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A51842 One hundred and ninety sermons on the hundred and nineteenth Psalm preached by the late reverend and learned Thomas Manton, D.D. ; with a perfect alphabetical table directing to the principal matters contained therein. Manton, Thomas, 1620-1677.; White, Robert, 1645-1703.; Bates, William, 1625-1699. 1681 (1681) Wing M526A; ESTC R225740 2,212,336 1,308

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upon earthly things they must have Heaven The more their affections are estranged from the one the more they are taken up about the other Col. 3. 2. Heaven and Earth are like two scales in a Ballance that which is taken from the one is put into the other 3. There is no sufficient direction how to attain this durable estate but in the word of God Without this we are but like poor pilgrims and wayfaring men in a strange Countrey not able to discern the way home A blessed state is only sufficiently revealed in the word 2 Tim. 1. 10. Life and immortality is brought to light in the Gospel The Heathens did but guess at it and had some obscure sense of an estate after this life but it is brought to light with most clearness in the Word so the way thither is only pointed out by the Word It is the Word of God makes us wise to salvation and our Line and Rule to lead us to the heavenly Canaan and therefore it concerns those that look after this durable state to consult with the Word 4. There is no understanding Gods word but by the light of the Spirit Job 32. 8. There is a spirit in man but the inspiration of the Almighty that giveth understanding Though the Word have light in it yet the spirit of man cannot move till he enlightens us with that lively light that makes way for the dominion of the truth in our hearts and conveyeth influence into our hearts This is that light David begs when he saith Hide not thy commandments from me David was not ignorant of the ten Commandments of their sound but he begs their spiritual sense and use 5. If we would have the Spirit we must ask it of God in prayer For God gives the Spirit to those that ask him Luke 11. 13. and therefore we must say as David Psal. 43. 3. O send out thy light and thy truth let them lead me let them bring me to thy holy hill to thy tabernacle 6. When we beg it of God we must do it with submission to his Soveraignty and with subscription to his Iustice Therefore doth David use this manner of speech Hide not thy Commandment from me God doth hide when he doth not open our eyes to see now the Lord may chuse whether he will do this or no for he is Soveraign and may in Justice forbear to do so because we have abused the light we have it will be hid from us unless he reveal it The mystery of Grace is wholly at Gods dispose and whosoever begs it he must refer himself to the holy and soveraign good pleasure of God who may give out and withhold his efficacious grace according to his pleasure Matth. 11. 25 26. I thank thee Lord of heaven and earth because thou hast hid these things from the wise and prudent and hast revealed them unto babes even so Father for so it seemed good in thy sight Here 's the Lords Soveraignty he doth in these things as he pleaseth therefore David submits to it And then it implies It may be just with God to leave us unto our natural blindness and suffer Satan to blind us more It is fully consistent with the honour of his Justice therefore it is said Joh●… 12. 40. He hath blinded their eyes and hardned their hearts c. that is judicially suffering them to encrease their own blindness by their sin blindness that 's their sin and the Lord may leave it as a Judgment upon them USE Here 's Direction to you that know you are but pilgrims the great thing you should seek after is the straightest way to heaven If you have a sense of Eternity and a sense of your present frailty you should look how to get home to your Countrey To this end 1. Study the word why This is your Antidote against Infection and a Cordial to cheer us in the way It is an Antidote against Infection 2 Pet. 1. 4. By the promises we escape the corruption that is in the world through lust The World is an Infectious place therefore you had need take the promises next your heart to keep your hopes alive And here 's your Cordial to keep you from fainting that which makes you to rejoyce in the midst of present afflictions Psal. 119. 54. 'T is a cordial to cheer us up to revive us in the way till we come to our journeys end This will make up losses sweeten difficulties allay your sorrows Then 't is your direction the way to lead you home Psal. 119. 105. Thy word is a light to my feet and a lanthorn to my paths We shall soon pass over this life all our care should be to pass it over well there are so many by-paths in the world and in a strange place we may soon miscarry 2. Intreat the Lord of his abundant grace to pity poor strangers who are ignorant and desire him he would not hide his word from you that you may walk in the nearest closest way wherein he would have you walk He may hide it from you as an Absolute Supreme Lord for he is bound to give his grace to none and he may do it as a just Iudg he may leave you to your own infatuations and prejudices Say Lord pity a poor stranger and pilgrim The word may be hidden two ways and take care of both 1. In point of External administration when the powerful means are wanting O it is a great mark of Gods displeasure when men are given up by their own choice to blind Guides to those that have no skill or no will to edifie or no abilities rightly to divide the Word of truth only fill the ear with clamour and noise but do not inform Conscience or move the heart by solid and powerful instruction from the Word of God 2. In point of Internal influence when the comforts and quicknings of the Spirit are withholden Lord withhold not thy Spirit from me SERMON XXI PSAL. CXIX 20. My soul breaketh for the longing that it hath unto thy judgments at all times DAVID had begged Divine illumination v. 18. The reason of his request was Because he was a stranger upon earth and a stranger may easily be bewildred Now here is a second reason why he would have God to open his eyes Because his heart was carried out with so strong an affection to the word He that asketh a thing coldly doth but bespeak his own denial But David was in good earnest when he prayeth for light it was not a dead-hearted perfunctory petition but such as came from an ardent and strong affection My soul breaketh c. In the words we have 1. The Object of David 's affection Thy judgments 2. The quality or kind of his affection 1. It was vehement My soul breaketh with longing 2. It was constant at all times By Misphalim Iudgments is meant the Word which is the infallible Rule of Gods proceeding with sinners For the Affection I shall
as the benefits that he bringeth with him He doth approve things upon good knowledg and cometh to a well setled resolution Another defect in wicked men is because the judgment is superficial and so come to nothing 'T is not full clear and ponderous 't is not a dictamen a resolute decree not ultimum dictamen the last decree all things considered and well weighed 2. God's Grace God doth never fully and spiritually convince the judgment but he doth also work upon the will to accept embrace and prosecute those good things of which it is convinced He teacheth and draweth they are distinct works but they go together therefore the one is inferred out of the other Drawn and taught of God both are necessary for as there is blindness and inadvertency in the mind so obstinacy in the will which is not to be cured by meer perswasion but by a gracious quality infused inclining the heart which by the way freeth this doctrine from exception as if all Gods works were meer moral suasion The will is renewed and changed but so as God doth it by working according to the order of Nature USE By all means look after this Divine illumination whereby your judgment may be convinced of the truth and worth of spiritual things 'T is not enough to have some general and floating notions about them or slightly to hear of them or talk of them but they must be spiritually discern'd and judg'd of for if our judgments were throughly convinced our pursuit of true happiness would be more earnest you would see sin to be the greatest mischief and grace the chiefest treasure and accordingly act God inlightning the soul doth 1. Take away carnal principles Many men can talk well but they are leavened with carnal principles as 1. That he may do as most do and yet be safe Mat. 7. 23. Many will say in that day Lord Lord have we not prophesied in thy name c. and then will I profess unto them I never knew you depart from me ye that work iniquity Prov. 11. 31. Behold the righteous shall be recompenced upon the earth much more the wicked and the sinner Exod. 32. c. 2. That he may go on in ungodliness injustice intemperance because grace hath abounded in the Gospel Tit. 2. 11 12. For the grace of God that bringeth salvation hath appeared to all men Teaching us that denying ungodliness and worldly lusts we should live soberly righteously and godlily in this present world And Luke 1. 75. That we being delivered out of the hands of our enemies might serve him without fear in holiness and righteousness before him all the days of our life 3. That he may spend his youth in pleasure and safely put off repentance till age But Eccles. 12. 1. we are bid to Remember our creator in the days of youth while the evil days come not nor the years draw nigh when thou shalt say I have no pleasure in them And Luke 12. 20. when the rich man said to his soul Soul thou hast much goods laid up for many years take thine ease eat drink and be merry God said unto him Thou fool this night shall thy soul be required of thee then whose shall those things be which thou hast provided Heb. 3. 7. Wherefore as the Holy Ghost saith To day if ye will hear his voice harden not your hearts c. Men think it is a folly to be singular and precise that 't was better when there was less preaching and less knowledg that small sins are not to be stood upon But God inlightning the soul maketh us to see the vanity and sinfulness of such thoughts 2. There is a bringing the understanding to attend and consider there is much lieth upon it Acts 16. 14. The Lord opened the heart of Lydia so that she attended unto the things which were spoken of Paul That is weighed them in her heart SERMON XXXVIII PSAL. CXIX 34. Yea I shall observe it with my whole heart I Come now to the last clause I shall observe it with my whole heart The Point is Doct. That it is not enough to keep Gods law but we must keep it with the whole heart Here I shall shew you 1. That God requireth the heart 2. The whole heart 1. God requireth the heart in his service the heart is the Christians sacrifice the fountain of good and evil and therefore should be mainly looked after without this 1. External profession is nothing most Christians have nothing for Christ but a good opinion or some outward prof●…on Iudas was a disciple but Satan entred into his heart Luke 22. 3. Ananias joyned himself to the people of God but Satan filled his heart Acts 5. 3. Simon Magus was baptized but his heart was not right with God Acts 8. 22. Here is the great defect 2. External conformity is nothing worth It is not enough that the life seem good and many good actions be performed unless the heart be purified otherwise we do with the Pharisees wash the outside of the platter Mat. 23. 25 26. when the inside is full of extortion and excess 'T is the heart God looketh after 1 Sam. 16. 7. For the Lord seeth not as man seeth for man looketh on the outward appearance but the Lord looketh on the heart Prov. 4. 23. Keep thy heart with all diligence for out of it are the issues of life Cast salt into the spring As Iehu said to Ionadab so doth God say to us 2 Kings 10. 15. Is thy heart right as my heart is with thy heart We should answer it is Men are not for obsequious compliances if not with the heart so neither is God Though thou pray with the Pharisee pay thy vows with the Harlot kiss Christ with Iudas offer sacrifice with Cain fast with Iezebel sell thine inheritance to give to the poor with Ananias and Saphira all is in vain without the heart for 't is the heart enliveneth all our duties 3. It is the heart wherein God dwelleth not in the tongue the brain unless by common gifts till he take possession of the heart all is as nothing Ephes. 3. 17. He dwelleth in our hearts by faith The bodies of believers are Temples of the Holy Ghost yet the heart will and affections of man are the chief place of his habitation wherein he resideth as in his strong Citadel and from whence he commandeth other faculties and members and without his presence there he cannot have any habitation in us the tongue cannot receive him by speaking nor the understanding by knowing nor the hands by external working Prov. 4. 23. Out of it are the issues of life 't is the forge of spirits He dwelleth not in temples made with hands Acts 7. 48. and Jer. 23. 24. Do not I fill heaven and earth saith the Lord He will dwell in thine heart and remain there if thou wilt give thy heart to him 4. If Christ have it not Satan will have it The heart of man is
