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A03339 The doctrine of fasting and praier, and humiliation for sinne Delivered in sundry sermons at the fast appointed by publique authority, in the yeere 1625. By that late faithfull and worthy minister of Iesus Christ. Arth. Hildersam. Hildersam, Arthur, 1563-1632.; Hildersam, Samuel, 1593 or 4-1674. 1633 (1633) STC 13459; ESTC S104100 106,897 227

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a reverend respect Gods people shewed even to the Word read Nehem 8 3. The eares of all the people were attentive unto the booke of the Law and ver 5. When Ezra opened the booke to read it all the people stood up Make conscience to joine with the congregation in those prayers that are read aswell as in those that are cōceaved For those that are read are holy good prayers and all the congregation should make their prayers and supplications with one accord as they did Act. 1. 14. Hold thy selfe bound to joine with the congregation in singing of Psalmes also See how well God shewed himselfe to bee pleased with this duty 2 Chron. 20. 22. When they began to sing and to praise the Lord set ambushments against the children of Ammon c. 2. Of giving according to thy ability some what to the poore Luk. 21. 23. Christ tooke notice of them that contributed and praised the poore widdow 3. To make it a day of restraint in the matter of food of all sorts so farre as thy health will permit in the matter of thy apparell so farre as decency will permit in the matter of thy delights of all sorts and in the matter of thy worldly affaires Yea 4. Of holding out in these duties a whole day 5. Take heed of hypocrisy and thinking that thy performance of these outward things will serve thy turne and merit at Gods hands When our Saviour saw what an innumerable multitude of people came to heare him in so much that they trode one upon another Luk. 12. 1. hee began to say to his Disciples first of all beware of the leaven of the Pharisees which is hypocrisy And this caveat we have all just cause to give to you in such great assemblies as this is specially at our solemne feasts take heed of hypocrisy Rest not in nor blesse your selves in the deed you have done but referre these outward things unto those right ends which I have told you they were ordained for And remember alwayes that speach of the Apostle Rom. 2. 29. Hee is a lew which is one inwardly and circumcision so is humiliation also is that of the heart in the spirit not in the letter whose praise is not of men but of God Thirdly For reproofe of sundry abuses which are chief causes why our fasts prevaile no more with God First Such are to bee reproved as refuse to joine with Gods people in this duty and will not separate themselves from their profits and delights no not so much as one day in a month though God calls them to it and the King also commaunds them to doe it But like them of Ephraim and M●nasseh of whom we read 2 Chron. 30. 10. are ready to laugh the officers to scorne and to mocke them that in the Kings name require them to doe it Let no man say had we not better have their room then their company What good can wee hope to receive by having such as they to joyne with us in our fasts For as you have heard the coming of all in this case would do us good and further our prayers and this open contempt that such men in all parts doe shew may make us all fare the worse You therefore that are officers doe what you can to restraine them from their labours and to bring them hither Remember that you are also comprehended in the number of those servants to whom the charge is given Luk. 14. 23. Goe out and compell them to come in that my house may be filled Secondly Such as doe come and joyne with us though they doe that also but by the halves but so soone as they are gone forget the occasion of our fasts remember no longer the affliction of Ios●ph give themselves as full liberty to all delights and jollity as if there were no judgement at all upon the land Marke well how God complaines of them that in a time of common calamity did give themselves liberty even in lawfull delights Marke well that speach that you shall find Esa. 22. 14. Surely this iniquity shall not bee purged from you till yee dye saith the Lord of Hosts Why what had they done See that verse 13. Behold joy and gladn●sse slaying of Oxen and killing of Sheep eating of Flesh and drinking of Wine Why what evill or unlawfulnesse was there in all this True but this was that that so much provoked the Lord that they gave themselves to this jollity at such a time as the Lord God of Hosts did by his judgements call them to weeping and to mourning to baldnesse and to girding with sack cloth as wee read verse 12. That they did this with contempt of Gods judgements saying and resolving with themselves thus profanely and desperately as verse 13. Let us eate and drinke for tomorrow we shall dye And what unlawfulnesse was there in that which Amos so much complaineth of Ames 6. 4. 6. In lying upon beds of lvory or in stretching themselves upon their couches or in eating the Lambs out of the flock and the Calves out of the midst of the stall or in chaunting to the sound of the Viol and inventing to themselves instruments of musick like David or in drinking Wine in bowles and annointing themselves with the chiefe ointments Were any of these things unlawfull No but because they did this in such a time as Ioseph the Church of God was in great affliction because they did hereby declare that they were not grieved for the affliction of Ioseph because they did by th●se meanes put farre away from them the evill day as the Prophet speaketh vers 3. and made themselves forgetfull and senselesse of Gods judgement therefore was the Lord so highly offended with them for it Consider of these places well beloved and you will easily discerne that in such evill times as these are in times of great calamity either upon our selves or upon our brethren wee must all of us some what abridge our selves both in our feasts and in our bravery and in our lawf●ll delights of all sorts whatsoever When the Lords sword is sharpened to make a sore slaughter saith the Prophet Eze. 21. 10. when it is furbished that it may glister much lesse when wee see it hath a●●eady made a great slaughter among our brethren as we now see it hath and is even dyed red with their blood should wee then make mirth And if the Lord will not allow us in such times the free use of our most lawfull delights what will the Lord say then to the mirth used even in this time of common calamity in our alehouses and at our wakes where lewd men of all sorts assemble themselves by troupes Ier. 5. 7. to provoke one another to all kind of lewdnesse Will there bee any hope our fasts shall doe much good while our disordred wakes are cōtinued and frequented so in such times as these are Thirdly Such as having power in their hand doe not endeavour to
of Christ for the people which indeed is that th●t did the deed but know 1. that when incense was offred Gods people also prayed L●ke 1. 10. And 2. that Christs intercession goeth with our prayers also ●nd is that that makes them effectuall He off●eth His incense with the prayers of all Saints Rev 8. 3. 4. In strange and extraordinary judgements that are upon Gods people we are bound not onely to pray for them but to do it in an extraordinary manner When the decree was sealed for the destruction of all the Iewes and Ester resolved to venture her life for the revoking of it then ordinary prayer would not serve the turne but Ester commanded extraordinary prayer to be used in such a case and that for sundry dayes together Ester 4. 16. Go fast ye for me and neither eat no● drinke three dayes night nor day 5. In publike and generall calamities that are upon Gods people or hang over them publike and generall prayers should be used for them This course Ie●os●phat tooke in that case 2 Chro● 20. 13. All luda stood before the Lord in that fast And so did the Ninivites likewise Ion. 3. 5. They pr●cl●imed a fast and put on sa●kcloth from the greatest of them to the le●st of them And the more publike and solemne the prayers are that are made in this case the more pleasing they are unto the Lord. This appeareth l●dg 20. 26. they had before gone up to the house of God and asked counsell of God Vers. 18. they had gone up the second time to seeke the Lord and then did weepe also before the Lord Vers. 23. but prevailed not the third time they prevailed Why What did they more now than they did before 1. They fasted 2. All the childre● of Israel ●nd all the people we●t up An evident proofe of this that when Gods judgements are publike and generall upon Gods people our prayers and humiliations should be as publike and generall as is possible and the more publike the more pleasing unto God Reason First The Lord is He that both layeth the judgement upon any of our brethren and He that must take it off and therefore the best way we have to helpe them is to seeke to Him in their behalfe It is the Lord that sends the pestilence I have sent among you the pestilence after the manner of Egypt saith the Lord Amos 4 10. And it is He and He only that moderates and sets bounds unto it He saith to it as to the sea Iob 38. 11. Hitherto shalt thou come but no further and here shall thy proud waves ●e stayed He hath set downe in His counsaile and decree whom it shall smite and whom it shall spare The just number that He hath appointed shall die of it use they what meanes they can which they are bound to do because this is a secret unto them to avoid it Ier. 15. 2. Such as are for death that is for the pestilence as it is expounded Ier. 21. 7. to death and such as are for the s●●rd to the sword and such as are for the famine to the famine and such as are for the captivity to the captivity And it shall not touch any of them whom He will have to be spared though they live in never so much danger Psal. 91. 7. A thousand shall fall at Thy side and ten thousand at Thy right hand but it shall not come nigh Thee And it is the Lord onely that removes it when He pleaseth that saith to the destroying Angell It is enough stay now thy hand 2 Sam. 24. 16. And lastly it is He onely that can cure those that are smitten with it 1 Sam. 26. The Lord killeth and ●aketh alive He bringeth downe to the grave and brings up againe So that to conclude this reason we may say with the Prophet Amos 3. 6. Shall there be evill in a City and the Lord hath not done it The plague is in the City and that is one great evill secondly it increaseth there wonderfully that is another evill thirdly the people in the out-parishes will not be restrained nor kept in that is another evill fourthly many perish with famine that is another evill And hath not the Lord done all this What better course then can we take for their good than to seeke to the Lord for them Secondly The Lord hath commanded us to do this He desires and lookes for this at our hands and is highly pleased with it when we seeing his judgements upon our brethren become suiters to Him in their behalfe He hath commanded 1 Tim. 2. 1. Before all things let supplications c. be made for all men Yea He desires it greatly and lookes for it even when He is most offended with a people to be thus sought unto in their behalfe Ezek. 22. 30. I sought for a man amongst them that should make up the hedge and stand in the gap before Me for the land that I should not destroy it Es● 59. 16. He wondred that there was no intercessour Yea He is highly pleased with this in which respect Ieremy desires God to take notice of this grace in him and remember it Ier. 18. 20. Remember that I stood before Thee to speake good for them and to turne away Thy wrath from them So that it is a sinne against God to neglect this duty unto our brethren 1 Sam. 12. 23. God forbid that I should sinne against the Lord in ceasing to pray for you Thirdly The force and efficacy that there is in the prayers of Gods people to helpe and relieve them that are in misery is very great The prayers of Gods people have prevailed wonderfully with Him even for wicked men How oft did Moses prayer remove Gods plagues even from Pharaoh Exod. 8. 13. 31. 9. 33. 10. 18 19. When Ah●● and his land were almost consumed with a drought and famine Elias prayer delivered him from that judgement and brought raine yet he was a man subject to the like passi●ns that we are lam 5. 17 18. Yea in this very judgement of the pestilence ye shall see the force of prayer For when God hath drawne out this terrible sword of His in His fierce displeasure and consumed many by it and stretched out His arme to smite more the prayers of Gods people have even stayed Him and held His hand and prevailed so with Him that they have even overcome Him and compelled Him to change His mind and put up His sword When wrath was gone out from the Lord and the plague was begun A●r●n stood with his incense betweene the dead and the living and the plague was stayed Numb 16. 48. When God had said unto Moses against Israel for their idolatry Exod. 32. 10. Let Me alone that my wrath may waxe ●ot again●● them and that I may consume them Upon Moses prayer Vers. 14. The Lord repented Him of the evill which He thought to do unto His people The like He did upon Davids
