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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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some renewed evidences of God's favour ask him then is it good to be afflicted Oh yes I had else been vain neglectfull of God wanted such an experience of the Lord's Grace Faith should determine the case when we feel it not Secondly That according to these Measures you will find it Good to be Afflicted 1. 'T is Good as 't is Minus Malum it keepeth us from greater evils Afflictions to the Righteous are either cures of or preservatives from spiritual Evils which would occasion greater Troubles and Crosses They prevent sin 2 Cor. 12. 7. And lest I should be exalted above measure through the abundance of Revelation there was given me a Thorn in the Flesh the Messenger of Satan to buffet me lest I should be exalted above measure They purge out Sin Isa. 27. 9. By this shall the Iniquity of Iacob be purged out We are apt to abuse prosperity to Self-confidence Psalm 30. 6 7. In my prosperity I said I shall never be moved Lord by thy Favour thou hast made my Mountain to stand strong And Luxury Deut. 32. 15. But Iesurun waxed fat and kicked thou art waxen fat thou art grown thick thou art covered with fatness then he forsook God that made him and lightly esteemed the rock of his Salvation The Godly have evil Natures as well as others which cannot be beaten down but by Afflictions We are froward in our Relations Hagar was proud in Abraham's house Gen. 16. 4. her Mistriss was despised in her Eyes but very humble in the Desart Gen. 21. 16. David's heart was tender and smote him when he cut off the lap of Saul's garment 1 Sam. 24. 5. but how stupid and senseless was he when he lived at ease in Ierusalem 2 Sam. 12. His Conscience was benum'd till Nathan roused him Before we are chastened we are Rebellious Frail Fickle Mutable apt to degenerate without this continual discipline we are very negligent and drowsy till the Rod awakeneth us God's Children have strange failings and negligences and sometimes are guilty of more hainous sins 'T is a great Curse for a man to be left to his own ways Hos. 4. 17. Let him alone So Psalm 81. 12. I gave them up to their own hearts Lust Men must needs perish when left to their selves without this wholesome profitable discipline of the Cross. 2. 'T is Good because the Evil in it is counterpoised by a more abundant Good 't is Evil as it doth deprive us of our natural comforts Pleasure Gain Honour but 't is Good as these may be recompensed with better Pleasures richer Gain and greater Honour There is more Pleasure in Holiness than there can be Pain and Trouble in Affliction Heb. 12. 11. No Affliction for the present seemeth Ioyous but Grievous but afterward it yieldeth the peaceable fruit of Righteousness more gain than Affliction can bring loss Heb. 12 10. But he for our profit that we might be partakers of his Holiness more honour than Affliction can bring shame surely then 't is good There is a threefold Profit we get by Affliction 1. The time of Affliction is a serious thinking time Eccles. 7. 14. In the day of Adversity consider 1 Kings 8. 47. Yet if they bethink themselves in the Land whither they are carried Captive We have more liberty to retire into our selves being freed from the attractive allurements of Worldly vanities and the delights of the Flesh. Adversity maketh men serious the Prodigal came to himself when he began to be in want Luke 15. 17. Sad objects make a deep impression upon our Souls they help us to consider our own ways and God's righteous dealings that we may behave our selves wisely and suitably to the dispensation Micah 6. 9. The man of wisdome will hear the Rod. 2. 'T is a special hearing time in the Text That I might learn thy statutes and 't is said of Christ Heb. 5. 8. that He learned obedience from the things that he suffered he did experimentally understand what obedience was in hard and difficult cases and so could the better pitty poor Sinners in Affliction we have an experimental knowledge of that of which we had but a notional knowledge before We come by experience to see how false and changeable the World is how comfortable an interest in God is what a burden Sin is what sweetness there is in the Promises what a reality in the Word Luther said qui tribulantur c. The Afflicted see more in the Scripture than others do the secure and fortunate read them as they do Ovid's Verses Certainly when the Soul is humble and when we are refined and raised above the degrees of Sense we are more tractable and teachable our understandings are clearer our Affections more melting our spiritual learning is a blessing that cannot be valued if God write his law upon our Hearts by his stripes on our backs so light a trouble should not be grudged at 3. 'T is an awakening quickening time 1. Some are awakened out of the sleep of Death and are first wrought upon by Afflictions this is one powerfull means to bring in Souls to God and to open their Ears to Discipline God began with them in their Afflictions and the time of their Sorrows was the time of Loves The hot Furnace is Christ's Workhouse the most excellent Vessels of honour and praise have been formed there Isa. 48. 10. I have chosen thee in the Furnace of Affliction Manasses Paul the Jaylor were all chosen in the Fire God puts them into the furnace and chuseth them there melts them and stamps them with the Image of Christ. The Hogs Trough was a good School to the Prodigal Well then doth God do you any harm by Affliction when he saves you by it If we use violence to a man that is ready to be drowned and in pulling him out of the waters should break an Arm or a Leg would he not be thankfull it you have broken my Arm you have saved my life So God's Children 't is good that I had such an Affliction felt the sharpness of such a Cross. Oh Blessed Providence I had been a witless Fool and gone on still in a course of Sin and Vanity if God had not awakened me 2. It quickeneth others to be more carefull of their Duty more watchfull against Sin and doth exercise and improve us in heavenly Vertues and Graces of the Spirit which lay dormant in us through neglect since pleasing Objects which deaden the Heart are removed Even God's best Children when they have gotten a carnal Pillow under their Heads are apt to sleep their Prayers are dead Thoughts of Heaven cold or none little Zeal for God or delight in him Isa. 26. 16. Lord in trouble they have visited thee they pour out a Prayer when thy Chastening is upon them Hosea 5. 15. In their Afflictions they will seek me early Because they do not stir up themselves God stirreth them up by a smart Rod. The Husbandman pruneth the Vine left it run
for they will grow upon us and therefore it makes for the encouragement of you that they should sooner begin with God 2. It makes for the encouragement of those that have the Education of Youth as Masters of Families Parents and the like Do not say it is too soon for them to learn No Age is too soon for God 2 Tim. 3. 5. Thou hast from thy Infancy learned the Scriptures When we suck in Religion with our milk it 's a great advantage those things we keep with us that we learn young Prov. 22. 6. Train up a child in the way he should go and when he is old he will not depart from it When the new Vessel is seasoned with this precious liquor it will keep the taste tender Twigs are bent this way when they are as Wax capable of any impression Use 3. Caution for young ones If young men should obtain this benefit to grow wiser than the Ancients notwithstanding this yet they should learn to shew reverence to the aged Iob 32. 4 5 6. And then to ascribe it to God saith he ver 8. There is a spirit in man and the inspiration of the Almighty giveth them understanding It is not the sharpness of our wit but the inspiration of his Grace he is the Author of all this wisdom that is wrought in us Use 4. To humble the Aged that have not made conscience of their time and ways and therefore are more blockish than many Children Isa. 65. 20. There shall be no more an infant of days nor an old man that hath not filled his days Old men that are ignorant of the mysteries of Faith after they have long sate under the Word of God and have many advantages to improve their youth Heb. 5. 12. When for the time ye ought to be Teachers ye have need that one teach you again which be the first principles of the Oracles of God and are become such as have need of milk and not of strong meat In this sense God is said to take away the understanding of the Aged that is by a just judgment for their unfruitfulness and unprofitableness under the means of Grace They that are much younger than you are wise in comparison of you when they excel you for ripeness in wisdom for solidness and setledness in manners in a course of godliness Those old men that draw near to the Grave before they have consider'd either the end wherefore they came into the world or the state into which they shall be translated when they go out of it those are Children of 100 years old that have nothing to reckon Age by but wrinckles and gray hairs Doct. 3. That the way to increase in spiritual understanding is to be studious in practical holiness The Word that will give you understanding will keep you out of all snares sufficiently direct you to true happiness But how shall we get it refer it to practice practise what you know and you shall know more it must needs be so 1. Because these are such as have God's Promise Iohn 7. 17. If any man will do his will he shall know of the doctrine whether it be of God or whether I speak of my self They that make conscience of their ways season their course in the fear of God that take Gods direction with them God will tell them they shall know what doctrine is of God 2. They have a greater clearness of mind and understanding therefore must needs discern holy things why because they are freed from the clouds of lust and passion which do insensibly blind and make them stay in generals Mat. 5. 8. Blessed are the pure in heart for they shall see God Saith Nazianzene Where there is purity there 's brightness where there 's a pure heart there 's a great deal more clearness in the understanding Reason and Fancy are dark unless a Man have a command over his Passions and Affections over his Passions of Anger Fear Grief and over his Affections of Love and Joy and Appetite towards sensual delights unless he be able to govern these things he will never truly discern the mind of God for the seasoning his course in living a holy life that of the Apostle is notable 2 Pet. 1. 5. Add to your faith virtue and to virtue knowledge and to knowledge temperance unless they be able to govern their affections in the use of worldly delights pleasures and profits they will never have this practical knowledge and therefore the only way to know divine things as Nazianzene well observes is conscientiously to keep the Commandments of God If you would know the Will of God do not spend your time in heaping up Notions but framing your heart to obedience governing your affections by the fear of God and suiting your hearts to the Word of God Alas Those that seek knowledge out of ambition curiosity and vain ostentation and lie under the power of vile affections get but very little true spiritual light they may have the understanding of Teachers but not the understanding to season them and guide them in their communion with God 3. The more we practise the more Religion is exemplifi'd and made sensible so that we come to understand more of the sweetness of it and on the other hand the more of difficulty is in it when there is nothing but bare Notions and naked apprehensions There we have a double advantage an exact Rule and more experience of the sweetness of Religion Prov. 3. 17. All her ways are ways of pleasantness When we practise what we know then we come to know the sweetness of entertaining communion with the Lord and they know more of the difficulty of Religion they know where their hearts are more averse and more in danger whereas others that soar aloft in Notions and idle and lofty speculations have not this experience 4. They that practise study things with more affection than others mightily help their understanding The more piety and zeal any man hath the more will the Lord bless his Studies Paul profited in the Iewish Religion above many of his Equals why Gal. 1. 14. Being more exceedingly zealous of the tradition of my Fathers A man that hath a zeal in any thing will profit more than others so he that hath a zeal for the things of God profits above others A blunt Iron if red hot will pierce through an Inch-board sooner than a cold Tool though never so sharp so those that have blunt parts in comparison of others yet if they have zeal and good affections they will pierce deep into the mysteries of Religion they that have sharper parts want the fire of zeal 5. The more fruitful any Grace is the more doth it abound with us and therefore when your knowledge is fruitful you will find it increased by laying out your Talents Col. 1. 10. Be fruitful in every good work always increasing in the knowledge of God First he presseth knowledge in order to practice then he presseth
is one means for our preservation therefore it must be often used Use. For reproof of those that ask sustaining Grace customarily and carelesly without any deep sense or renewed importunity we are too cold and formal when we say Lead us not into temptation Consider 1. None stand but may fall in some degree and it is our business to take heed we do not Every hour we are in danger either of getting some Distemper or letting out some Corruption Of getting some Distemper being spotted and defiled in the World or at least being made dull and indisposed in the service of God Or else of letting out some Corruption if God do not keep our heart and all Psal. 141. 3. Set a watch O Lord before my mouth keep the door of my lips how soon should we betray our folly And therefore it 's a happy day and we have cause to bless God when we have not by some words or works of ours interrupted our Communion with him Consider 2. How many things concurre to lead us aside corruptions within and temptations without and it may be sometimes the example of others that are of esteem in the Church Corruption within always fighting against Grace the Flesh lusteth against the Spirit and temptations without the favours and frowns of the World if these things have not they may befall us and it is too late to seek armour in time of conflict 3. And then to see men eminent for knowledge and profession turn back from the holy Commandment and glorious Stars fall from their Orb and Station this overturns the faith of many 2 Tim. 2. 18. So that all these things considered we cannot stand a moment without God and therefore we should be more earnest with him for Grace Doctr. 2. The constant safety of Gods people lies in sustaining Grace First Negatively without it we cannot be safe partly because there are so many tryals and temptations between us and home by reason of the sleights of the flesh the cunning of Satan and oppositions of the world and partly because the measure of Grace received is so small Phil. 3. 13. I have not attained and the danger of sinning against God is so great Amos 3. 2. You only have I known of all the Families of the Earth therefore will I punish you for all your iniquities So that we are no longer safe from sin and punishment than God puts under his hand Secondly Positively By Gods sustaining Grace we are kept safe both as the power and faithfulness of God are engaged for our defence 1. The power of God is engaged 1 Pet. 1. 5. Who are kept by the power of God through faith unto salvation The Apostle first speaks of Heaven that that is kept for us and then presently you are kept for it by the power of God An earthly inheritance may be sure enough for the Heir but who can secure the Heir from death and all other accidents But here God provides for our Comfort not only our inheritance is sure but we are kept and how doth God keep us By his power O what greater safety can there be He can mitigate the temptation or else give a supply of strength he can keep off tryals or support us under them 1 Cor. 10. 13. 2. The faithfulness of God is engaged 1 Cor. 1. 9. God is faithful by whom ye were called unto the fellowship of his Son And 2 Thess. 3. 3. The Lord is faithful who shall establish you and keep you from evil Certainly God is able but how shall we know that he will do it His truth is laid in pawn for what he hath promised and therefore we may hold up our heads with confidence and this should comfort us against all fears and doubtful and uncertain thoughts Use. Instruction To shew us how constantly God must be sought to in prayer and relied upon in the use of means for our preservation both from sin and danger 1. Sought to in prayer Our strength lyes not in our selves but in God 2 Cor. 3. 5. We are not sufficient of our selves to think any thing as of our selves but our sufficiency is of God It is not only of God but in God there 's our treasure kept 2 Tim. 2. 1. Be strong in the Grace that is in Christ Iesus And Ephes. 6. 10. Be strong in the Lord and in the power of his might If the Stock were in our own hands besides the danger of imbezilling it we should neglect God as when the Prodigal Son had his portion he went away from his Father Therefore God keeps Grace in his own hand to keep us humble depending observing and to have a constant converse with him that our eyes may be to him as Psal. 123. 2. As the eyes of servants look unto the hand of their masters and as the eyes of a maiden unto the hand of her mistress so our eyes wait upon the Lord our God until that he have mercy upon us that is as maid and men servants look for their dole and portion their allowance given to them from their master and mistress so God will still keep us to him Dependance begets observance to keep up our Allegiance to the Crown of Heaven 2. As he must be sought to in prayer so relied upon in the use of means for our preservation God keeps us but not without our care and diligence A Christian is said to keep himself 1 Tim. 5. 22. and this is pure Religion to keep our selves unspotted Iam. 1. 27. and 1 Iohn 5. 18. He that is begotten of God keepeth himself that the wicked one touch him not and Iude 21. Keep your selves in the love of God What! doth not this detract from all that was spoken before No we act with subordination and dependance upon him Our keeping is from him by him and under him so we keep our selves through his blessing upon the use of means which he hath appointed for us to use The third Note is taken from the promise of obedience upon the supposition of this help from God Uphold me What then And I will have respect unto thy Statutes Observe Doctr. 3. The more experience we have of Gods Grace in the preserving us from sin and danger the more we should be encouraged in his ways Why so 1. Because of the Obligation It is his mercy which requires thankfulness now gratitude and thankfulness is the true principle which should urge us to perform our Duty to God Observe there are several principles which put men upon Gods service some false and rotten some more tolerable some lawful some excellent Some false and rotten as carnal custom shall we serve God say they as we have done Zech. 7. 3. when men only do as they have done it is the manner of the place they learn it of their Fathers and so customarily worship and serve God Then vain-glory to be seen of men that 's a rotten thing Matth. 6. Come and see my zeal for the Lord saith Iehu
evil humour or to encrease our hatred and exasperation against a party whom it may be we hate too much already with a carnal hatred but to a good purpose partly that we may not be too consident of carnal ease too soon God will it may be have the enemies Cup yet fuller and that they shall appear more in their own colours And so our tryals may be greater We know not the bounds of the Lords patience We that are apt to extenuate our own sins are apt to aggravate the sins of others look upon them in the Glass of passion and cry too soon it is time But of this by and by And partly that we may see the greatness of our transgressions by which we have provoked the Lord to give us up into the hands of such men as blaspheme his Name every day Isai. 52. 5. Our sins were full in our kind in the abuse of Gods truth and worship and though not such moral wickedness yet a great deal of spiritual wickedness And God is more quick and severe upon us and will not bear that in a professing people that he beareth in others Iudgment begins at the house of God 1 Pet. 4. 17. The Cup of trembling goes round and his own people drink first and our staggering is not yet over in time they shall pledge us God beareth with Balaam though he tempted him again and again when he would not bear with the young Prophet whom the Lyon slew He bore with the Philistines a long time e're they were plagned We feel the smart of the Rod sooner Zech. 12. Yet 't is apparent our kind of sins were grown to a ripeness our selfseeking factions turbulency unquietness under Government abuse of Christian liberty uncharitable Divisions among our selves vexing one another vain opinions sleighting Gods Ministers and Ordinances And partly that we may be humbled for their sins It should be a grief to us to see men break Gods Laws to see men outdare Heaven David fasted for his enemies Psal. 35. 14 15 16. and Psal. 119. 136. Rivers of tears run down mine eyes because men keep not thy Law because God is so much dishonoured humane Nature so much corrupted If more of this spirit were stirring it were the better for us And partly that we may fear our selves We are bound up in the same Community and when God judgeth them how shall we escape The Jews have a Proverb That two dry Sticks may set a green one on fire The meaning is The godly man may fall in the common calamity Wheat is plucked up with the Tares God saith in Deut. 7. 22. That they should not destroy all the Can●…anites lest the beasts of the field should encrease upon them The safety of his people are involved in the safety of their sinning and persecuting enemies A Hedg of Thorns may serve for a fence to a Garden of Roses and all the relief we have is the Lord can make a distinction 2 Pet. 2. 9. The Lord knoweth how to deliver the godly out of temptation and to reserve the unjust unto the day of Iudgment to be punished 3. Why doth God take this time First For his own Glory His Justice is more discovered when men have filled up their measure Psal. 51. 4. That thou mayest be justified when thou speakest and be clear when thou judgest It justifieth Gods proceedings and maketh us the more inexcusable So also his power 't is Gods time to send help and remedy when all things are gone to utter confusion when things are at the most desperate pass Psal. 124. 3 4 5. in our low estate then is God seen Secondly Hereby Gods work upon Mount Zion is promoted His people are humbled when their Adversaries are chief and rage against them Psal. 123. 4. Our soul is exceedingly filled with the scorning of those that are at ease and with contempt of the proud When things come to extremity their prayers are quickened Psal. 130. 1. Out of the depths I cryed unto thee O Lord. They are fitted to prize mercy Psal. 102. 13 14. They that thought it no great matter to have a standing Temple delight in the dust of a ruinous heap Then Shepherds Tents look lovely we set a higher rate on despised Ordinances In short they are waiting and praying and humbling their souls before God IV. Fourth Consideration When a flood of wickedness is thus broken out we may mind God of the deliverance of his people But what needs that Doth not God know his seasons and will not he exactly observe them In the Answer I shall shew you Why and How 1. Why Because First God loveth to be awakened by the prayers of his people and when he hath a mind to work he sets the spirit of prayer awork Ier. 29. 11 12. I know the thoughts that I think towards you saith the Lord thoughts of peace and not of evil to give you an expected end Then shall ye call upon me and ye shall go and pray unto me and I will hearken unto you So thus and thus will I do Ezek. 36. 37. Yet for this will I be enquired of by the house of Israel We are to give a lift by our prayers 't is a time of finding Psal. 32. 6. Secondly He hath put an office upon us God acts the part of a Judg we as Sollicitors and Remembrancers Isai. 62. 6 7. I have set Watchmen upon thy Walls O Ierusalem which shall never hold their peace night nor day Ye that make mention of the Lord keep not silence and give him no rest till he make Ierusalem a praise in the Earth We are to put God in mind so that we but do our duty 2. How The principle and manner must be right First The principle be sure it be not the impatiency of the Flesh or love to our own ease or a mere tediousness and irksomeness of the Cross be sure it be not passion and a principle of revenge but a desire of promoting his honour and vindicating his glory David doth not say how troublesome they were to himself but they make void thy Law as if he had said Lord if my own interest were only concerned I would not open my mouth nor ever call upon thee to revenge my private quarrels but it is my zeal for thy Honour and Ordinances not that I have received injury but thy worship is corrupted work else what will become of thy Name and poor people Offences done against God should grieve us more than our own injuries and we should rather regard the general interest of Religion than any personal offence done to us There is often a carnal spirit breathing in our prayers and our zeal is fleshly the people of God beat it back Psal. 115. 1. Not unto us not unto us but unto thy Name give glory And Psal. 74. 10. O Lord how long shall the adversary reproach and the enemy blaspheme thy name for ever The godly can endure their own troubles better than
