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A76798 Expositions and sermons upon the ten first chapters of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, according to Matthew. Written by Christopher Blackwood, preacher to a Church of Christ in the city of Dublin in Ireland. Blackwood, Christopher. 1659 (1659) Wing B3098; ESTC R207680 612,607 923

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Christ ver 16. 2 That no man should dare to think as if there were any contradiction in these and such like Scriptures as Faustus the Manichee did who did deny this Gospel to be penned by Matthew and denied this Sentence to be any of Christ's words because it is false that Christ did not destroy the Ceremonies seeing Christians do not observe them Consider the Law having no place in justification and nothing contrary to the Law of the New Testament in point of meats days or ceremonies we ought with Paul to think it holy just and good Ob. But if the law be thus fulfilled what shall we think of the ten Commandements Answ The Decalogue or ten Commandements is part of the Law of nature Rom. 2.15 Which shew the works of the Law written in their hearts Yea every command of them was observed before the giving of the Law upon Mount Sinai even the command of the Sabbath Exod. 16.29 now they being the Law of nature are to be observed for example it s writ in every mans heart that there is a God and that this God is one and that he is the immediate object of worship and that his name is to be sanctified c. All the question is about the Sabbath or seventh day from the creation which is put to an end Col. 2.16 yet is it written in every mans heart that if God be to be worshipped there must be a time for his worship and if it be left to the scantling of every carnal mans heart it will be little enough yea in time it will come to nothing among such it remains then that godly men as they have it writ in their hearts to give God a time so that they give him that time which the Churches at Corinth and Galatia and Troas gave unto him and as they so doubtless all the Apostolical Churches This was the day which the Spirit calls the Lords day as like phrases call the Lords table the Lords body the Lords supper whereto that speech of Psal 118.24 hath respect This is the day which the Lord hath made we will rejoyce and be glad herein For all the rest of the Commands as the obedience of inferiours to superiours and that every man shall enjoy his own wife life state and good name c. is writ in every mans heart Moreover for that of the Sabbath the distinction of divers of the Rabbins is to be observed viz. one thing is commanded in these words Remember thou keep holy the Sabbath the cause of which holy worship is a thankful remembrance of the creation of the world another thing is commanded in these words The seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God in it thou shalt do not manner of work this rest respecting their servitude in Aegypt belongs to the Hebrews onely Exod. 31.13 remembring their own servitude in Aegypt they should handle their own servants gently which also was the opinion of Irenaeus l. 4. c. 30. and Eusebius l. 1. c 4. so that to distinguish rightly we must distinguish the commands of worship and the commands of rest as by their causes so by their times The Christians observed the Sabbath and had their assemblies thereon in which assemblies the Law was read Acts 15.21 which continued to the Council of Laodicea to whom it seemed better that that day the Gospels should be read and therefore from the ancient fathers Balsamon observs that almost in all things the Sabbaths were equal'd to the Lords days which two days Nyssen calls brethren Also Justin Martyr against Tripho before Abraham there was no need of circumcision nor before Moses of the celebration of the Sabbath feasts and offerings p. 186. Asterius cals them a beautiful couple also Clement Const l. 7. c. 24. saith Keep holy the Sabbath day and the Lords day because this is dedicated to the memory of the creation the other to the memory of the resurrection also cap. 8. he saith let servants labour five days but on the Sabbath day and Lords day let them wait on the doctrine that makes to Godliness in the Church In the ancient Church they had a custome not to fast on the Sabbath because it was a day of gladness except on the Sabbath that was before the burial of Christ Ignat ad Philip Tertul. de jejun and therefore Eusebius mentions that Constantine forbade Christians to be summoned to law on the Sabbath no less then on the Lords day because those days were dedicated to holy assemblies and therefore whereas some think from that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one of the Sabbaths the Lords day is placed into the room of the Sabbath they are deceived seeing there is no mention hereof by Christ or the Apostles Now when the Christians observed these two days viz. the Sabbath and Lords day they did not do it of any command of God or of the Apostles but by voluntary consent by the power of liberty given to them unless I should add by divine example which is not of little force see Jer. 26.18 Unless we add that the spirit calls the day of worship the Lords day Rev. 1.10 on this day there was a meeting of all that dwelt in the City and Country though he call it Sunday Justin Apol. 2. Q. Whether to these ten commandements as the law of nature may not other commands of the Gospel be refer'd A. Yes to the first we may refer all those commands which forbid the least shew of worship to be given to false Gods 1 John 5.21 and that the true God alone be worshipped John 17.3 1 Cor. 8.6 To the second command we may refer all commands forbidding resemblances of God and the worshipping of God through any mean which himself hath not instituted Matth. 6.24 Ephes 5.5 Phil. 3.19 To the third command we may refer the due sanctification of the name of God Matth. 6.9 and to keep our words in the bounds of yea and nay Matth. 5. ●4 Jam. 5.12 To that of the Sabbath we may refer that certain hope concerning the rest in heaven the taste whereof we have in peace of conscience Heb. 4.9 10 11. To the fifth we may refer all honour due to Princes Rom. 13.1 2 3 6 7. to Masters Col. 3.22 to Husbands Eph. 5.22 to Pastors 1 Tim. 5.17 Heb. 13.17 To the sixth command all wrath and hatred which are the seeds of murthers Matth. 5.22 1 Joh. 3.15 To the seventh command are reckoned all impurities and all divorces without the cause of adultery Matth. 19.9 To the command against theft are refer'd not only those commands which forbid us to hurt the goods of others but that we should profit them Col. 3.25 1 Cor. 12.7 To the ninth is refer'd those commands which caution us against lying and enjoyn us a continual care of truth Eph. 4.24 25. To the tenth are refer'd the commands of quenching inordinate motions Gal. 5.24 Eph. 5.22 23. the baits of which concupiscence are wealth honour
EXPOSITIONS AND SERMONS UPON The Ten first Chapters of the Gospel of JESUS CHRIST according to MATTHEW Written by CHRISTOPHER BLACKWOOD Preacher to a Church of Christ in the City of Dublin in IRELAND Necesse est nobis Scripturas sanctas in testimonium vocari sensus quippe nostri enarrationes sine his testibus fidem nullam habent Orig. homil 1. in Jerem. It 's needfull the holy Scriptures should be called into witness because our meanings and Expositions without these witnesses have no belief Quaemadmodum si quis herbas aridas nec odorem nec colorem gratum habentes in medici officina dispositas repererit c. As if a man shall finde in a Phisician or Apothecaries shop dry herbs having neither smell nor colour though they may seem to have a base shew yet he will suspect there is some virtue and remedy in them so in the Apothecary shop of the Scriptures if any thing meet which at first sight seems to be contemned yet we may surely set down that there is some spiritual profit in it because Christ the Phisician of souls is to be supposed to have put nothing idle or unprofitable in this his shop meaning of the Scriptures Orig. hom 8. in Levit. LONDON Printed by HENRY HILLS for FRANCIS TYTON and JOHN FIELD and are to be sold at the Three Daggers and at the Seven Stars in Fleetstreet 1659. To the Right Honourable Lord CHARLES FLEETWOOD late Lord Deputy of Ireland and now Lieutenant-General of the forces in England MY LORD TO testifie that due acknowledgement of Your Lordships favors whereto I am obliged I have hereto prefixt Your Lordships name Among all studies none are to be preferr'd before the study of the Scriptures LUTHER when one Chapter was opened to him said Me thinks I see heaven opened Here are several Chapters opened wherein if God shall open himself to Your Lordships heart heaven shall undoubtedly be opened unto you Let not Your Lordship herein expect the flourishing garnish of humane Eloquence nor the glorious varnish of Rhetorical expressions but naked truth or at least the same drest up in an homely garb Truth is more potent them Eloquence the spirit better then wit Faith greater then Learning and the foolishness of God stronger then men All knowledge save that of the Scriptures is but perishing food yea the very knowledge of the Scriptures is no better unless as the understanding be affected with the truth of them the will be affected with the goodness therein presented In vain is all knowledge if it be not improved to the benefit of our own souls If our knowledge consist onely in methodical discoursing of God we shall glorifie him onely as the Painter doth the party whose picture he hath exactly taken With all the truths of God our hearts should have such correspondence as between the Character and Letter instamp'd My Lord if now and then you shall redeem an hour from Court-affairs to Closet-contemplation to peruse this ensuing Treatise I hope through the blessing of God your labor will not be in vain I have no more at present save to exhort you to take opportunities of doing much for God who hath done so much for you that so your faith and fruits of righteousness may abound in the day of account which with my prayers to the Lord for Your Lordship Your Lady and Posterity is the hearty request of MY LORD Your Lordships in all duty to serve and observe you CHR. BLACKWOOD TO THE READER BEing desired by some of my friends to Print some Annotations upon the New Testament though my life was too far spent and I not like to accomplish it my Body being much worn yet I thought it adviseable to make an Essay herein but the Providence of God so disposed that I had no sooner finished 3. or 4. Chapters in Matthew but I was called from the City of Kilkennie in Ireland to be Overseer of a Church of Christ in Dublin to whom preaching I was necessitated in order to their edification to handle some Points largelier then the nature of an Exposition calls for but yet I suppose not with less profit to ordinary Readers I have not according to the itch of the times affected new fangled interpretations but judging it unsafe to move the bounds of the faith I have troden in the steps of the best ancient and modern Divines that Providence led me to adding changing rectifying inventing and proposing what I thought needfull Thou mayest perhaps in some points meet with a judgement differing from thine in some one thing yet let not that cause thee either to reject or not promote the truths in this ensuing Treatise wherein we agree in most things If the Lord may have glory and thy soul Edification and Comfort and any Comfort may redound to me in the day of my account which speedyly draws on I trust I shall have my end With much carefulness I have endeavoured to avoid the misleading of Gods people I cannot promise thee all in this Treatise is truth yet notwithstanding all fear of losing friends and procuring enemies I have pressed after truth through multitudes of impediments temptations and discouragements That the answer of those prayers which have been poured out for a good success upon these weak endeavours may redound to the rejoycing of both our souls in the day of the Lord is the earnest request of Thy well wishing friend for the Lords sake C. B. The Authours Introduction to the ensuing Treatise TO the better understanding of this Gospel which through the assistance of the good Spirit of the Lord I now undertake there must be certain things first to be considered whereunto I shall propose these ensuing I. That by the Gospel or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is meant The glad Tidings of Salvation of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that signifies Well and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To tell though sometimes the word Gospel is taken for the Reward of good Tidings as Cicero to Atticus saith O thy sweet Epistles to which I confess Evangelia that is the Reward of good Tidings is due This word Gospel is taken 1. Generally for the whole Scripture which declares this Message for there were many sprinklings of the Gospel in the Old Testament Gen. 3.15 Deut. 18.18 2. Or particularly 1. for the promise of forgiveness of sins to them that believe and repent Luke 24.47 Acts 10.42 2. For the publication of this Gospel so Paul Rom. 16 25. was separate to the Gospel of God that is to the preaching of it See also Gal. 1.15 16. 2 Tim. 2.8 Christ was raised from the dead according to my Gospel that is the preaching of my Gospel Rom. 2.16 God shall judg all secrets according to my Gospel that is according to my preaching II. In that it 's said according to Matthew we may note that the prime Authour of this Gospel was not Matthew but the Spirit of God Matthew onely penn'd what the Spirit dictated III. This
they came to Jerusalem Some think 12 or 13 days after they saw the star at first hence the Feast of Epiphany or Manifestation but it 's like the next day after they saw his star they came forward though it 's probable that it was near upon a year before Herod put the infants of Bethlem to death that while being spent in acquainting Caesar with the designe and in the plotting and projecting of the business V. 2. Saying Where is he that is born King of the Jews for we have seen his star in the East and are come to worship him Here is the question the Wise men propound 1 See the greatness of their faith they ask not whether he be but where he is presupposing he was born They acknowledge his natures his manhood in that he was born his Godhead in that they call the star his he the owner of it they also acknowledge his Kingly office so freely that it came to Herods ear they were neither afraid of Herod nor ashamed of Christ a politick bosome faith becomes not them that enquire after Christ The question was full of danger and amazement as casting down Herod from his throne and to set up a new King which was no less then capital 2 The ground of their faith For faith must have both a ground and an evidence Heb. 11.1 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which differences a believer and a credulous person who believs every thing Prov. 14.15 The ground of it was for we have seen his star in the East For this star it was not an ordinary star for it moved as they went and shone on the day time placed lower then the fixed stars perhaps like a blazing star Chrysostom thinks it was some invisible power or Angel figured in the shape of a star And the Lord cals them by a star rather then by an Angel as condescending to their weakness because they were much imployd about the stars Now if you ask how they came to know what this star did portend Though some think they living in the East might know it from Balaam's prophesie Numb 24.17 I shall see him but not now I shall behold him but not nigh there shall come a star out of Jacob and a scepter shall rise out of Israel and shall smite the corners of Moab yet I suppose they came to know this star by Divine revelation onely but whether soever they came to know it But whereas some from hence would conclude the lawfulness of Judicial Astrology it 's groundless onely this I must confess 1 That the stars have an influence here below Judges 5.20 The stars in their paths or courses fought against Sisera But I say it 's groundless 1 Because Astrologers proceed by way of observation as in such a year and such a concourse of Planets wars and rebellions to have been therefore this year the same will happen in the like concourse but here no experience or observation went before for never had a Virgin brought forth before Some have thought stars to be the causes of things But Christ was not therefore born because the star appeared but therefore the star appeared because Christ was born Others in this Age are apt to think them signes of our actions as if heaven were the book wherein God writes all future actions and events the stars are for signes oft-times as dayes and years but it seems to me in no wise signes of those things which depend upon the will of man the future motions whereof are onely known to God That Astrologers alledge experience it nothing moves me for all the predictions of Astrology are mere particulars but although they had any certainty yet it were better to be always in the fear of God then to be tormented with fear of events Luth. in Gen. cap. 1. We are not to heed Astrologers Jer. 10.2 Be not dismayed at the signes of heaven for the Heathen are dismayed at them If they fore-tell us prosperous things and they lye we shall be wretched by hoping in vain if they fore-tell to us adversity and lye they make us miserable by fearing in vain if they fore-tell unhappy things to us and speak truth to what purpose is it to fore-know those things we cannot prevent and if they should truly fore-tell prosperity expectation would weary us out Lapide in Jer. 10. King Muleasses fore-told in the year 1544 that he should lose his kingdome and his life be in danger to shun it he went out of Africa and in his departure brought upon his own neck that which he would have shunn'd To conclude these Astrologers and Star-gazers and Monthly Prognosticators cannot save us from the things that shall come upon us no more then they could Babylon Jer. 47.13 They enrich your ears with words that they may enrich their own purses with money In the East By this is meant not so properly the region of heaven as the land from whence they came q.d. we living in the East saw there a star shining in the East which accompanied us these Wise men as the pillar of fire and cloud did Israel This star or such an one like it was seen in the West towards the end of Augustus reign and Pliny saith it was held to be a happy star but the Western men for want of light did misapply it And are come to worship him Here was the end of their coming viz. to worship him yet do they not finde him in a worshipful case but in a stable in a manger yet by faith they over-look all this and worship him worship is a great matter in that heaven and earth stars and prophets lead us to it for this end the Eunuch came out of Aethiopia and the Wise men from the East The world was made for this end that he that created it might be worshipped the Scripture was made for this end that he that inspired it might be worshipped The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies the gesture of the body lying down to give honour Zanch. in 4. Praecept of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Dog to fall down as dogs do at their masters feet The Wise men being perswaded that a Kingdome was appointed for this childe after the manner of the Eastern nations who are generally known to have worshipped their Kings they fall down to worship yet did they not onely apprehend him to be a King and so worshipped him with a civil worship but also they apprehended him to be the King of heaven and so worshipped him with a Religious worship V. 3 When Herod the King had heard these things he was troubled and all Jerusalem with him We have here the effects of the inquiry of the Wise men which is 1 Herod was troubled Fearing as if this King would drive him out of his Kingdome and because he was a tyrant and distrusted the faithfulness of his subjects Besides Herod living long among them knew their
