the fruit and benefit of it will be manifest by our holiness and heavenliness when we are in Company Your most private Duties do not lose their reward As a mans pains in Study will appear in the accurate Order Strength and Rationality of his Discourse so his Converse with God in private will be seen in the fruits of it in his holy profitable and serious Conversation The Points are three 1. Doctr. Remembring God is an especial help to the keeping of his Law 2. Doctr. God is best Remembred when his Name is studied 3. Doctr. Those that have spiritual Affections will take all occasions to remember his Name I have remembred thy Name in the night season saith holy David 1. Doctr. That Remembring God is an especial help to the keeping of his Law I. What is it to remember God 1. It supposeth some Knowledge of God for what a man knoweth not he cannot remember The Memory is the Cofferer and Treasurer of the Soul what the Understanding taketh in the Memory layeth up and actually we are said to remember when we set the Mind awork upon such Notions as we have formerly received And particularly to remember God is when we stir up in our minds clear and heart-warming apprehensions about his Nature and Will 2. It supposeth some Faith that we believe him to be such as the Word describeth him to be for spiritual Remembrance is the actuation of Faith or in this case the improvement of that Wisedom Power Goodness Holiness Justice and Truth which we believe to be in God Otherwise without Faith those thoughts which we have of the greatest matters affect us no more than a Dream doth a Sleeper These things are supposed in Remembrance 3. It expresseth a reviving of these thoughts or an erection of the mind to think upon what we know and believe Man that hath an ingestive hath also an egestive Faculty and can lay out as well as lay up bring forth Truths out of the mind when it is usefull for us and whet and inculcate them upon the heart he may call to mind or ponder upon them 4. Let us see the kinds of this Remembrance 1. I must repeat that Distinction it may be done Notionally and Speculatively or else Affectively and Practically Notionally when Men have a few barren Notions or dry sapless Opinions or Speculations about the Nature of God always mens Remembrance is as their Knowledge is and Faith is Now there is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a form of Knowledge Rom. 2. 10. and dead Faith Jam. 2. 20. Affectively and practically we Remember God when there are such lively and powerfull impressions of his Name upon our hearts as produceth Reverence Love and Obedience It is not enough to grant the Doctrine own the Opinions that are sound and Orthodox concerning God but we must have a reverential and superlative Esteem of him All men confess a God with their mouth and think they believe in him but the fool hath said in his heart there is no God Psal. 14. 1. what Testimony do their hearts and actions give A Man's course of Life and Conversation is like an Eye-witness his Profession is as a Testimony by Report now one Eye-witness deserves more credit than many by Hear-say Plus valet unus oculatus Testis c. How would you walk
28. When God will immediately and in a fuller latitude communicate himself to his Creatures and there will need nothing besides himself to make us happy Here we enjoy God but not fully nor immediatly We enjoy him in his creatures but it is at the second or third hand the Creature interposeth between him and us Hosea 2. 21 22. And it shall come to pass in that day I will hear saith the Lord I will hear the Heavens and they shall hear the earth and the earth shall hear the corn and the wine and the oyle and they shall hear Iezreel In Ordinances it is but a little strength and comfort that we get such as is consistent with pain and sorrow it is not full because it is not immediate A Pipe cannot convey the whole Fountain nor the Ordinances the Full of God in Christ only a little supply either as we need or are able to receive but then God will be all in all he will do his work by himself The narrowness of the means shall not straiten him nor the weakness of the vessel hinder him to express the full of his Goodness in full perfection II. How is his Goodness manifested to us 1. In our Creation in that he did raise us up out of nothing to be what we are and form us after his own Image God made us not that he might be happy but liberal that there might be creatures to whom to communicate himself our Beings and Faculties and Powers were the fruits of his meer goodness When God made the world then was it verified He is good and doth good Gen. 1. For as the goodness of his nature inclined him to make it so his work was good after every days work there cometh in his approbation behold it was good and when he had made Man and set him in a well furnished world and compared all his works together then they were very good v. 31. That he still fashioneth us in the womb and raiseth us into that comely shape in which we afterwards appear it is all the effect of his Goodness 2. In our Redemption therein he commendeth his Love and goodness in providing such a Remedy for lost sinners There is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Tit. 3. 4. But after that the Kindness and Love of God our Saviour towards man appeared In creation he shewed himself 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Redemption 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God is brought nearer to us as subsisting in our Nature 1 Tim. 3. 16. Great is the mystery of Godliness God manifested in the flesh And so God had greater advantages to communicate himself to us in a more glorious way by the Redeemer that we might for ever live in the admiration of his Love 3. In daily Providence so the goodness of God is twofold 1. Common and general to all Creatures especially to Mankind Psalm 145. 9. The Lord is good to all his tender Mercy is over all his works Upon all things and all persons he bestoweth many common blessings as natural Life Being Health Wealth Beauty Strength and supplyes necessary for them There is none of God's Creatures but tast of his bounty and have sufficient proof that a good God made them and preserveth them the young Ravens Psalm 147. 9. He giveth to the beast his food and to the young Ravens which cry 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so the wicked Mat. 5. 45. He maketh his Sun to shine on the evil and on the good and sendeth rain on the just and on the unjust Acts 14. 17. Nevertheless he left not himself without witness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in that he did good and gave us rain from Heaven and fruitfull Seasons filling our hearts with food and gladness These common Mercies argue a good God that giveth them though not always a good People that receiveth them This Goodness of God sheweth it self daily and bountifully 2. Special God is good to all but not to all alike So he is good to his People whom he blesseth with spiritual and saving Benefits So Lam. 3. 25. The Lord is good unto them that wait for him to the Soul that seeketh him So Psalm 86. 5. For thou O Lord art Good and ready to forgive and plenteous in Mercy unto all them that call upon thee For this kind of Goodness a qualification is necessary in the receiver Satan will tell you God is a good God but he leaveth out this to those that Love and Fear him and wait upon him This peculiar Goodness yieldeth spiritual and saving Blessings such as pardoning of Sins Isa. 55. 7. Let the wicked forsake his way and the unrighteous man his thoughts and let him return unto the Lord and he will have mercy upon him and to our God for he will abundantly pardon Instruction in the ways of God in the Text thou art good and dost good teach me thy statutes And in short all the means and helps that are necessary unto everlasting Glory 2 Thess. 1. 11. Wherefore also we pray always for you that God would count you worthy of this calling and fulfil all the good pleasure of his Goodness and the work of Faith with power Once more to the objects of his peculiar Love common Blessings are given in Love and with an aim at our good Psalm 84. 11. No good thing will he withhold from them that walk uprightly So that the ordinary favours which others enjoy they are sanctified to them They are from Love and in bonum for Good God is ready to help them onwards to their everlasting hopes and that estate which they expect in the world to come where in the Arms of God they shall be blessed for evermore III. Why ought those that come to God to have a deep sense of this First What is this deep Sense 1. It must be the fruit of Faith believing God's Being and Bounty or else it will have no force and authority upon us Heb. 11. 6. He that cometh to God must believe that he is and that he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him If we have but cold Notions or dead Opinions of the Goodness of God they will have little power on us It is Faith sets all things a-work there must be a sound belief of these things if we would practically improve them 2. It must be the fruit of constant Observation of the effects of his Goodness vouchsafed to us so that we may give our Thanks and Praise for all that good we do enjoy Careless Spirits are not sensible of the hand of Providence never take notice of good or evil therefore the Psalmist saith Psalm 107. 8. Oh that men would praise the Lord for his goodness and for his wonderfull works to the Children of Men He repeateth the same verse 15. and verses 21 31. and concludeth all verse 41. Whoso is wise and will observe those things even they shall understand the loving kindness of the Lord. We are more backward to the observation of the
6. Though the Lord be high yet he hath a respect to the lowly and the proud he knoweth afar off Partly as he is the Portion of the afflicted and oppressed Psal. 140. 12. I know the Lord will maintain the cause of the afflicted and the right of the poor When Satan stirreth up his Instruments to hate those whom the Lord loveth the Lord will stir up his power to protect and defend them So Psal. 10. 14. Thou hast seen it for thou beholdest mischief and spite to requite it with thy hand the poor committeth himself to thee thou art the helper of the fatherless When they have layed forth their desires poured forth their heart before the Lord they quiet themselves 'T is God's office practice nature to relieve poor helpless Creatures that commit themselves to his custody 3. Innocency giveth confidence in Prayer when we are molested and troubled without a cause The testimony of Conscience giveth boldness towards God and men 2 Cor. 1. 12. and Heb. 13. 18. Pray for us for we trust we have a good conscience in all things willing to live honestly If God's Children would carry it more holily and meekly they might cut off occasion from them that desire occasion and in their addresses to God experience more humble confidence But is not this a revengeful Prayer Answ. No First Because directly they pray for their own deliverance that they may more freely serve God by consequence Indeed by God's shewing mercy to his People the pride of wicked ones is suppressed Psal. 119. 134. Secondly As it concerneth his Enemies he expresseth it in mild terms That they may be ashamed that is disappointed their counsels hopes machinations and endeavors And therefore it is not against the Persons of his Enemies but their Plots and Enterprises and shame and disappointment may do them good They think to bring in the total suppression of God's People that would harden them in their sins Therefore God's People desire he would not let their innocency be trampled upon but they disappointed that the Proud may be ashamed in the failing of their attempts Thirdly The Prayers of the Faithful for the overthrow of the Wicked are a kind of Prophecies so that in praying David doth in effect foretell that such as dealt perversly should be ashamed as a good cause will not always be oppressed Isa. 66. 5. But he shall appear to your joy but they shall be ashamed They met with despiteful usage at the hand of their Brethren for their loyalty and fidelity to God Fourthly Saints have a liberty to imprecate vengeance but such as must be used sparingly and with great caution Psal. 71. 13. Let them be confounded and consumed who are adversaries to my soul. Malicious Enemies may be expresly prayed against SERMON LXXXVII PSAL. CXIX VER 78 79. But I will meditate in thy precepts Let those that fear thee turn unto me and those that have known thy testimonies WE now come to David's Resolution But I will meditate in thy precepts The word Precepts is not taken strictly but largely for the whole Word of God DOCT. It is a blessed thing when the Molestations we meet with in the World do excite us to a more diligent study of the Word of God and a greater mindfulness of spiritual and heavenly things I. I shall shew what advantages we have by God's Word and Precepts for the staying and bettering of our hearts II. How this cometh by deep and serious meditation III. How Afflictions and Troubles in the Flesh do quicken us to it 1 In the Word of God there are notable Comforts and Supports as also clear directions how to carry our selves in every condition I shall shew what good thoughts do become as a ground of comfort and support and direction 1. That God hath a fatherly care over us Be once persuaded of that and Trouble will not be so grievous and hard to be born This our Saviour opposeth to worldly cares and fears Matth. 6. 32. Your heavenly Father knoweth that you have need of these things And Luke 12. 32. Fear not little flock it is your Father's good pleasure to give you a kingdom There are two Notions and they are both Christian which are the great support of the heart under any Trouble Adoption and particular Providence The Heirs of Promise are cared for in their Non-age And by the way once be persuaded of this and it will allay our distrustful cares Carking and shifting is a reproach to your heavenly Father as if your Child should beg or filch God knoweth our wants is able to relieve them willing to supply us this God is my Father 2. That the humble Soul which casts it self into the arms of God's Providence shall either have a full and final deliverance or present support Isa. 40. 31. They that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength To wait on the Lord is with patience and tranquility of spirit to expect the performance of the Promises Now these shall have what they wait for or a supply of strength yet enabling them to bear up or hold out when they seem to be clean spent Psal. 123. 2. Behold as the eyes of servants look unto the hand of their master and the eyes of a maiden unto the hand of her mistress so our eyes wait upon the Lord our God until he have mercy upon us 'T was in a time when they were filled with the contempt of the Proud let us be patiently submissive to God's dispensations there is hope of help 3. That God doth wonderfully disappoint the designs of wicked men Psal. 37. 12 13. The wicked plotteth against the just and guasheth upon him with his teeth The Lord shall laugh at him for he seeth that his day is coming Haman's Plot was destroyed so was the Conspiracy of them that would have killed Paul There is no wisdom nor counsel nor understanding against the Lord Prov. 21. 30. What is God now a doing in Heaven but defending his own Kingdom Psal. 2. Wherefore doth Christ sit at his right hand but to promote the affairs of his Church and to blast the devices of the wicked Mat. 18. The gates of hell shall never prevail against it 4. That the Proud are near a fall Prov. 16. 5. Every one that is proud in heart is an abomination to the Lord Though hand join in hand they shall not go unpunished Sometimes they seem to be supported by such combined Interests so woven in the Laws and Constitutions of a Nation but who can keep up him whom God will pull down Pride is a sure note and forerunner of destruction Prov. 16. 18. Prov. 15. 25. The Lord will destroy the house of the proud but he will establish the border of the widow Weak and oppressed Innocence standeth upon surer terms than the Proud though they excel in Wealth and Opulency 5. That God will never leave us wholly destitute and to difficulties insupportable Heb. 13. 5. I will never leave thee
is the best Judge of opportunities therefore all must be left to his will and pleasure Faith will not count it long for to the eye of Faith things future and afar off are as present Heb. 11. 1. Faith is the substance of things hoped for the evidence of things not seen 'T is said Isa. 28. 16. He that believeth shall not make haste Sense and carnal confidence must have present satisfaction but Faith contents its self with Promises Love will not count it long For seven years to Iacob seemed as a few days Gen. 29. 20. Sufferings for Christ would not be so tedious where love prevaileth Patience would not count it long Cannot we tarry for him a little while Heb. 10. 37. Yet a little while and he that shall come will come and will not tarry 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We love our own ease and therefore the ●…ross groweth irksom and tedious 3. God is a God of Judgment Isa. 30. 18. And therefore will the Lord wait that he may be gracious unto you and therefore will he be exalted that he may have mercy upon you for the Lord is a God of judgment Blessed are all they that wait for him Mercy will not come one jot too soon nor one jot too late In the fittest time for God to give and for us to receive Heb. 4. 16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In the time of need We think we stay for God but he stayeth for us If we were ripe for mercy God is always ready for he is a present help Psal. 46. 1. God is our refuge and strength a very present help in trouble I come now to the second Clause His longing desire after it Saying When wilt thou comfort me That is David was ever and anon repeating and saying Lord When The Hebrews express their wishes by way of question Oh that thou wouldest comfort me III. DOCT. When our Hope and Help is delayed we may complain to God for want of comfort 1. What is the comfort which David intendeth In the general Consolation is opposed to Grief and Mourning Sin hath woven Calamities into our Lives and filled us with Griefs Troubles and Sorrows so that we need comfort Comfort is either Eternal Spiritual or Temporal First Eternal 2 Thess. 2. 16. Everlasting consolation and good hope through grace Luk. 16. 25. Remember that thou in thy life-time receivedst thy good things and Lazarus evil things but now he is comforted and thou art tormented Secondly Spiritual which is of two sorts 1. Comfort against the Trouble of Sin In which respect the Holy Ghost is called the Comforter In this respect the Holy Ghost biddeth them comfort the penitent incestuous person 2 Cor. 2. 7. 2. Against Affliction So God is said to comfort those that are cast down 2 Cor. 7. 6. and Psal. 94. 19. In the multitude of my thoughts within me thy comforts delight my soul. 2 Cor. 1. 3 4. Blessed be God even the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ the Father of mercies and the God of all comfort Who comforteth us in all our tribulation that we may be able to comfort them which are in any trouble by the comfort wherewith we our selves are comforted of God Thirdly Temporal So God is said to comfort those whom he freeth from Afflictions Psal. 71. 21. After deep and sore Troubles Thou shalt increase my greatness and comfort me on every side So the Lord comforteth his People not by word only but also by deed not only by speaking comfort to them but also by relieving them and refreshing them and freeing them from their Troubles So Isa. 52. 9. Sing ye waste places for the Lord hath comforted his people he hath redeemed Ierusalem Though God's People lay low for a time yet his blessing can exalt them beyond all expectation and bring about such happiness as may make them forget their sorrows and miseries This is intended here Lord when wilt thou give that deliverance which I pray for and wait for at thy hands Let it not seem strange that temporal deliverance should be owned as a comfort to God's People Partly because they are Acts of God's Providence and Dispensations of his Grace sought not in a way of Faith and Prayer Zech. 1. 17. The Lord shall yet comfort Zion and shall yet chuse Ierusalem Partly because by these he seemeth to own them and confirm them in the priviledge of his peculiar care and that they have an interest in his favor which by sad afflictions seemed to be annulled and made void But hereby God giveth proof of his favor to them Psal. 86. 17. Shew me a token for good that they which hate me may see it and be ashamed because thou Lord hast holpen me and comforted me That in their affliction Godliness may not suffer nor wicked men be hardned in their insolency Partly as hereby Promises are made good and so Faith confirmed Isa. 57. 18. I will heal him and restore comforts to him and to his mourners Partly as they are helps and encouragements to love and praise God and to live in a thankful course of holiness when not stopped or diverted by fear of enemies Isa. 12. 1. In that day thou shalt say O Lord I will praise thee though thou wast angry with me thine anger is turned away and thou comfortedst me We may serve God more cheerfully then Partly because as they have seen his Wisdom and Justice in their Troubles so now his Power and Grace and Truth in their Deliverance They are more comfortable because there is much of God discovered in them Psal. 115. 1. Lastly because they are comfortable to the natural life They are not so divested of all humane respects Yet therein the Saints moderate themselves they do not count these things their highest consolation so 't is said of the wicked Luke 6. 24. Wo unto you that are rich for ye have received your consolation And Luke 16. 25. Thou receivedst thy good things Yet a sense they have otherwise how can we be humbled under Crosses or give thanks for Blessings 2dly We may complain of the delay of comfort God's Children have done so Psal. 6. 3. But thou O Lord how long Psal. 13. 1. How long wilt thou forget me Lord for ever how long wilt thou hide thy face from me So ver 2. How long shall mine enemies triumph over me Psal. 94. 3. Lord how long shall the wicked how long shall the wicked triumph How long shall they utter and speak hard things and all the workers of iniquity boast themselves Reasons 1. Partly because Prayer giveth ease 't is a vent to strong affections 2. It reviveth the work of Faith Hope and Patience 3. Though God knoweth when to bestow Blessings yet he will not blame the desires of his Children after them USE Well then let us seek comfort and complain not of God but to God Complaints of God give a vent to murmurings but complaints to God to Faith Hope and Patience 1. Refer the kind