three concurr in Elijahs speech Kings 1. 19. 10. I have been very jealous for the Lord God of Hosts there 's his zeal why for the Children of Israel have forsaken thy Covenant there 's his Truth perverted they have thrown down thy Altars there 's his Worship overturned they have slain thy Prophets with the Sword there his Servants are wronged So that zeal mainly is concerned when God suffers loss in any of these things if his Truth be perverted his Worship overturn'd his Servants be despitefully used vexed and grieved then zeal presently shews it self in opposing these things or in grieving for them 1. Zeal seeks to preserve the Truth of God inviolable Truth is a precious depositum Trust and Charge which God hath committed to the keeping of his People and without zeal to defend and propagate and maintain it though with the greatest hazard it will never be kept and you will never be faithful to God We are a kind of ●…offees for the present age and Trustees for the future and the charge of Gods Truth is put into our hands and we must see it be transmitted to the World pure and undefiled therefore Iude ver 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We must contend earnestly for the Faith which was once delivered unto the Saints When others would violate the Truth we must contend with them Ier. 9. 3. They are not valiant for the Truth A Christian needs not only the labour of an Ox that he may be diligent but the valour of a Lion that he may appear for God in defence of his Truth when it is invaded and in●…roached upon and especially doth this concern the Officers of the Church this zeal they should have for the word Titus 1. 9. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 holding fast the faithful Word The word signifies to be good at holding and drawing that is when others would wrest it out of our hands we should hold it fast as a staff that an other would take out of our hands we hold it faster and wrestle with him so should we wrestle contend and hold fast the truth when others would draw it from us And Phil. 1. 27. Striving together for the Faith of the Gospel O! we should not let one dust of truth perish This is to be zealous for the Truth standing to and striving for the defence thereof in our way and place If God had not raised up zealous Instruments in every Age to plead for his Truth what a sad case would the Church have been in Truth would have been buried under a great heap of prejudices and Christs Kingdom have been crusht in the very Egg and Religion strangled in the cradle But there 's a cloud of Witnesses gone before us in every age God sets up some of all Sexes Ages Conditions that have owned his despised and oppugned Truths and have not counted their lives dear so as they might give their testimony to the Truth of God Rev. 12. 11. and have more greedily embraced Martyrdom then Others honours and dignities in the Church as Sulpitius Severus observes they have with greater desire affected the glory of Martyrdom and Suffering for the Truth that they might be faithful to God and the Souls of Men in future Ages and to preserve Gods Truth inviolate they have greedily sought this honour to suffer for God And Ignatius he could say come saith he I desire the Beasts that are prepared should be let loose for me it is better to dye for Christ then to command the ends of the Earth And Basil when the Arrian Emperour threatned those that did oppose his Religion should dye the Death the wild Beasts let them be let out would to God it were so that I had the honour to dye for the Truth of Christ This was notably for the encrease of Christs Kingdom and thus the Lord hath inspired his people with a Holy Love and Zeal 2. For his Worship that that may not be corrupted but his Institutions kept Pure Zeal is conversant about that too Exod. 20. 5. Thou shalt not bow down thy self to them nor serve them for I the Lord thy God am a jealous God In the first Commandment God forbids a false God in the second he forbids the false Means of Worship as before the false Object Now because the Means of Worship are apt to be perverted the Lord shews how jealous he was for his Worship I am a jealous God if the Institutions of God be perverted then I will visit the iniquity of the Fathers upon the Children unto the Third and Fourth Generation of them that hate me The Children are considered in that Commandment because usually the interest of Families is our great snare when an Idol is set up or a false means of Worship the chiefest false worship is an Idol and the greatest sin is put for all the rest before an Idol the Imagination or Invention of men when that is set up The Lord speaks of the interest of Families because men are apt to think they shall undo them and their Families if they contend in this matter Now be you zealous of my worship for I will visit the iniquity of the Fathers upon the Children That the interest of Families might not abate our zeal the Lord takes the Family into the Curse for the violation and likewise into the Blessing for zeal for his Institutions And so Christ saith Iohn 2. 17. The zeal of thy house hath eaten me up We should be zealous for Gods Worship Ministers they should Preach zealously and Magistrates govern zealously to purge Gods house and Christians pray zealously every one of us as far as the bounds of our calling will permit should be zealous for Gods Worship Quis comeditur zelo Domus Dei saith Austin Who is he that is eaten out with the zeal of Gods house He that desires that no humane invention may be blended and mixed with Gods Worship and would fain amend what 's amiss This zeal is the only right and acceptable Principle of Reformation our great indignation against all false worship whatever I remember the story of Valentinian who was afterwards Emperour when according to the duty of his place being Captain of the Guard to Iulian the Apostate and Emperour he was engaged to attend him into the Heathen Temple of Fortune and the Priests were to sprinkle the lustrating and holy-water for that Ceremony was common to the Heathens with the Papists and a drop of it lighted upon Valentinian he struck the Priest that did it and said thou hast defiled me thou hast not purged me he thought his garments to be contaminated and not his body sanctified and he tore off his Belt renounced his honour rather then he would do any thing that should be contrary to his Religion and for this Iulian sent him into banishment and within a year and few Months the story tells us that he received the reward of his holy Confession and owning of Christ the Roman Empire For the
so they have their particular corruptions which are more suitable to their temper and course of life Peter seems to be inclin'd to Tergiversation and to shrinking in a time of trouble We find him often triping in that kind in the denial of his Master again Gal. 2. 12. it is said he dissembled and complied with the Iews therefore Paul withstood him to his face for he was to be blamed It is evident by experience there are particular corruptions to which the children of God are more inclinable this appears by the great power and sway they bear in commanding other evils to be committed by their falling into them out of inward propensity when outward temptations are few or weak or none at all and when resistance is made yet they are more pestered and haunted with them than with other temptations which is a constant matter of exercise and humiliation to them Secondly Wherein doth grace now discover it self where 's the difference 1. In that they cannot fall into those iniquities wherein there is an absolute contrariety to grace as hatred of God total Apostasie so they cannot sin the sin unto death 1 Joh. 5. 16. 2. In that they do not sin with the whole heart Psal. 119. 176. I have gone astray like a lost sheep seek thy servant for I do not forget thy commandments There was somewhat of God in the heart when he was conscious to himself of strayings and wandrings and David saith elsewhere I have not departed wickedly from thy precepts When they sin it is with the dislike and reluctancy of the new nature it is rather a rape than a consent Bernard saith A child of God suffers sin rather than acts it and his hearts protest is against it 3. It is not their course not constant easie and frequent Relapses into gross sins they argue an habitual aversion from God for a habit is determined by the constancy and uniformity of acts therefore it is but now and then under some great temptation There is sin and there is a way of sin Psal. 139. 24. Search me and see if there be any way of wickedness in me as Chrysostome glosseth 4. When they fall they do not rest in sin Shall they fall and shall they not arise Jer. 8. 4. They may fall into the dirt but they do not lye and wallow there like swine in the mire A fountain may be mudded but it works it self clean again The needle that hath been touched with the load-stone may be jogged and discomposed but it never leaves till it turn towards the Pole again Gods children have their failings but they sue out their pardon run to their Advocate 1 Ioh. 3. 1. humble themselves before God 5. Their falls are sanctified When they have smarted under sin they grow more watchful and more circumspect A child of God may have the worse in praelio in the battel but not in bello in the war Sometimes the carnal part may get the victory and they may fall foul but see the issue Psal. 51. 6. In the hidden part thou shalt make me to know wisdom David had sinned against the Lord but I have learned wisdom never to trust a naughty heart more but to look to my self better 6. Grace discovers it self by the constant endeavours which they make against sin What 's the constant course a Christian takes They groan under the reliques of sin it is their burden that they have such an evil nature Rom. 7. 24. They fly to Gods grace in Christ for daily pardon 1 Ioh. 1. 9. They are ever washing their garments in the Lambs blood Rev. 7. and every day are cleansing themselves from the filthiness and defilement they contract by sin Ioh. 13. 10. He that is washed needeth not save to wash his feet An allusion to a man that hath been a journey in those Countries where they went bare foot when he came home he must wash his feet So a man that is reconciled to God though he hath been in the Bath in the fountain which God hath opened for uncleanness yet every day he must be washing his feet cleansing himself by the blood of Christ more and more because he contracts new defilement Then by using all endeavours against it Col. 3. 5. as prayer striving watching cutting off the provisions of the flesh improving the death of Christ. They do not voluntarily and without opposition live under sin and the slavish tyranny of it Their bent and habitual inclination is to do otherwise therefore they are said to do no iniquity whereas those that are wretchless and careless of their souls sin and never lay it to heart they are the workers of iniquity Use 2. If this be the character of a blessed man To make it our business to avoid sin Then here 's caution to God's people 1. To beware of all sin 2. To be very cautious against gross sins committed against the light of conscience 3. To beware of continuance in sin First To beware of all sin The more you have the mark of a blessed man 1 Joh. 2. 1. These things I write unto you that you sin not Though you have a pardon and cleansing by the blood of Christ though you have an Advocate yet sin not Now the motives to set on this Caution are taken from God from our selves from the nature of sin 1. From God Sin not why because it is an offence to God Consider how contrary sin is to all the persons in the Trinity To God the Father as a Lawgiver being a contempt of his Authority 1 Ioh. 3. 4. Sin is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a transgression of the Law that is an act of disloyalty and rebellion against the Crown of Heaven Open sin doth as it were proclaim rebellion and war against God and privy sin is conspiracy against him All creatures have a Law Psal. 148. 6. Thou hast set to them a Decree beyond which they cannot pass And they are less exorbitant in their motions than we are It is a greater violation to the Law of Nature for man to sin than for the Sea to break its bounds The Creatures have not sense and reason yet they do not pass beyond the Law which God hath set them This should prevail with the new creature especially whose hearts God hath suited to the Law so that they offer a violence to their own conscience Take heed of entring into the lists with God of despising his Authority Every sin that is committed slights the Law which forbids it 2 Sam. 12. 9. Wherefore despisest thou his commandments God stands much upon his Law one tittle shall not pass away and you despise it go about to make it void when you give way to sin Nay it is an abuse of his Love 1 Joh. 3. 1. Behold what manner of love the Father hath shewed us you are children and sons of God and will you slight his love Your sins are like Absoloms treason against his Father The Rechabites are commended for
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
knowledg when it is so apt to break out When these living waters run out of the belly it 's a sign of a good spring there Col. 3. 16. Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly in all wisdom teaching and admonishing one another It 's a sign we have gotten the riches of understanding for out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaks So Prov. 16. 23. The heart of the wise teacheth his mouth and addeth learning to his lips When our speech hath weight and worth in it and we are ready upon all occasions it argueth a good stock of the word You know a man that puts his hand in his pocket and brings up gold at every draught it 's a sign he hath more plenty of it than silver So when we are ready to bring out gracious discourses it argueth a treasure and stock within 2. It argueth a good esteem of the word Things that are dear and precious to us we use to discourse of them What we love admire and affect the tongue will be occupied about such things John 3. 31. He that is of the earth is earthly and speaketh of the earth And 1 John 4. 5. They are of the world therefore speak they of the world I know it is spoken in the first place of ordinary Teachers All men whose original is of the earth they savour of it in their speech when they speak of divine things there is some earthiness in it The other Scripture is meant of false Teachers they savour of the world all their teaching doth savour of their affections But both places give this general truth What a mans affections are upon it is most ready in his mouth Therefore it argueth we are affected with the word of God when we are declaring it upon all occasions 6. It is for our benefit to be talking of good things to others The breasts that are not suckt do soon grow dry but the more they are milked out and drawn the greater is the encrease so in spiritual things we gain by communicating By discourse truths are laid more in view We find in any art of common learning the more we confer about things with others the more understanding we get our selves Prov. 11. 25. The liberal soul shall be made fat and he that watereth shall be watered also himself It is spoken of Alms it is true of spiritual Alms as plain Experience shews by watering and refreshing others the more we are comforted and refreshed our selves The loaves were encreased in the dividing Solomon compares Conference to the whetting iron upon iron the more one iron is whet upon another both are sharpned so by Conference our gifts are encreased Earthly goods the more they are given out we have the less in view and visible appearance though God can increase them but now in heavenly and spiritual things in the very giving out to others they are encreased upon our hands USE 1. To shame us for our unprofitableness in our relations and converses for these are two things wherein a Christian should take occasion to declare the Judgments of Gods mouth 1. In our Relations that we do no good there in declaring the Judgments of Gods mouth to one another Surely every Relation is a Talent and you will be accountable for it if you do not improve it for your Masters use The husband is to converse with his wife as a man of knowledg 1 Pet. 3. 7. and the wife to gain upon the husband 1 Pet. 3. 2. and both upon the children and servants The members of every Family should be helping one another in the way to heaven With what busie diligence doth an Idolatrous Family carry on their way and their course See Ier. 7. 18. The children gather wood and the fathers kindle the fire c. saith the Lord. Every one will have his hand in the work and are quickning and inflaming one another Fathers Children Husbands Wives all find some employment or other about their Idolatrous Service O that every one would be as forward and zealous and helpful in the work of God O that we were as careful to train and set our families a work in a course of godliness Christians should reason thus What honour hath God by making me a Father a Master of a Family Every such a one hath a charge of souls and he is to be responsible It will be no grief of heart to you when by your means they become acquainted with God Ye are my Crown and my rejoycing says the Apostle of the Thessalonians converted by his Ministry It will be a crown of honour and rejoycing in the day of the Lord when you have been instrumental not only for their prosperity in the world but of their encreasing in grace 2. In our converses how little do we edifie one another If Christs question to the two disciples going to Emans were put to us Luke 24. 17. What manner of conversation had you by the way What cause should we have to blush and be ashamed Generally our discourse is either 1. Prophane and sinful there is too much of the rotten communication which the Apostle forbids Eph. 4. 29. Let no corrupt communication come out of your mouth but that which is good to the use of edifying that it may minister grace to the hearer Rotten discourse argueth a rotten heart Or 2. Idle and vain as foolish tales The Apostle bids Timothy 1 Tim. 4. 7. To refuse prophane and old wives fables or vain complements though we are to give an account for idle words Mat. 12. 36. Or else like the Athenians we spend our time in hearing and telling news Acts 17. 21. Or we please and solace our selves with frothy flashes of a wanton wit and jesting that is not convenient which the Apostle forbids Ephes. 5. 4. The praise of a Christian lyeth not in the wittiness but in the graciousness of his conversation That which is Aristotles vertue is made a sin with Paul foolish jesting You should rather be refreshing one another with what experiences you have had of the Lords grace that is the comfort and solace of Christians when they meet together But when men wholly give up themselves to move laughter all this is idle and vain discourse It is not enough to say it doth no hurt but what good doth it do doth it tend to the use of edifying A Christian that hath God and Christ and his wonderful and precious benefits to talk of and so many occasions to give thanks he cannot want matter to discourse of when he comes into company therefore we should avoid vain discourse Or 3. We talk of other mens matters or faults as the Apostle speaks of those 1 Tim. 5. 13. That wandred from house to house that not being idle only but tatlers also and busie bodies speaking things which they ought not Levit. 19. 16. Thou shalt not go up and down as a tale-bearer among thy people The Hebrew word signifies a Merchant or one
cross then their affection was spent 6. Some in case of dubious anxiety or in doubtful debates may desire to know the truth and be much and earnest in the study of the word but when they get above their scruples and in plain truths ordinary cases they neglect it Whereas David longed for the word of God at all times to feel the power of God accompanying it so as to find strength against his corruptions and that he might be established in waiting upon God This was the constant and stable desire of his soul. Thus you see the Word of God is the Object either read or preached The End of it is that they may grow in grace and that their hearts may be more subjected to God and may be strengthned in waiting upon him And the manner of this desire is vehement and constant not at times but it is the usual frame and temper of their hearts 4. The Effects of this desire what it worketh I will mention but two 1. It draws off the heart from other things Psal. 119. 136. Incline my heart unto thy testimonies and not unto covetousness implying that when the heart is drawn out after Gods testimonies it is drawn off from carnal pursuits Desires they are the vigorous bent of the soul and therefore as the stream of a River they can run but one way Our passionate desires of earthly things certainly will be abated if spiritual desires prevail in us for being acquainted with a better object they begin to disdain and loath other things 2. It maketh us diligent and painful in the use of means that we may get knowledg and strength by the Word Where strong desires are there will be great endeavours Prov. 8. 34. Watching daily at my gates waiting at the posts of my doors A man that hath a desire after grace and strength by the word of God will daily be redeeming occasions of waiting upon God It is but a slight wish not serious desire that is not seconded with answerable endeavours Having opened the nature of these desires let me shew the reasons of this vehement and constant bent of heart towards the word of God 1. Of the Vehemency 2. Of the Constancy First The Reasons of this Vehemency they are these Natural instinct Experience and Necessity 1. Natural instinct 1 Pet. 2. 2. As new-born babes desire the sincere milk of the word Children desire the dug not by instruction but instinct without a Teacher All creatures desire to preserve that life which they have and therefore by a natural propension they run to that thing from whence they received life Meer instinct carrieth the brute-creatures to the teats of their Dams and every Effect looks to the Cause to receive from thence its last perfection Trees that receive life from the Earth and the Sun they send forth their branches to receive the Sun and stretch their roots into the earth which brought them forth Fishes will not out of the water which breeds them Chickens are no sooner out of the shell but they shroud themselves under the feathers of the Hen. The little Lamb runs to the Dams teat though there be a thousand sheep of the same wool and colour as if it said Here I received that I have and here I 'le seek that I want By such a native inbred desire do the Saints run to God to seek a supply of strength and nourishment and the desire is very strong and vehement One thing have I desired of the Lord that will I seek after c. There were other things David might desire but this one thing his heart was set upon That he might enjoy constant communion with God in the use of publick Ordinances What is the reason of this I answer The spiritual nature you may as well ask What teacheth the young Lambs to suck as who taught the Regenerate to long for the Word What teacheth the Chicken to run under the wing of the Hen The cause of Appetite is not persuasion and discourse but inclination not argument but nature Appetite 't is an effect of life By natural tendency the new creature is carried out to its support from the word of God there to be comforted and nourished It shews that all who have not such a kindly appetite to the word of God that can relish nothing but meats drinks wealth vanity they were never acquainted with this new nature 2. Experience is another cause of this desire A child of God is not satisfied with a slight tast of the word but he desires more when he hath felt the comfort of it he is still longing to receive more from God James 1. 8. He hath begotten us by the word of truth What follows wherefore be swift to hear A man that hath had experience of the power of the word taketh all occasions he knows there is strength grace and liberty of heart to be found there so 2 Pet. 2. 3. As new-born babes c. if so be ye have tasted that the Lord is gracious Certainly a man that hath had any tast of communion with God will desire a fuller measure as by tasting of excellent meats we get an appetite to them Carnal men they do not know what it is to enjoy God in an Ordinance and therefore do not long for them they do not tast the sweetness of the word Psal. 19. 10. The statutes of the Lord are sweeter than the honey or the honey-comb The children of God find more true pleasure in the Ordinances in the statutes of God than in all things in the world though to carnal men they are but as dry sticks burdensome exercises the reason follows V. 11. Moreover by them is thy servant warned and in keeping of them there is great reward He commendeth the word from his own experience he had felt the effects and good use of it in his own heart he had been warned and had a great deal of comfort and refreshing by it therefore it is sweeter than the honey and the honey-comb So Psal. 63. 1 2. O God my soul thirsteth for thee my flesh longeth for thee what to do to see thy power and thy glory so as I have seen thee in the sanctuary He that hath had once a sight of God would not be long out of his company He compareth his desire of communion with God with hunger and thirst his desire is greater than the hunger and thirst that men suffer in a dry wilderness where there is no water to give refreshment He had seen God and would now see him again The remembrance of those former pleasures of the Sanctuary revived his desires so that besides Nature there is this Experience 3. The next cause is Necessity We should take delight in the word of God for its excellency though we stood in no need of it But our necessity is very great and this awakens desire The word is not only compared to things which make for conveniency of life as to Wine and Honey
