Selected quad for the lemma: spirit_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
spirit_n judgement_n young_a youth_n 54 3 7.9519 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

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

There are 31 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

it is very needful they should be seasoned with the word betimes 3. Consider the many inconveniencies that will follow if they do not presently mind this work 1. Death is uncertain and therefore such a weighty business as this will brook no delay God doth not always give warning Nadab and Abihu two rash and inconsiderate young men were taken away in their sins and the Bears out of the Forest devoured the children that mocked the Prophet The danger being so great as soon as we are sensible of it we should flye from it When children come to the fulness of reason they stand upon their own bottom before they are reckoned to their Parents Oh! wo be to you if you dye in your sins Certainly as soon as a man is upon his own personal account he should look to himself lest God cut him off before he hath made his peace with him 2. Sin groweth stronger by custom and more rooted it gathereth strength by every act A brand that hath been in the fire is more apt to take fire again A man in a Dropsie the more he drinks the more his thirst increaseth Every act lesseneth fear and strengthneth inclination Jer. 13. 27. Wo unto thee O Ierusalem wilt thou not be made clean when shall it once be A twig is easily bowed but when it grows into a Tree it is more troublesome and unpliable A Tree newly set may be transplanted but when long rooted not so easily The man that was possessed of a Devil from his childhood how hardly is he cured Mark 9. 29. 3. Justice is provoked the longer and that will be a grief to you first or last If ever we be brought home to God it will cost us many a bitter tear not only at first conversion Jer. 31. 18. I have surely heard Ephraim bemoaning himself thus Thou hast chastised me and I was chastised c. but afterwards David though he began with God be-times Psal. 25. 7. yet prays Remember not the sins of my youth nor my transgression And Iob 13. 26. For thou writest bitter things against me and makest me to possess the iniquities of my youth Old bruises may trouble us long after upon every change of weather and new afflictions revive the sense of old sins They may stick by us We think tricks of youth are not to be stood upon you may have a bitter sense of them to your dying day 4. You will every day grow more useless to God the exercise of Religion dependeth much on the vigor of affections Again it is very profitable it brings a great deal of honour to God to begin with him betimes All time is little enough to declare your respects to God And it is honourable for you Seniority in grace is a preferment They were in Christ before me saith Paul An Old Disciple is a title of honour To grow gray in Christs service and to know him long it maketh the work of grace more easie The dedication of the first-fruits sanctified the whole lump Lam. 3. 27. It is good for a man that he bear the yoak in his youth to be inured to strictness betimes Dispositions impressed in youth increase with us Again it will be very comfortable when the miseries of old age come upon you As the Ant provideth in Summer for Winter so should we provide for age Now what a sweet comfort will it be when we are taken off from service that while we had any strength and affections God had the use of them Then our age will be a good old age USE 1. is for Lamentation That so few youths take to the ways of God No age doth despise the word so much as this which hath most need of it It is a rare thing to find a Ioseph or a Samuel or a Iosiah that seek God betimes Go to the Universities and you will find that those that should be as Nazarites consecrated to God live as those that have vowed and consecrated themselves to Satan Amos 2. 11. And I raised up of your sons for prophets and of your young men for Nazarites c. The sons of the prophets in their youth were bred for a more strict discipline in their holy calling separated from worldly delights to be a stock of a succeeding Ministry But alas they spend their time in vanity bringing nothing thence but the sins of the place and vainly following the sinful customs of the Countrey How few regard the education of their youth in knowledg or religious practice Families are Societies to be sanctified to God as well as Churches The Governours of them have as truly a charge of souls as the Pastors of Churches They offer their children to God in baptism but educate and bring them up for the world and the flesh They bewail any natural defect in them if their children have a stammering tongue a deaf ear or a withered leg but not want of grace We have a prejudice and think they are too young to be wrought upon but Gods word can break in with weight and power on young ones Luke 11. 1. One of his disciples said unto him Lord teach us to pray as Iohn also taught his disciples And Mat. 21. 15. When the chief priests and scribes saw the wonderful things that he did and the children crying in the temple and saying Hosanna to the son of David they were sore displeased and said unto him Hearest thou what these say And Iesus said unto them Yea have ye never read Out of the mouths of babes and sucklings thou hast perfected praise They learned it of their Parents Mat. 21. 9. And the multitudes that went before and that followed cryed saying Hosanna to the Son of David We should often be infusing good principles in youth Corruption of youth is one of the saddest symptoms of approaching Judgment USE 2. Is exhortation to young ones You that are to begin your course begin with God you have no experience yet you have a rule You have mighty lusts but a stronger Spirit No age is excluded from the promise of the Spirit Joel 2. 28 29. And it shall come to pass afterward that I will pour out my spirit upon all flesh and your sons and your daughters shall prophesie your old men shall dream dreams your young men shall see visions and also upon the servants and upon the handmaids in those days will I pour out my spirit Of Iohn Baptist it is said Luke 1. 15. He shall be filled with the Holy Ghost even from his mothers womb And Mark 10. 14. Suffer little children to come unto me and forbid them not for of such is the kingdom of God There is power to enlighten you notwithstanding all your prejudices to subdue your lusts notwithstanding the power of corruptions 1 Joh. 2. 13 14. I write unto you young men because ye have overcome the wicked one I write unto you little children because ye have known the Father c. And see Gen. 39. 9. It will be a
his mouth and walk in the way that is pointed out by his Word and Spirit you shall have enough to direct you in all your ways 2. It doth warn us of all our dangers It doth not only in the general call upon us to watch Mat. 13. 37. and walk circumspectly Eph. 5. 15. but it discovers all those deceits particularly whereby we may be surprized diverted and turned out of the way There are snares in Prosperity snares in Adversity Temptations you meet with in praying trading eating drinking in your publick undertakings and in your private converse it shews your danger in all your ways before you feel the smart of them therefore give up your selves to God's direction reading hearing meditating believing and practising read hear it often then the deceits of Satan will be laid open and the snares of your own hearts Christians an exact Rule is of little use if you do not consult it Gal. 6. 16. Peace and mercy be upon all them that walk according to this Rule That order their conversations exactly the word signifies that try their work as a Carpenter doth by his square they examine their actions by the Word of God what they are now a doing therefore consult with it often then meditate of it ponder it seriously 2 Tim. 2. 7. Consider what I say and the Lord give thee understanding in all things If we would have understanding by the Word there must be consideration Man hath a discursive faculty to debate things with himself Why this is my duty what would become of me if I slep out of God's way here 's danger and a snare What if I should run into it now it is laid before me And then believe it surely Heb. 4. 2. The Word profited not not being mixed with faith in them that heard it Believe God upon his Word without making tryal You hear much of living by sense and by saith living by faith is when we bear up upon the bare Word of God and encourage our selves in the Lord but living by sense is a trying whether it be so or no as they that will not believe Hell shall feel Hell and they that will not believe the Word of God shall smart for it Heb 11. 7. Noah being warned of God of things not seen as yet moved with fear prepared an Ark. It may be there were no preparations to the accomplishment of the Curse and Judgment the Word threatned it 's a thing not seen yet he prepared an Ark. When a man is walking in an unjust course all things prosper for awhile the misery the Word threatens is unseen Ay but if you would grow wiser by the Word than men can by Experience you must look to the end of things Psal. 73. 17. I went into the sanctuary of God then understood I their end And then practise it diligently A young Practiser hath more understanding than an ancient Notionallist Psal. 111. 10. A good understanding have all they that do his commandments It is not they that are able to speak of things and savor what the Word requires but they that do what they hear and discourse of Gregory saith We know no more than we practise and we practise as we know these two always go together The Word doth us no good unless there be a ready obedience therefore this is wisdom when we give up our selves to God's direction whatever it cost us in the world Doct. 2. That young ones may have many times more of this wisdom than those that are ancient Divers instances there are Ioseph was very young sold into Egypt about 17 years of age and when he was in Egypt Psal. 105. 22. He taught his Senators wisdom speaking of the Senators of Egypt With how much modesty did he carry himself when his Mistriss laid that snare Isaac was young and permitted himself to be offered to God as a Sacrifice Samuel was wise betimes 1 Sam. 2. 26. It is said The child Samuel grew on and was in favor both with the Lord and also with men From his Infancy he was dedicated to God and God gives him wisdom to walk so that he was in favor with God and men yea God reveals himself to Samuel when he did not to Eli. David when he was but 15 years of age fought with the Lion and Bear and somewhile after that with Goliah when he was a ruddy youth Iosiah when he was but eight years old administred the Kingdom before he was twelve sets upon serious Reformation Ieremiah was sanctified from the womb Ier. 1. 5. And Iohn the Baptist leapt in his Mother's womb Luke 1. 35. In the 32d of I●…b the Ancients Iob's Friends are spoken of pleading their Cause wise young Elihu brings wiser words and better arguments than those that came to comfort Iob. Solomon asked wisdom of God when he was young Daniel and his Companions those four children as they are called Dan. 1. 17 18. it is said The Lord filled them with wisdom above all the ancient Chaldeans And Timothy the Apostle speaks of his youth and bids him flee youthful lusts he was young yet very knowing and set over the Church of God Our Lord Iesus at 12 years old puzled the Doctors In Ecclesiastical Stories we read of one at 15 years of age dyed with great constancy for Religion in the midst of sundry tortures Ignatius pleads the cause of the Bishop when he was but a very youth but a man powerful in doctrine and of great wisdom and therefore he saith He would have them not look to his appearing youth but to the age of his mind to his wisdom before God And he saith There are many that have nothing to shew for their age but wrinckles and gray hairs So there are many young ones in whom there is an excellent spirit and in all Ages there are instances given of youth of whom it may be said That they are wise beyond their years For the Reasons why many times young ones may have more wisdom than those that are aged God doth so 1. That he might shew the freedom and sovereignty of his grace He is not bound to years nor to the ordinary course of nature but can work according to his own pleasure and give a greater measure of knowledge and understanding to those that are young and otherwise green than he will to those that are of great age and more experience in the world You have this reason rendred Iob 32. 7 8 9. I said days should speak and multitude of years should teach wisdom There 's the ordinary course But there is a spirit in man and the inspiration of the Almighty giveth them understanding Great men are not always wise neither do the aged understand judgment Though all men have reason and a spirit yet the Spirit of God is a wind that blows where he lists Those that exceed others in time may come behind them in grace He gives a greater measure many times of grace and knowledge to shew his
freedom and sovereignty 2. Sometimes to manifest the power of his grace both in the person that is endued with it and the power of his grace upon others As to the person himself in whom this wisdom is found when they are young the Lord doth shew he can subdue them by his Spirit and make their prejudices vanish enlarge their understanding and over-rule their heart 1 Iohn 2. 14. I write to you young men because ye are strong and the Word of God abideth in you and ye have overcome the wicked one In that slippery Age when Lusts were boistrous Temptations most violent and they usually uncircumspect and head-strong and give up themselves to an ungoverned licence yet then can God subdue their hearts and make them stand out against the snares of the Devil And then with respect to others when by the foolish he will confound the wisdom of the wise and blast the pride of man and cast down all conceit in external priviledges and give young ones a more excellent spirit than the aged as the Apostle intimates such a thing 1 Cor. 1. 26. Not many wise men after the flesh not many mighty not many noble are called But God hath chosen the foolish things of the world to confound the wise and God hath chosen the weak things of the world to confound the things that are mighty And our Lord Mat. 11. 25 26. Thou hast hid these things from the wise and prudent and revealed them unto Babes Even so Father for so it seemed good in thy sight Usually God will do so when he will punish the unfaithfulness of those that are in publick place and office The Law shall perish from the Priest and Counsel from the Ancient God will not take the usual way and course but will give his Spirit and graces of his Spirit to them and deny it to those that should be Builders Now what Use shall we make of this There may be an Abuse of such a Point as this and there may be a very good Use. To prevent the Abuse 1 This is not to be taken so but that there should be reverence shewed to the aged Job 32. 4 5 6. Elihu had waited till Iob's Friends had spoken because they were elder than he It is an abuse of men of a proud persuasion of their own knowledge and learning to despise the aged especially when they also have a competent measure of the same Spirit The Scripture speaks of Paul the aged certainly there is a reverence due to gray hairs And it argues a great disorder when the Staff of Government is broken and the established Order is overturned when a child shall behave himself proudly against the ancient Isa. 3. 5. And young men shall peark up to the despising of their Elders Deut. 28. And 2. this is not to be applied so to prejudice the general case of consulting with the Ancients which was Rehoboam's sin though God sometimes giveth wisdom to young men yet the usual course is that Iob 32. 7. I said days should speak and multitude of years should teach wisdom Certainly those that are old they are freer from passions bettered by use and experience and long continuance in study have more advantages to add to their knowledge therefore usually though the bodily eyes be dim the understanding may be most clear and sharp Use 2. The Use in general is twofold That young men should not be discouraged nor despised 1. Not discouraged We use to say youth for strength and age for wisdom but if they apply their hearts to Religion and the study of God's will and with knowledge join practice they may profit and so as they may be a means to shame those that are elder while they come behind them in many gracious endowments They are not to be discouraged as if it were too soon for them to enter into a strict course or grow eminent therein for God may glorifie himself in their Sobriety Temperance Chastity Zeal Courage and the setting their strong and eager spirits against sin it is a mighty honour to God Psal. 8. 2. Out of the mouth of babes and sucklings hast thou ordained strength because of thine enemies c. The graces of God in young ones do mightily turn to the praise of his glorious grace and God is admired in them and it is an honour and comfort to you also Eph. 1. 12. In Christ before me it is a just upbraiding to elder people that lie longer in sin 2. Nor yet should youth be despised 1 Tim. 4. 12. Let no man despise thy youth God's gifts should not be despised in any nor stir up rancor God may speak by them as he spoke by Samuel and to Samuel when he spoke not to old Eli. Having premised this let me come to apply it particularly though briefly it conduceth then 1. To the encouragement of youth to betake themselves to the ways of God O consider let us begin with God betimes do not spend your youth in vanity but in a serious mortified course This is your sharp and active time when your spirits are fresh therefore if your Watch is set right now you may understand more than the Ancients Give up your hearts to a religious course let not the Devil feast upon the flower of your youth and God be put off with the fragments and scraps of Satan's Table while you are young take in with God it 's a great honour to God and it will be an honour and advantage to you Mat. 11. 15 16. When the Children cry Hosanna to the Son of David and the Pharisees reproved him for it Christ approves of it saying Have ye never read Out of the mouth of babes and sucklings thou hast perfected praise When young ones take kindly it is a great blessing therefore is judgment hanging over this Nation that youth is so degenerated whereas formerly they were addicted to Religion now they are addicted to all manner of lusts and vanity Then it would be an honour and comfort to you the sooner we begin with God the more we glorifie God and the more praise to God Eph. 1. 12. That we should be to the praise of his glory who first trusted in Christ. They that get into Christ above others they glorifie Grace above others Rom. 16. 7. They were in Christ before me He that first gets into Christ he hath the advantage of others Seniority in Grace is a preferment as well as in Nature And then it is a great advantage Eccles. 12. 1. Remember thy Creator in the days of thy youth When we begin betimes with God we have more opportunity of serving and enjoying God than others have A man should bear the yoke in his youth Lam. 3. If the bent of our inclinations were set right in our youth it would prevent much and hinder the growth of sin Though a man cannot plant Grace in his heart that 's the Lord's own work yet it keeps sin in and prevents inveterate custom
ignorant nor forgetful of our prevarications and disobedience The Rechabites were tender of the Commandment of their dead Father Ier. 35. who could not take cognizance of their actions Our father commanded us certainly we should be tender of the commands of the great God Prov. 15. 3. The eyes of the Lord are in every place beholding the evil and the good He is not so shut up within the curtain of the Heavens but that he takes notice how his Laws are kept and observed Saith the Prophet to Gehazi Went not my spirit with thee meaning his Prophetical Spirit so doth God as it were appeal to the Conscience of a sinner doth not my Spirit go along with thee is not he conscious to our works and observes all we do 4. God stands much upon the authority of his Law Hos. 8. 12. I have written to them the great things of my Law c. Mark he calls them the great things of his Law they are not things to be slighted and contemned They are not directions of little moment there is no small hazard in contemning them or not walking according to them Indeed we think it a small matter to stand upon every circumstance but God doth not think so Uzzah was struck dead in the place for failing in a circumstance he would stay the Ark which shook The Bethshemites sinning in a circumstance it cost them the lives of many thousands Lot's wife for looking back was turned into a pillar of salt Let these things beget an awe upon our hearts of the great God and of what he hath enjoined us Use 2. It informs us of the heinous nature of sin of sin in general it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a transgression of the Law 1 Joh. 3. 4. that is a contempt of Gods authority it is an unlording of him and putting him out of the Throne Every sin is an affront to Gods authority it is a despising of the Command 2 Sam. 12. 9. you rise up in defiance to God and cast off his Soveraignty in despising his Command more particularly sins against knowledg or against conscience you may see the heinousness of these sins by this All sins they proceed either from ignorance or from oblivion or from rebellion Sins of Ignorance they are not so heinous though they are sins a man is bound to know the will of his Creator but then ignorance of it is not so heinous to strike a friend in the dark is not so ill taken as in the open light So there are sins of Oblivion which is an ignorance for the time for a man hath not such explicite thoughts as to revive his knowledg upon himself he is overtaken Gal. 6. 1. This is a great sin too why for the awe of God should ever be fresh and great upon the heart and we are to remember his statutes to do them But now there are sins of Rebellion that are committed against light and conscience whether they be of omission or commission We are troubled for sins of commission against light we should be as much for sins of omission for they are rebellions against God when we omit a duty of which we are convinced Iam. 4. 17. To him that knoweth to do good and doth it not to him it is sin Secondly Come we to the manner of this Obedience Thou hast commanded us to keep thy precepts diligently From thence note Doct. That we should not only do what God hath required but we should do it diligently 1. Because the matter of keeping Gods precepts doth not only fall under his authority but the manner also God hath not only required service but service with all its circumstances 1 Cor. 9. 24. I so run that I may obtain It is our duty not only to run but so run not as in jest but as in good earnest Rom. 12. 11. Fervent in spirit serving the Lord Not only serving the Lord but seething hot in spirit when our affections are so strong that they boil over in our lives And Iam. 5. 16. The servent effectual prayer that prayer which hath a spirit and a life in it not only prayer is required but fervency not dead and drowsie devotion So Luk. 8. 18. not only it is required that we hear but to take heed how we hear with what reverence and seriousness And Act. 26. 7. The twelve Tribes served God instantly day and night with the uttermost extention of their strength so the word signifies And for Charity it is not enough to give but with readiness and freeness Be ready to communicate like life-honey it must drop of its own accord 2. The manner is the great thing which God requires it is very valuable upon several grounds Prov. 16. 2. The ways of man are clean in his own eyes but the Lord weigheth the spirits What doth God put into the ballance of the Sanctuary when he comes to make a judgment When he would weigh an action he weighs the spirits he considers not only the bulk the matter of the action but the spirit with what heart it was done A man may sin in doing good but he cannot sin in doing well therefore the manner should be looked to as well as the matter 3. It 's a good help against slightness We are apt to put off God with any thing and therefore we had need to rouze up our selves to serve him with diligence Josh. 24. 19. You cannot serve the Lord for he is a jealous God c. It is another matter to serve the Lord than the world thinks of why for he is holy and jealous he is holy and so hates the least failing and very jealous sin awakens the displeasure of his jealousie he will punish for very little failings Ananias and Saphira struck dead in the place for one lye Zacharias struck dumb for an act of unbelief Moses for a few rash words never entred into the land of Canaan David for a proud conceit in numbering the people lost seventy thousand men with the Pestilence The Corinthians many of them died for unworthy receiving God is the same God still he hates sin as much as ever therefore we should not be slight 4. It is a dishonour to God to do his work negligently Mal. 1. 14. Cursed be the deceiver which hath in his flock a male and voweth and sacrificeth unto the Lord a corrupt thing for I am a great King saith the Lord Implying that it is a lessening of his Majesty it is a sign we have cheap thoughts of God when we are slight in his service Christians we owe our best to God and are to serve him with all our might Deut. 6. 5. Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart with all thy soul and with all thy might It is a lessening of his excellency in our thoughts when every thing serves the turn 5. Keeping the Commandment 't is a great trust God hath left this trust with us that we should keep his precepts therefore it is
