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A12260 A sacred septenarie, or, A godly and fruitful exposition on the seven Psalmes of repentance viz. the VI. XXV. XXXII. XXXVIII. LI. CXXX. CXLIII. the 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. of the penitentials. Seruing especially for the direction and comfort of all such, who are either troubled in minde, diseased in body, or persecuted by the wicked. The second impression. By Mr. A. Symson, pastor of the church at Dalkeeth in Scotland. Simson, Archibald, 1564-1628. 1623 (1623) STC 22568; ESTC S107775 256,267 548

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saluation onely belongs to the Lord let vs runne to him and seeke it at his hands who is onely able to performe and bring it to vs. Seeke it not at Saints but at the King of Saints In thee doe I trust There is described the powerfull instrument apprehending Gods mercies euen faith adorned with his chiefe quality Constancy crowneth all our vertu●● constancy for all the day signifieth as much as continually for there is no vertue in man which can be responsable to God if it be not ioyned with constancie Ye must wait patiently beleeue confidently seeke knocke aske hold vp your hands without fainting strengthen your weake hands and feeble knees Gen. 32 2● He abode with Iacob the heat of the day and the cold of the morning and shrinked not till the Lord came at last and we must abide to the end of the day of our life Many begin in the morning of their youth to seeke God who forsake him in the euening of their age The day hath a morning a noone and an euening-tide so hath our age a youth a middle age and a declining time blessed is he that perseuers to the end and till his later breath constantly depends on God and leaues him not for certainly that man shall haue the crowne of eternall glory VERSE 6. Remember O Lord thy tender mercies and thy louing kindnesse for they haue beene for euer IN the preceding words Dauid first prayed that God would deliuer him from shame and contempt next that hee woud teach him his wayes Doct. No assurance of the remission of sin till God put his law in our hearts and now he desires that God would haue mercy vpon him and pardon him his sinnes Marke by this his order in prayer how first hee desires that God would teach him his law and then that he would put away his sinne for we can neuer get assurance of the remission of our sinnes till God put his law in our heart After these dayes saith the Lord by Ieremy I will put my law in their inward parts and write it in their hearts and will be their God and they shall be my people And they shall teath no more euery man his neighbour and euery man his brother saying Know ye the Lord for they shall all know me from the least to the greatest of them sayes the Lord. For I will forgiue them their iniquity and remember their sinnes no more Which the Apostle to the Hebrewes reciteth word by word Doctr. Knowledge of sinne comes before remission of sinne For God first by his word and Spirit workes in the mind of a sinner a light and sight of his sinnes and in his heart a sorrow for it and then he putteth it away and forgiues it Therefore let vs try what sight and sense of sin the word of God hath wrought in vs that we haue a certificate to our conscience of the remission thereof Ps 107.20 He sendeth his word and healeth them He sent Nathan to Dauid and then pardoned him In these two verses he thrice repeateth the word remember not that there is any memory or forgetfulnesse in God as in man for time makes man to forget but God changeth no time absence makes vs forget but all things are present to him memory hath a seat in mans braine which being perturbed it fayles God is all memory But he is said to remember or forget How God is said to remember Gen. 8.1 and 19.29 Gen. 30.22 1 Sam. 1.19 when by visible tokens of doing he sheweth his fauour or displeasure to man As he remembred Noah when the flood diminished Abraham when he saued Lot and brought him out from Sodome Rachel when he made her conceiue and Anna when he granted vnto her her petition Thy tender mercies and louing kindnesse First he craues at God that he would remembe his mercies which is the first thing wee should seeke at God for if we get it as said Iacob wee get all things Gen. 33.11 Mercy against merit And hereby it is clearly seene that hee disclaimes all merits for albeit he fought the Lords battells gouerned his people by the word and sword in executing iustice prayed and praised God continually fasted and bestowed almes on the Saints Psal 16.2 Vse Of confutation of the Papists merits yet he confesseth they cannot extend to God which refureth and damneth the foolish Papists who pretend merits but commit murthers and adulteries and yet with open mouth they cry merits merits Hee amplifieth Gods mercies by three names mercies benignities goodnesse benignity twice repeated see how highly hee doth esteeme of Gods goodnesse when hee cannot finde termes sufficiently to expresse them A liuely representation of the Trinity But these three liuely represent vnto vs the Trinity the Father the fountaine of goodnesse yea goodnesse it selfe the Sonne mercie supplying our misery the holy Spirit benignity and bountifulnesse gratiously working and bestowing these things which the Father and Sonne giue The goodnesse of God is the fountaine begetting mercy and mercy bringeth forth benignity Let vs learne by this that whateuer commeth to vs must either come out of the fountaine of Gods mercy or else it is a curse not a benignity but a malignity Many say Who will shew vs any good thing Psal 4.6 but Dauid sayes Lord lift vp the light of thy countenance on me We should imitate the three properties of the Trinity These three properries of the Trinity all Christians should imitate the goodnesse of the Father the mercy of the Sonne and the bountifulnesse of the Spirit that in so doing they may haue society with the Father Son and Spirit I know thee to be a good man because thou art not cruell but mercifull I know thee to be mercifull in that thy hand is bountifull thou giues and distributes to the poore Psal 112.9 thy righteousnesse endureth for euer The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rachamim signifieth bowels which are the seats and places of the fatherly and motherly loue and therefore the children are called parentum viscera the bowels of the parents which phrase the Apostle writing to Philemon both in the 12. and 20. verse expoundeth spiritually Thou therefore receiue him that is mine owne bowels and in the 20. verse Comfort my bowels in the Lord. Esay 49.19 Can a mother forget her child c. yet the Lord cannot forget Israel Ps 103.13 And as the Father pitties his children so the Lord hath pitty on those that feare him So we see hereby how deare and neere we are to Gods very heart that we haue a place in his innermost affections Infinit miseries haue need of infinit mercies 2 Cor. 1.3 Gods mercies are eternall But when hee speakes of mercies and benignities he speakes in the plurall number because as our sinnes and miseries are infinit so we haue need of infinit comforts and pardons he is called the father of mercies For they
with Iosias 2 King 22.1 who in the morning of his life euen early began to seeke the Lord. We should in our life keepe such dyets as did Dauid in his prayers Psal 55.17 Morning noone-tide and at euen he sought the Lord. Remember thy Creator in the dayes of thy youth Eccles 12.1 before the yeeres come wherein ye shall say I haue no pleasure Eccles 11.9 Be assured O young man yee shall come to iudgement Iob 20.11 yea thy old bones shall inherit the sinnes of thy youth To what sins youth is most inclined The sinnes of youth whereto they are most inclined are first pride and a contempt of their elders the vile doe contemne the honourable and youth despise age Such was the pride of Absolom 2 Sam. 18.9 whose punishment should terrifie all youths Next lust is naturall to them as the Prodigall child spent his time in riot and luxury Luke 15.14 Thirdly hypocrisie they can very well dissemble their doings and when with the Whore in the Prouerbes they are intending sinne then they pretend they were offering their peace offerings and with Absolom pretending their vowes in Hebron 2 Sam. 15.7 but intending to stirre vp rebellion And finally all youths are subiect to inconstancy they are compared to dreggy wine not setled Simil. so that experience hath taught vs to say It is lost which is done to them If thou hast escaped from iudgement in thy youth and hast passed the dangers thereof thou maist greatly praise God I read of a man Simil. who being drunke in the night passed a very narrow bridge which considering in the morning died incontinently so wee should admire when we remember what dangers we haue escaped If sins of his youth and ignorance be grieuous how much more those of knowledge Then if the sinnes of youth now trouble him in his age what doe ye thinke of the sins which ye doe against knowledge and conscience in your old age Should ye not confesse them and bee ashamed of them If a child blush it is thought good verecundia but if an old man blush it is thought euill because hee is bound to doe nothing whereof hee should be ashamed But many are like to the false Elders that lusted after Susanna and to them appertaineth shame and confusion for their example in courageth youngmen to doe wickedly Yea they are very rare who haue escaped the perils of youth either by one notable sinne or other Now Dauid of these his own sins doth make a speciall confession doth not infold himselfe vnder the mantle of generality A simple confession needfull albeit many are taught naturaly to dissemble their sins to excuse them to extenuate them or else to inuolue them vnder a common necessity of sinning but this will not please God vnlesse wee freely say with Dauid I haue sinned Simil. for as a Patient must needs discouer his sore and wound to the Physitian so must a sinner vncouer his sinne to God vvhich is an euident token of a penitent Moreouer hee desires not onely that God would forgiue his sinnes but more Doctr. When God forgiues sinne he forgets it that hee would forget them wherein God differeth from men men may forgiue but they will remember for malice and anger takes such impression in our hearts that it is hard to rase out the memory of our receiued iniuries although wee pardon them with our heart But God as hee remits so hee forgets Num. 23 2● hee sees no iniquity in Iacob and because the children of God are imperfect and in this can neuer bee like to God so long as they carry about with them this sinning sinne as may be seene in Dauid 1 Kin. 2.8 who in his Testament remembred the iniury done to him by Simei to bee punished by Solomon although in his time hee did dissimulate it yet let this bee some comfort to vs that if the wicked motions of iniuries done to vs come in our minds let vs resist and controule them which shall bee sufficient before God Nor my rebellions Sinne and rebellion are conioyned 1 Sam. 15.23 Simil. Sinnes and rebellions are ioyned together the mother and her daughter sinne if it grow and increase it turneth into rebellion and disobedience which is like to the sinne of witchcraft and Idolatry and as a Serpent by eating a Serpent becommeth a Dragon 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so sinne feeding vpon sinne becommeth at last rebellion There are degrees of sinne Nemo repente factus est turpissimus Dauid prayeth to God to forgiue him his secret sinnes and hee desires that God would keepe him from presumptuous sinnes slay sinne in the cradle if yee let it come to maturity it may turne into rebellion The word also imports ignorances which agreeth very well with this youth to declare that the sinnes of youth commonly springs forth from ignorance Youth is ignorant albeit it th●●●●th it ●●●●e wise for they are blind through lack of knowledge for they haue no naturall iudgement they lacke instruction they want experience and such like by nature wee are all borne fooles nature hath taught the beasts to know things profitable hurtfull to them The Swallow knoweth her time the Oxe his crib Isa 1.3 but man knoweth not his owner neither the time when hee shall turne to the Lord. And this ignorance makes youth to be rebellious to their parents whereof the Lord complaines by his Prophet Isa 1.2 I haue brought vp children saith the Lord and nourished them and they haue rebelled against me A profitable Lesson for Parents to train vp their children in vertue This shold teach Parents to remedy the ignorance of their youth by instruction that their minds being inlightned by the knowledge of God and learning they may feare God in the morning of their youth and haue the eyes of their vnderstanding opened to know the true God and feare him that it may bee fulfilled that is spoken by the Prophet Ioel 2.28 And in the last dayes I will poure out of my Spirit vpon all flesh and your sonnes and your daughters shall prophesie and your young men shall see visions We may complaine most iustly with that holy Father S. Augustine of the neglect of education of our youth where hee saith Gods iuft recompence to Parents O flores vere non frondium sed veprarum O truely they are flourishes not of branches but of briers and so the Lord doth recompence the Parents in their age that as they were negligent in training them vp in the knowledge of God so they become crosses to their Parents in their age Plutarch Among the Lacedemonians there was a Law that children were not obliged to maintaine their Parents in their age who were carelesse of their education in vertue when they were young Moreouer Doct. Sinnes of ignorance wil not excuse vs. let vs assure our selue that the sinnes of Ignorance will