the Spirit into the Wilderness So that in the same day he was baptized he began his Fast of forty days He was led of the Spirit 2 His Tentation is set down from the efficient Cause v. 12. the Spirit He was led of the Spirit or driven or cast out by the Spirit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so Mark or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 led away or snatched away These phrases set down the violent impulsion and force of the Spirit in his heart as appears Luke 4.1 Jesus being full of the Holy Ghost returned from Jordan and was led by the Spirit into the Wilderness It was not then Satan that led him but the Spirit of God Whether carried through the air as Elias 2 Kings 2.16 and Ezekiel cap. 3.12 and Philip when he was taken from the Eunuch or whether he went on his feet I leave it in the midst but from the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sursum and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 duco I incline to think he was carried up into the air 3 Whither he was led viz. Into the Wilderness It 's like the great Wilderness where he was with the wilde Beasts yet are not any persons to live in Wildernesses now for Penance for though every action of Christ be for our instruction yet is it not for our imitation What popish Eremite is so carried as Christ was Christ went into the Wilderness to testifie his divine glory in abstinence not onely from flesh but from all manner of meat which hath no place in Eremites he went to be tempted of the Devil and therefore chose the fittest place even a solitary Wilderness We pray that we may not be led into Tentation If there were any such end of an Eremitical or Wilderness Life as Penance yet were it meet to be profest rather among men than beasts that they who have beheld our Fall may behold our Repentance And if the Warrant of a Wilderness Life be fetcht from the Example of Christ it must of necessity be shut up in the space of forty days and forty nights after the end of which forty days Temptation he lived the rest of his life in the society of men To be tempted of the Devil This was the end Christ was led into the Wilderness Christ was thus tempted first that he might be fitted for his Ministry by Tentations for knowledg of Tentations is one great requisite to make an able Teacher 2 To shew with what Weapons a Christian ought to oppose the Temptations of the Devil 3 That he might be succouring and helpfull to us in our Tentations Heb. 2.17 For that he himself hath suffered being tempted he is able to succour them that are tempted 4 To shew that Christ is stronger than Satan in time of Tentation 1 John 4.4 Christians overcome because greater is he that is in them than he that is in the World 5 That we may come unto him with boldness and confidence seeing he was in all the principal points of Tentations tempted as well as we Heb. 4.15 16. He was in all points tempted like unto us let us come therefore unto him with boldness 6 Satan tempted Christ that in overcoming Christ he might hinder the Work of our Redemption by drawing him to sin for the high Priest that was to redeem us was to be holy and harmless and undefiled Heb. 7.26 7 That by his combating with Satan he might obtain victory to us John 14. ult 8 To let young Converts see that after Baptism that is the profession of a sincere and holy life Temptations hang over such 9 To let us see that bare Tentations are not sins unless we give our consent to them Satans Temptations to evil are our crosses and Satan's sins provided we groan under them and oppose them In holy men God works a distaste of Satans Temptations yet may a Saint have as horrid thoughts cast into his heart as the Devil can invent who is indeed the great temptation-master 10 That we by Christ his Example may learn to fight it out with Satan and not to give way like valiant Souldiers that stand and maintain their ground against their Adversary Ephes 6.11 Put on the whole Armour of God that ye may be able to stand against the wiles of the Devil Learn we from this seeing Christ was led or driven of the Spirit to his Tentation that we do not rashly cast our selves into Tentations because we know not what weakness we may shew therein V. 2 And when he had fasted forty days and forty nights he was afterwards an hungred When he had fasted forty days Christ his temptation is amplified from the concomitants that accompanied his temptation which was prayer and fasting Because fasting kindles prayer therefore he used fasting as Moses and Elias had communion with the Lord miraculously Exod. 24.18 forty days and forty nights 1 King 19.8 so had Jesus Christ From hence Papists stablish Lent They say Christ his example is a command for us but by this reason all the miracles of Christ should be instead of a command but who can imitate Christ in miracles Moses at the receiving of the Law and Eliah at the restoring of it and Christ the restorer of the new Law fasted forty days apiece but what is this to us The example of Moses and Elias gave no warrant to the Jews to imitate that fast no more doth Christs fast give warrant to us to imitate that 2 There is great difference between Christ his fasts and Papists for Christ fasted but once they yearly Christ abstained from all meat and drink they onely from flesh and that which comes of it Christ abstained from food without need or appetite to it they hunger when they fast Besides in their fasts the Shambles are onely chang'd into Fishmarkets or into Grocers and Comfit-makers shops which are more pampering to the flesh Luke saith that in those forty days Christ did eat nothing Luke 4.2 but they eat every day Now for the fast of Christ it was supernatural For to fast above seven days is death for though sick persons in whom there is abundance of slimy phlegm and their natural heat is weak may live above seven days without meat for they are nourished of the moisture of the body and phlegm which the little heat in their body doth slowly eat up Yet man naturally cannot live without meat seven days because for want of nourishment the natural heat dies As the fire of a Lamp is put out for want of oyl the body also being dried becomes unfit that the soul should inform it besides the bowels as Hippocrates observes wanting chylous moisture growes together and then the man dies For Christ his divine power did keep his body strong without hunger and did likewise suspend the action of natural heat and other contrary qualities weakning one another and in the mean time afforded strength and animal spirits to the head and brain which were necessary to the
in some supposititious writings falsely ascribed unto him V. 11. Then the devil leaveth him and behold Angels came and ministred unto him We have here the victory over the tempter The devil brought the worst of his fiery darts but Christ overcomes him We may see the temptations of Satan are limited that God will not still suffer Satan to tempt 1 Cor. 10.13 nor us to be tempted above strength Luke adds when the devil had ended all the temptation ●e departed from him for a season Satan left not Christ altogether but onely for a season to let us know that the rest of his life was not free from temptations and to teach us that sometimes Satan politickly gives way to try afterwards whether he can finde us secure Satan will try whether we have not lost our former strength care or vigilance or whether God that now doth not will not at another time for some causes suffer us to be led into temptation Satan would come oftner but that God who knoweth our strength or rather our weakness will not suffer him Satan is apt to come again with the same temptation to see if he cannot tyre and weary us out with the anguish and vexation of it 2 Cor. 12.8 Satan thrice tempted Paul with pride and sometimes he changes his weapon Let us do as the Pilot doth have our compass ready and stand ready to turn your needle to any point knowing that your lust within is for any sin and Satan can as easily tempt us to prodigality as to covetousness Onely when Satan comes with some other weapon God doth it for our good as change of Physick is good for the body for the same Potion always used will not work so well so the longer we are used to the same temptation the less it worketh God will have Satan turn some other way to purge some other stream of lust Besides God will have us learn skill by experience at all sorts of weapons by the falls of Hezekiah and Jehosaphat and David learn we that when one temptation is over another will come which will be a mean to prevent spiritual pride and security As we must not be secure when the temptation comes but set against it before Satans suggestion joyn with our corruption set against it while it is young so let us not be secure when the storm of the temptation is blown over let us do as Mariners that mend their tacklings against another storm come We are apt to think we shall have no more such temptations and then comes the tempter Satan was never so beaten by any as by Christ yet he came again and again A man that is once well beaten in the Field will hardly be brought to fight with the same man again but it is not so with Satan We must have some good days to breath in else we should not be willing to live and more fits of Temptations we must have or else we should not be willing to dy And behold the Angels came and ministred to him Here 's the comfort Christ had after the Temptation was over Angels come to minister to him Consolations are wont to follow after Temptations Hereby Christ saw the Father had a care of him and whereas solitariness in a Wilderness was one Trial here 's the company of good Angels nor had he onely their company but also he had them ministring to him Meat and other necessaries till he came out of the Wilderness The word Behold le ts us see that this was no little wonder that the Son of God who was even now exposed to Satans scorns should have not onely one but divers Angels ministring to him The like was in his passion Luke 22. As in Battel when the Enemies are dispoiled and driven away Friends come to congratulate with us so the Devil being overcome the Angels come to rejoyce with Christ As the Angels ministred to Christ after his Combate so do they serve Believers they are all ministring spirits Heb. 1.14 but it 's not to Run-aways but to then who have valiantly stood it out Thus we see Satan's great Temptations 1 Distrust in Adversity 2 Presumptuous undertakings without a Call 3 To seek success in our Calling as Riches Honour c. without and against a Command of God The second part of the Chapter containing Christ's Preaching in Galilee in which observe 1 The time when which was when John was cast into Prison 2 The place where viz. in Galilee 3 The end wherefore Christ preached which was 1 For the fulfilling the Prophesie v. 14. 2 For the enlightening of those in darkness v. 15 16. 4 The subject matter of his Preaching which was the Doctrine of Repentance v. 17. V. 12. Now when Jesus had heard that John was cast into Prison he departed into Galilee We have Christ's Preaching set forth 1 By the time when which was when Jesus heard that John was cast into Prison from that time Christ began to preach v. 17. which was as soon as John Baptist his fore-runner was cast into Prison of this mention is made Acts 10.36 37. The Word which God sent unto the Children of Israel preaching peace by Jesus Christ that Word you know that was published throughout all Judea and began from Galilee after the Baptism which John preached This circumstance of time notes to us that this Jesus was the Lord whom they looked for who sent John as a Messenger to prepare the way of his Gospel which was prophesied by Isai cap. 40.6 and Malachy cap. 4 5 6. Hence the Disciples when they saw Elias come after Christ in the Transfiguration they scrupled saying Why do the Scribes say that Elias must first come Christ tells them that John Baptist was that Elias the fore-runner of Messiah according to those words of his father Zachary Thou Childe shalt be called the Prophet of the Highest for thou shalt go before the face of the Lord to prepare his way namely as the Angel told him in the power and spirit of Elias Luk● 1.17 This John was Christ's fore-runner both in his Birth being born six Moneths before him and in his Preaching and also in his Passion and Suffering Matth. 17.12 Elias is come and they knew him not but have done to him whatsoever they listed even so also shall the Son of man suffer of them Now seeing the coming of Christ is twofold the first in the flesh the second to judg the World whether do not the Prophesies imply that there must be an Harbinger of his second coming as well as of his first for though the Prophesie of Isai 40.6 seems applicable onely to his first coming yet that Mal. 4 5. seems to be applicable to both his commings I will send you Eliah the Prophet before the coming of that great and terrible Day of the Lord and he shall turn or restore the hearts of the fathers to the children that is he shall bring the unbelieving Jews to have the same heart then holy fathers and
progenitor● had that is he should convert them to the faith of Christ their fathers hoped in and looked for lest continuing obstinate to the great and terrible Day of the Lords Judgment they should perish among the rest of his Enemies to understand which the old Prophets Daniel excepted for the most part spake of the coming of Christ without distinguishing his first and second coming and applying those things which respectively concerne the state of either of them Again it appears from Matth. 17.10 the Disciples upon the Transfiguration asked Christ Why say the Scribes that Elias must first come Christ answers Elias truly shall first come and shall restore all things These words being spoken of Christ after John Baptist was beheaded imply plainly that he is to come again besides how can this restoring of all things be verified of the Ministry of John Baptist which continued but a short time and did no such thing as these words seem to imply for the restoring of all things belongs not to the first but to the second coming of Christ Acts 3 19. Repent and be converted for the blotting out of your sins that the times of refreshing may come from the presence of the Lord and that he may send Jesus Christ which before was preached unto you whom the Heavens must receive untill the times of the restitution of all things If the M ster come not to restore all things till then surely his Harbinger who is to prepare his way for restoring all things is not to be looked for till then Whereas Malachy saith Behold I will send you Eliah the Prophet it proves no more that it should be Eliah the This bite in person than when it is said David shall rule over you proves Christ should be David in person It 's like if it be one that comes again it should be John Baptist himself who was the Harbinger of the first coming so that as Christ had two comings so his Harbinger should have 2 We have Christ his Preaching set forth by the place which was Galilee The Word begun from Galilee Acts 10.37 Galilee was part of the Land of Canaan it was divided into two parts the higher and lower the higher was for the most part the Land of Nephtali wherein stood Capernaum the chiefest City of Galilee situate upon the bank of Jordan over against which on the other side stood Chorazin the lower Galilee contained the Tribes of Zebulon and Issachar wherein were the Cities Nazareth and Bethsaida near the Lake or Sea of Galilee and Cana. Also Mount Iabor where he was transfigured In Galilee was Christ's conversation principally when he was upon earth there it was Christ healed the Nobleman's son John 4.46 In Nazareth a City of Galilee he was conceived Luke 1.26 and brought up Matth. 2.23 there he began his Preaching in Capernaum thence it was that his Disciples were Acts 1.11 Ye men of Galilee why stand ye gazing up into Heaven Acts 2.7 When the Holy Ghost was given it 's said Are not all these that speak Galileans Jesus went about all Galilee teaching in their Synagogues and healing all manner of sickness Matth. 4.23 at Cana in Gatilee he turned Water into Wine his Transfiguration was upon Tabor a Mount of Galilee his ordinary residence was in Galilee he came into Judea as it 's thought onely at the Feast times when the whole Nation assembled at Hierusalem during which times partly during his stay there partly in his going and returning he did all in a manner that he did out of Galilee and the last Feast he came thither offered himself a Sacrifice upon the Cross And when he was risen from the Dead he appoints his Disciples to go see him in Galilee Matth. 28.10 Onely his Nativity was at Bethlem upon the occasion of the Taxing his Passion at Hierusalem and his Ascension upon Mount Olivet near to Hierusalem V. 13. And leaving Nazareth he came and dwelt in Capernaum which is upon the Sea coast in the Borders of Zebulon and Nephtali V. 14. That it might be fulfilled which was spoken by Esaias the Prophet saying V. 15. The People which sate in Darkness saw great Light and to them that sate in the Region of the Shadow of Death Light is sprung up We have in this History the beginning of Christ's Ministry set down 1 From the occasion of it which was Christ's hearing that John was cast into Prison 2 From the place of it which was Capernaum a City in the Coasts of Zebulon and Nephtali lying near the Sea 3 The end of his Ministry there which was twofold 1 For the fulfilling of the Prophesie of Esaias mentioned cap. 9.1 2. v. 14 15. 2 For the enlightening of People that sate in darkness v. 16. 4 The sum of his Doctrine which was Repentance v. 17. Repent for the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand Leaving Nazareth John gives the Reason hereof Because a Prophet hath no honour in his own Countrey John 4.44 This was the Town where his Parents dwelt Luke 2.39 wherein he had lived thirty years Luke 4.16 Matth. 2.23 hence called Jesus the Prophet of Nazareth of Galilee Mat. 21 11. the Reason why he could have no honour there was because it was his own Countrey Many Prophets that have their gifts and graces admired in strange places are partly from meanness of Parentage and partly from childish weakness in their childhood acted partly from observation of some Infirmities in them partly from Passions to which the holiest are liable Christ onely excepted and partly from curiosity men being apt to loath Manna because of the commonness of it and partly from wantonness men having itching ears and desiring change apt to be contemned by their own People As it should be the care of a faithfull Teacher to keep up the authority of his Ministry Titus 2.15 so should it be the care of Gods People to honour the Prophets of God and to esteem them that are over them in the Lord 1 Thess 5.12 lest their Ministry become ineffectual for the Message will never be esteemed where the person is vilified Christ was exceeding contemptuous of the glory and praise of men as appears John 7.3 4. but he knew none could receive good by his Ministry that did not esteem reverently of his person which reverence and honour because he could not have it at Nazareth he goes to Capernaum Teachers should have such sanctity of life powerfulness and impartiality in Doctrine sufficiency of maintenance as may keep their persons from contempt and the People of God should count it their happiness to have such as they can reverence for the obtaining such let them spare no pains nor cost He came and dwelt in Capernaum upon the Sea-coast Capernaum did adjoyn to Jerdan where Jordan flowed into the Sea of Tiberias it was by reason of its lying on the Sea the Metropolis of Galilee and the chief Mart town here Christ and his Disciples lived the best part of three years
