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A30238 An expository comment, doctrinal, controversal, and practical upon the whole first chapter to the second epistle of St. Paul to the Corinthians by Anthony Burgesse ... Burgess, Anthony, d. 1664. 1661 (1661) Wing B5647; ESTC R19585 945,529 736

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us from so great a death and doth deliver in whom we trust that he will yet deliver us THe Apostle having formerly discovered his humane feares and diffidence under that great trouble which came upon him in Asia doth now recollect himself and revive out of his swoonings The Sunne that was in an Eclipse doth now begin to shine forth in glorious lustre He had informed us that the end of that heavy tribulattion was That he should not trust in himself but in God And now in this verse we see this blessed effect took place in him For by the experience of Gods mercy to him at this time he is encouraged to trust in God for the future he hath doth and will deliver One favour from God is a pledge of more to come In this verse then we see Paul got above and conquering that weaknesse and imbecillity which he found in himself and acknowledging the goodnesse of God and his power to him Paul found God able to raise the dead by what he had done to him in his particular In the Text then we may take notice of 1. Paul's solemn acknowledgement of the goodness and power of God to him in delivering of him And 2. His Encouragement from thence to trust in God for the future In the former part we have his celebration of Gods goodnesse to him and this he aggravateth from the hopelesnesse and desperatenesse of his estate which he calleth a Death not a sicknesse but a death Yea Chrysostome observeth That he doth not say Who hath delivered us from such dangers but such death to shew the extremity Chrysostome reads it in the plural number 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 deaths but the general Copy is otherwise Now Paul doth not onely call it death but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 such death The word is used in the New Testament about three times besides in this place and it is alwayes applied to the great aggravation of a thing so as we are to admire it as if the like had never been heard of Thus Revel 16. 18. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is such an Earthquake as never had been before James Chap. 3. 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are ships very great And Hebr. 2. 3. How shall we escape if we neglect 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so great salvation then which there cannot be a greater The Apostle therefore in using this word doth intend to aggravate the goodnesse of God towards him to leave out no circumstance that may not heighten the mercy It is not enough with him to take notice of the mercy but the aggravation of his mercy and this maketh his heart seven times hotter as it were in praising of God than otherwise it would be From whence observe That the children of God do not onely acknowledge the mercy of God to them but they also consider of every circumstance that may make the mercy appear greater They will take up every crumme and the fragments as it were that Gods miraculous power may be more demonstrated They doe not content themselves with a beholding of the mercy in the bulke but they weigh every particular ingredient and so of one mercy make many mercies That as the godly in their humiliation for sinne thinke it not enough to humble themselves in the general but they endeavour to bring to minde every circumstance that may aggravate it and so make themselves more abominable and loathsome in their own eyes Thus they do also in matter of thanksgiving They doe not take the mercy in the grosse but they looke through it and about it to espie out every particular that may be like a coale of fire in their bosomes Thus we have the thankfull Psalmist Psal 136. severing every particular mercy of God to Israel by it self and then addeth For his mercy endureth for ever Sihon King of the Amorites for his mercy endureth for ever Og King of Basan for his mercy endureth for ever He reckoneth them up one and by one though he might have satisfied himself with that expression vers 24. Who hath redeemed us from all our enemies But a gracious heart dare not rob God of his glory in any one benefit that he hath from him For if he must say with Jacob He is lesse than the least of his mercies It is not for him to passe it by for every little mercy is farre above his deserts to him belongeth all the curses of the Law whatsoever is not hell and damnation cometh from the meer bounty of God But let us illustrate this truth in the particulars shewing wherein the people of God use to make their aggravation And First The children of God use to enlarge their thoughts in praises of God from the low weak and impotent condition they of themselves were in Now the more the disease is found out to be desperate and incurable the greater is the art and skill of the Physician Thus Psal 136. 