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A95065 An exposition with practicall observations upon the three first chapters of the proverbs: grammaticall rhetoricall, logicall, and theologicall. As they were delivered in severall expository lectures at Christ-church in Canterbury. / By Francis Taylor, B. in D. Taylor, Francis, 1590-1656. 1655 (1655) Wing T273; Thomason E847_1; ESTC R207317 415,752 563

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and thankfulnesse of the Elders Sibi victorias non attribuunt sed totum Deo ascribunt qui vires ipsis ad vincendum suggessit They do not attribute their victories to themselves but ascribe all to God who gave them strength to overcome Plinie reports that the Roman Generall after a Victory brought in his Garland and laid it in Jupiters lap in the Capitoll David doth the like speaking of his great preparations for the building of Gods Temple Who am I and what is my People that we should be able to offer so willingly after this sort for all things come of thee and of thine own have we given thee 1 Chron. 29.14 He ascribes all to the true God Non magnum est humil●m esse in abjestione sed magna prorsus rara virtus humilitas honorata Bern. in Cant. Ser. 33. It is no great matter to be humble in a low estate but it is certainly a great and a rare vertue for men in honor to be humble Non mirum est si ventus pulverem secum ferat rapiat Nos pulvis sumus Anselm de solitudine No wonder if the wind carry and snatch away the dust with it We are dust 4. Doct. A good man must seek for strength from God not in some of his actions alone but in all even in the least Without me ye can do nothing Ioh. 15.5 Reason The strength to do the least things is from God even to breath He giveth to all life and breath and all things Act. 17.25 And he can take it away when he please and so spoile all our actions His breath goeth forth he returneth to his earth in that very day his thoughts perish Psal 146.4 Use It reproves those who pray not to God for a blessing on their ordinary labours Onely they seek unto him in difficult cases when they are at their wits end as Seamen pray in a storm Psal 107.27 28. It may be they pray not before they work and therefore God lets them be forty years as the Israelites in the Wildernesse about that which might be done in fourty daies 5. Doct. Such as seek for Gods help may expect Gods blessing Cail upon me in the day of trouble I will deliver thee Psal 50.14 Jabez called on the God of Israel saying Oh that thou wouldest blesse me indeed and enlarge my coast and that thine hand might be with me and that thou wouldest keep me from evil that it may not grieve me And God granted him that which he requested 1 Chron. 4.10 Reason 1. He will make thy waies right 2. He will make them full and compleat 3. He will make them successefull Use See the reason why many mens waies prosper not They go on in their own strength God is not in all their thoughts Ps 10.4 So Pharaoh went desperately into the Sea and was drowned Ps 136.15 They seek not for strength from God and God will not blesse them 6. Doct. The chief director of our waies for good is God I have raised him up in righteousnesse and I will direct his waies he shall build my City Isa 45.13 I will direct their work in truth Isa 61.8 Reason 1. Because the wisest man in the world canot direct his own waies so as to make them alwaies succeed well O Lord I know that the way of man is not in himselfe it is not in man that walketh to direct his steps Ier. 10.23 2. God hath wisdom enough to guide us through all difficulties Use Do nothing without Gods direction in his word A man that had an house to build would in all things follow the direction of a skilfull workman lest he lose his cost So let us follow Gods guidance Else all our labour is lost None desires to go astray out of his way except he be first gone out of his wits Every man will rather take a guide to directhim the right way and give money to that end If we be careful to acknowledge God in our waies we shal not wander out of them for we shal have a trusty guide who offereth himselfe freely in the Text to direct our paths God led the Israelites through the wildernesse not the shortest but the safest way So wil God do for all them that make him their guide The Athenians conceived that their Goddess Minerva turned all their evil counsels into good to them the Romans thought their Goddesse Videlia set them again in the right way when at any time they were out All this and more then is undoubtedly done by the true God for all that commit their waies unto him and depend upon him for direction and successe Then may we conclude This God is our God for ever and ever he wil be our guide even unto death Psal 48.14 VER 7. Be not wise in thine own eyes fear the Lord and depart from evil IN this verse is a scale of duties consisting of three steps Mans forsaking his own wisdome leads him to the fear of God and the fear of