greater influence of grace from God How often doth it fall out thus with Gods children that their right is more confirmed to spiritual blessings when their sense is lost then they are more industrious and diligent to get a sense of Gods love again A Summer's Sun that 's clouded yields more comfort and warmth to the earth than a Winters Sun that shines brightest These cloudy times have their use and their fruit and Christians have the less of a happy part of communion with God that they may have more holiness and less of sweetness and sensible consolation that they may have more grace 4. There is desertio correctiva eruditiva a desertion for correction and a desertion for instruction Sometimes the aim of it is meerly for correction for former sins it is a penal over-clouding for our unkind and ungracious dealing with him God may do it for sins nay many times for old sins long ago committed he may charge them anew upon the conscience Job 13. 24. compared with v. 26. Wherefore hidest thou thy face and holdest me for thine enemy Thou makest me to possess the iniquities of my youth An old bruise may trouble us long after upon every change of weather Many that have grieved Gods Spirit in their youth after they have been converted God will reckon with them about it in their age A man will smart for his ungracious courses first or last Sometimes it is meerly for Instruction it instructs us chiefly to shew us Gods Soveraignty with the changeableness of the best comfort on this side heaven To shew us his Soveraignty that he will be free to go and come at his own pleasure He will have his people know he is Lord and may do with his own as pleaseth him The heavenly irradiations and outshinings of his love are not at our beck God will dispense them according to his pleasure A Mariner hath no cause to murmure and quarrel with God because the wind bloweth out of the East when he desireth a Westerly gale why because it is his wind and he will dispose these things according to his pleasure So the comfort and outshinings of his love are his and he will take them and give them as he thinks good Again to shew us the changeableness of the best comforts on this side heaven When Christ hath been in the soul with a full and high influx of comfort this doth not remain long with us God may withdraw Observe it often after the highest enlargements there may be some forsaking Cant. 5. 1. there we read of a Feast between Christ and his beloved Come eat O friends drink yea drink abundantly O beloved Here they are feasted with love presently we read of desertion the Spouse waxeth lazy and drowsie and Christ is gone then she is forced to go up and down to find him Paul had his Raptures then a Messenger of Satan to busset him The same Disciples that were conscious to Christs Transfiguration Peter Iames and Iohn Mat. 17. the same Disciples are chosen also to be conscious to his Agonies Mat. 26. 37. He took with him Peter Iames and Iohn First they had a glimpse of his Glory then a sight of his bitter Agonies and sufferings Ieremiah in one line singing of praise and in the next cursing the day of his birth Jer. 20. 13 14. After the most ravishing comforts may be a sad suspension Iacob saw the face of God and wrestled with him but his thigh halted There needs something to humble the Creature after these experiences 5. Desertion is either felt or not felt not felt and then it is more dangerous and usually ends in some notable fall as Hezekiah 2 Chron. 32. 31. God left him and he was not sensible and then he runs into pride and vain-glory and draweth wrath upon him and his people God's children when they do not observe his comings and goings they fall into mischief it begins their wo. We do not observe what experiences we have of God then we faint we do not observe his goings then that makes way for some scandal and imprudent and unseemly action and that makes way for some bitter and sharp affliction But if it be felt it is the better provided against If we do not murmur but seek to God in Christ to get the loss made up then it is better Meek acknowledgments are better than complaining expostulations It is a sign it works kindly 6. There 's a total and a partial desertion Those who are bent to obey God may for a while and in some degree be left to themselves We cannot promise our selves an utter immunity from desertion but it is not total We shall find for his great names sake The Lord will not forsake his people 1 Sam. 12. 22. and Heb. 13. 5. I will never leave thee nor forsake thee Not utterly yet in part they may be forsaken Elijah was forsaken but not as Ahab Peter was forsaken in part but not as Iudas that was utterly forsaken until he was made a prey to the Devil So carnal professors are forsaken utterly until they are made a prey fit for the Devils tooth David was forsaken to be humbled and bettered but Saul was forsaken utterly to be destroyed Saith Theophylact God may forsake his people so as to shut out their prayers Psal. 80. 4. so as to interrupt the peace and joy of their heart to abate their strength the spiritual life may be much at a stand and so as sin may break out and they fall foully but not utterly forsaken But one way or other God is present present in light sometimes when he is not present in strength when he manifests the evil of their present condition so as to mourn under it and present in awakening desires though not in giving enjoyment As long as there is any esteem of God he is not yet gone there is some light and love yet left manifested by our desires of Communion with him 7. There is a Temporary desertion and an Eternal desertion One is spoken of Isa. 54. 7 8. For a small moment have I forsaken thee but with everlasting kindness will I have mercy on thee God may forsake his servants for a little while Indeed they may have a long winter of it sometimes as David lay for many months under his sin until Nathan rouzed him but this is but a moment to the eternity wherein God loves them But the eternal forsaking is of the final Impenitent when God saith Never see my face more go ye cursed c. Thus for the kinds Secondly The Reasons of Desertion 1. To correct us for our wantonness and our unkind dealing with Christ. If we neglect him upon frivolous pretences certainly he will be gone Cant. 5. 2. I have put off my coat how shall I put it on See v. 6. My beloved had withdrawn himself and was gone When we are not at Gods call he will not be at our beck She that would not open to Christ when
of neither have entred into the heart of man to conceive Therefore the word hath a notable instrumentality that way 3. The Doctrine of the Scripture holds out the remedy and means of cleansing Christs blood which is not only an argument or motive to move us to it So it is urged 1 Pet. 1. 18. Whom having not seen ye love in whom though now ye see him not yet believing ye rejoice with joy unspeakable c. It presseth holiness upon this argument why God hath been at great cost to bring it about therefore we must not content our selves with some smooth morality which might have been whether Christ had been yea or no. Again the word propounds it as a purchase whereby grace is procured for us so it is said 1 Ioh. 1. 7. He hath purchased the spirit to bless us and turn us from our sins And it exciteth faith to apply and improve this remedy and so conveyeth the power of God into the soul Act. 15. 9. Purifying their hearts by faith 2. The manner how the word is applied and made use of If he take heed thereunto according to thy word This implieth a studying of the word and the tendency and importance of it which is necessary if the young man would have benefit by it David calleth the statutes of God the men of his counsel Young men that are taken with other books if they neglect the word of God that book that should do the cure upon the heart and mind they are with all their knowledg miserable Psal. 1. 2. His delight is in the Law of the Lord and in his Law doth he meditate day and night If men would grow wise to Salvation and get any skill in the practice of godliness they must be much in this blessed book of God which is given us for direction 1 Ioh. 2. 14. I have written unto you young men because ye are strong and the word of God abideth in you and ye have overcome the wicked one It is not a slight acquaintance with the word that will make a young man so successful as to defeat the temptations of Satan and be too hard for his own lust it is not a little notional irradiation but to have the word dwell in you and abide in you richly The way to destroy ill weeds is to plant good herbs that are contrary We suck in carnal principles with our milk and therefore we are said to speak lies from the womb A kind of a riddle before we are able to speak we speak lyes namely as we are prone to error and all manner of carnal fancies by the natural temper and frame of our hearts Isa. 58. 2. And therefore from our very tender and Infant-age we should be acquainted with the word of God 2 Tim. 3. 15. And that from a child thou hast known the holy Scriptures It may be children by reading the word get nothing but a little memorative knowledg but yet it is good to plant the field of the memory in time they will soak into the judgment and conscience and thence into the heart and affections 2. It implieth a care and watchfulness over our hearts and ways that our will and actions be conformed to the word This must be the young mans daily prayer and care that there be a conformity between his will and the word that he may be a walking Bible Christs living Epistle copy out the word in his life that the truths of it may appear plainly in his conversation All that I have said issueth it self into three Points 1. That the great Duty of Youth assoon as they come to the full use of reason is to enquire and study how they may cleanse their hearts and ways from sin 2. That the Word of God is the only rule sufficient and effectual to accomplish this work 3. If we would have this efficacy there is required much care and watchfulness that we come to the direction of the Word in every tittle not a loose and unattentive reflection upon the Word careless inconsiderateness but a taking heed thereunto Now why in youth and as soon as we come to the use of reason we should mind the work of cleansing our way 1. Consider how reasonable this is It is fit that God should have our first and our best It is fit he should have our first because he minded us before we were born His love to us is an eternal and an everlasting love and shall we put off God to old age shall we thrust him into a corner Surely God that loved us so early it is but reason he should have our first and also our best for we have all from him Under the Law the first-fruits was Gods to shew the first and best was his portion All the Sacrifices that were offered to him they were in their strength and young Levit. 2. 14. And if thou offer a meat-offering of thy first-fruits unto the Lord thou shalt offer for the meat-offering of thy first-fruits green ears of corn dried by the fire even corn beaten out of full ears God would not stay till ripened God will not be long kept out of his portion Youth it is our best time Mal. 1. 13. when they brought a weak and sickly offering should I accept this of your hand saith the Lord The health strength quickness of spirit and vigour is in youth Shall our health and strength be for the Devils use and shall we put off God with the dregs of time Shall Satan feast upon the flower of our youth and fresh time and God only have the scraps and fragments of the Devils Table When wit is dulled the ears heavy the body weak and affections are spent is this a fit present for God 2. Consider the necessity of it 1. Because of the heat of youth the passions and lusts are very strong 2 Tim. 2. 22. Fly also youthful lusts Men are most incident in that age to pride and self-conceit to strong affections inordinate and excessive love of liberty 1 Tim. 3. 6. Not a Novice lest being lifted up with pride he fall into the condemnation of the Devil A man may make tame fierce creatures Lyons and Tygers and the fury of youth needs to be tempered and bridled by the word It is much for the glory of Grace that this heat and violence is broken when the subject is least of all disposed and prepared 2. Because none are tempted so much as they Children cannot be serviceable to the Devil and old men are spent and have chosen their way but youths who have a sharpness of understanding and the stoutest and most stirring spirits the Devil loveth to make use of such 1 Joh. 2. 13. I write unto you young men because ye have overcome the wicked one They are most assaulted but it is for the honour of grace when they overcome when their fervency and strength is employed not in satisfying lusts but in the service of God and fighting against Satan Therefore
are some that a man had need teach them as he teacheth little children letter after letter and line after line little good done 2. In others there is a Grammatical knowledg but not a spiritual a repeating things by rote a talking of all that a Christian enjoyeth 3. Besides the Grammatical knowledg there is a Dogmatical knowledg when the truths of the word are not only understood but begin to settle into an opinion that we bustle for in the world An opinionative receiving of the truth is different from a saving receiving of the truth Many are Orthodox or have so much judgment and knowledg as to hold the Truth strictly but the heart is not possessed with the life and power of it Those are intended in Rom. 2. 20. An instructer of the foolish a teacher of babes which have the form of knowledg and of the truth in the law And such are described 2 Tim. 3. 8. Having a form of godliness but denying the power thereof It is not to be imagined that this is always in design though many times carnal men swim with the stream and take up with the opinions that are currant in their age but also out of conviction of judgment there is somewhat of conscience in it A sound judgment is a different thing from a sound heart The truths of God have great evidence with them and therefore a rational man being helped with some common work of the Spirit may close with them though they have no experience of the power and prevailing influence of them 4. Besides this Dogmatical knowledg by which we see round about the compass of Truths revealed in the word there is a gracious illumination when men are taught so as drawn to God Iohn 6. 44 45. and they do so understand Christs Doctrine as to apply and make a right use of it such a knowledg as is called not only sight but taste 1 Pet. 2. 3. If so be ye have tasted that the Lord is gracious and a feeling of what we understand Phil. 1. 9. And this I pray that your love may abound more and more in knowledg and in all judgment This sense and experimental knowledg is that which the Saints seek after 2. The Uses of this spiritual illumination And 1. To give us a clear sight of the Truths of God 2. An applicative sight 3. An affective sight 4. A transforming sight 5. Such a sense of the Truth as is prevalent over lusts and interests 1. A clear sight of the Truths of God Others have but an hear-say-knowledg gathered out of Books and Sermons and the common report which is made of Christ but he that is divinely enlightned drinks of the Fountain and so his draught is more fresh and sweet they do not talk of things by rote after others but it is written upon their hearts Heb. 8. 10. I will put my laws into their mind and write them in their hearts and so groweth more intimate and satisfactory and moving upon them 2. An Applicative sight not only knowledg but prudence Prov. 8. 12. I Wisdom dwell with Prudence Wisdom is the knowledg of Principles Prudence is an ability to apply them to our comfort and use that we may know it for our good Iob 5. 28. Many are right in generals but the Spirit doth not only reveal the Truths of the Gospel but applieth those Truths to awaken the conscience that was asleep in sin Many men that are unrenewed may be stored with general truths concerning the misery of man redemption by Christ the priviledges of a Christian but they do not reflect the light of these truths upon themselves so as to consider their own case and so it serveth rather for matter of opinion and discourse than for life and conversation it is not directive 3. An Affective sight Prov. 2. 10. When wisdom entreth upon thy heart which is the seat of affections it stirs up in the soul answerable motions to every truth Whereas when truths rest in empty barren notions without feeling and an answerable touch upon the heart the knowledg of them is like a Winters Sun that shineth but warmeth not the misery of man is not affective and Doctrines of Redemption by Christ are apprehended without any joy and relish 4. A Transforming sight 2 Cor. 3. 18. We all with open face beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord are changed into the same image from glory to glory even as by the Spirit of the Lord. It is a Light that is both Directive and Persuasive A man may hear the Gospel 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 when it is only known as a rule not as a means to convey the Spirit whereas a believer hears the Law 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Apostle preferreth the Gospel above the Law in the forementioned place for comfortableness perspicuity efficacy c. 5. It is a Light that prevaileth over our lusts and interests such a Light as hath fire in it to destroy lusts 1 John 2. 3 4. He that saith I know him and doth not keep his commandments is a lyar A true knowledg and sight of God is able to bridle lusts and purifie the conscience Therefore it is said He that doth evil hath not seen God Eph. 3. 11. hath not a true sight whatever speculations he may have about the nature of God Other light doth not check and controul vicious desires Reason is not restored to its dominion Rom. 1. 18. the reputed wise men of the world held the truth in unrighteousness Truth may talk its fill but can do nothing as a man that is bound hand and foot may rave and evaporate his passions but cannot relieve himself from the oppressor or the force that he is under II. Reasons that shew the necessity of this work 1. Spiritual blindness is natural to us as that man that was blind from his birth Iohn 9. 1. We are not all born blind in body but all in mind By tasting the tree of knowledg all Adam's sons have lost their knowledg Satan hath brought a greater shame upon us than Nahash the Ammonite would have brought upon the men of Iabesh Gilead in putting out their right eyes The eye of the soul is put out so as we cannot see the light that shineth in the word By the Fall we lost the true and perfect light of Reason but retain the pride of Reason It is no small part of our blindness that we cannot endure to hear of it Rev. 3. 17. Thou sayest I am rich and encreased with goods and have need of nothing and knowest not that thou art wretched and miserable and poor and blind and naked Man desireth to be thought sinful rather than weak and will sooner own a wickedness in Morals than a weakness in Intellectuals Men are dishonest out of choice and therefore think there is more of liberty and bravery in it but to be simple argueth imperfection Job 11. 12. Vain man would be accounted wise though man be born like a
open that and there first speak of the vehemency My soul breaketh for the longing that it hath It 's a Metaphorical expression to set forth the earnestness of his affection The Septuagint renders it thus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 My soul coveteth to desire thy judgments Desire is the stretching forth of the soul to the thing desired Now as things that are stretched out do break and crack in stretching so saith David my soul breaketh for the longing Here 's no respect to brokenness of heart in this place it is only strength of desire that is exprest and the expression is used the rather 1. Because affections when strong are painful and affect the body with impressions answerable thereunto 2. Not only the denial but the delay of satisfying the affection encreaseth the pain when they have not what they do desire they are even broken in heart as Prov. 13. 12. Hope deferred maketh the heart sick but when the desire cometh it is a tree of life like Apples of Paradise comforting and reviving Now the constancy and continuance of this desire is set forth in these words at all times not for a flash and pang but 't was the ordinary frame of his heart Doct. Gods children have a strong constant and earnest bent of affection towards his word 1. To open the nature of this affection 2. The Reasons of it First The nature there consider the Object the End the Properties and the Effects 1. The Object of this affection is the Word of God written or preached As it is written in the Scriptures so it is their constant exercise to read it and consult with it often Psal. 1. 2. But his delight is in the law of the Lord and in his law doth he meditate day and night And Joshua 1. 8. This book of the law shall not depart out of thy mouth but thou shalt meditate therein day and night As it is preached and explained they submit to Gods Ordinance in that also who hath appointed Pastors and Teachers as well as Prophets and Apostles Eph. 4. 11. Prophets and Apostles to write Scripture so Pastors and Teachers to open and apply Scripture therefore James 1. 9. They are swift to hear that is take all occasions for that end and purpose 2. For the End of this affection it is a sanctified subjection to God and strength and growth in the spiritual life 1 Pet. 2. 2. As new-born babes desire the sincere milk of the word that ye may grow thereby not meerly that you may know but that you may grow thereby not to replenish the head with notions but that you may encrease in spiritual strength and find more liberty of heart towards God 3. For the Properties of it you have them here in the Text 1. They must be earnest 2. A constant bent of heart 1. An earnest bent of heart Common and ordinary affection or desire after the word will not serve the turn not a faint and cold wish but such as hath heat and warmth in it It is good to see by what expressions the desires of the Saints are set forth in Scripture By the desire of Infants after the breast 1 Pet. 2. 2. they cannot live without it It is set forth also by the panting of the Hart after the water-brooks Psal. 42. 1. To meet with God in his word it is as a brook of water to a chased Hart it refresheth and revives it It is set forth by the desires of a longing woman vers 40. of this Psalm Behold I have longed after thy precepts The children of God are fond of nothing so much as of his Word and Ordinances It is set forth by the appetite which a hungry man hath toward his meat after a long abstinence Psal. 84. 2. My soul longeth yea even fainteth for the Courts of the Lord. Or as a weary traveller and thirsty man longeth after drink Psal. 63. 1. My soul thirsteth for thee c. Or as cool air to the weary Psal. 119. 131. I opened my mouth and panted for I longed for thy commandments A Metaphor taken from a man tired with running gaping for breath to take in some cool air and refreshing What think you of all these expressions are they strains and reaches of wit or the real experiences of the children of God The truth is we have such languid motions this way that we know not how to understand the force of such expressions therefore we think them to be conceits we that are so cold and indifferent whether we meet with God in his word yea or no. 2. As it is not cold so it is not fleeting but constant Many men have good affections for a while but they abide not as I shall give you some kinds 1. Some out of Error in judgment think the word of God is only fit for Novices as the Stancarists to enter us into the Rudiments of Religion but too low a dispensation for our after growth It is milk for babes they think but afterwards we must live immediately upon the Spirit But we see that David's affection ever carried him to the word not only at his first acquaintance with God but at all times as in the Text. 2. Some prize the word in Adversity when they have no other comforts to live upon then they can be content to study the word to comfort them in their distresses but when they are well at ease they despise it But David made use of it at all times in prosperity to humble him in adversity to comfort him in the one to keep him from pride in the other to keep him from despair in affliction the Word was his Cordial in worldly encrease it was his Antidote And so at all times his heart was carried out to the Word either for one necessity or another 3. Some during a qualm of conscience have an affection for holy things as we desire Strong-waters in a pang not for a constant diet While the terrors of God are upon them nothing will satisfie them but the Word O send for Moses and Aaron then when the plague was upon them but as their trouble wears off so doth their affection to the Word of God It is fear that drives them to the Word and not love 4. Some out of a general sense of the excellency that is in the Word They go on smoothly for a while as Herod who heard gladly Mark 6. 20. so do many till the Word come to cross their lusts and touch their darling sin then they run to earthly pleasures again and out of a sense of difficulty and carnal despondency they give over the pursuit 5. Some are taken with the meer novelty Joh. 5. 35. Ye were willing to rejoyce in his light for a season while the Doctrine is novel and Ministers have countenance from great men as Iohn had from Herod and their gifts are in the flourish none but Iohn in their account but when the conceit of Novelty was gone and Iohn fell under the
