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A19498 A holy alphabet for Sion's scholars full of spiritual instructions, and heauenly consolations, to direct and encourage them in their progresse towards the new Ierusalem: deliuered, by way of commentary vpon the whole 119. Psalme. By William Covvper ... Cowper, William, 1568-1619. 1613 (1613) STC 5926; ESTC S108977 239,299 430

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remooued or remained according as they were directed by the clowde in the day and piller of fire in the night so should all the vvaies of our life be ordered by the direction of God Otherwise as the vvarriour qui praescripto non incedit ordine armatus non ambulat rectaque via iter non conficit mansionem paratam non invenit who walkes not the way prescribed to him and goes not into it armed to resist the enemy comes not to that mansion prepared by the Imperator for his followers to enioy such furniture as he hath caused to prouide for them so shall it be with the straggling Christian vvhose vvay is a declining from Christ he cannot come to those mansions which hee hath prouided for his followers in his Fathers house nor be resreshed with his delicates Dauid knew this very well and therefore is he so inquisitiue to knowe the way of his Commaunder and earnest to seek grace that he may walke in it Dauid as wee said before was a Prophet indued vvith great vnderstanding yet doth hee earnestlie desire to be further taught of God for the treasures of manifold wisedome locked vp in the word are so rich that no man can attaine to such measure of knowledge but still hee hath neede to learne more The Angels vvho are full of eyes vvithin vvithout so figured for the greatnesse of their vnderstanding for which also by Nazianzen they are called Secundaria lumina are scholars in the schoole of the Church for those things which are preached to vs in the Gospel by the holy Ghost sent down frō heauen The Angels desire to be hold and shal we not delight to learne with thē seeing for our saluation whereof they are surealready these things are preached And I will keepe it vnto the end Here is a promise of thankfulness not in word but in deede 〈◊〉 lege●… tu●…m ser●…are studui prosequar haue cursum neque fatigab●…r in medio itinere vbi tu perrexer is me d●…cere If thou continue a teacher of mee saith Dauid I shall continue a seruaunt to thee Perseuerance cannot bee vnlesse continuall light and grace be furnished to vs from the Lord. As the tree which hath not sap at the roote may florish but cannot continue so a man whose hart is not watered with the dew of Gods grace continually may for a time make a faire shew of godliness but in the end shall fall away Wee beare not the roote but the roote beares vs let vs tremble and feare If wee abide not in him we become withered branches good for nothing but the fire Let vs alway pray that hee would euer abide with vs to informe vs by his light and lead vs by his power in that vvay which may bring vs to him VER 34. Giue me vnderstanding and I wil keepe thy law yea I wil keep it with mine whole hart HEre followes a prayer agreeable to this purpose with a promise of thankfulnes amplified Whē God appeared to Salomon in a vision and offered to giue vnto him whatsoeuer he would aske Salomon as hee had learned here from Dauid his father seekes a wise and vnderstanding heart which thing so pleased the Lord that because Salomon did so and sought not riches nor honour the Lord promised not onely to giue him wisdome which he sought but riches and honour which he sought not Let vs also be moued if we be the sonnes of Dauid to seeke best things from the Lord our God specially knowledge vnderstanding how we may serue him Certainly so great and gratious is the Lord so rich in mercy that then our prayers are most acceptable to him when we seeke most excellent blessings from him And I will keepe thy Lawe True vnderstanding rests not in speculation but breakes out in practise Naked knowledge breeds conuiction it were better to want it for greater knowledge makes the iudgement of the wicked greater because that when they knew God they glorified him not But true vnderstanding changes the heart for by it not only do we behold the glory of God as in the mirrour of his word but are changed into the same image from glory to glory by the spirit of the Lord. And this is that excellent knowledge of Christ wherein the Apostle reioyces to know the vertue of his resurrection the fellowship of his afflictions and bee made conformable to his death And indeede then onely is knowledge a blessing when it workes these happy effects in vs. Yea I will keepe it with mine whole hart As he promised before perseuerance in Gods seruice so now he promiseth sinceritie Some are temporizers in Religion these perseuer not in seruice Some are hypocrites these are not sincere they draw neere the Lord with their lippes but are from him in their harts Dauid promiseth both perseuerance sinceritie but so that stil he craues grace of God to performe thē When Dauid offred materials as gold siluer for building of the Temple he blessed the Lord ascribed to him the praise both of the things which hee had offred they were Gods own of the hart wherby he offred them Now therefore my God vvee thank thee and praise thy glorious Name But who am I and what is my people that we should be able to offer vvillingly after this sort For all things come of thee and of thy owne hand haue wee giuen thee But how much more should we acknovvledge this in spirituall graces Haue wee any thing that we haue not receiued And when we doe any good by his grace should not the praise be returned vnto him Yea indeed let vs all say with Dauid all comes of thee and of thine owne hand haue we giuen vnto thee And where hee promiseth that hee will keepe Gods law with his whole hart it is not a presuming of perfection Not as though I were alreadie perfect but a protesting of his sinceritie that he had not the false diuided hart of hypocrites VER 35. Direct mee in the path of thy commaundements for therein is my delight AS before hee craued light to his mind so now he craues grace to direct his heart that he may follow it Naturally man is ignorant of the way to eternall life and if any light or knowledge he haue of it yet is he easily miscaried to wander from it Euen as vvater if it be not walled in ad decliuia fertur of it ovvne nature declines to lowest places if the smallest passage be made vnto it Ita humana natura diabolo viam ad peccatum aperiente ad id quod peius est proruit so the nature of man rushes downeward to sinne vvhen any way thereto is opened to him by Satan And therefore Dauid fearing his owne infirmitie prayes so earnestlie that God would guide him and not leaue him to himselfe Now the way vvhich Dauid chooseth to
that as Dauid first got life to his soule by the word so by it life was conserued vnto him and if at any time hee fell it was the word that wakened him to turne againe to the Lord by repentance When we are tempted vnto sinne the word armes vs to resist it when we are vvounded with sinne the word lets vs see how to cure it And as the crowing of the Cock wakened Peter to mourne for the deniall of Christ so the warning of the word wakens vs to repent when we haue sinned Happy vvere we if such affection vvere in vs toward the vvord of God as here was in Dauid So should we finde that manifolde comfort in it which hee found to the reioycing of his heart If vve receiue it vvhen vvee heare it vvith a liuelie faith Fiet nobis quodcunque desideramus It shall be vnto vs what euer we desire if wee be in trouble it shall be to vs a word of consolation if we be in ioy it shal augment our ioy Certainly if vve knew it we would be more delighted with it It is the seede of our new birth it is the foode that conserues an immortall life in vs it is a preseruatiue against all euill it is the restoratiue of our soules in all diseases it is the staffe of our infirmityes it is our armour against our enemies it is the light of our eyes euen that day starre that shineth in darknes If we walke in the light thereof it shall leade vs to the bright-shining sunne of righteousnes Christ Iesus To whom with the Father and the Holy-ghost be praise honor and glory for euer Amen FINIS A Prayer commonlie vsed by the Author before his Euening Doctrine to the people O Lord prepare our hearts to seeke thee and open thou thy mercifull eare to heare vs. Let the meditation of our heart the words of our mouth and the lifting vp of our hands be vnto thee an acceptable Euening sacrifice and let thy blessing descend vpon vs thy people that by the ministery of thy word holy spirit light may increase in our mindes by which wee may knowe thee life in our hearts by which we may liue vnto thee that so long as wee are here in this miserable absence from thee we may continually be guided with thy grace and in thy owne good time receiued vp to thy glory through Iesus Christ to whom with thee and thy holy spirit be praise and glory for euer Another LOrd quicken vs that we may call vpon thy holy name Lord make vs wearie of our sinnes that we may come to thee and thou may refresh vs powre thy spirit vpon vs that we may hunger and thirst for thy righteousnesse and saluation that thou according to thy promise may satisfie vs. Declare thy presence in mercie vpon vs who heere wait for thy louing kindnes in the midst of thy Temple Water thine inheritance with the deaw of thy grace that we may fasten our roots in Christ and may growe vp in him in all holines fruitfull in euery manner of good worke which may be to thy glory through Iesus Christ. To whom with thee and thy holie spirit be praise and honour and glory for euer Amen A TABLE DIRECTING the Reader how to finde out the Principall points of Doctrine contained in this Book A A Brahams infirmity to teach vs strength P. 143. Gods Acceptation of any thing at our hands a great fauour for three respects 246. Accesse to God by Prayer while we are in the body will make vs not affraide to go out of the body 137. Adam had all graces except Perseuerance 260. Affections to be feruent in seeking spirituall things 356. Affections if strong will breake forth in Actions 368. Afflictions are fauours and proued such 166. 245. They are profitable 206. Afflictions and offences humble the Godly 170. Affliction not affecting Purgation is an argument of fearefull induration 171. In Affliction we see three things better then in prosperitie viz. What of the Lord what of our selues what of the world 181. The goodnes of the Wicked endeth with their Affliction It doth not so with the Godly 182. In Affliction to praise God a great grace 189. Afflictions of good and bad differ and how in the measure and in the end 191. They make the fruitfull more fruitfull 219. Alexanders and Caesars parting the night 159. Almuggim trees are such as rot not 156. The Anchor of the soul is Gods word 340. Angels to be imitated 332. Answere of Prayer delayed and why 199. Appeale to God frō the wrongfull iudgements of men 62. 344. Application of the word a speciall grace 377. Armour of the godly the Word and Prayer 65 The Art of Arts is the practise of piety 187. Assurance of saluation is no Arrogance 123. 215. Assurance confirmed by Arguments 124. The Awe-band of the wicked is without them of the godly within them 362. B THe Bands Combinings of the Wicked auaile not P. 155 Banishment and Pilgrimage bringeth vs neerer to God the farther from Men. 131. Beginnings nothing without perseuerance 252. God is a Beholder of our afflictions and Wrestlings 342 Benefits receiued well vsed beget Boldnes to aske more 38. Benefits should binde vs to Obedience 308. The fruite of Gods Benefits is our profit and Gods praise 393. Benignity of God generall speciall 163. Blessednes of Man described foure wayes 6. Mans Blessednes is in Gods Approbation 9. Desire of the best Blessings pleaseth God best 93. Blindnes of Man by Nature 51. Our Bodyes are houses of Bondage 132. Christs Burden beareth the Bearer 79. C CAlumnies are heauy Crosses Page 275. To commend a wrong Cause to Gods protection is dangerous 276. Bee our Cause neuer so good our owne wisedom will not help it ibid. Christians more honourable then Kings not Christians 48. Christians maimed which haue an eare to hear a tongue to speak but no hand to practise 119. Christians called Christs Companions 162. Christians are Prophets 388. Commandements all to be kept not with halfe obedience 21. Solide Comfort and Counsell commeth from the word 67. Comforts to bee sought from God for Gods sake 110. The Comfort of the Crosse vnknowne to Worldlings 171. Comfort the lesse worldly the greater heauenly 182. Comfort not comming from Gods word hath two euils with it 218 Comfort cōsisteth in two things 254. A three-fold Comfort 314. The Comfort of the worde is common to all the Godly 370. A man knowne by his Company 161. 257. Wicked Company to be for born for two causes 257. A threefolde Complaint against three sorts of Enemies 383. Confession of Sinnes confoundeth Sathan 274. 396. Confusion twofolde either a Desertion of God or Oppression of Men. 88 A Good Conscience affordeth continuall boldnesse in Prayer 273. 302. 343. 354 Consideration necessary in all things 150. Dauids Constancy in religion 174. Constancy of Christiās 250. 351. Conuersion to God not of any freewill in nature 85. Nothing can giue a
