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

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that thought the Spirit in bonds or tyed to them Come say they Jer 18.18 let us devise devices against Jeremiah For the Law shall not perish from the Priest nor Counsell from the wise nor the word from the Prophet The Priests are of this opinion and Jeremiah is out of the way he is a false Prophet and therefore certainly we may proceed in our devices against him for we have the opinion of the Priests and Prophets with us Thus they spake as if the Spirit of God had been bound up to that order We ought to seeke wisdome at the Priests mouth yet they who rest upon their vvisdome may soone be deceived knowledge may perish from the Priests mouth and counsel from the ancient The great Cheate which the Pope hath put upon the world is That the Spirit of God is tyed to the pumells of his Chaire or that there he cannot erre But as particular men so whole Counsells of learned and aged men have erred True vvisdome is not the birth of time nor the peculiar of a party but the free gift of the Spirit of God who is most free both in what he giveth and to whom he giveth Therefore Secondly Let us not pin our faith or our Consciences upon men how great or how Ancient soever they are Let us give respect to the Ancient and the honourable not to doe it is not only uncivill but sinfull yet let us not give up our Consciences to them For great men are not alwayes wise neither doe the aged understand Judgement We must not reverence any mans person to the prejudice of the truth The opinions of great or ancient men are not to be received as Oracles without debate we have liberty to Consider of them and to Compare them with the rule We must prove all things and hold fast that only which is good Quae in philosophia dicuntur ea oportet existimatione ejus qui dicit detracta seorsum per se examinari Etenim canities dicentis gestus supercilist c. faciunt ad percallendum imperitum Auditorem Plutaret de Auditione A heathen gave that direction to those who heare philosophicall discourses You must take off all those considerations which concerne the person speaking and only mind what is spoken his Antiquity that he is an old man and his authority that he is a great man must not sway you His outward gesture tone and gravity his severe or demure lookes which much affect almost astonish unlearned auditors and make them ready to swallow any thing that is uttered must all be layd aside when the matter delivered and asserted comes to be examin'd and layd in the ballance Believe what is said because you judge it true doe not believe it true because such or such a man hath said it because an old man or a great man or a good man hath said it How strictly then and religiously is this to be observed in hearing the word of God and the doctrines of faith in that case be sure to lay aside all that concernes the speaker and weigh what he speakes alone and single in the Ballance of the Sanctuary Thirdly Then we ought not to despise what young men say because of their youth Tempora quippe virtutem non prima negant non ultima donant If old men be not alwayes wise then wisdome may be with the young sometimes an opinion is undervalued because it is the opinion of a young man and truths are not received because he that delivers them hath not seene many dayes As it is a sin to adore old age or to give up our faith and Conscience to it so it is a sin to slight youth in doing so we may slight the truth Paul saith to Timothy Let no man despise thy youth Which as it is a Caution to Timothy as hath been shewed to carry himselfe wisely and warily lest he should occasion others to slight or despise him so it is a Caution to the people that they should not despise him because of his youth That which is the true glory of gray hayess doth sometimes Crowne the youthfull head wisdome I meane and ripenesse of understanding Corpore Juvencula animo cana fuit Ambr de Agnete Ser 90. It was said of a godly woman Shee had a youthfull body but an aged mind Samuel was young in yeares but in grace elder then old Ely Jeremiah was young but how wise did the Inspiration of God make him Daniel was young yet wiser then all the Magicians and Astrologers Timothy and Titus were young yet honourable for p udence and piety and therefore seeing great men are not alwayes wise neither doe the aged understand Judgement as we should not accept what old men say because of their age so let us not slight what young men say because of their youth When God furnisheth young men with abilities and calleth them to his worke even old men must be willing at least not disdaine to heare them Christ must be heard in or by whom soeever he will speake God indeed doth usually serve himselfe by the aged yet he hath abundantly testified that truth is not bound up to old age Modesty should bridle young men from being over-forward to shew themselves but it must not shut or seale up their lips Old men must have the preheminence Elihu shewes us that order v. 7. I saith he said dayes shall speake and multitude of yeares shall teach wisdome We must first attend and give eare to our elders And when we are to chuse Officers or Governours to chuse ignorant Greene-heads before knowing Gray hayres were a perverting of all order Therefore men of yeares having grace and wisdome proportionable are to be preferred before the younger In that case it were a shame to advance young men with a neglect of the aged But when God gives more grace and understanding to young men then to ancients our approbation should follow his preparation and whom he qualifies best we should soonest chuse The order of Nature is good yet not alwayes fittest to be observed Right reason and the rule of the word of God must sway and cast our vote no the age and yeares of men When Samuel was sent to anoynt a King in the place of Saul among the sons of Jesse he looking on Eliab said Surely the Lords anoynted is before him 1 Sam 16.5 but the Lord said unto him v. 6 Looke not on his countenance or on the height of his stature because I have refused him for the Lord seeth not as man seeth for man looketh on the outward appearance but the Lord looketh on the heart Now as we are not to be taken with the beauty and stature of men so not with their gray haires and outward gravity Old men are not alwayes wise wisdome and a heart for God a good heart or a heart to doe good may dwell with a greene Head even with a greener then seven the eighth o● greenest of all so was Davids
truth shall ride and prosper Truth may be borne downe by power and out-fac'd by impudence but it cannot be overcome Never feare to undertake a good Cause and ever feare to undertake a bad one for it will be slur'd at last Truth may be opposed but truth-defenders shall never be ashamed nor want a tongue to speake for it Christ Math 10.17 warnes his Disciples what entertainment they were like to find in the world They shall deliver you up to Rulers ye shall be brought before Governours and Kings for my sake But he withall encourageth them Take no thought what ye shall speak or what ye shall answer For some might say What if we should be called in question for the truths of the Gospel we are willing to burne for them as that Martyr said b●t we feare we cannot dispute for them Well saith Christ take no thought what you shall speak for it shall be given you in the same houre God himselfe by his Spirit will prompt you he will whisper such things into your eares as all your opposers shall not be able to gainsay Indeed we see some men of corrupt minds and reprobate concerning the truth as the Apostle gives their Character who have courage enough to set forth lyes and slander the truth who straine their wits to the utmost and as the Prophet speakes Jer 9.3 bend their tongues like their bow for lyes But let them remember what the Apostle sayd of such as they 2 Tim 3.8 Now as Jannes and Jambres withstood Moses so doe these also resist the truth but v. 9. they shall proceed no further for their folly shall be made manifest to all men That is shortly all shall see that these men have but playd the fooles we may say of all those who hold wild taunting opinions they shall proceed no further though they act highly against the truth now yet stay but a while and they will have nothing to answer or returne they will have emptied their quiver and quite spent their powder you shall heare no more of them From that 16th verse where Elihu addeth I waited for they spake not but stood still and answered no more Observe First It is our wisdome and our duty to stay our time before we put our selves out upon business