waters were appointed to break out and overwhelm the earth yet God hath firmly promised that they shall never be so again wherein his Truth is also verified and applied to the Covenant of Grace Isa. 54. 9. For this is as the waters of Noah to me for I have sworn that the waters of Noah shall no more go over the earth so have I sworn that I would not be wrath with thee nor rebuke thee The Covenant of Grace is as sure as the Covenant made after the deluge so that we cannot look upon this Earth but as an Emblem of those Attributes which confirm our Faith in waiting upon God till his Promises be fulfilled to us Use. Let us be then more firmly persuaded of God's Faithfulness that we may depend upon it both for his preserving the Church and our selves in the way of our duty till we enjoy our final reward 1. For the preservation of Christ's Kingdom God's Faithfulness chiefly appeareth in the Government of his Church or spiritual Kingdom and this is a Kingdom that cannot be moved when all things else are shaken Heb. 12. 28. Having received a kingdom that cannot be shaken Christ cannot be an Head without Members a King without Subjects And we are told Mat. 16. 18. That the gates of hell cannot prevail against it Many disorders happen but let us depend upon the faithful God The world was well guided before we came into it and other Generations have had experience of God's Faithfulness though we complain that we see not our signs nor any tokens for good 2. For the preservation of our bodies to the heavenly Kingdom we have many discouragements within and without but while we persevere in our duty God will not fail us his word is as sure as the earth 2 Thess. 3. 3. The Lord is faithful who shall establish and keep you from evil God hath promised not only to give us our final reward but to secure and defend his people by the way that they be not overcome by the evils they meet with in their passage SERMON XCVI PSAL. CXIX VER 91. They continue this day according to thine ordinances for all are thy servants THE Prophet is proving the Immutability of God's Promises from the conservation and continuance of the whole course of Nature he had spoken of it by parts now conjunctly apart first of the Heavens ver 89. of the earth v. 90. Now both together They continue c. In the words we have two things 1. An observation concerning the continuances of the courses of Nature They that is the Heaven and the Earth Heaven doth continue in its motion and Earth in its station according to the Ordinance of God that is by vertue of that Order wherein he placed things at first Psal. 148. 6. He hath established them for ever and ever he hath made a decree which shall not pass As he ordained at first by his powerful decree so Heaven and Earth is still continued God's Laws are fixed for the government of all Creatures and in the manner and to the end for which God appointeth them they stand and continue 2. The Reason For all are thy servants The Reason saith more than the Assertion and therefore doth over and above prove it not only the Heavens and the Earth but all things which are contained therein from the Angel to the Worm they all serve God they attend upon him as their supreme Lord and Master every moment DOCT. That it is a great help to Faith to consider God as the Omnipotent Creator Preserver and absolute Governor of the World disposing of all things as he pleaseth This is the Meditation which the Psalmist produceth and exposeth to our view in this Verse His Creation is implied in that Thine Ordinances when God first setled the course of Nature by a wise and powerful Decree His preservation in those words They continue this day The course of Nature is so setled that it doth not fail to go on according to God's Decree every thing standeth or falleth according to God's command and the Order first setled by God still obtaineth his Decree is not yet out of date His being the absolute Governor of the world in these words For all are thy servants which implieth his Sovereign Dominion and Empire over all the Creatures as his servants who are at the beck of his will To evidence this to you more fully consider there are in God two things Power and Authority Might and Right First By Power we mean a liberty and sufficiency in God to do whatever he will With God all things are possible Mat. 19. 26. or take the Negative which bindeth it the stronger Luke 1. 37. With God nothing shall be impossible 2dly Authority or Dominion or a Right over all things to dispose of them at his own pleasure In this Right there are three Branches 1. A Right of making or framing any thing as he willeth in any manner as it pleaseth him as the Potter hath power over his own clay to form what vessel he pleaseth of it this Right God exercised in his Creation Rev. 4. 11. Thou hast created all things and for thy pleasure they are and were created This was his absolute freedom and sovereignty to create all things according to his own pleasure 2. A Right of having or possessing all things so made and framed by him for God is owner and possessor of whatever he made since he made it out of nothing Heaven ●…is his Earth is his so Angels Man Beasts Gold Silver all things he challengeth as his right Psal. 115. 16. The heaven even the heavens are the Lords 'T is the Lord's to dispose of not only the lower but the highest Heavens which he hath provided for his own Palace and Court of residence So the earth is the Lords and the fulness thereof Psal. 24. 1. This whole lower world is his by right of Creation and providential preservation and so are all the sorts of Creatures with which he hath replenished it it was by him produced at first and every moment continued and preserved And so the Angels are his they are called his Ministers or Servants Psal. 104. 4. He maketh his angels spirits his ministers a flame of fire Though he is able to do all things by himself or administer the whole world as he at first created by a word by saying and it was done yet he pleaseth to make use of the ministry of Angels who some of them in subtle bodies of air others of fire come down to execute his commands upon earth Men are his creatures and his possession we are not Lords of any thing we have neither life or limb nor any thing Our bodies and our souls are his 1 Cor. 6. 20. Christ had power to lay down his life and take it up again but no meer man hath he is accomptable to a higher Lord who hath an absolute uncontroulable Right to dispose of us according to his own pleasure He killeth
he adds to it Gen. 28. 20 21. but the substance of it was this If the Lord will be with me and keep me in this way that I go then shall the Lord be my God There are many that will vow and promise trifles and so infringe their own Christian liberty and needlesly bind themselves in chains of their own making where God hath left them free This help is for the weighty things of Christianity not for by matters those monkish by-laws hath fill'd the World with Superstition not with Religion while they have been only conversant about some indifferent things as Pilgrimages Abstinences from meats and marriages wherein they place the heighth of Christian perfection 2. Helps to Obedience Such things as we shall find to be helps and do conduce to the removal of impediments such should come under a vow and solemn promise to God Iob 31. 1. I made a covenant with my eyes that was a help to the preserving of his chastity that he would not allow himself to gaze to take a view of the beauty of others And the Apostle when it was for the glory of God makes a Vow or kind of solemn promise that he would take no maintenance in Achaia 2 Cor. 11. 10. he solemnly binds himself that he might not hinder the progress of the Gospel So when we find our heart ready to betray us by this or that evil occasion we may in this case interpose a vow and promise but then with this caution that we do not unreasonably destroy our Christian liberty and so occasion a snare to our souls and that we do not think this to be a perfect cure of these distempers while we neglect the main things As many will make a vow to play no more at such a game or drink no more at such a house or use such a creature or come into such a particular company and so place all their Religion in these things this is but like cutting off the branches when the root remains or stopping one hole in a leaky or ruinous ship and vessel when every where it is ready to let in water upon us and to be broken in pieces therefore when you rest in those by-matters without resolving to cleave to God in a course of Obedience it is but like mending a hole in the wall of an house when the whole building is on fire or troubling our selves with a sore finger when we are languishing of a consumption it is but stopping this or that particular sin when the whole soul lies under the power and slavery of the Kingdom of Satan OBJECTION But here 's a doubt may arise How can I promise to keep God's Laws since it is not in my power to do it exactly it is impossible ANSWER 1. When David saith I have sworn c. he speaks not from a presumption of his own strength but only declareth the sense of his duty and useth his Oath as a sanctified means to bind his heart to God and therefore it is not to exclude the power of God's grace or to presume of his own strength God's assistance is best expected in God's way 2. Such vows and promises they are always to be interpreted to be made in the sense of the Covenant of Grace for no particular voluntary or accessory Covenant of ours can take away the general Covenant wherein we stand engaged to God but rather it must be included in it therefore when David saith I will keep thy righteous judgments he means according to the sense of the Covenant of Grace that is expecting help for duties and pardon for failings First As expecting help from God for so the New Covenant gives strength to observe what it requires Lex jubet Evangelium juvat the Law enforceth duty the Covenant of Grace helps us to perform the duty required of us The Gospel it is a ministration of the Spirit 2 Cor. 3. 8. and therefore promissory Oaths according to the sense of the New Covenant are made with a confidence upon the Lord's strength and assistance 2. Seeking pardon for his failings Infirmities may stand with the Covenant of Grace provided we crave mercy and recover our selves by repentance and so make no final breach with God therefore this is a keeping according to the measure of grace received and as humane frailty will permit Briefly then When are Sins to be looked upon as Infirmities and not as Perjuries and breach of Covenant Answ. When we would not voluntarily yield to the least sin but in case of great sin we grow more watchful more humble more holy when our falls are such as David's when he had fallen fouly Psal. 51. 6. Now thou shalt make me to know wisdom When upon our failings we are more ashamed of our selves more afraid of our weakness more earnest to renew our former resolutions more careful to wait upon God for grace to perform what he hath required of us more watchful more circumspect when we begin to grow wise by our own smarting in such cases an Oath is not broken Look as every failing of the Wife doth not dissolve the Marriage Covenant so every failing on our part doth not dissolve the Covenant between God and us and therefore though there will be some infirmities but yet when we are careful to sue out our Pardon in the Name of Christ Jesus and you shall by your failings be more watchful circumspect then we keep the Covenant in a Gospel sense Doct. 3. That when we have sworn Obedience to God we must Religiously perform and observe what we have sworn to God So Psal. 76. 11. Vow and pay unto the Lord. When we come under the bond of a vow we must be careful to make payment 't is a binding upon the heart see how 't is exprest Numb 30. 2. If a man vow a vow unto the Lord or swear an Oath to bind his soul with a bond he shall not break his word When we have bound our selves with a bond that is when we have increased our bonds for the ingeminating words in the Hebrew doth exceedingly increase the sense when a man is bound upon a bond he should not play fast and loose with God but be very careful to perform what he hath sworn God on his part hath sworn to the Covenant and he is constant in all his promises and certainly he expects the like constancy from us especially when we are so deeply bound not only by his Laws and obligation of his mercies but by the solemn consent of our own Vows we have bound our selves then to keep them whether we will or no. Now what Reasons are there why we must perform 1. The same Motives that inclined us at first to take our Oath should persuade us to keep it whatever falls out After trial we shall see no cause to repent of our resolution for God is ever the same that he was and his Commands are ever the same in all his righteous Judgments holy just good profitable
matter how comes this deadness upon me Isa. 63. 17. Why hast thou caused us to err from thy ways and hardned our heart from thy fear Enquirew hat●…s the cause of this deadness that grows upon me that you may humble your selves under the mighty hand of God The Argument only is behind According to thy Word David when he begs for quickning he is encouraged so to do by a promise The question is where this promise should be Some think it was that general promise of the Law If thou do these things thou shalt live in them Lev. 17. 5. And that from thence David drew this particular conclusion that God would give life to his people But rather it was some other promise some word of God he had to bear him out in this request We see he hath made many promises to us of sanctifying our affliction Isa. 27. 9. The fruit of all shall be the taking away of sin of bettering and improving us by it Heb. 2. 11. of moderating our affliction that he will stay his rough wind in the day of the east-wind Isa. 27. 8. That he will lay no more upon us than he will enable us to bear 1 Cor. 10. 13. He hath promised he will moderate our affliction so that we shall not be tempted above our strength He hath promised he will deliver us from it that the Rod of the wicked shall not always rest on the back of the righteous Psal. 105. 3. That he will be with us in it and never fail us Heb. 13. 5. Now I argue thus If the People of God could stay their hearts upon God's Word when they had but such obscure hints to work upon that we do not know where the promise lies Ah how should our hearts be stay'd upon God when we have so many promises When the Scriptures are enlarged for the comfort and enlarging of our Faith surely we should say now as Paul when he got a word Acts 27. 25. I believe God I may expect God will do thus for me when his Word speaks it everywhere Then you may expostulate with God I have thy Word for it Lord as she when she shewed him the jewel ring and staff whose are these so we may cast in God his promises whose are these according to thy Word And mark David that was punctual with God I have sworn and I will perform it and quicken me according to thy Word Sincere hearts may plead Promises with God Isa. 38. 3 Lord remember I have walked before thee with an upright heart These may look up and wait upon God for deliverance SERMON CXVIII PSAL. CXIX VER 108. Accept I beseech thee the free-will-offering of my mouth O Lord and teach me thy judgments IN this Verse two things are asked of God God's Acceptance then secondly Instruction First He begs Acceptation Therein take notice 1 Of the matter object or thing that he would have to be accepted The free-will-offerings of my mouth 2 The manner of asking this Acceptation Accept I beseech thee O Lord. In the former you may observe the general nature of the thing and then the particular kind they were free-will-offerings and yet more express they were free-will-offerings of his hands not legal sacrifices but spiritual services free-will-offerings of his mouth implying praises our praises of God are called the calves of our lips Hos. 14. 2. rendred there by the Septuagint the fruit of our lips and accordingly translated by the Apostle Heb. 13. 15. The fruit of our lips giving thanks to his Name He was in deep affliction wandering up and down the Desart he was disabled to offer up to God any other sacrifice therefore he desires God would accept the free-will-offerings of his mouth he had nothing else to bring him Secondly He begs of God instruction in his way Teach me thy judgments By Misphalim judgments are meant both God's Statutes and God's Providences If you take them in the former sense for God's Statutes so he begs grace to excite direct and assist him in a course of sincere obedience to God practically to walk according to God's Will If you understand it in the latter sense only for the accomplishment of what God had spoken in his Word for God's Providence for his corrective dispensation Teach me he begs understanding and profiting by them I shall begin with his first Request which offereth four Observations 1. That God's people have their spiritual offerings 2. That these spiritual offerings must be free-will-offerings 3. That these free-will-offerings are graciously accepted by God 4. That this gracious acceptance must be earnestly sought and valued as a great blessing I beseech thee accept c. Doct. 1. First That God's People have their spiritual offerings I shall give the sense of this Point in five Propositions 1 That all God's People are made Priests to God for every offering supposeth a Priest so it is said Rev. 1. 6. That Christ Iesus hath made us Kings and Priests All Christians they have a Communion with Christ in all his Offices whatever Christ was that certainly they are in some measure and degree Now Christ was King Priest and Prophet and so is every Christian in a spiritual sense a King Priest and Prophet for they have their anointing their unction from the Holy One and he communicates with them in his Offices So also they do resemble the Priesthood under the Law in 1 Pet. 2. 5. they are called a holy Priesthood to offer sacrifices to God And 1 Pet. 2. 9. they are called a royal Priesthood They are a holy Priesthood like the sons of Aaron who were separated from the People to minister before the Lord and they are a Royal Priesthood in conformity to the Priesthood of Melchisedec who was King of Salem and also Priest of the Most High God There is a mighty conformity between what is done by every Christian and the Solemnities and Rites used by the Priests under the Law The Priests of the Law were separated from the rest of the People so are all God's People from the rest of the World The Priests of the Law were to be anointed with holy oil Exod. 28. 41. so all Christians they receive an unction from the holy one 1 John 2. 20. By the holy oil was figured the holy Spirit which was the Unction of the Holy One. by which they are made fit and ready to perform those duties which are acceptable to God After the Priest was thus generally prepar'd by the anointing to their services before they went to offer they were to wash in the great Laver which stood in the Sanctuary door Exod. 29. 4. Lev. 8. 4 5. So every Christian is to be washed in the great Laver of Regeneration Tit. 3. 5. And when they are regenerated born again purged and cleansed from their sins then they are Priests to offer Sacrifices to God for till this be done none of their offerings are acceptable to him For they that are in the flesh ●…annot