23. Who remembred us in our low estate The blackest Eclipse makes the Sunnes light when recovering more glorious The lower and weaker in thy self the more is God thereby acknowledged So Psal 34. 6. This poor man cryed and the Lord heard him This aggravateth the mercy of God that though a very Lazar yet God would not despise him So Psal 142. 3. When my Spirit was overwhelmed within me then thou knewest my path Nothing is more ordinary then such passages in the Psalmes to aggravate the goodnesse of God towards the godly from the lownesse and the impotency they were in Oh if God had not come in at that time I had utterly perished How many low conditions have many of Gods people been in sometimes in respect of their outward sometimes in respect of their inward yet God hath delivered them from those whales bellies Your affections to praise God will be very cold and dull till you possesse your soules with this thought Oh how low was it with me Little did others know how it fared with me One step further would have cast me into utter horrour and then when I could bear no longer God supported me Many Psalmes may the chilren of God make as it were I was in such a sad temptation but God rescued me For his mercy endureth for ever I was in such an outward streight and the Lord made a way to escape For his mercy endureth for ever Thus the thoughts of thy low condition will greatly advance the help of God vouchsafed to thee Secondly The people of God doe aggravate the mercy of God not onely from the greatnesse of the danger they were in but also their sinfulnesse their unworthinesse that ever God should cast an eye of pity on them and this they doe whether in temporal or spiritual mercies And truly this is an excellent way to enlarge the heart in blessing of God when we shall consider how unworthy we are we that deserved cursing to meet with blessing See this humble frame in David 1 Chron. 17. 16. when
though it be thy duty to humble thy self for sinne to confess and bewail thy iniquities yet it is also a duty To rejoyce in the Lord alwayes and till the heart be fitted by this joy thou canst nor bless God with that hearty affection as thou oughtst to do Psal 103. David saith Blesse the Lord O my soul and all within thee praise his holy Name All within thee You see to praise God is heart-work as well as lip-work all within us must move and be affected Thy heart cannot boil over as the Psalmist sometimes expresseth it unless this fire of joy doth inflame it Oh then know that a grieving disquieted soul cannot bless God it hinders you from that duty which the Apostle presseth Col. 3. 16. Admonishing one another in Psalms and hymns and spiritual songs singing with grace in your hearts What an Heaven is such an heart where there are these spiritual hymns and psalms But alas how often is thy heart like an howling wilderness where the cries and dolefull sounds of unbelieving and distrustfull fears do torment thee Sixthly To blesse God there is required faith and a resting of the soul upon God as a reconciled Father Alas can the damned in hell bless God Could Cain or Judas bless God By no means because there is no faith there is no resting upon God as a Father Hence you see the Apostle addeth The Father of our Lord Jesus Christ and the Father of all mercies To cursed and condemned sinners God is not a Father of mercies but of vengeance and fury a God of dreadfull judgments who is said to be angry with the wicked all the day long Hence David doth so often in the Psalms exercise those appropriating and applying acts of faith My God and my Tower my strong help and defence It was his faith that made him so thankfull For what is it to hear of Christ and all spiritual mercies by him if faith doth not apply them and make them my own And then we are stirred up to give God thanks for them insomuch that faith hath the greatest influence into our thankfulness Seventhly Faith of adherence is not enough to make the heart so throughly and affectionately thankefull as it should be unlesse also there be as some call it faith of evidence or a good and true perswasion that God is our God It 's the reflecting acts of the soul whereby it knoweth and is assured that God hath pardoned my sinne and hath forgiveth my iniquities that are like oil to the lamp of this duty David in some Psalms dependeth upon God and so many times the choisest of Gods servants they are supported to rest on him to build their hopes on Christ but then wanting this assurance not feeling this love of God shed abroad in their souls hence they are not fervent and zealous in these duties of blessing and thanksgiving as they ought to be Do you not see many of Gods people more forward to duties of humiliation and mourning more attending to self-debasement and self-abhorrency then they are to faith joy and blessing of God the one they are constantly