by sharpe meanes to be wakened Ionah 1.6.17 that God is forced to vse sharpe remedies to awaken vs. Ionas lay sleeping in the shippe when the tempest of Gods wrath was pers●eing him God therefore threw him into the bellie of the whale and bottome of the deepe that from these deepe places he might cry to his God When therefore we are troubled either by heauie sicknesse Vse or pouertie or oppressed by the tirannie of men let vs make profit and vse thereof considering that God hath casten his best children in such dangers for their profite and that it is better to be in deepe dangers praying then on the high mountaines of vanity playing Nota. By the deepe places may be vnderstood also an heart deepely wounded with the consideration of sinne and Gods iustice for God will not accept such superficiall and scrufe praiers which come onely from the lippes and not from a contrite and broken heart 1. Sa. 1.16 Anna the mother of Samuel out of the bitternesse of her heart powred out her soule before the Lord. Exo. 14.15 Moses albeit he spoke not at all yet the Lord said vnto him Why criest thou for out of the deepe places of his heart he called on God Will not God cast backe the dung of those foolish prayers in their faces who thinke to be heard by their much babling and idle repetition of an vncouth language which they vnderstand not or numbering their beedes as though God could be pleased with such foolish and childish toies which come not from faith because they lacke knowledge nor yet from repentance or a sorrow for sinne Let not men thinke to find mines of gold or siluer in the streets Simil. no they must digge into the bowells of the earth for them So let vs not deceiue our selues thinking Gods fauour may be gotten euerie where for in the deepe places it is to be found I called vpon the Lord. The person vpon whom he calleth was the Lord Iehouah one who onely both might as omnipotent and would as most loujug heare him Psal 73.25 Whom haue I in heauen but thee and in earth none beside thee God is all sufficient therefore pray to him If Christ were not onely sufficient to whom and by whom we should pray we might seeke for others but seeing he is sufficient and none other what follie is it to pray to any but to him God differeth from kings kings are not able to doe all the duties of their office to their subiects Exo. 18.18 as Moses although indued with extraordinarie graces for his ease had seuentie ioyned to him to be iudges of the people and therefore we must addresse our selues to the kings officers to end our businesse But our God is infinite and willeth all men to come to him Mat. 11.28 Come to me all ye that are wearie and laden To adde to a thing perfect is to diminish it as to light a candle to the Sunne Simil. or poure a drop of water in the Ocean addition to things imperfect makes them the greater as the more waters the greater riuer the more men the greater armie more gold the greater treasure Then to adde to an infinite God To adde to a thing perfect is to make it imperfect a perfect Christ is nothing else but to dishonour him Search all the Scriptures if they yeeld one example or commanding of either Patriarkes Prophet or Apostle doing or commanding any to be prayed vnto but God onely Their apocrypha and vnwritten verities and their Legenda aurea must be all their warrand Let vs therefore with Dauid in all our prayers call vpon God 1. Kin. 18 29.37 and with Elias when Baal could not heare his priests pray to our God and with our Sauiour Christ say Our Father which art in heauen Mat. 6.9 I called He setteth downe the forme of his praier vnder the name of calling which sheweth his feruent intention not onely in calling vpon God but crying And this maner of feruent prayer is most necessarie albeit God doth as well heare vs when with Ezechias we mourne as a doue Pray vnto the Lord feruentlie Esa 38.14 and chatter as a swallow both to stirre vp our selues and others to call on God For we are more moued when we call and cry then when we speake with a lower voice Verse 2. Lord heare my voice and let thine cares be bowed to the voice of my prayer IN this verse he craueth attention that God would lay his care to his suite before he propoūd it Simil. For as a subiect whē he finds the kings eare prepared to heare him he thinketh that then he will be the more ready and willing to grant his suite So Dauid heere out of the aboundance of his heart vseth this repetition heare me not that he doubted but God heard for himselfe faith Psal 94.9 He that planted the eare d●●h not he heare But by hearing he desireth the grant of his suite As the king is then said to haue heard a supplication when he hath granted it Let vs with Dauid cry from a penitent heart and in faith Vse 1 and then we may be assured the care of the Lord is ready to hearken all requests Those are to be blamed who thinke that the Lord doth not heare them if immediatly he doth not grant their desire Vse 2 for his delay is for our best and it is our duty patiently to attend his pleasure and time This petition is often repeated in the Psalmes as Psal 16.2 5.4.17.7 c. Prepare your hearts to pray and his eare is euer open to heare you Read 2. Chron. 6. concerning Solomons dedi ation of the Temple there he prayeth that God would bow downe his eare so often as they called for grace Verse 3. If thou O Lord straightly markest iniquity O Lord who shall stand Verse 4. But mercy is with thee that thou maiest be feared These two verses are the summe of all the Scriptures THese two verses containe the summe of all the Scriptures In the third is the forme of repentance and in the fourth the mercies of the Lord. These are the two mountaines Gorazin and Ebal mentioned in Deut. 27.12.13 These are the two pillars in Salomons Temple 1. King 7.21 called Iachin and Boaz we must with Paul perswade our selues that we are come from mount Sinai to mount Sion where mercie is although some sowre grapes must be eaten by the way Ier. 24.1.2 Ieremie tasted in his vision first a bitter figge out of one basket then a sweet figge out of the other In the daies of Moses Exo 15.25 the waters were first bitter then sweetned by the sweet woode And Elizeus cast in salt in the pottage of the sonnes of the Prophets 2. Kin. 4.41 then they became wholsome If thou O Lord. Marke here that in this third verse he two times nameth God by the Lord as in all the other 8 verses he
the name of Mercy includeth all things Who gets me●cy gets all things Gen. 33.11 according to that of Iacob to his brother Esau I haue gotten mercy and therefore I haue gotten all things Desirest thou any thing at Gods hands cry for mercy out of which fountaine all good things will spring to thee The blind men seeking their light cried Haue mercy vpon vs thou sonne of Dauid The Cananite Mat. 20.30 who had her daughter possessed cried Haue mercy vpon me If ye haue purchased the Kings pardon Mat. 15.22 Simil. then ye may enioy the priuiledges of his Kingdome if yee haue mercy yee haue all that God can giue you yee haue title to Christ to the heauens to all the creatures yea and are freed and deliuered from the prison of hell Argumēts to o●taine mercy For I am weake The arguments which he vseth that he may obtaine mercy are taken from his owne vnworthinesse and miserable estate For saith he I am weake This is the generall word vnder which bee comprehendeth all his paines Two sorts of paines and this hee explicates by the diuision of them in his bodily paines in these words My bones are sore troubled and his spirituall temptations in the beginning of the third verse My soule also is sore vexed The order of Gods curing is first to cure the spirituall diseases next the boddy paines But before I handle the argument marke the coherence of this second part of his sute with the former In the first hee craued mercie in this he craueth a cure and remedie for his corporall paines First hee desires to bee freed of the bonds of his sinnes then of his trouble This is the order of Gods curing that first he cures the spirituall diseases next the bodily paines Hezekiah first weeped for his sin turning him to the wall 2. King 20.2 c. and God for gaue it and then commanded Isaias to take a lumpe of drie figges and cure him Mark 2.5 c. And Christ said to the sicke man Sonne thy sinnes are forgiuen thee A double mercy whē God cures both spirituall and temporall discases a double iudgement to bee loosed from the bonds of sicknes and bound with the bonds of sinne and then arise and walke It is a double mercy when God hath first loosed the bonds of thy sin and then the bonds of thy disease and a double iudgement when hee hath loosed thee from the bonds of thy sicknesse and left thy soule bound with the chaines of sinne for then thou are reserued for a further iudgement That deliuery is onely profitable to thee when God hath freed thee from thy sinne and from such plagues as follow it Yee see out of these words that it is very lawfull to craue corporall health it being a benefit of God And at this time it is certaine Dauid was vnder some heauie sicknesse in body Doct. 4 as well as he was pressed down vnder the weight of Gods wrath for his sinne It is very lawfull to seek corporall health Dauid was here sick in body contrary to Bellarmin contrary to the iudgement of Bellarmine writing vpon the Title and Argument of this Psalme thinking it onely to bee the opinion of the Rabbines and their followers Albeit Loranus the Iesuit bee contrary to him writing vpon the third verse of this Psalme and produceth Lyranus Innocentius tertius Theodorus Antiochenus and Caietane who in this are all of one iudgement and opinion with vs. And why may they not agree together that a man being distressed in body and troubled in conscience may repent and mourne for them both The beginning of the two thirtieth Psalme sets downe his bodily paines which hee sustained in his flesh Strong men weakned by the power of sinne 1 Sam. 17.49 August Quem non vicit ferrum vicit libido Iudg. 15.15 and 16.21 Euils of Adulterie Whereupon ye may perceiue that albeit Dauid was a strong man yet sinne is able to cast him on his backe Hee ouercame Goliah yet sin ouercommeth him Lust vanquished him whom the sword could not ouercome Sinne debilitateth man and taketh all strength from him and so it befell to Sampson who smote a thousand Philistims and yet one Whore del●uered him bound to them Euery sinne weakneth man but especially the sinne of Adultery which doth enfeeble mans nature and abate his strength that it maketh him effeminate and womanly hearted Alexander the Great being bewitched with the pleasures of Drunkennesse and Whoredome sodainely made an end both of his life and conquest yea how many other heroicall spirits haue been wasted therewith Therfore learne all to abstaine there-from otherwise it wil bring you low waste your body conscience substance name and posterity Doctr. Weakness● in man a meanes to preuaile with God But behold what Rethoricke hee vseth to moue God to cure him I am weake an argument taken from his weaknesse which indeed were a weake argument to moue any man to shew his fauour but is a strong argument to preuaile with God Simil. If a diseased person would come to a Physitian and onely lament the heauinesse of his sicknesse he would say God helpe thee Simil. or an oppressed person come to a Lawyer and shew him the estate of his action and aske his aduice he would answer that is a golden question Simil. or to a Merchant to craue rayment hee will elther haue present money or a suerty Simil. or to a Courtier for fauour you must haue your reward ready in your hand But comming before God the most forcible argument that yee can vse is your necessity pouerty teares misery vnworthinesse and confessing them to him it shall be an open doore to furnish all things that he hath to you for which cause the Spirit saith Prou. 9.4 All yee that are destitute of vnder standing come to me and euery one that thirsteth come to the waters Esay 55.1 c. and yee that haue no siluer come buy and eate come I say buy wine and milke without silver and without money And our Sauiour himselfe cried Mar. 11.28 Come vnto mee all yee that are weary and loaden with sinne and I will ease you Martha said to Christ Behold he whom thou louedst is sicke Iohn 11.3 that the mention of his sicknesse might haue moued him to reuiue her brother The teares of our miserie are forcible arrowes to pierce the heart of our heauenly Father Reas 1 to deliuer vs and pitie our hard case The beggers lay open their sores to the view of the world Simil. that the more they may moue men to pitie them So let vs deplore our miseries to God Luk. 10.33 that he with the pitifull Samaritan at the sight of our wounds may helpe vs in due time What thing he seeks wherefore O Lord heale me Dauid in the first verse of the Psalme desired that the Lord would not punish him in his heauy
enemies shall be confounded and sore vexed they shall be turned backe and put to shame suddenly THis is a Prophecie of the finall extirpation of his enemies Doctr. The Churches enemies will not prosper albeit it is to be vnderstood that Dauid was not of a vindicatiue spirit that he had malice against Simei Saul or Doeg for the particular wrongs hee receiued from them yet because they were enemies to Gods counsell in his promotion he triumpheth ouer them whereby by wee may learne to abandon our affections in our particular quarrels Doct. We ought in our own quartels to bee mercifull but sharpe in the quarels of God Numb 12.3 that wee may affirme before God and the world wee can be content to pardon whatsoeuer iniury done to our selues labor to be as vvas Moses the meekest man in the world in our own particular but most sharp in reuēging wrongs done to God It should teach Prince Preachers to imitate this Prince and Prophet to sharpen the edge of their sword tongue against Gods enemies namely these diuelish Iesuites and factions Papists to forget their own particulars against any so far as they may But in this his Prophesie it is most remarkable what shall be the end of all the enemies of Gods Church whatsoeuer they be either Kings Balaamites Baalites Iulians Turkes Papists they shall be confounded and ouerthrowne and shall be shamefull spectacles of the iudgement of God as Pharo Saul Achab Iezabel Herod Iulian there is no man breathing that sets him against that truth of God that shall escape shame in this world Let Persecutors learne by the examples of their Prodecessors eternal cōdemnation in the world to come without repētance But the examples of our Predecessors wil not learn this future age to be wise and therefore they shall inherit shame for a reward of their hostility against Gods Church except they repent But shame cannot befall Gods Children they shall neuer be ashamed for albeit they commit oftentimes things shamefull yet their repentance blots them away Suddenly Doct. Sudden Iudgemēts are the greatest are the greatest iudgemēts Dan. 5.30 Mat. 24.38 This is an amplification of their iudgement that it commeth suddenly vnlooked for as befell Beltazar for when God giueth men time to repent it is happy but when hee taketh them in their sinne then they are most miserable as those in the first world they were eating and drinking marying and giuing in mariage when the floud came The Lord help vs and keepe vs from such suddenties which may take vs in our sinnes but that we may be prepared with the fiue wise Virgins Mat 25.10 whensoeuer our Bridegroome shall come to call vs To whom with the Father and the holy Spirit be all praise honour and glory world without end Amen FINIS A GODLY AND FRVITFVLL EXPOSItion on the twenty fifth Psalme the second of the PENITENTIALS DAVID being oppressed by his enemies The substance of this Psalm in this Psalme desires that God would deliuer him from shame and sinne the cause of all his euils that he would direct him to walke in his wayes as also confirmes himselfe by many arguments in the assurance of Gods goodnesse and finally praies for deliuery to himselfe and to the Church This Ode of Dauids is set downe in 22. Sections or Verses after the number and order of the Hebrew Alphabet at least very neere as are the 34.111.112.119 as also the Lamentations of Ieremiah and the 31. of the Prouerbes Those who seeke a reason of this let them reade S. Ierome Epist 155. in Lament Ieremiae and Euseb de praepar Euang. For he alludeth to the fignification of euery Letter of the Hebrew Alphabet which hath a spirituall meaning But in my iudgment these Psalmes are so framed for our memory that keeping in minde the Letters wee may the more easily remember the matter Man hath need of many helps For wee haue need of many helps to confirme our memory in goodnesse These Verses are called Acrostichi as were Sibyllaes verses of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth a Fish 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sedullius in like manner made an Hymne A Solis ortus cardine Beatus auctor seculi Castae parentis viscera c. As also Nazianzen I would not wish men to be too curious in the searching of the causes hereof but rather be diligent in the confirmation of their memories by these 22. Alphabeticall Letters The Diuision of the Psalme THis Psalme containeth a Prayer to the eight Verse a Confirmation to the eighteenth and a Conclusion petitory to the end In the first seuen Verses hee craueth three things at God First that hee may not be a shamed Secondly that hee may learne Gods wayes and be taught by him Thirdly that he may be deliuered from sinne Then there is contained a deprecation against sinne and shame and the meane by which he may escape them both that is by the word of God which may direct him in such a way wherein hee may not fall vnder shame and sinne Shame proceedeth of sinne There are two things which we may lawfully craue of God to eschew sinne shame sinne as the mother and cause shame as the daughter and effect And as we desire to flye them so especially wee should craue of God that onely meane by which wee may shunne them euen that we submit our selues to be gouerned by his word The word of God freeth man both of sinne and shame and frame all our actions therto by which we may perswade our selues that we shall escape both All pray Lord keepe vs from shame and sinne when as many contemne the meane by which they should bee preserued euen that blessed word of God VERSE 1. Vnto thee O Lord lift I vp my soule To whom God is Iehouah hee is also Elohim THe names which he giues God are Iehouah and Eloim the first taken from his nature the other from his power and he applyeth them to himselfe My strong Gods including the persons of the Trinitie He leadeth vs to God in our praiers Psal 73.23 Heb. 11.6 Whom haue I in heauen but thee Hee that commeth to God must beleeue that God is and that he is able to saue such as come to him God appeared in sundry names to others Exod. 6.3 but to Moses in his essentiall name Iehouah Claime first to his nature and next to his power Note First he must be thy God Iehouah and then thy strong God First he must loue thee and then hee will defend thee Ps 144.15 Blessed is the people whose God is the Lord. Those are foolish who seeks his protection not first hauing assurance of his loue If hee be to thee Iehouah then shall he also be to thee Eloim Three arguments to moue God to beare him The arguments by which he would moue God to heare him are taken from three persons First from
