Selected quad for the lemma: truth_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
truth_n aaron_n believe_v good_a 13 3 3.0248 3 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A35535 An exposition with practicall observations continued upon the thirty second, the thirty third, and the thirty fourth chapters of the booke of Job being the substance of forty-nine lectures / delivered at Magnus neare the Bridge, London, by Joseph Caryl ... Caryl, Joseph, 1602-1673. 1661 (1661) Wing C774; ESTC R36275 783,217 917

There are 35 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

thy mouth for ever speak not thus to God If thou art as thou canst not deny a thing formed by God then say not why hast thou made me thus And as now thou strivest with God about that which thou canst not understand so at last though now thou dost not thou shalt understand that thou oughtest not to have striven with him about it And indeed if men have a mind to strive with God they may find as many occasions for it in the doctrine of his conditionall decrees of foreseene faith repentance and persevering obedience as in his absolute We shall never want matter of quarrelling with God till we have learned simply that is graciously to submit Secondly This truth should much more quiet our spirits and stop our strivings in reference to our temporall estate And that First As wrapt up in common with others Did we consider the soveraigne power of God in ordering the affairs of Nations and Churches we would glorifie him in a gracious silence however we see things goe with them The Scripture urgeth us often to this fixednesse of mind in the midst of all publick revolutions and changes upon this only account Heare David Psal 46.9 10. Come behold the works of the Lord What works ruining works what desolation he hath made in the earth God made strange work in the World at that time Those countryes which before were as the Garden of God became like a desolate Wildernesse who was able to beare this with patience Yet the Spirit of God saith in the next words it must be patiently borne when God lets men strive and warre with one another to a common confusion yet no man may strive with God about it and the reason given why no man may is only this which is indeed all the reason in the world He is God So it follows in the Psalme Be still and know that I am God As if the Lord had said not a word do not strive nor reply whatever you see hold your peace know that I being God I give no account of any of my matters Thus the Prophet cautions the whole world Zech. 2.13 Be silent O all flesh before the Lord doe not dispute the doings of God doe not murmure at them for he is raised up out of his holy habitation That is God is going to work as a man raised out of his bed is therefore doe not you trouble your selves nor rise up against him in your words or thoughts what work soever he makes Like counsell is given Psal 75.5 Lift not up your horne on high speak not with a stiffe neck for promotion cometh neither from the East nor from the West nor from the South But God is the Judge he putteth down one and setteth up another All great changes proceed from his judgment take heed of judging the sentence of the great Judge Remember That he whose name alone is Jehovah is the most high over all the earth Psal 83.18 Againe This is as true if we respect the private or personall estate of any man If God makes a man poor in estate or despised in the World if he make him sick or weak in body he must not say unquietly why doth God thus If he taketh away our Relations if he empty our families we must not strive with him When old Ely had received one of the saddest messages that ever was sent man It is the Lord said he let him doe what seemeth him good 1 Sam. 3.18 So David Psal 39.9 I was dumb I opened not my mouth because thou didst it Psal 62.1 Truly my soul waiteth patiently upon God The word is my soul is silent before God And Psal 42.5 How doth David chide his soul for making a noyse Why art thou disquieted O my soul hope thou in God But you will say May we not at all strive what ever God doth in the World or with us must we sit downe under it or rest satisfied in it and say nothing I answer First we may and ought to be very sensible of all the dealings of God But we must not be unquiet under any of them It is one thing to feele the smart and another thing to dispute the rod. Some are under a kind of Stoicall stupidity they doe not strive with God because they doe not mind what God doth they are not sensible Others are stout sturdy and proud spirited they care not for the crosse they slight and despise rebukes Thus or upon these grounds not to strive with God is as bad if not worse then that striving with him which this poynt disswades and disapproves We may yea we ought to take notice of every stroak we receive from God Secondly As we should be sensible of the hand of God at any time upon us so we may pray for the removing of his hand 'T is not a sinfull but a gracious act to strive with God by prayer for deliverance out of trouble Thirdly A man under the Rod may use means to get it off and free himselfe from it even while he is quiet under it So then the quietnesse of mind in our afflicted condition here intended and pressed is opposed only first to fretting and repining Secondly to vexing and tumultuating Thirdly to distracting cares Fourthly to desponding fears Fifthly to killing sorrows Sixthly to uncomposednesse of spirit for our callings Seventhly to hard thoughts of God Eighthly to the using of any unlawfull meanes to help or rescue our selves out of the hand of evill And that we may be preserved from all these strivings against God and unquietnesse of spirit under any of his saddest and darkest dispensations which will certainly run us upon some of if not all those eight most dangerous rocks last mentioned Let me lay down a few considerations why we should not strive with God in such a manner And prescribe some preservatives to keep us at the greatest distance from it First Consider to strive with God dishonours God and darkens his glory for hereby we call his wisdome and goodnesse yea his truth and faithfulnesse to us in question What can be done more dishonourable to God then this God resented it as a great dishonour that Moses and Aaron did not sanctifie him that is give glory to his name before the children of Israel Num 20.12 and therefore told them Ye shall not bring the children of Israel into the land which I have given them As if he had sayd Ye have not honoured me as ye ought in this thing and therefore I will not honour you in that But what is it that Moses and Aaron did not sanctifie God in it was saith the text in not believing And what is that at best but a striving with God as to the truth of his word and his faithfulnesse in fulfilling it Secondly Such striving with God hinders the exercise of grace and stops the worke of the new creature He that striveth with God by way of murmuring can never strive with God by praying and believing
that thought the Spirit in bonds or tyed to them Come say they Jer 18.18 let us devise devices against Jeremiah For the Law shall not perish from the Priest nor Counsell from the wise nor the word from the Prophet The Priests are of this opinion and Jeremiah is out of the way he is a false Prophet and therefore certainly we may proceed in our devices against him for we have the opinion of the Priests and Prophets with us Thus they spake as if the Spirit of God had been bound up to that order We ought to seeke wisdome at the Priests mouth yet they who rest upon their vvisdome may soone be deceived knowledge may perish from the Priests mouth and counsel from the ancient The great Cheate which the Pope hath put upon the world is That the Spirit of God is tyed to the pumells of his Chaire or that there he cannot erre But as particular men so whole Counsells of learned and aged men have erred True vvisdome is not the birth of time nor the peculiar of a party but the free gift of the Spirit of God who is most free both in what he giveth and to whom he giveth Therefore Secondly Let us not pin our faith or our Consciences upon men how great or how Ancient soever they are Let us give respect to the Ancient and the honourable not to doe it is not only uncivill but sinfull yet let us not give up our Consciences to them For great men are not alwayes wise neither doe the aged understand Judgement We must not reverence any mans person to the prejudice of the truth The opinions of great or ancient men are not to be received as Oracles without debate we have liberty to Consider of them and to Compare them with the rule We must prove all things and hold fast that only which is good Quae in philosophia dicuntur ea oportet existimatione ejus qui dicit detracta seorsum per se examinari Etenim canities dicentis gestus supercilist c. faciunt ad percallendum imperitum Auditorem Plutaret de Auditione A heathen gave that direction to those who heare philosophicall discourses You must take off all those considerations which concerne the person speaking and only mind what is spoken his Antiquity that he is an old man and his authority that he is a great man must not sway you His outward gesture tone and gravity his severe or demure lookes which much affect almost astonish unlearned auditors and make them ready to swallow any thing that is uttered must all be layd aside when the matter delivered and asserted comes to be examin'd and layd in the ballance Believe what is said because you judge it true doe not believe it true because such or such a man hath said it because an old man or a great man or a good man hath said it How strictly then and religiously is this to be observed in hearing the word of God and the doctrines of faith in that case be sure to lay aside all that concernes the speaker and weigh what he speakes alone and single in the Ballance of the Sanctuary Thirdly Then we ought not to despise what young men say because of their youth Tempora quippe virtutem non prima negant non ultima donant If old men be not alwayes wise then wisdome may be with the young sometimes an opinion is undervalued because it is the opinion of a young man and truths are not received because he that delivers them hath not seene many dayes As it is a sin to adore old age or to give up our faith and Conscience to it so it is a sin to slight youth in doing so we may slight the truth Paul saith to Timothy Let no man despise thy youth Which as it is a Caution to Timothy as hath been shewed to carry himselfe wisely and warily lest he should occasion others to slight or despise him so it is a Caution to the people that they should not despise him because of his youth That which is the true glory of gray hayess doth sometimes Crowne the youthfull head wisdome I meane and ripenesse of understanding Corpore Juvencula animo cana fuit Ambr de Agnete Ser 90. It was said of a godly woman Shee had a youthfull body but an aged mind Samuel was young in yeares but in grace elder then old Ely Jeremiah was young but how wise did the Inspiration of God make him Daniel was young yet wiser then all the Magicians and Astrologers Timothy and Titus were young yet honourable for p udence and piety and therefore seeing great men are not alwayes wise neither doe the aged understand Judgement as we should not accept what old men say because of their age so let us not slight what young men say because of their youth When God furnisheth young men with abilities and calleth them to his worke even old men must be willing at least not disdaine to heare them Christ must be heard in or by whom soeever he will speake God indeed doth usually serve himselfe by the aged yet he hath abundantly testified that truth is not bound up to old age Modesty should bridle young men from being over-forward to shew themselves but it must not shut or seale up their lips Old men must have the preheminence Elihu shewes us that order v. 7. I saith he said dayes shall speake and multitude of yeares shall teach wisdome We must first attend and give eare to our elders And when we are to chuse Officers or Governours to chuse ignorant Greene-heads before knowing Gray hayres were a perverting of all order Therefore men of yeares having grace and wisdome proportionable are to be preferred before the younger In that case it were a shame to advance young men with a neglect of the aged But when God gives more grace and understanding to young men then to ancients our approbation should follow his preparation and whom he qualifies best we should soonest chuse The order of Nature is good yet not alwayes fittest to be observed Right reason and the rule of the word of God must sway and cast our vote no the age and yeares of men When Samuel was sent to anoynt a King in the place of Saul among the sons of Jesse he looking on Eliab said Surely the Lords anoynted is before him 1 Sam 16.5 but the Lord said unto him v. 6 Looke not on his countenance or on the height of his stature because I have refused him for the Lord seeth not as man seeth for man looketh on the outward appearance but the Lord looketh on the heart Now as we are not to be taken with the beauty and stature of men so not with their gray haires and outward gravity Old men are not alwayes wise wisdome and a heart for God a good heart or a heart to doe good may dwell with a greene Head even with a greener then seven the eighth o● greenest of all so was Davids
truth shall ride and prosper Truth may be borne downe by power and out-fac'd by impudence but it cannot be overcome Never feare to undertake a good Cause and ever feare to undertake a bad one for it will be slur'd at last Truth may be opposed but truth-defenders shall never be ashamed nor want a tongue to speake for it Christ Math 10.17 warnes his Disciples what entertainment they were like to find in the world They shall deliver you up to Rulers ye shall be brought before Governours and Kings for my sake But he withall encourageth them Take no thought what ye shall speak or what ye shall answer For some might say What if we should be called in question for the truths of the Gospel we are willing to burne for them as that Martyr said b●t we feare we cannot dispute for them Well saith Christ take no thought what you shall speak for it shall be given you in the same houre God himselfe by his Spirit will prompt you he will whisper such things into your eares as all your opposers shall not be able to gainsay Indeed we see some men of corrupt minds and reprobate concerning the truth as the Apostle gives their Character who have courage enough to set forth lyes and slander the truth who straine their wits to the utmost and as the Prophet speakes Jer 9.3 bend their tongues like their bow for lyes But let them remember what the Apostle sayd of such as they 2 Tim 3.8 Now as Jannes and Jambres withstood Moses so doe these also resist the truth but v. 9. they shall proceed no further for their folly shall be made manifest to all men That is shortly all shall see that these men have but playd the fooles we may say of all those who hold wild taunting opinions they shall proceed no further though they act highly against the truth now yet stay but a while and they will have nothing to answer or returne they will have emptied their quiver and quite spent their powder you shall heare no more of them From that 16th verse where Elihu addeth I waited for they spake not but stood still and answered no more Observe First It is our wisdome and our duty to stay our time before we put our selves out upon business It is good to wait God himselfe is not hasty upon us he waits to be gracious and we must wait our season to be serviceable Elihu did not presently engage The providences of God and the Exigency of things must put us on we must not put our selves on Christ tells us Math 9.38 The harvest is great and the labourers few pray therefore the Lord of the harvest that he would thrust forth labourers into his harvest he doth not say pray that labourers would thrust forth themselves into the harvest or run into it before they are sent but pray the Lord of the harvest that he would thrust forth labourers that is that he would powerfully encline their hearts to the worke whom he hath fitted and prepared for it And as untill we are at least both competently prepared and fairely enclined to that or any other good worke 't is best for us to waite so when once we are prepared and enclined 't is best for us without delay to set upon the worke Elihu did so as appeares in the next verse Vers 17. I said also I will answer my part I will shew my opinion Now Elihu addresseth to his worke his duty and in this with the verses following to the end of the Chapter we have first his resolvednesse to speak I said I will answer for my part c. Secondly his ability readiness and furniture to speake v. 18. For I am full of matter c. Thirdly we have the motives that prest him to speak or that he was exceedingly prest to it in the latter end of the 18th verse as also v. 19 20. My spirit within me Constraineth me Behold my belly is as wine which hath no vent c. I will speake that I may be refreshed Fourthly in the two last verses he tells us what caution yea what conscience he meant to use in speaking v. 20. Let me not I pray you accept any mans person neither let me give flattering titles unto man c. I said I will answer for my part c. Now you have done I will begin those words I said are not in the Hebrew text explicitely yet are well understood I will answer for my part that is as some conceive the force of the phrase I will answer with my strength and might I will put my shoulders to it but better Grammarians conclude Illud quod aliqui partem interpretantur pro mea virili parte aut pro viribus latinè potius dictum est quam ad germanant vocis significationem Pined that the word imports A mans share or portion in any worke to be done rather then the strength which the workman useth or puts forth in doing it And so the sence is plaine as if Elihu had said they have done their part they have gone to the utmost of their line now I see it falls to my turne to speak and I will do what falls to my turne I will answer also for my part I also will shew my opinion We had these words in the negative at the 6th verse There Elihu sayd I was afraid and durst not shew you my opinion But here as also before v. 10. Elihu had taken courage and was resolved to shew his opinion I shall not stay upon any opening of this clause only I shall note two or three things briefely from it as connected with the former verse There we had Elihu waiting here we have him purposing to speake Hence note They who consider and waite before they speake speake most prevailingly most weightily It was long ere Elihu ventured to speake but when he did he did it to purpose and with full effect That which comes from our owne heart is most like to take upon the hearts of others they speake as much from their hearts as with their tongues whom we see long waiting before we heare them speaking And therefore it is not good no not for good speakers to be speaking before they have been waiting many through hast bring forth untimely births and unripe fruit Elihu could say I have waited before he sayd I will answer for my part Secondly Note We ought to observe order in speaking and act our proper part I will answer for my part saith Elihu or my turne is come to answer The Apostle Paul gives this rule at large 1 Cor 14.28 29 30. He would have no Interruption no confusion in Church-meetings or Church-speakings Thirdly When he saith I will answer also for my part I also will shew mine opinion Note He that hath received a gift or talent should make use of it and not hide it It is good to be doing our part and shewing our opinion where we may be usefull Some
love to act other mens parts rather then their owne and to intrude into Provinces which are not theirs But whatsoever our hand findes to doe as Solomon speakes Eccl 9.10 that is whatsoever is as Elihu here calls it our part that we should doe with all our might More was given about using our talent and shewing our opinion at the 10th verse of this Chapter whether I referre the reader Fourthly Elihu was here but an auditor not a disputant not a party he came in only upon the by yet having received a word he utters it Hence note Every man should thinke himselfe Concern'd to speake for the truth when 't is wronged and doe his best to right it Or we should take all occasions and seasons of doing good by our words as well as by our workes As it is not good to out-●un providence so to neglect or foreslow it is not good Lastly Observe What others fayle in we should labour to supply in the cause of God and for his truth It is a proverbiall speech among the Hebrewes Vbi non est vir tu vir esto Where there is not a man there be thou a man That is if we see any unable to carry on and goe thorow-stitch with the worke before them we should lend a hand to helpe and supply them thus saith Elihu I will answer for my part I also will shew mine opinion And it seemes by that which follows Elihu did so not only to answer his duty but to empty and ease his spirit For In the 18th 19th and 20th verses he gives us that further account of his interposition about this controversie Vers 18. For I am full of matter Yea I am under a mighty Constraint there is a kinde of force upon me The Spirit within me Constraineth me I am full of matter The Original is I am full of words yet of more then words as appeares in the following part of this Chapter therefore we translate I am full of matter that is I am full of such words as are materiall words of truth words of sobernesse I am full of such words as will carry with them a Conviction home to thy Conscience O Job silence all thy complaints Cum ait se plenum amicorum impiam notare videtur Pined Or as if Elihu had said to Job's friends Though ye have spent your store upon Job yet I have store and plenty by me to spend upon him Thus he reflects upon them as scanty and short in their undertaking your Lamps have spent their oyle you have emptied your vessels so have not I I am full of matter The Spirit within me Constraineth me 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Hiphil anxit angustovit pressit The text is My spirit in my belly Constraineth me Master Broughton renders My bellye 's spirit doth press me The Seventy render The spirit of my belly destroyeth me A Greek translater saith My spirit within me sets me on fire or I am all in a flame 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 comburit Sym. The word which we render Constraine signifies to press very sore Judges 14.17 And it came to passe the seventh day that he told her because she lay sore upon him or constrained him It may be questioned whose spirit or what spi●it it was that Constrained Elihu Some Expound it of the Spirit of God he dictates both words and matter to me Master Calvin seemes to Comply with this Exposition God hath printed such a marke in the doctrine of Elihu that the heavenly Spirit is apparent in his mouth God saith Elihu hath put his Seale to what I have to say therefore doe not receive it as the word of a mortall man the Spirit of God Constraines me Paul useth a word in the Greeke of like significancy 2 Cor. 5.14 The love of Christ Constraineth me it presseth and overbeareth me I am not able to get out of the power of it Againe Others understand it of his owne spirit yet acted by the Spirit of God Prov 29.11 A foole uttereth all his spirit we translate all his minde the spirit pressing Elihu was his mind carried strongly or resolvedly bent upon this business The strong inclination or disposition of a mans mind to any thing good or bad is in Scripture language called his Spirit The Spirit within me The Hebrew is The spirit of my belly Which forme of speech notes only that which is most internall Spiritus ventris est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 alacritas urgens existimulans ad loquendum Coc or lyeth closest within us Solomon saith of the words of wisdome Prov 22.18 It is a pleasant thing if thou keep them within thee The Original is in thy belly John 7.38 Out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water That is out of his inward man there shall be a spirit in his spirit for this Christ spake of the Spirit which should be given and the same word is used of the wicked man Job 15.35 His belly that is his mind or understanding prepareth deceit And Solomon Cant 7.2 speaking of the Church saith Her belly is like an heap of wheat set about with lillies That is she is big with holy thoughts and conceptions as a woman great with child ready to be delivered A gracious heart is continually meditating and conceiving holy things which it brings forth and is as it were delivered of upon any good occasion The spirit within me Constraineth me What Elihu had thus spoken in plaine termes by way of assertion in this verse he illustrates by way of similitude or allusion in the next Vers 19. Behold my belly is as wine which hath no vent 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vinum novum vel mustum cui non est ademptum obthuraculum ut exhalet Iun it is ready to burst like new bottles Elihu prosecutes the same thing in another way and to shew how troublesome it was to refraine speaking any longer his thoughts being not only too many but too working to be enclosed in so narrow a roome as his owne breast he compares them to wine or to new wine which will either find or make its way out The whole similitude is exceeding elegant First he compares his thoughts or the matter he had in his mind to wine Secondly he compares his soule or spirit to bottles his inward man was the vessell that held this wine Thirdly he compares his long silence to the stople or Corke of the bottle Fourthly he compares that trouble and griefe of mind which this forbearance to speake brought upon him to the working which is in a bottle so stopt or having no vent Fifthly he compares his intended speaking to the opening of the bottle which gives it vent Behold my belly is as wine that is the thoughts of my belly are as wine The Chaldee Paraphrase saith as new wine which is full of spirits and being stopt is ready to breake the bottle which shews the mighty force which