l have sinned and have done wickedly but these sheepe what have they done He knew well that not the sinnes of those that perished in that grievous plague but his owne sinnes had a chiefe hand in provoking GOD unto that judgement So that we see that there is no one man amongst us all that hath not just reason to be affected with GODS judgements upon the Land though himselfe be spared seeing that he is a cause of it as well as they that are smitten and it may be as great a cause as they nay it may be a greater cause than any of them were And this was that that made good Nehemiah cry thus in his prayer unto GOD Neh. 1. 6. Both I and my fathers house have sinned As if he had said that Ierusalem prospers no better I and my fathers house are as great a cause as any other We have heard the Doctrine which this example of David teacheth us delivered and confirmed in a generall manner let us now come to make use of it and to apply it to our owne case and to the occasion of our meeting at this time This Doctrine therefore serveth to exhort us unto two duties 1. That we would labour to take to heart and to be rightly affected with this judgement of GOD that is now upon London and sundry other parts of the Kingdome 2. That when we are rightly affected with it we would make right use of it to our selves For the first You will say it is a needlesse exhortation for who is not affected with this plague who is not affraid of it and wherefore come we hither els if we be not affected with it I answer That none of us I feare are sufficiently affected with it and that this is the fountaine and foundation of all good uses we can make of it either for their benefit that are visited with it or for our selves that we would labour to be affected with this judgement of GOD as we ought to be I will therefore shew you what just causes we have to be deeply affected with this judgement And they are principally three First In respect of the grievousnesse of the judgement it selfe For wee shall finde this called one of GODS sore judgements Ezek. 14. 21. And when the LORD threatens that Hee Himselfe would fight against Ierusalem with an out-stretched hand and a strong arme even in anger and in fury and in great wrath Ier. 21. 5. He tels them in the next Verse how He would do this He would smite the city with a great pestilence Certainly the LORD therefore now fights against our Land yea He fighteth against it in fury and in great wrath Observe foure things in this judgement 1. What a waster it is Psal. 91. 6. it is called the destruction that wasteth at noone-day In a short time even in three dayes it consumed seventy thousand in Israel 2 Sam. 24. 15. A grievous judgement it must needs be when GOD Himselfe matcheth a pestilence of three dayes continuance as a thing of equall force to afflict and destroy with a famine of seven yeares and with flying by the space of three moneths before their enemies that pursued them as we know He doth 2 Sam. 24. 13. And hath not the pestilence that GOD hath now sent into our Land proved a terrible waster when in one weeke in one City it hath swept away three thousand five hundred eighty two 2. Consider how suddenly it takes them away that have beene smitten with it many that were well in the morning have beene dead of it before night it is therefore called the LORDS arrow Psal. 91. 5. It strikes and pierceth men suddenly with a deadly wound and Vers. 6. it is said to walke in darknesse And certainly sudden death though it be not absolutely to be prayed against yet it is to be esteemed a temporall judgement and a signe of GODS anger Let destruction come upon him at unawares saith the Prophet here Vers. 8. It must needs add much to the bitternesse of death when it comes so suddenly that a man can neither commend himselfe to GOD nor set things in order for the world before he die 3. Consider it is such a judgement as oft makes men destroyers of them whom they most love and desire to keepe alive the father setting at unawares the infection upon the child the husband on the wife a man on his dearest friend A great cause of humbling it is for a man to have killed any other man at unawares as you may see by that law Numb 35. 28. and what is it then to have killed them that are dearest to them 4. It is such a sicknesse as doth usually debarre men of many comforts that other sicke persons do enjoy First many that are visited with this sicknesse do want convenient attendance and lodging dying in the streets and high-wayes of whom that may be said Esa. 51. 20. Thy sonnes have fainted they lie at the head of all streets the fury of the LORD the rebuke of thy GOD. Secondly their friends dare not visit them which as it is a worke of mercy so it is a great meanes of comfort to the afflicted and such as CHRIST hath enjoyned us Mat. 25. 36. 3. Whereas none have so much need of spirituall comfort as they because the very disease makes them more subject to terrors and feares than others and is therefore called the terrour by night Psal. 91. 5. they poore wretches can have none to comfort them but may in anguish of soule cry out Lam. 1. 16. The comforter that should relieve my soule is farre from me So that in respect of this first consideration the grievousnesse of the judgement it selfe they may cry to us all and to all GODS people throughout the Land as Lam. 1. 12. Is it nothing to you all ye that passe by Behold and see if there be any sorrow like unto my sorrow wherewith the LORD hath afflicted me in the day of His anger And will you not be affected with it Secondly if this will not serve come to a second cause we have to be deeply affected with it because none of us can tell how farre it may go how neare it may come to our owne dwellings In which respect though we may say as Namb. 16. 46. we are sure wrath is gone out from the LORD the plague is begun yet as the Psalmist saith Psal. 74. 9. There is not amongst us any that knoweth how long it will last or how farre it will spread Let no man say I am farre enough from London I dwell in a good ayre and we have taken good order to prevent all danger of this infectio●s disease no carriers shall come from thence to us no Londoners shall lodge amongst us These are good meanes I will not deny if they be used with that compassion that becomes Christians to shew unto them in misery and must not be neglected But all these cannot secure us from
the plague if we do not first make our peace with GOD all these are in vaine If we beare in our bosome the cause of the plague if we nourish and increase it daily I meane our sinnes we cannot be sure to keepe it from our townes and houses do what we can Know thou for a surety it is GOD that sends the pestilence as He saith 2 Chron. 7. 13. In this judgement above others we are said to fall into the LORDS hands as David speaketh 2 Sam. 24. 14. And as He sends it so He onely guides it whither it shall go and whither it shall not go whom it shall smite and whom it shall spare And though He do usually send it by outward and ordinary meanes yet alwayes He doth not so Some that live in the thickest of them that are infected and in a most corrupt aire do escape some that flie from the places infected into the purest aire are infected they know not how How many Physitians and Chyrurgions and nurses and keepers that have beene wont to visit the infected to sweat them to dresse their sores to wash their linnen yea how many that have daily conversed with them and lyen in bed with them also have beene knowne to have escaped the infection altogether Whereas many that have beene most carefull to keepe themselves from all that have been infected and to use all good preservatives against the contagion have beene taken by it No man may argue from hence as some foolishly have done that this disease is not in it owne nature more infectious than other diseases are No more than from this that the three noble Iewes that were cast into Nebuchadnezzars furnace received no hurt at all by it Dan. 3. 27. and that oft times one house in a street or roome in a house escape burning in the greatest fires that have beene heard of a man may conclude that fire is not in it selfe of a burning and consuming nature But in this as in the other the finger and power of GOD is to be acknowledged in restraining and setting bonds to this heavy judgement as pleaseth Him And this the LORD doubtlesse doth to hearten and encourage them that are whole to performe all necessary duties of mercy and love to them that are sicke And as the LORD can thus limit the plague of pestilence so can He if He please command it to go through our whole Land before it cease as He did through the land of Israel 2 Sam. 24. 15. from Dan to Beersheba Though we flie from it He can follow and pursue us with it as He hath done many and threatneth I will persecute and follow them with the pestilence saith He Ier. 29. 18. Though we shut our doores against it He can make it come in at our windowes as they complaine Ier. 9. 21. Death is come up to our windowes and is entred into our palaces Let no man thinke he can be sure to avoid this judgement by flying from it if he be not carefull to remove the cause of it and to make his peace with GOD. Do therefore before it come nearer to thee as the LORD Himselfe counselleth thee Amos 4. 12. Prepare to meet thy GOD. And because thou canst have no assurance in thy selfe that thou shalt be able to avoid the danger of the indignation of this King that comes against thee for ought thou knowest with so great a power learne that wisdome that our Saviour directeth thee unto Luke 14. 32. While He is yet a great way off send an ambassage and desire conditions of peacewith Him If thou wouldst be free from the feare of the plague feare GOD aright Be not afraid saith the Prophet Esa. 8. 12 13. sanctifie the LORD of hosts Himselfe and let Him be your feare and let Him be your dread If we could feare the LORD as we ought we should not need to feare any thing els in the world Be sure to make thy peace with Him which how thou mayest doe I will tell thee by and by Thirdly and lastly to cause us to take to heart and to be affected with this fearefull plague consider that if this judgement be neglected as great as it is it wil be but a fore-runner of some more fearefull judgement than this is And as our Saviour speaketh in another case Matth. 24. 8. this wil be but the beginning of our sorrowes There is a judgement that this nation hath hitherto beene preserved from to the astonishment and admiration of all the world that is greater than this for it useth to bring this and the famine also with it I meane warre The sword of our bloudy and mercilesse enemies is worse than the plague This is plaine by Davids choice 2 Sam. 24. 14. Let us fall now into the hand of the LORD for His mercies are great and let me not fall into the handof man And surely we have cause to feare that if this will do us no good GOD cannot endure to have His judgements despised Heare what He saith Levit. 26. 18. If you will not for all this hearken unto Me then I will punish you seven times more for your sinnes And certainly I may say to all you that heare me this day if you regard not nor profit by this fearfull plague you heare of in London and in other parts of the Land GOD will either bring it home to you or a worse plague than it Luke 13. 3. Except ye repent ye shall all likewise perish The second duty that this Doctrine serveth to exhort us to is that we would make right use of this judgement of GOD that is upon the Land unto our selves And that standeth in foure points First seeing 1. GOD gives us in this judgement such cause of sorrow seeing He is angry and 2 not with the Londoners onely but with us with the whole Land and 3. it may be more with us than with them and 4. seeing we know not how soon this fire that burnes our neighbours house may light upon ours We must therfore examine every one of us our own wayes This direction is given us Lam. 3. 39. 40. Wherefore doth a living man complaine a man for the punishment of his sinnes As if the Church there should say why do men mourne and fret and take on so for this judgement of GOD that is justly fallen upon them Why do they not betake themselves to the right course for the pacifying of GODS wrath Which is this and this onely Let us search and try our wayes and turne againe to the LORD Every one of us should say thus within himselfe surely the LORD is very angry with the whole Land with every one of us and what have I done to anger the LORD thus to provoke Him to this wrath Ier. 8. 6 7. The LORD chargeth the Iewes that they did not know His judgement because no man said what have I done And so surely will He judge of us We know not the meaning of the
be such as may be coloured with the best pretences will provoke Him to punish men this way So then to apply all this unto our selves seeing it is evident that we and our nation are guilty of all these sinnes for every one of which we find in the Word that GOD hath brought and threatned to bring this judgement upon His people in former times seeing we have beene 1. most unthankfull unto GOD for our deliverance out of that spirituall Egypt and house of bondage wherein our fore-fathers lived and have shewed too much desire to returne thither againe and have loathed so long the heavenly food of the Gospell of CHRIST more than ever they did that Manna and 2. have brought up and entertained a most slanderous and evill report of the promised Land and of that strait way that leads unto it speaking evill of and scorning the life and power of godlinesse and discouraging others from it murmuring against and hating to the death such of GODS servants as either by doctrine or example do presse and provoke us unto it and 3 are so ready upon every occasion to murmure and rebell against the servants and Ministers of the LORD content indeed to give them the hearing but apt to tell them if they shall deale particularly and roundly with us and require of us obedience to the truth and practise of that that we heare and professe that they take too much upon them seeing 4. whoredome doth every where so increase and abound in our Land and 5. we are every whit as proud of our owne strength and as apt to put trust in the arme of flesh as David was and 6. the holy Sacrament is in all places so commonly prophaned and those holy things given to and received without difference by such dogs and swine as have no care at all d●ly to prepare themselves thereunto seeing 7. the publique and solemne worship of GOD is every where so much neglected and 8 we have so hardened our hearts against and profited so little by many other judgements whereby the LORD hath witnessed His wrath from heaven against us and sought to bring us unto repentance and 9. we do continually with so great obstinacy refuse to yeeld obedience to many of the expresse commandements of GOD. Seeing I say we are guilty of all these sinnes that are the proper causes of this judgement let us therefore impute this fearefull plague whereby GOD ●ath smitten the chiefe City and many other parts of our Land unto these our sinnes and justifie the LORD in this judgement the causes whereof are so evidently to be found amongst us yea let us all feare that He will execute His fierce wrath upon us in the same manner except we repent us of and forsake these sinnes And this is the first way whereby we must make right use unto our selves of this heavy judgement of GOD that is upon the Land The second is this that seeing the LORD doth thus declare and proclaime that His anger and fury is kindled and inflamed against us all it behooves us without delay by all meanes to make our peace with GOD and to seeke reconciliation with Him Acquaint thy selfe now with Him saith Eliphaz to Iob. Chap. 22. 