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A11005 An exposition vpon some select Psalmes of David conteining great store of most excellent and comfortable doctrine, and instruction for all those that (vnder the burthen of sinne) thirst for comfort in Christ Iesus. Written by that faithfull servant of God, M. Robert Rollok, sometime pastour in the Church of Edinburgh: and translated out of Latine into English, by C. L. minister of the Gospell of Christ at Dudingstoun. The number of the psalmes are set downe in the page following.; Commentarius in selectos aliquot Psalmos. English Rollock, Robert, 1555?-1599.; Lumsden, Charles, ca. 1561-1630. 1600 (1600) STC 21276; ESTC S110527 186,758 565

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sufficiently the thing that is spoken except wee also feele the same yea with our bodelie senses in the seales and sacraments even from the beginning he hath reached forth as it were his grace in Iesus Christ to bee seene with the eies to be handled with the handes Wash me Againe hee craveth remission of sinnes wash mee sayeth hee to witte with that selfe-same blood That I may waxe whiter then the snow But hee speaketh this out by waye of comparison yea and that indeede making the comparison with the thing which in the owne nature is most white Also the comparison is made from thinges that are lesse to the end hee might declare that there is nothing in nature so white pure and cleane as is man to whome sinnes are once forgiven and who is once washen by that blood of Christ Consider here first Dauid while hee craveth forgiuenesse of sins and peace of conscience hee seeketh it vnder the symbolls and figures of these washings of the lawe whereby sometimes was shaddowed-out that washing through the blood of Christ We see therefore that Dauid soght the forgiuenesse of his sinnes in the onely bloud of Iesus Christ There hes never ben nor never shal be in time to come remission of sinnes and consequently quietnes of the conscience except by the bloud alone of Iesus Christ which is certain that the ancient Church fathers haue apprehended in the sacrifices and shaddowes It may be indeed that the Papistes so long as they feele not the weightines of their sin of the wrath of God for sinne for the conscience of those men so far indeed as my judgement can reach is cast vp in a deep sleep by that doctrine which daylie is taught among them I saye indeed it may be that for a time being thus afflicted they vaunt in their merites indulgences Purgatory and I cannot tell what satisfactiones By all which it is certaine somewhat is pulled awaie from the grace of Christ But if it come to passe that they bee oppressed in earneste with the burthen of sinne and with the sense of the wrath of GOD they shall feele surely and publickly professe that all those things are vaine and none other things but dreames and trisles which now they so much commend for then they shal feele in experience that there is no remission of sinnes or peace of conscience without that bloud and alone sacrifice of Iesus Christ Which would to God at length those miserable men sawe and learned that both Gods wrath is pacified and the consciences of miserable men quieted by that blood alone which in themselues are not disquieted troubled by any other thinge then by that sense of the wrath of God O blessed is that peace quietnesse which is by that bloud of Christ only Mark again in this place he promiseth cleannes whitenes whiter then the very snow If hee but once get that to be washen with the bloude of christ And indeed he doth this thing not to the end that he thinketh it shall not come to passe that sinnes once being forgiven in time to come there shall be no remnant left of sinne and vncleannesse in his nature But to that end because hee thinketh and perswadeth himselfe that all the guiltinesse of sinne shal be taken away by the blood of Christ and by his perfite satisfaction once imputed and that he shall be in that estate as if he had never sinned in his life For wee haue a two-folde purging and washing in Christe the one which is by blood the other which is by the Spirite of Christ That washing which is by the blood of Christ is most perfite and quieteth our consciences But this washing which is by the Spirite it is begunne onely in this life and quieteth not the conscience properly and of the owne selfe To speake it in a worde the forgiuenes of sinnes which is by Christs blood is perfite and absolute in all the partes thereof But the regeneration which is by the Spirite of Iesus Christ is but begun onely in this life Make mee to heare He doth yet continue in the self same petition The meaning is as if he should say witnesse vnto me through thy holye Spirite inwardelie that my sinnes are forgiuen me And so it shall come to passe that thou shalt furnish vnto me ane exceeding great matter of joy and gladnesse This is it which in other wordes hee speaketh els-where Lift vp the light of thy face vpon vs Psal 4. ● Iehoua and put greater gladnesse in my minde then