Rhetorick in heaven And certainly the more heavenly we are the more perfect in grace the more wisdom shall we see in plain Scriptural truth infinitely exceeding all the wisdom of the Heathen Many think the word of God too plain for their mouths to preach it others too stale for their ears to hear it and they must have the fancies of men Jer. 8. 9. They have rejected my word and what wisdom is in them It is strange to see how many will disguise Religion to please the lusts of men They mock Christ as the soldiers did that put a Centurions Coat upon him for a Robe and then Hail King of the Iews So they wrap up Christ in the foolish garments of their own fancy and so expose him to mockage rather than reverence 3. This satiety bewrays it self by our affections too novel opinions and erroneous conceits 2 Tim. 4. 3. The time will come that they will not endure sound doctrine having itching ears and shall turn away their cars from the truth and shall be turned unto fables Observe it when you will That soul is nigh to spiritual blasting that begins to have a loathing of a plain truth and men must have new things and conceits in Religion and so grow weary of opinions as they do of fashions and then by Gods just judgment they run from one fancy to another till they quite run themselves out of breath and have shaken off all Religion and good conscience Therefore take heed of being given up to this vertiginous spirit to be turned and tost up and down with every wind of doctrine Eph. 4. 14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Apostles word signifies to be carried round in a circle he alludes to a Mariners Compass that is carried by every wind this wind takes them and then another such light chaff are men when they begin to loath the plain truths of God But it is an argument of a gracious heart when we can receive old truth with new affections and look for the power of God and new quicknings 4. This levity and instability of spirit is because they look for all the virtue of Religion from their notions and their opinions and not from Christ then they think this change of opinion shall make them better their hearts shall be changed They try experiments so long till the Lord hath given them up to a spirit of infatuation and then all comes to nothing but they as a brand are fit for the burning 5. By our worldly projects Men shew a loathing of this word by their eagerness to the world their hearts with Martha are cumbred with many things while Mary sate at the feet of Jesus to hear his word Luke 10. We are very fervorous in worldly affairs there we can experiment this kind of affection which David speaks of to the word Beware of this coldness to the word it is an ill symptome both to Nations and persons USE 2. To press us to get this fervent and constant affection to the word To this end consider 1. Whose word it is Gods word and your best affections are due to him Isa. 26. 8. Our desires are to thee and to the remembrance of thy name There you shall hear of God there God hath displayed his name Our desires are to thee not only so but to thy memorial to the remembrance of thy name that is to his word which is as the bellows to blow up the sparks and to quicken our affections to him 2. See what benefits we have by the word of God how beneficial it is To enlighten and direct us To quicken and comfort us To supply and strengthen us 1. To enlighten and direct us Light is pleasant saith Solomon it 's a good thing to behold the Sun with our eyes Eccles. 11. 7. If light natural be pleasant what is light spiritual therefore the Psalmist compares the Word to the Sun the visible World can no more be without the one than the intellectual World can be without the other and the one doth as much rejoyce the heart as the other Psal. 19. 8. The statutes of the Lord are right rejoycing the heart the judgments of the Lord are pure enlightning the eyes Oh it is a comfort to have light to see our way when men begin to have a conscience about heavenly things O then they judg so indeed To others we speak in vain when we tell them what light they shall have by the word They say those that live under the Pole Arctick at the Autumnal Equinoctial the Sun setteth to them and doth not rise again till the Vernal and so are six whole months under a perpetual night as if they were buried in a grave but at the time of its return with what clapping of hands and expressions of joy do they welcome the Sun again into their parts So when the word of God is made known to us how should we welcome it The City of Geneva gave this for a Motto Post tenebras lux After darkness light implying that the return of the Gospel was as light after a long darkness as the coming of the Sun again to those Northern people While Paul and his company were in that great storm at Sea when they saw neither Sun nor Stars for many days and were afraid they should fall upon rocks and dangerous shelves O with what longing did they expect to see day again Acts 27. So a poor bewildred soul that hath lost its way or when a child of God doth see but by half a light how desirable is sure direction Now this cannot be had but from the word of God To the law and to the testimony 2. To comfort us in all straits In the word of God there 's a salve for every sore and a promise for every condition God hath plentifully opened his good will to sinners Therefore the children of God when they labour under the guilt of sin there they can hear of Gods promises of pardon Isa. 55. 7. Let the wicked for sake his way and the unrighteous man his thoughts and let him return unto the Lord and he will have mercy upon him and to our God for he will abundantly pardon Against Apostasie they have that promise Jer. 32. 40. I will put my fear in their hearts that they shall not depart from me When they are under weak performances the word will tell them The Lord will spare you and pity you as a man spares his only son Mal. 3. 17. and when they lye under troubles inconveniences and deep crosses there 's a promise The Lord will be with them in affliction the word will shew them Christ in the affliction and heaven beyond the affliction and then they are comforted 1 Cor. 10. 13. When they are troubled about worldly provisions providing for themselves and families it saith Be contented I will never leave thee nor forsake thee Heb. 13. 5. When their children come to their minds and thoughts what will become of them when
Hope in him to be born out in his Work Now if God hath specially excited your Faith it is not a foolish Imagination or vain Expectation like as of them that dream it is God's Word you build upon and it is by a Faith of God's operation he raiseth it in us 2. The Prayer of Faith is the Voice of the Spirit and God heareth the Voice of the Spirit always who maketh requests 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according to the will of God Rom. 8. 27. He that searcheth and trieth the hearts knoweth what is a groan of the spirit and what is a Fancy of our own what is a Confidence raised in us by the operation of his own Spirit For there may be a mistaken Faith seemingly built upon the Promises whenas it is indeed built upon our own Conceits Now God is not bound to make that Faith good But when we can appeal to the Searcher of Hearts that it is a Faith of his own working surely we may have confidence Now how shall we know that it is a Faith of God's raising 1. If the Promise be not mistaken and we do not presume of that absolutely which God onely hath promised conditionally and with the limitations of his own Glory and our good which are joyned to all Promises which concern the present Life In temporal things God exerciseth his Children with great uncertainties because he seeth it meet to prove our submission in these things for our Happiness lieth not in them Those things wherein our Happiness doth consist as Remission of Sins and Eternal Life are sure enough and that is encouragement to a gracious heart 2 Tim. 3. 18. God hath delivered me out of the mouth of the lion and will deliver me from every evil work In the Old Testament when God discovered less of Heaven he promised more of Earth but in the New Testament where Life and Immortality are brought to light we are told of many Tribulations in our passage yea the eminent Saints of the Old Testament that had a clearer view of things to come than others had were more exposed to the Calamities of the present Life because God thought the sight of Happiness to come sufficient to countervail their Troubles and if he would give them Rest in another World they might well endure the Inconveniencies of their Pilgrimage Heb. 11. 16. But now they desire a better countrey that is an heavenly wherefore God is not ashamed to be called their God for he hath prepared for them a city The holy Patriarchs lest their Countrey flitted up and down upon this hope but to us Christians the case is clear Rom. 8. 18. For I r●…on that the sufferings of this present life are not worthy to be compared with the glory that shall be revealed in us 2 Cor. 4. 17. For this light affliction that is but for a moment worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory 2. When the Qualification of the Person is not clear we must not absolutely promise our selves the Effect Ionah 3. 9. Who can tell whether God will turn away from his fierce anger that we perish not So Ioel 2. 14. Who knoweth if he will return and leave a blessing behind him In this Clause I put Believers who have sinned away their Peace and Assurance 2 Sam. 12. 22. Who can tell if God will be gracious unto me that the child may live He speaketh doubtfully Zeph. 2. 3. It may be ye shall be hid in the day of the Lords fierce anger Amos 5. 15. Hate the evil and love the good it may be the Lord God of hosts will be gracious to the remnant of Ioseph In such cases the Soul is divided between the expectation of Mercy and the sense of their own Deservings and can speak neither the pure Language of Faith nor the pure Language of Unbelief half Canaan half Ashdod There is a Twilight in Grace as well as in Nature God in these cases raiseth no other Confidence to heighten Mercy and try how we can venture upon God and refer our selves to his Will when we have any business for him to do for us Mat. 8. 2. Lord if thou wilt thou canst make me clean 2 Sam. 15. 25 26. And the king said to Zadok Carry back the ark of God into the city if I shall find favour in the eyes of the Lord he will bring me again and shew me both it and his habitation But if he thus say I have no delight in thee behold here am I let him do to me as seemeth good to him 3. In the Promises of Spiritual and Eternal Mercies when God's Conditions are performed by us we may be confident and must give glory to God in believing and being persuaded that he will fulfil them to us 2 Tim. 1. 12. I know whom I have believed and I am persuaded that he is able to keep that which I have committed unto him against that day Rom. 8. 38 39. For I am persuaded that neither death nor life nor angels nor principalities nor powers nor things present nor things to come nor height nor depth nor any other creature shall be able to separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord. I am persuaded there is no doubt The stronger our Confidence the better 2. When God raiseth in our Minds some particular express Hope as in some cases he may do to these things that are of a Temporal nature and are conditionally promised and where our Qualification is clear he will not disappoint us 2 Cor. 1. 12. Though the Promises of Temporal things have the limitation of the Cross implied in them and are to be understood in subordination to our Eternal Interest and God's Glory without which they would not be Mercies but Judgments yet his usual course is to save deliver and supply them here Psal. 9. 10. And they that know thy name will put their trust in thee for thou Lord hast not forsaken them that seek thee And when God by his Spirit doth particularly incline his People to hope for Mercy from him he will not fail their Expectations Where the Qualification is uncertain yet the Faith of general Mercy wrastleth against Discouragements as in the case of the Woman of Canaan There is the Plea of a Dog and the Plea of a Child in grievous Temptations to fasten our selves upon God God will make good the Hope raised in them by his Spirit Use is for Direction what to do in all our Distresses Bodily and Spiritual Our Necessities should lead us to the Promise and the Promise to God 1. Be sure of your Qualification for David pleadeth here partly as a Servant of God and partly as a Believer First Remember thy word unto thy servant and then wherein thou hast caused me to hope There is a double Qualification with respect to the Precept of Subjection with respect to the Promise of Dependence The Precept is before the Promise They have right to
of the wicked which forsake thy Law THE Man of God in the former Verse had shewed what Comfort he took in remembring God's Judgments of old meaning thereby his Righteous Dispensations in delivering the Godly and punishing the Wicked he now sheweth that seeing God's horrible Judgments on the Wicked he was seized and stricken with a very great fear In the Words observe 1. A great Passion described 2. The Cause of it assigned 1. A great Passion described Horrour hath taken hold on me The Word for Horrour signifieth also a Tempest or Storm Translations vary some reade it as Iunius a Storm overtaking me Ainsworth a burning Horrour hath seized me and expoundeth it a Storm of Terrour and Dismay The Septuagint 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 faintness and dejection of mind hath possessed me our old Translation I am horribly afraid all Translations as well as the Original word imply a great trouble of mind and a vehement Commotion like a Storm it was matter of disquiet and trembling to David 2. What is the matter the Reason is given in the latter Clause because of the wicked which forsake thy Law Now this Reason may be supposed to be 1. Either because of the Storm of Trouble raised by them or Persecution from them and so it would note the outragiousness of those who have cast off the Yoke all fear of God and respect to his Law and so also the imbecillity and weakness of the Saints who are not able to stand against violent Evils and assaults of Temptation But this is not so consistent with David's Constancy and Comfort asserted in the former Verses 2. Because of the Detriment and Loss which might accrue to the Publick they bring on common Judgments and Calamities It is a Iewish Proverb that two dry Sticks will set a green one afire One sinner destroyeth much good Eccl. 9. 18. much more Mercy Now the Godly which believe God's Word are troubled when they see Wickedness increaseth they know this will turn to loss and ruine in the issue therefore it causeth a grievous Horrour and Indignation to seize upon them for they have a tender and publick Spirit 3. Besides the common Calamities which they might bring upon others the sore Punishment which they would bring upon themselves was an horrour to him which sheweth a Charitable Affection to Enemies The Punishment which had not as yet seized upon them nor did they think of it yet being prepared for their Wickedness by the Justice of God was a grief and trouble to David as it is to all good Men to see the Wicked run on to their own Destruction and Condemnation These two last Senses I prefer Doctr. It argueth a good Spirit to be grieved to see God's Laws broken and to be stricken with fear because of those Iudgments which come from God by reason of the wickedness of the wicked The Reasons are 1. Here is matter of great Commotion of Spirit to any attentive and serious Beholder for the Cause assigned in the Text is because they forsake thy Law There are two things in the Law the Precept and the Sanction by Penalties and Rewards Now they that forsake the Law violate the Precept and slight the Sanction and so two things grieve the Godly their Sin and their Punishment How grievously they sin and what grievous Punishments they may expect 1. That the Law is violated that they should forsake God and all thoughts of Obedience to him and so make slight of his Law Sin is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Iohn 3. 4. the Transgression of the Law a contempt of God's Authority if we consider the intrinsick evil of Sin we shall see that it is not a small thing but an horrible Evil in it self a thing not to be laughed at but feared whether our own or others 1. There is Folly in it as it is a Deviation from the best Rule which the Divine Wisedom hath set unto us If we should look upon the Law of God as a bare Direction or Counsel given us by one that is wiser then we it is a Contempt of the Wisedom of God as if he knew not how to govern the World and what is good and meet for Man so much as he himself and so a poor Worm is exalted above God Micah 6. 8. He hath shewed thee O Man what is good Now shall we slight his Direction and in effect say our own Way is better Reason requireth that they who cannot choose for themselves should obey their Guides and since they are not wise for themselves content themselves with the Wisedom of others who see farther then they do as Elymas the Sorcerer when he was struck blind sought about for some body to leade him by the hand Acts 13. 11. can a blind man feel out his way better then another who hath eyes to choose it for him God is wiser then we and all who would not contemn their Creatour should think so He hath reduced the sum of our Duty into an holy Law now for us after all this to run of our heads and to consult with our foolish Lusts and the Suggestions of the Devil who is our worst Enemy is extreame Folly and Madness and so doth every one who breaketh the Laws of God 2. Laws are not onely to direct but have a binding Power and Force from the Authority of the Law-giver God doth not onely give us Counsel as a Friend but commandeth us as a Sovereign and so the second Notion whereby the evil of Sin is set forth is that of Disobedience and Rebellion and so it is a great Injury done to God because it is a Depretiation and Contempt of his Authority As Pharaoh said Exod. 5. 2. Who is the Lord that I should obey his voice or those Rebels Psalm 12. 4. Our Tongues are our own who is Lord over us We will speak and think and doe what we please and own no Law but our own Lusts. Now though Sinners do not say so in so many direct and formal Words yet this is the Interpretation of their sinfull Actions Whenever they sin they despise the Law which forbiddeth that Sin and so by consequence the Authority of him that made it 2 Sam. 12. 9 10. Wherefore hast thou sinned in despising the Commandment Tush I will doe it it is no matter for the Law of God that standeth in the way is the Language of the Corrupt and Obstinate heart Now no man can endure to have his Will crossed by an Inferiour and will God take it at their hands and therefore the Children of God who have a great Reverence of God's Authority when they see it so openly violated and contemned are filled with Horrour Will not God be tender of his Power and Sovereignty will he see his Authority so lightly esteemed and take no notice of it 3. It is shamefull Ingratitude Man is God's beneficiary from whom he hath received Life and Being and all things and therefore is bound to love him and serve
Psal. 11. 6. Upon the wicked he will rain Snares fire and brimstone and an horrible Tempest this shall be the portion of their Cup They may flourish for a time yet at length sudden terrible and irremediless Destruction shall be the portion of their Cup. God's Judgments are terrible and unavoidable both here and hereafter Eph. 5. 6. For these things cometh the wrath of God upon the Children of Disobedience Rom. 2. 4. Tribulation Wrath and Anguish upon the Soul of Man that doth evil Alas these things are slighted by wicked Men or else they would not venture as they do you cannot drive a dull Ass into the Fire that is kindled before him Prov. 1. 17. In vain is the Snare laid in the sight of any Bird and would a Reasonable Creature wilfully run into such a danger if he were sensible of it and venture upon so dreadfull threatnings if he did believe them no they think it is but a vain Scare-crow a deceitfull Terrour or a false flash of Fire and therefore embolden themselves in their Rebellion But God's People that know the certainty of these things they cannot but conceive a great horrour at it when they think of the end of these Men their Judgments in this World but especially their eternal Condemnation in the World to come Well then forsaking the Law despising the Precept and slighting the Sanction should be a matter of great Horrour to a tender and gracious Spirit 2. It argueth that they have a due sense of things though others have not 1. They have a due sense of the Evil of Sin Prov. 14. 9. Fools make a mock of sin They sport at it and jeast at it and count it nothing but gracious and tender Hearts have other Apprehensions they know that this is a Violation of the holy and righteous and good Law of God and that it will be bitter in the issue and that they which had pleasure in unrighteousness shall be damned They look upon it with sad Hearts though it be committed by others that the Wicked goe dancing to Hell and are angry with those who mourn for them and dislike that vain Course which they affect 2. They have a due sense of the Wrath of God the Prophet that threatned it saith That rottenness entred into his bones and his bowels quivered Hab. 3. 16. A Lyon trembleth to see a Dog beaten before him It is a trouble to the Godly to think of the horrible punishments of the Wicked which they dread not nor dream of But the Saints have a Reverence for their Fathers Anger Search the Scriptures and you shall find that the Godly are more troubled at God's Judgments then the Wicked themselves who are to feel them Dan. 4. 19. Daniel was astonished for an hour and his thoughts troubled him when he was to reveale God's Iudgments against Nebuchadnezzar So the Prophet Ier. 4. 19. My bowels my bowels I am pained at the very heart verse 22. But my people is foolish they are sottish Children they that brought the Evil upon themselves are senseless and stupid Psal. 90. 11. Who knows the power of thine Anger according to thy fear so is thy wrath Few lay to heart the terrible effects of God's heavy wrath but the Righteous doe they are truly affected with it and with the Cause of it which is Sin God's Wrath affects Men according to the Reverence and Fear wherewith they entertain it but to the Wicked it is but a vain and empty Terrour 3. The certainty of the Threatnings God's People see Wrath and Judgment in the face of Sin whereas those who are drowned in Sensuality and carnal Delights scoff at God's Menaces and jeast at his Judgments neither crediting the one nor expecting the other as if it were but a meer Mockery Isai. 5. 19. Come say they let him make speed and hasten his work that we may see it In their security they will believe nothing but what they feel 4. The Bane which cometh to Communities and Societies from the increase of the Wicked especially when their Wickedness groweth to an height that is when it is committed with boldness Isai. 3. 9. They declare their sin as Sodom they hide it not when Men have lost all shame and modesty and will not be restrained by any Law Surely if we know the evil of Sin the terribleness of God's Wrath believe the Truth of his Threatnings and then consider the danger that will come to our dearest Country we cannot but be greatly moved If a Man were sailing in a Bark and see it guided so that it must necessarily run against a Rock and suffer Shipwrack he would be sorry and deeply affected 3. It cometh from a good Cause 1. In the general it argueth a good Constitution of Soul 2 Pet. 2. 8. For that righteous man dwelling among them in seeing and hearing vexed his righteous Soul from day to day with their unlawfull deeds Passively he was vexed with the impurity of the Sodomites and actively he vexed himself So far as we are Carnal we are pleased with Sin so far as we are Spiritual we are vexed with it Isai. 63. 10. They rebelled and vexed his holy Spirit The better any are the more affected with publick Sins and Judgments Christ weepeth over Ierusalem for their Impenitency and approaching Desolation Luke 19. 41 42. As he came near he beheld the City and wept over it saying If thou hadst known even thou at least in this thy day the things which belong unto thy peace but now they are hid from thine eyes This was in the midst of the Acclamations and Hosannahs of the Multitude when he was welcomed with a Triumph Paul telleth the Corinthians 2 Cor. 12. 21. I am afraid when I come among you my God will humble me and I shall bewaile many which have not repented of the Fornication Lasciviousness and uncleanness which they have committed The more holy any one is the more he is affected and struck at heart with the Sins of others 2. A deep Resentment of God's Dishonour When his Glory is obscured it is a wound to the Hearts of his Children As a Child cannot endure to hear or see his Father disgraced Surely God's Glory is dear to the Saints Psal. 69. 9. The Reproaches of them that reproached thee are fallen upon me Injuries done to God and Religion affect them no less nearly then Personal Injuries which are done to themselves So affectionately zealous are they for God's Honour which is obscured by the wickedness of the Wicked who forsake the perfect Righteous Law of God and usurping God's Authority make a new Law to themselves 3. Compassion to Men. Though they are Wicked men yet they are Men made after God's Image remotely capable to know and love God and live with him for ever whom they should otherwise embrace as Brethren to see them treasure up Wrath against the day of Wrath should be a grief and a trouble to us To think of the everlasting Destruction