if we have any faith in him faith will work by love Gal. 5. 6. The soul may reason and discourse thus with itself Do I believe Christ Jesus did thus willingly give himself for my soul how can I be backward in God's service and hang off from him O let me live to Christ who loved me and gave himself for me Gal. 2. 20. What shall I be more backward to do for God than Christ was to die for me To go to the Throne of Grace than Christ Jesus was to go the Cross Can I hang off from such pleasing Noble Service when Jesus Christ my Lord refus'd not the hard work of my Redemption If his Will was in it certainly so should be yours Doct. 3. The third Point That these free-will-offerings are accepted with God They shall come with Rams speaking of the conversion of the Gentiles in terms proper to the old legal dispensation and they shall come with acceptance Isa. 6. 7. And Mal. 3. 4. Then shall the offering of Iudah and Ierusalem be pleasant unto the Lord. Upon what grounds and what way our acceptance with God is brought about our works in themselves cannot please God they are accepted not as merits but as testimonies of thankfulness 1. Our persons are by Christ reconciled to God and in worship he delights This is the proper importance of laying the Peace-offering upon the top of the Burnt offering Lev. 3. 10. 2. Our infirmities are cover'd with his Righteousness for Christ is the Propitiation the Mercy-seat that interposeth between the Law and God's gracious Audience We come to the Throne of Grace when we come to God in and by him Heb. 4. 16. 3. By his intercession our duties are commended to God As Aaron was to stand before the Lord with his Plate upon his forehead wherein was writ Holiness to the Lord why That he might bear the iniquity of the people that they might be accepted of the Lord. All our acceptance comes from Christ's intercession and alas our Prayers and Praises are unsavoury Eruptations Belches of the Flesh as they come from us a great deal of infirmity we mingle with them we mingle Brimstone with our Incense and Sweet Spices therefore provoke the Lord to abhor and despise us but there 's an Angel stands by the Altar that perfumes all our Prayers and Praises How should this encourage us against the slightings of the world and discouragements of our own hearts and look after the testimony of our acceptance with God Doct. 4. The fourth Point That this gracious acceptance must be sought and valu'd as a great blessing Psal 19. 14. Let the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart be acceptable in thy sight O Lord. And it must be valu'd as a great blessing if we consider either who the Lord is or what we are or what it is we go to him for If we consider who the Lord is God all sufficient that standeth in no need of what we can do that cannot be profited by us he is of so great a Majesty that his honour is rather lessned than greatned by any thing we can do the great-Author of all blessings all our offerings come from himself first of thine own have we given thee And if we consider what we are poor impotent sinful Creatures will God take an offering at our hands And if we consider what we do nothing but imperfection there is more of us in it of our fleshly part in any thing we do yet that these things should be accepted with God SERMON CXIX PSAL. CXIX VER 109. My soul is continually in my hand yet do I not forget thy law IN this Verse and the next David asserts his Integrity against two sorts of Temptations and ways of Assault the Violence and Craft of his Enemies Their Violence in this Verse My soul is in my hand And their Craft in the next Verse They laid snares for me And yet still his heart is upright with God In this Verse observe 1 David's condition My soul is continually in my hand 2 His constancy and perseverance notwithstanding that condition Yet do I not forget thy law First Let me speak of the condition he was now in in that Expression My soul is continually in my hand The soul in the hand is a Phrase often us'd in Scripture it is said of Iephthah Judg. 12. 13. I put my life in my hands and passed over against the children of Ammon So Job 13. 14. Wherefore do I take my flesh in my teeth and put my life in my hand And when David went to encounter Goliah 1 Sam. 17. 5. it is said He put his life in his hand and slew the Philistines In exposing our selves to any hazard and dangers in any great attempt it is call'd the putting our life in our hand And the Witch of Endor when she ventur'd against a Law to please Saul and so had exposed her life this form of speech is used concerning her 1 Sam. 28. 21. I have put my life in my hand Briefly then By Soul is meant Life and this is said to be in his hand I go in danger of my life day by day as if he should say I have my Soul ready divorc'd when God calls for it it not only notes liableness to danger but resolution and courage to encounter it In a sense we always carry our Souls in our hands our life hangs by a single thread which is soon fretted asunder and therefore we should every day be praying that it may not be taken from us as the Souls of wicked men are Iob 27. 8. Luke 12. 20. but yielded up and resign'd to God But more especially is the Expression verifi'd when we walk in the midst of dangers and in a thousand deaths my soul is in my hand that is I am expos'd to dangers that threaten my life every day Secondly Here 's his Affection to God's Word notwithstanding this condition Yet do I not forget thy law There is a twofold remembrance of things Notional and Affective and so there 's a twofold forgetfulness 1 Notional We forget the Word when the notion of things written therein are either wholly or in part vanish'd out of our minds 2 Affectively We are said to forget the Word of God when though we still retain the Notion yet we are not answerably affected do not act according thereunto and this is that which is understood here I do not forget thy Law Law is taken generally for any part of the Word of God and implies the Word of Promise as well as the Word of Command As for instance 1. If we interpret it of the Promise the sense will be this I do not forget thy Law that is I take no discouragements from my dangers to let fall my trust as if there were no Providence no God to take care of those that walk closely with him Heb. 12. 5. when they fainted they are said to have forgotten the consolation which spake unto
sincerely with him 5. It directeth us how to expect this blessing in what manner only in the way and manner that it is promised Zeph. 3. 3. Seek righteousness seek meekness it may be you shall be hid not absolutely but as referring it to Gods will There is the keeping of the outward man and the keeping of the inward man As to the outward man all things come alike to all the Christian is safe whatever becomes of the man the Lord will keep him to his heavenly Kingdome 2 Tim. 4. 17 18. That which the Christian desires mainly to be kept is his Soul that he may not miscarry and blemish his profession and dishonour God and do any thing that is unseemly I say we cannot absolutely expect temporal safety The righteous are liable to many troubles therefore in temporal things God will not always keep off the temporal stroke but leave us to many uncertainties or at least hold us in doubt about it that we may trust his goodness When we trust God we must trust all his Attributes not only his Power that he is able to preserve but his Goodness that he will do that which is best that there may be a submission and referring of all things to his will as David 2 Sam. 15. 26. If he say I have no delight in thee behold here am I let him do unto me as seemeth good unto him God will certainly make good his promise but this trust lies not in an absolute certainty of success However this should not discourage us from making God our refuge because better promises are sure enough and Gods keeping us in suspence about other things is no evidence he will not afford them to us it is his usual course and few instances can be given to the contrary to have a special regard to his trusting Servants and to hide them secretly They that know his name will find it that he never hath forsaken them that put their trust in him Psal. 9. 10. It is the only sure way to be safe whereas to perplex our souls with distrust even about these outward things that 's the way to bring ruine and mischief upon our selves or turn aside to crooked paths Well then you see what respect the word hath to this priviledge that God is a shield and a hiding place The word discovers God under these notions the word invites and encourageth us to put God to this use the word assures us of the Divine protection it directeth us to the qualification of the persons that shall enjoy this priviledge they that can trust God and walk uprightly with him and it directeth us to expect the blessing not with absolute confidence but leaving it to God III. The third thing I am to do is to shew this word must be applied by Faith I hope in thy word Hope is not strictly taken here but for faith or a certain expectation of the blessing promised What doth Faith do here Why the use of Faith is 1. To quiet the heart in waiting Gods leisure Psal. 33. 20. Our soul waiteth for the Lord he is our help and our shield If God be our help and shield then faith is quietly to wait the Lords leisure till he sends deliverance the word must bear up our hearts and we must be contented to tarry his time Isai. 28. 16. He that believeth shall not make hast will not out-run God 2. In fortifying the heart against the present difficulties that when all visible helps and interests are cut off yet we may encourage our selves in the Lord. When they were wandring in the wilderness and had neither house nor home then Moses the man of God pens that Psalm and how doth he begin it Lord thou hast been our dwelling place in all Generations Psal. 90. 1. What was wanting in sense they saw was made up in the alsufficiency of God And so here 's the use of Faith when in defiance of all difficulties we can see an alsufficiency in God to counterballance that which is wanting in sense So doth David Psal. 3. 3. Lord saith he thou art my shield and glory and the lifter up of my head Look to that Psalm it was penned when David was driven from his Palace Royal by Absolom when he was in danger God was his shield when his Kingdom and Honour were laid in the dust God was his Glory when he was under sorrow and shame and enemies insulting over him when the people rose against him and he was in great dejection of spirit God was the lifter up of his head This is getting under the Covert of this shield or compass of this hiding place 3. The use of Faith is to quicken us to go on cheerfully in our duty and with a quiet heart resting upon Gods love power and truth so David Psal. 131. 5. Into thy hands I commit my spirit for thou hast redeemed me O Lord God of truth David was then in great danger the Net was laid for him as he saith in the former verse and when he was likely to perish what doth he do he casts all his cares upon God and trusts him with his life Into thy hands I commit my spirit that is his life safety c. Use 1. Admire the goodness of God who will be all things to his people if we want a house he will be our dwelling place if we want a covert he will be our shield our hiding place whatever we want God will supply it There 's a notable expression Psal. 91. 9. Because thou hast made the Lord which is my refuge even the most high thy habitation Mark that double Notion a habitation is the place of our abode in time of peace a refuge the place of our retreat in a time of war Be it peace or war God will be all in all he will be a fountain of blessing to us in a time of peace he will be our habitation there where we have our sweetest comforts and then in time when dangers and difficulties are abroad God will be a refuge and a place of retreat to our souls Use 2. To perswade us to contentation in a time of trouble Though we have not a Palace yet if we have but a hiding place though our condition be not so commodious as we do desire yet if God will vouchsafe a little liberty in our service we must be content if he will give us a little safety though not plenty for here is not our full reward And therefore it is well we can make this use of God to be our shield and hiding place though we have not that ample condition which a carnal heart would fancy God never undertook in his Covenant to maintain us at such a rate nor thus to enlarge our portion if he will vouchsafe a little security and safety to us during the time of our pilgrimage we must be content Use 3. This should more encourage us against the evil of sin since God assures us of protection and
this may put us upon great seeming zeal and activity So for profit to make a Market of Religion as the Pharisees got themselves credit to be trusted with Widows Estates by their long prayers these are rotten principles Then some are more tolerable not so bad principles as the former as when we serve God out of hope of temporal mercy as when they howl upon their beds for Corn Wine and Oil Hos. 7. 4. or for fear of temporal Judgments when men hang down their heads like a Bull-rush for a while or else for mere fear of eternal death they shall else be damned When Mens Duties are a sin-offering a sleepy sop to appease an accusing Conscience But then there are some that are lawful good and sound as when Duties are done out of the impulsion of an enlightened Conscience that urgeth them to that which is good or upon the bare Command of God his authority swaying the Conscience or when they walk in the ways of God out of the consideration of the reward to come a respect to Heaven this is very good in its place Again there are some excellent principles of Grace and which do most of all discover a Gospel Spirit a well tempered frame of Soul to God and these are love to God because of his benefits and love to us gratitude and thankfulness 1 Iohn 4. 19. We love him because he first loved us And Rom. 12. 1. I beseech you by the mercies of God When we serve him out of love Again when we serve him out of delight out of love to the Duty find such a complacency in the work that we love the work for the works sake as David I love thy Law because it is pure when we love the Law for the purity of it Or when the Glory of God prevails above all our own interests Or when the promises and Covenant of God enabling of us that 's our principle Heb. 10. 16. I observe this Men usually are brought on from one sort of principle to another from sinful principles they are brought to tolerable and lawful and from lawful to those that are rare and excellent 2. This is such a mercy as gives us hope of more mercy in that kind If God hath held us up and we have been safe hitherto then we may say Thou hast held me up we may look for more new temptation will bring new strength every days work will bring its own refreshment God by giving binds himself more to give for he loves to crown his own work when he hath done good he will do good again Zech. 3. 2. Is not this a brand plucked out of the fire He hath saved us and he will save us And it holds good sometimes in temporal mercies 2 Cor. 1. 10. He hath delivered us from so great a death and doth deliver But especially it holds good in spiritual mercies 2 Tim. 4. 17. He hath delivered me out of the mouth of the Lion and the Lord shall deliver me from every evil work and will preserve me unto his heavenly Kingdome One act of mercy gives us more God that hath begun will make an end he that hath kept me will keep me Use. It serves to reprove two sorts of people 1. Those that are unthankful after their deliverance We forget his care of us and never think how much we owe to him When the Marriners have gotten to the Haven and Harbour they forget the Tempest so these forget how God stood by them in the temptation and conflict they do not abound more in the work of the Lord. These are like those that would have deliverance that Thorns might be taken out of the way that they might run more readily to that which is evil 2. It reproveth those that faint and despond in Gods ways after much experiences of his help and presence with them The Israelites in the Wilderness upon every new difficulty their faith is at a loss and then back again to Egypt they would go though they had so often experience of God they would not believe him because of his wonders but forgat his works and his wonders that he had shewed them Psal. 78. 11. God had given them wonderful mercy in destroying Pharaoh that it might be meat to their faith yet they believed not Good David was ready to say I shall one day perish by the hand of Saul 1 Sam. 27. 1. though he had experience upon experience We should rather encourage our selves and go on in our work notwithstanding all difficulties The last Point from the accuracy and constancy of his obedience I will have respect unto thy Statutes continually This Phrase is diversly rendered the Septuagint render it I will exercise my self in them or apply my heart to them David's regard to Gods law is diversly expressed in this Psalm Doctr. 4. Gods Precepts must be respected and consulted with as the constant measure and direction of our lives Not only respect but continual respect Gal. 6. 16. As many as walk according to this Rule it notes as many as shall walk in rank and order there needeth great accurateness and intention that we may keep within the bounds of commanded Duty So walk circumspectly Some men are so crafty through their self-deceiving hearts through their lusts and interests so doubtful that there needs a great exactness and so apt to be turned out of the way that we need a great deal of care to look to the Fountain and Principle of our actions to look to the matter manner end and weigh all circumstances that we may serve God exactly SERMON CXXIX PSAL. CXIX VER 118. Thou hast trodden down all them that erre from thy Statutes for their deceit is falshood IN the former Verse the man of God had begged establishment in the ways of God and now as an help to what he had prayed for he observe Gods Judgments on those that erre from them It is a special means to preserve us from sin to observe how mischievous it hath been to those that close with it So the Prophet here I will have respect to thy Statutes Why Thou hast trodden down them that erre from thy Statutes By this means we learn to be wise at other mens costs and are whipt upon others backs Zeph. 3. 6 7. I have cut off the Nations their Towers are made desolate their Cities are destroyed there is none inhabitant I said Surely thou wilt fear me c. God is very much disappointed if we be not bettered and improved by his Judgments Exemplo qui peccat bis peccat He that would plunge himself into a Quagmire where others have miscarried before sins doubly because he neither fears threatnings nor would take warning by their example God looks to be the more reverenced for every warning he gives us in his Providence because then what was before matter of Faith is made matter of sense and needs only a little application Thus it will be with me if I should straggle from