at that time when their cornes and their wines are increased For the sixtenth Psalme speaketh There is sacietie of joyes before the face of GOD. Then he addeth in the text let the bones which thou hast brused reioyse As if he shoulde say forgiue mee my sinnes and then I whome thou hadest humbled before shal reioice with an vnspeakable gladnesse For the ioye of the man caste downe and humbled is invtterable after that now hee is lift vp with that sense of mercy and confidence of remission of sinnes But wee are to considder the wordes more diligently Make me sayeth hee to heare ioy But by what Preacher and Messenger was it not alreadie before preached by the Prophet Nathan that Davids sinnes were forgiven him It is true But the outwarde testimonie of all men is nothing except that inwarde also of the holy Spirite be conjoyned Wherefore Dauid in this place requireth that inwarde testimony of the Spirite For the remission of sinnes is an action intirely hid in the minde of God And as no man knoweth the thinges of man but the Spirite of man So these thinges of God no man knoweth but the Spirite of God which as Paule sayth searcheth the deapthes of God himselfe ● Cor. 2. 10 Wherefore except the holy Spirite of God testifie in our heartes that our sinnes are forgiven vs surely no testimonie either of the creature or of man is able to assure vs of that thinge But after what manner at length doth the holy Spirite testifie that our sinnes are forgiven vs The holy Spirite of God worketh in our heartes a wounderfull sense of the loue of God as the Apostle speaketh powreth out loue into our harts whereby God loveth vs in christ But what a loue is this surely not any common loue but a special natural to speak so that affectiō which they cal the natural affection such as is the natural affection of the Father toward his onely begotten Son For the Spirit of God testifieth that fatherlie most tender affection towards vs Of the which also it followeth that the same Spirite beareth witnesse that we are the Sonnes of God For if it witnesse a certaine fatherlie loue It followeth by the force of thinges equal that wee are the sonnes of God From whence also hee is every where called the Spirite of Adoption to witte in respect he witnesseth Rom. ● 1● 19. that we are the sons of
muste proceed from the Spirit of God himselfe They call this Spirite the Spirite of adoption which as PAVL● speaketh Rom. 5. 5. powring out into our harts that fatherlie loue of God testifieing therewithal that we ar the sons of God therfor it openeth our mouth that we cry Abba father that in our affliction we complaine vnto God For this is it which the Apostle speaketh Rom. 8. 26. The Spirite it selfe maketh requeste for vs with sighes that cannot bee expressed From this Spirit therefore this so familiar a complaynt of afflicted DAVID commeth For except this spirit and some sense of the fatherly loue of God be present as in the meane time I grant vnto you that it may be that some man will shout and howle in afflictiones and roare according to the custome of Lyons wildbeastes as DAVID speaketh of himselfe Psal 32. at which time in troubles he is not so tuitched with this feeling of the fatherly loue of God Neverthelesse that a man may familiarly turne himselfe vnto God and complaine vnto him as vnto a father of the grievousnesse of the affliction no maner of way can it come to passe except this Spirit be present and that there be some sense of the fatherly loue of God Servile 〈◊〉 so●●y 〈◊〉 A servant that onely feareth his maister because of wrath and therewith loveth him not also neither yet on the other side feeleth that he is beloved of his maister while he is beaten by his angrie maister hee turneth not vnto him hee quarrelleth not with him familiarlie but as his maister handleth him inhumanelie so he complayneth not so much according to the maner of men as hee roareth and howleth like vnto wilde beastes without all sense of the loue of his maister But the sonne who is touched with a sense of his fathers loue in the midst of the chastening he turneth him vnto his father and quarrelleth with him familiarly So the afflicted childe of God quarrelleth with God his father of whome he feeleth himselfe much more loued yea euen then while he is afflicted be Gods hand then any naturall sonne whosoeuer can be beloved of his father Hee feeleth also God the father to suffer together with him to be commoved by the self same afflictions of his which otherwise hee him selfe sendeth vpon him euen as a father is touched with a compassion in the very meane time while he is chastising his sonne notwithstanding that of necessitie he is compelled to chastise his sonne specially to the ende he should not grow worse by libertie and impunitie And so to this place wee haue spoken of DAVIDS complaynt which we ought to follow in our afflictiones in which certainlie we should endeuour that ther be ever present with vs a sense of the loue of God in Christ Iesus But so far as concernes the person of DAVIDS enemies you haue in them not onely an example of blasphemie against God but of extreame malice against men who spare not so much indeede the soule or the other life in so far as they indevour altogether to cut away the hope of Gods helpe In which thing also yet see their wonderfull blindnesse who thinke that the godly are altogether left by God in the meane time when they are afflicted of him yea and also that they themselues are stirred vp by God to destroy and vtterlie to overthrowe them like as that blasphemous lowne Rabschake gloried against the people of God 1. King 18. 