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

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first declinings are a cause of all the rest remitting your watch and spiritual fervor by degrees you do not walk with such a strait foot he that looketh to the House to keep it tight and in constant repair prevents the fall of it 2. If through our infirmity we miscarry at any time we must not persist in a wrong course but reclaim speedily not depart wickedly Psal. 18. 21. not lie in the dirt when we have caught a fall There is a departing out of infirmity and a departing wickedly A Candle sucketh light if presently kindled again the longer we lie in our sins the worse the more care and the more speedy the more likely to succeed when there is any breach between us and God not lie in it 2dly As to publick Actions We live in changeable times but it is well that we have a sure Rule this may stablish your hearts if governed by sense and interest with what a gracious face shall we appear to the world Though you meet with troubles for being exact and punctual as to principles of Conscience and many disappointments from God yet in the issue that will be found to be the best course for you and yours Now when you see your duty for which you must consult both with Word and Spirit take heed of two things 1. Unbelief Heb. 3. 12. Take heed lest there be in any of you an evil heart of unbelief in departing from the living God The cause of Apostasie is Unbelief they do not look upon God's directions as judgments Men that look to the present face of things cannot see things to come and so miscarry Hezekiah in the midst of dangers and difficulties was steddy to God 2 Kings 18. 5 6. He trusted in the Lord God of Israel He clave to the Lord and departed not from following him but kept his commandments which the Lord commanded Moses Every duty hath a sanction invested with promises and threatnings therefore as there needeth obedience to make conscience of the precept so faith to believe the sanction which doth enliven the duty and keep our hearts under the awe of it 2. Mortification For till there be an indifferency to all events in temporal things we shall ever be departing and turning off from God sometimes allured out of our obedience sometimes afrighted out of it therefore till dead to worldly accidents and interests we are easily turned out of the way Heb. 12. 13. Lest that which is lame be turned out of the way That which is lame feeble and fearful good men may be carried away thus as Peter Too weak and unconstant are the best of men the least blast of temptation will make them leave off the course of well-doing and without respect had to conscience or credit openly to desert it For fear of man's offence Peter slippeth from his duty fear of losing applause or incurring hatred with men maketh us venture on God's dishonour unmortifi'd lusts make us more tender of our selves than of God Second Point That Divine Teaching causeth Constancy For therefore David saith I departed not for thou hast taught me Here 1. What it is to be taught of God 't is often spoken of in Scripture Isa. 54. 13. All thy children shall be taught of the Lord. John 6. 45. All taught of God Now God teacheth outwardly by his Word but inwardly by his Spirit these two must not be severed Our hearing is necessary Eph. 4. 21. If so be ye have heard him and have been taught by him as the truth is in Iesus The ordinary means of hearing him preached and set forth in the Gospel and publick Ministry and by that means doth Christ make use of it to teach us by his Spirit so Iohn 6. 45. Heard and learned of the Father it doth not seclude a teaching Ministry in the Gospel but it is said 1 Thes. 4. 9. Ye your selves are taught of God to love one another And 1 Iohn 2. 27. But the anointing which ye have received of him abideth in you and ye need not that any man teach you but as the same anointing teacheth you of all things and is truth and is no lye and even as it hath taught you ye shall abide in him It is a Rhetorical insinuation the Negative to be understood comparatively man 's teaching is nothing to what you have already by the Spirit On the other side much more doth it not exclude the Spirit upon whom the efficacy dependeth God teacheth by men but the effect is from his grace Mark 16. 20. They went forth preaching the Word the Lord working with them 1 Cor. 3. 6. Paul may plant and Apollo water but God giveth the increase The internal efficacy working by external means Docet Spiritus Sanctus sed per verbum saith Ferus docent Apostoli sed per co-operationem Spiritus Sancti God worketh in and by the means 2. Inwardly God teacheth two ways 1. By common Illumination 2. Special Operation 1. Common Illumination barely enlightning the mind to know or understand what he propoundeth by his Messengers so Rom. 1. 20. God shewed it to the Heathen For the invisible things of him from the creation of the world are clearly seen being understood by the things that are made even his eternal power and Godhead so that they are without excuse But then 2dly By way of special Operation effectually inclining the will to embrace and prosecute duties so known Ier. 31. 33. I will put my law in their inward parts and write it in their hearts This way of teaching is always effectual and persuasive now in this sense they are taught of God that they do not only get an ear to hear but an heart to understand learn and practise Secondly Why this teaching is the ground of constancy 1. They that are thus taught of God see things more clearly than others do God is the most excellent Teacher One man seeth a thing by candle-light another by day-light he seeth most clearly that seeth by noon-day The light of the Spirit doth clearly manifest things both Object and Faculty The Unction teacheth us all things 1 Iohn 2. 20. 2 Cor. 3. 18. A distinct clear abiding light Carnal men are blind 2 Pet. 1. 9. How sharp sighted soever in other things yet blind they do not see so as to affect their hearts 2. They know things more surely and with certainty of demonstration whereas others have but dubious conjectures and loose and wavering opinions about the things of God Iohn 6. 69. We believe and are sure that thou art that Christ the Son of the living God John 17. 8. Known surely that I came out from thee The many temptations and assaults we meet with need such a certain apprehension 3. This teaching is so efficacious and powerful as that the effect followeth Psal. 86. 11. Teach me thy way O Lord I will walk in thy truth 1 Cor. 2. 4. 'T is a lovely teaching causing us to cleave to what is taught 4. God reneweth this
confession of sin with grief and desire of the grace of Christ with a serious purpose of newness of life this is the doctrine of the Scripture They think that to the essence of true Repentance there is required Auricular confession penal satisfactions and the absolvence of the Priest without which true faith profiteth nothing to salvation Again the Scripture teacheth this doctrine That the Ordinances confer grace by virtue only of God's promises and the Sacraments are signs and seals of the Covenant of Grace to them that believe And they would teach us that they deserve and confer grace from the work wrought The Scripture teacheth that good works are such as are done in obedience to God and conformity to his Law and are compleated in love to God and our neighbour They teach us that there are works of supererogation which neither the Law nor the Gospel requireth of us and that the chief of these are Monastical Vows several Orders and Rules of Monks and Friers The Scripture teacheth us That God the Father Son and Holy Ghost is only to be worshipped both with natural and instituted worship in spirit and in truth and they teach both the making and worshipping of an Image and that the Images of Saints are to be worshipped The Scripture teacheth That there is but one holy Apostolical Catholick Church joined together in one faith and one spirit whose Head Husband and Foundation is the Lord Jesus Christ out of which Church there is no salvation And they teach us the Church of Rome is the center the right Mother of all Churches under one head the Pope infallible and supreme Judg of all truth and out of communion of this Church there is nothing but Heresie Schism and everlasting condemnation Instead of that lively Faith by which we are justified by Christ they cry up a dead assent Instead of sound knowledg they cry up an implicite faith believing as the Church believes Instead of Affiance they cry up wavering conjectural uncertainty Thirdly Come to their worship Their adoration of the Host their invocation of Saints and Angels their giving to the Virgin Mary and other Saints departed the titles of Mediator Redeemer and Saviour in their publick Liturgies and Hymns their bowing to and before Images their Communion in one kind and that decreed by their Councils with a non obstante Christi instituto notwithstanding Christs express Institution to the contrary their service in an unknown Tongue and the like are just causes of our separation from them But it is tedious to rake in these things So that unless we would be treacherous to Christ and not only deny the faith but forfeit sense and reason and give up all to the lusts and wills of those that have corrupted the truth of Christianity we ought to withdraw and our Separation is justifiable notwithstanding this plea. The USE Here is Reproof to divers sorts 1. To those that think they may be of any Sect among Christians as if all the differences in the Christian world were about trifles and matters of small concernment and so change their Religion as they do their clothes and are turned about with every puff of new doctrine If it were to turn to Heathenism Turcism or Judaism they would rather suffer banishment or death than yield to such a change but to be this day of this Sect and to morrow of another they think it is no great matter as the wind of Interest bloweth so are they carried and do not think it a matter of such moment to venture any thing upon that account You do not know the deceitfulness of your hearts he that can digest a lesser error will digest a greater God trieth you in the present truth He that is not faithful in a little will not be faithful in much As he that giveth entertainment to a small temptation will also to a greater if put upon it Where there is not a sincere purpose to obey God in all things God is not obeyed in any thing Every Truth is precious The dust of Gold and Pearls is esteemed Every truth is to be owned in its season with full consent To do any thing against conscience is damnable You are to chuse the way of truth impartially to search and find out the paths thereof 2. It reproves those that will be of no Religion till all differences among the learned and godly are reconciled and therefore willingly remain unsetled in Religion and live out of the communion of any Church upon this pretence that there is so much difference such shew of reason on each side and such faults in all that they doubt of all and therefore will not trouble themselves to know which side hath the truth You are to chuse the way of truth And this is such a fond conceit as if a man desperately sick should resolve to take no physick till all Doctors were of one opinion or as if a traveller when he seeth many ways before him should lye down and refuse to go any farther You may know the truth if you will search after it with humble minds Joh. 7. 17. If any man will do his will he shall know of the doctrine whether it be of God or whether I speak of my self The meek he will teach the way If you be diligent you may come to a certainty notwithstanding this difference 3. It reproves those that take up what comes next to hand are loth to be at the pains of study and searching and prayer that they may resolve upon evidence that commonly set themselves to advance that faction into which they are entred Alas you should mind Religion seriously though not lightly leave the Religion you are bred in yet not hold it upon unsound grounds As Antiquity Joh. 4. 20. Our father 's worshipped in this mountain Or custom of the times and places where you live Eph. 2. 2. According to the course of the world the general and corrupt custom or example of those where we live nor be led by affection to o●… admiration of some persons Gal. 2. 12. Holy men may lead you into error Nor by multitude to do as the most do follow not a multitude to do evil but get a true and sound conscience of things for by all these things opinions are rather imposed upon us than chosen by us 4. It reproves those that abstain from fixing out of a fear of troubles as the King of Navarre would so far put forth to sea as that he might soon get to shore again You must make God a good allowance when you imbark with him though called not only to dispute but to dye for Religion you must willingly submit If any man come to me and hate not his own life he cannot be my disciple Luke 14. 26. How soon the fire may be kindled we cannot tell times tend to Popery though there be few left to stick by us the favour of the times run another way we ought to resolve for God
special business and temptation Prov. 28. 26. He that trusteth in his own heart is a fool but he that walketh wisely shall be delivered that is he that followeth his own conceit soon falleth into a snare he that maketh his Bosome his Oracle and his own Wit his Counsel thinks himself wise enough without daily seeking to God to order his own business never succeedeth well but plungeth himself into manifold inconveniencies 2. From Gods manner of giving he is not weary and tyred with constant supplicants Iames 1. 5. If any man lack wisdom let him ask of God who giveth to all men liberally and upbraideth not and it shall be given him The Throne of Grace lyeth always open the oftner we frequent it the more welcome we frown upon one that often troubleth us with his suits but it is not so with God we may beg and beg again 3. The value of the benefit it self Saving knowledg or the light of the spirit keepeth alive the work of grace in our hearts Habitual graces will soon wither and decay without a continual influence the increase of sanctification cometh into the Soul by the increase of saving knowledg 2 Pet. 1. 2. Grace be multiplied unto you through the knowledg of God and of Iesus Christ our Lord. The more we grow thriving in knowledg the more we grow in grace and the heart and life is more engaged As we learn somewhat more of God in Christ our awe and love to him is increased Eph. 4. 20 21. Ye have not so learned Christ if so be that you have heard him and been taught of him as the truth is in Iesus that is if ye are taught and instructed by Christ himself in the Truth It is not every sort of hearing Christ or knowledg which will do us good Many learn him and know him who abuse that knowledg which they have of him but if he effectually teach us by his spirit then our knowledg is practical and operative we will practise what we know be careful to please God in all things 4. From the temper of a gracious heart a tast of this knowledg will make us desire a further supply that we may be taught more and the Soul may be more sanctified therefore doth David deal with God for the increase of saving knowledg We are contented with a little tast of heavenly Doctrine but holy men are not so shew me thy mind let me see thy Glory Hos. 6. 3. then shall we know if we follow on to know the Lord. They are for growth as well as truth they experimentally know how good God is and the more they know him the more they see their Ignorance and that there is more behind to be known of him Before they had but a flying report of him now they are acquainted with him and have a nearer inspection into his ways and this is but little in comparison of what they desire We are bidden 2 Pet. 3. 18. T●… grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Iesus Christ. Present measures do not satisfie them they must grow in knowledg as grow in grace more love to Christ more delight in his ways III. Prop. In asking any spiritual gift we are encouraged by the bounty and mercy of God David signifieth both 1. His bounty or benignity or that free inclination which is in God to do good to his Creatures 2. His mercy respects the Creature as affected with any misery Mercy properly is a proneness to succour and relieve a man in misery notwithstanding sin Now the larger thoughts of mercy the more hope partly because we have no plea of merit and therefore mercy is the Fountain of all the good which cometh to us from God We cannot come to him as a Debtor and therefore we must come to him as a free Benefactor Wherewith can we oblige God We have nothing to give to him but what is his own already and was first received from him all things come of thee and of thine own have we given thee 1 Chron. 29. 14. We pay the great Governour of the World out of his own Exchequer The Apostle maketh the challenge Rom. 11. 35. Who hath given him first and it shall be recompensed to him The Sun oweth nothing to the Beam but the Beam all to the Sun the Fountain oweth nothing to the Stream but the Stream hath all from the Fountain so we have all from God can bring nothing to him which was not his before and came from him Partly because there is a contrary Merit an ill-deserving upon us for which he might deny us any farther Mercies Psalm 25. 8. Good and upright is the Lord and therefore he will teach sinners in the way If the Sinner be weary of his wandring and would be directed of the Lord for the time to come God is upright he will not mislead us and he is good will readily lead us in a right Path. Sin shall not obstruct our Mercies and therefore must not keep the penitent supplicant back from confidence to be heard in his Prayer when he would be directed in the ready way to Happiness You would fain be reduced to a good Life after all your straying humbly lay your selves at God's feet 1 Kings 20. 31. We have heard that the Kings of the house of Israel are mercifull Kings let us I pray thee put sackcloath on our Loins and ropes upon our Heads and go out to the King of Israel peradventure he will save thy life If God were most tenacious we have cause to beat his Ears continually with our Suits and Supplications such is our want but he is good and ready to guide poor Creatures nay he is mercifull and former Sins shall be no obstruction to us if at length we are willing to return to our Duty IV. Prop. The universal Experience of the World possesseth all mens minds with this apprehension that God is a mercifull God The Earth O Lord is full of thy Mercy the World and every thing therein sets forth his Goodness to us The same is said in other places Psalm 33. 5. The Earth is full of the goodness of the Lord. If Earth what is Heaven Psalm 145. 9. His tender Mercy is over all his works 1. Let us see that every Creature is a Monument and Witness of God's Mercy and Goodness things animate and inanimate the Heavens and Earth and all things contained therein declare that there is a powerfull wise and good God There is no part of the World that we can set our Eyes upon but it speaketh Praise to God and the thoughts of his Bounty to the Creatures especially to Man for all things were either subjected to Man's dominion or created for his use and benefit If we look to the Heavens all serveth for the use and benefit of Mankind Psalm 8. 3 4. When I consider thy Heavens the work of thy fingers the Moon and the Stars which thou hast ordained What is man that thou
off Providence appeareth with a doubtful face they that take to the better part may be reduced to great straits therefore sometimes it may happen to the righteous according to the work of the wicked and to the wicked according to the work of the righteous Ecl. 8. 4. So variously doth God dispense external good and evil and may seem to frown upon those that are faithful now yet we should not depart from his judgments Iob 13. 14. Though he kill me yet will I trust in him We should wrastle through many disappointments here or hereafter God will not own us 2. By giving success to a wrong party that layeth claim to him to his favour in an evil way and interpret when his providence seems to be an approbation of an evil course 't is a great temptation God's choicest servants have staggered by it but yet 't is but a temptation Psal. 50. 21. I kept silence and thou thoughest that I was altogether such a one as thy self God may hold his hand though they strangely transform him in their thoughts and entitle their actions to his Patronage God tryeth you Deut. 13 2 3. The Lord your God proveth you to know whether ye love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul. God's Word is so clear and satisfactory that by a righteous judgment he may permit it to try our stedfastness and obedience not as chaff but as solid gra●… But must we not regard Providences yes but not interpret them against the Word but with it 't is comfortable to see the Word back'd with a Providence Rom. 2. 18. Heb. 2. 2. and Hos. 7. 12. when the Word is made good and they feel that which they would not believe 2dly Not interpret it against the Word Providence is never against the Word it is an exact Comment upon it if we had eyes to see it and when we see it altogether we shall find it so but now we view it by pieces and so mistake Rom. 8. 28. For we know that all things work together for good to them that love God to them who are called according to purpose Ps. 73. 17. Until I went into the sanctuary then understood I their ends When we look to the end of things all hazards are over Secondly The Reasons why we must be exact and constant notwithstanding these temptations I will name but two implied in the two words of the Text Thy Iudgments 1. 'T is God's Word 2. God's Word is Judgment 1. 'T is God's direction who cannot deceive or be deceiv'd you may venture your souls temporal and eternal estate and all upon it upon God's bare word for it is impossible for him to lye In his promises Heb. 6. 18. or to be deceiv'd in his directions The Word of the Lord is a pure Rule 1 Iohn 2. 27. The unction teacheth you all things and is truth and is no lye There is no erring while we walk by this direction the Spirit of God teaching us by his Word and indeed this is the effect of that great Faith to believe God upon his bare word to believe what he hath spoken is true and to act accordingly if this were rooted in our hearts we should not be so unstable so easily foiled by Satan discouraged by the oppositions of evil men or live by example but by rule and would interpret the Providence of God to the advantage and not the prejudice of obedience Whom resist stedfast in the faith 1 Pet. 5. 9. Adhere to the truth of the Word I know here is my direction and in the issue will be my safety and happiness But either we do not believe this is God's Word or do not urge the heart with God's authority and veracity and therefore we are up and down but now when we determine this is God's Word and so receive it 1 Thess. 2. 13. When ye received the Word of God which ye heard of us ye received it not as the word of men but as it is in truth the Word of God And then 't is my Rule whatever it cost me there you urge the heart with the authority of God Mat. 16. 24. A resolute giving up our selves to God's direction and to receive the Law from his mouth and it is a certain Rule whatever cross accidents fall out it should be receiv'd with such certainty and absolute authority as nothing should move us so assured of it That if an Angel should preach any other doctrine let him be accursed Gal. 1. 8. 2 Tim. 3. 16. and 2 Pet. 1. 2. when it is believed to be the Lord's mind 't is a sure ground for Faith to rest upon 't is not a doctrine sound out by the wit of Man no private invention of others but God's inspiration God hath wisdom to direct me the safest way and goodness and faithfulness enough not to mislead me Good and upright is the Lord therefore will he teach sinners in the way Psal. 25. 8. It is not the devices of their heads that wrote it but the publick mind of God and saith the Apostle Knowing this first this is the first and supreme principle he had said ver 19. that we should consult with the Word for direction and comfort before we can get any saving light or true comfort 2dly ' ●…is Judgments Every Man's doom is contain'd in the Word and if you can but stay a little you shall see it verifi'd by sensible and plain experiences do but wait and observe how God maketh good his promises and accomplisheth his threatnings and you will say no cause to depart you will find you have done right in the issue and that close obedience is the only way of safety and happiness here and hereafter David did as to his own case Psal. 18. 21. I have kept the ways of the Lord and have not wickedly departed from my God And was he a loser by it No God hath recompensed me according to the cleanness of my hands On the other side those that depart from God are destroyed his Word will be made good against them Psal. 119. ver 119. Thou puttest away the wicked of the earth like dross Use 1. Is direction to us both in publick and private Cases Be sure you follow such ways as God's Word doth allow for otherwise it is not constancy but obstinacy and then whatever troubles and discouragements you meet with this will be a comfort to you that you are in God's way First As to your private Case be not discouraged by the instability of your hearts and the temptations of Satan you will be up and down with God But observe these two Rules 1. It is necessary to watch against your first declinings lest by little and little the heart be stolen away from God When you lose your savor of holy things lessen your diligence and are not so exact and watchful you begin to depart from God The gap once made in the conscience groweth wider and wider every day The