Elihu's thoughts had upon him they would out there was no stopping of them Christ saith Math 9.17 No man putteth new wine into old bottles but men put new wine into new bottles why because they are stronger and so more fit to preserve the wine My belly is as wine It is ready to burst like new bottles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pro utre non alibi reperitur saepe pro pythone quod qui hoc ariolādi genere uterentur velut ex utribus vocem emitterent Vn●e a Grecis 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dicuntur Merc The word which we render bottles is never used in Scripture elsewhere in this sence but it is often used to signifie Wizards or such as have familiar Spirits Isa 8.19 Isa 29.4 because they who used those hellish arts by compact with the Devill did speak out of their belly so as it were out of a bottle Now saith Elihu My belly is as new wine that hath no vent and it is ready to burst like new bottles even new bottles will break unlesse the new wine have some vent And because though new bottles be stronger then old to keepe in wine yet the wine may be so strong as to breake them therefore Elihu here-by shewes that his desire or necessity of speaking was so urgent upon him that though he should strengthen himselfe yea strive with himselfe as much as he could to refraine from speaking yet speake he must I am full of matter c. Observe First A man should not speak especially in weighty matters till himselfe be well stored with matter Secondly Observe When some vessells are drawne quite dry and instruments spent and worne to the stumps when they can neither doe nor say any more then God fills up and furnisheth others for his purpose There was not a drop more to be squeez'd out of Jobs friends but Elihu was a full bottle Mal 2.15 there is a residue of the Spirit God hath more Spirit or spirituall abilities to dispose of and bestow then he hath yet disposed of to or bestowed upon any one or all the sons of men Thirdly Note God can furnish Instruments with proper gifts for the worke which he Calls them to Here was a man Cut out on purpose for this worke he was Clothed with a spirit of prudence and courage as well as with a spirit of discerning We have a wonderfull Example of this in Luther who came forth against all the powers of the papacy What a spirit had he his was a spirit of might his spirit Constrained him his belly was like a bottle full of new wine there was no stopping of it Others would have been daunted and cowed downe with the tenth of that opposition which he met with but he was bold as a Lyon who turneth not aside Againe Why did Elihu come forth why did his spirit constraine him what made his belly like wine Some charge him with pride and arrogancy of spirit as if he did it out of vaine ostentation to shew his parts and gifts to set himselfe above those other Worthyes who had dealt and discoursed with Job before But we have reason enough considering what he spake and what the issue of his speaking was to determine that he was moved with a zeale for God and to doe good to Job not with a spirit of pride to shew his learning wit or wisdome among men and therefore we finde that when the whole matter was brought to an issue and God himselfe came to deale with Job and his three friends God commends Job and reproves his three friends but there is no reproofe upon Elihu Now for as much as God himselfe doth not charge him what hath man to doe to charge him Not only charity but reason and judgement command us to thinke his designe honest and his aymes sincere while he professeth under so vehement an impulse or impression upon his spirit to engage and speake in this matter Hence note Thirdly To see truth ill handled should fill our spirits with much zeal for God That was it which drew Elihu to this engagement he saw those men though good men had put a disguise upon the things and dealings of God and if men disguise the truth and maintaine error if they deface the doctrines of faith and pure worship with their owne phansies and false glosses it should kindle a holy fire and fervour of spirit in us to assert and vindicate the truth Our spirit within us in all such cases should Constraine us Fifthly In that Elihu was so Constrained and pressed in spirit as wine which hath no vent or as a woman with Child ready to travell Note It is a paine not to speake when we have much to utter and much minde to utter it When El●hu was full he had a Constraint upon him to vent his opinion David saith Psal 39.1 2 3. I held my peace even from good words he did not only forbeare idle and evill discourse but refrain'd from good but it was a trouble to him not to speak especially not to speak good words therefore he adds My heart waxed hot within me Jeremy found it no easie worke to keepe in words yea he describes himselfe as much pained by not delivering his minde as a woman is when not delivered in child-birth Jer 20.9 Then said I I will not make mention of him nor speak any more in his name but his word was in my heart as a burning fire shut up in my bones and I was weary with forbearing and I could not stay There was wine new wine in his belly yea there was a fire within him as we may be weary with speaking so with not speaking or forbearing to speake Jer 4.19 My bowels my bowels I am pained at the very heart my heart maketh a noise in me I cannot hold my peace Read him in the like trouble upon the same occasion Jer 6.11 Eliphaz Chap 4.2 was thus pressed Who can withhold himselfe from speaking 'T is a great paine to be mind-bound or not to deliver our mind when our mindes are full and we full of desire to deliver it Sixthly When he saith I am Constrain'd I am like a bottle ready to burst It teacheth us The Spirit of God doth so over-power some men that they cannot containe The Pharisees and high Priests thought to stop up the Apostles those bottles full of the new wine of the mysteries of Christ and therefore gave them Counsell yea a command to speake no more in his name At the 10th verse they said of some in a common sence These men are full of new wine that is they are drunken but the truth was they were full of the Spirit full of Gospel-truths and like bottles full of new wine they could not hold And when the Pharisees and high Priests would have stopt up those bottles and charged them that they should speak no more in the name of Jesus they answered Whether it be meet to obey God or man judge ye for
doing my Maker would soon take me away IN these two verses Elihu concludes in which he had continued long the Preface to his following discourse and procedure with Job Here also he acquaints us in what manner he meant to proceed with him about which we may consider two things First His resolvednesse or the setlednesse of his purpose what course to take Secondly the reasons which moved him to it The former he expresseth negatively in the 21th verse and that in two points First He would not accept any mans person Secondly He would not give flattering titles unto man These two negatives as the negative precepts in the Law of God are to be understood with their affirmatives I will not accept any mans person is I will have and give an equall or neither a more nor lesse to the best of my understanding then a due regard to every mans person And I will not give flattering titles that is I purpose to speak plainly I will not complement men but doe my best to accomplish the matter And as he assures us how he will proceed in this 11th verse so Secondly He gives us the reasons of this his intended impartiall plaine and down-right proceeding in the 22d. These reasons are two-fold First He would not doe otherwise because he could not with any content to himselfe It was against the very graine of his spirit to doe otherwise his disposition lay a quite contrary way he was a man of another genius or temper a man of another mould and make then to doe such low and unworthy things as accepting the persons of or giving flattering titles unto men He is expresse in this v. 22. I know not to give flattering titles Secondly He would not because he durst not give flattering titles nor accept the persons of men The danger and dammage he should incurre by doing so kept him from doing so as wel as his owne indisposition to it He should lay himselfe open and obnoxious to the wrath of God by such seeking the favour of men as appeares in the close of the verse In so doing my Maker would soon take me away Thus you have the parts and purpose of these words I shall now give a more distinct explication and account of them Vers 21. Let me not I pray you accept any mans person or let me not now So that particle is rendred Job 5.1 Call now 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 adverbium seu particula obsecrantis seu ad horiandi ut fades amabo latinis if there be any that will answer thee yet 't is an Adverb of beseeching or intreating and therefore we render wel Let me not I pray you which rendring seemes to have in it these two things As if Elihu had sayd First Expect not that I should nor believe that I will doe any such thing as the accepting of persons or the giving of flattering titles Secondly Be not offended if I doe not be not angry with me if I deale plainly with you pray give me leave to use my owne freedome and liberty when I am speaking for I am resolved to doe it and not to accept the persons of men nor to give them flattering titles The words may be rendred also in a direct negation Verily I will not accept any mans person Non accipiam ut sit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pro 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quae enallage insolens non est Drus But I shall keep to our reading Let me not I pray you accept any mans person The Hebrew is Let me not lift up any mans person or which the Apostle forbids Let me not have any mans person in admiration I will not over-reverence any man nor give him a respect beyond himselfe The word which we render person 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is in Hebrew face Let me not lift up the face of a man or wonder at any mans face as the Septuagint often render this phrase And it is usuall to put the face or the countenance for the person because the face declares the person and shews who the mans is and it is elegantly expressed by the face because accepting of persons importeth a respect to others for their outside or in consideration of some externall glory Let me not accept the face of any man or person let him be who he will The originall word ish most properly signifieth an eminent or honourable man a learned or wise man As if Elihu had sayd I will not accept or lift up the face of a man though he be ish a man never so much lifted up and exalted above his brethren To accept the person of a man is not a fault in it selfe for as our persons are accepted of God so ought our persons to be accepted with one another yea it is a duty to accept the person of a man that is to give him favour honour and due respect Not only civility and humanity but religion it selfe calls us to give outward reverence to them who excell and are superior either to others of our selves God himselfe is sayd to accept the persons of his people first and th●● their sacrifices or services And we ought to accept the persons of men according to their differences in place and power especially according to those gifts and Graces which shine in them Therefore when Elihu saith Let me not I pray you accept any mans person his meaning is let me not doe it in prejudice to the cause or truth that is before us Then we are properly and strictly sayd to accept persons when in any matter businesse or poynt of controversie our eyes are so dazel'd or blinded by external appearances that we have respect rather to the person of the man then to the matter or the truth of the cause in hand So then this sin of accepting persons is alwayes committed when we are more swayed by or when there is more attributed to persons then to things that is when the mans worth is more looked to then the wo●th or merit of his cause or further when something in a person which hath no respect to the goodnes or badnes of his cause moves us to give him more or lesse then is meete this is sinfully to accept or respect a person Thus Elihu acquits himselfe from all those bonds and blinds which his respect to those worthy persons before him might lay upon him They were ancient and grave men they were wise and good men he had a great respect for them he owed much reverence to them considering their age and gravity their degree and dignity yet he owed a greater respect to God and to the truth then to their persons and was thereupon resolved though he had many and great temptations to doe it not to accept the persons of men Hence note To accept persons in prejudice to the cause or truth before us is a high offence both to God and good men 'T is so in a double notion First in the act of it
only forbid us to exalt our selves above our betters but it also in many cases bids us set our selves below those whose betters we are One of the Ancients hath made three degrees of this kind of humility The first is when we make our selves inferior to our equals The second when we make our selves but equal to our inferiors The third when we make our selves inferior even to our inferiors and lesse then those who are lesser then we Of this third sort of humility the Apostle speakes againe in that serious admonition to the Church Phil 2.3 Let nothing be done through strife or vaine glory but in lowlinesse of minde Let each esteeme other better then himselfe As it is good to judge according to truth the worst of our selves and the best of others so it is good to have a better opinion of others then of our selves So then the poynt lyeth not against giving honour to any man or to men of all sorts but only against the giving of undue honour to any Of that the Apostle speakes Gal 1.10 If I yet please men I should not be the servant of Christ that is if I should please men by flattery smoothing them up in their sins or errors I could not be the servant of Christ They that were the strick observers of Christ could not but observe this in him that though he came to save man yet he was farre enough from pleasing that is humoring any man Luke 20.21 And they asked him saying Master we know that thou sayest and teachest rightly neither acceptest thou the person of any but teachest the way of God truly Yet caution is to be used here For some goe so farre to the other hand that while they thinke they ought not to flatter or plea●e they care not how they slight or disrespect the persons of men and in stead of so bearing as they ought to give undue titles they will not as was toucht before give so much as those that are due that 's a sin in defect as the other is in excesse And they sin much more who while they refuse to give flattering titles a●e free to give reviling titles There are these two g●eat tongue-evills among men Some give flattering titles others give reviling titles detracting calumniating and biting titles it is as dangerous not to forbeare the one as to be free and forward in giving the other and therefore we should take heed of both these extreames that our speech may have an equall respect to truth both while we praise and while we reprove Vers 22. For I know not how to give flattering titles Nescio cognominare i. e. Blendiri Bez It seemes to have little vertue in it or matter of commendation not to give flattering titles when we are not able or know not how to give them To heare one that is as we speak a meere Countryman or a clowne say I will not give flattering titles speakes not his praise at all because 't is supposed he at most can but speake sence or true English but to heare a learned man or some Great Courtier say I will not give flattering titles this is something this shewes that his honesty masters his ability and that his conscience is too strong for his parts How is it then that Elihu saith I know not to give flattering titles Had not Elihu wit and skill words and language at command to give them Was he so coursely bred that he could not reach them I answer Those words I know not may have a three-fold interpretation First I know not is I have not made that piece of knowledge my study I have not set my selfe to learne the art of flattery nor to gaine the skill of carnal Courtship Thus I know not to doe it is I have not set my selfe to doe it I have not made it my businesse or my ayme to doe it A good man hath or at least desireth no skill in that which is evill or not his duty how much soever any man knows to flatter yet we may say he knows not to flatter who abhorreth flattery And can say as the Apostle speaks Ephes 4.20 He hath not so learned Christ that is he hath heard no such lessons nor received any such instruction in the schoole of Christ Thus Elihu saith I know not to give flattering titles And doubtlesse 't is best being an Ideot or a bungler at the doing of that which is not good or as the Apostle saith some are to every good work to be reprobate to every evill work and word How knowing are they who can say in truth they know not how to lie or flatter c. I dare not say with the Papists that ignorance is but I am sure this nescience is not only the mother of devotion but a great poynt of devotion it selfe And in this sence every godly man and only a godly man knoweth not how to doe evill For as the wicked may have the Theory of good workes and know what it is to pray what it is to heare the word of God yet they have no skill they are not studied nor fitted for the practise of those workes So a godly man may know in speculation what it is to doe wickedly and how to doe it as well as the most wicked man in the world yet he is not at all disposed nor ready for the practise of any wickedness As nature makes us reprobate to good so grace to evill workes The Prophet saith of a bad sort of men Jer 4.22 They are wise to doe evill but to doe good they have no knowledge Were they an ignorant people No the meaning is they had not set themselves to learne the doing of that good which they knew theirs were not sins of ignorance but of wilfulnesse and perversnesse So on the other hand 't is the commendation of the people of God They are wise to doe good but to doe evill they have no knowledge I know not to give flattering titles Secondly As to know a thing or person imports the allowance and approbation of it Psal 1.6 The Lord knoweth the way of the righteous that is he approveth it Psal 101.4 I will not know a wicked person that is I like him not I regard him not I will never give him testimony he shall neither have my hand nor my heart So not to know a thing or person notes our disallowance and distast of either in this sence Christ will say to those great knowing professors Luke 13.27 I tell you I know you not whence you are depart from me c. Thus here when Elihu professeth I know not to give flattering titles his meaning is I like not yea I cannot abide to doe it I may be as much skilled as any man to speake high words possibly I could Court it as well as others but I have no heart to doe it yea it is the abhorrence of my soule to doe it A good man doth not approve the doing of evill and
incorruptible it hath naturally no seedes of dissolution in it because no contrariety no contrary qualities in it as all bodyes or corporeall substances have I know the Apostle saith 1 Tim 6.16 God only hath immortality it 's true he only hath it in himselfe independently originally but he derives and gives it as a talent to some creatures in a way of dependance upon himselfe Secondly Observe The soule brings in the life of the body The life of man What is the body without the soule but a lumpe of clay As soone as ever the soule departs life departs man dyeth and becomes a putrifying carkasse yet such is the folly of most men that all their care is for the life of the body which is at best a dying life they utterly neglect the soule which as it is the life of the body so it selfe never dyeth The soule is the Jewell the body is but the Cabinet the soule is the kernel the body is but the shell Will you be sollicitous about a Cabinet and a shell and slight the Jewel or throw away the kernel Will you take care of that which liveth the body and will you not take care of that which holds your life the soule Againe Note Life is the gift of God If the soule which is the cause of life in man be of God then the life of man is of God also The cause of the cause is the cause of the effect or thing caused But we need not argue it from Logick rules Scripture testimony being so aboundant in this thing Acts 17.25 He giveth to all life and breath and all things And v. 28. In him we live and move and have our being Spirituall and eternall life are the gift of God so also is naturall life And if so Then First Live to God Secondly Seeing God gives us life we should be willing to give our lives to God Yea Thirdly We should therefore be ready to give up or rather to lay downe our lives for God And as we should give up our lives to God when he calls for them by natural death so we should give up our lives for God when he calls us to beare witness to his name and truth by violent death I shall yet take notice of one thing further before I passe from this verse The Spirit of God hath made me and the breath of the Almighty hath given me life Some upon good grounds referre the first clause The Spirit of God hath made me to the creation both of soule and body and the second or latter clause the breath of the Almighty hath given me life to that quickning which we receive by the Spirit to the duties whereinto we are called in this life The breath of the Almighty hath given me life that is hath fitted and prepared me for the severall offices and services of life As if Elihu had sayd The Spirit of God hath not only made me a man but a man for worke yea the Spirit of God hath quickned me to the present worke and businesse I am come about Thus life imports not only spirituall life in the being of it but all the furniture ornaments and abilities of a spirituall life The Septuagint render this profession made by Elihu expressely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Spiratio omnipotentis est quae docet me Sept Haud me latet non a meipso sed a deo hunc prudentiae sensum me accepisse Nicet to this sence holding out a strong assurance which Elihu had that God had both called and prepared him for the service he was come about and engaged in The Spirit of God hath made me and the breath of the Almighty hath instructed me Another of the Greek Interpreters speaks as much I am not ignorant that of my selfe I am able to doe nothing but I have received this power from God As if Elihu had said The Spirit of the Almighty hath quickned me to this worke I am now upon and taught me what both to say and doe in thy case O Job Hence note God giveth not only the life of nature unto men but he fits them for all the duties and services of this life We indeed are scarcely to be reckoned among the living if we have no more but a naturall life what is it to be able to eate and drinke to heare and see and speake unlesse we have more then this we deserve not to be numbred or written among the living we are upon the matter but dead lumps and clods of clay It is the breath of the Almighty that quickens us and superadds ability to doe good that frames fashions and fits us for every good word and worke This is the life of man when a man is fitted for duty and service when he is furnished for imployment to stand God and his Brethren in some stead while he is in this world then he lives The motions impulses and influences the teachings and guidings of the Spirit of God are the life of our lives We can doe nothing of our selves till the Almighty bestows a new life upon us and as we can doe nothing at all in spiritualls till he gives us a new life so we can do nothing to purpose till the Spirit acts stirres up that life in us It is the Spirit who first bestows Secondly encreaseth Thirdly excites our spirituall life puts the new creature into motion All our good thoughts and holy actings all our uprightnesse and sincerity all our strength and ability flow from the Spirit untill the holy Spirit workes in us we sit still and when the Spirit worketh we must not sit still I saith the Apostle Rom 15.18 will not dare to speak of any of those things which Christ hath not wrought by me to make the Gentiles obedient by word and deed As if he had sayd My owne workes are not worth the naming I will not so much as mention any thing that Christ hath not wrought in me by the Spirit That was a mighty worke which he was enabled to doe to make the Gentiles obedient in word and deed Christ did not leave him to doe it in his owne power The breath of the Almighty enabled him and so he doth all those that are able and willing ready for and successefull in any such holy worke Let us therefore ascribe all to his working and quickening let us set down our severall Items of receit in our account-books confessing that we have nothing of our own This gift that grace that ability to doe to speake to suffer to act we have received from him Let the whole Inventory of our soules riches have Gods name written upon it and ascribed to his praise alone And if we thus uncloath our selves by giving God the glory of all we shall loose nothing by it for God will apparrell and furnish us deck and adorne us better every day The poorer we are in our selves the richer will he make us To be thus diminish't is the best way to
truth there be nothing They had which may be a fifth step of this wickednesse a secret hope that he would halt and give them occasion of insulting Peradventure say they he will be inticed peradventure we shall catch him in this snare this was their hope and if attained their joy Which makes a 6th step of this wickednesse For so David describes his enemies Psal 38.16 17. They rejoyce when my foot slippeth for I am ready to halt or as we put in the margin for halting There is a double halting a halting by transgression and a halting by affliction that I conceive David chiefly spake of in that place because he presently adds in the close of the 17th verse And my sorrow is continually before me He shewes his enemies possessed with the same evill spirit and in the same posture Psal 35.15 In mine adversity or in my halting they rejoyced The same word is used in this Psalme for adversity which we had in the 38th for halting This is as true of evill men as halting is taken in the other notion for sinning The wicked are as if not more ready to rejoyce at falls or halts by sinning as at falls or halts by suffering In both these cases as David found in this 35th Psalme v. 15. the very abjects will teare the best of men as they did David and not cease But what doe they teare their flesh if they can but to be sure and so 't is meant there their good names and reputation by slanders and accusations O how contrary is this practice and that joy to the spirit of the Gospel The Apostle tells us the Grace of charity utterly abhorres it 1 Cor 13.6 Charity rejoyceth not in iniquity It neither rejoyceth in doing iniquity it selfe nor to charge others with iniquity Seventhly which is the highest step Some rather then faile will forme and frame occasions against others they will forge or fancy them in their own braine and then accuse their brethren as if they had been acting what themselves have been imagining Such the Apostle Peter speaks of 1 Pet 3.16 where admonishing Saints to much strictnesse and exactnesse in walking he gives this account why they should doe so That whereas they speak evill of you as evill doers they may be ashamed that falsely accuse your good conversation in Christ They who have not so much as a shadow of truth will make something out of a lie they will falsely accuse and strongly impeach knowing that if they doe so some of the dirt at least will disfigure the faces and stick upon the skirts of those who are impeached Thus I have given seven degrees of this wickedness every one of which plainly discover and all put together mightily aggravate the sinfullness of this sin the seeking of occasions against any man whosoever much more against any good man And therefore which was the second poynt proposed for the clearing of this truth you see how great a matter of charge was brought by Elihu against Job when he saith Job hath sayd He that is God seeketh occasions against me Hence note Secondly To charge the Lord with a willingnesse to breake with us either upon no occasion or to seeke an occasion that he may is exceeding sinfull and dishonourable to his Majesty neere to Blasphemy How sinfull is it that we who give the Lord so many occasions against us that he needs not seek any should yet say he seeketh occasions against us The people of Israel as it appeares intimated at least that God had broken with them or sought occasion to doe it this word is used in that text Numb 14.34 while the Lord to shew how ill he resented such thoughts and jealousies of him tells them According to the number of the dayes in which ye searched the Land even forty dayes each day for a yeare shall ye beare your iniquities even forty yeares and ye shall know my breach of promise or as read in the margin my Altering of my purpose As if he had said Ye shall know whether I have sought occasion against you Cognoscetis confractionem meam si dici possit latinè irritationem non a verbo irrito sed ab adjectivo irritus q.d. videbitis ut ego omnia a●●a vestra per hos quadraginta annos irrita faciam conatus ac instituto impediam Merc whether I have frustrated your hopes and endeavours these forty yeares in the wilderness or no ye shall know whether I have done any thing to breake and entangle you or whether all this hath nor proceeded from your owne frowardness and unbeliefe The Lord who searched their hearts and saw the utmost scope of their complaints found this evill thought lying at the bottome of all that he surely had put them upon all those difficulties or brought them into those straites on purpose to breake with them And therefore he saith Ye shall know my breach of promise Ye shall see one day or at last whether I have kept covenant and stood to my engagement or you whether I have sought an occasion against you or you have given me occasion to deale with you as I have done So that when the Lord sayd Ye shall know my breach of promise his meaning was ye shall know that I have kept my promise to you exactly or to a tittle and that ye only have been the promise-breakers 'T is infinitely below the nature of God to seeke occasions against the creature And 't is strange that the Jewes had any the remotest suspition of him as doing so after they had heard of those glorious stiles and titles in which he proclaimed his name Exod 34.6 The Lord the Lord God gracious and mercifull slow to anger abundant in goodnesse and in truth pardoning iniquity transgression and sin What can be speld out of this name that should yeild the least shaddow of a jealousie that the Lord would seeke occasions against them A good Prince desires to finde many good subjects who deserve to be rewarded but it troubles him to finde any who deserve to be punished or whom he is necessitated to punish Now what is the goodnesse of the most benigne and gracious Princes in the world to the graciousnesse and benignity of God! Againe his precious promises evidence the unworthinesse of such a surmise all which are full of mercy and goodnesse and patience and pardon and tendernesse to poore sinners so farre is the Lord from seeking occasions to charge any one with what is not that he seekes all the wayes and occasions he can to doe good and to extend compassion to those who have done amisse He even labours to deliver poore soules from their dangers and from their sins How farre is he then from desiring to find them tripping and sinning or from urging sin hardly harshly or causlesly upon them yea all the experiences of Saints bring in witness against this blasphemous apprehension They will tell us from what they have found and felt that when