25. Am I nowe come vp without Iehova vnto this place to destroy it Iehova hes saide vnto me Go vp against this land and destroy it And thus much haue wee spoken of the first part of this Psalme 4 But thou Iehoua art a buckler about me my glorie he who lifteth vp mine head 5 I crying vnto Iehova with my voice he answered me out of the mountaine of his holines Selah 6 I Layd me downe and slept I awakened because Iehoua susteined me 7 I will not be affrayd for ten thousands of the people which standing round about mee haue pitched their tentes against mee The other part of the Psalme BVt thou Iehova The second parte of the Psalme in which through the sense of the presence and help of God albeit hee was not yet in effect delivered notwithstanding he glorieth as if hee were euen now delivered For he had scarse complayned vnto God when hee felt some presence and protection of his before hand For surely no man wil haue his recourse vnto God in Iesus Christ before he first in some measure feele his helpe Come vnto mee saithe hee Matth. 11 28. all yee who are wearie and burdened and I will make you to rest But what are these helpes to the ende we may come to the particular which DAVID felt to come from God in the time he had his refuge to him DAVID being disarmed fledde from his sonne Abschalom now he felt God as a buckler to cover and protect him whollie over David miserie 〈◊〉 glorie Hee was in shame hee felt God to be vnto him Glorie He lay prostrate he felt God lifting vp his head And to speake it in a word hee felt God to supplie all that wanted in him The matter is so then surely thou shalt want nothing which that onely one God shall not furnish if thou haue thy refuge to him yea thou shalt also feele him only to be all vnto thee Desirest thou wisedome he shall be wisedome vn-thee desirest thou glorie He shal be glorie vnto thee Desirest thou riches hee shall be riches vnto thee Finally he shal be vnto thee al things that thou desirest Moreover DAVID whiles he felt the sethings he holdeth them not within himselfe but the things he feeleth he speaketh out professeth them first before GOD. This sense of the mercie of God The seeling of the mercy of God it cannot be altogether suppressed and restrayned but it will burst foorth in an open confession For so both God himselfe is glorified and he who hes that sense receiueth the greater consolation especially the sense of the mercy of God being inlarged by the confession For how much the more we vtter foorth that sense of Gods mercy in our harts so much more it groweth and is enlarged But hee who never at any time speaketh a word either with God or men of the mercy of God in Christ Iesus this man by his silence declareth plainely ynough that he is not touched as yet with that sense of the mercy of God with which it became him to be touched The acknowledging of the mercy gotion I crying out Hee goeth forward in his glorying and as first hee had professed before God himselfe that feeling of his mercy so turning himselfe vnto men hee commendeth the same vnto them beginning first from the manner and fashion whereby hee had apprehended the mercy of God Then in following out every particular parte of the mercy For so it commeth to passe that both
estate of death without Christ of necessitie they must dye in desperation For I will yet He maketh some place to hope in his soule from thence that he shall not be disappoynted of the thing hoped for but even as he hath hoped so shall it fall out vnto him I wil prayse him sayeth hee and the saluation of his face that is of all sortes That is his face in which is the s●cietie of joyes or that manifold salvation which is in his face and presence so to prayse is to publish David therefore promiseth that he will praise both God himselfe and also that so great a benefite of his life received from him or finally to praise the salvation of his face is to prayse publish the salvation which shall bee before him from whence in the laste verse he sayth that hee will prayse the salvation of his face that is the salvation which shall bee seene before him My God As he had first turned himselfe vnto his soule now hee turneth himselfe vnto his God and hee lifteth vp his eies sigheth as it were vnto him opening vp vnto him the sorrow of his soule and hee powreth out his carefulnesse and solicitude vppon his bosome Whosoever is indued with Gods holie Spirite This man sigheth vnto God in his affliction and sorrow But he who is indued with mans spirit onely