what the worse is a Captaine for a scarre in his face whose valorous armes haue beene so well tried Next his afflictions and persecutions cannot bee shamefull but honourable for the Apostles themselues thought it great honour to be beaten Acts 3.41 yea to bee scourged for Christs sake They now are crowned with martyrdome who to the worlds opinion haue suffered as euill doers Let not mine enemies reioyce ouer me The deuils reioyce at euill Luke 15.10 The wicked doe imitate the nature of the deuill for he is neuer glad but at the destruction of sinners as the Angels reioyce at their conuersion whereby ye may trie if yee be a true Christian The triall of a Christian by cōpassion 2 Cor. 11.29 Doct. Gods children haue many enemies Reu. 12.17 if ye lament with those that lament and haue compassion on them and say with the Apostle Saint Paul Quis affligitur ego non vror Who is afflicted and I doe not burne Gods children haue many enemies hee is not one of Gods lambes if he haue not a Lyon or a dogge to pursue him some are secret some are open but who are they none but the Deuill and his children the Dragon pursues the seed of the woman Next obserue their malitious nature they reioyce at the euill of Gods children Simil. and doe leape for gladnesse The Flies and Eagles liue on the sores of beasts so doe the wicked reioyce at the euill of Gods people Doct. The wicked alwaies reioyce in euill Reioyce not ouer mee my enemy I haue fallen I will rise againe Thirdly hee would not feed their eyes with his losses The ioy of the wicked is euer in euill either in their owne or other mens sinnes they sleepe not till they sinne they eate not but in sinne with gluttony they sleepe in vvhoredome they go to murther oppression or strealing VERSE 3. So all that hope in thee shall not bee ashamed but let them bee confounded that transgresse without cause Doct. The benefits of Christi●ns are common SO all that hope in thee He so drawes his deliuery that the benefit thereof may redound to the rest of the members of Christ for their euils and their goods are common neither should vvee seeke any thing to our selues but so farre as it may redound to the good of the Church and her comfort For as a ring on the finger adornes the vvhole body Simil. and as the hurt of the finger anoyeth i● all Doct. Shame sent to the wicked a● to the right owner 1. They transgresse so doth the good of one member reioyce all and the hurt of one offend all But let them bee confounded that transgresse without cause Now shame is sent to the right owner the vvicked vvho are described by two marks first they are perfidious and forsworne no bond can bind them they are a false generation trust them not vvhen they are vvith Iuda● kissing thee Luk. 22.47 2 Sam. 3.27 then are they betraying thee Ioab said to Abner in peaceable manner how doe you my Brother in the meane time had a dagger priuately wherewith to kill him 2. Without cause The next marke is vvithout cause they are not able to qualifie any iniury that euer they haue done Psal 11.3 What hath the righteous done saith Dauid They liue vpon suspitions apprehensions and iudge others after their owne false nature Doct. Ianocencie a great comfort in time of trouble Note a great comfort to establish thy conscience in thy sufferings thine innocencie vvhich maketh thy afflictions light and thy burthens easie VERSE 4. Shew mee thy wayes O Lord and teach me thy pathes Doct. Wee are naturally ignorant SHew mee This letteth vs see how that naturally vve are ignorant of the vvaies of God and therefore Dauid vvould bee taught of God Hee craued in the first three verses to bee freed of shame and now hee craues the meanes by vvhich he may bee deliuered euen Gods vvord which is the onely preseruatiue from shame And herefore it often commeth to passe that vvhen men are brought to be open spectacles of shame Doct. The contempt of Gods word the cause of shame Vse Against contemners of the word of God Simil. they doe confesse it was not the present accident wherein they are taken but the contempt of Gods word And this should teach vs to loue that word and follow it to the end vve may be kept from shame which maketh greatly against the Atheists and Papists of our Land who contemne the blessed word of God they are as Owles flying the light of the day Qui male facit ●ait lucem hee that doth euill hateth the light In this verse are contained 1. the person whom he implores Iehouah whom he describeth leading him teaching him Ioh. 3.20 The Parts receiuing him in fauour and nourishing him in the 4.5.6 7. verses 2. What hee seekes Gods wayes 3. By what meanes Teach me and lead mee 4. the reason Because thou art my God and I trust in thee Dauid a King and a Prophet craues to bee directed by God to the effect and end hee may direct the course of his life well and of all his Subiects which was Solomons choyce 1 Kin. 3. ● Lord giue me wisedome to go in and out wisely before thy people So should Pastors doe Who would bee a good Master Doct. All should desire to be taught by God in his wayes Two contrary waies let him be a good Apprentice this same should all priuate Christians desire that God would teach them that way which will please him best euen his owne wayes Thy wayes This presupposeth that there is another way which is the way of sinne as there are two places and ends heauen and hell so are there two persons sheepe and Goates two wayes the broad and narrow two words Ios 24.15 come and depart I with Iosua set before you life or death the right or wrong way chuse or refuse All men are going but there is onely one Gods way the Kings hie streete many by-wayes All thinke they are going to Heauen Iewes Turkes Papists Atheists but try if thou be going thereto by that vvay which God hath set downe to thee trye which is the ancient way the true and liuing way Brigands and false guids may deceiue you 2 Kin. 6.19 The wrong way as the Prophet led the Aramites Ioh. 14.6 Ps 119 35. and leade you to Samaria but the way of God is set downe by Christ I am the way the truth and the life no man comes to the Father but by me euen through the vale of his flesh thus he steps through Christ Dauid prayes vnto the Lord that hee would direct him in the path of his commandements for therein was his delight and Isaias saith God will teach vs his wayes Isai 2.3 and we will walke in his pathes Faith and Loue two feet whervpon wee must walk There bee two feete
euer man or can hee be but he shall finde comfort and good in this booke of Psalmes For the Psalmes are an Epitome of the old Testament Simil. a mirrour or looking glasse of the grace of God a perfect Anatomie of the whole man Wherein are expressed all sort of documents both of the gracious promises of God to his owne children and his iustice against his aduersaries also of our faith in the promises of God of our infirmities our patience our constancie our deliuerie from our troubles and our thankesgiuing for the same finally of our duetifull obedience to God and care of his Church Dauid by his doctrine teacheth these to repent whom by his example he had taught to sinne A generall lesson for al persons This is a Didascalique Psalme wherein David teacheth sinners to repent by this doctrine Who teached them to sinne by his example This science is vniuersal and pertaineth to all men and which necessarily wee must all learne Princes Priests and people men and women children tradsemen and whatsoeuer they be m●st be put to this Schoole without which lesson all others are vnprofitable A marke of a true penitent sin●er But to the poynt This is a marke of a true pe●itent when hee hath beene a stumbling blocke to others hee may be as carefull to raise them vp by his repentance as hee was hurtfull to them by his sinne and I neuer thinke that man truly penitent who is ashamed to teach sinners repentance by his owne particular proofe The Samaritan woman when shee was conuerted Ioh 4.29 left her bucket at the Well entred the City and sayd come forth yonder is a man who hath told mee all that I haue done Luk 22.32 and our Sauiour sayth to S. Peter when thou art conuerted strengthen thy brethren 1 Tim 1.14 S. Paul also after his conuersion is not ashamed to call himselfe chiefest of all sinners and to teach others to repent their sinnes happie and thrise happie is the man who can build as much as hee hath cast downe Let Princes be ashamed to sinne but not to repent Next hee is a King and yet not a shamed to be an example of repentance by which all kings and noblemen should learne to be ashamed of their sinne but neuer be ashamed to repent Theodosius the Emperour after the slaughter that his Souldiers made at Thessalonica came to S. Ambrose The example of Theodosius the Emperour and humbly fell downe on his face amongst the penitents saying that part of the Psalme Agglutinata est terrae anima mea Ps 44.25 my soule is glewed vnto the earth David an experimented teacher Thirdly David is an experimented doctor as I haue said in the former two Psalmes who hauing felt himselfe teacheth others The Pilot who hath Sailed the Sea can best teach others the art of Nau●gation Simil. a Captiane can direct an armie best who hath had proofe of the enemie himselfe So experience in Spirituall combates is of great worth and hee can best teach others to avoide sinne who hath ouercommed sinne in his owne person Learne to get remission of sinne The doctrine most necessarie for a Christian to learne is the remission of sinnes For although yee had learned all other sciences what could they auaile you without this For as one of the worthiest fathers sayes all sciences without this are vnprofitable What if thou thou were neuer so prudent in the lawes if thine owne conscience accuse thee and expert in Physicke if thine owne soule be sickly and know the power of the stars if thy sinne throw thee downe to the lowest hels yea albeit yee learned all the heads of Theologie and taught them vnto others yet they are nothing worth to thy selfe if thou hast not learned to repent thy sinnes and to haue perswasion of mercy for them Iam. 2.19 Mar. 5.12 The Deuils beleeue and they tremble the legion of Deuils which came from the possessed could pray to Christ that hee might licence them to enter into the heard of Swine they they could confesse and professe that Christ was the Son of God 2 Cor 7.14 the Deuill can change himselfe into an Angell of light Balaam can Prophecie and many shall say Numb 23. we haue done miracles in thy name Iudas can preach and many can speake eloquently thinking to adde to Pauls bands but one thing can they neuer doe euen assure themselues that their sinnes are forgiuen them This lesson none can learne but those who are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 taught by God And this is the lesson that David teacheth al Christians who come to his Schoole which if they learne it is sufficient this is that one thing which is needfull I wish to God from mine heart Note that Pastors of Gods word would leane ostentation words of humane eloquen●e and the shew of learning and labour more to worke most vpon the hearts of the people a remorse for sinne and an assurance of mercie Et vt plactum populo non sibi plausum mo●eant that they may moue a weeping among the people more then an applause to themselues VERSE I. Blessed is he whose wickednesse is forgiuen and whose sinnes is couered BEfore I come to the particular parts of this excellent Psalme I must obserue wherein David doth place happinesse and felicitie He more then twentie times in the Psalmes d scribing who are happie accounteth thesee onely happie who are godly Sometimes in the cause Blessed is the people whose God is the Lord Psal 33.12 Psal 41.1 Psal 128.1 Psal 32.1 Blessednesse sometimes imputed to the causes sometimes to the effect sometimes to the meane sometimes in the effect Blessed is the man who iudgeth wisely of the poore sometimes in the meanes as blessed are those that feare God whose sinnes are forgiuen for as gold is alwaies gold whither it be in the mine where it grew or put forth to exchange or in the kings treasurie so godlinesse must be esteemed all one whither yee iudge it by the cause from which it had its beginning or from the effects thereof or from the meanes whereby it is intertained albeit euery one of those haue their owne place the one as the fountaine the other as the spring flowing therefro There is no man although neuer so vnhappie who doth not aspire and desire to be happie Wherein many put happines 2 Sam. 13.4.29 but they perceiue not wherein happinesse consisteth some put it in the pleasure of their flesh with Ammon but his sudden repentance in thrusting away his sister and his infortunate end shew that there is no happinesse in those filthie pleasures some place happinesse in riches with Crassus but finding the incertaintie thereof they wil be forced to cry Plutarchus O Solon Solon other place happinesse on honours as Absolom and Haman who were both exalted on trees 2 Sam. 18.9 Ester 7.10 But David albeit hauing riches honours and pleasures