in the other unless provoked and forced as it were they seldom accomplish Now this ought not to be so we are to rejoyce as well as tremble we are to put both together we are to bless God for pardon of sinne as well as confess sinne we are to rejoyce in giving of thanks as well as to humble our souls in acknowledging of our sinfulness Thou often saist Lord pity me Lord shew mercy to me but how seldom dost thou say O Lord I bless thee For thy mercy endureth for ever My heart hath been full of sorrow for sinne and now it is full of joy for the pardon of it I have prayed that my corruptions may be subdued and I bless God that prayer is graciously answered If you winne a mercy by prayer and do not wear it by praise you greatly offend God SERM. XXX Of Praising God and that for all but especially for spiritual Mercies 2 COR. 1. 3. Blessed be God even the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ c. FRom the method that Paul useth here and in the beginning of most of his other Epistles we have observed the Duty that lieth upon all the people of God to bē carefull and conscientious in this duty of blessing and praising of God which is as the legal ointment for the High-priest compounded of choice and sweet ingredients It 's an Angelical work to blesse God There remain further particulars that are constituent of this comfortable and profitable duty As First The heart that is duly fitted to praise God though it be thankefull for every mercy even the least mercy yet it keeps an order in its thankesgiving according to the dignity of its objects so that it praiseth God chiefly and principally for spiritual mercies and then secondarily for temporal mercies And this argueth the difficulty of this duty and that also only the regenerate and spiritual man can in a Scripture-way blesse God for he only doth preferre heavenly things above earthly When the Psalmist had spoken of outward mercies to a people Psal 144. 12 13 15. great mercies in sons and daughters rich abundance and plenty he corrects all at last Happy is that people that is in such a case yea happy is that people whose God is the Lord. So that you see all the outward desirable mercies that are are but in a subordination to Gods favour When thou art breaking forth after this manner I bless God for my children for my health for my outward contents Oh but above all Lord that I have any spiritual mercy that thou hast loved my soul converted me to thy self saved me from the evil wayes of the world in this my soul is overwhelmed So then as we see it is in matter of Petition Seek ye first the Kingdom of Heaven Thus it is also in Thanksgiving whatsoever heavenly mercy God hath bestowed on thee bless God for that in the first place Thus the Apostle doth praise God in a most divine manner Eph. 1. 3. Blessed be God who hath blessed us with all spiritual blessings in Christ Insomuch that this may be a good Touchstone of the truth of grace in thee whether thy soul be most affected and enlarged towards God for soul-mercies that thou canst truly say O Lord in that thou hast made me in a saving manner to know thee in that thou hast revealed thy Son to me I do more rejoyce in this and bless thee for it then if thou hadst given me all the glory of the world Doest thou see a natural worldly man boast in his riches in his birth in his greatness above others and knoweth nothing at all of Gods favour and spiritual mercy to his soul This is like a beast that is crowned with Garlands but yet prepared for the slaughter Canst thou say O Lord I judge all the outward mercies I have to be but husks and empty
Christ though I have no comfort at all it is not my ease so much as thy glory I look at This will greatly indear thee to God Fifthly God may deny thee comfort to inform thee how much thou art beholding to Christ He suffered for thee and that without comfort He was willing to be deprived of it that so he might accomplish thy Redemption Now as Christ would be tempted like us so God will have us tempted like Christ that we might be the more thankfull to him Certainly all the paines on his body all the disgrace and reproach he went under was not equall to his being without comfort yet this he indured for thee Lastly Conclude on this That if comfort were absolutely necessary for thee at this time thou shouldst have it Rom. 8. How can he not but give us all other things who hath given us Christ Is comfort equall to Christ SERM. L. The Saints Sufferings are for the Churches good 2 COR. 1. 