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A25423 An helpe to better hearts for better times indeavoured in severall sermons, wherein the zeal and fervency required in Gods services is declared, severall hinderances discovered, and suitable helps provided : all out of Gods treasury ... / by John Angier. Angier, John, 1605-1677. 1647 (1647) Wing A3164; ESTC R24183 170,864 660

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the spirit of God These wandring thoughts in Gods worship imploied about things good in themselves earthly good or spirituall good things are therefore sinfull because wandring and therefore 1. Impertinent and so a part of disorder and confusion which God is not the authour of they are out of their place and ranke they should not come in when other occasions and duties take place they have no due place now they doe but usurp 2. Being wandring they are unseasonable out of their time and therefore undecent uncomely for time doth give a beauty to things 3. Being wandring they are distracting they goe from the duty in hand take away part of the souls strength and thereby weaken the performance of duty and thus pertinent thoughts sometimes gain the name of wandring thoughts from the effect because they make the soul to wander Having seen the nature and kindes of wandring thoughts in Gods worship Let us now consider how they do hinder our earnest worshipping of God Ans Two waies 1. As they weaken the inward power of the soul to worship God 2. As they weaken the assisting power of the spirit of God 1. Wandring thoughts do weaken the inward power of the soul to worship God and so hinder our fervent and affectionate worshipping of God First As they take up part of the minde so that Gods worship hath not the whole minde as it should have Thou shalt love the Lord with all thy minde A man doth not pray with all his minde nor hear with all his minde part is bestowed elsewhere let a river be parted into two streams and it cannot runne so full in both as it would in one No finite minde can be so strong about many objects at same time as about one Wandring thoughts make God to be worshipped with a divided parted minde with a piece of the minde therefore weakly 2. Wandring thoughts in worship do not onely take up part of the minde and so weaken the power of the soul to worship God but they do take off the minde from the worship in hand so God saith the heart is removed farre from me and their hearts goeth after their covetousnes that is the minde is much nearer such thoughts and more taken up with them then with the Word or praier the minde is wholly with them or at least chiefly with them As it is often seen when doggs are following an hare if a new one be started they follow that and leave the other so when we are praying reading hearing if new thoughts arise in our hearts we let go our thoughts of the duty and follow them and so God hath scarce a part of our minde in his worship if any it is the least part 3. Wandring thoughts do weaken the power of the soul to worship God not onely because they take up part of the minde and take off the minde from Gods worship but also because in so doing they take up and take off the affections and endeavours the desires and delights of the soul and the actions of the body What a man doth not think of he cannot desire or delight in and what he doth but little think of he will but little desire and delight in and consequently will take little pains about Thus wandring thoughts carrying away the minde from Gods worship do also carry away the affections and outward man and if God hath neither minde nor affections nor body or but little of them then he hath but weak service 2. Wandring thoughts do hinder our thorow worshipping of God as they do weaken the power of the assisting spirit in our hearts and that they doe three waies 1. As they draw us from present spirituall thoughts about the worship in hand which are the work of Gods spirit concurring with grace in the heart We cannot think a good thought in a duty without the assistance of Gods spirit All our sufficiency saith Paul 2 Cor. 3.5 is of God and he instanceth in the smallest power of the soul thoughts we cannot think any thing of our selves when therefore wandring thoughts do take us from such thoughts as the assisting spirit hath wrought in us doth it not weaken the power of the assisting spirit 2. Wandring thoughts being evil and sinfull do grieve the spirit of God and so weaken the assisting power of the spirit when a man is grieved he will have no minde to shew his love and power Ephes 4.30 Grieve not saith the Apostle the holy spirit of God unholines is contrary to the nature of the spirit therefore doth grieve it and wandring thoughts in holy duties are unholines because they separate the soul from God when the body comes near him they are therefore contrary and grievous to Gods spirit and makes it unwilling to shew it self 3. Wandring thoughts doe weaken the power of the assisting spirit of God Because they hinder us in the way of the spirit the Word Praier Sacraments wherein the spirit is wont to conveigh himself more unto us Wandring thoughts do prevent our carefull use of the ordinances and so a greater measure of the spirits assistance which we should have in those Ordinances were wandring thoughts absent If wandring thoughts do weaken the power of Gods assisting spirit in our hearts they must needs hinder our fervent worshipping of God for the exercise of the strength of our souls depends upon the assistance of the spirit But it may be demanded further what are the causes of these wandring thoughts and how comes it to passe that the godly are troubled with them in good duties that do so hinder them in the due worshipping of God Ans There is a three-fold cause of them 1. Our selves 2. Satan 3. God 1. We our selves are the causes of wandring thoughts in Gods worship How Surely many waies 1. As we have a remnant of originall corruption a root and stock yet living and fruit bearing and one fruit is evil thoughts Matth. 13.19 out of the heart proceed evil thoughts i. e. the heart being an evil tree It is the happines of a good tree to bring forth fruit in season Psal 1.3 good and seasonable good and it is the curse of corruption a bad tree to bring forth fruit out of season good thoughts but out of season More particularly sinne hath brought a vanity upon our mindes Ephes 4.17 and there is yet a remnant of it in us i. e. the more worth and weight and excellency is in a●y thing the lesse we in our mindes suit with it and the more light and empty any thing is the more our mindes agree thereto now thoughts on the by have not that worth and excellency in holy duties that pertinent thoughts inlarging our affections Besides the more any thing requires the fixing setling and holding close of the thoughts as good duties do the lesse do our mindes suit therewith our mindes are vain inconstancy variety change and alteration of thoughts do best please them Experience tells us that it is
of the streets they doe not onely pray in the Synagogues and in the corners of the streets but they love to pray there they have an affection thereto a delight therein why not in regard of the duties themselves or Gods glory but their own ends that they may be seen of men get praise and glory to themselves 3. Unregenerate men may have some affection to and delight in the service of God by reason of some work of the spirit of God upon them for the time As 1. A work of illumination giving some clear discerning of that good is in Gods worship more then in any other imployment and the apprehension of such good whilest it lasteth will somewhat stirre the affection 2. Awaking and exciting the conscience to do its office which by promises of good on the one hand and threatnings of evil on the other assisted by the spirit of God hath a power to command the desire and delight of the soul to work Felix his conscience awaked by the preaching of Paul stirred his affection of fear And when the conscience doth charge it upon the affections as a duty to joy in Gods worship and to be willing unto it a duty which God will reward the contrary whereto God will punish it may forcibly compell and draw out the affections 3. Lifting up the affections of desire and delight by an heavenly power of experience As a man which dips his finger in some sweet liquour and tasteth the sweetnes of it doth afterward desire and delight therein So God doth by the work of his spirit sometimes drench the affections of unregenerate men in the sweetnes of his worship doth so make their affections and the good of the Ordinances to meet that they feel and taste a sweetnes which make them affected afterward to the means thereof Heb. 6.4 5. Such as afterward fall away may taste of the powers of the world to come may dip their finger in the rivers of the pleasures of Heaven But this work of the spirit making unregenerate men willing to and cheerfull in the worship of God is rather a work upon them then in them a forced work not naturall rather a flash then a fire of affection The affections are lifted up not altered and changed acted onely by an outward principle the work of the spirit the experience the spirit hath forcibly and powerfully wrought not by an outward and inward principle both the spirit of God and the suitablenes of the affection to that which is good as in the godly If this were well considered that mens natures have no affection to that which is good it would keep them from priding themselves in their knowledge wisdom wit gifts it would keep them from pride in beauty and trimming their bodies considering there is no part of the body but gives it self away to sin and is wholly unwilling to bestow it self in the service of God 2. As there is great cause that unregenerate men should grow out of love with themselves on the one hand so in love with the image of God on the other hand that and that onely can affect their hearts with Gods worship for Gods Image is that in the heart which the law of God is in the book of God Act. 13.22 I have found a man after my own heart saith God of David which shall fulfill all my will David was therefore fit to fulfill all Gods will because his heart was after Gods own heart and what this is to be after Gods own heart we shall know if we consider David expressing his willingnes to do the will of God in other terms Psal 40.8 I delight to do thy will oh my God yea thy law is within my heart David therefore delighted to do Gods will outwardly because he had the law of God within in his heart Who would not have an heart like Gods heart an heart adorned with the good law of God Till thou have this heart thou canst not from within taste sweetnes in and readily come unto the worship of God Oh therefore thou that findest thy self in an unregenerate condition and the worship of God a burden to thee go to God tell him that indeed it was his goodnes to make thee after his image in Adam when thou couldest willingly and cheerfully have served him but it was thy sin in Adam to make away that image which now thou perceivest the want of tell him he hath promised to wri e his law in the hearts of his people a second time pray him to make good that promise to thee thou canst not else serve him with thy heart as the good will be thine so the glory will especially be his 2. Having thus spoken to the unregenerate to perswade them to grow out of love with themselves and in love with the Image of God as the way to grow in love with Gods worship and so to remedy their wearines let me now turn my speech to the people of God who are sensible of wearines bear it as a burden and would gladly be rid of it and that upon this ground which they are well aware of because it hinders them in Gods worship Let me first exhort and then direct them to get rid of this wearines in a greater measure First let me exhort them and for that end I will use a double argument 1. The first shall be my Doctrine Wearinesse makes us perform weak service unto God which every childe of God hath great reason to remedy The weight of this first argument will appear if we consider Time Past Present Future or to come 1. Time past we may call to minde that before God brought us home to him we did the work of sin both willingly and cheerfully Eph. 2.3 The Apostle saith of the converted Ephesians that in times past they had their conversation in the lusts of the flesh fulfilling the desires of the flesh they were willing to do whatsoever corruption desired would deny it nothing if that did but desire it must be done Tit. 3.3 Paul puts in himself and Titus and the rest of the godly and saith We our selves were sometimes foolish disobedient deceived serving divers lusts and pleasures not onely had we to do with sinfull lusts and desires but pleasures sweet sins that did bring us delight and joy and these we served were commanded by them they were our masters and we did them as willing and cheerfull service as ever servant did his Master The Holy Ghost speaking in the language of young men that will not be reclaimed from their sinfull waies saith Let thine heart chear thee in the daies of thy youth and walk in the waies of thine heart not onely doe young men and others walk in the waies of their hearts but their hearts are cheered therein Prov. 10.23 It is a sport to a fool to do mischief and all unregenerate men are fools Paul saith of himself Titus and the godly before conversion they were foolish And cannot we