the meaning scope and mind of any sentence or the purpose of man in what he speaketh Thirdly there is the divine of spirituall interpreter who labours to bring the truths of God and the heart of man together The Apostle having treated about prophecying concludes 1 Cor. 14.25 And thus are the secrets of his heart made manifest and so falling down on his face he will worship God and report that God is in you of a truth as if the man that beleeved not or one unlearned for of such he speaks vers 24. had said surely these men understand what is in my heart for they have brought the truth of God and my heart together so that I must confesse God is in them that is there is a divine wisdome or interpretation in them When Elihu faith If there be an interpreter we are to understand him in this last sence not of one that can interpret words like a Grammarian or give the scope and sence of words like a Logician but of one that hath a divine skill to bring the truths of God home to the heart of man that is to convince informe an ignorant conscience and to comfort relieve and support a troubled conscience If there be an interpreter Hence note The Ministers of Christ are the interpreters of the mind and good will of God toward poor sinners They interpret the mind of God as to peace and reconciliation as to grace and salvation as well as to duty and holiness of conversation 'T is the nicest and hardest thing in the world to interpret the mind of God aright to a sinner to bring his heart to a closing with the great truths and promises of the Gospel he that can doe this skilfully is worthy the name of an interpreter The Apostle saith of him who is but a babe in Christ and useth milke that is lives upon the lower and more easie principles of faith he is unskillfull in the word of righteousnesse Heb. 5.13 that is he knowes not how to make out and mannage for his own comfort the doctrine of free grace through the alone righteousness of Jesus Christ And therefore as first God himself is the author and fountaine of this grace as secondly Jesus Christ is the purchaser or procurer of the fruits of this grace to sinners as thirdly the effectuall worker of our hearts to receive this grace as also the witness-bearer and sealer of it to our souls is the holy Spirit as fourthly the word of the Gospell is the Charter and Covenant of this grace so fifthly the Ministers of Christ are the interpreters of this grace and they are or ought to be skillfull in this word of righteousness Their skill and duty is first to explaine what the Covenant is and rightly to lay down how the sinners reconciliation to God is wrought Secondly to make a sutable and seasonable application of it or to bring it home to the souls and consciences of poor sinners as they find their state to be And as the Ministers of Christ are Gods interpreters to his people so they are the peoples interpreters unto God They are the former two wayes First by opening the mind of God to his people Secondly by urging and pressing them to receive it both for their direction and consolation They are the latter four wayes First by laying open and spreading the peoples wants and weaknesses before God Secondly by confessing their sins and transgressions to God Thirdly by intreating the Lord for them or by praying for mercy pardon and forgiveness in their behalfe for sins committed Fourthly by giving thanks in their name for mercies received Thus they are first Gods mouth to the people in preaching declaring the Gospel Secondly the peoples mouth to God in prayer and thanksgiving And in both performe the worke and Office of an interpreter And if the Ministers of the Gospell are interpreters Then First Every Minister must be acquainted with the mind of God He must have skill in the mystery of the Gospel How shall he be able to interpret the mind of God to sinners who is not acquainted with the mind of God We have the mind of Christ saith the Apostle of himselfe and his fellow-labourers in the Gospel 1 Cor. 2.16 and when he saith we have the mind of Christ his meaning is not only this that they had the mind of Christ written in a book but they had a cleare understanding of it and so were fitted to interpret it to others Secondly As he must have the knowledge of the mystery so he must have the tongue of the learned Isa 50.4 That he may be able to speak a word in season to him that is weary that is to the wounded and troubled in conscience This is the interpreter intended by Elihu He is one that hath learned and is taught of God Humane learning the knowledge of Arts and Sciences is good and hath its use but divine learning or learning in divine things that is to be divinely learned 't is possible for one to have learning in divine things and not to be divinely learned is absolutely necessary to make him an interpreter It is not enough to know divine things but he must know them divinely or by the unction and teachings of the Spirit The Apostle John Rev 10.8 is commanded to eat the book this eating of the book signifieth the spirituall knowledg of divine truths in this sence we know no more then we eat then we as it were turn into our own substance that which is eaten becomes one with us the mystery of the Gospell must be eaten by the interpreter of Gospell mysteries A man cannot interpret the mind of God till he knows it and he cannot know the mind of God unlesse God himself reveals it so the Apostle argueth 1 Cor. 2. from 12 to 16. As no man knoweth the mind of a man but the spirit of a man that is in him so the things of the spirit of God knoweth no man but the spirit of God and he to whom the Spirit of God doth reveale them And therefore though a man may have an abillity to interpret the word of God as 't is an excellent book a book full of admirable knowledge he may I say have an abillity to interpret it soundly by humane learning yet no man can doe it savingly and convertingly but by the help of the Spirit Psal 25.14 The secret of the Lord is with them that fear him and he will shew them his Covenant he will shew it effectually he will make them know it Thus David prayed Psal 119.18 Lord open thou mine eyes that I may behold wonderous things out of thy Law Naturall parts and humane learning arts and languages may give us an understanding of the tenour and literal meaning of the Law of God but none of these can open our eyes to behold the wonders of the Law much lesse the wonders and mysteries of the Gospell The opening of our eyes to behold these
Gospel and to prepare the way for Christ by whom grace and truth came The Baptist was as it were the loop and button between the legall and the Gospel dispensation therefore his name might well be called John And there is frequent use in Scripture of the Adverb which comes from this Verb to signifie injuries received without desert or undeservedly Ps 7.4 Yea I have delivered him that without cause was mine enemy or that was mine enemy gratis And again Psal 35.7 For without cause have they hid for me their net in a pit which without cause have they digged for my soul Yet more as the word signifies the doing of good gratis or when there is no desert so any injury done gratis or when no provocation hath been given the party so to doe Now as all the mischief which the wicked plot against or doe to the people of God is undeserved and floweth meerly from their malice so all the good which God doth for his people is undeserved and floweth purely from the fountaine of his free grace or from his compassions which faile not And surely the Lord deserveth highest praises from man for any good he doth him seeing what he doth is gratis or undeserved Further This Hebrew word Chinnam answers the Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rendred freely Rom. 3.24 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gratis i. e. ejus gratia Bez We are justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Jesus Christ How can unjust men deserve justification Therefore Mr Beza translates We are justified gratis that is by his grace Againe When it is said then he or the Lord is gracious it may be taken two wayes First as to be gracious implyeth the intrinsecall graciousness of his nature or that mercifullness and kindness which dwells in the heart of God and which indeed is God for the graciousnesse of God is the gracious God thus God is alwayes and altogether gracious he is infinitely and uncessantly gracious Secondly when it is said he is gracious it may note only the graciousness of his acts and dispensations thus as I may say the Lord is gracious ad hinc et nunc as he sees cause at this time he is gracious and not at that time that is he puts forth acts of grace now and not then The Lord puts forth acts of grace both according to the pleasure of his own will without respect to any thing in man as also without respecting what man is or doth according to his pleasure And thus we are chiefly to understand it here then he is gracious God is gracious in his nature alwayes and alwayes alike gracious but he is not alwayes alike gracious in his dispensations or in giving forth acts of grace he is gracious to man according to his secret will as he pleaseth but he is gracious according to his revealed will as man pleaseth him Hence Observe first The first cause and spring of all our mercies is the graciousnesse of God Or All our mercyes flow out from the grace of God That 's the fountaine yea that 's the Ocean which seeds and fills all the Channels of mercy which stream to us as our happiness in this world and for our everlasting happiness in the world which is to come All is of grace fundamentally or because the Lord is and will be for ever gracious Thus the Lord spake to Moses Exod. 33.19 I will be gracious to whom I will be gracious My mercy shall flow our when and to whom and where I please And the proclamation which he made of himselfe in all his royall Titles runs in the same straine Exod. 34.6 The Lord the Lord God mercifull and gracious long-suffering and aboundant in goodnesse and truth keeping mercy for thousands forgiving iniquity If we consider God first in doing us good Secondly in forgiving us the evill which we doe Thirdly in delivering us from the evills which we now suffer Fourthly in delivering us from the feare of future sufferings all is from grace and from free grace He doth us good though we are undeserving any good that 's grace yea he doth us good though we are ill deserving and that 's more grace He doth all for us through grace First in spiritualls and Secondly in temporalls not only doe the good things of eternall life but the good things of this present life flow from grace unto his own people Not only the health of their souls but the health of their bodyes not only deliverance from hell but deliverance from sickness also flow from his free grace in Jesus Christ Therefore of all their mercies and salvations both as to the foundation and top-stone of them the people of God must cry as the Prophet Zachery Chap. 4.7 foretells the people of God should say of that longed for deliverance when that great mountaine should become a plain before Zerubbabell grace grace unto them That is grace hath begun them and grace alone will maintaine continue and perfect what it hath begun As there is nothing in us except our misery which moves the Lord to begin so there is nothing in us but our inability which moves the Lord to perfect what he hath begun He seeth we cannot and therefore he will perfect what he hath begun and all this he doth that he may exalt his own name and perfect the praise of his free grace towards us More distinctly that all comes from grace or from the graciousness of God may note these five things to us First not only that God doth all for his people freely or without desert But Secondly that he doth all things willingly or without constraint for his people Thirdly that he doth all things forwardly for his people He doth very much unaskt and unsought and he is not much askt or hardly drawne to doe any thing for his people Though he hath said of some things I will be sought unto or inquired after that I may doe them for you Ezek. 36.37 yet his mercies are never forced nor wrested from him by intreaties but flow from a principle of love naturally as water out of a fountain Fourthly he doth all rejoycingly even with his whole heart and with his whole soul Mercy pleaseth him and he is pleased with occasions of shewing mercy 't is no burden to him to doe us good mercy proceeds from his nature and therefore he delighteth in mercy Mic 7.18 yea to be mercifull is his nature and therefore he cannot but delight in it Fifthly graciousness being the very nature of God implyeth that he will do us good liberally and constantly or that as the Apostle James speaks he giveth liberally and upbraideth not he doth not upbraid us with our poverty who receive nor do●h he upbraid us with the riches of the gifts which himself bestoweth And because they flow from his nature therefore he doth not in the least empty himself how much soever he fills the creature with his gifts or goodness Some men
is sayd he will render unto man his righteousness we are not to understand it of righteousness in kinde but of the reward or fruit of his righteousness For here Elihu speaks of a person already righteous or at least of him who had repented of and turned from his unrighteousness So that to returne or render unto man his righteousness is to returne the mercy promised to those that are righteous Reddet justitiam i. e. praemium justitiae Drus For as iniquity or unrighteousness is often put for the punishment of unrighteousness so equity or righteousness is often put for the reward of righteousness or for that which God according to his righteous promise returnes unto a righteous person Thus we may understand Elihu here As if he had sayd God dealt with this man before as with a sinner or he afflicted him for his sin But now he will deale kindly with him as with a righteous person and removing his affliction and taking his hand off from him he will render his righteousness to him he will not reckon with him for any former unrighteousness From this notion of the word Observe God usually deals with men as they are and according to what they doe If a godly man sin he shall smart for it and if a sinner return and repent God will shew him kindness Though the mercy and kindness which God shews to a returning sinner be not for his returnings or repentings yet 't is according to them The favour which God sheweth any man is for Christs sake or for what Christ hath done and suffered but it is according to what himselfe hath done or suffered David experienced this himselfe Psal 18.20 The Lord rewarded me according to my righteousnes c. That is as I have been a righteous and just person so the Lord hath dealt with me And he gives the rule with respect to all others v. 25. With the upright thou wilt shew thy selfe upright with the pure thou wilt shew thy selfe pure c. That is Thou wilt be such to men in thy dispensations as they are in their conversations and dispositions in the frame and bent of their hearts and lives And as it followeth v. 27. Thou wilt save the afflicted or humble people but wilt bring downe high lookes that is those that are proud and high-minded The Prophet holds out the same truth in way of direction Isa 3.10 Say ye to the righteous it shall be well with him for they shall eat of the fruit of their doings that is they shall have good for the good they have done or according to the good which they have done Rom 2.10 Glory honour and peace to every man that worketh good to the Jew first and also to the Gentile If any object But may it not be ill with men that doe good and are good doth the Lord alwayes render to man according to his righteousness I answer It is well at present with most that doe well look over all the sons of men and generally ye shall find that usually the better they are the better they live Secondly I answer It shall be well with all that doe well in the issue and for ever This truth will abide to eternity God will render unto man according to his righteousness Secondly We may take the word righteousness Justiam quam ei confert in Christo reputans eum pro justo Jun for the righteousness of justification Mr Broughton inclines to that sence He will restore unto man his justice And presently adds by way of glosse Justice is Christ It is Christs Justice or righteousness that is restored to man Christ is indeed The Lord our righteousness Jer 23.6 And thus severall others of the learned expound these words He will render unto man his righteousness That is he will bestow upon him or restore to him righteousness in Christ he will account him righteous though he hath no righteousness of his owne which will hold in Gods account Elihu I grant calleth it Mans righteousness his righteousness yet we may well understand him calling it so not because it is wrought by but because it is imputed to or bestowed upon man as his righteousness That is ours which is freely given us so is righteousness in justification by faith in Christ We have no righteousness wrought in us or by us for that purpose but we have a righteousness wrought for us and freely bestowed upon us for that purpose which is therefore truely called mans righteousness But some may question how can it be sayd that God doth render or return to man this righteousness that is the righteousness of justification Can this righteousness be lost can a person justified fall out of a justified state I answer The righteousness of justification which is true also of the righteousness of sanctification as to the substance and being of it cannot be lost But it may be lost as to the comfortable enjoyments and fruits of it or as to our apprehension of it And the Lord is sayd to returne to man the righteousness of his justification not as if the grace it selfe were lost or taken away from him but because the sight and sence of it the sweetness and joy of it Non enim ablata justitia redditur sed ablatae justitiae sensus Coc the workings and effects of it having been lost are now restored to him againe When the Lord by his Spirit gives the soule a cleare and fresh evidence of it or reneweth the testimony of his Spirit with our spirits that our sins are forgiven and that we are justified beloved and accepted in Christ then the Lord is sayd to render unto man his righteousness otherwise neither the faith by which this righteousness is applyed nor the righteousness it selfe which is applyed to us by faith is at any time lost or removed Only in this sence as in many other Scriptures so in this the Lord is sayd to render unto man his righteousness both of sanctification and justification For when a beleever through sin hath blotted his own evidences and God hath left him under the darkness of his own spirit for his negligent unwatchfull unworthy walking or when the Lord hideth his face to try him what he will doe whether he will trust in his name while he walketh in darkness and seeth no light when I say after withdrawings for either of these reasons or for any other the Lord gives him in a renewed evidence of his love then he is sayd to render unto man his righteousness It is in this case as with a man that labours under some strong and dangerous disease which taketh away his sences and leaves him halfe dead we say the man is gone yet he recovers his speech returnes and his spirits revive and then we say his life is rendred to him or he is brought back from the grave we have fetched him againe not that his life was quite taken away for he was not a carkasse in
a strict inquisition for my sin My iniquity is not charged upon me to the utmost I have sinned grievously but God hath dealt graciously with me and hath not measured out to the full of mine iniquity 'T is an argument of true repentance to justifie God in afflicting us This is a pious and a profitable rendring of the text Whence observe First The punishment of sin in this life is not equall to sin As all the sufferings of this life are not worthy to be compared with the glory of the next life Rom 1.18 so neither are they comparable with the sins of this life When a man is under very sore affliction chastened with paine upon his bed and the multitude of his bones with strong paine So that his life abhorreth bread and his soul dainty meat yet he must confesse his sufferings are less then his sin The Church of the Jewes acknowledged this as to that great affliction their captivity in Babylon Ezra 9.13 After all that is come upon us for our evill deeds and for our great trespasse seeing that our God hath punished us lesse then our iniquities deserve c. It was no little punishment which that people endured yet they confessed it was lesse then their iniquity The least sin is so great that no punishment which man is capable of in this life can equall it nor can that in the life to come equall it as to present degree but only by the everlastingness of its duration Secondly Note A soule truly humbled is ready to confess to the glory of God that his punishment and suffering is less then his sin As a godly man doth not thinke any sin little so he doth not thinke any affliction great compared with his sin Cain sayd My punishment is greater then I can beare but he did not say it was greater then his sin How hot soever the furnace of divine wrath is heated yet sinners must acknowledge there is sparing mercy in it and that God might have made it seven times hotter and therefore hath afflicted them less then their sin As a godly man is ready to acknowledge his mercy more then he hath deserved Gen 32.10 I sayd Jacob am not worthy of the least of all the mercies and all the truth which thou hast shewed unto thy servant as if he had sayd I am less in my good actings then any of thy actings towards me for good have been so he is ready to say his greatest afflictions or evills which he suffereth are less then his sins or then the evills which he hath done Secondly The word signifieth to profit so we translate Verbum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 expono profuit non fuit mihi conducibilo quod peccaram Merc And it profiteth me not Other Scriptures comply with this sence Hester 3.8 Haman in his malicious and envious suggestions against the Jews tells the King It is not for the Kings profit to suffer them to continue He useth the same word againe Hest 5.13 where after he had reported all the great things that he enjoyed he concludes What doth all this profit me or all this availeth me nothing so long as I see Mordecai the Jew sitting at the Kings gate Thus here saith the sick man I have sinned And it profited me not or I have got nothing by it And when he saith it profited me not we are to expound it by a usuall figure in Scripture whereby more is intended then is expressed so that it profiteth me not is it had been very detrimentall dangerous and deadly to me I feel and smart under the sad issues of my sin my perverting that which was right hath done me though I have had but my right much wrong I have sinned and it profited me not Hence note First Sin pretends profit and advantage to a sinner There is no temptation comes without a bait Though some sin purely for sins sake yet it is rare that sin cometh without the offer of a bribe and profit is one of the greatest both baits and bribes that the Devill puts upon the hook of temptation when he fisheth for soules You shall get by it saith that deceiver But the repenting soule can truly say it profited me not I had thought to have gotten by my sin it promised me very faire but I have got nothing but blows The temptation with which the Devill assaulted our first parents was of this kinde He told the woman of profit she and her husband should gaine knowledge by it that 's a noble gaine They should be as Gods knowing good and evill there 's all profit imaginable in such a knowledge Christ himselfe who was God and perfectly knew good and evill was also tempted with profit Math 4.8 9. The devill shewed him all the kingdomes of the world and those not with bare walls but ready hung and furnished and the glory of them and sayd unto him all these things will I give thee if thou wilt fall downe and worship me If our head and the heire of all things was tempted with profit how much more poor we No marvaile if Satan provide him Agents to say to us as they are represented Pro 1.13 Come cast in your lot among us we will all have one purse or a joynt stock in this wicked trade What they hoped to get by it is told us in the next words We shall find all precious substance and fill our houses with spoyle We shall get enough and you shall share with us if you will but come and goe with us We see what sin promiseth But what doth the sinner find himselfe answers It profited me not Hence learne There is nothing gotten by sin no good is gotten by it The Apostle puts the question to sinners Rom 6.21 What fruit had ye then in those things whereof ye are now ashamed Cast up your account and tell us what you find at the foot of it Possibly some may say we have gotten hundreds and thousands we have gotten houses and lands our barnes are full of corne our fields of cattel and our bags are full of treasure But is it profit to have house and land gold and silver come in by sin Let that Scripture answer Math 16.26 What is a man profited if he shall gaine the whole world and loose his own soule But some may say they that are in Christ cannot loose their soules by sin I answer First though they that are in Christ cannot be such sinfull soules as to sin away their soules though they cannot sin at such a rate nor in such a height as to loose their soules who have indeed found Christ or rather who are found of him and planted in him yet the dammage which every sin unrepented of and unpardoned puts man to is the losse of his soule Secondly suppose a sinner repenteth what hath he got by sin but the sorrows of repentance And though no man shall have cause to repent of true repentance for sin yet no man shall