It is good to wait God himselfe is not hasty upon us he waits to be gracious and we must wait our season to be serviceable Elihu did not presently engage The providences of God and the Exigency of things must put us on we must not put our selves on Christ tells us Math 9.38 The harvest is great and the labourers few pray therefore the Lord of the harvest that he would thrust forth labourers into his harvest he doth not say pray that labourers would thrust forth themselves into the harvest or run into it before they are sent but pray the Lord of the harvest that he would thrust forth labourers that is that he would powerfully encline their hearts to the worke whom he hath fitted and prepared for it And as untill we are at least both competently prepared and fairely enclined to that or any other good worke 't is best for us to waite so when once we are prepared and enclined 't is best for us without delay to set upon the worke Elihu did so as appeares in the next verse Vers 17. I said also I will answer my part I will shew my opinion Now Elihu addresseth to his worke his duty and in this with the verses following to the end of the Chapter we have first his resolvednesse to speak I said I will answer for my part c. Secondly his ability readiness and furniture to speake v. 18. For I am full of matter c. Thirdly we have the motives that prest him to speak or that he was exceedingly prest to it in the latter end of the 18th verse as also v. 19 20. My spirit within me Constraineth me Behold my belly is as wine which hath no vent c. I will speake that I may be refreshed Fourthly in the two last verses he tells us what caution yea what conscience he meant to use in speaking v. 20. Let me not I pray you accept any mans person neither let me give flattering titles unto man c. I said I will answer for my part c. Now you have done I will begin those words I said are not in the Hebrew text explicitely yet are well understood I will answer for my part that is as some conceive the force of the phrase I will answer with my strength and might I will put my shoulders to it but better Grammarians conclude Illud quod aliqui partem interpretantur pro mea virili parte aut pro viribus latinè potius dictum est quam ad germanant vocis significationem Pined that the word imports A mans share or portion in any worke to be done rather then the strength which the workman useth or puts forth in doing it And so the sence is plaine as if Elihu had said they have done their part they have gone to the utmost of their line now I see it falls to my turne to speak and I will do what falls to my turne I will answer also for my part I also will shew my opinion We had these words in the negative at the 6th verse There Elihu sayd I was afraid and durst not shew you my opinion But here as also before v. 10. Elihu had taken courage and was resolved to shew his opinion I shall not stay upon any opening of this clause only I shall note two or three things briefely from it as connected with the former verse There we had Elihu waiting here we have him purposing to speake Hence note They who consider and waite before they speake speake most prevailingly most weightily It was long ere Elihu ventured to speake but when he did he did it to purpose and with full effect That which comes from our owne heart is most like to take upon the hearts of others they speake as much from their hearts as with their tongues whom we see long waiting before we heare them speaking And therefore it is not good no not for good speakers to be speaking before they have been waiting many through hast bring forth untimely births and unripe fruit Elihu could say I have waited before he sayd I will answer for my part Secondly Note We ought to observe order in speaking and act our proper part I will answer for my part saith Elihu or my turne is come to answer The Apostle Paul gives this rule at large 1 Cor 14.28 29 30. He would have no Interruption no confusion in Church-meetings or Church-speakings Thirdly When he saith I will answer also for my part I also will shew mine opinion Note He that hath received a gift or talent should make use of it and not hide it It is good to be doing our part and shewing our opinion where we may be usefull Some
in his Then all sorts and degrees of men are judged righteously when there is no regard had or notice taken in Judgement of what sort or degree any man is Judges are called gods and therefore should act like God without respect to men And as this is a truth in all those cases of judgement where Magistrates sit in the place of God so it is as true in all the private judgements and determinations of brethren concerning persons or things which by way of distinction from the former is commonly called the putting or referring of a matter in difference to men We must take heed in private judgements that we be not swayed according to the condition of persons nor must we make the fault great or lesse the cause better or worse because the person is greater or lesse friend or stranger to us The Apostle gives this counsel and caution to the Churches James 2.1 2 3 4 5. My Brethren have not the faith that is the doctrine of faith or profession of our Lord Jesus the Lord of glory with respect of persons For if there come into your assembly a man with a gold ring and there come in also a poore man in vile rayment and you have respect to him that weareth the gay clothing and say unto him sit thou here in a good place and say to the poore stand thou there or sit here under my footstool are ye not then partiall in your selves and are become judges of evill thoughts In administring the things of God which are spirituall we must observe no civill difference no distinction among men Christ hath given himselfe alike and equally to rich and poore bond and free and therefore as to Church-priviledges and enjoyments they must all be alike and equall unto us No man is to be knowne after the flesh in the things of the Spirit 2 Cor 5.16 that is no man is to be valued meerely upon natural or worldly accounts if we doe then as the Apostle James concludes in the place last ●efore mentioned are we not partiall in our selves that is as some also translate that reproving question Have we not made a difference a groundlesse difference or a difference grounded upon carnal respects rather then upon any solid reason and so as it follows in the close of the verse are become judges of evill thoughts that is have made our judgement of those persons according to the dictate of our owne evill and corrupt thoughts not according to the rule of the word Further this sin of respecting persons is found also in the ordinary converse of men For when we cast favours upon those that are ill deserving and commend those as we say to the skies who should rather fall under our severest censure and are led to doe all this also because the person is a kinsman or a friend for though eaeteris paribus other qualifications and circumstances being equall we are to respect friends and kindred who are our owne flesh before strangers yet vertue and worth should out-weigh relations and as Levi in doing Justice Deut 33.9 so we in bestowing rewards should not acknowledge our Brethren nor know our owne children but let such have our rewards who best deserve them I may adde this also To take up this or that forme of religion because such and such persons are in it and to reject another though better because none but a few that are despised and contemned are in it is a most dangerous way of respecting persons This was the meaning of that question John 7.48 Have any of the rulers or of the Pharisees believed on him As if certainly that must alwayes be the best way and rule of believing which is professed by the rulers Or as if it were ground enough to reject a way of religion because the common people or the poore are mostly found in it Thus 't is storied of a Great Prince that was converted to the Christian faith and resolved to be baptized that seeing a great many poore men in his way as he went he asked to whom they belonged it was answered they were Christians and of that religion which he was entring into what doth Christ keep his servants so poore sayd he I will not serve such a Master and so drew backe even while he was but setting his face towards Christ I might instance the sinfullness of accepting persons in many other particular cases as well as these but these may suffice for a tast Let me not saith Elihu accept any mans person Neither let me give flattering titles unto man In the former part of the verse it was Ish here it is Adam Graeciverteum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cognominandi