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A62374 A brief and plain commentary with notes, not more useful than seasonable, upon the whole prophecie of Malachy delivered, sermon-wise, divers years since at Pitmister in Summerset / by William Sclater ... ; now published by his son William Sclater ... Sclater, William, 1609-1661. 1650 (1650) Wing S913; ESTC R17140 147,505 246

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are hard Rich blame the poor and its a plague for them few or none enters into his heart to say what have I done that all this wrath is come upon me Ier. 8.6 Whereas if we would not flatter our selves how many causes of these and far greater judgments should we find in our selves Oaths drunkenness abusing Gods graces to wantonness contempt of the word c. And I wish there were such hearts in us thus to do how should we finde the Lord true in the proof to remove his judgments and wrath from us and till this be done never look we for peace Levit. 26.21 c. 2 King 19.22 Again Observ note here how the Lord would have us behave our selves in those things that serve to maintain the worship of God Bring all c. Two things he commend● unto us 1. Voluntarines 2. Faithfulness Bring Even withour craving Al nothing detained When the tabernacle was to be erected mark what charge the Lord gives touching it and what manner of offerers thereto he required Exod. 25.2 of every man whose heart giveth it freely and 35.5 21 22. their practice followed in both kinds Exod. 36.5 6. So plentifull that they were fain to restrain bringing See also 2 Chr. 31.5 6. Herein especially that hath place The Lord loves a chearfull and liberall giver 2 Cor. 9.7 But ah brethren what times are we fallen into under the Gospell As an eminent Divine hath well observed our blessings are more in the meanes of salvation revelation clearness burthen less c. And yet how unwillingly come even a little to the painfullest Minister And those that upon a kinde of conscience pay other duties think all lost that goes to the maintenance of the Ministery and that with such repining as if that were money of all other worst bestowed And secondly scant-handedness this way how is it seen in the best that we need not wonder at it in those that never tasted the sweetness of the word of God at the building of the tabernacle they were fain to proclaim a sufficet and 2 Chro. 31.5 6. They brought it in by heapes when Hezekia'hs commandement went forth But I conclude this point with the saying of the Apostle Gal. 6.8 He that soweth to the flesh shall of the flesh reape corruption he that soweth to the Spirit shall of the Spirit reape life everlasting Follows now the reason Gods promise which is not barely propounded but in a Rhetoricall permission Prove me now with this as if he had said many means you have assayed to remove my judgments and to supply your penury and all to no purpose and it may be you think guessing by second apparent causes that this is impossible at least unlikely well prove me with this c. make tryall of this one meanes for recovery of my favour Two things 1. What the Lord permits to his people prove me 2. Wherein or how they should take experiment of him Prove me Make but a tryall and if the event answer not then say I have forgotten my truth Observ This kinde of speech is not frequent in Scripture some thing like it is that of David Psal 34.8 Where having set out the notable and to wicked men incredible priviledges of the Children of God at length he thus speaks tast and see how gracious the Lord is and you shall finde it true that blessed is the man that trusteth in him And beloved if those wretches that make a mock at the counsell of the poor because God is his hope and cannot be perswaded of the sweetness that is in religion would but make triall a little if they would but make proof how comfortable the service of God is how happy were they David Psal 4.7 Speaking of the joy the wicked had in earthly things professed that he found far more comfort and joy in the service of God then they had or could have in the encrease of their corn wine and oyle And if those sluggardish fooles amongst us that have a price put into their hands to get wisdome but have no heart would consider this They think it is too late to learn their wits and memories are grown dull Oh yet do but prove the Lord wait at the posts of his doors hear read confer pray God prove him a little he hath promised that they that seek wisdome shall finde Prov. 2.4 Prove him and see whether thou finde him not full as good as his promise There is an unlawful and damnable proving and trying of the Lord we call it commonly tempting God It is when men presumptuously make needless experiments of the truth of God especially in his threatnings The Lord hath given charge unto the people of Israel that they should on the evening of the Sabbath provide for that might suffice on the Sabbath and told them that on the Sabbath they should finde none notwithstanding there went out some Exod. 16.27 To gather on the Sabbath day they would try whether the Lord would be as good as his word So likewise a charge he gave that if the manna they gathered for every daies provision they should keep none till the morning yet were there some that would needs reserve for experiment to see what would come of it it was full of worms and stank He had likewise given strict charge unto the people that they should take heed of doing any thing presumptuously against the Lord and told them they should dye there goeth out one notwithstanding Num. 15. To gather sticks he would try what the Lord would do to him and the Lord caused him to be stoned And of this kinde of presumptuous proving the Lord the world is full The Lord hath threatened to him that encreaseth his riches by usury and unjust gain that he shall lay it up for another yet mark notwithstanding this be exemplyfied still in the course of Gods providence they will prove the Lord and they will see whether goods so gotten may not be permanent So likewise that the companion of Drunkards shall be cloathed with raggs how often see we it exemplyfied and yet how many are there that presumptuously will herein prove the Lord The Lord hath taught us that theordinary means to come by faith is by the word of God and that prayers are all cursed and abominable when that is despised Prov. 28.9 Yet mark how many presumptuously make trial of the Lord and they forsooth wil see whether by other means they cannot be saved He hath threatned that he that deferrs repentance when it 's offered shall never come to repentance Ezek. 24.13 Yet how many be there that herewith prove the Lord they will put it to the trial and see whether repentance may not come on the death-bed Beloved this is a fearful provoking sin and they that thus prove him shall finde him in the proofe a terrible God to them What then is this proof of the Lord herepermitted unto the people of God It is when a man in faith of Gods
of God was precious in those daies when there was no manifest vision how frequent was it with them then to ride many a skore miles to heare a Sermon setting apart all worldly employments But alas How are our people degenerated in this kind To whom when the Lord comes home even in every of our particular Congregations yet audience not vouchsafed Again How dear was the word of God unto them when for it and to maintain it in purity how many of them laid down their lives and shed their bloud Read the histories of our Martyrs set out for this end and you shall see how many of all sorts and conditions the Lord then crowned with Martyrdom and with what constancy they embraced the extremest torments for Christs sake But behold degenerate children How do we flinch even at the least verball persecution if it be but a scoff and what they counted their glory and that justly we now count our shame to be professors of the Gospell Besides in education of Children and in straight charging of them to maintain the truth which they sealed with their bloud how forward were they O we slow-backs in this necessary duty Time would faile me to speak of their temperance the just condemnation of our gluttonous times their peaceableness condemning our jangling their hospitality condemning our nigardly living to our selves These things we can oft talk of Lord that we did make conscience to walk and to tread in their steps we wonder as Solomon Eccl. 7.10 Why it is that former daies were better than these though we enquire not wisely of these things when our manners are so far worse than theirs More particularly I doubt not but many of us can say and that truly that God hath given us our own immediate Parents Patterns of many excellent graces Gravity Piety love of Religion Bountifulness c. shall t not be our sin and shame to degenerate and disgrace our families What greater shame can there be than for the Son to talk of his Fathers Religion himself living as an Atheist Of his Fathers bounty himself a niggard Of his Fathers zeale himself a luke-warme Monster Now surely as these sins are odious in whomsoever So most odious in those who have had so worthy Patterns as examples to go before them To conclud this point as Esay in another case Cap. 51.2 Consider Abraham your Father and Sarah that bare you Consider every of us and call to mind their commendable parts Surely of all things the Lord most hates degenerating Children In the second place we may hence well observe That the piety of the Parent shall not priviledge the degenerating Child from the wrath of God Observ but yet threatned as a judgment for swerving from their fathers footsteps In Ezekiel Cap. 18.20 The Lord purposely teacheh thus much when the unthankfull Jews began to justifie themselves and condemn the Lord of injustice for their affliction as if they had smarted for their Fathers sins only The Lord protesteth that the Son shall not dye for the Fathers sin nor on the contrary a degenerate Child shall not live by his Fathers righteousness except he walk in his fathers steps And this that the Scripture affirmes Hab. 2.4 The just shall live by his own faith Object If any shall say That the Lord hath somewhere protested That for Davids sake he would spare as Solomon Rehoboam c. 1 King 11.12 Answer It is true that it pleaseth the Lord remembring the righteous dealing of Fore-fathers sometimes to bestow outward mercies upon degenerating Children But then these are not to them in the nature of blessings such an one may have wealth but to his hurt as Solomon speaks Riches reserved to the hurt of the owners thereof 2. Not the Child but the Parent in them crowned And this should teach us not to trust Vse or vainly to put confidence in the righteousness and obedience of our forefathers as if we for that should escape the Lords wrath yet this Beloved is the conceit of many ungracious children that love to be telling of their forefathers piety and love and zeal and how many descents Religion hath continued in their families what their Fathers suffered for the truth c. And this is indeed a Blessing if men know how aright to use it It s a Blessing when the Lord permits a man a Religious Parent as above but shall we therefore thinke that we are priviledged from Gods wrath being degenerate nay rather not much more laid open to his fierce Indignation because of our declinings was thy father Religious Thou an Atheist Heavy is thy Condemnation Thy father frugall Hospitable c. Thou a spend-thrift Woe worth the time that ever thou wert born of so righteous Parents whose steps thou refusest to follow and walk in Object Promise made to parents and seed Answ Rom. 9.8 To the seed that are such by Imitation conditionally so that they Imitate and tread in their fathers Righteous steps As well as to the seed who are such only by natural Descent VER 9. Therefore have I also made you contemptible and base before all the people according as ye have not kept my wayes but have been partiall in the law FOllows now the punishment of this their sin I have made you contemptible c. Wherein two things 1. The punishment 2. The cause of it Where Observ first observe we That base estimation amongst the people is a punishment even this to be vilely esteemed and disregarded amongst men is a punishment See vers 3. cap. 2. And surely if good Name and Reverence be a Blessing then is Contempt a Punishment Object If any shall say that this befell Christ Psal 22. A worme and no man Answ This a part of his humiliation Phil. 2. Object The Lot of the Apostles 1 Cor. 4.9 Answ With the wicked only for otherwise their feet are beautifull Rom. 10.15.2 Even they also have Sins to be chastened and this must be acknowledged as a part of the Curse Deut. 28.37 This should teach us Humiliation Vse under the mighty hand of God for our many abasures we are subject unto there is no blemish in good Name but comes for sin and he hath promised to Honour those that Honour Him It s true that the Lord turns these things unto the Best unto his Children and brings good out of them unto those that are his As 1. It seems to purge from Ambition and desire of vain-glory a great hinderance of sincerity Ioh. 12.43 2. It works in us a care to approve our selves the more to God that we may be glorious in his eyes 3. It makes us more dye to the world But yet it 's in its own Nature a Punishment and many times to Gods own children a chastisement Therefore The cause followeth whence we observe That vitious life breeds vileness of estimation this casts the salt of the earth to the dunghill Luke 14.34 35. and as its the Lord promise to Honour those that