dangers and those heart-cutting cares which otherwise are apt to seize upon us This a Believer can say this peace of Conscience I had in the midst of all the troubles from without Now this peace others cannot have Isa. 57. 21. There is no peace saith my God to the wicked they have not this inward tranquillity and serenity of mind their Affections are so unruly and their Consciences so unquiet they are never able to rest But how can this be none seem to be less troubled than wicked men I answer there is a difference between a dead Sea and a calm Sea a stupid Conscience they may have but not a quiet Conscience their Consciences are stupified by drenching their Souls in worldly delights and pleasures but the virtue of this Opium is soon spent their Consciences are easily awakened by the Convictions of the Word the Sting of Afflictions the Agonies of Death well then this may the composed heart say I had this peace this serenity of mind because I kept thy Precepts Secondly Next to Peace of Conscience there is Joy in the Holy Ghost this is the Fruit of Peace as Peace is the Fruit of Righteousness Rom. 7. 14. The Kingdom of God consisteth not in meat and drink but in righteousness and peace and joy in the Holy Ghost First Righteousness and then Peace and then Joy in the Holy Ghost As joy of heart and gladness is the fruit of Temporal or Civil Peace when every man may sit under his own Vine and his own Fig-tree and reap the fruit of his labour without the danger of annoyance so now when a man can enjoy himself as being reconciled to God or being at peace with him and hath tasted of the Clusters of Canaan he can rejoice in hope of the glory of God Rom. 5. 11. This is that joy in the Holy Ghost which God doth graciously dispence to those that obey his Word and hearken to the motions of his Spirit Oh how may a Believer triumph and say This I had because I kept thy Precepts Joy is the fruit of Holiness and the Oil of Grace maketh way for the Oil of Gladness Psal. 119. 14. I rejoiced in the way of thy Testimonies more than in all riches David experienced the joys of Obedience and the joys of a Crown now saith David I rejoiced in the way of thy Testimonies more than in all riches not in the Contemplation but in the Way This was a Joy that did result from practical Obedience which is more than the Possessions and Treasures of the World Many picture Religion in their fancies with a sowr and austere face and think it inviteth men to nothing but harsh and unpleasant courses Oh no it inviteth you to the highest Contentment the Creature is capable of the joy in the Holy Ghost which is unspeakable and glorious A Sensualist that runs after the dreggy delights of the Flesh is the veriest fool in the World for he can never have any true Joy 't is but frisks of Mirth while Conscience is asleep but when it is gone it leaveth a Sting behind it Thirdly Increase of Grace This is another benefit we get by keeping God's Precepts They go from strength to strength Psal. 48. 7. As they that went to the Feast at Ierusalem they went from Troop to Troop so they are brought forward in their way to Heaven God that punisheth Sin with Sin rewardeth also Grace with Grace The one is the most dreadfull Dispensation that God can use when men have gone on in a course of Sin God often punisheth one Sin with another so that they are plunged deeper and deeper every day in the gulph of prophaneness But 't is most comfortable when Godliness encreaseth upon our hands and God is still perfecting his own work in us Rom. 6. 19. As you have yielded your members servants to uncleanness and to iniquity unto iniquity so now yield your members servants to righteousness unto holiness It standeth us upon to observe the growth of Grace as we were formerly conscious of the growth of Sin shall we be more earnest to damn our selves than to save our selves there is no man but in his carnal Estate might observe how he departed from God by degrees and his heart was hardned by degrees At first he had some Light and Conscience till he sinn'd it away and turned the back upon the Ordinances which might revive it and keep it awake and then his sin betrayed him further and further into a customary course of prophaneness I say a Carnal man may trace the growth of sin in his own heart step by step and say this I had because I slighted such a check of Conscience despised such an Ordinance fell into such an enormous practice for God forsaketh none till they first forsake him so may a Child of God trace his gradual encrease in holiness this I had by hearkening to the Counsel of God at such a time against the reluctancy of my Flesh. There is no Duty recovered out of the hands of difficulty but bringeth in a considerable profit to the Soul Prov. 4. 18. The way of the just is a shining light which shineth more and more to the perfect day Look as the Day decreaseth the Night increaseth till it cometh to thick darkness so by every Sin men grow worse and worse till at last they stumble into utter darkness But the way of the just is a growing light it increaseth always into more durable resolutions and exact practice of Godliness till it comes to the High-noon of perfection David taketh notice of the fruit of Obedience Psal. 18. 24. The Lord accept of me according to the cleanness of my hands Fourthly Another benefit that we have is many gracious Experiences and Manifestations of God vouchsafed to us in the way of Obedience In the present World God and Believers are not strange to one another a man that walketh close with him will meet him at every turn Psal. 17. 15. As for me I will behold thy face in righteousness The Psalmist there preferreth his present condition before the greatest happiness of carnal men why because he had opportunity of beholding the face of God or enjoying the Comforts of his presence But how in Righteousness in a strict course of Obedience If God be a stranger to others they may thank themselves Ioh. 14. 21. He that hath my Commandments and keepeth them he it is that loveth me and he that loveth me is loved of my father and I will love him and manifest my self to him Holiness is the onely way to clear up our right to these great Comforts of the Gospel and if you would get Experience of them make Conscience of Obedience and be exact and punctual with God and you will not want your refreshments and visits of love and expressions of his grace and favour to you those sensible proofs and manifestations God will not give to us but in a way of Obedience so the Promise runneth He
nor forsake thee And 1 Cor. 10. 13. God is faithful who will not suffer you to be tempted above that you are able to bear but will with the temptation also make a way to escape that you may be able to bear it To the eye of sense we are lost and gone and have no helper but God is never wholly gone Hagar set herself over against the Lad would not go too far from him God seems to throw us away but he keeps himself within sight he will not totally or finally forsake us 6. That God's usual way is by Contraries The Gospel-way to save is to lose Ioh. 16. 25. Mat. 16. 25. He that will save his life shall lose it and whosoever shall lose his life for my sake shall find it Ioseph was made a Slave that he may be made Governor of Egypt His Brethren sell him that they may worship him And he is cast into Prison that he may be preferred at Court Thus God by Shame bringeth to Honour by Misery to Happiness by Sorrow to Comfort and by Death to Life to teach us to hope against hope Rom. 4. 18. and to trust in him though he kill us Job 13. 15. For Death is ours as well as other things If Calamities shorten our lives they hasten our glory Persecution is the nearest way to Heaven in the eye of Faith and the Sword of the Enemy is but the Key to open the Prison doors and let out the Soul which hath long desired to be with Christ. 7. That 't is better to suffer than to sin In suffering the offence is done to us in sinning 't is done to God The evil of suffering is but for a moment the evil of sin for ever In suffering we lose the favor of men in sinning we hazard the favor of God Suffering bringeth inconveniency upon the Body but sinning upon the Soul The sinful estate is far worse than the afflicted Heb. 12. 28. The evil of Sufferings for the present the evil of Sin for afterwards 8. That Holiness Faith Meekness and Patience are better Treasures than any the world can take from us Certainly a Christian is to reckon himself by the inward man if he hath an healthy Soul he may the better dispense with a sickly Body 3d Epist. Iohn 2. If the inward man be renewed 2 Cor. 4. 16. If sore Troubles discover reality of Grace Sound and saving Faith discovered to the Soul is better worth than the worlds best gold 1 Pet. 1. 9. If carnal sense were not quickest and greatest we would judge so and not look to the sharpness of the affliction but to the improvement of it If the bitter water be made sweet if you be more godly wise and religious 't is enough Heb. 12. 11. No affliction for the present seemeth joyous but grievous nevertheless afterwards it yieldeth the peaceable fruit of righteousness to them that are exercised thereby If the loss of worldly comforts make us apply our selves to heavenly consolations if being disburdened of worldly incumbrances we go on in our way of serving God with more liberty and delight and when our dangers are greatest we draw near to God and adhere to him most closely and being persuaded of his love vigilancy and power with these and such kind of thoughts will a man be stocked who is with seriousness and delight conversant in the Scriptures and so will go on undisturbed in the course of his obedience 2 These things must be improved by meditation so saith David I will meditate on thy precepts 1. Sleepy Reason is unuseful to us and Truths lie hid in the heart without any efficacy or power till improved by deep serious and pressing thoughts Non-attendency is the bane of the world Mat. 13. 19. When any one heareth the word of the kingdom and understandeth it not then cometh the wicked one and catcheth away that which was sown in his heart Those invited to the Wedding Mat. 22. 5. made light of it Men will not suffer their minds so long to dwell upon holy things as to procure a good esteem of them then in seeing they see not and in hearing hear not as when you tell a man of a business whose mind is taken up about other things A sudden carrying a Candle thorough a Room giveth us not so full a survey of the Object as when you stand awhile beholding it A steady contemplation is a great advantage Attending is the cause of believing when we grow serious Acts 16. 14. Whose heart the Lord opened that she attended to the things spoken by Paul Acts 17. 11. And these were more noble than they of Thessalonica in that they received the word with all readiness of mind If People would often return to cosinder they would not be hardned in sin Psal. 4. 4. Commune with your own heart upon your beds Hagg. 1. 5. Now therefore thus saith the Lord of hosts consider your ways God's complaint was They would not consider his ways Job 34. 27. Isa. 1. 3. My people doth not consider Running thoughts never work upon us nor leave any durable impression like the glance of a Sun-beam or a Wave When the Soul is besieged by a constant battery of Truths it yieldeth but a mind scattered upon impertinent Vanities groweth not up to any considerable strength of faith or joy or comfort or holiness 2. God will not be served by the bie and at hap-hazard David taketh a resolution to study his duty The more deliberate our resolutions are the better Psal. 119. 59. I thought on my ways and turned my feet unto thy testimonies We shall never stumble upon a good course by chance Isa. 56. 4. And choose the things that please me Not take them upon some sudden motion but after mature and serious deliberation 3. To divert the mind from other things Afflictions and Troubles stir up a multitude of thoughts in us Psal. 94. 19. In the multitude of my thoughts Sometimes self-oppressing thoughts carking thoughts envious thoughts and repining at God's Providence the object of our trouble is ever before us Now there is no way to get rid of these but by exercising them upon better things Troubles make us concerned about matters of weight they employ our minds usefully which before were scattered to impertinent vanities Psal. 39. 3. My heart was hot within me whilest I was musing the fire burned That our minds may not be a prey to inordinate passions we pore upon the trouble and the heart is heated like an Oven stopped up and therefore keep the mind well employed 4. Frequent meditation keepeth our principles in view and memory We are apt to forget in our sorrows Heb. 12. 5. And ye have forgotten the consolation 'T is not ready at hand to support us in the time of Trouble A seasonable remembrance of Truths is a great relief to the Soul 't is the Spirit 's office 3 That Afflictions and Molestations have a great tendency and subserviency to promote and advance these
that sets it forth thus By touching the unclean the man became unclean under the Law but by touching the clean the man was not purified The Conversation of the wicked hath more power to corrupt the good than the Conversation of the vertuous and holy to correct the lewd The Prophet tells us Isai. 6. 5. I am a man of unclean lips and I dwell in the midst of a people of unclean lips We soon encrease our pollution by living among them Iosephus relates That Agrippa at first was a Lover of Vertue and of his Countrey that he stood for the liberty of the people of the Jews but by converseing with Caligula the Roman Emperour being intimate and familiar with him learned his manners and as he affected Divine honours so Agrippa too and God smites him with Lice Acts 12. In infected places we get a Disease though we feel it not presently so secretly our hearts are tainted by example As a man that walks in the Sun unawares before he thinks of it his Countenance is tann'd so our hearts are defiled Prov. 22. 24. Make no friendship with an angry man and with a furious man thou shalt not go The furies of passion are so uncomely and so displeasing that a man would think that he should not take infection there that the sight should rather deterre than invite him but insensibly we learn their ways when we make friendship with furious and angry men for saith Solomon in the next Verse Lest thou learn his ways and get a snare to thy soul. Melancthon saith By converse familiarly with the wicked insensibly we grow wicked He that toucheth Pitch is defiled and a little Leven leveneth the whole Lump 1 Cor. 5. 6. 2. They will molest and disturb us in the exercise of godliness by their scoffs and persecutions you can never be acceptable to them if you live as you should Why For you will upbraid their Consciences by your lives dart conviction and reproofs into them As Noah condemned the World Heb. 11. 7. Christ saith The world hates because I testifie of it that the works thereof are evil Iohn 7. 7. You that live up to your profession and do not run into the same excess of riot with others your estrangement of course revives guilt upon their Conscience and therefore not to follow them in all things will be distasteful As sore eyes cannot endure the light so they cannot endure you if you are faithful to God Diversity of humours cannot long agree together You must either be like them or be hated by them You must either jump with them in all things or expect a greater trouble Now there is less danger in the flight than fight Now a total withdrawment is better than a partial compliance 3. They will seek to pervert us by carnal suggestions and counsels as the Psalmist speaks Psal. 1. 1. Blessed is the man that walketh not in the counsel of the ungodly Like troublesome Flies they will always be buzzing about us to take share and lot with them and importunate Suitors will prevail at length Prov. 1. 