21. and make peace with Him thereby good shall come unto thee This and this onely is the way unto true safety and comfort And marke that he adviseth him to do it now Now is the time to do it if ever we will do it now that His hand is so stretched out against us And we are strangely hardned in our sins if howsoever we have wretchedly neglected it hitherto we will do it now If any shall aske me what must I doe and what course must I take to make my peace with GOD I answer briefly and plainly that there be three things thou must do if thou wouldest obtaine peace with GOD and if thou canst do these three things thou needest not doubt to obtaine it 1. Thou must freely and fully and particularly confesse thy sinnes unto GOD even those sinnes which I have shewed to be the chiefe causes of this judgement I said saith David Psal. 32. 5. I will confesse my transgressions unto the LORD and thou forgavest the iniquity of my sinne 2. Thou must unfainedly and fully resolve with thy selfe to cast off and forsake these and all other thy sinnes Prov. 28. 13. Who so confesseth and forsaketh his sinne shall find mercy Though thou canst not quite leave them as who can do that in this life yet if thou canst unfainedly and without dissimulation desire and purpose and resolve with thy selfe to leave them all begging strength of GOD that thou mayst be made able to do it then hast thou forsaken them in GODS account and they shall not hinder thy peace and reconciliation with GOD. In this David tooke comfort I am purposed saith he Psal. 17. 3. that my mouth shall not transgresse and Psal. 39. 1. I said I fully resolved and determined with my selfe I will take heed to my wayes 3. And lastly Thou must strive by a lively faith to lay hold on GODS mercy in CHRIST and to get His bloud sprinkled upon thy heart CHRIST is our peace as the Apostle cals Him Eph. 2. 14. Neither can we with all that we are able to do make our peace with GOD but onely through faith in Him When the destroying Angell saw the bloud of the lambe sprinkled upon the lintell and side-posts of any doore he passed by that house and smote none in it Exod. 12. 23. The third way whereby we must make right use to our selves of this judgement that we see upon others is this it must increase our care to reforme not our selves onely but our families It is a vaine thing for any man to blesse himselfe or take comfort in his repentance without this care say not if I use all good meanes to make peace with GOD for my selfe I hope the faults of my family shall never be imputed unto me Search the Scriptures and you shall find there was never any man that was himselfe reconciled and at peace with GOD but his care was that his family might feare GOD and be in favour with Him as well as himselfe Cornelius though he were a Centurion and kept a great family and had souldiers to serve him yet feared God with all his house Acts 10. 2. So soone as Zacheus himselfe was become a sonne of Abraham a true believer salvation came unto his house too Luke 19. 9. Christ promised he should have a faithfull and a religious family So speaketh Eliphaz also to Iob Iob 22. 23. If thou returne to the Almighty thou shalt be built up thou shalt put away iniquity far from thy tabernacles No man that is himselfe truly returned unto the Almighty need to be discouraged in this if he do his endeavour God hath promised that he shall be able through His gracious assistance and blessing to reforme his family though not to
convert the heart of every one in it yet to keepe them from open and scandalous offences Certainly we do not make the right use we ought of this heavy scourge of God unlesse we be made thereby more carefull to reforme our families For this cause the Lord said He would not conceale from Abraham His purpose against the Sodomites because He knew that he would make this use of it For I know him saith the Lord Gen. 18. 19. that he will command his children and his houshold after him and they shall keepe the way of the Lord to doe justice and judgement that the Lord may bring upon Abraham that which He hath spoken of him 1. Abraham upon the knowledge and observation of Gods wrath even upon the Sodomites would become more carefull to looke to his whole family and to reforme it 2. God would assist and blesse him in this his endeavour and he should see the fruit of it in his family 3. This care that Abraham had of his family should be a principall meanes to make good unto him all Gods promises to bring upon him and make sure unto him all the blessings and good things that God had promised unto him and without this he could have had no assurance of them O that we could once believe and take to heart these things Certainly one maine cause of this and all other judgements that are upon our Land is the want of care that is in them that professe themselves to be the people of God in reforming their families whether they of their family be drunkards or sober persons blasphemers or such as feare an oath uncleane or chast prophane or religious is all one to them The fourth and last way whereby we must make right use to our selves of this judgement is this it must make us more mercifull to them that are in distresse and more ready to relieve them Nothing will give us more assurance to be freed from the plague our selves or to find comfort and strength in it if God shall please to visit us by it than this When Gods heavy hand did hang over Nebuchadnezzar Daniel speakes thus unto him Dan. 4. 27. Wherefore O King let my counsell be acceptable unto the and breake off thy sinnes by righteousnesse and thine iniquities by shewing mercy vnto the poore if it may be a lengthning to thy tranquillity As if he should have said if any thing will lengthen thy tranquillity and keepe off the judgement threatned this is likely to do it Remember what ourblessed Saviour hath said of this Mat. 5. 7. Blessed are the mercifull for they shall obtaine mercy Nothing will give a man more assurance to find mercy with God in the time of his distresse than this will Remember also what His holy Apostle saith of this Iam. 2. 13. He shal have judgement without mercy that sheweth no mercy If either the plague or any other judgement seize upon that man that hath beene void of mercy it shal be upon him without all mixture of mercy he shall have no comfort of Gods mercy in it and mercy rejoyceth or boasteth against judgement The mercifull man shall not feare this or any other judgement before it come as other men do and if it do light upon him he shall rejoyce and find a comfortable sense of Gods mercy in it And remember this at this time especially now you have kept a day of humbling your selves before God know that there is nothing that will more grace our solemne services before God specially services of this kind nothing will make them more acceptable unto Him than when we shall therein manifest and declare our selves to be mercifull and bountifull unto the poore Is not this the fast that I have chosen saith the Lord Esa. 58. 6 7. to loose the bands of wickednesse to undoe the heavy burdens and to let the oppressed go free and that ye breake every yoke Is it not to deale thy bread to the hungry and that thou bring the poore that are cast out to thine house When thou seest the naked that thou cover him and that thou hide not thy selfe from thine own flesh SERMON II. Aug. 17. 1625. FOlloweth the duty whereby David expressed his love and compassion to these men he prayed for them For though this be not expressed in the first part of the verse where the duty is mentioned that he performed towards these men in their misery yet is it evident 1. By the expresse words of the last clause of the verse where he mentioneth the successe he had in the duty he performed for them and 2. by this also that he saith he fasted and humbled his soule for them for in all fasts and exercises of humiliation that Gods people have kept prayer was the chiefe duty they performed and all other things they did in those exercises they did onely to helpe and further themselves in prayer Esa. 58. 3. To make their voice to be heard on high and Ion. 3. 8. to make them cry more mightily unto God The Doctrine then that we are to learne from this example of David is this That a chiefe duty we are to performe to them that are in misery is to pray for them See the proofe of the point in five degrees 1. This is a chiefe duty whereby we do expresse the truth of our love unto any and whereby we may do them good When our Saviour had commanded us to love our enemies and to do good to them th●t hate us M●t. 5. 44. He adds And pr●y for them 2. This is duty that is to be performed by us ●owards all men 1 Tim. 2. 1. Yea even towards the wickedest men that live upon ●arth See how importunate Abraham was with God for the beastly Sodomites Gen. 18. 32. 3. This duty is to be performed specially for s●ch as are Gods people though it be but in outward profession This course Moses tooke to relieve Israel in a great extremity When God threatned He would destroy Israel Moses st●od before Him in the breach by maine force to keepe Him out to turne away His wrath Psal. 106. 23. How stood he in the breach How did he turne away Gods wrath from them By prayer Ex●d 32. 11. Moses besought the Lord his God This course David tooke to relieve Gods people in the time of a fearefull pesti●ence that in a short time had consumed seventy thousand 2 Sa● 24. 15. He was deeply affected with their misery as appeareth by the story but what course tooke he to helpe them he prayed for them 1 Chro● 21. 16 18. and so stayed the plague So did Moses in the very like case of the pestilence when ●r●th was g●n● out fro● the Lord and the plague was 〈◊〉 he chargeth Aar●n to t●ke his ce●ser and put fire therein from the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 put ince●se on it and go quickly to the co●greg●tio● t● make an attonement for them N●●b 16. 46. True it is that signified the intercession
prayer 2. Sam. 24. 16. The Lord repented Him of the evill and said to the Ange●● that destroyed the people it is enough stay now thine hand Is it in the power of man to overcome God to withstand Him when He comes to take vengeance to cause Him to change His mind Yes verily Iacob had tha● power Gen. 32. 26 when the Lord had wrestled with Him and said Let Me go he would not let Him go but Verse 28. as a prince he had power with G●d and p●ev●iled And how did he overcome God th●s By prayer as you may see Hos. 12. 4. He h●d power ●ver the Angell and prevailed he wept 〈◊〉 mad● supplication unt● him Say not those were rare men for all Gods people have this name given them they are all called the Israel of God Gal. 6. 16. and therefore as Princes may prevaile with God this way And no marvell though Gods people may thus prevaile with God for the staying of His hand inte●porall judgements or removing of them from their brethren seeing they are able to prevaile with God even for the pardon of their sinnes which are the causes of those judgements and for the converting and saving of their soules Iam. 5. 15. The prayer of fai●h shall s●ve the sicke and if he have committed sin●●s they shal be forgiven him And 1 Io● 5. 16. If any 〈◊〉 see his bro●●er sinne● sinne which is not ●nto death he shall aske and he shall give him life for them that sinne not 〈◊〉 death The Use this Doctrine serves unto is for Instruction R●proofe Examination First for instruction To teach us what account is to be made of such as are true Israelites And know thou h●st two reasons to mo●e thee to make much of such 1. They are a blessing to the place where they live Esa. 19. 24. Israel shall be a blessing in the midst of the land They are the props and pillars of the Land for their sakes the Land is spared If there had been butten such in Sodom Sodom had beene spared Gen 18. 32. 2. They are able as Princes to prevaile mightily with God by their prayers to stand in the breach and to hold Gods hands they are the chario●s of Israel and the horse●e●● thereof as they are called 2 King 13. 14. Indeed there are but a few such true Israelites which makes the Prophet speake in that manner Psal. 25. 12. What man is he that feareth the Lord But where thou knowest such make much of them Why should not Gods favourit●s be as much honoured as the favourites of the greatest King Get as many such into the towne thou livest in as thou canst They are as L●ts in Sodom Gen. 19. 22. till L●t was gone out of Sodom the Angell could not destroy it Get as many such into thy family as thou canst As David professed he would do Psal. 101. 6. Mi●e eyes shal be upon the faithfull in the land that they may dwell with me Gen. 39. 5. The Lord blessed the Egypti●ns house for Iosephs s●ke Get such friends as these are Psal. 119. 63. I am a companion of all them that feare Thee Vers. 79. Let those that feare Thee turne unto me and those that have knowne thy testimonies I tell thee Paul as great an Apostle as he was knew how to esteeme and make use of such friends Rom. 15. 30. N●w I beseech you brethren for the L●rd Iesus Christs sake and for the l●ve of the spirit that you strive together with me in your pr●yers to God for mee I know I shall offend many of you in speaking so much for such whom above all others you detest most and are ready to shew it upon every occasion And I have wondred much to see the bitter hatred that many who are otherwise civill men beare to such as feare God For think I Psal. 11. 3. and What h●th the righteous done B●t I have found in Gods Booke the true cause of it and that is this that every naturall man hateth God and is an enemy to Him Rom. 5. 10. and that God hath put enmity betweene the seed of the serp●● and the seed of the wom●n Gen. 3. 15. and therefore so long as thou continuest an enemy unto God and one of the serpents seed thou must needs hate all such as truly feare God The good Lord be mercifull to thee and give thee an heart to take notice of thy wretched estate that thou maist repent and come out of it The second Use is for reproofe of three sorts of men I Of them that cannot pray 2. Of them that do not use to pray 3. Of them that will not pray First of them that cannot pray O consider how miserable a man thou art First thou wantest that whereby thou shouldest helpe thy poore brethren in their misery A griefe it is to an honest mind to see his brother in extreme want and misery and he hath nothing to relieve him with Therefore is that commandment given Ephes. 4. 28. Let him labour in some honest calling that be m●y have to give How much more just cause of griefe is this when thou canst not so much as pray for him Secondly thou wantest that whereby thou shouldest keepe off Gods judgements from thy selfe or remove them or yeeld thee comfort in them For my love th●● were mine ●dversaries saith David Psal. 109. 4. but I gave my selfe to prayer That was his chiefe comfort in all his afflictions Thirdly thou wantest that that should give thee comfort in thy present estate For thou canst have no assurance that thou art Gods child or that thou hast any truth of grace in thee if thou cannot not pray The spirit of grace is the spirit of s●pplication Zac. 12. 10. Because ye ●re sonnes saith the Apostle Gal. 4. 6. God hath sent f●rth the spirit of His S●nne into your hearts crying Abb● Father No man is the child of God nor hath the spirit of Christ in him that is not able feelingly and fervently to call God●Father and to pray unto Him Learne therefore to cry earnestly unto God as the Disciples did L●k 11. 1. Lord teach me to pray The second sort that are to be reproved by this Doctrine are such as can but through lazinesse and propha●e negligence do not use to pray Many there be that seldome or never pray it may be in their sicknesse or extreme danger they will but they beare upon them that brand of an hypocrite that Iob spea●eth of 〈◊〉 27. 10. Will he call upon God at all times that is constantly and not by fits and starts onely Many that did once use constantly to pray with their families and in secret have now given it over To whom the Lord will one day say as Esa. 43. 22. Tho● hast not called upon 〈◊〉 O 〈◊〉 but th●●●ast bee●e ●eary of ●e O Is●●●l they that neglect their calling upon God and are 〈◊〉 of prayer are weary of God Ma●y never po●●ed out prayer to God