the godly should smother their grief and not go to God with it their sorrow were able to choak them It is no small ease that we have a God to go to to whom we may freely open our minds Prayer hath a pacative virtue as Hannah 1 Sam. 1. 18. prayed unto the Lord and wept sore and mark the event the woman went her way and did eat and her countenance was no more sad c. An Oven stopped up is the hotter within but vent and utterance giveth ease to the heart if it be meerly by way of complaint to a friend without expectation of relief much more to go to God and lay open our case before him 2. To seek our comfort elsewhere from earthly things it is a vain and evil course 1. It is vain for God is the party with whom we have to do In many troubles the creatures may be instruments of our wo but the principal party is God Strike in with him and you stop the mischief at the head Pro. 16. 7. When a mans ways please the Lord he maketh even his enemies to be at peace with him In other troubles God hath a more immediate hand as sicknesses and terrors of conscience our business then lyeth not with the creatures in sickness not with Physicians first but with God In troubles of spirit we are not to quench our thirst at the next ditch but to run to the Fountain of living water not to take up with ordinary comforts that 's an attempt to break prison and to get out of the troubles before God letteth us out He is our party then whoever be the Instrument 2. It is evil that we refuse to come to God when he whippeth us into his presence and beateth us to the Throne of Grace Dan. 9. 13. All this evil is come upon us yet made we not our prayer before the Lord our God that we might turn from our iniquities and understand thy truth When men are ready to dye and will not so much as confer with the Physician they are either stupid or desperate Afflictions summon us into his presence God sendeth a tempest after us as after Ionah Now that trouble which chaseth us to God is so far a sanctified trouble 2. The hope of relief from God who alone can and will help us He put his mouth in the dust peradventure there is hope Lam. 3. 29. Now this hope is from God's Power and Will 1. His Power God can quicken us when we are as good as dead because he is the well-spring of life and comfort Other things give us life but as water scaldeth when it is the instrument of heat but God alone can help us God is the great quickner That I might trust in him that raised the dead and I am the resurrection and the life 2. His will When we are humble and tractable in our afflictions 1. It is some hope if we have nothing to bring before God but our grief and misery for be is pitiful A beggar will uncover his sore to move your bowels so many times all the reason that a poor pitiful afflicted person can bring for himself is lamenting his case to God how discouraged he is and apt to faint as David represents his case My soul cleaveth to the dust and elsewhere Psal. 69. 29. But I am poor and sorrowful let thy salvation O God set me up on high Justice seeketh a fit object but Mercy a fit occasion 2. It is a greater ground of hope when we are humbled under Gods hand and have a due sense of our condition that is are convinced of our emptiness weakness nothingness or emptied of self-conceit and carnal confidence Deut. 32. 36. For the Lord shall judg his people and repent himself for his servants when he seeth that their power is gone and there is none shut up or left Gods judgments are to break our carnal dependencies 3. Still the hope encreaseth when we acknowledg his Justice and Wisdom in all our troubles Levit. 26. 41. If then their uncircumcised hearts be humbled and they then accept of the punishment of their iniquity kiss the rod wherewith they are corrected be glad it is no worse and see that all this cometh from a Just and Wise God 4. There is farther hope when we can cast our selves upon his Faithfulness and Omnipotency in the face of all discouragements Christ's question to the man long possessed was Mark 9. 23. If thou canst believe all things are possible to him that believeth God's Power is exercised when glorified by faith and dependence 5. When we submit to whatmay be most for his glory Carnal prayers though never so earnest fail when we are too earnest upon our private end and the means which we fancy Psal. 115. 1. Not unto us O Lord not unto us but unto thy Name give glory for thy mercy and for thy truths sake USE In deep calamities run to God lay forth your case feelingly and with submission to the Justice of his Providence trusting to his Power and submitting to his wisdom without obtruding your model upon God but leaving him to his own course and this is the way to speed Take heed 1. Of a stupid carelesness under the Rod it is a time of seeking after God a summons to the creature to come before him Now if we think to sport away our trouble without looking after Gods comforts it is a desperate security Jer. 5. 12. They have belyed the Lord and said It is not he neither shall evil come upon us neither shall we see sword nor famine 2. Take heed of despondency The Throne of Grace is set up on purpose for such a time Heb. 4. 16. Let us therefore come boldly to the throne of grace that we may obtain mercy and find grace to help in time of need Psal. 50. 15. Call upon me in the day of trouble I will deliver thee and thou shalt glorifie me Open your case before the Lord. 3. Take heed of pitching too much upon outward things either as to the time or way of deliverance Lust is vehement but the more you seek the more comfortable will be the issue Psal. 51. 18. Do good in thy good pleasure unto Sion build thou the walls of thy Ierusalem 2. We come now to David's supplication or petition thereupon where observe 1. The Request it self Quicken thou me 2. The Argument According to thy word 1. The Request it self Quicken thou me which noteth either the renewing of comfort or the actuation of graces the restoring or putting life into his affairs 1. The renewing of comfort Quicken me revive me or restore life to me again and this either by outward deliverance so quickning is used Psal. 71. 20. Thou which hast shewed me great and sore troubles shalt quicken me again and shalt bring me up again from the depths of the earth where deep trouble is compared to the grave and deliverance a kind of resurrection or recovery from the dead or by
done and especially is this found by experience when great trouble comes upon us by reason of sin There is some sin at the bottom God will bring out and until they come to clearness and openness with God the Lord still continues the trouble they are kept roaring and do not come to their peace Iob 33. 26 27. When a man is under trouble and the sense of sin doth not fasten on the heart he is not prepared for deliverance but when it comes to this I have sinned and it profits me not then God sends an Interpreter one among a thousand to shew unto man his uprightness 3. It prevents Satans accusations and Gods judgments It is no profit to cover our sins for either Satan will declare them or God find us out and enter into judgment with us It prevents Satan as an Accuser and God as a Judg. 1. It prevents Satan as an Accuser Let us not tarry till our adversary accuse There is one that will accuse you if you do not accuse your selves He that 's a tempter is also an accuser of the brethren Now Confession puts Satan out of office When we have sued out our pardon Satan is not an accuser so much as a slanderer Rom. 8. 33. Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect The Informer comes too late when the guilty person hath accused himself and sued out his pardon And 2. It prevents God as a Iudg. It is all known to God Psal. 69. 5. O God! thou knowest my foolishness and my sins are not hid from thee It is a folly to conceal that which cannot be hid God knows them how God may be said to know things two ways Either simply with respect to the perfection of his nature and so he knows all things or by virtue of his office and so God knows things judicially as Judg of the world he takes knowledg of it so as to punish it unless you confess it But in this kind of knowledg he loves to be prevented he will not know it as a Judg if we confess it when there is process against sin in our own consciences 1 Cor. 11. 31. If we judg our selves we shall not be judged When we accuse and judg our selves then God's work is prevented God is contented if we will accuse arraign judg and condemn our selves then he will not take knowledg of our sins as a Judg. The end of God's judging is Execution and punishment but the end of our judging is that we may obtain pardon Now consider whether you will stand at the bar of Christ not as a Saviour but as a Judg or you will judg your selves in your own heart Better sit as Judg upon your own heart than God should sit as Judg upon you therefore deal plainly and openly with him Thus I have explained what it is to declare our wavs it is an act of dependence to take God's leave blessing counsel along with us an act of friendship as to lay open our case to God and an act of brokenness of heart as declaring our sins and temptations For the reasons why if we would speed with God we should unfeignedly lay open our case before him 1. It argueth sincerity A hypocrite will pray but will not thus sincerely open his heart to God Psal. 32. 1. Blessed is he in whose spirit there is no guile No guile it hath a limited sense with respect to the matter of confession that doth not deal deceitfully with God but plainly and openly declares his case Many ways men may be guilty of guile of spirit in confession of sin either when they content themselves with general or slight acknowledgments as thus We are all sinners but they do not declare their ways Generals are but notions and as particular persons are lost in a crowd so sins lye hid in common acknowledgments Or else men take up the empty forms of others You shall see in Numb 19. the waters of purification wherewith a man had been cleansed if another touched it he became unclean Confessions are like those waters whereby one hath cleansed himself Now to take up others Confessions and the forms of others without the same affection feeling and brokenness of heart doth but defile us the more when the heart doth not prescribe to the tongue but the tongue to the heart or else men make some acknowledgments to God but do not uncover their privy sore they are loth to draw forth the state of their hearts into the notice and view of conscience This guile of spirit may be sometimes in God's children Moses had a privy sore which he was loth to disclose and therefore when God would have sent him into Egypt he pleads other things insufficiency want of elocution that he was a stammerer that he had not utterance I but his carnal fear was the main therefore see how God touches his privy sore Exod. 4. 19. Arise Moses go into Egypt the men that sought thy life are dead Why Moses never pleaded that he mentions other things that were true that he was a man of slow speech and his brother Aaron was fitter but he never pleads carnal fear but the Lord knew what was at the bottom So it is with Christians many times we will confess this and that which is a truth and we may humble our selves for it I but there 's a privy-sore yet kept secret Therefore this open-dealing with God is very necessary to lay open before God whatever we know of our state and way for then God will be nigh to us Out of self-love men spare themselves and will not judg and condemn themselves therefore they deny excuse extenuate or hypocritically confess O! I am a sinner and the like but do not come openly 2. It argueth somewhat of the spirit of adoption to put in the bill of our complaint to our heavenly Father to draw up an Indictment against our selves to judg that 's irksome but to put in a bill of complaint to a Friend or Father that savours of more ingenuity To tell God all our mind notes freedom and familiarity not such as is bold rude nor a dress of words but such as is grave serious proceeding from an inward sense of God and hope of his mercy 1 Joh. 3. 21. If our hearts condemn us not then have we confidence towards God then we can deal with him as one friend with another and acquaint him with all our griefs and wants A man had need walk exactly that would maintain his freedom with God There is a freedom as men may call it such as is bold rude and wretchless in words only but that which proceeds from confidence in God and his mercy that 's a fruit of close walking we cannot have it in our hearts without it 3. It is the way to make us serious and affected with our condition When we open our whole heart to God then we shall be more earnest for a remedy we content our selves with some transient
in present delights and contentments The loss of God's favour carnal men know not how to value but the Saints prefer it above life the favour of God is better than life Psal. 63. 3. therefore if the Lord do but suspend the wonted manifestations of his grace and favour how are their hearts troubled Thou didst hide thy face and I was troubled Psal. 30. 7. A child of God that lives by his favour cannot brook his absence therefore when they lose the sweet sense of his favour and reconciliation with him O what a trouble is this to their souls Other men make no reckoning of it at all And so for sin common spirits value it only by the damage that it doth to their worldly interests when it costs them dear they may hang the head Jer. 2. 9. Now know what an evil and bitter thing it is to forsake the Lord. A worldly man may know something of the evil of sin in the effects of it but a child of God seeth into the nature of it they value it by the wrong by the offence that is done to God and so are humbled more for the evil in sin than for the evil after sin So for the wrath of God carnal men have gross thoughts of it and may howl upon their beds when their pleasant things are taken from them but God's children are humbled because their Father is angry they observe more the displeasure of God in afflicting Providences than others do and one spark of God's wrath lighting into their consciences O what sad effects doth it work more than all other straits whatsoever Thus they have a clearer understanding they see more into the dreadfulness of God's wrath into the evil of sin and they know how to prize and value his favour more than others 2. They have delicate and tender affections Grace that gives us a new heart doth also give us a soft heart Ezek. 36. 26. I will put a new heart into them what kind of heart a heart of flesh as the old heart that is taken out is a heart of stone A new soft heart doth sooner receive the impression of divine terror than another heart doth A stamp is more easily left upon wax or a soft thing than upon a stone Or thus a slave hath a thicker skin than one nobly born tenderly brought up therefore he is not so sensible of stripes A wicked man hath more cause to be troubled than a godly man but he is not a man of sense he hath a heart of stone and therefore is not so affected either with God's dealings with him or his dealings with God Look as the weight of the blows must not only be considered but the delicateness of the constitution so because their hearts are of a softer and more tender constitution being hearts of flesh and receptive of a deeper impression therefore their sorrows exceed the sorrows of other men Thirdly The good that they expect is exceeding great and their exercise is accordingly for after the rate of our comforts so are our afflictions Wicked men that have nothing to expect in the World to come but horrors and pains they wallow now in ease and plenty Luk. 16. 25. Son in thy life-time thou receivedst thy good things God will be behind-hand with none of his creatures those that do him common service have common blessings in a larger measure than his own people have they have their good things that is such as their hearts chuse and affect But now good men that expect another happiness they must be content to be harras'd and exercis'd that they may be fitted and prepared for the enjoyment of this happiness As the stones that were to be set in the Temple were to be hewn and squar'd so are they to be hewn squar'd and exercised with bitter and sharp things that they may be prepared for the more glory USE 1. Then carnal men are not fit to judg of the Saints when they report their experiences if it be with them above the rate of other men When afflicted consciences speak of their wounds or revived hearts of their comforts their joys are supernatural and so are their sorrows and therefore a natural man thinks all to be but fancy all those joys of the Spirit that they are but Fanatick delusions and he doth not understand the weight of their sorrows When a man is well to see to and hath health strength and wealth they marvel what should make such a man heavy all their care is to eat drink and be merry and therefore because they are not acquainted with the exercises of a feeling conscience they think all this trouble is but a little mopishness and melancholy Poor contrite sinners who are ready to weep out their hearts at their eyes can only understand such expressions as these My soul melteth away for heaviness There 's another manner of thing in trouble of conscience than the carnal world doth imagine and many that have all well about them great Estates much befriended and esteemed in the world yea for the best things yet when God hides his face poor souls how are they troubled If he do but let a spark of his wrath into conscience and hide his face from them it 's a greater burden to them than all the miseries of the world David was a man valiant that had a heart as the heart of a Lyon 2 Sam. 17. 10. He was a man cheerful called the sweet Singer of Israel 2 Sam. 23. 1. of a ruddy sanguine complexion and a great Master of Musick He was no fool but a man wise as the Angel of God and yet you see what a bitter sense he had of his spiritual condition And when a man so stout and valiant so cheerful so wise complains so heavily will you count this mopishness and foolish melancholy But alas men that never knew the weight of sin cannot otherwise conceive of it they were never acquainted with the infiniteness of God nor power of his anger and have not a due sense of Eternity therefore they think so slightly of these matters of the spiritual life USE 2. Be not too secure of spiritual joys We warn you often of security or falling asleep in temporal comforts and we must warn you of this kind of security also in spiritual All things change You may find David in this Psalm in a different posture of spirit sometimes rejoycing in the Word of God above all riches and at other times his soul melteth away for very heaviness God's own people are liable to great trouble of spirit therefore you should not be secure as to these spiritual enjoyments which come and go according to God's pleasure Men that build too much upon spiritual suavities or sensible consolations occasion a snare to their own souls partly as they are less watchful for the present like Mariners which have been at Sea when they get into the Haven take down their tackling and make merry and think never to see
Here 's 1. The sin deprecated Remove from me the way of Lying 2. The good supplicated and asked Grant me thy Law graciously In the first clause you have his Malady David had been inticed to a course of lying In the second we have his Remedy and that 's the Law of God First let me speak of the evil deprecated there Observe 1. The Object The way of lying 2. Gods act about it Remove from me c. First for the Object The way of lying It is by some taken generally by others more particularly 1. For those that expound it more generally they are not all of a mind Some think the way of lying is meant Corruption of Doctrine others of Worship others apply it to disorders of conversation some take it for Error of Doctrine false opinions concerning God and his Worship which are called lying and so opposed to the way of truth spoken of in the next verse I have chosen the way of truth Heresie and false Doctrine is called a lye Ezek. 13. 22. Their diviners speak lies So John 2. 21. A lye is not of the truth and the word used The way of lying is elsewhere rendred a false way v. 104. and 128. there is the same expression Now this he desires to be removed from him because it sticks as close to us as our skin Error is very natural to us and man doth exceedingly please himself with the figments of his own brain All practical Errors in the world are but man's natural thoughts cryed up into a voluble opinion because backed with defences of Wit and Parts and secular Interests and other advantages they are but our secret and privy thoughts which have gotten the reputation of an opinion in the world for we speak lyes from the womb even in this sense we suck in erronious principles with our milk Nature carrieth us to wrong thoughts of God and the ways of God and out of levity and inconstancy of spirit we are apt to be carried about with every wind of Doctrine by the sleight of men Now to this sense the latter clause will well agree Keep me from a way of lying that is keep me from falling into error and mistakes about Religion for he begs that the law may be granted to him or a certain stated rule without which all things are liable to deceit and imposture And according to this sense Austin beggeth that he may neither be deceived in the Scriptures nor deceive out of them Nec fallar in iis nec fallam ex iis let me never be mistaken my self nor cause others to mistake Again By a way of lying some understand false worship for an Idol is a lye Isa. 44. 20. Is there not a lye in his right hand meaning an Idol By others a course of sinning for a way of sinning is a way of lying for it deceives us with a conceit of happiness which we shall never enjoy therefore Eph. 4. 22. Put off the old man which is corrupt according to the deceitful lusts Lusts are called deceitful because they promise what they never perform they flatter us not only with hopes of impunity but much imaginary comfort and satisfaction O but it 's a lye Satan deceived our first Parents pretending to shew them a way of Immortality whereas that brought death to the world Most go this way Remove from me the way of lying that is the way of sin and the rather because the Septuagint translation read it thus Remove from me the way of Iniquity and Chrysostom in his gloss He means Every evil deed should be removed from him or it proves a lye in regard of all those flatterings and blandishments by which it enticeth the soul. Nay there 's a parallel place seems to make good this sense Prov. 30. 8. When Agur prays against sin Remove from me vanity and lies meaning a course of sin Thus it is taken more generally 2. Those that take it more particularly for the sin of lying or speaking falsly in commerce they again differ Some take it passively keep me from frauds or deceits of other men because it seems to be a hard thing to ascribe a way of lying to a child of God therefore they rather take it passively But this is to fear where no fear is But David begs that he might be kept from a way of lying that it might not settle into a way that 's his meaning Therefore I rather take it actively that he might not run into a false and fallacious course of dealing with others Now why would David have this way of lying removed from him Three Reasons 1. Because of the inclination of his corrupt nature We had most need pray to be kept from gross sins as Psal. 19. 13. Keep back thy servant also from presumptuous sins We need not only pray against lesser sins or spiritual wickednesses but from gross sins carried on presumptuously against the light of Conscience So Col. 3. 5. Mortifie your earthly members c. What members doth he speak of not worldliness and unbelief only but he speaks of adultery uncleanness inordinate affections and the like and the Children of God if they do not deal with God for grace against their gross sins they will soon know to their costs Jesus Christ warned his own disciples those that were trained up in his School those that were to go abroad and deliver his Gospel to the world Luke 21. 34. Take heed lest your hearts be overcharged with surfeiting and drunkenness c. A candle newly blown out easily sucks light and flame again and we that are newly taken out of the dominion of sin into a state of grace may suck light and flame again therefore we had need pray against gross sins 2. Because he had been tripping and guilty in this kind In the story of David you may trace too much of this way and vein of lying as his feigning to Abimeleck the Priest 1 Sam. 25. 8. and to Achish 2 Sam. 27. 8. compar'd with vers 10. his perswading Ionathan to tell his Father he was gone about such a business Now this we may learn when we are foiled by any sin we should take heed lest we settle into a way and course of sin for in every sin as there is culpa the fault or the transgression of the Law and reatus the guilt or obligation to punishment so there is macula the blot an inclination to sin again in like manner as a brand once on fire is more apt to take fire again By every act of sin the Law of God is lessened our carnal inclination is increased therefore we had need be earnest with God Lord keep me from a way of lying 3. Man is strongly inclined to lying it sticks close to our nature so that God must remove it from us as more fully afterwards Thus for the Object a way of lying Secondly Gods Act about it Remove from me Sin is removed either in a way of Justification when the guilt of