6. And whether we be afflicted it is for your consolation and salvation which is effectual in the induring the same sufferings which we also suffer or whether we be comforted it is for your consolation and salvation THis Verse is acknowledged by many Learned Expositors to be very difficult not so much from the matter for that is easie as from the grammatical disposition of the words there being several conjectures and divers adventures about the transposing of them In most of the Latin Copies there are three members in the disjunction whereas the Greek hath but two after this manner Whether we be afflicted whether we be comforted and whether we exhort But according to the Greek word which is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 this would make a tautology therefore no doubt this was inserted in the Latin Copies by some not diligently attending to what they did Then as for the Greek Chrysostome doth transpose the words otherwise then we do putting off the second member of the disjunction viz. Whether we be comforted c. to the next Verse Knowing that as you are partakers of the sufferings c. and then reduceth all the rest to the former part Some also blame Erasmus for adding in the Original it is Whether we be afflicted it is for your consolation which way our Translators also render And indeed the sense would runne well enough without it relating to those words Our hope of you is stedfast But this is not material for the sense is still the same Not therefore to trouble you with these grammatical difficulties seeing the scope and meaning of the Apostle is evident which is That whatsoever did befall him in his ministerial Office it was for their good and therefore they were to be so farre from being discouraged at his sufferings or to despise him for them as the false Apostles laboured to make them do that they ought rather to honour him and they themselves to be more animated in their sufferings for Christ And in this the Apostle doth so overflow with words that Erasmus absurdly giveth this prophane censure Intempestivae copiae affectatio as if he could teach the Spirit of God how to speak But no wonder at this presumption of his seeing in his Epistle to Barbirius purging himself from being a Lutheran much more from holding every thing that Luther wrote he addeth he would not be so addicted to Austin or Hierome vix etiam ipsi Paulo scarce even to Paul himself Whether this vix would preserve him from blasphemy let others judge But come we to the first member in this distribution wherein we have the condition supposed the consequent and effect of it with the amplification thereof I shall begin with the condition supposed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whether we be afflicted squeezed or pressed for the word signifieth such afflictions as are like the ●●ail to the corn that doth bruise it The end of this in the general is for the good of the Church more particularly for their consolation and salvation From whence Observe That the afflictions and sufferings we indure for Christ do not only turn to our own good but to the good of Gods Church That they are for our own good hath been partly spoken to Yea every dispensation of God to those that fear him is a benefit and an advantage For if it be a mercy it is bonum Dei consolantis if an affliction it is bonum Dei admonentis as Austin But I am now to speak of the diffusive good by afflictions in respect of others That sufferings for Christ are of publique edification to the Church appeareth by two or three notable texts concerning what Paul speaketh of himself Phil. 1. 12. I would ye should understand that the things which hapned to me have fallen out rather to the furtherance of the Gospel I would ye should understand It is a truth that Believers should possesse themselves with For indeed it is a ridle that out of this strong one should come honey that out of darknesse should arise light from death come life The not understanding of this hath made so many Apostates thinking that the Kingdom of Christ and his waies would never hold because all the power of the world conspire to oppresse it but the Apostle would have them know that persecutions do not hinder but further the Gospel The treading and trampling on this Camomile makes it thrive the better Another remarkable text is 2 Tim. 2. 10. where the Apostle having shewed that though they did cast him into bonds yet the Word of God could not be bound no more then a man as Chrysostome observeth that cutteth off a branch from the tree can cut off the Sun-beams also from the Sun that may shine upon that branch he addeth that he doth indure all things for the elects sake that they may obtain salvation Oh wonderfull expression you might think Paul goeth too high these words become Christ rather Who can say this but Christ He suffereth for the elects sake that they may have salvation But Paul speaks this only as a Minister not a Mediatour as is more particularly to be urged His scope is to shew that it is not for any sinnes of his own any wickednesse that he hath committed but it is for the good of the Church that he thus suffereth So that Paul doth not only propagate the Gospel by preaching but by suffering when he cannot preach he doth most preach when his person is bound in chains then the Gospel is more enlarged As Herod by cutting off John Baptists head did in effect make John's tongue more speak and witness against him The last instance is Col. 1. 24. which place is the more famous because abused by the Papists to uphold a treasure or overplus in the sufferings of the Saints that they suffer more than they deserve and therefore the overplus is to be dispensed by Papal authority for the relief of such who want merits And here cometh in their doctrine