per 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 reverori et 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 mirari persona in reddiderunt Merc Et deum homini non aequabo Vulg I will not respect the person of the greatest men nor will I flatter any earthly any mortall man Mr Broughton renders That I respect an earthly man The vulgar latine translates the whole verse thus I will not accept any mans persons and I will not equall God to man As if he had sayd I will not measure God by man in his dealings and proceedings with man As my purpose is to speake truth and spare no man so I will not wrong God by drawing him downe to the rules of men What is man that he should compare with God But though this be a truth yet because it departs so farre from the Original text I will not stay upon it Our reading is cleare I will not give flattering titles There are severall other readings of these words which I shall propose and passe to our owne Apud hominem Praefatione non utar Jun Et apud hominem ne permutem nomina Coc Et ad hominem non nutato nomine loquar Merc Ego non ingratiam ejus tectis verbis utar occultè eum designans nomen proprium immutans Verbum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 significat aliquem occultè designare Merc 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 est mutatis rerum nominibus agere ut non possis nisi obscurè quid sentiatur intelligi Cujus contrarium est aperire os et 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 appellare Coc First I will not use a preface or I will not stand prefacing with man Flatteries are usually set forth in affected Prefaces and Apologies Secondly Let me not change names before men or let me not speak to man under a borrowed name That is let me speake plainly and clearly without ambages and fetches let me speake to every man and about every thing by its owne name and not with covered words as if I were unwilling to touch those to whom I speake Our translation is yet more cleare to the scope and tendency of this place I will not give flattering titles This sentence is but two words in the Hebrew The verbe signifies say the Rabbins to hide or conceale or to carry a matter closely
incorruptible it hath naturally no seedes of dissolution in it because no contrariety no contrary qualities in it as all bodyes or corporeall substances have I know the Apostle saith 1 Tim 6.16 God only hath immortality it 's true he only hath it in himselfe independently originally but he derives and gives it as a talent to some creatures in a way of dependance upon himselfe Secondly Observe The soule brings in the life of the body The life of man What is the body without the soule but a lumpe of clay As soone as ever the soule departs life departs man dyeth and becomes a putrifying carkasse yet such is the folly of most men that all their care is for the life of the body which is at best a dying life they utterly neglect the soule which as it is the life of the body so it selfe never dyeth The soule is the Jewell the body is but the Cabinet the soule is the kernel the body is but the shell Will you be sollicitous about a Cabinet and a shell and slight the Jewel or throw away the kernel Will you take care of that which liveth the body and will you not take care of that which holds your life the soule Againe Note Life is the gift of God If the soule which is the cause of life in man be of God then the life of man is of God also The cause of the cause is the cause of the effect or thing caused But we need not argue it from Logick rules Scripture testimony being so aboundant in this thing Acts 17.25 He giveth to all life and breath and all things And v. 28. In him we live and move and have our being Spirituall and eternall life are the gift of God so also is naturall life And if so Then First Live to God Secondly Seeing God gives us life we should be willing to give our lives to God Yea Thirdly We should therefore be ready to give up or rather to lay downe our lives for God And as we should give up our lives to God when he calls for them by natural death so we should give up our lives for God when he calls us to beare witness to his name and truth by violent death I shall yet take notice of one thing further before I passe from this verse The Spirit of God hath made me and the breath of the Almighty hath given me life Some upon good grounds referre the first clause The Spirit of God hath made me to the creation both of soule and body and the second or latter clause the breath of the Almighty hath given me life to that quickning which we receive by the Spirit to the duties whereinto we are called in this life The breath of the Almighty hath given me life that is hath fitted and prepared me for the severall offices and services of life As if Elihu had sayd The Spirit of God hath not only made me a man but a man for worke yea the Spirit of God hath quickned me to the present worke and businesse I am come about Thus life imports not only spirituall life in the being of it but all the furniture ornaments and abilities of a spirituall life The Septuagint render this profession made by Elihu expressely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Spiratio omnipotentis est quae docet me Sept Haud me latet non a meipso sed a deo hunc prudentiae sensum me accepisse Nicet to this sence holding out a strong assurance which Elihu had that God had both called and prepared him for the service he was come about and engaged in The Spirit of God hath made me and the breath of the Almighty hath instructed me Another of the Greek Interpreters speaks as much I am not ignorant that of my selfe I am able to doe nothing but I have received this power from God As if Elihu had said The Spirit of the Almighty hath quickned me to this worke I am now upon and taught me what both to say and doe in thy case O Job Hence note God giveth not only the life of nature unto men but he fits them for all the duties and services of this life We indeed are scarcely to be reckoned among the living if we have no more but a naturall life what is it to be able to eate and drinke to heare and see and speake unlesse we have more then this we deserve not to be numbred or written among the living we are upon the matter but dead lumps and clods of clay It is the breath of the Almighty that quickens us and superadds ability to doe good that frames fashions and fits us for every good word and worke This is the life of man when a man is fitted for duty and service when he is furnished for imployment to stand God and his Brethren in some stead while he is in this world then he lives The motions impulses and influences the teachings and guidings of the Spirit of God are the life of our lives We can doe nothing of our selves till the Almighty bestows a new life upon us and as we can doe nothing at all in spiritualls till he gives us a new life so we can do nothing to purpose till the Spirit acts stirres up that life in us It is the Spirit who first bestows Secondly encreaseth Thirdly excites our spirituall life puts the new creature into motion All our good thoughts and holy actings all our uprightnesse and sincerity all our strength and ability flow from the Spirit untill the holy Spirit workes in us we sit still and when the Spirit worketh we must not sit still I saith the Apostle Rom 15.18 will not dare to speak of any of those things which Christ hath not wrought by me to make the Gentiles obedient by word and deed As if he had sayd My owne workes are not worth the naming I will not so much as mention any thing that Christ hath not wrought in me by the Spirit That was a mighty worke which he was enabled to doe to make the Gentiles obedient in word and deed Christ did not leave him to doe it in his owne power The breath of the Almighty enabled him and so he doth all those that are able and willing ready for and successefull in any such holy worke Let us therefore ascribe all to his working and quickening let us set down our severall Items of receit in our account-books confessing that we have nothing of our own This gift that grace that ability to doe to speake to suffer to act we have received from him Let the whole Inventory of our soules riches have Gods name written upon it and ascribed to his praise alone And if we thus uncloath our selves by giving God the glory of all we shall loose nothing by it for God will apparrell and furnish us deck and adorne us better every day The poorer we are in our selves the richer will he make us To be thus diminish't is the best way to
