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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A36272 A sermon preached before the King, Aug. 14, 1666 being the day of thanksgiving for the late victory at sea / by J. Dolben ... Dolben, John, 1625-1686. 1666 (1666) Wing D1833; ESTC R15031 13,657 34

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of Psalms but his whole life could not otherwise have been so full of jealousie for God's Honour Delight in his Commands and every thing that may express a Will knit and united to that of God as the Chaldee hath it here which is the true and proper effect of Love Indeed David could not without such a love of God have perform'd well those acts of Piety and Devotion which he promiseth in my Text Could not Trust in him Praise him or Pray to him acceptably with hope to be saved from his Enemies Nor can we however our Fancies and Dreams of Religion deceive us and therefore must be sure to take it along with us throughout And first to help us and give us ground and foundation for our Trust in God the next thing in my Text. TRust we know is an act of Friendship and the greatest fruit it yields Mutual Confidence springing naturally from Mutual Affection I can safely rely upon that Person whom I therefore love because I esteem him so good that he will not fail any just expectation and whose affection to me is my double Pledg that he will surely answer mine But if I doubt either of these two things Love and Trust vanish together so that we must both love God and believe that he loves us before we can Trust in him For though God's Goodness be Infinite and have wonderfully abounded to us yet being free in its exercise it will be presumption and folly not trust to expect any thing further from him but according to the methods of his Wisdom revealed unto us in his Promises and he hath promised his favours onely to those that love him And if we love him then shall we Trust in him both with a steady and humble Confidence Not murmuring when we want the success we expect nor growing insolent when we have it Love will not suffer us to suspect his Goodness if every event come not up to our wishes Nor censure his Wisdom though sometimes we discern not the reason of his Providence Much less shall we justle him out of his Throne and put in for our share in governing the World setting up a Counter-Deity of our own Councel and Force These are generally the two great faults of men in our Condition Not submitting to the Wisdom and Goodness of God And relying too much upon the Arm of Flesh And have we never been guilty of either of them Have we never quarrelled and grumbled if there were a ship less taken then we had predestined in our Fancy Any thing fallen out otherwise then we had set it down in the Gallery or the Coffee-house Do we not in the computation of our strength for the War make false Musters passing our own Force and Courage twice over upon the Rolls and leaving God quite out Imagine our selves sufficient Deliverers and Saviours to our selves and forgetting that God is our Strength The Rock of our Defence and the Horn of our Salvation I fear something of this may have been the Provocation which hath mov'd God to Discipline us with his own Sword the Plague at home while he saves us from that of the Enemy abroad Lately to shew us danger in an unequal Encounter and even now to check our Victory and snatch much of its fruit out of our hands when we were just grasping it and seem'd to our selves almost possess'd of a full and final Conquest And this hath he done not by animating our drooping Enemies with new Courage or strengthning their feeble hands with fresh force and activity but meerly by withholding the Breath of his Wind that we may be convinced upon how Particular and constant attendance of Providence upon us our felicity depends which if it be suspended but for one moment we presently falter if the influence of God's Power and Goodness that soul of our affairs do not exert it self in every instance immediately our nerves are relaxed and our spirits damp'd and we begin to languish without strength or motion This being duly considered I hope will engage us not onely to Love God more ardently and Trust in him more entirely and firmly but doing both to Praise and Pray to him more affectionately That so we may both now and always be safe from our Enemies I will call upon the Lord who is worthy to be praised So shall I c. I fear there is not so much of my time left as of my Subject Wherefore I will join these two Duties of Prayer and Praise in my Exhortation as the Chaldee and Greek do in the Text it self who read both of them Praising I will Pray And they cannot be more joint and united in any Expression then they are in their own natures Praise being one and the most noble Part of Prayer that which is most peculiarly and eminently the Worship of God For though when we Petition him for the Benefits we desire or against the Evils we fear we do tacitly and by consequence acknowledg both his Power and his Goodness yet do we more expresly and directy Honour and Glorifie God when our souls are pour'd out in cheerful Hallelujah's hearty and joyful celebrations of his holy Name who is the Lord Blessed for ever Whoso offereth me Thanks and Praise he (a) Ps 50.23 Honoureth me saith David and how much David thought so appears by this that all his Psalmes are so full of those oblations as in the Original they are justly called The Book of Praises And why are not our lives as full of them too We mistake our selves if we think this Duty confined to great Festivals and solemn Thanksgivings to depend upon our Calendars or the Kings Proclamations Holy Job in the depth of his sorrows and the midst of his great distresses when he had at once lost both his Wealth and his Children all the supports and comforts of this life Even upon the Dunghil (b) Job 1 21. Blesseth the Name of the Lord his God who had both given and taken away To teach us that we can never be in a condition so wretched and uncomfortable wherein we may not find somewhat for which we ought to Praise God and adore and magnifie his goodness towards us not onely although we be afflicted and cast down but even because we are so Would we allow our selves some time to meditate seriously on the incomprehensible Excellencies of the Divine Nature To consider how all God's Attributes have been employed and exercised for our Good To understand what it was at first to be created out of nothing and put into a capacity of hapiness What need we had of Mercy and how unworthy we were of it when by a foolish Disobedience we had obliged and confined our selves to endless wo and then at what a rate our Redemption was procured That by the Bloud of Christ not onely Pardon but Eternal Happiness was purchased for us Would we recollect the several instances of God's Care and Providence in the preservation of our lives and