there be any afflicted with bitterness as I am And is not this thy case Is not thy house a house of mourning for dead fathers or dead husbands as well as others Is not all this from the preventing mercy of God The second chanel in which these mercies may be discovered is In spiritual things And certainly here we may cry out also That they are more than can be numbred For what sinne what temptations what terrours and troubles of heart what wounds and gashes of soul do any of the godly fall into and thou mayest not also be plunged into the same Who maketh thee to differ Why must not the branch ingraffed in insult over that which is broken off but take heed and tremble Is it not because God may break off those also Oh then with bleeding and melting hearts acknowledge and say O Lord what would have become of me if left to such a passion if forsaken in such a temptation Why is it that I have not the guilt the condemnation that others lie under Is it not because thy goodness did keep me Even as David was preserved in respect of that busines● of the men of Keilah he asketh of God Whether they would deliver him into Saul's hands and God telleth him they would certainly do it thereupon David will not commit himself to them It is thus often in respect of thy soul if thou go to such a place if thou art put into such a temptation if placed in such a condition or relation God knoweth that this would prove a snare to thee it would be a ruine to thee Therefore the Lord doth so order by his mercy that thou shalt not come into that condition Divines have one kind of grace that they call Gratia praeveniens which doth prevent us it cometh upon us before we have any thought any will or desire about it As God said He was found of those that sought him not And truly such preventing grace we do not only need at our first conversion but all our life long as much as our daily bread Grace must prevent our mind our will our affections otherwise some sinne some lust or other would immediately fasten upon us Let then the godly soul remember what a deep and vast ocean this is of preventing grace the bottome whereof thou canst never dive into As Paul said By the grace of God I am what I am so saith Austin he might have added By the grace of God I am not what I am not It 's the grace of God that thou art not a withered tree a barren wilderness It is the grace of God keepeth thee from Hypocrisie and from Apostasie what a sinner and evil wretch thou art not it is wholly by the grace of God Thirdly Although the godly do thus judge of preventing mercies as well as of positive mercies yet because we are apt to account of mercies by sense and feeling we have hence it is That the godly are exceedingly-forgetfull many times about preventing mercies It is often said We never prize a mercy till we want it How precious is health to a diseased man ease to a tormented man And so also we never account any evil grievous but while we feel it while it is upon our backs and thereupon we are most sensible of such mercies which do take off this burden from us Thus it is indeed because we judge of all things according to our sense but if we did let judgement work then the godly soul would be likewise greatly enlarged for the keeping of evil as well as removing of it The evil we never felt yet because ready to come upon us had not the mercy of God kept it off is affectionately taken notice of by that soul which delights to search out the works of God towards it The godly ought not be so bruitish as to be taught only by thorns or to be like the horse which must have alwayes the bit and bridle Preventing mercy is as real a mercy as a positive one God is as truly good in keeping of evil from thee as removing of it Shall God therefore lose such of his glory and honour because thou wilt judge only by sense Fourthly That therefore the children of God may know It is their duty to go further in the way of praise to God then usually they do Let them consider these ensuing rules concerning preventing mercies And 1. Perswade thy self of this That whatsoever evil thou hast deserved by thy sinnes and is not brought upon thee look upon this as a preventing mercy and be affected wit it as much as with any positive mercy And truly this very particular may be like a live coal from the Altar to warm and purifie thy heart For hast thou not deserved all the curses threatned in the Law As soon as ever as thou hast sinned may not the Law of God immediately challenge thee take thee by the throat and hale thee to hell Well if so consider this preventing mercy of God that keepeth thee from them Mayest thou not truly say remembring the