10 15. the inticings of the wicked are spoken of My Son if Sinners entice thee consent thou not Walk not thou in the way with them refrain thy foot from their path c. 4. Familiarity with them will be a blemish and scandal upon your good name Every Mans Company declares what he is Birds of a sort flock together So that if they wrong not the Conscience they wound the Reputation and we are polluted and defiled by being of the same Society which a Christian should be tender of When a scandalous sin breaketh out in the Church the blot lies upon all The Apostle tells us in Heb. 12. 15. When any root of bitterness springs up thereby many are defiled many are defiled not only by the contagion of the example but the imputation of the fault Much more in private and intimate familiarity doth this hold good A carnal man delights in such as are like him and run with him in the same folly and sin But when a man is changed he will change his Company Psal. 119. 53. I am a Companion of all them that fear thee and of them that keep thy Precepts That is one thing David avoucheth for his innocency One wicked man falls in with another as the Tenon doth into the Mortise and their spirits suit frequently Psal. 60. 18. When thou sawest a thief then thou consentedst with him and hast been partaker with adulterers There is no such outward sign to discover our temper 5. If we have any love for God and zeal for his Glory their Company must needs be grievous and offensive to us for how can they that love God delight in their Company that are always grieving the spirit of God with unsavoury Speeches and a vain Conversation Psal. 139. 21. Do not I hate them O Lord that hate thee and am not I grieved with those that rise up against thee I hate them with perfect hatred I count them mine enemies So 2 Pet. 2. 8. Lot 's righteous soul was grieved from day to day It is not only said his righteous soul was vexed which is passive but he is said to vex himself at their wickedness which is an active word Injuries done to God should touch us no less nearly than injuries done to our selves it will be a continual grief and vexation of heart to us Well then how can their company be acceptable to us unless we have a mind to vex and bring trouble upon our selves 6. Our familiarity with them may be a means to harden them in their sin and our withdrawing a means to humble them 2 Thess. 3. 6 14. Withdraw your selves from every Brother that walketh disorderly And if any man obey not our word by this Epistle note that man and have no company with him that he may be ashamed While you accompany freely with them you seem tacitely to approve their doing and make them more obstinate in their way An Alien from the Faith may be melted with kindness but a Brother that walketh disorderly is more ashamed if you withdraw from him whereas otherwise you seem to shew approbation He that biddeth him God speed is partaker of his evil deeds 2 Iohn 10 11. as he seemeth to countenance them in their damnable errors But now when a man lives as an Out-cast from God's people this may work upon his heart Society with Gods Children is not only a duty but a priviledge by the loss of this priviledge we are to make them sensible of the evil course wherein they are 7. The great Judgements that follow evil Company therefore we must not voluntarily cry up a Confederacy with them Rev. 18. 4. Come out of her my people that ye be not partakers of her sins and that ye receive not of her plagues In conversing with the wicked there is a double danger infection of sin and infliction of punishment Prov. 13. 20. A Companion
peace shall bruise Satan under your feet shortly 'T is but a little while and we shall receive the Crown and triumph over all our enemies III. Why the Saints should deprecate this evil 1. Because there is sin still in us all 'T is a bosome enemy that is born and bred with us and therefore it will soon get the advantage of Grace if it be not watched and resisted As Nettles and Weeds that are kindly to the Soil will soon choke Flowers and better Herbs that are planted by care and grow not of their own accord when they are neglected and not continually rooted out We cannot get rid of this cursed Inmate till this outer Tabernacle be dissolved and this House of Clay crumbled into dust Our old nature is so inclinable to this slavery that if God substract his Grace what shall we do 2 It is not only in us but always working and striving for the mastery it is not as other things which as they grow in age are more quiet and tame but Rom. 7. 8. Sin wrought in me all manner of concupiscence the Spirit that dwelleth in us lusteth to envy It is not a sleepy but a working stirring principle If it were a dull and unactive habit the danger were not so great but it is always exercising and putting forth it self and seeking to gain an interest in our affections and a Command over all our actions and therefore unless we do our part to keep it under we shall soon revert to our old slavery Sin must be kept under as a Slave or else it will be above as a Tyrant and domineer Once more The more it acts the more strength it gets as all habits are encreased by action for when we have once yielded we are ready to yield again Therefore any one sin let alone yea that which we least suspect may bring us into subjection and captivity to the Law of sin Rom. 7. 23. It doth not only make us flexible and yielding to temptations but it doth urge and impel us thereunto Again This bondage is daily encreasing and more hard to be broken for by multiplied acts a custome creepeth upon us which is another Nature And that which might be remedied at first groweth more difficult Diseases looked to at first are more easie to be cured whereas otherwise they grow desperate So sins before hardned into a custome before they bring us under the power of any Creature or Comfort which we affect 2 Cor. 6. 12. For then afterwards it cometh to a compleat dominion and slavery so that if a man would he cannot help it It behoveth then every Child of God to do his part that sin may not reign for where care is not taken it certainly will reign Use. To reprove the security and carelesness of many David suspected himself else he would never have made this prayer to God Lord keep me Let not any iniquity have dominion over me And we should all do so that would be safe Prov. 28. 14. Happy is the man that feareth alway but he that hardneth his heart shall fall into mischief A constant watchfulness and holy jealousie and self-suspicion will be no burthen to you but a blessing Sin deceiveth us into hardness of heart for want of taking heed Many that are secure do not consider their danger and therefore they are not so careful to watch over themselves nor so humble as to implore the Divine assistance because they do not consider how soon they may be transported by a naughty heart and brought under the power and reign of sin Surely were we as sensible of the danger of the inward man as we are of the outward we would resist the first motions and not nourish and foster a temptation as we do The Saints do not tarry till the dead blow cometh but resist the first strokes of sin they do not tarry till it pines to death but resist the first inclinations An evil inclination if it be cherished and gratified gets ground the longer we let it alone the harder will our conflict be for sin secureth its interest by degrees 2. It sheweth the fearful estate of them that lye under the dominion of sin But who will owne it First It is certain that all men in their natural estate are in this condition Sin doth reign where there is no principle of Grace set up against it The Throne is always filled Mans heart cannot lye empty and void If Grace doth not reign sin reigneth Natural men are under the power of darkness Acts 28. 18. and Col. 1. 13. living in a peaceable subjection to sin till Christ come to trouble it all is quiet Wind and Tide go together Secondly It appeareth by your course Many will say There is not a just man on earth that doth good and sinneth not You are Sinners as well as we Answ. There is a difference though there be not a good man upon earth that sinneth not Eccl. 7. 20. yet there is a difference Some have not the spot of Gods Children Deut. 32. 5. There is a difference between sins Levit. 23. 24 27. God gave the Priest under the Law direction how to put a difference between leprous persons So still there is a great deal of difference between numbness and death and between dimness of sight and blindness want of sense and want of life between stumbling into a Ditch and throwing our selves headlong into an Ocean And so there is a difference between infirmities and iniquities a failing out of ignorance and weakness or some powerful temptation and a running headlong into all ungodliness Gods Children have their failings but a burning desire to be freed from them Though others wallow in their sin without any care of a remedy In the one there is a failing in point of Duty in the other a Rebellion Take Iudas and Peter both sinned against their Master the one denied the other betrayed him the one denied him out of fear the other betrayed him out of covetousness and greediness of gain the one plotted his death the other was surprized on a sudden There is a great deal of difference between purpose and a surprize the one wept bitterly the other is given up to a raging despair David did not make a trade of Adultery and bathe himself in filthy lusts Noah was drunk but not knowing the power of the juice of the Grape They dare not lye in this estate but seek to get out by repentance Thirdly Some things may beget caution and move you to suspect your selves that is when your souls readily comply with the temptation you are at sins beck If it saith Go you go if it saith Come you come It is of great concernment to know what goes to the determining a mans condition to know at whose beck he is whether he is at the Fleshes or Spirits beck Psal. 103. 20. The Godly are described that they hearken unto the voice of his Word so the wicked are those that hearken to the voice
and sinless Purity for so it is wholly unsuitable to them what should a carnal sensual heart do with heaven or how should they desire it that hate the Company of God the Communion of Saints the Image of God God maketh meet Col. 1. 12. Giving thanks to the Father who hath made us meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the saints in light There is jus haereditarium jus aptitudinale though they do not desire to be saved for it they would love holiness more Partly because those conceits that they have of the adjuncts of Salvation and that happiness and personal Contentment which results to them they do not practically esteem it as to value it above the delights of the flesh and the Vanities of the World and they do not think it worthy the pursuit but for the interests of the bodily Life cast off all care of it Heb. 12. 16. As Esau who for one morsel of meat sold his birthright Mar. 22. 5. They made light of it and went their wayes one to his Farm another to his Merchandise Use. I. It informeth us of two things 1. That wicked Men are the Authors of their own Ruine Salvation doth not fly from them but they fly from it they are far from the Law and therefore is Salvation far from them They will not take the course to be saved for they care not for God and his Statutes it is but just ut qui male vivit male pereat that they which despise Salvation should never see it 2. That the wicked buy the pleasures of sin at a dear rate since they defraud their own Souls of Salvation thereby Their loss you have in the Text Salvation is far from them and their gain is nothing but a little Temporal satisfaction and are these things worthy to be compared what is it maketh you wicked but the ease and sloth of the Flesh and the love of some carnal delight And are you contented to Perish for this Whoredom from God Use. II. Let it Exhort us to believe and improve this Truth for if men did surely believe it there would not be so many wicked men as there are neither would they dare to lye in sin as long as they do O! consider if the wicked have no part nor portion in the Salvation offered nor any jot of Gods Favour belonging to them the wicked should not flatter themselves with presumptuous hopes but break off their sins by Repentance 1. Gods Mercy will not help you though he be a God of Salvation yet he will not save the impenitent and such as go on still in their Trespasses Psal. 68. 19 20 21. Blessed be the Lord who daily loadeth us with benefits even the God of our salvation Selah He that is our God is the God of salvation and unto God the Lord belong the issues from death But God shall wound the head of his Enemies and the hairy scalp of such an one as goeth on still in his Trespasses You must not fancy a God all honey and sweetness and that his Mercy should be exercised to the wrong of his Justice the Lord will not spare the abusers of Grace whoever he spareth Deut. 29. 19 20. And it shall come to pass when he heareth the words of this curse that if he bless himself in his heart saying I shall have peace though I walk in the imagination of my heart to add drunkenness to thirst the Lord will not spare him but then the anger of the Lord and his Iealousie shall smoke against that man and all the curses that are written in this book shall lye upon him and the Lord shall blot out his name from under Heaven 2. No Doctrine preached in the Church will bear you out not Law for that discovereth both Sin and the Curse Convinceth of sin Rom. 3. 20. By the Law is the knowledge of sin what is sin and who is the sinner that bindeth you over to the curse Gal. 3. 10. For as many as are of the law are under the curse for it is written Cursed is every one that continneth not in all things which are written in the book of the law to do them The Gospel that sheweth a Remedy against sin but upon Gods Terms that first with broken hearts we sue out our Pardon 1 Ioh. 1. 9. If we confess our sins he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrightcousness Sin must be condemned confessed before pardoned And then that in the way of Holiness we should seek Salvation and Eternal Life The Way and End must not be separated Rom. 6. 22. We must have our fruit unto holiness if we would have our end to be eternal life The pure and undefiled have only part in this salvation but it is far from the wicked Christ disclaims the unholy and unsanctified Mar. 7. 23. Depart from me ye that work iniquity You may as well expect the way to the West should bring you Eastward as to walk in the wayes of sin and hope to come to Heaven at last to think God will save us and suffer us to walk in our own ways or that this undefiled Inheritance shall be bestowed on dirty sinners this had been pleasing to flesh and blood but it is the Devils Covenant not Gods that Article you shall be saved and yet live in your sins is foisted in by Satan that false Deceiver to flatter men with vain Conceits 3. Do you hope of Repentance hereafter But in the mean time ye run a desperate hazard to leave the Soul at pawn in Satans hands it is not easie work to get it out again who would Poison himself upon a presumption that before it cometh to his heart he shall meet with an Antidote Judicial hardness is layed on them that withstand seasons of Grace Isa. 55. 6. Seek ye the Lord while he may be found call ye upon him while he is near Prov. 1. 24 25 26. Because I have called and ye refused I have stretched out my hand and no man regarded but ye have set at nought all my counsels and would none of my reproofs I also will laugh at your calamity I will mock when your fear cometh None of those men that were bidden shall taste of my supper Luk. 14. 24. 4. The Heart is more hardened the longer you continue in this Course Heb. 3. 13. But exhort one another daily while it is called to day lest any of you be hardened through the deceitfulness of sin Inveterate Diseases are seldom cured a tree that hath long stood and begun to wither is unfit to be Transplanted Ier. 13. 23. Can the Ethiopian change his skin or the Leopard his spots then may ye also do good that are accustomed to do evil 5. There is a stint and measure as to Nations Gen. 15. 16. The iniquity of the Ammorites is not yet full Persons Vessels of Mercy Vessels of Dishonour Rom. 9. 22 23. What if God willing to shew his