were many false Gods worshipped The controversie about Religion mainly lay at first between the Iews and the Pagans the Pagans had their Gods and the Jews had the Lord God of Israel the only true God Yea among the Pagans themselves there was a great diversity every man will walk and sometimes a hot contention and many times there were hot contests which was the better God the Leek or the Garlick When Religion which restrains our passions is made the fuel of them and instead of a Judg becomes a party men give themselves up headlong to all manner of bitter zeal and strife and persuasion of truth and right which doth calm men in other differences are here inflamed by that bitter zeal every one hath for his God his service and party and the difference is greater especially between the two dissenting parties that come nearest to one another We read afterward when this difference ●…y more closely between the Iews and the Samaritans and Christ decides that Salvation was of the Iews The Iews were certainly the better party John 4. 20. Our father 's worshipped in this mountain and ye say that in Ierusalem is the place where men ought to worship Mount Sion or Mount Gerizim which was the Temple of the true God one or the other Then we read afterward among the Iews themselves in their private sects who were very keen against each other Pharisees and Sadducees and Paul though an Enemy to them both and was looked upon as a common adversary yet they had rather joyn with him than among themselves Acts 23. 8 9. Afterward you find the scene of Contention lay between the Iews and Christians Acts 14. 4. But the multitude of the city was divided and part held with the Iews and part with the Apostles There it grew into an open contest and quarrel And then between the Christians and the Pagans which was the occasion of that uproar at Ephesus Acts 19. I and after Religion had gotten ground and the way of truth had prevailed in the world then the difference lay betwixt Christians themselves yea while Religion was but getting up between the followers of the Apostles and the School and Sect of Simon Magus those impure Libertines and Gnosticks who went out of them because they were not of them 1 Iohn 2. 19. And afterwards in the Church-story we read of the Contentions between the Catholicks and the Arians the Catholicks and the Pelagians the Catholicks and the Donatists and other Sects And now last of all in the dregs of time between the Protestants and the Papists that setled party with whom the Church of God is now in suit As the rod of Aaron did devour the rods of the Inchanters so the word of God which is the rod of his strength doth and will in time eat up and consume all untruths whatsoever but for a great while the contests may be very hot and sharp Yea among those that profess a reformed Christianity there are the Lutherans and the Calvinists And nearer to us I will not so much as mention those invidious names and flags of defiance which are set up under which different parties do encamp at home Thus there ever have been and will be contests about Religion and disputes about the way of truth yea different opinions in the Church and among Christians themselves about divine truths revealed in the Scripture The Lord permits this in his holy and righteous Providence that the godly may be stirred up more to embrace truth upon Evidence with more affection that they may more encourage and strengthen themselves and resolve for God for when all people will walk every one in the name of his God we will walk in the name of our God for ever Micah 4. 5. And the Lord doth it that he may manifest the sincere that when Christ calls who is on my side who that are willing to stick to him whatever hazards and losses they may incur 1 Cor. 11. 19. There must be heresies among you that they which are approved may be made manifest among you I and that there may be a ready plague of strong delusion and lies for them that receive not the truth in the love of it 2 Thes. 2. 11 12. for damnable Errors are the dungeons in which God holds carnal souls that play the wantons and trifle with his truth and never admitted the love and power of it to come into their hearts Prop. 2. True Religion is but one and all other ways are false noxious and pestilent Eph. 4. 5. One Lord one faith one baptism There are many ways in the world but there 's but one good and certain way that leads to salvation So much the Apostle intimates when he saith He will have all men to be saved How would he have them saved 1 Tim. 2. 4. For there is one God and one Mediator between God and men the man Christ Iesus which text implies that salvation is by the knowledge of the truth or knowledge of the true way others tend to destruction And so God promiseth Jer. 32. 39. That he will give all the elect one heart and one way Though there be differences even in the Church of God about lesser truths yet there 's but one true Religion in the essence and substance of it I mean as to those truths which are absolutely necessary to salvation To make many doors to heaven is to set wide open the gates of hell Many men think that men of all Religions shall be saved provided they be of a good life and walk according to their light In these later times divers unsober Questionists are grown weary of the Christian Religion and by an excess of charity would betray their faith and while they plead for the salvation of Turks and Heathens scarce shew themselves good Christians The Christian Religion is not only the most compendious way to true happiness but it 's the only way John 17. 3. This is life eternal to know thee the only true God and Iesus Christ whom thou hast sent There 's the sum of what is necessary to life eternal that there is one God Father Son and Holy Ghost to be known loved obeyed worshipped and enjoyed and the Lord Jesus Christ to be owned as our Redeemer and Saviour to bring us home to God and to procure for us the gifts of pardon and life and this life to be begun here by the spirit and to be perfected in heaven This is the sum of all that can be said that is necessary to salvation certainly none can be saved without Christ for there is no other name under heaven whereby we can be saved but by Iesus Christ Acts 4. 12. and none can be saved by Christ but they that know him and believe in him If God hath extraordinary ways to reveal Christ to men we know not this is our Rule no Adults no grown persons can be saved but they that know him and believe in him And now Christ hath
only rejoyce in things for a season Iohn 6. 35. There are many that look for all their vertue and their experience from their notions in Religion Thus they run from doctrine to doctrine from way to way so remain unmortified Thirdly Take heed of the first decays and look often into the state of your hearts A man that never casts up his estate is undone insensibly therefore look often into the state of your hearts whether you encrease in your affections to God in the power of holiness or whether you go backward It is the Devil's policy when once we are declining to humble us further and further still as a stone that runs down the hill therefore take heed look to the first declinings A gap once made in the conscience grows wider and wider every day and the first declinings are the cause of all the rest Evil is best stopt in the beginning And therefore when you begin to be cold careless in the profession of godliness and not to have the like savour as you were wont to have take heed A heavy body moving downward still gets more strength it goes down and moves faster still O therefore stay at first The first remitting of your watch and spiritual fervor is that which is the cause of all the mischief that comes upon many so that they are given up to vile affections and lying errors It is easier to crush the egg than kill the serpent He that keeps his house in constant repair prevents the fall of it therefore look to your hearts still Our first declinings though never so small are very dangerous Pliny speaks of the Lioness lib. 8. cap. 16. first she brings forth five Lions then four then three then two then one and forever afterward is barren Thus we first begin to remit of our diligence in holy things and are not so frequent in acts of communion then this and that goes off till we have but little left us and then all is gone and men grow worse and worse I may resemble it to Nebuchadnezzar's Image the head of gold the breasts of silver the thighs of brass the feet of iron and clay still worse and worse So men are imbasing by degrees and fall off from God and their savour of the ways of God Fourthly Often review your first grounds and compare them with your after-experiences and what fresh tasts you had then of the love of God to your souls Heb. 3. 14. We are made partakers of Christ if we hold the beginning of our confidence stedfast unto the end The first rejoycing of faith the sweet sense that you had O how precious was Christ to you then when first you came out of your fears Revive this upon your heart this will stir you up to be faithful to God When the love of Christ was fresh upon your hearts your motions were earnest Many begin like a Tree full of blossoms give great hope of fruit We should labour to keep up this affection and that a cursed satiety may not creep upon us USE 2. If those that have chosen the way of God and begin to conform their practice ought with all constancy to persevere then it reproveth 1. Those that take up Religion only by way of essay to try how it will suit with them they do not intirely and by a resolute fixed purpose give up themselves to the Lord. You should resolve upon all hazards Not take up Religion for a walk but for a journey Not like going to sea for pleasure if they see a storm coming presently to shore again but for a voyage to ride out all weathers Thus you should do stick to the ways of God and at first make God a good allowance that neither tribulation or distress or persecution or famine or nakedness or peril or sword nor any thing may separate you from Christ Rom. 8. 35. We should count all charges and resolve upon the worst 2. It reproves Aguish Christians whose purity and devotion comes upon them by fits Hos. 6. 4. Their righteousness is as the morning-dew The morning-dew that cannot endure the rising sun it is soon wasted and spent when the sun ariseth with his heat and strength whereas our righteousness should not be like the morning-dew but like the morning-light 3. It reproves them that are only swayed by temporal advantages that are off and on As the Samaritans when the Iews were favoured by Alexander and other Princes then they would deny the Temple that was upon Mount Gerizim and say that they were brethren to the Iews but when the Iews were in danger then they would disclaim them Thus many are swayed by temporal advantages either intending or omitting the conscience of their duty as they are favoured by men But we are to stick to God's testimonies II. Let us come to David's prayer O Lord put me not to shame It is in the nature of a deprecation or a prayer for the prevention of evil The evil deprecated is shame By shame some understand the reproaches of wicked men Lord let me not suffer their reproach for I have stuck unto thy testimonies A man that doth not stick to God's testimonies that is not zealous and constant will be put to shame before God and man and made a scorn by them and lie under great reproach therefore Lord prevent this reproach These reproaches are grievous to be born It is against the spirit of man to be contemned especially when he doth well But certainly this cannot be meant he would not so earnestly deprecate this I should think at least not in such an expression O Lord put me not to shame He speaks of such a shame wherein God had a great hand It is true God may suffer this in his Providence Well then this shame may be supposed to result either from his sin or from his sufferings First From sin I have stuck unto thy testimonies O suffer me not to fall into any such sinful course as may expose me to shame and make me become a reproach to Religion Observe Doct. The fruit of sin is shame Shame is a trouble of mind about such evils as tend to our infamy and disgrace Loss of life is matter of fear loss of goods is matter of grief and sorrow but loss of name and credit is matter of shame and therefore it is a trouble of mind that doth arise about such evils as tend to our infamy and disgrace Now this infamy and disgrace is the proper fruit of sin To prove it by Scripture Reason and Experience To prove it by Scripture Shame entred into the world by sin though they were naked yet till they had sinned they were not asham'd Gen. 2. 25. with Gen. 3. 10. there was verecundia an awful Majesty or an holy bashfulness in innocency but not pudor A fear of reproach and infamy that came in by the fall To prove it by Reason There are two things in sin folly and filthiness and both cause shame it is an
as the benefits that he bringeth with him He doth approve things upon good knowledg and cometh to a well setled resolution Another defect in wicked men is because the judgment is superficial and so come to nothing 'T is not full clear and ponderous 't is not a dictamen a resolute decree not ultimum dictamen the last decree all things considered and well weighed 2. God's Grace God doth never fully and spiritually convince the judgment but he doth also work upon the will to accept embrace and prosecute those good things of which it is convinced He teacheth and draweth they are distinct works but they go together therefore the one is inferred out of the other Drawn and taught of God both are necessary for as there is blindness and inadvertency in the mind so obstinacy in the will which is not to be cured by meer perswasion but by a gracious quality infused inclining the heart which by the way freeth this doctrine from exception as if all Gods works were meer moral suasion The will is renewed and changed but so as God doth it by working according to the order of Nature USE By all means look after this Divine illumination whereby your judgment may be convinced of the truth and worth of spiritual things 'T is not enough to have some general and floating notions about them or slightly to hear of them or talk of them but they must be spiritually discern'd and judg'd of for if our judgments were throughly convinced our pursuit of true happiness would be more earnest you would see sin to be the greatest mischief and grace the chiefest treasure and accordingly act God inlightning the soul doth 1. Take away carnal principles Many men can talk well but they are leavened with carnal principles as 1. That he may do as most do and yet be safe Mat. 7. 23. Many will say in that day Lord Lord have we not prophesied in thy name c. and then will I profess unto them I never knew you depart from me ye that work iniquity Prov. 11. 31. Behold the righteous shall be recompenced upon the earth much more the wicked and the sinner Exod. 32. c. 2. That he may go on in ungodliness injustice intemperance because grace hath abounded in the Gospel Tit. 2. 11 12. For the grace of God that bringeth salvation hath appeared to all men Teaching us that denying ungodliness and worldly lusts we should live soberly righteously and godlily in this present world And Luke 1. 75. That we being delivered out of the hands of our enemies might serve him without fear in holiness and righteousness before him all the days of our life 3. That he may spend his youth in pleasure and safely put off repentance till age But Eccles. 12. 1. we are bid to Remember our creator in the days of youth while the evil days come not nor the years draw nigh when thou shalt say I have no pleasure in them And Luke 12. 20. when the rich man said to his soul Soul thou hast much goods laid up for many years take thine ease eat drink and be merry God said unto him Thou fool this night shall thy soul be required of thee then whose shall those things be which thou hast provided Heb. 3. 7. Wherefore as the Holy Ghost saith To day if ye will hear his voice harden not your hearts c. Men think it is a folly to be singular and precise that 't was better when there was less preaching and less knowledg that small sins are not to be stood upon But God inlightning the soul maketh us to see the vanity and sinfulness of such thoughts 2. There is a bringing the understanding to attend and consider there is much lieth upon it Acts 16. 14. The Lord opened the heart of Lydia so that she attended unto the things which were spoken of Paul That is weighed them in her heart SERMON XXXVIII PSAL. CXIX 34. Yea I shall observe it with my whole heart I Come now to the last clause I shall observe it with my whole heart The Point is Doct. That it is not enough to keep Gods law but we must keep it with the whole heart Here I shall shew you 1. That God requireth the heart 2. The whole heart 1. God requireth the heart in his service the heart is the Christians sacrifice the fountain of good and evil and therefore should be mainly looked after without this 1. External profession is nothing most Christians have nothing for Christ but a good opinion or some outward prof●…on Iudas was a disciple but Satan entred into his heart Luke 22. 3. Ananias joyned himself to the people of God but Satan filled his heart Acts 5. 3. Simon Magus was baptized but his heart was not right with God Acts 8. 22. Here is the great defect 2. External conformity is nothing worth It is not enough that the life seem good and many good actions be performed unless the heart be purified otherwise we do with the Pharisees wash the outside of the platter Mat. 23. 25 26. when the inside is full of extortion and excess 'T is the heart God looketh after 1 Sam. 16. 7. For the Lord seeth not as man seeth for man looketh on the outward appearance but the Lord looketh on the heart Prov. 4. 23. Keep thy heart with all diligence for out of it are the issues of life Cast salt into the spring As Iehu said to Ionadab so doth God say to us 2 Kings 10. 15. Is thy heart right as my heart is with thy heart We should answer it is Men are not for obsequious compliances if not with the heart so neither is God Though thou pray with the Pharisee pay thy vows with the Harlot kiss Christ with Iudas offer sacrifice with Cain fast with Iezebel sell thine inheritance to give to the poor with Ananias and Saphira all is in vain without the heart for 't is the heart enliveneth all our duties 3. It is the heart wherein God dwelleth not in the tongue the brain unless by common gifts till he take possession of the heart all is as nothing Ephes. 3. 17. He dwelleth in our hearts by faith The bodies of believers are Temples of the Holy Ghost yet the heart will and affections of man are the chief place of his habitation wherein he resideth as in his strong Citadel and from whence he commandeth other faculties and members and without his presence there he cannot have any habitation in us the tongue cannot receive him by speaking nor the understanding by knowing nor the hands by external working Prov. 4. 23. Out of it are the issues of life 't is the forge of spirits He dwelleth not in temples made with hands Acts 7. 48. and Jer. 23. 24. Do not I fill heaven and earth saith the Lord He will dwell in thine heart and remain there if thou wilt give thy heart to him 4. If Christ have it not Satan will have it The heart of man is
commandments Where there is true grace and the fear of God there we will delight greatly So Rom. 7. 22. I delight in the Law of God after the inward man Where there is an inner man a frame of grace in the heart that will bring delight See the character of a blessed man Psal. 1. 2. His delight is in the Law of the Lord. Quite contrary to the hypocrite he may act from compulsions and urgings of conscience from Legal bondage it may be a sin-offering but it is not a thank-offering he cannot do it with that delight and complacency that God hath required Iob 27. 10. it is said Will he always call upon God will he delight himself in the Almighty In his pang in his distress when his Conscience pincheth him sore he will be calling upon God I but hath he any delight in God he wants sincere grace Some time he may come with his flocks and herds to seek the Lord Hos. 5. 6. And cry arise Lord save us Jer. 2. 27. Some unwilling services he may perform upon foreign reasons from constraint from his affliction and anguish of soul but these things are never done with delight there needs then a principle of grace 2. Peace of conscience or a sense of our reconciliation with God is very necessary to this delight in the ways of God Rom. 5. 11. We joy in God as those that have received the attonement Christ hath made the Atonement now when we receive the Atonement that is are possest of it and look upon our selves as involved in the reconciliation Christ hath made for us then we joy in God The joy of a good Conscience is necessary to this delight in the ways of God 3. A good frame of heart must be kept up for the joy of a Christian may be impaired by his own folly and prevalency of carnal distempers There is dulness and a damp that is apt to creep upon us either by carnal pleasure or worldly lusts and cares we may abate of our chearfulness Christ tells us Luk. 21. 34. that both of them overcharge the heart Or some presumptuous sin lately committed when the weight of it lyeth upon the Conscience we lose this free spirit Psal. 51. 12. Restore unto me the joy of thy salvation and uphold me with thy free spirit Our delight is quenched and we lose that free spirit which otherwise we should have And therefore we must watch against carnal distempers and also presumptuous sins that we may not lose our liberty and our comfortableness in Gods service For when a Christian hath a good frame of heart he is filled as with gladness and the joy of the Lord is as oyl to the wheels and it strengthens his affections and he is carried on with a great deal of chearfulness 4. There is needful too some experience for besides the joy of God there is the inward pleasure of a good conversation The ways of God are all ways of pleasantness to them that walk in them Prov. 3. 17. They which will make trial will find Christs yoke easie yea they will find a sweetness in Gods ways beyond whatever they could think or expect Some experience of the pleasantness in the paths of wisdom breeds great delight Secondly What are the effects of this delight 1. A chearfulness of spirit a ready obedience Psal. 40. 8. I delight to do thy will O my God They find more solid joy in living holily than in all the pleasure of sin and vanity of the world therefore they chearfully practise that which God requireth of them 2. They are full of joy and gladness in all their approaches to God Psal. 122. 1. I was glad when they said unto me let us go into the house of the Lord. O then they can go to God and draw off from the distractions of this world that they may unbosom themselves that they may be in Gods company either in publick or private 3. They are weaned from earthly pleasures when they have tasted of this hidden manna the Garlick and Onions of Egypt lose their relish and they find more sweetness more rejoicing in the testimony of their Consciences than ever they could find in the world It is their meat and drink to do the will of God to be just holy temperate strict to walk closely with God here 's their pleasure and delight of their souls Ioh. 4. 34. My meat is to do the will of him that sent me and to finish his work Now the Reasons of this They which have their hearts set upon holiness must have delight A man whose heart is set upon earthly things will come and howl for corn wine and oyl outward enjoyments Hos. 7. And a man that makes a loose profession of Religion would fain be feasted with comforts and eased of the smart of his Conscience he loves to hear of the priviledg part of Christianity but they come not to God with a true heart whatever profession they make Heb. 10. 27. They embrace Christ as Iudas kist him to betray him or as Ioab embraced Amasa that he might smite him under the fifth rib so these are so earnest for pardon of sin and the priviledg part of Christianity but mind not the higher part which is Sanctification But now a man that is fallen in love with holiness and whose heart is sincerely bent to God desires grace to incline his heart to God and the ways of God and keep exactly with him Secondly As this is the reason of asking so likewise of granting make me to go in the path of thy Commandments for therein do I delight Take four Considerations for this 1. God will add grace to grace When God hath given the will he will give the deed further grace to add new influences to his own seed We tell God of the dispositions that are in our hearts that he may perfect them and ripen his own seed Ioh. 1. 16. Of his fulness have all we received and grace for grace Grace upon grace or grace after grace Gods giving one grace is an argument why he will give more grace 2. God looks after affection rather than action Sometimes he takes the will for the deed but never the deed for the will Where there is a will and delight in his ways that 's it which is most acceptable to him Look as to love sin is more than to commit it a man may commit it out of frailty but he that loves and cherisheth it it 's exceeding bad So where there is delight in the ways of God and the soul is gained to them this is that God looks after the affection 3. Of all our affections delight and complacency is most acceptable The Promise is made to such Psal. 37. 4. Delight thy self in the Lord and he will give thee the desire of thine heart It is a slander that the hypocrite brings upon God Iob 34. 9. He hath said It profiteth a man nothing that he should delight himself with God There