deserts of thy sinne not onely the God who deliuereth from so great a death but also so great an hell and so great a damnation Were not thy heart like a clod of earth like a stone how greatly wouldst thou be affected in this particular saying It 's the Lords mercy I am not in the grave It 's the Lords mercy I am not roaring in hell for the Law curseth me I have transgressed that there is nothing keepeth off the execution of that dreadfull sentence but the meer mercy of God And therefore if thou wert dead and raised again if damned in hell and yet delivered out Would not thy mouth and heart be filled all over with blessing and praising of God Why not then when God keepeth thee out of this destruction every moment It 's observed as the demonstration of Gods great power and mercy that the waters of the sea being higher than the earth yet they are so checked and bounded by the power of God that they do not overflow the earth This is the meer preventing mercy of God Insomuch that Luther said The Inhabitants of the earth are as wonderfully preserved from destruction by the sea as the people of Israel were in their passage to Canaan when the waters stood like walls on both sides And thus it is in any mercy we enjoy if we consider what the Law threatens how that curseth what we have deserved It 's a wonder of wonders that every houre we doe not fall into hell Therefore if thou findest thy heart not affected with these preventing mercies lay this particular close to thy soul 2. Consider That whatsoever evil doth actually fall upon any other in the world and not on thee this is a preventing mercy Is another sick and not thou Is another poor not thou This is a privative mercy For what reason can there be given of thy difference from others but onely
applied to them yet they were not the seed of the promise in the sense the Apostle intendeth as Isaac was that is so as to have the true and real benefits of the promise and in this respect we say no ungodly man hath any promise of any priviledge made to him abiding in that condition No promise of pardon no promise of Gods favour no promise of any earthly comfort not a morsel of bread or droppe of drinke he cannot plead any promise in his prayers And therefore when we may enjoy many outward mercies these come not by vertue of a promise to him but onely through the providence of God God out of a general love doth bestow such comforts upon him it is not from any promise made to him And indeed seeing the Text saith The promises of God are confirmed in Christ unlesse a man be in Christ there is no promise can be effectual to him Oh the sad condition of all ungodly men For if thou hast no promise what hope canst thou have Are not the Devils therefore eternally wretched because they have no promise Hope in this is compared to an Anchor Heb. 6. 19. Now what shipwrack must that ship needs endure which under waves and tempests hath no Anchor for a defence Fourthly Gods promise for the accomplishing of it doth suppose faith on our part for the promise on Gods part and faith on our part are correlates We cannot put forth faith for any mercy where we have not Gods promise neither is Gods promise accomplished to any but the believer Thus the Apostle Rom. 4. 16. saith The promise is of faith that it might be not only by grace but also made sure to such who do believe So that it is with a godly man according to his faith Christ saith to thee Be thou justified according to thy faith receive pardon and comfort according to thy faith If thou complainest God hath made great and precious promises but I cannot taste of this honey I perish notwithstanding this fullnesse Then remember it is not because there is not enough in the promise but thy faith is weak thy vessel is narrow to receive As if the woman should have refused to borrow vessels when the Prophet multiplied her oyle For the oyl did not cease till her vessels ceased So neither will Gods promise cease working till thy faith cease to operate Indeed in Gods comminations and threatnings they are fulfilled whether man will or no Let him believe or not believe God will throw the ungodly into Hell but in the promises it is otherwise then they do good to us when by faith we imbrace them So that by this we see how dangerous and noxious it is not to put forth faith it both dishonours God and depriveth us of all good it dishonours God as if he were not true as if it were not impossible for him to lie as if he were no more than a man Therefore Abraham is said To give glory unto God by believing Rom. 4. 