with a stranger thou art snared with the words of thy mouth Prov. 11. 15. He that is surety for a stranger shall smart for it Prov. 17. 18. A man void of understanding striketh hands and becometh surety in the presence of his friend Prov. 20. 16. Take his Garment that is surety for a stranger Prov. 22. 26 27. Be not thou one of them that strike hands or of them that are sureties for debts if thou hast nothing to pay why should he take the bed from under thee And in other places Our pity is stirred towards a man that is like to be undone and ruined therefore there is such disswading from suretiship and hath not God a greater pity over the afflictions of his people He pities the afflictions of them that suffer most justly yea far below their desert Iudg. 10. 16. His soul was grieved for the misery of Israel 2 Kings 14. 26. For the Lord saw the affliction of Israel that it was very bitter for there was not any shut up nor any left nor any helper for Israel How much more will he pity them that are unjustly oppressed of men Acts 7. 34. I have seen the afflictions of my people which is in Egypt and have heard their groanings and am come down to deliver them His bowels worketh God loveth his people better than they love themselves fide-jube Domine pro servo 3. Our relation to him I am thy servant and I know thou art a good Master and he is our Sovereign Lord and therefore hath undertaken to provide for us the master was to be the servants Patronus God hath found us work and he will find us defence This is the Argument of the Text Be Surety for thy Servant We are employed in his work engaged in his Cause If a rich man set a poor man at work as to dig such a Ditch if he be afterward troubled for it the rich man is concerned to bear him out Psal. 116. 16. O Lord truly I am thy servant I am thy servant and the son of thy Handmaid Whilest we are engaged about our masters business and in his work he is engaged to protect us and bear us out in it 4. Our very running to him and committing our selves into his hands is an engaging God Psal. 86. 2. Preserve my soul for I am holy O thou my God save thy servant that trusteth in thee Psal. 10. 14. The poor committeth himself unto thee thou art the helper of the fatherless Employ God and find him work he will not fail to do what he is entrusted with Psal. 57. 1. Be merciful unto me O God be merciful unto me for my soul trusteth in thee yea in the shadow of thy wing will I make my refuge until these calamities be over-past God taketh it well that we should make bold with him in this kind and tell him how we trust him and expect relief from him Nothing is so dishonourable to God nor vexatious to us as the disappointment of trust An ingenuous man will not fail his friend that doth trust and rely upon him much less will a faithful God fail those that look to him and depend upon him for help Use Is advice to us what we should do in our deep distresses and troubles when able to do nothing for our selves God will be Surety that is make our Cause his own 1. As your matters depend in an higher Court and with respect to your own guilt and sin which hath cast you into these troubles acknowledge your debt but look upon Christ as your Surety who gave himself a ransome for us The Controversie between God and us must be taken up by submission on our parts for God is an enemy that cannot be overcome but must be reconciled The way is not to persist in the Contest and stand it out but beg terms of peace for Christs sake 2 Chron. 6. 38 39. If they return to thee with all their heart and with all their soul then hear thou from the Heavens even from thy dwelling place their prayers and supplications and maintain their Cause and forgive thy people which have sinned against thee Job 5. 8. I would seek unto God and unto God would I commit my Cause 2. As your danger lyeth with men acknowledge your impotency but consider who is your Surety and will take your part against the instruments that have had a hand in your trouble First God who hath such a pity over his suffering servants is ready ever to do them good Psal. 35. 1. Plead my Cause O Lord with them that strive with me fight against them that fight against me He is in such full relation and so fast bound to them that they may not be weary and impatient and swallowed up of despair he will interpose God seeth our sufferings heareth our groans suffereth together with us and is afflicted in all our afflictions believe it assuredly that he will take the matter into his own hand and be the party responsible Psal. 140. 12. I know that the Lord will maintain the Cause of the afflicted and the right of the poor Wo be to them that would not have God for their party joined in the Cause of the afflicted God hath given assurance of his protection not by words only but by deeds Prov. 22. 23. The Lord will plead their Cause and spoil the soul of those that spoiled them He hath past his word and he will do it Prov. 23. 11. For their redeemer is mighty he shall plead their Cause with thee 'T is his title Isai. 51. 22. Thus saith thy Lord the Lord and thy God that pleadeth the Cause of his people not by a verbal or local but a real and active Plea Ezek. 38. 22. And I will plead against him with pestilence and with blood and I will rain upon him and upon his bands and the people that are with him an overflowing rain and great hail-stones fire and brimstone And Isai. 40. 8. He is near that justifieth me who will contend with me let us stand together who is mine adversary let him come near to me that is let him join issue with me commence his Suit in Law We should be confident upon Gods undertaking Ier. 50. 34. Their redeemer is strong the Lord of Host is his name he shall thoroughly plead their Cause that he may give rest to the land 'T is a great ease in affliction to commit our Cause unto God and put our affairs into his hand 2. God who hath such power we need not fear any opposite if God be our Surety Psal. 27. 1. The Lord is my light and my salvation whom shall I fear the Lord is the strength of my life of whom shall I be afraid Psal. 46. 1 2. God is our refuge and strength a very present help in trouble therefore will not we fear though the Earth be removed and the Mountains be carried into the midst of the Sea a resolution to adhere to God and his truth
himself and intrust us with a stock of Grace but after he hath done that we 〈◊〉 are faulting and sinning Rom. 8. 1. Yet now there is no condemnation to them that are 〈◊〉 Christ notwithstanding the reliques of corruption and its breaking out 4. From the temper of the Saints their humility None have such a sight and sense of sin as they have because their eyes are anointed with spiritual eye-salve They have a clearer insight into the Law Ier. 31. 19. After I was instructed I smote upon my thigh They are enlightened by Gods Spirit the least Mote is espied in a Glass of clear Water None are so acquainted with their own hearts and ways as they who often commune with their own hearts and use self-reflection Others that live carelesly do not mind their offences but they that set themselves do more consider their ways none have a more tender sense of the heinousness of sin She loved much wept much because much was forgiven her Luke 7. Some are of a more delicate constitution the back of a Slave is not so sensible of stripes as they that have been more tenderly brought up The Beams of the Sun shining into a house we see the Dust and Motes in the Sun-Beams which we saw not before They profess as Iacob I am not worthy of all the mercy and truth thou hast shewed me They groan as Saint Paul Oh wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from the body of this death Use 1. Is information We learn hence that we should not be discouraged when our hearts are touched with a deep remorse and sense of our failings and are desirous to break off our sins by repentance that mercy which is freely vouchsafed in the Covenant which all Gods servants have so often experienced which the best make their only plea and ground of hope will find out a remedy for us If you have an heart to give up your selves to Gods service and so to get an interest in the promises and blessings of the Covenant you may come and sue out this mercy for God desireth to exalt his Grace God saith Return to the Lord your God and I will heal your backslidings and love you freely Hos. 14. 'T is the delight of Grace to do good notwithstanding unworthiness The worst of sins do not hinder Gods help are not above his cure There is hope for such as are convinced and see no worth in themselves why God should do them any good God needs not will not be hired by the Creatures to do it Use 2. How inexcusable those are that reject the offers of Grace If they have any liking to the blessings of the Covenant they have no ground to quarrel and differ with God about the price Isai. 55. 1. Ho every one that thirsteth let him come to the Waters and drink freely without money and without price You have no cloak for your sin if you will not deal with God upon these terms Nothing keepeth you from him but your own perverse will Use 3. What reason there is the best of Gods servants should carry it thankfully all their days From first to last the mercy of God is your only plea and claim No flesh hath cause to glory in his presence there being no meritorious cause in the Covenant of Grace no moving and inducing cause no co-ordinate working cause Not for your sakes do I this Ezek. 36. 32. And in the 1 Cor. 7. 4. 't is said Who maketh thee to differ We paid nothing for Gods love nothing for Christ the Son of his love nothing for his Spirit the fruit of his love nothing for sanctifying Grace and Faith the effects of his Spirit dwelling and working in our hearts nothing for pardon we have all freely nothing for daily bread protection maintenance and shall pay nothing for Glory when we come to receive it Iude 21. Looking for the mercy of God unto eternal life 'T is all without our merit and against merit we should regard this especially when we are apt to say in our hearts This is for our righteousness as Haman thought none so fit for honour and preferment as himself Esth. 6. 6. Haman thought so in his heart So proud-hearted self-conceited Sinners say in their hearts God seeth more in them than in others Alas you are not only unworthy of Christ the Spirit Grace and Glory but the Air you breathe in and the Ground you tread upon What did the Lord see in you to judge you meet for such an Estate Gen. 32. 10. I am not worthy of the least of all thy mercies and all thy truth Did not you slight Grace neglect Christ as well as others and doth not sin break out and make a forfeiture every day Use 4. That we should carry it humbly as well as thankfully The best of Gods Children should most admire Grace and glorifie Mercy set the Crown on Mercies head Consider First What was the first rise of all Gods love what set all a stirring in Gods bosom Iohn 3. 16. There was no cause beyond this In other things we may rise higher from his Power and Wisdom to his Love but why did he love us There is no other cause to be given he loved us because he loved us 'T was love first moved the business in the ancient counsel of Gods will Gods love is the measure of its self Secondly When he came to apply it he found us in our blood 'T was a great mercy that God would take us into his service with all our faults We were his Creatures but quite marr'd not as he made us We are not what we were when first his as we came out of his hands we were pure and holy but since the Fall quite spoiled Ier. 2. 21. I had planted thee a noble Vine wholly a right seed how then art thou turned into the degenerate plant of a strange vine unto me Strangely changed and altered If a Servant run from his Master and is become altogether blind deformed and diseased will his Master look after him or care for him or take him again This was our case Thirdly What is spoken already is common to others you your selves knew what you were Tit. 3. 3. Every man is soundly affected more sensible of his own case seeth particular reasons why God should refuse him yet you are as brands plucked out of the burning who did resist such powerful means such fair advantages you dallied with God You know the case of others by ghess your own by feeling You lay not only in the common polluted Mass but had your particular offences Fourthly When taken in a fault that God will pity our weakness and infirmities in his service Mal. 3. 17. I will spare them as a man spareth his Son that serveth him that is he will continue his favour and good-will to them that serve him So surely they that have a Conscience and are privy to their manifold infirmities and failings will admire this Fifthly
3. For what the Law could not do in that it was weak through the flesh c. Then 3. God taking occasion by this miserable estate opened a door of hope by Christ 2 Cor. 5. 19. God was in Christ reconciling the world unto himself not imputing their trespasses unto them God hath set up a new Court of righteousness and life where sinners may appear where Grace taketh the Throne and the Judge is Christ and the Gospel the Rule and Faith and sincere obedience accepted 4. The Lord giveth notice to fallen man and sendeth him word That if he will come to this Court and put himself under the Laws thereof he shall be delivered from the Curse Luke 1. 77 78 79. To give knowledge of salvation to his people by the remission of their sins Through the tender mercies of our God whereby the day-spring from on high hath visited us to give light to them that sit in darkness and in the shadow of death to guide their feet into the way of peace 5. Because men are backward he hunteth and pursueth them by the Curse of the Law and the sense men have of it to take Sanctuary at his grace Heb. 6. 18. That by two immutable things in which it was impossible for God to lye we might have a strong consolation who have fled for refuge to lay hold upon the hope set before us 6. When a poor Creature cometh he receiveth him graciously Ier. 3. 12 13. Return thou backsliding Israel saith the Lord and I will not cause mine anger to fall upon you for I am merciful saith the Lord and I will not keep anger for ever Only acknowledge thine iniquity that thou hast transgressed against the Lord thy God 1 Iohn 1. 9. If we confess our sins he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness If he had not set up another Court of righteousness no tears no repentance could have helped us there had been no help that way Now he is willing to receive you he standeth with his arms open From first to last he dealeth with us upon terms of Grace II. Judgment is put for manner and custome or course Gen. 40. 13. Thou shalt deliver Pharaoh his Cup after the former manner 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So Iosh. 6. 15. They compassed the City after the same manner The same word again 1 Sam. 2. 13. The Priests custom with the people was c. 1 Sam. 8. 11. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This will be the manner of the King that shall reign over you 1 Sam. 27. 11. So did David and so will be his manner So in other places Doctr. I. That it is Gods constant method to encourgae all those that serve him by shewing to them all manner of expressions of favour and mercy The Proposition is often expressed in Scripture Psal. 25. 10. All the paths of the Lord are mercy and truth unto such as keep his Covenant and his Testimonies Psal. 84. 11. For the Lord God is a Sun and a Shield the Lord will give grace and glory no good thing will he withhold from them that walk uprightly Psal. 34. 10. The young Lions do lack and suffer hunger but they that seek the Lord shall not want any good thing David presumeth it Psal. 23. 6. Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life And many other places But it seemeth to be contradicted by sense They that love God most are most calamitous and have many afflictions Answ. 1. These belong to Gods Covenant and are expressions of his good will and faithfulness Psal. 119. 75. I know Lord that thy judgments are right and that thou in faithfulness hast afflicted me God were not faithful nor merciful if he did not now and then take the Rod in hand our need our good requireth it Heb. 12. 10. For they verily for a few days chastened us after their own pleasure but he for our profit that we might be partakers of his holiness Discipline is necessary for a Child as food Winter as necessary as Summer rainy Days as fair Days to curb the wantonness of the Flesh and to withdraw the fuel of our Lusts. 2. He useth to shew mercy to people in their afflictions to cause light to rise to them in darkness 2 Cor. 1. 5. For as the sufferings of Christ abound in us so our consolation also aboundeth by Christ. We are not capable of taking in spiritual comforts till we are separated from the dregs of worldly affections 3. God will sanctifie afflictions Rom. 8. 28. All things shall work together for good to them that love God And he will finally deliver when the Season calleth for it 1 Cor. 10. 13. There hath no temptation taken you but such as is common to man but God is faithful who will not suffer you to be tempted above what you are able but will with the temptation also make a way to escape that you may be able to bear it But he dealeth more hardly with them than others he doth not punish the gross iniquities of his Adversaries when the lesser failings of his people are severely chastised Answ. It is meet Iudgment should begin at the house of God 1 Pet. 4. 17. That it may be known God doth not favour any in their sins Amos 3. 2. You only have I known of all the Families of the Earth therefore will I punish you for all your iniquities Their sins though small have more aggravations being committed against clearest light dearest love Ezra 9. 13. And after all that is come upon us for our evil deeds should we again break thy Commandments Isai. 26. 10. Let favour be shewed to the wicked yet will he not learn righteousness God is jealous over his people and careful to have them reclaimed from every evil course 1 Cor. 11. 32. But when we are judged we are chastened of the Lord that we should not be condemned with the world In the bitterness of the Rod God discovereth the vileness of their sin for he will reclaim them when he suffereth others to walk in their own way 4. His enemies shall in time taste the Dregs of that Cup whereof his own people tast a little Psal. 75. 8. For in the hand of the Lord there is a Cup the Wine is red it is full of mixture he poureth out of the same but the dregs thereof all the wicked of the Earth shall wring them out and drink them Jer. 25. 29. For lo I begin to bring evil on this City that is called by my name and shall ye be utterly unpunished Ye shall not be unpunished for I will call for a sword upon all the inhabitants of the earth saith the Lord of Hosts They shall have the bottom 5. In the mean time Gods people have his love their sins are pardoned they are admitted into communion with him and Gods mercy and favour to his people must not be judged by temporal accidents