as of the chiefe cause why God did hide His face from His people and consumed them with His judgements Esa. 64. 7. There is no●e that c●lleth up●n Thy Name that stirreth ●p h●mself to take h●ld of Thee By prayer the faithfull may as it were take hold on God they may hold His hands from 〈◊〉 them as Mo●● did when God said to him Ex●d 32. 10. Let Me ●lone But none doth thus effectually call upon God and take hold of Him that prayeth coldly and drowsily but he onely that stirreth up and row●eth himselfe unto this duty that he may do it fervently And ●urely this m●y be one cause why God hath given no better answer to our prayers hitherto because he seeth how cold and drows●e we have beene in them how little affected we have beene with the miseries of our brethren whom we have seemed to pray for When our blessed Saviour was in His agony and his soule was exceeding sorrowfull even unto death Mat. 26. 38. His Disciples Peter and Iames and Iohn whom He desired to watch with Him and to be some helpe to Him in that His distresse fell asleepe so little sense had they of His extreme misery Mat. 26. 40. And even so have we carried our selves towards our brethren the members of Christ we have pretended a willingnesse to yeeld them our helpe in the miseries they are in but alas in the prayers that we have seemed to make for them we have beene overtaken with drowsinesse and sleepinesse we have beene in them little or nothing at all touched with the sense of their distresse But as our Saviour said then unto those His Disciples Mat 26. 41. Watch and pray So say I unto you beloved you can never do your selves or your brethren good by your prayers unlesse when you pray you watch and looke well to your hearts to keepe them from drowsinesse and senslesnesse from wandring and roving that when you pray you may pray with fervency and feeling of your owne necessities and of the necessities of them that you do pray for Let us not thinke that because we see no better fruit of our prayers the Lord hath beene displeased with us for keeping these fasts and presuming to become s●itors to Him for our brethren But let us rather judge that He hath therefore delayed to answer us hitherto that He might cause us hereby to cry lowder and to be more importunate and fervent with Him in our prayers For so dealt He with the good woman of Canaan Mat. 15. 22 24. 26. He did not onely delay to helpe her but by His neglecting of her and the rough answers He gave her seemed angry with her and willing to discourage her not out of any dislike He had to her or her suit wherewith doubtlesse He was much pleased but onely to increase her fervency and importunity in prayer Secondly We must pray in faith and confidence to be heard Let him aske in faith saith the Apostle Iam. 1. 6 7. els let him not think that he shall receive any thing of the Lord. And surely we have just cause to pray in faith and confidence that we shall prevaile with God in these prayers that we make for our distressed brethren Many good grounds of confidence we have 1. We have heard that it is the will and commandement of God that we should pray for them And this is the confidence that we have in Him saith the Apostle I I●h 5. 14. that if we aske any thing according to His will He heareth us 2. These extraordinary prayers and fasts that we keepe are injoyned us by publique authority of our gracious Soveraigne and of the State And even that is a thing highly pleasing unto God and will much further the successe of our prayers Therefore also it is mentioned by the Holy Ghost as a matter of no small impor●ance in two of the most succesfull fasts that is in that of I●dah 2 Chron. 20. 3. Iehoshaphat feared and set himself to seeke the Lord and proclaimed a fast throughout all ludah And in that of the Ninivites Ion. 3. 7. He caused it to be proclaimed and published through Niniveh by the decree of the King and his Nobles saying c. 3. These fasts are kept generally and every where throughout the Land and that is also a thing that God is much pleased with such prayers and dayes of humiliation that have beene so universall have beene wont much to prevaile with God as we have already heard out of Iudg. 20. 26. 2 Chron. 20. 3 13. Ion. 3. 5 7 8. 4. The nation and people that we pray for are Gods owne people and such as beare His Name Admit our Land be as sinfull as Sodom was yet remember that if there had beene but ten such in So●om as we have many thousands of in our Land God had heard Abrahams prayer even for Sodom because of them Gen. 18. 32. Of our Land blessed be God we may yet say there is no nation in the world at this day that hath so many righteous persons in it or that hath the Gospell preached in it in that sincerity and power as we have Nay there is no City in the world where the Gospell is so plentifully and so faithfully preached nor wherein God is so purely worshipped as in that City that we meet together this day to pray for And what an encouragement that may be unto us in our prayers is plaine by that speech of the Prophet in his prayer unto God for Iudah Ier. 14. 9. Yet thou O Lord art in the midst of us and we are called by thy Name leave us not And this must be acknowledged for another cause why our prayers hitherto have sped no better we have not prayed in faith Many have joyned with us whose persons God never yet accepted or was well pleased with And till God have respect to Abel himselfe He will never have respect to any off●ing of his Gen. 4. 4. And such of us as are in the state of grace yet have we not stirred up our faith and confidence to speed in the prayers we have made Do it hereafter and thou shalt be sure to speed the better in thy prayers for it Say unto thy soule when thou preparest thy selfe to pray as David did Psal. 42. 11 Why art thou cast downe O my soule and why art thou disquieted within me Hope thou in God for I shall yet praise Him who is the health of my countenance and my God Put thy confidence in God hope and expect to receive a gracious answer from Him when thou prayest unto Him and thou shalt find better successe in thy prayers than thou hast beene wont to do Thirdly We must pray in sense of our owne unworthinesse no man is fit to pray for Gods people but he that feeles the plague of his owne heart as Salomon speaketh I King 8. 38. But how can that be will you say if I have when I pray a deepe
apprehension and sense of mine owne unworthinesse and sinne how can I be import●nate with God in my prayer How can I pray in faith or be confident that He will heare me This must needs deprive a man of all boldnesse discourage and make him afraid to speake unto God This effect the sense of sinne seemes to have had in David when he cryed Psal. 40. 12. Mi●e iniquities have taken hold upon me so that I am not able to looke up they are more than the haires of mine head therefore mine heart faileth me But to this I answer that no faithfull man hath cause to feare this For Gods people have never beene so strong with Him in prayer as when they were most abased and dejected in themselves insense of their owne weakenesse and unworthinesse When I am weake saith the Apostle 2 Cor. 12. 10. weake and dejected in my selfe through sense of mine owne infirmities and afflictions then am I strong strong in the Lord and fittest to do Him service in an acceptable manner See an example and type of this in I●cob Gen. 32. 25 26 Never was he so strong with God as when the hollow of his thigh was out of joynt He had power over the Angell over Christ the Angell of the covenant saith the Prophet Hos. 12. 4. and prevailed He wept and made supplication unto Him He found Him in Bethel Why wept he so Certainly from the sense of his owne infirmity and unworthinesse but he prevailed with God in his supplications neverthelesse but much the more for that See this also in the good woman of Canaan do you not thinke she was much abased in her selfe upon those three repulses that she had received Mat. 15. 27. yet was her prayer then most strong and effectuall with God Vers. 28. And this is surely another cause why our prayers for our brethren have beene so weake and without force with God we are too strong too well perswaded of our selves to do Gods people any good with our prayers Fourthly We must bring with us unto prayer an unfeigned desire and a full purpose and resolution of heart to reforme that that is amisse both in our selves and others and so to remove the cause of Gods displeasure that is kindled against us Certainly this would give wonderfull force unto our prayers This was that that gave such force unto the fasting and praying of the Ninivites Ion. 3. See their care and desire Let them turne every one from his evill way say the King and his Nobles in their proclamation Verse 8. and from the violence that is in their hands See also both the performance of that they resolved to do and how nothing so much prevailed with God for the successe of their prayers as this Verse 10. God saw their workes that they turned from their evill way and God repented of the evill that He had said He would do unt● them and He did it not Therefore hath it been usuall with Gods people in their solemne fasts not onely to make full and particular confession of their sinnes but also to vow unto God that they would leave and forsake them yea they were wont solemnly to bind themselves unto this All this is evident ●eb 9. 12 38. 10. 29. When Phinehas stood up and executed judgement upon Zimri and Cozbi as Moses and the Iudges had before done of many others that were joyned unto Baal-Peor Numb 25. 4 5. and so removed the cause of Gods displeasure the plague was stayed saith the Prophet Psal. 106. 30. All the weeping of the whole congregation before the doore of the tabernacle of which we read Numb 25. 6. could do nothing without that O that God would put into the hearts of all our Magistrates not onely to appoint and keep solemne and generall fasts but also by severe execution of the lawes to remove the causes of all our plagues Our King and State blessed be God have made good Lawes against idolatry swearing prophanation of the Sabbath murther and drunkennesse but alas we want such as Phinehas to see the lawes executed upon any of these offendors and therefore it is no marvell though the plague be not stayed While these fowle sinnes are winked at and go unpunished what hope can we have that either our owne prayers or the prayers of all the Saints upon earth should prevaile with God for our Land Till the Achans be found out and punished as found they may easily be for they do every where declare their sinne as Sodom they hide it not as the Prophet speaketh Esa. 3. 9. but till they be punished as God did say to Ioshua Icsh. 7. 10 11. Get thee up wheref●re lyest thou thus upon thy face Israel hath sinned so will He to us why do you thus fast and pray and make such shew of humiliation as you do find out the sinnes and punish them that are the causes of Mine anger and then I wil be appeased toward you and your Land Certainly one chiefe cause why our fasting and praying hath done so little good is because this ●a●h not beene done Nay many of these lewd men that are guilty of these foule sinnes intrude themselves into our assemblies and joyne with us in these holy duties And we know that the sacrifice of the wicked is abomination unto the Lord Prov. 15. 8. Let me therefore exhort you beloved that as you desire to please God in this profession of humiliation that you make and to benefit your selves or your brethren by your prayers resolve both to forsake every knowne sinne and vow unto God this day amendment of life in such particulars as thine owne heart can tell thee thou hast most offended God by and which of us all is it that hath not something to reforme remembring alwayes that speech of the Prophet Psal 66. 18. If I regardiniquity in my heart the Lord will not heare me as also 2. to do what lies in thee to reforme others Fiftly and lastly We must joyne workes of mercy with our prayers 1. Let no man thinke he shall be a looser by that that he gives out of conscience towards God unto the poore He that hath pitie upon the poore lendeth unto the Lord saith the Holy Ghost Prov. 19. 17. and that that he hath given will He pay him againe 2. Of all almes that is given that is best and most pleasing unto God that is given in our Church-assemblies for it is an ordinance of God and even a Sabbath-duty that collection should be made for the poore when we meet together as is plaine by that speech of the Apostle 1 Cor. 16. 1 2. And of that that is thus given you may have much more assurance that it shal be given to them onely that have need than you can have of much of that that you give at your doores 3. There is great force in this worke of mercy to further the good successe of our prayers els would not the Angell have said thus unto Cornelius