say it Againe When Elihu saith Thou hast spoken in my hearing and I have heard the voyce of thy words He would convince Job to the utmost Hence note To accuse or condemne any man out of his owne mouth must needs stop his mouth Or To be condemned out of our owne mouth is an unanswerable condemnation When our owne sayings are brought against us what have we to say Christ told the evill and unprofitable servant who would needs put in a plea for his idleness and excuse himselfe for hideing his Lords talent in a napkin that is for not using or improving his gift Luk 19.22 Out of thine owne mouth will I judge thee thou wicked servant I will goe no further then thy owne words And we see as that evill servant had done nothing before so then he could say nothing because judged out of his owne mouth When the offenders tongue condemneth him who can acquit him Psal 64.8 So they shall make their owne tongue to fall upon themselves The tongues of some men have fallen upon them and crusht them like a mountaine and they have been pressed downe yea irrecoverably oppressed with the weight of their owne words The Apostle Jude tells us what the Lord will do when he comes to Judgement in that great and solemne day of his second Appearing v 15. He shall convince all that are ungodly of all their ungodly deeds which they have ungodly committed and of all their hard speeches which ungodly sinners have spoken against him He shall say to them are not these your words can you deny them or have you any plea for them Have you not spoken these things in my hearing And have I not heard the voyce of your words speaking thus and thus reproachfully of my wayes ordinances and servants This is like wounding a man with his own weapon 't is like the act of David in cutting off the head of Goliah with his owne sword He that is condemned by his owne saying dyeth by his own sword David saith of sychophants and slanderers Psal 55.21 Their words were smoother then oyle yet were they drawne swords Such draw these swords with an intent to wound other mens reputation or good name but they oftenest wound their owne And as their words who slander others rebound upon themselves and turne to their owne disgrace so also doe theirs for the most part who are much in commending or possibly only which was Jobs case in vindicating themselves Surely thou hast spoken in my hearing c. But what had Elihu heard Job speake the next words are an answer or declare the matter of his speech and in them as was said before in opening the Context Elihu first chargeth him with an over-zeale in justifying himselfe I have heard the voyce of thy words saying Vers 9. I am cleane without transgression I am innocent neither is there iniquity in me This thou hast sayd and this I charge upon thee as a great iniquity For the clearing of these words I shall doe these foure things because upon this charge the whole discourse of Elihu throughout the Chapter depends First I shall give the sence and explication of the words as here expressed by Elihu and some briefe notes from them Secondly I shall shew what matter of accusation or of fault there is in these words of Job as brought by Elihu in charge against him or how sinfull a thing it is for any man to say he is without sin Thirdly I shall enquire what ground Job had given Elihu to charge him with saying these things Fourthly which followeth upon the third I shall inquire whether Elihu dealt rightly and fairely with Job in bringing thi sore and severe charge against him First To open the words as they are an assertion Thou hast sayd I am cleane without transgression I am innocent neither is there iniquity in me Some distinguish the three terms used in the text as a deniall of three severall sorts of sin First That by being cleane without transgression he intends his freedome from sins against sobriety or that he had not sinn'd against himselfe Secondly that by being innocent his meaning is he had not done impiously against God Thirdly that by having no iniquity in him he cleares himselfe of wrong done to man These three sorts of sin containe sin in the whole latitude of it All sin is either against our selves strictly called intemperance or against God strictly called impiety or against man strictly called unrighteousnesse But though this hath a truth in it as to the distinction of sins yet it may be over-nice to conclude Elihu had such a distinct respect in these distinct expressions And it may be questioned whether the words will beare it quite thorow Therefore I passe from it and leave it to the readers Judgement Further as to the verse in generall we may take notice that the same thing is sayd foure times twice affirmatively I am cleane I am innocent And twice negatively I am without transgression There is no iniquity in me I am cleane without transgression The word which we render cleane implyeth the cleanest of cleannesse 't is rightly opposed to the word transgression which signifieth a defection or turning off from God Every sin in the nature of it is a defection from God but some sins are an intended or resolved defection from him Some even throw off the soveraignty of God over them and his power to command them not being willing to submit their backs to his burden nor their necks to his yoke These are justly called sons of Belial they not only transgresse the Law but throw off the yoke of Christ from their necks and his burden from their shoulderS and say like them Luke 19.14 We will not have this man reigne over us So then when Job sayd I am cleane without transgression he may be very well understood thus Though I have many failings yet I am free from defection though I have many weaknesses yet I am free from rebellion and obstinacy I still retaine an entire love to God and am ready to submit to his will though I often find my heart through corruption rising up against my duty I am turned aside through the strength of temptations but I turne not aside through the bent of my affections This doubtlesse or somewhat like this was Job's sence when ever he sayd I am cleane without transgression Hence note First Transgression is a pollution or Sin is a defilement If once men step over or besides the line and rule of holinesse the Law of God which to doe is transgression they become unholy Job supposed himselfe uncleane if guilty of transgression Sin is an uncleane thing and it maketh man uncleane This the Church confessed Isa 64.6 We all are as an unclean thing or person As if they had said Time was when there was a choice people among us who kept themselves pure from common defilements But now the contagion and corruption is so epidemicall and universal
thy mouth for ever speak not thus to God If thou art as thou canst not deny a thing formed by God then say not why hast thou made me thus And as now thou strivest with God about that which thou canst not understand so at last though now thou dost not thou shalt understand that thou oughtest not to have striven with him about it And indeed if men have a mind to strive with God they may find as many occasions for it in the doctrine of his conditionall decrees of foreseene faith repentance and persevering obedience as in his absolute We shall never want matter of quarrelling with God till we have learned simply that is graciously to submit Secondly This truth should much more quiet our spirits and stop our strivings in reference to our temporall estate And that First As wrapt up in common with others Did we consider the soveraigne power of God in ordering the affairs of Nations and Churches we would glorifie him in a gracious silence however we see things goe with them The Scripture urgeth us often to this fixednesse of mind in the midst of all publick revolutions and changes upon this only account Heare David Psal 46.9 10. Come behold the works of the Lord What works ruining works what desolation he hath made in the earth God made strange work in the World at that time Those countryes which before were as the Garden of God became like a desolate Wildernesse who was able to beare this with patience Yet the Spirit of God saith in the next words it must be patiently borne when God lets men strive and warre with one another to a common confusion yet no man may strive with God about it and the reason given why no man may is only this which is indeed all the reason in the world He is God So it follows in the Psalme Be still and know that I am God As if the Lord had said not a word do not strive nor reply whatever you see hold your peace know that I being God I give no account of any of my matters Thus the Prophet cautions the whole world Zech. 2.13 Be silent O all flesh before the Lord doe not dispute the doings of God doe not murmure at them for he is raised up