that man wil never sigh vnto God for he supposeth God to be angrie with him especially then when there lyeth any affliction vppon him For he thinketh that that his whole miserie proceedeth from the wrath of God But hee who hath the Spirite of God that spirit I say of adoption by whome wee crie Abba Father This man commeth without feare vnto God because indeed that Spirite is alwaie with some feeling of Gods mercie and fatherlie loue Wherefore as a sonne who hath his Father well-willing vnto him in his sorrow he taketh his way straight to his father Even so the childe of GOD hee passeth in his sorrow and miserie to God his father and maketh his complaint vnto him 7 Therefore I remember of thee out of the Land of Iorden and of the Chermonites out of the little hill 8 Howsoeuer a deepe calleth vppon a deepe at the sound of those that are sent out by thee let al the breaking-in surges and thy vallies passe by me 9 In the day time Iehova will sende away his louing kindnes and in the night his song vnto me I wil continue in my praier vnto the strong God of my life 10 Saying vnto the strong God of my rocke why forgettest thou mee Wherefore go I in mourning apparrell because of the oppression of the enemies 11 They assaile my bones with a shorte sword my enemies reproching mee while they say vnto me daylie where is thy God THerefore He glorieth thereafter verie suddenly first against the places of his banishment whatsoever then against everie one of his most grievous afflictions This particle Therefore appeareth not to giue a reason of anie sentence going before in the texte Then hee begouth this sentence as it seemeth to me from some cutted off and sudden feeling of joye and of the presence of God as if he had said because of that joy and that rejoycing of the soule which I cōceiue of my God I remember of thee c. Of which thou learnest this how soone a man vseth to be changed that turneth himselfe vnto God for the presence of GOD is forcible to giue life vnto the creature that his face shineth no sooner but the creature beginneth to reviue againe although it bee never so dead When the Psalme speaketh of these grosse bruitish creatures Psalme 104. 29. 30. When thou hidest thy face they are troubled if thou take away their breath they returne to their dust Againe if thou sende foorth thy Spirite they are refreshed finally thou renewest the face of the earth How much more the reasonable creatures as wee call them and not onely the reasonable but the spirituall that is the creatures that are renewed by the Spirite of GOD which haue once felt howe mercifull the Lord is those creatures I saye depend vppon their God for it is necessary yea much more that their life and death depende from his face present absent Psal 4 7. 8 Lift vp sayth David Iehouah the light of thy coūtenance vpō vs and put more ioy in mine heart then at the time in which their cornes and wines were increased Of these therefore chiefely do I speake which are already accustomed with the countenance of God that vse to take some pleasure of his face For to speake of others they are not able earnestly to seeke that countenance of GOD in Christ Iesus For there is no desire of that thinge wee know not Also these haue not yet tasted how sweet that sight of God is in Iesus Christ I remember of thee as if he shuld say In every place where it happeneth me to be banished from all the bordours and coastes of Israell From the East where is the riuer of Iorden from the North where it is bounded by the mountaine of Chermon and Libanus frō the South where the hilly coūtry boūdeth Iudaea He calleth these hillie countries by the name of a little Hill because they being compared with the Mountaine of Libanus and with Chermon which are situate vppon the North they are reckoned out onely among little Hilles Of this place thou perceivest that there is no place either of banishment or of imprisonment so vnpleasant and ougly of the selfe which is able to separat the children of God from the countenance of their God yea they glory in that presence of GOD which they possesse against any place whatsoever For this in which we driue over our life what ever it be it is nothing indeede But Gods presence is all things The word Of remembrance which he vseth is to bee marked For surely that remembrance was rather of Gods presence then the presence of God it self which was then without the Citie o● Ierusalem in which at that time was that visible presence of God The matter is so then when wee are banished from this outward ministerie of God in his Church yea in which wee chiefelie haue our God present Then surely we that ar the faithful are not said indeed so much to haue our GOD presente as to remember vppon his presence which was some-time with vs. Also this remembrance I graunt is joyfull sweete and acceptable notwithstanding it lacketh not some certaine displeasure heavines of the own yea in it there is a certaine matter of sorrow as we saw before in the fift verse Remembring these thinges sayth hee I power out my soule vppon my selfe I will saye some-what more This presence of GOD also which is in the ministerie of his worde it hath the owne dolour conioyned therewith because it is vnder hope Hope I grant is with joy and glorying from whence the Apostle remembreth