as appeares by the next words but the righteous sing and rejoyce Ier. 2. 19. Thine owne wickednesse shall correct thee know therefore and see that it is an evill thing and bitter that thou hast forsaken the Lord thy God and that my feare is not in thee Thy sinnes certainly will be bitter to thee one day sooner or later Take this for an undoubted truth thou must either temporally heere or eternally hereafter in hell lament and be waile and weepe for thy sinnes Luc. 13. 28. There shall be weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth when ye shall see Abraham and Isaac and Iacob and all the Prophets in the Kingdome of God and your selves thrust out How much more when they shall see and feele the torments that are prepared in hell for them Now when God as an angry judge strikes and afflicts the soule with sorrow for sinne even in this life ô that sorrow is terrible and intolerable when hee smites the heart he so sets it on as no man is able to abide it Heb. 10. 31. It is a fearefull thing to fall into the hands of the living God Prov. 18. 14. A wounded spirit that is which God in his anger hath wounded who can beare Nah. 1. 6. Who can stand before his indignation and who can abide in the fiercenesse of his anger his fury is powred out like fire and the rocks are throwne down by him And the best way to prevent the Lord from wounding and afflicting our soules is to smite and afflict our owne hearts for our sinnes the way to prevent those intollerable and everlasting sorrowes which God in his fury will bring upon wicked men is to worke our hearts to this godly sorrow our selves and to humble our owne soules this is plaine by that speach of the Apostle 1 Cor. 11. 31. If wee would judge our selves wee should not bee judged of the Lord hee meanes as appeares in the next verse O thinke of this thou merry Greeke that art all for mirth and pleasure thou drunkard and whoremaister that findest such joy and sweetnesse in thy sinne thou pleasant witted fellow that canst so wittily breake jests upon religion and the servants of God that thou canst set all the company on laughing the time will come when thy sinnes which thou canst not abide to thinke of shall be set in order before thine eyes that thou shalt not be able to looke of from them they shall never out of thy thought Psal. 50. 21. Thou that canst not abide to heare of thy sinnes nor to be told of them nor reproved for them by any of Gods servants who are as Elihu speakes Iob 33. 6 7 8. in Gods stead unto thee formed out of the clay aswell as thy selfe whose terror need not make thee affraid shalt one day heare the Lord himselfe reproving thee for them Psal. 50. 21. I will reprove thee saith he and that will be such a kind of reproving as is mentioned Psal. 2. 5. Then shall hee speake to them in his wrath and vex them in his sore displeasure better to have an hundred of Gods poore servants to reprove thee then to have the Lord doe it Thou that canst not abide to let any sadnesse or sorrow for sinne to come neare thy heart but hatest sorrow as the Devill and abandonest it from thee with all thy might doe what thou canst sooner or later it will seize upon thee When Gods servants that have beene much given to mourning for sinne shall sing for joy of heart thou shalt cry for sorrow of heart and howle for vexation of spirit Esay 65. 14. Luke 6. 25. Woe unto you that laugh now for ye shall mourne and weepe Yea 2. thinke of this all you that feare God were it not much better for you to take paines with your owne hearts to humble and afflict them then to leave it to God to doe it in his wrath You have heard hee will certainly doe it if you doe it not and the way to prevent him from doing it is to doe it your selves And these are the motives that may stir up in every one of us a desire to seeke for this grace of an humbled and broken heart It followeth now that I shew you the meanes whereby you may atteine it And these are of two sorts 1. Some such as wherein you must use the helpe of others 2. Some such as wherein you must be the agents your selves Of the first sort I will name to you but two The first is the ministery of the Word If thou wouldst have a soft heart able to mourne for sinne thou must conscionably frequent the faithfull ministery of the Word strive to live under a forcible ministery such as will search thy heart No meanes in the world have ever wrought so mightily to the saving humbling and afflicting of the soule as this hath done By this meanes they that had crucified Christ and were so hardned in their sin that when they saw that wonderfull miracle even the Apostles that were poore Galileans speake in all languages the wonderfull things of God they mocked them and said these men are full of wine Act. 2. 13. were so pricked and wounded in their hearts that they knew not what to doe till the same hand that wounded them had healed them againe as you may read Act. 2. 37 41. And what was it that brought David to such a saving sense of his sinne in numbring of the people that his heart smote him for it and he cryed I have sinned greatly in that I have done I have done very foolishly 2 Sam. 24. 10. Surely God had sent G●d the Prophet unto him as you may see in the next words verse 11. For when David was up in the morning the Word of the Lord came unto the Prophet G●d Davids Seer saying c. and though it be said of Manasses 2 Chron. 33. 12. that when he was in affliction he besought the Lord his God and humbled himselfe greatly before him yet if you looke into the 18. verse of that chap. you shall find he had a mightier and stronger meane to worke that humiliation in his heart then his affliction was the Lord had sent to him Seers and Prophets that spake unto him in the name of the Lord. His affliction was but a subordinate meanes to make him the better able to receive profit by the word the words and ministery of the seers was that that wrought this mighty work There is more force in the ministery of the Word to worke sound and saving humiliation then in all the afflictions in the world Psal. 94. 12. Blessed is the man whom thou chastenest O Lord and teachest him out of thy Law See a notable experiment of this in Rehoboam and the Princes of Iudah 2 Chron. 12. 2 6. When God had for their apostacy sent Shishak King of Egypt with a mighty and invincible army against them and brought them thereby into extreame perill and distresse
upon his name This was the meane whereby Gods people were kept from the prophanenesse and security of those times and God was wonderfully pleased with it Yea many a heart hath been mollified this way which the publique Ministry could not soften Nathans private dealing with David prevailed more with him than all the publique meanes he had enjoyed in a whole yeare 2 Sam. 12. 7. 13. Fourthly Count it therefore a great blessing of God to thee to have such a friend or such a Minister as will watch over thee and deale thus privately and plainely with thee yea seeke for such friends It is said of Ion●than 1 Sam. 20. 8. that he had brought David into a covenant of the Lord with him We should labour to get such friends as we might make this covenant with Yea we should beg of God to give us such a friend Psal. 141. 5. Let the righteous smite me it shal be a kindnesse and let him reprove me it shal be an excellent oyle that shall not breake my head And we have all great need of it for selfe● love so blinds us as we cannot see that that is amisse in our selves In these last times especially men shal be lovers of themselves as the Apostle teacheth us 2 Tim. 3. 2. And what marvell then if there be now adayes so much security and hardnesse of heart among Christians No man holds himselfe bound to watch over his brother to admonish or reprove him but every man saith in his heart as Cain Gen. 4. 9. Am I my brothers keeper The Papists shall rise up in judgement against us in this for they take all opportunities to gaine others to Antichrist They like the Scribes and Pharises of whom our Saviour speaketh Mat. 23. 15. do compasse sea and land to make one proselyte but we have no care at all to gaine any unto Christ. And on the other side all men are unwilling to be admonished and plainly dealt with in private even by the Minister of God but are apt to say to any that would admonish them as the Sodomites did to Lot Gen. 19. 9. Stand backe this fellow will needs be a Iudge But know for a certainty that thou that art so unwilling to heare of thy sinne and to be plainly dealt with about it art in love with thy sinne and hast no desire to bring thy heart to godly griefe and sorrow for it SERMON VII Decemb. 7. 1625. IT followeth now that we come to those meanes wherein we are to be principall agents our selves For though this to speake properly be the mighty work of God to humble and mollifie the heart of man and make it able to mourne for sinne according to that promise Ezek. 11. 19. I will take the stony heart out of their flesh and I will give them an heart of flesh yet may we after we are once regenerated do much to further this great worke of God in our selves Therefore we see David professeth here that he afflicted his owne soule and Psal. 69. 10. that he chastned his soule And of Iosi●h it is said that he did humble himselfe before God 2 Chron. 34. 27. and of Manasses 2 Chron. 33. 12. that he humbled himselfe greatly before the God of his fathers Yea Gods people are commanded in the day of their fast Levit. 23. 27. to afflict their owne soules and Ioel 2. 13. to rent their hearts And I●● 4. 3 4. to breake up their fallow ground and to circumcise and take away the foreskin of their owne hearts By all which places it appeareth we may our selves do much in this worke yea that we must be doers in it our selves or els it will never be well done And certainly if we would do what we might our hearts would be much softer and better able to mourne for our sinnes than they are If any of you shall aske me Why what can we do or what should we do to worke our hearts to this godly sorrow I answer There are foure principall things that we may doe and that we must do if we would get broken and humbled hearts For 1. We must make choice of a fit time 2. Of a fit place 3. When we have so done we must examine our hearts seriously and impar●ially 4. We must pray to God for his assistance in this businesse First We must take a fit time to go about this worke For though this be but a matter of circumstance yet have Gods people found much helpe unto spirituall duties even in this Daniel for his private prayer made choice of the time that God had appointed for the evening sacrifice Dan. 9. 21. And so did Cornelius as will appeare if you compare Act. 10. 30. and 31. together Our blessed Saviour made choice of the evening for this purpose sometimes Mat. 14. 23. and sometimes of the morning early before day Mar. 1. 35. And as all our time is not to be spent in mourning so are there some times and seasons fitter for this purpose and such as will yeeld us more helpe in this worke than other-some will do Eccles. 3. 4. There is a time to weepe and a time to laugh a time to mourne and a time to dance And it is the wisdome of a Christian to discerne and take the fittest time for this purpose Eccles. 8. 5. A wise mans heart discerneth both time and judgement saith Salomon Eph. 5. 15 16. Walke not as fooles but as wise men redeeming the time The wisdome of a man you see consisteth much in the husbanding of his time well and making choice of the fittest time fore every purpose and action that he takes in hand And what times are the fittest may you say for this purpose I answer it is profitable for a man every day to be doing somewhat in this worke by observing his owne wayes and calling himselfe to an account for them For First The Apostle tels us we are in danger to be hardned through the deceitfulnesse of sinne if we do not exhort or stirre up our selves daily Heb. 3. 13. Secondly The time of our death is very uncertaine and such servants we know as have great dealings for their master and looke to be called to a strict account they know not how soone will looke every day into their accounts and have them in areadinesse continually And surely this is our case we know not how soone our accounts will be called for Mar. 13. 35 36. Watch ye therefore for ye know not when the master of the house will come least comming suddenly he find you sleeping Thirdly This would helpe us greatly in our daily prayers unto God The more sense and sorrow for sinne we have when we pray the more acceptable certainly would our prayers be unto God Psal. 34. When David had said Vers. 17. The righteous cry and the Lord heareth them he tels us Verse 18. what cries and prayers of the righteous they be that the Lord hath such respect unto The