persons at difference so should we as much as in us lies be at peace with all men Rom. 12.18 The Apostle is full of exhortations herein 1 Cor. 1.10 2 Cor. 13.11 Col. 3.17 We are called to peace God calls to it who then calls to contention save Satan Means to peace 1 Mortifie your lusts James 4.1 Whence come wars come they not of your lusts The sea would be calm were it not for strong windes so would your hearts were it not for your lusts now the sins to be mortified are 1 pride Prov. 13.10 2 tale-bearing Prov. 26.20 21. 3 unrighteousness Prov. 15.27 4 provoking speeches Gal. 5.26 5 immoderate meditation of wrongs we have suffered 6 hatred Prov. 10.12 7 forcing of wrath Prov. 30.33 8 Let every one do his duty in that kinde of life to which God hath called him let him not lift up himself above others nor reprehend the works of others and praise his own as better but let one serve another by love Luth. Tom. 4.167 9 Practice Christian moderation in remitting of your right for peace sake Phil. 4.4 the word is epieikeia which signifies a yielding of our right 2 Study peace 1 Thes 4.11 The Apostle bids the Thessalonians to study to be quiet We study books arts sciences but this is an excellent study Sit down and think this man and I are at ods how should I make up the matter This is the pursuing of peace Psal 34.14 Seek peace and pursue it 3 Practice Christian kindness as giving lending c. One end why God gives us the things of this life is that we may maintain peace with them Every man is a friend to him that giveth gifts Prov. 19.6 Jacob took off a malice of twenty years standing by a gift Gifts are compared to precious stones Prov. 17.8 so that as persons that wear precious stones do oft delight to look upon them so do such persons look upon gifts Also mutual entertainments mutual visitings mutual counsellings and comfortings 4 Where you are damnified put up small wrongs Mat. 17.26 27. though Christ were free from paying tribute yet that he might not offend he bids Peter pay a piece of money for tribute Where you have damnified others give satisfaction for the least wrong Jacob Gen. 31.39 for peace sake gave satisfaction to Laban for that which was torn of beasts or stoln by day and night 5 In case of offence with any man proffer reconciliation both in your speeches and cariages Imitate the Lord who though the person offended yet sought to us 2 Cor. 5.19 As when an house is on fire every man brings water to quench it so let us meet one another in the midst to quench the fire of contention Luke 12.58 Agree with thine adversary whiles thou art in the way with him 6 Beware of stigmatizing one another with nick names take heed lest ye put off the name of Christ from those that have put on Christ Gal 3.28 by calling them Puritans Sectaries Anabaptists If every natural body no less desire its own unity then its being why should not the mystical body in like manner 7 Get the peace of Christ to rule in your hearts Col. 3.17 Creatures of a meek and peaceable nature though you use them never so harshly yet are they peaceable because they have principles of meekness and patience in them whereas creatures of fierce natures as Lions and Wolves though you use them never so gently yet will they be fierce because they have such principles so wicked men have not known the way of peace Rom. 3.17 but godly men usually are of peaceable spirits because the peace of God rules in their hearts Motives to Peace 1 Peace is a blessing that comprehends all blessings under it Psalm 29 1● The Lord will give his people the blessing of peace What is our joy but the peace of our consciences What is our health but the peace of our humours If a man were in heaven and could not have it in peace it would not be comfortable Everlasting peace is part of our joy in Heaven 2 That which is the excellentest life every one desires to live Such is a life of peace not onely in that the most flourishing Commonwealths have lived it but God and Angels that which is the worst life devils and wicked men live such is a lite of contention Hence Christ the Prince of peace lived this life called the Prince of Peace Esai 9.6 gave it for a legacy to his Disciples John 14.27 Esai 11.6 7 8. 3 The universal peace that is among all creatures The heavenly bodies Sun Moon and Stars keep their course the Sea keepeth within the girdle of the Sands and doth not invade the earth the Windes blow not together but successively the contrary qualities in the world heat and cold drought and moisture are so tempered together that like musical discords they make a perfect harmony Woods of trees fields of corn grow without molesting one another creatures not onely of the same kinde but of different kinde feed peaceably one by another If peace be among all bodies let it be much more among the mystical body of Christ Psalm 133.1 How good a thing is it for brethren to dwell together in unity 4 The common enemy should set us at peace I mean the Popish and Prelatical combinations So that the question is not so much what kinde of government we shall have in Protestant Churches but whether we shall have any Protestant Church at all At the Battle of Lepanto when there was great differences and animosities betwixt the three generals Don John and Venereus and the third general yet when the battel came to be fought they united against the Turk and got a mighty victory against his navy the like whereof hath hardly been heard of Phil. 1.20 Jude 3. contend for the common salvation 5 Herein consists the form of charity not in this that we are all of one minde for that is kept for heaven but that we are peaceably affected in our hearts and wish well one to another When Luther had vented some hard speeches against Calvin sayes he though Luther count me a dogge yea a devil yet I 'le count him a famous servant of God 6 The smalness of matters which causes a breach of peace many are as angry for rejecting their opinions as Jonah was for his gourd I know the smallest thing in Religion ought to be made conscience of yet those points without the knowledge whereof many have come to heaven though they may obstruct publick communion yet know I no cause why they should hinder peace and private communion among those that fear God Learn we of the Romish Churches if it be expedient and lawful so to call them among which there are controversies of far more moment viz. of the infallible judge in all points of the Christian faith the Spanish and Italian Churches defend the Pope to be the supreme judge affirming him so to be inspired with
you be reproachfully cast out of cities seeing ye are reproached for Christ He calls cities by the name of camp or tent because many cities begun from tents and the castles in them are called Castra or Tents 1 If those that take up reproaches against holy men shall not rest in heaven Psal 15.3 What shall become of them that raise them Such were there in Ter●ullians time Apol. cap. 7. we are called most wicked from the Sacrament of infant killing and the eating of them and the incest we commit after the banquet that dogs throw down the lights to wit that they may procure a meeting of knaves and whores together by the immodesty of darkness and lusts to whom Tertullian saith finde it out if ye believe it or do not believe that which you have not found out who ever heard any such infant crying who ever unlockt the cruel mouths of these Cyclops and Syrens to the Judg who hath found out some unclean foot-steps in his Wife who when he had found out such wickedness hath concealed them Minucius Faelix in his Octavius The Heathens thought that Christians did devour Infants make incestuous Banquets that they worshipped an Asses head p. 118 for ye killed the Just One and before him his Prophets and now them that place their hope in him and ye despise the Creatour of all things that sent him cursing them in your Synagogues that believe on him for ye have no power to kill them because of them who at present govern Justin Martyr against Triph. p. 181. After ye had killed that Just One by whose stripes was healing to them that go to him by the Father when ye knew he was risen from the dead and ascended into Heaven you were so far from repenting of your evils that you sent choice men from Jerusalem into all the earth saying The Heresie of the Christians was to acknowledg no God scattering those words against us which all that know us not boast of therefore ye are not onely the cause of iniquity to your selves but also altogether to other mortals Justin●bid 2 Revilers do but after their kinde They are called Devils 1 Tim 3.6 2 Tim 3.3 also Dogs Psalm 59.6 now we wonder not at Dogs snarling 3 Look upon Revile●●●● as a just punishment from God though unjust from 〈◊〉 2 Sam 16.10 The Lord hath bid Shi●●● to ●●se David 1 God inflicts them because we do not that good to men we should do 2 Because we make little conscience of sinning against God in secret 3 Because we have so little care of the honour of God 1 Sam 2.30 hence God hath no care of our name 4 Because we have so little care to preserve the good names of others Matth 7.2 4 Such Revilements as are cast upon thee were cast upon Christ and upon the godly For Christ he was called a Drunkard a Glutton Matth 11.19 said to cast out Devils by Beelzebub Matth 12.24 accused as a Blasphemer Matth 26.65 lookt upon as a Mad-man by his Friend Mark 3.21 railed upon Mark 15.29 called a Perverter of the Nations forbidding to give Tribute to Caesar Luke 23.2 that he was a Samaritan and had a Devil John 8.48 Yea Gods people have been so reproached Psalm 44.13 14 16 Thou makest us a reproach a scorn a by word a shaking of the head David was the Song of the Drunkards Psalm 69.11 12 yea he became a Proverb to them Christians were counted Turners of the World upside down Acts 17.6 Paul was counted a pestilent Fellow and a Mover of Sedition and not counted worthy to live Acts 22.24 5 Come we to the second thing the affections Christians ought to have under Revilings Rejoyce and be exceeding glad Obser Christians should be so far from being dejected under wicked Revilings for Christ that they have cause to rejoyce and be glad 1 Because all Revilings add to their Crown even when we are asleep and are not aware of it yea when we know not of it they add to our Crown Luke 6.23 Blessed are you when men shall reproach you and cast out your name as evil rejoyce you in that day and leap for joy for behold your Reward is great in 〈…〉 2 Because such persons so reproached when Christ shall appear in glory shall be glad with exceeding joy 1 Peter 4.13 Rom 8.17 3 Because there 's a Day coming when all Reproaches shall be wiped off Isai 66.5 Your Brethren that hated you that cast you out for my sake said Let the Lord be glorified but he shall appear for your joy James 5.9 4 In all Reproaches you have the Spirit of Glory and of God resting on you 1 Peter 4.14 as if he should say Why do you not rejoyce in your Reproaches you have great cause why the Spirit of Power and of Glory as it 's supposed to be the best Reading that glorious Spirt of God will not forsake but will abide with you yea will rest upon you 5 Either thou art reproached deservedly or undeservedly if deservedly it 's not a Reproach but a Judgment if undeservedly why shouldst thou blush for another mans sin Use For Application learn to rejoyce in all Reproaches and other hardships that shall come upon you for Christ Your Glory in Heaven is not uncertain for Christ then would not bid you rejoyce in it shew your joy herein by your words and gestures and by your chearfull walking James 1.2 Rom 5.2 Acts 5.41 The last is the Ground of this Affection of Joy because they are said to be blessed and because their Reward in Heaven is great Obser The Saints of God are happy under all manner of Revilements for Christ 1 Happy in this Life 1 Because they have the rejoycing of a good Conscience Acts 23.1 2 3 Acts 24.5 6 when there were railing Accusations against him yet his Conscience could witness that he walked uprightly v. 16 2 Sooner or later God will clear their innocency as we see in Joseph's case and in David's upon whom the Courtiers in Saul's Court cast Reproaches yet he died in honour 1 Chron 29 It 's with the name of a Christian as with the Sun which is sometimes hindered from our sight by Clouds and Eclipses but recovering a clear Sky shines the more bright so Reproaches sometimes cloud our names but in a while they are dispelled by the upright walking of Saints Isai 51.7 8 Fear ye not the reproach of men neither be ye affraid of their revilings Why For the Moth shall eat them up like a Garment and the Worm shall eat them as Wood that is all their Reproaches will insensibly by degrees wear away 3 The Revilings and Wrongs done to Gods people God takes them as done to himself 2 Kings 19.16 Hear the words of Sennacherib who hath sent Rabshakeh to blaspheme the living God Also v. 22 23 Whom hast thou reproached and blasphemed even the holy one of Israel yet Rabshakeh's Reproaches were against Gods people Acts 9 Rom 15.3 2 They are happy
sinn'd he should dye 2 Renewed whereby we are angry at our own or other mens sins so Moses Exod. 32.32 he was so angry that he slew three thousand who were actors in the golden Calf Phineas slew Zimri and Cosbi Numb 25.7 8. so we may have a just anger when our own name or state or wife or life is violated 2 There is an unjust anger which is when we have a desire of revenge stirr'd up in us upon unjust causes Jon. 3. Now that thy anger may be just and not sinful consider 1 The properties of holy anger 2 The remedies against sinful anger 1 The properties of holy anger as 1 It must have a just cause Exo. 11.8 Moses went from Pharaoh in a great anger Lot was angry with the Sodomites 2 Pet. 2.7 2 It must be proportioned to the fault We must not bring a club to kill a flye nor set an house on fire to rost an egg Here Jonah fail'd who was so angry for a gourd and the Disciples who for a contempt would have had fire come down from heaven Luk. 9.53 3 With love of those with whom we are angry so Moses pray'd for Israel when he was so angry at their golden Calf Exod. 32.11 4 In matters of importance not for trifles There 's more justice then love in such a carriage 1 Cor. 13.5 6. 5 It must be short the Sun must not go down upon it lest it boyl up into malice Eph. 4.26 and so much the shorter as we see signes of repentance in the person offending Absaloms long retained anger turn'd into malice and in fine to murther 6 It must be moderate Not as Simoon and Levi who slew innocent as well as guilty Gen. 34.25 Some are like cruel hangmen who having a just cause to execute the office to wit the Judges command do in the execution thereof use all cruelty So persons being commanded to be angry with the sins of their brethren seem glad they have got such an occasion to show their fury though too many can swallow the same evil in a friend Remedies against unjust anger 1 Take heed we be not abused by false imaginations as to be angry for a man 's not saluting us when perhaps he never saw us or to think a man bears us no good will when he discovers no ill will against us To think a man loves us not because he comes not so oft to our house when perhaps his business will not permit or because we see a man laugh to think he laughs at us 2 Consider thy own vileness Carry meekly to others for thou wast as bad as they Tit. 3.3 Jam. 3.2 3 Consider Gods patience how many imperfections he patiently bears in us 10000 talents let us bear with pence Matth. 18. ult He is over thee as thou art over others 4 Avoid occasions of anger as contentious companions Prov. 22.24 drunken company Prov. 23.29 too much affecting any thing for when we lose it it will cause much anger As we keep gunpowder and tow far from fire let us avoid occasions of anger 5 Consider nothing befals thee but by the providence of God This kept David from anger when Shimei curst 2 Sam. 16. and Job c. 1.22 he raged not against the devil nor the Sabeans but lookt at God and quieted his heart and though you have not deserved it at their hands yet have you deserved much more at Gods hand Gen. 50.20 21. it was not ye but God sent me hither 6 Behold anger in another how odious it is Should a man see himself in a looking-glass when he is in a Bedlam fit how ugly would he look to himself 7 It makes us unfit to duties as to prayer 1 Tim. 2.8 Lift up holy hands without wrath to hearing receive with meekness the ingrafted word Jam. 1.21 to receiving 1 Cor. 11.17 18. to Church-communion 1 Cor. 1.10 to mutual edifying hence Paul and Barnabas parted companies Acts 15. 8 Angry men take that which is proper to God which is vengeance Rom. 12.19 Vengeance is mine and not thine An angry man makes himself to be Judge and would have God to be his Executioner 9 Interpose reason and deliberation without this the soul is like a ship without Compass or Pilot let reason teach thee not to be hasty in thy answers Theodosius was taught by Ambrose to take thirty days respit before he punisht any offence because in that space his anger might be asswaged and his judgement rectified It 's as absurd for passions to lord over reason as for an intemperate scold to justle out a reverend Judge It 's not comely to be angry for it is a kinde of madness but if it shall seize upon us let us so use it that it be for the correction and amendment of our neighbour he that uses it besides reason hates himself and his neighbour by troubling himself and grieving his neighbour Justin ad Zen. Seren. p. 395. 10 Consider the loveliness of a meek spirit both with God and man 1 Pet. 3.4 it 's an ornament of great price It 's the sinews of all delightfull societie and drawes like a Loadstone the iron the spirits of men to it 11 The scandal Every blinde man can see the evil of a waspish cholerick spirit this made Jacob and his sons to stink Gen. 34. ult 12 Get out of the company of those who have offended us as Jonathan did 1 Sam. 20.34 besides thou shalt hereby cover thy sin which moves thy adversary to scorn and laughter and thy friends to sorrow and pity Also hereby shalt thou appease thy anger by removing the object Prov. 12.16 13 Suffer not anger to lodg with you We cannot sometimes keep it from entering but from lodging Eccles 7.9 anger rests what in a wise mans heart no in the besome of fools though we be sometimes touchy let us not be heavily disposed as Absalom 2 Sam. 13.23 Let anger be like a fire of thorns quickly extinct A spark or coal of fire if it light on us it will not hurt us if it be presently shook off but if it lye still it causeth burning so will our anger if we let it alone we give place to the devil who will boil it into malice by amplifying the indignity done to us and the unworthiness of the person Usually the devil chuses an angry passionate heart to act his designes as we see in Saul and Cain Anger is a young twig envy is a tree and a great beam Luth. 14 Look on the bad effects in nature it casts into a fever dries up radical moisture hastens consumptions It makes the minde drunk In passion reason that should govern us is like a key to a lock that is jumbled it makes men to be angry with the bruits as Balaam with his Ass Num. 24.10 to throw things out of their hand which after they are forced to take up 15 Suppress anger in thine heart though it do not boil out many are like rivers which are most