pray to God and is it not verie conuenient that the Godlie in their trouble should run to God from whō as they haue their name Conditions necessary to be in him to whom wee pray so they haue all good things if we would seeke helpe at any we must see that hee doth know our danger that hee will heare vs that he fauoureth vs that hee will helpe vs that hee will deliuer vs that hee will continue constant to helpe vs and if any of these lacke our sute is in vaine and to no purpose There is no creature in heauen or earth to whom all these can be attributed but onely to God For Images and Idols haue no more sense then Baal had when his Priests called O Baal heare vs of whom to deride them Eliah 1 Kings 18 26. God sees our miserie with pitifull eyes Luk. 10.33 said he is in a iorney or sleeping But our God sees all our tribulations and foresees them and sees them with regrate as a parent would behold the miserie of his childe not with common eyes as an on looker of a commedit but with mournfull eyes as the Samaritan beheld the wounded Iew for hee that made the eye can hee not see and qui totus est visus he who is altogether sight can he not perceiue This is a great comfort to the patient that hee hath God looking on him with the eye of his compassion And as hee seeth so hee heareth our groaning with both his cares Isa 63.26 God heares our groanings Psal 27.10 Though Abraham bee ignorant of vs and Israel know vs not yet thou O Lord art our father and our redeemer Though my father and my mother would forget me yet the Lord will gather me vp And if Abraham did not see the miseries of the Israelites who sprang out of his loynes shall we suppose that the Saints departed see our particular Crosses or sorrows The Saints departed heare not or tentations who when they were aliue could not see them but so farre as they would exprest them How much lesse now can they see our crosses except as the Papists folishly say in the Glasse of the Trinitie which were asmuch as to make the Trinitie a myrrour to their soules The Saints occupied in praysing God to occupie them in the earthly sorrows of his Saints who are so well occupied in the celestiall praises of his Maiestic and albeit they be lying vnder the altar desiring the accomplishment of the body of Christ yet they are put to no businesse to that which the Trinitie fullie can doe themselues to whom belongeth the worke of our saluation Many both see heare and pitle our miseries albeit they are not able to succour God able to help vs. or supplie vs. Here then is our comfort that wee haue an omnipotent God to whom we come who quiequid voluit fecit hath is able to doe what so euer hee will and if wee haue his heart to loue vs we neede nor to doubt of his hand to helpe vs as a subiect on whom a Potent king casteth his affection and whom hee loueth intirely needes not to doubt of his liberalitie and protection And finally albeit that any mortall man both saw and knew Gods fauouris constant and fauoured vs and had power to accomplish our suites yet what suretie haue we of the continuance of of his fauour or yet of his life Therefore saith Dauid Trust not in wordly Princes whose breath is in their nostriles Psal 146.3 But our God is constant eternall immutable and as hee abideth for euer so doth his loue continue without any shaddow of change Here I might very pertinently conuince that Doctrine of the Papists Against the Popish intercession of Saints who seeke to God by other intercessors then Christ But seeing that worthy English man Mr. Taylor hath handled that subiect very well and I vse not to fall forth in my Sermons in any Etenchticke place against the enemies except shortlie to poynt at them as the text affoordeth occasion or yet Didactick common places seeing onely I purpose to interpret the text of the Psalme as it lyeth therefore I referre you who desire to heare this controuersie to the said reuerend fathers commentarie on this Psalme who hath reasoned the mater very well and to all your contentments will satisfie you as also my brother Master Patricke Simsons treatise of the Invocatiō of Saints written in his Centuries In a time when thou maiest be found This is the fourth The time o prayer and last poynt of the godlie mans phrase the time when he shall pray This phrase implieth three things First That prayer is a seeking of God Secondly That there is a time wherein God will not be found and Lastly that there is a time wherein the godly shall finde him Seeke the Lord while hee may be found call vpon him while hee is neere Doctr. That praier is a seeking of God Psal 34.4 2 Chron 20 3. Math 7.7 Luk. 2.27 Can 6.1 Where God is to be found in his Temple Isa 55.6 I sought the Lord sayth Dauid and Iehosaphat sought the Lord by Prayer So it is necessary wee should seeke God by Prayer that wee may finde him Seeke and yee shall finde That yee may finde him First seeke him in his owne house there Simeon found him The Church found him amongst the tents of the shepheards in his Garden amongst the beds of the Spices that is in the assemblie of the Saints where graces grow vp as sweete Spices Next Seeke him in his word and by Praier His word Eph. 6 18. By prayer Ier. 29 13. for there hee is to be found Thirdly in sinceritie of Spirit praying in the Spirit Yee shall seeke me and finde me because yee sought me withall your heart Seeke him also in season timously Early in the morning sayth Dauid will I seeke thee Psal 63.2 that is euery morning the beginning of my worke shall bee to praise thee Fourthly seeke him for himselfe not as the Iewes God is to be sought for himselfe who sought him for their bellie Then wee seeke him for himselfe when wee seeke his glorie in euery thing although to our owne shame and discommoditie Then seeing the Lord may be found it were good for vs to seeke him as I said before and specially in his Temple where hee may be found and not in time of his seruice to frequent Alehouses or any pastimes vpon the Sabboth day or Merchandise pretending they can serue God on horsebacke as well as in the Church I will not be ashamed to borrow some fearefull examples from that learned and godly Pastor Master Taylor Marke the example of abusing the Sabboth A certaine man for hunting on the Sabboth day had a child borne with the head of a Dogge that seeing hee preferred his Dogges before the seruice of God hee might haue one of his owne geting to make much of
Histor Theat A Flaxwoman at Kinstat in France who dressed her Flaxe commonly on the Sabboth twise admonished on two Sabboths by fire and not amending the third day was burnt with her two children A warning for those who brew bake grind c. on the Sabboth A man working in his haruest on the Sabboth his barne was burnt and all that hee had according to that of the 17. of Ieremy verse 27. At Parise at the Beare-bating Ano. 1585 eight persons were slaine many hurt by the sudden breaking of the scaffold As also a fearefull iudgement of God fell forth at Dumbar about the yeere of God 1577. whereof I was an eye witnesse my father master Andrew Symson of good memorie being Minister thereof who going to Church law a thousand Boates setting their nets on the Sabboth he weeped and feared that God would not suffer such contempt it being a most calme day as euer was seene at that season at midnight when they went forth to draw their nets the winde arose so fearefullie that it drowned eightscore and ten Boates so that there were reckoned in the coast side foureteene score of widowes Thus God hath wayes to finde out profaine persones But Alas this is pit●ifull that not onely wee doe not seeke God Pro. 8.1 but when wisedome sendeth forth her maides in the streets to seeke vs and call vpon vs wee heare their cryes with deafned eares so that I feare that the reproch of Isaias iustly appertaine to vs Isa 63. All the day I stretched forth my hand to a rebellious people Finally as there is a time of all things which would be obserued Time fleeth away take it before it be gone Simil Pro. 6.6 for post occasio calua as fortune is bauld behind so is time a Spring time an Haruest time a Sommer time a winter-Wintertime The Pismire knoweth her time the Sea and Moone haue their times and so hath Grace a time while it is offered and God a time wherein he may be found Therefore seeke the Lord while hee may be founde Isa 55. If wee slippe the tyde and influence of grace the tyde will faile vs which we shall neuer recouer But to the end God must seeke vs first A time when God will not be be found ●●k 13.24 we may finde God wee are to be found of God for wee can neuer seeke him till hee first seeke vs as the lost sheepe cannot seeke it selfe Next there is a time when God cannot be found Many shall seeke to enter but shall not be able for the wicked seeke not till the time of finding be past so did the foolish Virgins Mat. 25.12 Gen. 27.35 it was too late when the gate was closed It was too late for Esau to seeke his Fathers blessing when he had contemned it Exod. 14.24 It was too late for Pharaoh to flie when he was in the midst of the Sea When God is found God is found when he offereth gracious occasions of his finding and wee imbrace them Which Hosea expresieth in his tenth Chapter vers 12. Till he come and raine downe righteousuesse on vs. But there are two things which breedeth doubts in vs Ob first the wicked are heard as Achab the Ninivites the Israelites in seeking a King 1 Sam. 8.22 1 King 21.29 Ion. 3.10 Luk. 8.32 Ans the Devils seeking to enter in swine c. I answere albeit God granteth their worldly desires yet it is to their double destruction The Israelites obtained a King in his wrath Achab prolonging temporall iudgement procuted eternall condemnation and in this world albeit suspended for a time to shew Gods lenitie sparing reprobates for a season in the end vtter exterminion Next the godly find not alway God Ob. Ans Answere They find him not at the present he delayeth time with them to exercise the●r faith and patience but in the end he commeth Mat. 14.25 he commeth at the fourth watch Abraham Zachary and Anna prayed for ch●ldren in their youth but gat their prayers granted in their age yea oft they are refused in some things and better giuen them Paul prayed to remoue the messenger of Sathan 2 Cor. 1● 9 but God would not yeeld thereto albeit he heard him in a better supplying him with sufficient grace Christ prayed the cup might be taken from him but in that he was not heard Luk. 22.42 yet he was heard in a better that he brought him well through it The fruit of Prayers Surely in the flood of great waters they shall not come neere thee Here is the second part of this Verse wherein is expressed the fruits of our prayers and the excellent effect thereof that the faithfull are delivered from all troubles after their prayer God giueth a singular priviledge to prayer Doctr. God delighteth in Prayer Rev. 8.3 that he preferreth it to any other thing for he delighteth in that sacrifice more then in any burnt offering and therefore the Angels are said to offer vp the prayers of the Saints as though God had preferred them more in assigning them to that office then in any other And none can pray but the childe of God Let vs therefore striue night and day to performe that dutie which shall doe vs more good in our miseries then any other remedie The great danger of Gods Saints Flood of great waters He magnifieth the mercy of God by setting forth the great danger whereto a Christian is subiect by a similitude taken from great Floods which is very frequent in the Scriptures And to expresse our danger it is sayd We goe through fire and water they are both extreame and mercilesse elemenes albeit water be worse and more dangerous for fire may be extinguished by water but what is able to resist the rage of waters and specially an invndation which commeth so vehemently so suddenly so forcibly that no man is able to resist it but straight way it carrieth him away The floods are sometime sayd to come vpon vs from God Psal 42.7 All thy floods and waues are gone over me Sometime by Sathan The serpent cast out waters as a Flood Rev. 12.5 Sometime by wicked men Isa 59.19 The enemie shall come as a Flood God is the first raiser of the Floods but the Devill and wicked men doe concurre and advances that worke to destroy the Church Ye see then the enemies of the Church are compared to waters Psal 124. Isa 8. Isa 17. Ier. 47. There is nothing to eschew the rage of waters but onely to fl●e from them Moreover as many waters yea stryps and rootes ariseth together A concurse of the wicked against God Psal 10. Psal 2. so doe wicked men in the persecution of the Church concurre together even to destroy Gods Church All p●t too their shoulder their force their malice their words and deeds and what they can to subvert her The fu●y of the enemies wasting the Church
in this life many in the life to come many within him many without him So vnhappie is the state of the wicked whose sorrows shall be multiplied Isa 65.13.14 Behold my servants shall eat and yee shal be hungrie c. and in the Revel Revel 9.12 Revel 8.13 One woe is past and two are to come and the Angel flying through heauen cryed Woe woe woe to the inhabitants of the earth The godly and wickeds sorrow differ The Godly haue sorrow also but nothing comparable to theirs For God remembreth mercie in the mids of iudgement which he doth neuer to the wicked the Lord deliuereth the godly as the Israelites through the Sea and drownes the wicked The examples of Gods iudgements are seene in Lucifer Isa 14.12 Gen. 3.10 Gen. 4.11 Gen 7. Gen. 18.19 Our first parents Caine. the first world The fiue Cities Pharoah Nebuchadnezar Antiochus Herod c. Read ouer the 28. of Dout. There is a Catalogue of the sorrows of the wicked which should affraie any Christian heart And also in the 20. of Iob. where is sayd Iob. 20.22 all sorrow shall fall on him But mercie shall compasse him who trusteth in the Lord. He hath threatned in his doctrine the wicked with a consideration of Gods iudgements Now hee is alluring them with an offer of Gods mercies the godlie are ever well and all turne to the best to them Saluation welfare attendeth them in all places at all times in all causes in all their businesse in things certaine and vncertaine in prosperitie and aduersitie in body and soule in things present and to come Mercie What euer come to him is mercie and flowing from the fountaine of the remission of his sinnes The Lord crowneth them with mercies yea his sinnes turne to mercies to him But of this before Shall compasse him Doctr. The godly as they are compassed with trouble so are they with mercies 2 King 6.15.17 Psal 125.2 Zach. 2.5 Doctr. Mercie belongeth to the faithful As hee was compassed with innumerable troubles So God shall compasse him with as many comforts Dothan was compassed with Aramits so was it also with Angels as the mountaine compasseth Ierusalem so is the Lord about his people and hath promised to be a wall of fire about her That trusteth in the Lord. These are the people to whom mercie appertaines euen the beleeuers for faith onely maks vs acceptable to God But of this likewise before I beseech God make vs all penitent for our sinnes and sensible of his ●uercies but aboue all things roote vs in the Faith of Christ that we may depend vpon his promises that are both faithfull and true VERS 11. Be glad yee righteous and reioyce in the Lord and be ioyfull all yee that are vpright in heart The substance of this verse THis verse containeth the conclusion of the Psalme wherein is set downe an exhortation ●o such as are happie and blessed by remission of their sinnes to a spirituall ioy and praysing of God And this exhortation dependeth very well on the antecedents for hauing spoken of the remission of sinnes and the fruites of repentance and the fatherlie mercy of God towards the faythfull to whom properly this exhortation belongeth For after the remission of sinnes After remission of sinne ariseth ioy Gal. 5. Rom. 5.1 there ariseth an