and returned And Esa. 26. 16. Lord in trouble have they visited thee they poured out a prayer when thy chastning was upon them And we find by experience that at such a time a faithfull Minister may much better worke up on the hearts of men to bring them to remorse and repentance then at another time According to that speach of Elihu Iob 33. 22 24. When a mans soule draweth neere to the grave if there bee then a messenger with him an interpreter one of a thousand to shew unto man his uprightnesse then he is gracious unto him And so speaketh David●lso ●lso Psal. 94. 12. Blessed is the man whom thou chastnest ô Lord and teachest him out of thy Law This is a singular favour of God when correction and instruction goe together And herein wee are bound to acknowledge the great mercy of God to our Land that in the time of so generall and grievous visitation as hath been upon it he hath put it into the Kings heart to command so much preaching that thereby the hearts of the people might bee effectually wrought upon now the Lord hath so by his judgement prepared them And certainly if in such a time the word doe not work upon mens hearts it will never doe them good Fiftly and lastly When wee feele a secret pensivenesse and sadnesse to come upon our hearts so as they even melt within us like ground that thaweth after a frost so as we could even weepe abundantly this is an excellent season and opportunity to bring our hearts unto godly sorrow in For 1. sadnesse and heavinesse maketh the heart more apt to bee wrought to goodnesse Eccle. 7. 3. Sorrow is better then laughter for by the sadnesse of the countenance the heart is made better 2. This is the way to turne the streame and current of our sorrow the right way by making our sin our greatest sorrow as indeed it ought to bee because it is the onely just cause of all other our sorrowes Lam. 3. 39. 40. Wherefore doth a living man complaine a man for the punishment of his sinnes Let us search and try our wayes and turne againe unto the Lord. And surely to conclude this first point in this we have all cause to acknowledge our owne folly and to bee humbled for it and to impute that want of grace and ability that is in us to mourne for our sins unto this that wee have neglected these times and seasons whereby we might have beene so much helped in this work We know the fittest seasons for the plowing and breaking up of our ground and we carefully observe them but we know not or care not to observe the fittest seasons for the breaking up of the fallow ground of our hearts which yet concerneth us much more then the other doth Breake up your f●llow ground saith the Prophet Ier. 4. 3. and sow not among thornes The second thing wee must doe to worke our hearts to godly sorrow is this after we have made choise of a fit time to goe about this work we must also make choise of a fit place for it even such as wherein we may be most free from all distractions For though this also be but a circumstance yet may it yeeld us some help in all exe●cises of devotiō Christ bids us make choise of a secret place for our private prayer Mat. 6. 6. And so did he hims●lfe Mar 1. 35. Hee went out and departed into a solitary place and there prayed And Act. 10. 9. Peter went up to the top of the house to pray So though it be no shame for a man to weepe for his sinnes as we have heard Gods people have done abundantly in their solemne fasts yet is a solitary and secret place the fittest to worke our hearts unto godly sorrow Commune with your own hearts upon your beds in secret saith David Psal. 4. 4. and be still H●Zechiah turned his face to the wall when he prayed and wept so sore Esa. 38. 2 3. And Ieremiah 13. 17. saith his soule should weepe in secret And Z●ch 12. 12. it is said they should mourne every family apart the husband apart and the wife apart And Ieremy describing the man that is humbled under Gods hand aright saith Lam. 3. 28. Hee sitteth alone and keepeth silence Thirdly When wee have made choise of a fit time and a fit place also for this businesse then must we examine our hearts seriously and impartially And in this examination two things are to be performed by us 1. We must labour to find out and call to mind our sinnes for which wee should bee humbled 2. We must lay them to our hearts and so consider and weigh with our selves the hainousnesse of them and aggravate them against our selves that we may be affected with them For the first Hee that desires to have his heart humbled and to bee able to mourne for his sinnes must labour by diligent search and examination to finde out his sinnes and call them to mind and set them before his face Bring it againe to mind ô yee transgressours saith the Lord Esa. 46. 8. Let not man be affraid or unwilling to doe this To commit sinne is dangerous and hurtfull to thy soule but to call thy sinnes to remembrance hath no danger in it will doe thee no hurt at all to have an enemy or a mortall disease upon thee is dangerous and hurtfull but to be aware of them to know them when thou hast them may doe thee much good Iob knew this well and therefore prayeth earnestly to God to helpe him in this Iob 13. 23. Make mee to know my transgression and my sinne For 1. till then thou canst never truly mourne for thy sin and repent of it Ier. 8. 6. No man repented himselfe of his wickednesse saying what have I done To know in generall and in grosse that thou art a sinner wil never hūble thee aright thou must know thy sins in particular or thou canst never truely repent This was that that humbled Gods people so in the dayes of Samuel 1 Sam. 12. 19. Wee have added to allour other sinnes this evill to aske a King This was that that humbled those 3000. mentioned Act. 2. 36 37. and pricked them at the heart God made knowne to them their sinne in particular even that hainous sinne of crucifying the Lord of life 2. It is profitable for us in another respect For the more carefull we are to remember our sinnes and call them to mind the more ready will the Lord bee to forget them and cast them behind his back This is plaine by that prayer David maketh Psalm 51. 1 2 3. Have mercy upon me ô God wash me throughly from my iniquity for I know my transgressions and my sinne is ever before mee But if thou strive to forget them never to thinke of them to cast them behind thy back bee thou sure God will remember them and never have them out of his eye Thou hast
be very small yet many heaped together will make an intollerable burden Iob 6. 3. Iob saith his grief was heavier then the sand of the Sea If for one sinne Adam was so terrified that he fled from God Gen. 3. 8. what cause of terrour have I maist thou well say to thine owne soule Fiftly How oft thou hast relapsed and fallen backe againe into the same sin that thy heart hath smitten thee for and thou hast repented of and covenanted with God that thou wouldst forsake it returning with the dogge to that thou hast loathed and vomited up 2 Pet. 2. 22. An arme once broken cannot be cured without paine but if often the cure will be more dangerous and painefull If thou hadst broken thy promises and covenants with men thou wouldst count it a matter of infamy and shame unto thee what cause of shame is it then that thou hast broken thy promises unto God See also how this circumstances doth aggravate sinne Eccle. 5. 4. When thou vowest a vow unto God deferre not to pay it for hee hath no pleasure in fouls Sixtly How thou hast by thy sinne corrupted others whereof it may bee some are in Hell already and some in the way to H●ll and thou canst not draw them unto repentance Indeed if thou canst truly repent this shall not hinder thy salvation that thou hast beene a meane of the damning of others for so was Paul Act. 26. 11. Yet must it needs be a heart-breaking to thee whensoever thou dost seriously thinke of it all the dayes of thy life and so was it unto Paul If thou hadst beene the meane to undoe another in his outward estate much more if thou hadst taken away his life it would be a just cause of heavinesse to thee how much more cause of humbling is it that thou hast beene a meane of destroying the soule of any Matth. 18. 7. Woe to the man by whom the offence cometh Ier. 6. 28. they are brasse and iron they are corrupters Seventhly consider the person against whom thou hast sinned Psal. 51. 4. Against thee thee onely have I sinned And consider the Lord 1. in his greatnesse and excellency of power and justice If one man sinne against another saith Ely to his sonnes 1 S●m 2. 25. the judge shall judge him but if a man sinne against the Lord who shall intreat for him 2. But specially in his goodnesse towards thy selfe Consider that that God whom thou hast offend●d thou dost not onely live by Act. 17. 28. but also hee is of that gracious difposition that notwithstanding all thy rebellions he would not have thee perish For 1. he is apt to forgive thee upon thy repen●ance Esa. 55. 7. 2. He hath proclaimed a generall p●rdon and not excluded thee Ioh. 3. 16. but will have it offred unto thee Mar. 16. 15. 3. Hee se●kes to thee to be reconciled 2 Cor. 5. 20. 4 He hath done more for thee hee loves thee with the love of a father for to such specially I speake and thou hast received the spirit of adoption whereby thou art able to cry Abba father Rom. 8. 15. Consider well of this and it will have more force to mollifie thy heart then any thing else in the world The sense of our desperate estate without this may make us roare and rave and rage against the Lord like a wild Bull in a net as the Prophet speaketh Esay ●1 20. but nothing will humble the heart so kindly nor make it melt in godly sorrow as the true consideration of this love of God Psal. 130. 4. there is forgivenesse with thee that thou mayest bee feared It was not the crowing of the Cock twice that made Peters heart melt but the gracious looke that Christ cast upon him Luke 22. 61 62. The Lord turned and looked upon Peter then Peter remembred the Word of the Lord and Peter went out and wept bitterly This was that that wrought upon the heart of the prodigall Luk. 15. 18. I will arise and goe to my father and I will say father I have sinned And so must thou say to thine owne heart if ever thou wouldst have it to melt and thine eyes shed teares for thy si●nes It is my father my father that I have so offended Say to it as Moses doth to the Iewes Deut. 32. 6. Have I 〈◊〉 requited the Lord O foolish and ungratious wretch that I am Is hee not my father hath he not made mee and established mee The fourth and last thing we must doe to bring our hearts unto this godly sorrow is fervent prayer For thou must 1. complaine to God of the hardnes of thy heart as Esa 63. 17. O Lord why hast thou hardned my heart from thy feare 2. Begge this grace of him and cry to him for it That which the Apostle saith of wisdome may bee said of this grace also Iam. 1. 5. If any of you lacke a soft heart let him aske of God who giveth to all men liberally and upbraideth not and it shall be given him 3. Challeng him with his promise and in a holy reverence charge him with that covenant mentioned Ezek. 36. 26. I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh and I will give you an heart of flesh And Zach. 12. 10. I will poure upon the house of David and upon the inhabitants of Ierusalem the spirit of grace and of supplications and they shall looke upon mee whom they have pierced and they shall mourne for him as one that mourneth for his onely sonne and be in bitternesse for him as one that is in bitternesse for his first borne 4. Bee importunate in this suite as one that will take no nay nor give it over till thou hast obtained it as David Psal. 27. 4. and the woman of Canaan Mat. 15. 27. 5. Waite for an answer and pray still limit not the Lord his time L●ke 18. 1 Wee ought alwayes to pray and not to faint Consider how oft the Lord called upon thee before thou didst answer him and how long hee waited for thee Romans 10. 21. All the day long have I stretched forth my hands unto a disobedient and gaine-saying people Remember that promise Esay 49. 23. They shall not bee ashamed or disappointed that wait for mee SERMON VIII August 2. 1626. IT followeth now that we proceed to ●hew you the signes and notes whereby wee may bee able to discerne whether wee have beene yet rightly humbled for our sinnes whether that sorrow for sinne that we have felt in our selves be unfeigned yea or no whether it be that saving sorrow of Gods elect unto which all these promises of comfort and mercy that we have heard of doe belong And surely it is a matter of great use and necessity to have notes given us out of Gods Word to try our humiliation and sorrow for sinne by First Because as it is certaine our sinnes are not pardoned unlesse we have truly repented of them Act. 5. 31. Christ giveth repentance to
Israel and forgivenesse of sinnes Soe is it as certaine we never truly repented of our sinnes if wee have not unfeignedly sorrowed and mourned for them 2 Cor. 7. 10. Godly sorrow worketh repentance unto salvation Wee must be made though not equall yet conformable to Christ in his death and passion as the Apostle speaketh Phil. 3. 10. or we shall never reigne with him This is a faithfull saying saith the Apostle 2 Tim. 2. 11. 12. if wee ●ee dead with him wee shall also live with him if we suffer with him wee shall also reigne with him And this was a cheif part of his passion wherein we must be conformable unto him When he suffred for our sinnes Mat. 26. 37. He began to be sorrowfull and very heavy insomuch as he could not containe but must needs acquaint his three Disciples with it verse 38. Then saith he unto them my soule is exceeding sorrowfull even unto death When he suffred for our sinnes hee wept abundantly as the Apostle saith Heb. 5. 7. He offred up prayers and supplications with strong crying and teares We cannot sorrow and weepe in that measure as he did for our sinnes but we must sorrow in our measure as he did we must be made conformable to him in his passion as you have heard or wee shall never have part in him We must either mourne as Peter did with a saving sorrow Mat. 26. 75. or wee shall mourne as Iudas did with a desperate sorrow Mat. 27. 3 5. We must either now in this life mourn for our sinn●s as we have heard all Gods servants have done or we shall certainly herafter cry for sorrow of heart as the Prophet speaketh Esa. 65. 14. and houle for vexation of spirit in Hell where shall bee nothing but weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth as our Saviour speaketh Luk. 13. 28. where their worme never dyeth and the fire never shall be quenched Mar. 9. 44. Secondly Because men are very apt to bee deceived in this point and to thinke they have beene rightly humbled and have rightly sorrowed for their sinnes when indeed they have not We read of the hypocrites expostulation with God Esa. 58. 3. They had afflicted their soules and God tooke no knowledge of it Zach. 7. 3 5. They had mourned and wept in their fasts and the Lord saith of them they had not done it unto him they had their owne ends in it Yea it is certaine many hypocrites doe indeed mourne and are exceedingly humbled sometimes You know the Lord giveth this testimony of Ahab himselfe that he was humbled 1 Kings 21. 29. And yet as good never a whit as never the better their sorrow and humiliation is to no purpose at all because it is not sound and sincere Thirdly Because many of Gods children that are indeed true mourners are apt to doubt of themselves and to complaine their hearts are so hard that they cannot mourne for their sinnes ô if they had soft and melting hearts that they could sorrow that they could weep for sinne they were in an happy case but alas they cannot Thus Gods Church and people complaine unto God Es● 63. 