Psal. 19. 12. Who can understand his errors This is not meant here of every failing and slip every sin of ignorance and incogitancy no nor every act of rebellion and perversness of affection which may be found in the children of God Though there be a pride in all sins against knowledg and light that kind of sinning is interpretatively a confronting of God a despising of his commandments as David is said to do 2 Sam. 12. 9. pro hic nunc for the time the will of the creature is set up against the Creator Yet this is not the erring here spoken of 2. There 's an erring out of Obstinacy impenitency and habitual contempt of the Law-giver This is spoken of Psal. 95. 10. It is a people that do err in their hearts To err in mind is bad to err out of Ignorance but it is a people that stubbornly refuse to walk in the ways God hath enjoined them Some err out of simple nescience ignorance or mistake or else through the cloud with which some present temptation overcasts the mind these err in their minds but others err in their hearts that care not for or do not desire to hear of their duty to God A man that erreth out of ignorance can say Lord I know not but those that err in their heart they say We desire not the knowledg of thy ways Job 22. 14. they do not only fall into sin but love to continue in it The Apostle speaks of ungodly deeds ungodlily committed Jude 15. The matter of sin is not so much to be regarded as the manner with what heart it is done ungodlily committed with contempt of God Now such contemners of God and his Law are here described as all obstinate and impenitent sinners are Secondly We must distinguish of Pride which is either Moral or Spiritual 1. Moral pride is an over-high conceit of our selves or our own excellencies discovered by our disdain and contempt of others So it is said of Nebuchadnezzar his heart was lifted up This is that pride that is spoken of 1 Pet. 5. 5. God resisteth the proud There should be a mutual condescension between men for God resisteth the proud that is those that are lifted up above others 2. Spiritual pride that 's disobedience and impenitency which is discovered by a neglect of God and contempt of his Law and that pride is often so taken appeareth by these Scriptures Mal. 4. 1. The day of the Lord shall burn as an oven and all the proud yea and all that do wickedly shall be stubble Mark they that do wickedly and the proud are made synonymous expressions So Neh. 9. 16. But they and our fathers dealt proudly and hardned their necks and hearkened not to thy commandments Their obstinacy in sin or unsubjection to God is made to be pride So Ieremiah when he gives the people good counsel to prevent ensuing judgments Hear ye give ear be not proud Jer. 13. 15. that is do not obstinately refuse to comply with Gods will And afterward v. 17. My soul shall weep sore for your pride So that unhumbled sinners are guilty of this spiritual pride of contempt of God himself Having opened these things that by erring is meant not out of frailty but by obstinacy That by pride is not meant that moral pride by which we contemn others but that spiritual pride when our hearts are unhumbled and unsubdued to God My work is now to prove 1. That Obstinacy and Impenitency is Pride 2. That it is the worst sort of pride First That there is pride in Impenitency and Obstinacy in a course of sin why 1. Because they neglect God To slight a Superior and not to give him due respect hath ever been accounted pride Surely then this is pride with a witness to neglect God who is over all blessed for ever Psal. 10. 4. The wicked through the pride of his countenance will not seek after God That is of his heart bewrayed by his countenance he will not seek after God and God is not in all his thoughts that is scarce troubled with such a thought of what will please or displease God he doth not think it necessary or worth the time to look after 2. They oppose God and set themselves as parties against him James 4. 6. God resisteth the proud God standeth in a posture of war against the proud The word implies that every proud man is in battel-array or posture of war against God So every impenitent person sethimself against God The quarrel between God and him is who shall stoop whose will shall stand whether God shall serve or they Isa. 43. 24. You have made me to serve with your sins and wearied me with your iniquities Indeed they do not only oppose him but they would depose him or put him out of the Throne while they would subject Gods will to their own He that would be at his own dispose and do what pleaseth him is a God to himself 3. In all this opposition they slight God and despise 1. His Authority in making he Law 2. His Power and Greatness in making good the sanction of the Law 1. They despise the Authority of God in the Law it self When men will set up their own will in a contradiction to God it is a mighty dishonour to God 2 Sam. 12. 9. Wherefore hast thou despised the commandment of the Lord Every sin that is committed slights the Law that forbids it as if it were not to be stood upon it is no matter what God saith to the contrary There is fearing the commandment and despising the commandment Fearing the Commandment that 's the effect of a wise heart Prov. 13. 13. He that feareth the commandment shall be rewarded If God interpose it is more than if there were an Angel in the way with a flaming sword there 's a commandment in the way he fears it his way is hedged up he dares not go on But now impenitency that slights the commandment A sinner dares do that which an Angel durst not do It is said of Michael the Archangel Jude 9. That he durst not bring a railing accusation he had not the boldness Thus they despise the Authority of God in the Law 2. They despise the Power of God in the sanction of the Law when they will run the hazard of those sad threatnings as if they were a vain scare-crow as if they could make good their cause against God 1 Cor. 10. 22. Do we provoke the Lord to jealousie are we stronger than he Sinning is an entring the lists with God as if they could carry their Cause against him and therefore one great cure of hardness of heart and impenitency is seriously to meditate upon Gods power Deut. 10. 16 17. Circumcise therefore the foreskin of your heart and be no more stiff-necked why For the Lord your God is a God of gods and Lord of lords a great God a mighty and terrible Do you know what God is and will you contend
shall a poor sinner do This is the duty exacted 2. The penalty that shall be inflicted Cursed is every one that continueth not in the words of this law to do it The Law hath a mouth that speaketh terrible things Cursed it is but one word but it may be spread abroad into very large considerations In one place it is said The Lord will not spare him All the curses that are written in this book of this law shall light upon him Deut. 29. 20. The book of the Law is full of curses and all together they show you what is the portion of an impenitent sinner In another place it is said Every curse and every plague which is not written in the book of this law will the Lord bring upon thee Deut. 28. 61. Mark though it be not specified in the Law God hath threatned sundty sorts of punishments yet he hath many plagues in store which are not committed to record or writing therefore whatever is written or unwritten revealed in the word or dispensed in Providence by way of plague and misery it is but the interpretation of this one word Cursed is he that continueth not c. However because particulars are most affective I will name some parts of the Curse 1. This is one part of the cursed condition of a sinner that is under the Law that the knowledg of his duty doth but the more irritate corruption Rom. 7. 9. The commandment came and sin revived The more we understand of the necessity of our subjection to God the more is the soul opposite to God Sin takes occasion by the Commandment as oppositions do more exasperate and enrage a waspish spirit 2. This exaction of duty doth either terrifie or stupifie the conscience he that escapeth the one suffereth the other Either men are terrified indeed all sinners are liable to it the conscience of a sinner is a sore place and the Apostle saith they are liable to bondage all their days Heb. 2. 14. as Belshazzar trembled to see the hand-writing upon the wall and Felix trembled to hear of Judgment to come so a carnal man is afraid to think of his condition and some are actually under horror and wherever they go as the Devils do they carry their own hell about them Or if conscience be not terrified then it is stupified they grow sensless of their misery and are past feeling Eph. 4. 19. and that 's a very sad estate and dangerous temper of soul when men have outgrown all feelings of conscience and worn out the prints of conviction These are the two extremes that all Christless persons are incident unto 3. There 's a curse upon all that a man hath as long as he continues in his rebellion and obstinacy against God He is cursed in his basket and store in his going out and coming in c. Deut. 28. 15 16 17. A man is cursed in his Table that becomes a snare his afflictions are but beginnings of sorrows It is a miserable thing to lye in such an estate If the curse do not break out so visibly sensibly it is because now it is the day of Gods patience and he waits for our return But mark Gods spiritual providence is the more dreadful when God rains snares upon men all the seeming-comforts which they have do but harden them in an evil course and hold them the faster in the bonds of iniquity 4. There 's a curse upon all he doth his duties are lost his prayers are turned into sin his hearing is the savour of daath unto death whilst he remaineth in his impenitency It is said Prov. 21. 27. The sacrifice of the wicked is abomination how much more when he bringeth it with a wicked mind Though he should come in the best manner he can with his flocks and herds yet all will be to no purpose it is an abomination to God 5. Impenitency binds over a man body and soul to everlasting torment in time it will come to that Go ye cursed c. Mat. 25. 41. They are only continued until they have filled up their measure and are ripened for hell and then they lye eternally under the wrath of God Look as it is sweet to hear Come ye blessed c. so dreadful in that day to hear Go ye cursed c. Thus are the proud cursed that is obstinate impenitent sinners while they stand off from God Secondly Let me examine upon what score they are cursed 1. Every man by Nature is under the Curse for until they are in Christ they are under Adams Covenant and Adams Covenant will yield no blessing to the fallen creature Gal. 3. 10. As many as are under the works of the Law are under the curse c. Mark every man that remains under the Law that hath not gotten an interest in Christ the curse of the first Covenant remains upon him and accordingly at the last day he shall have judgment without mercy he shall be judged according to the terms of that Covenant for there are but two states under the Law or under Grace therefore while they are in a state of Nature they must needs be under wrath So John 3. 18. He that believeth not is condemned already that is in the sentence of the Law there is a curse gone out against him the man is gone lost condemned already 2. This curse abideth upon us until we believe in Christ. The Sentence of the Law is not repealed John 3. 36. He that believeth not the wrath of God abideth on him Gal. 3. 13. Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the Law being made a curse for us c. 3. When Christ is tendered and finally refused then the sentence of the Law is ratified in the Gospel or the Court of mercy A Court of Chancery God hath set up in the Gospel for penitent sinners but then it follows This is the condemnation that light is come into the world and men choose darkness c. When God shall tender men better conditions by Christ and they turn their backs upon it then is this curse confirmed USE 1. Consider how matters stand between God and us examine how it is with you Here let me lay down these propositions by way of trial 1. Every man by nature is in a cursed condition Eph. 2. 3. every man is liable to Adam's forfeiture and breach the elect children of God as well as others are liable to the curse 2. There is no way to escape this curse but by flying to Christ for refuge Heb. 6. 18. As a man would flye from the Avenger of blood so should we flye from the curse of the Law that is at our heels Wrath is abroad seeking out sinners now saith the Apostle O that I might be found in him 3. A sense of this benefit we have by Christ will necessarily beget an unfeigned love to him else we can have no evidence but the curse doth still remain and therefore it is said 1 Cor. 16.