liberty in sinning this oak they had Christ had made them free these wretches here took Moses permission for a warrant and a cloake for their sinning Like colours Vse and pretences see we even at this day in many of our people sinning See we a few of them 1. Yee shall see the examples of Saints pretended But let men enquire how lawfull or whether by priviledg or whether in the same manner upon like grounds For these cases often vary actions 2. Scripture abused its lawfull to do good on the Sabbath c. But remember they must be necessary good duties yet so as that it may not be thine own works they must ever be works of mercy 3. We must live saith the usurer Answ And thou must live in obedience to the law of God besides the strumpet and the thiefe may pretend the same 4. Humane law and connivence of Magistrates Answ Here the Lord tries thee whether thou doest indeed in sincerity fear God 2. Connivence in Magistrates warrants not transgression in the people 3. Distinguish we must betwixt permissions and commands 5. Commands Answ All such must have limitation in the Lord Eph. 6.5 See Hos 5. Therefore take heed to your spirit that ye deal not treacherously And admonition of three branches 1. A duty 2. A Reason 3. A meanes to perform the duty Admonition drawn out of the former words Sith this liberty of divorce is so cross to Gods ordinance so contrary to his intendment manifested in creation so hatefull to God so injurious to the wife with whom a covenant is entred therefore keep your selves in your spirits and transgress not Out of the illative thus made we may observe the reason why it pleaseth the Lord to convince of sins Observ and to use aggravations and it is for our admonition that we should take heed how by them we defile our selves The end of conviction is our admonition See Ezek. 18. and Ier. 18. Now Brethren the Lord hath dealt mercifully with us in this kingdome this way by many meanes labouring to work conviction and happy we if it might have this effect to work in us admonition and care to avoid sin The usuall meanes whereby the Lord convinceth of sin are these 1. His word 2. Afflictions 3. His vengeance on others 4. The controllement and check of our own conscience And in none of these hath the Lord been behinde with us as Paul sin is not imputed where is no Law and Rom. 5.20 The law entred that sin might abound Beloved in daies of blindness many sins were swallowed up that were most fearfull in the sight of God Idolatry blasphemy breach of Sabbath c. And those that are every where called works of darkness Now in these dayes of light the Lord hath shewed us what is good Mic. 6.8 and as well what is evill by the light of his word shall it not be our shame if being convinced of sin we continue therein Second meanes afflictions the smart whereof discovers also the hainousness of our sins in time of ease sins sometimes are known but scarce throughly considered afflictions Iob 33.16 Open the eare c. And how the Lord hath dealt with us this way if we have eyes we cannot but see following us with many of his plagues and heavy judgments even Pharaoh could then under affliction confess I have sinned Third meanes of conviction exemplary vengeance of which besides the records of Scriptures other stories are frequent and the Lord thereby would shew unto us how to esteeme and account of our sins Usurers many brought to beggary drunkards cloathed with raggs false swearers ruinated in their families adulterers brought to a morsell of bread these are our convictions would God they were our warnings Fourth meanes check of conscience The heart smites it self 1 Sam. 24.5 and 2 Sam. 24. As the Disciples of Christ did not our hearts burn within us Luk. 24.23 whilest he talked with us and opened unto us the Scripture The like question if I should propound unto us I know they would answer they have often felt it Beloved happy he whom the Lord thus chastens if he be thereby admonished and woe to us if being convicted of sin we still continue therein Beloved let me exhort therefore every one of us to whom the Lord hath been thus merciful to reveal our sins and to convince us of them that the Lord may attain his end in us to work in our hearts a care to depart from evil how are we convinced in our judgments by the Lords judgments of many fearful and crying sins Why resolve we not to leavthem Let me add reasons 1. Continance of sin after conviction as it hardens the heart so makes it the sin much more haynous in the sight of God If ye were blinde ye should have noe sin Joh. 9.41 Jam. 4.17 To him that knowes to do well and doth it not to him it is sin with an emphasis Every sin after conviction is doubled Ezr. 9.13 after all this we have sinned 2. Reprobates ascend thus far to see sin and acknowlelg it Pharaoh could say I and my people are sinners but forsaking of sin is that only that argues sound grace The fear of the Lord is to depart from evil to hate pride arrrogancy and every evil way Prov. 8.13 Wherefore beloved let us thus resolve every of us as it pleaseth God more and more to enlighten us to see our sins and rightly to know them so with all speed and earnestness to leave them I doubt not but Prophecy at this day hath in many of us the same effect that it had in the Primitive Church by Gods ordinance 1 Cor. 14. Would God! as it convinceth so it might work detestation and care to avoid sin Observ And hence may we observe an order to be kept of us in ministring admonitions unto the people First to convince Then to admonsh and exhort that is First to make sin known before we admonish to leave it and this that enjoyned 2 Tim. 4.4 with doctrine implying that doctrine must be the ground of all exhortations and admonitions And the practice of Prophets is First to labour to convince then exhort they to forsake Jer. 3.13 14. Know thine iniquity then turn again Reason of it conscience ever works upon principles of judgment till those be planted conscience never doth her office in accusing or condemning Therefore it is that an erroneous or ignorant conscience is never moved with any reproofe never so sharp any threatning never so severe persecution a grievous sin yet while not known to be such or thought erroniously to please God Ioh. 16. never moves conscience 1 Tim. 1.15 16. And therefore mark deal with an ignorant body that is not informed give him the best exhortations use the forciblest perswasions thou movest them no more then so many stones c. Now brethren let us learn hence the method of admonition it 's a duty every where injoyned unto us and that
promise useth those means prescribed for his comfort expecting by hope the performance of what is promised And it hath in it three things 1. A promise of God to rest on 2. Walking in the wayes that God hath prescribed 3. Expectation of performance in use of the means Or briefly thus when a man using the means prescribed waits for the performance of what is promised as in this place here is 1. Promise of plenty 2. The means repentance 3. Faith in use of the means prescribed Now when a man fails in any of these he proves God indeed but that proving is tempting As for example when a man throwes himself into an unnecessary danger he hath no promise of protection as the devil tempted Christ to do Matth. 4.6 He may make experiment of Gods truth so doing but indeed is a tempter of God So likewise when a man having holy means prescribed neglects to use them as having meat looks to be fed as Elias was by Angels that he may prove God this also is tempting of God See we the means with this now prescribed the observation will be A man that would have a comfortable experience of Gods truth in his promises Observ must tye himself precisely to those means that the Lord prescribes Act. 27.31 The Apostle had received a promise from God for preservation of him and his company in the shipwrack they seeing the ship like to break begin by means not prescribed to provide for themselves but the Apostle tels them that unless they tarry in the ship they cannot be safe And let it teach us to walk in Gods high-way if we look for comfortable deliverance Vse out of any troubles Reproved those that neglect the means vouchsafed as how many both in temporal and spiritual things there be that fain would be saved but means of their own they seek at least neglect use of means by God prescribed and vouchfafed unto them Secondly such as in dangers and extremities betake themselves to means of their own that have no warrant from God As how many in these dayes of scarcity to pilfering and stealing prophanation of the Lords Sabbath c. Though the Lord hath often protested that obedience is the best means of preservation Deut. 28. If I will not open the windowes of Heaven See Gen. 7.11 2 King 7.2 Meaning that the Lord would give them plentiful means and a plentiful blessing with them Where note the power of repentance how prevalent it is with God to draw down his blessings upon us it turns the greatest penury into abundance See this first in feigned repentance by Ahab it respits Gods vengeance though but counterfeit 1 King 21. ult In Nineveh Who knows saith the King whether the Lord will repent of the evil and return and leave a blessing behinde him See Jon. 3.10 See Psal 106. in the example of the Israelites Beloved let us prove God with this It hath pleased God a long time to follow us with his judgments Vse in this Kingdom as Amos 4. And what marvel Isa 9.12 13. If the Lords wrath be not ceased but his hand stretched out still sith the people turneth not to him that smites them nor seek the Lord of Hostes Now beloved that we could be perswaded by repentance to seek the Lord and would prove him a whiles with this as we have provoked him by our sins so we would prove him a little with repentance how easily could the Lord turn our penury into abundance It was a prophane speech of the Prince 2 King 7.2 Though the Lord should open the windowes of Heaven this thing could not come to pass And as prophane is the thought of our people because perhaps we see no means mens hearts we say are hardend c. But in whose hand are the hearts of men How moved he the hearts of the people that led Israel captive to pity them Psal 106.46 See Gods favour to Israel in the eyes of the Egyptians that before had oppressed them neither is his hand shortened Prove the Lord with this Observe again secondly how plenty and scarcity are all the works of God Observ be the means what they will as scripture abundantly evidenceth He turneth the rock into a spring he maketh a fruitfull land barren he maketh the earth iron and the Heavens brass Again he opens the windows of Heaven he brought grass-hoppers upon Egypt he calls for a winde and sweeps all away He sends the Canker-worm and grass-hopper to devour as his instruments to be avenged of our sins it 's he that rebukes them c. Amos 3.6 No evil to wit of punishment but the Lord doth it Now Vse this serves for the reproof of those Naturallists who ascribe all things to Nature and never look up to the God of Nature whose will these second causes fullfil and accomplish dearth and plenty with them all come from Nature drought and immoderate rain but who sends the drought who rain Is it not the Lord Elias prayes for drought it 's given prayes for rain it 's given also Iam. 5.17 18. So in these inundations of late the windes observed but God not seen in them though as David saith he brings the windes out of his treasures Well beloved let us learn to hear the rod and him that smites Mic. 6.8 Surely of all these means we may say as Elias of the still voyce the Lord is in them 1 King 19.12 And what else should be the reason that the same causes have not allwayes the same effects but that the first cause tempers and over-rules them Nature ever works constantly and to the utmost of her power Natural faculties are applyed and brought to action by the power of God And therfore take we the Prophets advice Hos 6.1 as the Lord hath smitten us so to him let us return it 's he alone that can heal us VER 11. And I will rebuke the devourer for your sakes c. NOte we here Observ by how many mean instruments God can take vengeance of his people caterpillars and cankerworms creatures of no great power yet see how the Lord by them can avenge him of his people ● How dealt the Lord with the Egyptians by grasshoppers froggs lice flyes haile c. And let us learn hence to take heed how we provoke the eyes of the Lords glory Vse seeing by the meanest of his creatures he can thus be avenged of us thou that boastest of strength of body and promisest to thy self long life how soon can the meanest and vilest spider kill thee c. VER 13 14 15. Your words have been stout against me saith the Lord yet yee say what have we spoken so much against thee Yee have said it is vain to serve God c THe crime laid to their charge stout words against God In them consider the blasphemies themselves 1. Vain to serve God 2. Proud blessed Arguments whereby they prove it 1 From their own experience what profit have we had The interrogation