for silver and the needy for a paire of shoes and sell the refuse of the wheat It was not likely that they were so profane as to say so but they said so in their thoughts which whispering the Lord heard and so reports them these were wandring thoughts evil in themselves thoughts of deceit of falshood of oppression of injustice and that in the Sabbaths Thus wicked Jezebel 1 King 21.8 9 10. calls upon the Elders of Iesreel to proclaime a fast and in it to busie their thoughts about false witnesse and murther two men must come in and witnesse that Naboth blasphemed God and the King and then he must be carried out and stoned these things their thoughts must be busied about as the maine end of their fasting Our Saviour chargeth the Pharisees that they did devoure widows houses and for a pretence or cloke to hide it make long prayers in their prayers their thoughts did busie themselves about hiding their oppression and cruelty the main end of their praying Thoughts in themselves evil in time of Gods worship are most evil 1. Because they argue deepe hypocrisie for they are directly contrary to God yet covered over with shew of love to God To colour over great hatred of God with show of love is great hypocrisie 2. Great injury is done to God for in the very time that we should do service to him in a speciall manner we do speciall service to the devil 3. Deepe dishonour is put upon holy duties as if they had fellowship with sinne and could complie with it which doth indeede destroy their nature why else are these thoughts evil in themselves admitted when holy duties are in hand 4. Our spirits are specially poisoned hereby more then if we had them at another time because a greater curse goeth with them in that they abuse a time of blessing The devil is therefore the worst creature being corrupted because he was the best creature in creation and times of greatest blessing perverted are times of greatest curse Let a man abuse the sabbath time of prayer time of hearing with unclean drunken oppressing thoughts he shall be more accursed from God then if he had the same unclean drunken oppressing thoughts at another time and in other occasions for the sinne is aggravated from the time occasion and so the curse increased which well considered of would make us take heed how we spend the sabbath how we carry our selves in holy duties lest suffering sin to be stirred we become deeply accursed 2. A second sort of wandring thoughts in Gods worship are taken up about things lawfull and good in themselves and they are either Earthly good things Or spirituall good things 1. Wandring thoughts about earthly good things in Gods worship are such thoughts as are imployed about our particular callings or provision for our selves and children or about our pleasures and recreations thoughts warrantable and lawfull yea necessary at other times but now wandring thoughts because the minde is in other imployment God peremptorily saith that on the sabbath day we shall do no manner of work Exod. 20.10 If our hands rest and our thoughts be working is that no work Thoughts are as properly the labour and work of the minde as actions and doings are the work of the body Isa 58.13 God forbids us to finde our own pleasure on his holy day and do we not finde our pleasure by our thoughts Thoughts will frame the acting and enjoying of any pleasure or recreation If thoughts about earthly good things holden in time set apart for God are wandring and so sinnefull then in like manner such thoughts had in duties set apart for God are wandring and therefore sinfull When God complains of the Jews by the Prophet that their hearts went after their covetousnes in time of hearing the Word what doth he mean b●t that they were busy in thoughts and affections about worldly things which they so much desired though their bodies were absent from them 2. Wandring thoughts in Gods worship about spirituall good things are either such spirituall things as are impertinent and of a divers kinde from the duties in hand or such spirituall things as are pertinent of the same kinde and agreeable to the duty in hand Wandring thoughts in duty impertinent and of divers kinde are such as these When a man in time of hearing the Word hath thoughts of praier or of some Sermon th●t he heard at such a time in such a place how good it was and usefull unto him when a man in praier hath thoughts of preparation unto praier thoughts of meditation thoughts of hearing the Word Spirituall thoughts pertinent and of the same kinde with the worship in hand are not alwaies to be accounted wandring and sinfull thoughts As for example a man is hearing the Word of God and some thoughts come into his minde suitable to what is spoken some place of Scripture to the purpose or some place of Scripture inlightned to a man beyond what light the Minister giveth to it or something come to minde a man hath heard before to the same purpose A man also joins in praier with others and besides the thoughts of what is praied he hath other like thoughts of his own if these like thoughts do clear the duty in hand to the understanding do increase attention and affection to what is in doing they are not wandring thoughts but they are conserving thoughts thoughts that keep up and keep close the attention and affection to Gods worship and do prevent the weakning and wasting of the same and they are the work of the enlarging and establishing spirit which can at the same time suggest new thoughts and make them helpfull to us But if these pertinent and like thoughts do carry away the attention and take it wholly up that what is in hand is neglected and the thoughts lo●e the present duty and are long before they can recall themselves and finde the duty then ordinarily they are the work of Satan and corruption working as an Angel of light doing evil but in such a way as may not be discovered for who would suspect good thoughts in duty of the very same kinde to come from Satan and corruption I say if these like thoughts do carry away the attention they are ordinarily evil for God may and sometimes doth as experience proves so take up the thoughts and affections with something in the Word and praier that is suitable to the necessity of the soul that it can minde nothing else for the present but as the soul hath dwelt upon some matter of sorrow and been deeply humbled thereby so God will have a man dwell upon some matter of comfort till the heart be greatly refreshed thereby but this is more then ordinary we may not neglect any part of worship but God may imploy us about some part if he will this act is not voluntary or deliberate but the soul is carried thereto by the power of
make their soules weake and so weary of the duty When Moses chod with Aaron and his sonnes Levit. 10.17 to the end because they had not eaten the sacrifice in the holy place that day his sonnes were destroyed his answer was Had I eaten it would it have been accepted Why not oh he could not have done it with any chear and comfort so heavy a hand of God having lately befallen him and therefore he should have been weary of the service and then God would not have accepted it if thus the heart be weary having no desire or delight the body will be weary for that followes the disposition of the soul the soul carrieth the body with it which way so ever it goeth There is a wearines proper to the body when the strength thereof is spent and the spirits exhausted and so the body is left weak and feeble and so weary of any further action because it hath no strength There is a foure fold cause of exhausting the strength of the body and so making it weary of Gods service 1. The or●ginall corrupt disposition of the body by reason of sinne whereby it withholdeth and dryeth up it's strength from that which is good but freely expendeth it upon that which is evil Thus naturally the eyes had rather looke upon a company of sinners then a company of Saints see a company in the ale-house rather then in Gods house prophaning the Lords day then serving him the eare had rather hear evil then good the feet had rather walke to any sinnefull meeting on the Lords day then to the house of God Rom. 6.19 20. The Apostle saith We naturally give our members instruments of unrighteousnes there is no unwillingnes in us but we readily part with them all at sinnes motion nay we are free from holines will have nothing to do with that not any part of our bodies but we are servants of sinne all for sinne And this disposednes to withhold the strength of our bodies from Gods service and to give it unto sinne remains in part in the godly 2. The strength of the body is spent in sinnefull actions sometimes Jer. 9.3 They weary themselves to commit iniquity Particularly the sins of uncleannes and drunkennes do wast the strength of the body Prov. 5.11 The holy ghost tells what shall be the end of the unclean person a mournfull end thou mourne at the last when thy flesh and thy body are consumed And doth not experience tell that men are forced to ly in their beds or keep their houses on the Lords day because they have drunk so hard in the week or on saturday that their bodies are weak and tired The sinne of idlenes doth weaken the body strength used doth encrease and not used doth decay beside the nourishment taken for want of exercise doth turne to corruption and so rather weaken the body then nourish it none more weary of any imployment and of the service of God then idle persons 3. The strength of the body is exhausted sometimes by naturall distempers sicknesses diseases either such as are continually with men which is the case of some or such as lie upon the body at particular times onely the case of others 4. Sometimes foregoing recreations and businesses of mens callings do so spend the body that it hath no strength lest for Gods service The body thus wearied will reflect upon the soul 1. In regard of sympathy agreement and like affection between soul and body what the body delights in the soul doth in measure delight in and what the body is weary of the soul will in measure be weary of 2. As it doth expresse and act the wearines of the soul by reason of sin for so the wearines of the soul is increased and the contrary strength of the soul desire and delight weakned 3. As it is an unfit instrument to expresse the desire and delight of the soul if those affections may not be expressed they will decay and weaken 4. As by the eies and ears it doth let in new objects of delight the soul by sin is new fangled will entertain them and so grow weary of former delights The soul doth expresse its wearines 1. By letting loose thoughts and affections it will not keep them bound but suffers them to wander about for refreshment 2. In thinking the service hard painfull grievous 3. In thinking the time long that is spent therein wishing the same at an end The body doth expresse its wearines 1. By restlesnesse it cannot rest in any position or gesture of it but as a door upon the hinges turns first one way and then another 2. By letting the eies and ears loose to all objects to chuse their delights where they please 3. By speeches too if occasion serve as here they are brought in saying when will the new moon be gon If they did onely say so in their hearts yet God saw they would say so with their tongues if occasion were offered therefore he sets it down so How doth wearines weaken our worshipping of God 1. Wearines in the very nature of it is weaknes a deniall an absence of strength and actions performed in weaknes must needs be weak wearines denies the strength of the minde Can a man think well of what he is weary It denies the strength of the will Can a man be willing of that he is weary of What be willing of a burden It denies the strength of the affections a man will neither desire nor joy in what he is weary of and if the strength of the soul be denied the strength of the body also will be denied and that service which hath neither strength of soul nor strength of body must needs be weak service 2. As it is contrary to the spirit 1. To the nature of it which is a spirit of liberty and freedom a spirit of desire and delight a spirit of Adoption opposed to a spirit of bondage Rom. 8.15 The spirit of a childe which a spirit of love a childe doth his fathers commands with desire and delight he loves his father joyes in him therefore in his commands 2 Cor. 9.7 God loves a cheerfull giver wearines being contrary to the spirit must needs damp that hinder the assistance of it in worship 2. To the work of it 2 Cor. 3.17 Where the spirit of the Lord is there is liberty sin is compared to cords Prov. 5.22 to a snare 2 Tim. 2.26 because it takes away a mans liberty and free will unto that which is good when God calls a man to any duty his will is not in his own power he is not able to move thereto no not in desire God therefore is said to work the will Phil. 2.13 there is no will till God work it But when the spirit of God comes into the heart it breaks the cords and snares sets the will at liberty unto God 2 Cor. 8.3 The Churches of Macedonia were willing of themselves to minister to the Saints to