staineth the Pride of all created Glory Iob 4. 18. Behold he put no trust in his Servants and his Angels he charged with folly So that is a true Sight of God's Excellency that draweth off the Heart from the vain changeable and empty shadow of the Creature And God is not truly amiable to us till this effect be in some measure wrought in us 1 Iohn 2. 15. Love not the World neither the things that are in the World if any man love the World the Love of the Father is not in him so that our Love to God will be known by the decay of our Love to Earthly things 2. From Self A sight of God will best discover thy Self unto thy Self that in the Light of God's glorious Majesty thou mayst distinctly behold thine own vileness and misery Isaias when he saw God in Vision Isa. 6. 5. Then said I woe is me for I am undone because I am a man of unclean lips and I dwell in the midst of a people of unclean lips and mine eyes have seen the King the Lord of Hosts That is the use he made of this glorious Sight he knew doubtless something of this before but now is affected as if he had never seen it the Glory of God shining on him doth not lift him up in arrogancy and conceit of the knowledge of such profound Mysteries but he is more abased in himself this Light made him see his own Uncleanness So Iob 42. 5 6. I have heard of thee by the hearing of the ear but now mine eye seeth thee Therefore I abhor my self in dust and ashes As long as it was hearsay Iob thought himself something and might reflect upon himself and actions with a kind of complacency and delight but now he could not look upon himself with any patience Self-love maketh us loath other men's Sins more than our own and Self-love hindereth us from representing our selves to our selves in a true shape It is the mere speculative Knowledge of God and Science falsely so called that puffeth up but a true Knowledge of God breedeth self loathing 3. From Sin it draweth off the Heart This remembrance will represent filthiness as filthiness without a covering Sin is a deformity to God a contrariety to his Laws the purity and goodness of his Essence and Wisdome of his Laws yea an act of Rebellion and Disloyalty against his Sovereignty Sin still is greatned by the Consideration of God and a reflection upon his Nature as against his Authority Purity Goodness so there is Unkindness Disobedience and a Blot in it Well may the Apostle say 3 Ep. Iohn 11. He that doth evil hath not seen God 2. The Heart must be drawn unto God by Love Fear and Trust For unless we meditate upon God to this end Though we know God we do not glorify him as God Rom. 1. 21. till your Hearts be moved and inclined to love fear him and obey him His Being calls for it that we should seek after Communion with God who is such a Self-sufficient Alsufficient and eternal Being Whom would we own or whose Favour would we seek the Favour of poor Creatures who are now one thing now another or the Favour of God who can still say I am that I am What I was I am and I will be what I am Friends are changeable their affections dry up and they themselves die and their Favour and all their thoughts of doing us good perish There is no end of his Duration or Affection His Attributes call for Love his Power rendereth him the most desirable Friend and dreadfull Adversary What more dreadfull than Power that cannot be resisted Wisdome that none can be hid from and what more lovely than his Love Surely if we did study his Name his Promises and Threatnings it would have more Power with us How would we seek to him and submit to his blessed Will and depend on him as those that have nothing in our selves nor any thing else in the World had being without him we would then believe all opposite Powers to be nothing and wink out either the dreadfulness or loveliness of the Creature while the eye of our Souls is wholly taken up with the sight of God our Desires would be to him and our Delights in him and being deadned to the Creature would wholly cleave to him 3. Doctr. Those that have spiritual Affections will take all occasions to Remember God's Name In Adversity for their Comfort Isa. 26. 8 9. Yea in the way of thy Iudgments O Lord have we waited for thee The desire of our soul is to thy Name and to the remembrance of thee with my soul have I desired thee in the night yea with my spirit within me will I seek thee early Isa. 50. 10. Who is among you that feareth the Lord that obeyeth the voice of his Servant that walketh in darkness and hath no light let him trust in the Name of the Lord and stay upon his God In Prosperity for a Regulation and restraint to their Affections that they might not too freely run out on the Creature to the wrong of God It is said of the wicked Psal. 55. 19. Because they have no changes therefore they fear not God but God's Children remember him in their comforts Deut. 8. 10 11. When thou hast eaten and art full thou shalt bless the Lord thy God for the good Land which he hath given thee beware that thou forget not the Lord thy God so Ver. 18. Thou shalt remember the Lord thy God for he it is that giveth thee power to get wealth In Company they will be speaking of God Eph. 5. 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but rather giving of thanks Alone they will be thinking of God so that when they are alone they are not alone God is with them in their solitude Ioh. 16. 32. Behold the hour cometh yea is now come that ye shall be scattered every one to his own and shall leave me alone and yet I am not alone because the Father is with me By Day they redeem time God's Statutes are their Songs by Night when they cannot sleep when I awake I am still with thee Psal. 139. 18. Oh what an advantage it is to have the heart thus thronged with thoughts of God in the night when others sleep good men are awake with God 1. Observe this that which David speaketh of himself was a secret Duty Those Duties which we perform in secret and wherein we avoid the applause of men are most sincere and by them many times we obtain most blessing Matt. 6. 6. Thy Father which seeth in secret shall reward thee openly David was the same in secret that he was in the light Other Witnesses of our respect to God we need not than God himself it is enough that He seeth us and approveth us Our desire and scope should be to please him not to appear devout to men or be esteemed as such by them Therefore besides publick Ordinances we should give
sufficiently sheweth how good it is to have the Mind illuminated and endowed with the true Knowledge of things In handling this Point I shall shew 1. What is the use of a sound Mind 2. Why this should be so often and earnestly asked 1. What is the use of a sound Mind There is a threefold Act of Judgment 1. To distinguish 2. To determine 3. To direct and order 1. To distinguish and judge rightly of things that differ that we may not mistake Errour for Truth and Evil for Good So the Apostle maketh it the great work of Judgment to discerne between Good and Evil Heb. 5. 14. But strong meat belongeth to those that are of full age even those who by reason of use have their Sense exercised to discerne both good and bad The things that are to be judged are true and false right and wrong necessary or indifferent expedient or inexpedient fit or unfit For many things are lawfull that are not expedient 1 Cor. 6. 12. All things are lawfull for me but all things are not expedient as to Time Place Persons Well then Judgment is a Spirit of discerning of Truth from Falsehood Good from Evil that we may approve what is Good and disallow the contrary So the spiritual man judgeth all things 1 Cor. 2. 15. That is Though he hath not an authoritative Judgment he hath a Judgment of Discretion and if he did stir up this gift of Discerning he might more easily understand his Duty and how far he is concerned in point of Conscience and in order to Salvation So 1 Cor. 10. 15. I speak as to wise men judge ye what I say The spiritually Wise if they would awaken the gifts of Grace received in Regeneration by Diligence and Prayer and heedfulness of Soul might sooner come to a resolution of their Doubts than usually they do As Bodily Tast doth discern things savory from unsavory profitable from noxious so is Judgment given us that we may distinguish between the Poysons which the World offereth in a golden Cup to impure Souls and that wholsome spiritual Milk which we suck out of the Breasts of Scripture between savory Food and hurtfull Diet how neatly soever cooked The Souls Tast is more necessary than the Bodies as the Soul is the better part and as our danger is greater and errours there cost us dearer 2. To determine and resolve practicum dictamen the Tast of the Soul is for God that bindeth our Duty upon us when there is a decree issued forth in the Soul that after we know our Duty there may be a resolvedness of Mind never to swerve from it First the distinguishing work proceedeth there is a clear and distinct approbation of God then the determining followeth this is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Acts 11. 23. The purpose of heart 2 Tim. 3. 10. Thou hast known fully my doctrine manner of life 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 purpose The forme of this Decree and Resolution you have in Psalm 73. 28. But it is good for me to draw near to God This in the Soul hath the authority of a Principle he that meaneth to be a thorough Christian must set the bent and biass and purpose of his heart strongly upon it Psalm 39. 1. I said I will take heed to my ways So Psalm 32. 5. I said I will confess mine iniquities These Purposes have a powerfull command upon the whole Soul to set it a working whatever they purpose with this strong decree how backward soever the heart be otherwise They will excite and quicken us and admit of no contradiction it is our Judgments leade us and guide and poise us A man may have Knowledge and Learning and play the fool if his Judgment be not biassed a man never taketh any Course but his Judgment telleth him it is best and best for him all things considered It is not mens Knowledge leadeth them but their Judgments say to their Wills this is not for me the other conduceth most to my profit honour or delight but when the Judgment is in some measure set towards God then the man is for God 3. To direct as well as to decree so good Judgment and Knowledge serveth for the right guiding of our selves and all our Affairs Many are wise in generals that erre in particulars and have a Knowledge of Principles but their Affairs are under no conduct Particulars are nearer to Practice and very Learned men are deceived in Particulars Rom. 2. 20 21 22. An instructor of the Foolish a teacher of Babes which hast the form of Knowledge and of the Truth in the Law Thou therefore which teachest another teachest thou not thy self thou that preachest a man should not Steal dost thou Steal Thou that sayest a man should not commit Adultery dost thou commit Adultery thou that abhorrest Idols dost thou commit Sacriledge Therefore besides the general Rule the Knowledge of God's Will it is necessary to have the gift of Discretion when Particulars are cloathed with Circumstances There is an infinite variety of Circumstances which requireth a deale of prudence to determine them a man may easily discourse general Truths concerning God our Selves the state of the Church the privileges of Christianity but to direct them to particular Cases to govern our own Hearts and order our own Ways that is an harder thing Hos. 14. ult Whoso is wise and prudent c. Prov. 8. 12. I Wisdome dwell with Prudence To direct is harder than to determine or distinguish It is easier to distinguish of good and evil in the general to lay down conclusions upon the evidence of the goodness of the ways of God but to reduce our Knowledge to Practice in all Cases that is the great work of Judgment that we may know what becometh the Time the Place the Company where we are and may have that ordering of our Conversation aright Psalm 50. 23. to know how to carry our selves in all Relations Business civil sacred light serious that we neither offend in excess nor defect that we judge what is due to the Creatour and what is to be allowed to the Creature what is good what is better what is best of all that we know how to pay Reverence to Superiours how most profitably to converse with Equals what compassion to Inferiours how to doe good to them how to behave our selves as Husbands Wives Fathers Children Wisdome maketh us profitable in our Relations 1 Pet. 3. 7. Let Husbands dwell with Wives according to Knowledge There is much prudence and wisdome required to know how to converse profitably and Christianly with all that we have to doe with In short how to love our Friends in God and our Enemies for God how to converse secretly with God and to walk openly before men how to cherish the Flesh that it may not be unserviceable yet how to mortify it that it may not wax wanton against the Spirit how to doe all things in the fear of God in Meats Drinks Apparel
Recreations when and how to pray what time for our Callings what for Worship when to speak when to hold our peace when to praise and when to reprove how to give and how to take when to scatter when to keep back or withhold and to order all things aright requireth a sound Judgment that we carry our selves with that gravity and seriousness that exactness and tenderness that we may keep up the Majesty of Religion and all the World may know that he is wise by whose Counsel we are guided But alas where this sound Judgment and Discretion is wanting we shall soon offend and transgress the Laws of Piety Charity Justice Sobriety Piety and Godliness will not be orderly we shall either be guilty of a prophane neglect of that course of Duty that is necessary to keep in the Life of Grace or turn Religion into a sowre Superstition and rigorous course of Observances Charity will not be orderly we shall give to wastfulness or withhold more than is meet to the scandal or prejudice of the World towards Religion Not perform Justice we shall govern to God's dishonour obey to his wrong punish with too much severity or forbear with too much lenity our Reproofs will be Reproaches our Praises Flattery Sobriety will not be orderly we shall deny our selves our necessary Comforts or use them as an occasion to the Flesh either afflict the Body and make our selves unserviceable or wrong the Soul and burden and oppress it with vain Delights In short even the higher Acts of Religion will degenerate our Fear will be turned into Desperation or our Hope into Presumption our Faith will be a light Credulity or our search after Truth will turn into a flat Scepticism or Irresolution our Patience will be Stupidness or our Constancy Obstinacy we shall either slight the hand of God or faint under it so that there is need of good Judgment and Knowledge to guide us in all our ways 2. Why this is so earnestly to be sought of God the thing is evident from what is said already but farther 1. Because this is a great defect in most Christians who have many times good Affections but no Prudence to guide and order them they are indeed all Affection but no Judgment have a Zeal but without Knowledg Rom. 10. 3. Zeal should be like Fire which is not onely fervidus but lucidus hot but bright a blind Horse may be full of Mettle but he is ever and anon stumbling Oh then should we not earnestly seek of God good Knowledge and Judgment the Spirit of God knoweth what is best for us in the Scriptures he hath endited Prayers Phil. 1. 9. This I pray that your Love may abound more and more in Knowledge and in all Iudgment That our Love and Zeal should have a proportionable measure of Knowledge and Judgment going along with it And Colos. 1. 9. That ye may be filled with the Knowledge of his Will in all Wisdome and spiritual Understanding And again Colos. 3. 16. Let the word of God dwell in you richly in all wisdome These places shew that it is not enough to have warm Affections but we must have a clear and a sound Mind 2. The Mischief which ariseth from this Defect is so great to themselves to others and the Church of God 1. To themselves 1. Without the distinguishing or discerning act of Judgment how apt are we to be misled and deceived they that cannot distinguish Meats will soon eat what is unwholsome so if we have not a Judgment to approve things that are Excellent and disapprove the contrary our Fancies will deceive us for they are taken with every slight appearance as Eve was deceived by the Fruit because it was fair to see to Gen. 3. 6. with 2 Cor. 11. 3. For I fear lest by any means as the Serpent beguiled Eve through his subtilty so your minds should be corrupted from the simplicity that is in Christ. Our Affections will deceive us for they judge by Interest and profit not Duty and Conscience The Affections are easily bribed by those bastard goods of Pleasure Honour and Profit 2 Cor. 4. 4. In whom the God of this world hath blinded the minds of them which believe not The consent of the World will deceive us for they may conspire in Errour and Rebellion against God and are usually the opposite party against God Rom. 12. 2. And be not conformed to this world but be ye transformed by the renewing of your minds Good men may deceive us true and faithfull Ministers may erre both in Doctrine and Manners as the old Prophet seduced the young one to his own Destruction 1 Kings 13. 18. He said unto him I am a Prophet also and an Angel spake unto me by the word of the Lord saying Bring him back with thee into thy house that he may eat bread and drink water But he lied unto him In what a wofull plight then are Christians if they have not a Judgment and a Test to tast Doctrines and try things as the Mouth tasteth Meats how easily shall we take good for evil and evil for good condemning that which God approveth and approving that which God condemneth 2. Without the determining Act of Judgment how fickle and irresolute shall we be either in the Profession or in the Practice of Godliness Many Mens Religion lasts but for a pang it cometh upon them now and then it is not their constant frame and constitution For want of this purpose and resolute peremptory decree for the Profession of Godliness there is an uncertainty levity and wavering in Religion Men take up Opinions lightly and leave them as lightly again Light Chaff is carried about with every wind Eph. 4 14. That we henceforth be no more Children tossed to and fro and carried about with every wind of Doctrine by the slight of men and cunning craftiness whereby they lie in wait to deceive If we receive the Truth upon the credit of men we may be led off again and we shall be ready to stagger when Persecution cometh especially if we see those men from whom we have learned the Truth fall away if we have not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a stedfastness of our own 2 Pet. 3. 17. Beware lest ye also being led away by the errour of the wicked fall from your own stedfastness Men should have a stedfastness proper to themselves not stand by the stedfastness of another the examples of others the countenance or applause of the World or the Opinion of good men but convincing Reason by which their Minds may be inlightened and their Judgments set for God So for Practice we are off and on unstable in all our ways why because we content our selves with some good Motions before we have brought our hearts to this Conclusion to choose God for our Portion and to cleave to him all in hast they will be religious but suddain imperfect Motions may be easily laid aside and given over by contrary