out of his holy habitation That is God is going to work as a man raised out of his bed is therefore doe not you trouble your selves nor rise up against him in your words or thoughts what work soever he makes Like counsell is given Psal 75.5 Lift not up your horne on high speak not with a stiffe neck for promotion cometh neither from the East nor from the West nor from the South But God is the Judge he putteth down one and setteth up another All great changes proceed from his judgment take heed of judging the sentence of the great Judge Remember That he whose name alone is Jehovah is the most high over all the earth Psal 83.18 Againe This is as true if we respect the private or personall estate of any man If God makes a man poor in estate or despised in the World if he make him sick or weak in body he must not say unquietly why doth God thus If he taketh away our Relations if he empty our families we must not strive with him When old Ely had received one of the saddest messages that ever was sent man It is the Lord said he let him doe what seemeth him good 1 Sam. 3.18 So David Psal 39.9 I was dumb I opened not my mouth because thou didst it Psal 62.1 Truly my soul waiteth patiently upon God The word is my soul is silent before God And Psal 42.5 How doth David chide his soul for making a noyse Why art thou disquieted O my soul hope thou in God But you will say May we not at all strive what ever God doth in the World or with us must we sit downe under it or rest satisfied in it and say nothing I answer First we may and ought to be very sensible of all the dealings of God But we must not be unquiet under any of them It is one thing to feele the smart and another thing to dispute the rod. Some are under a kind of Stoicall stupidity they doe not strive with God because they doe not mind what God doth they are not sensible Others are stout sturdy and proud spirited they care not for the crosse they slight and despise rebukes Thus or upon these grounds not to strive with God is as bad if not worse then that striving with him which this poynt disswades and disapproves We may yea we ought to take notice of every stroak we receive from God Secondly As we should be sensible of the hand of God at any time upon us so we may pray for the removing of his hand 'T is not a sinfull but a gracious act to strive with God by prayer for deliverance out of trouble Thirdly A man under the Rod may use means to get it off and free himselfe from it even while he is quiet under it So then the quietnesse of mind in our afflicted condition here intended and pressed is opposed only first to fretting and repining Secondly to vexing and tumultuating Thirdly to distracting cares Fourthly to desponding fears Fifthly to killing sorrows Sixthly to uncomposednesse of spirit for our callings Seventhly to hard thoughts of God Eighthly to the using of any unlawfull meanes to help or rescue our selves out of the hand of evill And that we may be preserved from all these strivings against God and unquietnesse of spirit under any of his saddest and darkest dispensations which will certainly run us upon some of if not all those eight most dangerous rocks last mentioned Let me lay down a few considerations why we should not strive with God in such a manner And prescribe some preservatives to keep us at the greatest distance from it First Consider to strive with God dishonours God and darkens his glory for hereby we call his wisdome and goodnesse yea his truth and faithfulnesse to us in question What can be done more dishonourable to God then this God resented it as a great dishonour that Moses and Aaron did not sanctifie him that is give glory to his name before the children of Israel Num 20.12 and therefore told them Ye shall not bring the children of Israel into the land which I have given them As if he had sayd Ye have not honoured me as ye ought in this thing and therefore I will not honour you in that But what is it that Moses and Aaron did not sanctifie God in it was saith the text in not believing And what is that at best but a striving with God as to the truth of his word and his faithfulnesse in fulfilling it Secondly Such striving with God hinders the exercise of grace and stops the worke of the new creature He that striveth with God by way of murmuring can never strive with God by praying and believing
cannot do it lesse then twice nor can that number which is more then one be lesse then two When the woman in the book of Kings told the Prophet 1 Kings 17.12 I am going to gather two sticks Her meaning was a very few sticks onlye now to make a little fire to bake a Cake with And when the Spirit of God would shew how few comparatively to the rout of the World they are and will be that bear witnesse to the truths of Jesus Christ he calleth them two Witnesses Rev. 11.3 they are a number yet exprest by the lest number that we should not have our eyes upon the multitude or think that is not the truth which is not followed by great numbers or the most of the World The traine of Christ is not large nor are his wayes throng'd few there be that find them As they whom he calls forth to be eminently his witnesses are not many therefore called two so they that receive their witnesse are not many The world wonders after the beast Thus as two or twice imply a small number so in Scripture language that which is done more then twice is supposed done often or many times 2 Kings 6.10 When the Prophet had told the King of Israel where the forces of the King of Assyria would come and by that meanes defeated him of his purpose it is said And the King of Israel sent unto the place which the man of God told him and warned him of and saved himself there not once nor twice that is many times which made the King of Syria wonder how it came to passe that he was so often defeated he thought he had laid his plots so wisely and closely that the King of Israel could not escape but he saved himself not once nor twice more then twice is many but bare twice is the narrowest compasse of number imaginable Hence note God hath not given us any ground to presume upon frequent warnings or speakings Though he speake more then once yet it may be but twice possibly but twice precisely probably but twice restrainedly taken The Lord would not have us build upon the hope of future speakings to the neglect of what is presently spoken Though God be very patient and long-suffering to sinfull men yet he hath not given any man the least occasion no not by a promise of speaking a second day to continue one day much lesse to continue long in sin When God spake as I may say at the largest rate of his patience to sinners he sayd Gen. 6.3 My spirit shall not alwayes strive with man not alwayes that is though it strive long yet it shall not strive very long and that he may know it I will give him a day yet his dayes shall be an hundred and twenty yeares This was somewhat a long day indeed But remember this hundred and twenty yeares was all the time that was granted to all the men of that world there was not so much granted to every particular man of that world possibly the Spirit of God did not strive a day longer with many a one among them Therefore take heed of presuming When the Lord speaketh once doe not say I will stay till he speakes a second time and if he condescend to speake twice doe not believe that he will alwayes speake Thirdly Twice may be considered as a small certaine number put for a small uncertaine number 'T is frequent in Scripture to put a certaine number of any kinde for an uncertaine Sometimes a certaine great number for an uncertaine great number and sometimes a small certaine number for a small uncertaine number As twice is not to be tyed up strictly to the smallest number so not to any number whether small or great Hence note No man knows how oft he shall be warned or spoken unto by God God doth not put an absolute stint upon any of his actions Beware of neglecting the least twice the first twice which is the lowest twice for though we cannot binde God up strictly to twice it may prove three times or foure times yet whether it shall be so many or how many it shall be no man nor Angel knoweth Twice cannot be very often and 't is uncertaine how often Therefore if you hearken not when God hath spoken once take it strictly doe not stop your eares at the second speaking It is sayd Moses smote the rock twice that was twice beyond his Commission for he should not have smitten it at all and the mater came out aboundantly How many rocks that is hard hearts hath God smitten by his word and his workes twice and yet we see not the waters of Godly sorrow flowing out the rocks