God keeps him from sin A promise of health followes in the next verse for the words Be not wise See on Chap. 1.5 In thine own eyes See on Chap. 1.17 on the word sight For the phrase being wise in our own eyes is being so in our own conceit as the Doway Bible reads it and it comprehends these particulars under it that a man should not think himselfe sufficiently wise so as by that he should be able to guide himselfe in all his actions to know what is right what wrong what successe will follow good or bad and that he hath a deeper reach then other men and is able to dive into the greatest matters Solomon doth not say be not wise for then should he contradict other scriptures and himselfe too that bid us labour for wisdome his meaning is not then that we should not seek to understand scripture and to be able to give a reason of all we do and know when we judge aright of things and when not for that were to make a man a beast but that he should not think himselfe wiser then other godly men nor at any time oppose his own wisdom to God take heed alwaies that his judgment be not blinded by natural ignorance or selfe-love it differs a little from leaning to our own understanding Verse 5. This is the cause that the effect we lean to our own understanding because we are wise in our own eyes This is in the judgment that in the affection of confidence this is Theorical that is Practical There may also be a Meiofis in it think meanly of thy selfe take notice of thine own ignorance and think other men wiser then thy selfe fear the Lord. See on Chap. 1.7 And depart The word signifies to turn away from a thing which a man dislikes From evil It is put 1. for evil of sin which is the cause 2. of trouble which is the effect He that avoides the first shal escape the last the first is
had if it had a being and who can alter the form of that which is eternall And so by consequence God made not the world And scoffers will grow more bold and say All things continne not as they were from the beginning of the Creation 2 Pet. 3.3 4. But as they were before the Creation from eternity 2. Doct. The wolrd was made by God Where wast thou when I laid the foundations of the Earth Job 38.4 By the word of the Lord were the Heavens made and all the host of them by the breath of his mouth Ps 33.6 Reason 1. Because it was not from eternity as appears by the changes in it 2. It made not i● self That were a contradiction It could not be in fieri facto made and to be made both at one time It must then work before it be 3. There was none else before the world was to make it but God onely If an house be found in an Island wherein never any man but one was hee must needs build that house 4. None else had wisdom enough to do such a work if there had been men or Angells before the world As no beast could build the foresaid house if there had been many in the Island Use Give God the glory of it and of all the comforts ye enjoy here or shall in heaven 3. Doct. God sheweth wonderfull wisdom in making the world O Lord how manifold are thy workes in wisdom hast thou made them all Psal 104.24 To him that by wisdom made the Heaven Ps 136.5 Reason 1. Because he made this spacious world out of nothing The wisest man in the world or Angell in Heaven cannot work without matter But God made the whole world of nothing Onely his infinite wisdome could doe such a work 2. That excellency that is in the world shews the Makers infinite wisdom What is the most curious picture of a man beast tree star to the thing it self Like a dark shadow to the shining Sun So low do mens best works lie below Gods This shews that the foolishnesse of God is wiser then men 1 Cor. 1.25 For that work of God in which he shews least wisdom argues more then that wherein the wisest man in the world shews most 3. Because of the variety of these excellent workes both of severall kinds and of severall dispositions in each kind Stars Rivers Trees Beasts Men Angells Hills Vallies what thosands of each No created wisdom can number them much lesse make them How many thousands of men are in the world yet every face differs from one another 4. Because of their excellent order The stars are above our heads to give light the air about us to breath in the Earth under us to tread on Severall grounds for corn pasture gardens orchards What not Vse 1. Let us in the view of the creatures not onely take delight in the fight and use of them but also take notice of the wisdome of the Creatour and praise him for it The Earth is a Colledge built by God that in it we may study his wisdom The Heavens a Common-wealth or Kingdom established by him The Sun the King the Moon the Queen the Starrs the Nobility Clouds the commons Spheres the Provinces So we see a mans wisdom in his workes and books and God shews us his in the Heavens and in his Law Psal 19.1 7. Comparata omnia creata ad Deum sicut artificia ad artificem Recuperus All created things compared to God are as artificiall