he knowes our intentions for good when they are good Luke 21.2 V. 5. And when thou prayest thou shalt not be as the hypocrites are for they love to pray standing in the Synagogues and in the corners of the streets that they may be seen of men Verily I say unto you they have their reward Christ next unto a right direction in alms comes to give a right direction in prayer in which 1 He sets down the sins to be avoided 2 The manner of right performance The sins to be avoided are 1 Hypocrisie v. 5. 2 Vain glory v. 5. They love to pray standing that many eys may be on them 3 Vain repetitions v. 7. 2 The manner of right performance which must be 1 With confidence Pray to thy father 2 With secrecy Pray to thy father in secret v. 6. 3 Grounds hereof 1 Your father who sees in secret will reward openly 2 It 's a heathenish practise to use vain repetitions v. 7. 3 The knowledge God hath of your wants and his readiness to supply you v. 8. And when thou prayest thou shalt not be as the hypocrites are That is as the hypocritical Scribes and Pharisees For they love to pray standing in the Synagogues Q. Whether is it not lawfull to pray standing A. Yes Mark 11.25 When ye stand praying forgive The Pharisee and the Publican stood both when they prayed Luke 18 11 13. The Levites stood and cried with a loud voice unto the Lord Neh. 9.4 Abraham stood praying Gen. ●8 22 Moses and Samuel Jer. 15.1 and Job cap. 30.20 And sometimes and more frequently kneeling was used Solomon 1 Kings 8.54 arose from before the altar of the Lord from kneeling upon his knees Daniel kneeled upon his knees three times a day Dan. 6.10 Every knee shall bow to me Esai 45 23. I have left unto me 7000 that have not bowed the knee to Baal 1 Kings 19.18 Wherewith shall I bow my knee before the most high God Mic. 6.6 Let us bow down and kneel before the Lord our Maker Ps 95.6 To stand in prayer is not unlawfull but to stand that thou mayest be seen is unlawfull In the new Testament we read that Christ kneeled down and prayed Luke 22.41 Peter kneeled down when he prayed for Tabitha Acts 9.40 Paul kneeled down and prayed with them all who had brought him on his way Acts 20.36 Also Paul bowed his knees to the father of our Lord Jesus Christ Eph. 3.14 Stephen kneeled down in his last prayer Acts 7.60 Also Paul and his company kneeled down on the shore and prayed Acts 21.5 In prayer that gesture is to be used that doth most quicken and help to the duty The ancient Christians were wont to kneel in remembrance of the fall of Adam and of all his posterity and sometimes to pray standing in remembrance of the grace of Christ whereby we have risen from our fall Kneeling on the six days was a badge of our fall by sin but that we do not kneel on the Lords day is a signe of Resurrection From the times of the Apostles this custome came in as Irenaeus mentions Lib. de Pasch Quest Respons ad Orthodox q. 115. ascribed to Justin Aug. Epist 119.115 2 Q. Whether was it not lawfull to pray in the Synagogues A. Yes David saith Bless ye God in the Congregations Psal 68.26 For by Synagogues he means publick prayer which was used Matth. 18.20 Acts 1.14 practised by the hundred and twenty also Acts 4.24 Acts 12.5 where the Church were praying for Peter Grounds of publick prayer 1 There God is wont to communicate his presence Psal 26.8.65.4.52.8.76.1 2.132.13 14.133.3 2 The concurrent prayers of Gods people is wont to be more strong as many hands lifting at a burthen lift the burthen though great many flames of fire united in one are not easily quenched many springs of water conjoyned make the stream the stronger if the prayers of one Moses were so strong to keep God from destroying Israel Exod. 32.10.11 Psal 106.23 what will the prayers of many do Acts 12.5 as we see in Peters case who was delivered by the prayers of the Church 3 In that there are publick Officers chosen of Churches to present their requests before the Lord hence as those that are sollicitours for a Corporation had need to know the wants thereof so should the Officers of Churches in special be acquainted with the brethrens wants 4 Because publick occasions require it both in Church as the seeking some special mercy from God which concerns the whole Church as Peters deliverance Acts 1.5 12. the whole Church sometimes wants a mercy Matth. 18.20 the whole Church sometimes wants to have a judgement turn'd away Acts 4.24 also in the Commonwealth for to pray for the happiness of the Magistracy 1 Tim. 2.1 I exhort that supplications prayers be made for all men for Kings and all that are in authority By the blessing of whose prayers and examples is a City exalted Prov. 11.11 5 It 's for the honour and glory of God to have so many petitioners waiting on him for his royal assent a joynt cry of one and the same spirit from so many breathings of his people 〈…〉 prayer is as it were a publick hue and cry made our by an embodied Church against the common enemies of Je●●s Christ of their souls Praise waits for him in Sion Psal 68. ● 6 In publick prayer there is as it were the conjunctions of the spirits and graces of a body of Christ as it were in one Hence the whole Church Acts ● 42 as they continued in breaking bread together so did they in prayer and were as it were of one accord These all continued in one accord with prayer and supplication Acts 1.14 Acts 4.24 the Church lift up their voices with one accord the breathings of the spirit which were scattered in many are as it were united in one and as the waters of several channels disburthen themselves sometimes in one current so that where his name is thus recorded he is wont to come and blesse his people Exod. 20.24 In all places where I record my name I will come unto thee and I will bless thee Seeing then there are such conjunctions of spirits he that is the mouth ought to be carefull to present onely such requests wherein all Christians do agree and the body that are worshippers and all the worshippers are to come together like so many Doves to their windowes Esai 60.8 even the Prince himself not excepted Ezek. 46.10 that they may serve the Lord with one consent or shoulder Zeph. 3.9 the usual careless neglect whereof if it do not speak forth prophaneness yet doth it speak forth a spirit of lukewarmness 7 In publick prayer there 's a provocation of one another by godly examples In the corners of the streets That is where they might be beheld of the inhabitants of two or three or four streets at once whereas there is in sincere prayer 1 A proposing of the eye
must be honoured with puritie therefore they wrote upon the doors of their Temples Let none having a guilty conscience enter this place A bad conscience can never hope well Obj. But do not we finde wicked men in Scripture have had their praiers heard A. Yes when they have sought for temporal things Jehoahaz the son of Jehu was a wicked man 2 Kin. 13.2 yet when the nation of Israel was delivered into the hands of the Syrians Jehoahaz besought the Lord and the Lord hearkened unto him for he saw the oppression of Israel and the Lord gave Israel a Saviour v. 4 5. So Ahab seeking obtained the removing of the judgement until his sons daies 1 Kin. 21.27 28 29. So when men of all sorts are in danger by storms at sea they cry to the Lord in their trouble and he delivereth them out of their distress Psal 107.28 So prisoners that lie in irons v. 13. and sick men that draw near to death v. 18 19. If thou afflict a widow or fatherless person whether godly or ungodly I will surely hear their cry Exod. 22.22 23. Ishmael was a wicked person a persecutor yet God heard the voice of the Lad Gen. 21.17 Uzziah sought God in the daies of Zachariah and as long as he sought the Lord God made him to prosper 2 Chro. 26.5 yet was he wicked as we see 2 Chron. 25.2 compared with 2 Chron. 26.4 Besides God bestowes praying abilities upon unregenerate men therefore they may improve them the not calling upon God is charged upon wicked men as their sin therefore the performance of it is their dutie The Prophet proves the Jews to be under sin because there 's none seeks after God Psal 14.2 Also Psal 53.4 wicked men are branded that they call not upon God Psal 10.4 they are taxed for this both Pastours Jer. 10.21 and people Hos 7.7 Zeph. 1.6 and all flesh are said to come to God in prayer O thou that hearest prayer unto thee shall all flesh come Psal 65.2 An unbeliever may be underpreparing grace though he be not yet come to saving faith and in this estate he may have many good desires which God may hear To reconcile these to the former speeches know that God hears wicked men in temporal things which indeed oft is onely the cry of their cause not of their person as he is said to hear the cry of the ravens Psal 147.9 so the young Lions are said to seek their meat from God Psal 104.21 Quest But what would you have us to do with our children and servants Answ You may bid them call upon God in the general and if you speak to them to call upon God for saving grace as pardon c you must speak to them as Peter to Simon Magus Repent of this thy wickednesse and pray God if perhaps the thoughts of thy heart may be forgiven thee Act. 8.21 First he bids him repent then pray God Quest But what should we do for joyning in prayer with others Answ If the person with whom you are to eat and who is to give thanks be visibly wicked either forbear his table or declare that you desire liberty of conscience without which grant you cannot partake of his meat which doubtless was practised by the believers when they went to the unbelievers table 1 Cor. 10.27 we must not wound our consciences for good chear nor to gratifie a friend but where no such wickedness doth apppear my opinion is that charity must carry us to judge the best yet must we remember that this is onely a privative signe Positive signes of a good man being either Church Communion or some thing that is equivalent if you will follow conscience herein I know you must be content to lose some fat morsells 4 We must pray in saith 〈◊〉 faith in prayer ought to be certain of hearing but we must wait for the time when the place where the manner how and the person by whom God will work Now to pray in faith there is command Matth. 21.22 1 Faith in God How shall they call on him in whom they have not believed Rom. 10.14 And this God to be lookt on as a father Matth. 6.9 Heb. 11.6 2 Faith in the attributes of God as his omnipresence that he is every where Esa 6.31 in his omniscience that he knows all our wants and all our hearts hear thou in heaven and give to every man according to his wayes whose heart thou knowest 1 King 8.39 in his omnipotence thus Jeremy grounds his prayer thou hast made heaven and earth and there 's nothing too hard for thee Jer. 32.17.4 in his mercy Nehem. 1.4 5. in his all-sufficiency Of the object in prayer James speaks as I suppose Jam. 1.6 7. let him ask in faith nothing wavering for he that wavereth is like a wave of the sea driven with the wind and tossed let not that man think he shall receive any thing of the Lord. James speaks not of a partial or particular unbelief in the subject but of an universal and total unbelief in respect of the object 3 There must be faith to set before us the worthiness of the Mediator Heb. 4.15 16. and not barely his worthiness but also our union with him Joh. 15.7 8. If ye abide in me ye shall ask what you will and it shall be done unto you 4 Faith grounded on the promises Psal 119.49 50 147. remember thy word unto thy servant upon which thou hast caused me to trust To pray in faith is to go as far as the promise goes to believe that God is a father and being a father he will not keep any good thing from his child A beggar never goes from an house keepers door so long as he believes he shall have an alms no more doth a believing soul go from the throne of grace so long as he believes God will hear but if he leave off the words of prayer he doth not leave off the sute of prayer Had we a particular promise as Eliah had we were bound to believe in particular as Eliah did concerning the not raining for three years and six months And as faith looks on other promises so in particular such promises as concerns the souls present condition so Jacob Gen. 32.9 10 11 12. Thou saidest return into thy country and I will deal well with thee and thou saidest I will surely do thee good and make thy seed as the sand of the sea deliver me from the hand of my brother Esau There is scarce any case but the Scripture affords promises which speak to that very case had we wisdom to store them up as David did Psal 119. also Heb. 13.5 5 Faith grounded on former Experiments Thou art my trust from my youth leave me not in old age Psalm 71.5 9. When we thus pray in faith we have a bold access into the presence of God notwithstanding all our unworthiness and imperfections in prayer Ephes 3.12 5 Pray with fixedness of spirit When David's
thy words were heard yet Daniel knew not of it else would he not have further supplicated but have given thanks for it Sometimes through heedlesness and negligence persons look not after their Prayers Sometimes anguish of heart makes persons not perceive it Job 9.16 If I had called and he had answered me yet would I not believe that he had hearkened to my voice 2 Look upon it as a great affliction to cry and not be heard Lam. 3.44 3 God takes notice of the Prayers of his people Acts 9.11 Behold he prayeth yea delights in them as men do in the smell of sweet Odours and Incense Psalm 141.2 Revel 5.8 and if not yet answered wait for sooner or later they shall be answered They shall not be ashamed who wait for God Isai 49.23 9 Pray with watchfulness Col. 4.2 Continue in Prayer and watch Watch and pray Matth. 26.41 Take heed watch and pray Mark 13.33 Be sober and watch unto Prayer 1 Peter 4.7 Watch therefore and pray always that ye may be counted worthy to escape all these things Luke 21.36 There are two sorts of Watchings 1 Proper 2 Metaphorical 1 Proper this was practised 1 Under the Old Testament when holy men being compassed about with many cares distractions and business could not sometimes finde fit access to God on the day time hence were forced to take part of the night caeteris paribus the thing is lawfull now if a Christian unavoidably hindered on the day time do take part of the night for Prayer thus David Psalm 22.2 I cry unto thee in the night season and am not silent Psalm 6.6 All the night make I my bed to swim Psalm 119. At midnight I will rise to give thanks unto thee Or if a soul not content with Prayer in the day time shall have an impulse to pray in the night thus Christ Matth. 26.38 Tarry ye here and watch with me saith Christ So the godly Levites Psalm 134.1 2 Under the New Testament there were night-watchings the Christians in the Apostles times were compelled when they would either hear the Word publickly or pray to meet in the night Acts 12.12 Peter in the night came to the house of Mary where many were gathered together praying Acts 20 7. John 20.19 Now they met in the night because of the Pagans among whom they lived to avoid their fury Afterwards when Emperours became Christians whether for solemnity custome or devotion sake I know not Christians still retained the custome of wakings and these Wakes they kept when a solemn Feast or Holy-day came on which Wake they spent in Prayer and in the Word that so they might be more fitted to partake of the Supper of the Lord hence Tertullian lib. 2. to his Wife brings a Reason why Christian women should not mary heathen Husbands even from these Wakes for saith he Quis Ethnicus nocturnis convocationibus c. What Heathen would willingly endure his Wife to be from his side at these night assemblies What man would endure without trouble that his Wife should go abroad in the night at the Solemnities of Easter wherein it 's like they had divers Wakes From this custome have the popish Wakes continued in the Nations to this day but quite altered from their primitive institution being now onely kept as Festivals for the most horrid drunkenness dancings and licentiousness 2 There is a metaphorical watchfulness This is 1 Against drowsiness that we do not come before the Lord with sleepy Prayers Thus Peter James and John fell asleep even as Christ was at Prayer Matth. 26.40 They had a willingness to have watched with Christ but drowsisiness seized on them through fleshly weakness v. 41. See also v. 43. A sleepy spirit scarce speaks sense to God in Prayer How do you think that God should hear drowsie Prayers which your selves do not hear Will Gods ears be delighted with non-sense Shouldest thou offer such blinde halt services to the Prince would he accept them Mal. 1.13 It 's a shame to speak what many men do in secret which they have confessed after conversion yea and it were well if Christians were not guilty herein If it so fall out with thee that thou goest late to Prayer and thine eys and spirit prove drowsie be humbled and be short lest thy whole Prayer be a taking of Gods Name in vain Make the Lord amends some other time when thy heart is in a better temper Let us be like Musicians that first tune their Instruments and then play Or like Mariners who having a good Gale of Winde set up all Sails Psalm 57.7 2 Watchfulness against distractions I have before showen the causes of them under another Head onely I le add that a worldly frame of spirit is a great cause of them for when the heart comes immediately out of the World from pleasures and worldly business no wonder if the soul be full of wandering thoughts in duty Also disorderly affections of fear joy desire grief anger vain hopes will be ready to interpose in Prayer Besides a spirit of slothfulness when we do not press our hearts to the Prayer in hand will open a door for distractions besides abundance of vain impressions upon the imagination with the absence of holy impressions there help forward distraction Besides many remaining lusts draw away and entice the soul Remedies against these Distractions 1 Be humbled for them and desire God to cleanse thee Psalm 19.12 2 Keep thy heart with diligence Prov. 4.23 3 Practise preparation of heart that thou mayst not come rushing into the presence of God Job 11.13 4 Remember the greatness of that majesty before whom thou presents thy self The Angels cover their faces before him Psalm 6.2 The Mountains quake at him and the Earth is burnt at his presence Nah. 1.5 5 Keep thine eye from gazing How many distractions come through the eye That the Prophet might keep his heart close in the duty he desires the Lord to turn away his eys from beholding vanity Psalm 119. ●7 The eys and ears are as the gates of the City keep them well that the Enemy enter not 6 Trim thy soul There 's a twofold preparation 1 Habitual thus the wise Virgins had Oyl in their Lamps hence get a Principle of Grace in thine heart from this holy motions arise in thy soul 2 Actual as the wise Virgins had not onely Oyl in their Lamps but also trimm'd them so must thou do act every grace faith love joy fear grief upon a right object 7 Get an heavenly frame of heart Psalm 45.1 My heart boileth up good matter Eructat Hence the tongue is as the Pen of a ready Writer which scantly makes a dash Where the heart is heavenly the heart will be heaving uptowards Heaven such hearts converse in Heaven and dwell there Phil. ● 20 Revel 13.6 8 Bring a feeling of thy wants the more thou feel'st them the more fixedly thou wilt look unto God for supply God will not have the Prayer