20. because he did not regard the dead womb or the improbability in second causes but rested upon the promise alone If it be so hainous a matter to accuse man of a lie who yet is by nature a lyar as the Scripture pronounceth of him how unsufferable is it to attribute it unto God And then it is a very destructive sinne for it evacuateth all promises as to us it maketh thy condition as hopelesse as if never any promises had been made This is to cut the Conduit-pipes of all comfort and consolation This is with the Philistims as it were to throw earth into all the Wells of water Therefore above all things look to thy faith for it maketh God no God Christ no Christ promises no promises as to thee Fifthly That our faith may be the more confirmed he is not onely pleased to make promises to his people but also to give signes for the confirmation thereof Therefore Sacraments are confirming signes of Gods promise they are visible promises so that our unbelief will still be the greater sinne if neither the promises nor the seales visibly annexed thereunto shall not establish us against all doubting and uncertainty It is true the Sacraments cannot make Gods word surer in it self but they do in respect of us God graciously condescending to our humane weaknesse By which mercifull provision of God that his people might live a life of faith in his promise ' we may gather as the necessity of faith so also the great pronenesse that is in us to unbeliefe that we rather live by sense than by saith Hence it is that when we have outward supports and comforts our hearts are kept up but when all these leave us are taken away then like Peter upon the water we are afraid and should even sinke did not the Lord support us Sixthly It is therefore a very great skill to make use of the promises of God by faith It is the Gospel-wisdome a mystery it is that even the Disciples of Christ are a long while ere they can learne it For though God doth promise to doe such and such wonderfull things yet he suffereth so many crosse providences to fall out that we would think God had wholly forgot his promise Hence the Church complaineth Doth his promises fail for ever Yea the Apostle Peter doth speak of some prophane scoffers that asked Where was the promise of his coming 2 Pet. 3. 4. because they saw all things continue as they did therefore they thought Gods promise was in vain It behoveth the people of God therefore to acquaint themselves with Gods Riddles to plough with the Scriptures Heifer for their unskilfullnesse herein is that which maketh them so full of dejections which doth so often perplex them not knowing what to think or say yea they are apt to question the truth and righteousnesse of God but take heed of this it is a very great sinne when God giveth thee a sufficient testimony of his grace and favour to thee by his promises and seals thereof still to question and doubt whether God will doe it or no. This is grievously to tempt God as the people of Israel did Exod. 17. 7. who though they had so many miraculous discoveries of Gods presence with them yet still they ask Is the Lord amongst us or not Oh take heed of saying Is the Lord mine Will he do good to me When he hath given proof enough both by his promises and seals of his favour Oh satisfie thy soul with this Lord I have thy promise before thou promisedst thou wast free whether thou wouldst do it or no but since thy mouth hath promised it how can thy hand but fulfill it Let thy temptations thy straits be never so great yet know the promise of God cannot be straitned Though thy friends die though thy goods are lost yet Gods promise cannot die neither can that perish And if thou sayest Oh but I am unworthy I am a poor wretch What
3. Flesh saith our afflictions will never end 4. Flesh would put us upon any means to get out of trouble 5. Flesh only attends to what is troublesome and grievous in afflictions Why a man should so much study to discern betwixt the flesh and spirit within him 1. Because otherwise he will be apt to passe a false sentence upon himself 2. Hereby he may prevent the Devils end in troubling us It is not the natural strength of any man that can carry him through all afflictions 1. No man can bear all afflictions aright in his own strength 2. All opinion's that hold the contrary are injurious to the glory of God 3. There is a great difference betwixt a natural and spiritual bearing of troubles 4. There is a difference likewise betwixt moral and spiritual bearing of afflictions No grace removeth the natural fear of death The difference betwixt a natural and an elicite desire Propositions clearing the truth 1. Man was not made mortal 2. T is sin that maketh death so terrible 3. Christ came into the world to remove this sting of death sinne 4. Yet howsoever nature cannot but tremble at the thoughts of it Of what use the natural fear of death is 1. Hence men do more patiently endure afflictions 2. It keeps men out of many sins 3. It makes a man more thankfull for the mercies of life 4. The natural fear of death is very hardly kept from being sinfull There is a natural fear of death in all but in some more in some lesse When the fear of death is sinfull 1 When it becomes a snare 2. When it is immoderate and disquieting 3. When it excludeth much profitable and seasonable fear 4. When it proceeds from a sinfull cause as from 1. An inordinate love of life 2. The