of the wicked which forsake thy Law THE Man of God in the former Verse had shewed what Comfort he took in remembring God's Judgments of old meaning thereby his Righteous Dispensations in delivering the Godly and punishing the Wicked he now sheweth that seeing God's horrible Judgments on the Wicked he was seized and stricken with a very great fear In the Words observe 1. A great Passion described 2. The Cause of it assigned 1. A great Passion described Horrour hath taken hold on me The Word for Horrour signifieth also a Tempest or Storm Translations vary some reade it as Iunius a Storm overtaking me Ainsworth a burning Horrour hath seized me and expoundeth it a Storm of Terrour and Dismay The Septuagint 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 faintness and dejection of mind hath possessed me our old Translation I am horribly afraid all Translations as well as the Original word imply a great trouble of mind and a vehement Commotion like a Storm it was matter of disquiet and trembling to David 2. What is the matter the Reason is given in the latter Clause because of the wicked which forsake thy Law Now this Reason may be supposed to be 1. Either because of the Storm of Trouble raised by them or Persecution from them and so it would note the outragiousness of those who have cast off the Yoke all fear of God and respect to his Law and so also the imbecillity and weakness of the Saints who are not able to stand against violent Evils and assaults of Temptation But this is not so consistent with David's Constancy and Comfort asserted in the former Verses 2. Because of the Detriment and Loss which might accrue to the Publick they bring on common Judgments and Calamities It is a Iewish Proverb that two dry Sticks will set a green one afire One sinner destroyeth much good Eccl. 9. 18. much more Mercy Now the Godly which believe God's Word are troubled when they see Wickedness increaseth they know this will turn to loss and ruine in the issue therefore it causeth a grievous Horrour and Indignation to seize upon them for they have a tender and publick Spirit 3. Besides the common Calamities which they might bring upon others the sore Punishment which they would bring upon themselves was an horrour to him which sheweth a Charitable Affection to Enemies The Punishment which had not as yet seized upon them nor did they think of it yet being prepared for their Wickedness by the Justice of God was a grief and trouble to David as it is to all good Men to see the Wicked run on to their own Destruction and Condemnation These two last Senses I prefer Doctr. It argueth a good Spirit to be grieved to see God's Laws broken and to be stricken with fear because of those Iudgments which come from God by reason of the wickedness of the wicked The Reasons are 1. Here is matter of great Commotion of Spirit to any attentive and serious Beholder for the Cause assigned in the Text is because they forsake thy Law There are two things in the Law the Precept and the Sanction by Penalties and Rewards Now they that forsake the Law violate the Precept and slight the Sanction and so two things grieve the Godly their Sin and their Punishment How grievously they sin and what grievous Punishments they may expect 1. That the Law is violated that they should forsake God and all thoughts of Obedience to him and so make slight of his Law Sin is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Iohn 3. 4. the Transgression of the Law a contempt of God's Authority if we consider the intrinsick evil of Sin we shall see that it is not a small thing but an horrible Evil in it self a thing not to be laughed at but feared whether our own or others 1. There is Folly in it as it is a Deviation from the best Rule which the Divine Wisedom hath set unto us If we should look upon the Law of God as a bare Direction or Counsel given us by one that is wiser then we it is a Contempt of the Wisedom of God as if he knew not how to govern the World and what is good and meet for Man so much as he himself and so a poor Worm is exalted above God Micah 6. 8. He hath shewed thee O Man what is good Now shall we slight his Direction and in effect say our own Way is better Reason requireth that they who cannot choose for themselves should obey their Guides and since they are not wise for themselves content themselves with the Wisedom of others who see farther then they do as Elymas the Sorcerer when he was struck blind sought about for some body to leade him by the hand Acts 13. 11. can a blind man feel out his way better then another who hath eyes to choose it for him God is wiser then we and all who would not contemn their Creatour should think so He hath reduced the sum of our Duty into an holy Law now for us after all this to run of our heads and to consult with our foolish Lusts and the Suggestions of the Devil who is our worst Enemy is extreame Folly and Madness and so doth every one who breaketh the Laws of God 2. Laws are not onely to direct but have a binding Power and Force from the Authority of the Law-giver God doth not onely give us Counsel as a Friend but commandeth us as a Sovereign and so the second Notion whereby the evil of Sin is set forth is that of Disobedience and Rebellion and so it is a great Injury done to God because it is a Depretiation and Contempt of his Authority As Pharaoh said Exod. 5. 2. Who is the Lord that I should obey his voice or those Rebels Psalm 12. 4. Our Tongues are our own who is Lord over us We will speak and think and doe what we please and own no Law but our own Lusts. Now though Sinners do not say so in so many direct and formal Words yet this is the Interpretation of their sinfull Actions Whenever they sin they despise the Law which forbiddeth that Sin and so by consequence the Authority of him that made it 2 Sam. 12. 9 10. Wherefore hast thou sinned in despising the Commandment Tush I will doe it it is no matter for the Law of God that standeth in the way is the Language of the Corrupt and Obstinate heart Now no man can endure to have his Will crossed by an Inferiour and will God take it at their hands and therefore the Children of God who have a great Reverence of God's Authority when they see it so openly violated and contemned are filled with Horrour Will not God be tender of his Power and Sovereignty will he see his Authority so lightly esteemed and take no notice of it 3. It is shamefull Ingratitude Man is God's beneficiary from whom he hath received Life and Being and all things and therefore is bound to love him and serve
which they will bring upon themselves should afflict us Thus the Apostle Phil. 3. 18 19. Of whom I have told you often and now tell you weeping that they are enemies to the Cross of Christ whose end is destruction To see Men goe by droves to Hell it should work on our Bowels if this brought Christ out of Heaven to dye for Sinners surely this should make us sadly resent their Condition 4. This produceth good Effects it is a disposition of great Use and Profit to us 1. It deterreth us from sinning our selves and so we are kept from being tainted with the Contagion of evil Examples for what we mourn for in others we will not commit our selves The Heart is made more averse from Sin every day by this Practice whereas those that take Pleasure in the Sins of others do the same things Rom. 1. 32. consent with them to dishonour God and so howle among the Wolves as the Latin Proverb is but when this is a Trouble to us it maketh us avoid their Example notwithstanding Terrours and Allurements to the contrary Terrours from the angry World who cannot endure that any should part Company and Allurements from our commodious living among the Offenders Thus Lot scaped in Sodom because his righteous Soul was vexed and Noah was upright in his generation because he reproved the Deeds of the Wicked 2. When we see their Punishment in their Sin and fear a Storm when the Clouds are a gathering it puts us upon Mourning and Humiliation which is a necessary Duty in evil times Ier. 13. 17. If you will not hear my Soul shall weep in secret places for your Pride None do so feelingly bewaile the Sins of the Times as those who have a tender holy Heart affected with God's Dishonour and Compassion over the Souls of Men. Others do personate a Mourning and act a part in a Fast as the mourning Women among the Iews did at Funerals or as the Boyes in the Streets would act their Festivities and Lamentations Matt. 11. 16 17. Whereunto shall I liken this Generation It is like unto Children sitting in the Markets and calling to their fellows and saying We have piped unto you and ye have not danced we have mourned unto you and ye have not lamented therefore it is of great use to us to get this frame of Spirit 3. It maketh us more carefull to reform others so far as it lieth within our Power Certainly without this Disposition a Man will never seek the Conversion of Souls for which Christ dyed but have it once and then you will take all occasions to doe good to the Souls of your Children and Relations and Neighbours When Paul was stirred in Spirit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 exasperated within himself because he saw the whole City given to Idolatry He disputed with them daily in the Market-place and took all Occasions to reclaim them So if you were affected with the evil of Sin horribleness of Wrath certainty of the Word of God and the Bane that cometh to any Society by having the Wicked amongst them would you let your Children and Servants or Friends go on in a damning Course would you not have Compassion on them and pluck them out of the Fire Surely this should be the temper of every Minister when he hath to doe with Sinners that his Ministry may not be a sleepy Ministry of every Parent and Householder that all under his Roof may be found in the way of the Lord of every Christian towards his Friends 4. It justifieth our Zeal in reproving Surely Reproof had need to be managed with great tenderness and Compassion that it may not seem to flow from hatred and ill-will to the Persons reproved nor from Petulancy of Spirit nor a desire of venting Reproaches but from pure Zeal to the glory of God grief to see him dishonoured Souls in danger to be lost or hardened through the deceitfulness of Sin therefore holy Men in their sharpest invectives against Sin or oppositions of it have always mingled Compassion Mark 3. 5. Our Lord looked about with anger being grieved for the hardness of their hearts There was more of Compassion then Passion in our Lord Iesus Christ he was angry but grieved So Paul when he disputed earnestly against the Iews yet telleth us Rom. 9. 2. I have great heaviness and continual sorrow in my heart as much Love to the Persons of his Country-men as Zeal against their Errours So flens dico I tell you weeping they are enemies to the Cross of Christ Phil. 3. 18. Though he discovereth them to be Enemies to the Cross of Christ yet he wept for their sakes and the Churches sake 5. Those that are grieved and troubled even to some degree of horrour and trembling of heart for the prevailing of Iniquity in those Places and Persons among whom they live are delivered from the common Judgment So 2 Pet. 2. 7. He delivered just Lot vexed with the filthy conversation of the Wicked and those that mourned and sighed for all the abominations which were committed in the midst of the Land were marked out for preservation The Lord hath a special care of them in times of publick Calamity Use 1. Is of Reproof it condemneth 1. Them that take pleasure in nothing so much as in the Company of the Ungodly where they hear God dishonoured his Laws broken if they were horribly afraid of the Wicked which forsake God's Law how could this be All Conversation with the Wicked is not forbidden for then we must go out of the World and to some we are bound by the Law of Necessity or some civil and religious or natural Bond yet we are to eschew all unnecessary and voluntary Fellowship and Familiarity with them Psalm 26. 4. I have not sate with vain Persons nor gone in with Dissemblers So Prov. 22. 24 25. Make no friendship with an angry man and with a froward man thou shalt not goe Lest thou learn his ways and get a snare to thy Soul Certainly we are not to delight in the open Wicked as the onely Company that is pleasant to us for what can a tender Christian get among them but a wound to his Soul 2. Those that are not affected with their own Sins much less with the Sins of others It is but a deceit of heart to declaim against the Sins of the Times and not to mourn bitterly for our own Sins This is to translate the Scene of our Humiliation and to put it far off from our selves Surely that Grief will be most pungent and afflicting which doth most concern our selves and we know more by our selves then possibly we can by other Men therefore we should often think of the Merit of our own Sins their hainous Nature their dreadfull Consequences if God be not the more mercifull to keep us humble and thankfull Use 2. Is to perswade us to be of this Temper to be deeply affected when we see God's Laws broken It requireth 1. The general Grace