considerations should be propounded to us as it is easie to shew that eternal things are far better than temporal and spiritual things than carnal if Conscience I say should come in and represent the ill state wherein we are yet because the poyse of our hearts doth customarily carry us another way we are not inclined to God or to the concernments of eternal life for it is not argument meerly will do it In a pair of scales though the weights be equal●… yet if the scales be not equal there may be wrong done so though the argument be never so powerful yet if the heart that weighs them be customarily engaged and carried away with the momentany and cursory delights of the flesh alas these will sway us and affect us more than all those pure everlasting delights we may enjoy by communion with God In all reason a lesser good should not be preferred before a greater And worldly delights which are not only base and dreggy but also short and vanishing and the occasion of much evil to us these should not be preferred before eternal happiness But here lies our misery though the pleasures which affect us be less in themselves yet our habitual propension and customary inclination to them is greater Look as in a pair of Ballances though the weight of the one side be lesser yet if the scales be not even and equal pendent if the beam be longer on the one side than the other the lesser weight on the longer side of the beam will over-poize the greater weight on the shorter side So while the soul is perverted by evil customs and the heart doth hang more to temporal things than to spiritual and eternal certainly there must be something from above that must determine us Mans heart can never be sway'd until the Lord joins the assistance of his grace 3. There is Gods curse or penal hardness For as nature groweth into a custom so by our sinful customs God is provoked and doth withdraw those common influences of grace by which our condition might be bettered and in justice he gives up our hearts to their own sway Hos. 4. 17. Ephraim is joined to Idols let him alone Psal. 81. 12. So I gave them up unto their own hearts lusts and they walked in their own counsels So that we have not those frequent checks and gripes of Conscience those warnings and good thoughts as before Let him alone Providence let him alone Conscience let him alone and the sinner is left to his own will Therefore out of all the work remaineth to be Gods alone who only hath authority to pardon and power to cure the distempers of our hearts he hath authority to take off that judicial hardness which he as a Judg may continue upon us and which the Saints deprecate in these forms of speeches Incline my heart to thy testimonies c. And so he hath power to take off the natural and customary hardness which is in us For the heart of man is in his hand as the rivers of water Prov. 21. 1. and can as easily draw us out to good as water followeth when the Trench is cut But what needeth more arguing in the case David saith here Lord incline mine heart And 1 King 8. 58. The Lord be with us that he may incline our hearts unto him to walk in all his ways and keep his commandment It is Gods work alone to bend the crooked stick the other way But you will say This work sometimes is ascribed to man for instance ver 112. of this Psalm I have inclined my heart to perform thy statutes alway even unto the end And Ioshua chap. 24. 23. Incline your heart unto the Lord God of Israel I answer these places do only note our subordinate operation or the voluntary motion and resolution on our part When God hath bent us and inclined us to do his will when God hath made our love to act and poise us to that which is spiritual and good then we do incline we bend our hearts this way So that all these expressions do not imply a co-ordinate but subordinate operation on mans part Fifthly In this change there is a weakning of the old inclination to carnal vanities and there 's a new bent and frame of heart bestowed upon us The heart is taken off from the love of base objects and then fixed upon that which is good Deut. 30. 6. The Lord thy God will circumcise thine heart and the heart of thy seed to love the Lord thy God with all thine heart c. First there 's a circumcising a paring away of the fleshliness of the heart then an unfeigned love to God So Ezek. 36. 26 27. I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh and I will put my spirit within you and cause you to walk in my statutes First the untowardness of the will and affections is removed and then a heart is given to us which is tractable and pliable for gracious purposes First the weeds are plucked up then we are planted wholly with a right seed Or first we cast off the Old-man then put on the new Ephes. 4. 22 23. The natural inbred corruption which daily grows worse and worse is more and more done away as we cast off the old rotten garment when we put on new Sixthly When our hearts are thus changed they are ever and anon apt to return to the old bent and byass again For David a renewed man he doth thus speak to God O Lord incline my heart to thy testimonies and not unto covetousness He found his heart bowing and warping back again and being sensible of the distemper he complains of it to God The inclination that is in them to evil is not so lost to the best of Gods children but it will return unless God still draw us after him The Spouse saith Cant. 1. 4. Draw me and we will run after thee The Spouse of Christ those that were already taken into communion with him they say Draw me This is not a work to be done once and no more but often to be renewed and repeated in the soul for there are some reliques of our natural averseness from God and enmity to the yoke of his word yet left in the heart Gal. 5. 17. The flesh lusteth against the spirit There are two active Principles within us and they are always warring one upon another Therefore there is need not only to be inclined at first and drawn towards God but we must go to him again and again and pray to him daily that he would continue the bent of our hearts right and weaken carnal affections that we may mind better things USE 1. The Use is to set you right in point of doctrine as to the necessity of grace to bring us into a state of doing God's will because some do grant the necessity of grace in words but in deed they make it void Pelagius at first gave all to Nature acknowledged no
or the Infusion of Grace 2. For the renewing the vigour of the life of Grace the renewed Influence of God whereby this Grace is stirred up in our hearts First for Regeneration or the Infusion of Grace Ephes. 2. 1 2. When we were dead in Trespasses and Sins yet now hath he quickned us then we are quickned or made alive to God when we are new born when there is an habitual Principle of Grace put into our hearts Secondly Quickning is put for the renewed excitation of Grace when the life that we have received is carried on to some further increase and so 't is twofold either by way of Comfort in our Afflictions or enlivening in a way of Holiness 1. Comfort in afflictions and so 't is opposed to fainting which is occasioned by too deep a sense of present troubles and distrust of God and the supplies of his Grace when the affliction is heavy upon us we are like Birds dead in the nest and are so overcome that we have no Spirit nor Courage in the service of God Psal. 119. 50. This is my Comfort in affliction for thy word hath quickened me Then we are said to be quickened when he raiseth up our hearts above the trouble by refining our suffering Graces as Faith Hope and Patience Thus he is said to revive the Contrite one Isa. ●…7 15. To restore comfort to us and to refresh us with the Sense of his Love 2. There is a quickening in Duty which is opposed to deadness of Spirit which is apt to creep upon us that is occasioned by Negligence and sloathfulness in the business of the spiritual Life Now to quicken us God exciteth his grace in us An Instrument though never so well in tune soon grows out of Order A Key seldom turned rusts in the Lock so Graces that are not kept a work lose their Exercise and grow Luke-warm or else 't is occasioned by carnal Liberty or intermeddling with worldly things These bring a Brawn and deadness upon the Heart and the Soul is depressed by the cares of this World Luk. 21. 34. Now when you are under this Temper of soul desire the Lord to Quicken you by new influences of Grace 2. Let me shew the necessity of this quickening how needful ' t is 1. 'T is needful for without it our general standing is questionable whether we belong to God or no 1 Pet. 2. 5. Ye are living stones built up into a spiritual House t is not enough to be a stone in Christs building but we must be living Stones not only members of his body but living members I cannot say such a one hath no grace but when they have it not it renders their Condition very questionable a man may be living when he is not lively 2. Without it we cannot perform our Duties aright Religion to a dead heart is a very irkesome thing When we are dead-hearted we do our Duties as if we did them not in our general course of obedience we must go to God Psal. 119. 88. Quicken me after thy loving Kindness so shall I keep the Testimonies of thy Mouth Then we do good to good purpose indeed t is not enough for us to pray but we must pray with life and Vigour Psal. 80. 18. Quicken me and I will call upon thy Name so we should hear with Life not in a dull Careless Fashion Math. 13. 15. 3. All the Graces that are planted in us tend to beget quickening as Faith Hope and Love these are the Graces that set us a work and make us lively in the Exercise of the spiritual Life Faith that works by Love Gall. 5. 6. It sets the Soul a work by apprehending the sense of Gods love whereas otherwise t is but a dead Faith 1 Iam. 2. 16. Then for love what is the Influence of that it constrains the Soul it takes the soul along with it 2 Cor. 5. 14. and Rom. 12. 1. And then hope 't is called a lively Hope 1 Pet. 1. 3. all Grace is put into us to make us Lively not only the Grace of Sanctification but the Grace of Iustification is bestowed upon us for this end that we may be cheerful in Gods service Heb. 9. 14. How much more shall the blood of Christ purge our Consciences from dead works that we may serve the living God Sin and guilt make us dead and heavy hearted but now the blood of Christ is sprinkled upon the Conscience and the sentence of Death taken away then we are made cheerful to serve the living God Attributes are suited to the case in hand he is called the living God because he must be served in a living manner 4. All the Ordinances which God hath appointed are to get and increase this Liveliness in us Wherefore hath God appointed the Word Isa. 55. 3. Hear and your Souls shall live t is to promote the Life of Grace and that we may have new Incouragment to go on in the ways of God Moses when he received the Law is said to receive the lively Oracles of God Acts 7. 38. 10. So the doctrine of Christ they are all Spirit and Life and serve to beget Life in us As the redemption of the world by Christ the joys of Heaven the torments of Hell they are all quickening truths and propounded to us to keep us in Life and Vigour The Lords supper why was that appointed There we come to tast the flesh of Christ who was given for the Life of the world Iohn 6. That we might sensibly exercise our Faith upon Christ that we might be more sensible of our Obligations to him that we might be the more excited in the diligent pursuit of things to come Use 1. Is reproof David considereth the Dulness and Deadness of his Spirit which many do not but go on in a cold Tract of duties and never reguard the frame of their Hearts It is a good sign to observe our spiritual Temper and accordingly go to God Most observe their Bodies but very few their Souls If the body be ill at ease or out of Order they complain presently but love waxeth cold and their Zeal for God and delight in him is abated yet they never lay it to Heart Secondly To exhort us to get and keep this lively frame of heart 1. Get it Pray for it liveliness in obedience doth depend upon Gods Blessing unless he put life and keep life in our Souls all cometh to nothing Come to God upon the account of his Glory Psal. 143. 11. Quicken me O Lord for thy Name sake for thy Righteousness sake bring my Soul out of Trouble His tender Mercies Psal. 119. 156. Great are thy tender Mercies O Lord quicken me according to thy Iudgments Come to him upon the account of Christ Iohn 10. 10. I am come that they might have Life and that they might have it more abundantly And John 7. 38. He that believeth on me as the Scripture hath said out of his Belly shall flow Rivers
of a soft Heart which must be asked of God 2 Chron. 34. 27. Because thine heart was tender and thou didst humble thy self when thou heardest the words of the Lord against this place There was an high peace and calm at that time but a tender Heart relenteth at the Threatnings Beg of God to sosten thy Heart 2. There needeth eminent Holiness for such a Frame that we shine as Lights in the midst of a crooked and perverse Generation Phil. 2. 15. The Mourners must not be infected and tainted themselves but save themselves from an untoward Generation condemn the Sins of the T●…es by their Conversation 3. We must have a Fear animated by Faith By Faith Noah was moved by fear concerning things unseen Heb. 11. 7. The danger of the Floud was unseen as yet and they married and gave in Marriage We must not judge of things by the present or by carnal Appearance there is a righteous Judge in Heaven Faith in his Word will shew us our Danger for God's Threatnings are all fulfilled and the more we seek to establish our selves by carnal Means the more our Ruine is hastened 4. There must be a grief set awork by a Love to God and the Souls of Men. In Calamities the true temper for Humiliation is a due Sense of our Fathers Anger and Brethrens Miseries in Sins our Fathers Dishonour and Man's Destruction those who are the same Flesh with our selves Now it should trouble us to see them in the way to eternal Ruine Of some have compassion making a difference And others save with fear pulling them out of the fire hating even the garment spotted with the flesh Jude 22 23 verses SERMON LX. PSAL. CXIX 54. Thy Statutes have been my Songs in the House of my Pilgrimage DAVID had in the former Verse expressed his great Trouble because of the increase of the Wicked and their Defection from the Law of God Now he sheweth what comforted him the Children of God have a great deal of divine Consolation from the Word in the midst of all their Sorrows and Evils of the present Life David's Comfort is here expressed 1. By the Matter or Object of it thy Stdtutes 2. The Degree of his Rejoycing intimated in the Word Songs The Effect is put for the Cause Joy and Mirth which usually breaketh forth into singing or the sign and indication for the Thing signified 3. The place where he rejoyced in the House of his Pilgrimage 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wheresoever I sojourn 1. By God's Statutes is meant his Word in general more especially the Precepts and Promises in the one we have the offer of Life in the other the way and means how to attain it In the Word is both our Charter and our Rule in both regards it is matter of Rejoycing Psal. 19. 8. The Statutes of the Lord are right rejoycing the Soul Nothing is commanded there but what is equitable in it self and profitable to us 2. By Songs a Metonymy of the Effect for the Cause or the Sign for the Thing signified such Pleasure Joy and Contentment as other men had in Songs David had in the Word of God Travellers use to lighten and ease the tediousness of the Way by Songs thy Word doth comfort me wonderfully Or you may take it literally the Themes and Arguments of his singing Profane Spirits must have Songs suitable to their Mirth as their Mirth is carnal so the Songs of carnal Men are obscene filthy and fleshly but an holy Man his Songs suit his Mirth and Joy he rejoyceth in the Lord and therefore his Songs are divine thy Statutes are my Songs Singing of Psalms is a delectable way of Edification which God hath not onely instituted in the Scriptures but Heathens saw an use of it by the light of Nature Aelian lib. 3. nat Hist. cap. 39. telleth us of the Cretians 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It is a spiritual Channel wherein our Mirth may run Iames 5. 13. Is any merry let him sing Psalms 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there is the Harmony that is a natural Delight the Matter that is a spiritual Comfort I cannot exclude this because it is one way of expressing that Delight which we take in the Word but I prefer the former for David speaketh of the Comfort he took in keeping God's Precepts when they were violated by others 3. In the House of my Pilgrimage you may take it literally for the time of David's Exile when banished by Saul or driven from his Palace by Absalom when he fled from place to place and wandred up and down in great distress then God's Statutes by which his Life was directed Innocency vindicated Hopes confirmed both of present Support and seasonable deliverance were as Songs to him his real and cordial Solaces Wheresoever the Believer is or whatsoever his Case and Condition be he hath still matter of Rejoycing in the Word of God So had David when he was exposed to continual Wandrings without any fixed Habitation Indeed the Children of God in Babylon say Psal. 137. 4. How shall we sing the Lord's Song in a strange Land The meaning is not to exclude their own spiritual Delight and Solace but they would not gratify the carnal Pleasure of the Enemies with a Temple-song or subject Religion to their sportive fancies and humours Rather Metaphorically for the whole Course of his Life whether spent in the Palace or in the Wilderness in whatsoever place he was he was still in the House of his Pilgrimage so he accounted his best and his worst Condition compare verse 19. I am a Stranger in the Earth and Psal. 39. 12. I am a stranger with thee and a Sojourner as all my Fathers were with 1 Chron. 29. 15. We are Strangers before thee and Sojourners as were all our Fathers Not onely when hunted like a Partridge upon the Mountains but also when he was at Rest and able to offer so vast a quantity of Treasure for the building of the House of God Two Points are observable 1 Doct. That the Godly count this World and their whole Estate therein the House of their Pilgrimage 2 Doct. That during this Estate and the Inconveniencies thereof they find matter of Rejoycing in the Word of God 1 Doct. That the Godly count this World and their whole Estate therein the House of their Pilgrimage I shall not handle this Doctrine in its full Latitude having spoken largely thereof in the 19 Verse onely now a few Considerations 1. Here is no fixed Abode there where we live longest we count our home and dwelling not an Inn which we take up in our passage but the place of our constant Residence in this World We are onely in Passage and so should consider it Heb. 3. 14. Here we have no abiding City but we look for one to come whose builder and maker is God Here we stay but a little while passing through to a better Country The Mortality of the Body and the Immortality of the Soul
2. Providences these do more awaken us God's daily Benefits should bring him to our Remembrance 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 Deut. 8. 18. But thou shalt remember the Lord thy God for he it is that giveth thee power to get Wealth especially the sanctified Remembrance of God's dealing with his People is the way to keep the heart in the Faith Love and Fear of God and the forgetting his Works is the cause of all Defection and falling off to carnal Courses and Confidences Psal. 78. 11. They forgat his Works and Wonders that he shewed them Psal. 106. 21. They forgat God their Saviour which had done great things in Egypt Judges 8. 34. And the Children of Israel remembred not the Lord their God who had delivered them out of the hands of their Enemies on every side It is a base Ingratitude not to remember prize and esteem God for all this 3. Ordinances Ministry was instituted to put you in Remembrance and give you still new and fresh Occasions to think of God 2 Pet. 1. 12. I will not be negligent to put you always in Remembrance our business is not always to inform you of what you know not but to inculcate and revive known Truths there being much Forgetfulness Stupidness and Senselesness upon our Spirits 2 Pet. 3. 1. That I may stir up your minds by way of Remembrance The Impressions of God on our Minds are soon defaced we need to quicken and awaken your Affections and Resolutions to choose and cleave to God 1 Tim. 4. 6. If thou put the Brethren in remembrance of these things thou shalt be a good Minister of Iesus Christ. So Sacraments are instituted to bring God to Remembrance 1 Cor. 11. 24. This doe in Remembrance of me that we may remember his Love and our covenanted Duty The Sabbath was instituted for a Remembrance and Memorial of his creating redeeming Goodness 4. The great office and work of the Spirit is to bring to Remembrance Iohn 14. 26. He shall bring all things to your Remembrance We are apt to forget God and Instructions and Rebukes in their Season the Holy Ghost is our Monitor 3. God will not forget them that remember him he will remember them at every turn Mal. 3. 16. Then they that feared the Lord spake often one to another and the Lord harkned and heard it and a book of Remembrance was written before him for them that feared the Lord and thought upon his Name if he do not openly reward you with temporal Deliverances yet he taketh notice of every thought and every word you speak for him and taketh pleasure in you It is upon Record if you have not the comfort of it now you shall have it in a little time because they thought of him they spake of him and owned him in an evil time and therefore God is represented as hearing and booking and the books shall one day be opened and then you shall have your publick reward 2. Doctr. God is best Remembred when his Name is studied 1. When is his Name studied In the general when we look upon him as he hath manifed himself in his Word and Works More particularly God is discovered sometimes by the Name of his Essence sometimes by his Attributes 1. By the Name of his Essence When Moses was very inquisitive to know his Name and God can best tell his own Name let us see what answer was made him Exod. 3. 12 13. When they shall say unto me What is his Name and God said I Am that I Am. God was sending Moses upon a strange Message he was giving him Commission to go and speak to a King to dismiss and let go six hundred thousand of his Subjects to lead them to a place which God should shew now Moses thought for such a Message he had need have good Authority therefore desireth a significant Name I Am that I Am the form of the words sheweth it was a wonderfull incomprehensible Name Ask not my Name for it is Wonderfull Judg. 13. 18. This is enough to satisfie sober Inquiry though not wanton Curiosity enough for Faith to work upon the great I Am hath sent me It sheweth his unsearchableness It is our manner of speech when we would cover any thing and not answer distinctly we say It is what it is I have said what I have said Finite understandings cannot comprehend him that is Infinite no more than you can empty the Sea with a Cockle-shell 2. He is the great and onely Being in comparison of which all else is nothing Isa. 40. 19. All Nations before him are nothing they are counted less than nothing and vanity You have not a true and full Notion of God if you conceive him onely as the most eminent of all Beings no Being must appear as Being in his sight and in comparison of him As long as you onely conceive God to be the best you still attribute something to the Creature for all Comparatives include the Positive The Creature is nothing in comparison with God all the Glory Perfection and Excellency of the whole World do not amount to the value of an unite in regard of God's Attributes join never so many of them together they cannot make up one number they are nothing in his regard and less than nothing All created Beings must utterly vanish out of sight when we think of God As the Sun doth not annihilate the Stars and make them nothing yet it annihilates their Appearance to our sight some are of the first magnitude some of the second some of the third but in the Day-time all are alike all are darkned by the Sun's glory so it is here there are degrees of Perfection and Excellency if we compare one Creature with another but let once the glorious brightness of God shine upon the Soul and in that light all their differences are unobserved Angels Men Worms they are all nothing less than nothing to be set up against God this magnificent Title I Am darkneth all as if nothing else were God did not tell Moses that he was the best the highest and the most glorious but I Am and there is none else besides me nothing that hath its Being of it self nothing that can be properly called their own thus the incomprehensible Self-existence of God puts Man into his Original nothing none but God can say I Am because all things else are but borrowed drops of this Self-sufficient Fountain other things are near to nothing God most properly is who never was nothing never shall be nothing who may always in all difference of Time say I Am and nothing else but God can say so The Heaven and Earth for six thousand years ago could not say We are Adam could once have said I am as to his existence in the compounded nature of Man but now he cannot say
that 's no fault of our Portion but the defect of our Capacity Though we have not that fulness that we shall have hereafter yet we have it initially Here we have the First-fruits have it virtually hope and look for it there is something begun in the Soul that will increase towards this Satisfaction certainly this is a Portion that can alone be possest with Content God is satisfied with himself and sufficient to his own Happiness therefore surely there is enough in him to fill the Creature That which fills an Ocean will fill a Bucket that which will fill a Gallon will fill a Pint those Revenues that will defray an Emperours Expences are enough for a Beggar or Poor man So when the Lord himself is satisfied with himself and it is his happiness to enjoy himself there needs no more there is enough in God to satisfy If our desires run out after other things they are desires not to be satisfied but to be mortified If we hunger after other Contentments they are like feverish desires not to be satisfied but to be abated in the Soul for he that fills all things hath enough to fill up our Hearts Sixthly Complacency and Delight That which a Man would take pleasure in there where he may have abundant matter of rejoycing and Delight this a Man would choose for his Portion Now in God he hath the truest and sincerest Delight This is matter of rejoycing as David saith Psal. 16. 7. The Lord is my Portion what then I have a goodly Heritage here 's that which will revive and refresh my Heart enough There is no rejoycing that is sincere but this As the Discomforts of the New Creature are more real than all other Discomforts and pierce deeper a wounded Spirit who can bear so the Joyes of the New Creature none goe so deep Psal. 4. 6. Thou hast put more gladness into my heart c. Others do but tickle the Senses a little refresh the outward Man please the more bruitish part but this the Heart And this is such a joy as can be better felt than uttered 2 Pet. 1. 8. It is unspeakable and none can know the strength and sweetness of it till it be felt a Stranger cannot conceive it doth not intermeddle with his joy Prov. 14. 10. One drop of this is more than an Ocean of carnal Pleasure When we have other things without God we can never be serious Take the merriest Blades in the World and dig them to the bottom still there is something of sadness and remorse that doth sowre all their Content Conscience is secretly repining and ready to imbitter their Joy Though men strive to bear it down yet it 's ever returning upon them therefore they cannot be truly chearfull The most jolly Sinners have their Pangs that take off the edge of their Bravery Carnal Rejoycing makes a great noise like Thorns under a Pot but it 's but a blaze and gone But this is a solid Joy and Comfort wherewith a Man may look death in the face with chearfulness and think of the World to come and not be sad Alas a little thing puts the merriest Sinner into the Stocks of Conscience He that makes it his business to adde one Pleasure to another and spend his days in vanity how soon is his Mirth removed Therefore if a Man would choose a Portion to have Joy at the higest Rate he should choose God for his Portion II. How comes a godly Man to look upon God under this Notion that no less will content him but God himself why he hath another apprehension and another manner of heart to close with him than carnal Men his Understanding is inlightned and his Heart inclined by Grace 1. He sees more into the worth of Spiritual and Heavenly Things He hath Faith which is the Evidence of things not seen of things that do not lie under the judgment of Sense and present Reason he can spy things under a Vail and his eyes are opened to see what is the Riches of the glory of his Inheritance in the Saints Eph. 1. 17 18. and therefore he is convinced of the fullness and sufficiency that is in God and the emptiness and straitness that is in the Creature God hath given him Counsel his Reins instruct him Psal. 16. 7. All by Nature are blind ignorant apt to dote upon the Creature but by Grace their eyes are opened that they have another manner of discerning that they do not see things onely by discourse but their Hearts are affected Others may discourse but they have not this divine Light and spiritual Understanding by which spiritual Things may be discerned as matters of Opinion they may but not as matters of Choice A carnal Man may argue out with Reason the Worth and Excellency of God but he hath not a refined Apprehension and perswasive Counsel which is in God's People 2. Their Hearts are inclined to choose him for their Portion They do not onely see an alluring worth in the Object but there 's an attracting Vertue by which the Heart is drawn in to God Iohn 6. 44. No man can come to me except the Father which hath sent me draw him The great Article of the Covenant of Grace is to take God for our God Now all the Articles of the New Covenant are not onely Precepts ●…ut Promises The conditions of the Covenant are conditions in the Covenant God gives what he requires And therefore as the great Article of the Covenant is to take God for our God so the great Blessing of the Covenant is to have a new Heart or a new placing of our Desires and Affections Sin lieth in a Conversion from God to the Creature Grace in turning us to God again The Change is mainly seen in fixing our chiefest Good and our last End God gives his People a Heart to close with him and accept of him as their Portion to fix upon him as their chiefest Good and their last End Use 1. To reprove them that do not take God for their Portion Godly Men must have God himself they prefer him above all and saving Grace above other Benefits Psal. 4. 6 7. There 's the dispositions of the Godly and the Carnal The many say who will shew us any good but Lord lift up the Light of thy Countenance upon us A carnal Man is for Good in common any Good but not for the Light of God's Countenance nothing will satisfy the Saints but the Light of God's Countenance they prefer him above his Gifts and among his Gifts they prefer saving Graces and renewing Mercies such as begin and confirm them in their Union with God in Christ. But carnal Men go no further than the World they choose not God but his Gifts and among these not the best but the common sort such as suite with the Appetite of the fleshly Nature and the more brutish part of these Riches Pleasures and Honours and these too not as coming from God but as