their power yea and beyond their power How came that to passe ver 1. We do you to wit of the grace of God bestowed upon the Churches of Macedonia their outward bounty proceeded from abundance of grace within 1 Cor. 15.10 I laboured mort abundantly then they all yet not I but the grace of God in me abundant labour and wearines are contrary but the grace of the spirit makes a man labour abundantly wearines therefore being contrary to the work of the spirit must needs weaken the work of it and so the service of God 3. To the testimony of it the Word of God is the testimony of the spirit for holy men spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost what the word saith in this case is the testimony of the spirit the word saith 1. That forwardnes unto good duties is our duty when it saith Christ hath purified unto himself a people Zealous of good works Tit. 2.14 Hath Christ been at cost and pains to make us pure for that end and are we not bound to endeavour unto that end he hath laid it as a duty upon Ministers to put their people in minde that they be ready unto every good work Tit. 3.1 That they charge such as have ability to be ready to communicate willing to distribute 1 Tim. 6.17 18. a signe that not onely the duties themselves are our duties but readines and willingnes therein also 2. The word saith that cheerfullnes in duty is Gods delight 2 Cor. 9.7 He loveth a cheerfull giver Isa 64.5 The Lord cannot as it were contain himself till the soul come to him that worketh righteousnes with joy but he will go to meet him as we out of joy cannot contain our selves but we must runne to meet them we delight in when we espy them comming towards us 3. The word saith that the waies of wisdom are waies of pleasantnes and all her paths are peace ●rov 3.17 Christs yoke is easy his burden is light Matth. 11.30 The Commandements of God are not grievous 1 Joh. 5.3 4. The word saith that forwardnes and delight in good actions is beneficiall 2 Cor. ● 6 He that soweth bountifully shall reap bountifully full handed works shall have full handed reward 1 Cor. 15.58 alwaies abounding in the work of the Lord knowing that your labour shall not be in vain in the Lord If the Lord be the rewarder the most abundant service shall not want a reward wearines doth contrary the severall branches of this testimony of the spirit Is willing and cheerfull service our duty wearines denies it If it be our duty to be willing and obedient why are we weary Where is our obedience Is God delighted with cheerfull service wearines denies it Who would be weary of that which is Gods delight of that which is so good that it joys God himself Is the way of God an easy pleasant way wearines denies it Who is weary of ease nd pleasantnes Is the way of God a beneficiall way wearines saith to the contrary Who is weary of benefit wearines therefore doth make the spirit of God a liar which unworthy dealing must needs hinder the spirit in the heart 4. To the honour of the spirit of God wearines doth cast reproach and dishonour upon the spirit in two things 1. As if it did not dispose and fit them inwardly whom it sets awork as if it did not work the will in them by whom it requires the work to be wrought for what is the ground of wearines in the person but unfitnes unsuitablenes unto the work and is it not a dishonour to the spirit to set unfit persons to work Are we not his workmanship unto good works he doth inwardly fashion us thereunto should a man go to work with an instrument and not first fit it with hand and edge should it not shame him wearines saith that God takes up unhandled unedged instruments to do his work which is a dishonour to him 2. Wearines of good duties doth cast dishonour upon the spirit as if his work had wearying properties and so were worse then Satans work or our own work which do not so weary Wearying properties are these three Hardnes Harshnes Hurtfullnes Why doth a work weary but because it is hard and difficult doth cost much pains and labour more then can well be afforded or is harsh unpleasant uncomfortable or is hurtfull no profit no benefit in the same but the contrary Thus wearines saith of the work the spirit of God doth set us about which must needs be a dishonour to the spirit of God who is the best master therefore appointeth the best wo●k contrary to his wisdom goodnes justice Will it stand with his wisdom to set us about work too hard for us Will it stand with his goodnes to set us about evil work No work but evil work is wholly uncomfortable Will it stand with his justice to make us labour in vain and to no profit Hath he not promised to the contrary And is he not righteous to make good his promise yet wearines doth at same time cast dishonour upon the wisdom goodnes and justice of the spirit and must not such dishonour hinder the work of the spirit in the heart 3. Wearines doth weaken our fervent worshipping of God as it doth dispose and fit us for the work of sin and Satan in Gods worship which will weaken the worship we perform Wearines doth dispose us for the work of corruption a weary soul is fit for wandring thoughts and wandring affections a weary body is fit for change of objects fot new sights and sounds it is naturall to man to seek refreshment elsewhere when he is weary Corruption doth alwaies work in holy duties to hinder us in the same but when the man is weary it works with advantage he is in a corrupt temper fit for corruption now it may prevail more then at another time Wearines fits us for Satans work for his inward suggestions for his presenting of objects to withdraw us the heart is weary therefore fit for new work there is small ability to resist him and he walketh to and fro seeking whom he may devoure a great part of his work is to watch advantage against us When we are at best he will hinder us much more when we are so fit to be hindred 4. Wearines doth weaken our fervent worshipping of God as it produceth certain other effects both in opinion and affection 1. In opinion it makes a man think the worship of God evil if not in it self yet to him at least at this particular time what a man is weary of he apprehends to be an evil to him for no man is weary of good and suitable good for suitable good is delightsome therefore not wearisom 2. In affection 1. Wearines makes a man desire the end of the work rather then the work what a man is weary of he would have finished that his wearines might be at an end for whilst the work
be for family worship and the more we worship God in our families the sitter we shall be for publike worship Quest 2. How may we remedy the wearines of our bodies Ans By the exercise of Temperance governed by watchfulnes 1 Thes 5.6 watch and be sober This watchfull advised observant Temperance must be exercised about Sleep Diet. Labour Recreation Some lesse sleep makes fitter for Gods worship some more some are more apt by lesse food some by more some more labour makes fitter some lesse we must carefully observe and accordingly order our selves too much recreation will make the body altogether sensuall and so loose that it will not be fixed in any ordinance Caution Let the godly be advised not too easily to hearken to the complaints of the body i. q. the soul may deceive us thereby we may rather suspect the complaints of the body in Gods worship and trust them else where for the soul is more apt to be weary in Gods worship and lesse weary in other works and the body is more apt to be weary in other works and lesse in Gods worship the soul is more weary of Gods worship because it hath lesse disposednes thereto and it is more spirituall and so lieth heavier upon the soul it is lesse weary of other works because it hath more disposednes unto them and they are more bodily and do not so lye upon the spirit the body is more weary of other worke because they take more of the body lesse weary of Gods worship because it is more spirituall and doth not so presse upon the body suspect therefore the complaints of the body in Gods worship and do not easily hearken unto them 2. There is time and place for the execution of an holy revenge upon the body It hath spent the whole day and it may be the night after that in sin therefore put it to make it do somewhat more for the service of God then it willingly would This is not cruelty but mercy to our bodies to constrain them to Gods ●ervice and that in some proportion to their service of sin 3. There is a necessity of beating down the body if we mean it should be helpfull to our souls if we too much favour them we do against our souls 1 Cor. 9. ult There is a danger that Paul himself may be cast away whilst he doth preach to save others if he do not beat down his body The occasions and comforts we daily converse with do give a strength to the body and the body gives a strength to sin Hence the fruit of the godly is more mellow and gracious in old age because the vigour of their bodies decaying the strength of sin is wasted CHAP. VI. Of the fifth hinderance of instant worshipping of God sle●ping MATTH 26.40 And he commeth to his Disciples and findeth them asleep I Now come unto another hinderance of our fervent serving of God which is sl●●p a sin that doth not onely hin●er our fervency in Gods worship but also at this time will hinder the means of redresse if not forborne A sin not onely doggs the carelesse who regard onely to have their bodies present at Gods worship but steals upon the godly yea the godly of most lively inward affections and therefore it may be of generall use to discover how it hinders our instant serving of God and the remedy thereof The coherence of my Text is this our Saviour knowing that the place of his solace in communion with God should be the place of his suffering Joh. 18.2 He resorteth to that garden which he was so accustomed to when he knew Judas would look for him rather then else-where and he takes with him his Disciples to the intent they should assist him in praier having lately received the strengthening passeover and Lords Supper this appears by his speech unto them v. 36. Sit ye here whilst I go and pray yonder He that biddeth us when we pray privately to enrer into our chamber to shut the door and to pray to our Father in secret Matth. 6.6 would not have disclosed his secret praying had it not been to provoke them unto praie● for they might easily apprehend if he had need to pray much more they for though he had more work to go thorow then they yet he had incomparably more strength then they his so difficult work was lesse to his strength then their so easy wo●k comparatively to their strength Three of his Disciples he takes unto more intimate and retired sympathy with him in his troubles these three Peter and the two sonnes of Zebedee he took rather then the rest as we may conceive because they had expressed most forward confident affection unto him he will try them that upon triall they might better know themselves and be humble Peter ver 33 34 35. professeth that he will not be offended because of the evil shall befall Christ though all be offended And when Christ tells him that he shall deny him thrice that night he believes himself rather then Christ and affirmeth that he will sooner die with him then deny him The two sonnes of Zebedee Matth. 