works to the cunning workman As they shew the workmans wisdom so do these Gods Yea much more For if we admire a watch made by the art of man for the rare workmanship and frame of the wheels and their motions how much more should we admire the wisdom of God in making the glorious lights of Heaven with their revolutions without which no watch could exactly measure time And in the variety of earthly creatures without which our lives could afford us no comfort 2. Use Take heed of finding any faults in the workes of God They were all made in wisdom though thy shallow brain cannot reach them 4. Doct. God upholds the Earth strangely The world is established that it cannot be moved Ps 93.1 No man can tell whereupon the Foundations of the Earth are fastned God poses Job with this question Iob 38.6 and may pose all the world They must answer with him God hangeth the Earth upon nothing Job 26.1 And that 1. Because there is nothing above it or under it to uphold it It is the lowest Element and the Heavens above cannot uphold it 2. Because it is above the power of nature to do it or to know how it is done Use When we tread on the earth let us take notice who upholds it and makes it able to uphold us No creature can do it The earth would sink under us if God did not strangely uphold it for us Give God the glory then of your sustentation 5. Doct. God preserves the heavens and heavenly creatures in their motion It is God that in them hath set a Tabernacle for the Sun to run a race Psal 19.4 5. Thou makest the outgoings of the morning and of the evening to rejoyce Psal 65.8 Reason 1. Because the Heavens and the Sun Moon and stars have no principle of life in them whereby to move themselves much lesse of reason to direct them in their various courses 2. Because no creature either man or angell hath wisdom or power enough to do it Use Take occasion from the daily motion of the heavenly bodies to blesse God our spirits are comforted and bodies directed by them they are watches to keep time for us God keeps them in their motion else would they deceive us and deprive us of their light and comfort Doct 6. All manner of wisdom is in God It is expressed by divers words in the Text Wisdome and Vnderstanding We may well cry out with the Apostle O the depth of the riches both of the wisdome and knowledge of God Rom. 11.33 Reas 1. His word shews it to us in which are the grounds of all arts and sciences and higher things then they 2. His works shew it none hath wisdom to do the like Use Be humble and see thine own folly be thou never so wise thou art but a fool in respect of God thou wantest some wisdome he hath all Thou mayest say of thy wisdom as David of his age Psal 39.5 My wisdome is nothing before thee Verily every man at his best state is altogether vanity Selah VER 20. By his knowledge the depths are broken up and the clouds drop down the dew GODS infinite wisdome was set out in the former verse by the higher parts of the world the heavens and by the lower the earth or as was mentioned in the former verse by setling solid substances there and liquid ones here and by ordering the two middle elements aire and water For the words By his knowledge Not by
is life eternal that they might know thee the only true God and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent Joh. 17.3 9. Doct. Knowledge of trivial things is little worth It is like Fishermen by the Sea-side gathering fine shels and letting Oysters alone or fools playing with feathers Hereby much precious time and labour is lost Vse It should be our wisdome to passe by such things as being known will doe us little good that we may have time for better things A good choyce of matter and books is a great help A bad choyce a great hinderance 10. Doct. Knowledge of divine truth will doe us much good It will bring us acquainted with God more fully then the creatures can Psal 19. comp vers 1. with vers 7. It will shew us the way to heaven Joh. 17.3 Vse Go to the Fountain Gods Word Thirst for those living waters as the Hart Psal 42.1 C●y out with David Oh how doe I love thy Law it is my meditation all the day Psal 119.97 Vers 3. To receive the instruction of wisdom justice and judgement and equity The former verse directed us to Theorical this to practical wisdome For the words To receive From others by instruction The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies 1. To receive or take away from others by force as 2 Sam. 12.30 He took their Kings Crown from off his head 2. To receive what is purposely given Thou shalt not take a gift Deut. 16.19 3. To take a thing not given As though they would have fetched wheat Heb. Taken wheat 2 Sam. 4.6 4. To receive instruction or to learn of another as Job 22 22. Receive I pray thee the Law from his mouth 5. To allure or take with fair speech Let her not take thee with her eyelids Prov. 6.25 So there is a taking of souls Pr●v 11.30 He that winneth Heb. taketh souls is wise And the Apostles were made fishers to take men Matth. 