promise to Dauid The meaning is I knowe ô Lord that thy promise is sure enough in it selfe but I pray thee make it sure to me Sure it is the promises of God are most cercertaine the earth may mooue and mountaines may fall yea the earth at length shal be shaken and the heauens wimpled vp like a garment but one iot of the word of GOD shall not faile This is the maine poynt vvhereat in all our life vvee should aime To make sure our calling election that the promises of God most sure in themselues may be made sure vnto vs. Many waies hath GOD confirmed his promise to vs First by the blood of his sonne Next by his owne oath he hath not onely spoken that he will giue mercie to the penitent belieuer but hee hath sworne it that by two immutable things wherin it is impossible that hee should lie he might shew to the heires of promise the stabilitie of his counsell But for all this neuer is his promise sure vnto vs till we receiue the seale of the spirit of adoption For this let vs pray For so long as we are in this body of sinne our infidelitie will euer be sending out feares and doubtings and distrusts against vvhich vvee haue neede to pray the Lord alwaies to confirme vs. Omnes enim Dei benignitate indigemus et qui extremum consequutus est virtut is apicem hac indiget continuò No man hath made such progresse in faith but hee hath neede further to be confirmed Lord incrcase our faith Lord helpe our vnbeliefe And therefore let not our wants and great weakenesse driue vs to despaire but so much the more vvaken and prouoke vs to feruent prayer To thy seruant Dauid frequently vseth this stile as very honourable and indeed so it is The seruaunt of God onely is a free man yea and a King but hee who is not the Lords seruaunt though hee were a Monarch and ruler of the whole earth he is but Satans captiue and a seruaunt of seruaunts O quam multos Dominos habet qui vnum non habet Because hee feares thee Hee who hath receiued from the Lord grace to feare him with loue may be bold to seeke any necessary good thing from him because the feare of GOD hath annexed the promises of all other blessings vvith it Sometime Dauid brings the reason of his petition from the Lord as from his mercy or his truth sometime from himselfe as from this that hee trusts in the Lord ver 42 or that hee hath a great desire toward the Lord ver 40 or that he feares God as heere All the promises of God are conditionall if the condition bee no way in vs how shall the promise be performed vnto vs It is true the Lord is gracious mercifull readie to forgiue c. But what is that to thee who repentst not belieuest him not louest him not and trustest not in him VER 39. Take away my rebuke that I feare for thy iudgements are good THere is a rebuke which comes vpon the godly from men without a cause and this suppose it grieue the godly yet they feare it not but rather reioyce in it according to that of our Sauiour Blessed are yee when men reuile you and speake all manner euill of you for my names sake be glad and reioyce for great is your reward in heauen With this meditation did Augustine confirme himselfe against the detractions of his Aduersarie who sought to empair the credit of his name Quisquis volens detrahit famaemeae nolens addit mercedi meae Hee that willingly would empaire my name against his will increaseth my reward And Dauid glorieth in this that the rebukes of them who rebuked the Lord had fallen vpon him There is againe a rebuke and shame comming from God as the fruite and iust punishment of sin for this the godly are afraid if they looke to their begun sinnes they know they haue deserued it they feare it and therefore pray vvith Dauid Psalmo 6 Lord rebuke mee not in thine anger If againe they looke to the time to come they feare least their infirmities bring them to shame euery one of them according to their seuerall tentations And this also they preuent by prayer as heere Dauid doth For it is to be marked that a godlie man is more afraid for sinnes vvhich hee may doe then a vvicked man is for sinnes that he hath done as hee liues in a continuall sorrow for begun sinnes so also in a continuall feare of sinnes wherein he may fall Semper est in dolore et tremore the one for repenting of sinne the other for preuenting of sinne For thy iudgements are good This reason heere subioyned declares that the rebuke which he feared was Gods rebuke The meaning is As to man his iudgement it is so peruerse that I passe not for it at all I knowe hee condemnes vvhere thou vvilt absolue It is high many a time in mans eye vvhich is abhomination to thee but as to thy rebuke I know Lord it comes neuer vndeserued for thy iudgement is good And therefore prayes he that the Lord vvould keepe him from those sinnes which may bring shame and reproach vpon him VER 40. Behold I desire thy commandements quicken me in thy righteousnesse SOmetime he confesseth his naturall inclination to euill as yee may see out of his prayers in the verses preceding sometime his new disposition by grace vnto that which is good The children of God finde in themselues motions of sinne but not without motions of grace to restrain them the one fights against the other and in this battell are we militant here vpon earth let vs mourne for the one and giue thankes for the other with the Apostle Rom. 7. He offers his desires to the Lord to be looked vpon It is an argument of a well set and disposed heart when a man dare present it vnto the Lord that hee may looke vpon the desires and intention thereof An euill conscience dare not doe this for as an eye when it is hurt craues some couering to hide it from the light so the guiltie conscience flies from the Lord and hath no desire to come before him let vs refuse to liue in that course of life wherein we dare not be bold to looke to the Lord nor content that he should looke vnto vs. I desire Our perfection in this life is rather in godly desires then in a full obtayning of things desired Phil. 3. yet haue the godly this comfort that where desires goe before satisfaction shall follow for the Lord hath promised to fulfill the desires of them that feare him Blessed are they who hunger and thirst for righteousnesse for they shall be satisfied yea sure it is how great soeuer our desires be we cannot desire so much as the Lord hath to giue vs for he is rich in mercy
my soule This may convince the vnthankfulnesse of this age who hath tongues for euery purpose but none to speake of the testimonies of God yea they are ashamed to speake of that subiect who vvithout shame or measure speake of all other things VER 47. And my delight shall bee in thy commaundements which I haue loued THe next thing hee promiseth is the seruice of his affections It is not a small progresse in godlinesse to delight in the commaundements of God Our corrupt nature counts them burdenable but the grace of Christ makes vs find his yoke easie his burden light And indeede so doe his children esteeme of it who haue found by experience there is more solid ioy in the obedience of Gods commaundements then in all the perishing pleasures of sin And would to GOD they who of a long time haue proued the pleasures of transgression wold turne them and proue by experience on the other hand what comfort there is in mourning for sin what is the ioy of a good conscience and the sweet inward pleasures of a godly conuersation they should then easily perceiue that the delights of the one doe by infinite degrees surmount the pleasures of the other Naturall men do some externall workes of Gods worship but not with an inward delight this is no acceptable seruice to GOD. They assemble themselues on the Sabboth with the godly to heare the word but what the one doth of delight the other doth of custome or compulsion The Lord lookes to the affection moreth●…n to the action and we should not onely consider what we doe but how we doe it ●…o to come to the Temple that we come with Simean by motion of the Spirit so to heare the word that it be with spirituall ioy and delight as Dauid did And this also condemnes those of our age to whom the word of the Lord is a reproach weariness VER 48. Mine hands also will I lift vp to thy commandements which ●…haue loued and I wil meditate in thy Statute THe thi●…d 〈◊〉 pron●…h is the seruice of hi●… actions that hee will lift vp his hands to 〈◊〉 practise of Gods commandements Dabo ope●… in vt sactis exprima●… mandatatua The kingdome of God is not in word but in power we are the d●…ciples of that Master who first beganne to doe then to teach Qui fecit docuit hi●… magnus v●…cabitur but now the wo●…ld is full of mutilate Christians eyther else they want an eare and cannot heare Gods word or if they hear they want a tongue and cannot speak of it or if they haue both they want hands and cannot practise it Concerning his protestation of the loue of Gods commandements and his meditations of them see ver 15. 103. 111. ZAIN VER 49. Remember the promise made to thy seruant wherein thou hast caused mee to trust THe first verse of this section containes a prayer that God would perform the promises hee had made vnto him When hee prayes God to remember vvee must not thinke that he chargeth the Lord with any obliuion Nulla in Deum cadit aut obliuio aut reminiscentia The godly sanctifie the Lord in their hart and think more reuerently of his Maiestie then so but his Memor esto is all one with this Perfice et ad finem deducito Remember that is perfit and accomplish the promise made vnto me Made to thy seruant As Dauid beseecheth the Lord to remember his promise so hee protests verse 52. that hee remembred the iudgements of GOD and vvas comforted and verse 55. that hee remembred the name of the Lord in the night It is but a moekerie of GOD to desire him remember his promise made where vvee make no conscience of the promises wee haue made to him But alas how often faile we in this duety and so in our owne default diminish that comfort we might haue of Gods promises in the day of our trouble But what promise is this that God made to Dauid There is a promise made him concerning the Kingdome of Israel and for this he prayed 2. Sam. 7. Who am I O Lord God and what is mine house that thou hast brought me hitherto c. And now Lord confirme for euer the word that thou hast spoken concerning thy seruant c. For thou art God and thy wordes are true and thou hast spoken this goodnesse concerning thy seruant But his comfort in trouble stood not in this promise nor performance of it The promise whereof he meanes here is the promise of mercy and grace which God in his couenant hath made to his children and this as euery one of Gods children accounts their own by a particular application of it vnto themselues so Dauid not excluding others and yet including himselfe speakes of this promise as properly and particularly belonging to him And so also did that woman of Canaan rest in the generall promise of Gods mercie as if it did containe a particular promise to her selfe And therefore by no temptation yea not by Christs contrary affirmation made for her tryal could she be remoued from this ground That the generall promise of mercy made in the Couenant contained a particular promise vnto her howsoeuer not vnder the name of a childe yet vnder the name of one albeit vnworthy belonging to the family of God And this proceedes from the nature of faith by which the godly apprehend God as their Father Christ as their Sauiour and in him all Gods promises made generally to his people as if they were made particularly and by name vnto themselues collecting hereof the certainty of their owne saluation The proposition being furnished by the word the assumption is made by faith and makes the conclusion most ce●…taine the ground of all being Gods vnchangeable truth and the stability of his counsell which he will not change for the changes which are in his weake seruants but constantly performes for his owne names sake Sanctis quodeunque spoponderit implere consueuit nostrarū immemor iniquitatum suarum non immemor sponsionum the Lord perfits that which hee promiseth to his Saints vnmindfull of their iniquities not vnmindful of his owne promises Wherein thou hast caused me to trust This is a most forcible argument to moue the Lord to the performance of his promise When his children declare vnto him that it stands with the honour of his truth to doe ●…o The like of this argument is vsed by Ieremie O Lord i●…●…e deceiued thou hast deceiued me which is as he would say a thing impossible that so should be And so Dauid confirmes himselfe here that he could not be disappointed of his hope vnless that the Lord did faile in his truth which cannot be Thus ye see when the godly rest assured of their saluation they are neyther presumptuous nor arrogant but giue glory to God and the praise of