vnspeakeable ioy in the beleeuers heart for ioy is that fruit of faith And after the Apostle Rom. 4. had spoken of iustification hee inferreth Rom. 5. Then being iustifieed by faith we haue peace toward God through our Lord Iesus Christ Which doubtlesly cōprehendeth all sorts of ioy and the Angels when they Preached to the shepheards of Christ Luk. 2.10 they professed they tolde ioyfull tydings This exhortation containeth three parts First what hee doth exhort to reioyce Secondly whom the righteous and vpright men Thirdly the limitation thereof in the Lord. Be glad He exhorteth them three times be glad reioyce and be ioyfull and as ●ee made mentiō of a threefold blessing so doth hee of a threefold ioy Wherein we haue two things necessary to be obserued First the duinesse of our nature who as slow horses neede many spurres Mans senslesnesse in spirituall things and prou●c●tions to spirituall things for we are naturally ouermuch ●ent to carnall things that wee neede no incitations to the same But by the contrary in spirituall things wee are cast in a deepe sleepe who cannot be wakened at the first cry as those men after drinke haue neede to be roused often that they may behold the light so men drunken with the pleasures of sinne as Nazianzen sayth Must be wakened by diuerse exhortations as this same Prophet in the subsequet Psalme redoubleth his exhortatiōs for the same effect And the Apostle to the Philippians sayth Phil. 4.4 reioyce in the Lord continually and I say againe Tho proper signification of the words be glad reioyce Next I perceiue that this exhortation growes for the word Be glad properly in the owne language signifieth an inward and hearty ioy Psal 35.26 Reioyce by the presence or hope at least of a thing desirable or good The second word Reioyce in the owne language signifieth to expresse our ioy by some outward gesture sometimes vsed for dancing as the Hills skip for gladnesse Psal 65.12 Be ioyfull Isa 35.6 The third word Be ioyfull signifieth to cry forth for gladnesse as the dumbe mans tongue shall sing This Gradation teacheth vs Doctr. Spirituall ioy alwayes increaseth that this is the nature of Spirituall ioy That it is alwayes augmented to vs by certaine degrees vntill the time is come to the perfection of all ioy which is signified by the last word importing as it were a triumph and showting after victorie So that they are truly penitent when they haue ouercome sinne and Satan in their spirituall combate triumphes ouer them as vanquished enemies Obi But it may be obiected that the best christians commonly haue the least cause of reioycing in regard they are more subiect to Troubles Crosses Imprisonments Pouerty Sicknesse c. then others Our Sauiour answereth to that In the world yee shall haue trouble Ans Ioh. 16.33 but in me yee shall haue ioy reioyce I haue ouercome the world The Martyrs who suffer the losse of their liues and riches with great ioy answeres in the midst of the fierie flames where they sing and prayse God as though they felt no paine their inward ioy swallowing vp their outward trouble Christians in their very death answeres to that when they cry O death where is thy sting O hell where is thy victory So 1 Cor. 15. Inward ioy swalloweth vp outward crosses how so euer they be subiect to the greatest miseries outwardly yet the ioy arising from the assurance of Gods fauour doth swallow them vp Obserue Doctr. Only those truly reioice whose sinne is pardoned Pro. 29.6 Pro. 14.10 Psal 40.16 Isa 65.13 Rev.
so strictly vrged that he can get no relaxation of his euill being so incurable except he get a remedie frō God These would seeme to be the words of an impatient mind but we must not thinke that a Christian can keep a continual course but as Iob fell forth in bitter speeches so the best man in the world may do as much and more Therefore when men are thus passionate let vs not cast them off iudging them to be reprobates When he faith they are euer before him note the extremitie of his tentation that he hath no stay of his trouble but continually pressed therewith Should not we thank God that deales more mercifully with vs that notwithstanding of our sins doth not suffer vs to be ouerwhelmed with troubles for he is faithfull 1. Cor. 10.13 who will not suffer vs to be tempted aboue that which we are able to beare Lorinus here bringeth in Purgatorie as though Dauid had not had purgatorie of afflictions in this l●fe but had need of another purgatorie in another life Verse 18. When I declare my paine and am sorie for my sinne Verse 19. Then mine enemies are aliue and are mightie and they that hate me wrongfully are many HEre the malice of his enemies is described from the circumstance of time when they vtter their malice in the highest degree when he is lowest in declaring both his sinne and the punishments thereof and being afflicted of God they afflict him and impeach his spirituall meditations Thus Satan taketh vs at the shot and at the pinch that when we haue to do with God specially and most particularly he then manifesteth his malice most against vs to interrupt our diuine seruice yea he goeth mad in furie when he seeth vs seruing God Satan abhorreth our repentance and confession of sin for there is no exercise which he doth more abhor then repentance and confession of our sinnes for in so doing we bid adieu to the diuell and acquit our selues from his camp Lorinus following Origen expoundeth this of auricular confession to the Priest yet he granteth that this place doth not conuince the vse of confession sacramentall which was not vnder the law neither the other which was made sometime to men yet he thinketh it fauoureth them both lest contadicting the Fathers he may seeme to fauour the heretikes who abhorre the sacramentall confession Mine enemies are aliue The miseries of Gods children inanimates their enemies and giues them new courage as though they got a new life and were reuiued when they heare the destruction of Gods children and yet they are in effect dead who delight in the dead works of sinne Non est viuere sed valere vita Si viuis animae si quid antiquà tibi Remanet vigoris pelle foemineos metus E●● inhospitalem caucasum mente indue 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ardere but rather as Plato in Cratylo 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 viuere vnde Iupiter 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The lust of the wicked is sinne Also I mark here what is the life of wicked men sinne and doing of wrong The diuel he delighteth to tempt men to sin and the wicked cannot sleep till they haue done some sin and neither can eate nor drinke with delight till they haue performed some mischiefe And they that hate me wrongfully are many An argument to perswade God to deliuer him is his innocencie that the wrongs he suffereth are causlesse For surely the Lord will not maintaine vs against our enemies if we haue iustly prouoked their anger Psal 5.4 For he is a God that loueth no iniquitie and no wickednesse dwelleth with him It is not his pleasure that we should be enuious neither wil our Christian profession admit it which is so far from doing wrong A mark of one truly religious he doth wrong to none that by the contrary it will be content patiently to endure iniuries Then if this be a note of true religion to do violence to none what religion thinke ye the Romanists haue who teach that it is s●ruice done to God 〈◊〉 murder Princes shed Christian and innocent blood it is a bloodie religion a●d the Diuell is the father of i● and Rome the mother which hatched it Flie from ●ha● Babel that ye be not partakers of her iudgements Verse 20. They also that rewarded euill for good are mine ad●●rsaries because I ●o●●ow goodnesse THis is a higher d●gree of iniquitie that not onely they har●d him without any cause or wrong done by him to any of them but also he had prouoked them by his benefi●s to loue him and yet they were so diuellishly disposed that as Iudas did recompence Christ so did they Dauid repaying him euill for the good things he had bestowed on them Three sorts of spirits 1. naturall There be three sorts of spirit a naturall when a man can do good for good and euil for euill which theeues Pagans Barbarians and the very beasts will do 2. celestia●● The second celestiall who can do good for euill to shew their conformitie and obedience to Christ their Master The third sort are infernall 3 diabolical possessed by the diuell who render euill for good who in our dayes abound too much whom God reserueth to eternall darknesse Were mine aduersaries or did calumniate From this commeth the name of the Diuell Satan an accuser of the brethren The wicked calumne always Gods children Gods children haue euer the diuels children set against them to accuse who if at any time they praise let vs suspect our selues lest we haue done any euil for which they do it As Antisthenes when he heard the people praise him said Quid inquit mali feci Plutarch What euil haue I committed Because I followed goodnesse This is the highest degree of their persecution to trouble him for religion and because he feared God So they hated God in him and persecuted God in him 21. Forsake me not O Lord be not thou far from me my God Verse 22. Haste thee to help me O my Lord my saluation THese two verses containe a prayer wherein he imploreth the help of God by a three-fold repetition● euer he feareth desertion for sinne ingendreth this feare For if we were cast into the deepest dangers this will euer comfort vs if we be assured of the Lords presence heauen is hell to vs if he be not with vs Nota. hell is heauen to vs if he be there Haste thee to helpe me O my Lord my saluation Here is the weaknesse of our nature described that through our infirmitie we cannot waite the time of Gods deliuerie which maketh vs to crie hasten God will come if we patiently attend his coming But let vs learne patiently to attend his good leisure assuring our selues that he will come Come Lord Iesus and deliuer thy Church from all her miseries by thy glorious appearance O my Lord my saluation He attributeth those names to God Iehouah the name
hath no care to cure God woundeth seeketh to cure Which thou hast broken The forme of Gods curing he first woundeth and then healeth He cureth none but those whom his hand hath pierced and he who woundeth can best cure the wound And in this God differeth from man for man woundeth but hath no care to cure but when God inflicteth a wound on his children he hath a present remedy appointed to cure the same let vs therefore be content to be vnder his hand who for sufficient causes crossing vs is euer ready to comfort vs in Iesus Christ May reioyce By this he letteth vs see what would be the effect of his deliuerie euen to burst forth in the praises of his God by his words by his actions Let thy desire to be deliuered frō trouble be to glorifie God by his writings Which should teach vs that in trouble either spirituall or temporall we euer haue this the principall end for which we desire to be deliuered that we may praise and glorifie God Verse 9. Hide thy face from my sins and put away all mine iniquities NOw he reneweth his former suite of the remission of his sins shewing now earnestly he desired the same He is not content once and againe to crie for pardon but many times For he thought otherwise of his sin then we do of ours it touched him at the very heart In this verse he vseth two similitudes one that God would turne away his face from his sinnes next that he would blot out all his iniquities Hide The first similitude is taken from men God cannot see sin in his children who will hide their face from that which they desire not to see And it is certaine God is in euery place and seeth euery thing but he cannot see the sins of his elect children for that intervenient righteousnes of Christ will not suffer him to see any filthinesse in his children He seethno iniquitie in Iacob Ns● 23.21 Simil. saith Balaam For as a red or blue glasse being set before out eyes what euer we see thorough it seemeth to be of the colour of the glasse so God looking thorough Christ to vs all his righteousnesse seemeth to be ours and we are of his colour In the meane time Vse let vs not sin because he hideth his face from our sin for if we abuse the riches of his bountie we shall appeare in our owne colours And put away all mine iniquities The blotting away presupposeth an hand-writ of the law against him wherein his name was put in the count-booke which must be scraped out and taken away which cannot be done away but by the blood of Iesus Christ All. Ye see that one sin calleth to mind many thousands and he is not contented to be acquitted from one vnlesse he be acquitted from all Call to mind all the sinnes of thy life be not at quiet till thou gettest a generall pardon for them all which is to be purchased by Iesus Christ Be afraid to adde new sinnes to thy old Pro. 28.19 Ezech. 8.8 Blessed is he that feareth continually Do as Ezekiel did to the wall of the Temple dig once twice thrice and trie thine heart the more thou diggest the more abominations shalt thou see in that place which should haue bin a Temple to God Verse 10. Create in me a cleane heart O God and renew a right spirit within me DAuid hath prayed already for the remission of his sinnes and hath doubled ouer that petition eight times now he craueth new benefits of sanctification of the holy Spirit of ioy c. In all his peritions he prayeth for spirituall things he seeketh first the kingdome of God He prayeth not for the health of his bodie Those are senslesse of troble who seeke to be freed of the pain thogh not reconciled to God God as hee is a great God bestoweth great gifts but for the health of his soule he craueth not to be rich temporally but spiritually in God Those are sensuall who being fallen in trouble craue no other thing then to be deliuered from their present paine neuer seeking to be recoueiled to God Next he seeketh great things for he is a great God who according to his greatnes can bestow ample gifts as the Ocean plentie of water It stood not with Alexanders honour to propine Diogenes with a small gift We bring small vessels to God a weake faith although we haue great need we thinke that hee is not able to giue great things Our Sauiour Christ could worke no miracles amongh them Mat. 13.53 2. Kin. 7.17 because of their infidelity The Gentleman on whom the King leaned died and was troden vnder foot because he beleeued not the Prophet Thirdly he suiteth importunately and beggers euer speed best at Gods hand The Prophet Elizeus reproued King Ioas that he shot onely three arrowes forth of the window for if he had shot six or 7 times 2. Kin. 13.19 he might haue v●terly subdued the Aramites Let vs then pray instantly and importunately vnto the Lord and we may be assured he will heare vs. He prayed before for remission of sius Sanctification followeth remission and now he prayeth for the Spirit of sanctification an inseparable companion with the other For you can neuer be assured that you haue receiued pardon for your sinne past vnlesse Gods Spirit hath giuen you a care to liue holily in time to come Shall you be washen euen now and after pu●●le your selfe in the mire Not possible that euer Christ will bestow his blood to wash any whom he denieth to sanctifie by his holy Spirit Create in me a cleane heart O God The worker God the workmanship in me the worke it selfe create the subiect a heart the qualitie a cleane heart O God As in the first creation a man is a meere patient and hath no part of it but God by the parents worketh it God must worke our second creation so God worketh the second creation by his Ministers There is no freewill or preparation to grace or foreknowing godlinesse as these hereticall Iesuits do affirme Work the work thy selfe and take the praise to thy selfe O Lord. Create A man must be twice borne before he can enter into heauen As he is made to the similitude of the first Adam Man must be twice borne and his second creation is more excellent then the first so must he be made to the similitude of the second Adam and the re-creation or regeneration is more excellent then the former For in the first man was wrought out of clay but in the other God worketh grace out of sin What harder to worke vpon then the dust Next he breathed in the dead bodie a soule but here he breatheth in the holy Spirit in mans heart Thirdly in the creation he made man perfect in all his members so in the regeneration all the members of the body and powers of the soule must be renewed and if thou