But Justification is but a relative It rendreth us amiable in the eyes of God God hateth sin more than misery Sin is against Gods very nature God can inflict punishme●…t but he cannot infuse sin Gods interest and honour is to be preferred before our comfort and personal benefit In sanctification besides our personal benefit which is the perfection of our natures Gods honour and interest is concerned in our subjection to him Justification is a pledge but Sanctification is not only a pledge but a beginning 't is removens prohibens We love him for pardoning but he delighteth in holiness he delighteth in us rather as sanctified than pardoned We love much because much is forgiven Luke 7. 47. But God delighteth in the pure and upright Prov. 11. 20. Such as are upright in their way are his delight Use. 1. For reproof of three sorts First Of those that would have ease and comfort but care not for duty would have the love of God to pacifie their Consciences but never mind this to have their hearts directed in Gods ways Hos. 10. 11. Ephraim is as an Heifer that is taught that would tread out the Corn but not break the Clodds It yielded food Deut. 25. 4. They would be feasted with priviledges yet abhor service when they prize comfort To these we may argue not only ab incongruo how disingenuous it is to separate duty and comfort to be so ready to expect all from God and so unwilling to do any thing for him 'T is contrary to the disposition of Gods Children Tit. 2. 11 12. and Rom. 12. 1. But ab impossibili Will God ever delight in you till you be conformed to his Image Christ came not to make a change in God but in us not to make God less holy but us more holy 'T is not agreeable to the reasonable nature to conceive that God should be indifferent to good and bad or a friend to those that break his Laws Would you think well of that Magistrate that should let men rob and steal and beat their Fellow-Subjects and not only connive at them but receive them into his bosome You that have but a drop of the Divine Nature cannot delight in the company of Sinners 2 Pet. 2. 8. Secondly Those that would have the favour of God but expect it should be shewed to them in temporal things Alas these things are promiscuously dispensed to all Can be no evidence of his special love God is behind-hand with none of his Creatures Eccl. 9. 1 2. sometimes evil things to good men and good things to evil men Iosiah dyed in wars as well as Ahab Is Abraham rich so is Nabal Is Ioseph honoured by Pharaoh so is Doeg by Saul Hath Demetrius a good report of all men 3 Iohn 12. so have false Teachers Luke 6. 26. Hath Caleb health and strength Iosh. 14. 11. so have wicked ones No bands in their death Psal. 73. 4. Their strength is firm Was Moses beautiful Acts 7. 20. so was Absolom 2 Sam. 14. 25. Did God give learning and wisdom to Moses and Daniel c. Dan. 1. 17. so to the Egyptians Acts. 7. 22. Long life to Ishmael Gen. 25. 17. as well as to Isaac Gen. 35. 20. Thirdly The Children of God that murmure and repine at their sufferings when others ignorant of the mind of God and the strictness of his ways fare better Psal. 17. 14. 'T is often seen That he that encreaseth knowledg encreaseth sorrow Eccl. 1. 18. Drones and Sots have their ampler revenues but we should not be thereby discouraged 'T is their portion Prov. 3. 31 32. Envy thou not the Oppressor and chuse none of his ways for the froward are an abomination unto the Lord and his secret is with the righteous They are hateful to God while they flourish 'T is a greater evidence of Gods favour and friendship to understand his counsel in the Word and to be acquainted with the mysteries of godliness than to enjoy all the power and greatness in the world the knowledg of a despised hated truth than to flourish in opposition against the ways of God through ignorance obstinacy and prejudice Use 2. Is direction to us 1. For strict walking If we would have a comfortable sense of Gods love we must resolve upon a strict course of holy walking Gal. 6. 16. And as many as walk according to this rule peace be on them and mercy upon the Israel of God and Psal. 85. 8. and Ephes. 4. 30. 2. If we would walk strictly we must go to God for continual direction Psal. 86. 11. Teach me thy way O Lord I will walk in thy truth unite my heart to fear thy name Psal. 143. 10. Teach me to do thy will for thou art my God thy spirit is good lead me into the land of uprightness Especially when blinded with interest or apt to be carried away with temptations 3. Gods teaching is not only directive but perswasive it prevents sin Psal. 119. 133. quickens to Duty Psal. 119. 33 34 35. Teach and keep and make me to go for that 's the difference between literal instruction which we have from man and spiritual instruction which we have from God Gods teaching is drawing ●…ohn 6. 44. 45. SERMON CLI PSAL. CXIX VER 136. Rivers of water run down mine eyes because they keep not thy Law MOST of the Sentences of this Psalm are independent and do not easily fall under the rules of method so that we need not take pains in clearing up the Context the Verse needs it not the time permits it not only you may observe this That often in this Psalm David had expressed his great joy and now he maketh mention of his exceeding grief There is a time to rejoyce and a time to mourn as times vary so do duties We have affections for every condition Indeed in this Valley of tears mourning is seldome out of season either with respect to sin or misery for our selves or others David that did sometimes mourn for his own sins and watered his Couch with tears Psal. 6. 6. He took also his time to mourn and bewail other mens sins Rivers of tears run down mine eyes because they keep not thy Law In the Words observe David's grief is set out by 1. Constancy and greatness of it Rivers of tears run down mine eyes 2. The goodness of the cause or reason of it Because they keep not thy Law Rivers of tears He compares his tears to a Stream and River always running The same expression is used Lam. 2. 18. Let tears run down like a River day and night let not the apples of thine eyes cease When affections are vehemently exercised the Scripture is wont to use such kind of expressions The will of a godly man is above his performance it is wont to do much more than the body can furnish him with abilities to express He had such a large affection that he could weep Rivers Because they Some referr it to eyes the
not only opens the Scripture but opens the understanding Luk. 24. 45. The subordinate Teachers are the Ministers of the Gospel whom God useth for this work not out of any indigence but indulgence not for any efficacy in the Preacher but out of a suitableness to the hearer as a means most agreeable to our frail estate to deal with us by way of counsel God can teach us without men by the secret illapses of his Spirit but he will use those that are of the same nature with our selves that have the same temptations necessities and affections which know the heart of a man He would use them who if they deceive us must deceive themselves he would use men of whose conversation and course we are conscious we know their walk and way he would use them as Ambassadors to pray us in Christs stead to be reconciled to God 2 Cor. 5. 20. 4 The lesson which we learn is not only to know but to obey Science without Conscience will not fit our turn nor suit with the dignity of our teacher To be like children that have the Rickets swollen in the head when the feet are weak we do not learn truth as it is in Jesus till we be regenerated for that 's a truth for practice and walking not for talk Eph. 4. 21. He is most learned that turns Gods word into works 1 Ioh. 2. 4 5. He that saith I know him and keepeth not his commandments is a lyar and the truth is not in him But whoso keepeth his word in him verily is the love of God perfected In this School there is no man counted a Proficient but he that grows in practice It is not the curious searcher that is the best Scholar but the humble Practitioner when we are cast into the mould of this Doctrine and have the prints the stamp and character of it upon our heart as Rom. 6. 17. Ye have obeyed from the heart that form of Doctrine which was delivered you In the Original it is Whereto ye were delivered When we come to a Physician it is not enough to know his Prescriptions but they must be followed we do not come to Christ as Students of Physick to be train'd up in the Theory but as Patients not as one that minds the Art but the Cure to do what is prescribed that we may know how to get rid of our soul-diseases Therefore Christ saith John 8. 31. Then are ye my disciples indeed if my word abide in you There are Christs Disciples in pretence and Christs disciples indeed those that make it their work to get from Christ a power and vertue to carry on an uniform and constant obedience these are the true learners Therefore it will not fit our turn unless we labour to come under the power of what we learn as well as get the knowledg and it will not suit with the dignity of our Teacher who doth not only enlighten the mind but change us by his efficacy and leaves a suitable impression upon the soul. God writeth the lesson upon our hearts that is not only gives us the lesson but an heart to learn it Man's teaching is a pouring it into the ears This is Gods teaching to inform our reason and move our will Phil. 2. 13. It is God that worketh in you both to will and to do of his good pleasure He teacheth us promises so as to make us believe them and commandments so as to make us obey them and the Doctrine of the Gospel teacheth us so as to stamp the impression of it upon the soul to change us into his image and likeness 2 Cor. 3. 18. Use. It presseth us to give up our selves to this Learning Study the word but take God for your Teacher Look to him that speaks from heaven if you would learn to purpose otherwise our natural blindness will never be cured nor our prejudices removed nor our wills gained to God or if they should be gained to a profession of truth it will never hold long When men lead us into a truth we shall easily be led off again by other men and all a mans teaching will never reform the heart Man's light is like a March-Sun which raiseth vapours but doth not dispel and scatter them so it discovers Iust but doth not give us power to suppress it therefore our main business must be to be taught of God Secondly Observe your proficiency in this knowledg Heb. 5. 14. To have your senses exercised to discern both good and evil We should every day grow more skilful in the word of righteousness John 14. 9. Have I been so long time with you and yet hast thou not known me Philip To be backward in the knowledg of grace after long teaching and to be still conflicting with fleshly lusts which is the exercise of beginners so much means and so small experience and get no further this is sad Thirdly The fruit of this benefit obtained Then shall I praise him From hence observe 1. Upon receit of every mercy we should praise God We are forward in supplication but backward in gratulation This is a more noble duty and continueth with us in heaven It is the work of glorified Saints and Angels to praise God All the lepers could beg health yet but one returned to give God the glory This is sad when it is so for this is a more sublime duty therefore it should have more of our care This is a profitable duty Psal. 67. 5 6. Let the people praise thee O Lord let all the people praise thee Then shall the earth yield her encrease and God even our own God shall bless us The more vapours go up the more showers come down and the more praises go up the more mercies There 's a reciprocal intercourse between us and God by mercies and praises as there is between the earth and the lower heavens by vapours and showers There are two words by which our thankfulness to God is exprest Praising and Blessing Psal. 145. 10. All thy works shall praise thee O Lord and thy Saints shall bless thee What 's the difference Praise respecteth Gods Excellencies and Blessing respecteth Gods Benefits We may praise a man that never hath done us good if he be excellent and praise-worthy but blessing respecteth Gods Bounty and Benefits yet they are promiscuously taken sometimes as here Praise is taken for Blessing 2. Observe We should praise God especially for spiritual blessings Eph. 1. 3. Why partly because these come from the special love of God God bestows Corn Wine and Oil in the geral upon the world but now knowledg and grace and blessed experiences of communion with God these are special things he bestows them upon the Saints therefore deserves more thankfulness Protection it is the common benefit of every subject but Preferment and Favour is for friends and those that are near to the Prince so this is the favour of his people called so Psal. 106. 5. Shew me the favour of
at our best we were so Adam in innocency was not able to stand without confirming grace but gave out at the first assault And still we are mutable though we have a strong inclination for the present When the precepts of God are propounded with evidence and backed with promises and threatnings and a resolution follows thereupon the fruit of rational conviction and moral suasion which is not for the present false and hypocritical yet it will not hold without the bottom of grace It hath not supernatural yet it may have moral sincerity Such a resolution was that of the Israelites after the terrible delivery of Gods Law They promised universal obedience and did not lye in it for God saith They have done well in their promise there was a moral sincerity but there wanted a renewed sanctified heart And those Captains which came to Ieremiah ch 42. 5. intended not to deceive for the present when they called God to witness that they would do according to all things for the which the Lord thy God shall send thee to us And Hazael Is thy servant a dog that he should do this thing Certainly he had abomination of it when the Prophet mentioned that cruelty of ripping up women with child But suppose the resolution to be a fruit of grace and regeneration yet we have not full power to stand of our selves still we are very changeable creatures in matters that do not absolutely and immediately concern life and death Lot that was chast in Sodom in the midst of so many temptations you will find him committing Incest in the Mountains where were none but his two daughters What a change was here David that was so tender that his heart smote him for cutting off the lap of Saul's garment one would wonder that he should plot lust be guilty of murder and lye in that stupid condition for a long time Peter which had such courage to venture upon a band of men and to cut off Malchus's ear should be so faint-hearted at a Damosels question So while the strength of the present impulse and the grace of God is warm upon the heart we may keep close to our work while the influence continues but afterward how cold and dead do men grow as vapours drawn up by the Sun at night fall down again in a dew The people were upon a high point of willingness mighty forward and ready to offer whole Cart-loads of Gold and Silver 1 Chron. 29. 18. what saith David O Lord God keep this for ever in the imagination of the thoughts of the heart of thy people and stablish their heart unto thee We are not always in a like frame 2. Our strength lyes in God and not in our selves When the Apostle had exhorted his Ephesians to all Christian duties he concludes it thus Eph. 6. 10. Be strong in the Lord and in the power of his might This might is in God he is our strength And 2 Tim. 2. 1. Be strong in the grace that is in Iesus Christ. God would not trust us with the stock in our own hands now we have spent our portion and plaid the prodigals but would have us wait upon him from morning to morning Psal. 25. 4. Shew me thy ways O Lord teach me thy paths lead me in thy truth and teach me We are apt to embezil it or forget God both which are very mischievous When the Prodigal got his stock in his own hands he went into a far Countrey out of his Fathers house God would not hear from us there would not be such a constant communion and correspondence between him and us if our daily necessities did not force us to him Therefore that the Throne of Grace might not lye unfrequented God keeps the strength in his own hands We need to consult with him on all occasions 3. God gives out his strength according to his own pleasure God many times gives the will when he suspendeth the strength that is necessary for the performance Sometimes God gives s●…ire a sense and conscience of duty at other times he gives velle to will to have a purpose And when he gives to will he doth not always give posse to be able not such a lively performance It is possible he may give the will where he doth not give the deed for it is said Phil. 2. 13. He worketh both to will and to do of his good pleasure And Paul certainly doth not speak as a convinced but as a renewed man when he saith To will is present with me but how to perform that which is good I find not He had received the will and not the deed finding presupposeth searching when we have done all we can yet how to bring our purposes into actions we cannot tell Peter had his resolutions and no doubt they were hearty and real yet when he comes to make them good what a poor weakling was Peter Putabat se posse quod se velle sentiebat He thought he could do that which he could will saith Austin John 13. 37. Lord why cannot I follow thee now I will lay down my life for thee We look upon the willing spirit and not upon the weak flesh It is possible we may lean upon resent dispositions and affections as if they would carry us out without dependance upon God Therefore for all the parts of spiritual strength he must be sought to The Use is USE To press you to beware of presumption and self-confidence when your resolutions are at the highest for God and your hearts in the best frame Resolution is needful as was said before but all our confidences must arise from Gods promises not our own if we mean not to be left in the dirt This self-confidence in spiritual things I shall shew 1. How it discovereth it self 2. How to cure it It discovereth it self 1. Partly thus by venturing upon temptations without a call and warrant When men will lay their heads in the lap of a temptation and run into the mouth of danger they tempt God but trust to themselves Peter would be venturing into the Devils quarters but what 's the issue He denies his Master Dependence upon God is ever accompanied with a holy solicitude and cautelous fear Phil. 2. 12 13. when we go out of Gods way it is a presuming upon our own strength for he will keep us in viis in his ways not in praecipit iis when we run head-long into danger 2. When men neglect those means whereby their graces or comforts may be fed and supplied A man that is kept humble and depending will be always waiting for his dole at wisdoms gates Prov. 8. 34. We cannot regularly expect any thing from God but in Gods way they who depend upon God will be much in prayer hearing and taking all opportunities But when men begin to think they need not pray so much need not make such conscience of hearing when we are more arbitrary and negligent in the use of means then we
soon is the edg of his bravery taken off Dan. 5. 5 6. Haman in the midst of his honours was troubled at the heart for want of Mordecai's knee Those things which seem to affect us so much cannot allay one unquiet passion certainly cannot still and pacifie the least storm of the Conscience and therefore what ever face men put upon temporal enjoyments if they cannot see Gods special love in them they want sincere joy There is many a smart lash they feel when the world hears not the stroke Prov. 14. 13. Even in laughter the heart is sorrowful and the end of that mirth is heaviness All the laughter and merriment which men seem to receive from the Creature it is but a little appearance not such as will go to the Conscience that will indeed and throughly rejoice and comfort a man and give him solid joy 3. There wants eternity An Immortal soul must have an eternal good pleasures for evermore Psal. 16. ult In this world we have but a poor changeable happiness Luk. 12. 19. 't was said to the rich fool This night thy soul shall be required of thee Thus much for the first Branch Blessed art thou O Lord. II. I come from the Compellation to the Supplication Teach me thy statutes And here observe 1 The person teaching he speaks to God Do thou O God teach 2 We may consider the person taught Teach me I that have hid the word in my heart David that was a Prophet is willing to be a Disciple Those that teach others have need that God should teach them the Prophet saith Teach me O Lord. David a grown Christian he desires more understanding of Gods will Certainly we should still follow on to know the Lord Hos. 6. 3. Heathens that only knew natural and moral things yet they saw a need of growth and the more they knew the more they discovered their ignorance and always as they grew elder they grew wiser How much more sensible would they have been of their defects in the knowledg of spiritual things if they had in a little measure been acquainted with the mysteries of godliness that pass all understanding and are so much from humane sense and above the capacities of our reason Prov. 30. 3. Agur said I neither learned wisdom nor have the knowledg of the holy There is very much yet to be learned of God and of his ways Many think they know all that can be taught them David a great Prophet a man after Gods own heart yet is earnest that God would teach him his statutes 3 The lesson or matter to be taught Thy Statutes so he calls the Word because the Doctrines of it have the force of a Law published they do unalterably bind and that the soul and conscience and therefore the Precepts Counsels and Doctrines of the Word are all called statutes The Point is Doct. If we would know Gods statutes so as to keep them we must be taught of God Here I shall enquire 1. What it is or how doth God teach us 2. The necessity of this teaching 3. The benefit and utility of it First How doth God teach us Outwardly by his Ordinance by the Ministry of man Inwardly by the inspiration and work of the Holy Ghost 1. The outward teaching is Gods teaching because it is an Ordinance which is appointed by him now both these must ever go together external and internal teaching Despise not Prophecy Quench not the Spirit If you would have any enlightning and quickning of the Spirit you must not despise Prophecy We teach you here and God blesseth Jesus Christ when he comes to teach his Disciples first he openeth the Scripture Luk. 24. 37. And then v. 45. he opened their understandings Of Lydia it is said God opened her heart in attending to the things spoken by Paul Act. 16. 14. She was attending and then God openeth her heart When the Eunuch was reading then God sends an Interpreter The outward means are necessary it is Gods teaching in part but the inward grace especially Both these must go together for it is said Ioh. 6. 45. Every man that hath heard and hath learned of the Father cometh unto me There must be a hearing of the Word and so there is a teaching from God But 2. The inward teaching which is the work of the Spirit that needs most to be opened What is that it consists in two things 1 When God infuseth light into the understanding so as we come to apprehend the things of God in a spiritual manner Psal. 36. 9. In thy light shall we see light There is no discerning spiritual things spiritually but in Gods light There may be a literal instruction which one man may give to another But in thy light only shall we see light such a lively affective knowledg as disposeth the heart for the enjoyment of God There is a seeing and a seeing in seeing Isa. 6. 10. Lest in seeing they shall see A man may see a truth rationally that doth not see it spiritually now when we have the Spirits light then in seeing we see Or as the Apostle calls it Col. 1. 6. A knowing of the grace of God in truth Since you did not only take up the report but feel it and had some experience of it in your hearts Again 2 Gods teaching it consisteth not only in enlightning the understanding but in moving and inclining the heart and the will for Gods teaching is always accompanied with drawing Ioh. 6. 44. No man cometh to me except the Father draw him which Christ proves v. 45. Because they shall be all taught of God The Spirits light is not only directive but perswasive it is effectual to alter and to change the affections and to carry them out to Christ and to his ways he works powerfully where he teacheth When the Holy Ghost was first poured out upon the Apostles there was a notable effect of it It came in the appearance of ●…ven tongues like as of fire Act. 2. 3. to shew the manner of the Spirits operation by the Ministry not only as light but as fire it is a burning and shining light that is such a light as is seasoned with zeal and love that affects the heart that burns up our corruptions And therefore you know when Christ would put forth a Divine effect in his conference with his two Disciples it is said Their hearts burned within them while he talked with them Luk. 24. 32. There 's a warmth and heat convey'd to the Soul Thus for the nature of this Teaching Secondly The necessity of this Teaching will appear in several things 1. If we consider the weakness of a natural understanding 1 Cor. 2. 14. The natural man receiveth not the thing of the spirit of God because they are spiritually discerned They must be spiritually understood There must be a cognation and proportion between the object and the faculty Divine things cannot be seen but by a Divine light and spiritual things by a