17. O Lord why hast thou hardned our heart Seeing therefore it is as you see in these three respects a matter of so great necessity to have a sure direction given us out of Gods Word how to discerne that humiliation of soule and sorrow for sinne that is sincere and saving from that that is counterfait I will give you some principall notes of differences betweene them whereby they may be judged of And these are to bee referred to foure heads The first is from the object of our sorrow and humiliation the thing the matter that we are grieved and humbled for The second from the measure and degree of our sorrow The third from the cause that breedeth it in us and fountaine from whence it floweth The fourth and last from the effects and fruits that proceed from it For the first If we desire to know whether we were ever yet rightly humbled or whether we doe still remaine in the hardnesse and impenitency of our hearts we must examine what it is that hath troubled us and made us to mourne First He that is truly humbled mourneth for the evill of sinne rather then for the evill of punishment It is no ill signe to mourne and to be humbled under the judgements of God Nay it is our duty to be so and a passing ill signe it is of an ungratious heart not to be affected with the judgements of God not to be troubled when the Lord sheweth himselfe to be angry with us The Prophet complaineth of this as of a great sinne Ier. 5. 3. O Lord thou hast stricken them and they have not grieved It is said of Gods people Ezr. 10. 9. that they trembled because of the great raine And David and the Elders of Israel humbled themselves greatly for the plague that God sent upon the land 2 Sam. 24. 17. And so did Iehoshaphat when God threatned an invasion 2 Chron. 20. 3. When the state and government of the Kingdome of Israel in the dayes of Saul was so broken and out of order had so many breaches in it that it did even shake and totter as ready to fall and come to ruine as the Prophet complaineth Psal. 60. 2. Gods people were so troubled with the sensible token of Gods displeasure that they were euen astonished with it thou hast made us to drinke the wine of astonishment as the Prophet speaketh verse 3. And certainly this is a dangerous signe that our people generally are given up of God to a marvellous hardnesse of heart that the Lord having by all these tokens of his anger cald us to weeping and to mourning as the Prophet speaketh Esa. 22. 12. we have beene generally given to asmuch jollity in these times as ever we were Surely this iniquity shall not be purged from you till you dye saith the Lord God of Hosts as it followeth there verse 14. Yet though it be a good thing to be humbled under Gods judgements this is not enough to prove our humiliation to bee sound and sincere Many an hypocrite hath gone so farre Thus farre Ahab went ô how he was humbled at the hearing of that fearefull judgement that God threatned by the Prophet to bring upon him and his house 1 King 21. 29. Seest thou how Ahab humbleth himselfe Thus farre Iehoram his sonne and as bad a man almost as he went when a grievous famine was upon the land he greatly humbled himselfe for though he were a King he wore sackcloth not as his upper garment as the manner was to expresse their humiliation outwardly but secretly next his skin 2 King 6. 30. See how farre an hypocrite may goe in humbling himselfe under Gods judgements But the true repentant though he is humbled for and can mourne for Gods judgements yet that is neither the onely nor the chief cause of his sorrow his
sinnes that have provoked God to those judgements trouble him most I will declare mine iniquitie saith David Psal. 38. 18. and be sory for my sinne And Ezek. 7. 16. They shall be on the mountaines like the d●ves of the valleyes all of them mourning every man for 〈◊〉 iniquity Yea even whē Gods judgements do presse and humble him most yet ●he is more troubled for his sinne then for the affliction that is upon him as wee shall see in that prayer of David Psal. 25. 18. Looke upon my affliction and my paine and forgive all my sinnes And so it is said of Gods people in Ezras time when the Lord by a judgement of immoderate raine had testified his displeasure against them Ezra 10. 9 They trembled because of this matter their sinne in marrying Idolaters and for the great raine Their sinne was the chief thing they trembled for Let us then examine our sorrow by this first note alas many blesse themselves in this that they have beene much given to sorrow and heavinesse 1. If sorrow be good saith many a one I have had enough of that Yea upon this they ground their hope that they shall escape the wrath to come because they have endured so much sorrow in this life I have had my punishment in this life saith he Alas poore wretch of all thy sorrowes that thou hast endured I may say as our Saviour doth in another case Mat. 24. 8. All these are but the beginning of sorrows worldly sorrowes are but the beginning of hellish sorrowes The Devils also beleeve and tremble after this sort as the Apostle speaketh Iam. 2. 19. They are troubled exceedingly more then ever thou couldst be with the apprehension and sense of the punishment which they undoubtedly b●leeve is prepared for them 2. Many of you are oft troubled with sadnesse and heavinesse of heart and can say as Iob 23. 16. God maketh my heart soft and the Almighty troubleth me O that thou couldst turne the streame of thy sorrow the right way from sorrowing for thy affliction to sorrowing for thy sinne One houre spent in sorrowing for thy sin will yeeld thee more true comfort then a thousand spent in sorrowing for thy affliction will doe 3. And we all now assembled to professe our humiliation for the manifold tokens of Gods anger upon his Church and this land must examine the truth of our hearts in this whether we can aswell mourne for the sinnes of the land as for the judgements of God that are upon it and are threatned against it See a notable example of this in Nehemiah Chap. 1. when he heard of the great affliction and reproach Gods people were in at Ierusalem verse 3. How the wals of Ierusalem were broken downe and the gates thereof burnt with fire he sat downe and wept and mourned certaine dayes and fasted and prayed before the God of Heaven as he saith verse 4. But what is it that most humbled and troubled his heart in this his fast Surely not so much the judgement whereby God had shewed himselfe to be angry with them as their sinnes whereby they had made him angry as you shall see verse 6. 7. and surely the sinnes of the land ought to trouble us more then any of the judgements either persent or imminent though they bee very great and fearefull For 1. they give us cause to feare far heavier then these be and God hath said of England as hee said once of the Kingdome of Iuda Ezek. 21. 27. I will overturne everturne overturne it and it shall be no more 2. If it were not for the sinnes of the land these judgements would vanish or doe us no hurt at all 1 Cor. 15. 56. The sting of death is sinne And of one sinne the sinne of Idolatry specially being openly committed and alas our land standeth guilty of that and of many more it is said Exod. 32. 25. Moses saw though every blind foole could not see it that the people were naked for Aaron had made them naked to their shame before their enemies Alas the sinnes of the land make us naked to our enemies abroad and to our treacherous and bloudy Papists at home do what we can to defend and arme our selves till our sinnes be repented of till they be removed we shall be found to be a naked people We cannot stand before our enemies till the accursed thing till Ach●n betaken away Iosh. 7. 13. and alas we have many Achans amongst us So many of you therefore as have hearts that can mourne that can be humbled mourne for the sinnes of the land and by the first note approve unto God and to your owne hearts the truth of your humiliation that you professe this day And so much for the first note Secondly He that is truly humbled mourneth for sinne not so much in respect to himselfe of the hurt and danger that his sinne bringeth upon himselfe as in respect to God because he is offended and dishonoured by his sinne Saving sorrow is therefore called 2 Cor. 7. 10. Godly sorrow 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sorrow that respecteth God and is opposed to worldly sorrow that respecteth onely the crosses and miseries that sinne maketh us subject unto I graunt 1. It is not unlawfull to bee troubled for sinne even out of respect to the punishment and misery that it will bring upon us As a man may have respect to this in his feare that keepeth him from committing sinne so may he also in his sorrow for it after it is committed Iob giveth this for a reason why he durst not sinne For destruction from God saith he Iob 31. 23. was a terrour to me And so doth Paul 2 Cor. 5. 11. Knowing therefore the terrours of the Lord we persuade men 2. Sound and saving humiliation for sinne useth to begin in this legall compunction and terror which hath respect onely to the misery that sinne bringeth us to And not one of an hundred doe ever come to mourne for sinne in respect to God till they have first learned to mourne for sinne in respect to themselves this prepareth maketh way for and draweth in the other as the prick of the needle doth the threed So it is said of those three thousand that were converted by Peter Act. 2. 37. that they were first pricked in their hearts that is with this legall sorrow and feare But though this bee a lawfull and good thing to mourne and be troubled for sinne even in respect of the misery it maketh us obnoxious unto yet is not this sufficient to prove our humiliation and sorrow for sinne to be sound and sincere for many an hypocrite hath gone so farre they have beene greatly humbled and troubled for their sinnes O how Pharaoh complained and cried out of his sinne Exod. 9. 27. He saith to Moses and Aaron I have sinned the Lord is righteous and I and my people are wicked And so did Iudas Mat. 27. 3. 4. He repented himselfe cryed out saying
I have sinned in that I have betrayed innocent blood Did not these men mourne for their sinnes thinke you Yes that they did but it was not out of any respect to God whom they had offended but onely out of respect to themselves and the hurt they had done themselves thereby as appeareth plainly in their stories Now the true repentant though he be humbled for his sinne in respect to himselfe and the danger and hurt that he feareth his sinne will doe him yet he resteth not there but he is also humbled for his sinne in respect to God and chiefly because he hath offended and dishonoured God by his sinne This was that that troubled David most Psal. 51. 4. Against thee thee onely have I sinned When God had threatned heavy things against him by God he cryeth not as Pharaoh Exod. 10. 17. Take away from mee this death only but as 2. Sam. 24. 10. I beseech thee ô Lord take away the iniquity of thy servant Yea he was well content to beare that punishment so his sinne might be pardoned that he might have Gods favour verse 17. Let thy hand I pray thee be against me and my fathers house The punishment that his sinne hath brought or is like to bring upon him troubleth the true penitent nothing so much as the offending of God and losse of his favour Hee lamenteth after the Lord as it is said Gods people did 1 Sam. 7. 2. And as he mourneth for his sinne in respect to God more then to the punishment of his sinne so doth hee joy and take more comfort in the assurance of the pardon of his sinne then in deliverance from any judgement whatsoever This is the thing that David gloried in Psal. 32. 5. Thou forgavest not the punishment as the old translation reads but the iniquity of my sinne O let us examine our selves by this second note whether we have sorrowed for oursinnes in respect unto God or to our selves onely Thy sinnes doe trouble thee because thou knowest they deserve hell and damnation thou knowest they deserve Gods curse in thy children in thy estate in every thing thou takest in hand Thou dost well in this but if this be the onely thing or the chief thing that maketh thy sinne such a burden to thy heart thou hast not yet repented aright When those that heard Peter were pricked in their hearts with these legall sorrowes and asked him what they should doe to come to comfort he bad them repent Act. 2. 37. 38. As if he had said This is a good preparative but this is not repentance This is a chief note of sincerity in every grace and so in this when we doe that that God requireth when we mourne for our sinnes in respect unto God and not to our selves Thus God upbraideth the hypocrites Zac. 7. 5. When yee fasted and mourned did yee it at all to mee even to mee Rom. 14. 6. He that regardeth a day regardeth it unto the Lord. I will give you therefore three other notes to try this by whether your sorrow for sinne be in respect to the Lord because you have offended and dishonoured him or noe First Then your sinnes will trouble you aswell in the days of health and prosperity as in sicknes and affliction else you doe no more then an hypocrite may doe For it is said of the wicked Israelites Psal. 78. 34. When he slew them then they sought him and returned and enquired early after God Secondly Then you will be troubled for one sinne aswell as for another for every thing you know to be a sinne for God is offended and dishonoured by one aswell as by another Whosoever shall keepe the whole Law saith the Apostle Iam. 2. 10. and yet offend in one point he is guilty of all I doe not say we should be troubled so much for one sinne as for another for God in his Law hath put a difference betweene sinnes and as some dutyes that God requireth of us so some sinnes are weightier then others Mat. 23. 23. Iudgement Mercy and Fidelity are called by our Saviour the weightier matters of the Law and it is made there the note of an hypocrite to be more troubled for small sinnes then for great Matthew 23. 24. to straine at a gnat and swallow a camell But this is also certaine that he that is troubled for sinne because it is sinne in resepect unto God because he is offended and dishonoured by it will be troubled for one sinne aswell as for another So we shall find David was humbled not for his adultery and murder onely but for all his sinnes Psal. 51. 9. Hide thy face from my sinnes and blot out all mine iniquities The Apostle speaking of the loose performing of spirituall duties of coming to the sacrament without due preparation saith we must judge our selves even for that 1 Cor. 11. 31. And saith that even for this sinne God strucke many with sicknesse and mortality because they would not judge themselves for such sins God did judge them 1 Cor. 11. 30. Davids heart smote him even for cutting of the lap of Sauls garment 1 Sam. 24. 5. When Saul counted the sparing of Agag and of the fattest of the cattell specially for sacrifice but a matter of nothing Samuel telleth him disobedience to God is as bad as witchcraft and idolatry 1 Sam. 15. 23. O therefore know thou art not troubled for any sinne in respect to God if thy very unprofitablenes idlenesse peevishnesse unconstancy playing fast and loose with God do not trouble thee Yea the man whose heart is truly humbled for sin is conscious of the sinfull depravation of his nature and is humbled for that which is the root asmuch if not much more then for his actuall sinnes which are the fruits of it All sins that defile a man come from within from this fountaine Mar. 7. 23. David was humbled for this Psal. 51. 5. Behold I was shapen in iniquity and in sinne did my mother conceive me And so Paul though he had lived a most innocent life even before his calling to Christ Phil. 3. 6. Yet see how he was troubled even for this Rom. 7. 14 24. Thirdly If you be humbled for your sinne out of respect to God because God is offended and dishonoured by it then will you be able to mourne for the sins of other men for God is aswel offended and dishonoured by them as by your own 1. I shewed you before that the man that is truly hūbled for the Iudgments of God upon this land will mourne more for the sinnes of the land then for the Iudgements themselves So must we 2. bee able to mourne for the sinnes of the places and townes we dwell in specially if they be of note for religion This is prescribed as a duty 1 Cor. 5. 2. Ye should have mourned that he that hath done this deed might be taken away This is commended by the Holy Gost as a great vertue and grace in Lot