4.19 Here the word is taken in the fouth sense for learning and receiving knowledge out of these Proverhs which doe minister and offer it plentifully to us and are it were dead teachers of living men Much is got by conferring with the dead in their Books The Instruction Expounded before in the second verse to be not a particular head of knowledge but the way of attaining it or receiving from our teachers Of Wisdome Not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as before Theorical wisdome but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Prudence or providence It comes from a root that signifies good forecast wifely to foresee all conveniences and inconveniences that we may order our actions aright So it is used 1 Sam. 18.30 David behaved himself more wisely then all the servants of Saul Hence it signifies to prosper For prosperity ordinarily follows wife managing of businesse as ruine follows foolish carriage of affairs Keep therefore the words of this Covenant and doe them that ye may prosper in all that ye doe Deut. 29.9 The first signification is here intended Such instruction as may teach a man how to carry himself wisely that he may prosper 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Justice That is giving every one his right Not to be restrained to Magistrates alone but to be applyed to the people also for all may doe right or wrong to others though they be no Magistrates Judgement The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is used 1. For discerning right from wrong The aged doe not alwayes understand judgement Job 32.9 2. For the law manner or rule of it The judgements of the Lord are true Psal 19.9 3. For punishment or execution of judgement God would bring forth his people out of Egypt by great judgements Exod. 7.4 Here it is used in the first fignification to teach men how to discern right from wrong Neither is this peculiar to Magistrates but common to others also for though all have not an authorative judiciary power either in Church or Common-wealth yet all have a power so far as concerns their own actions to judge before and after what is fit to be done to others and what not And equity Heb. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Straight wayes that goe on foreright and even like plains when men goe not up hill and down hill in their actions but proceed in an even course It comes from a word that signifies to be right and equal It is translated taking the straight way 1 Sam. 6.12 It signifies also a thing right in Gods or mans eyes which they approve as just and equal Doing that which is right and good in the sight of the Lord Deut. 6.18 Because that which is right pleaseth God and should please men also although it be to their losse Heb. Equilies that is all kinde of equity or equity in all our actions not in some only or it may be the word wants a singular in Hebrew Wisdome then is required for the guiding of all these three justice judgement and equity Some think these three words to contain three several vertues but cannot well distinguish them All three are found chap. 2.9 Some understand by Justice the matter of our actions that it be lawful by Judgement the manner of them that it be right by Equity moderation that we use not the extremity of the law nor doe all that we may Others understand by Justice right actions by Judgement discerning good from evill by Equity integrity of minde in working and discerning Set out by the clean creatures in the law The first by chewing the cud ruminating on Gods Word to know what is just The second by dividing of the hoof distinguishing between good and evill The third by the fishes that live in the clear water above the mud So a right minde carries us above the sinful wayes of the world Others by Justice mean that which is just and right by Gods Law or mans by Judgement that which is due by contracts or bargains by Equity that which nature dictates to be equal Quod tibi fieri non vis alteri ne feceris That which thou wouldst not have done to thee doe not to another Others take them all to be Synonymas fignifying the same thing and trebled to work more upon mens affections especially there being some difference in the notion though the things be the same Justice looking to the object what is Gods right what mans what our own Judgement looking to the workman who must discern the difference that each may have his right Equity looking to the manner of doing it not going too far nor falling short in any of them This last I think to be right because the former doe either interfere one with another or doe not so well agree with the nature of the words and use of them in Scripture where they are often put promiscuously Figures I finde none the words being all literally to be understood Here is first another general end of these Proverbs to teach us practical wisdome 2. An explanation of it by particulars In the general note 1.