vndoubted truth to his promises Non est arr●…gans vsurpatio sed fidelis quia verū Deum non posse fallere confitetur It is no arrogant vsurpation but a faithfull depending for hee acknowledgeth that the most true God cannot beguile him And againe Non vsurpatoriè speraui quae vt sperarem ipse fecisti I haue not hoped by vsurpation bu●… it was thou Lord who caused me to hope Seruus sum expecto alimentum à Domino miles sum exigo ab imperatore stipendium vocatus sum postulo ab invitante promissum I am thy seruant and wait for nourishment from thee who art my Lord I am thy souldier and require wages from thee who art my Captaine I am called and seeke from thee who called me that which thou hast promised Let this serue for an answer to the aduersaries of the truth who say it is arrogance presumption for any man to affirme the certainty of his saluation Propter hoo da●…sunt digna quaedam indicia manif●…sta salutis vt indubitabile sit eum esse de numero electorum in quo ea signa permanserint For this cause some signes and manifest tokens of saluation are giuen to the end it may be out of doubt that hee in whom they remaine is of the number of the elect Non arrogantia est sed fides praedicare quod acceperis It is not arrogancy but faith to speake of that mercie which thou hast receiued To this purpose let vs remember that the promises made to vs are of Gods free mercie that the grace to beleeue which is the condition of the promse is also of himselfe For faith is the gift of God thirdly that the arguments by which he confirmes our faith in the certainty of our saluation are drawne from himselfe not from vs. As first from the nature of God He is faithfull who hath called vs to the fellowship of Christ and will also keepe vs blamelesse to the day of Christ. And againe He who hath begun that good worke in you will also perfite it against the day of Christ. Secondly from the nature of that life which Christ communicates to his members they liue in him or rather he liues in them Now in that I liue by the faith of Christ I liue yet not I any more but Christ liueth in me Now this is the nature of the life of Christ that it is no more subiect to dying as witnesseth the Apostle Thirdly from the nature of that seede whereof we are begotten for as the seed is so is the life which it giueth Now the seed ●…aith Saint Peter is immortall and beside that holy vnction by which the Lord corroborates and strengthens his children is called a permanent and abiding vnction All these proue a perseuerance of Gods fauour VER 50. It is my comfort in trouble for thy promise hath quickned me THis Verse containes a commendation of the word of God from the excellent effects and fruits thereof to wit that the comfort thereof vpholds Gods children in trouble when all other comforts faile them The lawfull comforts of nature such as meat and drinke recreation becom loath some to men in heauy diseases And as to the vnlawfull pleasures of sin they are so farre from helping our comfort that they encrease our terrour in the day of trouble only the word of the Lord sustains vs and assures vs that our light momentanean afflictions shal cause to vs at the length an infinite weight of glorie Facilè superant●… aduersa si sit spes quae consoletur quisquis enim meliora sperat leuioribus non frangitur In trouble He telleth not what kind of trouble he was in neither was it needfull for there is no sort of tentation can befal vs for which the word of God doth not furnish vnto vs sufficient consolation Prouiding alway we make conscience of it in prosperity otherwise it shall be a comfortlesse word to vs in our aduersity For thy promise hath quickned mee As the life of our soules at the first commeth by the Word so is it conserued by the same Word When tentations oppresse vs so that we faint and our life is gone it is the Word that reuiues vs Vt connexio ista animae corporis nostri spiritu vitali animatur alitur tenetur ita verbo Dei spiritali gratia anima nostra viuifi●…atur As the connexion of this bodie and soule is made and conserued by naturall breath so is our soule quickned by the Word and spirituall grace As therefore we loue our life let vs loue the word of the Lord. And if the promises of God render such ioy to the beleeuing what ioy may we looke for in the full performance of them VER 51. The proud haue had me excedingly in derision yet haue I not declined from thy law HEere is a protestatiō of Dauid his honest and constant affection toward the word of God That albeit he was sore tempted by the derisions of the proud yet he declined not from the Lawe of the Lord his God Let no man who is truely religious thinke that he can eschue the mockeries and derisions of the wicked this is a part of the crosse of Christ Iesus they railed vpon him they nodded with their head and fleered with their mouthes and mocked him but patiently did he suffer this contradiction of sinners Ismael was the first for any thing we reade who beganne this kinde of persecution but euer since Satan hath continued it in his cursed instruments like vnto him As he that was borne after the flesh persecuted him that was borne after the Spirit euen so is it now Let vs take vp the crosse of our Lord and follow him and be content to beare with him the rebuke of the wicked Concerning this stile of the wicked whereby they are called proude see ver 69. 78. VER 52. I remembred thy iudgements of olde O Lord and haue beene comforted MAny are the impediments of godliness for beside the corruption of our owne nature within vs we haue the corruption of other men fighting against vs. By their profane speeches they corrupt vs by their euill example they infect vs and if that way they cannot come to speede then they speake euill of vs they lye they rai●…e they mocke vs leauing nothing vndone that may disquiet vs in our selues and disgrace vs to others Against this impediment Dauid here shewes how he was sustained by remembring the iudgements of God which in former ages he had poured out vpon the like profane men If wee shall onely looke to the present time forgetting the by past iudgements of God not fore-thinking of the wrath to com vpon the wicked their present prosperity shall be witch us and we shall be in danger to be carried away with them after deceitfull vanity but let vs go with
thy portion but the Lord. Whom haue I in heauen but thee And I haue desired none in the earth with thee Let vs looke to the creatures consider how they are very good let vs vse them also but so that we remember alway how with them a greater good then they are is offred vnto vs namely that good GOD that made them What is the creature if it be compared with him that made it Can the vvorke of a mans hand bee so excellent as man that made it And vvhy then shouldst thou thinke that there is either beautie or vertue in a creature for which it should bee more desired and loued then the Lord vvho made it Pulchrum coelum pulchra terra sed pul chrior qui f●…cit illa Ethnicks saw by the light of Nature specially the Platoniques that whatsoeuer good is in the creature it is but Splendor quidam summi illius boni a certaine beame of that great and infinite good which is in God and that then onely was the good which is in the creature rightlie vsed when by it men learned to goe vp and returne to the Creator But alas such is our wretched corruption that the same things which should cary vs vpward toward God drawe vs downe and we are oftentimes so snared with the loue of the creature that wee forget the Creator not that any blame is in the creature but as I saide in our owne corrupt nature for euery creature in the own kind sends vs to him that made it speaking with such a voice as it hath Seeke not rest nor contentment from vs Goe vp and seeke it in him that made vs no contentment no satisfaction haue wee to giue you The eye is not satisfied with seeing nor the eare filled with hearing This then is the first motiue that as the Lord would not rest till hee had made man so man is bound of his dutie neuer to rest till he find the Lord. The other motiue is It is impossible that man can get rest or contentment to his soule in any thing but in the Lord his God Man vvas made for God and to the image of God and therefore can no other thing fill and content the desires of his soule but GOD himselfe Caeteris rebus occupari potest repleri non potest Other things may busie and vex the spirit of man but cannot fill or replenish it Fecisti nos Domine propter te semper in quietum est cor nostrum donec requiescat in te thou madest vs ô Lord for thy selfe and our hart is alway vnquiet till it rest in thee As the point of the Mariners compasse touched with the Adamant trembles euer till it be directed toward the North so doth the hart of man till it bee directed to the Lord. And as the Doue which Noah sent forth of the A●…ke went flying abroad and could find no rest for the sole of her foot the earth being couered with waters till she returned againe to Noah so the soule of man may goe through the world caried in the body as a chariot or otherwise flee abroad and view al the creatures vpon the wings of contemplation but it shall find no place of rest no creature to content it till it returne to the Lord. Otherwise anguish of spirit and sore tribulation shall be the portion thereof But heere it is demaunded whether or no is this preiudiciall to the rest of Gods children that Dauid saith The Lord is his portion I answer no manner of way for the Lord shall not be the lesse the portion of one that feares him because he is the portion of another hee is sufficient for all Earthly heritages are the lesse when they are communicated to many and therefore oftentimes is there st●…ife among them about the diuision heere it is not so there needs no contention about the diuision of this inheritance one shal not haue the lesse because another hath much the Lord shall bee all in all euery one of his Saints shall be filled with his glory Wee see the Sunne in the firmament shineth vnto all the vvorld neither is there any man who thinks that the light is the lesse because it is common to many If GOD haue created the Sunne with such maruailous wisedome that the light thereof is not the lesse to euery one because it is common to many what may wee looke to find in himselfe The generall vse of this towards vs all is to assure vs of our election If from our heart wee haue made this choise that we can say in sinceritie with Dauid O Lord thou art my portion we may be assured that first of all hee did choose vs to bee his inheritance Yee haue not chosen me but I haue chosen you saith Christ. Heerein is loue saith Saint Iohn not that wee loued him first but that hee loued vs. If the Lord had not chosen vs to be his peculiar people we should neuer haue chosen him to be our portion The particular vse of it is first to those vvho are poore in worldly things let this comfort them that GOD is become their portion The Lord is my Shepheard I shall not want vvhat matter is it who haue the greatest measure of Gods mooueables sith the permanent goods of the inheritance are ours His mooueables I call the things of this world which goe from hand to hand the permanent good is himselfe his fauour his loue toward vs in Christ Iesus It was the infirmitie of our father Abraham when the Lord said vnto him Feare not I shall be thy buckler and exceeding great reward that hee answered What canst thou giue mee Lord seeing I goe childlesse As if this were no more then all children or gifts temporall whatsoeuer that the Lord promised to giue himselfe to him for a reward It is marked in him that by his weakenesse wee may learne to gather wisedom and strength neuer to thinke vvee can vvant any thing seeing we haue the Lord himselfe for our portion The other particular vse of it is toward those who haue receiued a greater measure of worldly things from the Lord if with it they haue also grace to loue and feare him Let them knowe they haue gotten a double portion which obligeth them in a double seruice beyond their brethren I wish of God men of honour in the world professors of the Gospel could shew as much holy zeale for the maintenance of the gospel which is the testimony of God witnessing that he is become their father and portion in Christ as they can declare carnall zeale against those that would preiudice them in the smallest portion of their earthly inheritances yea for a foote bredth of their land But this is the time wherin men are fallen from their former zeale not onelie is the fruite decaied but the leaues also are fallen away and there is no courage