oppose me if thou hast such words ready as have the weight of reason or authority in them to maintaine thy cause bring them forth I am not afraid of what thou canst object neither am I unwilling to heare thy defence Some expound Elihu speaking Ironically at least Rhetorically If thou hast any thing to say answer me speake and spare not As if he had sayd Possibly thou canst set all right and shew me where I am wrong Possibly thou thinkest I have spoken amisse when I sayd In this thou art not righteous goe to then shew me my mistake or wherein I have misapprehended thee make it good if thou art able against my assertion that thou art just and righteous even in that wherein I have endeavoured to detect thy unrighteousness Possibly thou mayst bring me to be of thy opinion and then surely I shall justifie thee Artificiosa prohibitio per concessionem Simile est illud poetae I sequere Italiam ventis pete regna per undas Virgil Aeniad 4to and retract my censure of thee Rhetoricians call this an Artificiall prohibition by a concession or the admitting of another to doe that which they know he cannot doe when he hath done his utmost or as we say hath left no stone unturn'd to doe it But I conceive Elihu spake plainly to Job and did not like a subtle Orator put him upon impossibles but like a sincere friend soberly and seriously invited him to doe and say as much as was possible in his owne defence If thou hast any thing to say answer me Hence note Wise men though they have more to speake and purpose to speake more yet are willing that others should speake too Though they can speake still yet they are ready to sit still and heare The most prudent speakers are also patient hearers Elihu when he began to speake Chap 32.18 19. compared himselfe to a full bottle he was even burdened with his owne conceptions I am full of matter sayd he there the spirit within me constraineth me Behold my belly is as wine which hath no vent it is ready to burst like new bottles And though he had not halfe emptied himselfe yet he could stop his vessel and containe himselfe Answer me I will heare Though Elihu was warme in his worke labouring tooth and nayle to convince and humble Job and shew him wherein he had exceeded and offended though he was teaching him to give glory to God and to ahhorre himselfe as at last he did repenting in dust and ashes yet he was unwilling to determine till he had heard him speake if he had any thing to speake and a minde to speake it Hence note 'T is but equall to give him leave to speake for himselfe with whom we are unsatisfied How else can we either get satisfaction or give an account why we remaine unsatisfied We must not condemne any man in hast nor judge him till we have heard him Necessary stops are no delayes They may procure not only a better but a speedier issue of our business especially in matters of controversie Politicians have a rule Take time and you may doe any thing To make hast slowly is the surest way of making hast Many a journeying man had rid more miles in a day if he had not rid too fast They who will doe all at once or in a breath often loose their breath but seldome doe any thing that 's worth the doing And as hastiness hinders us in doing so it altogether unfits us for censuring Time brings forth truth a sentence deferred may afterwards be given but when it is once given it cannot be recalled therefore it is good before we censure to heare every man out If this moderation and wel-tempered ingenuity were exercised in all our controversies with others it would be a great helpe to the ending of controversies And we should either see no reason to condemne many or condemne them with more reason had we patience to heare them But when first we will not heare an answer or when secondly we suppresse our opposites with power and violence whom we cannot answer or convince by argument or thirdly when we interpret what they say in answer to the worst sence or fourthly when we are glad to finde any weakness or insufficiency in their answers and are so hasty to condemne that we will not give them leave to recollect their thoughts or thinke better on 't to mend their answers and explaine their meaning either by speech or writing it is impossible breaches should be healed differences reconciled or that ever we should come to a cleare full understanding of one another This offer made by Elihu to Job is a good patterne and shewes us how to deale with brethren in all such cases and that which followeth sheweth the best and noblest ground of such amicable condiscentions even a willingness not only to agree with but to embrace those from whom we differ That 's the generall sence of what Elihu assureth Job and would have him confident of in the next words For I desire to justifie thee As if he had sayd I have not spoken all or any of these things to thee because I would conquer thee nor doe I now provoke or invite thee to speake because I have a mind to lye at catch or entangle thee in thy answers for I tell thee my heart and my ayme in this overture is I heartily desire to justifie thee 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The word whereby Elihu expresseth this desire signifieth more then a bare desire It notes first an earnest desire or strength of desire Secondly A pleasing desire or delightfull desire The highest act of desire is delight delight is the intention and strength of affection Non mihi volupi est ut tu im causam injustā estendam velim enim esse justam nec esse in te quod reprehendi possit Merc 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 est non modo pietatis sed et veritatis laudem tribuere significat se magis propendere ad defendendum quam increpandum Coc or desire at rest As if Elihu had sayd I have not spoken out of ill will to thee or desire of victory over thee nor would any thing be more welcome newes to my soule then to see just cause of justifying thee it doth not please me at all to prove that thou art not just it would extreamly please me even ravish my heart with joy if thou couldst prove thy selfe or thy cause so just and faultlesse that nothing could be blamed or reproved in either I desire to justifie thee That is not only to judge thee a godly man or a man fearing God which I already doe but to judge that thou hast in all things both done and spoken well which as yet I doe not nor can unlesse thou shewest me better reason for it then hitherto thou hast done To justifie another is foure wayes applyed in Scripture as was shewed more largely
at the second verse of the former Chapter First and chiefly 't is applyed or attributed to God himselfe Rom 8.33 It is God that justifieth God puts man into a state of justification he justifieth his person so fully that none can of right lay any thing to his charge much lesse condemne him upon any charge layd against him Secondly Man justifieth God Luke 7.29 30. And all the people that heard him and the Publicans justified God being baptized with the baptisme of John God himselfe who is the Judge of all men is condemned by many men and when things are at worst he alwayes hath some to justifie him Man justifieth God when he honoureth God taking his part and owning both his power and his righteousnesse in whatsoever he doth It is impossible God should be unjust and God is pleased to say we justifie him when we maintaine his wayes as just and righteous Thirdly Man justifieth himselfe when he is either lifted up proudly in the thoughts of what he is or hath done well Luke 18.11 or when he upon good grounds can maintaine that to be well done which he hath done Fourthly Man justifieth man when he either consents to or approves of what he hath done or spoken whether it be good or bad he that approves of a man justifies him though the man be unjust Prov. 17.15 He that justifieth the wicked and he that condemneth the just even they both are an abomination unto the Lord. Let a man be never so wicked and doe never so wickedly some through ignorance of his wickednesse and others through love to and liking of his wickednesse being such themselves will approve of him and give him their good word But as Christ speaks Math. 11.19 Wisdome is justified of her children that is the true lovers and followers of wisdome having a right knowledge and estimation of her worth will stand by her and speake for her when slighted by the blind and unknowing world And as this is true of declarative wisdome so especially of Christ who is essentiall wisdome His children highly prize and justifie him while the world condemns and contemns him In this fourth sence Elihu is to be understood here I desire to justifie thee that is to give testimony unto thee or subscribe thy certificate that thou art worthy of commendation Though Elihu was a man of a very warme and keene spirit full of fire and mettle yet he discovered a very honest bent and a well governed intention towards Job in saying I desire to justifie thee for 't is as if he had said It would not please me at all to see cause of further censure but it would please me fully to see cause of approving and acquitting thee Therefore doe but state thy case and make out the merits of it and I shall yield so soon as I see cause So then Elihu did not carry himself in this business first as a party or as one that had taken a side and was resolved to hold it as some doe right or wrong because he had appeared in it Nor Secondly was he hurryed by passion or intemperance of spirit Nor Thirdly was he hood-winkt by prejudice or fore-stalled by his opinion against the person Nor Fourthly was he engaged by love to contention or hopes of victory Nor Fifthly was he purposed to suppresse smother or keepe downe the truth Nor Sixthly had he any desire to asperse Job and make him appear black Nor Seventhly had he a mind to grieve the man or burthen him with accusations but declared a cleare candor and much melting compassion towards his afflicted Antagonist hungring and thirsting yea even longing for a just occasion to justifie him Verbum justificare sumitur pro justitiam exercere justè ac recte procedere q. d. statui apud me juxta aequitatis leges tecum agere Bold Some I grant expound this word justifie as used here by Elihu in a very bare and barren sence as if it implyed only thus much I will doe thee right or I have no mind to doe thee wrong but surely the word is much more fruitfull and beares the signification of a great willingness in Elihu to render Job as faire as possibly he could or as his cause would beare to all the world he waited to understand so much of him and by him as might enable him to say he had neither spoken nor done any thing amisse Hence note First A good man is glad to see any mans cause or case prove good or better then he thought it The Apostle giving severall Characters of Gospell love or charity saith 1 Cor. 13.6 It rejoyceth not in iniquity but rejoyceth in the truth As charity rejoyceth not in the doing of iniquity so neither doth it when others are found to have done iniquity But it rejoyceth much when any who are either suspected or charged with iniquity are upon due tryall found cleare and acquitted Paul wished that all who heard him had been not only almost but altogether such as he except his bonds Acts 26.29 It is a great argument that a man is good and just when he heartily wisheth that he who hath given occasion to others to think ill of him may at last appeare better then they thought him Secondly note A good man seekes not victory but truth and the good of those he deals with When he contends earnestly with others he desires as earnestly that truth may gaine by that contention Where a spirit of strife uncharitableness possesseth the minds of many men they love to be vexing trampling upon those they deale with rather then helping and enforming them This evill spirit is the familiar of this age That which the Apostle spake Phil. 1.15 of not a few who had the name of Gospel Ministers some preach Christ even of envy and strife and some also of good will the one preach Christ of contention not sincerely the same may be said of many disputers and polemicall writers they doe it enviously they doe it out of love to strife and contention not out of love either to truth or to those with whom they contend and strive this is a bad spirit a spirit far unlike that which ruled in Elihu who wished that the sharpest reprehensions he gave Job might end in his justification There should be such a spirit in man contending with man as there is in God contending with man who doth not thunder against sinners because he would have them perish or delighteth in their destruction but doth it first to awaken them secondly to humble them thirdly to convert them fourthly to justifie them and lastly to save them for ever I write not these things saith the Apostle 1 Cor. 4.14 to shame you but as my beloved sons I warne you As if he had said I intend not to asperse you or throw dirt upon you but only advise you to wipe off the dirt that is cast upon you or to keep your selves out of the dirt I would either be
what is good what is right is a gracious work of a renewed will as Gods Election of us from Eternity so our Election of God and the things of God at any time is a very gracious worke This affirmative act To chuse to us judgement seemes to imply a negative the rejecting or laying aside of whatsoever is contrary to or a hindrance of Judgement that is the laying aside First of all animosities or undue heates of spirit Secondly of all prejudices and undue prepossessions Thirdly of all groundlesse suspitions and jealousies of the person we have to deale with we can never chuse judgement till we are cleare of all these The original word rendred to chuse signifies in the noune a young man a man in the flower of his age in the best of his life when his breasts as Job spake at the twentieth Chapter are full of milke and his bones of marrow and the reason is given because our younger time is our chusing time as to our way in this world it should be so much more for heaven or the things of another world Remember now thy Creator in the dayes of thy youth saith Solomon Eccl 12.1 Some render those words expressely In the dayes of thy elections or chusings As if he had sayd Remember to chuse God in thy chusing dayes when thou chusest thy calling in which to live when thou chusest a wife In diebus electionum tuarum Mont with whom to spend thy life then be sure and remember above all things to chuse God When Moses was a young man he was famous for this Choice Heb 11.25 26. He chose the reproach of Christ rather then the riches of Egypt when he had all the riches and honours of Egypt presented to him and courting him on the one side and the reproach of Christ affliction poverty disgrace threatning him on the other side he chose these rather who would thinke that man wise who should chuse the reproach of Christ in appearance nothing but dirt and dross before the riches of Egypt yet Moses never shewed his wisdome and learning so much in all the learning of the Egyptians as he did in that Choice Let us chuse Judgement Judgement may be taken two wayes First Judicium est causae inquisitio Judicium pro aequo Merc. for the act of enquiry let us discourse and debate this matter to find out what is just Judgement is the result or sentence given upon hearing and debate And most properly a right sentence is Judgement and that by Judgement Elihu meanes a right sentence appeares clearely from the next words And let us know among our selves what is good Communis hic sit nobis propositus scopus ut accurata judicij lance quae hactenus in hac causa dicta sunt probemus quod optimum est approbemus Scult Let us know that is let us so try by the ear what shall be spoken that we may come to a right knowledge to a right gust or tast of what is good There is a two-fold knowledge First of simple intelligence when we know any thing as it is precisely in its owne nature true or false good or evill Secondly of approbation when we conclude what we know to be true or good We may take in both here especially the latter It being doubtlesse the desire of Elihu to find truth and goodness if it were to be found on Jobs side And when he saith That we may know what is good we may understand it either Comparatively or Positively that we may know what is good is first that we may know good from evill Secondly that we may know among good things what is better yea what is best let us not only distinguish between good and bad but between good and better better and best The reason of man is able to put a difference not only between wheat and tares but if you bring him severall samples of wheat or other graine he is able to judge which is the better which is best a knowing man will judge to two pence in a bushell which is best so in all other commodities we not only judge between that which is good and that which is stark nought but when we have many parcels and particulars of any kinde before us good and usefull we judge which is the best which the principall Thus in spiritualls we are not only to judge of things so farre as to know good from evill which yet is a very good piece of knowledge for many put darkness for light and light for darkness bitter for sweet and sweet for bitter as the Prophet complained Isa 5.20 that is they huddle all things together in a Chaos of confusion but it should be our care to know good from good yea to know what excells among things that are excellent 'T is well when we know truth from falshood but we should labour to know which among truths is the most precious truth Paul having spoken of what was good yea of the best gifts saith Yet I will shew you a more excellent way 1 Cor 12.31 As if he had sayd sayd This is a good way you are in the exercise of the best gifts but here 's a more excellent way the exercise of grace Thus here I take good not so much Positively as Comparatively Let us know what is good that is what is best and what is best of all Let us chuse to our selves Judgement and know among our selves that which is good First In that he saith Let us chuse to our selves Judgement Observe We must consider deliberately and maturely before we pass Judgement Judgement is a choice thing and must be made upon choyce it is not to be snatched up hastily but duely chosen They that are upon the choyce either of things or persons should be much in Consideration How uncomely besides unrighteous is it to judge men or matters rashly to be hurried on to election with passion or to judge upon heare-sayes and Conjectures This is not to chuse Judgement but to snatch it up to chuse Judgement is to doe it with mature deliberation there must be much weighing else properly no judging rash judgement is usually wrong judgement and that layeth us open to another judgement Judge not that ye be not judged is Christs warning Math 7.1 that is doe not judge hastily or harshly doe not judge rashly nor rigidly much lesse falsely for if you do you shall be judged righteou●●y indeed as to your case but not comfortably as to your condition They who will not chuse Judgement doe in the issue chuse Judgement that is not using deliberation in Judgement they draw deservedly upon themselves a judgement of condemnation Secondly Taking it more generally Let us chuse to our selves Judgement or that which is right Note It is not enough for us to doe Judgement or that which is right but we must chuse it 'T is a worke of no acceptation with God to doe that which is just unlesse
we chuse it as wel as doe it that is unlesse our hearts close with it and pitch upon it Solomon Prov 1.29 chargeth the simple for not chusing what was good they did not chuse the feare of the Lord. By the feare of the Lord he meanes the true worship of the Lord or any worke of obedience by which we testifie a holy feare of him possibly they might doe the feare of the Lord possibly they worshipped the Lord they prayed to him and heard his word but they did not chuse the feare of the Lord they did not sit downe and judge that best or most necessary but tooke it up by accident or by custome or for company because they saw others doe it It will not turne to our account to be found doing good unlesse we chuse to our selves that which is good Our elections are more eyed by God then our actions and the setting of our hearts then the work of our hands Thirdly From the latter branch Let us know among our selves what is good Note First There 's nothing worth our knowing but that which is good Whatsoever hath a morall or a spirituall good in it is worthy to be knowne the truths the workes the wayes of God are the most desireable good things to be studied and knowne Psal 4.6 There are many will say who will shew us any good What 's their good Corne wine oyle gold silver houses lands c. these are their good and these are all their good but though a godly man knoweth that these are good things and blesseth God for any portion in them yet that which he call's his good and the good is of a higher nature We commonly call worldly things our goods but we mis-call them if we call them our good The Favour of God is our good grace is our good faith and love and hope and righteousnesse are good above all God himselfe is good and to know and enjoy him in Christ through the Spirit is our chiefest good here and will be all our good hereafter Let us know what is good From the Comparative sense of the words Let us know what is good that is if there be a better to be had let us know that Observe It is not enough for us to have the knowledge of good things but among good things the best are to be sought out to be knowne and attained to This was a speciall branch of the Apostles prayer for the Philippians Phil 1.10 That ye may approve the things that are excellent or the things that differ in excellency Some are contented to sit downe in the lowest forme of Christs Schoole if they have but any thing which they may call good or true right and sincere they looke no further any thing satisfieth them which will serve turne to keep them from perishing they have no holy aspirings nor godly covetous desires after the best things and the best of the best God is willing and hath promised to give us not only good things but the best things Psal 81.16 He should have fed them also with the finest of the wheat and with honey out of the rock should I have satisfied thee 't is a mercy to have wheat but the finest of the wheat and honey out of the rock not ordinary honey but the best honey the purest honey are greater mercies We by our sins deserve that God should as the Prophet speakes Isa 30.20 give us the bread of adversity and the water of affliction that is either that he should give us adversity in stead of bread and affliction in stead of water or that he should feed us with the coursest bread with huskes and bran and give us bitter waters the waters of Marah to drinke yet he in mercy gives us pleasant bread and wel-tasted water yea were we better he would give us the best bread the finest of the wheat and our cup should be sweeter to us then the sweetest honey The reason why we have not of the best is because we are no better Yea God now gives us not only good things but the best of good things even himselfe his Son and Spirit who are best of all O how excellent is this loving kindness therefore let us not only look after good things but the best of good things to honour God and lift up his name to the highest in this world Let us labour to know and doe the best things and give God our best services and purest praises even the male of our flocke the first-borne the strength of our whole soules To these highest attainments Elihu perswades those wise and knowing men promising to joyne with them in that search Come let us beat out the business with diligence that we may at last chuse Judgement and know among our selves what is good what is best JOB Chap. 34. Vers 5 6 7 8 9. For Job hath said I am righteous and God hath taken away my Judgement Should I lie against my right my wound is incurable without transgression What man is like Job who drinketh up scorning like water Which goeth in company with the workers of iniquity and walketh with wicked men For he hath said It profiteth a man nothing that he should delight himselfe with God THe Preface hath been dispatcht the context of these five verses containes the whole charge or bill of complaint drawne up by Elihu against Job consisting of many particulars This charge is double The first part whereof is contained in the 5th and 6th verses the second in the 7th 8th and 9th verses In the first charge he alledgeth foure things against Job two in the 5th verse and two in the 6th The two things alledged against him in the 5th verse are First That Job insisted too much upon his owne righteousness Job hath said I am righteous Secondly That he reflected too boldly upon the righteousness of God yea that upon the matter he had accused God of unrighteousness or injustice God hath taken away my Judgement Vers 5. For Job hath said I am righteous That 's the first charge Job hath said Elihu gathers up and collects those passages of Jobs complaint which he found most faulty and layeth them as we say in his dish Job hath said we may well remember and he cannot deny it for he hath said it not once only but often not lightly but seriously and assertingly I am just or righteous that is I have sufficiently shewed my innocency and the equity of my cause but I am not permitted to declare and hold it forth in such a way as I would before my Judge yea the Lord proceedeth with me not in the ordinary way of Justice but being above law afflicts me at his pleasure though I am innocent This is the summe of what Job said as often as he hath sayd I am righteous The first particle which we render for imports Vocabulum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quia certitudinem et firmam asseverationem hic importat q.d. profecto equidem
be answered for whether good or bad Math. 12.36 37. For every idle word that men shall speak they shall give account thereof in the day of judgment for by thy words thou shalt be justified and by thy words thou shalt be condemned that is it shall be rendered to thee according to thy words or as thy words have been so it shall be with thee Nor secondly are we to take the works of a man exclusively or in opposition to his thoughts as if God would render to man what he hath acted outwardly but not what he hath acted inwardly or would passe by his thoughts We must give an account of our thoughts which are the spring of our works as well as of our words which are the publishers and proclaimers of them God shall bring every work saith Solomon Eccl. 12.14 to judgment and every secret thing the most secret whispers of the tongue and the most secret plottings contrivings devisings designings yea the simple and single thinkings of the heart These are not only the moulds and principles of every work but every one of these is a work and all of them the whole work of the inner man whose work or what is wrought there is chiefly as well as only under the inspection and eye of God Againe The work of a man shall he render unto him c. He doth not say the works of another man shall he render to any man but the work of a man shall he render to him he that doth the work shall have the reward the works of one man shall not be rendered to another but every mans own works shall As the faith of another man shall not help us if we have no faith Abrahams faith who had a mighty faith will doe us no good if we have no faith of our own so the good works of another man shall doe us no good if we have none of our own And as not the good works so the evill works of others shall not be rendered to us The hurtfull works of others shall not hurt us if we doe no hurt I grant we may partake of the evill works of others yea we may make other mens works our own either by consenting to them before they are done or by approving them after they are done or by not reproving them when we have opportunity In these and many other cases we may make other mens evill works our own and so farre as other mens works are our own God shall render them also unto us Hence that caution given by the Apostle to Timothy 1 Tim. 5.22 Lay hands suddainly on no man neither be partaker of other mens sins keep thy self pure They that partake in any of those wayes mentioned before or in any other way of any mans sins may also quickly partake of his punishment Thus John heard a voyce from Heaven Rev. 18.4 saying come out of her that is out of Babylon my people that ye be not partakers of her sins and that ye receive not of her plagues Not only is that work ours which we doe but that also may be ours by participation which others do And by what title soever a work becomes any mans the worke of the man shall God render unto him And he will cause every man to find according to his wayes This latter part of the verse containes the same thing with the former in another cloathing of words In semita virt inveniet eum Some read the Text thus and he will find every man in his way let man goe in what way he will God will meet with him That 's a truth God will meet or find a man in a good way to incourage guide assist and reward him And God will meet or find a man in an evill way to stop oppose and punish him God will find every man in his way and man shall find God to him according as the way is wherein he findeth him We render very well and fully to the sence he will cause every man to find according to his way I find an Interpreter over-curiously distinguishing between a mans work and his way which doubtlesse here in effect Cajetanus are the same yet there may be a graduall difference 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 via actiones significat quatenus ad finem diriguntur Quemadmodum via initur metae et termini causa Emphaticè via dicuntur actiones ad certum finem directa Coc work being taken for this or that particular act and way for a continued course either good or evill Againe The way of a man may be considered in association with his ends Every man goeth such or such a way for some speciall end no man takes a step in any way without a purpose nor doth any wise or good man take a step in any way without a good purpose Yet there is finis operis an end or issue of the work as also finis operantis an end proposed by the worker And oftentimes that proves to be the end of a work which was not the end purposed by the worker The end of a mans work or way proves sometimes better and sometimes worser then he proposed Possibly a man may not find according to that end of his way and work which he intended not whether good or evill But assuredly whatsoever good or evill end a man proposeth to himself when he enters upon his work or way God will cause him to find accordingly So that when Elihu saith God will cause every man to find according to his way he intimates that God will not only render to man according to the matter of his work or outward path of his way but well considereth every mans scope and intendment or what he would have his work issue in and causeth him to find as he findeth that to be As the end which man proposeth to himselfe hath a great influence upon his way so upon his account with God about it This is a good sence God will cause every man to find according to his way both as his way is taken for the matter or course of his actions as also sor the scope and design of them Hence Observe First Every man shall have according to what he hath done Our receivings will be according to our layings out whether good or evill God is so farre from doing any man wrong that every man shall have his due reward Psal 62.12 Also to thee O Lord belongeth mercy for thou renderest to every man according to his work And lest any should hope to escape the evill which at least some of their evill works deserve by the secrecy of them that hope is quite dashed because God is the searcher and seer not only of our works but of our hearts Prov. 24.12 Doth not he that pondereth the heart consider it and he that keepeth the soul doth not he know it what followes and shall not he render to every man according to his works Solomon speaks in that place