misery And their anguish is encreased by the fruitlesnesse of their prayers A sad condition to be miserable and helplesse yet a most just punishment that they that would not hear God should not be heard of God Ye heard the cause of their crying in the last verse extremity of misery now ye have the fruitlesnesse of it in this verse For the words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Then In that moment when they see their destruction coming upon them I called in their prosperity and they would not hear They shall call in their adversity and I will not hear There is both an Emphasis in that particle and an Antithesis Now I call and they will not hear Then they shall be glad to call to me but I will not hear When their hearts are full of distresse and anguish then their tongues shal be compelled through extremity of torment and danger to cry to me They. They who have thus slighted me Which slighting Wisdome takes so unkindly that she will no more speak to them in all the Chapter Onely she tells other men what shall become of them She speaks not in the second person as before but changes it to the third No more ye but still they speaking at a distance as if they were unworthy to be spoken to directly any more Shall call They shall pray for help For the severall significations of this word See on v. 21. Vpon me Whom they would not hear before But. See on v. 25. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I will not answer This word signifies 1. To speak or begin a speech And Job spake and said Job 3.2 2. To cry out or speak aloud And the wilde beasts of the Islands shattery Isa 13.22 3. To sing Sing unto the Lord with thanksgiving Sing praise Psal 147.7 4. To speak for or against one or bear witnesse Thou shalt not bear false witnesse Exod. 20.16 5. To hear what is said or regard it Behold I ery out of wrong but I am not heard Job 19.7 6. To give an answer to what is said Then answered Bildad Job 8.1 7. To grant what is desired which is a reall answer They cryed but there was none to save them even unto the Lord but he answered them not Psal 18.41 8. To be afflicted I was greatly afflicted Psal 116.10 Here it is taken in the seventh sense I will not grant what they pray for so that they shall pray to no purpose and without successe And none else can help them therefore their case is desperate and they must needs perish being forsaken both of God and men 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They shall seek me early Heb. They shall seek me in the morning For then comes the light by the benefit whereof things sought for may be found out They shall seek me not coldly nor faintly but as diligently as men that rise betimes in the morning as soon as they can see to seek somewhat lost The greatnesse of their distresses shal make them to seek me quickly very diligently and carefully they shal spare for no pains they shall break their sleep in the morning to do it So diligent men use to seek things they would finde So the Israelites went early in the morning to seek for Manna They shall seek me diligently as men that begin in the morning betimes and hold on till night But. See on v. 25. They shall not finde me They shall not finde me gracious and mercifull unto them in the time of their perplexities Seeking here is praying and finding is speeding Seek ye the Lord while he may be found call ye upon him while he is neer Isa 55.6 Ask and it shall be given unto you seek and ye shall finde Mat. 7.7 For the word see on v. 13. Figures Call upon me A figure of the generall for the particular The meaning is Pray to me Answer I will not grant what they ask The same figure as before For a man may answer and deny Seek me early Pray earnestly to me as men seek good things lost So shall they pray fervently to me to deliver them A Metaphor Not finde me Not have their desires of me nor be satisfied as men are that finde what they seek for A Metaphor Note a double threatning In the first note 1. Mans call 2. Gods refusall In mans call note 1. The adjunct of time Then 2. The act shall they call 3. The object upon me In Gods refusall note 1. The person but I. 2. The act will not answer In the second threatning note 1. Mans endevouring 2. Gods rejecting In mans endevouring note 1. The persons They. 2. The act shall seek early 3. The object me In Gods rejecting note 1. The parties They. They that seek me 2. The act shall not find 3. The object me 1. Doct. Affliction makes men seek to God that slighted him before So the Israelites did Their cry came up unto God by reason of the bondage Exod. 2.23 When they were smitten down by their enemies they would pray 1 King 8.33 Reason 1. Poena aperit oculos quos culpa tenebat clausos Greg. Men are dull sighted in prosperity and quick sighted in adversity 2. Because they know not where to get help else As the prodigall child when none else would