are smitten more then twice with the rod of God with the rod of his mouth in the ministery of his word they are smitten with admonition upon admonition with reproofe upon reproofe with threatning upon threatning and yet the waters came not out aboundantly yea scarce at all May not they feare that they shall have poenall sorrow upon sorrow Paul tooke notice of the goodnesse of God to him that he did not let him have afflictive sorrow upon sorrow Phil 2.27 but I say may not they feare they shall have poenall sorrow upon sorrow that is everlasting floods of sorrow who after the Lords speaking upon speaking and reproving upon reproving give no proofe of their godly p●enitentiall sorrow O how angry was the Lord with Solomon because his heart was turned from the Lord God of Israel which had appeared to him twice 1 Kings 11.9 God appeared to him in Gibeon 1 Kings 3.5 when he was first made King putting him to his choice or giving him a blanke to aske what he would and he chose well he chose wisdome and had it God appeared to him a second time after the building and dedication of the Temple 1 Kings 9.2 And said unto him I have heard thy prayer and thy supplication that thou hast made before me c. Thus the Lord appeared solemnly unto Solomon twice and but twice for any thing that appeares upon record in that solemne manner Now when notwithstanding these two appearings of the Lord to Solomon the heart of Solomon was turned away from the Lord God of Israel his anger was kindled against Solomon and the Lord smote him once yea twice renting his kingdome and pulling away ten tribes at once from his son and successor O doe not refuse God speaking to you twice or the renewed speaking of God to doe so is very sinfull and therefore very dangerous For as 't is a signe of a holy heart of a gracious frame of spirit to heare twice at once speaking as David professed he did Psal 62.11 God hath spoken once twice have I heard this that power belongeth unto God also unto thee O Lord belongeth mercy There are severall rendrings and interpretations of those words But that which to me seemes most intended by our rendring is I heard what was once spoken
have a good assurance that while we are trading with God for the gaine and encrease of our soules our bodyes shall not waste nor be loosers yet we should be ready to waste and weare off the flesh from our bodyes for the gaine and encrease of our soules Sixthly Why should we be unwilling to offer our flesh to be consumed by the fury of men or by the rage of flames in the cause of God seeing it may ere long consume by sickness and not be seene why should we be afraid to let our flesh consume or rot in prisons or by tortures for Christ seeing a disease will doe it and hath often done it Thousands of the blassed Martyrs and suffering Saints have rejoyced they had flesh to consume when God called them to it So some interpret that Scripture before mentioned 2 Cor 12.14 where the Apostle professed I am willing to be spent for you how spent as an offering or sacrifice by fire in the service of your faith and in bearing my witness to those truths of the Gospel which I have preached to you And indeed he in that sense spent his flesh at the last he suffered death and let his flesh fall in holding up and holding out the faith of our Lord Jesus Christ It is better that our flesh should be thus consumed if God call us to it then that we leave it to be consumed by age or sickness by wormes or rottenness How freely should we offer up this flesh to so noble a consumption seeing we cannot keepe it long from so meane a consumption doe what we can Secondly Note Sickness is a consumer sickness is a consumer of all that will consume It consumes the body and it consumes the purse yea it consumes all our worldly comforts and concernments it consumes every thing but grace We say A time of sickness is a spending time the usuall reference of that expression is to spiritualls In health we gather grace and lay up truths which we spend in sickness But though sickness be a spending time yet it is not I am sure it ought not to be a wasting time to grace and spiritualls A spending time it is that is a time wherein a godly man may lay out a great deale of his spirituall stock and heavenly treasure a great deale of faith and patience a great deale of sweet contentation and selfe-submission to God But sickness is not a wasting time to any of these graces or heavenly treasures yea where grace is reall and active it is not only not wasted or consumed but encreased and improved occasionally by sickness God having promised that all things shall worke together for good to them that love him Rom 8.28 will not suffer the best things of those that love him their graces to take hurt by the worst of bodyly sicknesses Sickness doth only dammage the body and deface the beauty of the flesh and it quickly doth as Elihu affirme of his sick man in the text His flesh is consumed away that it cannot be seene yea as it followeth And his bones that were not seene stick out Flesh and bones are the two eminent materialls of this faire and most regular building The Body of man The Bones of a healthy and strong man are not seene because they are covered with flesh they are only felt or perceived through their clothing skin and flesh God hath put these very comely and beautifull garments as a covering upon our bones but sickness pulls away these coverings it pulls away the cloaths from our bones and makes them appeare as it were naked When the fat is dript away and the flesh is spent the bones seeme to start out We commonly say of a man that hath been consumed by a lingring sickness He is a very Skelleton he lookes like an Anatomy which is nothing else but a pack of bones the flesh is gone Thus David mourned Psal 31.10 My life is spent with griefe my yeares with sighing my strength faileth because of mine iniquity and my bones are consumed The sin-sickness of a sencible soule consumes the bones more then any bodyly sickness This was not only the consuming but the breaking of Davids bones Psal 51.8 And as his sorrow for his owne transgressions so his sorrow for the afflictions of Sion had the like effect in him Psal 102.3 4 5. My dayes are consumed like smoake or into smoake they vanish like smoake and my bones are burnt as a hearth My heart is smitten and withereth like grasse so that I forget to eate my bread By reason of the voyce of my groaning my bones cleave to my skin Et comminuentur ossa ejus non videntur interpretantes vocem 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in significatione Syriaca Pisc Significationē Syriacam malo quam omnes penè hebraei sequuntur Merc Some read this Text His bones are diminished lessened wasted or broken in pieces as if the consumption reached not only his flesh but his bones too That 's a fierce disease which at once invadeth and wasteth the bones The word which we render to stick out signifieth in the Syriack Idiom the abating lessening or breaking of any thing into lesser parts or pieces And so those words are not seen in the text which according to our translation refer to the time of health when a man is so fat and full fleshed that his bones cannot be seen scarcely felt those words I say are referred according to this translation to the time of sickness which is supposed so to diminish and wast the bones that by an ordinary straine of Rhetorick they are said not to be seen His b●●●● are diminished they are not seen We also render this word● 〈◊〉 that first propheticall word concerning our restoring by Christ Gen. 3.15 by bruising It that is the womans seed shall bruise thy head that is the Devills and thou shalt bruise his heele When bones are bruised and as it were shuffled together they cannot be seen in their proper places or as once they were fixt by nature This various reading doth not vary the generall sence of the Text but only heighten and encrease it We render fully and significantly his bones that were not seen stick out Hence note There is no man so strong there is nothing in man so strong that can stand out against the strength of sickness Our bones are not made of brasse sickness will diminish them and pain master them Secondly Whereas 't is said His flesh that was seen is not seen and his bones that were not seen stick out or are seen Observe Sicknesse makes a wonderfull change in man It puts that out of sight which was seen and it brings that in sight which was not seen This holds true not only as to that which is naturall in man his flesh and bones of which this text treats in the letter but 't is true also as to that which is morall and spirituall in man his virtues and his vices his graces and his lusts