6. Though the Lord be high yet he hath a respect to the lowly and the proud he knoweth afar off Partly as he is the Portion of the afflicted and oppressed Psal. 140. 12. I know the Lord will maintain the cause of the afflicted and the right of the poor When Satan stirreth up his Instruments to hate those whom the Lord loveth the Lord will stir up his power to protect and defend them So Psal. 10. 14. Thou hast seen it for thou beholdest mischief and spite to requite it with thy hand the poor committeth himself to thee thou art the helper of the fatherless When they have layed forth their desires poured forth their heart before the Lord they quiet themselves 'T is God's office practice nature to relieve poor helpless Creatures that commit themselves to his custody 3. Innocency giveth confidence in Prayer when we are molested and troubled without a cause The testimony of Conscience giveth boldness towards God and men 2 Cor. 1. 12. and Heb. 13. 18. Pray for us for we trust we have a good conscience in all things willing to live honestly If God's Children would carry it more holily and meekly they might cut off occasion from them that desire occasion and in their addresses to God experience more humble confidence But is not this a revengeful Prayer Answ. No First Because directly they pray for their own deliverance that they may more freely serve God by consequence Indeed by God's shewing mercy to his People the pride of wicked ones is suppressed Psal. 119. 134. Secondly As it concerneth his Enemies he expresseth it in mild terms That they may be ashamed that is disappointed their counsels hopes machinations and endeavors And therefore it is not against the Persons of his Enemies but their Plots and Enterprises and shame and disappointment may do them good They think to bring in the total suppression of God's People that would harden them in their sins Therefore God's People desire he would not let their innocency be trampled upon but they disappointed that the Proud may be ashamed in the failing of their attempts Thirdly The Prayers of the Faithful for the overthrow of the Wicked are a kind of Prophecies so that in praying David doth in effect foretell that such as dealt perversly should be ashamed as a good cause will not always be oppressed Isa. 66. 5. But he shall appear to your joy but they shall be ashamed They met with despiteful usage at the hand of their Brethren for their loyalty and fidelity to God Fourthly Saints have a liberty to imprecate vengeance but such as must be used sparingly and with great caution Psal. 71. 13. Let them be confounded and consumed who are adversaries to my soul. Malicious Enemies may be expresly prayed against SERMON LXXXVII PSAL. CXIX VER 78 79. But I will meditate in thy precepts Let those that fear thee turn unto me and those that have known thy testimonies WE now come to David's Resolution But I will meditate in thy precepts The word Precepts is not taken strictly but largely for the whole Word of God DOCT. It is a blessed thing when the Molestations we meet with in the World do excite us to a more diligent study of the Word of God and a greater mindfulness of spiritual and heavenly things I. I shall shew what advantages we have by God's Word and Precepts for the staying and bettering of our hearts II. How this cometh by deep and serious meditation III. How Afflictions and Troubles in the Flesh do quicken us to it 1 In the Word of God there are notable Comforts and Supports as also clear directions how to carry our selves in every condition I shall shew what good thoughts do become as a ground of comfort and support and direction 1. That God hath a fatherly care over us Be once persuaded of that and Trouble will not be so grievous and hard to be born This our Saviour opposeth to worldly cares and fears Matth. 6. 32. Your heavenly Father knoweth that you have need of these things And Luke 12. 32. Fear not little flock it is your Father's good pleasure to give you a kingdom There are two Notions and they are both Christian which are the great support of the heart under any Trouble Adoption and particular Providence The Heirs of Promise are cared for in their Non-age And by the way once be persuaded of this and it will allay our distrustful cares Carking and shifting is a reproach to your heavenly Father as if your Child should beg or filch God knoweth our wants is able to relieve them willing to supply us this God is my Father 2. That the humble Soul which casts it self into the arms of God's Providence shall either have a full and final deliverance or present support Isa. 40. 31. They that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength To wait on the Lord is with patience and tranquility of spirit to expect the performance of the Promises Now these shall have what they wait for or a supply of strength yet enabling them to bear up or hold out when they seem to be clean spent Psal. 123. 2. Behold as the eyes of servants look unto the hand of their master and the eyes of a maiden unto the hand of her mistress so our eyes wait upon the Lord our God until he have mercy upon us 'T was in a time when they were filled with the contempt of the Proud let us be patiently submissive to God's dispensations there is hope of help 3. That God doth wonderfully disappoint the designs of wicked men Psal. 37. 12 13. The wicked plotteth against the just and guasheth upon him with his teeth The Lord shall laugh at him for he seeth that his day is coming Haman's Plot was destroyed so was the Conspiracy of them that would have killed Paul There is no wisdom nor counsel nor understanding against the Lord Prov. 21. 30. What is God now a doing in Heaven but defending his own Kingdom Psal. 2. Wherefore doth Christ sit at his right hand but to promote the affairs of his Church and to blast the devices of the wicked Mat. 18. The gates of hell shall never prevail against it 4. That the Proud are near a fall Prov. 16. 5. Every one that is proud in heart is an abomination to the Lord Though hand join in hand they shall not go unpunished Sometimes they seem to be supported by such combined Interests so woven in the Laws and Constitutions of a Nation but who can keep up him whom God will pull down Pride is a sure note and forerunner of destruction Prov. 16. 18. Prov. 15. 25. The Lord will destroy the house of the proud but he will establish the border of the widow Weak and oppressed Innocence standeth upon surer terms than the Proud though they excel in Wealth and Opulency 5. That God will never leave us wholly destitute and to difficulties insupportable Heb. 13. 5. I will never leave thee
quite the contrary way They see the mercy of God that the things of Nature keep ordinarily one constant course and are not terrified with the frequent change thereof yea they are thereby confirmed in the belief of the Lord's constancy and faithfulness But men in love with their lusts make a woful use of this consideration hardning themselves in their conceit that there shall never be a change and so sin more securely See the like in other things 1 Cor. 7. 29. 1 Cor. 15. 32. Iude 24. Rom. 6. 2. 2 Sam. 7. 2. with Haggai 1. 2. 1 Sam. 3. 18. 2 Kings 6 33. USE 2. When ever you look to Heaven remember that Within you have a God who hath fixed his residence and shewn his glory there and made it the seat both of his mercy and justice You have also there a Saviour who after he had dyed for our sins sate down at the right hand of Majesty to see his promises accomplished and by his word to subdue the whole world There are Angels that fulfil his commandment hearkning to the voice of his word Psal. 103. 21. There are glorified Saints who see God face to face and dwell with him for evermore and came thither by the same Covenant which is propounded to us as the Charter of our peace and hope Without we see the Sun and Moon and all the heavenly Bodies move in that fixed course and order wherein God hath set them And will God shew his constancy in the course of Nature and be fickle and changeable in the Covenant of Grace wherein he hath disposed the order and method of his mercies USE 3. To cure our Unbelief by considering how God's Grace is setled in the Covenant so as to leave no cause or occasion of doubting or suspecting the truth and certainty of those blessings which he hath promised us And shall we live in jealousie as if we were not upon such sure terms with God If we transact with another about certain benefits the Transaction may prove to no purpose if the matter about which we contract with them hath no Being or the terms be impossible or the conveyance be not firm and strong so as to hold good in Law Now none of these can be imagined in our entring into Covenant with God For 1. Eternal Life is not a Chimaera or a thing that hath no Being you might run uncertainly 1 Cor. 9. 24. if it were a Dream or a well-devised Fable No 't is the greatest reality in the world Heb. 4. 9. we cannot be mistaken we see it before us in the promises so confirmed 2. 'T is not upon impossible terms but such as are performable by the grace of God Eph. 2. 8. By grace ye are saved through faith and that not of your selves it is the gift of God And the Apostle telleth us Rom. 4. 16. it is of grace that it may be sure to all the seed 'T is grace maketh it sure God giveth what he requireth There are conditions that concern making Covenant and keeping Covenant First Conditions for making Covenant Jer. 24. 7 I will give them an heart to know me that I am the Lord. Ezek. 36. ●…6 A new heart will I give you and a new spirit will I bestow upon you After this for keeping Covenant This is a Covenant that keepeth us as well as we keep it Ier. 32. 40 41. I will put my fear into their hearts that they shall not depart from me So Ezek. 36. 27. There is a promise of influence I will put my Spirit into you and cause you to walk in my statutes and ye shall keep my judgments and do them This to prevent the danger of Discovenanting 3. Or that the Conveyance be not strong and firm so as to make a Plea in Law for it is as strongly confirmed as any thing can be by God's word and oath as before it is upon record in Heaven among the ancient decrees of God 'T is written in the word for our comfort yea upon our hearts 'T is sealed by the blood of Christ Heb. 9. 16 17. sealed by the Spirit Eph. 1. 13. And therefore the Conveyance will bear a Plea both now in Prayer and hereafter before the Tribunal of God we may shew him his promises plead the satisfaction of Christ as he pleadeth it in Heaven Heb 9. 24. But where is there room for any doubt If any it must be of your qualification for on God's part all is ordered and sure and there two things First That all the qualifications of the Gospel must be Evangelically interpreted not legally not in absolute perfection but prevalent degree Mark 9. 29. and Can. 5. 2. Secondly Your only way to obtain comfort is to make the qualification more explicite 1 Iohn 2. 5 Whosoever keepeth his word in him verily is the love of God perfected hereby we know that we are in him And 1 Iohn 3. 19. Hereby we know that we are of the truth 4. Let nothing that is uncertain keep you from this blessed and sure Covenant all things without it are uncertain Riches are uncertain 1 Tim. 6. 17. The like may be said of Honours they are slippery places of Friends Health Life itself Now do not forsake your own mercies for lying vanities Some vain thing or other taketh us off from God and seeking his favor which will certainly prove a Lye to you therefore employ your time care and thoughts about these things 5. If the Covenant be setled never expect to alter it or module it and bring it down to your fancies and humors 'T is God only that can prescribe Conditions and Laws of Commerce between us and him Man is not allowed to prescribe the Conditions or treat about the making of them but is only bound to submit to what God was pleased to prescribe and to fulfil the Conditions without disputing They are not left free and indifferent for us to debate them and modifie and mitigate and bring them down to our own liking and humor We are to take hold not to appoint Isa. 56. 4. and Rom. 10. 3. so that it bindeth our duty as well as assureth our comfort our vote cometh too late to retract and alter God's eternal decrees What would you have to be done for your freedom from Hell and the wrath of God Oh that God would alter those severe Constitutions which he hath made and not insist so strictly on the self-denying duties required in the Gospel Covenant for the salvation of sinners You may as well ask that God should repeal the Ordinances of Nature turn night into day and day into night for your sakes But if the Gospel-Covenant were repealed that you may be more secure what then In what a case are you then What will you hold by then You have no hope if the Gospel stand in force but what hope would you have if the Gospel were abolished Must the whole world be ruined to establish your security and indulgence to sin Oh! surely this
That I might keep thy Word 6 This refraining must be from every sinful course The grace of Justification will teach this and the grace of Sanctification the grace of Justification that pardoneth all sin will teach us to deny all Tit. 2. 12. And the grace of Sanctification will teach us to deny not one but all for that introduceth a setled hatred against sin in the soul Now hatred is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the whole kind he that hates one sin as sin hates all sin As Haman thought scorn to lay his hands upon Mordecai alone but sought to destroy all the seed of the Iews Esther 3. 6. So this hatred 't is universally carried out against all sin Indeed they do not mortifie any sin that do not mortifie every sin one lust remaining unmortifi'd it keeps the Devil's interest afoot in the soul. Pharaoh when the Israelites would have gone would fain have a pawn of their return their Flocks their Herds or their Children that they might be sure to come back again So Satan if a Man be touched in conscience and will bethink himself and look after Religion if he can get but a pawn a corner of the heart one sin he knows his interest is still kept Herod did many things but he had his Herodias and that held him fast and sure to Satan The young man had a sense of eternal life upon him Mat. 19. 22. and he did many things All these have I kept from my youth but he was worldly There are certain tender parts in the soul that are loth to be touched but now if we would be sincere with God we must refrain from every evil way Any one man entertained besides the Husband it breaks the Marriage Covenant any one sin allowed in the soul be it never so small it forfeits our priviledges by grace But now because particulars are more affective and do strike upon the soul with the more smart blow than generals briefly consider 1. We must refrain from every evil way not only notorious sins but those that are plausible and of more reputation in the world that are not so ranck in the nostrils of men and expose us to such disgrace and dishonor There are open sins that are found hateful that have a turpitude in them and bring shame Gal. 5. 19. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The works of the flesh are manifest such as Murder Adultery gross oppression these are ranck weeds of an ill savor that stink in nature's nostrils and are accompanied with shame and disgrace To refrain from these is little thanks Luke 18. 11. The Pharisee wipes his hand of these I am not an Adulterer c. Ay but he was proud censorious and covetous there 's Pride Censoriousness Covetousness and Worldliness cloaked sins that are not of such disgrace in the world all these should be hated by you Many times those sins that are majoris infamioe of greater infamy they are not always majoris reatus they do not leave the greatest guilt upon you Unbelief it is not infamous in the World neglect of the Gospel of grace want of love to Christ Jesus these are great sins and therefore you must not only abstain from notorious sins but those which are more plausible and are not of such ill fame in the world 2. You must abstain from sins outward and inward Isa. 55. 