the conuersion of sinners The word can doe more then any thing Esa 53.1 Rom. 1.16 O the wonderful power of Gods word that it can do that which all the world could not do It is the arme of the Lord To whom is the arme of the Lord reuealed saith Isaias It is the power of God to saluation saith Paul No doctrine can worke faith in man but the worke whereto it perswadeth him not forceth him Conuersio presupposeth auersiō Conuersion presupposeth auersion The vse of the word is to conuert them that are auerted or peruerted as the shepheard bringeth home the wandring sheepe Which cleerly argueth the necessitie of the word and teachers thereof so profitable as without which sinners cannot be conuerted to God for no other instrument can conuert them and they cannot conuert themselues This teacheth Ministers to be diligent in their calling if they would shine as starres in heauen Dan. 12.3 they must labour to conuert sinners Verse 14. Deliuer me from blood O God which art the God of my saluation and my tongue shall sing ioyfully of thy righteousnesse HAuing before so often begged pardon for all his sinnes in generall he now particularly confesseth which of all his sins grieued him most The shedding of innocēt blud Dauids greatest sin which he setteth downe to be innocent blood and therefore he craueth to be deliuered from the burden of it from the terrors of an accusing conscience the cries which it sendeth vp to God This verse hath a petition and a promise In the petition two things 1. of whom he beggeth this petition 2. what he seeketh to be deliuered from blood O God the God of my saluation His doubling and repeating the name of God sheweth vnto vs that he taketh hold on God with both his hands and it declareth his vehemencie and earnestnesse in his suite at God that he might be deliuered from that blood And all his suites he directeth onely to God Foolish Papists God helpe you When he calleth him the God of his saluation he cleerly sheweth to vs that he hath no saluation either of his body or soule but onely of God who will not giue his glory either to man or Angell When he saith My saluation he applieth saluation to himself and doth not imply and infold his saluation in generalitie thinking it presumption to certifie himselfe of his saluation as the Papists say For what comfort can we haue in life or death We can haue no comfort vnles we be perswaded of Gods mercie Dauids petition if we be not perswaded of Gods mercie and fauour not that we presume of our merit but perswading vs of his maiesties constancie and truth Deliuer me from blood His petition is to be deliuered from blood● both from the guiltinesse which he had contracted by his murder as from the terrors of his conscience as also from the punishment threatned by Nathan that blood should neuer depart from his house 2. Sa. 12.10 and finally from future blood that he neuer fell into it again as God deliuered him from the blood of Nabal by Abigail And this is a great deliuery 1. Sa. 25.33 that we do not euil as we ate commanded to pray Deliuer vs from euil Mat. 6.11 that we commit no sin and when we haue done euill it is a great deliuerance when God freeth vs of the guilt of it the condigne punishment But our greatest comfort is when we are kept from doing of it as Ioseph and Susanna and it is Gods greatest honour when we are deliuered from the punishment which we haue deserued for committing such euils From blood He both committed adultery and murder but he is more touched for the one then for the other Adultery is euil because it defileth and defaceth Gods image in man Murder worse then adultery but murder destroyeth his image And there is no sinne more odious in the sight of God then blood for which cause he banished Cain from his presence Gen. 4.14 Gen. 6.5 he destroyed the first world which was full of crueltie he remoued Saul from his kingdome 2. Sa. 21.1 who slue the Priests and the Gibeonites he remoued the Crowne from the house of Ahab and dogs licked his blood 1. Is● 22.38 Kings should pray with Dauid to keepe them frō the blood of innocents for blood shall be in their house Nota. And often those who liue in blood die in blood and make a bloodie testament according to that of the Poet Ad generum Cereris fine caedet sanguine Discedunt reges sicea morte tyranni The word in the originall is bloods in the plurall number Why called bloods in the plurall number For such is the atrocitie of that sin that one is weightier then a thousand weights of Lead So soon as it is shed so soone doth it defile the shedder as the purple dieth the cloth It seemeth well coloured when it is shed but within a litle time it becometh so thicke and black that a man would abhorre to behold it therefore it is called bloods Leu. 7.27 The Lord in the Leuiticall law forbad his people to eare any flesh with the blood Nota. that the detestation of beasts blood might make them so much the more to abhorre the blood of man wherein his life standeth Blood hath a crie Gen. 4.10 Gen. 4 10. The voice of thy brothers blood crieth Who so shedeth mans blood his blood shall be shed which is either by the iustice or by reuenge and repaiment The auengers of blood are admitted by the law Now mens hands are full and foule with blood The earth is drunken with blood In her wings there is found blood Polluted with blood Lam. 4.14 Bull of blood Ezek. 9.9.22.2.23.27 Blood hath touched blood Hos 4.2 Ioel complaineth of them Ioel 3.19 Mica 7.2 Nah. 3.1 Hab. 2.12 Mat. 23.35 that they shed innocent blood Micah Nahum and Habakuk pronounce a woe to them that shed innocent blood And Christ bringeth together all the blood shed from Abel to Zechariah Mat. 27.8 The Iewes bought Aceldema a field of blood Reu. 8.8 Their feete are swift to shed blood The third part of the sea shal be blood God will reuenge the blood of the Saints Innocent blood is hath bin shal be shed So I see from the beginning of the world to the end thereof innocent blood hath euer bin is and shall be shed but namely the blood of Gods dearest children Sanguine fundata est Ecclesia sanguine creuit leftblank sanguine finis crit Let vs then thinke it no vncouth thing when we see innocent blood shed so abundantly that the streets of Ierusalem are filled and like to be more filled with the blood of Gods Saints And my tongue shall sing ioyfully of thy righteousnesse He promiseth to be thankful vnto God for it becometh righteous men to be thankfull Psal 33.1 Sinne tooke away the
haue preuailed with such a maiestie Therefore princes who be athiests can neuet be good to the Church and no maruell because they know not what prayer is Wicked princes cannot abase themselues so low as to pray to a superiour but Dauid who will be renowned for euer not onely prayeth but biddeth the people pray for the peace of Ierusalem In a word the chiefe armour of the Church and all Church wardens and Church defenders are spirituall Arma militia non sunt carnalia The weapons of our warrefare are not carnall but spirituall Be fauorable vnto Zion He prayeth for Sion and Ierusalem this is a noueltie should the king pray for the Church I thinke the Church should pray for the king Yea but this king thinketh that all his prosperitie standeth in the weale of the Church and therefore he as the most principall member thereof prayeth for her The Church is represented by the names of Sion and Ierusalem What Sion and Ierusalem were and what they signifie● Sion was the mountaine vpon which the fort and Temple were builded Ierusalem was the cittie But these two haue spirituall interpretations being shaddowes of things to come as all the Fathers confesse Sion was a mountain in the holy land which the Lord loued more then all mountaines He might haue chosen Olimpus for height Basan for fatnesse And what was Sion it is to be seene yet there are many bigger stronger and fairer mountaines in Scotland then was Sion I will compare it to Authur seate at Edinburrough how commeth it to passe that the Lord chooseth it before all mountaines What but because he loued it and made it a place of his habitation there he built a Church out of it he will let the law yea the Gospell came to all nations mount Sion is a place so firmely fixed by Gods prouidence that it shall neuer be moued So is the Church a number indeed obscure and base in comparison of other people but so sure by his power that the gates of hell shall not preuaile against her for Sion is a watch tower specula and the watchman of Israell standeth on the top thereof who can take it or do it wrong she seemeth weake in comparison of mighty mountaines who leaped and scorned her yet she standeth and they are all fallen for they exalted themselues by their pride and power but she abideth strong by the strength of God and the arme of the Almightie We haue now left mount Sinai which is in Arabia where was earth quake and thunder and are come to mount Sion the Church in the Gospell where is peace and grace So our estate is better then theirs was firmer then theirs for God hath chosen it to be euerlasting What doe ye then thinke of those persecutions and nouations in the world nothing for the Church but extremitie her enemies are seeking to roote her out but let these murthers of Caines seede beware of themselues let God roote out their seede Our mountaine is fixed by God which cannot be mooued and that little stone which came out of the mountaine without hands shall bruise that golden image in peeces Therefore let vs build our selues vpon mount Sion and not on the sand of mans inuentions that we stand in the euill day and be approued of God reioyce therefore daughter Sion for thy foundation is in heauen they shall inuade heauen and pull Christ from the right hand of his Father before they ouerthrow thee Let them build vp their towre Babel but God will confound their languages when the gates of hell cannot ouercome her the sword of princes shall destroy her Ierusalem The name Ierusalem importeth a vision of peace a vision or a sight Ierusalem a vision of peace for there is neither sight nor light in all the world but blindnesse and ignoran●● as there was no light in Aegipt fo● three daies but a palpable darkenesse except among the Israelits in the land of Goshen Exo. 10.23 so there is no knowledge of God or Christ the light of the world to be found in all the earth but in the true Church of Christ Then as there is a great difference betwixt a blind man who seeth nothing and a seeing man as great difference is there betwixt one who knoweth Christ and an ignorant These ignorants blinde leaders of the blinde doe not see this peace of Ierusalem This peace is onely in the true Church it groweth where grace groweth which two are inseperable Gal. 1.3 grace and peace was the salutation of Saint Paul which he wished to all the Churches this peace is first with God by the peacemaker Iesus Christ next in a tranquillitie of the conscience after reconciliation and last with all men There is no peace to the wicked saith my God Esa 48.22 Therefore dwell in Ierusalem and ye shall see peace Be fauourable 2. What he craueth to the Church euen that God would be fauorable to her and that he would build vp her walls as he saith in the 132. Psalme Peace be within her walls and prosperitie within her palaces The Church can neither prosper in peace or warre without God blesse her The Church haue palaces for peace and walls for warre he prayeth the Lord to blesse her in both for neither can the Church of God flourish in peace neither be victorious in warre vnlesse God blesse her in both estates To be fauorable to Sion is to giue her tokens of his good will and of his comfortable assistance This is a token of his fauour when he giueth her good gouernours and heads A speciall token of Gods fauor when the Church hath good gouernours both in Church and policie And againe a signe of his wrath when he giueth her such as Saul and Achab wicked and euill gouernours The next token of his fauour is prosperitie when the Gospell hath free passage When the Gospell hath a free passage the worship of God is inlarged heretiques are put away true teachers are diligent and vigilent Thirdly when vnitie is in the Church and all are in one mind When then God is among them but when God hath casten them off vnitie is in the church all are rent and spoiled religion decayeth heritiques increase Sathan hath gotten the vpper hand Gods Church is miserablely spoiled by wolues and foxes troublers of the Lords vine Build the walles The second part of his prayer is for the walles that they may be builded for Ierusalem is not onely a citie for peace but to be prepared for warre she hath not onely pallaces but castles towers fortresses and walles and therefore Dauid craueth that these might be built vp againe First see what are these walles Secondly whereof they are builded Lastly who is the builder What are the walles The Church of God is a fortefied towne which must haue defences to resist the enemie for the deuill and all euill men princes wise-men gentiles Iewes are conspired against the citie