be seasonable if not when we see them dying and going to the grave yet some when they visit sick friends will not speak a word of either they fear it may hasten death to hear of it that speaking of the grave may put them into it then which I know no fear more foolish or more to be feared Yea some will forbid visiters to mention death when their Relations lye sick O doe not speak of death to my Husband saith the Wife c. But remember it if the sick are drawing near to the grave they that visit them should remember them of the grave both in prayer and in conference to speak of death cannot hurt the body but the not speaking of it may hurt the soul and hinder it from getting out of the snares both of spirituall and eternall death Yet godly prudence and great caution is to be used about it none should doe it bluntly nor suddenly but having by discreet insinuations first hinted to the sick man his danger of death we should then by faithfull counsells prepare him for it and by comfortable Scripture cordialls strengthen and arme his spirits against it Such savoury and well mannaged discourses of death may through the blessing of God be a savour of eternall life to the sick man and will not in the least prejudice his recovery from sickness when his soul draweth near to the grave A●d his life to the destroyers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mortificantibus Mont The Hebrew is to those that kill or to l●fe destroyers There is a difference among Interpreters who are here intended by these Destroyers to whom the sick mans life draweth near or who are these life destroyers First some thus his life to the destroyers that is to his enemies that are ready to destroy him But that 's improper to the text which speaking of sickness cannot intend any destroying enemy but the last enemy which is to be destroyed death or the antecedents and usuall attendants of it sicknesses Ad Angelos morti praefectos non incommodè resertur sequentis versiculi ratione habita ubi Angeli vitam annunciantis unius de mille mentionem facit ut 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 intelligas mortis ●umcios Merc Secondly by the destroyers others understand Angells who are commission'd and sent of God to cut the thread of life and to take mortalls out of this world by mortall diseases and so the destroying Angell in this verse stands in opposition to that comforting Angell spoken of in the next verse if there be a messenger or an Angell c. That Angells have such a Ministry is clear 2 Sam. 24.16 Where David having chosen to fall into the hands of God an Angell is presently dispatcht to doe execution upon his people And when the Angell stretched out his hand upon Jerusalem to destroy it the Lord repented him of the evill and said to the Angell that destroyed the people it is enough stay now thine hand c. That destroyer so he is called Exod. 12.23 who slew all the first borne of the Egyptians Gods last and greatest plague upon them his tenth plague is by most interpreted to be an Angell yea by some a good Angell because appointed and directed by God to spare his people the Jewes and to poure out his vengeance upon the Egyptians his and their enemies For most usually the wicked are plagued by good Angells and the good as Job in this book was are afflicted by evill Angells Howbeit that text say some Psal 78.49 leadeth us rather to beleeve that it was an evill Angell He cast upon them meaning the Egyptians the fiercenesse of his anger wrath indignation and trouble by sending evill Angells among them Yet possibly those Angells which destroyed the Egyptians are called evill Angells not because they were so in their nature but because they were Ministers of evill to that hard-hearted people Which way soever we take it there is a truth in it applicable to the Scripture here in hand And so some expound that of Solomon Prov. 17.11 An evill man seeketh only rebellion therefore a cruell Messenger shall be sent against him The text may be rendred a cruell Angell that is an Angell with a Message of wrath and destruction shall be sent unto him The Apostle 1 Cor. 10.10 speaking of those dreadfull judgments which God sent upon his people the Jewes in the Wildernesse such as we are like to find in these Gospell times if we provoke him for all those things are said to have happened unto them for Types or examples vers 11. And there he gives us warning neither murmure ye as some of them also murmured and were destroyed of the destroyer That is by the Pestilence or Plague as 't is expressed Numb 14.12 37. which the Apostle Paul calleth a destroyer because doubtless it was executed by some invisible destroyer or Angell The Devill whom John in the Revelation Chap. 9.11 calleth the Angell of the bottomlesse pit is there also set forth by this Title whose name in the Hebrew tongue is Abaddon but in the Greek tongue hath his name Apollyon The Devill is the Apollyon the Abaddon both which signifie a destroyer yea the Devill Heb. 2.14 is said to have the power of death as if he were set over that sad work and Lorded it over dying men yet let us know to our comfort the Devill hath not the power of death as a Lord or Judge but only as an Executioner thus the sick mans life may be said to draw nigh to the destroyer that is to the destroying Angell or to the messenger of death Thirdly we may take the destroyers not for persons sent to destroy but for diseases and sicknesses these are destroyers And thus it may be said of a sick man his life draweth nigh to the destroyers that is he is in the hand or under the power of such diseases as probably will destroy him That seems to be Mr. Broughtons understanding of the words Praestat generale est et ad omnia mortis signa et mortifera quicquid illud sit referre Merc who renders his soul draweth nigh to the grave and his life to killing maladies Whatsoever is a death-bringer whatever is deadly or mortall to man may be comprehended under this expression The Destroyers And so these words His life draweth nigh to the destroyer may signifie only thus much he is deadly or as we commonly expresse it mortally sick There 's no hopes of him he is past recovery the Physitians have given him over Heman Psal 88.3 4 5. speaks to this sence and near in this language of himself My soul is full of troubles my life draweth nigh unto the grave I am counted with them that goe down into the pit I am as a man that hath no strength Free among the dead like the slaine that lye in the grave whom thou remembrest no more Heman was alive yet with respect either to the anguish of his soul
and as in the former sense 't is the prerogative of Kings to be Keepers of the Law so it is their piety and their goodness to be Keepers of them in the latter 'T is possible a King may be a Keeper of the Law by Conservation and yet not be a Keeper of it by Observation but then he shines most bright in the sphear of his Royal Soveraignty when he is every way a keeper of the Law of God and so far as they respect himself of his own Further Is it fit to say to a King Belial As Belial designs an unprofitable person a man good for nothing a man of no use what Upon the Throne and yet of no use to a Nation How high an indignity is this to Regal dignity Kings are set up for the greatest use for the most important services even for the profit and advantage of mankinde especially of all within their Kingdoms and Dominions as all are to serve them in their state so they count it their chiefest honour to advance the peace and profit of all their peaceable and profitable subjects Therefore nothing can be said more dishonourably to a King then this Thou art good for nothing an unprofitable person Belial Is it fit to say to a King Thou art wicked And to Princes ye are ungodly The word rendred Princes signifies munificent bountiful free willing Principes hic vocantur 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a liberalitate munificentia quasi tu dicas 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Drus so Princes are called to shew what they are or should be men of bountiful noble munificent heroick free spirits open hearted and open handed they who are so are Princes in truth as well as in Title The holy Spirit of God or God the holy Spirit is called a Princely Spirit Psal 51.12 we read it Free Spirit and this free Princely Spirit of God makes all his people of a free Princely spirit of a large heart both as to duty God-wards and as to charity man-wards Psal 110.3 In the day of thy power the people shall be willing they shall be as Princes they shall serve thee as sons not as slaves a Royal Spirit