worthy to be believed The Summ is God hath his Testimonies extant their Authority is inviolable and their Justice and Truth immutable Some read Praecepisti Iustitiam Testimoniorum tuorum fidem valde Thou hast highly charged and earnestly commanded the righteousness and faithfulness of thy Testimonies as referring to our Duty But most Translations agree with ours Our duty indeed may be inferred but I shall not make it the formal interpretation of the place In the Texture of the Words in the Hebrew these Attributes are given to the Word it self Doctr. They that would profit by the word or rule of faith and manners which God hath commanded them to observe should look upon it as righteous and very faithful So did David here and elsewhere Psal. 19. 9. The Iudgments of the Lord are true and righteous altogether I shall make good the Point by these Considerations Prop. 1. That our faith and obedience must be well-grounded or else they will have no firmness and stability The want of a foundation is the cause of many a ruinous Building Men carry on a fair and lofty Structure of profession but when the Winds of boisterous temptations are let loose upon them all is blown down because they build upon the Sand and not upon the Rock They take up this profession without sound evidence and conviction in their Consciences and so they are not grounded or setled in the faith Col. 1. 23. not rooted and grounded in love Ephes. 3. 7. They take up Religion sleightly not looking into the reasons of it upon Tradition or vulgar esteem they are not undoubtedly perswaded that it is the very truth of God The good Seed withered that fell upon the stony ground because there was no depth of Earth Matth. 13. 5. no considerable strength of soil to feed faith Prop. 2. Faith and obedience cannot be well-grounded but on such a Doctrine as is true and righteous for who can depend on that which is not true or who can obey that which is not righteous Truth is the only sure foundation for faith to build upon and righteousness for practice Faith considereth truth Ephes. 1. 13. In whom ye trusted after that ye heard the word of truth the Gospel of your salvation And that righteousness is that which bindeth to practice we may gather from Psal. 119. 128. Therefore I esteem all thy Precepts concerning all things to be right and I hate every false way The Word commandeth nothing but what is just and righteous Prop. 3. This true and righteous Doctrine must be backed with a strong and powerful Authority not only recommended to us but strictly and severely enjoyned for two reasons First Because otherwise it will not be observed and regarded but be lookt upon not as a binding Law but as an arbitrary direction There is difference between a Law and a Rule A bare Rule may only serve to inform our understandings or to give direction but a Law is a binding Rule a Rule with a strong Obligation The Word of God is not his counsel and advice to us only but his Law that men may examine and regard it with more care and diligence God hath interposed his authority Psal. 1. ●…9 4. Thou hast commanded us to keep thy precepts diligently And in the Text Thy Testimonies which thou hast commanded God hath commanded us to believe all truths revealed to obey all duties required and if God commandeth there is good reason why he should be obeyed Secondly Divine authority is one means to evidence the righteousness and truth of what is to be believed and obeyed The righteousness for if God who is my Superior and hath a full right to govern me according to his own pleasure doth command me any thing it is best that I should obey it without reply and contradiction yea though I see not the reason of it Acts 17. 28. For in him we live and move and have our being All Creatures have their Being not only from him but in him and therefore sometimes God giveth no other account of his Law but this I am the Lord Lev. 22. 2 3. Speak unto Aaron and to his Sons that they separate themselves from the holy things of the Children of Israel and that they prophane not my holy name in those things which they hallow unto me I am the Lord. Say unto them Whosoever he be of all your Seed among your Generations that goeth unto the holy things which the Children of Israel hallow unto the Lord having his uncleanness upon him that soul shall be cut off from my presence I am the Lord. Therefore it gives rules of practice to be embraced with all the heart as holy just and good Gods authority is founded upon the total dependance of all Creatures upon him and upon his infallible Wisdom Truth and Goodness by which he hath right to prescribe all Points of Faith to be believed and assented to upon his own testimony without contradiction 1 Iohn 5. 9. If we receive the testimony of man the testimony of God is greater A man that would not deceive us we believe him upon his word though he may be deceived himself but God doth not deceive nor can he be deceived by the holy God nothing can be given but what is holy and good and thereupon I am to receive it Prop. 4. This Divine authority truth and righteousness is only to be found in Gods Testimonies which he hath commanded or in Gods Word First There is a God-like authority speaking there and commanding that which it becometh none but God to command who is the universal King and Sovereign For it speaketh to the whole World without respect of persons to King and Beggar rich and poor Male and Female without reservation of Honour or distinction of Degrees The Word looketh on them as standing before God on the same level Iob 34. 19. He accepteth not the persons of Princes nor regarded the rich more than the poor for they all are the work of his hands And speaketh to them indifferently and equally Exod. 20. 3. Thou shalt have no other Gods but me Which is not the voice of any limited and bounded Power but of that which is supreme transcendent and absolute And by these Laws he bindeth the Conscience and the immortal souls of men Psal. 19. 7. The Law of the Lord is perfect converting the soul. Men may give Laws to the words and actions because they can take cognizance of them but the Word giveth Laws to the thoughts Isai. 55. 7. Let the wicked forsake his way and the unrighteous man his thoughts Matth. 5. 28. Whosoever looketh on a woman to lust after her hath committed Adultery with her already in his heart And the internal motions and affections of the heart how we should love and fear and joy and mourn 1 Cor. 7. 30. They that weep as though they wept not and they that rejoyce as though they rejoyced not Of these things God can only take notice the power
Trouble for in the 146 verse 't is save me but in the 149 verse 't is quicken me which implyeth the vigour of the Spiritual Life or Grace to keep Gods Statutes Whether for the one or the other David would be heard Thirdly Here is a promise of Obedience I will keep thy Statutes Which is mentioned either as the end and scope of his Prayer That I may keep thy Statutes or as an Holy Vow and Promise which the Saints are wont to mingle with their Prayers I will c. He would diligently serve God if the Lord would hear him First I begin with the Allegation or Description of Davids Carriage in Prayer David devoured not his Grief nor nourished his Unbelief but opened his heart unto God and that in an affectionate manner He did not Call but Cry Crying noteth Vehemency and Earnestness and is opposite to careless Formality and Deadness The Note from thence is Doctrine That there is a Holy Vehemency and Fervour required in Prayer Here I shall shew I. That we may Cry II. That we must Cry III. Wherein it Consisteth I. We may Cry in our Afflictions David doth so for help and relief and it is not inconsistent with Patience for us to do so For our Lord Jesus had his Cries Heb. 5. 7. in the extremity of his Sufferings without any impeachment of his Courage and Patience So did Iob Chap. 30. 28. I went mourning without the Sun I stood up and I cryed in the Congregation It argues we have a sense of our Condition and are under a pinching necessity and therefore may complain to God though not of God They are sullen and obstinate and senseless that have no feeling and so no complaint to make when God lasheth them II. We must Cry For 1. The Spirit of Grace was given for this end Rom. 8. 15. Ye have received the Spirit of Adoption whereby we cry Abba Father not say but cry He assisteth us by Groans Rom. 8. 26. The Spirit it self maketh intercession for us with groanings which cannot be uttered And such a spirit of Prayer should we all labour for to come to God with affection and humble and sensible Groans if we cannot come with the Pomp of Gifts There is good sense in brokenness of Heart though it be accompanied with brokenness of speech for God knoweth what a groan meaneth and will not refuse the work of his Spirit 2. Because the Saints have all done so Their way of Praying is Crying Psal. 18. 6. In my distress I cryed unto the Lord. Psal. 34. 6. This poor man cryed unto the Lord. And Psal. 130. 1. Out of the depths have I cryed unto thee O Lord. And Psal. 55. 17. At noon will I pray and cry aloud and in many other places Others can say a Prayer but they cry it out 3. These Cryes are heard and answered as in all the former places so Psal. 22. 5. Our Fathers cryed unto thee and were delivered Psal. 34. 17. The Righteous cry and the Lord heareth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word to help is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to run to the Cry An Arrow drawn with full strength will pierce deep 4. Other Prayers are not comely It doth not become God to whom we pray Dead service doth not become the living God Mal. 1. 14. Cursed be the deceiver which hath in his Flock a Male and voweth and sacrificeth unto the Lord a corruptthing For I am a great King saith the Lord of Hosts and my Name is dreadful among the Heathen Slight dealing in Gods service argueth mean thoughts of God It doth not become the spirit by whom we pray as in the first Reason Nor doth it become the Blessings for which we pray God will not give a Mercy till it be valued if we be indifferent and pray for things of course without any esteem of them we bespeak our own denyal Then we undervalue the Grace we seek if we seek it so as if we cared not whether we obtained our request or no for Forms sake we must say something When things are prized we are earnest and God will have us earnest to Ask Seek and Knock Matth. 7. 7. if you have good things you must do so and will do so before you have them Nor doth it become the state of Want wherein you pray where there is real Indigence and felt Necessity it will sharpen your affections and put an accent upon your Prayers You will not tell a Tale or a cold story of your own Wants but cry aloud for help Ionah 1. 2. I cryed by reason of mine Affliction unto the Lord. And the Saints cry day and night Luk. 18. 18. A true sense of Want will sharpen our sluggish desires the hunger-bitten Beggar will not easily be put off III. Wherein this Crying consisteth 1. In the Earnestness of the Affection not in the Loudness of the Voice Gal. 4. 6. He hath sent the Spirit of his Son into our Hearts crying Abba Father 'T is a cry not of the Mouth but of the Heart It lyeth not in the lifting up of the External Voice or the Agitation of the bodily spirits but the serious bent and frame of the Spirit Rom. 8. 26. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 inward Groans and holy Meltings and Breathings of soul after God Moses cryed after God Exod. 14. 18. But we hear of no words which Moses spake We hear of Israels crying and have an account of their words hot and full of impatience ver 10. But not a word that Moses said yet he cryed unto the Lord. Israel was in streights the Red Sea before the Egyptians behind Clamabat Populus non audiebatur Tacebat Moses audiebatur saith Ambrose Moses his silence was sooner heard than their Cry Our Groans and Tears have a Language which God understands 'T is said 1 Sam. 1. 13. that Hannah spake in her Heart onely her lips moved but her Voice was not heard That 's the better Crying in sighs and groans rather than words as the Child that cannot speak will cry and make moan for the Breast God hath heard the cry of the Heart without that of the Tongue but never the cry of the Tongue without that of the Heart Quibus Arteriis opus est si pro sonitu audiamur What lungs and sides must we have if the loudness of the Voice did it A dumb Beggar gets an Alms at Christs Gate if he can but make signs when his Tongue cannot plead for him 2. This Spiritual Crying is not the earnestness of Carnal Affections that 's stirred up by the Flesh but this Cry is stirred up by the Spirit who maketh request 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 8. 27. God should have work enough to do if he did answer all mens Prayers some would set him a Task to provide meat for this others for that Lust. This Man prayeth heartily for his Pleasures another for Honour another for Preferment another to satisfie his Revenge A Carnal Spring may send
escape was some while after 2 By giving in spiritual Manifestations to the Soul though he doth not give the particular Mercy prayed for As when upon the prayer he reviveth the soul of him that prayeth Iob 33. 26. He shall pray unto God and he will be favourable to him and he shall see his face with joy The Lord giveth them the light of his Countenance and special discoveries of his love or support till the Mercy come Psal. 138. 3. In the day when I cryed thou answeredst me and strengthenedst me with strength in my Soul Support is an Answer such an Answer had Paul My Grace is sufficient for thee Or when the heart is quieted though we do not know what God will do with our requests yet satisfied in the discharge of our Duty and that we have commended the matter to God So it is said of Hannah When she had prayed her Countenance was no more sad 1 Sam. 1. 18. And Phil. 4. 6 7. Be careful for nothing but in every thing by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God and the peace of God which passeth all understanding shall keep your hearts and minds through Iesus Christ. Sometimes by a secret Impression of Confidence or a strong inclination to hope well of the thing prayed for Psal. 6. 8. The Lord hath heard the voice of my weeping Or Experiences as they that travailed to Ierusalem passing through the Valley Baca they met with a Well by the way Psal. 84. 6. a sweet refreshing thought or some help in the Spiritual Life by serious dealing with God some Consideration to set you a work or some new ingagement of the soul to God as a recompence of the Duty some Principles of Faith drawn forth in the view of Conscience not shewed before Some truth or other presented with fresh Life and vigour upon the heart 3. Sometimes by way of Commutation and Exchange and so God doth answer the prayer though he doth not give the mercy prayed for When he giveth another thing that is as good or better for the party that prayeth though not in kind the same yet in worth and value as good This Commutation may be three wayes First In regard of the Person praying David fasts and humbleth and melteth his soul for his Persecutors Psal. 35. 13. and it returned into his own bosom was converted to his own benefit his fasting had no effect upon them but his Charity did not lose its reward David prayeth for his first Child by Bathsheba but that Child dieth and God giveth Solomon instead thereof 2 Sam. 12. 15. Noah Daniel Iob shall save their own Souls Ezek. 14. 14. Your peace shall return to you again Luk. 10. 5 6. the Comfort of discharging their Duty Secondly In regard of the matter Carnal things are begged and Spiritual things are given Acts 1. 6 7. The Apostles asked him wilt thou at this time restore the kingdom to Israel They did not receive the Kingdom to Israel but received the promise of the Spirit Moses would fain enter into Canaan with the People Deut. 3. 23 24. And God said let it suffice thee speak no more of this matter but God gave him a Pisgah sight and ease of the trouble of Wars We would have speedy riddance of Trouble but God thinketh not fit as showers that come by drops soak into the Earth better then those that come in a Tempest and Hurricane We ask for Ease in Troubles and God will give Courage under Troubles Lam. 3. 55 56 57. I called upon thy name O Lord out of the low dungeon Thou hast heard my voice hide not thine ear at my breathing at my cry Thou drewest near in the day that I called upon thee thou saidst Fear not His gracious and powerful Presence in Trouble was enough Christ was heard in that he feared Heb. 5. 7. not saved from that Hour but supported and strengthened in it Iob sacrificed prayed for his Children when they were Feasting Iob 1. 5. and though they were all destroyed God gave him Patience verse 22. for in all that befell him he sinned not nor charged God foolishly Thirdly In regard of means we pray such means may not miscarry God will use other As Abraham would fain have Ishmael the Child of the Promise but God intended Isaac Gen. 17. 18. O that Ishmael might live before thee Thus doth God often blast instruments we most expect good from and maketh use of others to be Instruments for our good which we did least expect it from God may give us our Will in Anger when the Mercy turneth to our hurt Therefore the kind of Gods Answer must be referred to his own Will in all things for which we are not to pray Absolutely and when we have discharged our Duty endeavoured to approve our Hearts to God take what Answer he will give Doct. 2. From the manner of praying with the whole Heart the Saints have the more confidence of being heard in Prayer David alledgeth his crying with the whole heart as an hopeful intimation of a gracious Answer 1. Because a Prayer rightly made hath the assurance of a Promise the Promise is Ioh. 16. 24. Ask and you shall receive that your joy may be full Now this beareth no exception but that we ask according to his Will 1 Ioh. 5. 14. Si bona petant boni bene ad bonum Good men asking good things in the name of Christ for a good end thou canst not miss 2. Where there is sincerity and fervency we have two witnesses to establish our Comfort and Hope the Spirit of God that knoweth the deep things of God and the Spirit of Man that knoweth the things that are in man Gods Spirit who stirreth up these groans in us Rom. 8. 26 27. He that searcheth the heart knoweth the mind of the Spirit because he maketh intercession for the Saints according to the will of God And the Testimony of our own Spirits that we have done our part and discharged our Duty and so have true Joy and Confidence Iob 16. 19 20. My witness is in heaven and my record is on high My friends scorn me but mine eye poureth out teares to God 3. God doth not use to send them away comfortless that call upon him in spirit and truth because by one grace he maketh way for another by the grace of Assistance for the grace of Acceptance Psal. 10. 17. Lord thou hast heard the desire of the humble thou hast prepared their heart thou wilt cause thine ear to hear Where God hath given an Heart to speak he will afford an ear to hear for God will not lose his own work he cannot refuse those requests which are according to the direction of his Word and the motions of his holy Spirit when they are brought to him Use. This exhorteth us to look more after the manner of praying An earnest and sincere prayer cannot miscarry judge by this and you cannot want