is pleasing in his sight and that is the ready way to come to Knowledge and sound Judgment Iohn 17. 17. Sanctify them through thy Truth thy word is Truth John 3. 21. He that doth truth cometh to the light that his deeds may be made manifest that they are wrought in God Men that have a mind to maintain an Opinion or suffer an evil Practice are prejudiced and byassed by the Idol that is in their hearts and so do not see what may be seen and what they seem to search after Therefore David urgeth this as an Argument in the latter end of the Text I have believed thy Commandments That is to say Lord I know this Word is thine and I am willing to practise all that thou requirest The great thing that is to be aimed about Knowledge is not onely that we may know and be able to jangle about Questions or that we may be known and esteemed for our knowledge but that we may practise and walk circumspectly and in evil days and times know what the will of the Lord is concerning us to desire knowledge as those that know the weight and consequence of these things as I shall shew more fully hereafter Those that would have good Judgment and Knowledge must be willing to understand their Duty and practise all that God requireth that they may neither doe things rashly and without knowledge and deliberation for then they are not good how good soever they be in themselves Prov. 19. 2. Also that the Soul be without knowledge is not good Or doubtingly after Deliberation For he that doubteth is in part condemned in his own mind Rom. 14. 23. And he that doubteth is damned if he eat We must have a clear Warrant from God or else all is nought and will tend to evil Then it is the Spirit of God satisfieth these desires when we earnestly desire of him to be informed in the true and perfect way Iohn 6. 45. They shall be all taught of God He hath suited Promises to the pure and earnest desire of Knowledge Then it is the Lord who sendeth means and blesseth means as he sent Peter to Cornelius Acts 10. and Philip to the Eunuch Acts 8. All is at his disposal and he will not fail the waiting Soul He hath made Christ to be Wisdome for this very end and purpose that he might guide us continually 1 Cor. 1. 30. But of him are ye in Christ Iesus who of God is made unto us Wisdome and Righteousness and Sanctification and Redemption 3. You must seek it in the Word that maketh us wise to Salvation and by the continual study of it we obtain Wisdome and Discretion There we have the best and safest Counsel It maketh wise the simple Psalm 19. 7. No case can be put so far as it concerneth Conscience but there you shall have satisfaction Col. 3. 16. Let the word of God dwell in you richly in all Wisdome You must not content your selves with a cursory reading but mark the end and scope of it that you may be made compleatly wise by frequent reading hearing Meditation upon it and conferring about it There you find all things necessary to be believed and practised therefore you must hear it with Application reade it with Meditation 1. Hear it with Application the Lord blesseth us in the use of instituted means both light and flame are kept in by the breath of preaching Where Visions faile the People perish men grow bruitish and wild It is a Dispute which is the sense of Learning the Ear or the Eye by the Eye we see things but by reason of innate Ignorance we must be taught how to judge of them Iames 1. 19. Wherefore my Brethren let every man be swift to hear take all occasions And we must still apply what we hear Nunquid ego talis Rom. 8. 31. What shall we then say to these things Job 5. ult Loe this we have searched so it is hear it and know thou it for thy good Heb. 2. 3. How shall we escape if we neglect so great Salvation Return upon thine own heart 2. Reading Scriptures is every man's work who hath a Soul to be saved Other Writings though good in their kind will not leave such a lively impression upon the Soul All the moral Sentences of Seneca and Plutarch do not come with such force upon the Conscience as one saying of God's Word God's Language hath a special Energy here must be your study and your delight Psalm 1. 2. His delight is in the Law of the Lord and in his Law doth he meditate day and night 2 Tim. 3. 16 17. All Scripture is given by inspiration of God and is profitable for Doctrine for Reproof for Correction for Instruction in Righteousness that the man of God may be perfect throughly furnished unto all good works These make you wise unto Salvation your Tast is not right when you relish and savour humane Writings though never so good more than the Word of God A draught of Wine from the Vessel is more fresh and lively that Conviction which doth immediately rise out of the Word is more prevailing We suspect the mixture of Passion and private Aims in the Writings of others but when Conscience and the Word are working together we own it as coming from God himself besides those that are studying and reading and meditating on the Word have this sensible advantage that they have Promises Doctrines Examples of the Word ready and familiar upon all occasions others are weak and unsetled because they have not Scriptures ready In the whole work of Grace you will find no weapon so effectual as the Sword of the Spirit Scriptures seasonably remembred and urged are a great relief to the Soul No diligence here can be too much If you would not be unprofitable sapless indiscreet with others weak and comfortless in your selves reade the Scriptures We have sic scriptum est against every Temptation Besides you have the advantage to see with your own Eyes the Truth as it cometh immediately from God before any art of man or thoughts of their head pass upon it and so can the better own God in what you find 4. Long use and exercise doth much increase Judgment especially as it is sanctified by the Spirit of God You get an habit of discerning fixing directing guiding your ways 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 5. 14. Who by reason of use have their Senses exercised to discern good and evil As men of full age by long use and exercise of the Senses of seeing smelling tasting have acquired a more perfect knowledge to discern what food is good and wholsome and what is unwholsome so by much Attention Studying and Meditation men who have exercised the intellectual Faculty to find out the scope and meaning of the Word of God do attain a more discerning Faculty and understand better the Truth of the Word and can judge what Doctrine is true and what false and more easily apprehend
Life 1 Pet. 1. 23. He hath begotten us not by corruptible but incorruptible Seed c. Iames 1. 18. He hath begotten us by the word of Truth 2 Pet. 1. 4. To us are given great and precious Promises that we might be made partakers of the divine Nature John 17. 17. Sanctify them through thy Truth thy Word is Truth All this is said of the Word 't is the means to sanctify us the immortal Seed the beginning of the New life the divine Nature to make us live after a God-like manner therefore 't is better than thousands of gold and silver A Child of God findeth a greater Treasure in one Chapter of the Bible than worldly Men in all their Lands and Honours and large Revenues A poor Christian meeteth with more true Gain in a Sermon than others can in their Trades while they live God begetteth him at first by the Word of Truth and giveth him there the supply of the Spirit therefore be swift to hear much in reading and meditation day and night Oh there is the true Treasure the Pearl of price there their Souls become acquainted with God 2. It directeth us and keepeth us from being carried away with every deceit of Sin Psalm 119. 105. Thy word is a light unto my path and a lamp unto my feet Here are Directions for all Cases here is a general Direction 't is a light to our path and sheweth us what to doe in particular Actions 't is a lamp to our feet So 133 verse Order my steps in thy word and let no iniquity have dominion over me 'T is the Word prevents the reign of any one Sin To have a sure Rule to walk by in the midst of so many Snares and Temptations is a greater favour than to injoy the greatest affluence of worldly Felicity 3. It supporteth us in all our Afflictions and Extremities All the Wealth in the World composed and put together cannot yield us that true Contentment and Satisfaction which the Word of God doth to the obedient Soul Wealth cannot allay a grieved Mind nor appease a wounded Conscience The Word directeth us where we may find rest for our Souls Ier. 6. 16 Goe ask for the good old way and you shall find rest for your Souls We lose our selves in a maze of Uncertainties till we come to the Word of God Mat. 11. 28. Come unto me all you that are weary and heavy laden and you shall find rest for your Souls here is ease for the great wound and maim of Nature The great maim of Nature is Sin now where shall we have a Plaister for this Sore but onely in the Word of God So for particular Afflictions Rom. 15. 4. That ye through the patience and comfort of the Scriptures might have hope Comfort is the strengthening of the Mind or the fortifying the Mind when 't is vexed and weakened with doubts fears and sorrows I had fainted in my Affliction unless thy word had quickened me Psalm 119. 50. The Comforts of the World appear and vanish in a moment cannot firmly stay and revive the Heart every blast of Temptation scattereth them Philosophy and natural Reason cannot give us true ground of Comfort that was it they aimed at how to fortify the Soul and keep it quiet notwithstanding Troubles in the Flesh but as they never understood the true ground of Misery which is Sin so neither the true ground of Comfort which is Christ. That which Man offereth cannot come with such power and authority upon the Conscience as that which God offereth and bare Reason cannot have such an efficacy as divine Testimony and the Law of God's Mouth This Moonlight rotteth before it ripeneth Fruits but the Word acquainteth us with Christ who is the Foundation of Comfort with the Spirit who is the efficient cause of Comfort with the promise of Heaven which is the true matter of Comfort with Faith the great Instrument to receive it 3. Let us look to the Duration there is a vanity and uncertainty in all these outward things they soon take the wing and leave us in sorrow If they continue with us till death then they have done all their work Wealth may bring you to the Grave but it can stead you no farther then Wealth is gone but Horrour doth continue Luke 16. 24. Son in thy life time thou enjoyedst thy good things these good things are onely commensurate with Life Sometimes they do not last so long but when we must leave the World and lanch out to those unknown Regions Iob 27. 8. how miserable shall we be Worldly Comforts will fail us when we have most need of them as Ionah's Gourd when the Sun scorched him So in the hour of Death what will Bags of Gold doe then but now on the other side Wisdome is better than Gold and Silver because with her are durable Riches and Righteousness Prov. 8. 18 19. therefore my fruit is better than gold yea than fine gold and my revenue than choise silver If a man would labour for any thing labour for that which is Eternal Iohn 6. 27. No Treasure can be compared to eternal Life and this the Word assureth us of II. Let us now come to examine why the Children of God value it so 1. Because they are enlightned by the Spirit when others have their Eyes dazzled with an external splendour and their Judgment is corrupted by their Senses 'T is not Ignorance undoes the World so much as want of spiritual Prudence spiritual and heavenly Things can onely be seen in the light of the Spirit without which we can neither discern the truth or worth of them in order to choice 1 Cor. 2. 14. The natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit and therefore till we have this illuminating and sanctifying Light of the Spirit we shall not make a good Choise for our selves Eph. 1. 17 18. The Apostle prayeth That the Lord would give you the spirit of Wisdome and Revelation The eyes of your Understanding being inlightened that ye may know what is the hope of his Calling and the riches of the glory of his Inheritance in the Saints That saving Knowledge of divine Mysteries which causeth us to prefer and choose them above other things comes from the spirit of Wisdome and Revelation otherwise in seeing we see not There is a perfect contradiction many times between speculative and practical Knowledge the common Wisdome and Knowledge of divine Mysteries is a Gift that cometh from the Spirit much more this spiritual discerning 2. They are affected with their true Necessities Our real Necessities are the Necessities of the Soul bodily wants are more urging and pressing upon us but these are more dangerous therefore Gold and Silver which supplieth our bodily Necessities is not so welcome to them as the Law of God's Mouth which provideth a remedy for their Soul defects How to be justified how sanctified is more than what shall we eat and drink and wherewith shall we be cloathed
usually Soul-necessities are overlooked We regard them not or conceit we are well already Rev. 3. 17. Thou thoughtest thou wast rich and increased with goods and hadst need of nothing and then we have no relish for the offered Remedy The Word of God is the offered Remedy to repair our collapsed State The Gospel is not onely true but worthy to be imbrac'd 1 Tim. 1. 15. but who will imbrace it but the sensible Sinner for 't is offered as a Remedy to the Sick and Deliverance to the Captive 't is not enough to see the Excellency of things but we must see our Necessity of them There are two hinderances that prejudice our Salvation Either the Necessity and Excellency of the Gospel is not considered or the Truth and Reality of it is not believed 3. They measure all things with respect not to this World but the World to come 'T is an high point of Religion to doe all things and regard all things for eternal Ends 2 Cor. 4. 18. Looking not to things seen that are temporal but to the things which are not seen which are eternal Making this our scope and doing all to this end Gold and Silver are the most valuable things in the World what cannot Gold and Silver buy in this World but there is another World and Believers look to things unseen Within a while it will not be a pin to choose whether we have injoyed much or little of this World 's good things but much will lie upon this whether we have obeyed God and glorified God and accepted of Christ. The use of Gold and Silver ceaseth in the World to come these things are not currant in Canaan nor accounted of in our heavenly Country therefore Money should be a vile thing instead of Grace we can carry away none of these things with us when we die Eccles. 5. 15. And surely that which hath no power to free us from Death to comfort us in Death or goe with us into another World after Death is no Happiness or solid Tranquillity 4. They have had trial and experience of the Word what a Comfort and Support it hath been to them 1 Pet. 2. 2 3. As new-born babes desire the sincere milk of the word that ye may grow thereby If so be ye have tasted that the Lord is gracious There is an Appetite followeth the New nature and makes us desire spiritual Food Phil. 1. 9 10. And this I pray that ye may abound in all knowledge and in all Iudgment That we may approve the things that are excellent When the Spirit giveth us a tast of the goodness of those things offered in the Word of God a tast of divine Truth in our Souls when we find these Comforts verified in us then we come to approve the things that are Excellent above all other things Psalm 119. 11. Thy word have I hid in my heart that I might not sin against thee We never know the worth of the Word till we come to make trial of it by Practice and Experience The pleasure of the Word we find in practice and the comfort and support of it in deep Afflictions 't is not so with the World try it and loath it 't is more in fancy than fruition because the Imperfections which formerly lay hid are discovered but the more intimately acquainted with the Word of God the more we prize it we see there is more to be gained there than in all the World besides Use 1. Is to reprove and disprove those that prefer Gold and Silver before the Word of God this is done by four sorts 1. This is grossly done by those that revolt from the profession of the Truth for the World's sake 2 Tim. 4. 10. Demas hath forsaken us and embrac'd the present world that betray the cause of Religion as Iudas sold his Master for thirty pieces of Silver or by those who will transgress for a small hire the Devil needeth not offer great things to them when they will accept of less with thanks for two pence or three pence gain will profane the Sabbath or wrong their Neighbour Is the Law of God's Mouth dearer to them than Gold and Silver surely no they may flatter themselves with love to the Word but when they can violate it for a Trifle for a pair of Shoos 't is a sign that a little gain gotten by iniquity of Traffick is sweeter to them than all the Comforts of the Promise 2. 'T is done by them that will not forsake any thing for the Word's sake but when they are put upon an apparant Trial here is Gold and Silver and there the Law of God's Mouth what will you doe obey God or comply with your Interests you shew your Love by leaving the one rather than the other as Moses counted the reproach of Christ better treasure than the riches of Egypt Heb. 11. 26. Christ's worst is better than the World 's best The Thessalonians shewed their Love when they received the Word in much Affliction but when you decline Duty and are loth to hazzard your Interests 't is evident what you prefer To some this may be a daily Temptation If I should be conscionable in my Calling I should be poor keep touch and honesty in all things it would turn to my loss How many are discouraged from the Ways of God and discharging a good Conscience by Inconveniency 3. This is also in part done by them who turn back upon the Word and Ordinances of God for gains sake and fix their residence there where they can neither enjoy God nor his People nor the Comfort of his Ordinances as Merchants who remove for Traffick and settle their abode there where the true Religion is not professed it may be suppressed with extremity of rigour especially when they send Youth thither and Novices and Persons not grounded in the Faith This is like turning a Child loose among a company of contagious Persons or setting an empty Pitcher to crack before the fire Commerce and Traffick with Infidels or Persons of a false Religion is lawfull but to make our constant Residence where there is no Liberty for reading and hearing the Word of God no Liberty of Worship and Ordinances cannot be excused from Sin You make Religion to stoop to Gain I will not urge so high and heroical an Instance as Moses Heb. 11. 25. Choosing rather to suffer afflictions with the people of God than injoy the pleasures of sin for a season but of a Iew since the time of their Degeneration I have once and again read of one Rabbi Ioseph who being allured with the hope and call to a place of great gain to teach Hebrew where there was no Synagogue is said to have brought forth this Scripture for his Answer and Excuse The Law of thy Mouth is better to me than thousands of gold and silver let us Christians remember it and consider the pertinency of it 4. 'T is more refinedly done by them who by earthly
48. 10. Behold I have refined thee but not with silver I have chosen thee in the furnace of affliction that is not so throughly silver is not refined till all the dross be consumed and wrought out of it and when should we see good day if God should so refine us 4. They are not reckoned to dross but metal that walk answerable to their profession and obligations to God as becometh his peculiar people to do they are not satisfied with common mercies A man may have the world at will and yet be a cast-away they must have something peculiar and distinguishing Psal. 119. 132. Look upon me and be merciful unto me as thou usest to do to them that love thy name things that can never be given in anger They do not rest in common Grace Heb. 6. 9. But we hope better things of you and things that do accompany salvation Those good moods in Hypocrites and Temporaries Nor content themselves with a common conversation 1 Cor. 3. 3. Are ye not carnal and walk as men 1 Pet. 4. 4. Wherein they think it strange that you run not with them into the same excess of riot Matth. 5. 46. If you love them that love you what reward have ye do not even the Publicans the same You should do something rare and singular not in an ordinary loose rate III. That it is God's business in heaven to put away the wicked as dross to sever them from the purer metal 1. God hath many ways and means to do it partly by his Judgments he doth it more and more Matth. 3. 12. His Fan is in his hand and he will throughly purge his Floor and gather his Wheat into the Garner but he will burn up the Chaff with unquenchable fire As the Chaff from Corn so Dross from Metal Isai. 4. 4. When the Lord shall have washed away the filth of the Daughter of Zion and shall have purged the bloud of Ierusalem from the midst thereof by the spirit of judgment and by the spirit of burning that is by the Judgment executed upon the evil among them Ezek. 20. 38. And I will purge out from among them the Rebels and them that transgress against me This God doth by destroying wasting Judgments 2. Partly by the censures of the Church 1 Cor. 5. 9. Put away from among your selves that wicked person And partly by the stroke of the Civil Magistrate and their punishments Prov. 25. 4 5. Take away the dross from the silver and there shall come forth a vessel for the Finer Take away the wicked from before the King and his Throne shall be established in righteousness Thus doth God do it now but he will fully and finally do it at the last Judgment when there shall be a perfect separation of them and all the wicked shall be cast away as refuse Matth. 25. 32 33. Before him shall be gathered all Nations and he shall separate them one from another as a Shepherd divideth his Sheep from the Goats and he shall set the Sheep on his right hand and the Goats on his left hand there is a congregation and then a segregation never to meet more nor be mingled more Now God doth it in part but then more fully 2. The Reasons First God doth so lest the silver it self should be turned into dross We are apt to corrupt one another natural corruption within meeting with examples without Isai. 6. 5. Wo is me I am undone because I am a man of unclean lips and I dwell among a people of unclean lips As a man that hath the matter of a Disease prepared coming into infectious Company is soon infected Gods choicest people have much dross in them therefore the Lord needeth to purge out their dross the purest Church is apt to contract pollution and to degenerate and the choice Plants of the Covenant-Stocks to run wild were it not for these dispensations Secondly That impunity may not harden the wicked and encourage others God suffereth it as long as he judgeth it expedient Eccl. 8. 11. Because sentence against an evil work is not executed speedily therefore the hearts of the sons of men are fully set in them to do evil Psal. 9. 16. The Lord is known by the Iudgments he executeth the wicked is snared in the work of his own hands Men sin the more freely and securely when a Judgment doth not presently overtake them when sinners go on without any mark of Gods vengeance but God will in every Age clear his Providence by bringing of Judgments upon wicked men Thirdly The nearer they are to God the more hateful their provocations are and more severely punished Amos 3. 2. You have I known of all the families of the earth therefore I will punish you for all your iniquities For their sins the valley of vision is brought to barrenness They sin against the clearest light the dearest love the highest engagements to the contrary and therefore when they are mingled among his people as dross with the silver God putteth them away Use. Is to inform us that God in his judicial proceedings will distinguish he will divide the dross from the other metal that he may destroy the one and preserve the other David prayeth Psal. 26. 9. Gather not my soul with sinners nor my life with bloody men that God would not lay him common with the wicked God hath his Harvest for cutting down for cutting and binding together those that sinned Now David prayeth That he that had severed himself in his course of life might not be gathered with them in their punishment God will distinguish his Judgments are for the destruction of the worser sort and the amendment of the better When he severeth the dross he hath a care of the silver Though never so terrible to the wicked still he will be comfortable to his own 2 Pet. 2. 9. The Lord knoweth how to deliver the godly out of temptation and to reserve the unjust to the Day of Iudgment to be punished His own Jewel that lyeth hidden among them when all is shaken round about them God can hide them in the secret of his Presence and preserve them as he did Lot and Noah His own are wonderfully preserved in common Judgments several Scriptures speak to this Eccl. 8. 12 13. Surely it shall be well with them that fear God but it shall not be well with the wicked And Iosh. 3. 10. Hereby ye shall know that the living God is among you and he will without fail drive out from before you the Canaanites and the Hittites Isai. 3. 10 11. Say unto the righteous It shall be well with him for they shall eat the fruit of their doings Wo to the wicked it shall be ill with him for the reward of his hands shall be given him God will make a difference between good and bad Use 2. That a few wicked men may bring a great deal of hurt and mischief as Achan upon Israel two dry sticks may set a green one