Church when he is provoked by their disobedience See 1 Pet. 4.17 Judgment begins at Gods house So Jer. 25.29 Reasons are these First because amongst them Reasons by the Lords wise dispensation lye many wicked Hypocrites that by their secret sins provoke Gods wrath as Achan Josh 7. Secondly Gods care more over them than others Psal 89.31 32. as a good Father over his own Child Thirdly To prevent scandall in the Adversaries 2 Sam. 12.14 Vse 1 Let no man therefore presume of impunity because he is gathered to the Church of God and made one of his people as the Jews Jer. 7. The Temple of the Lord That they thought was a Bulwark against all afflictions fondly And at this day how take most men upon them Profession like bankrupt Debters a Kings Protection as those Hest 8. became Jews to enjoy their privileges and immunities But Beloved know we God spareth not his own in any age not Jerusalem not Israel but as David speaks Psal 89.7 God is very terrible in the assembly of his Saints and will beare that in an Alien what he will not beare in his own House or People And therefore feare we and be not high-minded Rom. 11.20 Many excellent things are spoken of us in this Kingdom of England how long we have had the Gospell amongst us c. How many by it converted and this must thankfully be acknowledged But it is but a weak consequence collected thence therefore England shall be free from Gods wrath if it provoke him The Lord had a burthen for Israel and he hath a burthen for England also Vse 2 Secondly Doth the Lord then not spare his own people Much lesse then them that are not his people Jer. 25.29 1 Pet. 4.17 And this should comfort Gods Children in their Chastisements through expectation of heavy vengeance to be poured down upon the ungodly And withall it should terrifie ungodly men when they see the Lords heavy wrath against his own people of all men the ungodly have least cause to rejoyce in the Afflictions of Gods people See Micah 7.8 9 10. Against Israel That is against the whole people because generally all engaged in Transgression Observ so have common Transgressions common Punishments If any say Object that the Lord promiseth deliverance out of common Afflictions and Iudgments to his own Answer Answ From destruction not from afflictions Secondly All these Promises are to be understood with exemption of the Cross and chastisement for particular disobedience So Lot Gen. 14. taken Prisoner amongst the Sodomites to chasten his boldness in pitching his Tent amongst them whom he knew to be such exceeding sinners against the Lord. Thirdly Delivered out of Temptations Fourthly If more expedient permitted unto them Let no man promise himself immunity from common judgments who takes liberty to partake in common sins It is just with the Lord that they should be partakers in punishment that are partakers in transgression And if nothing else yet let this teach us to beware of the common sins of the Times I know it is common especially with the multitude to do as the most do that fewest may talk of them and that also to avoid singularity unjustly so censured prevailes over-much with Gods Children Well heare If all Israel sin All must beare their burthen yea if Gods Children give way to like corruption and streame of the Times let them look for a chastisement from the hand of the Lord. By the hand of Malachy Not to trouble you with the vaine speculations of the Rabbins what this Malachi was whether an Angell in an assúmed body whether Ezra the Scribe and those others of the exceeding beauty of his body things that perhaps have some truth but little use It is generally received that he was the last of the Prophets and that he prophesied in the daies of Ezra and Nehemiah as some gather by the things he specially deales against as corruptions in marriages with Idolaters whereof see Ezra 10. and Neh. 10. By the Ministery of Malachy not as the Executioner but as the Denouncer Hence observe Observ That the Lord hath ordained the Ministery of his servants the Prophets not only for Consolation of his people by mercies but also for their terrour by judgments See Ezek. 3. Isa 6. Ier. 1. c. And this should teach us that are Ministers to make conscience hereof the judgment for omission is fearefull and a Note of unsoundness Ier. 28.7 And secondly To you that are the people Learne you to submit not only to their Evangelical but also to their Legall Preachings sharp it may seem but surely it is wholsome Sundry reasons there are of it 1. It serves not to inflict but to prevent Judgments And it is but Satans policy to perswade the people there cannot be love where there is severity Cannot a Father chasten severely and yet love tenderly it serves likewise secondly To humble Gods Children Taxed here is the over-much delicacy of our people in hearing Vse who are all for Mercy Mercy Peace Peace whereas alas there is no peace as in the dayes of Amos so now Amos 7.10 The Land not able to endure or bear his words And that exception of bringing men to despaire is frivolous our Saviour himself how often hath he woe in his Mouth And againe know we That the best way to bring to sound hope is first to bring to a kind of despaire namely In respect of our selves or of our own sufficiency to compasse as meerly by our selves our own happiness VER 2 3. I have loved you saith the Lord yet ye say wherein hast thou loved us was not Esau Jacobs Brother saith the Lord Yet I loved Iacob and I hated Esan and laid his Mountaines and his Heritage waste for the Dragons of the wilderness THe summe An Expostulation with the People And an Exprobration of their Ingratitude Parts three 1. Gods Protestation 2. The peoples Exception 3. The confirmation by an argument from the effect I have loved you Schoolemen have many curious enquiries touching Love whether it be in God Answ The love of God his very Essence 1 John 4.8 Yet this love in God is no Passion but implies these three things 1 Benevolence 2. Beneficence 3. Oblectation As hatred not to will good to will evill to work evill to detest The peoples Exception Wherein hast thou loved us The reason of it was their Affliction by Captivity as if it had been said we see not but we are afflicted as much as others therefore thou lovest us not Now mark here the corruption of Nature Observ instigated by Satan To conclude from Afflictions that they are not loved The reason is that Carnality in every one measuring Gods love by feeling and Temporal blessings whereas it should rather be measured by Spiritual Blessings Take we heed of this Temptation Vse Satan usually labours to perswade that we are not loved and advantage taken by afflictions as usually as by any thing Now note here for thy
yet Israel returns Edom is laid waste Isa 27.7 8. Not smitten as he that smote her For 1. In measure 2. In the branches 3. To purge sin ver 8.9 Not so with the wicked See 2 Cor. 4.8 9. His own for a time Isa 54.7 8. His enemies for ever Mal. 1.3 The Reasons may be these 1. The Promise of God made of love to his people 2. The difference of their sins It is true that Gods Children are sometimes overtaken with the same sins that others are But though the same sins yet not in like measure committed One with an high hand The other of frailty And this should comfort Gods Children against all common judgments wherewith the Lord shall chasten Vse or visit us As what have we not cause to expect in regard of our sins Wicked men foolishly thus reason to the deluding of their soules Isa 28.15 though a plague run over all yet it shall not come nigh them for they have made a Covenant with Death c. Gods Children may better thus reason though they cannot assure themselves to be exempted from common Calamities yet from the measure of them For with the Lord they are at agreement Beloved What plagues we in this Land have cause to feare The Commonness and height of sin in our Multitude and that communication with them in a measure by Gods Children who seeth not And it is good for us all to prepare to meet the Lord by Repentance But yet this is our comfort there shall be a difference betwixt the Righteous and Wicked betwixt him that serveth God and him that serveth him not The means whereby the Lord provides for the comforts of his own Servants These 1. He delivers them from the Temptation as he did Lot Noah c. 2. Or else provides a mean for restitution Ez. 9. 3. Comforts inwardly in afflictions 4. Takes from evill to come 2 Kings 22.20 Edom saith we are impoverished but we will return Ver. 4. Observ and build the desolate places Mark here the nature of wicked men opposing themselves to the power of God and the course of his Judgments providence We are impoverished but we wil return build the desolate places Isa 9.10 Ephraim in the pride and presumption of their hearts say The Bricks indeed are fallen down but we will build it again with hewen stones the wild Fig-trees are cut down but we will change them into Cedars Pharaoh though he sees the more he oppresseth the more the people grew through Gods blessing yet ceaseth not to attempt their destruction And when Israel flies yet ceaseth not to pursue them till he be destroyed with his People Exod. 14. The Scribes and Pharisees though they see still the Disciples growing and the number of Believers to be multiplied yet cease they not to persecute So was it with Saul against David And Vse at this day How strive men with their Maker the Potsheard with the Potter though they see the hand of God against them yet still are fighters against the Lord See Act. 5.39 Gamaliel yet could thus say If it be of God ye cannot destroy it except you will be found fighters against the Lord But let Gods children learn to humble themselves for their sins under the mighty hand of God more prevalent to turn away Gods wrath is unfeigned Repentance than all the power and might of man It is excellently said of Job Cha. 9. v. 4. He is wise in heart and mighty in strength who ever was seen against him that hath prospered And how vain such contentions are he sheweth by his might in the mightiest Creatures This therefore let us do when as we shall see the Lord against us humbly deprecate his judgments but feare to stand out against him They shall build Observ but I will throw down When God means to destroy no man can withstand or hinder desolation The Ephraimites promised unto themselves Resting the Lord had denyed the contrary therefore they perish An 130 years after the death of Christ the Jews by the leave and help of Julian the Emperour attempted to re-edifie their City and Temple but mark how the Lord because his Counsels must stand and because he will be known to be true in his threatnings Ruffin l. 1. c. 38 causeth fearefull thundrings lightnings and Earthquakes to arise many of them slain and all driven from their attempts And other stories record many huge hosts of Jews attempting the recovery of their Holy Land and their dipersions The like ye may see in the Lords dealing against Antichrist many attempts have they made to destroy with the name of Luther and Calvin the whole truth of God and to re-establish their Kingdom of Idolatry but yet see we him blasted by the breath of the Lords mouth and though an utter consumption cannot be expected till the brightness of Christs coming 2 Thes 2.8 Yet this they can never hope for The recovery of their full power and dominion they once had in the Christian world What doth this teach us Vse but to tremble before the Lord when as we see his judgments begin to take course against us and to take heed how we harden our selves to his resistance that is to our own utter overthrow and desolation It is the fashion of many when they see the Lord crossing their attempts or weakening their State justly for their sins yet still to attempt their fortification without humbling themselves for their sins But it is vain to strive when the Lord will destroy In these days of security how many fond and profane speeches have been heard That they will not cease till they have brought Corne to such a rate c Beloved it were well to depend upon Gods blessing if we had turned from our sins But thus desperately to oppose against the will and decrees of the Lord without humiliation how vain is it And they shall call them the border of wickedness It may be demanded what was the cause of this irrecoverable desolation brought upon Edom These speciall sins we may see set down Num. 20.18 Ezek. 25.13 Jer. 49. alibi but specially if ye read the Prophecy of Obadiah where this judgment of God is denounced against the Edomites and the causes thereof specified One was unkindness to the people of God denying them in their passages common courtesies Num. 20.18 Another was Cruelty against his Brother Jacob in that not only they helped them not against their Adversaries but were partakers with them in their cruelty And thirdly Insulting over them in their afflictions ver 10. Now then mark here How fearefull a sin it is and how the matter of extreme desolations Observ cruell usage of the people of God The Lord delights in this Title The avenger of his people Luk. 18.7 8. and therefore as James hath it Chap. 5.6 Ye have condemned and killed the just therefore howle Beloved This is the common and crying sin of this Land unkindness and cruelty offered to the people
impute to us the neglects of our people can any blame if we desire to keep off that burthen And let no man say The Minister is excused and the sin is only the Parties that adventureth This plea if it could have holden might have been made by the Priests of the Jews They offered such as the people brought had they brought better better they would have offered yet this made their sin because the Lord had forbidden the offering of such upon what pretence soever brought unto them VER 10. Who is there even among you that would shut the doores for nought neither do ye kindle fore on mine Altar for nought I have no pleasure in you saith the Lord of Hosts neither will I accept an offering at your hand REading in our English corrupt Better thus after Tremellius who is there amongst you that shuts the doore on free cost or do you kindle the fire on free-cost The Interrogation as above denies more strongly For the meaning we are to know That the Priests and Levites serving in the Sanctuary had their severall offices and places to serve in Num. 3. 4. 1 Chro. 25. 