sends a tempest after us Oh how frequent and earnest should we be in the practice of this Duty 1. This is a time proper for it Prayer is a duty never out of season though some seasons are proper and solemn to it God is alwaies to be prayed unto Iob 27. 11. when freed from Trouble and Inconvenience we are not freed from Prayer still we must profess Dependance Subjection and maintain our Communion but this is a special Season Iames 5. 13. Is anyone afflicted let him pray 2. Though Afflictions drive us to the Throne of Grace yet if we come seriously and heartily we are not unwelcom to him those very Prayers which necessity doth extort from us are accepted by God and valued by him as an acceptable piece of worship therefore such as look toward God ought not to be discouraged though Afflictions drive them to it though they sought him not before or not in good earnest before provided that alwaies they find other errands and be careful to maintain a constant Communion with him Most that are acquainted with God are taken in the briars Jesus Christ in the daies of his flesh had never heard of many if their necessities had not brought them to him their Palsies and Possessions and Feavers Deafness Dumbness thanks to these as their awakening occasions a man will say say you come to me in your necessity God is willing to receive us upon any Terms 3. How desperate in appearance soever our Condition seem to be yet crying will bring Relief or help may be found in God for them that cry to him Iudges 3. 9. When they cried the Lord raised up a deliverer to the Children of Israel who delivered them even Othniel the son of Kenaz Iudges 3. 15. And when the children of Israel cried to the Lord the Lord raised them up a deliverer Ehud the son of Gera. So Psalm 107. frequently From that unto thee Doctrine IV. In our Troubles we must have recourse to God and sue to him by Prayer and Supplication for help and deliverance in due time 1. Because he is the Author of our Trouble in Miseries and Afflictions Our business lyeth not with Men but God by humble dealing with him we stop wrath at the Fountain head he that bindeth us must loose us he is at the upper end of Causes and whoever be the Instruments of our trouble and how malitious soever God is the party with whom we are to make our Peace for he hath the absolute disposal of all Creatures and will have us to acknowledge the Dominion of his Providence and our Dependance upon him in Treaties of Peace between two warring Parties the address is not made to private Souldiers but to their Chief The Lord hath taken away saith Iob chap. 34. 27. When he giveth quietness who then can make Trouble 2. He challengeth this Prerogative to be the God of Salvation Psal. 3. 8. Salvation belongeth unto the Lord and therefore if we would be saved we must seek it of him Others cannot help if he help not for he hath all means and creatures and second causes at his Command if we lean to means they may fail but if we rely upon God he will never fail Therefore whatever means God offereth for our help Prayer to God is the best means and first to be used 3. There is Comfort in dealing with God whatever our Case be 1 Because of his All-sufficient Power 2 Because of his good Will and readiness to help 1 Because of his Power and All-sufficiency so that he hath waies of Deliverance more than we know of and can save his own when men do count their case desperate Dan. 3. 29. There is no other God that can deliver after this sort Let the streight be never so great the burden heavy and the Creature weak and at a desperate loss yet God can find out waies and means to do his people good 2 For his good Will and readiness to hear Psal. 65. 2. Oh thou that hearest prayer unto thee shall all flesh come The readiness of God to hear Prayer doth open a door of access to all people who are sensible of their burdens and necessities He hath ever shewed himself ready to hear the cries and groans of his people and wo be to them against whom they cry Psal. 22. 5. They cried unto thee and were delivered Their cries and groans are not hid from him and cannot be shut out Psalm 106. 44. Nevertheless he regarded their affliction and he heard their cry 1. Use. To reprove divers sorts 1. Some seek to help themselves by impatiency fretting unquiet behaviour in their Troubles this doth increase their Misery Go pour out your hearts before the Lord that giveth ease Phil. 4. 6 7. Be careful for nothing but in every thing by Prayer and Supplication with Thanksgiving let your requests be made known unto God And the peace of God which passeth all understanding shall keep your hearts and minds through Christ Iesus Your wrestling with Trouble within your selves doth but imbroyl you the more 2. Some trust in outward helps seek to men and means as Asa to the Physitians not to the Lord 2 Chron. 16. 12. It is not unlawful to use means but we must depend upon the Lord for the Blessing Seek to him first otherwise looking to man proveth a snare many waies as it tempts us to comply with their Lusts to neglect God maketh way for the greater sorrow in disappointment The Creature is vain in it self made more vain by our Confidence Psal. 60. 11. Give us help from trouble for vain is the help of man You will be brought to it at last The more earnestly we seek God the more Confidence we way have of the Creature 2. Use. To inform us of the Priviledge and Duty of the Godly 1. Their Priviledge they have a God to go to The worldly man sigheth and cryeth he knoweth not to whom but the Godly man presenteth himself in his Lamentations to God my friends scorn me but mine eye poureth out tears unto God Iob 16. 20. He hath a Father in secret a Friend in a corner they need not go to Men nor to Saints and Angels they have God himself and can challenge him by his Office as the Judge of the World to help poor Creatures Psal. 94. 2. Lift up thy self thou Iudge of the World render a reward to the proud Yea by his peculiar Relation to them Psal. 5. 2. Hearken unto the voice of my cry my King and my God for unto thee will I pray They do not cry unto him as a stranger but one in Covenant Relation with them 2. Their Duty to make God their Guardian and Saviour in all their distress when in their own sense they are near perishing Mark 8. 26. Arise save us we perish 2 Kings 19. 19. Now therefore O Lord our God I beseech thee save us out of his hand that all the Kingdoms of the earth may know that thou art
over our distempers and personal necessities Zech. 12. 10 11 12 13 14. Many will say they have no gifts certainly they that feel their necessities will speak of them in one fashion or another But this cuts off the objection the Spirit is given to help thee I will pour upon them the Spirit of Grace and Supplication and they shall mourn apart Such is Gods condescension to the Saints that he hath provided for them not only an Advocate but a Notary A Notary to draw up their Petitions and an Advocate to present them in Court And surely the gifts of the Spirit should not lie by idle and useless 4. I might urge you too from the practice of the Saints who are called Gods supplicants Zeph. 3. 9. the generation that seek him Psal. 24. 6. They delight in Gods Company and cannot be content to stay away long from him Daniel had his three times a day Dan. 6. 10. So David Psal. 55. 17. Evening and morning and noon will I pray and cry aloud and he shall hear my Voice And David Seven times a day will I praise thee Psal. 119. 164. And Cornelius prayed to God alwaies Acts 10. 2. not only with his Family but sometimes alone for his Family They that have an habit of prayer will be thus affected now to be altogether unlike the People of God giveth just cause of suspicion 5. Shall I add our own private Necessities which cannot be so feelingly spoken to by others do challenge such a Duty at our hands or it may be are not so fit to be divulged and communicated to them 1 Kings 8. 38. There is the plague of our own hearts Paul had his thorn in the Flesh 1 Cor. 12. 7. I sought the Lord thriee No Nurse like the Mother none so fit feelingly to lay forth our Case to God as our selves private prayer 't is an help to inlargement of heart for the more earnest men are the more they desire to be alone Ier. 13. 17. My soul shall weep sore in secret places Christ went from his Disciples in his Agony when he would pray more earnestly Luk. 22. 41 42. Strong affections are loth to be disturbed and seek retirement Iacob sent away his Company when he wrestled with God Gen. 23. 24. Oh! then let all this be considered by you if you neglect Closet addresses to God you wrong God and your selves You wrong God because 't is a necessary part of the Creatures Homage to God and you wrong your selves because such duties bring in a great deal of comfort and peace to the Soul and many sweet and gracious experiences which are not vouchsafed else-where Bernard saith The Churches Spouse is Bashful and Christ will not communicate his Loves in Company You are to use acquaintance with God and so peace shall come to us Iob. 22. 21. It argueth little friendship to God when we seldom come at him and maintain no personal Commerce with him When we pray with others we cannot so well tell who is heard as when we pray alone and see what God will do for our Souls Ps. 116. 1. I will love the Lord because he hath heard the voice of my Supplication You sought earnestly for such a thing and the Lord heard you To conclude all A man will not pray with any savour and delight in publick that doth not pray in secret I observe in Ezekiel's Vision the Lord removed from the Temple by degrees First from the holy place to the Altar of Burnt-offerings then to the Threshold of the house then to the Mountain on the East-side of the City there it stood hovering as loth to be gone So first God is cast out of the Closet private intercourses are neglected then out of the Family and then out of the Congregation and then publick Ordinances are laid aside as useless then are men given up to a strange giddy and vertiginous Spirit and all manner of Prophaneness As a Tree dies by degrees first bears not Fruit then no Leaves then no Bark so carnal Christians die by degrees II. It was an early Morning Prayer I prevented the dawning of the morning and cried I would not lay a burden upon any ones Conscience so God have his due at any time of the day 't is enough In colder Climates those of a weaker constitution may not be able to rise so soon and therefore if any other time of the day be fittest for Commerce all circumstances considered it cometh to the same issue Yet that the morning is our golden time and should not be neglected out of sluggishness what ever dispensation there be for weakness these Considerations may evince 1. The Example of Christ and his Saints we read of our Lord Jesus Christ Mark 1. 35. That in the morning rising a great while before day he went out and prayed This Example bindeth those to receive it that can receive it if you would take the opportunity of the Morning it deserves to be considered by us how willing Christ was to deny his Natural Rest to be with God in private And have not we more need And accordingly the Saints have practised this Psal. 5. 3. My voice shalt thou hear in the morning O Lord in the morning I will direct my prayer to thee and look up Upon which Chrysostom saith Before thou washest thy hands wash thy soul by Prayer So again Psal. 59. 16. I will sing aloud of thy mercy in the morning So would David begin his day with praises of God and prayers to him So 1 Sant 1. 19. And they rose up early and worshipped before the Lord. That was their first work and they were betimes at it So the primitive Christians their hymnos Antelucanos they sung Psalms to God and Christ in the morning early as their Persecutors informed against them See Tertul. Apol. Euseb. c. Now this is of some significancy to Christians 2. Because when ever we have strong Affections to any thing we make it our morning work be it good or bad Good so Mary and Mary Magdalen came early to the Sepulchre of Christ Matth. 28. the Disciples when they came to wait for the promise of the Spirit they met betimes for the Holy Ghost fell upon them in the morning Act. 2. 15. For these men are not drunk as ye suppose seeing it is but the third hour of the day which was about Nine of the Clock and some good time had been spent before as appears by this speech that was uttered So Hosea 5. 16. In their afflictions they will seek me early This is their first and chiefest work that which urgeth the heart most we shall think of in the Morning The Objects that have made deepest impression upon our Spirits will present themselves before any images be received from abroad Prov. 6. 22. Bind my Law upon thy heart when thou walkest it shall talk with thee c. Abraham when he went about the work of offering his son Isaac he rose early in the
work a great change in us A Christian should and in some measure doth carry an equal mind in all Conditions and keep the same pace whither he goeth up-hill or down-hill and have his heart fixed in God whatever falleth out Psal. 112. 7. He shall not be afraid of evil tydings his heart is fixed trusting in the Lord. But alas we are much discomposed oftentimes especially at the first onset by our outward estate when under great Afflictions it puts a damp upon our spirits and we cannot serve God so chearfully Levit. 10. 19. And Aaron said unto Moses Behold this day have they offered their sin-offering and their burnt-offering before the Lord and such things have befallen me and if I had eaten the sin-offering to day should it have been accepted in the sight of the Lord. So Hezekiah it is said of him 2 Chron. 32. 25. When Hezekiah was sick unto death and he prayed unto the Lord and he gave him a sign that Hezekiah rendred not again according to the benefit done unto him for his heart was lifted up We are too apt to be dejected and cast down with worldly Troubles or exalted and puffed up with worldly Comforts and both bring on deadness upon the Heart both worldly sorrow and carnal complacency It is not requisite that a Child of God should be without all sense of his condition and it cannot be supposed that this sense should always be kept within bounds and under the Coercion and Government of Grace considering our weakness and therefore a Christian receiveth some Taint from the changes he passes thorow as the water doth from the soil through which it runneth He is sometimes in Credit sometimes in Disgrace sometime Rich sometimes Poor sometimes sick and in Pain at other times in Health and firm Constitution of Body Now though it argueth small strength to faint in ordinary Afflictions Prov. 24. 10. and a light spirit to be puffed up like a bubble with every slight blast yet when Troubles are heavy and pressing Gods best servants have been ready to dye and faint and in a full estate it is hard to keep down carnal rejoycing By both the freedom of following Gods service chearfully may often be interrupted 4 Because we sin away our life and strength and by our careless walking contract deadness and hardness of Heart The Mind like the Eye is soon offended and out of Temper we forfeit the quickning influences of his Spirit upon which the activity of Grace dependeth To correct our sinful rashness and to teach us more Watchfulness and Caution God withdraweth Phil. 2. 12 13. Be the sin a sin of Commission especially if grievous and hainous as David found a shrewd abatement of Life and Vigor after his foul sin Psal. 51. 11 12. Or a sin of Omission when we neglect God or serve him slightly if we give way to deadness Isa. 64. 6. rest in the work wrought and are more willing to get a Duty over than to perform it with any Life and Vigor God suspends his quickning If you do not mind the work why should God quicken you in it 3. Reason Is taken from the Nature of Gods Dispensation They do often and earnestly ask quickning because God giveth out by degrees and would keep us in constant dependance In him we live move 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and have our being Act. 17. 28. both as Creatures and new Creatures There is a constant Concurrence of his motions and influences by their beings and operations God will indear his Grace to us by bringing us daily under new debt and therefore he doth not give us all our stock and portion in our hands lest we neglect him as the Prodigal did his Father By multiplyed and renewed Acts of Grace he doth more commend his love to us every day he must quicken us and in every Duty If so much Rain fell in a day as would suffice the Earth for seven years the Commerce between the Air and the Earth would cease Or if a man could eat so much at one meal as to go in the strength of it all his Life there would be no ground to pray for daily bread therefore God doth dispence his Assistances so as you must still wait upon him and be calling to him He keepeth Grace in his own hand that he may often hear from us Doctrine II. The main Argument which Gods Children have to plead in Prayer is his own favour and loving-kindness I shall shew I. That this is a Modest Humble and Pious Argument II. This is a Comfortable and Incouraging Argument I. 'T is a Modest Argument and 't were good if we could learn this modesty of David He was one much in Prayer diligent in keeping Gods Statutes abundant in all Acts of Devotion spent nights in Meditation and yet after all this placeth all his hopes in the Mercy and Loving-kindness of God and desireth onely to be heard according to mercy But in us there is a secret carnal notion of God as if he were our Debtor if we act for him or suffer any thing for him we carry it as if God were obliged to us Isa. 58. Wherefore have we fasted c. We cannot be at a Fast give a little Alms or make a Prayer but we think we have merited much at Gods hands Oh this is against all reason Alas what profit can we be to God Iob 35. 6 7 8. God is above the injuries and benefits of the Creature what miss had he of Angels and Men in those innumerable Ages of duration that went before any Created Being And as it is against Reason so it is against all the declarations God hath made of himself to us Ezek. 36. 32. Not for your sakes do I this saith the Lord of Hosts Be ashamed and confounded for your own wayes So Tit. 3. 4 5 6. But after that the kindness and love of God our saviour towards man appeared not by works of Righteousness which we have done but according to his mercy he saved us by the washing of regeneration and renewing of the Holy Ghost which he shed on us abundantly through Iesus Christ our saviour In short no worth in us or Righteousness of ours is that Merit and Righteousness by vertue of which we are accepted with God Our Works and Righteousness are not that Condition by which we receive and apply this Merit that 's Faith No Works or Merit are a motive or the first inducing Cause to move God to give us that Faith but all is from his Loving-kindness and readiness to do good to the Creatures Again 'T is contrary to the practice of the Saints and Children of God who though never so Holy and never so good yet still they plead Mercy and this by direction from him who knoweth what plea is fittest for Creatures to use to God Luk. 17. 10. As it is not the merit of one part of the Earth that it lyeth nearer the Sun than another onely the Creator would
indeed then is a Believer tryed and exercised 2 Cor. 1. 9. But we had the sentence of death in our selves that we should not trust in our selves but in God which raiseth the dead We are much given to self-confidence while our mountain standeth strong and we are intrenched within the security of Worldly Advantages and Props we scarce know what Faith and dependance upon God meaneth now saith God I will make you trust in me e're I have done and to live alone upon my all-sufficiency you may think your Reputation will bear you out but I will load you with Censures that you may trust in me you think Friends shall help you but Friend and Lover shall be afar off you think to shelter your selves under common Refuges but they shall all fail and cease that I may see whether you trust in me or that the common Justice and Equity of your Cause shall bear you out but I will send against you those that are maliciously resolved contrary to all justice and gratitude that shall approach and endeavour to mischief you Who would think that Paul should be in danger of Self-confidence a man so exercised as he was so tossed to and fro so often whipped scourged exposed to danger Alass we can hardly see with other eyes than Nature hath or depend upon invisible help we look at present things and laugh at danger upon the confidence of outward probabilities If we can get a carnal pillow and bolster under our heads we sleep and dream many a Golden dream of ease and safety now God that is jealous of our Trust will not let us alone and therefore will put us upon sharp Tryals 'T is not Faith but Sense we live upon before that 's Faith if we can depend upon God when they draw near that follow after Mischief Psal. 3. 6. I will not be afraid of ten thousands of the people that set themselves against me round about A danger at a distance is but imagined it worketh otherwise when 't is at hand Christ himself had other thoughts of approaching danger than danger at a distance Ioh. 12. 27. Now is my soul troubled this Vessel of pure water was shaken though he discovered no dregs 2. To Quicken to prayer Ionah that slept in the ship falls a praying in the Whales Belly A drowsie Soul is awakened in case of extream danger Psal. 130. 1. Out of the depths have I cryed unto thee Now an ordinary prayer will not serve the turn not to speak a prayer but to cry a prayer we do but act devotion before and personate the part of the Supplicant then we exerciseit Now rather than Gods Children shall neglect prayer he exposeth them to great hazards Matth. 8. 25. Master carest thou not that we perish What careless dead and drowsie prayers did we perform when all things went on fairly and we are well at Ease Moses cried when Israel was at a loss Exod. 14. 15. the Sea before the Egyptians behind ready to tread upon their heels Mountains on each side 3. That the deliverance of his People may be more glorious partly because there is more of his Power and Care discovered when our streights are great Israel may now say we had been swallowed up quick Psal. 124. Rescues in extremity of Dangers are more glorious Psal. 118. 13. Thou hast thrust sore at me that I might fall but the Lord helped me So Psal. 27. 2. When the wicked even mine enemies and my foes came upon me to eat up my flesh they stumbled and fell In great dangers to be overtaken by his Enemies God doth some way suffer his People to be brought near Destruction but he doth always prove their Friend and Helper Davids Strength and Courage was seen in that he plucked a Lamb out of the Lions Mouth 1 Sam. 17. 34 35. And partly because these great streights and troubles are a means to open our eyes and waken our stupid senses Deliverance is all one to God whether from great Exigences or in ordinary Cases but is more endeared by extremity of danger 'T is as easie to save an hundred or a thousand but it maketh a fuller sound we are more sensible of our weakness to help our selves to be sure without his Assistance Use. Be not offended if God cast you into great dangers 't is no Argument of Gods Hatred to destroy you but of his love to try you and to prepare you for the greater Comfort that we may have a more glorious sight of his Salvation Many after Confidence expressed have been put to great Tryals The three Children were delivered but put into the Fire first and the furnace made seven times hotter Pauls Company suffered Shipwrack before the promise of their safety could be fulfilled Moses and the Israelites were delivered yet pursued and shut up the Egyptians behind and the Seas before and steep Mountains on each side Psal. 118. 18. The Lord hath chastned me sore but he hath not given me over to death Things at the worst begin to change though it come to such a desperate pass as it must be speedy Help or speedy Ruin such Exigences do mightily conduce to the glory of God and the bettering of his People Whatever weakneth our Confidence the greatness of Danger should not for in such Cases God is there Use 2. Let us use the more Prayer 't is a time to put Promises in suit 2 Chron. 20. 12. O our God wilt thou not judge them For we have no might against this great company that cometh against us neither know we what to do but our eyes are unto thee The fittest season to treat with God about help for when the Creatures are at a loss that is the time for God to help when Danger is near call upon God for help acquaint him with it 't is time for him to be near also Verse 151. of this Psalm Thou art near O Lord. The less help of mans Mercy the more hope of Gods help Use 3. The greater the Danger the more thankfully should we acknowledge the Deliverance The Woman of Sarepta when her Son was restored to Life 1 Kings from the 17. verse to the end said By this I know thou art a man of God and that the word of the Lord in thy mouth is truth So Israel may now say If the Lord had not been on our side men had swallowed us quick Secondly A Description of those from whom this Danger was feared they are far from thy law that is they do not regard it This Clause may be added 1. To Amplifie or Aggravate the Danger As if he had said Lord having opprest them they Contemn thy Law and all Restraints of Conscience and Duty The farther the Enemies of the Godly are from Gods Law the nearer to do Mischief So Psal. 54. 3. Oppressors seek after my soul they have not set God before them So Psal. 86. 1. Violent men have sought after my foul they have not set thee before them They