The Lord when hee exhorts to repentance cryes My sonne delay not to turne to the Lord. This day vvhile it is called vpon you harden not your harts but Satans voice is Tarry till the morne Let me first goe and kisse my father that is delight yet a space in the pleasures of this life It was offred by Moses to Pharao When shall I pray for thee and he answered To morrow It is offred by the Lord to man When wilt thou that I haue mercie on thee and in effect it is answered by many Not till mine old daies Miserable was Pharao who delayed Moses but one day and more miserable are they vvho delay the Lord for many yeeres vvhen hee offers them mercy I knowe no difference betweene the vvise Virgins and the foolish but that the one did that in time which the other would faine haue done out of time and could not The most profane men of the world are forced in death to make their refuge to the Lord then the eye and the hand are lifted vp vnto him then they cry for mercie and desire all others to pray for them If wee be wise let vs doe that in time which al men are faine to doe at the length VER 61. The bands of the wicked haue robbed me but I haue not forsaken thy law TRue godliness will indure great tentations euen as trees wel rooted abides the blast of strong winds and gold that is fine abides the triall of fire Many waies was Dauid tempted and among the rest the wicked by troupes and multitudes combined against him yet did he not forsake the law of the Lord. The godly liue in this world like sheep among vvolues euery wicked man in whom Satan ruleth is like a Cananite to an Israelite a thorne in our eye a prick in our side yea and as a dart of Satan shot at vs to driue vs away from the fear of God if so wee can take them it should greatly strengthen vs to indure all troubles that come from them There will neuer be peace among those two parties between whom the Lord himselfe in Paradise proclaimed inimity And howsoeuer to strengthen themselues in an euill cause the wicked goe together by bands and companies yet shall it not availe them nor hurt vs. Babels builders Moab Ammon Edom conspyring in one may tell vs Though hand ioyne in hand the wicked shall not escape vnpunished the wickd are like thornes before the fire their multitude may well embolden it but cannot resist it VER 62. At midnight will Irise to giue thanks vnto thee because of thy righteous iudgements IN this verse we haue a protestation of Dauid his thankfull affection toward the Lord wherein we haue three things 1. The dutie promsed namely to giue thanks 2. The time at midnight 3. The cause because of thy righteous iudgements As for the dutie of thanksgiuing wee spake of it verse 7. As for the time hee saith hee will rise at midnight and giue thanks to God We pray that we may doe Gods will on earth as it is done in heauen now in heauen we know they praise God continually without ceasing we should doe so vpon earth but our necessities of sleeping eating and such like interrupt vs that wee cannot doe it as we should yet happy shall we be if wee season all our dyets and doings with prayer and thanksgiuing That as God in nature hath made the knee to bow at euery step so the hart in euery action might bow and blesse the Lord acknowledging our Maker and Redeemer and directing all our dooings to his glory When Salomon made harps and other musicall instruments for the praise of God he made them of Almuggim trees that is of such trees as rotte not Teaching vs by like signification how induring should bee those instruments of our heart and affections wherewith wee praise God that we should not suffer them to decay But alas how soone do we faile Oftentimes we begin the day with some feruencie in praysing and prayer but wee faintere euen yet shall we haue great comfort if when our performance faileth our purpose remaine for this will reuiue our former zeale and make vs to returne vnto an earnest calling vpon God and that with the greater feruencie That we finde our great infirmity hath carried vs away from our former purpose Let vs againe consider here how Dauid spends the time of his life that we may learne at him to be wise Time is a most pretious thing not such a jewell among all things perteyning to this life By this it may be esteemed that in a small point of time an infinite weight of glory may be acquired and men who haue beene prodigall of it spending yeares and moneths without consideration would haue giuen great riches yea all the jewels of the world if they had beene in their possession for prorogation of their life one year yea one moneth Let vs therefore learne at Dauid how he vsed his time when he lay downe at night he watered his couch with teares after the examination of his heart At midnight againe he rose vp to giue thankes there-after he preuented the morning watch that he might meditate on the word of the Lorde then in the day time morning noone and even hee made a noise to the Lord yea seauen times in the day he called vpon God Our Sauiour hath commended the like care vnto vs both by his precept and practise in the Temple at the table in the garden in the mountaine did he pray all night Vt te proprio ad de precandum inuitaret exemplo Happy were we if so we could spend our dayes for certaine it is when our last day coms we shal haue comfort of no by-gone time but that which we haue spent in the seruice of God Sleepe is most necessary for the intertainment of bodily health it is Ros naturae the dewe of nature more necessary then meate or drinke yet as Dauid protests ver that hee loued the word of God more then his appointed food so heere hee preferres the prayses of God to his sleepe and rest in the night This may make vs ashamed when we see how wicked men cannot rest except they haue done euill and how they defraud themselues of sleep that they may commit iniquity and how againe the superstitious Priests of Baal can wake in the night to attend vpon their Idols that Christians professing Gods true worship should so pamper themselues that they will not rise out o●… the bedde to bowe their knee to the Lord yea scarsely lying still with their bodies will raise vp their spirits to praise him Sleepe is compared by one to a sory customer that eyther takes vp more then wee should giue or then his Master allowes him The Lord allowes a certaine time for our sleepe and rest as he doth to all the
walke by faith then wee shall walke by sight now we haue but the earnest of the Spirit but in heauen wee shall be filled with his graces and receiue the principall summe Now that Dauid●…o ●…o frequentlie and feruentlie desires the Lord to teach him see ver 34. For I belieue Sometime Dauid brings the reason of his petition from Gods mercy goodnesse righteousnesse power and so forth sometime againe from himselfe as from his loue his feare his faith in God and some such like It is not sufficient to seeke from God because of that which he is wee must also consider what vvee are otherwise as Iehu said vnto one demanding Is it peace What hast thou to doe vvith peace So may it bee answered to vs Though the Lord bee good and gracious and mercifull yet vvhat is that vnto vs if vvee bee such as beleeue not in him loue him not and feare him not VER 67. Before I was afflicted I went astray but now I keepe thy word IN this verse Dauid protests that the chastisements of God had made him more godlie Euthymius thinks Dauids meaning is that his sinnes had made him more humble This is true in the godly that their sinnes humble them and make them more godly as is euident in S. Paule but the former sense is most agreeable to these words as ye may perceiue ver 71. As the Philistims could not vnderstand Samsons riddle How sweet came out of the sowre and meat out of the eater so can not worldlings vnderstand what comfort is in the Crosse or what profit comes by afflictions But certaine it is there is none truly godlie but they will testifie this that either they first learned Religion or at least vvere confirmed in it by some notable crosse But this is to be vnderstood of sanctified crosses vvith the vvhich GOD ioynes grace such a Crosse changeth the nature of it and is not Poena sed remedium delinquentis a punishment of sinne but a remedie Otherwise as of their owne nature afflictions are euill being the fruits of sinne so they bring out euill fruites in the wicked as impatience murmuring blasphemie for if euen good things become euill vnto them what maruaile that by those which are euil they become worse But now I keepe thy word To be afflicted and not purged by affliction to be striken vvith the roddes of God and no correction to follow is an argument of fearefull induration As siluer metall put in the fire if nothing come of it but dross is found to be reprobat siluer so these men who are not fined in the fornace of affliction if they so continue shall be found reprobate men the lead is consumed the bellowes are burnt but their wickednesse is not taken from them Alas how many are there such among vs of whō the Lord may complaine Wherefore should yee be smitten any more for yee fall away more and more God hath strooken them with Pestilence beside many other roddes he hath marked their bodies with the Byle but after their deliuerance they haue become more profane then euer they were before as if now they had escaped all wrath of God and no plague after this could ouer-take them sith the Pestilence had not deuoured them But as Esau spake of his fathers blessings Hast thou but one blessing my father so doe wee wish them consider of Gods plagues Hath the Lord but one plague The Sodomits escaped the sword of Chedarlaomer and the perill of the Lime-pits but they perished with fire from heauen And the Israelites who drowned not in the Red sea because they repented not many of them were stinged to death by fiery Serpēts So the wicked escaping some heauie iudgement and still continuing in their sins are but reserued to a worse as if one flying a Beare should be deuoured of a Lyon for the last plague of God is euer heauiest to the impenitent VER 68. Thou art good and gracious teach mee thy statutes HE repeates his former petition desiring againe that God would teach him And no maruaile he frequently makes this prayer Diuinae doctrinae auidus couetous of heauenly instruction for he had not onely himselfe to gouerne in his priuat conuersation but being called to be a gouernour of others he prayeth so much the more earnestly that God would teach and gouerne him The reason is taken from Gods goodnesse in himselfe his beneficence toward his creature Bonus es beneficus When we haue to do with men we labour by praysing them to conciliate their fauour and oftentimes we praise them for that which is not in them but we would wish to be in them or else in so praysing them admonishing them what they should be Quanto magis Deo laus sua est deferenda cuius proprium est vt bonus sit qui nisi bonus esset super terram stare quis possit How much more should Gods owne praise be giuen to himselfe whose propertie it is to be good yea goodnesse it selfe And if he were not good none vpon earth could stand before him And it is this goodnesse of God that moues him to be beneficiall gratious to his creature Omne enim bonum est Communicatiuum sui for euery good thing communicates the selfe vnto another And as it excels in goodnesse so excels it in this vertue of communicating the selfe vnto others as ye see the Sunne which is a most excellent light doth aboue all 〈◊〉 lights communicate his light to other 〈◊〉 And if so it be with the creatures which are good how much more with the Creator who is goodnes it selfe And this is the reason whereby our Sauiour confirmes vs If ye who are euill can giue good thinges to your children how much more shall your heauenly Father who is good giue good things to them that seeke from him And surely if wee knew with Dauid how good the Lord is in himselfe how gracious and beneficent to them who wait vpon him we would account it a greater blessing then we doe to be in fellowship with him and would testifie it by a more carefull seeking of his fauour by prayer VER 69. The proud haue imagined a lie against me but I wil keep thy precepts with my whol hart HE professeth here again his constancy in religion amplifying it by this circumstance that albeit hee was hated persecuted by wicked men yet still he followed after godliness Here we haue three things First who were Dauids enemies Proud men Secondly how they did warre against him by lies Thirdly how they trimmed their lies To the first it is manifest by Dauids example how the godly are exercised with the continuall inimitie of the wicked Quanto magis quis Deo seruice ●…esiderat tanto magis in se excitat aduersarios yea the more a man sets himselfe to serue God the more stirs hee