26. some to bear the Arke some to keep the Lamp some to make clean the Sanctuary and Instruments thereof some to dress the Sacrifices some as Porters to keep the doors of the Temple c. And to all these was appointed a portion of Tythes and Oblations for recomperce of their service The meanest door-keeper was to live of the Sanctuary and to have his portion for attendance The meaning then is this There is not the meanest of you that hath served me in the meanest place but I have provided him of maintenance as for recompence These words then contain an Amplification of those Priests and Levites sins That whereas the Lord had so liberally rewarded even the meanest of them for their services they had no more care to honour him and to preserve his worship from profane contempt Hence then may be observed Observ That there is not the meanest service performed unto God but hath his reward This not only in Ministery but in common life See Eph. 6.8 Col. 3.24 touching the offices of Servants to their Masters It confutes the speech of profane men Vse Mal. 3.14 Job 21.25 It is in vain to serve God and what profit is it that we have kept his Commandements and walked humbly before the Lord Their Reason They that work wickedness are set up and they that tempt God even they are delivered Surely there is no service performed unto God but hath his recompence howsoever performed Of Nebuchadnezzar the Lord thus speaks Eze. 29.20 Aegypt given him for wages for service done though unwittingly against Tyrus Of the Romans during the space of their first entrance into their Empire that they were renowned for Morall vertues Austin well observes that the Lord did for that cause enlarge their Empire And at this day who is there that can say He hath performed any service unto God but he hath selt the Lord a recompencer of him Distribute servants of God thus some there are that unwittingly do God service at profane men yet they lack not their reward in temporall things nor yet Hypocrites as Achab for externall humiliation plagne deferred sound worshippers of God though perhaps in things of this life more inferable yet in inward comforts in spirituall blessings Eph 1.3 In assurance of heavenly rewards recompenced for that Principle is infallible Heb. 11.6 God is a rewarder of all chiefly of them that dingently seek him Herde then It is not hard Observ farther to observe That Benefits received add much to the weight of unthankfulness and make neglects of duty more odious in them As ye shall see Isa 5.4 So Saul 1. Sam. 15.17 When thou mast 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thine own eyes c. So to David 2. 〈◊〉 10. Take we heed there fore How Vse when the Lord provokes us by his blessings we then neglect fidelity in his service Surely if we take view of our state in this Church in generall we may many waies sensibly perceive that the Lord is not behind with us for recompence of our services As in peace prosperity means of Salvation c. would God we had not been too much behind in duties of obedience This shall be our just condemnation that the Lord having provoked us so by his blessings we have failed in the duties of thankfulness Wherefore Let us all remember to make use of the mercies and loving kindnesses of our God that they may be to us so many allurements to sincerity and soundness in our service I will not accept an offering at your hand What is the Reason Namely because they had offered unlawfully Hence then observe Observ That when once a man hath corrupted himself in the worship of God his lawfull services during impenitency have no acceptance with the Lord The Reason is Because the Sacrifices of wicked men are abominable and such mens persons are not reconciled unto God Rro. 21 27. And this may teach us what to judg of that opus operatum taught by Papists Vse when as they teach that good works by whomsoever performed are acepted of the Lord as justice in an Atheist is a good and acceptable work to him c. contra Heb. 11.6 Without Faith impossible to please God Sacrifice of wicked abominable for such men want the foundation of all acceptance namely Reconciliation with God Heb. 9.14 Nor can they performe services in acceptable manner As 1. Not as from the night fountain Love Nor a. As to the right and Gods glory Take we heed therefore How we corrupt ourselves in the Worship of God Labour especially to be at one with God in Christ See Heb. 11.4 Gen. 4.4 and repent especially of Corruptions in the first Table VER 11. For from the rising of the Sun even unto the going down of the same my name shall be great among the Gentiles in every place incense shall be offered unto my Name and a pure offering for my Name shall be great among the heathen saith the Lord of Hosts THe second judgment here threatned is The translating of the Kingdom of God and his worship from the Jews to the Gentiles A fearfull judgment to have the word of God Observ and his worship taken from us See Mat. 21.12 Isa 5. The Reason men thus deprived sit in darkness and in the shadow of death Mat. 4.16 are as without God in the world Eph. 2.12 they become more vile as Jews and Romenes yea from such as the Arke from Israel is the glory departed 1 Sam 4.21 Take we heed of this judgment and tremble at those things that may procure it As 1. Corrupting out selves in this worship of God 2. Receiving it vain 3. Cruell usage of the Ministers Mat. 23.37 Surely though I be half of his mind that taught that when Antichrist's Kingdom hath been runated it shall never again be re-established in full power But
in the sight of God See Ezra 9. 10. its hated by us in our own very children and servants Therefore this mark Gods Children have not been noted to have fallen twise in the same kinde except in matters of smaller weight I mean after once brought to see their sin by affliction or other meanes few or none examples of iteration shall be found of Abraham concealing the truth we read that it was done twise but of great and gross sins we read it seldome Indeed of Lot and Solomon we read they fell oftner but mark their acts were as it were continued acts and in the interim little or no remorse or chastisement but after once scourging you shall not I take it finde that they turned to their old sins Now then Vse let us be admonished to take heed of these sins or the Iterating of any sin whatsoever Its a grievous thing to fall into the hands of God and by one sin to provoke him but to fall again that is discomfortable once drunkenness or whoredome c. fearfull but once warned to fall again marvellous discomfortable I do not exclude such men from hope of pardon for I know the Lord is much in sparing and he that will have us to forgive seventy times seven he no doubt hath mercy in store upon repentance renewed But repentance in such cases hardly attained and admonitions contemned cause that the Lord withholds and permits to wallowing many times And therefore Let this be mine admonition to all those that have been in any one sin overtaken Hast thou sinned and hath the Lord had mercy on thee Remember who said Joh. 5.14 sin no more lest a worse thing happen unto thee the last errour worse then the first conscience deeplyer wounded Gods favourable Countenance more estranged And for this cause we must be exhorted 1. After such falls seriously and heartily to repent not to content our selves with superficicall cures but to have the wound searched to the bottome As it fares in the body so in the soul a wound superficially only cured the rottenes still remaining within breaks out again and the cause is evident so in spirituall diseases ordinary this the cause we see many fall again into the same sins 2. But specially keep watch over that affection or that occasion that was occasion to betray us surely as the divell ceaseth not every where to assault us so especially he there gives the onset where he hath once prevailed and there specially hopes for success If thou hast fallen once by lust look again to be assaulted there and therefore there-against specially arme thy self 3. Labour especially to shun all occasions of that sin and come not neere any of those meanes that have entangled thee if company beware it if idleness beware it the burnt child dreads the fire let it be true of thee 4. Labour especially to forget the pleasures of that sin 5. Be not behinde in any measure of humiliation publique or private Covering the altar of the Lord with teares Observ with weeping and with crying out c. The thing we may here observe is how even the wicked are sometimes grieved at the testimonies of Gods displeasure especially in rejecting their services from his acceptance One speciall instance we have Gen. 4. How doth Cain go drooping and hange the head when he sees the Lord give testimony of accepting his brothers rejecting his own Sacrifice vers 5. and Isa 5.8.3 The Hypocrites are brought in reasoning the case with the Lord why he should not respect their fasting And Heb. 12.17 and Gen. 17. As lightly as Esau esteemed of that favour of God in his primogeniture yet when he sees himself deprived of the blessing how weepes he and howls to think of it This one Reason of it there seems to me to be namely because there is not the wickdest man that lives but knows and thinks this that the top of blessedness consists in Gods favour and the testimonies thereof Balaam as vile a wretch as he was he could wish to dye the death of the righteous when he had seen the blessednes that God had provided to bestow upon his Church Num. 23.10 And I am perswaded howsoever we have many at this day that like Atheists mock at the counsell of the poor because he makes God his hope Psal 14.6 Yet he wisheth from his heart he were as many of them be so well acquainted with Gods will so sensibly favoured of the Lord and so highly assured of his love All the world for a good conscience in extremity Now hence it follows that every grief for the loss of Gods favour is no token of a childe of God because Vse even wicked men may have it a very cast-away may bewaile the loss of Gods favour as Esau did he may be discontented at the Lords testifying his displeasure as Cain and therefore let no man thus conclude It grieves me to think that the Lord favours me not therefore I am a Child of God And yet its true there is a kinde of grieving for the testimonies of Gods dis-favour that is a true note of a Child of God and therefore let us examine it Signes of that grieving for the lack of Gods favour that is a note of a childe of God are 1. A Childe of God that is indeed sorrowfull for the loss of Gods favour he is never at quiet till he have recovered the sensible tokens of it as Psal 32. When David had offended the Lord by those his fearfull sins see how he professeth of himself that he found no quiet in himself till he had recovered it conferr Iob 33. Sleep and all things are unpleasant to him with a wicked man it s not so ordinary though perhaps it may disquiet him some time yet the storme is soon blown over and you shall see such is the like esteeme of it that as they speak it shall never break their sleep they will never eate or drink less c. By this try thy self 2. Confession of sins as the cause of it Psal 32.5 And they will be the first who will accuse themselves and acknowledg that its just with God thus to plague them with a wicked man not so 3. A desire to remove all things that may offend and continue the Lords displeasure as Iosh 7. When it pleaseth the Lord to manifest his displeasure against Israel for their sin and the Lord hath made known the cause of it Ioshua presently goes about the removall Thus is it with all Gods Children and nothing so dear but they part with to recover his love Not so with a wicked man gladly would he have Gods favour but doth nothing to procure it if they may have his favour together with the pleasures and profits of their sins they are contented if otherwise rather then lose their pleasures farewell Gods favour 4. Instant prayer and that without ceasing as in David c. Not so with a wicked man hypocrites in heart encreaseth the
imputation by instance In the accusation are two things 1. The fact 2. The mean By this weariness we are to understand two things 1. the Lords long patience even ad defatigationem usque towards the wicked and the abuse thereof by the people 2. His readiness to turn patience into wrath and to execute vengeance upon the transgressours Of the first of these This is that the Lord every where challengeth to himself and in common experience is seen to practise Exod. 34.6 Rom. 2 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yea even towards the vessels of wrath Rom. 9.22 So after many long provocations yet he gives to the old world an hundred and twenty years so to the Amorites though their sins were ever crying yet four hundred years given them Gen. 15.13 And this is that that every one of us have had plentiful experience of What a long course of sinning ran we along in before our calling and how bountiful found we the Lord towards us And which even of the desperatest wretches amongst us can say that the Lord hath been hasty to take notice of or punish his rebellions The reason is to lead us to repentance if it were possible Rom. 2.4 or otherwise to leave the impenitent excuseless Now beloved this should teach us amendment of life and lead us on to repentance Vse but to see how this patience of the Lord is abused to wantonness because the Lord bears long therfore continue we in sin and heap up wrath See Eccles 8.11 12 13. Secondly this is propounded to us as a pattern to imitate in our own provocations Col. 3.13 2 Tim. 24.25 that we should bear patiently as good children And it condemns that hasty and rash desire in hastening unto vengeance in our personal injuries see Paul Tit. 3.3 we forward also till God called and many times the latter in calling outstrips the former in obedience God will not alwaies bear our provocations its true Observ that he bears long but at length he comes and puts end to patience that justice may take place So with the old world Ierusalem Egypt see Psal 50.21 22. One reason is that he may shew himself though he be a bearer of evil yet to be not lover of it 2. That we may know it is not an idle name of God but hath in him actual and active justice thereforegives he us continual experiments of his taking notice of mans sins and hatred of them Vse see Isa 1.24 And what may we learn hence but to take heed how we continue to provoke the Lord to wrath by our continued sins surely though the Lord keep long silence yet at length he reproves by his judgmens And as David saith Psal 50.21 22. Consider this ye that forget God lest he tear you in pieces like a lion and there be none to deliver The Lord puts upon him the habit of these violent creatures the more to terrifie Sometimes he seems to sleep and David saith The Lord awaked out of sleep but in the day of his wrath he is furious and none can stand before him And would God beloved ye could all lay this to heart swearers drunkards c. Surely the restraint would be much The mean followeth by their words So that words have their weight Observ and are marvellous provoking in the eares of the Lord yea brethren Audacter dicam works sometimes provoke not so much as proud and contemptuous speeches See Mal. 3.13 And would God these men that speak so lightly of their words that are most blasphemous would lay this to heart saying words are but winde And let it teach us all to pray with David to the Lord Vse to keep the door of our lips Sundry reasons there are of it 1. We are countable even for idle words much more for blasphemous Matth. 