20.20 21 22. desire to sit the one at Christs right hand and the other at his left in his Kingdom he asketh them whether they be able to drink of his cup and to be baptized with his baptisme they say they are able as little considering what they now answered as what they before asked when our Saviour had parted these three from the rest he began to be sorrowfull and very heavy he communicateth his sorrow to them and the extremity thereof My soul is exceeding sorrowfull even unto death he had as much sorrow as life could hold he exhorteth them to whom he had thus specially unbosomed himself that they would tarry in that place and watch with him As he was sensible of affliction so of comfort and the means thereof It became him to fulfill all righteousnes therefore not onely to pray himself but to resort to the praiers of others His suspended comfort must be recovered in Gods own way The weak Disciples may help their persect Saviour whilest he suffered as a sinner if they doe but watch But watching was not all that Christ aimed at that is a duty no further usefull then it seemeth for some other end Christ would have them watch that they might pray with him as ver 41. Watch and pray watching without praier had been but a waking idlenes Our Saviour himself goes a little further from them and praies earnestly that if it vvere possible the cup of his sufferings might be turned some other vvay He returneth again to his Disciples and findeth them asleep Though they had professed great love to him and great ability to expresse that love though he singled them out and told them his present great necessity and cald upon them to watch and pray i. e. to pray not drousily but fervently which in all these regards did presse upon them
receive the word with all readines of minde they did in the greatest measure put forth their hearts unto the words of the Apostle to meet with it in the way and to take it up so soone as it was let fall by him Luk. 24.32 Did not our hearts burne within us when he opened to us the Scripture burne these did and were in a flame with indignation against themselves for their ignorance with desire of and joy in the good and glad tydings of Christs death and resurrection 2. Receiving the Sacraments the Passeover 2 Chron. 35.18 There was no Passeover like to that kept in Israel since the dayes of Samuel the Prophet They exceeded in this Passeover all the Passeovers of a long time a signe they kept it with a great measure of affection for would God onely have commended the outward action Luk. 22.15 With desire I have desired to eate this Passeover with you before I suffer .i. with earnest and vehement desire earnest desire to the ordinance doth imply earnest desire in the ordinances The duty of examination required of the communicant 1 Cor. 11.28 doth carry as much examination is the bellows of affection The like we finde in the Eunuch in regard of baptisme Act. 8.36 See here is water what doth hinder me to be baptized He had a forward desire the Evangelist should have stirred up and provoked him but he prevents him is more forward to receive it then he to offer it 3. Prayer Psal 119.145 I cryed with my whole heart he imploied all the affections of his heart in prayer and that with earnestnes he cries Psal 142.2 I poured out my complaint before him David empties his soule in prayer leaves nothing behinde a signe of earnestnes Psal 143.6 I stretch forth my hands unto thee the instancy here spoken of he fears lest his prayers should fall short of God therefore sends them forth with as great earnestnes as may be 4. Singing of psalms Ps 149.5 6. Let them sing aloud let the high prayses of God be in their mouthes in singing psalmes our hearts must be extended and stretched out as the extending of the voice implies our hearts must be wide open and filled with gracious affections When God would expresse great Joy he bids the mountains breake forth into singing Esai 49.13 Ephes 5.18.19 Be not drunk with wine wherein is excesse but be filled with the spirit speaking to your selves in Psalms c. we should labour to drinke deepe of the spirit and expresse it in singing and makeing melody in our hearts to the Lord there must be a sweet and loud sounding joy in our hearts when we sing psalmes For proofe of this truth may be brought in the testimony of Scripture examples commended and reproofs of the contrary The Scripture calls for this affection Rom. 12.11 Fervent in spirit serving the Lord if we should be cold in our owne occasions which we are not yet when we come to serve God our spirits should burne within us with desire and delight Gal. 4.18 It is good to be Zealously affected allwayes in a good thing good because agreeable to Gods will to Gods nature to the nature of the good we are zealous about zealous affection in good is allwaies good other good things have their proper season this is allwaies in season in every good action 2. The servants of God have thus practised Nehemiah was zealous for the service and worship of God so that he had his conscience on his side to embolden him to desire mercy of God according to his forward affection that way Nehem. 13.14 Remember me O my God concerning this and wipe not out my good deeds that I have done for the house of my God and the offices thereof David Psal 69.9 The Zeal of thy house hath eaten me up Such was his affection to Gods Worship and Service that partly out of desire thereafter and partly out of greife for the neglect contempt and reproach thereof he was even a devoured consumed man so great was his affection that way that he seemed carelesse every other way And herein he was a type of the best of paterns the Lord Jesus Christ who being a Preist though not after the order of Aaron did expresse an ardent affection in purging the Temple from the corruption of those times in so much that his Disciples thought he was an apparent accomplisher of that place of propheticall Scripture The Zeal of thy house hath eaten me up John 2.17 Who but a man in the power and possession of zeale to Gods house would have made a whip and therewith driven out the polluters of the Temple and have overthrown their Tables and Seats and that with Scripture-chiding Math. 21.13 Another remarkable instance concerning our Saviour we have John 4.32.33.34 Whilst his Disciples were gone into the City to buy meat he falls into parly with a woman of Samaria about her soul when his Disciples come again they pray him to eat he tells them he is provided he had meat to eat they knew not of his Disciples say one to another Hath any man brought him meat to eat our Saviour answereth My meat is to do the will of him that sent me and to finish his work No meat could be more sweet unto him or refreshing then the doing of Gods will a signe he was dearly affected thereto that he could make food of it The like we read of Apollos Acts 18.25 being fervent in Spirit he spake and taught diligently the things of the Lord he did not only preach the things of the Lord but with fervencie of spirit with a burning heart Thus unlesse we will be irregular in our serving of God and unlike the approved Saints and servants of God in Scripture yea unlike Christ our patern who was sent from Heaven to set us a copy we must perform Gods service with earnestnesse of affection 3. God hath reproved the want of this fervency of affection in his service a signe it is a transgression Where the Apostle saith Gal. 4.18 It is good to be Zealous alwaies in a good matter he doth conveigh a secret reproof of them who were dearly affected to the false Apostles who were but counterfeit Ordinances of God but were abated in their love to him a true Apostle and so a true Ordinance of God If it be good to be zealous in a good thing then it is evil nor to be zealous The luke-warm temper of Laodicca the Lord reckons to be worse then key cold I would thou wert hot or cold down-right and sensibly good or evil no temper so evil as lukewarm he threatens to spue them out of his mouth shewing that the ●ord will have no communio●●●●h but doth detest and will 〈◊〉 ●ove far from him the p●●●ons and services that are luke●a●● God tells the Churc● 〈◊〉 ●p●es●● he had somewhat against her because she had left her first love her love was not utterly gone but her first love and her first works she
God and reading Gods word the meanes are his meanes under his authority and for his glory you cannot separate God and them when men speake ill of professours for praying reading they thinke they speake ill of men and that not for goodnes but nicenes and overstrictnes but they speake ill of God in men they speake ill of godly men who do read and pray not because it is their own minde but Gods minde and shall we run into such horrible profannes to speake ill of God 3. Despising of Gods worship is the way to quench the spirit in our hearts and in the ordinances These two are put together as depending one upon another 1 Thes 3.19 20. Quench not the spirit Despise not prophesying implying that to despise prophesying is the way to quench the spirit It is observable when the Apostle speaketh of other sins Ephes 4 2● as lying sinfull anger stealing corrupt communication he saith Grieve not the holy spirit but when he comes to speak of despising prophesying he saith Quen●h not the holy spirit shewing us that any sin if it be but corrupt speech will grieve the spirit make it sad in our hearts withdraw its lively and comfortable working but despising or prophesying doth quench the spirit it doth take a course quite to put out the fire of the spirit for it takes away the sewel of the spirit that which should nourish and increase its slame If a man despise Gods ordinances either he will not make use of them at all or never the better and then the nourishment of the fire of the spirit is taken away and so it is quenched As therefore we would have the spirit slame in our hearts and in the ordinances let us take heed of despising the ordinances Do we not finde a damp of Gods spirit in our hearts and in the ordinances the cause is here we have taken away the fewel by sleighting the ordinances It may be said How may we be helped against this despising of Gods worship Answer By the contrary reverence a f●ame of minde called much for in the book of God Psal 2.11 Serve the Lord with fear rejoice with trembling Psal 3.7 In thy fear will I worship towards thy holy Temple Prov. 13.13 Fear is opposed to dispising who so despiseth the Word shall be destroyed but he that feareth the commandement shall be rewarded the way not to despise the Word is to fear it Psal 66.2 To him will I look that trembleth at my word tremblin● i● 〈◊〉 ●●●t of the bo●y spring●●● f●o●●●●●●rence or 〈◊〉 ●n act of the minde apprehending an excellency and worth an excelling overpow●●ng worth and excellency How shall we get this reverence Answ For obtaining the truth and beginning of reverence there is no way but one chan●e of heart for that brings both ●ight and love which two make reverence light to discern worth and love to affect it to be willing it should be there and to acknowledge it to be there If a man receive light from the spirit to see an excellency in Gods worship in preaching in praier yet if there be not love a man will at one time or other shut out that light and so despise the ordinances notwithstanding them No wonder if unregenerate men be careles of the Word Sacraments Praier yea after many years preaching it will not be helped nor can it be expected otherwise till the heart be changed For the help of the measure and increase of our reverence and so our earnest worshipping of God it will be usefull 1. To labour to increase our knowledge of the worth of Gods ordinances which we shall do two waies 1. By considering that Gods ordinances are means of conveighing glory to God yea the greatest glory and good to us yea the greatest good They are means of conveighing honour to God therefore they are called Gods worship because they do defer and carry worship and honour to God yea the greatest honour more then the works of God for they do declare Gods worth more then his works more clearly m●re abundantly and they do work more deep and constant expressions of Gods honour in our thoughts affections words and actions then the works of God That which conveighs honour to God as