relieve him thought of returning to his Father Luk. 15.16 17. Wicked men will try all wayes ere they will seek to God he is their last refuge 3. Suspicion begins to work when trouble begins to come Wicked men are often called Fools in this Book Fools fear nothing till they feel something and then they fear more then needs 4. Conscience then begins to terrifie them setting fin before them in its colours with death and hell attending it Rev. 6.8 Vse 1. To mitigate our sorrows in our afflictions They bring some good They have honey as well as a sting They oftentimes drive men to God Foelix necessitas quae cogit ad Christum Happy necessity that drives men to Christ 2. To condemne those that keep aloof from God even in affliction Men may keep out at Sea in a calm but they that keep out in a storm are desperate So are such as call not on God in trouble Sea-men will pray in a storm that swear in a calm 2. Doct. Prayer is an invocation or calling upon God Call upon me in the day of trouble Psal 50.15 They call not upon the Lord Psal 14.4 A man that in want or trouble calls upon his neighbour for help 1 sees that he needs help 2 desires to be helped 3 sues to another for it 4 to one that is able So do we in prayer confesse our want defire relief sue to God for it who is able to deliver us Heb. 5.7 Vse It instructs us in the nature of prayer It is not with Papists or ignorant persons mumbling over words we understand nor but spreading our wants before God and suing for supply O Lord I am oppressed undertake for me Isa 38.14 3. Doct. God will
body businesse and societie of friends yea and in Soul also for the Soul hath a fellow-feeling of the bodies joy or sorrow in regard of the neer conjunction of them 2. From the contrary because sicknesses and diseases are threatned as crosses and sometimes as curses See Deut. 28.29 c. The leprosie of Naeman shall sleave unto thee and unto thy seed for evers 2 Kings 5.27 3. Because health fits us for duty to God and men sicknesse makes us unserviceable to both Use To inform us that we may lawfully pray for health because in it self it is a blessing Spirituall blessings are best worth asking yet temporall not to be despised 5. Doct. Prosperity also is a blessing in it self the Devill confesses it to be so to Iob. Thou hast blessed the work of his hands his substance is encreased in the land Job 1.10 Abraham's servant confesses it in his Master The Lord hath blessed my Master greatly and he is become great and he hath given him flocks and heards and silver and gold and men-servants and maid-servants and Camells and Asses Gen 24.35 Reason 1. Because it is a gift of God I will give thee riches and wealth and honor 2 Chron. 1.12 2. He hath given it to some of his choisest servants as to Abraham Joseph David Solomon Use Abuse it not to luxury or oppression To be naught thy self more freely or to hurt others more powerfully Remember outward prosperity is Gods gift use it then to Gods honor and bless him for it Take heed it proves not as Tertullian calls it Campus quo ambitio decurrat A field in which ambition may run his course 6. Doct. Long life health prosperity are sometimes the rewards of well doing and obedience If ye be willing and obedient ye shall eat the good of the Land Isa 1.19 O that thou hadst hearkened to my Commandments then had thy peace been as a river Isa 48.18 That is thy prosperity as was shewed in the exposition of the Text. Reason 1. Because of Gods bounty who besides Heaven often gives comforts to his here 2. Because of mans frailty who is by prosperity much encouraged to obedience and discouraged by the contrary 1. Object Godly men oftentimes live but a while and in much pain and and poverty Answ Besides what was said before on the third Doctrine I answer 1. That their obedience is but in part and the reward is answerable 2. Promises of outward things are but conditionall And God by short life or sorrows keeps them from corruption or persecution and trouble 3. God gives them a longer and better life in Heaven So God verifies his promise with advantage As if a man should promise twenty shilling a week for a year and at the first months end void the bargain and give the party a thousand pound What cause had the receiver to complain either of falshood in the promiser or of losse to himself 4. Their short life have more sun-shiny daies and true and spirituall comforts there then any wicked mans long life Summer fruit may be as ripe as winter fruit though gathered some months before Use 1. It blames those who think that the study of wisdom and piety shortens their childrens daies They say they are too wise or too good to live long Such bring up their children foolishly and impiously and so shorten their daies which they would prolong 2. It encourages us to get wisdom and obedience Ungodly men think there is no better way in the world to make them live