vp Sathan and his instruments to be aduersaries vnto him No band of nature can conioyne them whom grace hath not conioyned Iacob Esau both gotten of one father Isaac both borne of one mother Rebecca lying both together in one wombe yet euen there doe they fight together Let vs neuer looke for peace where God hath proclaimed warre the world wil hate vs bicause we are not of the world Let vs neuer be dismaied when we are crossed by them but rather so much the more comforted being assured that while as wicked men are enemies to vs for a good cause we are vpon that side whereof Christ is Captaine his Saints are souldiers and victory is most certaine Neither is it without cause that wicked men are so commonly called proud men for pride is the mother of all rebellion against God and man By pride Satan and his confederat Apostats vsurped to be like vnto God and by the same sin he drew man into the similitude of his condemnation so that now euery man by nature is a proud man which makes him shake off the yoke of God and without regard transgress the limits of obedience appointed to him by God As Phara●… would not let Israel go til the Lord slew his first borne so our nature now corrupted shall neuer render obedience to God nor loue to man til the first borne sin that is pride be subdued by grace Forgrace on the contrary euer works humility so soone as the eyes of Gods children are opened to see their sinnes they abhorre themselues the combe of their naturall pride is pulled downe and they abase themselues before God and man It was the humble speech of Abraham the great father of the faithfull I am but dust and ashes it was the voyce of Iacob I am not worthy of the least of Gods mercies Dauid hath the like Who am I Lord Gedeons voyce My fathers house is the least in all Israel and the Baptist who receiued this praise That a greater Prophet was not among the children of women acknowledged in humility That he was not worthy to loose the latchet of Christs shooe the Centurion confessed hee was not worthy that Christ should come vnder his roofe Saint Peters voyce was Depart from me for I am a sinfull man S. Pauls I am not worthy to be called an Apostle yea he confessed plainely he was the least of all the Apostles and the chiefe of all sinners Thus all the children of God giue glory to God by downe-casting themselues And if ye will go thorough all the examples of the booke of God ye shall finde that they who haue beene greatest in Gods estimation haue beene alway smallest in their owne eyes the heart which hath receiued most from God 〈◊〉 thinking least of it selfe Alye The 〈◊〉 ●…cumstance is h●…re shewing with what 〈◊〉 proude did fight against him namely with lyes Satans two armes by which hee wrestles against the godlie are violence and lyes vvhere hee cannot or dare not vse violence there be sure he will not faile to fight with lyes And herein doth the Lord greatly shew his carefull prouidence in fencing his children against Satans malice and the proud bragges of his instruments in such sort that their proudest harts are forced to forge lyes their malice beeing so great that they must doe euill and yet their power so bridled that they cannot doe what they would The third circumstance is in the words they haue imagined Vatablus translates it Concinnarunt mendacia So Tremel They haue trimmed vp lyes As Satan can transforme himselfe to an Angel of light so can hee trimme vp his lies vnder couerings of truth to make them the more plausible vnto men And indeed this is no small temptation when lyes made against the godlie are trimmed vp with the shadowes of truth and wicked men couer their vnrighteous dealings with appearances of righteousnes Thus not only are the godly vniustly persecuted but simple ones are made to beleeue that they haue most iustly deserued it In this case the godly are to sustaine themselues by the testimonie of a good conscience But I will keepe thy precepts Dauids enemies fought against him by lies Hee takes him to the obedience of Gods word Wee should not fight against the wicked with their owne armour rendring one wrong for another a lie for a lie rebuke for rebuke no more then Dauid could fight against Goliah with Saul his armor which was like vnto the armor of Goliah If we encounter Satan with his owne armour he shall soone ouerthrowe vs for by striking lying euil doing we are deadly wounded But to the weapons of flesh we must oppose the weapons of the spirit ouerocmming after the manner of our Lord the furie of men with our patience their persecutions vvith our prayers their euill with our good so shall we either winne them vnto vs or else heape coales of fire on their heads With my whole hart See ver 2. 10. 34. 58. 69. VER 70. Their hart is fat as grease but my delight is in thy law DAuid makes here an oppositiō between his disposition and the disposition of his enemies shewing how their hart vvas become fat and senselesse through their worldlie wealth but he being humbled by the rods of the Lord had his delight in the law of God counted more of it then thousands of gold and siluer When the godly looke into their owne harts or vp vnto GOD they see in themselues such a power of corruption as humbles them and makes them account themselues the cheefe of all sinners but vvhen they looke to the effects of Gods grace in them working a renouation which is not in the wicked then ariseth to them matter of reioycing That which the Pharisee in the pride of his heart spake of the Publican the penitent Publican in humilitie and a good conscience may turne ouer to the Pharisee I thanke God I am not like this Pharisee For the Christian by the light of God seeing the miserable estate of the wicked they could wish as St. Paul did to Agrippa that the wicked were like vnto them but would not change their state of grace with the most honourable estate that worldlings can haue on earth without grace In this that hee saith their heart was fatte as grease hee noteth two things First that they abounded in worldly wealth Next that their hart was become fat senselesse and voyd of feeling Quaedam veluti crassities occupat corū corda vt stupidi sint in sua obstinatione neque Deum curent audeantque simul contra seruos eius insurgere a certaine grossenes possesseth their harts which makes them senseless in obstinacy It is the principal blessing of the new couenant to haue a soft feeling melting hart like the hart of good Iosiah but a hard hart called a stony hart an adamantine and stubborne hart is a
enim quis persecutiones pati non iniustè and it is euer Causa non poena facit Martyrem But let none of you suffer as a murtherer or a thiefe or an euill doer or a busie body if any man suffer as a Christian let him not be ashamed but glorifie God in this behalfe Helpe mee Profane mockers thinke that a man is weake when he is driuen to Gods helpe but indeed then he is strongest when he is weakest in him selfe and seeks help in his God So long as we depend on the arme of flesh whether it be our own or others the Lord will do the lesse for vs but when distrusting our selues we relie vppon him then is he strongest to worke for vs. VER 87. They had almost consumed me vpon earth but I for sooke not thy precepts IN this verse are two things a complaint of the malice of his enemies a protestation of his constant affection toward the word of God In the first he complains they had not only troubled him but almost consumed him the malicious cruelty of the wicked is insatiable it cannot be quenched nay not by death for euen after death they rent both the name and the bodies of godly men Dauid was not thus farre deliuered into his enemies hands but he complaines that their malice almost had vndone him We mark it for this end that we may know it is Gods great prouidence that at any time we liue among the wicked and are not consumed by them Secondly we marke here the great weakenesse and infirmity of Gods children who oftentimes are more discouraged w th those tentations which come immediatly from men then with those others which com immediatly from God in the one they stand strong in the other they faint and are ouercome Surely because wee are in a great parte carnall therefore is it that the want of mans comfort and countenance commoues vs. If we were as we should be or as Nazianzen compares vs like Rockes in the Sea what would we regard the wind of mens mouthes or raging waues of their turbulent affections As an arrow shot at a stone returnes to him who sent it or otherwise fals downe to the ground so an iniurie done to a spirituall man who is built like a liuely stone vpon the Rocke Christ Iesus returns to the doer but troubles not the receiuer If it be otherwise that we consume and faint for the iniuries of men all this weakenesse proceeds from our vnregenerate nature Thirdly we marke here the Lords dispensation in his manner of working with his children who not onely suffers them to be troubled but brought so lowe by trouble that in their owne sense they are almost consumed Both in outward inward troubles doth the Lord humble them so farre that they are brought euen to the doore of death that so their faith and his truth may be the more manifested Thus the Apostle protests that he receiued in himselfe the sentence of death all for this end that hee might learne not to trust in himselfe but in God who raiseth the dead For so long as in danger there is any hope of remedy our infidelity casts her eye a wrong way but when we are brought to such extremity that with Peter we begin to sinke in affliction then we looke to the Lord we c●…aue the helpe of his hand and hee releeueth vs and wee cannot but acknowledge that our d●…iuerance is come from him onely and so by the greatnesse of our trouble our faith is ●…roborate and the praise of Gods truth more 〈◊〉 manifested VER 88. Quicken mee according to thy louing kindnesse so shall I keepe the testimonies of thy mouth MAny a time in this Psalme doth Dauid make this petition it seems strange that so often hee should acknowledge himselfe a dead man and desire God to quicken him But so it is vnto the child of God euerie desertion and decay of strength is a death so desirous are they to liue vnto GOD that vvhen they faile in it and find any inabilitie in their soules to serue GOD as they would they account themselues but dead and pray the Lord to quicken them According to thy louing kindnesse Hee oppones Gods kindnesse to his enemies malice and it is very comfortable I am troubled with their malice for thy sake and therefore I craue to be refreshed with thy kindnesse acknowledging that in Gods kindnesse there is comfort enough against all the malice of wicked men whatsoeuer according to that opposition vvhich hee makes in another place Why boastest thou thy selfe in thy malice the louing kindnesse of the Lord indureth daily Dauid knew a two-fold kindnesse or benignitie in God One generall extended to all his creatures whereof he speakes Psalm 145. All liuing creatures depend vpon thee and thou giuest them meate in due season Another speciall toward his owne beloued in Christ and for this hee prayeth Psalme 106. Visit mee with the saluation of thy people And againe Looke vpon mee and be mercifull vnto mee as thou vsest to those that feare thy name And for this now he prayeth that God would be good vnto him not onely by that generall kindnesse by the which as a Creator hee is good vnto all his creatures but according to his speciall fauour whereby as a louing father he abounds in kindnesse towards all his children in Christ Iesus So shall I keepe the testimonies of thy mouth Hee protests heere that 〈◊〉 the Lord quicken him there is no strength in him to obey nor to doe any other ac●…●…ing to Gods spirituall worsh●… 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●… dead man can doe actions 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 natural life But the presumptu●… 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of his age find no difficultie in the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they can pray well enough 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●…m-selues but they are saire de●… 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lord renew his mercy towar●… 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 daily by his spirit of grace wee ●…hall be bu●… 〈◊〉 senselesse stocks in praysing praying 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Lord our God Non enim commun●… 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 custodit coeleste mandatum sed illa quae 〈◊〉 fulcitur aeterno per operationē gratiae spiritualis for it is not this common life which keepes the heauenly commaundement but that life which is sustained by the eternall and spirituall operation of the grace of God which the Lord may encrease and conserue in vs for euer LAMED VER 89. O Lord thy vvord endureth for euer in heauen IN the last Section Dauid complained to God of the malicious doings of his enemies he comes now to shew what sustained him in his troubles to weet the certaintie and eternitie of the word of God by the which he considers that both heauen and earth were sustained and thereof concludes that so long as he trusted to Gods word he could not faile So that he giues this glory to the Lord that his word onely