want of love to God 3. A sinfull life 4. Want of faith in Christ The godly are sometimes deceived about Gods dispensations towards them 1. A godly man may sometimes be deceived in his advise to others which he may think is of God when it is not 2. They are deceived when they thin● Gods dispensations are to abet some errours which they may be fallen into 3. When they judge of God after outward appearance 4. When they give too much credit to their zeal and affections 5. They may be deceived in the frame of their own hearts Gods people are deceived when they judge according to sense not saith Reasons 1. Because the godly are too hasty in their judgings 2. Because of their feare and anger wherewith they are too passionately transported 3. From the want of spirituall wisdome Rules for the preventing of false judgements concerning Gods dealings with us Two sorts of trust humane and divine Selfe-confidence a great sinne Propositions clearing the nature of self-confidence 1. All Creatures necessitated to trust in something 2. Our trust is corrupted by originall sin 3. Hence our trust is placed upon many false objects 1. Some trust in their wickednesse 2. Humane power and strength 3. Wealth What are those inward things which a man is apt to trust in 1. In his own heart 2. Self-righteousnesse 3. Church-priviledges How even a godly man may be guilty of self-confidence by trusting 1. In his spiritual gifts 2. In his graces Whether Paul speaketh these words in his own person Of the sinfulness of self-confidence which appears 1. From Gods chastising his children so much to prevent it 2. It is a secret sinne 3. 'T is a sinne soon committed 4. 'T is a making the creature a God 5. 'T is a foolish and unprofitable sin God alone is the proper object of our trust Propositions concerning our trusting in God 1. It is wrought by the Spirit of God 2. None but the regenerate can act this grace 3. It is an act of faith 4. It is not God as absolutely but relatively considered that is the object of our trust 1. As he is an infinite true and everlasting God 2. As immutable in his promises 3. As he is omnipotent 2. The matter for which we trust in God is the good thing we want either spiritual or temporal What is required to our trusting in the Lord. 1. A powerfull apprehension of our own and the creatures inability to help us 2. A practicall consideration of Gods greatness and goodness 3. A particular appropriation of God as our God 4. An experimentall knowledge of Gods promises and providences 5. An use of meanes 6. A sound judgement Of the excellency of this grace of trusting in God 1. It is many times put for the whole worship of God 2. The Lord delighteth to put us upon the daily practice of it 3. It indeareth God to us and engageth him for us 4. T is difficult to flesh and blood 5. One of Gods ends in afflicting us is to work this grace 6. It giveth all glory to God 7. It calmes and quiets the spirit God both can and will help his people in their extremitics 1. God raiseth up the naturally dead 2. God raiseth the metaphorically dead and such who are in any trouble either externall or internall Of Gods raising from internall extremities What is implyed in the expression God raiseth from the dead 1. That Gods own Children may be brought into helpless and hopeless conditions 2. That God hath power over all estates whatsoever 3. That our extremities are Gods opportunities The children of God do not only take notice of Gods mercies but their aggravations likewise 1. From their own low condition 2. From their own sinfulness 3. From the times and seasons of Gods mercies 4. Fromothers miseries We should account of privative and preventing mercies as of positive 1. Some mercies suppose evil inflicted others do not 2. Two sorts of evils spiritual and temporal which the mercy of God prevents 3. The godly are o●● forgetfull about these preventing mercies 4. It is therefore their duty to go further in praise and thankfulness for these mercies then usually they do 1 Whatsoever evil is not inflicted that we have deserved is to be acknowledged a preventing mercy 2. Whatsoever evil fals upon others and not upon us 't is a preventing mercy 3. Whatsoever evil God justly may and yet doth not inflict 't is a preventing mercy 4. What evils God brings upon others in a providential way and not upon thee it is of his preventing mercy 5. Whatsoever mans own weakness would cast him into and yet God keeps it off is a preventing mercy Gods continuing his mercies is as necessary to us as his first bestowing them What deliverances God workes for us 1. Temporall 2. Spirituall 1. From wrath to come 2. From the power of sin and Satan 3. From temptations to sin and apostacy Why 't is necessary God should continue his mercies as well as give them to us 1. Because we cannot continue them our selves 2. Because of our unworthiness 3. Because our dangers and temptations continue The experience of former mercies should encourage us to trust in God