Providence This tenderness as it is wrought in them by Grace at the first so 't is encreased by their acquaintance with God and experiences of his love Familiarity with men breedeth contempt familiarity with God not so None are moved with reverence to the Lord more than they that know him best and are most familiar with him None rejoyce more than they when they find God is pleased and giveth out demonstrations of Grace to the world None fear more than they when God is angry Psal. 90. 11. Who knoweth the power of thine anger According to thy fear so is thy wrath The world think not of Gods anger till they feel the terrible effects of it but Gods Children that have a deep awe of God and observe him in all his motions have the greatest apprehensions of his displeasure Secondly It is the property of Gods Children when they look to any thing without them still to draw home the Providence and consider their own Case and to edifie themselves by that they see in others whether it be good or evil Electorum Corda semper ad se sollicitè videant saith Gregory When Uzzah was stricken How shall I bring the Ark of God home to me saith David 1 Chron. 13. 12. Will not God be as severe to me if I behave my self unreverently He observed how failing about holy things did much incense Gods wrath Gal. 6. 13. Ye which are spiritual restore such a one with meekness considering thy self lest thou also be tempted They that rigidly and uncharitably censure others are usually greatest strangers to their own hearts but a man that draweth all things home knoweth that if God should let loose temptations upon him he may be as bad as others A man that usually reflects upon himself will be afraid and will not reflect on the Judgments executed on others but tremble Nunquid ego tali c. was a good Question in a Heathen If God should visit my transgressions I have broken his Laws and deserve as great a punishment A spirit of application is a great advantage Our Lord telleth others Luke 13. 5. Ye shall likewise perish without repentance David was afraid lest he should be cast away with the dross because they love not Gods testimonies therefore he would not only love his testimonies but also fear his judgments Carnal men forget themselves when they are so bitter against others Thirdly The usefulness of this fear sheweth it is their duty 'T is very necessary 1. To stir up watchfulness and care for our own safety that we may not fall into like offences or do any thing that is displeasing to God lest we fall into his vengeance We are bidden to work out our salvation with fear and trembling Phil. 2. 12. We have to do with a just and holy God who is tender of his Laws Now this fear should be more active and lively when we see his Judgments executed for then God is ready at hand with a Whip to awaken us and to shew us he will not be dallied with and that danger attendeth us when we begin to straggle out of our Duty He that breaketh through an Hedge a Serpent shall bite him Fear is the great restraint of sin as the fear of man keepeth the Beasts from hurting him Gen. 9. 2. 't is their bridle The fear of you shall be upon the Beasts of the field So fear of God helps to keep from offending him or breaking his Laws 2. To humble us when we see that sin shall not escape unpunished Alas If God should enter into judgment with us who could stand Psal. 143. 2. Non dicit cum hostibus tuis sed cum servo tuo He doth not say if thou shouldest enter into judgment with thine enemy but with thy servant God is a just Judg and therefore when we see judgments executed upon others we may be afraid of his righteousness Every humble heart is conscious to himself of grievous offences and if God when he cometh to purge out dross should be severe with us what miserable wretched Creatures should we be This striketh an holy fear into our hearts and so helps us to humble our selves in his presence 3. To make us thankful for our mercies and gracious escape 'T is fear that maketh us taste the sweetness of the promise of free pardon when we see from what miseries we are delivered by the mercy of God when the Israelites had seen the Egyptians drowned in the water they saw they had cause to triumph in the God of their salvation Exod. 15. 1 2. The consideration of our defects is in part represented to us in the bitter experience of others there we may see what dangers we are liable unto were it not for his preventing Grace that we are not condemned with the world and left to perishin our sins 4. To quicken and sharpen our prayers God knoweth how to take vengeance on all iniquity even in his dearest servants Ioel 2. 17. Spare thy people O Lord and give not thine heritage to reproach Sparing is an act of Gods mercy withdrawing and moderating deserved Judgments Now the more our fear is encreased the more earnest and importunate will we be to keep off or get the Judgment removed Use. Is reproof of the greatest part of the world that pass by Gods Judgments and take no notice of them so as to fear and return to him Not his judgments upon others when the Arrows of God fly round about us we should fear for our selves and when wrath is making inquisition for sinners be the more earnest to be found in Christ. But a sensless stupidity possesseth most men they mind none of these things The Gibeonites were more wise and cautious Iosh. 9. 3 4. when they saw the Cities of Iericho and Ai destroyed and their inhabitants cut off by the sword they did not expect the coming of Ioshua but sent messengers to him and by a Wile struck up a Covenant with him before he came any further Or as that Captain when two before him with their fifties were destroyed by fire he fell upon his knees before the Prophet 2 Kings 1. 13 14. saying O Man of God let my life and the life of these fifty thy servants be precious in thy sight Behold there came fire down from Heaven and burnt up the two Captains of the former fifties with their fifties therefore let my life be precious in thy sight But Oh our blindness and stupidness though others fall under the Judgment of God we are as immoveable as rocks and do not fall down before the Lord to deprecate his anger Certainly if we had a due sense of our condition we are as worthy as they 't is by the mercy of God that yet we stand Therefore we should fear with an holy fear that we may bridle the flesh humble our selves before the Lord be thankful for our safety and be earnest in prayer this we should do when we see any others in
afflictions Again when Judgments are on our selves when God cometh nearer to us and beginneth to touch us with his hand we should relent presently To be sinning and suffering is the condition of the damned in Hell The Holy Ghost sets a brand upon Ahaz 2 Chron. 28. 22. That in the time of his distress he did yet trespass more and more against the Lord this is that King Ahaz If we keep our pride luxury vanity wantonness still our avarice coldness in Religion Sabbath-prophanation if we be not brought by all our afflictions to fear God the more such a brand will he put upon us yea our Judgments will be encreased and the Furnace heated seven times hotter as when the Child is stubborn and obstinate the Father redoubleth his strokes Therefore we are to beg his Spirit with his Rod that we may be the better by all his corrections Numb 12. 14. If her Father had spit in her face should she not be ashamed seven days So if our heavenly Father be displeased and casts contempt upon us c. Use 2. It reproveth those that triumph over the faln and declaim and inveigh against their sins but do not consider their own We should rather tremble and learn to fear from every Judgment executed though upon the worst of men and say Well God is a righteous God and whosoever provoketh him to wrath shall not escape unpunished But this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 this insulting over and upbraiding others with their evil and afflicted condition is a-sin which God cannot endure and will certainly punish Prov. 17. 5. And he that is glad at calamities shall not be unpunished If God hath stricken them and the hand of Justice found them out we should be tender to them Prov. 24. 17 18. Rejoyce not when thine enemy falleth and let not thine heart be glad when he stumbleth lest the Lord see it and it displease him and he turn away his wrath from him Some read it Et convertat iram suam in te he turn his wrath upon thee Thine enemy is not he that thou hatest for a Christian should hate no body but he that hateth thee if we rejoyce in their evil certainly 't is a sign we hate them however we please our selves with the thoughts of forgiving them as not when he falleth so not when he stumbleth not at lesser evils that befal them Many will say They do not wish their destruction but a little evil they could be glad of which sheweth how rare true piety is God will give him like advantage against thee As the leprosie of Naaman doth cleave to Gehazi David when he heard of the death of Saul rent his Cloaths and wept and fasted 2 Sam. 1. 11 12. Therefore to feed our eyes with the misery and torment of others is no holy affection Iob disclaimed it Iob 31. 29. If I rejoyced at the destruction of him that hated me or lifted up my self when evil found him neither have I suffered my mouth to sin by wishing a curse to his soul. Revenge is sweet to carnal Nature but such a disposition as that cannot or should not find room in a gracious heart to evidence his integrity Iob produceth this vindication Though they that hate us be our worst enemies and should have spirits steeped in bitterness and Wormwood against us yet ought we not to rejoyce at the misery of an enemy Yea to mourn at their fall becometh us more if we would act as Christians and to fear because of it is an act of piety Therefore this old leven of malice and revenge must be purged out this being inwardly delighted when we hear of the fall of those that hate us When thine enemy falleth consider Either I my self am like him or worse or better than he If better who made thee to differ If worse thou hast cause to wonder thou art spared and to fear before the Lord. Let us therefore observe the Judgments of God executed according to his word Lactantius telleth us Quod non metuitur contemnitur quod contemnitur utique non colitur If the wrath of God be not feared it is contemned and if God be contemned he cannot be worshipped SERMON CXXXII PSAL. CXIX VER 121. I have done Iudgment and Iustice leave me not to mine Oppressours HEre is I. David's Plea II. His Prayer I. His Plea I have done Iudgment and Iustice Defensio est non arrogantia saith Ambrose he doth not speak this boasting or trusting in his own righteousness but by way of Apology and just defence 't is no pleading of merit as if God were his Debtor but an asserting of his innocency against slanderers There is Iustitia personae the righteousness of the person and Iustitia causae the righteousness of the cause wherein any one is engaged We may propound the Justice of our cause to God as the Judge of the Earth and appeal to him how innocently we suffer when we are not able to plead the righteousness of our persons as to a strict and legal qualification Psal. 143. 2. Enter not into judgment with thy servant for in thy sight shall no man living be justified Well then David pleadeth the equity and justice of his Cause and his right behaviour therein They cannot condemn him of any unrighteousness and injustice and yet endeavour to oppress him therefore he pleads Lord thou knowest where the right lyeth so far as concerneth their slanders I appeal to thee for my integrity and sincerity thou knowest that I have given up my self to do just and right things though they are thus forward to mischief I have ●…one them no wrong Hear me O God of my righteousness Psal. 4. 1. They that look to be protected by God must look that they have a good Cause and handle that Cause well otherwise we make him the Patron of sin when we suffer as evil Doers 't is the Devil's Cross not Christ's that we take up But let us see how David expresseth his innocency I have done Iudgment and Iustice these two words are often joined together in Scripture When God is spoken of 't is said of him Psal. 33. 5. He loveth righteousness and judgment and in the 2 Sam. 8. 15. 't is said that David executed judgment and justice over all Israel Muis distinguisheth them thus Iudicium adversus sceleratos Iustitia erga bonos Judgment in punishing the wicked Justice in rewarding the good Besides that David speaketh not here as a King but as a poor oppressed man The words will hardly admit of that Notion Some think they are only put to encrease the sense I have done Judgment justly exactly I suppose the one referreth to the Law or Rule it self according to which every one is to do right that is judgment a clear knowledg of what ought to be done the other referreth to the action that followeth thereupon So that Judgment is a doing of what we know an acting according to received light Ezek. 18. 5. Do that which
servants they are they do nothing but what their master commandeth and what he commandeth they see reason to obey Second Branch Give me understanding that I may know thy testimonies This is subjoined to the former Plea First Because David would not be a servant in name and title only but in deed and in truth and therefore would fain know his duty Secondly To shew the difference between Gods servants and the servants of other Lords who command us Prov. 14. 25. The Kings favour is towards a wise servant they see them wise find them wise and then love them but God must begin with us his favour maketh us wise Doctr. Gods best Servants think they can never enough beg Divine illumination David doth often enforce this request Reasons 1. Our blindness in the matters of God is a great part of our spiritual misery Ephes. 5. 8. Ye were sometimes darkness There is a Veil lying upon our hearts not easily removed and taken away All the mischief introduced by the Fall is not cured at once but by degrees as spiritual strength encreaseth we grow up into it so spiritual light The maim of the understanding as well as the will is not wholly cured till we come to Heaven for here we know but in part till God give us understanding we are utterly blind the best of Gods servants have cause to acknowledge it in themselves the remnants of ignorance and incredulity The Apostle biddeth them to adde to faith vertue to vertue knowledge that is skill to manage the work of our heavenly Calling 2. None are so sensible of this blindness as they 'T is some proficiency in knowledge to understand our ignorance Prov. 30. 2 3. Surely I am more bruitish than any man and have not the understanding of a man I neither learned wisdom nor have the knowledg of the holy The most knowing see they need more enlightening The best of our knowledge is to know our imperfections 1 Cor. 8. 2. He that thinketh he knoweth any thing knoweth nothing as he ought to know 3. There is room for encrease for in the best we never know so much of Gods ways but we may know more Hos. 6. 3. Then shall we know if we follow on to know the Lord. Prov. 4. 18. But the path of the Iust is as a shining light that shineth more and more unto the perfect day True sanctified knowledg is always growing If we sit down with measures received 't is a sign we do not know things as we should know them Christ grew in knowledge not in Grace for the fulness of the Godhead dwelt in him bodily Practical knowledg is never at a stand though a man may see round the compass and light of saving truth yet he may know them more spiritually and more feelingly 4. The profit of Divine Revelation as to these three things First A clear discerning of the things of God not a confused Notion as the blind man in the Gospel saw men as Trees walking So 2 Cor. 4. 6. For God who commanded the light to shine out of darkness hath shined in our hearts to give the light of the knowledg of the Glory of God in the face of Iesus Christ. And 1 Iohn 5. 20. And hath given us an understanding that we may know him that is true Every degree of knowledg is Gods gift What other men see confusedly we see more distinctly in this light Secondly Firm assent Then shall I know thy testimonies know them from others that have not Divine Authority 'T is the spirit of Wisdom and Revelation that openeth our eyes to see the truth and worth of heavenly things contained in the promise Ephes. 1. 17 18. The father of glory may give you the spirit of wisdom and revelation in the knowledg of him the eyes of your understandings being enlightened that ye may know the hope of his calling and the riches of the glory of the inheritance of the Saints in light And Matth. 16. 17. Flesh and blood hath not revealed these things unto thee Humane credulity we may have upon the report of others the evidence of the truths themselves but this firm assent is the fruit of Divine illumination Thirdly Hearty practice Let thy testimonies not only strike my ear but affect my heart command my hand let me know them so as to do them for otherwise our knowledge is little worth God doth so direct that he doth also enable us to approve our obedience to him sincerely and faithfully There is a knowledge that puffeth us up 1 Cor. 8. 1. which yet is a gift and floweth from the common influence of the Spirit Ier. 22. 16. Was not this to know me saith the Lord But there is a greater efficacy in practical knowledge such as warmeth the heart with love to the truths known Iohn 4. 10. If thou knewest the gift c. Such a light as proceedeth from the gracious influence of the Spirit Use 1. Let us be often dealing with God in prayer that our judgments may be enightened with the understanding of the word and our affections renewed and strengthened unto the true obedience of it beg for that lively light of the Spirit 1. We need it In how many things do we erre in the things which know how weak are we both as to sound judgment and practice The Apostle saith We know but in part 1 Cor. 13. 9. We are but of yesterday and we know nothing Job 8. 9. Therefore we have need to go to the Ancient of days that he may teach us knowledge and kindle our Lamps anew at the Fountain of light Alas we take it in by drops or by degrees as a tender and sore eye must be used to the light We have but little time to get knowledg in and do not improve that little time we have 2. We have leave to ask it Iam. 1. 5. If any man lack wisdom let him ask it of God and why do we not seeing we have a liberty to ask it 3. God hath promised to bestow it he will give his spirit to them that ask it Luke 11. 13. And to beget Faith in us If ye then being evil know how to give good gifts to your Children how much more shall your heavenly father give the holy spirit to them that ask him Here is a notable Argument he reasoneth and promiseth And Prov. 2. 3. we must cry for knowledg Well then let us be earnest that we may not miss that which is to be had for asking beg for an heart to know Ier. 24. 7. I will give them an heart to know me that I am the Lord. Use 2. It informeth us That there is somewhat more than the Word necessary to give us knowledge God must not only reveal the Object but prepare the Subject David having a Law beggeth understanding that he might know Gods testimonies The literal sense and meaning of the words may be understood by common gifts and ordinary industry unless men be exceedingly blinded and
the Lord blesseth this institution and this means for it is not bare truth but instituted truth with which God will associate the operation of his Spirit By this Word of his that was indicted by the Spirit and penn'd by holy men that were moved by the Holy Ghost he doth joyn his virtue and power and efficacy of his Spirit to sanctifie the souls of men 3. They that make it their scope and business to please God in all things and take his Word for their Rule their souls will soon see a need for Divine direction and the establishment of his Grace This reason is taken from the temper of the persons that are to walk in this strict way according to his strict rule they are such as are naturally blind and naturally opposite to God now certainly such need to go to God for direction I gather that from these words Order my steps Every man is a poor blind Creature and hath a heart opposite to the ways of God he need beg this grace of God Lord encline my heart Every man is a blind Creature partly because our own spirits are blind crooked and unstable that we shall neither consult our Rule nor understand our Duty nor like it when it is represented to us until the Lord doth enlighten us A mans heart is naturally blind 2 Pet. 1. 9. He cannot see afar off he hath no skill in spiritual things 1 Cor. 2. 14. The heart is naturally full of darkness and then this darkness grows upon us Partly by prejudice or custome and many evil habits 2 Cor. 4. 4. The God of this world hath blinded mens eyes There are many inordinate affections that encrease upon us So 't is then that a man is blind by nature more blind by custome and inordinate affection is exceedingly blinded which have a great influence upon our judgments in all practical Cases Though we should know general Rules yet to bring them down to every particular action is very grievous and hard to bring the heart to But you will say When we have received the Spirit God hath put his Law into our minds this blindness is cured therefore why should such as David pray Lord order my steps c. Yes we are cured but in part non totaliter Grace doth heal us but in part much of the matter that clouded the mind before is yet upon us and when lusts are awakened by temptations we strangely forget our selves our own reason our senses and examples of others we are misled so that we know not what to do unless the Lord order our steps Well as we are blind so we are opposite too When we know our way what we should do yet we are apt to stumble at every Stone Naturally the wisdom of the Flesh is opposite Rom. 8. 7. The carnal mind is enmity against God And so much as the wisdom of the Flesh still remains we are apt to be discouraged from walking with God according to his strict rule and in the way that he hath given us and we are extreamly slack that unless we be quickened by the lively and strengthning light of the Spirit alas how soon shall we miscarry Therefore this ordering is a strengthening against the reluctancies of the flesh Psal. 17. 5. Hold up my goings in thy paths that my foot-steps slip not Alas when a man finds a good way he is either apt to lye down out of laziness or to stumble and fall and we cannot keep our footing against temptations Every man of experience seeth the need of this Therefore Lord direct me Order my steps The 4. Reason is taken from the value of the blessing here asked It is one of the chiefest blessings of his grace and favour to have his illuminating Afer he had said Lord be merciful unto me presently follows Lord order my steps To prove this must needs be a great blessing and favour It will appear out of the Words of the Text partly from the word order it makes our lives orderly and regular Alas what a confused disproportionable thing is a man that is half in and half out with the ways of God! His conversation is not all of a piece sometimes right and sometimes wrong there is not that beauty that harmony that holiness to be found in them Solomon tells us Prov. 26. 7. The legs of the lame are not equal so is a parable in the mouth of fools Baines on the place saith thus The man hath knowledge to speak well but he lives ill so his conversation is halting like the legs of the lame Sometimes his speculative light will encline him to do easie things but his practical endeavours will carry him another way there is no even and uniform strain of godliness Then is a mans Conversation ordered when all is carried on with a fair respect to his last end for it is the last end that fixeth a mans mind and cuts off impertinencies and inconsistences and makes a mans Conversation beautiful otherwise the man is tost up and down in a various uncertain motion distracted by a multiplicity of ends and objects that his will is in no composed and settled frame I remember David prays Psal. 86. 11. Unite my heart to fear thy name It 's a blessed thing when a man is united when his conversation is all of a piece And Iames 1. 8. A double-minded man is unstable in all his ways A divided mind will beget an uncertain life I say the last end of our lives doth unite all the parts of it and there 's a regularity and harmony between them But others their life is a mere Lottery the fancies by which they are governed they are jumbled together by Chance and they live at peradventure and hap-hazard and there is not a comely intire uniform order to a blessed end Again partly too from the reason here Order my steps according to thy word and let no iniquity have dominion over me This will prevent the dominion of sin perverse affections are apt to sway us but when the Lord supplies fresh directions the tyranny and dominion of sin is prevented and crushed in the Egg. Sin usually steals into the Throne by insensible degrees temptations and occasions reduce us to some evil practice Well and that produceth another then do multiplied acts get strength then they insnare us and when once the soul is insnared then this bondage daily encreaseth and is hard to be broken for by multiplied acts custome creeps upon us and that 's another nature and that which was but indifferent at first grows more difficult As Diseases looked to at first are easily cured otherwise they grow desperate so sins when they come to a slavish tyranny and custome they cannot help it All this is prevented by the seasonable warnings of the holy Spirit Partly too because this is only vouchsafed to Gods special people God as he loves any so he manifests himself to them this appears out of the Text for in the Verse before