spiritual light else they shall have no favour and relish Can sense which is the light of Beasts trace the workings or the flights of Reason Can you see a Soul or an Angel by the light of a candle there is no proportion between them So can a natural man receive the things of the Spirit he receives them not why because spiritual things must be spiritually discerned 2. There is not only blindness but obstinacy and prejudice When we come to judg by sense and reason the whole business of Christianity seems to be a foolish thing to a carnal heart To give up our selves to God and all our Interest and to wait upon the reversion of a happiness in another world which is doubtful whether there will be any such thing or no is a folly to him To deny present lusts and interests to be much in prayer and be often in communion with God is esteemed a like folly When the Apostle came to preach the Gospel to the Wits at Athens they scoffed at him they entertained his Doctrine as fire is entertained in wet wood with hissing and scorn To do all and suffer all and that upon the account of a happiness to come to a carnal heart this is but a fancy and a meer imagination 3. As blind and obstinate so we are apt to abuse truth Carnal hearts turn all to a carnal purpose As Spiders assimilate and turn all they suck into their own substance so doth a carnal heart turn all even the Counsels and Comforts of the word to a carnal purpose Or as the Sea whatever comes into it the sweet Rivers and droppings of the clouds turns all into salt water Hos. 14. 9. Who is wise and he shall understand these things prudent and he shall know them but the transgressors shall stumble therein As right excellent and as notable as the doctrines of the word are yet a carnal heart finds matter in them to stumble at he picks that which is an occasion of ruine and eternal perdition from the Scripture therefore the Apostle saith Eph. 4. 21. If ye have learned of him as the truth is in Iesus We are never right and truth never works as to regeneration but it 's only fuel for our lusts until we have learned it as it is in Jesus Carnal men undo themselves by their own apprehensions of the truths of God Luther calls some Promises bloody Promises because of the mistakes of carnal men by their perverse application Therefore that we may maintain an awe of God in our soul we need to be taught of God 4. We are apt to abuse our knowledg Saving-knowledg makes us more humble but carnal knowledg more proud Where it is in gift rather than in grace there men are puft up The more we know God or our selves by a divine light the more humble we shall be Jer. 31. 18 19. When I was instructed I smote upon my thigh I was ashamed even confounded because I did bear the reproach of my youth The more light we have from God the more we look into a vile heart When Adam's eyes were opened he runs into the bushes he was ashamed So when God opens the eyes and teacheth a Christian this makes him more humble 5. There needs Gods teaching because we are so apt to forsake when we have known the things of God Psal. 119. 21. The proud do err from thy commandments What 's the reason David was so stedfast in the truth he did not take it up from the teachings of man but from the teachings of God When a man leads us into any truth another man may lead us out again But now when God hath taught us and imprest a truth upon the heart then it is durable What 's the reason believers are not as fickle as others and not led away by the impure Gnosticks and like those Libertines now among us 1 Joh. 2. 20. Ye have an unction from the holy One and ye know all things They had an unction which came down from Jesus Christ upon their hearts and then a man is not led away by every fancy but begins to grow stable in spirit 6. We cannot tell how to master our Corruptions nor restore reason to its Dominion again 'T is not enough to bring light into the soul but we must have power and efficacy or true conversion will not follow Man's reason was to govern his actions Now all literal instruction is weak like a March-Sun which draweth up the vapours but cannot scatter them it can discover sins but cannot quell them Rom. 7. 19. When the commandment came sin revived and I died He could not tell how to bridle his lusts he found them more outrageous The good that I would do I do not and the evil which I would not that I do Thirdly The Benefit and Utility of Gods teaching When God teacheth truth cometh upon us with more conviction and demonstration 1 Cor. 2. 6. and so hath a greater awe and soveraignty Those that have made any trial can judg between being taught of God and men Those that are taught of men the charms of Rhetorick may sometimes stir up some loose affection but it doth soon vanish and wear away again but the work of God makes deep impression upon the soul and truths are then more affective Man's knowledg is sapless dry and unsavoury 2 Pet. 1. 8. For if these things be in you and abound they make you that ye shall neither be barren nor unfruitful in the knowledg of our Lord Iesus Christ. There may be an empty belief and a naked and unactive apprehension of Christ which stirs up no affection but the light which comes from God enters upon the heart Prov. 2. 10. it affects the whole soul. It doth not only stay in the fancy float in the brain but affect the heart And then it is renewing Man's light may make us more learned but God's light more holy We are changed by beholding the glory of God into the same Image 2 Cor. 3. 18. SERMON XIV PSAL. CXIX 13. With my lips have I declared all the judgments of thy mouth FOR the coherence of these words you may refer them either to the 11th or 12th Verse If to the 11th Verse there he speaks of hiding the word in his heart and now it breaks out in his tongue First it must be in the heart and next in the tongue First in the heart It is but hypocrisie to be speaking and talking of good things when we have not been refreshed and warmed by them our selves Christianity is not a Religion to talk of but to live by There are many rotten-hearted hypocrites that are all talkers like the Moon dark in themselves whatever light they give out to others or like Negroes that dig in rich Mines and bring up gold for others when themselves are poor The power of grace in the heart is a good foundation for grace in the lips This is the method and order wherein David expresseth it I
young or had more leisure and rest In that I have meditated and conferred You must continue still in a holy course To begin to build and leave unfinished is an argument of folly There is always the same reason for going on that there was for beginning both for necessity profit and sweetness We have no licence to slack and give over till all be finished Phil. 2. 12. Work out your own salvation otherwise all you do is in vain yet not in vain Gal. 3. 4. in vain as to final reward yet not in vain as to encrease of punishment You lose your cost your watchings striving prayings but you will gain a more heavy punishment so that it had been better you had never begun 2 Pet. 2. 20 21. For if after they have escaped the pollutions of the world through the knowledg of our Lord and Saviour Iesus Christ they are again intangled therein and overcome the latter end is worse with them than the beginning for it had been better for them not to have known the way of righteousness than after they have known it to turn from the holy commandment delivered to them You bring an ill report upon God your sense of the worth of heavenly things must needs be greater for your making trial and therefore your punishment for neglect the greater Into the Vineyard they came at several hours but all tarried till the close of the day Some called sooner some later but all held out till the end Heb. 6. 10 11. You have ministred and must minister you have prayed and must pray you have heard the word with gladness and must hear still Many in youth are zealous but when their first heats are spent grow worldly careless and ready to sound a retreat from God The fire of the Altar was never to go out so should the life and warmth and vigour of our affections to the word of God be ever preserved God is the same still and so is the word and therefore we should ever be the same in our respects to it The Devil in policy lets men alone for a while to manifest some respect to the ways of God that they may after do Religion a They are full of zeal strict holy diligent in attendance upon Ordinances he never troubleth them but is at truce with them all this while till they get some name for the profession of godliness and then he knoweth their fall will be the more scandalous and ignominious not only to themselves but to their profession They are forward and hot men a while till they have run themselves out of breath and then by a notable defection shame themselves and harden others 2. Compare it with the 13th verse I have declared now I will meditate To be warm and affectionate in our expressions of respect to the Word before others and to slight it in our own hearts argueth gross hypocrisie Therefore David would not only confer but meditate Many talk with others but not with their own soul. Commune with your hearts and be still True zeal is uniform when there is no witness but God it acts alike 3. Refer it to the 14th Verse David had spoken of his delight in the Law now that he would meditate therein in both not to boast but to excite others by his example that is to be understood all along when he speaketh of his diligence in and about the Law of God But mark first the word was his delight and then his meditation Delight causeth meditation and meditation encreaseth delight Psal. 1. 2. But his delight is in the law of the Lord and in his law doth he meditate day and night A man that delighteth in the Law of God will exercise his mind therein Our thoughts follow our affections It is tedious and irksome to the flesh to meditate but delight will carry us out The smallest actions when we have no delight in them seem tedious and burdensome It was no great matter for Haman to lead Mordecai's Horse yet a burdensome offensive service because it was against his will The difficulty that we find in holy duties lyeth not in the duties themselves but in the awkwardness of our affections Many think they have no parts and therefore they cannot meditate He that findeth an heart to this work will find an head Delight will set the mind a-work for we are apt to muse and pause upon that which is pleasing to us Why are not holy thoughts as natural and as kindly to us as carnal The defect is in the heart I have rejoyced in thy testimonies saith David and therefore I will meditate in thy statutes In the words there is a double expression of Davids love to the Law of God 1. I will meditate in thy precepts 2. I will have respect to thy ways Concerning which observe 1. In both the notion by which the word of God is expressed and diversified Precepts Ways The word precepts implieth Gods Authority by which the counsels of the word are ratified Ways implieth a certain direction for our walk to heaven There are Gods ways to us declared in his Promises so it is said Psal. 25. 10. All the paths of God are mercy and truth Our ways to God ver 4. of that Psalm Shew me thy ways teach me thy paths These are his precepts 2. Observe the one is the fruit of the other I will meditate and then I will have respect Meditation is in order to practice and if it be right it will beget a respect to the ways of God We do not meditate that we may rest in contemplation but in order to obedience Joshua 1. 8. Thou shalt meditate in the book of the law day and night that thou mayest observe to do according to all that is written therein So Phil. 4. 8 9. Think of these things do these things 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 when you cast up your accounts and consider what God hath required of you it is that you may set upon the work Meditation is not a flourishing of the wit that we may please the fancy by playing with divine truths Sense is diseased that must be fed with quails but a serious inculcation of them upon the heart that we may urge it to practice Nor yet an acquainting our selves with the word that we may speak of it in company Conference is for others Meditation for our selves when we are alone Words are but the female issue of our thoughts works the male Nor meerly to store our selves with curious notions and subtil inquiries study searcheth out a truth but Meditation improveth it for practical use it is better to be sincere than subtil 3. Observe this practical obedience is expressed by having respect unto the ways of God To respect Gods ways is to take heed that we do not turn out of them to regard them and our selves observe to do them Josh. 1. 8. and it is called elsewhere pondering our path Prov. 4. 26. ponder the path of thy feet that we
a right understanding of the word of God I. What is meant by opening the eyes Before I come to the particular explication of the terms let me premise two observations 1. The Saints do not complain of the obscurity of the Law but of their own blindness The Psalmist doth not say Lord make a plainer Law but Lord open mine eyes blind men might as well complain of God that he doth not make a Sun whereby they might see The word is a light that shineth in a dark place 2 Pet. 1. 19. There is no want of light in the Scripture but there is a vail of darkness upon our hearts so that if in this clear light we cannot see the defect is not in the word but in our selves 2. The light which they beg is not any thing besides the word When God is said to enlighten us it is not that we should expect new Revelations but that we may see the wonders in his word or get a clear sight of what is already revealed Those that vent their own dreams under the name of the Spirit and divine light they do not give you mysteria but monstra portentous opinions not show you the wondrous things of Gods Law but the prodigies of their own brain unhappy abortives that dye as soon as they come to light Isa. 8. 21. To the Law and to the Testimony if they speak not according to this word it is because there is no light in them The light which we have is not without the word but by the word Now to the phrase the Hebrew signifieth unvail mine eyes There is a double work Negative Positive There is a taking away the vail and an infusion of light Paul's cure of his natural blindness is a fit emblem of our cure of spiritual blindness Acts 9. 18. Immediately there fell from his eyes as it had been scales and he received sight forthwith First the scales fall from our eyes and then we receive sight 1. There is a taking away the vail before we can have a true discerning of the mysteries that are revealed in the word of God 2 Cor. 3. 14 15. the Apostle speaking of the Iews saith But their minds were blinded for until this day remaineth the same vail untaken away in the reading of the Old Testament which vail is done away in Christ but even unto this day when Moses is read the vail is upon their hearts Now this vail is divers 1. The vail of Ignorance Though man hath Reason and is capable of understanding the sense and importance of the words that are used about the Mysteries of godliness yea and the matter too yet he gets not the saving-knowledg of them by his natural abilities There is a Grammatical knowledg and a Spiritual knowledg a man may know things Grammatically and literally that is ignorant of them Spiritually As a child may read the letters and words that doth not conceive of the sense so a man may know what is said concerning God and Christ and Sin and Grace the vanity of the creature the excellency of heaven and have yet no saving-knowledg of these things and therefore the Scripture useth the expression that they oversee in seeing as Acts 28. 26. Hearing ye shall hear and not understand seeing ye shall see and not perceive Though Truths are never so plainly delivered never so powerfully pressed and though they are capable to understand the words yet they do not take in the truth into their hearts so as to profit by it So Deut. 29. 2 3 4. Ye have seen yet ye have not an heart to see Most will declaim against the vanity of the creature evil of sin but they do not see with an affective heart-piercing light they have on them the vail of spiritual ignorance 2. The vail of Carnal knowledg and wisdom that puffeth up 1 Cor. 8. 1 2. by which seeing not we think we see This is a great hinderance to the entertaining of the word So Christ telleth the Pharisees who were conceited of their own knowledg Joh. 9. 39. For judgment am I come into this world that they which see not might see and they which see might be made blind The Pharisees were the Rabbies of the age the most seeing and learned men of that time Carnal men are puffed up with a conceit of their own abilities and so are obstructed by them from profiting by the Gospel 3. The vail of Prejudice and corrupt affections The passions of the mind Love and Fear Desire and Anger hinder us from judging aright in the things of God Our hearts are overcast with strong affections to the world and so cannot clearly judg either of practical truths or of the controversies of the age Not of practical truths When Christ had taught that they could not serve God and Mammon it is said Luk. 16. 14. And the pharisees that were covetous derided him Holy mortifying truths are unpleasing to a carnal ear though they be represented with never so much evidence How will men distinguish themselves out of their duty They shift and stretch and turn and wind hither and thither and prove truth to be no truth rather than part with their lusts So present truths as the Apostle calls them 2 Pet. 1. 12. when the dust of Interest is raised are not discerned The Orthodoxy of the world is usually an age too short 2 Cor. 4. 4. The god of this world hath blinded their eyes 4. The vail of carnal sense 2 Pet. 1. 9. He that lacketh these things is blind and cannot see afar off There are so many mists and clouds in the lower world that men cannot out-see time and without the Prospective of faith have a sight of Eternity Nature is short-sighted so inured to present things that we receive no light concerning things to come These are the scales that are upon our eyes 2. There is an infusion of light without which men of excellent wit and sharp understanding in other things are stark blind in the things of God What this light is will appear by the degrees of knowledg and the uses of this light 1. The degrees of knowledg 1. In some there is a simple nescience both of terms or notions and things as in those that have not a revelation or have not regarded it when the revelation is made As the Gentiles that have not a Revelation Eph. 4. 18. Having their understanding darkned being alienated from the life of God through the ignorance that is in them because of the blindness of their heart Or rude and ignorant Christians that have not the advantage of education so as to understand the notions in which the Doctrine of God is propounded Isa. 28. 9 10. Whom shall he teach knowledg and whom shall he make to understand doctrine them that are weaned from the milk and drawn from the breasts for precept must be upon precept precept upon precept line upon line line upon line here a little and there a little So sottish and brutish
are some that a man had need teach them as he teacheth little children letter after letter and line after line little good done 2. In others there is a Grammatical knowledg but not a spiritual a repeating things by rote a talking of all that a Christian enjoyeth 3. Besides the Grammatical knowledg there is a Dogmatical knowledg when the truths of the word are not only understood but begin to settle into an opinion that we bustle for in the world An opinionative receiving of the truth is different from a saving receiving of the truth Many are Orthodox or have so much judgment and knowledg as to hold the Truth strictly but the heart is not possessed with the life and power of it Those are intended in Rom. 2. 20. An instructer of the foolish a teacher of babes which have the form of knowledg and of the truth in the law And such are described 2 Tim. 3. 8. Having a form of godliness but denying the power thereof It is not to be imagined that this is always in design though many times carnal men swim with the stream and take up with the opinions that are currant in their age but also out of conviction of judgment there is somewhat of conscience in it A sound judgment is a different thing from a sound heart The truths of God have great evidence with them and therefore a rational man being helped with some common work of the Spirit may close with them though they have no experience of the power and prevailing influence of them 4. Besides this Dogmatical knowledg by which we see round about the compass of Truths revealed in the word there is a gracious illumination when men are taught so as drawn to God Iohn 6. 44 45. and they do so understand Christs Doctrine as to apply and make a right use of it such a knowledg as is called not only sight but taste 1 Pet. 2. 3. If so be ye have tasted that the Lord is gracious and a feeling of what we understand Phil. 1. 9. And this I pray that your love may abound more and more in knowledg and in all judgment This sense and experimental knowledg is that which the Saints seek after 2. The Uses of this spiritual illumination And 1. To give us a clear sight of the Truths of God 2. An applicative sight 3. An affective sight 4. A transforming sight 5. Such a sense of the Truth as is prevalent over lusts and interests 1. A clear sight of the Truths of God Others have but an hear-say-knowledg gathered out of Books and Sermons and the common report which is made of Christ but he that is divinely enlightned drinks of the Fountain and so his draught is more fresh and sweet they do not talk of things by rote after others but it is written upon their hearts Heb. 8. 10. I will put my laws into their mind and write them in their hearts and so groweth more intimate and satisfactory and moving upon them 2. An Applicative sight not only knowledg but prudence Prov. 8. 12. I Wisdom dwell with Prudence Wisdom is the knowledg of Principles Prudence is an ability to apply them to our comfort and use that we may know it for our good Iob 5. 28. Many are right in generals but the Spirit doth not only reveal the Truths of the Gospel but applieth those Truths to awaken the conscience that was asleep in sin Many men that are unrenewed may be stored with general truths concerning the misery of man redemption by Christ the priviledges of a Christian but they do not reflect the light of these truths upon themselves so as to consider their own case and so it serveth rather for matter of opinion and discourse than for life and conversation it is not directive 3. An Affective sight Prov. 2. 10. When wisdom entreth upon thy heart which is the seat of affections it stirs up in the soul answerable motions to every truth Whereas when truths rest in empty barren notions without feeling and an answerable touch upon the heart the knowledg of them is like a Winters Sun that shineth but warmeth not the misery of man is not affective and Doctrines of Redemption by Christ are apprehended without any joy and relish 4. A Transforming sight 2 Cor. 3. 18. We all with open face beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord are changed into the same image from glory to glory even as by the Spirit of the Lord. It is a Light that is both Directive and Persuasive A man may hear the Gospel 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 when it is only known as a rule not as a means to convey the Spirit whereas a believer hears the Law 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Apostle preferreth the Gospel above the Law in the forementioned place for comfortableness perspicuity efficacy c. 5. It is a Light that prevaileth over our lusts and interests such a Light as hath fire in it to destroy lusts 1 John 2. 3 4. He that saith I know him and doth not keep his commandments is a lyar A true knowledg and sight of God is able to bridle lusts and purifie the conscience Therefore it is said He that doth evil hath not seen God Eph. 3. 11. hath not a true sight whatever speculations he may have about the nature of God Other light doth not check and controul vicious desires Reason is not restored to its dominion Rom. 1. 18. the reputed wise men of the world held the truth in unrighteousness Truth may talk its fill but can do nothing as a man that is bound hand and foot may rave and evaporate his passions but cannot relieve himself from the oppressor or the force that he is under II. Reasons that shew the necessity of this work 1. Spiritual blindness is natural to us as that man that was blind from his birth Iohn 9. 1. We are not all born blind in body but all in mind By tasting the tree of knowledg all Adam's sons have lost their knowledg Satan hath brought a greater shame upon us than Nahash the Ammonite would have brought upon the men of Iabesh Gilead in putting out their right eyes The eye of the soul is put out so as we cannot see the light that shineth in the word By the Fall we lost the true and perfect light of Reason but retain the pride of Reason It is no small part of our blindness that we cannot endure to hear of it Rev. 3. 17. Thou sayest I am rich and encreased with goods and have need of nothing and knowest not that thou art wretched and miserable and poor and blind and naked Man desireth to be thought sinful rather than weak and will sooner own a wickedness in Morals than a weakness in Intellectuals Men are dishonest out of choice and therefore think there is more of liberty and bravery in it but to be simple argueth imperfection Job 11. 12. Vain man would be accounted wise though man be born like a
the request We pray for giving success to such an enterprize why that we may serve God safely God will bring it about another way Fifthly If God do not give us the blessings themselves we ask yet he gives us many experiences by the by in the manner of asking one way or other something comes into the soul by praying to God as those in Psal. 84. their end was to go to Ierusalem but in passing through the valley of Baca they met with a Well by the way So we meet with something by the way some light or some sweet refreshing some new consideration to set us a work in the spiritual life By praying to God unawares unthought of by you there are many principles of faith drawn forth in the view of conscience not noted before some truth or other presented to the heart or some spiritual benefit that comes in with fresh light and power that was never aimed at by us USE 1. If God be so ready to hear his people Let us not throw away our prayers as children shoot away their arrows but let us observe Gods answer what comes in upon every prayer in every address you make to God put the soul in a posture of expectation Psal. 5. 3. I will pray and look up and Psal. 85. 8. I will hear what God the Lord will speak for he will speak peace unto his people See what God speaks when you have been praying and calling upon him It argues a slight formal spirit when you do not observe what comes in upon your addresses To quicken you to this know 1. If you observe not his answer God loseth a great deal of honour and praise for 't is said Psal. 50. 15. Call upon me in time of trouble and I will deliver thee and thou shalt glorifie me Every answer of prayer makes for the glory of God and Col. 4. 2. Continue in prayer and watch in the same with thanksgiving You are not only to see how your hearts are carried out in prayer but watch for God's answer that you may gather matter of praise We should not be so barren in gratulation as usually we are if we were as ready to observe our experiences as to lay forth our necessities 2. You lose many an argument of trust and confidence Answers of Prayer are an argument against Atheism which is so natural to us and inbred in our hearts it perswades us that there is a gracious being Psal. 65. 2. O thou that hearest prayer unto thee shall all flesh come we have called upon him and found that there is a God and against the natural unbelief which doubts of his truth in his Promises Psal. 18. 30. The word of the Lord is a tried word he is a buckler to all those that trust in him Well saith the soul I will build upon it another time there is more than letters and syllables in it there is something that speaks Gods heart so Psal. 116. 2. The Lord hath heard my voice and my supplications because he hath enclined his ear unto me therefore will I call upon him as long as I live Promises shall not lye by as a dead stock I will be pleading them 3. It encreaseth our love to God when we see how mindful he is of us and kind to us in our necessities it is a very taking thing Visits maintain friendship so when God is mindful of us it maintains an intercourse between God and us Psal. 116. 1. I love the Lord because he hath heard my supplications Therefore observe what comes in upon your prayers especially when your hearts are earnestly carried out by the impulses of his grace USE 2. To admire the goodness of God to poor creatures that he should be at leisure to attend our requests I declared my ways and he heard me When a poor soul that is of no regard among men shall come with conflicts and temptations and the Lord presently hear him it renders his grace truly admirable Psal. 34. 6. This poor man cryed and the Lord heard him and saved him out of all his troubles He doth not say this eminent Prophet or this great King but this poor man O! that such contemptible persons as we should have such audience For Great ones here in the world to let a poor man tell his tale at large that would be counted great patience much more if he finds relief in the case But beyond all this observe the goodness of God The more we declare our ways the sooner doth he hear us he doth not turn away from us when we tell him plainly we cannot believe in him or trust in him Come to a man and tell him You have made me great promises but I cannot believe you speak truth this will provoke him but when you come to the Lord and say Lord thou hast made a great many promises though we cannot trust him as we should yet we have declared our sins conflicts temptations yet Lord pity our weakness Thirdly Here is his Petition Teach me thy statutes First I observe David having been once heard of God expects to be heard in the like manner again Here Thou hast heard me and then comes with a new request Teach me thy statutes Doct. 1. Those that have sped with God in one address they will be dealing with God for more mercy For so doth David The reason is 1. Because God is where he was at first he is not weary by giving nor doth waste by giving but what he hath done that he can do and will do still I AM is God's name not I was or will be for ever remaining in the same constant tenor of goodness and power His Providence is still new and fresh every morning God is but one always like himself He hath not so spent himself but he can work again Creatures have soon spent their allowance but God cannot be exhausted There 's no decays of Love or Power in him no wrinkle in the brow of Eternity There was is and will be a God 2. Experience breeds Confidence the Apostle teacheth us so Rom. 5. 4. when we have had former experience of Gods readiness to hear us it is an argument that breeds confidence of the like audience for the future He that delivered me out of the mouth of the Lion c. God that hath been gracious surely will be gracious still for then Promises are sensibly confirmed and then former mercies are pledges of future By giving God becomes a debtor Mat. 6. 25. Is not life more than meat and the body than raiment Our Saviours argument this was If God give life he will give food if a body he will give raiment If he hath given grace the earnest of the Spirit he will give glory If he hath given us Christ he will give us other things together with him If he hath begun with us he will end with us Phil. 1. 6. One mercy is the pledg of another 3. We are endeared to God not only by