of such as make excuses to shift themselves off from acts of charity they will say we know not whether it be so with him or no possibly he may not be in such want as he pretendeth Take heed of these cloaks of covetousnesse and pitifull pleas to save your purses from shewing pity to the poor for saith Solomon Will not God search it out and render to every man according to his worke The holy Scripture abounds in this poynt Read Jer. 32.19 Ezek. 33.10 Rom. 2.6 2 Cor. 5.10 1 Pet. 1.17 Rev. 22.12 But some may say how doth God render to every man his work Is it not said He justifieth the ungodly Rom. 4.5 Are the works of an ungodly man rendred to him when he is justified I answer it is one thing what God will do through free grace and another what he will deale out in strictnesse of Justice The Apostle speaks in that place of the free grace of God to sinners not of his Justice against sinners Secondly though God justifieth the ungodly yet he never justifieth ungodlinesse or though he justifieth a man who hath done many evill works yea all whose works are evill yet he never justifieth nor rewardeth the work of an evill man Thirdly God acts according to justice and righteousness where he justifieth the ungodly he doth not shew favour to the ungodly in his own wrong Acts of grace from God are not opposite to his Justice much lesse doe they contradict or overthrow it He doth not justifie an ungodly man in himselfe or meerly considered in his ungodlinesse but he justifieth him in the righteousness of another even of Jesus Christ who hath given full satisfaction to the Justice of God with respect to the ungodly whom he justifieth Lastly we may say that God renders the work of an ungodly man to him when he justifieth him for though then he hath not done nor ever can doe any works which deserve the justification of his person yet God doth render to him according to that present work of faith in closing with the promise and the work of Christs righteousnesse therein tendered to him and applyed by him for his justification Further that other Scripture seems to lye in the way of this observation Psal 103.10 He hath not dealt with us after our sins or rewarded us according to our iniquities How then doth God render every man his work I answer as before Acts of mercy do not cross acts of justice When the Lord doth not deal with any man according to his sins it is because he hath freely pardoned his sins and he doth not reward a man according to his iniquity because his iniquities are done away thus he deals with all his own people who are received to favour through Jesus Christ but no wicked man no impenitent person in the world shall have cause to say that God hath not dealt with him according to his sin or hath not rewarded him according to his iniquity There may be some present stops of Justice through the patience of God to wicked men their works are not alwayes presently rendered into their bosomes but they shall God will render to every man according to his work one way or other one time or other The full rendering to all men according to their works will be at the great day in this world the godly doe not somtimes receive according to their good works nor doe the wicked according to their evill works Good men are often rewarded with shame and reproach with want and poverty with banishment and imprisonment with tortures and with death in this present world but the Lord will have a time to render to them according to their workes though at no time for their works so look upon wicked men and their workes they goe often unpunished at the present yea many of them prosper greatly as I have had occasion to shew more then once in opening this Book they have their good things many good things in this life but the time will come when God will render to the wicked their work and they shall be forced to say that he hath caused them to find according to their wayes Take two or three inferences from this generall truth If God will render the work of a man to him Then First Godly men have great encouragement to doe good yea to abound in doing good workes That 's the Apostles argument 1 Cor 15.58 Be ye stedfast and unmoveable in the worke of the Lord forasmuch as ye know that your labour is not in vaine in the Lord that is the Lord will render to every man his labour Hence also that of Solomon Eccl 11.1 Cast thy bread upon the waters for thou shalt find it after many dayes Charities done in faith as an holy offering to God produce a sure encrease To give with a right heart to the poore is the best way of growing rich For God will render to man according to that work And as it may incourage to doe good so to doe it against all discouragements We must not only doe good when the Sun shines when it is faire weather with us and all men applaud us but though men frowne and scorne though which Solomon reports as one of the great vanities of this world Eccl 4.4 For a right worke a man be envied of his neighbour let us not hold our hand from doing good though we are opposed and checkt though we are traduced and slandred though we are mis-interpreted and have the foulest glosses put upon our fairest workes though men call our zeale madness and our circumspect walking hypocrisie yea though we are persecuted and suffer the worst of evills though men cast stones at us as they did at Christ for his good workes yet let us not be deterred from doing good For howsoever men deale with us or what rendrings soever we find from the world yet God will render to us both according to the rightnesse of our worke done and according to the uprightnesse of our hearts in doing it Let this provoke us not only to doe the Lords worke but to doe it with much patience and perseverance for in due time we shall reape if we faint not where there hath been sowing there will be reaping and where the seed time hath been with teares the harvest or reaping time shall be with joy Secondly This is a dreadfull doctrine to evill workers Some as the Apostle calls the Cretians out of their owne Prophet are evill beasts slow bellyes and as they are slothfull or slow bellyes at doing good so they are very free and forward very quicke lively and nimble beasts in doing evill O how should evill workers tremble at this Scripture To every man will God render according to his worke as a cup of cold water given to a disciple in the name of a disciple shall not be lost but have a reward and the giver fully payd for it Math 10.42 so not any the least evill worke impenitently continued
in shall be unpunished Further God will not render to man according to the opinion he hath of himselfe A bad man and the worst of his workes may be good in his owne conceit He may flatter himselfe in his owne eyes untill his iniquity be found to be hatefull Psal 36.2 But God will render unto man according to what his workes are in truth Secondly God will not render to man according to the thoughts which others have of him and of his work some are high in the opinion not only of the world but of some Good men they have a name to be alive while they are dead and their workes dead workes but God will render to man according to that cleare certaine and infallible knowledge which himselfe by whom actions are weighed 1 Sam 2.3 hath of them Thirdly God will not render to man according to his good meanings when his workes are evill many will confesse they have done amisse but they had good intendments in it A right end will not excuse us if our way be wrong There is no pleading of meanings against commandements nor will sincerity of intentions cover the deformity and irregularity of actions The Apostle pronounceth a fearefull doome against those who sayd Rom 3.8 Let us doe evill that good may come whose damnation is just Fourthly As God will not render according to a mans good ends if his worke be evill so remember God will not render to man according to his good workes if his ends are bad Therefore consider your end when you enter your way and begin your worke Pro 21.27 The sacrifice of the wicked is an abomination to the Lord how much more when he bringeth it with an evill mind that is when he hath some bad end in doing it A wicked mans sacrifice is an abomination to the Lord at the best but much more when he hath base designes in his sacrifices or holy services Herod sayd to the wise men Math 3.8 Goe and search diligently for the young child and when ye have found him bring me word againe that I may come and worship him also It was a good worke to enquire after Christ and worship him but his end was to destroy him Jezebel pretended a holy fast but her end was to feast her selfe with revenge upon innocent Naboth The best workes of hypocrites will have an ill returne because they doe them with an evill mind There are three sorts of good workes which will never turne to a good account First Those good works which are done but for a season temporary good workes or the good workes of temporary professors such as are described Math 13.5 7. by the 2d and 3d grounds who bring forth for a while but afterwards fall away such good workes I say shall not have a good reward If your goodness be as the morning cloud and as the early dew it passeth away it will doe you no good He that endureth to the end shall be saved and none but he Math 10.22 Christ exhorts the Church Rev 3.11 Hold that fast which thou hast that no man take thy crowne They loose the good workes they have done who hold not out in doing them It will not advantage us to begin in the Spirit if we end in the flesh Secondly Those good works which are trusted to or boasted of will never make a good returne Though a man should continue doing good all the dayes of his life yet if he buildeth his hope upon it his hope shall be cut off and his trust that is what he trusteth to shall be a spiders web that is weake like that because like that woven out of his owne bowels he shall leane upon his house but it shall not stand he shall hold it fast but it shall not endure Job 8.14 15. you and your workes will perish together if you depend upon your workes Good workes trusted to are as dangerous to the soule as evill workes persevered in Thirdly Those good workes which are done for base ends to serve men or to compasse a worldly interest shall have no reward from God but that which shall be upon every soule that sinneth and repenteth not anguish and tribulation JOB Chap. 34. Vers 12 13. Yea surely God will not doe wickedly neither will the Almighty pervert Judgement Who hath given him a charge over the earth or who hath disposed the whole world ELihu proceedeth in the proofe of this poynt the vindication of the righteousnesse of God with a strong asseveration Vers 12. Yea surely There is a mighty force of affirmation in the originall words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Irgons est in origi-nali assertionu vis we may parallel them with those assertive speeches frequently used by our Saviour Jesus Christ in the Gospel Amen Amen Verily verily I say unto you Yea surely is as much as verily verily as if Elihu had sayd There is no question to be made of what I affirme that God is righteous or will not doe wickedly as the Apostle writ to Timothy about the great mystery of the Gospel God manifested in the flesh 1 Tim 3.16 without controversie great or as the word imports confessedly on all hands great is the mystery of Godlinesse so here Elihu might speak to Job This is a truth beyond dispute or controversie an unquestionable truth and such a truth that if once confessed will quickly determine all the Questions which are depending between you and me There are some Master-truths ruling truths such a one is this in the text Yea surely or undoubtedly God will not doe wickedly Hence note It becomes us to grow up into highest confidences about the truths of God especially about the truth and Justice of God We should not be as meteors hanging in the ayre speaking with hesitation possibly it is so peradventure it is true but as the Apostle directs the Collossians Chap. 2.3 We must labour to grow up unto all riches of the full assurance of understanding as there is a full assurance of faith in believing of hope in waiting or expecting so also of understanding in apprehending the things of God We should be in a sense Masters of truth and then we are so indeed when truth hath fully mastered us and prevailed upon both our judgement and affections and we are led captive by light to the love and obedience of it We have cause to bewayle those much more have they cause to bewayle themselves who are but Scepticks or Questionests in Religion never coming to a poynt nor able after a due making up of their thoughts to say Thus it is and by this we will abide as Elihu did in the then present case delivering himselfe confidently yea surely or verily verily God will not doe wickedly To cleare the meaning in this Negative assertion we must take in the highest affirmatives of the holinesse and Justice of the righteousnesse truth and faithfulnesse of God For it sounds like a flat and low commendation of God to say
he will not doe wickedly for so it may be sayd of every honest man He will not do wickedly but seeing in this Negative commendation given by man to God as in all the Negative commandements given by God to man all affirmatives are to be understood what can be sayd more to or more sound out his praise and glory then this God will not doe wickedly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 est aliquando impium pronunciare condemnare aliquando vero impiè agere vel iniquè quippiam facere Merc The word here used for doing wickedly signifies two things First to pronounce any person wicked and Secondly to doe any thing which is wicked both these often meete together For in many cases to pronounce a person wicked is to doe a wicked thing he that condemneth a just person pronounceth him wicked and what thing can be done more wickedly then that Some take the word in that sence here as a deniall that God either hath done or ever will condemne the innocent There are two things wherein men doe very wickedly with respect to the persons of men both which the Lord abhorres First when they condemne the innocent Secondly when they acquit or cleare the guilty The former way of doing wickedly is chiefly removed from God here by Elihu as the latter is directly and expressly by himselfe Exod 34.7 The Lord the Lord c. that will by no meanes cleare the guilty To pronounce a guilty person innocent or an innocent person guilty if ignorantly done is a great piece of weaknesse and if knowingly done is a great piece of wickednesse Yet because the latter part of the verse speakes particularly to cleare God from wrong Judgement therefore I conceive we may better expound this former part of it more largely as a generall deniall of any evill act whatsoever done by God Surely God will not doe wickedly Neither will the Almighty pervert Judgement The Almighty who hath power to doe what he will hath no will to doe this evill He will not pervert Judgement 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 detorquobit curvabit The word signifies both to pervert and subvert as also to bow wrest or put out of order to mingle or blend those things together which should be for ever separated or as we say to mingle heaven and earth yea heaven and hell together so doe they who mingle good and ill right and wrong together To pervert Judgement is to doe all this for then which Abraham assured himselfe was farre from God Gen 18.25 The righteous are as the wicked that is the righteous fare as ill as the wicked or the wicked fare as well as the righteous But the Almighty will not pervert Judgement that is the right which belongs to any man and therefore he will-doe every man right We had the same position in termes Chap 8. 3d and we have had this whole verse equivalen●ly in the 10th of this Chapter where Elihu sayd Far be it from God that he should doe wickednesse and from the Almighty that he should commit iniquity Here only one verse intervening El●hu reports and repeats the same matter againe but it is no needlesse or vaine repetition for which Christ reproved the prayer of the Heathens Math 6.7 there are many repetitions in Scripture but not one vaine one how often soever the same truth is repeated there it hath its weight and use not only as it is still a truth but as it is a truth repeated And therefore I shall give a threefold reason why this truth is here againe repeated which will also lead us to a fuller improvement of it First Because this truth is as it were the hinge upon which the whole controversie between Job and Elihu is turned Job was unsatisfied because he was so ill handled and therefore Elihu tells him often that God is righteous and that he will not wrong any man Hereby giving Job to understand that God had done him nothing or done nothing to him but right Such grand swaying controling truths should be often and can scarce be too often repeated Secondly Elihu repeated this againe because 't is such a truth as no man can too much no nor enough weigh and consider the value and worth of it Now that which cannot be too often nor too much thought of cannot if rules of prudence be observed be too much or too often spoken of There is scarce any man who hath not sometimes at least indirectly and obliquely some hard thoughts of the proceedings of God either in reference to himselfe or to others Nor is there any thing that we have more temptations about then that surely we are not in all things rightly dealt with and that the dispensations of God are not so even as they might These sinfull suspicions are dayly moving and fluctuating in the heart of man and therefore this opposite principle ought to be fastened and fixed there to the utmost that the will and workes of God are all just and righteous yea that his will is the rule of all righteous workings or that as whatsoever is done in this world is done by the disposure of God so God though the thing be evill and unjust is just and good in the disposure of it Therefore unlesse we resist or contradict the will of God we must say whatsoever comes to passe comes righteously to passe because it comes to passe by the determinate will and counsell of God Thirdly Elihu repeates this assertion that he might the more commodiously make his transition or passage to the matter following and prosecute it with greater successe And therefore I shall not stay longer upon those words only Note First This great truth that God will not doe wickedly neither will the Almighty pervert Judgement convinceth those not only of injudiciousnesse but of wickednesse who though they are ready to acknowledge in generall God is just yet as to those particular providences which concerne them or wherewith themselves are pincht doe not cannot acquiesce and rest in the will of God with freedome and satisfaction That which is just should not displease us though in it selfe it be very bitter and unpleasant to us Secondly This truth is a ground of comfort to all the people of God who are under heavy pressures from this evill world or who receive little reward or incouragement as to sense from the good hand of God Such are apt to say with the kingly Prophet Psal 73.13 14. Verily in vaine have we cleansed our heart and washed our hands in innocency for all the day long have we been plagued and chastened every morning David was under a temptation when he was under hatches he could hardly perceive it worth the while to take paines in cleansing and washing either heart or hand while God was so constant and frequent in correcting and chastening him with so heavy a hand Yet David soone after recovered out of this temptation and concluded the Psalme with this particular assurance v. 28. It is
hands Histories have given many examples and dreadful instances of such calamities falling upon Princes by the rising of the people and then they are said to be taken away Without hand That is Without any foreseen appearance of such a mischief a hand which was not thought of being lifted up against them It is said of wicked Zimri who slew his master that when he saw the people conspire against him and the City taken he went into the Palace of the King's house and in the heat of his rage set it on fire and burnt the Kings house over him and died 1 Kin. 16.18 Justine reports the like conclusion upon a like occasion of Sardanapalus that effeminate and voluptuous Monarch of the Assyrian Empire They who prosecute this Translation conceive Elihu reflecting upon Job in all this who was very uncivilly treated by his own people from whom he had deserved highest respects as he complained at the 30th chapter they raised up against him the wayes of their destruction they used him very rudely even despightfully and he was in a pining consuming condition as a man taken away without hand But I shall not insist upon this reading but take the words according to the scope before given as a description of a mixt judgement from God a judgement partly upon the people and partly upon Princes a judgement upon the many and a judgement upon the mighty In a moment shall they die 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Punctum momontum tempus exiguum Illipsis praeposition● ב In a moment The Text is a moment they die Not that they shall die but a moment or be only for a moment dead but they shall die before a moment is over there is an Elipsis of the preposition Beth in the Hebrew which we supply in our Translation In a moment they shall die A moment is the least particle or parcel of time we cannot imagine any thing shorter then a moment 't is the very point of time Psal 30.5 His anger endureth for a moment saith David when he would shew how very short comparatively the anger of God towards his people is but in his favour is life Thus Solomon Prov. 2.19 He that speaketh truth his tongue shall be established but a lying tongue is for a moment A lye cannot last long he that speaks truth what he speaks to day is good to morrow and to morrow and will be good for ever but a lying tongue is for a moment that is his lies will be discovered and usually they are quickly discovered though he live long to tell lies or doth nothing but tell lies as long as he liveth yet his lyes are not long lived Job describing the joy of the hypocrite chap. 20.5 saith It is but for a moment like a fire of thorns a blaze and gone when the Apostle would strengthen and encourage the hearts of believers against all the troubles and sorrows of this present life he calls them 2 Cor. 4.17 First light Secondly short Our light afflictions that are but for a moment work for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory And that we might know how quick the devil was at his work with Christ the Scripture saith Luke 4.5 He shewed him all the Kingdoms of the world in a moment of time As to shew the instantaneousness of our change from death to life in the resurrection it is said 1 Cor. 15.52 In a moment in the twinckling of an eye at the last Trump we shall be changed So to shew the extream suddenness of these mens change from life to death it is said here In a moment They shall die They Who Both great and small one and another of them shall die or be swept away by death in a moment There is a twofold death First Natural When either sickness or old age dissolves the earthly house of this tabernacle The natural death of some is very lingring and slow others are suddenly snatcht away they die in a moment Secondly There is a violent death thus many are taken away by the sword Martial or Civil others casually The Text is true both of natural and violent death either of them may overtake us in a moment yet I conceive the latter is here chiefly intended In a moment shall they die that is some sudden destruction shall come upon them they shall be surprized by an unlooked for disaster and removed out of the world while they had not a thought of their removal Hence Note First Death of any sort may befal all sorts of men None can plead exemption or priviledge from the grave It is appointed to men once to die most die a natural death and any man may die a violent death who knows how he shall go out of this world Christ told Peter John 21.18 When thou shalt be old thou shalt stretch forth thy hands and another shall gird thee and carry thee whither thou wouldst not This spake he signifying by what death he should glorifie God And what kinde of death was that The Church History assureth us 't was a violent death He as his master Jesus Christ was nailed to a Cross and dyed We come but one way into the world but there are a thousand wayes of going out Note Secondly Death comes suddenly upon many men and may upon all men The whole life of the longest liver in this world is but a moment compared to eternity and there is not any moment of our life but with respect to second causes we are subject to death in it We alwayes in some sense though at some times more carry our lives in our hand and how soon or by what hand they may be snatcht out of ours we know not Now if our whole life be but a moment and we subject to death every moment how should we stand prepared for death every moment And how sad is it to think that they who may die the next moment should for dayes and weeks and moneths and years never prepare for death Most are loth to think of the end of their lives till they are nearer the end of them yet no man knoweth how near he is to the end of his life Many put off the thoughts of death till it cometh yet none can put off the coming of death they would remove the meditation of death to the fall of their leaf to the winter and worst of their old age yet they are not able to remove death one moment from the Spring and best of their youth Note Thirdly Violent death by the sore and severe judgement of God often sweeps multitudes away in a moment God can thrust whole throngs of men yea whole Nations into their graves together it is said Numb 16.21 of Corah and his companions The earth did cover or swallow them up in a moment And the Lord commanded Moses to say unto the children of Israel Exod. 33.5 ye are a stiff-necked people I will come up into the midst of thee in a moment and consume