to be iudge of his loue to the word Nec speciem sed plenitudinem charitatis tali conventione testatur Witnessing thereby that it was no counterfet loue but compleat and sincere loue which he bare vnto it The like protestation was vsed by S. Peter Thou knowest O Lord that I loue thee It were good that in things pertayning to godlinesse wee did declare our vpright hart by speaking as they spake Sith at the length wee must be presented before him and made manifest such as wee are let vs in time present our selues vnto him for many by custome speake that of themselues which in conscience they durst not speake beeing presented vnto God All that GOD craues of vs is loue Therefore saith the Apostle that the end or perfection of the law 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is loue and againe that loue is the fulfilling of the law Amari exigit qui omnes amat quia charitas est hee desires to bee loued of all who loues all because hee is loue it selfe This one commaundement containes all and it is most reasonable for what excuse can a man bring for this that he loues not God Yet many in word profess that they loue him who loue not indeed The triall of our loue to God is our loue to his word our care to keep his commaundements If any loue mee he will keepe my commaundements Qui enim diligit ex voluntate facit quae sibi sunt imperata This one triall conuinceth many to be lyers who say they loue God and yet delight not in his word nor are carefull to obey him It is my meditation continually Hee proues that which hee hath spoken The nature of loue is that it is euer thinking of the thing beloued and vseth all meanes to obtaine it Strong loue is like fire that cannot be quenched with much water So Dauid proues his loue to God by his loue to Gods word and his loue to Gods word by his continuall meditation in it no change of other exercises could make him forget it Marke againe the meanes by which after Dauids exāple we must grow in the knowledge of the word of God First meditation of that which wee haue heard or read Secondly prayer for grace to belieue and practice it Thirdly thanksgiuing for grace receiued Fourthly godly conference thereof one of vs with another All these shal a man find carefully practiced by Dauid And truly the greatest cause why now there being so much preaching there is so little profiting in godlinesse is that men before hearing prepare not in hearing pray not after hearing neither meditate thereof in themselues nor speak thereof vnto others VER 98. By thy cōmandements thou hast made me wiser thē my enemies for they are euer with me NOw he prayseth the word for the singular profit fruit which he reaped by it to weet that he learned wisedom by it And this he amplifies by cōparing himselfe with three sorts of men his enemies his teachers and the ancients And this he doth not of vaine glorie for bragging is farre from him who is gouerned by the Spirit of grace but to commend the word of the Lord and to allure others to loue it by declaring to them what manifold good hee found in it Wiser then mine enemies But how can this be seeing our Sauiour saith that The men of this world are wiser in their owne generation then the children of God The answer is Our Sauior doth not call worldlings wise men simply but wiser in their owne generation that is wise in things pertaining to this life Or as Ieremie calls them Wise to doe euill and when they haue so done wise to conceale and cloak it All which in very deed is but folly therfore Dauid who by the light of Gods word saw that it was so could not be moued to follow their course Well there is a great controuersie between the godly the wicked either of them in their iudgement account the other to be fooles but it is the light of Gods word which must decide it VER 99. I haue had more vnderstanding then my teachers for thy testimonies are my meditation HEere is the second amplification That the word of God had made him wiser then his teachers which might indeed seem to be Incongrua presumptio Where note stil hee is magnifying not himselfe but the grace of God toward him It is no new thing to see many teachers often pretending to learne others that which they haue not learned thēselues and who can tell how miserable these men are who will be Doctors but not disciples teaching others but not taught of God themselues because they are not carefull to learne from him To such saith Nazianz. Our Lord was 30. yeers old ere hee beganne to be a Preacher Et tu magister vis fieri antequam discipulus and thou wilt be a master of Christians before thou be a scholer of Christ. Vnus verus est Magister qui solus non didicit quod omnes doceret caeteri omnes discant prius quod doceant ab illo accipiant quod alijs tradant There is one true Master who teacheth all and learnes of none as for all others they must first learne what they should teach and receiue from him that which they should deliuer vnto others But alas Quam multi sunt qui sermone valent loquuntur non tamen sale coelesti conditi sunt recensent que multa de mensa regia quorum nullum adepti sunt gustum How many are powerfull in speech who are not seasoned with heauenly salt rehearsing many delicates which are on the table of the heauenly King whereof they neuer tasted themselues More wise was the holy Apostle who subdued his body by discipline least while as he preached to others he should haue beene a reprobat himselfe God grant that wee may follow his example And yet euen where the Preacher is godlie partaker of that grace himselfe whereof hee is an Embassadour to others it falls out oftentimes that greater measure of light and grace is communicated by his ministrie to another then is giuen to himselfe As Augustine first illuminated and conuerted by Ambrose did far excell both in knowledge and spirituall grace him that taught him And heerein God wonderfully shewes his glory That whosoeuer be the instrument he is the dispenser of light and glorle giuing more by the instrument then it hath in it selfe And this is so farre from beeing to a godly Teacher a matter of griefe that it is rather a matter of glory The wicked glory to make others more wicked then themselues as our Sauior said the Pharisees did with the Proselyts that they made them tenne times more the children of Satan then themselues and shall the godly grudge to see that they haue made others more godly then themselues Nay truely but rather such
Let men beware of this lest they also be punished after the similitude of his condemnation VER 114. Thou art my refuge and shield and I trust in thy word HEe makes heere a secret opposition betweene the armour of the wicked by which they impugned him and his armor wherby he defended himselfe As for them by their worldly wisedome they are subtill in inventing wayes to hurt and craftily lay many snares wherein to trap me but my defence is in thee onely Dauid was in many most desperate dangers and still he found the Lord prouiding vnlooked-for deliuerances the strong Cittie of Keilah could not defend him the Lord warned him to come out of it and he was a shield vnto him the solitarie Wildernesse of Maon could not secure him for euen there Saul and his souldiers had compassed him but God had a care of him and turned his pursuers another way These by-gone experiences of Gods louing care and fauour towards him doe now confirme him to rest in God how many wayes soeuer his enemies pursue him he will still make the Lord his refuge and shield and trust in his word VER 115. Away from me yee wicked for I will keepe the commandements of my God AS before he protested that he would cleaue vnto God so now that he will sunder from the wicked True fellowship with God bindes vs to diuide our hearts from all them who will not walk Gods way and therefore this is brought in as a sufficient reason of improbation against the wicked to proue they were not the Lords because saith the Lord If thou see a thiese thou runnest with him and art companion with the adulterers what then hast thou to doe to take my ordinances in thy mouth Euery mans company wherin he delights may tell what maner of man he is himselfe As Rauens flock together by companies and Doues flie together and beasts of the earth gather themselues to other of their own kinds so wicked men loue the company of wicked and godly men through grace delight in the fellowship of such as are like them Which is not so to be vnderstood as if in regard of personall conuersation we behoued to separate from the wicked for so as saith the Apostle we should goe out of the world but euen in the midst of their company we must separate from them both in fashions and affections as we see Lot did in Sodome And this Dauid did for two causes First for offences don against God he withdrew himselfe from the company of the wicked for their sport and pleasure is in those things which grieue the spirit of the Lord. Sure it is he neuer loued God who mislikes not men for offending God Doe I not hate them that hate thee Doe I not contend with them who contend with thee I hate them as if they were mine vtter enemies The other cause is the feare of his owne infirmities lest by the exāple of the wicked either he should be allured to euill or relented to good For euery company warnes vs to walke in feare and trembling Quoniam vndique scandala nos obsident innumeris vitijs refertusest mundus quae extinguunt vel saltem corrumpunt in nobis legem Dei legis studium On euery hand we are compassed with stumbling blocks the world is replenished with innumerable euils which eyther extinguish or corrupt in vs the studie of Gods lawe and for which we haue neede to walke circumspectly if we be in the company of godly men we should watch ouer our wordes and wayes lest we offend them and if we also be in the company of the wicked we should likewise feare lest we be offended or infected by them For I will keep the commandements of my God There is the reason of his protestation Your course and mine are contrary I haue resolued to walke another way then the way wherein I see ye are walking and therefore your company is not for me Of my God As a man can esteeme of any thing which he knowes is his owne so if once he know that God is his he cannot but loue him and carefully obey him neyther is it possible that any man can giue to God hearty and permanent seruice who is not perswaded to say with Dauid He is my God All the pleasures all the terrours of the world cannot sunder that soule from God who can truely say The Lord is my God Againe a true Christian hath nothing in the world wherein he can reioyce as in his owne but onely in the Lord his God A worldling will speake with Nabal My flesh and my bread and with Nebuchadnezer Is not this my Palace and with Alcibiades boast of their Rent A Christian hath none of these of his owne but vseth them like moueables a mans own flesh yea his owne heart his friends and all that he hath will faile him To these a Christian will neuer say They are mine but God is the strength of mine heart and my portion for euer VER 116. Stablish me according to thy promise that I may liue disappoint me not of my hope DAuid after his former resolution turnes him to prayer for our intentions and conclusions are nothing except the Lord blesse them and therefore now Dauid craueth that God would stablish him The godly are subiect to a two fold instability the first is a wauering from a constant beleeuing of Gods promises And this is an instability of faith not that I think the faith of a man regenerate can faile but because oft-times it is sore combred shaken with the winde of manifold tentations Who can tell how many wayes Gods children are tempted with vnbeliefe It may truly be said that he nere knew what it is to beleeue who knowes not what it is to wrestle with vnbeliefe great neede therefore haue we to pray with Dauid Lord stablish me and with that Father interceding for his sonne in the Gospell O Lord I beleeue helpe thou my vnbeliefe The other is an instability of loue obedience for the godly finde their hearts many times carried away by externall allurements to a forgetfulnesse of the Lord their God and there-thorough also to an offending him Alas how instable a thing is the heart of man by nature euery obiect intangles it and it is ready to goe a whooring after euery creature vnlesse that golden nayle of the holy loue and feare of God bee driuen into it And in this respect also we haue great neede to pray with Dauid Lord stablish me Adam created by God was indued with many excellent graces but wanted this perseuerance and stability in grace which now wee haue in Christ for by him we haue not onely the grace of conversion but the grace also of confirmation the one makes vs godly the other continues vs godly But now many so leane to the shewe of their conversion