of Truth as may keep them savoury and sound in the faith To be able to prattle a little in Religion is not sound knowledg but we must be grounded and setled in the faith Col. 1. 23. That is have not only some floating opinion but well grounded perswasion of the Truth so as we know we are upon firm ground and dare venture our souls upon it and may build surely and safely upon such principles He calleth it elsewhere Col. 2. 2. the riches of the full assurance of understanding to the acknowledgment of the mystery of God and of the Father and of Christ. When men rest contented with obvious Truths or a slight knowledg of the common and easie principles of Christianity there is not such an awe upon their practice nor any establishment of their judgments but like light chaff they are soon carried with the blasts of temptation and the wind of errors And therefore we need to ask again and again Give me an understanding of the way of thy precepts 2. A sound saving knowledge is such as causeth the soul to lye under the dominion life and power of the Truth and aweth and commandeth the heart into obedience Joh. 8. 32. Ye shall know the truth and the truth shall make you free When our knowledg freeth us from the slavery of sin In others that content themselves with a naked knowledg Truth is held captive and cannot break out with any soveraignty in their conversations Rom. 1. 18. Holding the truth in unrighteousness Lust beareth sway but Truth lyeth under fetters and restraint it may talk its fill like a man in bonds but it can do nothing 3. When it giveth us prudence how to practise This is that which David beggeth of God to understand the way of his precepts that is to be taught how to walk in each duty and point of conversation after what sort he may live and direct his life 'T is not sufficient to know the meaning of the Word in general to have a notional understanding of it but to reduce it to practice where and when and how we ought to perform each action Some have a naked module of Truth are wise in generals but fail in the application of the Rule and are to seek in the ordering of their steps and all particular cases 1 Pet. 3. 7. Husbands dwell with your wives as men of knowledg Then is a man a man of knowledg when he knoweth how to order the passages of his life in every relation according to the will of God The narrow way of obedience is hardly found hardly kept and easily mistaken especially where prejudices lusts and interests are apt to pervert us Therefore prudence to apply the Rule is necessary Psal. 119. 33. Teach me O Lord the way of thy statutes that I may keep it to the end Not only in the general points of faith and godliness but that it may season all our actions that we may be made partakers of the sweet refreshments that flow from it such a knowledg as endeth in a tast 1 Pet. 3. 2 3. As new born babes desire the sincere milk of the word that ye may grow thereby if so be ye have tasted c. So Psal. 19. 8. The statutes of the Lord are right rejoycing the heart when we do so approve and follow the Lords directions that we experiment the sweetness and are acquainted with the Peace and Joy in the Holy Ghost Such an understanding as begets judgment and feeling or maketh us to find power and comfort in the word 2. The Children of God think this can never be enough asked of God Why 1. Because of the excellency of Knowledg Light is comfortable and it is a pleasant thing to behold the Sun much more the light of the Gospel shining in upon our minds Oh what a pleasant thing is that when all Clouds vanish and the Truths of God are fully cleared up to the soul None knoweth the sweetness of it but he that hath experimented it Prov. 24. 13 14. My son eat thou honey because it is good and the honey-comb which is sweet to thy tast so shall the knowledg of wisdom be unto thy soul when thou hast found it The more perfect the operation of any faculty of the soul is the greater contentment the Conscience in the feeling of God's love the heart when it findeth liberty in the ways of God and the understanding upon the sight of the truth cause all doubts and scruples to vanish Therefore certainly they that know any thing of God will be pressing to know more of his Nature and Will one degree draweth on another Moses desireth God Tell me thy name Exod. 3. 13 14. Then shew me thy glory Exod. 33. 18. And he said I beseech thee shew me thy glory And Hosea 6. 3. Then shall we know if we follow on to know the Lord. They are not cloyed but desire more The more men know the things of God the more they admire them the more they admire them the more they love them and the more they love them the more they desire to know of them And therefore do they insist so much upon this request Make me to understand the way of thy precepts 2. Because of the vastness and latitude of it Knowledg is a growing thing Religion cannot be taken up all at once we receive a little now and a little anon as narrow-mouth'd Vessels take in things drop by drop We read of Jesus Christ that he grew in knowledg We do not read that he grew in grace Luke 2. 52. He encreased in wisdom and stature as his body encreased in stature so his soul in wisdom And still Christians are growing in knowledg and understand more of the mysteries of the Gospel Though speculative knowledg may be at a stand and a man may see round about the compass of revealed Truths yet practical knowledg is never at a stand Directive affective operative knowledg is never at a stand but encreaseth daily And therefore the Apostle saith He that thinketh he knoweth any thing knoweth nothing as he ought to know 1 Cor. 8. 2. Many think they know as much as can be taught them surely they have no experience 3. Natural Blindness is an obstinate disease and hardly cured therefore again and again we had need to pray Open mine eyes Teach me thy statutes Make me to understand the way of thy precepts Our ignorance is great when it is cured in part The clouds of temptation and carnal affection cause it to return upon us so that we know not what we know Therefore open my eyes cause me to understand Yea the more we know the more is our ignorance discovered to us Prov. 30. 2 3. Surely I am more brutish than any man and have not the understanding of a man I neither learned wisdom nor have the knowledg of the Holy Job 42. 5. I have heard of thee by the hearing of the ear but now mine eye seeth thee Alas
to throw off the scum but she hath wearied her self with lyes And in this sense it is said Hosea 7. 16. They return but not to the most high they are like a deceitful bow that is they did not seriously intend when they did promise As a man that shoots if he do not level right and take care to direct the arrow to the mark it will never hit So they shoot that is they cast out promises to flatter God till they get out of trouble but they do not seriously set their hearts to accomplish it Secondly As to men there are three sorts of lyes Mendacium jocosum officiosum perniciosum there 's the sporting lye tending to our recreation and delight there 's the officious lye tending to our own and others profit and there 's the pernicious and hurtful lye tending to our neighbours prejudice 1. The sporting lye when an untruth is devised for merriment We have no instance of this in Scripture but it is a sin to speak untruth and we must not make a jest of sin Prov. 26. 19. As a mad-man that casteth firebrands arrows and death so is the man that deceiveth his neighbour and saith Am not I in sport Have we nothing wherewith to refresh our neighbour but with the breach of Gods Law If a Christian will be merry let him sing Psalms Jam. 1. 13. let him give thanks Eph. 5. 4. Not filthiness nor foolish talking nor jesting which are not convenient but rather giving of thanks that is let him remember the sweet loves of God in Jesus Christ and that 's spiritual refreshment to a gracious heart Let him not speak things against the sense of his own mind let him use honest recreation Certainly we that are to give an account for every idle word should not allow the sporting lye Now to this sporting lye a Fable or Parable is not to be reduced for that 's only an artificial way of representing the truth with the more advantage and putting of it into sensible terms which most are apt to apprehend As Iotham brings in the trees that went forth to anoint a King over them Iudg. 9. 8. Neither such sharp and piercing Ironies as we find used by holy men in Scripture 1 Kings 18. 27. As Elijah mocked them and said Cry aloud for he is a God either he is talking c. For this is a notable way to make truth strike upon the heart with some force and therefore this must not be reduced to this sporting lye 2. The officious lye for the help and relief of others Many instances of this we have in Scripture Thus Rebekah teacheth Iacob to lye that he might gain the blessing Gen. 27. and the Egyptian Midwives saved the male-children of the Israelites by feigning they were delivered before they came to them Exod. 1. 21. yet it is said they feared God and it is rewarded by God Non remunerata est fallacia sed benevolentia not their lye but their mercy is rewarded their mercy is commended as proceeding from the fear of God and their infirmities are pardoned So Rahab spared the lives of the spies by telling the men of her City that they were gone when she had hid them under the stalks of flax Ioshua 2. 4 5 6. Thus Michol to save David from the fury of her Father feigned him sick 1 Sam. 19. 14. and David advised Ionathan to an officious lye 1 Sam. 20. 6 7. so 26 28 29 verses Thus Hushai by temporizing with Absolom preserved David 2 Sam. 16. 17 18 19. to divide his counsels pretendeth hearty affection to him 3. There 's a pernicious lye that is to the hurt and prejudice of another Of this nature was the first lye by which all mankind was ruined the Devils lye to our first Parents Ye shall be as Gods Gen. 3. 4 5. And of this nature was the Patriarchs lye concerning Ioseph when they spake to his Father Gen. 37. 31 32. This have we found and know not whether it be thy sons coat or no yet they knew well enough And that of the Iewish Elders that said Mat. 28. 12 13. Say ye his Disciples came and stole him away while we slept All these are severely forbidden but especially in point of witnessing in Courts of Judicature Exod. 23. 1. Put not thine hand with the wicked to be an unrighteous witness and verse 7. Keep thee far from a false matter c. Now some question whether all these lyes be sins or no sporting or officious lyes All these sorts of lyes are sins For 1. The Scripture condemns all without restriction Eph. 4. 25. Wherefore putting away lying speak every man truth with his neighbour Rev. 21. 8. all lyars are shut out of the new Ierusalem And all lyars shall have their part in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone and Rev. 22. 15. Whosoever loveth and maketh a lye 2. They all violate the natural Order and Conformity which God hath appointed between the heart and the tongue and though officious lyes are not for the hurt but the good of others yet it is to the hurt and prejudice of truth a man is not to lye for the glory of God therefore certainly not for the good of another man you hurt your own soul more by sin than you can do him good Augustine treating of officious lyes he tells of one Firmus who was Firmus nomine firmior voluntate Firm by name but more firm and fixed by will and resolved purpose therefore when one was pursued for casual homicide he conceal'd him and being asked for him answered Nec mentire se posse nec hominem prodere He could neither lye nor betray him So much for the first thing namely what is a lye and lying Secondly For the Reasons why the Children of God should be far from it 1. In regard of outward Commerce That which is contrary to humane society that should be odious to the Children of God who as they are in a peculiar sense members one of another so are also of the same Political body and therefore should speak truth one to another Eph. 4. 25. Humane society is mostly upheld by truth Where there is no truth there can be no trust where there is no trust there can be no commerce it makes men unfit to be trusted When a man hath much counterfeit money offered to him in payment though there may be some true gold and silver yet he casts it away and suspecteth it all Men that are given to lying can have no credit nor faith with man so they are unfit for human commerce therefore it should be far from men Nay it is the right of our neighbour that we should speak truth for speech is a kind of traffique and commerce and therefore it is a kind of theft to defraud your neighbour of his right if you give him false words for true Now because it is the band and foundation of human society therefore it should be far from
sent Samuel to anoint David Samuel said How can I go if Saul hear it he will kill me And the Lord said Take an heifer with thee and say I am come to sacrifice to the Lord That was a truth but not the whole truth Obj. But you will say Will not this justifie Mental reservation and Jesuitical Equivocation I answer There are two sorts of Reservations I may reserve part of the truth in my mind But the mental reservations the Jesuits plead for is this When that which is spoken is a lye if abstracted from that which is in the mind for instance If a Magistrate say Art thou a Priest no meaning not after the order of Baal So that which is spoken is a lye But if it be spoken with truth we may reserve part of it That in Samuel was not an untruth but concealing some part of the truth not fit to be discovered So Ier. 38. 24. to 27. Then said Zedekiah unto Ieremiah Let no man know of these words and thou shalt not dye But if the Princes hear that I have talked with thee and they shall come unto thee and say unto thee Declare unto us now what thou hast said unto the King hide it not from us and we will not put thee to death also what the King said unto thee Then thou shalt say unto them I presented my supplication before the King that he would not cause me to return to Ionathans house to dye there Then came all the Princes unto Ieremiah and asked him and he told them according to all these words that the King had commanded so they left off speaking with him for the matter was not perceived 2dly We now come to the Blessing asked Grant me thy law graciously Where first the benefit it self Grant me thy law Secondly The terms upon which it is asked implied in the word Graciously 1. The benefit asked Grant me thy law David had the book of the Law already every King was to have a copy of it written before him but he understandeth it not of the law written in a book but of the law written upon his heart which is a priviledge of the Covenant of grace Heb. 8. 10. For this is the Covenant which I will make with the house of Israel in those days saith the Lord I will put my laws in their minds and write them in their hearts c. Doct. 1. Then is the Law granted to us when it is written upon our minds and hearts that is when we understand it and our hearts are framed to the love and obedience of it otherwise it is only granted to the Church in general but it is not granted to us in particular We may have some common priviledge of being trained up in the knowledge of Gods Will but we have not the personal and particular benefits of the Covenant of Grace till we find it imprinted upon our hearts Well then 1. Press God about this not only to grant his Word unto the Church but to grant it unto you unto your persons To reveal his Son in me Gal. 1. 16. There is a general benefit He hath shewed his word unto Iacob and his statutes unto Israel Psal. 147. 19. And there is a particular benefit Grant me thy law graciously The whole Church may be under a Covenant of grace and some particular members of it may be all that while under a Covenant of Works if they have only an external Law without to shew them what is good but not a Law within to urge and inable them to do it Lex jubet gratia juvat litteral instruction belongeth only to the first Covenant but when the word is made ours that 's a priviledge of the second Covenant The ingrafted word that is able to save our souls Jam. 1. 21. When it is received in our hearts and doth prosper there and fructifie unto holiness when it is written over again by the finger of the Spirit 2. See if this effect be accomplished if the law be granted to you It is so 1. When you have a sense and conscience of it and you own it as your rule for the governing of your own heart and life Psal. 37. 37. The law of God is in his heart none of his steps shall slide It is not in his book only but in his heart to guide all his actions 2dly It is so when you have some ability and strength to perform it Their hearts carry them to it as Psal. 40. 8. I delight to do thy will O God yea thy law is in my heart They have not only a sense and conscience of their rule but a ready spirit to perform it and set about this work cheerfully and heartily A ready and cheerful obedience to Gods Will is the surest note that the Law is given to us when the study and practice of it is the great employment and pleasure of our lives Doct. 2. The Law that is odious to the flesh is acceptable to a gracious heart What others count a restraint they count a great benefit and favour Rom. 8. 7. The carnal mind is enmity against God for it is not subject to the law of God neither indeed can be They shun all means of searching and knowing themselves wishing such things were not sins or not desiring to know them to be so therefore hate the law and will not come to the light 3 Joh. 20. For every one that doth evil hateth the light neither cometh to the light lest his deeds should be reproved As a man that hath light ware is loth to come to the ballance or Counterfeit-coin to the touch-stone or as a bankrupt is loth to cast up his estate They hate the directions and injunctions of the word as contrary to their lusts 1 King 22. 8. He doth not prophesie good concerning me but evil said wicked Ahab and therefore would not hear him and yet he was the Prophet of the Lord They are loth to understand their duty are willingly ignorant 2 Pet. 3. 5. For this they are willingly ignorant of c. But now a gracious heart desireth nothing more than the knowledge of Gods Will how contrary soever to their lusts they approve it Rom. 7. 12. Wherefore the law is holy and the Commandment holy and just and good The Law and Commandment that which wrought such tragical effects in his heart Therefore they desire the knowledge of it above all things Psal. 119. 72. The law of thy mouth is better to me than thousands of gold and silver more than all earthly riches whatsoever it is the best thing they can enjoy to have a full direction in obedience 2dly The practice is welcome to their souls 1 John 5. 3. His commandments are not grievous They are to others not to them because of the suitableness of their hearts to a galled shoulder the least burden is irksome but to a sound back it is nothing love sweetens all USE Do you count the Law an enemy or a friend
we are to go to God for his teaching because the means are not successful unless he joyn his influence especially to give us this practical knowledg teaching in order to keeping the way of God's statutes I say though we have the Word and many Pastors and Teachers better gifted than in the Old Testament Eph. 4. 11. yet God must be our Teacher still if we mean to profit for Paul may plant and Apollos may water but God giveth the encrease 1 Cor. 3. 6. To seek knowledg in the means with the neglect of God will never succeed well with you as we Ministers must not rest upon our work but pray much for success bene orasse est bene studuisse Luther so you hearers must not restin the fruit of our studies but still beg God to teach you every Truth But all this will be more evidently made out in the following Points 2. Doct. Divine Teaching is necessary for all those that would walk in the way of Gods Statutes 1. We have lost our way to true happiness Adam lost it and all mankind in him ever since we have been wandring up and down Psal. 14. 3. They are all gone aside i. e. gone out of the way of holiness as it leadeth to true happiness Eccles. 7. 29. God hath made man upright but they have sought out many inventions wander in a maze Man at first that had perfect Wisdom to discern the way to true Happiness and ability to pursue it now is full of crooked counsels being darkened with ignorance in his mind and abominable errors and mistakes and seconded with lusts and passions 2. We can never find it of our selves till God reveal it to us He hath shewed thee O. man what is good Micah 6. 8. It is well for man that he hath God for his Teacher who hath given him a stated Rule by which good and evil may be determined 1. Because there are many things which nature would never reveal to him as the whole Doctrine of Redemption by Christ the book of the creatures discovereth the mercy of God but giveth not the least hint of the way how that mercy should come unto us speaketh nothing of God incarnate two natures in Christs person the two Covenants the way of salvation by Christs Death c. these could never be known by natural Reason for all these things proceed from the meer motion of Gods Will without any other cause moving there unto than his own love and compassion John 3. 16. God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have-everlasting life And how could any man divine what God purposed in his heart unless he himself revealed it 2. Because those things that nature teaches it teacheth but darkly and with little satisfaction without the help of Scriptures as that there is one God the first cause of all Omnipotent Wise Righteous Good and that it is reasonable he should be served that reasonable creatures have immortal souls and so dye not as the beasts that there is no true Happiness in these things wherein men ordinarily seek it that since Vertue and Vice receive not suitable recompenses here there must be punishment and reward after this life that men live justly do as they would be done to be sober and temperate that Reason be not inslaved to sensual appetite all which nature revealeth but darkly so that the wisest men that have lived according to this light in one thing or other have been found fools Rom. 1. 22. professing themselves wise they became fools but all these things are clearly revealed in Scripture which discovers the nature and way of worshipping the true God what that reward and punishment after this life is and the right way of obtaining the one and eschewing the other with weighty arguments to inforce these things 3. That we may have assurance that the worship which we give to God is pleasing to him there must be a revelation of his will otherwise when we have tired our selves in an endless Maze of Superstitions he might turn us off with who hath required these things at your hands Isa. 1. 12. Therefore for our security and assurance it concerneth us to have a stated Rule under Gods own hand and God must be both author and object of worship 3. Besides the external Revelation there must be an inward teaching They shall all be taught of God Joh. 6. 45. not all the Prophets that wrote Scripture but all that come to Christ for salvation and this is prophesied of that time when the Canon and Rule of Faith should be most compleat then there will be still a need that they should be taught of God before their hearts be drawn into Christ. As the Book of the Scriptures is necessary to expound the Book of the Creatures so and much more is the light of the Spirit to expound the Book of the Scriptures Others teach the Ear but God openeth the Heart The Rule is one thing and the Guide is another The means were never intended to take off our dependance upon God but to engage it rather that we may look up for his blessing 1 Cor. 3. 6. I have planted Apollo watered but God gave the increase 2 Cor. 4. 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God that commanded light to shine out of darkness hath shined in our hearts to give the light of the knowledg of the glory of God in the face of Iesus Christ. Though the Gospel hath enough in it to evidence it self to the Consciences of men yet God must make use of his creating power before this light can break in upon our hearts with any efficacy and influence The Law is light Prov. 6. 23. Yet not comprehended by darkness Joh. 1. 5. The light shineth in darkness and the darkness comprehended it not Which rests in the hearts of all men that remain in their natural condition It is not enough to see any object to have the light of the Sun unless we have the light of the eye the Scripture is our External light as the Sun is to the world the understanding is our Internal light Now this eye is become blind in all natural men and in the best it is most imperfect therefore the eyes of the understanding must be opened by the spirit of wisdom and revelation Ephes. 1. 17 18. Though Truths be plainly revealed by the Spirit of God in Scripture yet there must be a removal of that natural darkness and blindness that is upon our understandings Outward light doth not make the object conspicuous without a faculty of seeing in the eye a blind man cannot see at noon-day nor the sharpest fight at midnight the work of the Spirit is to take off the scales from our eyes that we may see clearly what the Scripture speaketh clearly Now Scripture is perfected that is the great work to strengthen the faculty 4. This inward teaching must be renewed and continued from day to