God where did God appeare to us that we are thus charged with turning back from him I answer First God manifests himselfe to man in his workes or in his providences Secondly He manifests himselfe in every part of his word especially in his Commands in his promises and in his threatenings in his Commands he manifests himselfe a holy God in his promises a gracious and bountifull God in his threatenings a just and righteous God who will neither do wrong nor suffer himselfe to be wronged 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Quia declinaverum de leg● del Sept The Septuagint make this Exposition the text translating these words of Elihu thus Because they have turned from the Law of God Hence note They who turn from the word of God turn back from God When a Command comes if you slight the authority and obligation of it you turn back from God when a promise comes if you doe not believe the truth of it and hope for the good of it you turn back from God look what of the mind of God is manifested to you in the dispensation of the word if you doe not obedientially close with it you neglect to close with God himselfe and while you turn from it you turn from God himselfe Thus the Apostle speakes concerning back-sliders 2 Pet 2.20 21. If after they have escaped the pollutions of the world through the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ they are againe entangled therein and overcome the latter end is worse with them then the beginning For it had been better for them not to have knowne the way of God then after they have knowne it to turn from the holy commandement delivered unto them so that a turning from the Commandement of God is a turning from God himselfe He turneth back from the holy commanding God who turneth back from the holy commandement of God and he turneth back from the God of the promise who turneth back from the promise of God Fifthly Note As it is exceeding sinfull to turn back from God so they who doe so grow every day more and more sinful If a man be once upon a course of back-sliding and Apostatizing from the commands and promises of God he will find himselfe worse and worse day after day for still the further from God any man goeth the more vaine he groweth and the more doth lust get a hand over him As unbeliefe is the roote of Apostacy from God so Apostacy encreaseth all that wickednesse which is in man As the cause of all evill whether of punishment or of sin is our departure and turning from God so the very nature of sin is a turning from God and therefore the more we turne from God the more sinfull and the fuller of sin we are As the neerer we come to God the more holy and spirituall and heavenly we are while we with open face as in a glasse saith the Apostle 2 Cor 3.18 Behold the glory of God that is while we draw neere to him in his holy ordinances we are changed into the same image that is we become more like to God so the more we keep at a distance from God the more unlike we are to him that is the more unholy we are And as persons unconverted or in an unholy state are wholly alienated from the life of God and cannot endure to come neere him so it is in a degree by any of our withdrawings or turnings from him we are made more unholy and are changed more into the image of those carnal and earthly things which we behold and with which we over-intimately converse in the time of those withdrawings Lastly Note A holy life consists in following of and keeping close to God To keep close to God is both a holy and a comfortable life 'T is the perfection of Saints to walk with God Enoch walked with God and that was his holiness Gen 5.24 Caleb followed God fully Optima vivendi ratio est deum sequi Religiosissimus dei cultus est imitari quem colis Lact lib 5. Instit cap 10. and that was his holiness A spirituall life is nothing else but our following God The most religious worship of God is to imitate whom we worship And our imitation of God is our following of God no man can imitate any thing but when his eye is upon its pattern or the Idaea of it abides in his mind And therefore it is sayd of the ungodly man Psal 10.4 God is not in all his thoughts then followeth v. 5. his wayes are alwayes grievous If God be not in the thoughts of a man nothing of God is stampt upon the wayes of that man In vaine are we called Christians unless we keep close to Christ and in vaine doe any pretend to godliness unless they walke with God Jesus Christ hath called himselfe the way Joh 14.6 chiefly upon this account because by him we goe to the Father and have acceptance with God by the grace of Justification but Jesus Christ is the way also of our Sanctification we must walke in him and as he walked 1 Joh 2.6 that we may be holy every departure from God lets the heart loose to sin That which shall maintaine the Saints holiness to Eternity is They shall alwayes behold the face of God they shall never turn back from God they shall never be taken off one moment from the actuall vision enjoyment and contemplation of God in glory therefore they shall never be taken off from actuall holiness and purity now in proportion as we keep our hearts and spirits steady upon God and doe not turn back from him such is our holiness in this life and as our holiness is such will our comfort and peace and joy be in this life For as because when we arrive at glory we shall never turn back from God much less turn our back 's upon him therefore in glory there is fullness of Joy and pleasure for evermore so the neerer we keep to God and the closer we walke with him in this life the fuller and more lasting will our joyes and pleasures be As in this former part of the 27th verse we have had the first cause opened why God striketh the mighty as wicked men in the open sight of others namely their apostacy from God Because they turned back from him So in the latter part of this verse we have another reason assigned why God doth it and that is because They would not Consider any of his wayes The word which we render Consider signifies also to understand or know which is an act precedent to consideration 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 intellexit cognovit cōtemplatus est Hinc Maschil carmen erudiens ode didascalica Tit Psal 32. Consideration is a contemplative act by consideration we become more knowing but we cannot consider any thing till we have some understanding or knowledge of it And this word is often in another Conjugation used in the title of some speciall
Psalmes The 32d Psalme as also the 42d Psalme is called Maschil as much as to say a teaching or an instructing Psalme a Psalme giving understanding and requiring deep and serious consideration Thus in the text they would not consider nor understand nor know nor contemplate any of his wayes The Hebrew is all his wayes that is none at all of them The wayes of God in Scripture are taken in a two-fold notion First for those wherein he would have us walk such are the wayes of his commandements they are called the wayes of God because he directs us to walke in them A holy life consists in our walking with God and we cannot walke with God any further or any longer then we keep in the wayes of his commandements It is sayd of the children of Israel after the death of Joshua Judg 2.17 they turned quickly out of the way which their fathers walked in obeying the commandements of the Lord but they did not so To obey the commandements is to walke in the way of them Taking the wayes of God in this sence when Elihu saith They would not consider any of his wayes his meaning is they did not intend nor had any heart to set themselves to learne the mind of God revealed in his word concerning their duty or what they ought to doe they know not the wayes of God practically The word properly denotes the wisdome and prudence which stayeth not in notion but proceeds to action These men lived as if they had never heard of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ad prudentiam sapientiam practicam rerum agendarum pertinet at least never understood the Law of God which is the rule of life They considered not the wayes of God to walke in them as Moses exhorted the people of Israel Deut 29.9 Keep therefore the words of this covenant to doe them Secondly The wayes of God are those wherein himself walketh the works of God are the wayes of God the works of his providence either in mercy or in judgement either in doing good or in doing evil that is poenal evil these are the wayes of God in these God shewes himself as in a way in these he goeth forth in his power and goodness in his mercy and justice All these divine glories and perfections are discovered in the works of God Thus David is to be understood when he saith Psal 25.10 All the wayes of God are mercy and truth to them that fear him and keep his Covenant that is all the providential works of God are mercy and truth though all of them are not mercy in the matter or precisely taken as works done though none of them are mercy respecting some persons to whom they are done for many of them are materially chastisements afflictions and crosses to good men and all of them are wrath and judgement to evil and impenitently wicked men yet they are all mercy in the issue or result of them to good men or to those who fear God and keep his covenants For whether he do good or whether he do evil whether he wounds or whether he heals all these providential wayes of God are as truth in themselves so mercy to his people or as the Apostle concludes Rom. 8.28 They work together for good to them that love God and are the called according to his purpose In both these sences we may expound this Text They would not consider any of his wayes that is they would neither consider the Lawes of God which were the way wherein they should walk towards him nor would they consider the works of God which are the wayes wherein himself walketh towards them This was the spirit of that evil generation intended in this Scripture they had not much understanding in and less consideration of the wayes of God Hence first we may take notice Elihu doth not say they did not consider his wayes but they would not It was not so much an act of carelesness and negligence as of contempt and rebellious resolution Hence Observe Evil men have no will to consider or understand the good wayes of God yea their will is against such an understanding A natural man liketh not to retain God in his knowledge Rom. 1.28 Now he that doth not like to retain God in his knowledge or had rather think of any thing then of God he can never while such like to retain the wayes of God in his knowledge he that layeth God out of his thoughts will much more lay the law of God out of his thoughts The natural man hath not only a blindness in his minde which hinders him from discerning the things of God they being discernable only by a spiritual eye but he hath an obstinacy in his Will or he hath not only an inability to know but an enmity against the knowledge of that which is spiritual He shuts his eyes and draws a curtain between himself and the light which is ready to dart in upon him away with this light saith he Thus he rebelleth against the light and as his understanding is dark so his affections are corrupt Solomon gives us all this in the expostulations of wisdome with wicked men Prov. 1.20 21 22. Wisdome cryeth c. How long ye simple ones will ye love simplicity and the scorners delight in their scorning and fools hate knowledge That which a man hateth he hath no will no minde to know An impotency or inability unto God argues a very sad condition but a rebellion a frowardness a wilfulness against it demonstrates a condition much more sad not to know because we have no means of knowledge will make us miserable enough but not to know because unwilling to receive or because wilfully set against the means of knowledge renders any mans condition most miserable Such were these in the Text They would not consider any of his wayes Secondly Elihu saith not they did not know any of his wayes or they knew not which way to go but they would not consider them There is no man but knowes some yea many of the ways of God that is of those wayes wherein God would have him to walk these wayes of God are written in the heart by nature there is an impression of the Will of God upon every soul though not such an impression or writing as grace maketh there that 's another kinde or manner of work for when once through grace the Law of God is written in and impressed upon the heart then the heart is suited to the Law yea the heart is not only conformed unto but transformed into the Law of God whereas by nature the Law is written only so far as to give us the knowledge of the Law and a conviction of that duty or conformity which we owe to it The men here intended by Elihu knew the Law or wayes of God by the light of a natural conscience but not by the light of a renewed conscience and therefore they would not consider any of his wayes
hide his pleased face or withdraw his favour who can behold him confidently or come to him with hopes to speed Fierce Abner sayd to Asael 2 Sam 2.22 Turne thee aside from following me wherefore should I smite thee to the ground I could easily doe it and he did it presently how then should I hold up my face to Joab thy brother As if he had sayd I can have no confidence to come to Joab thy Generall if I should kill thee Guilt of evill done to others drawes a jealousie that others will do evill to us especially they who are neerely concern'd in the evill which we have done we cannot hold up our face to or behold them with expectation of acceptance and favour to whose neere relations we have been unkind or injurious Thus if God hide his face who can behold him either with confidence or with comfort Some referre the relative him who can behold him to man not to God as if the meaning of Elihu were this if God hide his face from any man all men will hide their faces from him too no man will looke kindly upon such a deserted person Quis favorem ei exhibebit a quo deus vultum averterit Drus or give him a good look he shall have but frownes from men from whom God withdraweth his favour that 's a truth He that is out with God cannot keep in long with men Usually all sorts disowne him that is forlorne and forsaken of God As when a mans wayes please God because then God is pleased with him his enemies shall be at peace with him Pro 16.7 so when God is displeased with a man his very best friends shall turne enemies to him Yet I conceive the text carrieth it rather the other way referring to God himselfe If God hide his face who can behold him that is who can confidently behold God or draw neere to him with comfort And so it generally comes to passe or thus it is Whether it be done against a nation or against a man only As if Elihu had sayd What I have affirmed that when God giveth quietness no man can make trouble or when he hideth his face no man can behold him is appliable to whole nations as well as to particular persons This is an extensive truth a truth of large concernment and therefore a truth of necessary and important consideration That which may be any mans or all mens case should be studyed by every man Whether it be done against a nation c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The particle which we render against signifieth also for We find it so translated Psal 32.6 and at the 36th verse of this Chapter Now to doe a thing for a nation or for a person notes the doing of it with respect to or in favour of either Thus we commonly speake in our language pray doe such or such a thing for me To this sense some render here whether it be done for a nation or for a man only So Mr Broughton whether it be done for a nation or for an earthly man alone But whether we read for or against the generall truth is the same The word and power of God in sending good or evill upon nations or persons in acting for or against them is uncontrouleable and irresistible Further to cleare the text that word in the close of the verse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 trio significat simul pariter solum rendred only signifieth sometimes together Ezra 4.3 sometimes alike Psal 34.15 and sometimes as we understand it alone or only whether it be done against a nation or a man together or against a man only or alone the matter is alike or the same to God Many or one make a great difference among men in any matter but they make no difference with God he can deale with whole nations in wayes of Judgement or mercy as well as with single persons yet because of the opposition which the text makes between one man and a nation it is most sutable to translate it either only or alike not together Thus we see how the Spirit of God by Elihu hath made a double application of the fo mer part of the text when he giveth quietness who can make trouble c. in this latter first to a nation secondly to a person If the text were not thus exprest it might be thus expounded and improved without any streine at all to it But forasmuch as the Spirit of God hath told us distinctly that this great truth concernes nations as well as persons This Lecture was preached upon the Fifth of November 1658. therefore we have a cleare ground besides the great usefullness of it to speake to the words in both their references And this present memorable day as also their native order leades me specially to speake of them first under a National consideration When he giveth quietness to a nation who can make trouble or disturbe the peace of it And the text may well respect that national blessing peace because the word translated giveth quietness signifies such quietness primarily as is opposite unto warre sedition and tumult in a nation Josh 11.23 And the land rested from warre it is this word so Judg 3.11 The land had rest forty yeares Judg 3.30 And the land had rest fourscore yeares 2 Chron 14.1 In his dayes the land was quiet ten yeares Zech 1.11 And behold all the earth sitteth still and is at rest in all these places we have the word here rendred quietness in opposition to warre who knows not how great an unquietness warre makes wheresoever it comes and by a like analogie the word is sometimes rendred to be silent Warre is full of clamour Isa 9.5 Every battell of the warrier is with confused noise Not only is it so in some battells but saith that Scripture 't is so in all battels Every battel of the warrier is with confused noise What a noise is there in an Army especially when joyning battell with another Army what beating of drums what sounding of trumpets what neighing of horses what clashing of armour what groanings of the wounded When God gives quietness or peace there is none of this noise none of this confused noise of the warrier Hannah saith in her song 1. Sam 2.9 The wicked shall be silent in darkness that is either they shall be destroyed and thrust into their graves where there 's nothing but rottenness and stench darkness and silence or they shall be so affrighted confounded with the horror and darkness of those miseries which shall come upon them while they live that they shall not have a word to say the mouth of iniquity shall be stopt In this manner the wicked are silent in darkness but the Lord can make his people silent in light that is he can give such quietness as shall at once silence the noise of warre and all their own complaints When he giveth quietness this blessed silence to nations who then can
which some Princes have held out to all the world as the rule of their reigning He that knoweth not how to dissemble Qui nescit dissimulare nescit regnore knows not how to reigne Dissimulation is a great part of hypocrisie there is dissimulation both as to the things of God and the things of men Some if they knew not how to dissemble in both at least with men would not believe that they knew how to rule over or governe men Now as many who are great and in power make little conscience to dissemble or make use of hypocrisie to carry on their government and secure themselves so most hypocrites have a mind and will use all meanes not forbearing those which are bad enough to get into power and make themselves great The spirit of hypocrisie is an aspiring spirit Againe Elihu saith That the hypocrite reigne not lest the people be ensnared here 's not one word of the good government or protection of the people which should be the maine businesse of those that reigne The text speaks only of snares That the hypocrite reigne not lest the people be ensnared Hence observe Thirdly Hypocrites getting into power doe either secretly or openly wrong and oppresse the people They lay snares for them in stead of being shields to them Hypocrites in power ensnare chiefly two wayes First By their ill example there is a great snare in that Inferiors are very apt to be formed up according to their mould and manners who are above them R●gis ad exemplum totus componitur orbis the example of Kings and Princes are seldome unconformed to by their Subjects There is a great power in example what is done perswades as wel as what is spoken And the errors of those that rule become rules of error men sin with a kind of authority through the sins of those who are in authority Jeroboam made Israel to sin not only by commanding them to worship the Calves at Dan and Bethel but by commending that Idolatous worship to them in his owne practise and example Secondly They ensnare the people by sinfull and bad Lawes The Prophet denounceth a woe distinctly unto men of severall ranks and places Hos 5.1 Heare ye this O Priests and hearken ye house of Israel and give ye eare O house of the King he directs his speech in that three-fold division First to the Priests Secondly to the body of the people Thirdly and chiefly to the house of the King why to the house of the King Because ye have been a snare on Mizpah and a net spread upon Tabor That Scripture may be interpreted First as an allusion to such as were wont to hunt upon those mountaines Mizpah and Tabor were famous places for hunting there they were wont to set netts and lay snares to catch their game now saith the Prophet ye have been even like hunters spreading netts and laying snares Nimrod is called a mighty hunter before God He was a hunter of men more then of wild beasts Now look what nets and snares are to wild beasts the same are sinfull lawes to the consciences of honest and upright-hearted men And it is wel conceived that the Prophet there referrs to those ensnaring Lawes made by Jeroboam and the succeeding Princes in the Kingdome of Israel whereby they endeavoured to draw off the people of God from his true worship and vexed those who kept close to it Secondly some expound those words Ye have been a snare on Mizpah and a net spread upon Tabor to signifie their setting spies upon those mountaines to watch and so to give information who went to the solemne feasts that so they might be proceeded against according to those ensnaring Laws Which way soever we take it 't is cleare that Scripture reproves and threatens Judgement against the Priests and Apostatizing people of Israel complying with if not provoking the the ruling powers to trouble those who could not digest the Idolatrous worship set up by Jeroboam at Dan Bethel upon a politique consideration lest the people going to Jerusalem should fall off from him and weaken the kingdome of Israel in his hand Another Prophet complained Mic 6.16 The Statutes of Omri are kept Omri was a king of Israel a successor of Jeroboam both in his power and hypocrisie he also pretended a zeale for the worship of God after his owne devising and therefore made ensnaring Statutes to entangle those that were sincere and persevered in the true worship which the Statutes of God appoynted The Prophet speakes of a strange kind of bridle or of a bridle used for an unusuall purpose Isa 30.28 There shall be a bridle in the jawes of the people causing them to erre A bridle is put upon the head of a horse or mule as David speaks Psal 32.9 not to cause either to erre or goe out of the way but to keep them in the way 'T is evident by the context of this Chapter as also by the expresse text of the 37th Chapter v. 29. that this bridle was the Lords power against Senacharib and his host whereby as with a bridle in their jawes he diverted them from their purpose of besiedging Jerusalem 'T is a truth also to which we may warrantably enough apply those words of the Prophet in a way of allusion that good lawes are like a bridle in the jawes of a people the multitude or the most would else be like head-strong horses if authority did not keep them in 'T is a great mercy when Laws are as a bridle to keep us from erring but 't is sad when any Lawes are a bridle in the jawes of a people causing them to erre or go out of the way of the Laws of God such Laws are not which all Lawes should be rules but snares Such were the Lawes of Jeroboam and the Statutes of Omri in Israel of old and what Nation is there that hath not had experience in one age or other of such Lawes as have been a bridle in their jawes causing them to erre or a snare to their souls and consciences Fourthly When Elihu saith That the hypocrite reigne not lest the people be ensnared he intends an act of divine wrath upon hypocrites abusing their power to the hurt of the people Hence Note God is highly displeased with Princes and Magistrates when they ensnare the people We read Isa 3.12 how the people of Israel were ensnared and how the Lord was highly displeased with those who did ensnare them O my people they which lead thee cause thee to erre and destroy the way of thy paths Thy Leaders mislead thee There are two sorts of Leaders First Spiritual Leaders the Ministers and Preachers of the Word now as of old the Priests Levites and Prophets were Leaders of the people and somtimes proved their misleaders Jer. 23.1.3 in Spirituals Secondly There are Leaders of the people in Civil things such are all Princes and Magistrates We may understand that Text in the Prophet Isaiah of