us and we are called by thy name leave us not Thus God is said to be nigh because he dwelleth in the Churches and walketh in the midst of them but those that are Converted indeed are in a straighter Union with God all those that are Members of the Visible Church and are united to Christ by a visible and political Union they have great Priviledges for they are a Society under God's special care and government and enjoy the means of Grace and the offers of Salvation and great helps by the gifts bestowed upon the body and so have God nearer to them then others though they have not the saving fruits of Union with Christ and Communion with God Once more a People that are nigh unto God visibly and politically may be cast off as Ier. 13. 11. For as a girdle cleaveth to the loines of a man so have I caused to cleave unto me the whole house of Israel and the whole house of Iudah saith the Lord that they might be unto me for a people and for a name and for a praise and for a glory but they would not hear yet I will cast them away as a rotten girdle that is good for nothing ver 10. These words are the Application of a charge given to Ieremiah to get him a girdle and hide it till it was rotten and then to bring it forth and tell the People the meaning of this Ceremony he was to get a Girdle not Leathern nor Woollen such as were commonly worn by the ordinary sort but a Linnen Girdle such as the better sort of Persons were wont to wear he was not to wet it or put it in water to imply that neither God not ought from him had been the cause of the general Corruption and Destruction of this People but to hide it in a dry place near Euphrates till it was Corrupted Thus God would lay visibly before their eyes their own state they were as near about him girded as close to him as a girdle about a man's loins yet then good for nothing But for those to whom God is near by saving benefits they cannot be lost for where the nearness is really begun it will continue and never be broken off You may as well separate the Leaven and the Dough impossibile est massam a pasta separare c. 5. In those that are living Members of Christ's Mystical Body we must distinguish between a state of nearness and Acts of nearness by Converting Grace we are brought into a state of nearness unto God and in Worship we actually draw nigh unto him and he to us The state of nearness is the state of Favour and Reconciliation with God into which we are admitted who were before strangers and Enemies Col. 1. 21. And you that were sometimes alienated and enemies in your mind by wicked works yet now hath he reconciled And also our participation of the Divine Nature 2 Pet. 1. 4. Whereby are given unto us exceeding great and precious promises that by these you might be partakers of the divine nature having escaped the corruption that is in the world through lust or Life of God from which we were formerly alienated by Sin Eph. 4. 18. Having their understandings darkned being alienated from the life of God through the Ignorance that is in them because of the blindness of their heart For these three do alwayes go together the Favour of God the Image of God and Fellowship with God when Adam lost one he lost all when he lost the Image of God he also lost the Favour of God or Fellowship with God or nearness to him So then our state of nearness lyeth in the recovery of the Favour of God and the Image or Life of God when we stand right in his grace and live his life they are both great Mercies and both the ground of our Fellowship with God or nearness to him Oh Christians think with your selves is it not a great priviledge for poor sinful Creatures that could not think of God without horror or hear him named without Trembling or pray to him without great dejection of Heart to look upon God as reconciled and willing to receive us and bless us So for the Life of God to have a life begun in us by the Spirit of God and maintained by the continual Influences of his Grace till all be perfected in Glory what a Priviledge is this None but they that live this Life can have Communion with God Things cannot converse that do not live the same Life as Adam had no Companion or meet-help but was alone though all the Creatures came and subjected themselves to him Trees Beasts Men c. Gen. 2. 18. And the Lord said it is not good for man to be alone I will make him an help meet for him But besides this state of nearness there are special Acts of nearness both on God's part and ours he is nearer to us sometimes than at others when we have more evidences of his Favour inward or outward inward Evidences when he quickens comforts supports the Soul filleth the heart with Joy and Peace in Believing at such a time God is near we feel him sensibly exciting and stirring up his own work in us The Soul alwayes dwelleth in the Body but it doth not alwayes act alike it is ever equal in point of Habitation but not in point of Operation So Christ doth always dwell in the heart by his Spirit but he doth not alwayes act alike but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according to his good Pleasure Phil. 2. 13. God is not alike always present with his People but never withdraweth that Influence that is necessary to the being of Grace Psal. 73. 23. Nevertheless I am continually with thee thou hast holden me by my right hand So outwardly sometimes God hideth himself sometimes seemeth not to mind the affairs of his People at other times all the World shall know that they are near and dear to him he that toucheth them toucheth the Apple of his Eye those that will not see shall see and be ashamed for their envy at his people Isa. 26. 11. So on our part there is a standing Relation between us and God but our hearts are more or less towards him in Worship we especially then draw near unto him though there be a communion in walking with God in our whole course these things must be distinguished for actual intercourse may be interrupted or suspended when our state of nearness to God ceaseth not 6. The Grounds and Reasons of all nearness or the way how it cometh about are these four I. God's Covenant with us II. Our Incorporation into Christ. III. The Inhabitation of the Spirit in us And IV. Mutual Love between God and us These are the Reasons why God is near us and we a People near unto God I. His Covenant with us or Confederation in the Covenant God promiseth to be our God and we to be his People Ier. 32. 38. And they
therefore though God will give sufficient means of Conviction yet not always such evident marks of his Favour to the best Cause in Temporal things as that mere sense shall lead them to embrace it No he will onely set a good Cause a-foot and then suffer it to be exposed to the hatred of the World and sometimes to be over-born as to any Temporal Interest it can get that the mere Evidence and Love of Truth may gain men and not any secular motives All the countenance and owning God will give to it is by infusing Courage and Constancy to his Servants to suffer for it and so they overcome by the blood of the Lamb and not loving their Lives to the Death Rev. 12. 11. he speaketh of such a time when the Church seemeth weakest like a poor woman Travelling and her Enemies seem strongest like a great Red Dragon ready to devour the Child assoon as born Now though at such a time the Church is overcoming and the Devil and his Instruments are but pulling down their own Throne and establishing Christs while they are shedding the Blood of his Saints Yet none of this appeareth and is visibly to be seen Though suffering be a sealing and ratifying of the Truth yet to the Worlds eye it seemeth a suppressing and over-bearing of it Therefore few will own such a despised hated persecuted way and the difficulty is the greater when there is much of Gods Truth owned by the persecuting side and the contest is not about the main of Christianity but some lesser Truths and so the opposition is more disguised then certainly it may be said Isa. 59. 4. None calleth for Iustice nor any pleadeth for Truth all half Friends are discouraged therefore nothing is left the people of God but their Prayers Lord plead my cause David in the Text appealeth to Gods Judgment when he was deserted by men burdened by prejudices oppressed by mans wrong Judgment So often Gods People are not able to defend themselves and few in the World will own them or be Advocates for them then God will take their cause in hand In the Civil Law if a man could not get an Advocate metu adversarii the Judge was to appoint him one to plead for him So God taketh notice of his Peoples Condition Ier. 30. 13. There is none to plead thy cause that thou mayst be bound up Often among men none can or dareth undertake the defence and patronage of oppressed Right 2. Though we have a good Cause and hopeful Instruments yet we cannot plead it with any effect till God shew himself from heaven Nay though the Cause be never so right and just and Instruments and Means hopeful yet it requireth God's power to keep it a-foot For the justice of the Cause must not be relyed on nor probable means rested in but God must have the Trust of the Cause and the Glory of maintaining it otherwise by our own ill managing or by some secret and unseen opposition it will Miscarry Psal. 9. 4. Thou ●…st maintained my right and my cause thou satest in the Throne judging right This is a work wherein God will be seen while it is in agitation or under decision God will have the Trust and when it is over he will have all the Glory III. What Hopes or Grounds there are to expect that God will plead the Cause of his People 1. He can 2. He will Infinite Power and infinite Justice can do it 1. He can The Lord is able he that pleadeth our Cause hath infinite Power Prov. 23. 11. Their Redeemer is mighty he shall plead their cause with thee It is easie to bear down a few afflicted Creatures that have no strength or heart to oppose being in bonds and under oppression but there is a mighty God who when he pleadeth any ones cause he will do it to the purpose really and effectually delivering them for whom he pleadeth Ier. 50. 34. Their Redeemer is strong the Lord of Hosts is his name he will throughly plead their Cause that he may give rest to the land and disquiet the inhabitants of Babylon 2. He will Considering 1. Their Relation to God 2. God's Relation to them and to the whole World 1. Because of their Relation to him the Dominus the Lord whom they had chosen was to be their Patronus they that have put themselves under Gods Protection and are faithful to him keeping close to his Word he will plead their cause and manage it as his own Isa. 51. 22. Thus saith thy Lord the Lord and thy God that pleadeth the cause of his people Behold I have taken out of thy hand the cup of trembling even the dregs of the cup of my fary thou shalt no more drink it again He being their Soveraign Lord had undertaken to protect his Servants he counteth the wrongs done to them done to himself Acts 9. 4. Saul Saul why persecutest thou me Especially since molested for his Truth 2. Because of his Relation to them he is the Supream Potentate and the righteous Judge of the World and so bound by his office to defend the weak and innocent when oppressed Psal. 146. 7. He executeth judgment for the opppressed those that should maintain Right upon Earth and punish Wrongs are often prevaricators but the Judge of all the Earth will do Right he is an impartial Judge and will maintain the cause of his People Prov. 22. 22 23. Rob not the poor because he is poor neither oppress the afflicted in the gate For the Lord will plead their cause and spoil the soul of those that spoiled them Though no Relation to him yet if poor if afflicted if destitute of humane help the Lord taketh himself to be the Patron of all such much more his People Use. I. To rebuke our Fears and Mis-giving of Heart When we see the best men go to the Walls and to be made objects of Scorn and Spight we are apt to say as the Church doth in the Prophet Isaiah Chap. 40. 27. My way is ●…id from the Lord and my judgment is passed over from my God that is in effect that God doth wholly neglect them and will not plead their Cause Oh no! he knoweth what strife there is between us and our Adversaries and how good our Cause is and how much he is concerned in it onely we must wait his leisure and bear his Indignation until he plead True submission to God ought to prescribe no day to him but referr all to his Will Use. II. Let us commit our Cause to the Lord as the expression is Iob 5. 8. I would seek unto God and unto God would I commit my cause who is the Friend and Advocate of the Afflicted and hath promised to be so and to keep us from the hand of the wicked and the mouth of the wicked from their hand and violence so far as it shall be for his Glory Isa. 49. 25. I will contend with him that contendeth with thee and I
the preparation must still remain with us and we are to watch against dulness and indisposedness for this holy work This preparation is more or less at times for special Mercies do raise enliven and inspirit the heart but some measure of a thankful disposition or bent and inclination to Praise God must never be wanting As the Vestal Fire among the Romans was ever kept in on special occasions it was blown up so there should be an habitual frame of heart to Praise God at all times but upon some special occasions it must more especially be excited and stirred up to it 3. We must keep a constant Course and certain order of Worshipping and Praising God both in Publick and Private In Scripture they are said to do a thing alwayes who do it upon stated occasions as Mephibosheth did eat continually at Davids Table 2 Sam 9. 13. not as if alwayes eating but at the eating times And the Disciples are said to be continually in the Temple Praising and Blessing God Luk. 24. 53. that is at the appointed times of Worship So we are to set forth certain times to Bless and Praise the Lord who is continually good to us especially on the Sabbath See the 92 Psal. the Title with the first Verse It is a good thing to give thanks unto the Lord and to sing praises unto thy name O most high We are not to omit any occasion of Formal and direct thanksgiving acknowledge Mercy and Faithfulness the two Pillars of our Confidence as it is to be done Constantly which the former head called for so Frequently that is we must take every just occasion to perform it let no special opportunity pass the Lords Mercies are new every moment Lam. 3. 21. And he loadeth us with his benefits dayly Psal. 68. 19. Therefore as Gods hand is ever open to Bless so should our Mouths be ever open to Praise and we should never go from this exercise nisi cum animo revertendi but with a purpose to return to it again We have poor Temporary Affections towards God and are very rare and unfrequent in these Duties though we are dayly receiving more and more Benefits yet we are slow and backward to this work Every Hour every Minute every Moment God is obliging us to it a-new therefore we should say I will Praise him more and more Thirdly The ground of Praising mentioned in the Text because of thy righteous Iudgments Here observe 1. The Term is one of the Notions by which the Word of God is expressed surely all kind of Mercies are the matter of Praise especially spiritual Mercies and among these his Word for this is a great favour in itself the Church can as ill be without it as the World without the Sun Psal. 19. He compareth the Sun and the Law together this is a peculiar Favour Psal. 147. 19 20. He hath given his word to Iacob he hath not dealt so with every nation praise ye the Lord. The benefit of the Scriptures is a precious gift of God to the Church and so it should be valued and esteemed not counted a burden as it is to them who are wholly Earthly and mind not Heavenly things Alas what should we do without this help to ease our burdened minds to understand Gods Providences and learn the way to happiness without these pure Precepts and heavenly Promises What is it that raiseth in us the joy of Faith the patience of Hope that directeth us to a streight and certain way to Glory but the Word of God This is the book of books the Food and Comfort of our Souls Psal. 56. 10. In God I will praise his word in the Lord I will praise his word The best hold that Faith can have of God is by his Word let us own his Word and then what ever his Dispensations be we have cause to Praise him here is a sure hope to six upon and a sure Rule to walk by it cannot be told in a Breath what benefit we have by it here is matter of Glorying and firm Confidence we need not fear Men or Devils as long as we have such a firm Bulwark to secure us here we have Gods Will made known to give us notice of a blessed Estate and Gods Promise to give us an Interest in it 2. It noteth the dispensation of his Providence fulfilling his Promises unto the Faithful and executing his Threatnings on the wicked he is the same in his Works that he is in his Word his Judgments are declared in his holy Word and executed in his righteous Providence and therefore 't is said of them that have not his Word Psal. 147. 20. As for his Iudgments they have not known them praise ye the Lord. Where they have not his Word the Lords dealing with Men in Justice and Mercy and the Course which he observeth in ruling the World is not understood it lyeth much in the dark so that his Providence is complicated with his Word and as 't is the sentence of his Word Executed is matter of Praise Well then we must Praise God for his Righteous Government of the World according to his Word whether it concern the Church in general or Us in particular Rev. 16. 7. True and righteous are thy judgments But because particular Providences come nearest home and do most affect us I shall instance in them 1. Let me shew you how we should Praise God for his Favours and fulfilling of Promises to us and hearing our Prayers and remembring us for good in our low Estate Ioshua leaveth this note when dying Ioshua 23. 14. I am going the way all the earth and ye know in all your hearts and all your souls that not one thing hath failed of all the good things which the Lord hath spoken to you all are come to pass not one thing hath failed thereof Trust God and try him and you will return the same account with this which was the result of all his experience And Solomon taketh notice of Gods fulfilling Promises 1 Kings 8. 20. and 24. And the Lord hath performed his word that he spake Who hast kept with thy servant David my father that thou promisedst him Thou spakest also with thy mouth and hast fulfilled it with thine hand There is none of any acquaintance with God but find much of this now they should therefore Praise the Lord and love him so David Psal. 116. 1. I will love the Lord who hath heard the voice of my supplication When we have put Promises in suit and challenged God upon his Word he hath stood to it justified our Confidence every fresh experience in this kind should excite new Love and Praise 2. In time of Affliction when Divine Dispensations go Cross to our Affections and it may be to our Prayers yet even then should we praise the Lord. Iob when the Lord had taken away he blesseth the Name of the Lord Iob 1. 21. The Lord is worthy of praise and honour when he giveth and