understanding heart to judg thy people that I may discern between good and bad for who is able to judg this thy so great a people And the speech pleased the Lord that Solomon had asked this thing Oh beg it of God 1. The way of Gods statutes is worthy to be found by all 2. So hard to be found and kept by any 3. It is so dangerous to miss it that this should quicken us to be earnest with God 1. It is so worthy to be found it is the way to eternal life and escape eternal death and in matters of such a concernment no diligence can be too much Prov. 15. 24. The way of life is above to the wise to depart from hell beneath It is the way that leadeth to life and true happiness 2. It is so hard to find and keep it is a narrow way Mat. 7. 13 14. Enter ye in at the strait gate for wide is the gate and broad is the way that leadeth to destruction and many there be that go in thereat Because strait is the gate and narrow is the way which leadeth unto life and few there be that find it There is defect here excess a gracious spirit that would keep with God in all things is sensible of the difficulty there are many ways that lead to Hell but one way to Heaven 3. It is so dangerous to miss it in whole or in part in whole you are undone for ever in part in every false Religion such disadvantages so little of Gods presence and the comforts of his spirit 1 Cor. 3. 15. If any mans work shall be burnt he shall suffer loss but he himself shall be saved yet so as by fire A man should look after the most clear and safe way to Heaven 2. Doct. That Divine Teaching is earnestly desired by Gods children How often doth David repeat this Request These expressions are strange to us who as soon as we have gotten a little knowledg think we know as much as we need to know and are wise enough to guide our way without further direction but they are not so to the People of God Reason 1. It is an hard matter to understand a thing spiritually and as it ought to be understood there is an understanding of things litterally and a spiritual discerning 1 Cor. 2. 14. A natural man receiveth not the things of the spirit of God for they are foolishness unto him neither can he know them because they are spiritually discerned There is a knowing things at random and by a general knowledg and a knowing things as we ought to know 1 Cor. 8. 2. If any man think that he knoweth any thing he knoweth nothing yet as he ought to know there is a knowing the truth as in Jesus Ephes. 4. 21. If so be that ye have heard him and have been taught by him as the truth is in Iesus It is not every sort of knowledg that is saving a man may go to hell with speculative light that never reacheth the heart such as is practical and operative the Scripture presseth knowledg and the modus of it 2. Gods children are sensible of their own insufficiency and so of the need of a constant dependance upon God sound and saving knowledg is ever humble they have clearer light than others and so best see their own defects Prov. 30. 2. Surely I am more bruitish than any man and have not the understanding of a man and are too most sensible of corruptions and see most of the excellency of the Object 1 Cor. 8. 2. If any man think that he knoweth any thing he knoweth nothing yet as he ought to know they study their own hearts and so are conscious to many weaknesses they know how easily they are misled by the wiles of Satan and the darkness of their own hearts whereas a presumptuous Formalist goeth on boldly and in the confidence of his own wit runneth headlong into Temptations 3. Their strong affection to knowledg they desire to know more for there is more still to be learned in the Word of God though taught in part they see what a small measure of knowledg they have attained unto till they attain the Beatifical vision they are never satisfied Hos. 6. 3. Then shall we know if we follow on to know the Lord still increasing and bettering their notions concerning the things of God 4. Their great care that they may not go astray nor offend in matter or manner or Principle and end they whose hearts are set upon exact walking would fain know what God would have them to do in every action and in every circumstance Lord teach me let thy holy Spirit guide me and direct me in performing acceptable obedience to thee It was Davids resolution v. 32. I will run the way of thy commandments when thou shalt inlarge my heart Now we have his prayer for direction in this verse Teach me O Lord the way of thy statutes I would know it that I may keep it 'T is a very troublesome condition to a child of God when he is in the dark and knoweth not what to do and is forced to walk every step by guess and cannot find the ground sure under him The conflict between duty and danger doth not trouble so much as between duty and duty John 12. 35. He that walketh in darkness knoweth not whither he goeth Oh it is a sad Judgment to wander in a maze of confusions and to be like those that thought to go to Dothan and found themselves in Samaria 2 Kings 6. 20. Well then the Use is Have we this temper of Gods People do we look after spiritual Knowledg such as will not only store the head with notions but enter upon the heart are we sensible of our weakness and Satans wiles and that God that hath begun the work must perfect it do we make it our happiness to grow rich in knowledg and better our apprehensions concerning God and the things of God would we understand every point of duty that we may fulfill it as face answereth to face in water so should heart to heart the heart of one child of God to another Doct. 3. All that teaching that we expect or get from God must still be directed to Practice Teach me O Lord the way of thy statutes and I shall keep it unto the end 1. This is Gods intention in teaching therefore should be our end in learning The end of sound knowledg is obedience Deut. 4. 5 6. Behold I have taught you statutes and judgments even as the Lord my God commanded me that ye should do so in the land whither ye go to possess it Keep therefore and do them for this is thy wisdom Others do little more than learn them by rote when they know them only to talk of them or fashion their notions and plausible opinions that they may hang together 2. It is not the knowing but obeying will make us happy We desire to know the way that we may
be troubled with nice debates but all things must give way to the Profit and general Edification 3. When the unseasonable venting of things will do more hurt than good and the sway of the times and the strong Tyde and Current of Prejudices running down against us hinder all probability of doing good then our Profession now may deprive us of a more useful Profession another time Prov. 29. 11. A fool uttereth all his mind but he that is wise keepeth it in till afterward Paul was at Ephesus two years before he spake against Diana Acts 19. 10. Only intimated in general Terms that they were no Gods that were made with hands When we cannot effect the good things we desire nor in that holy manner we would we must not obstruct our future Service but commend the cause to God and wait farther opportunity to do good 2. The Manner how to make Profession 1. Knowledge must be at the bottom of Profession some will run before they can go leap into Opinions and Practices before they see the Reasons of them and then no wonder they are as Children carried about with every wind of Doctrine Ephes. 4. 14. Wherefore that which we profess we must do it knowingly that we may be able to render a reason of all that we do Profess 2. Gracious Wisdom to espy the due occasion when God is Glorified and our Neighbour Edified Rash Arrogant and Presumptuous Spirits are Headdy High-minded Disgrace Religion more than Honour it 3. With Boldness to do it freely and without Fear of men Acts 4. 13. When they saw the boldness of Peter and John c. Verse 29. grant to thy Servants that with all boldness they may speak thy Word And 1 Tim. 3. 13. They that have used the Office of a Deacon well purchase to themselves a good Degree and great boldness in the Faith which is in Christ Iesus Acts 9. 27. Barnabas declared unto them how he had Preached boldly to them at Damascus in the name of Iesus Verse 29. He spake boldly in the name of Iesus Acts 14. 3. Long time therefore abode they speaking boldly in the Lord. Acts 13. 46. Then Paul and Barnabas waxed bold Fear and Shame argueth Diffidence of the Truth which we profess or else a Distrust of the God from whom it cometh or at least the unsoundness of the professing Party that he hath a naughty Conscience or a great deal of Fleshly Fear unmortified As he cannot walk stoutly that has a stone in his shooe so he that hath sin in his Conscience obmutescit facundia si aegra sit conscientia saith Ambrose a bad Conscience stoppeth the mouth 4. With sincerity without dissimulation and guile Profession without answerable Duty is like leaves without fruit words must come from the heart to be talking of God when they lye under the guilt of known sins Iames 2. 16. If one say unto the Poor Depart in Peace be ye warmed and filled notwithstanding ye give them not those things which are needful to the body what doth it Profit Psal. 50. 16 17. Unto the Wicked God saith what hast thou to do to declare my Statutes or that thou shouldst take my Covenant into thy mouth seeing thou hatest Instruction and castest my word behind thee 5. With Meekness and Reverence 1 Pet. 3. 15. Be ready always to give an answer to every man that asketh you a Reason of the hope that is in you with meekness and fear not in a Passionate Froward Arrogant way but with meekness of Spirit without all shew of Passion and with sober and respective language 6. The general end is the Glory of God and the Edification of our Neighbour and the means to this end is the Fear of God which keeps us out of all faulty extremes Eccles. 7. 16 17. Be not Righteous overmuch neither make thy self over-wise why shouldest thou destroy thy self be not overmuch Wicked neither be thou foolish why shouldst thou die before thy time some drive all things to extremity hot like Gunpowder others freeze into a complyance and time-serving when the heart is seasoned by the fear of God and we are guided by Reasons of Conscience rather than Interest and we constantly wait upon God for Direction then will God guide us Doct. II. Such Tryals may befall Gods Children that the word of Truth may seem to be taken out of their Mouths This may come to pass two ways 1. They may not have Liberty to own it As Acts 4. 18 19. They commanded them not to speak at all nor to teach in the name of Iesus and they said whether it be right in the sight of God to hearken unto you or unto God judge yee The Magistrates command is a silencing of them shutting of their mouths only here cometh a Question whether Ministers forbidden by Magistrates should desist from Preaching if we say they ought it seems to be against the Apostles Reply if we say not we shall seem to deny Obedience to Secular and Politick Powers who ought to be satisfied in the Persons that exercise a publick Ministry in their Dominions and so lay a Foundation for publick Disturbance and Disorder For Answer We must distinguish between Persons employed to Preach the Gospel some immediately called by Christ himself others mediately called by Men some fallible and obnoxious to Errors and many failings which render them unworthy of such a Calling others infallibly guided and assisted these latter without flat Disobedience and Injury to Christ could not own any command contrary to the precedent Authority of Christ being the only men of that Order that could witness these things It is true a necessity is laid upon us of Preaching the Gospel 1 Cor. 9. 16. So as not voluntarily to relinquish our station but we may be forced to give way to the greater force Some are silenced by Authority and Opposition of men a Dispensation God often permitteth for despising the Truth and playing the Wantons with an opportunity of open Profession when men dally with the Light God removeth their Candlestick and the door is shut upon them 2. They may not have courage to own the Word of Truth for fear of Danger because of many Adversaries there is a great deal of this unmortified fleshly fear in the best and may be tongue-tyed when Gods Glory is concerned and awed by the menaces and insultations of evil men or discouraged that they dare not trust God with events and are out of all hope of success Ezek. 3. 26. I will make thy Tongue cleave to the roof of thy mouth and thou shalt be dumb and shalt not be to them for a Reprover for they are a Rebellious house by these and many other ways they may be discouraged from speaking of God and his Truth but now when such a case falleth out what shall we do That in the third point Doct. III. At such a time God must be dealt withal about it upon two grounds 1. Because God hath a great hand
sufficiently sheweth how good it is to have the Mind illuminated and endowed with the true Knowledge of things In handling this Point I shall shew 1. What is the use of a sound Mind 2. Why this should be so often and earnestly asked 1. What is the use of a sound Mind There is a threefold Act of Judgment 1. To distinguish 2. To determine 3. To direct and order 1. To distinguish and judge rightly of things that differ that we may not mistake Errour for Truth and Evil for Good So the Apostle maketh it the great work of Judgment to discerne between Good and Evil Heb. 5. 14. But strong meat belongeth to those that are of full age even those who by reason of use have their Sense exercised to discerne both good and bad The things that are to be judged are true and false right and wrong necessary or indifferent expedient or inexpedient fit or unfit For many things are lawfull that are not expedient 1 Cor. 6. 12. All things are lawfull for me but all things are not expedient as to Time Place Persons Well then Judgment is a Spirit of discerning of Truth from Falsehood Good from Evil that we may approve what is Good and disallow the contrary So the spiritual man judgeth all things 1 Cor. 2. 15. That is Though he hath not an authoritative Judgment he hath a Judgment of Discretion and if he did stir up this gift of Discerning he might more easily understand his Duty and how far he is concerned in point of Conscience and in order to Salvation So 1 Cor. 10. 15. I speak as to wise men judge ye what I say The spiritually Wise if they would awaken the gifts of Grace received in Regeneration by Diligence and Prayer and heedfulness of Soul might sooner come to a resolution of their Doubts than usually they do As Bodily Tast doth discern things savory from unsavory profitable from noxious so is Judgment given us that we may distinguish between the Poysons which the World offereth in a golden Cup to impure Souls and that wholsome spiritual Milk which we suck out of the Breasts of Scripture between savory Food and hurtfull Diet how neatly soever cooked The Souls Tast is more necessary than the Bodies as the Soul is the better part and as our danger is greater and errours there cost us dearer 2. To determine and resolve practicum dictamen the Tast of the Soul is for God that bindeth our Duty upon us when there is a decree issued forth in the Soul that after we know our Duty there may be a resolvedness of Mind never to swerve from it First the distinguishing work proceedeth there is a clear and distinct approbation of God then the determining followeth this is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Acts 11. 23. The purpose of heart 2 Tim. 3. 10. Thou hast known fully my doctrine manner of life 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 purpose The forme of this Decree and Resolution you have in Psalm 73. 28. But it is good for me to draw near to God This in the Soul hath the authority of a Principle he that meaneth to be a thorough Christian must set the bent and biass and purpose of his heart strongly upon it Psalm 39. 1. I said I will take heed to my ways So Psalm 32. 5. I said I will confess mine iniquities These Purposes have a powerfull command upon the whole Soul to set it a working whatever they purpose with this strong decree how backward soever the heart be otherwise They will excite and quicken us and admit of no contradiction it is our Judgments leade us and guide and poise us A man may have Knowledge and Learning and play the fool if his Judgment be not biassed a man never taketh any Course but his Judgment telleth him it is best and best for him all things considered It is not mens Knowledge leadeth them but their Judgments say to their Wills this is not for me the other conduceth most to my profit honour or delight but when the Judgment is in some measure set towards God then the man is for God 3. To direct as well as to decree so good Judgment and Knowledge serveth for the right guiding of our selves and all our Affairs Many are wise in generals that erre in particulars and have a Knowledge of Principles but their Affairs are under no conduct Particulars are nearer to Practice and very Learned men are deceived in Particulars Rom. 2. 20 21 22. An instructor of the Foolish a teacher of Babes which hast the form of Knowledge and of the Truth in the Law Thou therefore which teachest another teachest thou not thy self thou that preachest a man should not Steal dost thou Steal Thou that sayest a man should not commit Adultery dost thou commit Adultery thou that abhorrest Idols dost thou commit Sacriledge Therefore besides the general Rule the Knowledge of God's Will it is necessary to have the gift of Discretion when Particulars are cloathed with Circumstances There is an infinite variety of Circumstances which requireth a deale of prudence to determine them a man may easily discourse general Truths concerning God our Selves the state of the Church the privileges of Christianity but to direct them to particular Cases to govern our own Hearts and order our own Ways that is an harder thing Hos. 14. ult Whoso is wise and prudent c. Prov. 8. 12. I Wisdome dwell with Prudence To direct is harder than to determine or distinguish It is easier to distinguish of good and evil in the general to lay down conclusions upon the evidence of the goodness of the ways of God but to reduce our Knowledge to Practice in all Cases that is the great work of Judgment that we may know what becometh the Time the Place the Company where we are and may have that ordering of our Conversation aright Psalm 50. 23. to know how to carry our selves in all Relations Business civil sacred light serious that we neither offend in excess nor defect that we judge what is due to the Creatour and what is to be allowed to the Creature what is good what is better what is best of all that we know how to pay Reverence to Superiours how most profitably to converse with Equals what compassion to Inferiours how to doe good to them how to behave our selves as Husbands Wives Fathers Children Wisdome maketh us profitable in our Relations 1 Pet. 3. 7. Let Husbands dwell with Wives according to Knowledge There is much prudence and wisdome required to know how to converse profitably and Christianly with all that we have to doe with In short how to love our Friends in God and our Enemies for God how to converse secretly with God and to walk openly before men how to cherish the Flesh that it may not be unserviceable yet how to mortify it that it may not wax wanton against the Spirit how to doe all things in the fear of God in Meats Drinks Apparel
higher points when taught unto them they discern and know the differences of things to be understood God's Blessing doth accompany use and frequent exercise and make it effectual to this end by degrees we come to a solidness 5. Sense and Experience doth much increase judgment when smarted for our folly tasted the sweetness of conversing with God in Christ 1 Pet. 2. 3. If so be ye have tasted that the Lord is gracious Optima demonstratio est à sensibus Col. 1. 6. Which bringeth forth fruit as it doth also in you since the day you heard of it and knew the grace of God in truth God is not taught by experience to whose Knowledge all things are present and at all times and before all times but we are God is fain to teach us by Bryars and Thorns as Gideon taught the men of Succoth 6. Avoid the Enemies to it or hindrances of it I shall name two 1. A passionate or wilfull addictedness to any Carnal things Most men live by Sense Will and Passion whereby they enthrall that Wisdome which they have and keep it in unrighteousness Perit omne judicium cùm res transit in affectum Truth is a Prisoner to their sinfull Passions and Affections rejecting all thoughts of their future Happiness A man cannot be wise to Salvation and passionately addicted to any temporal Interest 2. Pride that maketh us either rash or presumptuous either not using a due consideration or not humble enough to subject our Minds to it Besides we cast off God's Assistance The humble and meek will he guide in Iudgment the meek will he teach his way Psal. 25. 9. Men that lean on their own understandings reject him Prov. 3. 5 6. Trust in the Lord with all thine heart and lean not unto thine own understanding In all thy ways acknowledg him and he shall direct thy paths SERMON LXXV PSAL. CXIX 66. For I have believed thy Commandments THIS latter Clause may be considered absolutely or relatively in it self or as it containeth a Reason of the foregoing Petition First Absolutely These words deserve a little consideration because Believing is here suited with an unusual Object had it been for I have believed thy Promises or obeyed thy Commandments the sense of the Clause had been more obvious to every vulgar Apprehension to believe Commandments sounds as harsh to a common Ear as to see with the Ear and hear with the Eye But for all this the Commandments are the Object and of them he saith not I have obeyed but I have believed To take off the seeming asperity of the Phrase some Interpreters conceive that Commandments is put for the Word in general and so Promises are included yea they think principally intended those Promises which encouraged him to hope for God's help in all necessary things such as good Judgment and Knowledge are But this Interpretation would divert us from the weight and force of these significant words Therefore 1. Certainly there is a Faith in the Commandments as well as in the Promises as I shall fully prove by and by 2. The one is as necessary as the other for as the Promises are not esteemed embraced and improved unless they are believed to be of God so neither are the Precepts they do not sway the Conscience as the other do nor incline the Affections but as they are believed to be Divine 3. The Faith of the one must be as lively as the other as the Promises are not believed with a lively Faith unless they draw off the heart from Carnal vanities to seek that Happiness which they offer to us so the Precepts are not believed rightly unless we be fully resolved to acquiesce in them as the onely Rule to guide us in the obtaining that Happiness and to adhere to them and obey them As the Kings Laws are not kept as soon as they are believed to be the Kings Laws unless also upon the consideration of his Authority and Power we subject our selves to them So this believing noteth a ready alacrity to hear God's Voice and obey it and to govern our Hearts and Actions according to his Counsel and Direction in the Word Doct. That the Commandments of God must be believed as well as his Promises Or The Precepts of Sanctity and Holiness bind the Conscience to obey God as well as the Promises bind us to trust in God 1. What we must believe concerning the Commandments 2. The Necessity of believing them if we would be happy 3. The Utility and Profit I. What we must believe concerning the Commandments 1. That they have God for their Authour that we may take our Duty immediately out of his hand that these Commands are his Commands The expressions of his commanding and legislative Will whereby our Duty is determined and bound upon us that is a matter of Faith not a matter of Sense We were not present at the giving of the Law as being past but we ought to be affected with it as if we were present or had heard the Thundrings of mount Sinai or had them now delivered to us by Oracle or immediate Voice from Heaven God doth once for all give the World sensible and sufficient satisfaction and then he requireth Faith See Heb. 2. 2 3 4. For if the word spoken by Angels was stedfast and every transgression and disobedience obtained a just recompence of reward How shall we escape if we neglect so great Salvation which at the first began to be spoken by the Lord and was confirmed unto us by them that heard him God also bearing them witness both with signs and wonders and with divers miracles and gifts of the Holy Ghost according to his own will The Apostle compareth the first promulgation of the Law and the first publication of the Gospel After ages did not hear the sounding of the dreadfull Trumpet nor see the flaming smoaking Mountain were not conscious to all those Circumstances of Terrour and Majesty with which the Law was given yet it was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a stedfast Word God owned it in his Providence the Punishment of Transgressors is proof of God's authorizing the Doctrine So we were not present when the Miracles by which the Gospel-law was confirmed were wrought yet there is a constant evidence that these things were once done and God still owneth it in his Providence therefore we must receive the Gospel-law as the Sovereign will and pleasure of our Law-giver as if we had seen him in person doing these Wonders heard him with our own Ears It is not onely those that were present at Mount Sinai that were bound but all their Posterity God giveth arguments of Sense once for all This belief is the more required of us as to Precepts and Commandments because they are more evident by natural Light Rom. 2. 14 15. For when the Gentiles which have not the Law do by nature the things contained in the Law these having not the Law are a Law unto themselves Which shew the