man of wickedness nothing but wickedness altogether wicked The Lord looking downe from heaven upon all the children of men in a state of nature● sayd There is not one that doth good no not one Take any wicked man he hath no good in him no not one good thought in him he is a man of Iniquity he is meere wickedness till he be changed till his heart be broken by Godly sorrow till he be united unto Christ by faith and through the Spirit I know this expression is used severall times in Scripture to note those men who are sinners of the first forme being not only sinners in their state but in the highest degree of activity Thus Antichrist is called The man of sin 2 Thes 2. And when the Prophet saith Isa 55.7 Let the man of iniquity turne from his evill way he meanes the worst of men Yet this is a truth every man in an unconverted estate is a man of iniquity he hath no goodness nothing of God in him he bears only the Image and impresse of the devill upon him Christ told the Pharisees who were high in reputation with the world for good men John 8.44 Ye are of your father the devill and the lusts of your father ye will doe The naturall man is so sinfull that he is meerly sin And sometimes a godly man speakes and doth as if he were so too Job spake like men of Iniquity Elihu proceedeth more fully to declare both the reason why he would have Job further tryed and likewise what he meant by his answers for wicked men Vers 37. For he addeth rebellion or trespass to his sin Nomine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 intelligitur peccatum ex errore commissum Nomine vero 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 scelus propriè rebellio Here are two words sin and rebellion the first which we render sin signifies sin in common the least transgression of the Law it is sin the least vaine thought of the heart the least idle word of the tongue is sin but every sin is not rebellion that hath many speciall markes or brands rather upon it To rebell is to sin with a high hand to rebell is to sin with a stiff neck to rebell is to sin with obstinacy and resolvedness of will he addeth rebellion to his sin But did Job rebell indeed I conceive the rebellion which Elihu chargeth Job with is not rebellion in a strict but in a qualified and comparative sense As if he had said Job sinned before but now his sin is heightened we see him now in words rising up against God complaining of his justice or as if he had dealt unjustly with him What he did in the time of his prosperity those slips falls which he had then weighed nothing as laid in the ballance with the intemperate speeches which he hath uttered in the day of his trouble He addeth rebellion unto his sin So we render as respecting what he was and had done before Others render it potentially not indicatively Let Job be tryed unto the end because of his answers for wicked men for otherwise he may adde rebellion to his sin we know not whether his corruptions may carry him if suffered to goe onne This is a more favourable reading of the text not as a charge of naturall but feared rebellion against God As if he had sayd I see the mans spirit is so entangled that if he be not well and wisely dealt with possibly he may come to adde even rebellion unto his sin and whereas he sinned before out of ignorance or imprudence he may shortly sin out of contumacy and perverseness Hence Note First There are sins of severall degrees Every man sinneth he that saith he hath no sin or doth not sin there is no truth in him 1 John 1.8 But every mans sin is not rebellion every man doth not rise up to that height and degree of sinning If any shall enquire when is a mans sin rebellion I answer First That mans sin grows to be rebellion whose will is much in it He that will sin rebells The Apostle Paul saith Rom 7.19 The evill which I would not that I doe This is the case of every godly man at his best he doth those evills which he would not this is not rebellion because the will of a godly man is changed and turned off from sin he can say the evill which I would not doe that doe I. Rebellion is the doing of that evill which we would Secondly In rebellion or in rebellious acts of sin there is much of the understanding as well as of the will that is a man seeth cleerely what he doth is sin or that the rule is against him to rebell is to sin against the light It is sayd in the 24th Chapter of this booke The wicked are of them that rebell against the light that is they cannot abide the light he means it there of the naturall light the adulterer and the thiefe cannot indure Sun or day-light it is much more true of mysticall light if he hath any light of knowledge he resists and rebells against it It s great rebellion to resist the receiving of light offered but 't is greater rebellion to resist light received sins against knowledge are rebellious sins Thirdly A rebellious sin is a sin against reproofe admonition and warning when we have been often told of such a sin and admonished of such an evill course and yet we will goe on in it here is rebellion such a man hath not only light in his understanding that what he doth is sinfull but this light hath been brought home to him and wrought upon him by reproofe counsell and admonition here is still greater rebellion Therefore in the proceeding of the Church spoken of Math 18. when an offending brother hath been reproved and told of his fault first in p●ivate by a particular brother then by two or three then by the whole Church if after all these admonitions and reproofes he doth not repent he is to be cast out as a rebel and accounted as a heathen or a publican Lastly As 't is rebellion when we sin as against the reproofes of man so against the providences of God and those of two sorts First When we sin against the favourable providences of God I meane those which are outward when God bestows many mercies and comforts upon us when he gives us health and riches in the world and fullnesse of all things then to sin against him is rebellion Deut 32.15 Jesurun waxed fat and kicked and rebelled against the Lord and lightly regarded the rock of his salvation When we have received many and great mercies then to grow vaine and wanton and nourish our selves as in the day of slaughter this is rebellion against God Secondly When the providences of God have broken us by this evill or that evill when we are broken in our estates broken in our names broken in our relations broken with sickness after sickness and yet persist in
Sickness brings downe the strongest men 342. Severall ends for which God sends sickness 343 344. In sickness all creature-comforts are vaine and tastless to us 347. Sickness brings great decay upon the body 351 352. Sickness in what sense called a spending time 356. Sickness makes a wonderfull change in man 358. Sickne●s neere the grave three inferences from it 361 362. Other cautions from the nature of sickness 367 368. Sight twofold 816 Silence or holding our peace Vid peace Sincere persons doe not affect to be seene 770 Sin to say we have no sin how extreamly sinfull it is shewed in foure things 202 203. That shewed further 515. Sin three things in it 31. How man is sinned against God only sinned against properly 167. All sin reducible to three heads 198. Sin a defection from God 198. Sin is a defilement 199. Sin a hurtfull thing three wayes 201. Every step in sin is a step to misery 331. What sin is 448 450. Sin pretends to bring in profit to the sinner 454. No good can be gotten by sin 455. Sin is exceeding dangerous and destructive 455. Sinners shall confesse at last there is no profit in sin 456. The heart strongly set to sin 472 473. The more easily any man sinneth the greater is his sin 537. Sins of others how they may become ours 562 Sin unpardoned a great burden yet by some unfelt 809. We have many unknowne sins 818. A godly man desires God would shew him his sins 824. A godly man may live free from grosse sins 826. Sin considered three wayes 827. A godly man may commit sin after sin but he doth not adde sin to sin 828. The addition of sin to sin a great and most dangerous sio 830. To sin rebelliously what 856. When a sin may be called rebellion shewed in foure things 857 858. 'T is the burden of a godly man to sin and 't is his care not to sin 858 859 Sinners would but cannot hide themselves either from the eye or revenging hand of God 669 670. Sinners would hide themselves upon a twofold account 670. Foure things upon which sinners thinke themselves hid from God 672 673 Sirnames or titles of two sorts 126 Sleepe what it is 280. Three words in the Hebrew signifying sleepe 284 Soveraignty of God shewed 255 839 Man is never displeased with what God doth till he forgets what himselfe is 840. Soveraignty of God in afflicting the most innocent person 515. The Soveraignty of God shewed in five things 580. Three inferences from it 581. God hath an absolute power to pull downe and set up whom he pleaseth 683 Soule of man why called the breath of the Almighty 169. The soule floweth immediately from God 169 170 594. Three inferences from it 170. Soule put for the whole man 359 Speaker he that speaketh is at the mercy of his hearers 530 Speaking twofold 46. 'T is very painfull not to speake in some cases 114 He that speaketh his mind easeth his mind 116. The right end of speaking 116. To neglect speaking where duty calls very dangerous 117 A fourfold consideration is to be had of what we speake 149. We should first try and tast what we are about to speake 152. Three sorts who speake amisse doctrinally 156 157 How or when God is sayd to speake 264. Severall wayes of Gods speaking to man 265 Speech they who have most ability are usually most sparing of speech 45 Spirit often taken for the soule of man 51. Spirit of God free not tyed to age nor to any order of men 66 67 Spirit an imposing Spirit how bad 193. Spirit of God mightily over-powers some men both to doe and speake 114. Why our making is attributed to the Spirit 162. The Spirit of God is God 165. Eight reasons from Scripture proving that the holy Ghost is God 165 166 167 168. The Spirit supplyes the absence of Christ in the Church 685 Spirituall things are not understood by a naturall or unregenerate man 275 Two reasons of it 276. They that are spirituall doe not alwayes perceive spirituall things 277. Three grounds of it 277 278 Striving fourefold described 243. Man is apt to strive with God 248. Foure wayes shewed in which man striveth with God 249. Striving with God very uncomely and sinfull 250. Striving with God a presumptuous sin 251. Striving with God an irrationall thing 252. Striving with God of two sorts 255 256. Seven considerations why we should not strive with God 258. Seven preservatives against striving with God 259 260 Three things to be striven with 261 Submission with silence to the will of God alwayes a duty 479 Sufferings we may not will our sufferings though we must suffer willingly 793 Suspition a godly man suspects himselfe that he is worse and hath done worse then he knows by himselfe 825 Sword put for all violent calamities 330 T Talent not to be hid 72 108 Teachers should be leaders 489 Teaching of God twofold 821. God only can teach effectually 821. We should pray and wait for the teachings of God 823 Teachableness or a willingness to learn shewes an humble and gracious spirit 823 Threatnings it is good to thinke of them 139 Tongue he hath a great command over his spirit that can command his tongue 208. Tongue an unruly member 547 Troubles both nationall and personall at the command of God 644 Troubles overtake many when they least expect 645 Truth must be held and held to in all cases 121. Cleare truth should be spoken 158. We should speake truth clearely 159. Truth to be maintained with all our might 179. A good man seeks not victory but truth 487. We should grow up into highest confidences about the truth 569. Why some truths are and ought to be often repeated 571 572 Tryall word preached to be tryed before it be received 502. Tryall of two sorts 850. A person tryed may be trusted 851. Tryall by affliction 852 Turning back from God how sinners doe so 700. Three sorts of them who turne back from God 700 701 How some good men and how all unregenerate men turne back from God 701. The whole life of a person unregenerate is a turning from God 703 Twice considered three wayes 270 Twice thrice what it implyeth 464 V Vanity of all earthly greatness 685 Vision of God in this life what it is 432 Visitation or visiting a threefold sense or use of it 575 Unbeliefe a striving with God 249 Unbeliefe is the roote of Apostacy 704 Understanding of man taken two wayes 52. God can furnish the weakest man with much wisdome and understanding 61. In what sense every man hath not an understanding 602 604. Three attributes of the understanding 603. Only a spirituall understanding can receive spirituall things 604 605. What we heare we should labour to understand 605 Unity among the Saints the great argument moving to it 175 Vocation an act of absolute free grace 397 Uprightness of heart in speaking standing in a threefold opposition 153 Uprightness
with God If he will contend with him he cannot answer him one of a thousand Againe ver 20. If I justifie my selfe my mouth shall condemne me If I say I am perfect it shall also prove me perverse And while he affirmes the generall viciousnesse of nature he must needs imply his owne Chap. 15.14 What is man that he should be cleane and he which is borne of a woman that he should be righteous Behold he putteth no trust in his Saints yea the heavens are not cleane in his sight how much more abominable and filthy is man In this universall conclusion he includeth himselfe therefore Job was far from being righteous in his owne eyes in any proud opinion of his owne righteousnesse or freedome from any staine of sin So much for the opening of those words containing the reason why his friends ceased to answer Because he was righteous in his owne eyes It was the designe of these three men not only to convince Job that he was a sinner but to bring him upon his knees as a notorious sinner And yet all their allegations and arguments could not bring him to it My righteousnesse said he Chapt. 27.6 I hold fast I will not let it goe Now when they saw him thus resolved and stiffe in maintaining the goodnesse of his cause and the integrity of his spirit they quitted the businesse or as the text saith ceased to answer Hence note We cease to doe when we cannot attaine our end in doing Impossibilium nullus est conatus When we see it is in vaine to perswade we give over perswading Despayre of working our end puts an end to our working Industry is at a stand yea withdraweth when impossibilities appeare And though nothing be impossible unto God yet we find God himselfe giving over both speaking and smiting when he seeth he is like to doe no good by eyther Thus he expresseth his purpose Isa 1.5 when he had spent many rods of sore Judgements afflictions upon that people when he had stricken them till from the crowne of the head to the sole of the feete they were nothing but a continued wound and yet they received not correction he presently reasons thus Why should ye be stricken any more ye will revolt more and more As if he had said The end why I smote you was to amend you to bring you home to my selfe to cause you to turne back or returne from your evill wayes but I see I have lost my labour and spent not only my rods but my scorpions in vaine upon you therefore I will cease from this kind of work why should ye be stricken any more ye will revolt more and more And when God hath spoken long to a people who regard it not he ceaseth to speak any more but saith Why should ye be taught any more Let the Prophets tongue cleave to the roof of his mouth let him be dumb and silent as the word is Ezek. 3.26 Thou shalt be dumb and shalt not be a reprover why for they are a rebellious house After all thy speaking they continue rebelling therefore speak no more We read the like dreadfull prohibition Hos 4.4 Let no man strive nor reprove another let all wayes of reclaiming this people be laid aside For thy people are as they that strive with the Priest That is they are obdurate and desperately ingaged in wickednesse Hos 4.17 Ephraim is joyned to Idols he cleaveth and sticketh fast to them he will not be pulled from his owne inventions Let him alone Thus God saith to his Prophets and Ministers cease he saith to his Ordinances cease when sinners will not cease to sin and doe wickedly against the Lord. The same unprofitable and incorrigible people are threatned in the same manner by another Prophet Amos 8.9 It shall come to passe in that day saith the Lord God that I will cause the Sun to goe downe at noone And ver 11. I will send a famine in the Land not a famine of bread but of hearing the words of the Lord. God would stop the raining down of heavenly Manna and the people should not heare because they would not Such was the sentence of Christ against the Jewes Math. 23.37 O Jerusalem Jerusalem thou that killest the Prophets and stonest them which are sent unto thee how often would I have gathered thy children together as a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings but ye would not What follows this refusall read and tremble ver 38. Behold your house is left unto you desolate for I say unto you ye shall not see me henceforth c. As if he had said because ye have been so unteachable therefore ye shall be taught no more It is sad when we give God occasion to give over either speaking to us or afflicting us God will not alwayes strive with the unwillingnesse much lesse with the wilfulnesse of man nor will men be alwayes doing that to men which they see doth them no good So these three men ceased c. Secondly Note hence When men are obstinate and will not be reclaimed it is good to give over Why should they who in any kind are absolutely resolved be further moved Acts 21.14 When Pauls friends saw he would not be perswaded they ceased they had used much perswasion to keepe him from going up to Jerusalem because of the sufferings that were prophesied should befall him there yet when he stood out in an holy obstinacy against them cloathed with a gracious spirit of courage to suffer for Christ When he would not be perswaded they ceased saying the will of the Lord be done As it was the height of Pauls holiness that he would not be perswaded he was obstinate for Gods cause or for the doing of a duty so it is the height of many mens wickednesse that they will not be perswaded they are obstinate against God or against the doing of their duty Such as are infected with the lust of contending will maintaine that opinion pertinaciously which they cannot maintaine truely As some strive for the love of victory rather then of truth so others strive because they love strife even more then victory and had rather contend then conquer because that puts an end to strife In such cases they doe best who doe no more And if Jobs case had been such if he had held up the discourse not for truth but for victory or because he would have the last word like a clamorous Sophister who hath alwayes somewhat to say though nothing to the purpose In that case I say Jobs friends had done wisely in ceasing to answer They indeed did well upon their owne supposition though as to the truth of Jobs condition they failed greatly Job was not a man of that spirit he that persists in holding and defending truth is not obstinate but constant Further as to the ground why they ceased according to their supposition Observe To be righteous in our owne eyes is hatefull both to God and
good men A man is never so vile in the eyes of those who can discerne him as when he is righteous in his owne how righteous soever any man is he should be little in owning it To insist much upon our owne righteousnesse savours rankly of a Pharisee Luke 18.9 Christ spake a parable to this purpose that 's the title of the Parable ver 9. And he spake this parable unto certain which trusted in themselves that they were righteous and despised others Then follows the Pharisees boast of his fasting twice in the weeke c. And when the text saith ver 14. the Publican went downe to his house justified rather then the other It doth not imply that the Pharisee was at all justified but rather that being righteous in his owne eyes he was under a sad sentence of condemnation in the eyes of God The meaning is not that the Pharisee was somewhat justified and the Publican more But that the Pharisee was not justified at all It is our duty to follow after righteousnesse but our sin to boast of it Math. 5.3 Blessed are the poore in spirit The more poore we are in spirit the more rich we are in spiritualls Poverty of spirit is directly opposite to our being righteous in our owne eyes Christ came not to call the righteous but sinners to repentance Math. 9.13 By the righteous there we are to understand those that are righteous in their owne eyes those that have high thoughts of themselves The sinners whom Christ calls to repentance are the poore in spirit though indeed the righteous in their owne eyes are the greatest sinners As we never doe worse or more against right then when we doe that as it was said of that ungovern'd age Judg. 17.6 which is right in our own eyes so we are never worse then when we are righteous in our owne eyes From the whole matter of these words we see that as Jobs friends had been mistaken all along in that which they spake so now in the reason of their ceasing to speake which was a supposall that Job was righteous in his owne eyes Hence observe There is nothing more common then for men to mistake and mis-judge one another Jobs friends concluded him setled in a proud conceit of his owne righteousnesse because he constantly denyed their charge of unrighteousnesse Some impose an opinion upon their brethren which is not theirs and make them say that which they doe not affirme how injurious is this yea some mis-judge the word of God as well as the words of men They wrest the Scriptures 2 Pet. 3.16 They make the Scripture speake that which the holy Ghost never intended It is dangerous to straine the word of a man much more the word of God The former proceeds from a want of charity but the latter is a great impiety There could not be a more unrighteous thought conceived of Job in any mans heart then that he was as his friends thought him righteous in his owne eyes yet thus they thought him nor would they thinke otherwise of him let him say what he would to the contrary So much of the first verse which giveth us a reason why Jobs friends sate downe and ceased to answer His being as they judged him righteous in his owne eyes In the next verse Elihu gives out a severer Judgement against him then this To be at all righteous in our owne eyes according to the sence intended argues a man to be both very blind and very proud but for a man to be so righteous in his owne eyes as that he dares justifie himselfe rather then the most righteous God argues not only blindnesse and pride but pride and blasphemy yet thus saith Elihu of Job as it followeth Vers 2. Then was kindled the wrath of Elihu the son of Barachel the Buzite of the kindred of Ram against Job was his wrath kindled because he justified himselfe rather then God Here comes in the fourth speaker as a moderator or determiner of this great dispute And he begins much unlike a moderator in a heate Then was kindled the wrath of Elihu Novus hic est disputādi actus nova etiam argumentādi forma tanto subtilior quāto magis in seipsam reflexa Nam videtur argumentari ut logici loquuntur quasi ad hominem ex ipsis Jobi verbis dictis Pined It is very common for men to grow hot in dispute but for a man to begin his dispute with an heat that 's very strange many have been all in a flame upon a little discourse but to be in a flame upon the entrance of a discourse is a thing almost unheard of Yet thus it was with this man Then was kindled the wrath of Elihu The Hebrew is his nose or nostrills were angry The Metaphor is taken from Horses Bears Lyons Bulls or any furious creatures who send forth fumes of wrath or anger at their nostrills The blood at the heart of an angred angry man is enflamed and he as it were breaths out fire and smoake at his mouth and nostrills Elihu came in a flame to this businesse How uncessant were the oppositions of Job no sooner had those three men ceased speaking but a fourth riseth up to speake The Good man found no rest his three friends had their Saboth they ceased or rested from the dispute but Job was at week-day labour still attending the words of this angry moderator Mr. Broughton renders The anger of Elihu was in choler Anger is hot but his anger was heate or at least his anger was heated yea it was not only heated as at the fire but kindled like a fire Then was kindled the wrath of Elihu Anger is a fire Philosophi irā 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 faciunt spiritus affectuum instrumēta sunt ut res phantasiae imprimitur ita spiritus commovetur ad habendam vel d●pellendam Coc and as Solomon saith can a man take fire in his bosome and not be burned so I may say can a man carry anger in his bosom and not burne himselfe if not others with it And as fire is blowne up by bellowes so is anger by provocation The anger of God is expressed in a heat Deut. 29.24 What meaneth the heat of this great anger ver 20. The anger of the Lord and his jealousie shall smoke against that man And Psal 2.12 If his wrath be kindled but a little c. The least sparklings of it are terrible The anger of God is a most dreadfull fire and the anger of man hath much dread in it We have need to look to our passions Fire is good but it must be kept in its due place fire on the hearth fire in the chimney is good but fire in the roof or among the houshold stuff consumeth all There is as I may say an hearth for anger where it will doe no hurt Then was kindled the wrath of Elihu the son of Barachel There are many questions about this person
shoulders to them Secondly passionateness of spirit and of speech must be avoyded That which hinders reason had need be shut out while we are reasoning What a contradiction in the adjunct is it to heare of an angry moderator or to see a man set himselfe to compose differences between others with a discomposed spirit of his owne Thirdly partiality in speaking or the favouring of a party must be layd aside for as Elihu did not spare to tell Jobs friends their owne so neither did he spare to tell Job his owne he was not partiall on either side What can be imagin'd more uncomely then that he who stands between two should leane to any one or that he who comes to be an umpire or a Judge should make himselfe a party or an Advocate Fourthly he must avoyd timorousnesse and not be daunted with what man shall say or can doe against him while he is doing his duty The feare of man is a snare saith Solomon That man had not need be in a snare himselfe whose business it is to bring others out of the snares of error whether in opinion or in practise Fifthly he must beware of an easiness to be drawne aside either by the perswasions or applauses of men A Judge between others must keepe his owne standing Thus farre concerning these two verses wherein Elihu is still carrying on his Preface to prepare Job to receive attentively what he had to say In the next place Elihu turning to the standers by signifies to them in what condition he found Jobs friends JOB Chap. 32. Vers 15 16 17 18 19 20. They were amazed they answered no more they left off speaking When I had waited for they spake not but stood still and answered no more I said I will answer also my part I also will shew mine opinion For I am full of matter the spirit within me constraineth me Behold my belly is as wine which hath no vent it is ready to burst like new bottles I will speak that I may be refreshed I will open my lips and answer ELihu had spoken of his friends silence before and here he returns to it againe with a further addition and aggravation Vers 15. They were amazed they answered no more they left off speaking c. There are two opinions concerning the person who spake these words First Some referre them to the writer or penman of this Book but I rather take them as the words of Elihu himselfe They were amazed The root signifies to be affected with a very passionate and strong feare 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cum pavorem affert quo affici solent qui ab hoste potentissimo superantur even such a feare as they are arrested with who flee or fall before their Enemies in battel So the word is used Jer 50.26 A sword is upon her mighty men and they shall be dismayed Dismay or amazement is the displacing at least the disturbing of reason it selfe Elihu shews how unable and unfit Jobs friends were to argue with him any further seeing upon the matter they had lost the use of their reason and were as men crack-brain'd or broken in their understanding They were amazed They answered no more they left off speaking or Speech was departed from them there is a two-fold Exposition of that speech they left off speaking Some understand it passively 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 q. d ab illis ablata sunt verba like that Luke 12.20 This night shall thy soule be required or taken from thee thou shalt not freely deliver it up but it shall be snatcht from thee So here their speech was taken from them or by an unanswerable conviction silence was imposed upon them Mr Broughton renders They doe speake no more speeches be departed from them How can they speake from whom speech is departed We translate actively they left off speaking as implying a voluntary act they gave a stop to themselves either they were not able or it was not fit for them to say any more The Hebrew is They removed speech from themselves and so became as silent as if they could not speake at all They were as mure as fishes The following verse being of the same sence I shall open that before I give the observations from this Vers 16. When I had waited for they spake not but stood still and answered no more Job waited hoping they would speak somewhat worthy of themselves worthy of that opinion and reputation which they had in the world for wisdome Stare pro tacere but they deceived his expectation He could not have nor heare a word more from them This Elihu puts into a parenthesis for they spake not but stood still and answered no more He useth many words to the same purpose to shew that there was somewhat extraordinary in their silence They spake not their tongues stood still As speech is the image of the mind and from the aboundance of the heart so it is by the motion of the tongue If the tongue stand still discourse is stayd Their mouths were stopt as being either unable or ashamed to urge their accusations and arguments any further They stood still and answered no more It is said of those forward accusers of the women taken in adultery John 8.9 That being Convicted by their owne Conscience they went away one by one they shrunke away having not a word to reply And so did Jobs friends who while they stood still carried it as men unwilling to be heard or seene any more upon the place They were amazed c. First Hence note Amazement unfits us for argument Where wondering begins disputing ends They were amazed they answered no more Secondly Note The same men are sometimes so changed that they can scarcely be knowne to be the same men Eliphaz sayd Chap 4.2 Who can withhold himselfe from speaking He was so forward that he could not be kept from words but now he had not a word in his keeping speech was withheld or departed Thirdly Note False grounds or positions cannot be alwayes maintain'd God will supply both matter and forme arguments and words to confirme his owne truth they who are in the right shall not want reason to back it but they who are in the wrong may quickly find a stop and have no more to say The Apostles were weake because unwilling in a bad cause 2 Cor 13.8 We can doe nothing against the truth but for the truth and they who are willing to be against the truth shall be weake and not able long to doe any thing against it They spake no more As God gives a banner that is outward power to them that feare him that it may be displayed because of the truth Psal 60.4 So he gives wisdome and understanding that is inward power for the maintaining of the truth In thy majesty ride prosperously because of the truth Psal 45.4 As Christ who is truth and the giver forth of truth so they who are undertakers for