of God therefore God fortifieth his citie with al necessary defences which may hold out the enemie The Church hath walls inuisible visible The walles are too fold inuisible the protection of God which the world seeth not for the Lord is a wall of brasse about his Church to repell her enemies and a wall of fire to burne them also he hath his Angels who pitch their tents about his holy and chosen ones 2. Kin. 6.7 there was horses of fire compassing Elizeus The outward and visible walles are made of a number of liuely stones compacted together by the morter of loue strongly resisting all the enemies of the Church for that vnitie of the Saints strengthen them by the power of their God Boni enim ciues mania cinitatis good citizens are the walles of the citie And vpon these walles compassing them on all sides be bulwarks whereupon are set the canons of the word of God mighty in operation destroying the enemies the censures of the Church namely excomunication which being lawfully led is of greater power to subdue the enemie and resist him then all the power of ciuil authoritie The sinnes of princes and people make great gaps in the walles at which the deuil and enemies of the Church and wolfes enter and destroy the Lords vines They with Tobias and Sanballat stay the building of these walles Neh. 4.2 and are striuing to build the walles of Iericho which were forbidden by Iosuah to be redefied vnder a great curse 1. Ki. 16.34 which lighted on Hiel the Bethelite in the daies of Achab pitie is it to see the princes of this world so much enfeebling Ierusalem to strengthen Iericho Dauid crieth to God that he would build them whose power is greater then all the worlds who as he hath inuisible walles of his protection so he hath outward defences to maintaine his Church he is master of it yea master builder and sendeth forth seruants whom he strengtheneth for the building of his worke I see many pulling downe the walles yea with Edom in the destroying of Ierusalem crying sacke sacke Psal 137. ● raze raze vp the foundation Few with Nehemiah mourning for the ruines of Gods house in all parts and helping to restore them Let vs therefore goe to the God of Dauid who albeit he was king of the towne and began to build the citie and walles and laid materials to the Temple yet he knew that the labourers wrought in vaine vnlesse the Lord of heauen builded the citie Lord repaire the decaies of thy Church for thy Christs take For thy good pleasure He findeth the ground of all that perfection to be in God himselfe and his good fauour and not in men or their merits for as the whole building of the Church is the onely worke of God so is the reparation of her ruines onely belonging to himselfe Men might haue builded with stone and bricke the exterior walles It belongeth to God to build the Church but it is proper to God to build his spirituall Church And this is a token that God hath pleasure in his Church when he is building it sending good builders materialls of spirituall graces fortifiers as Cyrus and Darius good Princes Nehemiah good gouernours Esdra and good Priests And our obedient and carefull people who do take the sword in one hand and the instrument of building in the other that the Lords Ierusalem may be edified But when his fauour is departed then in his wrath he giueth Princes Gouernours Nobles Preachers and people who striue either to hinder the building or to pull downe the building to build vp Iericho and cast downe Ierusalem Dauid he craueth that God may be fauorable according to his good pleasure for the building of the Church dependeth vpon Gods good will and pleasure who when he liketh his Church can aduance her and when he is displeased with her cast her downe It appeareth euidently now that God is angrie with his Church in all parts of Christendome when he is pulling downe and not raising vp his Church we haue prouoked his wrath against vs and his soule abhorreth our hipocriticall profession and our wicked conuersation Verse 19. Then shalt thou accept the sacrifices of righteousnesse euen the burnt offering and oblation then shall they offer calues vpon thine altar THis is the promise of thankefulnesse to God wherein is set downe a correspondence or restipulation betwixt the people who shall offer sacrifices and God who will accept them And Gods seruice then goeth well when we offer willingly and God accepteth gladly If our sinnes be forgiuen vs God will heare our p●●er● Gen. 4.5 Then Marke the time when God hath beene fauorable to his Church in forgiuing her sinnes then he will accept the offerings For pray what ye please and distribute to the poore if God doe not like of it all is in vaine Caine offered sacrifices but the Lord accepted them not because he hated his cruell heart Abel offered in faith and was accepted But how shall ye know if your offerings be acceptable to God seeing there is no fire to fall downe from heauen as that which burnt vp Elias sacrifice 1. Ki 18.34 Yee shall know that albeit an elementarie or materiall fire falleth not downe Nota. yet the fire of the Spirit falleth on our hearts the fire burning vp the drosse of our corruptions by vnfained repentance warmeing our hearts with the loue of God kindling our hearts with a zeale of Gods glorie This is the fire which will fall downe from heauen vpon our soules which sensiblie we feele if the Lord heare our prayers The sacrifices of righteousnesse● Some expound these offerings to be such as agree to his will I reuerence their iudgement but I see not how that exposition can agree with the text But it may be expounded of that righteousnesse which we ought to doe to our neighbours as we offer a sacrifice of a contrite heart the calues of our lippes by praises and these are the sacrifices of righteousnesse by our hands so that heart tongue hand should be all offered to God for God liketh well of righteous dealing● that our hand be not defiled with thirst couetousnesse oppression which if we sacrifice to Sathan by sinne let vs not lift to God by prayer but lift vp pure hands wash our hands in innocencie and then compasse Gods altar It would seem to be some differenc wher God said Obiect he would haue none of their sacrifices and now they promise sacrifices Indeed if the sacrifices be onely externall Solut. what accounteth God of them if they want mercie and righteousnesse for he will haue mercie and not sacrifice Therefore let externall and internall worship be conioyned and then God will like best of it but being seperated from spirituall offerings it is abominable and a burden to the Lord. Which be the sacrifices of righteousnes The alter Iesus Christ● by whom we must offer our prayers
yea his write and seale that he should haue it at the time promised the subiect hath nothing to depend vpon but the kings bond and word which both may faile him for princes are changable because they may die within the time appointed for performance of their promise Psal 146.3 Trust not in worldly princes whose breath is in their nostrells they may alter and may become vnable to doe that which they promised But our God if he promise and we beleeue it he can doe he will doe Heauen and earth shall change Mat. 5.18 but one title of his word shall not faile Psa 119.96 I haue seene an end of all perfection but thy word is exceeding large Hope is an ancer to which thou being tied thou art in safetie albeit thou see no natural cause of thine hope yet hope aboue hope Rom. 4.18 as Abraham did when he sacrificed his sonne In these two verses he doth foure times make mention of his hope and attendance vpon God and his word to let vs see how sure an holde we should take on God Hope a sure refuge in time of tentation and many temptations our faith is assaulted with when we can see no reason of it There is nothing will beare vs vp but hope Spero meliora What encourageth husbandmen men and marriners Simil. against the surges and waues of the sea and euill weather but hope of better What comforteth a sicke man in time of sickenes Simil. but hope of health or a poore man in his distresse Simil. but hope of riches or a prisoner but hope of libertie or a banished man man Simil. but hope to come home All these hopes may faile as oftentimes wanting a warrand Albeit a phisitian may encourage a sicke man by his faire words yet he cannot giue him an assurance of his recouerie for his health dependeth on God friendes and courtiers may promise poore men releife Our hope in God cannot faile vs. 1. Cor. 10.13 Nota. onely God is faithfull who hath promised Therefore let vs fixe our faith on God our hope on God for he will stand by his promise No man hath hoped in him in vaine neither was euer any disappointed of their hope Dauid was thirtie yeares of age before he attained to the kingdome 2. Sam. 5.4 which was promised to him being a child The Israelits were in Aegipt foure hundred yeares Exo. 12.40 and in the wildernesse fortie yeeres Amo. 5.23 yet at last came home to Canaan God brake not his promise to Abraham The Iewes were seuentie yeares in Babilon yet at last God brought them backe according to his promise Ier. 38. by Ieremiah So our hope shall neuer be disappointed My soule hath waited By this doubling and ingemination of his esperance and hope he would signifie that vnfainedly without simulation he attended the promises of Gods mercifull deliuerances Out of which we may gather that he was not onely patient and constant before men but he nourished his patience secretlie before God which is the onely and best triall of faith for albeit there be many that are ashamed through their ambition to murmure against God in their troubles and to vtter to men their distrust and diffidence yet there is not one among twenty who will keepe himselfe from secret murmuring and grudging before God and who can awaite patiently the day of Gods deliuerie as that king said Why should I attend on the Lord any longer 2. Ki. 6.33 But we should not precipate and hasten He that hopeth is not too hastie he that hopeth will not be too hastie but waiting patientlie on Gods time attend his leasure willingly for his time is our best time And I haue trusted in his word He setteth downe the ground of his trust euen the word of God and Gods promise otherwaies we deceiue our selues by vaine hopes and dreames if we thinke God will giue that to vs Faith and hope depend on Gods word which he neuer promised neither we beleeued faith and hope doe not leane on imaginations but vpon the sure truth of Gods word Therefore saith he Remember thy word to thy seruant in which thou gauest me hope Psa 119.49 Bellermine citeth this same place of Scripture which maketh much against himselfe Those who leaue to any thing but Gods word rest on sandie foundations who biddeth men beleeue those vnwritten verities and decrees of councells as if they were the written word of God and whereto doth all papisticall seruice relie but vpon the traditions of men And who relieth on those their hopes are in vaine and themselues like vnto those that leane to dreames and visions or to oracles of diuils shall be illuded because they rest vpon false grounds So if you would be assured of eternall life take a sure hold of the holy Scriptures a sure rocke to leane vnto in thy trouble and aduersitie Whatsoeuer saith Paul is written is written for our instruction Rom. 15.4 that by patience and comfort of the Scriptures we might haue hope The Apostle stablisheth the word the onely ground of his faith and hope and affirmeth that our faith is in vaine vnlesse it forme vs to true patience and attendance vpon his promise and good will to vs. Herein of all heretiques the papists are most to be blamed Against the papists with holding of the Scriptures from lay people Ioh. 3.30 who deny the vse of the Scriptures to Christians thinking that thereby their knauerie in abusing the people would be discouered and made manifest to the eyes of the world He that doth euil hateth the light How can the people see when the candle is put vnder a bashell But now seeing the light not of a candle but of the Sunne shineth I would wish you all Simil. not as hooded hawkes whose eies are closed and are led they doe not know whether not to be led blind folded to hell but in time desire that your eies may be opened that you may see the word and by it try who speaketh truth who teach erroneous doctrine Search the Scriptures for in them yee will find eternall life Ioh. 5.39 My soule waiteth on the Lord. This is the fourth time that he sheweth that his soule that is his inward affections waited on the Lord and this is the sixt time that he maketh mention of the Lord one God and one faith one hope that God was the onely ground of his hope that he could not goe by him and to declare the feruencie of his attendance he compareth it to the expectation and looking of the morning watch for the breake of day yea more then they Bellarmins opiuion concening this verse refuted This verse is falsly peruerted and translated by Bellermine who saith that the Latine vulgar translation Videtur partim mutila partim redundans cum non habeat bis à custodia matutina vt habet hebraica veritas at habeat vsque ad noctem
aboue Reu. 22.25 which all Christians should earnestly attend and feruently pray with the spouse Come Lord Iesus The watchman looketh about to see the Sun spread out his beames he knoweth that light doth not come from below We should turne our eies from the world because here is no comfort Nots and looke vnto Christ Iesus sitting at the right hand of the Father with Saint Steuen from whom onely we may expect a comfortable deliuery out of all our miseries Act. 7.56 4. The light commeth in the morning Before breake of day is greatest darkenesse and then the Sunne ariseth and by his beames expelleth the same the light commeth not till the euening The Apostles rowed all night Mat. 14.24 till they were become weary and out of all hope and then Christ came in the fourth watch and relieued them being then in a most desperat case God will come So the Lord although he tarieth to let vs feele our owne weakenesse yet no doubt he will come he dealt this way with Iacob he wrestled all night with him till the breake of day Ge. 32.28 and then blessed him Dauid after he was long pursued and persecuted by Saul 2. Sam. 1. yet at last gat rest and ease Iudg 2.16 The Iewes were neerely destroied by their enemies but God raised vp Sauiours to defend them Dispare not then and disquiet not your selues be not discouraged howsoeuer yee see the Church which is as the Disciples boate tossed to and fro by the waues of persecuting tyrants Mat. 14.23 looke to heauen for the day of her deliuerie is at hand yea that euerlasting deliuerie when the Sunne of righteousnesse shall arise and shine on her for euer she may haue a night for a time but her morning will be most gratious she may be in paines as a woman in trauell for a time but her deliuery will be most comfortable God albeit he seemeth to come serò late yet he commeth seriò in earnest as he did in preseruing the Church in Queene Esters daies Ester 8. By the contrary the wicked may haue a short morning in this world but they cannot escape an euerlasting night in that bottomlesse pit of darknesse Nota. out of which is no deliuerie Verse 7. Let Israel waite on the Lord for with the Lord is mercy and with him is great redemptions After the Prophet hath spoken of himselfe that he awaited vpon the Lord he now exhorteth all the Church to do the same He euer desireth the Church to be a partner with him in any benefite which he obtained from the Lord as in the 51 psalme after he hath prayed for mercy to himselfe he in the 18 verse prayeth vnto the Lord for the Church that he would be fauorable to Sion The like did Moses Daniel Ieremie they all prayed for her weale All should pray for the peace of the Church D●uid exhorteth others to pray Pray for the peace of Ierusalem Such sort of preachers are to be highly respected who night and day powre out their prayers for the peace and welfare of Sion who depend on God and stirre vp others to put their trust and hope in God This did Iosua and Caleb after they had viewed the land Numb 13.31.33.34 giue heart and courage to the people of Israel to goe forward to Canaan whereas the other ten spies discouraged them saying their walls reached to heauen and the people were as the sonnes of Anak When Dauid desireth the whole Church to put her hope in God he recalleth her from al● other vaine hopes or putting her trust in any other This should make those who professe themselues to be Christians to blush and be ashamed to put their trust in any other but God I looked saith Dauid vnto the mountaines from whence mine helpe shall come Psal 12● ● 2 mine helpe commeth from the Lord who made the heauen and the earth When Israel looked to haue helpe fortification and refuge of man then she was disapointed and left comfortlesse in her greatest extremeties Ier. 17.5 Cursed be he who maketh the armo of flesh and blood his confidence For with the Lord is mercie That which he so patiently attended vpon was mercie and that which he