of a sinner that feels not his sins because he doth not understand nor will the thing that he prays for Luth. Tom. 4.380 9 Fear repulse for thy careless cold and slothfull calling upon God and this will quicken up thy attention in the duty Fear is a very wakefull affection as being conversant about danger hence in our service we are bid to bring fear Psalm 2.11 Psalm 5.7 10 Get love to God this makes the soul follow hard after God Psalm 63.8 Quest Whether do distractions in Prayer nullifie the acceptation of it Answ There are two sorts of distracted Petitioners 1 Unregenerate men who voluntarily usually and contentedly admit roving thoughts in duty Prov 5.14 I was almost in all evil in the midst of the congregation and assembly Ezek. 33.31 These despise their ways and shall die Prov. 19.16 2 Regenerate men who groan under these distractions Rom. 7.15 16. these do not nullifie the fruit of Prayer to them regenerate men herein make usually resistance it matters not whence they come whether from Satan or corruption as it is a thing very difficult if possible to distinguish them provided we resist them and mourn under them they are not imputed to us Yet may even Saints sometimes pray so carelesly drowsily and distractedly that they may lose the comfort of this or that particular Prayer as when the distraction arises from sloth and carelesness But if the distraction arise from Satan bodily distemper or pain God is very pitifull in this case as a father to his childe Psalm 103.14 Quest Whether may not the Devil and corruption distract the soul in Prayer sometimes with unseasonable good motions I mean such motions as are for the matter good but not good at that time Answ Yes we see it in that Pithonesse Act. 16.16 17 when Paul and his company were going to prayer she cries out these men are the servants of the most high God which shew unto us the way of salvation this was a good motion but injected by Satan that his lyes might be believed and the Saints disturbed in prayer Zach. 3.1 Satan by these motions intends diversion or turning away the soul from what the soul is upon but motions that tend to further intention in the duty attentness and further inlargement are of God The spirit moves not to draw us out of the way but to put us into it and being in it to move us to keep on Rom. 8.14 15. Esa 30.21 These motions of Satan are like misplaced words and letters in a Printers press which spoil the sence 10 Let thy prayer be full prayer is a powring forth of the heart before God Psal 62.8 1 Sam. 1.15 yea we are to powr them out as water before the face of the Lord Lam. 2.19 It may be thou powrest out thy prayer like tarre out of a tarre box half sticking by the sides but when thou prayes thou must powr out all before God provided there be time and no hindrance powr out all thy wants be humbled for all thy evils when thou givest thanks remember all Gods benefits Psal 10● 2 Many men make quick dispatch because they are eager to be about their business hence they gallop over their prayers but thy prayer must have its full growth that is when convenient time affords we must powr out supplications confessing our sins petitions desiring pardon healing and new dispositions of heart intercessions to turn away judgements from others and thanksgiving for benefits on our selves and others 1 Tim. 2.1 11 Pray with frequency It s bad when the soul contents it self with seldome approaches to God If David Psal 55.17 and Daniel cap 6.10 could finde time to pray three times a day what shame for us who come so seldom before the Lord sometimes David praised God seven times a day Psal 119.164 Anna continued in prayer night and day Luk. 2.37 12 With assurance of obtaining whatsoever things ye desire when you pray believe that you receive them and ye shall have them Mark 11.24 Matth. 7.7 ask and ye shall have Matth. 21.22 Doubt not of your prayer but know when the word is gone out of your mouth your prayer is writ in the eyes of God so that that shall be done which is desired or its expedient not to be done The Lord is like a most bountiful king that signes all petitions with a fiat quod petitur Oratio sinelaude dei est thuribulum sine prunis Luth. Tom. 4.124 let that be done which is desired 13 Joyn praise with prayer Phil. 4.6 In every thing by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your request be made known unto God Prayers are the seeds of prayses when we have sown we may look to reap what we receive as a a fruit of our prayer is more sweet then what we receive of common providence Praise is that imployment we shall have in heaven when prayer shall be no more mean time joyn we them together whiles we are here on earth and so much more in that we have but a drop of affliction and a sea of benefits 14 Break through all hindrances and use all furtherances as 1 hindrance is multitudes of business what business so great almost but should give way to this 2 Brokenness in expressions why God hears sighs 3 Dumbness and barrenness if this come from unacquaintance with God be humbled for thy coldness and by stirring thou mayest get warmth if dumbness come from overwhelming temptations it 's no otherwise with thee then it was with Asaph Psal 77.3 4. Green wood with long blowing will be made dry and take fire so motion in prayer fits for the duty 4 Our own unworthiness Who acknowledged his own unworthiness more then Daniel Dan. 9.7 8. However thou art unworthy yet must thou pray for God hears thee not for thy own worth but of his meer mercy 5 Prayer will take up much of our time to this I say remember the comfort that will redound to the conscience in time so spent We think not long of the time spent in the refreshment of our bodies why should we think long in the time spent in refreshing of our souls of four and twenty hours can we not afford God one or two who took more time in prayer then David and Daniel and who did prosper better Time spent in this brings a blessing on our affairs 6 That many do well enough that never pray as those do that use to pray to this know they onely receive temporal things as the shining of the sun and the falling of rain Matth. 5.44 45. But the Saints receive the Spirit in prayer Luk. 11.13 Neither can prayerless men be sure to have earthly things when they want them nor to hold them when they have them Job 21.15 16. What profit is there that we should pray unto him seeing we have earthly things ver 16. Lo their good is not in their hand 7 Because the soul hath lately been in passion of anger
to this I say lay aside passion and then come 1 Tim. 2.8 Lift up holy hands without wrath pray for the party with whom lately thou hast been angry and that is a sign thou comes with a new disposition 8 Take heed of Satans temptations who will be ready to propose businesses then to hinder thee 2 Use furtherances for prayer as 1 when the spirit bespeaks prayer and puts the soul into a frame to long to be alone to vent it self to God when the wind and tide serves its good then to hoyse up sails Psal 27.8 Seek my face thy face will I seek 2 The second furtherance is when the soul is in tribulation Tribulation sets an edge on prayer hence Psal 50.15 we are bid to call on God in the time of trouble no better master to teach a man to pray next to the spirit then necessity In trouble the grace of prayer is much revived Esa 26.17 Lord in trouble they have visited thee they powred out a prayer when thy chastning was upon them Look upon Passengers in a storm and arrived at the haven look upon persons in prison and at banquets compare persons on beds of sickness and the same persons in strength of health and abounding with outward comforts in the one estate they are full of contempt of God and security in the other prone to cry earnestly for mercy Hezekiah when Sennacherib came against him very much given to prayer when he was delivered from his enemy ready to be lifted up David in adversity gave himself to prayer Psal 109.4 in prosperity falls to number the people 3 A third furtherance is calmeness of spirit when the spirit is neither in a hurry of passion nor a hurry of business for unfinished business is apt to run in the mind and to disturb at that time the soul having so many bussings in its ear can neither hear it self speaking to God nor hear God speaking to the soul 4 In Gods approaching to our soul Lam. 3.57 Thou drewest near in the day that I cryed unto thee thou saidest fear not Esa 55.6 call upon him while he is near Noble Princes in their progress are wont to grant petitioners their sutes its wisdom then to petition the Lord when near to us Psal 145.18 one time or other God's near to every holy heart therefore then call on him Psal 34.18 Quicken us and we will call upon thy name Psa 80.18 5 When promises are near fulfilling Psa 102.13 Thou shalt arise and have mercy upon Sion for the time to favour her yea the set time is come meaning of seventy years This is some good hope that Christs coming is near because the Saints are stirred up so generally to pray for it The reading of Jeremies prophecy Jer. 29.10 that God would visit his people after seventy years put Daniel upon praying for the accomplishment thereof Dan. 9.2 3 4. Object I would thus pray but I finde I am so straitened that I cannot pray Answ It is so with the best of Saints sometimes that their souls are bound up they are like poor Infants that feel pain but cannot tell where their pain lies hence Psal 51.15 Lord open thou my Lips By grieving the spirit we become straitened for when the spirit is withdrawn we are like Mills that want Winde or Water and cannot grinde In such times it is persons are backward to stir up their souls to take hold of God Isai 64.7 To help us against straitnings 1 Use holy motion Motion is the cause of heat motion brings a benummed member to feeling let us make essays even when deadness is upon us yea when most straitened a gracious heart is to stir up it self 2 Tim. 1.6 Stir up the gift of God which is in thee Exod. 35.21 They came every one whose heart stirred him up and every one whom his spirit made willing to bring the Lords offering 2 Complain of thy straitness say Lord I am in Prison and cannot come forth I would willingly display all my wants to thee but cannot weep over my unbelief but am not able Why withdrawest thou thy self Why art thou so far from helping me and from the words of my roaring Psal 22.1 2 Isai 63 17. 3 Beg enlargement of God Psalm 119.32 I will run in the way of this Commandment as well as other but when when thou shalt enlarge mine heart Isai 35.6 The tongue of the dumb shall sing when waters break forth in the wilderness 4 Take heed thou straiten not thy self neither for time nor place For time persons often causlesly put themselves into the compass of so little time that they cannot enlarge persons frequently inuring themselves to straitning in the end begin to like it well enough So for straitness of place they do not use their voices because they cannot use them without being heard of others let it be your wisdom to chuse such a place wherein you may not be straitned as to your voice or otherwise 5 Consider what a dangerous thing it is to 〈◊〉 taken with a Palsey in the tongue that a man cannot tell where his pain lies All Imprisonment is comfortless but this the worst in other Imprisonment we may perhaps have much access to God but not in this many men have enlargements of all sorts of blessings upon them as Liberty Estate c. onely as it was said of the Corinthians 2 Cor. 6.12 They are straitened in their own bowels for Prayer and Praise and yet little lay it to their hearts Such kinde of straitnings when they are long they are dangerous for persons that have lain long under straitnings are ready to lay aside endeavours for their liberty because they have often used it to no effect 6 Usually reade the word before thy closet prayer and meditate of it in the use whereof the fire kindles besides those good things which thou diddest reade out of the Word will remain in thy thoughts and conduce to season thine heart 7 Walk humbly under straitnings especially when they are of any long continuance so the Church Song cap. 5. v. 5 6. I sought him but I could not finde him I called unto him but he gave me no answer Job 30.20 Job cries out I cry unto thee but thou dost not hear me I stand up but thou regardest me not Quest But seeing Saints are sometimes straitned in Prayer as well as carnal men wherein is the difference Answ Godly persons though sometimes they have straitnings yet have they also enlargements now and then Lam. 3.44 compared with v. 57. One while the Church saith The Lord compassed himself with a cloud that her Prayer could not pass through anon she saith Thou drewest near in the day that I cried unto thee thou saidst Fear not Psalm 31.22 I said I am cast out of thy sight here was the Prophets straitning nevertheless thou heardest the voice of my supplications here was his enlargement see Psalm 6.1 compared with v. 8. Jon. 2.7 Carnal men they may
1 Peter 2.5 And Angels are called holy Mark 8.38 but there is none holy as the Lord 1 Sam. 2.2 Saints and Angels are holy with a derivative holiness but in God it is essential Holiness in the creature is a quality in God it is his being and nature in the creature it 's finite and in such a measure in God it 's infinite and without measure Being then so infinitely and essentially holy let us sanctifie his Name by 1 Acknowledging him to be the true God Psal 103.1 The gods of the Heathen were impure Lechers 2 By being abased when thou comest into his presence after Jobs eye had seen God he abhorred himself in dust and ashes Job 42.5.6 Peter out of the apprehension of that great vileness in himself and holiness in Christ saith Depart from me for I am a sinfull man O Lord Luke 5.8 3 By extolling and praising this holiness in God Glorious in holiness and fearfull in praises are joyned together Exod. 15.11 Psalm 30.4 Give thanks at the remembrance of his holiness Without Gods holiness what were his wisdom but subtilty his will but wilfulness his power but oppression his love but dotage his justice but terrour but his Holiness declares the perfection of all his Attributes 4 By removing all causality of sin from God he can no more be a cause of sin than the Sun of darkness Shall not the Judg of all the World do right Gen. 18.25 God may will the being of sin but man the nature of it as in a Chain that breaks none is in fault but that which breaks so in the concurrent causes of sio none is to be faulted but the immediate cause the will of man God withdrawing his restraint which he is not bound to give corruption boils out and the creature sins necessarily but voluntarily He that drives a lame Horse is the cause of his going not of his halting God is the cause of the actions of the sinner for in him we live and move Acts 17.28 but not of the corrupt turning of the will 5 By avoiding all prophanation of his holy name When a man and his father went in to the same maid they prophaned Gods holy name among the heathen Amos 2.7 so the Babylonians seeing the unholy lives of the Jews cryed These are the people of the Lord and so Gods holy name was prophaned Ezek. 36.20 A small impeachment to the name of a Prince stirrs him up to arms and will not the Prince of Princes be jealous for his holy name See Ezek. 36 2● Ezek. 39.25 Give unto the Lord the glory due unto his name Psal 96.8 6 By imitating God in holiness be ye holy for I am holy 1 Pet. 1.16 as a little white is like a great white differing onely in degrees so let our holiness be like Gods Are we not Gods temples wherein his spirit dwells and were not temples severed from common uses Was Belshazzar so punished for abusing a material temple and shalt thou escape if thou prophanes a spiritual temple The lives and families of too many proves that they live the lives of heathens under the name of Christians some cry out as Corah Are not all the Lords people holy Numb 16.3 others think there 's none holy but glorified Saints but there is a people who are called to holiness and who so walk making holiness their Element wherein they live as the birds in the aire and fishes in the water Hereunto were we elected that we should be holy 2 Thess 2.13 we cannot climbe up into heaven to behold our election yet may we read it in our sanctification Without holiness we cannot prove our justification seeing the water and spirit witness with us as well as the blood 1 Joh. 5.8 Ere long heaven and earth will be on fire holiness at that time will be like pure gold which will not be consumed by the fire 2 Pet. 3.11 3 Gods Name is his Attributes which name God proclaimed Exod. 33.19 compared with cap. 34 6. I will proclaim my name before thee and the Lord passed by and proclaimed the Lord merciful gracious c. the name of God is every thing which is truly affirmed of him Thou shalt fear this glorious and fearful name the Lord thy God Deut. 28.58 to derogate from any attribute of God as to tax his justice to limit his power to question his faithfulness to ascribe that to fortune which is due to providence is a prophaning of the name of God 4 Gods Name is his ordinances Mal. 10.14 as the word Psal 138.4 Prayer Act. 9.14 The supper 1 Cor. 11.29 There ought to be a discerning of the Lords body so baptisme Matth. 28.19 Baptizing them into the name of Father Son and Spirit onely God magnifies his word above all his name Psal 138.4 5 Gods Name is taken for the honour of God and credit of Religion Rom. 2. ●4 My Name is blasphemed every day through you that is you Jews who profess my name and live loosly Ezek. 36. ●0 the loose Jews in Babylon prophaned Gods name when the heathens reported These are the people of the Lord Esa 52.5 Hallowed be thy name To hallow is taken 1 for the making of a person or thing that was unholy to become holy 1 Cor. 6.10 thus we cannnot hallow Gods name 2 For the declaration or for an appearing to be holy so God will have his name appear to the whole world that he is an holy God not onely by a reverend speaking of his essence and Attributes avoiding all swearing cursing c. but also by a holy conversation Thus we are to sanctifie God in our hearts 1 Pet. 3.15 and in our lives 1 Pet. 1.16 Be ye holy for I am holy We by our holiness should show forth the glory of Gods holiness that if there be so much holiness in poor Saints how much is there in God 3 For the publishing of a thing to be holy so we are to publish the name of God to be holy Ps 105.3.111 9. Holy and reverend is his name Psal 30.4 4 For the manifestation of Gods holiness in a way of judgement when sinners will not show forth his holiness in a way of practice so when God destroyed Nadab and Abihu he saith I will be sanctified in them that come nigh unto me Levit. 10.3 so God was sanctified in the destruction of Zidon Ezek. 28.22 so God will be sanctified of God in the eyes of the heathen Ezek. 38.16 23. Thy kingdome come There 's a twofold kingdome 1 of grace 2 of glory 1 Of grace this kingdom we desire may come 1 By casting down the kingdome of Satan in us 2 Cor. 10.4 2 By setting up Christ to raign in every one of our hearts thus the kingdom of God is said to be within us Luk. 17.21 governing us by his Word and Spirit 3 By stablishing all means towards the building up of this Kingdom as the preaching of the Word which is called the Gospel of the Kingdome 4
nor in that which is to come therefore some sins are forgiven in the world to come Answ Mark expounds it that such a one hath never forgiveness Mark 3.29 Matthew to aggravate the sin against the holy Ghost uses a Periphrasis as if we should speak of a sick man he can sleep neither day nor night that is never or as if we should say the grace of faith can never be bought with mony neither in this life nor in the life to come that is never For that place 1 Pet. 3.18 19 20. Being put to death in the flesh but quickned by the Spirit by which also he went to preach to the spirits in prison which sometimes were disobedient when once the long suffering of God waited in the dayes of Noah therefore say some the Gospel was preached in the world to come for forgiveness there is a misunderstanding of three things in this text 1 the Word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by which they understood the soul of Christ as by flesh his body the body they held to dye but the soul to remain alive in which soul say they he went and preached but by the flesh of Christ is meant his humanity according to this he is said to be put to death but by his spirit is meant his divinity Joh. 4.23 By the power of this spirit and divinity he was raised from the dead 2 Cor. 13.4 A second word misunderstood is this to the Spirits in prison Where the Word are is to be understood or the word being they understood were or had been which words are referred to those men that in the time of Noah were unbelievers and were then in the world now in Peters time their souls were in Hell for by the prison is meant Hell Rev. 20.7 There they are kept to the day of judgement The third word which almost deceived all was the word Going or went which they understood of his going out of the world into Hell when it was meant of his going out of Heaven into the world and speaking then by his spirit in the ministry of Noah to these rebells that were now in Hell in Saint Peters time Now that no sins are forgiven in the world to come appears 1 Because in this life onely are tenders of grace 2 Cor. 6.2 Behold now is the accepted time now is the day of salvation When the master of the house hath shut to the door of this life and ye stand without and knock and say Lord Lord Christ will say Depart from me I know you not Luk. 13.25 The gate of grace was wholly shut unto the foolish Virgins Matth. 25.11 2 The time betwixt this and death is the time for repentance patience and constancy and after death is the present receiving of the crown Rev. 2.10 Be thou faithful unto death and I will give thee a crown of life The godly lamented Stephen at his death but never prayed for him Col. 1.14 9 The grievousness of that prison whereinto unpardoned sins will cast us 1 We are afraid to be cast into a stinking prison for debt yet may there be hope one way or other to get out by satisfaction or compounding or the creditours pity but none of these can befall thee if thou dyest in thy sins and be cast into that prison thou canst not come out by satisfaction because that is of force onely by Christ his satisfaction in this life Act. 13.39 40. Col. 1.13 14. nor yet by composition for thou must lye there till thou hast paid the utmost farthing Luk. 12.59 nor by the creditours mercy because after death the wicked shall have judgement without mercy Jam. 2.13 2 There will be no running away from this prison because the prisoner is bound hand and foot Matth. 22.13 Bind him hand and foot and take him away and cast him into outer darkness Kept in everlasting chains Jude 6. Psal 49. Like sheep that are driven into the fold so are they driven into Hell ver 14. Luk. 16.26 3 In other prisons we have friends come to visit us but here not onely friends 2 Thess 1.9 but also all other comforts shall be removed yea the damned shall be deprived of the presence of God If the deprivement of the sight of God by faith be so grievous how grievous will the deprivation of the beatifical sight in glory be 4 The perpetuity of it to be condemn'd to perpetual imprisonment and that in some loathsom dungeon is terrible yet death may set us free thence but from the prison of Hell there 's no getting out The worm never dyes nor the fire never goes out Mark 9.44 45 46 47 48. It s five times set down the fire that never shall be quenched which are not idle repetitions but to ascertain us of the perpetuity of the torment If the damned had hope after some millions of years to have their torments ended it were something but the burnings are everlasting Isai 33.14 Isai 30.33 the Worm everlasting Isai 66.24 the Fire everlasting Revel 20.10 the contempt everlasting Dan. 12.2 Object But by what right will God punish temporary faults with eternal punishments Answ 1. Sin is committed against an infinite Majesty and so deserves infinite punishment now because man is a finite creature and cannot suffer for it at once therefore he must suffer for it successively to all eternity 2 Because in unpardoned sinners so dying there 's a wicked habit that should they live ever they would sin ever the sinner sins in his eternity and God punishes in his eternity 3 Punishment is to be measured not by length of time the offence is in committing but by the greatness of the offence Murder and Adultery are soon committed shall the Offender be no longer punished than the offence is committing 4 As we are to look upon the perpetuity of this Prison so upon the darkness of it Jude 6. the rebellious Angels are reserved under darkness chains of darkness 2 Peter 2.4 to the wicked the mist of darkness is reserved for ever 2 Peter 2.17 Light is most comfortable but in Hell there 's fire without light 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because the damned see not 10 Together with pardon come all other blessings Ezek. 36.25 26 27. I will sprinkle clean water what more the cleansing from filthiness a new heart the putting of the Spirit within us writing the Law in the heart Power over sin follows pardon of sin Rom. 7.15.8.2 yea all good things here Rom. 8.32 and glorification in Heaven hereafter Whom he justified them he gloried Rom. 8.30 11 True happiness consists in forgiveness of sins the World counts them happy that have great Estates that have the Princes ear but the Lord tells us those are happy that have sins pardoned Psalm 32.1 Blessed is he whose transgression is forgiven and whose sin is covered I am covered under the shadow of the wings of Christ and live secure under the most broad heaven of