appointed means is honourable that which conveys most honour to God is most honourable so do the ordinances of God therefore they are most honourable As the ordinances do convey the greatest honour to God so they convey the greatest good to us In Gods providence we have many sweet mercies which we could not want as health estate friends guidance protection but in the ordinances we finde God and Christ and eternall life Prov. 8.34.35 They that wait at the gates of wisdome and attend at the posts of her doores are blessed for they finde Christ and with him life and savour at Gods hands Is not that of great worth and greatly to be respected that brings unto us the greatest good good incomparable and invaluable so do Gods Ordinances And that we may have the knowledge of this worth ready at hand for use we are to call it often to minde and to consider of it for what a man hath forgotten it is all one to him as if he had never knowne it and especially when we are to come to them let us consider of their worth make present our knowledge by meditation 2. To increase our knowledge of the worth of Gods Ordinances let us observe and remember the effects and workings of Gods Ordinances sometimes in one sometim s in another our hearts are humbled quickned comforted satisfied yea sometimes when our hearts have been at a low ●bb when we have despaired of helpe and thought all ●●ans in vain when much hearing and use of private means would do no good these are sensible arguments of the worth of Gods Ordinances we know they have done us good when no other means could 2. Consider the examples of the servants of God This is their description and hereby they differ from others they tremble at Gods Word Ezra 9.4 David will worship God with fear Psal 3.7 Josiahs heart melted at the hearing of the word 2 King 22.11 Habakkuk trembled Hab. 3.16 these were deepe expressions a signe they had deepe thoughts Wilt not thou be like Gods people what and call God father Wilt not thou expresse the image of his children 3. Consider this frame of minde hath the promise of speciall favour Isai 66.2 God will have an eye to them that tremble at his word Josiah should not see the evil God would bring Habakkuk should rest in the evil day 4. Endeavour after a reverent carriage of body there is that nearnes betweene soul and body that they are helps or hinderances one to another An irreverent behaviour will 1. Increase the irreverence of the minde provoke and procure sleighty thoughts 2. Beget the like irreverent behaviour in others which will reflect upon our hurt 3. Give advantage to satan to suggest and move unto
having though it cost dear So on the contrary wandring thoughts being a curse are worthy preventing though it cost us tears to God yea many tears and much pains with our own hearts 3. The Lord hath threatned to punish these wandring thoughts which carry away the heart in his worship and make it only a bodily exercise without spirit and life with a secret but sure blasting of inward spirituall good that as God hath but a shadow and outside of worship so they shall have but a shadow and shew of spirituall wisdom and prudence Isa 29.14 Therefore the wisdom of the wise shall perish and the understanding of the prudent shall be hid Therefore why Because they have drawn neer to God with their mouths and have removed their hearts farre from him They gave God a body without an heart therefore he will give them a body without an heart the shape of wise men without wisdom and prudence a suitable judgement What is the reason that Christians are so much shadows and shews of Christians rather then substance and truth when they should come to bear injuries and wrongs to forget and forgive they can do it no more then other men when they should expresse their dependance upon God and submission unto God in willing and chearfull parting with comforts and friends when God will have it so they can no more do it then other men they hold comforts fast as if they should part with God and all when they part with them and they hold friends fast and will not let them go as if friends were made more to serve one another then to serve God and when friends and comforts are gon they grieve as if all their joy were gone When they should bear quietly the crosse and grieving passages of Gods providence as those who have learned in whatsoever state they are to be content knowing they are in heavines if need be they cannot bear but carry themselves as untamed heifers that would rather shake off the yoke then bear it they have the shew of these graces in their profession but they want that measure of substance the reason is because their service of God is more in shew then substance therefore they are Christians more in shew then substance As we spend our Sabbaths so will our week daies be spent and as we perform holy duties so will our conversation be Is it not a heavy judgement to be inwardly worse then we think our selves or others think us to be to be unable to use grace when we have most need to exercise it yet thus hath God threatned to afflict us and he will make his Word good if we suffer our thoughts to wander in his service Quest By what means may we prevent wandrings in Gods worship Answ First labour the increase of grace Heb. 13.9 It is good that the heart be established with grace i. e. with g●acious knowledge of old and well known truths which the Apostle opposeth to new and strange doctrine And when the Apostle would direct the people of God to keep their own stedfastnes yea though the errour of the wicked took course to draw them away He gives them counsell to grow in grace 2 Pet. 3.17 18. Which places do shew that grace is of an establishing setling nature and so indeed it is for 1. It is contrary to vanity and inconstancy being the nature of God who is stable and firm alwaies one and the same 2. It sets the soul in order puts every faculty into its place and sets it about its own proper office and so it doth establish 3. It doth establish as it is the work of the free or liberall spirit Psal 51.12 David praieth that God would establish him with his free spirit grace doth establish a man as it is the work of the free spirit because it maketh a mans spirit free and liberall like to the spirit of God to sleight earthly things in comparison and to minde heaven and heavenly things earthly things do unsettle they are themselves changeable and do change the thoughts and affections pitched upon them Let a man pitch his thoughts and heart upon his nearest friends he hath in the world to whom nature society interchange of love Christianity hath bound him yet his thoughts and affections placed upon these nearest friends shall change and not alwaies contitinue one and the same because they change and are not alwaies the same therefore the thoughts pitched upon them do change also spirituall and heavenly things are of the nature of the spirit and heaven steady and stable immoveable unchangeable therefore will establish the affections pitched upon them Now the more grace we have the more we shall minde heavenly things and so be the more established 2. Labour the increase of thy reverence and high esteem of the worship of God According to thy thoughts of the worship of God so much-what will thy thoughts be in it Psal 48.9 We have thought of thy loving kindnes oh God in the midst of thy Temple They professe their thoughts were busied about Gods loving kindnes in his Ordinances why so because of their high thoughts thereof ver 2 3. beautifull for situation the joy of the whole earth is mount Sion God is known in her palaces for a refuge And herein were they helped by the report of their fathers ver 8. as we have heard so have we seen in the City of the Lord of hosts they had seen Gods mighty presence and protection in and about his own Ordinances but they had also heard so and that before they had seen it To help our reverence of Gods worship it is good to talk with ancient Christians that have lived long before us to hear what they will say we may be helped by their experience when we have none or but little of our own and if we have experience of the worth of the Ordinances we may be further helped by their experience 3. Prepare our selves aforehand Prov. 18.1 Through desire a man having separated himself intermedleth with all wisdom if a man have a desire to meddle with matters of wisdom and would do it as becomes such occasions and as may be for profit he will first separate himself not passe immediately from common and triviall matters to matters of wisdom but he will have some time betwixt the leaving off of the one and taking to the other If we passe from our callings to Gods worship without separating our selves how is it ordinarily possible but that we should have the same thoughts in Gods worship that we bad in our callings There are some separating duties that do prepare unto others as examination meditation praier and they do prepare by stirring up the grace of God and providing an heavenly assistance to begin with us in the duty If thou canst not alwaies have separating time betwixt other occasions and Gods worship Yet have some separating thoughts ere thou enter upon the duty thou art not fit else to meddle
to be but as the Publican and the Heathen and the Publican and Heathen may hear the Word But all may not receive the Sacrament for that is the seal of the Covenant and the seal doth belong to none but them who by the Word are brought into the Covenant 2. Where there is a meeting of more Ordinances more preparation is required but where the Sacrament is administred together with the Word is a meeting of more Ordinances therefore more preparation is required were this Ordinance more frequently used men would better be acquainted with the preparation due thereto Quest Suppose a man come to Church on the Lords day and the Sacrament be administred there beyond his expectation whether may he receive not knowing of that aforehand to prepare himself for it Answ 1. If a man doubt whether he may receive lawfully or no he shall do best to forbear for in this case holds that of the Apostle Rom. 14.23 Whatsoever is not of faith is sin if a man do an action and knoweth not whether he shall do well or no he sinneth in that action for the rule of our obedience is the Word of God if therefore I do not know that such an action is according to the Word I do not obey in it and therefore sin 2. If thou be prepared for the Word thou art in measure prepared for the Sacrament for those duties of examination meditation praier which do prepare us for the Word do not onely stirre up those affections and graces that are more properly requisite unto the Word but those also that more peculiarly belong to the Sacrament 3. God may increase the beginnings of thy preparation by the Word further provoking and stirring up thy graces especially thy faith and repentance 4. Though there be some defect in thy preparation before thou didst come yet if thy hearts desire be set to seek and finde the Lord he will have such respect to the praiers of the Congregation that he will pardon thy unpreparednes and conveigh to thee the blessing so 2 Chron. 30.18 19 20. Many of the people whose hearts were prepared yet were ceremonially unclean did eat the passeover contrary to the law but Hezekiah praid for them saying The good Lord pardon every one that prepareth his heart to seek the Lord God of his fathers though he be not cleansed according to the purification of the sanctuary and God hearkened to Hezekiah and healed the people Quest Suppose there be a day of fasting kept and I know not of it till the morning of it whether may I go unto it it being an extraordinary duty and requiring extraordinary preparation and I unprepared not knowing of it Answ A day of fasting ought to be kept from even to even Levit. 