12.36 2. By them is our righteousness or unrighteousness declared a good man good things an evil man brings forth evil things Amongst all speeches first stoutness in words and desperate speeches 2. Blasphemies that impose upon the Lord any thing unbeseeming his majesty 3. Justifications of such speeches Yet yet say wherein Here is their apology Observ From whence we note how unwilling a wicked man is to acknowledg his sins and how he stands up to justifie himself even against God himself The reasons are 1. Secret hypocrisie in the heart none so wretched but he would fain seem religious 2. Ignorance of the will of God Ob. If any shall say that Gods children do thus sometimes Answ They are to be understood as speaking of particular righteousness in some particular cause wherewith they are burthened by men The distinction is usuall justitia personae justitia causae So David labours to clear himself of those particulars that Doeg and other adversaries imposed on him in respect of Sauls person and his aspiring to the kingdome 2. They thus speak as in respect of men not of God and therefore when they come to deal with the Lord they acknowledg their sins Ob. 2. Iobs example is alledged as justifying himself before God Answ Iob must thus be understood as speaking of his freedome from hypocrisie and that he was in the Lords service upright in the sight of God whereas his freinds condemne him of hypocrisie he challengeth to himself uprightness See Iob 8.20 9. per tot and therefore when he comes to speak of himself in respect of his infirmity he acknowledgeth his sins Iob. 9.2 3 20. And let this teach us to acquaint our selves with our own sins and corruptions to which purpose Vse 1. Know the Law of God and therein diligently view thy self 2. Compare thy self with God not with man Whiles we look on our selves and compare our selves with men we seem semidei as half Gods but look up to God and thy righteousness will appear unclean Iob 9.2 3. Consider there may be many corruptions which we see not I know not mine own soul Iob 9.21 When ye say every one that doth evill is good in the sight of the Lord Here is the instance Let us see their conclusion which is disjunctive either God an approver of the wicked or else no God of judgment that is regards not things done on the earth or else indeed there is no God at all Hear their medium Mal. 3.14 15. Because the Lord punisheth not but prospereth the wicked 2. Afflicts and delivers not his own children The like blasphemous thoughts are in wicked men Observ at this day which also sometimes they utter with their mouths they see not but the Lord blesseth hem in temporall things as well as others that are more nice and precise and stand upon points yea this that wherewith David confesseth himself to be much turmoiled to doubt of Gods providence love of the wicked and seeming hatred of his children Psal 37. 73. So Ieremy chap. 12.1 It shall not be amiss therefore a little to shew a mean to fortifie our selves against this Godless and blasphemous temptation
and for the wicked these conclusions shall be proved 1. That it may well enough accord with the justice of God to forbear prosper bless in temporall things even wicked men Eccles 9.1 First of all know we that the will of God and his appointment is the rule of justice see this Rom. 9. in the case of Election and Reprobation God wills not things because they are just but they are just because he wills them This conclusion throughly seated in judgment stops the mouths of wicked men and restrains from many blasphemies so that though the Lord bear yet considering it 's his will who may finde fault The second conclusion that the Lord is an absolute Lord having free power to dispose of his blessings and no man may ask a reason of his counsells Rom. 9 11. Seeing then that these things are all his own who should ask him a reason of his dispensation See also Matth. 20.15 A third conclusion that what is lawful for men cannot but be much more lawful for God But man sometimes delayes and his delayes are not censured of injustice The Prince useth not allwaies martial law but in extremity when he fears outrage they are kept in prison till the day of tryal and conviction and after conviction and condemnation have a respite to prepare for death and thus the Lord deales with the wicked respitting and delivering them and therefore weigh by the end not by the beginnings A fourth conclusion that the Lord for good ends reserves the wicked to punishment and in the mean time prospers them with temporalll things as 1. For exercise of his children so Ashur Isa 10.5 deferred to execute Gods wrath upon Israel and Jerusalem so the Gibennites reserved to be Pricks in the eyes and thornes in the sides of his children and thus the Lord at this day reserves And beloved what would become of us were it not so 2. To declare his power 1. in preservation of his own children how wonderfully shews this the power of the Lord that notwithstanding all the attempts of the wicked yet still his Church is preserved as Exod. 1.12 The Israelites vexed but the more vexed the more encreased 2. In conversion Beloved it may be there are amongst the very wicked themselves some in whose conversion and salvation the Lord means to glorifie his rich grace Mat. 13.30 Not the tares but the wheat also If the Lord had taken away Paul in persecution his grace had never so much appeared and this that we see daily men brought from power of darkness to the kingdome of Jesus Christ 3. In their overthrow and confusion never had Gods name been so marvellous over the world if he had presently shewn his power in the destruction of Pharaoh but thus permitting him to fortifie himself and then to overthrow him this shewed his power like at this day when they are flourishing like Cedars then cuts he them down A third end this serves much to illustrate his justice when he thus beares and invites by all meanes to repentance and yet men turn not I gave her space to repent Rev. 2.21 Who cannot but acknowledg the justice of God in their condemnation Yea beloved what if wicked men are punished what if punished in these very things wherein they think themselves blessed These two things I will briefely evidence First that the wicked are never without punishment Secondly that the very blessings for which they applaud themseves are their punishments For the first know we that punishments are not all of one sort some are internal some external some Eternal Now for internal punishments we see them evident upon them as 1. Horror of conscience in many of them can there be a more fearful judgment This perhaps we see not but they feel in their inward restlesness Isa 57. ult See Cain flying if he could from himself Pashur a terrour to himself Ier. 20.4 Achitophel hanging himself as the Romans were wont to make the crucifyed carry their own cross so God hath made the wicked to carry this cross of an evil an accusing conscience Ob. If it be said they all feel it not Ans First that I much doubt of Secondly they have judgment much more fearful hardness of heart the fearfullest judgment that God in his wrath can inflict see in Pharaoh Thirdly sins themselves are fearful punishments Rom. 1.24 26 28. And what drudges they are what toil they take to enjoy the pleasures of their sins How unquiet sleeps what filthy belchings feels the drunkard Temporary are in their persons or in the things about them as sometimes graceless and unfortunate children besides these there are paenae posthumae surviving plagues The posterity smarts for the sins of the fathers Job 21.19 God layes up the iniquity of the father for the childe And their very outward blessings what curses are they unto them The riches of the wicked suffer them not to sleep fill them with cares and sorrows many and many their honours exposed to envy their pleasures have bitterness c. Eternal punishments are those that are respited till after this life Now brethren Vse see we the use of all this Hence may Gods children learn to stablish themselves against that common temptation wherewith Satan sometimes annoies them and labours to draw them from their confidence Differtur non aufertur wait but a while and thou shalt see the Lord manifest his justice in their punishment and overthrow And hence likewise let wicked men learn to terrifie and dismay their hearts c. For the second that it may well agree with the justice of God thus to afflict his own children First there is none so just but must be forced to confess he hath in him what deserves punishment no not Infans unius dici we bring corruption out of the womb and suck it from the breasts of our mother Psal 51.5 Rom. 5.12 It s true that Achans children perish with him but yet not without their own sin being corrupt by nature so of the dearest servants of God And who is there under any affliction but must needs say as that good thief on the cross I am justly in this condemnation Luk. 23.41 view them in their original or in their end they are good for Gods children Their end 1. Exercise 2. Chastisement as exercises 1. Firmant 2. Probant 3. Praeeunt 1. Firmant Afflictions are Gods schoole-houses wherein he traines us up to hardship skill in sailing is best learnt by tempest in warfare by fight as trees tossed with winde take deeper root so c. and those tenderlings unused to hardship how doth a little affright them 2. Probant Deut. 8. and without these men know neither the soundness nor measure of their graces affliction tryes how many please themselves in their graces whom affliction discovers to be but hypocrites They shew also what thy strength is 3. Praeeunt when as by example they draw others as Phil 1.14 and Abel's bloud still cryes to imitate his
whilest they live in their sins It s true that Christ is a Saviour of his people Mar. 1.21 but a severe judg of all disobedient and impenitent sinners It s worth the noting that Paul hath 1 Tim. 1.9 The law saith he is not given to the righteous namely as its the Ministery of condemnation or the hand-writing of ordinances against us but it s given to the lawless and disobedient and to them it stands still in force And therefore let this be the Exhortation as Psal 2.12 Kiss the son that is submit to his dominion suffer him to your saviour else surely you shall finde him your severe judge See we a little how Christ executed this office of judgment upon the earth in the dayes of his flesh Joh. 9.39 namely by blinding them that saw that is by giving men up to blindness of minde and hardness of heart that pleasing themselves in opinion of their own knowledg despised that knowledg of God which he laboured to teach them And thus we finde Christ daily to execute judgments amongst us in the Church of God though we see him not now executing outward vengeance upon the bodies of all ungodly men yet spiritual judgments we see on many in the Church of God many given up to blidness of minde and hardness of heart and so prepared to condemnation Now as meanes to avoid this judgment 1. Take heed of opinion of thine own knowledg Ioh. 9.39 1 Cor. 3.18 2. While we have light walk in it Ioh. 13.35 3. Shut not your eyes against it but what the Lord would teach learn to acknowledg See Ioh. 12.37 39. Next thing observable is that part of judgment Christ here executed in the dayes of his flesh Judgment hath four acts 1. Examination 2. Conviction 3. Sentence-giving 4. Execution Now of these this only is here noted that here he executed the second office of a judg which is to convince of sin Therefore it is said of the Father in Christ that he would be a swift witness against the sooth-sayers c. that howsoever he did not presently send them down to hell yet he would convince them of their sins For this is the office of a witness to convince and give evidence of sins committed Now this Christ did by sundry means First by his word whilest out of it he evidenced unto the conscience of them all their sins so by shewing the meaning of the law he convinced the Pharisees of their corruptions Matth. 