things yea even to the reprobat But he giveth Christe and his benefites to none but to the faithfull for in these onely hee attayneth to the ende of his benefites and those alone who receiue them in faith glorifie that God the giver What sayest thou that ther commeth any thing to the increase of the glory of God by the praises that cum from vs I answer God indeed in himself is most perfit and all sufficiente and that his glorie consisteth perfite within himselfe without the helpe of any of the creatures without the which The Father glorifyeth the Sonne The Sonne the Father The Father and the Sonne the holy Spirite The holy Spirite the Father and the Sonne But for this cause God craveth his glory from the creature in respect hee is righteous Nowe his righteousnesse requireth that the creature acknowledge the owne Creator and glorifie him the fountaine of al good things in his benefits Also that good thing which is in the praysing of GOD belongeth to the creature whose happinesse consisteth in this that by all duties it serue God the owne Creator redemer Yea this same thing every one of the godlie finde in experience in themselues For if at any time they feele not their hart to be loused into the praises of GOD then surely there is no comfort there is no gladnesse But contrariwise if at any time they feele their heart to bee touched to prayse their own Creator to seeke all whatsoever they haue need of at him to giue him prayse for benefites received then surely they appeare to them to be blessed For thou delightest not David said that he wold publish the prayses of God that hee would sing with his tongue the righteousnesse of God which service indeed is onely spirituall and inwarde Wherefore it might bee asked concerning the sacrifices and externall ceremonies whether if hee should not by them prayse God also He preventeth this demaund and aunswereth to it in these words Thou delightest not in sacrifices as if he should say God taketh not so much pleasure in the outwarde worshippe as hee doth in the inwarde which is seene in spirit and trueth Hee delighteth not so much in the sacrifice and killing of beastes as he doth in the internall obedience of the heart and inward holines whereby it commeth to passe that men present themselues a sacrifice vnto God holy liuing and acceptable vnto God Rom. 12. Notwithstanding it may be obiected yet seeing that sacrifices are of his owne ordinance and commandement seeing that David lived none otherwaies but vnder the iudiments of the law Christ not being yet manifested in the flesh howe is it that either David himselfe refuseth those externall exercises of Religion or pronounceth that GOD taketh no pleasure in them I aunswere the wordes are not simplie to be vnderstood neither yet absolutely are they spoken but by way of comparison of that outwarde worship with the inwarde in respect of which indeede the outward worship is not greatly to be accounted of So GOD himselfe professeth that he regardeth not so much in the respect of the sacrifices if in the meane time prayses be offered and sacrificed vnto him Psal ●0 4 Samuel sharply rebuketh Saule because hee had thought that God taketh more pleasure in burnt offrings then in obedience taketh Iehoua pleasure sayth hee so much in burnt offerings as when he is obeyed 1 Sam 15 22. Behold to obey is better then sacrifice and to take heede is better then the fat of Rammes There is also another answer of others which indeed I refuse not to witte that Dauid here speaketh of the abuse of the sacrifices The law taught that sinnes were purged by sacrifices that siners distrusting their own deservings and works they might put their confidence in Christes sacrifice alone where of all those Leviticall sacrifices were types And that their faith in time comming might bee strengthened by that sacrifice of Christ This surely was the proper vse of those auncient sacrifices But men neglecting the sacrifice of Christ neglecting faith and repentance neglecting finally the inward worshippe they put their confidence in their sacrifices offered and outward ceremonies ●s in merites He sayeth therefore that God taketh no pleasure in this abuse of sacrifices which also God saith he abhorred Esay 1. Those external exercises of Religion in hearing of the word in administrating and participating of the sacraments was indeed prescribed by God but if there be not therewith the internal worship of the soule faith repentance good workes all these externall things are nothing God taketh no pleasure in them yea contrariwise he abhorreth them Concerning sacrifices I mark this onely in this place that those which specially were called propitiatorie were so many types and figures of that onely one sacrifice of Christ vppon whom were to be transferred the sinnes of the world and