power in God whereby he is able to do whatsoever he will as to beget a Son equal to himself in all things and could he not do this he were not omnipotent this he doth 1 Immediately Psalm 115.3 2 Mediately using the means of his own appointing Use For application 1 To blame our darkness that cannot conceive this power of God Object But if there be such a power in God why do we not perceive it as we do bodily force Answ Because it works invisibly as the influence of the Heavens doth upon the bodies of men and beasts 2 The brightest Light while it shineth in a thick Cloud is not beheld so the power of God whiles it worketh in our weakness is not beheld so powerfull as it is in it self 2 To tax them who limit this power Psalm 78.18 19 20. Israel angred God saying Can God prepare a Table in the Wilderness Can he give Bread Can he provide Flesh They did not say he could not but onely questioned his power They limited the Holy One of Israel v. 41. This was Moses sin Num. 11.19 to 24. when God said he would feed 600000 men with flesh a whole moneth he could not believe it Martha could not believe Christ was able to raise up Lazarus being dead four days John 11.39 So when Elisha prophesied of such a plenty next day the Noble-man said If the Lord would make Windows in Heaven might this thing be 2 Kings 7.19 20. 2 Information 1 That there 's nothing too hard for God Gen. 18.14 He hath brought Light out of Darkness 2 Cor. 4.6 Good out of Evil Gen. 50.20 Men may make good out of natural evil as out of poysonous Ingredients but not out of moral evil We are too apt to draw a scantling of God by our selves 3 Consolation to Gods people 1 In straits Gen. 22.10 When Abraham was ready to slay Isaac God appears to him out of Heaven and bids him hold his hand Gen. 22.14 When Esau came against Jacob Gods power was seen in turning his heart to Jacob Gen. 33.10 I have seen thy face as the face of God that is I have seen God in thy loving looks So in Queen Hesters time God still puts forth his power in behalf of upright men 2 Chron. 16.9 2 In sad and forlorn conditions Are you in danger He is a present help Psalm 46.1 Are you indisposed to good He that can bring beautifull flowers out of ground seemingly sapless in Winter can do so in grace Are lusts strong God can subdue them Mic. 7.18 Are Enemies potent God can make them Friends Prov. 16.7 4 Terrour to wicked men that have such a powerfull God against them God can arm all creatures against thee Worms to eat up Herod Acts 12.23 Flies and Lice to infest Pharaoh Though hand joyn in hand the wicked shall not be unpunished Prov. 11.21 See Judges 2.15 Whither soever they went the hand of God was against them for evil but especially in another World Rom 9.17 22. There God will make his powerfull wrath known Psalm 90.11 5 Exhortation 1 To make this powerfull God thy Friend Men strive to make powerfull men their Friends make God thy Friend Psalm 27.1 Isai 51.12 13. and fear to offend him We are affraid to offend men of power much more fear to offend this powerfull God See a notable place Josh 4.23 24. 2 To go about all your actions in the power of God In this power Asa went against a million of men 2 Chron. 14.11 It 's all one with thee to save whether with many or few Jehosaphat 2 Chron. 20.12 We know not what to do but our eys are upon thee against spiritual Enemies also be strong in the power of his might Ephes 6.10 Phil. 4.13 Psalm 71.16 3 Labour to know this power We love to know the strength of persons or things to which we trust 2 Tim. 1.12 I know whom I have trusted 4 Believe this power without belief hereof we cannot believe the Creation of the World the forgiveness of sins Resurrection of the Body His power is seen 1 In that he can do whatsoever is possible to be done An Angel can do what belongs to an Angel an Ox or Horse what belongs to them but they cannot do the works of a man but God can do what is possible 2 He can do what he will Psalm 115.3 Whatsoever the Lord pleased that did he Isai 46.10 Matth 8.2 3 He can put forth his power more in one than in another as he puts forth his power more in scalding Oyl that it burns more strongly than scalding Water the Fire is more in the Oyl than in the Water so the power of God is more in Saints than wicked men more in one Saint at one time than another more in Paul than in the rest of the Apostles more in some part of a duty than another part of it 4 His power is not tyed to means He works without means at the blowing of Rams horns the Walls of Jericho fell Josh 6.20 Judges 6.12 Gideon by three hundred men overcame an Army of above an hundred and twenty thousand yea he works against means bringing his people through the Red Sea Exod. 14.21 5 Whatsoever he doth he doth it without labour or weariness Isai 40.28 The Creatour of the ends of the Earth fainteth not neither is weary 6 He is always powerfull Princes are powerfull but they may die or their power be diminished or resisted not so with God Deut. 32.39 None can deliver out of his hands 7 All the power that any Creature hath is in God whether power of authority or power of force John 19.11 Thou couldst have no power neither of authority nor force unless it were given thee from above said Christ to Pilate When an Enemy lifts up his hand to hurt us he hath the power of his strength from God if we saw a Bear or Lion in the hand of our father we need not be affraid 8 His power can frustrate and annihilate all other power as the Babel-builders The Egyptians God took off their Charet-wheels Exod. 14.25 and the Sea over-whelmed them v. 26. Haman's combination against the Church all power coming against God his cause and people is as if a Pitcher should rise against a stone-wall or as if the Thorns and Briars should put themselves in arms against the Fire Isai 27.4 Job 9.4 1 Cor. 10.21 Object But I doubt not of his power but of his will Answ His will is seen in his promise If we be confirmed of his power and believe his promise you need not be troubled Object But if this power be so comfortable how should I know it Answ Believe it Christ would not shew miraculous power where unbelief hindered Matth. 13.58 2 See God in the Glass of his Word Jer. 32.17 and works as in making the World Rom. 1.20 in binding in the Sea Jer. 5.22 by the Sand. 3 Pray God to open thine eys to behold it as Elisha prayed for his
secret fasting so he will reward thee openly not by way of desert which is onely proper to Christs obedience but he by his Spirit will in the sincere performance of this duty stirre up in thee mortification of the flesh and affliction of the Spirit together with a devout intention in the exercise of repentance and we shall understand this not onely at present but specially at the day of judgement Mean time know God is not a debtor to thee for thou canst deserve nothing at his hand Luk. 17.10 Rom. 11.35 The same way that a reward is given to him that prayes it is given to him that fasts but the reward is promised to him that prayes of grace not of desert Therefore so it is given to him that fasts and that not simply to him that fasts but to him that joyns prayer with his fasting Thus we see how Christ reprehends the Pharises Hypocritical fasting who did institute their fasts as to the outward part of it in imitation of the Fathers and holy people who were wont to sit on the ground and to be covered with sackcloth and ashes which were signes of their true sorrow but to the inward part which was hearty grief for sin and an earnest breathing after reconciliation this the Pharisees altogether omitted From the words thus expounded Observe that Gods people ought as in other duties so in fasting to avoid corruptions and to perform it in a right manner I will open 1 The kindes 2 The manner There 's a twofold fast 1 publick which is when Gods people meet together either to desire pardon for some great sin committed or to turn away judgement as in Jezabels time they met together in respect of a supposed blasphemy so when the men of Ai had smit thirty six men Joshua and the elders of Israel fasted Josh 7.6 7. So the men of Israel having lost two set battles against the men of Benjamin Judg. 20.26 fasted untill the even so when there was a famine coming the Lord calls to the Priests to gather all the people of the land to fasting and prayer Joel 1.14 so when Moab Ammon and Mount Seir came against Jehoshaphat he seeks to God by prayer and fasting 2 Chr. 20.3 2 Private when we humble our selves for some evils lying upon our persons or family So David humbled himself for the child 2 Sam. 12.16 Of this Christ speaks when the bridegroom shall be taken away from them then shall they fast Matth. 9.15 So when in private we humble our selves for some evil lying upon the Church so did Nehemiah cap. 1.4 for the affliction of the Jews And Daniel sought the Lord for the Jews that God would bring them out of their seventy years captivity Dan. 9.3 Sometimes one friend fasts for another so Jobs friends Job 2.12 sometimes for enemies Psal 35.13 And so David fasted for the recovery of the health of his enemies 2 The manner of fasting 1 it must be with preparation to get off the hardness of the heart as in all prayer preparation is to be used before it so much more in this solemn duty Levit. 23.29 32. 2 It must be with humiliation and affliction of Spirit Psal 35.15 Levit. 23.29 Ezra 8.21 3 Removed from hypocrisie Anoint thy head and wash thy face As in the text Thou art not to be proud because thou hast been humbled but to be humbled because thou hast been proud 4 Free from censoriousness of others that fast not when thou fastest Johns Disciples when they fasted censured the Disciples of Christ for their not fasting Mat. 9.14 In the same family one may have cause of fasting when another hath cause of rejoycing 1 Cor. 7.5 5 In performance of reading and expounding the Word Nehem. 9.3 one fourth part of the day was spent in reading the word and opening the same Baruch on the fasting day read the Word of the Lord by Jeremiah Jer. 36.6 Another fourth part of the day they spent in prayer wherein confession of sins was most insisted upon Neh. 9.3 6 In separation of the soul and body from sundry comforts wherewith at other times we do refresh our selves as from stately apparrel the King of Niniveh laid aside his princely robes Jon. 3.6 Such apparrel is fittest at a fast as most shows the abasement of our Spirits onely let it not be affected also then refrain from pleasures which are then both unlawful Esa 58.3 Joel 2.16 The bridegroom then must go forth of his chamber and the bride out of her closet also they are unsutable God complains that when he called to weeping mourning and girding with sackcloth then behold joy and gladness Esa 22.12 13. Yea on a fasting day we are to refrain from the ordinary works of our calling Esa 58.3 Behold in the day of your fast ye exact all your labours Also abstinence from Meat and Drink 2 Sam. 3.35 David did not taste Bread or ought else till the going down of the Sun Onely note this abstinence is so far forth requisite as it helps forward our inward humiliation If the forbearance of food prove an hinderance to humiliation it is not to be used and such as cannot abstain though through weakness they cannot keep a fast yet may they keep a day of humiliation and prayer Onely 1 Beware of a pretended necessity instead of a true for if it be pretended God findes out pretences Prov. 24.12 Doth not he that pondereth the heart consider If it be a real necessity then God will have mercy rather than sacrifice 2 Though thou canst not abstain wholly yet abstain from so much as usual or from food of such a kinde Daniel ate no pleasant bread for three weeks Dan. 10.3 A tanto à toto or à tali in such bodily abstinence we judg our selves unworthy of the creatures 7 Consider the petitions you would commend to God in prayer and the sins you desire to acknowledg and the judgments you desire to have removed and the mercies you desire to obtain and insist especially upon them when the Church would have a blessing upon Paul's Ministry they used fasting Acts 13.2 so for a blessing upon stated Elders prayer and fasting was used Ezra to have a right direction for the people in their coming from Babylon sought God by fasting and prayer Ang. ad Casul Ezra 8.21 in all these fasts they insisted upon the matter in hand When Peter was to encounter at Rome with Simon Magus the Roman Church on the Sabbath-day fasted Augustine when he saw his City besieged by the Vandals gave himself to prayer and fasting and died in that Siege as Possidonius mentions 8 Beware that thou turn not thy fast into a matter of penance Persons when they do penance in formal and idolatrous Churches are glad when it is over though they never shew any true repentance so persons are glad when the fasting is over though their hearts have never melted throughout the duty The end of a thing is that for which
of danger Psalm 3.5 6. I will not fear ten thousands that have set themselves against me Psalm 27.1 2.46.1 2. 4 A mighty spirit of Prayer that will take no denial from God Matth. 15.28 The Woman of Cana would take no denial from Christ hence Christ says O woman great is thy faith 5 A comfortable apprehension of Death and Judgment which days are feared by weak Christians Luke 2.29 Phil. 1.23 6 To have a clear manifestation of Gods love without any questioning of his Estate Rom. 8.38 39. and thereupon to triumph in Gods love over all both sin Satan and afflictions Rom. 8.33 34 35 36 37. Quest Whether may not a man of great faith so decline that his faith may become weak Answ As some of weak have become strong so some of strong have become weak Heb. 11.34 Asa had a great faith that he feared not a Million of Ethiopians yet after became weak See 2 Chron. 16.7 8. yea so weak that we might question his grace did not the Scripture say His heart was perfect with God all his days 1 Kings 15.14 This is caused partly from want of the means of grace or disuse of them as want of Preaching Prayer and good company Shut up a strong man from food and diet him thus and his strength will decay Partly from falling into some sin against conscience Psalm 51.10 11. or a frequent giving way to ones daily corruptions without lamenting and reforming of them and partly from love of the World and multitude of worldly businesses hence many who have shewn much forwardness in their youth have decayed in their affections to the Lord and to his people V. 31. Therefore take no thought saying what shall we eat or what shall we drink or wherewith shall we be clothed 32 For all these things do the nations of the world seek after Here is a fifth argument against earthly sollicitude or carking because this inordinate carking for meat drink and apparel is proper to heathens which are ignorant of God and his providence and not to Christians who acknowledge and experience both The word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies a certain vehement desire As ye my disciples differ in your profession from the Gentiles see that ye differ also in your practice they are still carking what they shall eat drink put on but let your questions be how shall we live for ever Few of the heathens look for any happiness after death and therefore no wonder they are so eager after the things of this life but you are born to better things and called out from them therefore though you have great charge and perhaps but little means to maintain them though you have now and then a cross in the world do not you distrustfully say as they say What shall we eat c. For your heavenly Father knoweth that ye have need of all these things This is a sixth argument against earthly sollicitude taken from Gods fatherly care of you he knowes what your means and charge is what the hardness of the times the contingent charges that befall you he is a Father and therefore will not neglect his children an heavenly Father and therefore will give you the best of blessings he is also your Father one in whom you have a property what need you then doubt what childe is there that casts not his care upon his father It 's the fathers reproach if he either will not or cannot provide for his children will it not redound to Gods reproach when we shall be carking for our selves as if we had no God to care for us Psal 23.1 The Lord is my shepherd I shall not want If we could conceive God were our Father and we his children the world would be base to us with all its glory wealth and pleasures we would not be sollicitous for livelihood we would not be so confident earthly things being present nor cast away our confidence they being taken away Luth. Tom. 4.127 V. 33. But seek ye first the Kingdom of God and his righteousness and all these things shall be added unto you We have heard of Christs dehortation from worldliness and carking now followes the exhortation to true care but seek ye first the Kingdom of God In the words 2 things 1 a duty Seek ye first the Kingdom of God 2 The promise All these things shall be added Seek ye first Threefold firstness 1 of time 2 of estimation 3 of opportunity He that forsakes opportunity shall be forsaken of it Opportunity is like a ship under sail to which you must call presently else it is gone Hannibal when he could would not destroy Rome after he could not when he would Though we are to give God our youth Exod. 22.29 Thou shalt not delay to offer the first of thy ripe fruits Prov. 3 9. Honour the Lord with the first-fruits of thy increase Eccles 12.1 Remember thy Creator in the days of thy youth And those that have been most eminent in grace have been wrought upon young Obadiah feared the Lord from his youth Samuel was called when a childe Timothy and many others and it is a mans honor to begin to know God betimes Yet this firstness is not all but we must understand a firstness of dignity and estimation that we prize spiritual things above temporal those temporal things are to be sought in order to the Kingdom of God Carnal men say seek money first and vertue afterwards But Christ sayes seek grace first if not we shall be as foolish virgins who too late sought for oyl Mat. 25. So that here is a seventh argument against distrustful care viz. all temporal good things are the rewards of godliness therefore cark not for them Psal 34.9 10. There is no want to them that fear him they that seek the Lord shall not want any good thing 1 Tim. 4.8 Earthly things are added over and above alluding to that 1 Kings 3.11 Because Solomon asked an understanding heart and not long life riches or the lives of enemies God gave him that which he did not ask over and above riches and honour The Kingdom of God and his righteousness The Kingdom of God as the mark righteousness as the way So Matth. 5.20 Except your righteousness exceed the righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees ye shall not enter into the Kingdom of God He that seeks the Kingdom of God above all other things and all other things for it need not be sollicitous for other things for they shall be added Also by Kingdom of God understand right and title to the Kingdom of God And his righteousness which is 1 Imputative righteousness of Christ which is also called the righteousness of God Rom. 1.17 Rom. 3.21 Rom. 10.3 2 The righteousness of sanctification as integrity of love hunger and thirst after doing Gods will innocency charity and all other graces Now that sanctification is called righteousness appears Deut. 6.25 It shall be our righteousness if we observe to