5. By shewing the accomplishment of the Prophets predictions he convinced them of infidelity c. Secondly by his Spirit Ioh. 16.8 9. When he sent him down into his children and by a general work of the true Spirit of God in the hearts of very cast awayes Thirdly by his own holy and spotless life as also by the examples of his childrens obedience in whose hearts it pleased him to be effectual And thus we shall see at this day the Lord Christ execute that part of judgment committed to him by his Father It s true that the Lord hath long patience bears the very vessels of wrath prepared to destruction respitting their execution as we see in dayly experience But let no man say that therefore he doth sit still and not judg the wicked except we will say that the judg of assize performes no office of a judg but only when he delivers them over to be executed And see we beloved a little this truth daily evidenced unto us in the Church by the very preaching of his word which is his testimony 2 Cor. 10.6 How many times perswade I my self doth the desperatest contemner of God and all goodness finde that in himself verified 1 Cor. 14.24 25. that he is convinced of all men and judged of the ministry of the word as when out of the word of God we shew the haynousness of Adultery Sabbath-breaking c How stand such offenders like men arraigned at the barr and say secretly in their hearts they are guilty yea the very tryal of their countenance testifieth against them Again how doth the Spirit of God in the word smite them with fear and horrour that they tremble and quake at the noise of Gods judgments denounced against them Thirdly the very examples of Gods children Heb. 11. Whiles they submit themselves to the word of God convince them also of their sins The Use will best appear Vse if we shall consider the ends why it pleaseth the Lord thus to convince us They are two according as the persons are in whom this is wrought First in regard of Gods children it 's to humble them by giving them sight and feeling of their sins that renouncing themselves they may supplicate to their judg see Act. 2.37 Art thou then convinced in thy conscience out of the word of God of thy sins This do supplicate to the judg surely not all whom the Lord convinceth he condemneth but as a merciful judg though he arraign all at the barr of his conscience by the Word and Spirit yet whom he sees broken in heart purposing amendment earnestly begging for pardon to such he extends pardon and remission And therefore beloved if when thou art convinced thou canst thus do happy art thou and Gods children that finde these things in themselves have no cause to despair of pardon and salvation The end of conviction in castawaies is their just damnation for that when the Lord convinced them in judgment of their sins they still persisted in them And therfore beloved take we all heed how we live in our sins after conviction when the Lord once brings unto the barr arraigns us in our consciences by his word shews us out sins and the smart of them if after all this we shall continue in them heavy and just is our condemnation And this the state of many at this day as of swearing drunkenness c. they know the hainousness of them yet practise them and is it not just with God to condemn A thief arraigned convicted c. but by mercy of the judg reprieved upon hope of better behaviour if he shall still persist in theft all acknowledg his execution most just Well next let us see unto whom Christ is sent as a judg To soothsayers and adulterers c. Now we are not so to understand the Prophet as if he meant that Christ should be a judg of these particulars only but as Paul 1 Tim. 1.9 He includes all sins in general Wherefore then these mentioned only Answ Because most rife in the practice of that people Thence we learn who are Ministers Observ to apply our proofes and denunciations of judgments as generally to all sins so most specially to those particulars rife in our people It were long to evidence this by the practice of the Servants of God the Prophets See Iohn Baptist how excellenly he fits his prescripts to the nature of the people Luk 3.10 11. and when he comes to Herod he tells him of his particular sin Mat. 14.4
And Paul before Felix a bribing and incestuous person preacheth of justice and temperance Act. 24.25 It warrants like practice of ministers at this day Vse that bind themselves especially to the particular corruptions of their own people and therefore pleaseth it God to set us over particular congregations and to give us charge of them that we might redress their sins And howsoever that other course be most plausible unto carnall men I mean generall dealing in instruction admonition reproof c. as you shall hear such preachers that shoot at rovers in their Sermons much applauded yet this is the profitable kind of teaching And therefore in the primitive Church were there assistants unto the Minister in particular congregations to enquire and give information of manners and if we had now such as the household of Cloe 1 Cor. 1.11 No doubt we might more profitably a great deal converse in our Ministery that by the way First particular mentioned Sooth-saying Sooth-saying the word rendred by skilfull in originall languag proestigiatores as you would say juglers such as by deceiving the sence bring strange things to pass but Synechdochically under this name are comprized all such as exercise any of those divellish arts that cannot be exercised without contract either secret or open with the Devil which in one word we call Magick My purpose is to speak something largely of it and so much the rather because I see there is some kinde of this divellish art still in practice amongst our ignorant people Of it there are sundry branches but they may be all reduced to these two heads Magia Divinatrix Operatrix The first is that that is exercised about prediction of of contigent events not out of their causes but by wayes not sanctifyed of God and this is of two sorts according as the persons that use them one seemingly joyned with art the other vulgar these of divers sorts briefly of each First Pythones or Pythonissae such as by acquaintance with familiar spirits take upon them to reveale secrets and to foretell things to come of such read Levit. 20.27 Deut. 18.11 Beloved I say not we have such in our own congregation but this I fear is too common amongst us upon every occasion consulting with such if any thing lost or out of the way presently a messenger dispatched to the cunning man or the cunning woman any sickness dangerous enquiries whether they shall recover if a journey undertaken consult of success c. As the Lord saith Psal 50.18 Thou hast been partaker with the adulterer so surely such are partakers with Soothsayers And it were to be wished that as there are laws wholesome that way provided so those to whom execution thereof is committed would put upon them this resolation and imitate his practice 2 King 23.24 And let us all be admonished to take heed how we joyn with them 1. See what is noted of Saul before the Lord forsooke him he took them away out of the land when God had forsaken him then goes he to consult with a witch 1 Sam. 28.7 2. The Lord by strange judgments hath shewn his dislike of it See 2 King 1. Ahaziah was sick and as it 's the fashion of profane men to be more inquisitive touching the issue then to prepare for death he sends to Baal-zebub the god of Ekron to enquire whether he should recover mark how the Lord reasons against him 1. What a sin is this as if the devil in Ekron could better resolve then the God of Israel 2. He tels him he shall surely dye and accordingly it came to pass 3. Isa 8.20 The Lord taxing this sin prescribes us the right means how we should know what the success of our enterprises will be To the law and to the testimony When journeyes are so undertaken we have a promise of blessing when otherwise assure we our selves of a curse though all the devils in hell shall foretel a blessing A second sort are Astrologers or start-gazers who as Austin well saith though under another colour yet exercise their art of foretelling things to come by secret compact with the devil of these the world was ever full and at this day almost no place empty of them These are of sundry sorts 1. Genethliaci that by calculating Nativities and searching out the constellations and aspects of the starrs take upon them to foretel what should be the manners state of life death c. of men born under them 2. Such as of particular events in businesses undertake to fortel events of things in their own nature contingent These also not amongst us yet I fear every where consulters with such That we arme our selves against them let us see some reasons out of the word of God 1. starrs made to another end Gen. 1.14 namely to measure out dayes and nights summer and winter 2. That they make good creatures malignant 3. The houses themselves feigned things 4. They but universal causes and their influence mixt 5. Gemini or twins born in one hour have divers issues 6. Many other wayes doth the Lord descry their folly Isai 46. Ier. 10. shewing them to be but heathennish vanity I might add unto these those that by dreames take upon them to foretell things to come now it once pleased God by dreames to reveal particular events not so now So those that by looking on the hand take upon them to foretell what shall be mens fortune to these also may be added that same which they call Necromancy that is divination by consulting with the dead that is indeed with the devill in the habit and likeness of the dead Of all which ye may read Deut. 18.10 11. Vulgaris that which our common people in superstitious ignorance observe of things boding good or ill as how many such observations have they of dismall days wherein they say its dangerous to begin any work That when a man puts his shooe on the wrong foot that bodes ill if the salt fall towards us on the table ill luck that if the staff fall out of the hand a hare cross our way stumble at the threshold when we first go out of the house or if the garments be gnawn of the Rats of which Augustine well notes the answer of Cato an old wizard among the Romans A superstitious observer of such things came to him as a man full of heaviness more grieving saith he at the suspition of ill to come then for loss present and he would needs know what hard chance that might bode To whom the heathen answered merrily that is no strange thing saith he that Rats should gnaw cloathes the wonder had been if thy cloathes had eat Rats so did the heathen deride that folly and superstition And it should admonish us Christians to detest and abhorr such idle superstitious observations whereby as much as by any the devil ruleth in such If it be said that the event many times answers to their fear and expectation This comes
partly through Gods judgment upon such partly through Satans desire to bewitch them with such things God gives them over to these delusions that they may believe lies because they have not received the love and obedience of the truth 2 Thess 2.11 A second kinde of Sooth-saying or Magick is operative that is consisting in working things strange and beyond conceit because we see not the reason of them as we see in the sorcerers about Pharaoh and Simon Magus and the like perhaps at this day strange cures wrought by bringing inchanted napkins c. Now first by natural causes known to Sathan as of the lamp burning in the Temple of Venus without oyl a thing that hath a cause in nature as Pliny of a stone called Asphaestus once set on fire never quenched Secondly by deceiving of the sence as Pharao'hs Wizards by agility of their nature removing rods bringing in Serpents Thirdly perhaps also some marvels wrought true for their nature but false in their end Reasons 1. Gods judgment upon such as believe such things 2. That those that obtain such gifts might not be too much exalted 3. To teach us not rashly to receive doctrines thus commended but to bring them to the touch 4. That we might not too much admire this gift but labour for those rather that tend to edification and salvation And in this rank may I also reckon those so rife in every corner charmers and sorcerers would God our own congregation were free which is by procuring of words to procure speedy help or hurt and this is either plain or covert some meanes pretendedly used against which and all the rest See Deut. 18.10 11. Reasons 1. God cast out the heathen for these 2. Prophets ordained Against all which these rules must be observed 1. That they are all exercised by a secret compact with Sathan Reason they have no such force by nature divine ordinance or promise Ob. Prayers are good and prevalent Answ Made in faith according to Gods will But 1. What warrant to pray for cure without meanes or by meanes supernaturall 2. What reason why such a prayer rather then another 3. See such people known to be ignorant vitious of whom the Lord professeth he knows none such Ob. Gift Answ Extraordinary gift of healing now ceased Ob. Devill doth none good Answ Yes ease with a desire to hurt VER 6 7. For I am the Lord I change not therefore yee sons of Jacob are not consumed Even form the days of your fathers yee are gone away from mine ordinances and have not kept them Return unto me and I will return unto you saith the Lord of Hosts but yee said wherein shall we return HEre the true cause assigned why they were not consumed because the Lord is unchangeable And that it might not seem strange the Lord should in mercy so long forbeare them he makes it probable by promising a greater blessing the summe whereof is this that though they had gone astray so long and were not amended yet if now at length they would return the Lord promiseth to return to them Parts three 1. An aggravation of the peoples sins 2. An invitation to repentance 3. A promise of a blessing with a confirmation of it saith the Lord of Hosts From days of your Fathers That is ever since your fathers gave you that ungracious example and became patterns of disobedience ye have gone astray How prevalent with posterity the example of parents is especially in evill I might instance this Observ in the State of Ieroboam how many hundreds of years did idolatry continue in his lineage And succeeding Kings of his Stock went a whoring after the calves in Dan and Bethel as the leprosie of Gehazi clave to him and his posterity so the sins of Parents oft-times to their children Heare some reasons of it The 1. Is that proness in nature to imitate examples either in good or evill especially in children towards Parents as we see in common appearance in the least of our infants but newly crept out of their cradle speeches gestures c. how apishly imitate they them 2. But specially this comes to pass by a judgment of God upon the children for the fathers transgression threatned in the second commandement where he saith he will visit the sins of the fathers upon the children If a man demande how Answ By withholding his grace from them and giving them over to imitate their fathers sins and this how see we it verified in daily experience Popery how long continues it in families popish This should admonish all those of us whom the Lord hath made parents to take heed how we forsake the wayes of our God and walk after the stubbornness of our own hearts Sundry reasons I might give for this 1. Examples in evill are always prevalent like leaven 1 Cor. 5.7 how soon it leavens the whole lumpe we see so spreads the infection of an evill example 2. Me-thinks the very misery of our children should move us God hath made us fathers of their bodies Heb. 12.9 And very birth is in its own nature a blessing but yet if we shall bane them by our evill example better had it been for them never to be born how discomfortable is it to parents to see the shamefull ends of their children as sometimes on the gibbet Can we grieve at this Me-thinks that other misery of them their eternall damnation should move us murther of bodies odious much more of soules And therefore beloved let us all be exhorted to take heed how by a poysonful example we corrupt the souls of our children be diligent to bring up in the discipline and information of the Lord but be as careful to go before them in an holy example of practice Wouldest thou have children reverently use the name of God beware how thou prophanest it by ungodly swearing Longest thou to wean them from wantonness and love of pleasure and wouldest thou have them even in youth to renounce the vanities of life Redeem thou the time me-thinks it 's unreasonable that parents should spend weeks and moneths in pleasures and yet expect restraint from pastime at the hands of their children What is this but to binde heavy burthens and not to move them with the least of our fingers Secondly this should teach us to repent of our sins lest we bequeath unto them with our goods our sins also Riches and possessions they descend by inheritance sins also are sometimes hereditary Thirdy this should be admonition unto children to fortifie themselves against the means so powerful used by Satan to pervert them As much as for thine own grieve for thy fathers sins I never knew an ungracious father but he hath left behinde him some pledg of Gods displeasure amongst his children yea though they have seen their fathers sins and fled from them I speak now of temporal plagues by which it pleaseth God to visit the sins of fathers even in Godly children And therefore this doe when