7. The Sinner must not only forsake his way but his thought by his way is meant his outward course and practice but he must make conscience of his thoughts and secret workings of heart Practices may be over-rul'd by by-ends but thoughts and desires these are the genuine immediate motions and issues of the soul that do come immediately out of the Fountain and are restrained only by grace 3. Sin 's profitable and pleasant as well as those that have no such allurement and blandishment in them There are many sins that have nothing of allurement in them that are entertained only upon sin's account and evil custom as rash swearing blasphemy malice and the like But there are other sins that allure and entice the soul by the promise of profit and pleasure these two bastard goods that do make us often quit the good of honesty and duty Now you are to deny all ungodliness and worldly Lusts Tit. 2. 12. worldly Lusts what ever would endanger the soul all inordinate inclinations that carry you out to these things of pleasing the flesh and gratifying worldly interests 4. In refraining the feet from every evil way that is from sins against either table Rom. 1. 18. Mark God hath owned both tables not only revealed his wrath against ungodliness breaches of the first table but against unrighteousness breaches of the second table Many they indeed will not be unjust intemperate unkind to their neighbours I but they express no affection to God by worshipping him in their hearts by faith fear and love or in their houses by constant prayer morning and evening and secret and familiar in closet converses with God they are guilty of ungodliness though not of unrighteousness And there are many that would be much in worship in praying fasting and hearing but they forget their neighbours they are unrighteous they do not make Conscience in their dealings with men and in the duties of their relations are unfaithful many times to the great dishonour of God they do things Heathens would boggle at 5. There are great sins and small sins Many make not Conscience of small offences count these venial certainly he that would have a tender regard to God's Law no sin should seem little to him that is an offence to the great God It is Satan's custom by small sins to draw us to greater as the little sticks do set the great ones on fire and a wisp of straw enkindles a block of wood and by small sins we are enticed by Satan the the least sin allowed of is of a deadly and dangerous consequence Matth. 5. 19. Whosoever shall break the least of these commandments and teach men so It is treason to coin a penny as well as a pound To break the least of God's Commandements to make no Conscience of them because it is a small thing it argues a naughty heart Bodkins may wound and stab as well as swords Look as we read of the Prophet he was devoured of Lyons so we read of Herod he was eaten up by lice Small sins may be a very great mischief to the soul. Little sins are often the mother of great sins and the grand mother of great punishments and of plagues from God and therefore these lesser sins we must refrain from I kept my self from every evil way 6. We must not commit any thing that is evil out of a good intention if it be an evil but stand at a distance from it Do not turn aside to any crooked path upon any pretence soever Some have a good action but a bad aim now these do as it were make God serve the
we would gratifie with the displeasure of God So that we are not a people for him according to the Covenant 3. This God will bear us out in our work Dan. 3. 17. Our God whom we serve is able to deliver us You may promise your selves all that a God can do for you therefore let this perswade you to do as David firmly to resolve and exactly to observe all that he hath required of us First Firmly to resolve upon a strict course of obedience I will saith David in the Text I am resolved of it whatever cometh on 't or whatsoever temptations I meet with to the contrary Many are convinced of their evil courses and that there 's a necessity to leave them but want resolution therefore are unconstant in all their ways Secondly Exactly to observe I will keep the Commandments of my God He that is our God 't is fit he should be obeyed in all things Mic. 6. 8. Walk humbly with thy God You deny his Sovereignty by interpretation if you stick at any precept of his Doctr. 2. They that would keep the Commandments of God must avoid the company of the wicked I. I shall shew How far the Company of the wicked is to be avoided II. Why they that would keep the Commandments of God are to do so I. How far the Company of the wicked is to be avoided On the one hand 1. There is necessary civil Converse allowed for otherwise as the Apostle saith we must needs go out of the World 1 Cor. 5. 10. Necessary Converse in buying selling trading performing the Duties of our Relations it is allowed 2. We must not forsake the Church because of some wicked men therein In God's Floor there is Wheat and Chaff Saith Augustine Fugio Paleam ne hoc sim non Aream ne nihil sim. I fly from the Chaff that I may not be it but I may not I do not fly from the Floor lest I be nothing Christ maintained Communion with the Church wherein there were men corrupt in manners and bids us to hear those that sit in Moses's Chair though they say and do not Matth. 23. 1 2. 3. We are not hindred from endeavouring the good of their Souls whilst there is hope and opportunity to gain them we may converse with them for their good Thus Jesus Christ did converse with Sinners to gain them Luke 15. 2. The Pharisees murmured saying This man receiveth sinners and eateth with them It is one thing to converse with Sinners to harden them in their sins another thing to converse with them to gain them to God as Physicians to heal the sick not as their Associates to delight in their Company so we may converse with them with all gentleness remembring that we our selves were sometimes foolish disobedient deceived c. Thus we must not avoid them But yet we should avoid them so 1. That we should not be familiar with them Eschew all unnecessary voluntary fellowship and familiarity Psal. 26. 4. I have not sate with vain persons neither will I go in with dissemblers We are not to chuse them for our Companions lest we be corrupted and deadned by their example 2. We are not to enter into a durable relation with them such as will put us upon continual converse When we are at liberty 2 Cor. 6. 15. Be not unequally yoked together with unbelievers Parents upon any conveniencies of estate or outward emoluments are not to dispose of their Children there where they may necessarily converse with wicked persons Exod. 34. 15. Thou shalt not take of their daughters to thy sons lest they go a whoring after their Gods Instances there are many of the great mischief that hath come by entering into these durable relations with wicked men Gen. 6. 2. The sons of God saw the daughters of men that they were fair and they took them wives of all which they chose Men in the visible Church are called the Sons of God they that were of the line of Seth and they that were of the line of Cain are called the Daughters of Men to go in to them because they are fair or they are noble or because they are of our rank This was the provoking sin that helpt to bring the Flood upon them So Psal. 106. 35. They were mingled among the heathen and learned their works Solomon gave an instance that he was corrupted by his wives So it is said of Iehoram the Son of Iehoshaphat 2 Kin. 8. 18. That he walked in the way of the Kings of Israel as did the house of Ahab for the Daughter of Ahab was his Wife and he did evil in the sight of the Lord. In Ecclesiastical Stories we read of Valence the Emperour who married with an Arian Lady and so was insnared thereby and became a cruel Persecutor of the Catholicks as the best metals mixt with baser metals are embased thereby 3. If necessitated to keep company with them because of our dwellings relations and business let us not comply with them in their sins Ephes. 5. 11. Have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness but rather reprove them We may freely converse with such as we are bound to by the laws of necessity but we must converse with them with a great deal of caution that we may not be ensnared David had no great liking to his Companions yet he was forced to abide with them in the Deserts Psal. 120. 5 6. Wo is me that I sojourn in Mesech that I dwell in the tents of Kedar My soul hath long dwelt with him that hateth peace The Apostle would have the Wife to abide with the Husband 1 Cor. 7. 12. and Servants to abide with their Masters 1 Pet. 2. 18. and Children with their Parents Ephes. 6. 1. but no tye of that kind doth bind us to partake with them in their sins And being thus necessitated to their Converse we ought to have the more fear and caution And thus Ioseph lived in Aegypt untainted and Nehemiah in Ahasuerus's Court and Lot in Sodom and Daniel in the Court of Persia necessity forced them thither but all their care was to keep themselves unspotted from the world in the places where they lived II. Why they that would keep the Commandments of God are to do so 1. Because it is hard to keep familiarity with them and avoid and escape the contagion of their example Example in general hath a great force especially evil example the force of example is great Why Seneca gives the reason Homines plus oculis credunt quàm auribus because an example strikes more upon the heart than a bare word Man being a sociable Creature is mightily encouraged to do as others do especially in an evil example for we are more susceptible of evil than we are of good Sickness is sooner communicated than health we easily catch a Disease one of another but those that are sound do not communicate health to the Diseased Or rather to take Gods own expression
Gold yea fine Gold for mark it is not more than I love Gold but more than any man some have an ardent desire of it however it be mortified in Gods Children I. For the Note of inference together with the Duty inferred Therefore I love thy Commandments Some refer it to Gods taking his time to work as the Judg of the world in punishing the wicked for their disobedience and contempt of his Law as if he had said Lord though thou dost connive and hold thy hands for a time yet I know thou wilt undertake the defence of the righteous and not let the wickedness of the wicked go unpunished it will cost them dear in the issue therefore I love thy Commandments c. This sense I cannot exclude If I thought fit to prosecute it it would yield this Doctrine That a little faith would help us to continue our affection to the word of God notwithstanding the wickedness of those that oppose it For in truth here this wickedness doth soon come to an end Psal. 73. 18. Surely thou didst set them in slippery places thou castedst them down into destruction But I rather referr it to the latter Clause They have made void thy Law therefore I love thy commandments Doctr. The more others despise the ways and laws of God the more should a gracious heart love and esteem them So doth David profess that his love to Gods ways was so far from ceasing that he found it encreased rather Reasons 1. Because the ways of God are still the same they were before if there be any difference they only need to be more owned by us with greater zeal and cheerfulness because they are despised and forsaken by others God is the same still Heaven the same and the Scriptures the same whether we have Company to walk with us in heaven-way yea or no and therefore why should not a Christian be the same he was before Their contempt and hatred of Gods ways doth not make void our obligation to God and the Bonds of our Duty to him If God had only required us to be good when we may be so with safety and ease and would dispense with us at other times when Religion is in disgrace then indeed a Christian might change his course and run with the Cry as others do but God hath required in the worst times we should take Gods part and stand for him in the worst places and keep his Name even there where Satans Throne is Rev. 2. 13. and be Saints though in Nero's Houshold Phil. 4. 22. under the nose of a raging Persecutor And as God is the same so his ways are the same Their contempt and hatred of holiness doth not hinder the loveliness of it to a spiritual eye There is a beauty in Gods despised ways Heb. 11. 25. Chusing rather to suffer affliction with the people of God than to enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season He saw more excellency in the Tents of Iacob than in the Courts of Pharaoh When the outward Glory of his w●…ys is darkened and they are put under reproach and trouble yet their inward beauty still remaineth and may be seen by a spiritual though not by a carnal eye by those that will not judge according to appearance but judge righteous judgment Iohn 7. 24. The external Glory which is the favour of the World outward prosperity and Countenance is foreign and accidental but this is essential and ever remaineth And as holiness is the same so the Scriptures are the same they do not speak one thing to day and another to morrow and leave us at a latitude to put our selves into all changes and postures 2 Cor. 1. 19. For the son of God Iesus Christ who was preached among you by us was not yea and nay saith the Apostle but in him was yea The Scripture doth not allow saying and unsaying and building again the things which we have destroyed Gal. 2. 18. For if I build again the things which I have destroyed I make my self a transgressor Truth is the same in all Ages not like an Almanack to be changed every Year or calculated peculiarly for one Meridian Nor is it always the same Indeed in some lesser things that serve only for the conveniency of Religion we may upon weighty grounds change practice and do that which is good where best may not be had So Heaven is the same still it not only serveth us as an Antidote in Prosperity but as a Cordial in Adversity and is at all times to be regarded Well then since God and Holiness and Scripture and Heaven are always the same why should not we If there be change it should be in the degree of our love that it be greater than it was before to repair God in point of Honour and to testifie against the defection of others that we are not of their stamp who do not see by their eyes nor walk by their principles nor allow of their warpings 2. God expects more from gracious hearts because of their relation to him and acquaintance with him and therefore if others despise the Laws of God they should esteem them the more Iohn 6. 66 67. From that time many of his Disciples went back and walked no more with him Then said Iesus unto the twelve Will you also go away It goeth nearer to Christs heart that those should forsake him that are trained up in his bosome that the Devil should steal away souls under his own arm Whatever defection others make yet that those who have tasted of his mercy drunk of his Cup feasted with his l●…aves have had experinence of his Grace will ye also He stood not upon the multitudes going so much as his Disciples Therefore they should rowze up themselves in evil times 3. The good and the bad do exercise and keep one another in breath and vigour When there are but two factions that stand in opposition to one another one apparently for God the other apparently for Satan it addeth zeal and indignation to both sides and they mutually inflame one another and are as Ieremiah's two Baskets of Figgs the good Figgs very good and the evil Figgs very evil Ier. 24. 3. When others are so very bad it should not quench zeal but inflame it we should be not only good but very good Corruption the more it is opposed the more it stormeth and groweth outragious as a River swelleth by opposing Damms and Banks against it they rage upon restraints now the floods break loose So on the other side should Grace be more earnestly and zealously exercised the more it is opposed as the casting on of water sets the Lime on fire To be sure their malice will put us to a great deal of trouble and trouble is a time to exercise Grace To be much in prayer and faith and patience and mortifying corruptions and watchfulness and wary walking that we may neither take infection our selves nor give occasion to others to stumble at