23.32 therefore to be known before the morning and they that hinder such knowledge of it are like to bear their sinne 2. If thy soul be earnestly desirous to seek God in that Ordinance unwilling to misse the opportunity and sensible of thy unpreparednes the bare want of extraordinary preparation need not hinder thee if thou do not lie under the guilt of some sin unrepented of for thy unpreparednes is not through any neglect of him It is not bare want of such a measure of preparation that doth displease God so as to disrespect our duties but neglect and sleighting of it God requires no more then he gives had God given thee time of extraordinary preparation by fore-knowledge of the duty he would have required the same but having not given thee that time he will not require that Nay it may be God will specially prepare thy soul by want of speciall preparation humble and soften thy heart Ob. But the scrupulous heart as the most conscientious are will be ready to say If God would have had them to partake in the duty he would have given them time of preparation Answ Not so God may give thee the substance of preparation disposednes of heart but deny the circumstances of preparation viz. time and performance of preparing duties Preparation serves unto the worship of God the measure and time thereof cannot strictly be set down but the rule thereof is the measure of the souls unpreparednes God hath commanded extraordinary preparation for extraordinary duties because the heart usually is extraordinarily unfit but suppose by affliction or some other way the heart be more then ordinarily prepared then extraordinary preparation is not required for it is allready done some other way so if thy soul be much humbled and quickned by want of preparing time and means it is all one as if thou hadst them True it is God requires preparation as well as duty but preparation is the lesser part of Gods minde though a necessary part when therefore thou maiest do a greater part of Gods minde thou art not to neglect it though thou canst not do a lesser when that not doing of the lesse doth not proceed from any known and willing neglect of thine which alters the case For if a man have time and do not prepare he doth presumptuously not believingly p●rform holy duties To be sure this case may put the godly in minde what need they have to keep their hearts continually in a good frame that so they may have a continuall preparednes unto every good work Quest Suppose I labour in the use of means to prepare my heart and cannot finde it prepared what should I then do Answ 1. Thy soul may be prepared and thou not sensible of it it is the measure of preparation and evidence of the spirit in the heart that makes a man sensible of his preparation 2. Sense of preparation is a separable fruit of the use of the means part of the successe it is but may be separated from the use of the means when thou therefore hast prepared thy self thou hast done part of thy duty thou must not now stay from going about the Ordinances which is a further part of thy duty till thou be sensible of thy preparednes which is part of the successe and so Gods part thy duty is to prepare thy heart and when thou hast prepared to go about the worship though God for reasons best known to himself doth withdraw his part the sense and feeling of preparation Let a man examine himself and so let him eat not forbear when he hath examined himself because he findes not matters as he would Quest Suppose I finde God helping my heart in preparation and withdrawing himself in the worship prepared unto there my heart is dead carelesse what should I then do Answ 1. The godly are apt in experience to runne upon extreams if their heart be not assisted in preparation they are discouraged if they be much assisted they grow proud and confident therefore God withdraws himself sometimes in one way and sometimes in another that they might not be discouraged nor be confident Not be discouraged if they do not finde God in one way of promise yet they may finde
continueth wearines doth continue and increase 2. It makes a man desire to change the present service for some other imployment a weary man would have new work to take away his wearines and to bring him contrary comfort and delight Can that be fervent service which a man thinks to be evil the end whereof he more desireth then the doing of it which he would change for any other imployment such service doth wearines make Quest It may be said you told us lately what some causes are of the wearines of the body in Gods service tell us now what the causes of the wearines of the soul are in the same service of God Answ 1. Remnants of corruption which do alwaies strive to draw the strength of the minde and affections another way and sometimes do prevail by our carelessenes and Satans watchfullnes Thus David when he was acted by corruption having looked too much upon the worlds prosperity and his own affliction without reflecting upon the end of both he was ready to throw off all the service of God Ps 73.13 Verily I have cleansed my heart in vain and washed mine hands in innocency if all the fruit of his piety be affliction and all the fruit of the worlds prophanenes be prosperity then hath David spent a deal of labour in vain and it is time to make an end but this was the faulse suggestion of corruption so Jer. 28.8 9. When he was mocked and reproached daily for his ministery he said he would make mention of the Lords name no more he grew weary of his ministery if he could see no better fruit of his labour but reproach he would give it over but then he was acted by corruption as appears by his bitter cursing the day of his birth Thus the godly have sometimes their spirituall sick sits and so are spiritually weary of spirituall things More particularly 1. Ignorance of the inward worth and excellency of Gods worship and service So much know so much desire and delight and no more we cannot desire and delight in what we know not for so we might desire and delight in evil as soon and as much as in good which cannot be we do but little know the good of Gods worship and so can but little delight in it and where is but little delight will be wearines 2. Imperfect suitablenes of soul to Gods worship suitablenes and agreement is the cause of desire and delight Amos 3.3 Can two walk together except they be agreed Can they desire and delight in one anothers company unlesse they suit and agree in disposition Prov. 27.19 As in water face answereth to face so doth the heart of man to man Why doth a man love some particular man with a more inward free strong love because as in water face answereth to face a man may see the image of his face in water the represented face hath the likenes of the true face So a man sees the image and representation of his own affections and dispositions in some more then in others he sees himself in him and every man loves himself more then others and consequently such men in whom he sees himself more then in others Psal 40.8 The more suitablenes and agreement the more desire and delight we are but in a small measure suitable to the worship of God because the Image of God is but in part renewed in us and if there be but a measure of likenes in us to Gods worship there will be but a measure of delight and therefore wearines present likenes alone doth exclude wearines beside there will be a measure of unlikenes and that naturally causeth wearines 3. Immoderate desire and delight in other things even lawfull callings occasions and comforts so in my text Why are they weary of the new Moon and of the Sabbath the reason is rendred That we may sell corne and set forth wheat and why should they sell corn that they might gather riches When they were in the midst of Gods worship they had a greater desire and delight to their callings and worldly busines the strength of their souls went that way therefore they were weary of Gods worship 4. So much earthly converse with our callings and earthly occasions I say earthly converse after the manner of men who are altogether earthly for it is not the use of our callings that draw our hearts from heaven to earth but the manner of our use of them when we do not set awork grace in them do not use them as an appointed way to fit us for Gods worship and therefore watch our hearts that they be not drawn too much unto the things we have to do with We do not use them with fear lest there be a snare in them we do not use them with dependance upon God with strife against our naturall earthly mindednes therefore they steal away our hearts 5. Over-length of duties there is but a measure of desire and delight in us therefore duties should have but a set time in heaven when our affections shall be perfect there shall be no time to measure duties by but they shall be immeasurable The measure of the affections is regulated by judgement and discretion when therefore duties are drawn out beyond discretion they are burdensom or indiscretion beside the soul hath other occasions to attend beside Gods worship even on the Lords day works of mercy and necessity if therefore time be taken up so that convenient time is not reserved for these the soul growes weary because it cannot do all its work so in a family duties are then wearisom when they do not consist with our particular callings 6. Absence of the all-filling and quickning spirit It is the spirit that quickneth the flesh profiteth nothing the words that I speak unto you they are spirit and life Joh. 6.63 As the body is dead without the spirit so the Ordinances without Gods quickning spirit it must both quicken our desire and delight and stirre up the good of the Ordinances Psal 84.10 11. David exceedingly prizeth a door in Gods house why the Lord is a sunne when there is such a presence of God that is both light and heat to discover the good in the Ordinances and to warm our hearts therewith then are they delightfull 2 Cor. 3.18 When the spirit shews us the face of God peace comfort grace in the glasse of the promise and so reflects the sunne upon us that whilst we behold Gods favour we are at peace with him whilst we behold his grace we are made gracious whilst we behold his comfort we are made comfortable then are the Ordinances delightfull but if the spirit be absent there is no affection stirring Vse This Doctrine doth manifest First that God hath but weak service at the hands of the most weak praying weak hearing because but weary service But because all will say they come willingly and cheerfully to Gods worship I will shew by severall instances as so many
but turneth not off his bed The speeches of sloth are such as these Eccles 4.6 Better is a handfull with quietnesse then both the hands full with travell and vexation of spirit what ever he hath or wanteth he would have quiet and his opinion is that a little with ease is better then as much again with trouble of minde and body Prov. 22.13 The slothfull man saith there is a Lion without I shall he slain in the streets There is no safety in stirring out of doors therefore he will keep within all safety is in the house but nothing but danger abroad if he should stir about any businesse His discouragement from labour is difficulty and trouble Pro. 15.19 The way of the slothfull man is as a hedge of thornes when he should goe about any businesse it seems as troublesom to him as a mans way that must goe thorow an hedge of thornes no comfort nothing but vexation to be found Prov. 20.4 The sl●ggard will not plow by reason of the cold He cannot endure the could though for profit he is all for warmth and ease The slothfull mans work tends to ease rather then to labour is a cessation from pains-taking a life of rest rather then of labour as the holy Ghost declareth● Prov. 6.9 10. How long wilt thou sleep O sluggard When wilt thou rise out of thy sleep Yet a little sleep a little slumber a little folding of the hands to sleep A slothfull man dwells upon ●ase gives himself much to sleep and will not be drawn to labour Quest Whence comes this sloth Answ It is the fruit of the fall which hath brought about a double cause of sloth one within us and another without us The cause of sloth within us is 1. The losse of inward strength activity and ability unto action the native and naturall strength of soul and body is gone we are altogether weaknesse and insufficiency and how should a man be willing unto that he is too weak for Naturally we know not how to doe things in the best way we know not the benefit of labour our will is perverse refusing what we should chuse and our affections carelesse so that we cannot set about any action without inward trouble and disquiet in regard of our unfitnesse 2. The contrariety that is in our nature to the law of God if God would have us love labour we love sleep Prov. 20.13 and so abhorre labour The outward cause of sloth is the travell and toil which sin hath made unavoidably to accompany all actions as a punishment and part of the curse which God hath threatned and man deserved wherein he is separated from God who is in a condition all of comfort and works all his works with ease and comfort whereas man in innocency should have laboured without trouble Gen. 2.15 God set Adam to dresse the garden of Eden