God gives thee eyes to see the sins of thy parents and to fly from them Ezek. 18. Humble thy self even for thy fathers sins See Dan. 9. Neh. 13.18 But specially learn to fly from them and for this cause inform thy self by the word of God touching thy duty and ever set thy self these bounds to follow thy father no farther then he follows the Lords commandment great is the benefit of such wisdom Prescription in errour is no feasible plea in the Court of the Lord. What if thou couldest say Popery whordom covetousness c. had continued in thy lineage to a thousand descents This may aggravate thy sin but shall not excuse it And therefore observe every where how the Lord adds this as the aggravating circumstance Psal 95.10 Fourty years long was I grieved with this generation and Act. 7.51 Alwayes ye have resisted the Holy Ghost as your fathers did so do ye And therefore Vse vain and hellish is that speech of prophane ones amongst us that because they are able to prescribe in sinning therefore procure themselves immunity from the wrath of the Lord. How often hear we those speeches from our people Thus have I alwayes used and my father before me Now brethren put it in some other case in sins against the second table and see how odious a defence this would be if a man should plead thus in his whordom thus my father hath used before me if in theft c. How should we abhorr him And yet in sins as vain as the excuse is must go for currant Psal 78.8 Be not as your fathers a disobedient and rebellious generation and Psal 95.9 in tempting God and hardness of heart Ezek. 20.18 Walk not in the ordinances of your fathers to defile your selves with Idols and for th●s cause see Zech. 1.5 Your fathers where are they and remember what Peter speaks 1 Pet. 4.3 It s enough if any thing were enough that we have spent the former part of our life in vanity ignorance c. To the dishonour of our God Sins never so long continued shut not out from mercy if repentance unfeignedly be performed Observ 3. Luk. 19.42 If thou hadst known in this thy day c. that is if after all this contempt of my word all this innocent blood of my Prophets shed amongst you if in this day thou knewest and wouldest embrace the things that concern thy peace happy wert thou Act. 17.30 The times of this ignorance God regarded not but now he admonisheth every man to repent The reason is nothing but the endless mercy of the Lord that knows no limits of time so be it repentance can be performed If a man turn whensoever he turn he shall live Ezek. 18. c. Now mark the forward use prophane men make of this doctrine Vse sith there is place for pardon after so long continuance in disobedience vain therefore to take thought too soon a little in old age or on the death-bed will serve the turn for Gods mercy never rejects repentance from pardon if at any time heartily performed Well beloved this is true But shall we continue in sin that grace may abound God forbid Rom. 6.1 Know we therefore that that God who hath promised to give pardon whensoever repentance is performed hath not all-wayes given repentance when it 's sought for nay hath threatened to deny repentance to them that contemning it offered in the means respit the day of their conversion unto God How howls Esau for the blessing How fain would he come to heaven How bewailes he the loss of Gods favour with tears Heb. 12.17 and yet obtains it not and what saith wisdom Prov. 1 24 26. I called you heard not you shall call but shall not be heard you shall seek mee early but not finde mee And therefore mark what Esay saith Isa 55.6 Seek the Lord while he may be found Is there any time when the Lord will not be found Answ Yes no doubt not but that his mercy is everlasting but for that men cannot seek it when the time is over-slipt Ezek. 24 13. Hence then let us learn beloved that perhaps have lived long in our sins now at the length to seek God if he may be found of us And mark how lovingly the Lord invites us who have gone astray c. a long time yet return unto mee and I will turn unto you as if he had said yet at the length return there is hope of mercy and forgiveness Beloved the Lord is the same to us as he was to Israel and still saith to us as to them though ye have long gone astray yet if now at length we could return there were hope of mercy and forgiveness Let me thus apply it to every of us and let us all think this spoken to our selves Thou that art ignorant and lived thus all thy life long if now at length thou couldest be admonished to repent God regards not thy past sins upon performance of present repentance so to all other sinners and mark how the Lord protests he delights not in our death why will ye dye saith the Lord See Hos 13.9 And let not Sathan prevail with thee so far as to think as the saying is too late now for the promise of remission is made to repentance without all limitation of time person or number of offences and this be assured out of the word of God that howsoever there is no sin so light but deserves a thousand hells yet none deadly in the event but impenitency yea the very sin against the Holy Ghost were capable of pardon if capable of repentance And Observ 4. if these things move us not what shall we say but as the Lord by his Prophet thy destruction is from thy self salvation of me this only be sure of that thou bring repentance What that is we shall see anon if we shall first observe the state of man during impenitency which is the next thing to be considered in the text The State and condition of impenitency it s nothing else but a continuall straying from God as Ier. 2.27 They have turned unto me the back therefore 1 Pet. 2. ult We are said to go astray like sheep and the Scripture every where calleth it a wandring from God And beloved let this be holden of all men whose hearts are not turned and renewed by the Holy Ghost Let their civill honesty be never so great their zeal and devotion never so fervent till the heart be changed all is but celer cursus extra viam What learn we hence Surely to take notice of our own misery whose hearts the Lord hath not yet turned unto him we are as men in a wilderness fain perhaps we would finde the way to heaven but cannot nay the more we strive the further out of the way and this is the misery of every impenitent sinner Then hence learn all such to pray with Ieremy Chap. 31.18 19 Convert thou us O Lord and we shall be converted
Law to the maintenance of the Ministery if not directly yet by consequent if not in specie yet in the aequivalent Whence this conclusion will soundly follow that to detain any thing belonging to maintenance of the Ministery is Sacriledg let it be coloured with never so goodly pretences Now Vse beloved where should I begin to reprove First those ingrossers of Ministers maintenance by impropriations c. I stand not now to dispute the question this only know things once consecrated are the Lords Levit. 27 30 31. and may not for ever be alienated 2. This holden by all Divines that so to alienate as that there be not a liberall maintenance for the Minister for all works of his calling is generally holden an accursed practice And what maintenance is this Micah's allowance Iudg. 17. A Livery dyet and ten shekells of silver surely the platform I think was first taken from that Idolater But beloved let such men consider how many souls perish for lack of Ministers I know what they say blame the law Be not deceived God is not mocked Gal. 6.7 There is a law of equity should guide every christian and they should be laws unto themselves Ob. Ministers covetous Answ So indeed they say who are deeplyest engaged this way but it will be hard to prove that desire of a competency comes under the censure of covetousness Secondly guilty of this sin also are all those that detain any thing due from the maintenance of the worship of God I know it will be said I am now in my own harvest But sith it pleaseth God to give so just occasion judg I pray you in charity that I preach of conscience not of commodity And this let me say from my own and other mens experience men most liberall to other profane uses think any thing too much that is given to the Ministery What should be the cause of it Surely 1. That root of all evill covetousness 2. Lack of feeling sweetness and comfort by the Ministery surely if Spirituall things were reaped temporall things would flow of own accord But to what cause should we impute the scanthandedness of men professing of Religion and the fear of God that they notwithstanding should so niggardly contribute and paying never so little look for a cap and courtesie from the Minister Let me add some Reasons for exhortation 1. It s an honouring of God Prov. 3.9 2. It argues that we have tasted sweetness in the word and are indeed partakers of spirituall things 3. Consider but the example of very Idolaters this way as of papists at this day and let it shame us Christians 4. Detaining brings Gods curse Prov. 20.25.5 Mark what the Lord here speaks it brings down scarcity and famine upon the land Ye are cursed with a curse The punishment the generallity of it obstinacy of the Jews notwithstanding thus afflicted Common sins draw down common judgments Observ All partake in sin all therfore in punishment Hence that exhortation Rev. 18.4 Go out lest thou partake of her plagues What doth this teach us but as Solomon saith Prov. 1.10 If sinners entice us not to consent unto them Quest What is then to be done Must we leave the world Answ There may be a just dwelling among sinners and wicked men 1. If there be mourning for their sins Ezek. 9.4 2 Pet. 2.8 2. If we partake not with them any way by consent countenance-giving fellowship in evill Eph. 5.11 3. If there be a reproofe of their evil within bounds of our calling 4. An hindering within bounds of our calling Neh. 13. Josh 24. Yet ye have robbed me Note here the amplyfication of the sin yet ye spoyl me This is ever an aggravating circumstance in sin Observ to persist in practice of sin when Gods judgments are upon us Neh. 13.18 Yet ye encrease the wrath Ezr. 9.13 After all this Jer. 5.3 Thou hast smitten them but they have not sorrowed And this the common sin of these times Vse God hath made his plagues wonderful amongst us and though his arrows have passed amangst us yet who hath regarded to enter into his heart and once to say what have I done Ier. 8.6 c. VER 10. Bring ye all the Tythes into the store-house that there may be meat in mine house and prove me now herewith saith the Lord of Hostes if I will not open you the windowes of Heaven and pour you out ablessing that there shall not be room enough to receive it c. IN the former verse was a reproofe of sacriledg We have here a duty prescribed as a remedy for removal of that curse of God now upon them Wherein consider we 1. The duty Bring all the Tythes into my store-house 2. Reasons perswading the duty 1. Abundance promised 2. Means of their penury removed 3. That all nations shall call you blessed For the duty see we 1. What it is 2. Form of it Bring ye all my Tythes For this was the ordinance of God partly to free the Levites from distractions and partly to prove the fidelity and willingness of the people this way that they should bring the Tythes to the place appointed a store-house provided for that purpose Deut. 14.28 29. Whereas the Lord propounds this mean to remove his wrath we may observe what course to take Oserv when Gods hand is upon us namely to give our selves to practice of those duties for omission whereof Gods wrath is come out against us and this propounded Isa 1.16 So in Moses Exod. 4. Isa 9.12 13. Reason is because that cause remaining the effect must needs stay upon us The Lords wrath is compared to a fire Isa 10.17 Wicked men they are as the fewel impenitency as the bellows that blow it till it have utterly consumed This then let us do Vse when as we see the tokens of Gods wrath gone out against us every one as Ieremy Lam. 3.48 Search and try his wayes and turn unto the Lord. Beloved we have seen and do see the infallible evidences of Gods wrath upon us and just cause have we to fear lest greater plagues than these hang over our heads Surely as many evidences of it we see still before our eyes as any nation how the Lord hath gathered his Saints from evil to come Isa 57.1 How stubbornly and securely we walk still towards our God who seeth not Beloved these are the fore-runners of some heavy judgment Would we prevent it Remove the cause of it that is every man his own sins What duties we have been slack in let us learn now zealously to practise And to see the behaviour of our people in all these judgments it 's strange Some little wonderment we can make how it should come to pass that the Lord should be thus incensed against us never free from one judgment or another One while sword another while pestilence another while famine and one blames this cause another that Poor they cry out it comes from wealthy and their hearts