desireth the Church to waite for is mercie He repeeteth to the Church the goodnesse of that which he had tasted himselfe that which was needfull to him was needefull to the whole body of the Church● and therefore as he wished mercie to himselfe he wished mercie to the whole Church militant Euery Christian should loue the Church more then himselfe which teacheth euery Christian to loue the Church as well as himselfe yea more and as he would haue health and welfare to himselfe so to procure the same for the Church And with him is great redemption He pointeth out this mercie First By the wonderfull effect thereof redemption Secondly By the qualitie thereof great redemption Redemption is the freeing of that which is in thraldome by giuing of a price What redemption is as the redemption of land presupposeth that it was ingaged for summes of money giuen to the owner and thus folde vpon reuersion or warriours that are taken in battell and ransoned at a price Oh that we would consider the thraldome we are in and how we stand in Gods debt the freedome which we get and the meanes whereby we obtaine the same God gaue vs his golden law and we haue nothing whereby to pay him but the drosse of our merits wherewith we will neuer be able to pay him that summe wherein we are oblished and thus we lie in thraldome Man may be redeemed But heerein is our comfort that we are not solde out at the ground but God hath alwaies reserued to vs a reuersion that we may be redeemed But what is the meanes whereby we are redeemed either it must be by strong hand as Abraham freed Lot or by the gratious fauour of those Ge. 14.16 whose captiues we are as a Master through loue which he beareth to his seruant may set him free or by paying of a ransome The parties were God and the Deuill Gods iustice must be satisfied Sathan must be vanquished or no redemption for vs. This Christ Iesus the sonne of God seeing that blessed seed of the woman and p●tying vs became a redeemer for vs by his valour and strength he vanquished that old serpent the Diuil and made vs free from him and by his death he satisfied the wrath of God and paied a ransome for vs euen his pretious blood Mans redemption is by the blood of Christ This redemption then is neither by gold nor siluer but by Christs blood All the world was not able to haue redeemed his blood only was a perfect satisfaction to the Father Lands impignorated become free at the Iubilie and when we are made free from our sinne we may account that the most ioyfull Iubilie that we euer saw Great
winds and tempests God will passe by all these our frailties and imperfections and will at last deliuer vs from them all if in the midst of these our extremeties our heart set it selfe toward heauen This Prophet in the 77. Psalme findeth himselfe so farre cast downe that his soule refused comfort and in this verse he thinketh himselfe so astonied that his senses were become scupified and benumed through the great paines which he sustained Verse 5. Yet doe I remember the time past I meditate on all thy workes yea I doe meditate in the workes of thine hands Verse 6. I stretch forth mine hands vnto thee my soule desireth after thee as the thirstie land Selah IN the two former verses were expressed his double tentations bodilie and spirituall in these two are double comforts so As the Churches troubles encrease so doe her comforts 1. Cor. 10.13 as the crosses of Gods childrē do increase so doe their consolations day by day for God is faithfull who will not suffer vs to be tempted aboue that we haue abilitie to beare but with the tentation will giue vs a comfort to his glorie One of the greatest comforts which Christians can haue in their extreame miseries Experience of former mercies a great comfort in time of extremitie 1. Sa. 17.34 is the ancient mercies of God bestowed either on themselues in particular or on the Church in generall This moued Dauid to enterprise the nomachie against Goliah The Lord saith he who deliuered me from the pawe of the Lyon and from the pawe of the Beare will deliuer me also from this vncircumcised Philistim Remember mercies past if thou would be deliuered in time to come Wee should recount the ancient mercies of God that they may encourage vs to seek him in time to come a Christian mans memorie should be a faithfull chronicle of antiquitie we should remember what our fathers haue told vs and shew that to our children but especially the works we haue found done by God to our selues God would hide nothing from Abraham Gen. 18.17 because he would shew it to his children The foole and idiot doe not ponder the workes of God but the righteous doe lay them vp in their hearts and shew them to those who come after them So let vs make a register and book of remembrance of the auntientie of Gods goodnesse to his Church which will comfort our soules in the present day of sorrow Our memories may easily shew to our children the antient mercies of God in the first beginning of our Church threescore yeares agoe and how he deliuered her in her infancie from the furie of the Frenchmen and againe in the 1588. yeare from the great armado of Spaine and diuerse others bloudie interprises of wicked men Let vs therefore haue a fresh memorie of Gods benefits which may furnish vs with comfort in our present necessities let our owne particular benefits encourage vs against our owne particular euills and generall blessings and deliueries which the Church hath had strengthen vs against those euills which befall to her in our time Let vs recollect our Spirits and take vigour in this our present distresse that we faint not If Gods mercies be rooted in our hearts our tongues will vtter the same From his remembrance there floweth a meditation twise remembred in this verse for a sanctified memorie of Gods goodnes stirreth vp an holy meditation and reuolution in our mind of the same from whence floweth our gratitude and thankefulnes to God and if we looke lightly to the mercies of God we speake as lightly but when they are rooted in our hearts then we begin to speake magnificallie and worthilie The workes of thine hands Here he letreth vs see that these works could haue bin done by no humane power but by the immediate power of God Exod. 8. ●● As the Aegiptian sorcer●rs spake of the lice so may we say concerning the deliuerances of the Church God reserueth to himselfe the deliueries of his Church surely this is the finger of God He will otherwaies honour his owne children but he keepeth the honour in deliuering the Church to himselfe He will haue it said in the ages to come the Lord hath done this As he by the workes of his hand made the Church so by these same sauing hands he hath redeemed it from hell and damnation and it is the worke of his owne hands that shall deliuer her from temporall dangers Therefore let God arise and deliuer his Church for she is now in great hazard Psal 6● ● but the Lords arme is strong enough and in his appointed time can deliuer her I stretch forth mine hands vnto thee His ●econd comfort 〈◊〉 prayer which springeth ●rom his earnest meditation Here the fruit of holy meditation it stirreth vp our hearts t●o an earnest prayer Such meditations of Gods goodnes and power are the best helpers and confirmations of our faith Earnest prayer from a serious meditation consideration of Gods workes to lighten vs of our sorrowes and griefes Hence it followeth where there is no meditation and earnest consideration of Gods workes there will be no earnest prayer but perfunctorious dealing with God which we will not regard but repudiat and forsake The instruments of his prayer is the stretching forth of his hands The stretching forth of the hands noteth the lifting vp of the heart Exo. 17.11 which noteth the lifting vp of the heart As Moses hands were lifted vp when Israel fighted against Amalek and when they fell Israel had the worse and therefore Aaron and Hur held them vp and so Israel preualed Thus we should compose the gestures of our body in spirituall exercises as they may be most helpefull vnto vs to our inward and secret worshipping of God My soule desireth after thee as the thirstie land He declareth his vehement affection to God by a verie prettie similitude taken from the ground which is thirstie by the long drought of summer wherein the earth rent in peeces as it were and with open mouth through long thirst seeketh drinke from heauen By which he sheweth that he came to God as distitute of naturall substance and therefore seeketh from aboue that which he lacked So in all his extremities he looketh euer vpward from aboue he seeketh helpe and comfort Doctr. Art thou athirst ther is water in heauen to refresh thee Albeit we be in extremitie and as it were rent in sunder yet here is comfort there is water in heauen which will refresh vs if we gape after them Here is a blessing those that thirst shal be satisfied If we thirst for mercie for deliuerie and spirituall and temporall comfort thou shalt be satiffied therewith for if God heard the prayer of Hagar and Ismael being athirst in the wildernesse Ge. 21.17 and opened vnto them a fountaine will he forsake Isack the childe of promise If he heard Samson in the bitternesse of his heart when
he said Iudg. 15.19 I die for thirst and opened a spring out of the law-bone of an Asse will he forsake vs in time of our distresse if we thirst aright Verse 7. Heare me speedily O Lord for my spirit faileth hide not thy face from me else I shall be like vnto them that goe downe into the pit HE is now brought as it were to the latter sweat he crieth for speedy helpe or else he seeth nothing but death before his eies Our impatiencie maketh vs so bold and familiar with God that we would prescribe time to him as though he knew not which were the most conuenient time for his comming My spirit faileth He is now as it were in a swouning he craueth quicklie to be helped Doctr. Gods children are often brought low that the loue power of God may be manifested in their deli●e●● or he is gone See to what extremitie God will bring his Saints euen neere the graue and yet bring them back againe that his loue and power may be known so much the more seeing to him belongs the issues of death God bringeth vpon his owne children such fainting as it were deliquium animi a lossing of our life that then feeling the weaknes of our naturall powers and after being restored by his grace we may learne how greatly we are beholden to him as by whom and in whom we haue our life and being and can be restored by none but by him alone and may bestow al the rest of our life vpon himselfe and his owne seruice and depend not on naturall strength but on him Hide not thy face from me He declareth plainly that he hath no sparke of life but from the fauorable face and countenance of God that he is then dead when he seeth not God reconciled to him in Christ Simil. The face of the Sunne bringeth life to the earth and all the world and the face of God bringeth life to men soules Simil. The countenance of the husband gladdeth the wife but the countenance of God reioyceth the soule He who hath once seene the countenāce of God cannot liue without it He who once hath seene a blanke of his countenance can no more breathe or liue without it then a fish or bird out of their owne elements Else I shal be like vnto them that goe downe into the pit As though he would say I shall be like a deade man without sense and life The soule is the life of the body and God is the life of the soule should we not then be busie to seeke him and when he hath hid himselfe to find him againe There is no life in the soule without the sensible presence of God Psal 22.1 Mat. 27.46 for I will assure you there is neither life comfort peace or ioy in a mans soule vnlesse he haue the sensible presence of God Dauid not feeling it cryeth My God my God why hast thou forsaken me And Christ himselfe vttered the same voice on the crosse My God My God why hast thou forsaken me Of which I haue spoken in another place on the same wordes Verse 8. Let me heare thy louing kindnesse in the morning for in thee is my trust shew me the way that I should walke in for I lift vp my soule vnto thee AS he was cast downe in the former verses so he now ariseth by prayer which was the chiefest bulwarke whereto he did runne in time of his troubles In this verse he craueth two things First that he might heare Gods kindnesse and the reason because he trusteth in him Secondly that he would shew him the way wherein he should walke the reason because he lifted vp his soule to him Let me heare thy louing kindnesse Here he craueth Gods fauour and kindnesse as he doth in many other Psalmes Because in his fauour is life grace wealth all good things and pleasure for euermore How we may be assured of the fauour of God so that if he look kindly to vs we need be affraid of nothing But how shall he be assured of his fauour euen by hearing it as he saith in the 51. Psalme Let me heare the voice of ioy and gladnesse The voice which is heard is the word of God which being apprehended by faith is onely able to comfort our soules in whatsoeuer tentation And no meruell that such athiests and papists who altogether refuse the word of God Why papists and Athists liue die comfortles liue comfortles and die without comfort because they refuse that instrument which should carry ioy to them Good reason they die athirst since they reiect that vessell the word o● God by which they might be refreshed Therefore since faith cōmeth by hearing of Gods word and all our comfort commeth by it let vs pray God to bore our eares and our hearts that we may receiue the glad tidings of reconcilation from God In the morning Psal 90.14 The time when he seekes to heare Gods kindnesse is in the morning as in another Psalme Fill vs with thy sweet mercies in the morning Psal 55.17 Dauid vsed to pray morning noone and eueningtide In the morning in the beginning of the day he addressed himselfe to God offering his morning sacrifice he desireth that God may betime meete him that he may begin the day with some comfort for then we know that God hath accepted our prayer when he hath sent down the comfort of his spirit in our hearts when he with the fire of his loue and ioy of his countenance burneth vp our sacrifice This gladdeth our heart and encourageth vs to seeke him the rest of the day Seeke God early Then let vs seeke God early euen in the morning of our youth and euery morning not perfunctoriously or for a fashion but from our hearts that he may let vs heare that comfortable voice saying Thy prayers are come vp before me Act. 10.4 and I haue heard them For thy sinnes are forgiuen thee For in thee is my trust Confidence and faith in God is a great argument to moue God to speake good things vnto vs for otherwaies our prayers are in vaine Praiers not in faith are a scorning of God and shall not preuaile with him if they proceede not from faith if you come vnto him without confidence in him you scorne him and so doe double iniurie to your selues adding to your former sinnes a scorning of God These also who put their trust in any thing beside him neede not to looke for any good thing from him If yee would vse a thousand Angells as intercessours to moue God to heare you it is nothing only faith will preuaile with God The Pharises almes deedes Luk. 18.11.12.13.14 his tithes-giuing his prayers of which he much bragged wrought nothing with God but the Publicanes faith and contrition were forcible arguments preualing with him Shew me the way that I should walke in The second petition ariseth very well from the first