the World more than Heaven and our temporal Pleasure and Contentment more than our spiritual and eternal Benefit and therefore we cannot endure to hear of the Cross much more to bear it Oh this doth not become men surely it doth not become Christians Would you have your Consolation here Luke 6. your Portion here Psalm 7. Would you value your selves by the flourishing of the outward man or the renewing of the inward man 2 Cor. 4. 16. Should we be so impatient of the Cross Afflictions are bitter to present Sense but yet they are healthfull to the Soul they are not so bitter in present feeling as they will be sweet in the after-fruits Now we are greatly unthankfull to God if the bitterness be not lessened and tempered by this fruit and profit Consider when are we most miserable when we goe astray or when we are reduced into the right way when we are ingaged in a Rebellion against God or when brought into a sense of our Duty Hosea 4. 17. Ephraim is joyned to Idols let him alone Let him alone is the heaviest Judgment that can be laid upon a poor Creature Providence Conscience Ministry let him alone the case is desperate and we are incorrigible when we are left to our own ways There needeth no more to make our case miserable and sad than to be suffered to goe on in Sin without lett and restraint there is no hope of such God seemeth to cast them off and to desert and leave them to their own Lusts. It is evident he mindeth not their Salvation but leaveth them to the World to be condemned with the World Well then doth God doe the Elect any harm when he casts them into great troubles If we use violence to a man that is ready to be drowned and in pulling him out of the Waters should break an Arm or a Leg would he not be thankfull yes saith he I can dispense with that for you have saved my Life So may God's Children bless his Name Oh blessed Providence I had been a witless Fool and gone on in a course of Sin if God had not awakened me A Philosopher could say that he never made better Voyage than when he suffered Shipwrack because then he began to apply himself to the study of Wisdome surely a Christian should say Blessed be God that he laid his Chastenings upon me and brought me to a serious heavenly mind I should otherwise have been a carnal Fool as others are Wicked men are left to their own swing When the case of the Sick is desperate Physicians let them alone give them leave to take any thing they have a mind unto The Apostle speaketh much to this purpose Heb. 12. 6. Whom the Lord loveth he chasteneth and scourgeth every son whom he receiveth Sharp Afflictions which in their visible appearance seem tokens of God's Hatred are rather tokens of his Love There is a twofold Love of God Amor benevolentioe complacentioe the Love of Good-will whereby the Lord out of the purposes of his own free Grace doth regenerate us and adopt us into his Family and having loved us and made us amiable he doth then delight in us The Text alledged may be expounded of either Oh then why do not we more own God in our Afflictions if he use us a little hardly it is not an argument of his Hatred but his Love Thou darest not pray Lord let me have my worldly Comforts though they damn me let me not be afflicted though it will doe me good and if thou darest not pray so will you repine when God seeth this course necessary for us and taketh away the fuel of our Lusts Is it not a good Exchange to part with outward Comforts for inward Holiness If he take away our quiet and give us peace of Conscience our worldly Goods and give us true Riches have we cause to complain If outward Wants be recompensed with an abundance of inward Grace if we have less of the World that we may have more of God an healthy Soul in a sickly Body it is just matter of Thanksgiving 3 Ep. Iohn v. 2. I wish above all things that thou mayst prosper and be in health even as thy Soul prospereth We can subscribe to this in the general all will affirm that Afflictions are profitable and that it is a good thing to be patient and submissive under them but when any Cross cometh to knock at our door we are loth to give it entrance and if it thrust in upon us we fret and fume and our Souls sit uneasy and all because we are addicted so unreasonably to the ease of the Flesh the quiet happiness and welfare of the carnal Life and have so little regard to Life spiritual 7. At the first coming of the Affliction we do not see this Benefit so well as in the review of the whole Dispensation Before I was afflicted I went astray but now I have kept thy Word So Heb. 12. 11. Now no chastening for the present seemeth to be joyous but grievous nevertheless afterward it yieldeth the peaceable fruit of righteousness to them which are exercised thereby There is a perfect opposition the Root and the Fruit are opposed Affliction and the Fruit of Righteousness the quality of the Root and the quality of the Fruit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Appearance and the Reality 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 then the Season 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God's Physick must have time to work at first it may not be so or at least not appear for things are before they appear or can be observed for the present We must tarry God's leisure and be content with his blows till we feel the benefit of them it is first matter of Faith and then of Feeling though we do not presently understand why every thing is done we must wait The hand in the Dyal doth not seem to stir yet it keeps its course while it is passing we see it not but that it hath passed from one hour to another is evident So is God's work with the Soul and spiritual Renovation and increase is not so sensible at the first though it be carried on 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 day by day 2 Cor. 4. 16. but in the view of the whole it will appear What are we the better doth Sin decay and what Sin do we find it otherwise with us than it was before 8. This Profit is not onely when the Affliction is upon us but after it is over the Fruit of it must remain Their qualms and pangs most have Psalm 78. 34 to 37. When he slew them then they sought him and returned and enquired early after God And they remembred that God was their Rock and the high God their Redeemer Nevertheless they did flatter him with their Mouth and they lied unto him with their Tongues For their heart was not right with him neither were they
though he kept God's Commandments yet he craveth farther Grace and desireth that he may be still taught because he knew not all that he might know and was ready to erre both in Practice and Judgment and this must teach us to desire God's guidance and direction not onely when we have erred but when we doe well Many when they have smarted for their Errours will desire God to teach them but David kept this continual dependance upon God for daily Grace both for turning away of evil and also for doing good Prov. 3. 5 6. Trust in the Lord with all thine heart and lean not upon thine own Understanding In all thy ways acknowledge him and he shall direct thy Paths which we are to follow in our Places and Callings We are apt to ascribe too much to our present Frame and Resolutions God must still be called to for his Counsel and Blessing in every Business 5. An Evangelical Frame He pleadeth not Merit appealeth not to Justice but to God's Grace and Goodness This should be the special ground-work of our Prayers The Lord doth all to the praise of his glorious Grace Eph. 1. 7. and he will not have that Glory infringed either in part or in whole The Spirit of God is very tender of it in Scripture and we should be very tender of it in our Addresses to God that all Conceits of our own worth be laid aside and that we wholly fly to God's Goodness and Mercy The whole work of Sanctification from its first step to its last period is all of Grace all must be ascribed to God's free Goodness 6. The Will of God revealed in Scripture is a Subject that is never perfectly known While we are in the way to Glory there is always some new thing to be learned of it and from it even by those that are the greatest Proficients in the knowledge of it and therefore we must be still Scholars in this School and when we have learned never so much we must still be learning more This is continued lasting work for David is ever and anon at his old request Lord teach me thy Statutes and not without reason since ' t●…s not sufficient to know God's Will in some few great and weighty Actions of our liv●… but in all whether of greater or lesser Concernments And when we know Generals yet we are so apt to erre in particular Cases and since the Commandment of God is ●…o exceeding broad Psal. 119. 96. Every day we may see more into it and may be more fully informed of the mind of God We every day see more in a Promise than we did before in a Precept than we did before therefore the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 8. 2. And if any man think that he knoweth any thing he knoweth nothing yet as he ought to know Use. Here is a Pattern and President for us especially now we have ingaged our Souls to God let us seek this directive Grace It implieth Pardon and that maketh way for Joy and Comfort for God teacheth pardoned Sinners A sure Light and Direction prevents many troubles of Spirit and anxious doubts 't is a pledge and assurance of our getting home to God those whom God guideth are sure to be safe in the issue First It sheweth what should be the matter of our Prayers David beggeth not to increase him in Riches and Honours nor to flow in temporal Delights no if God would shew himself a good God to him he desireth it may be in giving him the spirit of Understanding and some increase of Holiness this he would take as the principal sign of God's Favour and Grace to him The World generally imploreth God's Goodness to another end they think they are dealt liberally with when every man hath his Lust satisfied they pray from the intemperateness of the Flesh but David professeth it was enough to him if he might find God answering him in that one thing which most others neglect and pass by in their Prayers or if they mention it 't is for fashion sake and to comport with the usual way of praying But because there is great deceit and we often pray for what we have no mind to have granted let us see if this be our temper 1. We must discover it in our Thanksgiving and blessing God for this Gift though he denieth us other which make a fair shew in the World Matth. 11. 25 26 27. At that time Iesus answered and said I thank thee O Father Lord of Heaven and Earth because thou hast hid these things from the wise and prudent and hast revealed them to Babes Even so Father for so it seemed good in thy sight All things are delivered to me of my Father and no man knoweth the Son but the Father neither knoweth any man the Father save the Son and he to whomsoever the Son will reveal him Christ sheweth that the Mystery of Grace is at God's disposing who manifests it as he seeth good that if he hath cut us short in other things and been liberal to us in this we should not onely be contented but highly thankfull and how contemptible soever we be in the World yet 't is matter of Praise and Thanksgiving in that God hath bestowed his Grace and Love to us according to his Will and Pleasure 2. By our Patience and Contentedness in the want and loss of other things for this things sake want if God's Providence be so loss if occasioned by our adherence to Truth want we have no reason to envy carnal Men Psalm 17. 14 15. From men which are thy hand O Lord from men of the world which have their portion in this life and whose belly thou fillest with thy hid treasure they are full of Children and leave the rest of their substance to their Babes But as for me I will behold thy face in Righteousness I shall be satisfied when I awake with thy likeness We have no reason to repine our present Condition of entertaining Communion with God in a practice of Holiness countervaileth all their Happiness especially our future Hopes to increase in Knowledge and abound in the work of the Lord and to own and stand up for an hated and despised Truth will bring more Comfort to our Souls than all the Pleasure the Wicked have in their sensual Delights Are they the happy Men that goe on in opposition against the ways of God Prov. 3. 31 32 33. Envy thou not the Oppressour and choose none of his ways For the froward is an abomination to the Lord but his secret is with the Righteous The curse of the Lord is in the House of the Wicked but he blesseth the Habitation of the Iust. They are not happier than the Godly 't is a greater Happiness to know more of God's Mind than any thing they injoy Iohn 15. 15. Henceforth I call you not Servants for the Servant knoweth not what his Lord doth but I call you Friends for all things that I have heard of my
spiritual Protection under the Affliction though the Affliction was not removed It is good c. In the words there is 1. An Assertion It is good for me that I have been afflicted 2. The Reason that I might learn thy Statutes Or Here is a general Truth explained by a particular Instance In the general he saith it is good and then what good he got by it Doctr. That affliction all things considered is rather good than evil The Assertion is a Paradox to vulgar Sense and the Ears of the common sort of Men. How few are there in the World that will grant that it is good to be afflicted Yea the Children of God can scarcely subscribe to the truth of it till the Affliction be over While they are under it they feel the Smart but do not presently discern the Benefit but in the review they find God hath ordered it with much Wisdome and Faithfulness and in the issue they say as David doth It is good for me that I have been afflicted Carnal Sense is not easily perswaded but the New Nature prevaileth at length and then they readily subscribe to the truth of it The word is clear in this Point Iob 5. 17. Behold happy is the man whom the Lord correcteth The first word Behold summoneth our Attention and Observation What 's the matter As those that ran before Ioseph cryed Abeck bow the Knee Gen. 41. 43. to shew some eminent person was at hand so this Behold calleth for Reverence and Admiration there is some strange Truth to ensue and follow Happiness in the lowest Notion it includeth a freedome from Misery and yet the Scripture pronounces the man happy whom the Lord correcteth There have been among the Heathens many Opinions about Happiness 288 Austin reckoneth up but none ever placed it in Correction in Sickness Disgrace Exile Captivity loss of Friends much less in God's Correction who is our supreme Judge to whom we ultimately appeal when others wrong us And yet the corrected man and the man corrected by the Lord is happy though not with a consummate Happiness he hath not the Happiness of his Country but he hath the Happiness of the Way The man is kept by the Way that he may come to his Country His Afflictions take nothing from him but his Sin Therefore his solid Happiness remaineth not infringed rather the more secured So Psalm 49. 12. Blessed is the man whom thou chastenest O Lord and teachest out of thy Law To be chastened of God for what we have done amiss and by that means to be reduced to the sense and practice of our Duty is one of the greatest Blessings on this side Heaven that can light upon us 'T is an evidence of God's tender care over us and that he will not lose us and suffer us to perish with the unbelieving and sinfull World The Truth lyeth clearly in the Scripture but to reconcile it with our prejudices 1. I shall shew by what measure we are to determine Good and Evil. 2. Prove that Affliction is good First For the Measure 1. This Good is not to be determined by our Fancies and Conceits but by the Wisdome of God For God knoweth better what is good for us than we do for our selves and foreseeth all things by one infinite act of Understanding but we judge according to present appearance therefore all is to be left to God's disposal and his divine Choices are to be preferred before our foolish Fancies and what he sendeth and permitteth to fall out is fitter for us than any thing else Could we once assuredly be perswaded of this a Christian would be compleatly fortified and fitted not only for a patient but a cheerfull entertainment of all that is or shall come upon him Besides he is a God of Bowels and loveth us dearly better than we do our selves and therefore we should be satisfied with his dispensations whatever they are whether according to or against our will The Shepherd must chuse the pastures for the Sheep whether lean or fat bare or full grown the Child is not to be governed by his own Fancy but the Fathers Discretion nor the sick man by his own appetite but the Physicians skill 'T is expedient sometimes that God should make his People sad and displease them for their advantage Iohn 16. 6 7. Because I have said these things unto you sorrow hath filled your heart nevertheless I tell you the Truth it is expedient for you that I go away We are too much addicted to our own conceits Christ's dealing is expedient and usefull when yet 't is very unsatisfactory to us he is to be Judge of what is good for us his going or tarrying not we our selves who are short sighted and distempered with passions whose requests many times are but Ravings and ask of God we know not what as the two Brethren Matth. 20. 22. and seek our bane as a blessing as children would play with a knife that would cut and wound them pray our selves into a mischief and a snare It were the greatest misery if God should carve out our condition according to our own fancy and desires Peter said Matth. 17. 4. Master it is good for us to be here He was well pleased to be upon Mount Tabor but little thought what service God had to do for him elswhere how much poor Souls needed him and the other Apostles help We would always be in the Mount with God enjoy our comforts to the full even to surfeit but God knows that is not good for us His pleasure should satisfie us though we do not see the reason of it So Ier. 24. 5. God speaketh of the basket of good Figs whereby were represented the best of the People whom I have sent into the land of the Chaldeans for their good What can there be seemingly more contrary to their good than an hard and an afflicted lot out of their own Countrey yet God that foresaw all things knew 't was for their Good worse evils would befall the place where they had been So to be kept under to have no service for the present no hopes to rise again for the future and to be loaden with all manner of prejudices and reproaches this is for Good We think not so but God knoweth it is so most for his Glory and our Benefit So the selling of Ioseph into Egypt Gen. 50. 20. God meant it to Good alas what Good to have the poor Young man sold as a Slave to be cast into Prison for his Chastity and Continency and exposed to all manner of difficulties but alas many had perished if he had not been sent thither So God taketh away many beloved Comforts from us he meaneth it for Good We think 't is all against us no 't is for us So Psalm 34. 10. They that seek the Lord shall not want any Good thing Many times they want food and raiment want liberty at least in some degree they may want many things
better in its self There was reason for his esteem and choice Many will say 't is better in its self but David saith 't is better to me Let us explain these Circumstances as they are laid 1. The things compared 1. On the one side there is the Law of God's Mouth 't is God's own Word and we should be as sure of it as if we had heard him utter it and pronounce it with his own Mouth or had received it immediately by Oracle from him And indeed that is one way to raise this esteem 1 Thess. 2. 13. Receiving it not as the word of men but as it is in truth the word of God which worketh effectually in you that believe In the Word we must consider two things the Authority of it and the Ministry of it if we consider the Authority of it so it cometh from God's Mouth if we consider the Ministry of it so it cometh by Man's Mouth for he speaketh to us by Men 2 Pet. 1. 21. Holy men spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost If we look to the Ministry onely and not to the Authority we are in danger to slight it certainly shall not profit by it Many doe so as Samuel thought Eli called him when it was the Lord 1 Sam. 3. 7 8. but when we consider who is the Authour of it then it calleth for our reverence and regard 2. On the other side thousands of gold and silver Where Wealth is set out 1. By the species and kind of it Gold and Silver Gold for hoarding and portage Silver for present commerce 2. The quantity thousands that is thousands of pieces as that addition is used Psalm 68. 30. They shall submit themselves with pieces of silver or Talents as the Chaldee Paraphrase expoundeth it Money answereth all things Eccles. 10. 19. it can command all things in the World as the great Instrument of Commerce 2. The value and preference of the one above the other 't is better and 't is better to me 'T is better in its self that noteth the intrinsick worth of the Word 't is better to me that implieth his own esteem and choice To say in the general onely 't is better implieth but a speculative Approbation which may be in carnal Men Rom. 2. 18. And approvest the things that are more excellent but to say 't is better to me implieth a practical Esteem which is proper onely to the Regenerate 'T is more dear precious and sweet to them than the greatest Treasure Could we have such an holy Affection to the Word and say also to me and to me we should thrive more in a course of Godliness For a man is carried on powerfully by his Choice and Esteem his Actions are governed and determined by it Doctr. The Word of God is dearer to a gracious heart than all the Riches in the World Let me bring Proofs Psalm 19. 10. More to be desired are they than gold yea than much fine gold So speaking of spiritual Wisdome which is onely to be had by the Word of God he saith Prov. 3. 14. That the Merchandise thereof is better than the Merchandise of silver and the gain thereof than fine gold So Prov. 8. 11. For Wisdome is better than Rubies and all the things which are to be desired are not to be compared with it These Expressions are frequently used because the greatest part of Mankind is miserably bewitched with the desire of Riches but God's Children are otherwise affected they have a better Treasure Let me prove two things 1. That the Word of God and the benefit that we get by it is better than thousands of Gold and Silver 2. That the Children of God do so esteem it Both must be proved the one to shew the worth and excellency of the Word the other to shew the gracious Disposition of the hearts of God's Children There is no question but that if these things were well weighed the Law of God's Mouth and thousands of Gold and Silver we should find there is a great inequality between them but all men have not a judgment to choose that which is most worthy Many take glass Beads for Jewels and prefer Toyes and Trifles before a solid Good Gold and Silver draw the Hearts of all men to them and their Affections blind their Judgment and then though the Weights be equal if the Ballances be not equal wrong will be done We do not weigh things with an equal Ballance but consider them with a prejudiced Mind and an Heart biassed and prepossessed with worldly Inclinations I. First then for the things themselves surely Gold and Silver which is digged out of the bowels of the Earth is not worthy to be compared with the Law that cometh out of the Mouth of God if you compare the Nature Use and Duration of these Benefits that you have by the one and the other you will see a vast difference 1. The Nature the Notion of Riches is abundance of valuable things Now there are true Riches and counterfeit Riches which have but the resemblance and shew The true Riches is spoken of Luke 16. 11. and is opposed to that Mammon and Pelf which the World doateth upon Grace giveth us the true Riches and Wealth 'T is good to state what are the true Riches and the false The more abundance of truely valuable Things a man hath the more he hath of true Riches a Child counteth himself rich when he hath a great many Pins and Points and Cherry-stones for those suit his childish Age and Fancy A worldly Man counteth himself rich when he hath Gold and Silver in great store by him or Lands and Heritages or Bills and Bonds but a Child of God counteth himself rich when he hath God for his Portion Christ to his Redeemer and the Spirit for his Guide Sanctifier and Comforter which is as much above a carnal Man's Estate in the World as a carnal Man's Estate is above a Child's Toyes and Trifles yea infinitely more Well then surely the Word of God will make us rich because it revealeth God to be our God according to our Necessity and Capacity Psalm 16. 5 6. The Lord is my Portion I have a goodly Heritage and it revealeth unsearchable Riches of Grace in Christ Eph. 2. 7. Eph. 3. 8. pardon of Sins and Life eternal They that have Christ want nothing but are compleatly happy So for the Spirit what are all the Riches of the World to those Treasures of Knowledge Comfort and Holiness which we have by the Spirit What is in one Evangelist He will give his holy Spirit to them that ask him Luke 11. 13. is in another Matth. 7. 11. He will give good things to them that ask him The Spirit is instead of all good things so that the Word is able to enrich a man more than all the Wealth of the World can It giveth us abundance and abundance of better things so that a man is not absolutely poor that wants Gold