when in hand and in present expectation work far otherwise than they do when they are considered at a distance So when the effects of sin are looked upon as near at hand when faith makes them present then they stir up these affections in the soul. Fifthly A fifth cause is from their publick Spirit and tender respect to the common good When they wisely foresee approaching dangers they are moved with the love and care of their Countrey and this melteth them They know sin is of a destroying nature that one sinner destroyeth much good Eccl. 9. 18. One sinner may do his Countrey a great deal of mischief an open bold fac'd Sinner Achan troubled the whole Camp Iosh. 7. 11 12. much more when a multitude of Sinners are encreased therefore they sigh and mourn Godly men are the truest friends to their native soil they are the Chariots and Horsemen of Israel Those that plead with God stand in the Gap keep off Judgments and have the most publick spirit therefore the least they can do is to sigh for it and to plead with wicked men as Tertullian Si non vis tibi parcere parce Carthagini If thou wilt go on with thy soul-destroying course and wilt not spare thy self yet spare Carthage This will be bitterness in the issue The Children of God are always of a publick Spirit David fasted for his enemies Psal. 35. Abraham prayed to God for Sodom a neighbour Countrey the godly Israelites were good friends to Babylon in their Captivity Ier. 29. 11. Seek the peace of the City whither I have caused you to be carried captive and pray unto the Lord for it for in the peace thereof ye shall have peace If nothing but their interest and share in the common rest and quietness Passengers are concerned in the welfare of the Vessel wherein they are imbarked Babylon fared the better for the Jews prayers Now more especially are their hearts carried out with a respect to their native Soil and dearest comforts therefore this melteth them to see the Land defiled with sins and ready for Judgments SERMON CLII. PSAL. CXIX VER 136. Rivers of water run down mine eyes because they keep not thy Law USE 1. For reproof of two sorts of persons 1. Those that do not lay to heart their own sins Usually men make their affections to prescribe to their judgment and cavil at the fervorous exercises of Religion because unpleasant to flesh and blood To humble our selves before the Lord with a pressing sorrow seriously and indeed to rend our hearts and not our garments In this wanton and delicate Age men are apt to think I speak of a Theam obsolete and out of date as calculated for former times when men were more tender hearted if we could awaken some of the old godly professors out of their Graves as the Prophet calleth up Rachel to weep in Ramah for her Children Ier. 31. 15. then we might hope to prevail Alas to plead now for mourning over the sins of others when men think it a crime to mourn for their own this is like to be lost labour Were this the humour only of ungodly Wretches it might be born with silence and patience but those that would be taken for Christians of the highest form are altogether prejudiced against such Doctrines as this Men would be honeyed and oyled with Grace and distaste the wholesome discipline of repentance as too severe They cry out we are legal How may the poor Ministers of the Gospel go to God and say as Moses did Exod. 6. 12. The Children of Israel have not hearkened unto me how then shall Pharaoh hear me The Professors of Religion will not brook such Doctrine and how shall we hope to prevail with the poor blind carnal world To scoff at Doctrines of repentance and humiliation was once a badg of prophaneness many now adopt it into their Religion But be not deceived the Gospel doth not take away the Conscience of sin It may take away the fear of Hell and damnation upon right terms The heart of flesh is a promise and the spirit of Grace is a promise or mourning apart is a promise You that say that justified persons must no more mourn for sin you may as well say they shall no longer have an heart of flesh or a spirit of Grace and supplications that they shall no longer have a tender Conscience Be not deceived there must be some time to weep for your own sins as Peter went out and wept bitterly Sorrow must have its turn in the Christian life I would press it upon you by this Argument You cannot be sorrowful for others sins unless you be first sorrowful for your own sins Grief must begin at home there where you have the advantage of Conscience and inward remorse 'T is hypocrisie to pitch upon other mens sins and neglect our own as some will zealously declaim against publick disorders yet neglect their own hearts as the crafty Lapwing will go up and down fluttering and crying to draw the Fowler from her own Nest. We have a nest of sin of our own and we are loth it should be rifled and exposed to publick view 2. It reproveth them that in times of publick defection never take care to mourn over Gods dishonour We complain and murmure under our Judgments but do not weep over our sins every person and family apart Whether it be out of negligence and carnal security or out of distaste and displeasure against the conduct of present affairs we seem to have lost our publick affections and can only wonder at the Children of God in former times since they were so broken and tender To many that would now go for Professors this Doctrine seemeth a Riddle a mere strain of wit and fancy like a precept wire-drawn or elevated beyond its pitch and tenour But in the fear of God consider what hath been spoken There are many abuses in our reflections upon the sins of others Wicked men are quite otherwise disposed they do not only do evil themselves but take pleasure in those that do so Rom. 1. 32. would be glad that sin were more common that it might be less odious and then there would be none to put them to the blush Prov. 2. 14. It is said they rejoyce to do evil and delight in the frowardness of the wicked So the Prophet speaks of some corrupt men in the Priesthood They eat up the sin of my people and they set their heart on their iniquity Hos. 4. 8. God had appointed those that served at the Altar should live of the Altar have a proportion of those Offerings Now they flattered them in their sins so they might have meat and get a portion of the Sacrifices Many that would be accounted Ministers care not for the sins of the people but think the less serious men are in Religion the better they can work them to their private advantages and have more respect among them Then there are some
by Iudgment understand Wisdom and Prudence the Word will sometimes bear that sense Micah 3. 8. But truly I am full of power by the Spirit of the Lord and of Iudgment c. As we say a man of Judgment for an Understanding Person In this sense According to thy Iudgment will be As thou thinkest fit but surely Iudgment here is to be understood in the notion of his Covenant or the Rule according to which he judgeth of men for it is one of the Terms by which the word is expressed Iudgement is sometimes put for the Covenant of Works or his strict renumerative Justice David declineth it under this notion Psal. 143. 2. Enter not into Iudgment with thy servant O Lord. And this is called by the Apostle Iudgment without Mercy Iam. 2. 13. Sometimes for the Covenant of Grace and free promises of God or that merciful right which he hath established between him and his People wherein God acteth as an Absolving and Pardoning Judge Of this see verse 132. And of this the Prophet speaketh Isa. 1. 27. Zion shall be redeemed with Iudgment that is by his Mercy promised according to his Judgment David desireth to be Quickned From thence observe Doctrine III. That Gods Mercy and Loving-kindness manifested and impledged in the Promises of the Gospel doth notably incourage us to ask help from him You have heard what incouragment we have by the Loving-kindness of God Now what we have over and above that by his Iudgment I. Quickning and Enlivening Grace is promised in the new Covenant 1. In General From the general undertaking of the Covenant The Covenant of Grace differeth from all other Covenants in the World because every thing that is required therein is also promised and therefore 't is called The Promise Gal. 3. 18. because God hath promised both the Reward and the Condition Faith and Perseverance therein as well as Righteousness Pardon and Life The new Heart to bring us into the Covenant and the continual assistance of Grace to keep us in that Covenant And so it differs from the usual Covenants that pass between man and man Among men each Party undertaketh for and looketh after his own part of the Covenant but leaveth the other to look to his Duty and his part of the ingagement But here the Duties required of us are undertaken for by him that requireth them No man filleth his Neighbours hand with any thing to pay his Rent to him or enableth him to do what he hath covenanted to do But God filleth our hand with a stock yea more than a stock of Habitual Grace with Actual Influences to draw forth habits into Act and doth with strength so far enable us to perform every commanded Duty that in the performance thereof we may be accepted Ezek. 36. 26 27. God owneth there not onely the Principles of Acting but also the Excitement of these Principles yea the very Act it self He hath undertaken to infuse the Principle and stir up the Acts and Exercise of it I will cause you to walk in my Statutes So Ier. 32. 39 40. And I will give them one heart and one way that they may fear me for ever for the good of them and of their children after them and I will make an everlasting Covenant with them that I will not turn away from them to do them good but I will put my fear in their hearts that they shall not depart from me Besides Converting Grace superadded influences It differeth from the Covenant of Works that had more of a Law and less of a Promise there was a promise of Reward to the Obeyer but no promise of giving Obedience God indeed gave Adam a stock of Habitual Grace but no promise of Assisting Grace There Man was to keep the Covenant here in effect the Covenant keepeth us Ier. 32. 40. And indeed therein lyeth the exceeding graciousness of the Covenant of Grace that God undertaketh for both parties and worketh in his people all that is required for entring into and keeping this Covenant with him 2. In Particular This part of actual influence which is more especially called Quickning is promised in the Covenant of Grace for the Covenant concerneth mainly the Life of Grace the care of which he hath taken into his own hands not to lay it down till it be perfected in the life of Glory And therefore alloweth his Children to repair to him when their life is any way enfeebled or decayed So that besides that the general undertaking of his Covenant will warrant such a plea his particular promises of Preserving and Restoring our Life will embolden us to ask quickning For with respect to his Judgment or Covenant-ingagement God is called The God of our life Psal. 42. 8. And The strength of our life Psal. 27. 1. The care of life Bodily Spiritual and Everlasting lyeth upon him By vertue of the Covenant he hath undertaken to keep it feed it renew it in all the decays of it till we be possessed of the Life of Glory II. The Advantage we have from this Promise We have a double Argument not onely from Gods Mercy but his Truth Both which do assure us that God is not onely easie to be intreated but bound and tyed by his own free condescension His Loving-kindness sheweth that he may do it for us his Judgment that in some part he will do it He is not onely inclined but obliged which is a new ground of Hope His Promise in the New Covenant inferreth a debt of Favour though not of Justice when God hath bound himself by promise both his Mercy and Fidelity are concerned to do us good We have not onely the freeness of Gods love to incourage us but the certainty of his help ingaged in the Promise God inviteth men to him by his Grace and ingageth his Truth to do them good The Nature of God is one incouragement he is wonderful ready to do good but in his Covenant he hath established a right to Believers to seek his Mercy so that all is made more sure and comfortable to us Use. Is to encourage the People of God when they miss his help in the Spiritual Life to lay open their Case to God The thought of strict Justice striketh us dumb there is no claiming by that Covenant but the remembrance of this Merciful Right or Judgment should open our Mouthes in Prayer and loosen our Tongues in acquainting God with our case Lord I want that Life and Quickning which thy promises seem to speak of You may do it with the more confidence for these Reasons First Consider the Tenour of this Judgment or the Terms thereof The mildness of the Court in which you plead 't is not a Covenant of Justice but of Favour in it Grace taketh the Throne not Justice The Judge is Christ The Law according to which Judgment is given is the Gospel our Plea is Grace not Merit The Persons allowed to plead are penitent Sinners Yea they are not
This is not the fruit of slavish Fear but holy Love 't is not afraid of the Word but delighteth in it as it discovereth the Mind of God to us as in the next Verse 162. This is called by a proper name Reverence or Godly Fear when we consider whose Word it is Gods who is our God and hath right to command what he pleaseth to whose Will and Word we have already yielded Obedience and devoted our selves to walk worthy of him in all well-pleasing who can find us out in all our failings as knowing our very thoughts afar off Psalm 139. 2. and having all our wayes before him and being one who will not forgive our wilful Transgressions Ioshua 24. 19. He is an holy and jealous God he will not forgive your transgressions and your sins that would Impenitently continue in them and so we receive the Word with that trembling of Heart which God so much respects III. The Object thy Word that is the whole Word of God the Precept with its double Sanction the Threatning and the Promise the Precept is the Rule of our Duty the Sanction of Gods proceeding we are to stand in Awe not only of the Threatning but the Precept it self for Love to God hath a great influence in producing this Awe of the Word 'T is in Angels and Heavenly Creatures whose happiness is absolutely secured to them Iude 4. The great ground of it is Gods Authority And that is seen in the Precept as much as in the Sanction Gods Will is the reason of our Duty and his Will declared in his Word is the Rule of it and the Saints obey intuita voluntatis a bare sight of his though no inconvenience should follow of it 1 Thes. 4. 3. For this is the will of God 1 Thes. 5. 18. For this is the will of God concerning you in Iesus Christ. 1 Pet. 2. 15. For so is the will of God c. But yet I would not exclude the Sanction no not the sad part of it neither the Threatning nor the Promise because I dare not contradict any of the Holy-Ghosts methods nor exclude his Argument from having an influence upon our Obedience as he telleth us of Moses who had an eye to the recompence of reward Heb. 11. 26. So of Iob who was tender of doing any thing contrary to the Will of God because Destruction from God was a Terrour to him Iob. 31. 23. To be afraid of Gods Judgments in an holy manner is not Sin but a Grace a great point of our duty yet a matter of Faith to apprehend that destruction which God in his Word threatneth to sinners Unbelief of the Threatning had a great predominancy in the first sin Ye shall not surely die Gen. 3. 4. and still 't is a main Ingredient men Imbolden themselves to Rebellion because they look upon Gods wrath as a vain Scar-crow and that he doth only frighten us with a deceitful terrour and a flash of false fire but yet reflection upon the threatning must not be alone that breedeth Legalisme nor yet upon the Promises alone but a deep Awe and Reverence of Gods Authority must be the main thing that swayeth the Conscience A Christian should have no more to move or stop him than to know what God will have him do or not do That terrour that doth arise from a meer slavish Fear of God as a Judge and Avenger is not right but such an Awe as doth at once arise from looking upon God at once as a Wise Lawgiver a gracious Father and righteous Judge A Son a Child if he take liberty to break the Bonds of Duty shall smart for it though a Believer obeyeth and keepeth off from sin upon higher and nobler Terms then Wrath yet he maketh a good improvement of these Terrours also for godly Fear is influenced by Gods being a consuming fire Heb. 12. 29 30. Let us have grace whereby we may may serve God acceptably with reverence and godly fear for our God is a consuming fire Secondly We come to the Reasons why we should stand in Awe of the Word of God 1. From the Author of it 't is Gods Word not the Word of a weak man but of the Great and Mighty God his Authority is Supream his Power Infinite his Knowledge Exact his Truth Unquestionable his Holiness Immaculate his Justice Impartial the same Reasons which move us to Fear God do move us also to Reverence his Word and add this above all the rest that therein his Truth is Impawned to us and by it he obligeth himself to make good both his Threatnings and his Promises Three things I shall take notice of which sheweth Gods stamp and impress upon the Word 1. It s Authority in searching the heart Heb. 4. 12 13. The word of God is quick and powerful and sharper than any two-edged sword piercing even to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit joints and marrow and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart that is as a sharp sword doth pierce asunder between Joints and Marrow so doth the Word divide Soul and Spirit and is a discerner that is the Convictions of the Mind and the disposition and inclination of the Soul or sensual Appetite The Soul cleaveth to the sin when the Mind or Spirit disliketh it or plotteth pretences to hide it from himself or others even in those sins which lieth as hidden in the Mind as the marrow in the Bones secret Purposes fall under its judging Power as well as Practices accomplished And what Use must we make of this but that we stand in Awe of the Word avoiding what it forbiddeth and following what it commandeth Now to evidence this Property of the Word he urgeth the Omniscience of God whose Word it is Verse 13. Neither is there any creature that is not manifest in his sight for all things are naked and open to him with whom we have to do As the Sinners secret thoughts are under the sight of the All-seeing God so they are under the piercing Power of his Word for God joyneth with his Word and giveth it that discovering and piercing Vertue So the Apostle of the Word preached or explained it 1 Cor. 14. 24 25. He is convinced of all and judged of all and thus are the secrets of his heart made manifest and so falling down on his face he will worship God and report that God is in you of a truth The Word is the Rule God is the Judge and the Word being assisted by God God is there where the Word is and so doth ransack the Conscience and discover men to themselves in order to Judgment 2. It hath a mighty Power and Force because of the Spirit that goeth along with it Rom. 1. 16. 'T is the power of God to salvation 1 Cor. 1. 22. The Gospel is the power of God and the wisdom of God It 's powerful to Convince even there where it Converts not as Felix Trembled Acts 24. 'T is
in rugged ways though we oftentimes stumble yet if our soul be with him we may have comfort Use. I. This is for the Conviction of divers Persons that they do no more serve God in their Souls do not keep his Testimonies 1. There are some that neither serve God with body or soul as all loose Persons who do not so much as make a shew of his service they are all for their brutish Pleasures their souls to hunt them out and their bodies to pursue and follow them Their Souls is a cage of unclean Birds and a stye of all filthiness and their Bodies only a strainer for Meats and Drinks to pass thorough or a Channel for Lust to run in so that they have nothing at all to spare for God The Soul is an ill guide suggesting all manner of evil and the body a ready instrument to accomplish it These are those that yield up their Members to Uncleanness and to iniquity unto iniquity Rom. 6. 19. Oh! time will come when God will tear them in pieces and rend the guilty Soul from the imbraces of the unwilling body A sad time 't will be for these the Soul will curse the Body as an ill Instrument the Body the Soul as a corrupt Guide and curse the day of their first union when they cannot expect but to meet again in flames 2. Some that give their Bodies to God but withhold their Souls from him How may this be done Answ. 1. Generally When Men content themselves with a naked Profession of Christianity and some external Conformity thereunto 'T is a stupid Religion that consists in outward Actions Iudas was externally a Disciple but Satan entred into his heart Luk. 22. 3. Ananias joyned himself to the People of God but Satan filled his heart Acts 5. 3. Simon Magus was Baptized but his heart was not right with God Acts 8. 22. Many Men may not only make Profession but perform many good Actions Be as to external conformity blameless yet till their hearts are subdued to God they should not be satisfied with their Condition Though you pray with the Pharisee Luk. 18. Pay thy Vowes with the Harlot Prov. 7. Offer Sacrifice with Cain Fast with Iezabel sell thine Inheritance to give to the Poor with Ananias and Saphira 't is all in vain without the heart Many Hypocrites are all Ear to Hear all Tongue to Talk all Face to Appear but not an Heart to Obey Something must be done for Religion for Fashion sake and shame of the World yea though thou dost not dissemble do many things yet if your hearts be not renewed and changed all is nothing you do not keep the Testimonies of the Lord with your Souls 2. And more Particularly When Men make conscience of Ceremonies and outsides rather then sincere Obedience As the Pharisees Matth. 23. 25 26. They make clean the outside of the cup and platter but within are full of extortion and excess Pretend great purity in eating their Meat but care not with how great Iniquity they purchase it Papists think they have done enough if they mutter over a few idle Words without Spirit and Life the most part of their service 't is but that of the body without the soul they Worship in a strange Language not knowing what they do or say and nearer home draw nigh with their Lips when their Hearts is far from him Matth. 5. 8. These leave their Hearts at home the Devil findeth them other work that suffer their Hearts to straggle and to be like the Fools Eyes in the corners of the Earth when with their Bodies they are ingaged in serious and solemn Duties of Gods Worship Use. II. Is to press you to serve God with your hearts and souls as well as your bodies 1. This is the Character of true Worshippers Rom. 1. 9. My God whom I serve in the spirit And 2 Tim. 1. 3. God whom I serve with a pure conscience This was peculiar to Paul alone 't is the description of the spiritual Circumcision Phil. 3. 3. For we are the circumcision which worship God in the spirit and rejoyce in Christ Iesus and have no confidence in the flesh These are such as are true Worshippers 2. God will accept of no other for he looketh for the heart and knoweth whether we give it him yea or no Men care not for fawning and the obsequiousness of empty Courtships but look for reality if they could discern it 2 Kings 10. 15. Is thy heart right as my heart is with thy heart 't was Iehu's question to Ionadab the Son of Rechab Dost thou as really affect me as I do thee And Men do not look to the Matter of the Gift but the Mind of the Giver and will God think you who can infallibly Judge and will one day bring the hidden thoughts of the heart to Light 1 Cor. 4. 5. will he be put off with shows and empty formalities Well then see that your Souls be in it otherwise he will not accept of Rivers of Oyl and thousands of Rams All your Pomp and Cost upon outside services is lost But 't is not every soul that will keep Gods Testimonies when the People said all that the Lord hath spoken we will do it Deut. 5. 29. Oh that they had such an heart It must be such an heart for man is naturally averse from God sin sets up its Throne in the Heart and thence diffuseth its Venom into his Actions Gen. 6. 5. It must be 1. A Broken Heart 2. A Renewed Heart 3. An Heart purified by Faith 4. And Acted by Love 1. A Broken Heart it must be Psal. 51. 11. for before that all that we do is forced and superficial We are never serious till acquainted with brokenness of heart but serve God in a slight careless fashion That bruising is to cast into a new Mould 't is a preparative to the New Heart Wheat is not Bread till it be Grinded and a crack'd Vessel cannot be renewed till it be melted in the Furnace Nor we formed anew till we be first melted humbled and broken for sin 2. The Heart must be Renewed by Grace for 't is a Renewed Soul only that keepeth the Commandments Ezek. 36. 26. A new heart also will I give unto you and a new spirit will I put into you and then I will cause you to walk in my statutes and ye shall keep my Iudgments to do them The Hearts of the Sons of men are fully set in them to do evil till God change them and renew a right Spirit within them Prov. 10. 20. The heart of the wicked is nothing worth A vain sottish sensual careless heart will never do God any service there must be Life before there can be Action A supernatural Principle before there can be supernatural operation for all things act according to their form All that we do else is but like Adulterating Coin Guilding over Copper or Brass 3. An Heart purified by Faith Acts 15. 9. There are