to you but that may be the occasion Zacb. 10. 3. My anger was kindled against the Shepherds and I punished the Goats So Prov. 28. 2. For the transgression of a people many are the rulers thereof The peoples sins may make great changes and alterations of Government Thirdly You are one Body with them Nations are one political Body Churches one political Body In Gods Plea about Sodom with Abraham ten righteous persons have an influence to save or ruine it The sins of one Generation may be the cause of another It 's said God turned not from the fierceness of his anger that was kindled against Iudah because of all the provocations that Manasseh had provoked him withal Manasseh was dead thirty or forty years before Manasseh had repented and Iosiah was a great Reformer none like him You see God may punish their sins many years after nay in the process of vengeance the whole lump is involved as being one body So all Israel were troubled for one Achan Do not tax Gods dispensation of severity and rigour for 't is the condescension and art of Divine mercy by this means to prevent publick ruine and you are involved in their portion that every man in his place may study the prevention of sin and ruine So Churches are one lesser Body one root of bitterness defileth many Heb. 12. 15. not only by the contagion of the sin but also by imputation of guilt So at Corinth 1 Cor. 5. 6. A little leven leveneth the whole lump So also in Housholds and Families which are one lesser Body Fourthly Many of their sins may be thine 'T is a good prayer though it be a harsh expression to desire God to be delivered from our other mens sins Ab alieno libera me Domine They have sinned the more because thou hast been wanting as a Magistrate as a Minister as a Neighbour a Fellow-member as a private Christian. As a Magistrate A negligent Prince all the sin is put upon him Eli was an High Priest and was a Judg in that case and therefore though he were innocent God saith he would cut off his house for the iniquity of his Sons 1 Sam. 3. 17. Because his sons made themselves vile and he restrained them not When Magistrates suffer all things to run at randome in Religion instead of Gods Ministers they prove the Devils Agents though they be holy for their persons yet there is a great guilt lyeth upon them So for Ministers We are to watch as those that must give an account Heb. 13. 17. I will require him at thy hands c. He may be a good man yet not a good Minister when he is not so diligent in inspection so faithful to his trust as he should be so frequent in exhortation prayer mourning care of the flock much hurt cometh by our connivence So for private Christians they are bound to watch over one another It may be you do not look after them Heb. 3. 13. You suffer hardness to grow upon them and would not warn them Ye are Witnesses from God to the people of Israel You may be guilty of much evil example and unwary carriage Heb. 11. 7. By faith Noah being warned of God of things not seen as yet prepared an Ark to the saving of his house by the which he condemned the world and became Heir of the righteousness that is by faith And Ezek. 16. 51 52. Thou hast justified thy sisters in all thine abominations which thou hast done Thou also which hast judged thy sisters bear thine own shame for the sins that thou hast committed more abominable than they they are more righteous than thou yea be thou confounded also and bear thy shame in that thou hast justified thy sisters You either justifie or condemn the world So that in effect they may be your sins you are sensual vain We easily catch a Disease from one another but do not get health Nature is more susceptible of evil than of Grace Fifthly By seeing of their sins Conscience may awaken and thou mayest remember thy own as Pharaoh's Butler said I remember my faults this day Their lives are but a Glass of the deformity of our Natures There are many Iudas's many Cains in thy nature I was in times past as bad as any as bold with sin and as notorious a Sinner Every sin therefore should be a fresh bleeding wound in our own souls They are but the picture of thy natural face Tit. 3. 3. We in times past were foolish disobedient deceiving and being deceived Thou seest them given up to vain pleasure remember how it was with thee before Conversion and let this humble thee Sixthly If all this do not work consider the holy Angels that are no way interested but as it conduceth to Gods Glory that do not communicate with us in nature and blood how they rejoyce at the welfare of man As when the World was made Iob 38. 7. When the Morning Stars sang together and all the Sons of God shouted for joy So when Christ came and assumed humane Nature at his birth Luke 2. 14. Suddenly there was with the Angel a multitude of the heavenly host praising God and saying Glory to God in the highest and on earth peace good will towards men And when the Creature repenteth Luke 15. 7. I say unto you that likewise joy shall be in heaven over one Sinner that repenteth more than over ninety and nine just persons which need no repentance So should we mourn over them to God who are our Flesh our Neighbours united in the bonds of Duty and Neighbourhood it may be Church Relation Seventhly I might tell of the fruits of mourning The greater party of Mourners the more hope of preservation We have complained of drought we have dry Bottles Judgments are kept off as long as there is a sighing party you are preserved Ezek 9. 4. as Lot out of Sodom But if the righteous God see not this fit and a godly man may be swept away as two dry Sticks burn a green one yet you shall laugh when others mourn in Heaven there will be joy enough This is the Valley of tears Wicked men though now they are dry Wood yet they are fit Fuel for Hell Consider of these things 'T is a difficult work to soften the heart and you have need of all the help that may be First Consider the compassion of Christ to thee If he had not mourned and sighed in the Garden and sweat drops of blood where had thy soul been Thou wert in thy blood when free Grace went a sighing after thee in the Ministry of the Word Ezek. 16. 6. I said unto thee when thou wert in thy blood Live yea I said unto thee when thou wert in thy blood Live These are intending Considerations 1 Tim. 1. 13. Who was before a blasphemer and a persecutor and injurious but I obtained mercy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 If I had not been all to be bowelled and all to be mercied
Action A Rebellion or an act of disloyalty against God yea there is not only a vertual hatred in Sin but a formal hatred not only implyed but exprest they wish there were not a God to punish them and call them to an account such a Law to forbid such Practices as they affect or that such things were not sin VVell then 't is not some kind of pleasure in the study of the VVord will shew our love to the VVord but an Impartial Intire and Uniform Obedience strictly abstaining from such things as if forbiddeth and carefully practising what it requireth at our hands 2. That our hatred of Sin must flow from such a Principle a man may hate sin upon forreign and accidental reasons and so that obstaining from sin is not a true hatred but a Casual dislike as when we forbare some sins but retain others that sute better with our Condition Callings Employment Temper or because of some difficulty in compassing shame in Practising or repugnant to our natural Temper No it must be out of a principle of Love to God Psal. 97. 10. Ye that love the Lord hate evil So Psal. 119. 113. I hate vain thoughts but thy law do I love An hatred of Sin arising from love to God and his VVord is the only true hatred that 's hatred of sin as sin as 't is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Iohn 3. 4. A transgression of the Law as 't is ingratitude to God contrary to our Obligations to him not only as destructive to our selves not principally timore poenae but amore virtutis The VVord of God furnisheth us with divers Reasons and Arguments to move us to hate sin they all have their place but some are more Noble and Excellent than others As when a Man hateth sin because God hath forbidden it True hatred cometh from a love of the contrary therefore he that hath a vehement love to the Law hateth all things which are contrary to it Matth. 6. 20. He will hate the one and love the other There is no serving two Masters love to the one inforceth hatred of the other To love the Good and hate the Evil are inseparable 3. The more we hate Sin the more prepared we are to love the Law A carnal Heart hateth the Law Ioh. 3. 20. He that doth evil hateth the light And Rom. 8. 7. The carnal mind is not subject to the Law He that doth not hate sin hateth the word of God VVe cannot delight in it till our Affections be purified and sanctified Mens evil practices and dispositions cause them to hate the Light 't is a reproving light can sore Eyes delight to look upon the Sun or an unsound heart delight in that which will so ransack and search the Conscience 4. According to the degree of Love so will the degree of our Hatred be they that have the highest love of the Law will have most hatred of Sin they hate every lesser contrariety a vain Thought Psal. 119. 113. They do not only hate open and scandalous sins but sin carried on in a more close and cleanly manner yea they groan under the Relicks of Corruption and feel it an heavy burden Rom. 7. 22 23 24. For I delight in the law of God after the inward man but I see another law in my members warring against the law of my mind and bringing me into captivity to the law of sin which is in my members And then Oh wretched man that I am Next to the Object of our affection the principle or spring of it must be regarded and next to the spring and rise of it the degree must be looked after that we love the good and hate the evil proportionably that is to say that our Hatred must be proportionable to the evil of the thing hated and our love to the good of the thing loved and indeed where the one is the other will be where a great love a great hatred where a little love a little hatred Psal. 119. 127 128. I love thy commandments above gold yea above fine gold therefore I esteem thy precepts in all things to be right and hate every false way Use. Well then if we would shew our love to the Word we must truly sincerely and constantly turn from all known sin with Detestation and Abhorrence for hatred of sin is an infallible evidence of love to the Word Now hatred of sin if it be right 1. 'T is Universal 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the whole kind as Haman thought scorn to lay hands upon Mordecai alone but sought to destroy the whole Race of the Iews Ester 3. 6. one sin is as inconsistent with the love of God as another there may be as much Contempt of Gods Authority in a sin of Thought as in a sin of Practice in a small sin as in a greater There may be much crookedness in a small line and in some Cases the Die is more than the Stuff I hate every false way 't is twice repeated in this Psalm in the 104. verse and verse 128. To hate what God hateth Prov. 8. 13. The fear of the Lord is to hate evil 2. 'T is Implacable it aimeth at the utter Extirpation and Expulsion of Sin they seek to remove the guilt to weaken the inclination they groan sorely under the very Being of sin that any thing of sin is left O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from the body of death Rom. 7. 24. 3. 'T is still growing at first 't is a dubious Case men that are Convinced have some Mind to let sin go or a wish that Christ would save them from it but 't is with such Reserves that they have rather a mind to keep it than let it go As Pharaoh had no mind to dismiss Israel and therefore stood hucking with God or as David when he sent out Forces against Absalom yet be tender of the young Man Pleasing Lusts we have but a remiss Will against them our love to it is greater than our dislike of it therefore so unstable Iam. 1. 8. but when the soul is Converted the soul is armed with a resolution 1 Pet. 4. 1. Then the love of sin is weakned in their hearts and the strength and vigour of it abated the soul is armed with a serious purpose to give it up and shake off this servitude in the confidence of that Grace which is purchased for them by Christs Death there is a Godly Inclination and bent of soul to live unto God Again as our Communion with God and sense of his Love is increased in us so our hatred of sin groweth more keen and fierce when God had told what he would do for Ephraim what have I any more to do with Idols Hosea 14. 8. I have had too much to do already what any more In what proportion there is a sense of Gods Love in the same proportion an hatred of Evil. Moses when he had talked with God in the Mount at his return