In a patient bearing of crosses which in themselves are very contrary to our stubborn wills 1 Sam. 3.18 Levit 10.3 3 Obs He that in sincerity doth the will of God in the purpose of his heart and actions of life shall enter into heaven I put in both these because many hypocrites may have an outward seeming reformation as Joas Herod the Scribes Luke 11.39 Therefore we must look to inward reformation in the purposes of the heart Use As we look for blessedness so let us endeavour to do Gods will Jam. 1.25 He that is not a forgetfull hearer but a doer of the work which God requires this man shall be blessed in his doing a bare pretence to do Gods will is not enough to say as he in the Gospel I go Sir into the Vineyard but went not Matth. 21.29 30. First do Gods will then receive the promise Heb. 10.36 Means to do Gods will 1 Labour to know it Ephes 5.17 Be ye not unwise but understanding what the will of the Lord is Col. 1.9 2 Beg instruction of God herein Psal 143.10 Teach me to do thy will for thou art my God 3 Desire that your will may be brought over to Gods will Matth. 26.39 42. Father not my will but thine be done Acts 21.14 Phil. 2.13 4 Get the Law of God within your heart Psal 40.8 I delight to do thy will O God yea thy Law is in my heart Hence it was as meat to Christ to do the will of the Father John 4.34 My meat is to do the will of him that sent me Eph. 6.6 Heb. 10.7 2 Cor. 8.3 5 Have an eye to every part of Gods will Psal 119.6 I shall not be ashamed when I have respect to all thy Commandements Acts 13.22 I have found David a man after mine own heart which shall fulfill all my will Epaphras prayed that the Colossians might be compleat in all the will of God Col. 4.12 6 Consider the equity perfectness and holiness of Gods will Rom. 12.2 Proving what is that perfect holy and good will of God 7 Consider how dear thou art to Christ if thou dost his will more then mother sister or brother Mark 3.26 8 Persevere in doing Gods will all that is past is nothing without perseverance Matth. 24.13 V. 22 Many will say unto me in that day Lord Lord have we not prophesied in thy name and in thy name have cast out devils and in thy name done many wonderfull things V. 23. And then will I profess to them I never knew you Depart from me ye that work iniquity Christ comes to amplifie the rejection of carnal Professors in the day of judgement from the vanity of their pretences and allegations they alledge for themselves Their pretences are three 1 That they prophesied in the name of Christ 2 Cast out devils in Christs name 3 Did wonderfull things in Christs name as healings tongues and hereby witnessed thy power They reason thus It 's unjust to cast out of heaven those that have prophesied in thy name and cast out devils in thy name but we have done so therefore c. See the horrible pride of formalists who will dare to reply against the Judge see Matth. 20.12 These last have wrought but one hour and thou hast made them equal with us There are some gifts formal hypocrites may have Balaam prophesied the Magicians of Egypt did miracies miracles are no note of a Church as Papists would make us believe but were done by professors of Christianity for the conviction of unbelievers see Mark 16.17 1 Cor. 14.22 Tongues are a signe to them that believe not Caiphas prophesied John 11.49 True miracles are the alone work of God given for the confirmation of Teachers come from God and were in the primitive times seals unto them John 3.2 We know thou art a Teacher come from God for no man can do these miracles thou dost except God be with him See Heb. 2.4 Yet all were not thus confirmed John Baptist did no miracle John 10.41 Yet sometimes not onely wicked men have done miracles Matth. 24.24 2 Thes 2.9 but even wicked Teachers Deut. 13.1 2. And in the primitive times all Christians could not do miracles 1 Cor. 12.29 Are all workers of miracles When miracles were done they were done by the will of God not when the instrument that did the miracle would Heb. 2.4 for then would not Paul have left Trophimus sick at Miletum 2 Tim. 4.20 but would have wrought a miracle to have raised him up And sometimes uncharitable men have wrought miracles 1 Cor. 13.2 Though I have all faith so that I could remove mountains and have not charity I am nothing And then will I profess unto them I never knew you Depart from me ye workers of iniquity Here is the sentence against these formal professors they are sent to hell as well as other gross sinners I never knew you that is I never approved you So to know is taken Psal 1.6 I never knew you i. e. I reject you 1 Cor. 8.3 2 Tim. 2.19 I never knew you I knew you as Prophets and Teachers but never knew you as children and friends though I know all things and consequently know you with a knowledge of speculation yet I never knew you with a knowledge of love and affection You have professed me to be your Lord but you were never yet my servants I must acknowledge you to be my creatures but must profess you are none of the members of my body Rom. 8.9 I know you with a general knowledge as I know all things Psal 139.2 3. but I know you not with a special knowledge as I know mine Elect and Sheep John 10.14 your lusts are your lords and not I. Depart from me ye that work iniquity The words are taken out of Psal 6.8 they are the sentence of Christs sending formal hypocrites to hell as Matth. 25.41 Depart from me ye cursed into everlasting fire Oh terrible sentence thou formalist shalt not onely be severed from thy estate relations and all earthly comforts but also from the presence of the Lord. See 2 Thess 1.9 never to behold him any more By workers of iniquity he means such as live in sin Rom. 16.21 which in John's phrase is called the commitment of sin John 8.34 Whosoever committeth sin is the servant of sin called walking in darkness 1 John 1.6 See also 1 John 3.8 9. He that committeth sin is of the devil whosoever is born of God doth not commit sin v. 9. called also walking after the flesh and living after the flesh Rom. 8.1.12.13 Learn therefore either to depart from thine iniquity or else be assured thou shalt depart from Christ Ezek. 18.30 Repent and turn from your iniquity so iniquity shall not be your ruine Also v. 31. It 's called also the reign of sin Rom. 6.12 and dominion of sin v. 14. the service of sin v. 17. Obs The number not onely of profane multitudes but even of professing people that shall
be damned will be great 2 Outward Privileges as prophesying and doing miracles will not stand us in stead at the Day of Judgment to move the Judg to have mercy upon us O then get something else to stand thee in stead at that Day even Christ his Righteousness where with Paul then desired to be covered Phil. 3.9 2 Cor. 5.3 2 Peter 3.11 3 There are many persons whom Christ knows with a general knowledg whom he never knew nor will know with a special knowledg of love and affection 4 That man that lives in a purpose of sin is in Gods account onely a worker of iniquity 5 That man that lives in any sin and dies therein must look at the Day of Judgment for ever to be severed from the presence of Christ V. 24. Therefore whosoever heareth these sayings of mine and doth them I will liken him unto a wise man which built his house upon the Rock Christ coming to conclude his Sermon tells his Auditory that there are two sorts of professing hearers 1 Bare hearers 2 Doers as well as hearers to the bare formal hearing Christ threatens destruction but to the doer he promises life and salvation This he sets down 1 Plainly v. 24. 2. By way of similitude comparing these two hearers to two builders one of which built upon the Sand and the other built upon a Rock the one when assaulted by temptations fell the other in the midst of greatest storms stood Therefore whosoever heareth these sayings of mine By hearing he means the whole profession of Christianity Rom. 2.13 in general and hearing properly taken in particular Denoting that there may be and are abundance of hearers that are no more but hearers as the stony ground thorny ground and high-way side hearers Seeing themselves in the glass of the Law of God they go away and forget their shape as men do that take a glance of the glass and are gone James 1.23 but good hearers are like some Women that look long in the glass that they may form themselves by it And doth them As if he should say I have hitherto taught you how you may lead your lives holily and have shewed you the way to the Kingdom of Heaven therefore if ye do these things I have taught you ye will be like unto a wise man that built his house upon the Rock or upon a sure foundation knowing that else all his cost and labour will be in vain now the foundation of a Christian is faith and a godly practise 1 Tim. 6.19 Laying up in store a good foundation for time to come Obs Hearing and doing in godly hearers go together Such persons are blessed John 13.17 Luke 11.28 James 1.25 By doing Christ means a purpose of doing Learn we to joyn doing with hearing 1 Hereby we shall be able to stand against all storms and tempests 2 This will be the testimony of the honesty and integrity of our hearts Luke 8.15 The good ground with an honest and good heart having heard the Word kept it and brought forth fruit with patience 3 Such persons are blessed James 1.25 If you know these things blessed are ye if you do them No other knowledg save the knowledg of Christian doctrine though we had all knowledg of Histories Laws will stand in stead nor this neither without practise not the bearing of Christ in the womb nor giving him suck with the breast is comparable to this See Luke 11.27 28. Yet in opposition to carnal men who upon pretence of crying up practise cry down knowledg Christ tells that first there must be a knowledg before a practise And in this practise Christ intends the command of believing on his Son as the first and chiefest command without which we can never appear to comfort in the sight of the Judg. 4 By joyning doing with hearing God is honoured and glorified Matth. 5.16 John 15.8 And by the contrary God is dishonoured See Rom. 2.17 to v. 25. The Jews resting in the knowledg of Gods will and approving things that were excellent and in being guides of the blinde and not practising what they knew they caused the Name of God to be blasphemed v. 24. 1 Tim. 6.1 5 At the Day of Judgment we shall receive not according to what we have known but according to what we have done 2 Cor. 5.10 Revel 22.12 Matth. 25.34 Ephes 6.8 Matth. 16.27 6 Our knowledg will onely serve to justifie Gods damning us with the heavier condemnation if we do not practise what we know Luke 12.47 1 Peter 4.17 What shall become of them that obey not the Gospel of Jesus Christ Rom. 2.7 8 9. 2 Peter 2.20 21. 7 Our comfort and crown will abound at the Day of Christ according to our care and conscience in the discharge of our duties and our misery if we do the contrary Matth. 25.20 21. Well done good and faithfull servant enter into the joy of the Lord but to the slothfull and unprofitable servant Christ saith Binde him hand and foot and cast him into utter darkness v. 26 27 28 30. 8 Practise joyned with hearing wins upon others 1 Pet. 2.12 The Heathens beholding the good works of Christians glorified God in the day of visitation 1 Pet. 3.1 The Heathen husbands were won to look after the truth by the conversation of their wives whiles they beheld their chaste conversation coupled with a fear of sinning against God A holy conversation steals into the hearts of them that behold it insensibly to build them up many times to salvation as a scandalous carriage doth into the hearts of others to build them up to damnation 9 An holy practise mightily blunts the rage of Persecutors 1 Pet. 3.13 Who is he that will harm you if ye be followers of that which is good Tit. 2.7 In all things shewing thy self a patern of good works why what then When your lives and speeches are well ordered they that are of the contrary part will be ashamed having no evil thing to say of you 10 All thy hearing knowledge and parts and common gifts will come to nothing and thou wilt be deprived of them unless thou joyn an holy practise to them Matth. 25.29 Take the talent from him From him that hath not to wit a fruitfull practise shall be taken away even that which he hath It is with Religion as with other trades that bring no gain unless diligently followed 11 Thou hast no interest in the mercy of God unless thou remember his Commandements to do them Psal 103.19 Many remember Gods commands to speak of them but few remember them to do them It was wittily spoken of one If God had given us his commandements onely to preserve he might have committed them to iron Coffers if onely to talk of them better to Geese and Parrots if onely for contemplation to Owles in Ivy-bushes or to Monks in Cloisters Gods scope was not to make trial of the wits of men who could sharpliest conceive nor of their memories who
must be just ruling in the fear of God 2 Sam. 23.3 3 God is wont to deal well with such as fear him Exod. 1 20 21. God dealt well with the mid-wives because they feared God Deut. 5.29 Oh that there were such an heart in them to fear me that it might be well with them Neh. 1.11 Eccles 8.12 I know it shall be well with them that fear God which fear before him but it shall not be well with the wicked Why because he feareth not before God Mal. 2.5 My covenant was with Levi of life and peace and I gave them to him for the fear wherewith he feared me and was affraid before my name Luke 1.50 His mercy is on them that fear him from generation to generation Deut. 6.18 He that feareth God shall come forth out of all trouble Eccles 7.18 4 The fear of God is a special mean to lengthen our days in this world Deut. 6.2 That thou mightest fear the Lord thy God to keep all his statutes that thy dayes may be prolonged now the reason why Gods fear lengthens our daies is because it makes a man take heed of such sins as would cut off life Prov. 10.27 The fear of the Lord is a fountain of life to depart from the snares of death see the contrary threatning to wicked men Eccles 8.13 It shall not be well with the wicked neither shall he prolong his daies which are as a shadow why because he feareth not before God 5 Gods fear is one of the first graces that showes it self in the soul hence called the beginning of wisdom Job 28.28 and they that have it are said to have a good understanding Psalm 111.10 Deut. 10.12 What doth the Lord require of thee but to fear the Lord thy God c. 6 God hath excellent loving kindness laid up for those that fear him See this 1 in spiritual mercies as 1 understanding Gods secrets Psalm 25.14 The secret of the Lord is with them that fear him 2 Pittifull affection as in a father towards his childe Psalm 103.11 so the Lord pittieth them that fear him 3 Healing and comfort Mal. 4.2 Unto you that fear my name shall the son of righteousness arise with healing under his wings 2 See it in temporal mercies as 1 strong confidence in evil times Prov. 14.26 in the fear of the Lord is strong confidence which is grounded upon promise of deliverance Psalm 85.9 Surely his salvation is nigh them that fear him 2 A special eye of providence for the providing outward things for such Psalm 31 18 19. Behold the eye of the Lord is on them that fear him to deliver their soul from death and to keep them alive in famine Psalm 34.9 O fear the Lord ye his Saints for there is no want to them that fear him Psalm 111.5 He hath given meat to them that fear him he will ever be mindfull of his Covenant q.d. Its part of Gods Covenant to give meat to them that fear him meat is put for all other provisions 3 There 's much contentedness of minde comes along with this grace of Gods fear in them that have it Prov. 15.16 Better is a little with the fear of the Lord then great revenues and trouble therewith Pro. 19.23 The fear of the Lord tendeth to life and he that hath it shall abide satisfied Psalm 7.16 4 It 's a mean to obtain riches honour and life every man wishes for these three things oh then get Gods fear Pro. 22.4 By humility and the fear of the Lord are riches and honour and life 2 Use Trial whether we have Gods fear in us 1 when we think nothing too good for God but will let it go rather then sin Gen. 22.12 Lay not thine hand upon the lad for now I know thou fearest God seeing thou hast not withheld thine onely son 2 When we fear to do any thing that is of bad report 1 Cor. 6.1 Dare any of you meaning Christians go to law before the unjust and not before the Saints Neh. 5.9 Ought we not to walk in the fear of the Lord because of the heathen 3 When we fear not the greatest of men in opposition to God Exod. 1.15 16. The King bad the Hebrew mid-wives kill the male children but they would not obey the King why was it the Text vers 17. gives the reason because they feared God they would not obey the King How did the three children out of fear to God not fear Nebuchadnezzar his burning fiery furnace Dan. 3.17 18 28. The Parents of Moses hid Moses three moneths and they not affraid of the Kings commandment Heb. 11.23 4 When we are fearfull of the private and secret stirrings of corruption in our own hearts Job 31.1 2. Job so apprehended Gods eye that he durst not have or harbour a lustfull thought see vers 4. This fear of God kept him from lifting up his hand against the fatherless when he saw his help in the gate for destruction from God was a terrour unto him vers 21.23 Deut. 15.9 10. Gods fear will be opposing proud revengefull unclean and hypocriticall thoughts in the soul 5 When hope or proffer of gain will not make us sin against God Peter would not take Magus his money Acts 8.20 Nor Elisha Naamans talents 2 Kings 5. Why he knew in his conscience it was no time for it Contrary in Balaam how fain would he have been fingring Balaks gold so Judas Demas 6 When we will not deliberately venture upon sin for fear of losse Gen. 39.9 How can I do this great evill and sin against God 1 Kings 22.13 14. Micaiah durst not flatter the King as the false prophets did John Baptist durst not forbear Herods sin though the Princes favor lay on one side and the loss of his life or hazzard thereof on the other Mat. 14.3 Such a man will not be drawn to sin for fear of offending a wife or husband where Gods fear is there will be a choice of affliction rather than iniquity 7 When we are affraid of doing any thing with a doubting conscience Rom. 14.22 23. 8 When we are affraid of the least evil Carnal men for shame of the world may avoid gross evils but where Gods fear is the soul is affraid of small sins 1 Sam 24.5 even for cutting the skirt of Sauls garment how much more was he of hurting Sauls person 1 Sam. 26.9 It s said of a godly man that he keeps his hand from doing any evil Isai 56.2 9 When we are affraid of sinfull temptations and occasions Gen. 39.10 Joseph would not hearken to his Mistris to ly by her or to be with her Prov. 5.8 Come not nigh the doors of her house Hos 4.15 that Judah might not offend with Israels Calve-worship the Prophet bids them not to come to Gilgal or Beth-aven where the Calves were God will not keep us from sin if we do not keep our selves from the occasions of it He that ventures upon the occasions of sin