that they are carelesse of the grace of confirmation wherof it comes to passe that they end in the flesh who made a shew of beginning in the Spirit not considering these two distinct graces requisite to saluation Conuersion and Confirmation Let vs therefore still pray with Dauid that God would stablish and confirme vs. According to thy promise The prayers of the godly are poured out in faith they seek nothing but according to Gods promise Many do otherwise who pray neither looking to Gods promise nor leaning to the Mediator such prayers are vvords poured out into the ayre and carried away with the wind Yet others are more profane who pray not onely without a promise but against the commaund of God for either when they goe to doe wickedlie they pray GOD to prosper them or else in their perturbations they cry for vengeance on their neighbours where they should cry for mercy These praiers are the offring of strange fire to the Lord which is abhomination Yet are wee to remember that if wee vvould haue our prayers grounded well vpon Gods promises wee must also remember the condition whereupon hee hath made the promise Wee reade that when Israel was opprest by the Philistims and cryed vnto God at the first he gaue them a hard answere Goe to the Gods whom yee haue serued and let them deliuer you But beeing humbled by this answer they pray againe and with their prayer put away the salse Gods from among them and then it is subioyned that the soule of God was grieued for the miseries of Israel VVhereof wee learne that it is but a vaine thing to charge GOD with his promise where wee make no conscience of the condition he requires of vs. That I may liue But what life is this he craues Had hee not already the life of a King vvith worldly wealth and honour enough Hee had indeede but this is not the life which Dauid esteemes to bee life There is nothing naturall men loue better then life nor feare more then death yet knowe they not what is the life they should loue nor what is the death they should flee Sunt enim qui viuentes mortui sunt qui mortui viuūt for there are some liuing men who are but dead some dead who are liuing If this be life to grow well and wex strong frō infancie proceeding to old age wil not in this the trees of the field excell man who from little plants grow vp into most excellent Cedars Or if this be life to see to heare to smell c. will not in this the beasts of the earth excell thee for there is no sense wherein some beasts doe not far excell men some see better some heare better some smell better And generally all of them haue a greater appetite to their meat are more strong to digest it But if ye●…●…hou glory in this that thou art indued with reason then remember how many Philosophers and Ethnicks haue excelled thee in the vse of reason So that neither can thy comfort be in the vegetatiue life wherein trees excell thee nor in the sensitiue which beasts haue better thē thou nor in the reasonable life which many reprobates haue that shal neuer see the face of God If man haue no better life then these hee hath but a shadow of life and it may truelie be said of him that while he is liuing he is dead The life of a Christian stands in this To haue his soule quickned by the spirit of Grace For as the presence of the soul quickens the body the departure thereof brings instant death and the body without it is but a dead lumpe of clay so it is the presence of Gods Spirit which giueth life to the soule of man And this life is known by these two notable effects for first it brings a ioyfull sense of Gods mercy and next a spirituall disposition to spirituall exercises And without this pretend a man what he will hee is but the image of a Christian looking some-what like him but not quickned by his life And disappoint mee not of my hope That is in the time of need let mee feele the truth of thy promises to comfort mee as now I hope to find thy helpe in the time of trouble so I pray thee that I may find it It is the manner of the godlie to fore-thinke of that whi●… is to come and to prouide for trouble ere trouble come VVherefore Salomon describing a wise man saith that his heart is alway at his right hand and that his eye is in his forehead A prudent man seeth the plague and hideth himselfe in time hee knoweth that trouble and heauie tentations are before him and that hee must fight fore battels before hee enter into his promised Canaan and therefore prayeth feruently before hand that God would not be farre from him when trouble comes neere him It is on the contrary the follie of the vvicked They goe on saith Salomon and are snared they neuer fore-thinke what is to come they rest vpon present false comforts which disappoint them in the time of their need Others that stand by may bid them be of good comfort but what cōfort can they haue when outward comforts where-to they trusted faile them and inward comforts they neuer knew VER 117. Stay thou mee and I shall bee safe and I will delight continually in thy statutes THis verse contains a prayer in substance and effect one with the former and the repetition of the prayer sheweth that he was touched with a deepe sense of his owne necessitie which made him feruent in prayer and it doth greatly reproue vs who are cold in prayer We may haue store of grace for seeking and alas wee are carelesse to seeke If thou knewest thou wouldest aske and if thou askedst I vvould giue It is true our Sauiour forbids vs to make repetitions in praying like the heathen who thinke to be heard for their much babbling For to offer vnto the Lord multitude of words without spirit or affection is to offer a dead sacrifice to a liuing GOD but certaine it is that words doubled from a feruent and intended affection are euer gracious and acceptable to the Lord. Stay mee Like a man ready to fall hee prayeth God to hold him vp Three things made Dauid afraid First great tentations without for from euery ayre the wind of tentation blowes vpon a Christian. Secondly great corruption within Thirdly examples of other worthie men that haue fallen before him and are written for vs not that wee should learne to fall but to feare least we fall These three should alway hold vs humble according to that warning Hee that stands take heed least he fall Sure it is we are most strong when distrusting our owne weakenesse we leane to the Lord praying him to stay vs otherwise as Peter in his carnall confidence was
voluptatum cruci affixa non habeat nayle therefore thy carnall desires to the Crosse of Christ that they may haue no libertie as they were wont to goe loose and wander where they please Otherwise if thou wilt be vaine caried like an instable man after the wandering lusts of corrupt nature fearful is that sentence My Spirit shal not alway striue with man for he is but flesh For feare of thee Familiaritie with men breeds contempt familiaritie with God not so none reuerence the Lord more then they vvho knowe him best and are most familiar with him The Seraphins who couer their faces in presence of his Maiestie teach vs this by their example Such as doe not remember God and far lesse reuerence him when they thinke or speak of his Maiestie declare sufficiently that they were neuer familiar with him I am afraid of thy iudgements It is not to bee thought strange that this feare of Gods iudgements is in men regenerate for the guiltinesse which by sinnes of commission and omission daily they contract cannot be without fear But as I said it cannot continue for in them feare prepares away to loue and loue as it increaseth diminisheth feare Alway we learne here that if the iudgements of God executed vpon others make the godlie afraid how fearefull and importable they will be to the wicked If Moses trembled at the giuing of the law how terrible shall the execution thereof be vnto the wicked Let vs fear in time and we shall not feare in that day wherein horrible feare shall confound the wicked AIN VER 121. I haue executed iudgement and iustice leaue me not to mine oppressors IN this Section Dauid continueth his prayer for protection against his enemies as also for grace to knowe his way vpon earth and follow it He begins with a Petition Leaue me not to mine oppressors and he giues the reason I haue executed iudgement and iustice Where we are not to thinke that he is iustifying himselfe before God but onely declaring how iniustly he was oppressed by men Desensio est non arrogantia Our lesson is If we would haue our prayers forcible let vs intertaine the testimony of a good conscience Iudgement and iustice These two are distinguished by Ambrose in such sort that he makes the one the effect of the other Iudicij finis iustitia est in altero veritatis custodia est in altero fructus aequitatis iudgement is the keeper of verity iustice the fruit of equity the one of these perteyning to the minde makes it giue light for discerning betweene right and wrong the other rectifying the affections and actions Happy is the man in whom these two concurre together Quis autem hodie tanta animi praeditus est puritate vt cum fiducia verbis ist is vti possit But who this day is indued with such purity of minde that with boldnesse he may vse these words My reioycing is the testimony of a good conscience Leaue me not We haue often said that Dauid was a man after Gods owne heart who had also the testimony of a good conscience to sustaine him yet could he not liue free from the oppression of wicked men So long as this battell lasts and Satan wants not instruments let vs euer look to be troubled by them and not to be discouraged thereat but rather comforted considering the inimity proclaimed in Paradise is without reconciliation and sith the Prince of our saluation sustained such contradiction of sinners why shall it grieue vs to beare his crosse And sith Dauid so earnestly prayed not to be left into the hands of his bodily oppressors what shall we doe against our soules oppressors Satan seekes continually to spoile vs of that sparke of spirituall life which God hath put into vs. It is a searfull iudgement where God leaues men to his tyrannie let vs pray for mercy against it VER 122. Answer for thy seruant in that thing which is good and let not the proud oppresse me AMong many crosses wherewith Dauid was exercised the strise of tongues is not one of the least they did persecute him with lies and calumnies scoffers and belly-gods made a by-word of him in their meetings and flattering Courtiers belied him vnto Saul This was not a small crosse Molesta enimres calumnia etiamsi magnum afferat praemium against it Dauid makes his refuge to God Answer for thy seruant His meaning is Lord thou kno west how iniustly I am calumniate and euill spoken of in many parts where I am not nor may not answere for my selfe Lorde answere thou for me And his petition imports not onely a crauing of helpe from God but that God would take his part and ioyne himselfe with his righteous cause And so it is indeede the Lord is partaker with his children in their innocent sufferings and their cause is his cause Blessed are ye when ye are railed vpon for righteousnesse sake c. For the spirit of grace and glorie rests in you which on their part is euill spoken of but on your part is glorified This might serue for a warning to wicked men if any wisedom were in them they should be loath to meddle with the children of God for if so they will they meddle with a stronger partie then they are aware of Againe it is to be considered that hee craues protection onely in his good and honest cause It is not for vs to call for the Lords assistance to all our willes and workes Hee is the righteous Iudge of the world and neyther will nor can do vnrighteously To commenda wrong cause to his protection is to prouoke him to hasten our punishment And on the other hand albeit our cause were neuer so righteous yet we must not think to bear it out with our owne strength and wisedome It falles out oft-times that men fall downe and faint through feeblenesse euen in a good cause because they giue not to God his glory In their lawfull affairs they prosper not because they take counsel but not from me saith the Lord They commit not their way to God as Dauid exhorts neyther cast they their burden vpon the Lord as Peter commaunds them but sacrifice to their own net think to cōpasse their affaires by their own wi●… Sure it is the Lord is then most carefull of vs when we cast our greatest care vpon him For thy seruant Customably King Dauid delights in this stile to call himselfe Gods seruant learning vs also to count this our greatest honor to be the seruants of the great and euer-liuing God for we are not our owne as saith the Apostle We are bought with a price But here is our sin such as are vndervs whether they be bought or hired seruants wee thinke they should serue vs and are offended if they doe not but are not so carefull to doe seruice to