the curse of God Of the which it appeareth how great the excellencie of this sacrifice is vnto which so many sacrifices offered since the beginning of the worlde did serue as so many shaddowes thereof There was never at any time a thing concerning which there are so many prophecies so many significations among the Iewes Yea not one day hes past by in which morning and evening it was not the selfe viuely represented to wit in this continuall daylie sacrifice And surely this plainly prooveth that this sacrifice was passing excellent most necessary which wee should not at any time suffer to depart out of our eies which also it was of necessitie requisite to be represented to our fathers in certaine shaddowes from the fall of Adam to that time in which Christ was exhibited for they considered another thing in their sacrifices then the blood of beastes to wit the blood of the sonne of God which also they placed in the middest betuixt them and the angry GOD But wee to whom it hath happened to be borne after Christ his comming who haue fallen in those times in that respect wee are happier then that auncient people because we behold not now in a shaddow as they sometime did that sacrifice but wee haue Christ crucified before our eyes in his Gospell which thing those auncient fathers Abraham Isaac Iaakob and all the Prophets most earnestly desired and yet notwithstanding they obtayned it not The Fathers and the Prophets sayeth Christ desired to see the things that yee see but they haue not attayned to that And this blindnesse of ours is miserable and cannot bee y●uough ●amented who see not surely as it becommeth vs this sonne of righteousnesse which is rysen Therefore we are to pray vnto God that as hee hath set this sacrifice before our eies to be seene so he would open our eies that we may at length clearely see the same Let vs consider the worship now which pleaseth God and let vs weigh the wordes of this text The sacrifices of God sayeth hee are ane broken Spirite Hee calleth them sacrifices
example Also the third that we in this place learne by his example that that desertion is exceeding doleful whereby he who is once left of God yea that by his most just judg●ment God to witte leaving him because of his sinne and being now forsaken left he remayneth in the paines which by his owne sinne he hath deserved Yet notwithstanding in the meane time neither is his minde enlightened by Gods Spirit nor his hart reformed But the more he leaneth thereto the more is he blinded and hardned For to such a man extreame destruction is appoynted vnlesse at last he repente Of this sorte of men that threatning of Iohn Baptist is to be vnderstood The axe is layde to the roote of the trees Math. 3. 10 Also that saying of PAVLE When they shall say peace 1 Thes 5 5 and all things quiet then suddaine destruction shall come vpon them Moreover it appeareth out of this example of DAVID that GOD leaveth not his owne by so sorrowfull a desertion For Dauid repented very soone at the threatning of Nathan For God when he afflicteth his owne he therewith illuminateth and changeth them also by his holy Spirite that repenting they may obteine remission of sinnes and may be restored to life Restore to me the ioy Yet he persisteth in the petition of the holy Spirite or of the presence of God by his Spirite as if hee should saye surely I haue felt O my GOD an exceeding great joy of thy salvation that is since the time thou becammest my salvation protectour and defender But now through mine own default that whole joy is broken off in the middest Therefore O God restore to me that wonted joy proceeding from thy presence The onelie comforte and solide joye of man aswell in life as in death is that hee is not in his owne power and left to himselfe but that hee is the Lordes and that hee hath him to be as it were his protectour and defender David when hee felt in experience Psal 2● ● that God was no otherwaies his keeper then the sheepheard was to his sheep it cannot be spoken how great a ioye he conceived thereof which also bursted forth in these wordes Thy rode and thy sheep-crooke they haue comforted me This spirituall reioycing which commeth of the presence of God whosoever hath once tasted it this man wil not be content with the whole ioy of this world vnlesse surely he be therewith participant in some measure of that heavenly ioye also David verely had refused the whole comfort of this world and would haue nothing esteemed that his kingdome royall dignitie if that old and wonted ioye had not bene restored vnto him which arose from the presence of God by his owne holie Spirite But if wee would not provoke to wrath God present with vs neither yet would grieue his holy Spirit surely wee should haue that joy of the Spirite more solide and constant For from whence commeth that interruption thereof because we make defection from God Dauid had God present with him hee had the Spirite the comforter But after he had forsaken God by committing adultery and murther together he spoyled himselfe both of that