sharpness of apprehension in carnal Things but dull slow and blind in spiritual and heavenly Things Thoughts are spent freely and unweariedly about the one but there is a tediousness and barrenness about the other a Will backward to what is good but a strange bent and urging to what is evil in that which is good we need a Spur in evil a Bridle these things persevere with us but how fickle and changable in any holy Resolution the Memory slippery in what is good but firm and strong in what is evil the Affections quick easily stirred like Tinder catch fire at every spark but as to that which is good they are like fire in green Wood hardly kept in with much blowing Again our delight is soon moved by things pleasing to Sense a carnal gust and savour is very natural to us and rise with us Rom. 8. 5. but averse from the chiefest good and every thing that leadeth to it Surely then we have need to goe to God and complain of Corruption sometimes under the notion of a blind and dark Mind begging the illumination of the Spirit sometimes under the notion of a dead hard Heart or an unperswadable Will begging his inclining as well as inlightning Grace Surely they are strangely hardened that do not see a need of a spiritual Understanding Nay God's Children after Grace received though sanctified betimes yet halt of the old Maim dull in Spirituals alive and active in carnal Matters Carnal and worldly Men act more uniformly and suitably to their Principles than the Children of God to theirs Luke 16. 8. The Children of this world are wiser in their generation than the Children of light that is more dexterous in the course of their Affairs Grace for the present worketh but a partial Cure we have the advantage in matter of Motive we have better and higher things to mind but they have the advantage in matter of Principle their Principles are unbroken but the Principles of the best are mixed we cannot doe what we would in heavenly things there is the back-bias of Corruption that turns us away and therefore they need to be instant with God to heal their Souls sometimes a blind Mind and sometimes a distempered Heart 5. We must be new made and born again before we can be apt or able to know or doe the Will of God as Christ inferreth the necessity of Regeneration from the corruption of Nature he had been discoursing with Nicodemus You cannot enter into the Kingdome of God For that which is born of the flesh is flesh John 3. 5 6. Our Souls naturally accommodate themselves to the Flesh and seek the good of the Flesh and all our Thoughts and Care and Life and Love runs that way now what was lost in Adam can onely be recovered in Christ 't is not enough that God's hands have once made us and fashioned us but there is a necessity of being made and fashioned anew of becoming his workmanship in Christ Iesus Eph. 2. 10. and so the words of the Text may be interpreted in this sense Thou hast made me once Lord new make me thy hands made me O Lord give me a new Heart that I may obey thee In the first Birth God gave us a natural Understanding in the second a spiritual Understanding that we may learn his Commandments First that we may be good and then doe good The first Birth gave us the natural Faculty the second the Grace or those divine Qualities which were lost by Adam's Sin better never been born unless born again better be a Beast than a Man if the Lord give us not the knowledge of himself in Christ. The Beasts when they die their Misery and Happiness dieth with them Death puts an end to their Pain and Pleasure but we that have Reason and Conscience to foresee the end and know the way enter into perfect Happiness or Misery at death unless the Lord sanctify this Reason and give us an heart to know him in Christ and choose that which is good Man is but a higher kind of Beast a wiser sort of Beast Psalm 49. 12. for his Soul is onely employed to cater for the Body and his Reason is prostituted to Sense the Beast rides the Man We are not distinguished from the Bruits by our Senses but our Understanding and our Reason but in a carnal Man the Soul is a kind of Sense 't is wholly imployed about the animal Life There is not a more brutish Creature in the World than a worldly wicked Man Well then David had need to pray Lord thou hast given me Reason give me the knowledge of thy self and thy blessed Will 6. When we seek this Grace or any degree of it 't is a proper Argument to urge that we are God's Creatures so doth David here I am now come to my very Business and therefore I shall a little shew how far Creation is pleadable and may any way incourage us to ask spiritual Understanding and renewing Grace 1. In the general I shall lay down this 'T is a good way of reasoning with God to ask another Gift because we have received one already 'T is not a good way of reasoning with Man because he wastes by giving but a good way with God and that upon a double account Partly because in some cases Deus donando debet God by giving doth in effect bind himself to give more as by giving Life to give Food by giving a Body to give Rayment Matth. 6. 25. God by sending such a Creature into the World chargeth his Providence to maintain him as long as he will use him for his glory God loveth to crown his own Gifts Zech. 3. 2. Is not this a brand plucked out of the burnings The thing pleaded there is was not this a Brand plucked out of the fire one Mercy is pleaded to obtain another Mercy So God bindeth himself to give perseverance 2 Cor. 1. 10. but this is not the case here for by giving common Benefits he doth not bind himself to give saving Graces And partly too because he doth not waste by giving his mercy endureth for ever The same reason is given for all those Mercies Psalm 136. Why the Lord chose a Church maintaineth his Church giveth daily bread his mercy endureth for ever God is where he was at first he giveth liberally and upbraideth not James 1. 5. he doth not say I have given already Now a former common Mercy sheweth God's readiness and freeness to give the Inclination to doe good still abideth with him he is as ready and as free to give still daily Bread his mercy endureth for ever spiritual Wisdome his mercy endureth for ever indeed the giving of daily Bread doth not necessarily bind God to give spiritual Wisdome but that which is not a sure ground to expect may be a probable incouragement to ask and learn this that though nothing can satisfy Unbelief yet Faith can pick Arguments out of any thing and make use of
not of they have all in God You account him a richer man that hath much Land and a thousand pounds in Bonds than he that hath only a hundred pounds in ready money so a Child of God that hath one promise is richer than all the world he hath Bonds and his Debtor cannot fail him Let me tell you a man may not only live by faith but he may grow rich by faith You read of living by faith Gal. 2. 20. this is that which supports and keeps up a Believer in heart and life This will not only keep Body and Soul together but help us to grow rich Use 2. For Examination You have heard much what it is to have an heritage in the testimonies of the Lord O but who is the man try your selves Let me propound a few plain Questions 1. Were you ever chased out of your selves in the sense of the insufficiency of your worldly portion and the curse due to you Are you driven out of your selves Heb. 6. 18. There 's a comfortable place God willing to shew unto the Heirs of promise the immutability of his counsel confirmed it by an oath That by two immutable things in which it was impossible for God to lie we might have a strong consolation O who are these Heirs of promise If we could find out that we are sure there 's enough in God there they are named who have fled for refuge to lay hold upon the hope set before us There is none ever took the testimony of the Lord for their portion but they came first to take hold of it as men in danger ready to sink and perish and be undone Our first address is to take Sanctuary in the Covenant to flee to Christ represented there as a City of refuge that we may be safe It is an allusion to a man which fled from the avenger of blood when taken out of the City of refuge under the Law he was to dye without remedy so a poor soul that first takes hold of the Covenant runs for sanctuary there first before he comes to take possession of the comforts of it 2. What do you take to be your 〈◊〉 and your great work Do you make it your main care to keep up your interest in the promises the great business you drive on you would ●…it down in as your work and employment What do you wait upon as your great project and design in the world Mary chose the better part Luke 10. 42. do you make this to ●…e your choice your work and business you drive on that you may be possest of the whole land of promise and enjoy eternal life and clear up your Right and Title to Heaven 1 Tim. 6. 19. Laying up in store a good foundation against the time to come that they may lay hold of eternal life 3. Are you very chary of your interest O you would not hazard it upon such easie terms this is that all your happiness depends upon what shall I break with God for such a trifle Are you afraid to lose your Inheritance by sin as a man his Treasure by theft Are you careful and wary in this kind that you may not hazard your interest 1 Kin. 21. 3. said N●…oth God forbid that I should sell mine inheritance Mark there was a King would traffick with him and that inheritance was but a poor Vineyard of the Earth but it was that which was descended from his father now God forbid I should sell it Thus will be the disposition of Gods Children O here lies my all my happiness my daily supplies from God God forbid that upon every trifle and carnal satisfaction I should break with God It was a great prophaneness in Esau Heb. 12. 16. who for one morsel of meat sold his Birth-right It is an argument that God is little valued or the Covenant and Testimony of the Lord when you can part with them for a Mess of Pottage when the consolations of God are so cheap and you can part with them for a little temporal satisfaction and sell your part in Christ at a very easie rate 4. What respect do you bear to the promises of God Do you often meditate upon them Have you recourse to them in straits Do you keep them up as the choicest things upon your heart upon which all your comfort depends as a man would keep the Key safe which opens to all his treasure Do you carry the promises as a bundle of Myrrh in your bosome Because this is the Key that gives you admission to the Blessings promised A man will keep his Bonds chary and will be often looking over them and considering them so are you meditating upon the promises Are they the rejoycing and delight of your Souls Do you keep them near and dear to you When alone do your hearts run upon them For a man may know his heritage by his musing and imagination When Nebuchadnezzar was alone Is not this great Babel which I have built for the honour of my Majesty He was thinking of his large Territories So if you have taken the testimonies of the Lord for your heritage your heart will be running upon them O what a happiness is it for God to be my God and my interest cleared up in eternal life and the great things of the Covenant Many times the flesh interposeth Psal. 144. 15. Happy is that people that is in such a case You will be admiring carnal excellency sometimes but then you will check your Souls Yea rather happy is that people whose God is the Lord. 5. If the testimonies of the Lord be your heritage then you will live upon them and make them the Storehouse from whence you fetch all your supplies as righteousness peace comfort and spiritual strength nay all your outward maintenance This will be comfort in straits strength in Duty provision for your Families There are two sorts of the Children of God either those that are in prosperity or those that are in want and both live on the Covenant A Child of God that hath a plentiful affluence of outward comforts yet he doth live upon God 1 Tim. 4. 5. To them that believe for every thing is sanctified by the word and prayer Though God hath supplied them with mercy yet they have their right all comforts and blessings owe their rise from the promise I take them immediately out of Gods hand from a God in covenant with me and so I use the Blessing and praise God otherwise if you look only to present supplies you live by sense not by faith Every one is to say Give us this day our daily Bread to fetch out his supplies from God every day rich men as well others when you see you have a right and liberty by Christ so Gods leave and Gods blessing go along with all by this means rich men live upon the Covenant I but chiefly in want the word quickned and strengthened him when he was in distress and want of all
in the use of all these things Now let a carnal Wretch work upon this Principle and what inference doth he draw Let us eat and drink for to morrow we shall die 1 Cor. 15. 32. See this other Principle The Grace of God brings salvation to poor Sinners Tit. 2. 12. How doth a gracious heart work upon it Teaching us to deny ungodliness and worldly Lusts c. O what shall be done for this God the Grace that offers such salvation by Christ Let a carnal wretch work upon this principle and he will take liberty to sin that Grace may abound Rom. 6. 1. Shall we continue in sin that Grace may abound God forbid Such kind of reasonings there are in the hearts of the Godly 2 Sam. 7. 2. saith David I dwell in an house of Cedar but the Ark of God dwelleth within Curtains God hath fenced me with his Providence What then Here I may sit down and rest and take my ease and pleasure and gratifie my sensual lusts No he doth not argue so but what shall I do for God that hath done so much for me Now see those ungracious Jews after their return how they reason Hagg. 1. 2. The time is not come the time that the Lords house should be built no matter for Gods House It is the Lords hand let Eli work upon that 1 Sam. 3. 18. Let him do what seemeth him good he draws from it a submissive patience O the Sovereign God will take his own way and the Creature must not murmure repine and set up an Anti-providence against him But now saith that carnal Wretch 2 Kings 6. 33. Behold this evil is of the Lord what should I wait for the Lord any longer he murmures and frets and grows impatient Solomon tells us Prov. 26. 9. As a Thorn goeth up into the hand of a Drunkard so is a Parable in the mouth of Fools A Thorn was their instrument of sewing now when a Drunkard should manage his Needle he wounds and gores himself so is a Parable in a Fools mouth a carnal heart wounds and gores himself with the most holy Principle of Religion The 2. Sort of vain thoughts are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 musings and here take notice the vanity of our thoughts appears First In the slipperiness and inconstancy of them We run from object to object in a moment and our thoughts look like strangers one upon another wondring like those vagabond Iews Act. 19. 13. so they are called because of their uncertain station and frequent removes Eccl. 6. 9. Better is the sight of the eyes than the wandring of the desire in the Original 't is the working out of the Soul Usually we have a stragling Soul roving wandring here and there and all in an instant especially this roving madness may we take notice of when we are employed in holy things hearing prayer meditation It is strange to see what impertinent sudden discursions there are from good to lawful from lawful to sinful and how far the heart is removed from God when we are before him when a man hath brought his body to God his heart is turned back again These vain thoughts pursue and haunt us in Duties so that we mingle Sulphur with our incense it is Gregory's comparison even in our prayers and holy addresses to God Secondly The unprofitableness and folly of our musings Our thoughts are set upon trifles and frivolous things neither tending to our own profit nor the benefit of others Prov. 10. 20. The heart of the wicked is little worth all their debates conceits musings are of no value The tongue of the just is as choise Silver but all their thoughts are taken up about childish vanity and foolish conceits Prov. 24. 9. The thought of foolishness is sin not only the thought of wickedness but foolishness Thoughts are the first-born of the Soul the immediate issues of the mind yet we lavish them away upon every trifle Follow men all the day long and take an account of their thoughts O what madness and folly are in all the musings they are conscious to Psal. 94. 11. The Lord knoweth the thoughts of man that they are vanity If we did judge as God judges all the thoughts reasonings discourses of the mind if they were set down in a Table we might write at the bottom Here 's the Summ and Total Account of all nothing but vanity Thirdly The carnality and fleshliness of our thoughts Phil. 3. 19. They mind earthly things How sweet is it to us to be thinking of worldly matters how to grow great to advance our selves here This carnal mind is very natural to us We are in our Element and do with a great deal of savour and sweetness think of these things it makes our heart merry but when we come to think of that which is good we are tired presently and it is very tedious to spend our thoughts upon them Good things come upon us like a flash of Lightning soon gone but on carnal things we can spend our thoughts freely These carnal musings are stirred up by carnal desire or carnal delight sometimes by a desire of worldly things so they are forming images and suppositions of those things they hope for As Faith works in a godly man forming images and suppositions of that happy time when they shall be gathered to God and all holy ones and rejoyce in his presence He hath a Faith the substance of things hoped for the evidence of things not seen Heb. 11. 1. which represents his hopes to him so carnal men dream of preferment riches honours vain-glorious applause they are looking out after their hopes they send their thoughts as Messengers of the Soul to forestal the contentment of those carnal things which they do expect Sometimes they are employed by carnal delight when the thing we muse upon is enjoyed the complacency men take in any carnal enjoyment it is part of this vanity when we go musing upon our own worth and our own excellency as that King Dan. 4. 30. Is not this great Babel that I have built for the honour of my Majesty Men take some time every day to worship the Idol of self and dote and gaze upon their own excellencies and atchievements their wisedom and wit Hab. 1. 15. They gather them in their drag therefore they rejoyce and are glad Or else pleasing themselves in their Estates dialogizing within themselves as the word is Luke 12. 13. Soul take thine ease thou hast Goods laid up for many years c. Fourthly By the impiety and apparent filthiness of them When men are taken up with sin so as to act it over in their own minds delighting themselves in fansying of sin either by way of revenge or lust or any other such thing as an unclean person sets up a stage in his own heart 2 Pet. 2. 14. Eyes full of adultery or the adulteress their fancy is upon the beauty of women their soul is set upon it The 3. Thing is
11. Shall I take my bread and my water and my flesh which I have provided for my Shearers and give it to men I know not affect them not so as to neglect heavenly things affect them not so as to lay out your whole time and care about them Prov. 23. 4. Cease from thine own understanding labour not to be rich Isai. 55. 2. Why do ye spend your money for that which is not bread and your labour for that which satisfieth not but only affect them as you may honour God Prov. 3. 9. Honour the Lord with thy substance you may provide for your families in the fair lawful way of Gods Providence 1 Tim. 5. 8. also you may be helpful to others Ephes. 4. 28. for if you so do you are not the wicked of the earth but those that use this world but hope to enjoy better things Use 2. Let us be contented though we be kept low and mean in the world Gods people are not the Children of this world better things are reserved for them in the world to come and therefore if we have food and rayment and that but of the coursest let us be content 1 Tim. 6. 8. Having food and rayment let us be therewith content Jesus Christ gave thanks for five barley Loaves and two Fishes Mark 6. 41. The wicked are characterized to be of the earth Gods Children are from above as to their original and thither they tend as to their scope and end and if we have any thing by the way we have no cause to complain 1 Pet. 2. 11. I beseech you as Strangers and Pilgrims What ●…ld a man care for in a journey but a bait or a little refreshing if we seek after more 't is i●…dinate affection and must be mortified not satisfied Ephes. 3. 5. Mortifie your members which are upon the earth Evil inclinations bend us to the Earth and earthly things those splendid nothings Riches Pleasures Honours these hinder us from nobler things yea they encrease our difficulties about the things that are necessary for us by the ●…ay Heb. 13. 5. Let your conversations be without covetousness and be content with such t●…●…as you have for he hath said I will never leave thee nor forsake thee implying that w●…●…e indulge carnal desires 't is hard to trust God with daily supports for daily prote●… and daily maintenance but always distract our selves with fruitless cares and thoughts about the things of this life And also we may say The Lord is my helper I do not fear what man can do unto me Therefore let us not desire more than God alloweth a little with Gods blessing is enough to supplie our necessities as to wants and to give us protection against dangers as the Apostle subjoyneth Gods undertaking and the Saints confidence thereupon by way of cure if we believe Gods promises and have the spirit of his Saints this is enough to us Use 3. Let us not envy the prosperity of the wicked First They are the wicked of the Earth here they flourish as Nettles will more easily grow than choicer Plants the soil bringeth them forth of its own accord so do wicked men thrive here but you need not envy them not only our hopes are much better than their possessions but our present condition is much better Psal. 17. 14. their possessions are not to be compared with our hopes what is a more plentiful table to the everlasting fruition of God the pomp of the world to the seeing God face to face vain-glory to everlasting Glory honour here to the Glory that shall be upon us at Christs appearing their momentany pleasures which pass away suddenly as a dream to the everlasting pleasure you shall enjoy in the sight of God Nay for the present you have Communion with God and the sense of his favour how poor and afflicted soever your outward condition be Psal. 4. 6 7. There be many that say Who will shew us any good Lord lift thou up the light of thy countenance upon us Thou hast put gladness in my heart more than in the time when their Corn and Wine encreased Carnal men rejoyce in sensual earthly good things not in the favour of God and mark this joy is proposed with a supposition of encrease and at the time of this encrease when the Carnalist doth enjoy the greatest affluence of worldly blessings take them at their best when they have the most lively sense of these things yet a Christian hath more cause of rejoycing Thou hast put gladness in my heart here is matter and ground of rejoycing They drink of the Cistern you of the Fountain Ier. 12. 13. they rejoyce not in God but his gifts and not the best gifts but the common sort Riches Pleasures and Honours and these not as the effects of Gods bounty but as happening to them in the ordinary Course of second Causes Who will shew us any good but you rejoyce in God in his best gifts his Love and Grace And then here is the Authour of this joy Thou hast put gladness This joy is allowed by God and wrought by him Rom. 14. 17. The Kingdom of God is not meat and drink but righteousness and peace and joy in the Holy Ghost it is stirred up by his Spirit their joy is neither Gods allowance nor Gods work And then here 's the subject and seat of this joy not tickle the senses but delight the heart Thou hast put gladness in my heart And then here is the measure 't is more joy 't is more pure and sublime of a stronger efficacy which not only overcometh the sense of present infelicities but the fear of Death Hell and Judgment to come Heb. 6. 18. That we might have stronger consolation But wicked men dance about the brink of Hell have their secret gripes and will you envy them as if your condition were not much better When God hath given you the Feast will you be troubled that they have the scraps and fragments of his bounty Secondly In regard of the uncertainty of their condition Psal. 37. 1 2. Fret not thy self because of the evil doers neither be thou envious against the workers of iniquity for they shall soon be cut down like the Grass and wither as the green Herb. Though they seem to be in a very prosperous condition for the present as Grass while it is standing is very green yet they are soon cut down by the Sythe of Providence then presently fadeth and is carried away from the place where it grew You think Providence doth not deal righteously because the unworthy are exalted and the worthy depressed Do but tarry a while and you will have no cause to complain or to grow weary of godliness or to cry up a confederacy with evil men they are never nearer their own ruine than when they come to the height of their exaltation as the Sun declineth presently when he cometh to the highest Point of the Zenith Who would envy those that