Prophet being commanded to cry and putting the question what shall I cry had this answer All flesh is grasse There indeed flesh is taken in the most comprehensive notion as to all externalls not only the flesh of the body but all the riches honours and dignities of this world come under the name of flesh there All flesh is grasse Isa 40.6 But why doth he call it grasse 'T is so under a two-fold consideration First for the greenenesse and fairenesse of it God hath put beauty upon this fading flesh both for the comfort and for the tryall of man that flesh is faire as a flower is matter of delight and to abstract our thoughts or weane our hearts from that which is faire and delightfull is matter of tryall How hardly are we taken off from affecting flesh our owne or others while this grasse continues beautifull and greene Secondly Flesh is grasse because soone gone as it followeth in the Prophet The grasse withereth and the flower fadeth because the Spirit of the Lord or his breath like a blasting East winde bloweth upon it Which yet some expound more spiritually of the Spirit of God discovering the vanity and mutability of all earthly things to the soule for that presently causeth the gayest and best of them to wither or be as a withered flower before our eyes In which sense David sayd Psal 119. ●6 I have seene an end of all perfection Take flesh in the largest sense and 't is a consuming thing The fashion or scheame of the world passeth away and so doth the fashion of all those perfections or most perfect enjoyments which are but of a worldly birth and extraction Flesh under every forme is a fading thing especially the flesh of the best-form'd face body of man Whence take these six inferences If the flesh the fairest outside of man be a fading thing then First Be not desirous much lesse ambitious to make a faire shew in the flesh for it may prove but a vaine shew and at last not so much as a shew Flesh may so consume away that it cannot be seene When the Apostle tells us of some who desire to make a faire shew in the flesh Gal 6.12 he specially meanes it of those that brave it and boast themselves in the outward part of religion and would appeare much in the forme 'T is a most vaine thing to desire to make a faire shew in the flesh of spirituall things as hypocrites and formalists doe And 't is a very vaine thing to desire to make a faire shew in the flesh of corporall things as proud and vain-glorious men love to doe Many desire to make a faire shew in the flesh of their bodyes they love to have faire faces and faire skins to be fairely drest and deckt is a great part of their care But take heed of desiring to make a faire shew in this or in any thing that is called flesh For when you have done all flesh will be a nothing And after you have bestowed much cost upon the flesh of this body that it may be seene a sickness may come and consume it that it cannot be seene Secondly Take heed of priding your selves in the flesh when your flesh possibly unsought by you makes a faire shew Though you have beauty and the goodliest structure of body that ever was seene though you have riches and honour the highest built estate that ever was enjoyed what have you to be proud of will it not consume and moulder away may it not melt like a snow-ball or like wax before the fire be not proud of any thing called flesh how goodly a sight soever it is to th● world for in a little in a very little time there may be nothing of flesh left in sight His flesh is consumed away that it cannot be seene Thirdly Be not over-carefull to provide for your flesh the outward man this body or any thing that concernes it As the Apostle utterly forbids us to make provision for the flesh to fullfill the lusts thereof Rom 13.14 that is those lusts that are exercised in the flesh so be not much carefull not at all unduely carefull to make provision for your flesh to satisfie the necessities of it for 't is but a perishing thing Be not carefull what you shall eate and drinke and wherewith you shall be clothed as Christ himselfe adviseth Math 6. The flesh that you prepare for your flesh is not more perishing then the flesh for which it is prepared Meates for the belly and the belly for meates but God shall destroy both it and them 1 Cor 6.13 It will not be long before there shall be an end both of the meate that is eaten and of eating meate Fourthly If the flesh may soone be so consumed by the hand of God that it cannot be seene then be not unwilling to wast and consume your flesh which is seen in working for God or in doing good worke which is the worke of God your flesh may consume upon worse termes quickly then working for God why then should you be unwilling to consume it in Gods worke Are not some so tender of their carkasse and their skin that they are afraid though that feare be their shame and sin of taking too much paines in the worke of God lest they should dammage their bodyes endanger their health and consume their flesh This flesh will wast with idleness is it not better to wast it by industry in usefull services The Apostle was willing to spend and be spent in the service of the Corinthians That is he was willing to spend not only his purse and his paines but to be spent as to his bodyly strength health and life He cared not for his owne flesh so he might be serviceable to their spirits and promote their spirituall good 2 Cor 12.15 Fifthly Be not unwilling to waste and consume your flesh in duty with God as the flesh consumes in work for God so in duty with God in prayer and fasting and selfe-humbling these are duties with God Some are afraid of taking too much paines in these soule-workes with God lest they hurt their bodies their flesh We can never lay out our strength or bring our flesh to a better market we can never put it off at a higher rate if it must be put off then in wayes of communion with God Yet let us remember we have a promise that our bodyes shall thrive as well as our soules even in those duties of communion with God which are most expensive and severe to our flesh prayer with fasting Isa 58.61 And the Lord shall guide thee continually and satisfie thy soule in drought and make fat thy bones Which though it may have a more spirituall meaning yet there is a truth in it as to the poynt in hand Holy Fasting which is a soule-fatning duty as all agree is under a gracious promise that it shall also be a body-fatning yea a bone-fatning duty Now though we
have a good assurance that while we are trading with God for the gaine and encrease of our soules our bodyes shall not waste nor be loosers yet we should be ready to waste and weare off the flesh from our bodyes for the gaine and encrease of our soules Sixthly Why should we be unwilling to offer our flesh to be consumed by the fury of men or by the rage of flames in the cause of God seeing it may ere long consume by sickness and not be seene why should we be afraid to let our flesh consume or rot in prisons or by tortures for Christ seeing a disease will doe it and hath often done it Thousands of the blassed Martyrs and suffering Saints have rejoyced they had flesh to consume when God called them to it So some interpret that Scripture before mentioned 2 Cor 12.14 where the Apostle professed I am willing to be spent for you how spent as an offering or sacrifice by fire in the service of your faith and in bearing my witness to those truths of the Gospel which I have preached to you And indeed he in that sense spent his flesh at the last he suffered death and let his flesh fall in holding up and holding out the faith of our Lord Jesus Christ It is better that our flesh should be thus consumed if God call us to it then that we leave it to be consumed by age or sickness by wormes or rottenness How freely should we offer up this flesh to so noble a consumption seeing we cannot keepe it long from so meane a consumption doe what we can Secondly Note Sickness is a consumer sickness is a consumer of all that will consume It consumes the body and it consumes the purse yea it consumes all our worldly comforts and concernments it consumes every thing but grace We say A time of sickness is a spending time the usuall reference of that expression is to spiritualls In health we gather grace and lay up truths which we spend in sickness But though sickness be a spending time yet it is not I am sure it ought not to be a wasting time to grace and spiritualls A spending time it is that is a time wherein a godly man may lay out a great deale of his spirituall stock and heavenly treasure a great deale of faith and patience a great deale of sweet contentation and selfe-submission to God But sickness is not a wasting time to any of these graces or heavenly treasures yea where grace is reall and active it is not only not wasted or consumed but encreased and improved occasionally by sickness God having promised that all things shall worke together for good to them that love him Rom 8.28 will not suffer the best things of those that love him their graces to take hurt by the worst of bodyly sicknesses Sickness doth only dammage the body and deface the beauty of the flesh and it quickly doth as Elihu affirme of his sick man in the text His flesh is consumed away that it cannot be seene yea as it followeth And his bones that were not seene stick out Flesh and bones are the two eminent materialls of this faire and most regular building The Body of man The Bones of a healthy and strong man are not seene because they are covered with flesh they are only felt or perceived through their clothing skin and flesh God hath put these very comely and beautifull garments as a covering upon our bones but sickness pulls away these coverings it pulls away the cloaths from our bones and makes them appeare as it were naked When the fat is dript away and the flesh is spent the bones seeme to start out We commonly say of a man that hath been consumed by a lingring sickness He is a very Skelleton he lookes like an Anatomy which is nothing else but a pack of bones the flesh is gone Thus David mourned Psal 31.10 My life is spent with griefe my yeares with sighing my strength faileth because of mine iniquity and my bones are consumed The sin-sickness of a sencible soule consumes the bones more then any bodyly sickness This was not only the consuming but the breaking of Davids bones Psal 51.8 And as his sorrow for his owne transgressions so his sorrow for the afflictions of Sion had the like effect in him Psal 102.3 4 5. My dayes are consumed like smoake or into smoake they vanish like smoake and my bones are burnt as a hearth My heart is smitten and withereth like grasse so that I forget to eate my bread By reason of the voyce of my groaning my bones cleave to my skin Et comminuentur ossa ejus non videntur interpretantes vocem 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in significatione Syriaca Pisc Significationē Syriacam malo quam omnes penè hebraei sequuntur Merc Some read this Text His bones are diminished lessened wasted or broken in pieces as if the consumption reached not only his flesh but his bones too That 's a fierce disease which at once invadeth and wasteth the bones The word which we render to stick out signifieth in the Syriack Idiom the abating lessening or breaking of any thing into lesser parts or pieces And so those words are not seen in the text which according to our translation refer to the time of health when a man is so fat and full fleshed that his bones cannot be seen scarcely felt those words I say are referred according to this translation to the time of sickness which is supposed so to diminish and wast the bones that by an ordinary straine of Rhetorick they are said not to be seen His b●●●● are diminished they are not seen We also render this word● 〈◊〉 that first propheticall word concerning our restoring by Christ Gen. 3.15 by bruising It that is the womans seed shall bruise thy head that is the Devills and thou shalt bruise his heele When bones are bruised and as it were shuffled together they cannot be seen in their proper places or as once they were fixt by nature This various reading doth not vary the generall sence of the Text but only heighten and encrease it We render fully and significantly his bones that were not seen stick out Hence note There is no man so strong there is nothing in man so strong that can stand out against the strength of sickness Our bones are not made of brasse sickness will diminish them and pain master them Secondly Whereas 't is said His flesh that was seen is not seen and his bones that were not seen stick out or are seen Observe Sicknesse makes a wonderfull change in man It puts that out of sight which was seen and it brings that in sight which was not seen This holds true not only as to that which is naturall in man his flesh and bones of which this text treats in the letter but 't is true also as to that which is morall and spirituall in man his virtues and his vices his graces and his lusts
verè ceriè Job dixit Justus sum Pined Vid c. 33 8 9. where this poynt is also discussed the cleareness and truth of the charge there is no avoyding the matter of fact It will fall upon him let him take it off and answer it if he can or as wel as he can For Job hath said I am righteous But it may be questioned where said he this For answer I shall doe two things First Shew from what passages in Jobs former answers this charge may be made good or at least made up Secondly I shall shew in what sence Job said this and how Elihu and Job doe either agree or differ in the thing To the first where said Job I am righteous I answer We find not this direct assertion in termes or in so many words but what he spake in severall places amounts to it Chap 13.18 Behold now I have ordered my cause I know I shall be justified Chap 23.10 But he knoweth the way that I take when he hath tryed me I shall come forth as gold Chap 27.6 My righteousness I hold fast and will not let it goe and he insisted at large upon this poynt his vindication from all unrighteousness throughout the whole 31th Chapter There we find him making frequent imprecations v. 5 6 7. If I have walked with vanitie or if my foot hath hasted to deceit Let me be weighed in an even ballance that God may know mine integrity If my step hath turned out of the way and mine heart walked after mine eyes and if any blot hath cleaved to mine hands then c. In all which and many other passages of that Chapter Job spake highly of his owne innocency and said in effect I am righteous His other friends had taken notice of this before Eliphaz hit him with it Chap 4.17 while he put those questions Shall mortall man be more just then God shall a man be more pure then his maker And so did Bildad Chap 8.6 If thou wert pure and upright surely now he would awake for thee and make the habitation of thy righteousness prosperous Nor was Zophar behind with him Chap 11.4 Thou hast sayd my doctrine is pure I am cleane in thine eyes Secondly In what sence did he speak this For answer when Job said I am righteous we must consider a two-fold righteousness First a perfect absolute righteousness and that may be two-fold First the righteousness of justification which is an imputed righteousness Secondly the righteousness of sanctification which is an in-wrought or inherent righteousness this latter is not absolute or perfect in degree while we abide in this life yet it is dayly growing up to perfection and shall at last attaine a perfect growth If any say Why then doth God call us to a perfection of sanctification in this life if it be not attainable in this life I answer he doth it first to shew how holy he is Secondly to shew how holy we ought to be Thirdly he doth it that we might run to Christ who is the Lord our righteousness and who is made unto us of God wisdome righteousness sanctification and redemption we being altogether short of righteousness and short in righteousness may goe to him and have a compleat and perfect righteousness Now besides this absolute righteousness of justification which is attainable here and of sanctification which is not attainable here but shall be hereafter there is a comparatively perfect righteousness of sanctification the righteousness of uprightness and sincerity when we strive to the uttermost to please God in all things by doing good and can say we doe not please our selves in any way of doing evill It should seeme that Elihu and Job did not wel agree about the definition of justice or righteousness Job intending either civill righteousness towards men or a righteousness imputed freely by God but Elihu understood him of absolute perfect personall righteousness which no man attaines unto in this life For when Job is charged with saying Intelligitur justitia per fidem mediatoris spiritus sancti Arrabone confirmata Neque enim aliam potuit habero Job qui suam claris verbis amoliretur Coc I am righteous he said it either as a justified person or as a sanctified person In the former sence he might say he was perfectly righteous and in the latter he sayd he was so as to the sincerity and uprightness of his heart with God and this he might say of himselfe without fault or blame for God himselfe had sayd of him Ch 1.1 that he was a man perfect and upright I grant Job seemes to say though he said it not with that aime or intention yet he seemes to say that he was even absolutely righteous not only as justified but sanctified while he said Chap 31.7 8. If there be any blot cleaving to my hands if my steps have gone out of the way or my heart been deceived c. This gave Elihu occasion to charge him with saying I am righteous he did not charge him with saying so as justified through the free grace of God nor did he charge him for saying so as to his sincerity but he charged him in these two respects First Because he spake so much of the righteousness of his way and of his workes for though it were true he was righteous in the sence by him intended yet because he made it his business and spent a large discourse to tell the world how good how just and how holy a man he had been this was more then became him in that condition Secondly Elihu checkt him for saying so because though he were fully righteous as justified and sincerely righteous as sanctified he complained of his afflictions as if God might not lay his hand heavy upon him no nor touch a righteous person with an afflicting hand or as if he and all other righteous persons ought to passe all their dayes in peace and have an exemption from the crosse Whereas one great reason why God afflicted him so sorely was to make it knowne to all the world in his example that meerely upon his owne prerogative and soveraignty he both may and will when he pleaseth afflict the most innocent person in the world Yea the intent of Elihu in urging and burdening Job with those sayings was to convince him that though he was a child of God and had walked before him in righteousnesse and true holiness yet he ought to humble himselfe and beare with meekness and patience the forest visitations of God And that therefore he should not have pleaded his owne integrity to priviledge him from affliction nor have sayd Why doe I suffer seeing I am righteous Hence note First That as it is altogether sinfull for any man to say I am altogether without sin for 1 John 1.8 If we say we have no sin there is no truth in us and he who saith in that sense I am righteous doth but declare his owne unrighteousness so to speake much of our
owne righteousness and goodness though we are both good and righteous is evill and very blameable For whereas Job said I am righteous he should rather have left others to say it he should have been satisfied that he was so without saying so and though it cannot be denied that Job was extreamly urged to it as hath been shewed more then once in opening this Booke and it had been but necessary for him to say it once or twice in his owne defence yet because he sayd it so often it drew and that deservedly this censure or charge upon him Hence take this corolary or inference If to speake much of our owne righteousness be displeasing then how abominable is it to be proud of it or trust upon it There is nothing more pleasing to God then to see man walking in wayes of righteousness nor is there any thing more displeasing unto God then to see a man lifted up with or leaning upon his owne righteousness If we make our owne righteousness our staffe God will make it our rod. And though he is farre from scourging us because we are righteous yet he will correct us if we proclaime our owne righteousness yea if we thinke it much or thinke much of it We must have a very great occasion when at any time we beare witness to our owne righteousness and goodness but if the heart be lifted up in pride or trust at all upon it this renders man odious in the sight of God God saved Noah out of that common deluge in which the old world perished For saith the Lord Gen 7.1 thee have I seene righteous before me in this generation Noah was righteous before God and was saved when others perished but surely had he vainely boasted or unnecessarily voted himselfe righteous before men he had perished as wel as others It comes much to one and the same account with God whether men be openly unrighteous or whether without a just cause and call they open their righteousness before men Secondly Note How righteous soever we are in life yea though we are righteous by faith which is our righteousness unto life yet we must not plead that for our freedome from afflictions We may plead the righteousness of faith against condemnation but not against correction if any man be in Christ he shall never be condemned but though a man be in Christ and justified by the highest actings of faith in the blood of the Covenant yet he may be severely corrected This was I conceive the principall scope and intent of Elihu in charging Job thus even to convince him that though he was a faithfull servant of God and of a very unstained conversation among men yet he must not thinke himselfe above the crosse but quietly and meekly submit to it Job spake sometimes fully to that poynt He destroyeth the righteous and the wicked if the scourge slay suddenly he laugheth at the tryall of the innocent Chap 9.23 yet at other times he forgot himselfe and therefore he was justly as to his present case and profitably as to the future issue remembred of it by this plaine and home-dealer Elihu Job hath said I am righteous And God hath taken away my Judgement As if he had sayd Once thou didst say God destroyeth the perfect and the wicked but now thou seemest to say thou art greatly wrong'd and thy Judgement quite taken away because being a righteous man thou art thus afflicted Mr Broughton renders But the Omnipotent keeps back my right As Judgement is right fully given so there is but little difference between keeping back our right and taking it away 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 est auserre declinare divertere subvertere therefore the word signifieth not only to take away or cause to decline to divert and subvert but to keep back or withhold any thing in any kind as Mr Broughton translates expressely This is the thing saith Elihu which Job hath said God hath taken away or kept back my Judgement But where did Job say this he said it Chap 27.2 As the Lord liveth who hath taken away my Judgement and the Almighty who hath vexed my soule Bildad charged Job with it Chap 8. 3. while he put this question to him Doth God pervert Judgement or the Almighty pervert Justice Implying that Job had spoken words reflecting upon the Justice and Judgement of God in taking away his Judgement But you will say What is Judgement and what is it to take away Judgement or how is a mans Judgement taken away I answer There is a three-fold notion of Judgement in Scripture First Judgement is the result or issue of a mans reason about any matter or question propounded to him God sometimes takes away mans Judgement in that sense and then he becomes a foole and unable to judge 'T is a dreadfull judgement when God thus takes away mans judgement and gives him up to a Reprobate or an unjudicious minde as he did the old Gentiles Rom 1.28 for then he will quickly doe those things which are not convenient not being able to distinguish nor discerne between true or false he must needs put light for darkness bitter for sweet sweet for bitter Elihu doth not represent Job complaining that God had taken away his judgement in this notion Secondly Judgement is any angry dispensation or wrath powred out or executed upon persons nations or Churches If judgement begin at the house of God that is if trouble or wrath begin at the Church of God what will the end of those be that obey not the Gospel 1 Pet 4.17 Davids Song consisted of two parts Psal 101.1 judgement was one of them I will sing of mercy and judgement This notion of judgement is every where found in Scripture yet neither is this the notion of it in this Scripture God had not thus taken away Jobs judgement he begg'd indeed that God would take away this his judgement and it was the matter of his complaint because he did not take it away Thirdly Judgement is right done or right due right due is judgement due right done is judgement done Thus David prayed Psal 72.1 Give the King thy Judgements O God and thy righteousness to the Kings son that is give him an understanding to doe right or to give every man his right To doe this is a thing so desireable in all men especially in Kings and Princes that when God at Gibeon sent young king Solomon a blanke from heaven and bid him aske what he would he asked only this 1 Kings 3.9 Give thy servant an understanding heart to judge thy people that I may discerne between good and bad This is properly the judgement intended here Job complained God hath taken away my Judgement that is my right or hath not done me right But how is Judgement taken away I shall answer it in three things First When right is quite subverted and over-throwne This the Prophet elegantly expresseth and reproveth Amos 6.12 Ye have turned judgement into