delay yet at length in due time we shall reape if we faint not Gal. 6.9 This also should encourage Ministers though of all others their labours be most slenderly regarded amongst men as Isai 49.4 I have laboured in vain I have spent my strength nevertheless my judgment is with the Lord and my work with my God Thus should Magistrates encourage themselves though for conscionable discharge of duties they receive nothing amongst men but shame and reproach let it be enough as Nehemiah prayes that the Lord remembers thee in this So in works of mercy though perhaps thou fearest to lose it even as if thou shouldest cast it down the waters yet after many days thou shalt finde it Eccles 11.1 c. Again doth the Lord remember the good works and words of his servants No doubt he hath also then his remembrance-book his register for the ungodly See Rev. 20.12 The books are opened a glympse whereof we may see in that little book of the conscience which though in times of peace it be as a book shut up yet in judgments of God layeth open it self to the view of ungodly men Joseph's brethren a long time carried away the matter smoothly but at length in affliction mark how conscience sheweth its record Gen. 42.21 22. Now his blood is required Herod had slain Iohn Baptist with the sword Mat. 14. Mark how when he hears of the fame of Christ conscience is his remembrancer John Baptist's blood still runs in his minde Now beloved that this one perswasion might be setled in our hearts no doubt it would restrain many of our sins and those conclusions of Atheisme Psal 94.7 God seeth not or regards not or his memory oppressed with multitude forgets breeds all this Atheisme and profaness in practice Consider then beloved what the Lord every where teacheth Psal 50.21 22. I will set thy sins before thee in order Words we think are wind and with us soon forgotten yet saith our Saviour every idle word shall come to be reckoned for at the day of judgment Mat. 12.36 And let me say as David Psal 50.22 Consider this yee that forget God there is not an oath that thou swearest but the Lord knoweth it there is not an idle word but the Lord takes notice of it not a wanton look but the Lords eye seeth it c. And if this were thought of much wickedness would be restrained VER 17. And they shall be mine saith the Lord of Hosts in that day when I make up my Iewels and I will spare them as a man spareth his own son that serveth him THe blessings of God upon those that fear him They shall be unto me a flock peculium cordis some read Res desideratissima or as some his chiefe treasure mark here the priviledges of those that fear God they are called Gods peculiar his lot and his inheritance Secondly that the Lord will spare them which is set down in a similitude The blessings that this includes 1. Singular protection there is an universal providence and protection that is vouchsafed unto all his creatures Thou Lord shalt save both man and beast There is a special protection which the Lord vouchsafeth unto men 1 Tim. 4.10 The Saviour of all men There is thirdly a singular protection which he carrieth over the Church and those in it that fear him specially of them that believe Besides the singular blessings and gifts that he vouchsafeth unto them there are common graces which he vouchsafeth unto all as general knowledg more special vouchsafed to them that fear him see Exod. 19.5 That which we learn hence is First separation from the wicked that as the Lord singles us out from the rest of mankinde to be his peculiar so should we separate our selves from the corruptions of the times see 2 Cor. 7.1 Secondly comforts that hence arise to Gods children as assurance of defence in all miseries and calamities The next priviledg promised is sparing or mercy see Psal 103.13 Whence observe we that remission of sins is a blessing peculiarly belonging to the Church of God Observ 2 for these Christ alone merited Ioh. 17. to these only God is a father And it confutes the opinion of such as make remission of sins a common gift for thought it be so in respect of offer and propounding yet is it not so in respect of actual performance Again this if there were no other thing sheweth a plentiful difference betwixt religion and Atheisme in that to the one is promised remission of sins to the other not This the treasure of the Church of God No sins are forgiven to a cast-away but every sin to a childe of God Psal 32.1 1 Joh. 1.7 And this should comfort us against our infirmities and imperfections that alas shew themselves in every best duty that we perform unto God and this that which most humbles Gods children their present weakness and imperfections considered but brethren consider we God is a father unto us and if he see in us but a striving to perform our dutyes acceptably that desire is accepted Heb. 13.18 1 Pet. 2.5 VER 18. Then shall ye return and discern between the righteous and the wicked between him that serveth God and him that serveth him not THat which in sum is hence observable is this Observ that the Lord will not alwayes suffer his children to be afflicted and the wicked to prosper but a day shall come wherein a sensible difference shall be put betwixt him that serveth God and him that seveth him not the justice of God and his truth requires it 2 Thess 1.5 Then shall Christ perfectly winnow the chaff from the wheat 2. In common judgments the Lord delivers his Ezek. 9.4 3. The finall consummation reserved for the time of the last judgment when the full separation shall be Mat. 25.32 And this should stay Gods children against that temptation which ariseth from that seeming confusion of things in this life See Psal 37. 73. Ier. 12.1 A thing that hath troubled the Saints of God in all times It pleaseth God for a time to grant the wicked prosperity and to exercise this Children with afflictions Reasons 1. To prove the patience of his Saints 2. To give the wicked their portion 3. To nourish in us the hope of another life But alas as their rejoycing is but short so the afflictions of Gods servant are but momentany 2 Cor. 4.17 Trust then in God and keep his way judg not of the happiness of Gods Children by things present but by their end and issue Psal 37.37 38. The wicked exalted but to be thrown down into utter destruction the godly afflicted but his end is peace CHAP. 4. VER 1 2 3. For behold the day commeth that shall burn as an oven and all the proud yea and all that do wickedly shall be stubble and the day that commeth shall burn them up saith the Lord of Hosts that it shall leave them neither root nor branch But unto you
that fear my Name shall the Sun of Righteousness arise with healing in his wings c. THE former conelusion proved by divers effects of Christs comming to the wicked a black day set out in similitudes The time of accomplishment hereof its apparent by the place that it s to be understood of Christs first comming in the flesh and if any question how this verified then It was Inchoativè and by way of preparation then and shall be Consummatè in the day of the last judgment That Christ came not to save all Observ but to be a judg and destroyer of the wicked and ungodly this place concludes it See Ioh. 9.39 Luk. 2.34 and it appeareth 1. By the event 2. By Christs own profession Ioh. 17.3 By the sign in that grace is not given to all to receive the benefit And this reproves that fond opinion that Christ came to save all How is it then that all are not saved They answer because they will not but absurdly For 1. God hath power to frame mens wils if his will were such 2. How unreasonable is it that God should will to save and man disappoint his purpose Ob. Gods will was not absolute but conditionall Answ It s that the Scripture teacheth that the Lord had decreed something certain of those that he meant to save otherwise not likely that he would send his son and he submit himself to those indignities not having any certainty whether any man should accept this grace or no. 2. It s a great unlikelihood that the Lord should hang the fulfilling of his decrees upon the mutability of mans will And this that deceives many the fond and groundless opinion that the Lord hath sent his son to reconcile all unto him Ob. The world Answ Of believers only Ob. All men 1 Tim. 2.4 Answ Of all sorts Ob. God otherwise unjust Answ Not so 1. For he is bound to none 2. They willingly refuse the grace offered Let us rather labour to know whether we be of them that Christ came to save Signs 1. If Christ have redeemed us from our vain conversation 1 Pet. 1.18 2. Our esteem of Christ Phil. 3.8 3. The life of Christ manifested in us Rom. 8.4 4. Lively hope hope that hath life is operative 1 Pet. 1.3 1 Ioh. 3.3 5. Desire to win other Psal 34.8 Observ 2 Secondly observe hence how easily the Lord can destroy the wicked Gods wrath compared to a violent fire the wicked to the lightest things to stubble Gods wrath to the winde the wicked to chaff and the lightest dust Psal 1.4 Gods power to an iron rod the wicked to a pot-sheard Psal 2.9 It should teach the wicked to submit to Christs Scepter Vse and to serve him ni reverence and fear See Heb. 12.28 And withal it should comfort the righteous in the greatest pride and jollity of the wicked How easie is it for the Lord in a moment to consume them Be not affraid when a man is made rich and the glory of his house is encreased what though they grow up like Cedars in Lebanon See Nebuchadnezzar cast out amongst beasts Pharaoh suddenly destroyed in the Sea The rich mans soul taken away in a night Luk. 12.20 How this accomplished in Christs first comming Answ 1. Praeparativè 2. Spiritually in those flames of Gods wrath wherewith inwardly their consciences are filled Wherefore though we see not utter destruction presently executed upon the ungodly yet let this patient us to consider that God hath invisible and unseen judgments And if a man were but privy to those fears and inward panges that wicked men are plunged unto he would never envy them their outward felicity Ver. 2 3. In these verses are set down the benefits whereof men fearing God are made pertakers 1. The sun of righteousness ariseth unto them 2. Healing under his wings 3. Continuance of regeneration 4. Victory over their enemies Christ the sun of righteousness because righteous not for himself Observ but for us 1 Cor. 1.30 Divine righteousness proper to him as God humane by voluntary dispensation under-taken and performed for us This comforts against conscience of our own unrighteousness sith what righteousness Christ had Vse he had it for us 2. Because from him we receive righteousness as the light is derived from the sun Ioh. 1.14 Understand this 1. Of imputed 2. Of inherent righteousness Whence those are confuted who imagine man able to conferr something to his own justification And withal here we see whither we must resort to have all our imperfections and defects supplyed With health or healing under his wings The wounds of our soul are our sins Christ is the healer of those Observ who betake themselves unto him 1 Pet. 2.24 By his stripes ve were healed under such a distress then repair unto him Matth. 11.28 The next benefit is continual flourishing and increase of the graces of regeneration Ezek. 47.12 Trees planted in Gods garden are watered by the rivers issuing out of the sanctuary and bring forth new fruit every moneth And by this may we try the truth of our regeneration the seed is immortal and permanent 1 Joh. 3.9 and such as springs up unto eternal life Ioh. 4.14 Vers 3. The next benefit is victory over the wicked and all the wicked adversaries of our salvation Vers 3 Ye shall tread down the wicked for they shall be ashes under the soles of your feet c. If any ask how this is verified Answ First in Christ who is our head he hath overcome for us Secondly in us after a sort that they are not able to hurt us Rom. 8.28 Which is enough to comfort us in all afflictions Ioh. 16.33 Vers 4. Remember ye the law of Moses my servants c Admonition here given us Observ how to prepare for Chrsts coming remember the law of Moses What are the reasons of it 1. It s a means of humiliation Gal. 3.10 2. As a rule of life Antinomians reproved Vse that would have the law taken out of the Church of God where as great and manifold is the use of the law 1. It serves to discover sin Rom. 3.20 Rom. 7.9 2. Shews the punishment due to sin Gal. 3.10 3. scourgeth unto Christ Gal. 3.24 4. And is a perfect rule of obedience Hence then learn we all who would with benefit receive Christ to be diligent this way in labouring to see our imperfections Surely he bests knows and is best fitted to receive Christ that best profits in the law of God VER 5 6. Behold I will send you Elijah the Prophet before the coming of the great and dreadful day of Lord And he shall turn the hearts of the fathers to the children and the heart of the children to the fathers lest I come and smite the earth with a curse A promise and prediction of Iohn Baptists coming where is 1. A description of Iohns person by his gifts set out in resemblance of him to Elias therefore called metaphorically Elias the