long then to be merry and to put away sorrow by letting slip the bridle to all manner of concupiscence but let us remember that a long healthfull prosperous life is the reward of obedience and live accordingly VERSE 3. Let not mercy and truth forsake thee bind them about thy neck write them upon the Table of thine heart NOw follow particular duties to bee performed to God and Man enterlarded with many excellent promises and rewards for encouragement to obedience And first the wise man begins with two duties to men setting the Exhortation to mercy and truth in this Verse and the encouraging promise in the next For the words Let not mercy and truth These two are oft enjoyned together in Scripture and it is pitty that they being so nearly joyned in themselves should ever be separated Sometimes they are jointly attributed to God His mercy is everlasting and his truth endureth to all generations Psal 100.5 His merciful kindness is great towards us and the truth of the Lord eudureth for ever 117.2 Sometimes to man Mercy and truth preserve the King Chap. 20.28 When they are attributed to God then Gods mercy is shewed in promising or giving man any good that deserves nothing but ill of him His truh is shewed in performance of his promises When they are spoken of man then is mercy seen in giving freely to the poor who deserve nothing of us yea to enemies who deserve ill of us Truth is manifested in doing what we owe by promise or debt to men Misericordia est gratia qua ex nostro libero animo benefacimus alteri non ex debito non ex passione Veritas quâ exclusa omni fictione adaequamus facta dictis verba cordi cordebitis Gratia qua gratuita veritas qua debita exhibemus Cajeetan Mercy is favour whereby out of our own free mind we doe good to another man not out of debt not out of passion Truth is that vertue whereby shutting out all feigning we do equall our deeds to our words our words to our haart our heart to our debts Grace or mercy is whereby we give free things Truth whereby we pay or restore things due to others Some interpret the Text here of Gods mercy and truth and that two waies 1. So carry thy self that God may deal mercifully and truly with thee But this cannot be the sense For though a man may so carry himself that God will not deal mercifully with him yet he cannot carry himself so badly that God will not deal truly with him for that were a blemish to God If he be upright God will perform his promises to him if not God will execute his threatnings upon him whichsoever God doth he shewes forth his truth 2. By way of promise not of exhortation And they read it Mercy and truth shall not forsake thee And they tie it to the former words if thou forget not my Law c. then God wil deal mercifully with thee and perform all his promises to thee But 1. This crosses the ordinary sense of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for a prohibition and that without need 2. The words following are imperative 3. In the first and second Verses ye have a prohibition and promise This method is also observed in the verses following and most likly so here in this Verse and the next The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies 1. Mercy or favour All the paths of the Lord are mercy and truth Psal
good we are corrected Doct. 6. We must not be weary of afflictions though they be great and frequent Consider him that endured such contradiction of sinners lest ye be weary and faint in your minds ye have not yet resisted unto blood striving against sin Heb. 3.4 Thou hast born and hast patience and for my names-sake hast laboured and hast not fainted Rev. 2.3 Reas 1. Because we are Gods creatures He hath supream and absolute power over us and therefore may lay on us what he will Say with the Jews We are the clay and thou our potter Isa 64.8 2. Fainting makes us unfit for all good duties either of religion or of our callings we can do nothing truly good or acceptable to God without cheerfulnesse A weary man cannot walk or work with comfort his spirits are spent already Use 1. To reprove such as are weary and faint under afflictions some bear little ones or great ones a while and then give over some utterly despair of help and conclude they are quite undone others mur mur against God others seek freedome by unlawfull meanes as Saul by a Witch All these faint under Gods hand and sin against him This is the other extream we heard before that some made light of afflictions and sleighted them now we see that others despair sink under them Non quia dura sed quia molles patimur Not because the things are hard but because we that suffer are tender Seneca Though it be profitable for us to be arflicted yet our flesh is impatient and desires nothing but pleasure and ease and so discourages us under affliction as if God intended to destroy us the Devill tells us as much and we are ready to believe him