Father I have made known unto you 3. By our constancy in Prayer and earnest Supplication to know more of the Mind of God They will not be put off with other things God gave the Spirit to the rest of the Apostles but he gave the Purse to the Son of Perdition Men may have a fit of Devotion in their Prayers but their general Course is not answerable Matth. 6. 33. First seek the Kingdom of God if we seek it in good earnest we shall shew it in our Conversations and Demeanours Prov. 4. 7. Wisdome is the principal thing therefore get Wisdome and with all thy getting get Understanding This must be the chiefest thing that beareth sway in our Endeavours that we may know more of God's Mind in following our Suits uncessantly we must not be put off though God giveth other things you must not cease your Importunity Lord I expect something else from thy Goodness see Psalm 119. 132 133. Look upon me and be mercifull unto me as thou usest to doe to them that fear thy Name Order my steps in thy Word and let no Iniquity have dominion over me And Psalm 27. 7. Hear me O God when I cry with my voice have mercy upon me and answer me If we do not suffer this Desire to languish and die but still it be recommended to God daily my business is rightly to understand and perfectly to doe thy Will this is my one and great Request which I will ever and ever urge I cannot give over this Prayer till thou beest all in all and shewest me the utmost of thy Bounty We desire many things but we are soon put out of the humour as Children that seem passionately and pettishly to desire a thing but by presenting other things to them they are diverted and stilled but 't is not so with God's People As Naomi said of Boaz Ruth 3. 18. For the man will not be in rest until he have finished the thing this day So a Child of God will not be satisfied till his Desire be in some measure accomplished Secondly In what manner we should pray 1. With Earnestness slight Prayers bespeak their own denial Prov. 2. 1 2 3 4 5. My Son if thou wilt receive my Words and hide my Commandments with thee So that thou incline thine ear to Wisdome and apply thine heart to Understanding yea if thou cryest after Knowledge and liftest up thy voice for Understanding If thou seekest her as Silver and searchest for her as for hid Treasures Then shalt thou understand the Fear of the Lord and find the Knowledge of God 2. With Confidence he is wont to doe it for you Ask nothing contrary to his Nature we should come with a confidence of speeding there is in him a propensity and inclination to help us What would ye doe to an hunger-bitten Child if he cometh to you for a Knife or an Apple you would deny him them but not Meat to satisfy his hunger If for Bread to play with or Meat when he hath enough you would deny him not gratify his Fancy if he come to be taught his Book you would readily hear him So when we come not for temporal Things but spiritual Comforts when spiritual Comforts are not asked out of course and for forms sake yea not onely for Comforts but necessary Grace to doe his Will surely it cannot be that he should cast off them that love him and would fain be conformed to his Will that come humbly and long and pray and seek for his Grace 3. That this Confidence must be Evangelical he sets before his Eyes God's Goodness or Readiness to be gracious to all that call upon him so that all the hope we have to prevail should not be taken from any thing in us but something in God himself We must expect and ask Blessings from God for God and because of God's sake it is not for any good we deserve or have done or can doe that God taketh care of his weak foolish Children but for the glory of his Name his Grace and constant Goodness God is our Fountain our Reasons are his Goodness our End his Glory This is the true way of addressing our selves to God deprecating Sins for which he may harden us and remembring his Mercies on which we ground our Hope So doth David Psalm 25. 5 6. Lead me in thy Truth teach me for thou art the God of my Salvation on thee do I wait all the day Remember O Lord thy loving kindnesses and thy Mercies for they have been ever of old His eternal Love is assigned as the cause of all Psalm 23. 3. He leadeth us in paths of Righteousness for his Names sake Thirdly What should be the Grounds and impelling Principle of Prayer 1. A strong bent to please God and that all your Affections and Actions may be ordered so as to be acceptable in his sight Those that stand in awe of God are loth to offend him they may expect Direction and Light in all difficult Cases Psalm 25. 12. What man is he that feareth the Lord him shall he teach in the way that he shall choose Vers. 14. The secret of the Lord is with them that fear him and he will shew them his Covenant 2. A desire to injoy him for these things are valuable as they lead us to God Our solid Joy lieth not in outward things but in our Communion with God Psalm 139. 24. Lead me in the way everlasting And Psalm 73. 24. Thou shalt guide me by thy Counsel and afterward receive me to thy Glory Their Business is to be happy hereafter and well guided here that they may attain that Happiness Now there is an inseparable Connexion between our walking in the time of this Life and receiving into Heaven after this Life and he that is resolved to walk by the Rule of God's Direction may promise himself to be received into Glory after his Journey is ended So Psalm 43. 3. Send out thy Light and thy Truth to lead me to thy holy Hill They would fain take the nearest way to Heaven and follow God's Counsel in all things We have his Word continually to guide us in this way but we need also the assistance of his Spirit The promised Rest is much in their Eye and doth mightily prevail with them they would have God to be their Guide here that he may be their Rest hereafter SERMON LXXIX PSAL. CXIX 71. It is good for me that I have been afflicted that I might learn thy Statutes THE Context speaketh of Afflictions by occasion of Persecutions The Proud had forged a lie against him and involved him in many Troubles when in the mean time their heart was as fat as grease They wallowed in Ease and Pleasure but David kept right with God and yet his Afflictions do not cease God doth not presently take away Opposition because of our proud unhumbled unmortified Spirits though we hold fast our Integrity for the main therefore he comforteth himself in his
Storm but no Deluge When all is Wrath to a poor Soul let it come to him in the Covenant of Noah 3. It will be of use in pleading for Grace for your Children who are as yet it may be graceless and disobedient Thy hands have made and fashioned them desire him to renew his Image upon them by the Spirit of Grace In short the sum of all is here is incouragement God is good to all his Creatures especially to Man most especially to Man seeking after him and seeking after him for Grace that we and ours may obey him and doe him better service than ever yet we have done SERMON LXXXII PSAL. CXIX 74. They that fear thee will be glad when they see me because I have hoped in thy Word THIS Verse containeth two things 1. The Respect of the Faithfull to David They that fear thee will be glad when they see me 2. The Reason of this Respect because I have hoped in thy Word First The Respect of God's faithfull Servants to David and there take notice of the Character by which God's Servants are described They that fear thee then their Respect to David they will be glad when they see me which may bear a double sense 1. How comfortable 't is for the Heirs of Promise to see one another or meet together Aspectus boni viri delectat the very look of a good Man is delightfull 't is a pleasure to converse with those that are carefull to please God and awefull to offend him 2. How much affected they are with one another's Mercies they will be glad to see me who have obtained an Event answerable to my Hope they shall come and look upon me as a Monument and Spectacle of the Mercy and Truth of God this sense I prefer though not excluding the other But what Mercy had he received the Context seemeth to carry it for Grace to obey God's Commandments that was the Prayer immediately preceeding to be instructed and taught in God's Law vers 73. Now they will rejoyce to see my holy Behaviour how I have profited and glorified God in that behalf The Hebrew Writers render the reason because then I shall be able to instruct them in those Statutes when they shall see me their King study the Law of God It may be expounded of any other Blessing or Benefit God had given according to his Hope and I rather understand it thus they will be glad to see him sustained supported and born out in his Troubles and Sufferings they will be glad when they shall see in me a notable Example of the fruit of hoping in thy Grace and this Hope leaveth not ashamed Secondly The Reason is because I hoped in thy Word and there compare this with the first Clause God's Children are described to be those that fear God and David is described to be one that hopes in his Word both together make up a good Character and Description of the Lord's People they are such as fear God and hope in his Word they are elsewhere coupled Psal. 33. 18. Behold the eye of the Lord is upon them that fear him that hope in his mercy And Psal. 147. 11. The Lord takes pleasure in them that fear him that hope in his mercy A sincere Christian is known by both these a fear of God or a constant obedience to his Commands and an affiance trust and dependance upon his Mercies Oh how sweetly are both these coupled an uniform sincere Obedience to him and an unshaken constant reliance on his Mercy and Goodness The whole perfection of the Christian Life is comprized in these two believing God and fearing him trusting in his Mercy and fearing his Name the one maketh us carefull in avoiding Sin the other diligent to follow after Righteousness the one is a bridle from Sin and Temptations the other a spur to our Duties Fear is our curb and Hope our motive and incouragement the one respects our Duty the other our Comfort the one allayeth the other God is so to be feared as also to be trusted so to be trusted as also to be feared And as we must not suffer our Fear to degenerate into legal Bondage but hope in his Mercy so our Trust must not degenerate to carnal Sloath and Wantonness but so hope in his Word as to fear his Name Well then such as both believe in God and fear to offend him are the onely men who are acceptable to God and his People God will take pleasure in them and they take pleasure in one another They that fear thee will be glad when they see me The first part of the Character They that fear thee the Fear of God is an excellent Grace a strong bridle to hold the Soul from Sin not that servile but filial and Child-like Fear that is afraid to sin against God or break his Laws Prov. 28. 14. Blessed is the man that feareth always this Grace should always bear rule in our Hearts 1 Pet. 1. 17. Pass the time of your sojourning in fear our whole course must be carried on under the conduct of this Grace Look as the Fear of Man is a Bridle upon the Beasts to keep them from hurting Man Gen. 9. 2. The fear and dread of you shall be upon every Beast of the Earth so when the Fear of God is rooted in our Hearts we are kept from disobeying and dishonouring God Ioseph is an instance of the power of this holy Fear Gen. 39. 9. How shall I doe this great wickedness and sin against God Secondly the other Character I hope in thy Word a Christian liveth by Faith whereas the bruitish Worldling liveth by Sense the one liveth by Bread onely the other by the Word of God the one is a higher sort of Beast the other is a kind of an earthly Angel for he liveth with God and dwelleth with God and expecteth all out of God's hands Psal. 130. 5. I wait for the Lord my Soul doth wait and in his Word do I hope there is his Charter and Inheritance and his Solace and Support he fetcheth all from the Word Both these Graces as they are very acceptable unto God so are they most lovely and beautifull to behold by Men to be among the Company of them that fear God and hope in his Word is the most pleasant thing to a gracious Heart that can be for while others are taken up about Toyes and Trifles they are taken up about the onely serious Matters If Balaam was constrained to say of God's People How goodly are thy Tents O Iacob and thy Tabernacles O Israel Oh how pleasant is it much more to the People of God to see one another to come among them that fear God and are loth to offend him and also that hope in his Word They can speak of the life of Faith and Blessedness to come and take off the Vaile of the Creature and are mainly taken up with another world their business is not to offend God here and hope fully
of them Credit and honour before the world what is more uncertain than the Peoples affections They that cry Hosanna to day will cry Crucifie him to morrow Pleasures they are gone as soon as they come and when they are gone they are as a thing of nought but that they leave a sting in the conscience and a sadness in the heart Riches take wings and flie away Prov. 23. 5. You can be no more confident of them than of a Flock of wild Fowl that pitcheth in your Field Honour is soon gone Haman is one day high in favor the next day high upon the Gallows Strength and Beauty are soon assaulted by diseases 't will be matter of sense better believe it than try it then it will prevent a great deal of vexation and the shame of disappointment Seldom doth a Man act the same part in the world for a year together now joyful anon sad now children then none now married anon in a widowhood condition 'T is much in the desire and thoughts of natural men to have a perpetual enjoyment of this life and the comforts of it but it will never be they perish and we must dye and when we are gone our glory will not be remembred Solomon recordeth his experience of the vanity of all earthly things O! that we would believe it without trying conclusions you that are so eager after the world what will you think of it when 't is parting from you or you from it will they then be found to be such excellent things as you once deem'd them to be O no! at last you must come to this I have seen an end of all perfection and then you will say O how hath the world deceived me I have laboured for nought Secondly I have seen that is with a spiritual eye this should be observed and improved by faith Many are sensible of the vanity of the creature but are not a jot the wiser Psal. 49. 13. This their way is their folly yet their posterity approve their sayings They are sensible of the folly of their Ancestors but yet do not mend by it We should not only see with our eyes but understand with our hearts When the wise man went by the field of the Sluggard he saw it overgrown with Thorns and Nettles and the stone-wall thereof broken down Prov. 24. 32. I saw it and considered it well I looked upon it and received instruction We should profit by every thing In this sense we may gather Figs of Thistles and Grapes of Thorns especially should we observe the vanity of all sublunary things Eccles. 7. 2. 'T is better to go to the house of mourning than to the house of feasting for this is the end of all men and the living will lay it to heart We should make a good use of these occasions a man seeth his own end in the end of others and by their death is admonished of his own frailty and mortality 't is a sad sign when this is not considered Isa. 42. 25. Yet he laid it not to heart Isa. 26. 11. Lord when thy hand is lifted up they will not see but they shall see They shall be forced to take notice of what now they will not when God's hand is upon them to their utter confusion Thirdly I have seen Happy they that have such eyes but alas there is a great deal of difference between the sight of the senses and the sight of the understanding when we see things with our eyes there is a natural blindness or brutishness or a vail upon our hearts that we mind them not Men have eyes to see but they have not an heart to see So God complains Ier. 5. 21. They have eyes and see not ears and hear not So Deut. 29. 3 4. The great temptations which thine eyes have seen and the signs and those great miracles Tet the Lord hath not given you an heart to perceive and eyes to see and ears to hear unto this day So Isa. 6. 9 10. And he said go and tell this People hear ye indeed but understand not and see ye indeed but perceive not Make the heart of this people fat and make their ears heavy and shut their eyes lest they see with their eyes and hear with their ears Though things be never so plainly delivered so powerfully pressed so apparently verified and so they see and hear and receive no more benefit than if they had never heard nor seen it God witholding and withdrawing the efficacy of his spirit whereby it might be beneficial to them for good So Isa. 42. 20. Seeing things but thou observest not opening the ears but thou hearest not They see the wonderful works of God but do not consider them as wise people ought to do Isa. 1. 3. The Oxe knoweth his owner and the Ass his Masters crib but Israel doth not know My people doth not consider Ezek. 12. 2. Thou dwellest in the middest of a rebellious house which have eyes to see and see not they have ears to hear and hear not That is they make no use of them but strive and endeavour to put it out of their minds So Iohn 9. 39 40 41. And Iesus said for judgment I am come into this world that they which see not might see and they that see might be made blind And some of the Pharises which were with him heard these words and said unto him are we blind also Iesus said unto them if ye were blind ye should have no sin but now ye say we see your sin remaineth There is a great deal of difference between the sight of believers and unbelievers the one sees with an understanding heart the other without it In the one there is a free ready and sincere use of their disciplinable senses that they may learn his word and walk in his ways that they may profit in the knowledge of God and so get understanding and spiritual prudence The other are brutish ignorant or idle negligent and forgetful they shut their eyes and their ears are uncircumcised and so they know not what they know The causes of this are first non-attendency or inadvertency prejudicate opinions and rooted lusts hinder their profiting Look as the Sun Moon and Stars though they move with a most swift and rapid motion seem to a vulgar eye to stand still or at least to move very slowly So these sublunary things though they are always passing yet the inward thought of worldlings is that they shall endure for ever Oh labour then for this spiritual and heart affecting sight If a man could behold this world in the light of a divine knowledge he would find it to be but a vanishing shadow Though the vanity of the creature be a plain truth and taught by daily experience and is easily and commonly acknowledged yet it is not easie to make this truth have a deep impression upon the hearts of men They are naturally unwilling to admit thoughts of a change Amos 6. 2. because
teaching and is always at hand to guide us and give counsel to us which is cause of our standing We need this continual teaching to keep us mindful that we may not forget things known The Spirit puts us in remembrance because of the decay of fervency and dulness of spirit that groweth upon us therefore are truths revived to keep us fresh and lively that we may not neglect our duty because of incogitancy and heedlesness we mistake our way and are apt to run into sin in the time of trial and temptation Therefore we need a Monitor on all occasions Isa. 30. 31. that we may not be carried away with the corrupt bent of our own hearts Well then this abiding in us is the cause of perseverance 1 Iohn 2. 27. Use. To shew the reason of mens fickleness and unconstancy both in opinion and practice He that is led by man unto man both as to opinion and practice may be led off by man again when we take up Truth upon Tradition and Humane Recommendation Oh seek it of God! Isa 48. 17. I am the Lord your God that teacheth you to profit Not our own ability but the light of the Holy Ghost wait upon God learn something of him every day and give God all the glory SERMON CIX PSAL. CXIX VER 103. How sweet are thy words unto my taste yea sweeter than honey to my mouth IN this Verse you have another evidence of David's affection to the Word and that is the incomparable delight which he found therein as being suitable to his taste and spiritual appetite This pleasure and delight he found in the Word is propounded 1 By way of Interrogation or Admiration How sweet are thy words unto my taste As if he had said so sweet that I am not able to express it 2 By way of Comparison Yea sweeter than honey to my mouth To external sense nothing is sweeter than honey honey is not so sweet to the mouth and palat as the Word of God is to the soul. It is usual to express the affections of the mind by words proper to the bodily senses as taste is put here for delight and elsewhere eating is put for believing and digesting the truth Thy Word was sweet and I did eat it Jer. 15. 8. Again in all kind of Writers both prophane and sacred it is usual to compare the Excellency of Speech to Honey The Poet describes an Elegant man That his Speech flow'd from him sweeter than Honey And the like we may observe in Scripture Prov. 16. 24. Pleasant words are as an honey comb sweet to the soul and health to the bones He means words of wisdom such words as come from a pure heart now these are sweeter than Honey So the Spouse because of her gracious doctrine it is said Cant. 4. 11. Thy lips O my Spouse drop as the honey-comb And Psal. 19. 10. More to be desired are they than gold yea than much fine gold sweeter also than honey and the honey-comb For Profit he esteemed them more than Gold for Pleasure more than Honey or the Honey-comb and David saith here Thy words are sweet unto my taste He doth not say in general They are sweet unto the taste but sweet unto my taste Holy men that have much communion with God such as David was they that have his Spirit find this delight in the Word of God nothing so sweet or so full of pleasure to the soul. Two Points 1. That there is such a thing as spiritual taste 2. That to a spiritual taste the Word of God is sweeter than all pleasures and delights whatsoever Doct. 1. That there is such a thing as spiritual taste 1 I shall shew that it is and what it is The use of it and what is requisite to it 1. It appears that there is such a thing the soul hath its senses as well as the body We do not only know but feel things to be either hurtful or comfortable to us so the new nature doth not only know it but doth seem to feel it that some things are hurtful and others are comfortable to it and hence the Apostle's expression Heb. 5. 14. Such have their senses exercised to discern both good and evil Christians If there be such a thing as spiritual life certainly there must be spiritual sense for all life is accompanied with a sense of what is good or evil for that life and the higher the life the greater the sense Beasts feel more than a Plant when hurt is done to them because they have a nobler life and a Man than a Beast and the life of Grace being above the life of Reason there 's a higher sense join'd with it and therefore the pain and pleasure of that life is greater than the pain or pleasure of any other life for spiritual things as they are greater in themselves so they do more affect us than bodily A wounded Conscience who can bear it Prov. 18. 4. What a sense doth the evil of the spiritual life leave upon the soul And then for the comforts of the spiritual life the joys and pleasures of it are unspeakable and glorious 1 Pet. 1. 8. such joy as no tongue or words can sufficiently express A taste of the first-fruits of Glory how sweet is it Briefly let me tell you there are three internal Senses spoken of in Scripture Seeing Tasting and Feeling Sight implies Faith Iohn 8. 56. Abraham rejoiced to see my day And Heb. 11. 27. By faith Moses saw him that was invisible There is a seeing not only with the eyes of the body but with the eyes of the mind things that cannot be seen with the outward sense Abraham saw my day at so great a distance As there is sight so also taste which if we refer it to good is nothing else but spiritual experience of the sweetness of God in Christ and the benefits which flow from communion with him Psal. 34. 8. O come taste and see that the Lord is gracious Do not only come and see but come and taste The third sense is feeling or touch that relates to the power of grace Phil. 3. 10. That I might know him and the power of his resurrection c. There is a sense that a Christian hath of the power of grace and of Christ upon his soul so 2 Tim. 3. 5. Having a form of godliness but denying the power thereof When men resist the force and vertue of that Religion which they profess then they are said to deny the power of those Principles Well then there are spiritual senses 2. Now that we might know what they are let me shew 1. How these spiritual senses differ from the external 2. That in some sense they differ from the understanding 1 These spiritual senses differ from the external sense that I shall prove by three Arguments 1. Because in those things that are liable to external sense a man may have an outward sense of them when he hath not an inward