he God is pure and holy they know yet how can he bear with the enemy in their treachery and violence against the Church So brutified are they that they know not how to reconcile his Dispensations with his Nature and Attributes though they have Faith enough to justifie God yet Atheism enough to question his Providence When the heart is over-charged with fears Psal. 73. 1. Yet God is good to Israel my feet were almost gone my steps well nigh slipped They hold fast the Conclusion Yet God is good to Israel yet cannot maintain it against all objections 3. Carnal affections are hasty and impetuous and if God give not a present satisfaction they question all his love and care of them Psal. 31. 22. I said in my heart I am cut off Isai. 49. 14. Zion said The Lord hath forsaken and my God hath forgotten me Jon. 2. 4. And he said I am cast out of thy sight So that did not God confute his unbelief by some sudden experience as in the first instance or the Word contain a suitable supply as in the second or the principle of Grace in some measure withstand but I will look towards thy holy Temple the soul would be swallowed up in the Whirlpool of despair Thus hasty and precipitant are we while we hearken to the voice of the flesh we are apt to count all our troubles Gods total desertion of us Such an hasty principle have we within us that will hurry us to desperate Conclusions as if it were in vain to wait upon God any longer 4. Mutability in man What a flush of faith and zeal have we at first as Stuffs have a great gloss at first wearing We lose as our first love so our first faith Gal. 5. 7. Ye did run well who did hinder you There is a great forwardness at first which abateth afterwards and men grow remiss faint in your minds Heb. 12. 3. from one degree to another Thirdly That this failing is but an infirmity of the Saints though their hope be weak and ready to faint 't is not quite dead First T is an infirmity of the better sort not like the Atheism and malignity of the wicked Some Diseases shew a good constitution and seize on none but such This Distemper is not incident to carnal men Isai. 38. 14. Mine eyes fail with looking up It argueth a vehemency in our hope they that do not mind things are never troubled with such a spiritual Disease for this failing cannot be but where there is vehemency of desire and expectation Those that desire little of the salvation of Gods people feel none of this Secondly There is a difference between them and others though they have their weaknesses yet their faith doth not quite expire there is a twig of righteousness still to trust to they are weary of watching but they do not give over waiting and say as he 2 Kings 6. 3●… What should I wait for the Lord any longer Fainting is one thing and quite dead is another they strive against the temptation though no end of their difficulties appeareth they attend still keep looking though the vigour of the ey●… be abated by long exercise There is life in the Saints though not that liveliness they could wish for they do not fall and rise no more and are quite thrown down with every blast of a temptation Thirdly They confess their weakness to God as David doth here acquainteth God with it and so shame themselves out of the temptation and beg new strength 'T is an excellent way of curing such Distempers to lay them forth before God in prayer for he helpeth the weak in their Conflicts When we debate dark Cases with our own hearts we intangle our selves the more Use 1. It reproveth our tenderness when we cannot bear a little while What! not watch with me one hour Matth. 26. 40. David kept waiting till his eyes failed Some their whole Voyage is Storms Christ indents with us to take up our Cross daily Luke 9. 22. who are all their life time kept under this discipline and can we bear no check from Providence We would have all done in an hour or in a year can bear nothing when God calleth us to bear much and long cannot endure to abate a little of our wonted contentment when God will strip us of all 2. Let us provide for long sufferings All colours will not hold as long as the Cloath lasts We need a great deal of Grace because we know not how long our great troubles may last Sometimes sufferings are like to be long First When the Cross maketh little improvement carrieth little Conviction with it While the stubborness of the Child continueth the blows are continued God will withdraw till they acknowledge their offence Hos. 5. 15. When we eye instruments and pour our rage upon them or instruments are minded and we hope to be delivered some other way when we repent not Secondly When provocations are long Deut. 28. 58 59. If thou wilt not observe to do all the words of this Law that is written in this Book that thou mayst fear this glorious and fearful Name THE LORD THY GOD then the Lord will make thy plagues wonderful and the plagues of thy seed even great plagues and of long continuance and sore sicknesses and of long continuance SERMON CXXXVI PSAL. CXIX VER 124. Deal with thy Servant according to thy mercy and teach me thy Statutes IN this Verse we have two requests the one general the other particular wherein he would have the Lord exercise his mercy to him Shew thy mercy to me in teaching me thy Law The one respects the priviledg●… part of Religion the other the duty-part The one concerns time past or the pardon of sin already committed Deal with thy servant according to thy mercy the other prevention of sin for the time to come that I may perform my Duty for the future Teach me thy Statutes Mercy is the ground of his request teaching Gods Law the matter of it He would have this gift bestowed on him freely First Branch Deal with thy servant c. Where we have I. His relation to God Thy servant II. The terms upon which he would have God deal with him not according to my works but according to thy mercy 1. His relation is mentioned either first as a part of his Plea as if he had said Lord thou art merciful to all for thy tender mercy is over all thy works Psal. 145. 9. much more to thy Servants now I am thy Servant Gods Servants have a special claim and interest in God besides his general bounty they expect his special mercy and favour Psal. 116. 16. O Lord truly I am thy servant I am thy servant and the son of thine hand-maid Clear that that you are some of Gods servants once and then you may the better expect your Masters bounty Or Secondly To shew his need of mercy though Gods servant Such an Emphasis it seemeth to
Souldiers being weary of this Pagan Emperour assoon as he dyed chose Iovinianus that had been banished and a fellow sufferer with him who recalled him and other Christians from their exile and after having reigned not full eight Months he dyed and Valentinian was chosen Emperour in his stead 3. The Third thing we should be zealous for is Gods Servants when they are opprest we should own and cherish them as good Obadiah did the Prophets who hid them by fifty in a Cave and fed them with Bread and Water 1 Kings 18. 4. And Ionathan owned David though his Father was greatly displeased with him and flung a Javelin at him 1 Sam. 20. 32. And Hester pleads for the Jews when they were doomed to Destruction Hester 7. 3. And Nicodemus pleads for Christ that he might not be condemned unheard Iohn 7. 50 51. When the Council was ready to condemn him Nicodemus saith to them he that came to Iesus by night being one of them doth our Law judge any man before it hear him And then they went their way That stopt the persecution for that time Certainly they have little zeal for God that can see good men perish before their eyes and have not a word to speak for them This Nicodemus that was before infirm and weak that sneaked unto Christ that came to him by Night gets courage in the time of need to speak for Christ. 3. What are the Acts of zeal with respect to these Objects 1. It quickens us to our duty and makes us publickly active for God Gal. 4. 18. It is good to be zealously affected always in a good thing O how remiss and sluggish would we be otherwise in matters of Gods Kingdom and Glory if we had not a strong degree of Love to stir us up to appear for God in the worst times and in the way and places that 's proper for us Paul when he saw the whole City given to Idolatry it is said his Spirit was stirred in him Acts 17. 16. He could not contain and again Acts 18. 5. Paul was pressed in spirit and testified to the Iews that Iesus was Christ. That heroical act of Phineas when he saw the Laws of God broken and no body ready to vindicate the honour of God he took a javelin in his hand and thrust the offenders through Numb 25. 7. And the Lord saith afterwards ver 11. Phineas the Son of Eleazar the Son of Aaron hath turned my wrath away from the Children of Israel while he was zealous for my sake among them that I consumed not the Children of Israel in my Iealousie He had an extraordinary call to do that he was High-Priest but he went then upon jus zenorum So Elijah 1 Kings 18. 40. He took the Prophets of Baal and brought them down to the brook Kishon and slew them there There was an extraordinary call but we are all to be active in spreading and defending the Truth and promoting the purity of Gods worship and welfare of his People as far as our calling and places permit 2. It maketh us spare no cost yea it judgeth that best done for God which costs us most as David would not serve God with that which cost nothing 2 Sam. 24. 25. That 's worth nothing that cost nothing in Religion Iezebel she was zealous for Baal and maintained 400 of his Priests at her Table In the Primitive times they sold all things that they had and had all things common And the Israelites they offered so plentifully to the Tabernacle that Moses was fain to forbid them to put a stop because there was enough given for the Advancement of Gods worship Exod. 38. 8. And therefore certainly they are cold and have little zeal for God that love as the Corinthians did 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Gospel without charges would be at no cost for Christ. This was Pauls case there the poor Saints of Macedonia which had but from hand to mouth they ministred to him and maintained him when he was at Corinth a rich and opulent Town Paul would depart from his right rather then prejudice the Gospel Therefore they that will be at no cost for Christ maintaining his Truth upholding his worship relieving his People have no zeal 3. It vents it self by holy Grief and Anger when any of these are violated 1. With holy Grief we should be touched and that to the quick with other mens sins when they neglect their duty pervert all that is right and honest and seem not to be concerned with the glory of God 1 Pet. 2. 7 8. It is said of Lot his Righteous Soul was vexed at the wickedness of the Sodomites and he vexed himself not with Sodoms injuries but with Sodoms impurities he could not redress the evils but he mourns for them So the Prophet Ieremiah for the stubbornness of the People Ier 13. 17. But if ye will not hear it my soul shall weep in secret places for your pride and mine eye shall weep sore c. Though they would not hearken amend nor any way regard these things yet it grieved him exceedingly So you shall see the like of Ezra Ezra 10. 6. He mourned because of the Transgression of them that had been carried away The Transgression of Gods People was very grievous to him Thus we read of Ely 1 Sam. 4. 13. Ely sate by the way side watching for his heart trembled for the Ark of God The Glory of God was dear to him and when Religion is in danger God dishonoured it leaves a mighty impression upon the hearts of those that have a zeal and strong love to God 2. It vents it self by indignation and holy anger As Christ whipped the buyers and sellers out of the Temple and shewed his divine power therein Iohn 2. 15. And remember them O God that defile the Priesthood Nehem. 13. 29. And Exod. 32. 19. Meek Moses yet his anger waxed hot and he cast the Tables out of his hand And Ezra 9. 3. When I heard this thing I rent my Garment and my Mantle and pluckt off the hair of my Head and of my Beard and sate down Astonied Thus deeply are Gods Children affected with Gods publique dishonour though not occasioned by themselves but occasioned by others and this is to have a zeal for God 4. The Qualifications and Concomitants of this holy zeal I 'le name three 1. It must be accompanied with knowledge and discretion that is to say there must be a distinct knowledge of the Cause that we take up else we may be Factors for the Devils Kingdom when we think we are acting for God and be persecuting the Saints when we think we are destroying his Enemies It must be out of the knowledge of the Cause of the evil to be renounced and the good to be established There is a blind zeal Iohn 16. 2. Whosoever killeth you will think that he doth God good service The Pseudo-Christians the Literal Christians have a blind zeal against the serious Christians
and God is too Fatherly to deny it to his Children You may deny an Apple to a wanton Child but you will not deny Bread to a fainting Child The bowels of a Father will not permit you to do that you may deny them superfluities in wisdom but your love will not permit you to deny them necessaries Meat is not so necessary to revive and refresh the Body as Grace for the Soul and his Holy Inspirations to act and guide you And will God deny these requests 7. Know when you have received Quickning Many Christians look for rapt and extatick Motions and so do not own the work of God when it hath passed upon them they under-rate their own Experiences and so cannot take notice of Gods Faithfulness Sense Appetite and Activity are the fruits of life and quickning 1. We have the more sense of indwelling Sin as an heavy Burthen Rom. 7. 24. None groan so sorely as those that are made partakers of a new Life Elementa non gravitant in suis locis a delicate Constitution is more sensible of pain Wicked Men scarce feel deep wounds given to their Conscience nor have any remorse for gross sins Gods Children their hearts smite them for the smallest disorders and irregularities 2. Appetite after Christ his Graces and Comforts 1 Pet. 2. 2. the more life any have the more craving of Food to maintain it in being they are always hungering and thirsting after God Matth. 5. 6. our Appetite will be after the things that conduce to the maintaining and preserving that being which they have If a man lose his Appetite the body pineth and languisheth and strength decayeth desire prepareth the soul to take in its supplies Your Life is in good plight when that is desired 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 't will be a means of Spiritual growth a kindly appetite after this Milk They are under a great decay who have lost their Appetite after the Gospel 3. Activity in Duties That we may honour Christ 1 Pet. 2. 4 5. To whom coming as a living stone ye also as lively stones are built up into a spiritual House Christ liveth and we live by him as the stones in the building carry a proportion with the corner-stone So Christians as the body with the Head It must needs be so because of Gods Spirit dwelling in us Ezek. 36. 27. Ioh. 7. 37. and because of the Graces in a Christian Faith and Love Faith working by Love is the great evidence of the new Creature If Faith and Love be strong it will quicken us to do much for God the apprehension of Faith doth enliven our notions of God Christ Heaven and Hell Faith puts Life into our thoughts of him Love is a notable pleader and urger 2 Cor. 5. 14. The Love of Christ constraineth us c. Secondly The Reasons why c. 1. They that have so much to do with God do see a need of it for he is a living God and will be served in a lively manner Rom. 12. 11. Not slothful in business fervent in Spirit serving the Lord. They that serve the Lord Negatively must not be slothful in business Affirmatively fervent in spirit God will not be served negligently coldly but with Life and earnestness The twelve Tribes served God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 instantly Act. 26. 7. Instantly serving God with the uttermost of their strength He that hath a Right to our all must have our best surely he will not be put off with every slight thing Now the Children of God that are sensible of this are earnest for quickning that they may serve God in such a way as becometh him with Life and Power and Zeal for the manner in every Duty is to be regarded as well as the matter A man may do many things that are good but there is no Life in what he doth He prayeth but without any life in Prayer dead in Prayer Heareth but no Life in Hearing dull of Hearing All things in a Christian may be counterfeited but Life cannot be counterfeited that cannot be painted 2. They are acquainted with themselves and observe the frame and posture of their own spirits Now they that know themselves will see a need of Quickning 1 Because of the instability and changeable frame of mans Heart it hardly stayeth long in the same state now 't is up and anon 't is down as the constant experience of the Saints witness Sometimes they have a forwardness and strong propension of Heart to that which is good at other times a lothness and dulness or unfitness to perform any spiritual service when their Will is more remiss and their Affections unbent 'T is not indeed the constant frame of their Hearts yet it is a disease incident to the Saints even good men may feel a slowness of Heart to comply with the will of God and some hanging off from Duty Spontancae lassitudines sunt signa imminentis morbi so is this laziness and backwardness of spirit a sign of some great spiritual distemper Sometimes they are carried with great largeness of Heart and full sail of Affections at other times they are in bonds and streights that they cannot pour out their Hearts before God Psal. 77. 4. I am sore troubled that I cannot speak sometimes they have great Life and Vigour at other times no such lively stirrings but are flat and cold and dead when with Sampson they think to go forth and shake themselves as at other times Iudges 16. 20. by sad Experience they find that their Locks are gone that their Understandings are lean sapless and their Affections cold and their Delight and Vigour lost Man is a sinful weak inconstant Creature his heart is as unstable as water and much of this levity and instability remaineth with us after Grace as is seen in the various postures of spirit that we are under 2 Because of the constant opposition of the Flesh. There is an opposite Principle in our Hearts Gal. 5. 17. The body of Death that dwelleth in us doth always resist the life of the Spirit in us and therefore God must renew the influences of his Grace to preserve Life There are desires against desires and delights against delights this must needs abate our Vigour The Spirit draweth one way the Flesh another 'T is drawing Iam. 1. 14. Every man is tempted when he is drawn away of his own lust and enticed 'T is depressing Heb. 12. 1. Seeing we also are compassed about with so great a Cloud of witnesses let us lay aside every weight and the sin which doth so easily beset us Carnal Affections hang as a weight retarding us in our Heavenly flight and motions 'T is warring Rom. 7. 23. I see another law in my members warring against the law of my mind and bringing me into captivity to the law of sin And therefore the Lord had need to cherish the new Creature and good seed which cannot but be weakned with this opposition 3 Because our outward condition doth
sweetness in it to Confer together of holy things Rom. 1. 12. That I may be comforted by the mutual faith of you and me Holy discourse doth refresh more than vain and foolish jesting 't is a far sweeter thing to talk of the Word of God and those spiritual and heavenly things which are contained therein than to spend the time in vain and foolish jesting or discoursing about meer Worldly matters should any thing be more delightful to a Christian than Christ and Heaven and the Promises of the World to come and the way that leadeth thither and should it be burdensom to talk of these things which we profess to be our only hope and joy certainly our Relish and Appetite is mightily depraved if we think so judge our-selves in a Prison when we are in good Company who remember God and when they invite you to remember him with them will you frown upon the motion because 't is some check and interruption to your Carnal Vanity 4. The well ordering of our Words is a great point of Christianity and argueth a good degree of Grace He that bridleth his tongue is a perfect man Iam. 3. 2. Death and Life are in the power of the Tongue saith Solomon Prov. 18. 21. upon the good or ill use of it a mans safety doth depend Not only temporal safety but eternal Matth. 12. 37. By thy words shalt thou be justified and by thy words shalt thou be condemned These Evidences are brought into Judgment therefore it concerneth us to see what our Discourses are as well as our actions Solomon often describeth the righteous by his good Tongue Prov. 10. 13. The mouth of the righteous bringeth forth wisdom And Prov. 12. 18. The tongue of the wise is health Use. I. Is Reproof It reproveth us for being so dumb and tongue-tyed in holy things We can speak liberally of any subject only we are dumb in spiritual matters which concern our Edification we shew so little Grace in our Conferences because we have so little grace in our hearts Alas many that profess Religion their talk is little different from other mens as if they were ashamed to speak of God or had nothing to say of him and for him I do not alwayes bind you to talk of religious things but sometimes it bindeth Now when is it your Tongues speak of the Word in a serious and affectionate manner Can you love God and never put in a word for him Can you see or hear God dishonoured and suffer your mouths to be sealed up with a sinfull ●…nce that you should not have a word to speak in the cause of God Use. II. Is to Exhort us to be frequent and serious in our discourses of God and spiritual heavenly things For means to help us 1. Divine Illumination to teach others the way of God requireth that we our selves should be taught of God then it cometh the warmer and fresher when we speak not by here-say only but experience as heart answereth to heart so the renewed heart in him that heareth to the renewed heart in him that speaketh and we shew others what God by his illuminating grace hath first shewed us it savoureth of that Spirit that worketh in both he will easily kindle others who is once on fire himself The word passeth through others as water through an empty Trunk without feeling they may speak very good things but they do but personate and act a part but when we have been in the deep waters and God hath bound up our wounds we can more feelingly speak to others 2. A sight of the excellency of the Word and a value and esteem thereof the reason in the Text for all thy Commandments are righteousness We are apt to speak oftenest of those things which we most affect Did not your Souls grow out of relish with these Holy Spiritual and Excellent things your speeches about them would be more frequent lively serious and savoury for we cannot conceal our Affections Our coldness in speaking to others of these spiritual and heavenly things cometh from want of this perswasion that all his commandments are righteousness For they who are perswaded of the excellency of the Word will be talking of the sweetness of its Promises continually 3. A Stock of Spiritual Knowledge Matth. 12. 35. A good man out of the good treasure of his heart bringeth forth good things Every man entertaineth his Guests with such Provisions as he hath 'T is the Word which enableth us to edifie our selves and others with holy Conference the more store the more we have to bring forth upon all occasions Col. 3. 16. Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly in all wisdom teaching and admonishing one another A plentiful measure of Gospel Knowledge enableth us to direct and instruct others there all Wisdom is made plain things revealed which cannot be found else-where that which may by long search be found else-where is made ready to our hands and brought down to the meanest Capacity The Heart is the Fountain from whence the Tongue doth run and flow and when the Heart is well furnished the Tongue will be employed and exercised 4. Zeal for the Glory of God and Love to others Souls we should communicate to others what we have learned our selves David would not reserve his knowledge to himself Teach me and my tongue shall speak of thy word Fire turneth all about it into Fire Mules and all Creatures of a Bastard Race do not Procreate Davids Maschil Psal. 32. Title is to instruct others True good is diffusive in itself our Candle enlightened should enlighten others When Philip was called he inviteth Nathaniel to come to Christ Iohn 1. 45. Andrew calleth Simon True Grace sheweth itself in Zeal to promote the Kingdom of Christ and the good of our Neighbours Souls and the new Nature seeketh to multiply the kind and such as are brought to Christ will be careful to invite others 5. Wisdom is necessary Col. 4. 6. Let your speech be alwayes with grace seasoned with salt that you may know how to answer every man that is seasoned with the salt of Holy and Divine Wisdom that it may be savoury and acceptable to the Hearers and both Delight and Edifie Without this Holy Skil and Wisdom how often is Conference turned into Jangling or meer Babling 6. Watchfulness and heed otherwise Corruption will break out in Pride in a vain ostentation of parts Passion in some heat of Words Worldliness and Sensuality in diverting from Holy Conference to that which is Carnal and Worldly Discontent in some unseemly Expressions of Gods dealings with us Indiscretion and Folly in a multitude of impertinent Talk Psal. 141. 3. Set a watch O Lord before my mouth keep the door of my lips The Tongue must be watched as well as the Heart all Watching will be to little purpose unless God bridle and direct our Tongue that nothing break out to his Dishonour There must be a constant Guard that nothing
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