But we should not forget the exhortation which speaketh unto us as unto children My son despise not thou the chastning of the Lord nor faint when thou art rebuked of him Heb. 12.5 2. Resolve still to bear while God afflicts remember it is for correction not for confusion And that we are naturally impatient and had need of patience which as Nazianzen calls it is Nervus animae the sinew of the soul Say with Tertullian Totus mundus mihi pereat dum modo patientiam lueis faciam Let me lose all the world so I may get patience Lib. de patientia If that shrinks all failes if afflictions like waves of the sea come rouling one in the neck of another expostulate not with God but pray and wait for deliverance be such as the Apostle bids you to be Rejoycing in hope patient in tribulation continuing instant in prayer Rom. 12.12 VER 12. For whom the Lord loveth he correcteth even as a father the son in whum he delighteth BEcause as it is a hard thing to part with our substance for God so it is as hard if not harder to endure Gods correcting hand which we are alwaies ready to suspect to come out of hatred therefore Solomon takes away that thought and assures us that such corrections come from Gods love and tend to our good For the words For. See on Chap. 1.9 Whom the Lord. See on Chap. 1.7 Loveth See on Chap. 1.22 He correcteth The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies 1. To reason a case by arguments and answers How forcible are right words But what doth your arguing reprove Job 6.25 Should he reason with unprofitable talk Job 15.3 2. To convince confute or reprove such as are in the wrong Do ye imagine to reprove words Job 6.26 3. To correct or scourge one for sin O Lord rebuke me not in thine anger neither chasten me in thy hot displeasure Psal 6.1 And in that sense it is taken here See more on Chap. 9.7 Even as a father See on Chap. 1.8 The son See on Chap. 1.1.8 In whom he delighteth With whom he is wel pleased The sum of the verse is as if Solomon had said Thou must not despise nor be weary of Gods correction because it comes not out of anger but from abundance of love For as a godly Father seeks by correction to amend his child or a wise Physitian to cure his patient by bitter potions so doth God use by afflictions to keep every one in order whom hee loves or to call him back if he have sinned lest he grow worse and lose the comfortable sense of Gods favour For as Parents according to the flesh use to correct their children according to their offence when they neglect their duty or do evill so doth God exercise his children with crosses that they may not be proud or live loosely but more warily and wisely for time to come Figures none Note 1. The truth nakedly set down 2. By Smilitude In the former note 1. The word of coherence For. 2. The Agent The Lord. 3. The Act. Correcteth 4. The Patient Whom he loveth In the latter note 1. The Note of similitude Even as 2. The Corrector The Father 3. The corrected set out 1. By his relation The Son Not the servant onely 2. By his Fathers affection In whom he delighteth Abraham must offer Isaac whom he loves Gen. 22.2 God offers up his Son Christ in whom he is well pleased Math. 3.17 Though God chastise his children sorely yet he takes pleasure in them 1. Doct. God gives reasons of his proceedings that need not give any at all So in the preface to the commandemens Exod. 20.1 c. Ye must obey for I am Jehovah that gave you your being I am your God in convenant with you and I shewed my love to you in bringing you out of Aegypt In the second Commandment God reasons from his jealousie to idolaters and his kindnesse to true worshippers and their posterity long after them For I the Lord thy God am a jealous God visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the children unto the third and fourth generation of them that hate me And she wing mercy unto thousands of them that love me and keep my Commandments In the third Commandement hee argues from his judgements on such as abuse his name For the Lord will not hold him guiltlesse that taketh his name in vain In the fourth from his liberall allowance of six daies to us for our own occasions who may well therefore afford him one in seven Six daies maist thou labour do all thy work For so indeed it should be translated being a permission not a command for labour in our callings belongs to the eighth Commandement And from his own example who after six daies worke rested one day For in six daies the Lord made Heaven and Earth the Sea and all that in them is and rested the seventh day Wherefore the Lord blessed the seventh day and hallowed it In the fifth Commandment from the good that comes by honouring Parents A long and comfortable life which all men desire That thy daies may be long in the land which the Lord thy God giveth thee There are no reasons given for the rest because mans reason can