Entrance The word Petack signifieth door gate or opening The expression giveth us occasion 1. To distinguish of Truth in Scripture There is Ostium and Penetrale the Porch of Knowledge and the secret Chambers of it The Porch I should take for the first vital essential necessary Truths that concern Faith and Practice those are obvious to every one that looketh into the Scriptures The inner Chambers are those more abstruse points that do not so absolutely concern the life of Grace but yet conduce ad plenitudinem Scientiae serve for the encrease of Knowledge Those that are in the Porch and have not as yet pierced into the depths of Scripture may yet have so much light as to direct them into solid Piety 2. Every door hath a Key belonging to it so hath this a Key to open it which Christ hath in his keeping Rev. 3. 7. He hath the Key of David which openeth and no man shutteth and shutteth and no man openeth The Officers of the Church are in part intrusted with it for the good of the Church Christ saith Luk. 11. 52. The Lawyers had taken away the key of knowledge and entred not into the Kingdom of God themselves and them that were entring in they hindered Such unfaithful ones hath every age almost afforded that shut the door of Knowledge against the people Papists that lock up the Scriptures in an unknown tongue are grosly guilty of it Others that hinder plain and powerful preaching cannot excuse themselves from being accessary to this guilt yea those that obscure the plain word of God by Philosophy Traditions of men or careless handling Tertullian complained long ago of those qui Platonicum Aristotelicum Christianismum proeudunt Christianis 3. By this Door opened there is entrance and so cometh in our word This Entrance may be understood or actively passively when the word entreth into us or we enter into it First Actively when the word entreth upon a mans heart and maketh a sanctified Imression there as the expression is Pro. 2. 10. When wisdom entreth into thy heart and knowl●…dge is pleasant to thy Soul This entrance of the word bringeth Light with it the first Creature God made was light so in the new Creature therefore it concerns us to know what manner of entrance the word had upon us 1 Thes. 1. 9. For they themselves know of us what manner of entring in we had unto you and how ye turned to God from Idols to serve the living and true God Secondly Passively when men do first enter upon the study of the word It may be read the entrance into thy Word as well as of thy Word when once acquainted with it and the first rudiments of Knowledge we should soon discern the Lords mind in the necessary Truths that concern Faith and Practice Secondly The other question is what is meant by the Simple The word is sometimes used in a good sense sometimes in a bad 1. In a good sense 1. For the sincere and plain hearted Psal. 116. 6. The Lord preserveth the simple I was brought low and he helped me 2 Cor. 1. 12. For our rejoycing is this the testimony of our Conscience that in simplicity and godly sincerity not with fleshly wisdom but by the Grace of God we had our Conversation in the world and more abundantly to you-wards 2. For those that do not oppose the Presumption of carnal wisdom to the pure light of the word so we must be all simple or fools that we may be wise 1 Cor. 3. 18. If any man among you seemeth to be wise in this world let him become a fool that he may wise That is in simplicity of heart submitting to Gods conduct and believing what he hath revealed The Septuagint in the text 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it inlighteneth and giveth understanding to the Babes and so they often translate this word Babes or little ones thence Christs saying Mat. 11. 25. I thank thee O Father Lord of heaven and earth because thou hast hid these things from the wise and prudent and hast revealed them unto ●…abes Nor to worldly wise but babes in comparison not to conceitedly wise but those that are sensible of their own Ignorance 2. In a bad sense for the Ignorant 1. In the general every man is naturally dull and ignorant in divine things Iob 11. 12. Vain man would be wise though man be born like a wild asses colt For grossness as well as untamedness So every man is simple 2. Those that are naturally weak of understanding or of mean capacity Prov. 1. 4. To give subtilty to the simple to the young man knowledge and discretion Prov. 8. 5. O ye simple understand wisdom and ye fools be ye of an understanding heart In all these senses may the Text be made good I take the last chiefly intended Observations 1. Observe somewhat from that word the Entrance Doctr. I. That in getting knowledge there is a Porch and Entrance that we must pass through before we can attain to deeper matters As in Practice there is a Gate and a Way Mat. 7. 14. Because strait is the gate and narrow is the way that leadeth to life An Entrance and a Progress An Entrance by Conversion to God and a Progress in a course of holy walking So in Knowledge there are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The first Principles of the Oracles of God or some Elements and afterwards deeper mysteries Milk for babes as well as meat for stronger men Heb. 5. 12 13 14. For when for the time ye ought to be teachers ye have need that one teach you again which be the first principles of the oracles of God and are become such as have need of milk and not of strong meat For every one that useth milk is unskilful in the word of righteousness for he is a babe But strong meat belongeth to them that are of full age even those who by reason of use have their senses exercised to discern both good and evil There is an order in bringing men to knowledge First There is something obvious and lyes uppermost in all Truths that is soon understood and this we put into Catechisms we must teach as able to bear Mar. 4. 33. And with many such parables spake he the word unto them as they were able to hear it Indeed afterwards we come to dig into the mines of Knowledge and to dive deeper as choice Metals do not lie in the surface but in the bowels therefore we should not content our selves with a supersicial search but dig as for Treasure in a Mine Prov. 2. 4. If thou diggest for her as silver and searchest for her as for hid Treasures So Paul 1 Cor. 3. 1 2. And I Brothren could not speak unto you as unto spiritual but as unto carnal even as unto babes in Christ I have fed you with milk and not with strong meat for hitherto ye were not able to bear it neither yet now are ye able By Milk he meaneth
thy heart for entertaining the light and power of these truths and in due time God will shew thee other things In the mean time bless God that whatever is necessary is plain to them that are docile and heedful and willing to do the will of God As in the world the most necessary things are at hand the less necessary are hidden in the bowels of the Earth so in Scripture necessaries are facile and easie 2. Let us use this method in learning and teaching of others In learning our selves First Be sure to get a clear understanding of and firm assent unto the main plain truths of Scripture That there is one God Heb. 11. 6. He that cometh to God must believe that he is That Jesus Christ is the Son of God Iohn 17. 3. This is life eternal that they might know thee the only true God and Iesus Christ whom thou hast sent It is a corner truth that enliveneth all Religion Matth. 16. 16. Thou art Christ the Son of the living God then Upon this Rock will I build my Church John 6. 69. We believe and are sure that thou art Christ the Son of the living God This is the great enlivening truth that hath influence both on faith and obedience We must believe that he is able to bring us to God Iohn 14. 6. Heb. 7. 25. and must be obeyed Heb. 5. 9. that every man needeth this Christ to bring him to God Acts 4. 12. There is a necessity of his merit that God may be propitious of his Spirit as the foundation of a new life that we may be reconciled to God that we should live holily because there is a day of account when every one shall receive according to his works We should bestow more cost upon the main truths to get a clear distinct knowledge of them there must be a removing of Rubbish and digging to lay the foundation of the knowledge of the principles of the Doctrine of Christ before there can be any safe building or going on unto perfection Heb. 6. and firm assent to them For he is the best Christian that doth most clearly understand and firmly believe these things Not the Opinionist the Disputer he that best promotes the interest of his party or side which are the distempers now afoot in Christendome Those truths well accepted would so purifie the heart as we should sooner discern Gods interest in other things and be able to find out that So for teaching our Children God reckons on it from his people Gen. 18. 19. For I know Abraham that he will command his Children and his houshold after him and they shall keep the way of the Lord to do Iustice and Iudgment Deut. 6. 6 7. And these words that I command thee this day shall ●…e in thy heart and thou shalt teach them diligently unto thy Children and shalt talk of them when thou sittest in thy house and when thou walkest by the way when thou liest down and when thou risest up Train them up in wholesome truths in the nurture and admoni●…ion of the Lord Ephes. 6. 4. how to carry themselves towards God in matters of Religion how towards men in righteousness civility and good manners chiefly that they may be instructed in the knowledge of Christ and salvation by him 3. Let the entertainment we have upon our first entrance into the study of Religion encourage us to follow on to know the Lord that we may see more into his mind and counsel concerning us When we are first serious we have notable experience of light and comfort and power this is a bribe to draw us on further more light for it is a growing thing Prov. 4. 18. The path of the Iust is as the shining light that shineth more and more to the perfect day more taste 1 Pet. 2. 3 4. If so be that ye have tasted that the Lord is gracious to whom coming as to a living stone c. It should sharpen and put an edge upon our desires more power Iames 1. 18 19. Of his own will begat he us with the word of truth that we should be a kind of first-fruits of his creation wherefore my beloved brethren let every man be swift to hear slow to speak slow to wrath You saw the entrance and your first acquaintance with the word succeeded well Doctr. II. By the word of God we get light or our understandings are enlightened Prov. 6. 23. For the Commandment is a lamp and the Law is light and reproofs of instruction are the way of life 1. Light is a great benefit This is the perfection of the rational Nature the benefit that we have above the Beasts He teacheth us more than the Beasts of the field They are guided by instinct ruled by a Rod of Iron we have Reason and in it more resemble God who is light and in him is no darkness at all 1 Iohn 1. 5. we come nearest to our happiness in heaven it is called The inheritance of the Saints in light Col. 1. 12. Our knowledge is perfected and the vision of God is our happiness 1 Cor. 13. 12. For now we see through a glass darkly then face to face now I know in part then I shall know even as also I am known 2. This light hath excellent properties First It is lux manifestans it manifesteth it self and all things else How do I see the Sun but by the Sun by its own light how do I know the Scripture to be the Word of God but by the light that shineth in it commending it self to my Conscience So it manifests all things else By this light a man may see every thing in its own colours it layeth open all the frauds and impostures of Satan the vanity of worldly things the deceits of the heart the odiousness of sin Ephes. 5. 8. 13. All things that be reproved are made manifest by light for whatsoever doth make manifest is light It sets out the odiousness of sin as a breach of Gods most holy Law enmity against the Great God the procurer of his eternal wrath Nothing manifests things as this light doth Secondly It is lux dirigens a directing light that we may see our way and work As the Sun lighteth man to his labour so doth this direct us in all conditions Psal. 119. 105. Thy word is a lamp unto my feet and a light unto my paths It directs us how to manage our selves in all conditions in prosperity adversity in all affairs paths steps in all the particular actions of our life it filleth us with spiritual prudence the wayfaring the fool a man of parts that is a stranger the man of mean parts all may meet with plain and clear directions hence to guide them in the way to Heaven Thirdly It is lux vivificans a quickening light Lux est vehiculum influentiarum Joh. 8. 12. I am the light of the world he that followeth me shall not walk in darkness but shall have the light of
the Text the words run thus Look upon me and be merciful unto me as thou usest to do unto those that love thy name and what then Order my steps in thy word O this is to do good to us as he useth to do good to them that fear his name Mark some have only Providence and natural Conscience there are others that have the Word and have an enlightened Conscience that plead Gods interest in them but there are others are honoured so far that they are his people that have not only his Word but Spirit to enforce his Word upon their hearts How did Christ declare his love to his people Iohn 15. 15. I call you friends for all things that I have heard of my father I have made known unto you There 's Gods love declared when he shews us his whole will when he doth guide us in all his ways this is the favour of his people Psal. 25. 14. The secret of the Lord is with them that fear him and he will shew them his Covenant There 's the great priviledge that God vouchsafes to his peculiar people they know the mind of God more than others do and in all doubtful debates and uncertain Controversies they are not left in the dark Mark 4. 11. Unto you it is given to know the mystery of the Kingdom of God David surely found such direction to be a very special blessing Again another Argument from the Text that this must needs be a very great blessing partly because it helpeth us in our way to true happiness I gather that from the word steps for all motion hath a term to which it tends and every Journey hath its period Now whither doth the path of the Word lead us but to God and to the everlasting enjoyment of him O here they have an infallible direction that they cannot miscarry in so great an affair as this is as the getting home to God! Surely that 's a great blessing I remember David saith Psal. 73. 24. Thou shalt guide me by thy counsel and afterwards receive me unto Glory They that wait upon Gods direction are sure to be received into his heavenly Glory their steps are directed for the present and they may be confident that at length they shall get home to God for God will accept of what he hath ordered You are sure God will take pleasure in you when you walk according to his direction So you see the need from the value of this blessing 5. Consideration That the Children of God are sensible of their need of it that they cannot chuse but pray for it I take this from the very form of the Words Lord order my steps It is a prayer from the man of God They seek it humbly and earnestly therefore they shall find it They that make their bosome their Oracle and wit their Councellor God is disengaged from being their Guide they need him not but the snares they run into will soon shew how much they need him But the Children of God need him therefore they shall find it Prov. 3. 6. In all thy ways acknowledge him and he shall direct thy paths You should ever go to God for the direction of your way then God will not disappoint you nor defeat your expectations Psal. 85. 13. Righteousness shall go before him and shall set us in the way of his steps Sometimes we wander turn aside and walk out of the right way at other times we fall and stumble in the right way but the Lord will set us in the paths of his steps Use. To press us to seek this great priviledge of God beg of the Lord continually to order your steps according to his Word Alas evil may surprize you before you are aware Little did David think danger was so near him when he walked upon his Tarrace He gave leave to his eye to wander and his eye fired his heart Every morning be with God about this business Psal. 5. 3. O Lord in the morning will I direct my prayer unto thee and will look up You need not only protection against dangers but direction against evils and snares As we seek for protection in the night so in the morning prayer is for the direction of the day Nay we need not go to God in the morning but all the day long Psal. 25. 5. On thee do I wait all the day Beg of him that you may not miscarry but carry your selves humbly and prudently and may do nothing that is contrary to the will of God and his Grace but that the Lord would support and guide you continually There is one Argument that may mightily encourage you in praying Consider your Covenant interest in God doth establish this blessing as the Saints always plead the relation Psal. 25. 5. Lead me in thy truth and teach me for thou art the God of my salvation Psal. 143. 10. Teach me to do thy will for thou art my God Psal. 48. 14. For this God is our God for ever and ever he will be our Guide even unto death To be a God to any is to be a Guide for to a people in Covenant God makes over his whole self Now in God there are considerable these three great Attributes his Wisdom Power and Goodness Look as God by virtue of his Power is alsufficient against all dangers and by virtue of his Goodness is a fountain of everlasting happiness so also by his Wisdom is a fountain of all goodness to guide and direct us Now as God hath engaged all his goodness to make us as happy as heart can wish and his power to defend and maintain us so all his Wisdom to guide and direct us SERMON CXLVIII PSAL. CXIX VER 133. And let not any iniquity have dominion over me FOR the second Branch of the Prayer I observe Doctr. 2. That the dominion of sin is a great evil and ought earnestly to be deprecated even by the Children of God I. What is the dominion of sin II. That it is a great evil III. Why the Saints should deprecate this evil 1. What is the dominion of sin It may be known by some distinctions 1. There 's a dominion of sin that is gross and sensible and a dominion of sin that is more secret and close First More gross and sensible For though sin do reign in every one by nature yet this dominion more sensibly appears in some than in others who are given up to be visibly under the dominon of sin as the just fruit of their voluntary living under that yoke and usually these are set forth as a warning to the rest of the world God hangs them up in Chains of darkness in the sight of men as an instance of this woful slavery that every man that seeth them and are acquainted with their course of life may say without breach of Charity There goes one that declares himself to be a servant of sin This is either to sin in general or to some particular sin
part of Mankind fear the Prince more than God and the Gallows more than Hell If every vain thought or carnal motion in our hearts were as the cutting of a finger or burning in the hand men would seem more afraid of that then they are of Hell Nay I will tell you men can dispense with Gods law to comply with Mans. Hos. 5. 11. Ephraim is oppressed and broken in Iudgement because he willingly walked after the Commandment A little Danger will draw men into the snare when Hell will not keep them from it Oh let us Rouze up our selves Is not Man Gods Subject Is not he a more powerful Sovereign than all the Potentates in the World Doth he not in his Word give Judgment on the Everlasting estate of men and will his Judgment be in vain Hath not God appointed a day when all matters shall be taken into consideration If you can deny these Truths go on in sin and spare not but if Conscience be sensible of Gods Authority oh break off your sins by Repentance and walk more cautiously for the time to come Every sin is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Ioh. 3. 4. a breach of Gods Eternal law and will God always wink at your disloyalty to him Nothing remaineth to be spoken to but the last Clause Thy Law is truth Doctrine Gods Law is Truth 1. I shall shew in what sense 't is said to be Truth 2. The Reasons why 't is Truth 3. The end of this Truth First In what sense 't is said to be Truth 1. 'T is the Chief Truth there is some truth in the laws of Men and the writings of Men even of Heathens but they are but sorry Fragments and Scraps of Truth that have escaped since the Fall But the Truth of the Word is transcendent to that of bare Reason here are truths of the greatest Concernment matters propounded that are very comfortable and profitable to lost sinners 1 Tim. 2. 16. Here Moral Duties are advanced to the highest Pitch Deut. 4. 6. Keep therefore and do them for this is your Wisdom and your understanding in the sight of the Nations The end of these is not only to regulate your Commerce with men but to guide you in your Communion with God and help you to the Everlasting Enjoyment of him 2. 'T is the only Truth that is the only Revelation of the Mind of God that you can build upon 't is the Rule of Truth A thing may be true that is not the Rule of truth There is veritas regulata veritas regulans the Word is the measure and standard and they are true or false as they agree or disagree with it Every Custom and Tradition must be tryed upon it from the beginning it was not so from the beginning my Christianity is Jesus Christ. We must not attend to what others did but what Christ did who is before all every dictate of reason must be tryed by it for here is the highest reason It is written to make the Man of God perfect or else it cannot guide you to your happiness 2 Tim. 3. 15 16. Every Revelation must be tryed by it Gal. 1. 8. If an Angel or Man bring any Doctrine if it differ from or be besides the written Word 't is a cursed Doctrine This is the Rule 3. 'T is the pure Truth in it there is nothing but the Truth without the mixture of Falshood every part is true as truth it self 't is true in the Promises true in the Threatnings true in the Doctrines true in the Histories true in the Precepts true in the Prohibitions God will make it good to a tittle True in Moralities true in the Mysteries of Faith not only true in Duties that concern man and man but in the sublimer truths that concern commerce with God where Nature is more blind Psal. 19. 9. The Testimonies of the Lord are true and righteous altogether 'T is true where a Carnal Man would not have it true in the Curses and Threatnings If Gods Word be true wo to them that remain in a sinful way they shall find it true shortly and feel what they will not believe 'T is true where a godly man feareth it will not be true no Promises contradicted by sense but will prove true in their performance Whatsoever in the hour of Temptation Carnal Reason may judge to the contrary within a while you will see your unbelieving fears confuted 4. 'T is the whole Truth it containeth all things necessary for the Salvation of those that yield up themselves to be instructed by it Ioh. 14. 26. He shall teach you all things and remember you of all things Ioh. 16. 13. Lead you into all Truth In all things that pertain to Religion and our present Conduct towards everlasting Happiness Therefore nothing is to be hearkned to contrary to what God hath revealed in his Word there is no room left for Tradition nor for extraordinary Revelations all that is necessary for the Church is revealed there 't is a full perfect Rule Reasons 1. From the Author God is a God of Truth and nothing but Truth can come from him for God cannot lie Tit. 1. 2. The truth of the law dependeth upon the truth of God therefore it must needs be without Error yea it corrects all Errour if God could deceive or be deceived you might suspect his Word 2. The matter it self it commends its self to our Consciences by the manifestation of the truth 2 Cor. 4. 2. Approving your selves by the Word of truth 2 Cor. 6. 7. If the Heart be not strangely perverted and become an incompetent Judge by obstinate Atheisme and corrupt Affections it cannot but own these truths to be of God if our Gospel be hid 't is hid to them that are lost 1 Cor. 4. 4. 3. The end of it which is to regulate man and sanctifie man Now it were strange if he should be made better by a lie and a cheat Ioh. 17. 17. Sanctifie them by thy truth thy word is truth Certainly 't is the most convenient Instrument to reduce man to his Wits and make him live like a Man 4. It pretends to be the law of God it is so or else it would be the greatest cheat in the World for it speaketh to us from God all along and by vertue of his Authority None can be so bruitish as to think that the wisest Course of Doctrines that ever the World was acquainted with is a meer Imposture Use 1. Is to commend the Word of God to us we cannot have true Doctrine nor true Piety nor true Consolation without the Scriptures Not true Doctrine Isa. 8. 20. To the law and to the testimony if they speak not according to this word there is no light in them 'T is to be condemned of Falshood if not according to the Word you cannot have true Holiness for Holiness is but Scripture digested and put in Practice Iam. 1. 18. The Foundation of the spiritual life is laid in
by Land a stone of stumbling to those that travel by Sea a Rock of offence his slender appearance was an offence to them As to his sufferings 't is said 1 Cor. 1. 23. That Christ Crucified is to the Iews a stumbling block and to the Greeks foolishness They had not a Messiah to their mind though such an one as the Scriptures had before described His Doctrine Matth. 15. 12. His Disciples said to him knowest thou not that the Pharisies were offended when they heard his saying Again Iohn 6. 61. When they murmured at his saying except ye eat my Flesh doth this offend you Flesh and Blood are apt to stumble in Gods plainest ways at the Doctrine of God which is strict and spiritual the Worship of God that is simple and without pomp the Dispensations of God in chastising and afflicting his People they are all an offence to carnal and worldly men And so through their sin prove an impediment to the success of the Gospel but this offence is causless and without any just ground and without special Grace when it prevaileth with men will prove their eternal ruine and destruction God never intended to satisfie mens lusts and humours truth must be taught who ever be displeased therefore all our care must be to avoid this kind of offence Matth. 12. 6. Blessed is he that is not offended in me that doth not stumble at Christ because of the Cross nor the holiness of his Doctrine nor the simplicity of his worship nor the despicableness of his followers nor the troubles that attend his service 2. Offence may be given where none is taken as when men Counsel others to Evil or reproach the Holy ways of God as when Peter disswaded Christ from suffering Matth. 16. 23. Get thee behind me Satan for thou art 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an offence to me 't was scandalum in se though not ratione eventus not that Christ was offended by it when the heart is guarded against evil Counsel or the infection of evil example So for reproaches they are a means of betraying the soul into sin and prejudicing it against Godliness but the Godly are well Fortified they can see loveliness in such ways as are hated and discountenanced in the World As David Psal. 119. 127. They have made void thy Law therefore I love thy Commandments above Gold above fine Gold And Moses Heb. 11. 26. Esteemed the reproach of Christ greater riches then the Treasures of Aegypt They are no more moved at the Worlds scorn then a man that is streight and upright would be at the mocks of Cripples because he doth not limp and walk after their fashion they can see honour in disgrace and beauty in Gods despised wayes 3. Offences also may be both given and taken as when one provoketh and another is provoked to evil inticed by false doctrine corrupt Counsel or evil example False doctrine Matth. 15. 14. The blind lead the blind and both fall into the Ditch Not one but both the blind follower as well as the blind guide or by corrupt Counsel as Ahab was seduced by the False Prophets 1 Kings 22. and Amnon by his Friend Ionadab was drawn to incest 2 Sam. 13. 6. he as readily obeyeth the others wicked Counsel as he was to give it So for evil example it secretly tainteth us the Prophet complaineth Isaiah 6. 5. I am a man of polluted lips and I dwell among people of polluted lips 'T is hard to avoid the contagion of their iniquities with whom we do dayly and familiarly converse as to live in an infected Air without taint or to walk in the Sun and not be insensibly tanned We leaven one another by our coldness and deadness in Religion 't is hard to be fresh in salt Waters to live among offences and not be offended Secondly With respect to the object or matter of it a scandal may be given dicto aut facto 1. In Word 2. In Deed. 1 In Word by evil Counsel or carnal suggestion Psal. 1. 1. Blessed is the man that walketh not in the Counsel of the ungodly As carnal Friends and Parents that relish not the Word of Life themselves out of prejudice against godliness and holy zeal disswade their Children and Servants from attending on the exercises of Religion as Praying Hearing Meditation lest they grow mopish and Melancholy and lest a zealous minding Gods interest should hinder their preferment had rather see them lewd then holy but Luke 14. 26. If any man come to me and hate not Father and Mother c. Or by Atheistical or obscoene and carnal discourse 1 Cor. 15. 53. Evil Communications corrupt good manners Eph. 5. 4. Neither filthiness nor foolish talking nor jesting which are not convenient 2. In Deed and so three ways 1. When they do things that are simply unlawful and so propagate their sin to others by their example Prov. 22. 24 Make no Friendship with an angry man and with a furious man shalt thou not go lest thou learn his ways and get a snare to thy soul. The violences and furious passions of Anger are so uncomly that a man would think they should rather affright then allure to imitation but these things unsensibly overcome us and e're a man is aware a man is tainted 2. By the abuse of Christian Liberty to the wrong and hinderance of others in a way of godliness As Rom. 14. 13 14 15. Let no Man put a stumbling block or an occasion to fall in his brothers way I know and am perswaded by the Lord Iesus that there is nothing unclean of it self but to him that esteemeth any thing to be unclean to him it is unclean but if thy brother be greived with thy meat now walkest thou not charitably destroy not him with thy meat for whom Christ dyed 1 Cor. 8. 9 10. But take keed lest by any means this Liberty of yours become a stumbling block to them that are weak We must not commit a sin or omit a duty to avoid offence yet in indifferent things we may expect from others what is lawful to do and forbear it as conduceth to edification For we must have a care of offending little ones and therefore must drive according to their pace using our Liberty as they are able bear 3. By Persecution enforce others against their duty Matth. 18. 6. But whoso shall offend one of these little ones which believe on me it were better a Milstone were hanged about his neck and that he were drowned in the Sea Better he did suffer all extremity Offending is persecuting as receiving is countenancing cherishing treating them kindly and tenderly So Mattth 13. 21. When persecution ariseth by reason of the Word by and by they are offended Matth. 24. 9. 10. This opposing hating vexing the people of God is one way of offence and very dangerous to those that practise it how ever it succeedeth For though they be little ones little in their own eyes little in the esteem of