presence of God and likewise of that solide comforte of his presence Men commonly with all the strength they haue provoke that holy Majesty of God to anger But it commeth to passe I cannot tell howe that in the meane time they appeare to themselues to liue at reste and with sufficient pleasure and delight themselues with a vaine dreame For as the Lorde saith there is no peace for the wicked I speak of the true peace for I would not call this stupidity a peace whereby it commeth to passe that neither they feele their own sinne nor yet the wrath of GOD which thing they in wofull experience shal learn some day when suddainly being awakned out of this dead drowsie sleepe they shall be forced to beholde that angry face terrible countenance And vphold me The self-same is the meaning of these words of the words preceeding for so at last wee feele God present his salvatiō gladnes arising thereof if we be vp-holden by his Spirite David is afraid of the affections of his mind least he be over-whelmed with them as by a certaine deluge He craveth therfore that GOD would susteine him by his Spirit For as if a great bosse be cast into the water presently the water running in into it it is drowned but if first it be blowen vp with wind the aire being inclosed before it be cast into the water it swimmeth in the superfice of the water So our mind if it remaine voyde of the Spirit of God it is drowned incontinent in the middest of the waues of our affections But if it bee replenished with the Spirite of God it is not possible that it can bee overcommed of the affectiones Let everie man take heede what minde hee hath whither it bee voyde and tume or rather full and replenished with the Spirit He calleth the Spirit the Spirite of freedom● or of liberty To the ende we may vnderstande the reason of the word it is to bee learned out of the 8. chap. to the Romanes that there is a two fold spirit or rather that there is a twofold effect of that one selfe same spirit of GOD. The Apostle calleth the former the Spirite of bondage to feare that is which at the preaching of the law toucheth vs with a sense of our sin misery for vnles the Spirite of God were effectuall in our hearts with the preaching of the law surely by the preching of the law alone wee should never be touched with an earnest sense of sin of our own misery this spirit ther fore maketh vs to know our sin misery and holdeth vs vnder feare of the wrath of God death cōdemnation and therefore it redacteth vs as it were vtterly to a servile estate For this was of old proper vnto servantes continually to feare punishment and vengeance at their maisters hands The Apostle calleth that other spirit the Spirit of adoption It is he who while the Gospel is preached maketh vs to know our deliverance from sinne and misery For we should never be so touched with the preaching of the Gospel vnlesse in the meane time the Spirite of God were powerfull in vs which maketh vs to know our deliverance from sinne and misery and that we feele in our heart that fatherlie affection of God toward vs and consequently leaveth a testimonie within vs that wee are the sonnes of God And if wee be sonnes that we are also delivered from sinne wrath and damnaton From thence it is called the Spirite of freedome or libertie because it witnesseth that in Christ wee are delivered from sinne and death There is also another cause why it is called so to witte because renewing our minde according to the image of GOD it maketh vs in the meane time freelie to serue God and
that we walke in the liberty of the Spirit For by nature there is no free-will But where the Spirite of God is there is libertie 2. Cor. 3. 17. sayeth PAVLE And this is that blessed Christian libertie wherby we are so delivered that we may serue God and not that wee should liue according to our owne will such as libertie as these Libertines Fpicures doe faine neither yet must wee thinke that we are forced to doe our duty by this Spirite but that willingly we are led For God loveth those that are willing as Dauid speaketh in an other place Neverthelesse in this life this libertie is but begunne onely which at last shal be perfited in that life to come But we must yet a little more diligently marke the word of freedome for it signifieth not any common liberty but a speciall noble freedome such as is the liberty of a Noble man or kings son Neither yet without cause this worde is applyed to the presente purpose For wee are the sonnes of a king that is indeed Noble the King of kings and the most hie God For whosoever is regenerated by his Spirit he is his sonne in Christ although otherwise if wee considder these prerogatiues among men hee be base borne notwithstanding hei noble and more noble then any King who hath onely the first nature and is not regenerated by the holy Spirit For the regenerate man to speake this with Peter is made participant of the most noble divine nature 2. Pet. 1. Iohn esteemed much of this noblenes when he said whosoever receiued the Worde that they haue gotten this dignitie Iohn 