and to keep it but speaks of no toil Adam was made perfectly fit for all imployment and fitnesse for action causeth comfort therein The blessing of God also was perfectly upon him he dwelt in the midst of blessing and Prov. 10.21 The blessing of God maketh rich and he addeth no sorrow with it Where Gods blessing is there sorrow cannot be if it be in perfection and fullnesse as with Adam But now that sin hath entred into the world and the curse of God by sin a man cannot use any power of soul or part of body without vexation and toil the soul is vexed in its labour Eccles 1.13 I gave my heart to seek and search out by wisdom concerning all things that are done under the heaven this sore travell hath God given to the sonnes of men to be exercised therewith Let a man set a work his wisdom to finde out the secrets of actions he shall finde that travell sore and grievous to exercise and humble him therewith vers 17 18. I gave my heart to know wisdome and to know madnesse and folly I perceived that this also is vexation of spirit For in much wisdome is much grief and he that increaseth knowledge increaseth sorrow The labours of the soul the exercise of wisdome and knowledge in the means thereof is accompanied with grief and sorrow and vexation of minde The body is toiled and wearied in it's labour sweat forced out and strength weakned Gen. 3.19 In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread Gen. 5.29 This shall comfort us concerning our work and toil of our hands because of the ground which the Lord hath cursed The curse of God upon the ground did not bring man labour but toilsome painfull afflictive labour This outward trouble which accompanieth all labour meeting with an inward love of ease and aversnes unto labour must needs further and increase the same When a man findes himselfe unfit for action and therefore disquietnes will arise from that unfitnes it will make him backward thereunto but when he considereth disquietnes from within shall be met with outward trouble that cleaves fast even by the bond and tie of Gods truth unto all labour it will make him more backward Most of all are these causes of sloth found in spirituall actions inward and outward disquiet 1. Because our greatest weaknes and insufficiency lies in spirituall actions mans perfection in innocency was to be after Gods Image so that though he could perfectly dresse and keep the garden do the work of his particular calling rule and govern all the creatures put under his feet yet he could best do those works that come nearest to the works of God spirituall and divine actions love the chief good and delight himself in communion with God on the contrary now he hath lost the Image of God he can do any thing better then spirituall actions naturall and civil actions he can do but expresse no life of grace holines therein no more then a dead man can expresse naturall life And when God hath bestowed grace upon men yet that is but imperfect the contrary sloth doth remain spirituall actions are still above and most contrary to the naturall temper so that the soul quickned by grace is most unfit for them therefore most disquiet will thence arise to their souls which will make them more backward to them then to other actions any farther then faith assisted by the Spirit of God doth apply and make use of the all-sufficiency of Christ doth not experience tell us that the vexation which ariseth from sense of insufficience unto spirituall duties doth keep back and is a continuall clogge unto them in the way to such performances Beside our nature is enmity to the law of God Rom. 8.7 therefore most enmity to that which is most Gods law as the commandments of the first table 2. The curse lies heavier upon spirituall actions the curse of sorrow that attends actions for where the blessings of comfort did most appear there the cause of sorrow will be most manifested but the blessing of comfort was especially contained
the lesse labour about them the more worth the more labour Thus our Saviour doth expresse things Matth. 6.33 speaking of earthly good things he saith they shall be added to us cast in as an over-plus but speaking of heavenly things he bids us seek the kingdom of God take pains about that diligently imploy our selves we must take no pains about earthly things in comparison of the pains we take about spirituall things 3. It will help to our prizing of the spirits assistance and consequently to our thankfulnesse for it not to attain it without pains our knowledge of the worth of heavenly things is but little it is increased by experience of the difficulty in attaining them evil things come easily good things hardly and the more we know the worth of the spirits assistance the more we shall value and prize it Beside if the spirits assistance should not be so precious in it self as it is yet it is of worth to us if we attain it by diligence for it costeth us much and what we pay much for we set store by And according as we prize the spirits assistance we shall be thankfull for it the greater good it is the greater mercy from God to us and the more cause of thanksgiving If thus it be that fervency in Gods worship will not be had without diligence because of the weaknesse of grace the strong opposition against it and the necessity the supply of the spirit then sloth will hinder our servent worshipping of God for that is clean contrary to diligence and doth destroy that where it prevails 2. Sloth hinders our fervent worshipping of God as it gives advantage to Satan the enemy thereof Satan hath alway a ready minde to hinder us in Gods service but he hath not alwaies the same advantage therefore he walks to and fro seeking advantage Sloth gives him advantage not onely as it is a corruption contrary to fervent worshipping of God and suitable to the Devils dispositition whereby he worketh but also as it is a fit corruption whereby to screw into the soul the Devils temptations against the fervency of Gods worship as the difficulty uncomfortablenesse needlesnesse unprofitablenesse thereof all these sloth stands ready to entertain and is increased thereby If lesse will serve what needs more If it be so hard a thing to serve God with earnestnesse if there be no profit nor comfort in it who would take the pains though he had a love to pains Much lesse where there is no love as in sloth The diligent man hath much adoe to withstand these temptations they cause often waverings and staggerings in them and present abatements of diligence they make their hearts cold within them much more must they take hold of the slothfull who are prepared and ready for such temptations Beside sloth doth give advantage to Satan as it doth make no use of appointed strength against him Duties of preparation unto more solemn worship are means of strength against Satan labouring to hinder our fervency in Gods worship thereby we shake off sloth stirre up diligence procure the presence and power of the spirit But sloth will either neglect duties of preparation or carelesly perform them and so the soul is stripped of that strength against Satan Watchfulnesse in duty is a means of strength against Satan but watchfulnesse is too painfull for sloth resisting of stirrings of corruption and temptations of Satan in duties is a means of strength against Satan Jam. 4.7 Resist the devil and he will flee from you He is a most impatient discontented creature and cannot indure to be resisted he will not there abide but resistance of Satan is too painfull for sloth it will not be done without a detestation of his temptations and an increase of attention to Ordinances in hand 3. Sloth hinders our fervent worshipping of God as it doth grieve the holy spirit and make it withdraw his working and assistance it grieves the Spirit of God 1. As it is contrary to its nature which is all life and action compared to things most stirring and active as the fire the winde 2. To its command to be fervent in spirit to be zealous to be diligent not to be slothfull 3. To its title when it is called a spirit of promise Eph. 4.30 for sloth is not the condition and way of the promise but diligence 4. To its operation and working which is to baptize with fire Matth. 3.11 The spirit doth besprinkle the soul with inflamed affections toward God and his service Sloth being thus contrary to the spirit must needs grieve the spirit and the spirit grieved will reserve its assistance without which we cannot fervently worship God Vse To inform us 1. That God hath but little fervent worship For 1. All unregenerate men are overwhelmed and drowned in sloth there is not so much as a seed or principle of diligence till grace come into the foul all the service therefore of men destitute of grace is cold and heartlesse whatsoever it may seem such onely as sloth will afford and how full are our Congregations of unregenerate men and women 2. There are many lazy and slothfull Christians that do indeed perform duties in publike and private but they make no labour of them they take no pains to prepare and fit their hearts they are not diligent to get the assistance of the spirit they say not with David 2 Sam. 24.24 I will not offer to the Lord a sacrifice of that which cost me nothing they do not offer the Lord costly services but cheap such as cost them nothing all their preparation to the duties of the Sabbath is family duties and it were well if they did perform them so much the more carefully No wonder that they are thus idle in Gods service grace for want of ordinary exercise is sluggish they do not use their faith love and spirituall wisdom in their callings and how should they be diligent in Gods worship Their diligence is taken up other wayes in some about some lust they savour It was their case Iames 4.2 3. Ye fight and warre yet ye have not because ye aske not ye aske and receive not because ye ask amisse that you may consume it upon your lusts They were so busie about their contentions and wranglings amongst themselves that they could not pray at all or if they did pray it was for their lusts sake to get advantage unto them Thus a man may be conversant about good duties and his end not be Gods worship but his own corruptions that they may not be discovered that the ragings of conscience may be quieted that he may the more easily compasse his corrupt and sinfull ends The diligence of others is taken up abo●t matters of the world meat drink apparell riches This was their case Iohn 6. they seem to take much pains to enjoy Christ his ministry and miracles they compasse land and sea after they had enjoyed him at land they take ship and follow
to the house of God on the Lords day as they have done to go to the alehouse in the week dayes had they searched Gods book but as much as they have tossed the cards and tables yea it may be on the Lords day they had been Saints in heaven 3. To perswade the godly to shake off this sloth If we prize the manner of Gods worship and affect it we must do so if we care not how we pray or hear if we think any affections are meet for him we may continue our sloth We finde this commanded Josh 22.5 Take diligent heed to keep the commandment which Moses charged you to love the Lord your God to serve him with all your heart and with all your soul take heed and diligent heed Prov. 4.23 Keep thy heart with all diligence we finde it commended Act. 18.25 Apollo being fervent in spirit taught diligenly the things of the Lord. 2 Cor. 8.7 The Apostle makes it part of the commendation of the Corinthians that they did abound in all diligence Of our Saviour the head of the Church that he went about doing good Act. 10.38 he did not onely do good but was diligent therein To discourage the more from sloth and bring in love with diligence consider how the wisedome of the holy Ghost doth compare them in Solomons Proverbs all which comparisons we may improve with advantage against spirituall sloth and for spirituall diligence spirituall sloth being a greater sin and lying under an heavier curse and spirituall diligence being a greater grace and attended with an happier blessing 1. For wealth Prov. 10.4 He becometh poor that dealeth with a slack hand but the hand of the diligent maketh rich It holdeth especially true in spirituall riches the slothfull Christian is poor in grace the diligent Christian is rich hath store and abundance of precious grace Prov. 18.8 He that is slothfull in his work is brother to him that is a great waster if a man have a good stock of grace yet by slothfullnesse he will waste it not labouring to