18. We see it in Devils who believe and tremble Matth. 8.29 Contrarily filial fear hath quiet of heart joyned with it The heart is never in so good a temper as when it is most fearfull of sin Acts 9.31 The Churches walking in the fear of the Lord walked also in the comfort of the Holy Ghost Mal. 4.2 Unto you that fear my Name shall the Sun of Righteousness appear 4 Those that have slavish fear would fain be rid of it 1 Kings 22.26 Zedekiah goes from chamber to chamber to hide himself the wicked in fear of Gods judgment call to mountains and hills to hide themselves Revel 6.16 Contrarily Saints would still have the fear of God continue upon them nay if they finde it decaying they complain Isai 63.17 Lord why hast thou hardened my heart from thy fear 5 Slavish fear is from 1 The sting of a guilty conscience Deut. 28.65 66. The Lord shall give thee a trembling heart and thou shalt fear day and night Saul 1 Sam. 13.7 when he was near the battle all the people followed him trembling Hypocrites in Sion looking on God as devouring fire fearfulness surprized them Isai 33.15 Paul preaching to Faelix of righteousness temperance and judgement to come he living an unrighteous and an intemperate life trembled to think of the judgement to come and was so stung with it that he was driven to make Paul leave off his preaching 2 From the expectation of future wrath Heb. 10.27 they have a certain fearfull looking for of judgement and fiery indignation Contrarily filial fear 1 Ariseth from faith Heb. 11.7 By faith Noah was moved with fear Isai 50.10 Or 2 From godly sorrow 2 Cor. 7.11 Fear was one effect that godly sorrow wrought in the repenting Corinthians the soul having felt much inward sorrow for the evils it hath done is affraid to do the like evils again 3 From love to God we are affraid to offend those whom we love an husband fears to offend his wife a good childe fears to offend his father so the soul that loves God fears to offend him Motives to this Godly fear 1 Gods fear is a perpetual duty Some duties are but for a time and then at an end but this is perpetual Prov. 23.17 Be thou in the fear of the Lord all the day long Yea We are to pass the time of our sojourning here in fear 1 Pet 1.17 Psal 19.9 The fear of the Lord endureth for ever Hence this duty is practised by glorified Saints who in heaven know evil as well as good but by the fear of God in them their wills are eternally determined to the choice of good 2 It 's a principal duty lying upon Saints above all people in the world Psal 34 11. Fear the Lord ye his Saints for God is wont to punish them more sorely then other men in this world when they sin against him Exod. 23.21 Provoke him not for he will not pardon your iniquities Deut. 32.19 Amos 3.2 As men that have more to lose then others are affraid to offend Princes so the Saints that have more to lose then the rest of the world should be affraid to offend the King of heaven they may in case they sin lose Gods face Isai 50.10 the peace of their consciences and be smitten with temporal strokes 1 Cor. 11.32 3 It 's an honourable Character to be a man fearing God 1 Kings 18.12 It 's said of Obadiah That he feared the Lord from his youth Job 1.1 Job was a man fearing God and eschewing evil Hananiah Neh. 7.2 Cornelius feared God and all his house feared God Yea a woman that feareth the Lord she shall be praised Prov. 31.30 4 The children of God have found much comfort in this grace Neh. 1.11 Let thine ear be attentive to thy servants that desire to fear thy Name Yea when they finde no other grace in their hearts but this grace yet are they commanded to stay their hearts herein Isai 50 10. Contrarily they have been much troubled if they have found either a want or a decay of this grace 5 Gods fear as at other times so especially in evil times is a principal treasure to good men Isai 33.6 The fear of the Lord is his treasure The meaning of the place is from Gods fear arises all prosperity to supply us as out of a treasure arises money to supply our needs 6 Gods fear is the most watchfull affection as being conversant about danger How often would temptations captivate us were it not for this in-dwelling grace in Saints Jer. 32.40 This grace doth as it were stand Centry for the soul Psal 119.11 7 The attributes wherein God stands related to us 1 His power and justice Job 37.23 24. He is excellent in power and judgement and plenty of justice men do therefore fear him 2 The pitifull affection or disposition God bears to them that fear him Psal 103.13 As a father pities his children so the Lord pitieth them that fear him Psal 147.11 The Lord taketh pleasure in them that fear him in what ever Nation such Saints be God being no respecter of persons they are accepted of God with a favourable respect Acts 10.35 8 The relations wherein we stand ingaged to the Lord 1 Of servants If earthly servants must have a fear of their masters according to the flesh Eph. 6.5 ought not we to the Lord Hence the Lord expostulates Mal. 1.6 If I be a master where is my fear 2 Of children What dutifull child stands not in fear of offending his father Heb. 12.9 We gave earthly parents reverence shall we not much rather be in subjection to the Father of Spirits and live 9 Gods fear sweetens a low condition Prov. 15.16 Better is a little with the fear of the Lord then great revenues and trouble therewith that is then great revenues got with a wounded and troubled conscience Psal 37.16 10 Such men as fear God are blessed Prov. 28.14 Blessed is the man that feareth alwayes They are often blessed in this world especially when a delight in Gods law is joyned therewith Psal 112.1 Blessed is the man that feareth the Lord his seed shall be mighty upon earth wealth and riches shall be in his house c. Also in the world to come they are blessed Rev. 11.19 When the time comes that the dead shall be judged there is a reward to be given to all that fear Gods Name both small and great Come we to the second thing viz. The true fear of God where it is eats out the fear of men we see it in Moses parents Moses himself in the Mid-wives Exod. 1.19 in Shadrach Meshech and Abednego Psal 27.1 3 The third point is God is able to destroy soul and body in hell This is called the second death Rev. 20.6 called a double destruction Jer. 17.18 The bodies of all that are in the graves shall come forth John 5.28 They that have done evil to the resurrection of damnation death and grave gives them
Laws set by him in the creation without taking advice of any creature I have oft endeavoured to prescribe to God certain ways which he should use in the government of his Church and other things I said ah Lord I would have it done in this order this event but God did altogether the contrary from that which I had requested then did I think but my counsel is not strange from the glory of God but will conduce much to sanctifie his name It 's well thought but doubtless God laught at this my wisedome and said Go too I know thee to be wise and learned but it was never my manner that Peter or Martin should teach lead form govern me I am not a passive God but an active Luth. Tom. 4. in Gen. fol. 56. 2 Extraordinary when God works against or besides his appointed order as in dividing the waters of the red Sea Reas 1 Because all things yea the most contingent things in the world are ordered by it as the falling of a tyle Exod 21.13 the flying of the head of the ax from the helve and killing a man Deut. 19.5 yea the ordering of a lot Prov. 16.33 2 The order of things in the world prove it 1 Natural order the motions of the heavens the Sun warms the earth the ayr moistens it the earth brings forth the grass the beasts feed on it and man feeds on them Look on the fowls God appoints them their residence Psal 104.17 18. and so doth he for other creatures Yea the fowl knows her appointed time and changes her country according to the season of the year That there 's a place appointed for the waters that they may not overflow the earth Psal 104.7 8 9. that there are springs of waters in the Valleys to give drink to the beasts of the field v. 10. that there should be an intercourse of light and darkness that the wilde beasts should get them to their dens on the day time that man may follow his work that there should be such provisions made for all the inhabitants of the world all this proves to us a providence 2 Politick order In Courts of Justice one Officer depends on another as wheels in a clock and moves not without the first wheel How many thousands are provided for in their several trades one depending upon another How hath God made the City to depend upon the Country and the Country upon the City how do all creatures move at his command as soldiers at the command of the General 3 From the reasonable actions God puts into unreasonable creatures Prov. 6.6 7 8. the Pismire having no guide over-seer nor ruler provideth her meat in the summer Jer. 8.6 7. the Stork Crane Swallow know their appointed time Who hath put wisdome in their inward parts Job 38.36 4 Should God not take care of things below it 's either because he will not or cannot or knowes them not but to affirm any of these were blasphemy 5 In his provision he makes for all creatures Psal 145.15 The eyes of all wait on thee and thou givest them food in due season thou openest thy hand and satisfiest the desire of every living thing Psal 104.28 That thou givest them they gather thou openest thy hand they are filled with good v. 30. Every Spring God renues the face of the earth Psal 147.9 He giveth to the Beast his food and to the young Ravens which cry compared vvith Job 38.41 See Job cap. 36 37 38 39. 6 In ordering the sins of men for his own glory and good of his Church The envy of Josephs brethren for the advancement of Joseph and the preservation of Jacobs posterity The treason of Bigthan and Teresh for the advancement of Mordecai Cyrus his ambition for the Churches deliverance Titus Vespasian who persecuted the Christians at Rome God orders his passion that he goes to revenge Christs death at Jerusalem Sennacheribs covetousness and pride to punish the hypocrisie of the Jews Isai 10.5 6 7. the covetousness of Judas and malice of the devil to accomplish the work of our redemption 7 In a special respect to the good of his people Besides a general providence in the world he hath a special providence for their good 1 Cor. 9.9 He is the Savior of all 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the preserver of all but specially of them that believe 2 Tim. 4.9 10. 2 Chron. 16.9 The eyes of the Lord run to and fro through the whole earth to show himself strong in the behalf of those whose hearts are perfect with him Zach. 2.8 He that toucheth you toucheth the apple of mine eye 8 In snaring the wicked in the work of their own hands Psal 9.16 The Lord is known by the judgment which he executeth the wicked are snared in the work of their own hands Higgaion Selah a thing to be meditated as Hierom renders it When Nebuchad-nezzar in his boasting is bereft of his wits Herod in his pomp eaten up of Worms the Philistims in their jollity have the house fall on them Judg. 16.30 who will not say they are taken in a snare 9 In making wicked men whether they will or no to do Gods will Acts 4.28 To do whatsoever thy hand and counsel had before determined to be done As in a kennel of hounds every one of them runs according to his natural inclination yet all of them serve the purpose of the Hunter And as in an Army of men one fights for honour another for spite another for pay yet all of them fight for victory for the Prince who sent them into the field so whatsoever wickedness evil men do they do but serve Gods providence and fulfill his will God sometimes changes their will sometimes stops it by offering consideration of good or ill danger or profit so that still he makes their wills serve his decree Use 1 Acknowledg this Providence in all thy undertakings God keeps us not onely waking but sleeping when we know not that we live then he observes our dreams in opposition of that tenent that God considers nothing but himself and is onely delighted in the beholding of himself in thy appointing future businesses James 4.15 16. Go to ye that say We will go to such a City and buy and sell c. Prov. 3.6 In all thy ways acknowledg him and he shall direct thy steps So did Eleazar for his Master Abraham Gen. 24. that he might get a Wife for Isaac but yet Eleazar did not neglect the use of means he that rightly looks to Gods providence is most carefull to use means When thou findest a treasure in digging of a field when thou escapest a fall in walking on a plank was it not God who brought thee to the one and saved thee from the other 2 Not to fear men to the balking of duty seeing Gods provicence takes care of us this stayed Davids heart when at Ziglag his Souldiers were at the point of stoning him 1 Sam. 30.6 He encouraged himself in
Brethren with many words So in the Church of Corinth 1 Cor. 14.1 c. In the Church of Ephesus Ephes 4.11 gave some Prophets In the Church at Thessalonica 1 Thess 5.17 Despise not prophesying Yea we finde Prophets in the Church when Babylon shall be destroyed Revel 18.20 Rejoyce over her ye holy Apostles and Prophets for God hath avenged you on her he means such Prophets as the Beast made to prophesie in sack-cloath 1260. days Rev. 11.3 Now of these Prophets there were two sorts in the New Testament 1 Those that did foretell things to come such was Agabus Acts 11.28 under this kinde came the Prophetesses Philip had four daughters which were Prophetesses Acts 21.9 of this Acts 2.17 This is that which was spoken by the Prophet Joel saying I will pour out my spirit upon all flesh and your sons and your daughters shall prophesie your young men shall see visions and your old men shall dream dreams And of this it 's probable 1 Cor. 11.5 6. Every woman praying or prophesying with her head uncovered dishonoureth her head and every man prophesying with his head covered dishonoureth his head that is with his head covered with Ribbons and Garlands after the manner of the Heathen and the women prophesied after the manner of the Sybills with their hair hanging down and so dishonoured their head Christ Of which heathenish custom Lucan in his fifth Book speaks who lived a little after Christs time Bacchatur demens aliena per antrum Colla ferens vittásque dei Phaebeáque serta Erectas discussa comas per inania templi Ancipiti cervice rotat spargítque vaganti Obstantes tripodas magnóque exaestuat igne Iratum te Phoebe ferens In English thus The frantick Beldam raging through her den Bearing strange necks the heads of sundry men Adorn'd with Ribbons and with Garlands fair To Phoebus honour flownc'd her gastly hair Wheels here and there through temples empty spaces Shaking her doubtfull head here there she faces c. These Prophets told things past and future to persons as Christ did to the Woman of Samaria John 4.29 and Elisha to Gehezi 2 Kings 5.26 Irenaeus 1.6 saith himself had known and heard many Brethren that could discover the hidden things of men he means such secrets as could not be known by the power of mans wit From the revelation of which secrets it is supposed the Ideot or Heathen falls down and worships your God reporting that God is in you of a truth 1 Cor. 14.24 25. 2 Those that did expound the prophetical places of Scripture prophesying according to the proportion of faith Rom. 12.6 and did apply their doctrines to exhortation and confirmation so Judas and Silas Acts 15.32 to edification and comfort 1 Cor. 14.3 If any man ask whether prophesying be the same with preaching I answer no. 1 The words in Greeek are diverse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifying to preach and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to prophesie Besides 2 Preaching is to be performed to every creature prophesying is to be performed onely to the Church 1 Cor. 14.22 Now if you ask what these Prophets were I dare not determine them to be Officers in Churches unless I could prove the manner of their call to make out which I can finde nothing but that they are put in the order and rank of men who are called by Office Eph. 4.11 As Apostles Prophets Evangelists Pastors Teachers which is something in order to prove them Officers but not full proof Some think them to be grown brethren such as are called perfect men 1 Cor. 2.6 Fathers 1 Joh. 2.13 Clemens makes three sorts of Christians 1 They that are turned from the Gentiles 2 They that are going up towards knowledge 3 They that are chiefly knowing It may fall out sometimes there may be some such knowing men in Churches who are by virtue of a gift as able to teach as a person in office pity such gifts should be quenched for want of exercise though I doubt not the fault of the times is on the contrary hand in that upon pretence of gifted Brethrens prophesying those that are not gifted in too many places are prest hereto verifying too much that conceipt that hath been cast by some viz. that ignorance impudence and a Concordance were all the accoutrements some had for preaching I speak not this to quench any gift where it is real but to sober those who may perhaps think of themselves more then is meet Prophets then if any such be out of office they are such as are perfect or well-grown Christians Heb. 5.14 Strong meat belongs to them that are perfect the word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 those who by reason of habit have their senses exercised to difference good and evil But let Prophets be what they will be a Church can no more comfortably be without Ministers then a body without eye and hand Luth. Tom. 4.374 I shall conclude this with one querie Whether it be required by the word of God that a weak Brother that hath but a little measure of the Spirit and so consequently can pray but weakly and but weak parts both in the Analizing Explaining and Dividing the Scriptures and so must needs teach much more weakly be required to be a mouth for the Church at a Church-meeting especially in a Church where there are Brethren of better parts to be had And whether the exercising such weak Brethren be a mean for them to obtain the gift of prophesie or whether there be not some other way thereto As taking direction from some experienced Preacher and reading besides the Scriptures godly books chosen by the direction of some godly Teacher For which studies as also for the study of their own heart they are to set time apart and whether the company of the faithful are to set times apart on the Week day and to meet together on the Lords day onely to help a weak Brother to increase his gifts or rather to try whether he can by exercise increase them by our hearing of him or whether the faithfull whether Lambs or Sheep are not to meet to hear such persons as are able to feed them with knowledg and understanding and whether the faithfull come not for that very end unto hearing to obtain spiritual nourishment in the knowledg of duty and to obtain quickening from their deadness of heart by lively and powerfull notions and also growth by a higher measure of knowledg and information then hitherto they have had and whether such weak Brethren are able to give such information many whereof are onely babes in Christ many of the hearers being strong And whether the best means of edifying a Church be not to be followed And whether established Teachers in Churches reserving the liberty of Prophets and prophesie be not onely more creditable for the honour of the Gospel and edifying the souls of believers by many degrees then the having such weak Brethren to exercise who besides that they cannot