as any that they could heare yet could they receive no comfort or benefit at all by it Moses spake so saith the text Exod. 6. 9. unto the children of Israel but they hearkned not unto Moses for anguish of spirit and for cruell bondage 3. Admit we were never so able and fit to minde this matter then and to go about this weighty businesse admit we could be then more apt to seeke reconciliation with God than at any other time yet have we just cause to feare that because we have wilfully neglected this worke so long and presumptuously put it off till the last houre the Lord in his righteous judgement will refuse to be found of us at that time Thus we shall find the Lord hath threatned to do Prov. 1. 24 26 28 29. Because I have called saith he and ye refused I have stretched out mine hand and no man regarded I also will laugh at your calamity I will mocke when your feare commeth Then shall they call upon me but I will not answer they shall seeke me early but they shall not find me for that they hated knowledge and did not choose the feare of the Lord. Now if you shall aske me how may this be done I answer That he that would make this sure to himselfe that when he dies he shall go to heaven must do these three things 1. He must repent of all his knowne sinnes He must call them to mind bewaile them unfainedly confesse them to God and crave earnestly of him the pardon of them and resolve with himselfe to forsake them all For 1. Sinne is the s●ing of death as the Apostle cals it 1 Cor. 15. 56. And if that be once done away and forsaken death can never hurt a man nor hath he any cause to feare it at all 2. On the other side no man can hope to go to heaven with his sinnes unrepented of Know ye not saith the Apostle 1 Cor. 6. 9. that the unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdome of God Be not deceived neither fornicators nor idolaters nor adulterers nor effeminate nor abusers of themselves with mankind nor theeves nor covetous nor drunkards nor revilers nor extortioners shall inherit the kingdome of God Any one of these sinnes unrepented of will certainly exclude a man utterly out of the kingdome of heaven 3. Though it be dangerous for a man to live in sinne yet is it a matter of farre greater danger to him to die in sinne and to be over-taken by death before he have repented of it This our Saviour noteth as the extreme unhappinesse of the wicked Iewes and repeats it often Iohn 8. 21. 24. that they should die in their sinnes 2. Get good assurance by a lively faith that Christ is thine and then shalt thou be able to die in peace and in a certaine hope to go to heaven when thou art dead When old Simeon had seene Christ whom he had waited for by faith and longed to see and was thereby confirmed much in that faith he had in him before He blessed God an● said Luke 2. 28 29 30. Lord now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace for mine eyes have seene thy salvation They that have once seene and embraced Christ as he did spiritually by faith I meane and not corporally onely shall die in peace and none but they can do so For 1. It is Christ onely that hath overcome death for us and taken away the sting of it When the Apostle had said 1 Cor. 15. 56. that sin is the sting of death But thanks be to God saith he Verse 57. which giveth us victory through our Lord Iesus Christ. Death is overcome so that it cannot hurt the true believer at all but him that is nor in Christ it will sting unto death even unto the second death 2. We can have no hope to come to heaven but onely through him Christ is in you saith the Apostle Col. 1. 27. the hope of glory There is no hope to come to glory but onely by Christ. Nay there is no hope to come to glory through him unlesse he be in us unlesse he dwell in us by a lively faith 3. If thou wouldst be sure to go to heaven when thou diest labour whilest thou livest to lead an unblameable a godly and fruitfull life even to do all the good that God gives thee power and opportunity to do As we have opportunity saith the Apostle Gal. 6. 10. which none of us can tell how soone it may be taken from us let us do good unto all men especially unto them that are of the houshold of faith See what comfort Hezechia found in this when he was to die Remember now O Lord I beseech thee saith he Esa. 38. 3. how I have walked before thee in truth and with a perfect heart have done that which is good in thy sight Now on his death-bed his conscience gave this comforta●●e testimony unto him that he had lead a holy life and now doth he even before the Lord comfort himselfe in that against the feare of death See also what a testimony the holy Apostle gives unto good workes even to the workes of charity and mercy in this case Charge them that are 〈◊〉 in this world saith he 1 Tim. 6. 17 19. that they 〈◊〉 good that they be rich in good workes ready to distribute willing to communicate laying up in store for themselves a good foundation against the time to come that they may lay hold on eternall life Workes of charity not as a meritorious cause of salvation but as a sure evidence that by a lively faith we have interest and title to the merits of Christ shal be rewarded with stable and durable riches in time to come and will make a man able with confidence of hope to lay hold on eternall life And that which the Apostle saith of certaine bad men 2 Cor. 11. 15. that their end shal be according to their workes may be said of all good men also their end shal be according to their workes A good life will certainly end in a blessed and comfortable death Foure things are wont to be objected against this which I will briefly give answer unto Experience sheweth daily that many do die willingly and quietly and comfortably also that have neither lived so unblameably and fruitfully nor used any such means to prepare themselves for death as you have prescribed To this I answer 1. That we may not thinke that every one that dies quietly and speakes gloriously of his willingnesse to die and of the peace and comfort that he finds in the assurance of his salvation doth die happily and comfortably indeed For the Holy Ghost speaks of some that were most w●cked and wretched men that have no bands in their death Psal. 73. 4. In outward things all things aswell in death as in life fall alike to good and bad as Salomon saith Eccles. 9. 2. 2. We have just cause to suspect the peace
is wont to be the sharpest of all other The Apostle telleth us Col. 2. 15. that our blessed Saviour spoiled the principalities and powers and made a shew of them openly triumphing over them in his crosse All the principalities and powers of hell did then set upon him and shewed their uttermost strength and rage against him This Christ did fore-see and told his Disciples of also before hand The prince of this world commeth saith he Iohn 14. 30. and hath nothing in me as if he should say I know well that Satan in my passion which is now at hand will come and assault me with all his forces but he hath nothing nothing of his owne no corruption at all in me and therefore shall lose his labour and do me no hurt at all And as he did with Christ our head so hath he been wont to deale also with the best of his members and servants even to set upon them most fiercely in their ●ast sicknesse and that for two causes 1. Because he sees his time and opportunity that he can have with them is now so short having great wrath saith the voice from heaven Rev. 12. 12. because he knoweth that he hath but a short time 2. Because he knoweth we are then through paines and feares and distempers of body and mind like to be most weake and unable to resist him Secondly though godly men may have such conflicts with Satan and experience of his most fiery assaults upon their death-beds yet the Lord the God of peace is wont to tread downe Satan under their feet as the Apostle speakes Rom. 6. 20. before they die He useth to make them even in this life mor● then conquerours over that distresse and anguish which his assaults hath brought them unto In all these we are more than conquerours saith he Rom. 8. 37. through him that loved us Yea the experience of many of Gods servants hath proved that these bitter conflicts of theirs have ended in more abundance of peace and comfort than ever they found in their lives before and that not inwardly onely in their owne feeling but God hath made them able also to expresse it outwardly to the exceeding comfort and admiration of them that have beene about them Thirdly and lastly although it should so fall out that the Lord for the further hardning of wicked men or for some other causes best knowne to himselfe whose judgements are unsearchable and his wayes past finding out as the Apostle speaketh Rom. 11. 33. should take away any of his servants in these fearfull fits and conflicts and utterly disable them from expressing by word or gesture the victory over them and the comfort that they have ended in yet are we to rest confidently assured of this that every one that hath lead a good and godly life doth certainly die blessedly and comfortably though we cannot perceive it Because we are to walke by faith and not by sight as the Apostle teacheth us 2 Cor. 5. 7. and more credit is to be given to the word of God than to all sense and experience of men and therefore whatsoever we heare them speake or see in the manner of their death we should resolve with Salomon Eccl. 8. 12. Yet surely I know that it shall be well with them that feare God which feare before him For the Lord hath expresly said of every godly man Prov. 14. 32. The righteous hath hope in his death And commanded us Psal. 37. 37. to marke the perfect man and behold the upright assuring us that the end of that man is peace The fourth and last thing that may be objected against that which hath been said is this if the death of all the godly be so blessed and happy why hath there beene such mourning and lamentation for their death among Gods people as we see there was both in the old Testament for the death of Iacob Gen. 50. 10. and of Samuel 1 Sam. 25. 1. and of many more and in the new Testament also for the death of Steven Acts 8. 2. and of Tabitha Acts 9. 36. and sundry others To this I answer 1. That the happinesse of the godly in their death makes nothing against our mourning for them but it is both lawfull and fit for us to mou●ne for the death of our Christian friends for all that 1. Out of the respect we owe unto them and out of that love and affection we are bound to shew unto them And the Apostle noteth it Rom. 1. 31. for a signe of one that is given up of God to a reprobate mind to be void of natural affection towards them that God hath linked him unto 2. Out of respect to our selves and therein unto the Lord also for we are to take it for an argument of Gods displeasure against us for our sinne when he deprives us of such friends as were his good instruments of our comfort any way So Naomi when God had taken from her her husband and her two sonnes said Ruth 1. 21. that the Lord had testified against her and the Almighty had afflicted her Secondly though it be lawfull and fit we should mourne for the death of our Christian friends yet may we not mourne for them immoderately but take heed that we exceed not this way They that weepe saith the Apostle 1 Cor. 7. 30. should be as though they wept not They must take heed their hearts be not too much taken up and oppressed with griefe I would not have you to be ignorant brethren saith he 1 Thess. 4. 13. concerning them which are asleepe that ye sorrow not even as others which have no hope And we should moderate our griefe in this case 1. Out of our respect unto the Lord who is the doer of this It is he that gives and it is he also that takes away our friends from us This quieted Iobs mind and moderated his sorrow when he had lost all his sonnes and daughters The Lord gave and the Lord hath taken away saith he Iob 1. 21. It becomes us all to stoope and submit our selves to his will in all things and to say with old Ely 1 Sam. 3. 18. It is the Lord let him do what seemeth him good And immoderate sorrow in any of our losses must needs argue a kind of murmuring and impatiency against God 2. Out of our respect unto our Christian friends whom we mourne for for death is to them we know a great advantage to die is their gaine as the Apostle speaketh Phil. 1. 21. Death makes them happy and blessed Write blessed are the dead which die in the Lord saith the voice from heaven Rev. 14. 13. For 1. Death puts an end to all their sorrowes afflictions and tentations that they were vexed with continually in this life now they rest from their labours Rev. 14. 13. 2. Death puts an end to all their infirmities which they so much complained of and perfecteth their sanctification which they so much longed after while