increase it he will diminish it Prov. 20.4 the slugard shall beg in harvest and have nothing they who have nothing of their own nor no interest in them that have something are poor indeed God will shut up the hearts of men towards slothfull Christians when they come to beg counsell and prayers when they come to complain of their spirituall wants and poverty 2. For honour see how they are compared Prov. 12.24 The hand of the diligent shall bear rule but the slothfull shall be under tribute A diligent Christian shall be a King in his own soul and amongst the people of God God will set him up give him authority and rule in their hearts they that can rule themselves are fit to rule others so do the diligent but the slothfull Christian shall be an underling in his own soul and amongst the people of God he shall be a slave and tributary to his lusts Prov. 22.29 3. For fruit of pains-taking see how they are compared Prov. 12.27 The slothfull man rosteth not that which he took in hunting but the substance of the diligent man is precious When a slothfull Christian hath taken some pains for want of taking a little more he loseth that pains as if an huntsman should take pains to kill an hare and then through lazines should suffer the dogs or some other to run away with it for instance a man is at pains to come to the house of God to pray in the word or prayer his heart is much affected he goes his way and thinks no more of it that man doth in great measure lose his labour but the substance of a diligent man is precious what he getteth by labour he doth not easily part with he makes precious account of it that help of heart which a diligent Christian findeth in the Ordinances of God he thinks oft of he improves by prayer by praise by treasuring up the same he can tell you what it cost him to get down such a corruption to get to such a frame of heart to obtain such a mercy how oft he praid how long he waited therefore he maketh a precious account thereof Lastly That which is not the least to discourage us from sloth it is full of pride and conceitednesse Prov. 26.16 put the wisdome of seven men together the sluggard conceits he goes beyond it and no wonder for he neither knows what he hath nor what he wants and ignorance is the mother and nurse of pride If a man knew the thoughts of sluggish Christians he should finde that they think all is well with them though a man may be able to convince them by reason that things cannot be well with them And the devil will not stick to tell them all is well to keep them from taking pains It is a misery to have an heart empty of good but to think an empty heart full is a double misery so is it with the slothfull Christian To help against sloth and unto diligence it will be usefull first To ponder these weighty considerations 1. Fervency in Gods worship and ease cannot possibly stand together whilst so great opposition remains both within us and without us 2. The difficulty and toil found in Gods service is a bitter afflictive fruit of sin Shall we not bear the burden we have brought upon our selves willingly though not cheerfully It is a signe sinne is pardoned when we have patience to bear the chastisement of sinne it is a great favour when there is a will to bear where there is no power to shake off 3. The deceitfull ease that proceeds from sloth is both Gods losse and thine and who would covet that ease whereby God and himself his best friends must lose 4. The more painfull the service of God is the more sweet for that sweetnes comes out of the strong it is the delightfull fruit of a powerfull conquest over corruption of more honour done to God of the condition of the promise performed with a greater measure of heavenly assistance 5. If sloth prevail in thy soul it will shut out diligence but at the same time it shuts in more disquiet then ease for sin is shut up in that ease the disquiet of lawfull labour is but affliction the ease of sloth is sin and sin is attended with more trouble then ease it will prove more easy to taste the sower of affliction then the sweet of sin 2. It will be usefull to inure our selves to the serious and thorough examination of our hearts and waies of our spirituall estate this will discover what need we have of diligence and what hurt sloth hath done us This cured Davids lazines Psalm 119.59 60. Though he were slow-paced in his obedience in the neglect of this yet when he was once past this difficult usefull duty he made haste he lost no time nor ground as formerly 3. It will be usefull not to cherish our pride by poring upon what we have atained but to strengthen humility by frequent and serious meditation of what we want and what is to be attained This helped Paul Phil. 3.13 14. what he was come to was behind him he could not so redily and constantly look upon that but what he was to come to was before him in his eye to alure and draw him forward Looke we also upon what is before us Hast attained some measure of fervency stay not gazing upon that but look right forth look onward dost see what thou wantst Look not so much upon thy work as thy patter● the affection not onely of the best of creatures upon earth but also and chiefly in heaven the spirits of just men made perfect yea the flaming Angels yea the Lord Jesus Christ who had zeal enough to carry him through the flames of hell to do his fathers will in whose brest alone that fire of heavenly love dwels that hath inflamed Saints on earth and Saints in heaven which we shall finde inflaming us more and more as we draw near to look upon him as our pattern with desire of imitation The close of all containing an help in all that hath gon before as prayer comes after the severall pieces of the spirituall armour to help our skill in all and the usefulnes of all Ephe. 6.18 may fitly be Davids prayer when the people were warm hearted in their offering to the building of the Temple for the publike solemn worship of God 1 Chron. 29.18 O Lord God of Abraham Isaac and of Israel our fathers keep this for ever in the imagination of the thoughts of the heart of thy people and prepare their heart unto thee Finis
neither did so much nor so well for God as sometimes and this God hath against them a fault it is in them and makes against them Thus where God findes this fervency of spirit wanting he speaks ill of it a figne his service cannot well be performed without it for he cannot be pleased with it without this fervency For further proof I will make use of the Lords own reasons laid down Commandment third to which command this duty doth belong and so I shall open that command so far as concerns my purpose What better more weighty more perswading argument then Gods own God is all truth and all understanding he knows us better then we know our selves and he is all wisdom that knows what arguments will best take with us upon severall occasions The first Commandment taketh care that we make choise of the true God and no other the second that we embrace his commanded worship and reject all others the third that we use his Name all that whereby God is made known to us reverently and respectively as becometh the same The Commandment is this Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain for the Lord will not hold him guiltlesse that taketh his Name in vain every word of the command is as well a reason as a command The thing forbidden is the taking of Gods name in vain Before I speak of the grounds of this prohibition I must show how this truth of performing Gods worship with earnestnesse of affection is implied in this Commandment and the contrary sin forbidden that will appear if we consider two things 1. Part of the meaning of Gods name is the worship of God Word Sacraments prayer 1 Tim. 6.1 That the name of God and his doctrine be not evil spoken of where the name of God and his doctrine are all one Mal. 1.6 the name of God is put for his worship 2. Part of the meaning of taking Gods name in vain is this want of fervent performance of Gods worship are not light and empty things vain things and is not dead cold service of God light service and empty service that wants that weight and substance it should have Are not unusefull and unprofitable things vain things and is not carelesse service of God unusef●ll and unprofitable service it doth neither honour God nor please God nor profit us Mal. 1.8 If ye offer the blinde for s●crifice is it not evil and if ye off●r th● lame and the sick is it no evi o●●●r it now to thy Governour will he be pleased with thee As if God had said If ye offer you care not what so it be a sacrifice it will serve the turn can it be well Would an earthly Governour accept you care not what much lesse will I. In like manner if men hear the Word receive the Sacrament pray they care not how so the duties be done can God be pleased herewith and if he be not pleased he is not honoured for were he honoured he would be pleased and if God be not honoured the doers cannot beprofited for our good is wrapt up in Gods glory and that service which doth neither honour God nor profit the performers is vain service Having thus made it clear that ardent service of God is implied and carelesse serving of God prohibited in this third Commandment Let us now consider the reasons why we must not rest in carelesse performance of worship but on the contrary must earnestly worship him they are 5. in number 1. Gods worship is his name 2. The name of the Lord. 3. The name of thy God 4. His Name is taken in vaine by carelesse worship 5. He will not hold him guiltlesse that taketh his Name in vaine 1. Gods worship is his Name that whereby God is made knowne to us that whereby he is distinguished from others and whereby he is made glorious to be carelesse of Gods worship is to obscure the knowledge of the Lord to confound him with Idols to hinder his glory to be carelesse whether God be known to us or others be distinguished from others be famous and glorious and to be earnest in the worship of God is to make the Lord better known to us and others to difference him from other Gods and to make him glorious And shall not our best affections be busied about Gods worship which is his Name God hath betrusted us with his Name that it lies in our power in ordinary course and for a time to make him lesse or more known lesse or more glorious and shall we betray this trust Mans name is precious and the name of one man committed to the keeping of another to bear false witnesse is a sinne much more is Gods name precious which is the chief Governour and much more committed to our trust and bearing false witnesse to that is much more a sinne which we shall do if we be carelesse of his worship Is not the knowledge of God the ground of our faith hope comfort If God be not good wise powerfull true what ground have we to beleeve or hope for any good in this or another world and if we know not the goodnesse wisdom and power of God what ground of comfort can we have To sleight Gods worship is to sleight the knowledge of God and so the ground of our faith and hope and comfort therein and to take care of Gods worship is to take care of the knowledge of God and so the ground of our faith hope and comfort Is not care of Gods glory the way unto and evidence of our glory To be earnest in Gods worship is to take care of Gods glory therefore the way unto and evidence of our glory 2. Gods worship is the name of the Lord the name of Jehovah therefore carefully and fervently to be performed His name it is who is the fountain of being therefore the first being and so of due the first and best service belongs to him because none is before him therefore none is to be served before him our Saviour when he duely ranketh and ordereth the Commandments saith Thou shalt love the Lord with all thy heart this is the first and great Commandment and the second Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thy self Why is the love of God and so the service of God the first and great Commandment before and greater then the love of our selves but because he is the first and greatest before our selves and greater then our selves It had been sin in Moses and Paul to wish themselves out of Heaven for his glory and in hell had not this been true that God is before us and so above us of due to be honoured by us though by our utter dishonour None should go to hell were not this true that there is an honour due to God from the creature above the salvation of the creature and could men be willing to go to hell that God might have glory hell should be no hell unto them