so cleerely that in regard of time they might haue been teachers of others yet are they but children in knowledge and vnderstanding But to whom doth the word giue vnderstanding Dauid saith to the simple not to such as are high minded or double in heart or wise in their owne eyes who will examine the mysteries of godlines by the quicknes of naturall reason No to such as deny themselues as captiue their naturall vnderstanding and like humble disciples submit themselues not to aske but to heare not to reason but to belieue And if for this cause Naturalists who want this humility cannot profit by the word what maruaile that Papists far lesse become wise by it who haue their hearts so full of preiudices concerning it that they spare not to vtter blasphemies against it calling it not onely vnprofitable but pernitious to the simple and to the idiots And againe where they charge it with difficultie that simple men and idiots should not bee suffered to read it because it is obscure all these friuolous allegations of men are annulled by this one testimony of God that it giues light to the simple Eos qui ignorantia tenentur infantibus similes sunt intellectu replet lex tua that is Euen to such ignorants who are like infants saith Basill non solum viris sed mente intellectu paruulis it giues not onely light to men but to such as in vnderstanding are children To this purpose notable is that saying of Irenaeus Vniuersae scripturae et propheticae euangelicae in aperto et sine ambiguitate et ab omnibus audiri possunt The whole scriptures both prophetical and euangelicall are open plaine not doubtfull but such as may be heard of all men And to this purpose saith Lactantius Num igitur deus mentis linguae vocis artifex disertè loqui non potest Imò verò summa prouidentia carere fuco voluit ea quae diuina sunt vt omnes intelligerent quae ipse omnibus loquebatur Shall wee thinke that God who is the creator of the minde the tongue and voice cannot speake distinctly himselfe No truly by great prouidence he hath propounded his word in so plaine a manner that all sorts of men may vnderstand that which he speakes vnto all Many other witnesses might be brought to this same purpose but I cease VER 123. I opened my mouth and panted because I loued thy Commandements BY this manner of speech Dauid expresses as Basile thinks Animi propensionem that the inclination of his soule was after Gods word For this opened mouth Ambrose thinks is Os interioris hominis the mouth of the inward man which in effect is his heart and the speech notes Vehementem animi intensionem a vehement intension of his spirit saith Euthymius yet shall it not be amisse to consider heere how the minde of the godly earnestly affected moues the body also The speech may be drawne from trauellers who being very desirous to attaine to their proposed ends enforce their strength thervnto and finding a weakenes in their body to answere their will they pant open their mouth seeking refreshment from the aire to renew their strength or as Vatablus thinks from men exceeding hungry and thirstie who open their mouth as if they would draw in the whole aire and then pant and sigh within themselues when they finde no full refreshment by it So he expresseth it Tanto desiderio legum tuarum flagrat cor meū vt subinde cogar haurire aerem propter ass●…dua suspiria How-euer it be it lets vs see how the hearing reading or meditating of Gods word wakened in Dauid a most earnest affection to haue the light ioy grace and comfort thereof communicated to his owne heart For in the godly knowledge of good increaseth desires and it cannot be expressed how vehemently their soules long to feele that power and comfort which they know is in the word and how sore they are grieued and troubled when they finde it not And happy were wee if we could meete the Lord with this like affection that when hee opens his mouth wee could also open our heart to heare as Dauid heere doth Christus aperit os vt daret alijs spiritum Dauid aperuit vt acciperet Opening his heart to receiue the spirit of grace when God openeth his mouth in his word to giue it For it is his promise to vs all Open thy mouth wide and I shall fill it let vs turne it into a prayer that the Lord who opened the heart of ●…dia would open our heart to receiue grace when he offers by his word to giue it VER 132. Look vpon me and be merciful to me as thou vsest to do vnto those that loue thy name FRom praises Dauid now turns him to praier In our best estate we are farre from that which we should be our perfection in this life stands in the acknowledging of our imperfection Euen when the godly speake any thing to God out of a good conscience concerning their vpright affection toward him at that same time priuie to the conscience of their wants they take them to prayer and seek mercy Looke vpon me This prayer is vsed by the godlie in two respects first when they are vnrighteously iudged of men and charged with that whereof they are not guilty in this case they desire that God would look vpon them For sure it is vnlesse the conscience be sleeping no man dare present an euill cause to the eye of God but rather as Adam hid himselfe after his transgression so men whose consciences are euill flie the sight of God and dare not desire him to look vpon them And againe when they are vnder spirituall desertion and in their sense the countenance of God is turned from them whose fauour is better then life which after the manner of men turning their face from such as they are angry withall they take vp to be an argument of displeasure in this case also they pray that the Lord would looke vpon them that is as he expounds himselfe be fauourable and mercifull to them And be mercifull This is very well subioyned for God looks to some in his displeasure so hee looked to the Egyptians and vnloosed the pinnes of their chariots that they could not driue so he looked to Sodome and rained downe fire and brimstone vpon them The eyes of the Lord said Amos are vpon the sinfull kingdome to destroy it Dauid knew this and therefore desires the Lord so to looke on him as to be mercivnto him As thou vsest These words containe in effect a reason from Gods constant kindnes toward all his children Lord doe to me as thou hast vsed to doe to others that loue thee Or●… vt aequali cum illis sententia potiar The examples of Gods mercie are not only registred for our comfort but for our confirmation Wherein we
the eternity of it And by these two he sustaines himselfe against all tentations wherwith hee was compassed and namely the contempt of men Sith the Lawe of God is truth and his righteousnesse euerlasting they cannot be deceiued who depend vpon it and they who liue in a contrary disposition vnto it cannot be but miserable eternally Neyther is it enough for vs to know this generally as many do but with Dauid wee should earnestly pray wee may bee taught by his word stablished by his truth rectified by his righteousnesse Haec conciliant sempiterna bona that so we may be partakers of that euerlasting good which cometh by them VER 143. Trouble and anguish are com vpon me yet thy commandements are my delight ALbeit Dauid was laden with heauy troubles yet did he neuer quit his affection toward the word of God Where if it be enquired why did the Lord lay such heauy trouble vpon a man whom he loued so dearely and why suffers he his children to be so hardly handled in this life for whom he hath prepared a blessed fellowship and communion with himselfe in the life to come The reason is because as saith the Apostle Neede so requires Necessaria est crux peregrinanti The crosse is necessary for a pilgrime for by it sin is subdued pride weakned patience and all other graces of the spirit increased It workes a contempt of this world and prepares vs for the kingdome of God Of this let such as are vnder the crosse learne with patience to beare it and others who know not yet what it is prepare them-selues for it For if they bee the kindly sonnes of God they shall not eschew it For hee chastiseth euery one whom he receiues Are my delight This is strange that in the midst of anguish he hath delight yea indeed the sweetnesse of Gods word is best perceiued vnder the bitternes of the crosse the ioy of Christ and the ioy of the world cannot consist together A heart delighted with worldlie ioie cannot feele the consolations of the spirite the one of these destroyes the other But in sanctified trouble the comforts of GODs word are felt and perceiued in most sensible manner Many a time hath Dauid protested this delight of his in the vvorde of GOD and truely it is a great argument of godlinesse vvhen men come not onely to a reuerence of it but to loue it and to delight in it Let this bee considered of those vnhappy men who heare it of custome and count it but a wearinesse VER 144. The righteousnes of thy testimonies is euerlasting Grant mee vnderstanding and I shall liue THis verse is one with the 142. saue only that he adioynes to it his accustomed petition for vnderstanding that hee may liue Nam propriè homines non viuunt sine intelligentia diuinae legis for it is no life which men haue vvho are destitute of this knowledge The vvord of God is contemned of none but suchas knowe not the excellencie thereof And they are repayed with this fearefull recompence that because they knowe not nor cannot account of it the light the vertue the grace there of is not dilated toward them but they abide still in their naturall darknes and death From which most vnhappy condition the Lord deliuer vs. KOPH VER 145. I haue cryed with my whole heart hear me O Lord and I will keep thy statutes IN this verse wee haue three things a petition Heare mee a reason I haue cryed with mine whole heart a promise I will keepe thy statutes The reason is first sette downe which in effect is this O Lord thou hast bound thy selfe by thy promise to answere them who call vpon thee and thou hast not at any time sent them away comfortlesse that call vpon thee in spirit and truth yea thou hast been found of them vvho sought thee not Then Lord seeing thou hast giuen me this grace to cry to thee with my whole heart shew me also this grace that thou maiest heare me As the husbandman seeks no increase of that land wherein he hath sowen no seed so hee that prayeth not and seekes not the Lord while hee may be found what comfort can hee expect in the time of his trouble Our praiers are seede sowen not in the earth but in the heauen wee cast them into the bosome of God he that sowes sparingly shall reape sparingly if wee looke for a plentifull haruest let vs sowe more aboundantly in the seede time for euery praier feruentlie and in faith sent vp to God either presently returnes with some good or then laies good vp in store for vs which we shall enioy heereafter The feruency of his praier he expresseth when he saith that he cryed it notes Animi propensionē the earnestnes of his soule without this the earnestnes of the tongue is but Ludibriū quoddā quo deus non honore sed contumelia afficitur a mockery of God and a dishonouring of him Non ●…ocis magnitudine sed cordis magnanimitate clamādum est non sono corporis sed cogitationum sublimitate concentu virtutum It is not by lowdnes of the voice but stoutnes of the heart not by sound of the body but by sublimity of our cogitations and by consent of vertues that wee must cry vnto God When Israell was straighted at the red sea the Armie of Egyptians vpon their backe and the sea before them and in their iudgement they saw no outgaite but lookt either to be deuoured by the sword or drowned by the water no doubt there was among the people murmuring and crying with dolefull lamentation but what Clamabat populus et non audiebatur tacebat Moses audiebatur the people cryed and were not heard Moses is silent and God heares him for his heart was fixed vpon God waiting till God should shew the way of deliuerance which they could not see What auailes the voice of the wicked who honour God with their lips but their heart is far from him Iniustianima deo mertua est The soule of an vnrighteous man is dead vnto God Nihil in illa sublime nihil magnificum est There is no high nor excellent thing in it which can go vp to the most high and excellent God With mine whole heart He amplisies this yet further when he saith that hee cryed with his whole heart Non solum ergo elamandum est sed et toto corde clamandum For as a man cryes most loudly whē he cries with al his mouth opened so a man praies most effectually when hee praies with his whole heart Neither doth this speech declare onely the feruency of his affection but imports also that it was a great thing which he sought from God Et tu cum oras magna ora id est ora quae aeterna sunt non caduca And thou when thou prayest pray for great things for things induring not for things perishing praie