we should look to our Confidence whether it be Faith or Security whether we rest upon a carnal Pillow or the Corner-stone which God hath laid in Sion Use. It concerneth us all to look to this whether we love the law so as to have gotten Peace of Conscience and Assurance of Gods Protection because of the ●…titude of Scandals and the Trials and Exercises we are put upon by Gods Correcting hand The Prosperity of the Wicked the Disgrace that is cast on the stricter ways of God the World being so full of Snares and Temptations that bring men to Sin and Ruin Omnia timeo saith Bernard quae placeant quae tristantur I am afraid of every thing of those things that please us and those that make us sad What shall a poor Christian do that he may not Miscarry 1. Be sure that your Resolutions for God and the World to come be thoroughly fixed and settled for you will be distracted with every thing if you be not at a point and have not chosen the better part and fully fixed your purpose The Apostle telleth us Iam. 1. 8. The double minded man is unstable in all his ways A wavering and inconstant Christian will not know which way to turn himself being disquieted upon all occasions 2. They never rightly begin with God that do not sit down and count what it may cost them to be holy Christians Luk. 14. 26. If any man come to me and hate not his father and mother and wife and children and brethren and sisters yea and his own life also he cannot be my Disciple If you have not a preparation of mind to suffer any thing rather than part with Christ you are not fit for his turn Like a man that sets on Building and hath not a Stock to hold out or designeth a War and is not provided with all necessaries to go thorough with it You must expect Temptations and Troubles because they serve to try whether you will hold your integrity and if God be not sufficient enough to be your portion never serve him Never pretend to Religion if you do not resolve to renounce all that is precious to you in the World rather than forsake it 3. Consider the necessity of standing to Gods Law whatever persecutions and sufferings you meet with There is no other way to be saved Ioh. 6. 68. Lord whither shall we go thou hast the words of eternal life Such as have a mind to quit Christ have need to consider where they shall find a better master Change where they will they change for the worse Obedience to the Word of God is the only way to Eternal Life and whatever Law you make to your selves God will judge you by his own Law 4. Be established in the peace of God and never break this peace to obtain your outward peace What a wound will it be to thy Soul and how shiftless and helpless wilt thou be when to make thy peace with the World thou hast broken thy peace with God! Therefore rise up against Temptations as the Trees refused in Iothams Parable to be Ruler over the rest Shall I lose my fatness another my sweetness to rule over the Trees Shall I to please men put my Conscience to a continual Torment and Anguish sell the Birth-right for one Morsel of Meat The remembrance will come into your minds when you had joyful Communion with God and his People whose Company you have abandoned every day of solemn Assembly will be a new Torment to you 5. When troubles surprize you consider how unbeseeming it is to take offence at Gods Providence 'T is an ill sign to be so apt to pick quarrels with God and Godliness it argueth little love either to God or his Law for love thinketh no ill of those whom we love they are Murmurers that said the ways of the Lord are not equal or what profit is there if we serve the Lord Mal. 3. 14 6. Consider The greatest hurt Satan intendeth you is not to hurt your Bodies but your Souls To bring you to be offended at the holy and righteous ways of the Lord he would let you enjoy the pleasures of sin to rob you of your delight in God and Celestial pleasures let you have all the World if it were in his power Matth. 4. 9. 7. Consider How short is the Prosperity of the wicked and those that turn aside to the wayes of sin Psal. 17. 14. They shall be cut off they are soon withered and dried up and all their outward Glory perishes with them 'T is a more prudent Course to adhere closely to God Iob 5. 3. I have seen the foolish taking root but suddenly I cursed his habitation 'T is a prediction he foretold that there was a Curse at the root of all his Prosperity SERMON CLXXXI PSALM CXIX VER 166. Lord I have hoped for thy Salvation and done thy Commandments THE Man of God had said Verse 165. Great Peace have they that love thy Law and nothing shall offend them now he particularly applyeth to himself what he had generally spoken before 'T is sweet when we can thus comfortably apply Promises and make out our own Title and Interest this is Davids work in this and the following Verses Here he maketh profession of two things his Hope and Obedience which indeed are the two great things that belong to a Christian Graces much praised and little practised Quarum multa sunt Elogia pauca Exempla They are fitly coupled together in his Plea I have hoped I have done For our Confidence in Gods Mercy is no greater than our Fidelity in his Precepts and they are both professed before God who searcheth the heart and tryeth the Reins Lord I have hoped for thy Salvation and done thy Commandments Doctrine Sound hope of Salvation is and must be joyned with a care of keeping Gods Commandments First I shall speak of the several branches of this Profession apart Secondly Then of their Conjunction First Separately and there I. Of the Profession of his Hope Lord I have hoped for thy salvation 1. The Object and thing hoped for is Salvation Salvation is Temporal or Eternal of the Body or of the Soul Rabbi David Kimchi understandeth it of the latter but it seemeth rather to imply help and deliverance out of dangers and distresses Indeed neither can be well excluded not Eternal Salvation for without that Temporal Deliverance is but a reprieve for a time not a total exemption from Evil not Temporal Salvation because before we come to look for our full and final deliverance God will try us by the way and train us up in the expectation of other things As men learn to swim in the Rivers and shallow Waters that afterwards they may swim in the Ocean and deep Waters So by expecting lesser things we learn to wait for greater both must be hoped for but with a difference Eternal Salvation absolutely but Temporal with submission to Gods Will. We have
Though for the main we give up our selves to live according to the will of God yet consider notwithstanding our sins what constant humbling confiderations there are to keep us sensible of our defects First All that you do is not worthy of God who can serve so great a Majesty as the Lord is according as he should be served Iosh. 14. 29. You cannot serve the Lord for he is a holy and a jealous God Alas such is the poverty of humane condition that they can never perform service becoming his Majesty have you a due sense of his purity and holiness Nay how jealous he is of the respects of his people Secondly Not worthy of such a pure Law which requireth such perfect service at our hands Psal. 19. 6 7 8. The law of the Lord is perfect converting the soul c. What doth that speculation produce that a short exposition of the Law begetteth a large opinion of our own righteousness Thirdly Not worthy such great hopes 1 Thess. 2. 12. That ye walk worthy of God who hath called you to his Kingdom and Glory Since we have such great wages we should do more work Is this for Heaven Is this for eternity Fourthly Not such as will answer our obligations We are indebted to all the Persons of the Trinity God himself for our portion Christ our Redeemer the Spirit for our Guide and Comforter The Gentiles greatly obliged to God for fruitful Seasons The Jews though acquainted only with Gods patience and forbearance the Ceremonial Law was a testification of guilt or a Bond that shewed the Creatures Debt this Bond was not cancelled Fifthly Not answerable to the new Nature in Gods Children they would be in a state of perfect conformity and subjection to God A seed worketh through the Clods so they groan under the reliques of corruption and sin Rom. 7. 24. longing for the time when they shall be more like God when they shall serve him without spot or blemish therefore are unsatisfied with their present imperfections These things considered we should ever keep humble and thankful praising Gods Grace Isai. 63. 7. I will mention the loving kindness of the Lord and the praises of the Lord according to all that the Lord hath bestowed upon us and the great goodness towards the house of Israel which he hath bestowed on them according to his mercies and the multitude of his loving kindnesses Use 5. Directeth us how to pray Cast your selves at Gods feet pleading his mercy We have heard the Kings of Israel a●…e merciful Kings 1 Kings 20. 31. you have heard so of the God of Israel try wh●… mercy will do for you say as David here Deal with thy servant according to thy mercy My prayers have no other foundation of hope but thy mercy I am nothing and would be nothing but what I have from thee I have no merits but thou hast mercy all that I have and expect to have floweth and must flow from this Fountain take heed of challenging Duty as a Debt no Lord thy mercy is all my plea as all thy servants before have done Lord temember me in thy mercy if any have other things to plead let them plead I am resolved to use no other Plea Psal. 13. 5. But I have trusted in thy mercy Second Branch Teach me thy Statutes This may be considered apart by it self or with respect to the Context 1. Apart as an intire prayer in its self So the Doctrine is Doctr. 'T is God must teach us his Statutes This will appear if we consider 1. What it is to be taught of God There is a difference between Grammatical Knowledge and Spiritual Illumination or a literal instruction and a spiritual instruction a greater difference than there is between teaching a Child to spell and read the words and a Man to understand the sense Literal instruction is when we learn the truths contained in the Word by rote and talk one after another of Divine things But Spiritual Illumination is when these things are revealed to us by the Spirit of God as we read of the evidence and demonstration of the Spirit 1 Cor. 2. 4. Others have a form of knowledge Rom. 2. 20. Some have only the report of Christ have but an humane credulity or the recommendation of others that reveal the Doctrine of God to them Others receive a revelation made to their souls their eyes are opened by the Spirit Isai. 53. 1. Once more there is a difference between the Spirits enlightening in a way of gifts and common Grace and his enlightening in a way of special and saving Grace Some that are enlightned by the Spirit fall away Heb. 6. 4. Others are taught of God so as to come to him by Christ Iohn 6. 45. This latter sort that are savingly enlightned have not only their minds opened but their hearts enclined So to be taught as to be drawn to faith and practice this is proper to God who is the Soveraign Dispenser of Grace 2. This will appear if we consider the heart of Man which is naturally full of darkness and oppressed by the prejudices of customs and evil habits 1 Cor. 〈◊〉 14. But the natural man receiveth not the things of God 2 Cor. 4. 4. The God of this world hath blinded their eyes This Veil can only be removed by the Spirit of God After Grace received we know but in part 1 Cor. 13. 9. and much of the matter which becloudeth the mind still remaineth with us And when our lusts are awakened by temptations our old blindness returneth upon us and we strangely forget our selves and our Duty for the present Therefore we have need to go to God to be taught 2 Pet. 1. 9. He that wanteth these things is blind and cannot see afar off 3. If we consider the matter to be taught 't is the mysterious Doctrine that came out of the bosome of God Every Art hath its mystery which Strangers cannot judge of 1 Tim. 3. 16. All Scripture is given by inspiration This was a Secret which had not been known without a Revelation God hath his Mysteries which no man knoweth but by the Spirit of God Matth. 13. 1●… To you 't is given to know the mysteries of the Kingdom of Heaven but to them it is not given Those that have Scriptures yet have scales on their eyes 1 Cor. 2. 14. they have not saving knowledge How sharp-sighted soever graceless souls may be in things that concern the present World yet they are blind in spiritual things so as to be affected and engaged thereby seriously to turn to God Yea how accurately soever they can discourse in the Theory and preach of Christ and his ways yet they have no transforming light Gods mysteries must be seen in his own light or they make no impression upon us Psal. 36. 9. In thy light we shall see light The Scriptures containing the summ of the Lords mind none can of themselves attain to the meaning of them 'T was
not the device of mans brain So none understand by their proper skill and invention There are such knots as cannot be untyed and loosed but by imploring the help of the Spirit Use 1. To press us to be often with God for this teaching and make it our great request to him A gracious heart would fain learn the right way to Heaven Psal. 43. 3. O send out thy light and thy truth Direction●… how to carry our selves is a great Blessing 2. The blindness of our understandings should make us more earnest with God We are apt to mistake our way through the natural weakness of our understandings especially when lusts and interests interpose Ier. 10. 23. Lord the way of man is not in himself it is not in man that walketh to direct his steps As Man understandeth not events so easily mistaketh present Duties 3. Our present estate The world is a dark place 2 Pet. 1. 19. compared with the light of Glory 't is but like a light that shineth out of a Room where a Candle is and a Room where a Candle is not seen the glimmerings of the Anti-Chamber of eternity Our own reason the counsel and example of others will easily misguide us So the more we depend upon God the more he will undertake to teach us Prov. 5. 6. Those that make their own bosomes their Oracle God is disengaged from being their Guide they need him not but the snares they run into will soon shew them how much they need him 4. How unapt we are to see Conclusions in the promises and to apply general Rules to particular Cases and times which most Christians cannot do 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in their inferences Rom. 1. 21. Are vain in their imaginations have their foolish hearts darkened 5. To bind all upon the heart and to lye under the Conscience of our Duty maketh the difficulty the greater many imprison the truth in unrighteousness Well then beg the constant direction and illumination of Gods holy Spirit cast your selves upon him in the sense of your weakness and see if he will refuse you say I am blind and ignorant Lord guide me 'T is dangerous to be left in any part of our Duty to our selves II. If we consider the words with respect to the Context And first the remoter Context where David speaketh like a man under trouble and oppression verses 121 122. Let not the proud oppress me c. Lord shew me what to do in this time of my oppression Doctr. Direction how to carry our selves in trouble till the deliverance cometh is a great mercy and should be earnestly sought of God Reasons 1. From the parties oppressing They that oppress watch for our halting as Ieremiah complained Ier. 20. 10. They accused the Prophet unto the Ruler and so to work his ruine if they could find him tripping in any thing Now when we are watched we need special direction that God would teach us to walk warily and safely Psal. 27. 11. Teach me thy way O Lord and lead me in a plain path because of mine enemies Or those which observe me they watch to get some advantage therefore that they may have no advantage against us we should not trust to our own single wisdom 2. Because the danger of sin is a greater inconvenience than the danger of trouble In times of tryals and troubles we are in danger of soul-losing and sinning as well as bodily danger therefore we have need to beg wisdom of God to carry it well under trouble because we are so apt to miscarry unless God guide us continually in our dark condition and take us by the hand and help us over our stumbling Blocks There are many sins incident to our condition First Uncomely passion and unadvised speeches therefore David prayeth in his trouble Psal. 141. 3. Set a watch before my mouth keep the door of my lips In our oppression we are under a temptation to hurt our own Cause by unadvised and passionate speeches when we have too great a sense of the temptation something or other breaketh out to Gods dishonour Secondly Some indirect course to come out of trouble Psal. 125. 3. Men that make haste out of trouble carve for themselves break prison before they are brought out Necessity is an ill Counseller and will soon tempt us to some evil way for our own ease some sinful compliance or confederacy The Devil tempted Christ when he was an hungry Matth. 4. 3. hoping to work upon his necessity Thirdly Private revenge or meeting injury with injuries We are apt to retaliate 2 Sam. 16. 9. Why should this dead Dog curse my Lord the King let me go over I pray thee and take off his head Revenge is soon up No man is troubled if a shower of Rain falleth upon us but if any cast a Bucket or Bason of Water upon us we are in a rage presently We can better bear any trouble from God than injuries from men Oppression maketh a wise man mad A revengeful spirit is contrary to our heavenly Calling Fourthly Waxing weary of our Duty and quite tired and discouraged in Gods service Heb. 12. 3. Consider him that endured such contradiction of sinners lest you be weary and faint in your minds Weariness and fainting belong properly to the Body and they differ gradually weariness is a lesser and fainting a higher degree of deficiency as when a man laboureth hungers or travelleth it abateth his strength and abateth the active powers or toileth the Spirits the principle of motion And from the Body 't is translated to the Mind to a less or higher degree of defection and is thus When troubles are many and long continued then we begin to grow faint and wax weary of the faith and service of Christ and sink under the burthen 'T is the Devils design to make us weary and tire us out in the service of God Fifthly Another evil is despairing and distrustful thoughts of God David after all his experiences of God though he had conducted him up and down 1 Sam. 27. 1. I shall one day perish by the hand of Saul He had a particular promise and assurance of the Kingdom and had seen much of Gods care over him yet after all this David doubteth of the Word of God Psal. 31. 22. I said in my hast I am cut off from before thine eyes nevertheless thou heardest me As if he should say God hath no care of me nor thoughts of me and at that instant deliverance was coming Sixthly Questioning our interest in God by reason of the Cross. Our Lord hath taught us to say My God my God in the bitterest agonies when he was upon the Cross but few learn this Lesson Iudg. 6. 23. If God be with us why hath all this evil befallen us Sometimes we question the love of God because we have no affliction and anon because we have nothing but affliction as if God were not the God of the Valleys as well as of the Mountains