God yea the very Deed of praising him 5. Partly Because temporal favours may be given in Anger but the graces of the Spirit are never given in Anger God may give an Estate in Judgment and indulge large pastures to Beasts fitted for destruction but he giveth not an inlightened Mind and a renewed Heart in Anger 't is a token of his special love To you 't is given to know the misteries of the Kingdom of God Mat. 13. 11. Well then for all these things should we praise God We have a quick sense in bodily Mercies but in Soul concernments we are not alike affected IV. That among spiritual Blessings Divine Illumination is a very great gift and accordingly should be acknowledged by us To make this evident I shall 1. Open the nature of this Divine Illumination 2. Shew you the worth of it and how much it should be valued by us 1. For the Nature of it There is a twofold Wisdom and Knowledge of Divine Misteries 1. One which is only a gift 1 Cor. 8. 1. We know that we all have knowledge knowledge puffeth up but charity edifieth This is an excellent gift but yet it floweth from the common influence of the Spirit and puffeth up the party because 't is apprehended only such an excellency as conduceth to the Interests of the flesh and to attain esteem in the World and because he hath not thereby a deep and piercing knowledge of his Misery but is cold and weak and doth not warm the heart with love to the thing known therefore we should see to it what kind of knowledge we have whether it be a gift or a grace whether we use it to exalt God or our selves the bare gift puffeth us up with a lofty Conceit of our selves and a disclain of others but grace keepeth us humble for the more we know that way the more we see our defects and what little reason we have to glory in our knowledge or any other grace and besides by it we are suitably affected to what we know 2. There is a special knowledge of Divine Mysteries wrought in us by the special and sanctifying work of the Holy-Ghost this is the wisdom which cometh from above which is first pure and then peaceable Iam. 3. 17. which humbleth the man that hath it for the more he knoweth of God the more his own opinion and estimation of himself is lessened Iob 42. 5 6. I have heard of thee by the hearing of the ear but now mine eye seeth thee therefore I abhor my self and repent in dust and ashes I have spoken unadvisedly of God This knowledge also maketh him serious and is operative upon the heart and worketh love to the thing known Ioh. 4. 10. If thou knewest the gift c. and maketh us to know God in Christ so as to acknowledge him and give him due Honour Respect and Reverence 'T is a knowledge joined with oblectation and affection This knowledge is considerable as to its beginning and increase 1 Its beginning the first removing of the natural blindness and darkness of our understandings so that we have a clear discerning of the things of God when the Scales fall from our eyes Naturally we were ignorant of God and the way to heaven but now brought to the saving knowledge of God in Christ we are acquainted with both The first Creature which God made was light so in the new Creation the new Creature is illuminated with an heavenly light and cured of its former blindness that we see things in another manner than ever we saw them before 1 Pet. 2. 9. Called out of darkness into his marvellous light as a man brought out of a dark Dungeon into an open Light And Acts 26. 18. To open their eyes and turn them from darkness to light and from the power of Satan to God So Eph. 5. 8. Ye were sometimes darkness but now light in the Lord. To be seeing is better than to be blind to be in light than to be in darkness This is Gods first work and it is marvellous in our eves 't is double when we first begin to have a clear knowledge of our own misery Rev. 3. 18. Whereas before we lived in gross ignorance of our own condition So when we begin to see the remedy as well as our Misery 2 Cor. 4. 6. God who commanded the light to shine out of darkness hath shined in our hearts to give us the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Iesus Christ The first thing that God convinceth us off is our own Sin Guilt and Misery So that those things that either we knew not or did swim loose in the Brain we begin now to be affected with them We talked before of sin as a thing of course and were wont to marvel why men-kept such a deal ado about sin but now the case is altered God hath opened his eyes and therefore he complaineth of it as the greatest burden and fain would be rid of it at any rate He beginneth to seek after Christ as his only remedy and nothing will satisfie him but Christ and all things are but dung and dross in comparison of the excellency of Christ and that he may be found in him He lamenteth his case and can trust himself no where but in Christs hands a natural man slippeth into an heedless credulity and either doth not look upon the Gospel as a real truth or else is not affected with it so as to venture his Salvation in that bottom 2 As to the increase and progress and so those that are taught of God need to be taught of God again and to seek a further increase of spiritual Wisdom or a further degree of the saving knowledge of Divine Misteries As the Apostle prayeth for the Ephesians towards whom he acknowledgeth God had abounded in all Wisdom and Prudence yet prayeth that God would give them the Spirit of Wisdom and Revelation that the eyes of their Understandings might be opened Eph. 1. 17 18. with the 8th verse we are yet ignorant in many things for we know but in part not fully rooted in the knowledge of these things which we know they need to be refreshed with new illumination from God that our knowledge may be active and lively and stand out against new and daily Temptations And that oblivion and forgetfulness which is a kind of ignorance and is apt ever and anon to creep upon us may be prevented and Truths may be ready at hand for our use Iam. 1. 5. And this is that which David beggeth an increase of knowledge for he being an holy man and a Prophet needed not the first illumination and every degree is a great favour to be acknowledged with praise Secondly Let me speak of the worth of this Divine Illumination in its self the worth of it appeareth in four things I. Its Author God by his efficacious teaching doth cure the blindness of our minds and doth open and incline our
hearts towards spiritual and heavenly things Ioh. 6 45. They shall all be taught of God 1 Thes. 4. 10. Ye your selves are taught of God to love one another 1 Ioh. 2. 27. The anointing teacheth you all things As the Heathen Cato would have none to teach his Son but himself for he said that Instruction was such a benefit that he would not have his Son beholding to none for it but himself Oh 't is a blessed priviledge to be taught of God! to be made wise to Salvation and not only to get an ear to hear but an heart to understand and learn by hearing not only the power to Believe but the very Act of Faith itself Gods teaching is always effectual not only directive but perswasive inlightening the mind to know and inclining the Will and Affections to imbrace what we know he writeth the truth upon the heart and puts it into the mind Heb. 8. 10. He sufficiently propoundeth the Object and rectifieth the Faculty imprints the Truth upon the very Soul But how doth God teach in the very place where Christ speaketh of our being taught of God he presently addeth Ioh. 6. 46. Not that any man hath seen the Father Gods teaching doth not import that any man must see God and immediately Converse with him and talk with God and so be taught by him no God teacheth externally by his Word and internally by the Spirit but yet so powerfully and effectually that the Lesson is learned and deeply imprinted upon our Souls this teaching is often expressed by seeing now to a clear sight three things concur an Object conspicuous a perspicuous Medium and a well disposed Organ or clear Eye in Gods teaching there is all these The Object to be seen plainly in the Scriptures are the things of God not Fancies but Realities and by the light of the Spirit represented to us and the Eye of the Mind opened A blind man cannot see at mid-day nor the most clear-sighted at midnight when objects lye hidden under a vail of darkness the object must be revealed and brought nigh to us in a due light and God secretly openeth the eye of the Soul that we see heavenly things with Life and Affection The Author then sheweth the Mercy when God will not only teach us by Men but by his Spirit II. The Objects known the highest and most important matters in the World the gracious Soul is savingly acquainted with 't is more to have the knowledge of the profoundest Sciences then of some poor and low employment as Themistocles said to know a little of true Philosophy is more than to know how to play upon a fiddle But now to have the saving knowledge of God and of the life to come is more than to have the most admired Wisdom of the Flesh than all the Common Learning in the World and therefore how much are we bound to praise God if he will teach us his Statutes more than if we knew how to govern Kingdoms and Common-wealths and to do the greatest business upon Earth Two things do commend the object of this knowledge 1. It is conversant about the most high and excellent things 2. The most necessary and useful things 1. Things of so high a nature as to know God who is the cause of all things and Jesus Christ who is the restorer of all things and the Spirit who cherisheth and preserveth all things especially to know his heavenly operations and the nature and acting of his several Graces Ier. 9. 24. Let him that glorieth glory in this that he knoweth me saith the Lord. There is the excellency of a man to know God to conceive aright of his Nature Attributes and Works so as to Love Trust Reverence and Serve him Alas all other knowledge is a poor low thing to this God hath written a book to us of himself as Caesar wrote his own Commentaries and by Histories and Prophesies hath set forth himself to us to be the Creatures Creator Preserver Deliverer and Glorifier This is the Knowledge we should seek after common Craft teach us how to get bread but this book teacheth us how to get the Kingdom of heaven to get the bread of Life the meat that perisheth not Law preserveth the Estates and Testaments of Men but this the Testament of God the Charter of our eternal Inheritance Physick cureth the Diseases of the Body this afflicted Minds and distempered Hearts Natural Philosophy raiseth up men to the contemplation of Nature this of the Maker of all things and Author of Nature History the Rise and Ruine of Kingdoms States and Cities this the Creation and Consummation of the World Rhetorick to stir the Affection this to inkindle Divine Love Poetry moveth natural delight here Psalms that we may delight in God These are the only true and sublime things as Light is pleasant to the Eye so is Knowledge to the Mind but where have you the knowledge of such high things what are the mysteries of Nature to the mysteries of Godliness to know the Almighty living God and to behold his Wisdom Goodness and Power in all his Works surely this is a sweet and pleasant thing to a gracious soul but especially to know him in Christ to know the Mistery of the Incarnation Person Natures and Mediation of Christ. 1 Tim. 3. 16. Great is the mistery of Godliness This is a mistery without Controversie great to know the Law and Covenant of God Deut. 4. 6. This is your wisdom and understanding in the sight of the nations who shall hear these statutes And the sanctifying work of the Holy-Ghost by which we are wrought and prepared for everlasting Life 2. So necessary and useful to know the way of Salvation the Disease and Remedy of our Souls our Danger and the Cure our Work and our Wages the business of Life and our End what is to be believed and practiced what we are to enjoy and do these are the things which concern us all other knowledge is but curious and speculative and hath more of pleasure than of Profit To know our own Affairs our greatest and most necessary Affairs these are the things we should busie our selves about 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 One thing is necessary Luk. 10. 42. Other things we may well spare Now what is necessary but to know our Misery that we may prevent it our Remedy that we may look after it in time our Work and Business that we may perform it our End that we intend it and be incouraged by it What course we must take that we may be everlastingly happy Well then if God will shew us what is good Mich. 6. 8. and teach us what is good that we may know whither we are a going and which way we must go if he will give us Counsel in our reins to choose him for our portion Psal. 16. 5. We ought to bless his name So the 11th Verse Thou wilt shew me the path of Life though ignorant of other things we are
the Flesh p. 899 Grounds of love to the Word the most noble is the words purity p. 863 Grounds of Faith and Obedience p. 939-940 Guidance of God to be submitted to if we will have him to be ours p. 10 Guilty Creatures cannot immediately enjoy God p. 14 Guilt makes us jealous of God p. 473 H. HAbitual and actual reign of Sin p. 919 Hand of God notes the power of God p. 1070 Our Mercies are in the hand of God p. 513 Happiness of the Saints not in this World p. 867 Happiness as well as Honour to be Gods Servants p. 850 Happiness mistakes about it 1. Some mistake wherein it lies 2. Others mistake the way that leads to it 3. Some are indifferent in the use of means leading to it p. 2 29 30. Mistakes herein very dangerous ibid. Many would be happy that would not be holy ibid. Happiness of Saints that God is near them on all occasions p. 948 Vid. Blessedness Hardness of heart from delaying Repentance p. 405 by converse with wicked men p. 775 prevented by acknowledging Mercies p. 445 from neglecting answers of prayer p. 906 Wicked men harden themselves 1. From Divine Patience 2. Divine Mercy p. 938 Harmony between the Spirit Scripture and Grace p. 66 Harmony between Gods work and our Duty p. 66 Harmony between the Word and Spirit in teaching us p. 74 Hasty we are apt to be hasty with God p. 836 Hatred of God under the Notion of a Iudge not as a Preserver p. 756 Hatred of sin when it is right p. 100S it is twofold ibid. Hatred of the World against Christians because God loves them p. 882 883 Hatred of sin 1. The Kinds 2. Causes 3. Effects of it p. 877 878 879 1006 1007 1008 Hating of sin as it is sin p. 659 660 679 680 683 It is a Character of those that are good-p 680 681 877 None hate sin but they that hate all sin p. 683 Hearing the Word without practice not sufficient p. 318 Hearing Prayer God may hear when he does not answer p. 901 Heart Tender heart soon affected with Gods judgments p. 810 Means to get a tender heart p. 933 Heart purity of heart the internal principle of good Actions p. 8 The Word of God to be laid up in the heart p. 9 What a Mans heart is that the Condition is p. 486 Heart what it implies 1. The Mind 2. The affections p. 9 God will be sought with the whole heart p. 15 236 393 Half-heart what it is p. 393 239 Whole Heart what it is it implies 1. Extension of parts 2. Intention of degrees p. 15 16 Examine whether we give God the whole Heart p. 239 Why God will be sought with the whole heart p. 15 16 58 59 902 236 237 238. Motives p. 239 God enclines the heart and man inclines his own heart how p. 46 751 251 Vid. Inclination Heart enclined to keep Gods Statutes what it is the necessity of it p. 752 753 God requires the Heart in his service p. 236 237 Heart its bent towards the Word how expressed p. 122 Heart must 1. Be drawn off from the Creature Self and Sin 2. Drawn unto God p 373 374 Vid. enlarged heart Heaven the belief of it a great support under the Terrors of this World p. 310 Heavenly things Motives to press after them p. 1089 1090 Heavens an Emblem of the stability of Gods VVord p. 575 Help and Hope when delayed we may complain to God p. 551 Help to be sought of God in heavy troubles p. 158 To be sought of God to encline our hearts to Gods statutes p. 46 Height when is iniquity come to its height p. 858 859 Hell a worm that never dies a pit that hath no bottom a fire that shall never be quenched p. 861 Help in straits may be expected by them that make a Conscience of Gods Commandments p. 1079 Heritage denotes 1. The substance of our portion 2. Our right to it 3. The tenure by which we hold it 4. Our actual possession of it p. 741 742 743 Gods testimonies are 1. a full 2. a sure 3. a lasting Heritage p. 741 742 743 Marks of one that hath Gods testimonies for his Heritage p. 746 747 Consideration to move us to take Gods testimonies for our Heritage p. 748 749 Heirs of the promise rejoice in each others company and in each others mercies p. 501 502 Reasons of it p. 502 503 Hiding Gods word in the heart what p. 63 64 Why Gods word must be hid in our heart p. 64 65 Great advantages of hiding Gods word in our heart in seven particulars p. 65 How we may hide it in our hearts 1. By meditation upon it 2. Receiving it in the love of it p. 67 Hide Gods word not as a Talent in a Napkin but as Gold in a Treasury p. 76 Gods hiding his commandments from us is his not opening our eyes to see into them p. 119 Hieroglyphick of the Egyptians p. 432 Hiding place God is a hiding place to his own It implies many things for their comfort 1. Secresie 2. Capacity 3. Safety 4. Consolation p. 765 766 Hinderers of preaching the word great judgments threatned against them p. 336 Holiness in God is his essence in us a quality p. 859 It 's a means of maintaining communion with God p 389 Holiness negative and positive p. 17 18 22 Not enough to avoid evil but we must do good p 22 Reasons and Uses thereof ibid. Holiness of life is oft made a scorn by carnal men p. 337 It 's better than wisdom wisdom better than strength p 928 Honesty in our dealings with others directions about it p. 817 Honest heart one sign of it is when a man fears to offend and cares to please God p. 478 Honour great honour to be Gods servant p. 101 849 850 To be dishonour'd for Christ's sake p. 311 Horrour at mens forsaking Gods Law argues 1. A due sense of sin 2. Of Gods wrath 3. Of the truth of the threatnings 4. The effects of sin p. 351 It proceedeth from a good cause p. 351 352 Hope teaches us to purifie our selves p. 18 And to obey Gods Commandments p. 1035 1040 Hope and help when delay'd we may complain to God p. 551 Hope and obedience much praised little practised p. 1035 Hope in Christ consider what we have of that hope p. 399 Hope keeps the soul alive under faintings how p. 542 543. What Hope is p. 1036 Hope keeps us from being utterly overcome p. 337 Hope and faith their difference p. 543 Hope its excellency and certainty it causeth earnestness to be delivered out of the trouble and yet patience under the trouble p. 543 827 Hope nourished by the word of God p. 544 927 Hope from worldly things causeth shame p. 786 Hope true and false distinguished p. 786 1036 1. False hope is not built on God 2. It is slight and superficial 3. Dead and cold 4. Weak and inconstant 5. Lazy and Ioitering p. 787 True hope
is pleasing in his sight and that is the ready way to come to Knowledge and sound Judgment Iohn 17. 17. Sanctify them through thy Truth thy word is Truth John 3. 21. He that doth truth cometh to the light that his deeds may be made manifest that they are wrought in God Men that have a mind to maintain an Opinion or suffer an evil Practice are prejudiced and byassed by the Idol that is in their hearts and so do not see what may be seen and what they seem to search after Therefore David urgeth this as an Argument in the latter end of the Text I have believed thy Commandments That is to say Lord I know this Word is thine and I am willing to practise all that thou requirest The great thing that is to be aimed about Knowledge is not onely that we may know and be able to jangle about Questions or that we may be known and esteemed for our knowledge but that we may practise and walk circumspectly and in evil days and times know what the will of the Lord is concerning us to desire knowledge as those that know the weight and consequence of these things as I shall shew more fully hereafter Those that would have good Judgment and Knowledge must be willing to understand their Duty and practise all that God requireth that they may neither doe things rashly and without knowledge and deliberation for then they are not good how good soever they be in themselves Prov. 19. 2. Also that the Soul be without knowledge is not good Or doubtingly after Deliberation For he that doubteth is in part condemned in his own mind Rom. 14. 23. And he that doubteth is damned if he eat We must have a clear Warrant from God or else all is nought and will tend to evil Then it is the Spirit of God satisfieth these desires when we earnestly desire of him to be informed in the true and perfect way Iohn 6. 45. They shall be all taught of God He hath suited Promises to the pure and earnest desire of Knowledge Then it is the Lord who sendeth means and blesseth means as he sent Peter to Cornelius Acts 10. and Philip to the Eunuch Acts 8. All is at his disposal and he will not fail the waiting Soul He hath made Christ to be Wisdome for this very end and purpose that he might guide us continually 1 Cor. 1. 30. But of him are ye in Christ Iesus who of God is made unto us Wisdome and Righteousness and Sanctification and Redemption 3. You must seek it in the Word that maketh us wise to Salvation and by the continual study of it we obtain Wisdome and Discretion There we have the best and safest Counsel It maketh wise the simple Psalm 19. 7. No case can be put so far as it concerneth Conscience but there you shall have satisfaction Col. 3. 16. Let the word of God dwell in you richly in all Wisdome You must not content your selves with a cursory reading but mark the end and scope of it that you may be made compleatly wise by frequent reading hearing Meditation upon it and conferring about it There you find all things necessary to be believed and practised therefore you must hear it with Application reade it with Meditation 1. Hear it with Application the Lord blesseth us in the use of instituted means both light and flame are kept in by the breath of preaching Where Visions faile the People perish men grow bruitish and wild It is a Dispute which is the sense of Learning the Ear or the Eye by the Eye we see things but by reason of innate Ignorance we must be taught how to judge of them Iames 1. 19. Wherefore my Brethren let every man be swift to hear take all occasions And we must still apply what we hear Nunquid ego talis Rom. 8. 31. What shall we then say to these things Job 5. ult Loe this we have searched so it is hear it and know thou it for thy good Heb. 2. 3. How shall we escape if we neglect so great Salvation Return upon thine own heart 2. Reading Scriptures is every man's work who hath a Soul to be saved Other Writings though good in their kind will not leave such a lively impression upon the Soul All the moral Sentences of Seneca and Plutarch do not come with such force upon the Conscience as one saying of God's Word God's Language hath a special Energy here must be your study and your delight Psalm 1. 2. His delight is in the Law of the Lord and in his Law doth he meditate day and night 2 Tim. 3. 16 17. All Scripture is given by inspiration of God and is profitable for Doctrine for Reproof for Correction for Instruction in Righteousness that the man of God may be perfect throughly furnished unto all good works These make you wise unto Salvation your Tast is not right when you relish and savour humane Writings though never so good more than the Word of God A draught of Wine from the Vessel is more fresh and lively that Conviction which doth immediately rise out of the Word is more prevailing We suspect the mixture of Passion and private Aims in the Writings of others but when Conscience and the Word are working together we own it as coming from God himself besides those that are studying and reading and meditating on the Word have this sensible advantage that they have Promises Doctrines Examples of the Word ready and familiar upon all occasions others are weak and unsetled because they have not Scriptures ready In the whole work of Grace you will find no weapon so effectual as the Sword of the Spirit Scriptures seasonably remembred and urged are a great relief to the Soul No diligence here can be too much If you would not be unprofitable sapless indiscreet with others weak and comfortless in your selves reade the Scriptures We have sic scriptum est against every Temptation Besides you have the advantage to see with your own Eyes the Truth as it cometh immediately from God before any art of man or thoughts of their head pass upon it and so can the better own God in what you find 4. Long use and exercise doth much increase Judgment especially as it is sanctified by the Spirit of God You get an habit of discerning fixing directing guiding your ways 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 5. 14. Who by reason of use have their Senses exercised to discern good and evil As men of full age by long use and exercise of the Senses of seeing smelling tasting have acquired a more perfect knowledge to discern what food is good and wholsome and what is unwholsome so by much Attention Studying and Meditation men who have exercised the intellectual Faculty to find out the scope and meaning of the Word of God do attain a more discerning Faculty and understand better the Truth of the Word and can judge what Doctrine is true and what false and more easily apprehend