1 12 to be made the sons of GOD. Beholde hee calleth dignitie that estate to the which the Sonnes of GOD were lifted vppe which if men would some-what more diligentlie take heede to they would not trouble themselues with those thinges which the Apostle calleth Carnall as are kindred 2 Cor 5. ●iches honoures but would seeke rather the new Creature in Christ for olde thinges are paste awaie and all thinges are made new● And hitherto the petition hath bene two folde The first of remission of si●●es The other of Regeneration Nowe followeth the common argumente of the craving of both from the edifying of our neighbours I shall teach back slyders thy waies sayeth hee As if hee should saye if I shall obtayne at thy handes the thing that I craue O God I shall be a Preacher of thy infinite and incomprehensible mercy to others Thy waies he sayeth not my waies such as were man slaughter adulterie c. For those then were DAVIDS waies which waies indeede men are skilfull ynough commonly to pretend to their evill deedes who seeke none other thing then liberty to sinne yea and that vnder some certain cloake when notwithstanding this example of life is not set before them by David that they should follow it yea but much rather the waies of God a● set before them that is his vnspeakable mercies toward sinners which also appeareth of that that where sinne abounded grace superabounded The waies of God by nature ar vnknowen to man and specially that way of infinite mercy in his owne Christ of the which natur indeed was not able ever at any time to suspect But after beside nature and against nature it was reveiled notwithstanding the conscience trembling through the feeling of sin and of the wrath of God so that a mid cloud as it were is cast in betuixt the sight thereof and the grace of God that it cannot but see very hardly For then such an huge heape of sinne aryseth that it taketh away by force the whole sight of the grace of GOD almost from it In the mean time infidelitie which proceedeth of nature perswadeth vs to despayre of the mercy of God Finally a thousand impediments ingire themselues which al maketh it to come to passe that we are blind at the light of that grace of God so that wee finde in experience howe hard a thing it is especially to a man who is touched with an earnest feeling of his sinne to haue before his eies that mercy of God in Christ For I speake of him who is touched with a sense of his sinne For others who while they sinne yea and sinne grievously indeede notwithstanding they feele not that their sinne in speech surely they promise to themselues the mercy of God in Christ nevertheles in very deed they feele it not For it is easie to any secure man and that sleepeth in his sinne in a dreame to promise all things to himselfe God therefore willing the weill of sinners in this so great a difficultie of feeling of grace hee would haue left vnto vs an example of that this mercy whereby moste grievous sinnes are pardoned such as was this example of Gods mercy in DAVID the more notable in this respect the more grievous that his sinnes were as manslaughter adultery c. Also they were the heavier in that selfe-same respect that hee was a King PAVLE the Apostle 1. Timoth. 1. Professeth indeede himselfe to bee the chiefest of all sinners to witte a Blasphemer a persecutor a man that did wrong Notwithstanding sayeth hee God for this cause had mercie vppon mee that hee might shewe first on mee all long suffering vnto the example of them which shall in time to come beleeue in him to everlasting life This way of bringing men vnto grace which is by experience by his own exāple God wil haue without al dout every one whosoever haue felt at any time in experiēce his mercy to follow to cōmunicate to others willingly that tast of grace which they thēselues before haue felt which thing David promiseth to do in this place I wil teach back-sliders saieth he thy waies In this place thou shalt marke that the godly when God as it were taking holde of their hande lift vp themselues they stretch out their other hand as it were to lift vp others whereby they also may be participant of the same grace Whē Christ calleth vpon them they also at the same time cal others that they may come together vnto him according to that commandement of Christ vnto Peter When thou art converted strengthen thy brethren For true faith not only is careful for the self but chiefly this is the ende of the purpose thereof through a certain zeale of the glory of God to promoove the salvation of others to wit that other sinners may be turned vnto God repent For David respecteth this ende in teaching others that is the mercie of GOD towarde sinners that they also might repent being mooved to wit with that sense of the mercy of God toward thē Of the which that thinge appeareth that some taste of the mercy of GOD preceedeth turning vnto God that faith is the cause of Repentance For it cannot bee that men can be turned vnto God vnles they be allured with some ●eeling of his fatherlie loue Deliver me from blood