of the Lord. By seeing him in the Word considering him as alwayes present with us the heart is Coloured and Dyed by the Object it often thinketh upon Oh! therefore be perswaded to set the Lord before you For Means 1. To see God aright we need Faith for God is Invisible and invisible things are only seen by Faith Heb. 11. 1. and the Instance is in Moses Verse 27. By faith he saw him that was invisible Many have an opinion that God knoweth all things but they have not a sound belief of it 't is what is owned by the Tongue rather than the heart Cold and dead opinions are easily taken up but a lifely Faith is Gods gift this is a sight not easily gotten 2. We must often revive this Thought for the oftner we think of it the more deeply it is impressed upon the Soul Psal. 9. 17. The wicked shall be turned into hell and all the nations that forget God 'T is not said that deny him but forget him On the other side there is a book of Remembrance for those that thought upon his Name Mal. 3. 16. God takes it kindly when our minds are set a work upon him and upon his Attributes We have every moment Life and Breath and all things from him he thinketh of us and therefore out of a necessary gratitude we should oftner think of God Nazianzen saith twice Naz. Orat. de cura Pauperum Orat. 10. and Orat. de Theol. Orat. 11. We should as often think of God as breathe for we cannot breathe without him and without his continual providential influence we fall into nothing as Sun-beams vanish when the Sun is gone Therefore the Apostle telleth the Ephesians they were in their natural Estate 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eph. 2. 12. There are two sorts of Atheists they that deny God and they that wholy forget God The latter are more common and the latter sort are described Psal. 10. 4. God is not in all their thoughts Oh what is Misery is this that we have thoughts more than we can tell what to do with all and yet we will not afford God the least share in them He was a cruel man that would cast his provisions and superfluities into the street and deny them to the poor that should let his drink run into the Kennel rather than they should taste a drop of it Such are we to God we know not what to imploy our thoughts upon and yet we will not think of his Name We go musing of Vanity all the day long and be grinding of Chaffe rather than take in good Corn into the Mill. 3. There are certain Seasons when we are bound not only habitually but actually to think of God 1. In a time of Temptation when the flesh being inticed by profit or pleasure or feared by Fears tempts us to do any thing contrary to the Will of God Thus did Ioseph when he might have sinned securely and with advantage Gen. 39. 9. The thoughts of Gods Eye and Presence dashed the Temptation We forget him that seeth in secret and therefore take the liberty to indulge our Lusts can I consider that God looketh on and can do thus unworthily 't is a daring him to his face to go on with these thoughts therefore God seeth what I will now do 't is a seasonable relief to the Soul 2. We should actually revive this thought in Solemn Duties when we come to Act the part of Angels and to look God in the Face Surely God is greatly to be had in fear of all that are round about him it would prevent a great deal of Carelesness in Worship to remember who is the Party with whom we have to do who is speaking to us in the Word and to whom we speak in prayer Heb. 4. 13. All things are naked and open unto the eyes of him with whom we have to do He knoweth how we hear what Thoughts and Affections are stirring in our hearts Acts 10. 33. We are all here present before the Lord to hear all things that are commanded thee of God We come not hither to see and to be seen of men but to see God We are here before God as if God himself were speaking to us God is every where with us but we are not always every where with God but when we lift up our hearts and set him before our Eyes So in prayer when we speak to God we should think of him who is an eternal Being to whom belongeth Kingdom Power and Glory Prayer is called a coming to God we beg his Eyes be open Neh. 1. 6. to behold us as well as hear us Now what an awing Thought is this in Prayer that our Preparations Motions Affections Dispositions Aims are all naked and open to his Eyes 3. When God findeth us out in our secret sins by his Word Spirit and Providence or the Wrings and Pinches of our own Consciences by his Word 1 Cor. 14. 25. And thus are the secrets of his heart made manifest and so falling down upon his face will worship God and report that God is in you of a truth And Heb. 4. 12 13. For the word of God is quick and powerful and sharper then any two-edged sword pierceing even to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit and of the joints and marrow and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart Neither is there any Creature that is not manifest in his sight for all things are naked and open unto the eyes of him with whom we have to do So by his Spirit setting Conscience a-work Iob. 13. 26. Thou makest me possess the sins of my youth Old forgotten sins come to remembrance own God and his Omnisciency in the dispensation When God sets our sins in order before us as if a new Committed So Providence Gen. 42. 21. We are verily guilty concerning our brother c. Afflictions openeth the eyes 't is his Rack to extort Confessions from us 4. Consider upon what good reason God's knowing all things is built his Creation and Providence If he made all things and sustaineth all things surely he knoweth all things in particular for every wise Man knoweth what he doth A Father cannot forget how many Children he hath He that leadeth us by the hand wherever we go knoweth where and how we go Christ knew when vertue passed from him in a Crowd he said some-body toucheth me for I perceive that vertue is passed out from me Luk. 8. 45 46. Certainly God knoweth there is such a Creature as thou art such a Man or Woman of the World knoweth thy uprising and down-lying Psal. 139. 2. Thou understandest my thoughts afar off He knoweth whether we are Laughing Mourning or Praying He that will Judge thee knoweth thee or else he were an incompetent Judge 5. Humble thy self for walking so unanswerably it would trouble us to have our Thoughts Counsels Actions all we think and speak divulged and published All is naked and open to God
makes wiser then our enemies p. 638. 642 Engagement of the soul to come to God Its usefulness p. 223 Enjoyment and use of a thing how they differ p. 69 Enjoyment of God should be our end and scope p. 573 Enjoyment of God either mediately or immediately p. 71 72 Enlarged heart given 1. At conversion consists in a freedom from guilt and power of sin 2. A particular enlargement given by exciting grace Necessity of an enlarged heart-p 216 217 218 219. Means 220 Enmity of wicked men against the Church p. 882. 729 730. 995 Entertain Gods word How to do it aright p. 887. 888 Entrance of Gods word giveth light how p. 888 889 Envy difference between Envy and VVrath p. 520 Envy strikes at some excellency p. 137. 563 Envy at the prosperity of the wicked checked by the consideration of Gods judgments upon them p. 135 Envy not the comforts of sinners p. 360 Envy makes men undermine others p. 520 Equity the duty should continue whilst we expect Mercy p. 341 Error about Gods word from 1. Presumption 2. Prejudicate opinions 3. A spirit of opposition 4. Carnal affections 5. Superficial apprehensions c. p. 694 695 Error 1. From ignorance 2. Judicial blindness p. 678 679 Error is Natural to us p 184 185. 1101 Error out of frailty or out of pride p. 129 793 Erroneous principles in policy a cause of persecution p. 144 Errors a ground of Apostacy p. 211. 343 Esteem practical of spiritual things p. 677 Vid. Valuation Esteem of the Word motives to get it p. 869. What it is c. p. 872 873 Eternity applyed to keep the soul awake p. 412 All our actions relate to Eternity p. 340 Eternal things to be secured before Temporal p. 403 404 Eternal Salvation longing for it is the duty property of Gods Children p. 1087 Eternal Life makes us willing to submit to Temporal Death p. 1096 Evangelical obedience and legal how they differ p. 11. 15 16 Evangelical obedience accepted it's imperfections pardoned p. 11. 15 16 Events of things confirm the Truth of the Word p. 285 Events of things are not seen do depend on God p. 31 642 Good or bad holy men provided from them p. 643 Everlasting punishment awarded to the despisers of Everlasting mercy p. 874 Everlasting things should be our chief comforts p. 875 Everlasting Covenant p. 875 Everlastingness of Gods Testimonies what it is p. 889 Evidences of Gods favour to be sought earnestly Why p. 920 Evidence of Blessedness Conformity to Gods Law 1. Inclusive all such are blessed 2. Exclusive none but such are blessed p. 6 Evidence of Reason and of the Holy Spirit differ p. 686 Evil speaking very sinful either against Truth or Charity p. 140 141 Whether in any case lawful p. 300 Exact and constant obedience against all temptations Reasons for it p 668 Examples of purity in Gods Word p. 859 Examples are very prevalent especially in evil p. 864 866. 1101 It is no excuse for sinning p. 864 Examples of others fallings a great Temptation p. 790 Example no safe Rule to walk by p. 4. 1075 Examples and instances of Gods goodness should confirm our Faith and Patience p. 912 To take up Religion merely by example no good Ground p. 1075 Excuses for not speedy turning to God vain p. 406 407 Excuses and cavils against keeping Gods Law argue an evil temper p. 1026 Exercise God may exercise his Children with sharp and long afflictions p. 554. 856 God exercises them according to their Reward p. 178 Exercise in Gods Word how p. 151. It encreaseth knowledge and judgment p. 453 Saints are exercised from within and without p. 921 Exceeding great Love to be given to Gods Commandements p. 1048 Expectation its qualifications p. 547 God has more expectations from those that are related especially to him then from others p. 863 Gods people expect deliverance from him 1. What it is to expect it 2. The Reasons for it 3. The singular excellency of it p. 1080 1081 1082. 1083. When it is right p. 1083 Experience of Gods goodness the priviledge of those that walk with him p. 7 Experience of Gods ways a Reason of our desire after them p. 30. 123. It teaches us how ready we are to wander from them p. 61. Reasons thereof p. 61 Experience brings good and sound judgment p. 453 Experience compared with Gods precepts as to getting understanding p. 651 652 Experience of Gods faithfulness in former ages of great use to succeeding ages p. 581. 962 963 Experience proves the good of Obedience p. 789 Experience of Gods grace a great encouragement p. 791 It breeds Confidence p. 166 It is a ground of our valuation of the word p. 492 It begets high thoughts of Gods tender mercies p. 994 External profession and conformity not accepted without the Heart p 236 237 Extremes two extremes we are apt to run into under affliction either to slight or faint under Gods correction p. 884 Two extremes 1. Self-confidence 2. Desperation p. 320 Extremity God permits his people to be reduced to the Extremity of danger p. 944 Reasons 1. To exercise trust 2. To quicken Prayer p. 944 Extremities are to be endured rather then offered against Gods Word p. 733 Eyes the windows whereby sin hath been let in to the Heart proved doctrinally and historically p. 278 279 They are to be watched Great evils from not watching the Eyes p. 279 280 Eye of God an engagement to obedience Reasons p. 1051 1052 Vid. Sight of God It is always on us p. 340 It hath many blessed effects p. 1053 1054 F. FAce of God shining what it implies p. 924 Face of God implies his favour and strength p. 12 Faility of Spirit a Reason of Apostacy p. 213 Fadingness of the World should excite us to look after an Eternal state p. 613 Faculties of the Soul either such as Command or are to obey p. 1103 Failings in the choisest saints p. 11. 17. 1100 1101 1102 p. 336. pardoned to the sincere p. 11. 17. 1106. daily failings and infirmities p. 19. 27 754 How to discern the infirmities of Saints from other men p. 754. 836 How to distinguish them from wilful sins p. 703 When disallow'd they exclude us not from the priviledges of Gods Servants p 846 We must not be too severe upon men failings p. 336 Fainting of Soul from delaying Salvation p. 540 592 Faintings of Spirit 1. Their Nature 2. Causes 3. Kinds described p. 541 542 543. c. Remedies against fainting p. 541 542 c. It s cured by the Word which is 1. A proper 2. An Universal cure p. 183 Fainting argues weakness if not Nullity of grace p. 416 Faintings Twofold 1. Of Dejection 2. Of Defection p. 541 Faith must conquer 1. Our fears 2. Cares 3. Troubles p. 1086 Faith ultimately resolved into Gods Testimonies p. 9 Exprest by terms of motion p. 12 By lifting up the Eyes p. 833 Faiths Excellencies 1. Eminent wisdom in it 2. Nobleness of Spirit it
the precepts of the Word is better than understanding gotten by long experience It is better in four regards 1. It is more exact Our experience reacheth but to a few things but the Word of God reacheth to all cases that concern true happiness The Word it is the result of God's wisdom who is the ancient of days therefore exceeds the wisdom of the Ancients or experience of any Man or all Men. God is more ancient than they sees all things that have been are and shall be at one view and sight and therefore if he will give us a Rule certainly that 's more than all our experience Experience will shew us the evils of this world and give us some Rules to escape it but the Word of God tells us of evils in the next and that with more persuasiveness and evidence than if one came from the dead and had been wallowing in those devouring flames that had been kindled in the other world Luke 16. 30 31. There is more exactness and compleatness in this Rule than possibly can be in Experience 2 Tim. 3. 17. The Word is profitable for doctrine for reproof for correction for instruction in righteousness that the Man of God may be perfect throughly furnished unto all good works By the Man of God is meant the Teacher the Prophets are call'd Men of God and the publick Teacher is the Man of God If there be enough to furnish the Teacher to every good work surely there is enough to furnish the Practiser There is enough to furnish the Man of God who is to consult not only for his own private necessity but the necessities of others 2. As it is a more exact so a more sure way of learning wisdom whereas experience is more uncertain Many have much experience yet have not a heart to see and to gather wisdom from what they feel Deut. 29. 2 3. Ye have seen all that the Lord did before your eyes in the land of Egypt Yet the Lord hath not given you an heart to perceive and eyes to see and ears to hear unto this day They saw it that is had experience of it yet not an heart to improve it Psal. 49. 13. This their way is their folly yet their posterity approve their sayings The Father he gets an Estate when gotten it he thinks to enjoy it God takes him off their Posterity lives by their carnal Maxims and do not profit by their experience Though they stand upon the Graves of many that made a great busle in the world to compass their worldly ends yet they are never the wiser for all this therefore it is a great advantage to have a stated fixed Rule to our hands to have a Rule of Wisdom and Principles given us by God himself wherewith to steer and guide our course 3. 'T is a safer and cheap way of learning to learn by Rule than to come home by weeping cross and to learn wisdom by our own smart Experience is too expensive a way and if we had nothing else to guide us into how many thousand miseries should we run how would a Man's life be expos'd to inevitable hazards and soul-dangers And if by chance he should get out of the snare which is uncertain yet the taint of former practices will remain in him a long time therefore 't is God's mercy he will teach us by Precept rather than by Experience that he doth not teach us as Gideon taught the men of Succoth by bryars and thorns but that we may learn wisdom at a cheaper rate If we were only to know as God saith of his People Ier. 2. 19. Thine own wickedness shall correct thee and thy backslidings shall reprove thee when we had smarted for it this were an expensive costly way But if we will hearken to God's Precepts all this smart and trouble and bitterness of affliction may be saved therefore the Precepts of God are better 4. The way by age and experience is a long way and so for a long time all a Man's younger age must needs be miserable and foolish Now here you may come betimes to be wise by studying the Word of God Prov. 1. 22. How long ye simple ones will ye love simplicty and ye fools hate knowledge It concerns a Man not only to be wise at length but to be wise betimes The foolish Virgins were wise too late but never any were wise too soon therefore surely that 's better which will make us wise betimes as soon as we come to be expos'd to dangers In these respects he that applies himself to God's Precepts will get more wisdom than he that gets wisdom by age and experience he hath it in a shorter way a safer way a less expensive way and in a more certain and exacter way Use 1. To reprove the folly of Men that will not take God's directions but will be trying Experiments at their own cost As Solomon gave out his heart to a critical search he would find where happiness and comfort was and at length was forc'd to come home by weeping cross to the fear of God and keeping of his commandments This is the whole of Man he had tried pleasure profit and all things The Prodigal would be running out of his Fathers house and we all would be trying because we will not take God's Word God hath given his Word here to Man we need not search elsewhere and it 's a thousand to one that when you are trying that ever you recover your selves out of the snare here or there a Man returns I found them saith Solomon but there are very few and therefore as the Prophet saith Ier. 31. 32. How long wilt thou go about O thou backsliding daughter Why do you compass about there 's a shorter way to true happiness if we had a heart to take it O but we must have our swing and our scope and then come home by shame and sorrow Mat. 11. 28. Come to me all ye that labour and are heavy laden Mark they that come to Christ not only laden with their sins but weary with vain pursuits But this is the fashion of Man to be running about to be wearying himself and contract weariness and thirst as the Prophet speaks Ier. 2. 13. Use 2. To recommend the study of the Word O Christians God hath provided for us better than the Heathens who were forc'd to hunt up and down to find a spark of wisdom here and there it is all brought home and suited to your hands in the Word of God there 's more wisdom to be gotten there for the guiding of your affairs and course of life in order to true happiness than by age and long experience you can possibly reach Two ways doth this appear 1. Because the Word doth sufficiently instruct us in our duty Prov. 2. 9. Then shalt thou understand righteousness and judgment and equity yea every good path Then when when you give up your selves to God's direction and take the Law from
draw us to the same Fountain of Grace for Pardon and Life to our selves These Examples do more than the Doctrinal declaration because they do not onely shew that Mercy and Grace may be had but that it hath been attained unto by those who in all respects did judge themselves and were really unworthy of it as unable to lay hold of it and to make good use of it afterwards as we our selves The Ice is broken the Ford ridden before us therefore we may venture our Salvation and Acceptance with God upon the same Grace 3 His former love to our selves At first he took us with all our faults and betrothed us unto himself in Loving-kindness and tender Mercy Hosea 2. 19. and therefore he will still do us good freely and bountifully And so we may answer all Objections from Gods wonted goodness towards us When he hath entred into Covenant with us out of his Love and Bounty we may well expect that upon the same terms he should keep Covenant The continuance is more easily believed and asked than the beginning and first grant Psal. 36. 10. O continue thy loving-kindness unto them that know thee and thy righteousness to the upright in heart When by Experience we have found what it can do for unworthy creatures we may the better expect it should help us upon all occasions 4. The End why God exerciseth it which is his Glory even the glory of his Grace and Loving-kindness That that might be acknowledged and exemplified by those that are partakers of it even to be altogether glorious Eph. 1. 6. To the praise of his glorious grace wherein he hath accepted us in the beloved That it may be owned and esteemed as free and liberal and working of its own accord We only cross Gods End when we do not plead it admire it and esteem it highly and improve it for our Comfort for this is Gods End in the whole business of our Salvation from first to last that Men and Angels might be excited to set forth the praises of his rich Mercy and free Grace And here is a new incouragement to ask gracious supplies of God according to his Loving-kindness or upon the account of that Attribute even that his Grace may be more esteemed and exalted in our hearts Psal. 109. 21. But do thou for me O God the Lord for thy names-sake because thy mercy is good deliver thou me It concerneth him in point of his chief honour and glory to do good to his People that he may be known and owned to be a good and a gracious or loving God Use Well then If this be the great plea of the Saints 1. Let us meditate often of the Loving-kindness of God of his pitying and pardoning and lovingly intreating poor sinful and broken-hearted creatures that come to him This should be our daily Meditation bonum est primum potentissimum nomen Dei saith Damascene It is the first-born and chiefest name of God We cannot conceive of God by any thing that concerneth us so much as his Goodness by that we know him and for that we love him We admire him with Reverence for his other Titles but this doth first insinuate with us and command our respect to him The first Temptation that ever was in the World was to weaken the conceit of his Goodness in the heart of the creature as if God were envious harsh and sowre in his restraints still it is a great Temptation yet God is good to Israel Psal. 73. 1. Oh let us fortifie our Hearts with frequent thoughts of his Goodness and Loving-kindness As we should do this every day so especially upon the Sabbath day Psal. 92. 2. I will shew forth thy loving-kindness in the morning and thy faithfulness every night We should do this with all the advantage we can use more especially when we are in his presence conversing with him and ministring before him Psal. 48. 9. We have thought of thy loving-kindness O God in the midst of thy Temple We should often and seriously think when we come to God surely now we have to do with a loving and gracious God whether we wait upon him in Prayer or the Word or Sacraments if any prayer to make or comfort to expect 2. Observe the fruits and effects of it and value them They that are Students in Providence shall not seek long before they find God to be a God full of loving-kindness and tender Mercy Psal. 107. Whoso is wise and will observe these things even they shall understand the loving-kindness of the Lord. Few regard it or look after it but they that do pry into the course of his dealings shall not be without many instances of Gods love and free favour to them now when you have found it out value it Psal. 63. 3. Because thy loving-kindness is better than life my lips shall praise thee You shall have rich experiences such as will fill you with joy unspeakable and glorious to be esteemed above all comforts whatsoever 3. Praise God for it This should be a lively motive to praise him Psal. 138. 2. I will worship towards thy Temple and praise thy name for thy loving-kindness and for thy truth These two are the cause of all we have 't is without any deserving of ours only because we have to do with a gracious and faithful God Isa. 63. 7. I will mention the loving-kindness of the Lord and the praises of the Lord according to all that the Lord hath bestowed on us and the great goodness towards the house of Israel which he hath bestowed on them according to his mercies and according to the multitude of his loving-kindness The Prophet speaketh as if he could never find words enough or pregnant enough to express his sense of Gods gracious dealing so bountifully had he dealt with his People 4. Let us improve this loving-kindness and readiness of Gods Mercy to help penitent Supplicants 1. In a way of Trust the least degree of which is enough to keep the sinner from running away from him how grievous soever his offences and demerits be yet come to him say as David Psal. 51. 1. Have mercy upon me O God according to thy loving-kindness according unto the multitude of thy tender mercies blot out my transgressions Yea make it a ground of confidence and support Psal. 69. 16. Hear me O Lord for thy loving-kindness is good turn unto me according to the multitude of thy tender mercies 2. In a way of Fear that we may not interrupt the sense of it or stop the current of his good will Psal. 26. 3. Thy loving-kindness is before mine eyes and I have walked in thy truth 'T is the ground of all our Confidence lose not that the Lord taketh notice of them that trust in his goodness Nahum 1. 7. The Lord is good a strong hold in the day of trouble and he knoweth them that trust in him There is one word yet undiscussed According to thy Iudgment Some