is conveyed into them by the Spirit in the day of the Power of Jesus Christ or when he conquers them to the obedience of himself By this appellation worldly Princes the Princes of this world are expressed in sacred language that so their very names might minde them of being such and of doing such things as are the ornament both of their persons and places These two high Titles in the Text Kings and Princes are somtimes taken for the same and in strictest sence Princes are the next degree or but one remove from Kings Again There are some called Princes who have the supreame power within their own Territories Others are called Princes who have a delegated or derived power from Kings The Apostle speaks of such 1 Pet. 2.13 charging the Church and people of God to submit to every Ordinance of man for the Lords sake whether to the King as supream or unto Governours as sent by him for the punishment of evil doers and for the praise of them that do well Elihu brings in both for the fuller confirmation of his point and the stronger conviction of Job Is it fit to say to a King thou art wicked and to Princes who stand about his Throne and serve him in his Government ye are ungodly Ye regard neither right nor reason neither what 's fit to be done nor what to be advised That 's the sence of the words as they are an argument from the less to the greater If it be an uncomely and undecent thing saith Elihu to say to a King thou art wicked and to Princes ye are ungodly How much more to him that accepteth not the persons of Princes c. Hence Note First Men are not all of a rank or all are not of an equal state in this world This Text speaks of Kings and Princes and the most of men are inferiour not only to Kings but to Princes God hath not made man upon earth as minims in writing all of a height but as in the alphabet of Letters some are longer and deeper then others so in the Alphabet of mankinde some men are bigger and higher then others Kings and Princes are but men yet they are men in a great letter or they are among men as the Aleph among the letters which as it is first in order so it signifies a Prince a Chief a Leader And if the most wise God had not ordered such an inequality among men how should order have been kept among men Nothing considering the corruptions and lusts of men can be more unequal then that equality which some have vainly contended for among men All men would fall down into confusion if some were not above That which keeps all up is only that some are uppermost Kings and Princes Secondly which is here principally aimed at Note It is most uncomly and sinful to revile or give reproachful words to Kings or Princes When we say It is not fit we say less then the thing is or then the Text intendeth there is more evil in it then a bare unfitness 't is indeed a very great wickedness and ungodliness to say to a King thou art wicked and to Princes ye are ungodly To say so is expresly against the Rule Exod. 22.28 Thou shalt not revile the gods or as we put in the margin Judges nor curse the Ruler of thy people And the Apostle Paul quotes this Text Acts 23.5 when himself had slipt in that point as he stood before the Judgement seat and pleaded his own integrity for when Ananias the high Priest commanded them that stood by to smite him on the mouth Paul said unto him God shall smite thee thou whited wall This drew a reproof upon him presently from them that stood by v. 4. Revilest thou Gods high Priest And what doth Paul answer v. 5. I wist not Brethren that he was the high Priest for it is written Thou shalt not speak evil of the Ruler of thy people There hath been much dispute about that answer I wist not that he was the high Priest Certainly Paul saw and knew that he was the high Priest and it is as certain that he did not tell a lye when he said I wist not that he was the high Priest His meaning I conceive was only this as if he had said having received such unjust usage in the Court as to be openly smitten in time of hearing I confess I was in a passion and did not consider 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as I ought that it was the high Priest I spake rashly and unadvisedly I wist not that is I deliberated not with my self who it was I spake to for I ought not to have used such language the Scripture also having forbidden it which saith Thou shalt not curse the Ruler of thy people It will not bear us
will not thinke any time or labour lost if they may but gaine that precious commodity by it called true knowledge or the knowledge of the truth And that expression of running too and fro may wel be expounded they shall by discourse and arguing beare out the truth In discoursing the mind runs too and fro faster then the feete can in travelling In discourse we run from poynt to poynt from reason to reason from objection to objection from question to question till we come to solid answers and conclusions and so knowledge is increased The Lord is surely a God of knowledge whose eyes run too and fro without motion and see the bottome of all things without discourse or argumentation Secondly Note The Lords knowledge of man never abateth he is alwayes observing and alike observing what men doe and what men are The best the most waking men have their slumbrings and sleepings but the Lord neither slumbreth nor sleepeth his eyes are upon the wayes of man And when the Scripture saith The Lord doth neither slumber nor sleepe we may understand it in a twofold reference First as to the protection of his people Psal 121.4 Behold he that keepeth Israel shall neither slumber nor sleep that is he watcheth over them so uncessantly so unweariedly that no danger can approach them without his knowledge Secondly he never slumbereth nor sleepeth as to the observation and consideration of all people he never takes his eye off from the wayes of man Thirdly Note The Lords knowledge or sight of mans wayes is universall and everlasting The All-seeing God seeth all our wayes and he seeth them alwayes And he seeth them all alwayes by one act The Lords view or prospect of things is not successive one after another but conjunctive all at once The Lord hath a large eye and an everlasting eye yea is all eye He knows all things First past or that have been Secondly present or that are Thirdly future possible or that shall be Thus saith the Lord in the Prophet Isa 46.10 I am God and there is none like me declaring the end from the beginning and from ancient times the things that are not yet done And upon this read the Lords challenge of all the Idolls in the world Isa 41.21 22 23. Let them shew the former things what they be that we may consider them and know the latter end of them or declare us things to come Shew the things that are to come hereafter that we may know that ye are gods As if the Lord had sayd if ye can tell us all that 's past or any thing that is to come as I can then ye may take the honour of God otherwise ye are but lyes and vanities Againe the Lord knows all things First without distraction and secondly he knows all things with clearest distinction it is no more trouble to the Lord to see all things then to see one and he seeth all things as if he had but one thing to see From the consideration of this knowledge of God let me give foure or five inferences for instruction First which is most naturall to the text if the Lords eyes be upon the wayes of man if he seeth all his goings then all the Lords Judgements are right The Judges of this world may have a principle of righteousnesse in them and we may call them just and righteous Judges yet all their Judgements are not alwayes right For as some men are so ignorant that they know nothing at all so there are none so knowing as to know all things the clearest sighted Judges doe not see all that may concerne them in giving Judgement even among them some may be blinde and many blinded some are blinde and cannot see much others are blinded and will not see all that they see they are blinded possibly with bribes and gifts with hopes or feares with passions and prejudices And how cleare-sighted and honest-hearted soever any are yet they cannot see all somewhat may lye out of their sight Hence it cometh to passe that a just Judge may doe that which is unjust he cannot see quite through every matter though he set himselfe to search the matter before he giveth Judgement But as the Lord is all righteousnesse in his principle and beares an everlasting love to righteousnesse so he hath a cleare sight of all things and persons and therefore he must needs give a righteous Judgement concerning all things actions and persons Though he overthrow nations he is righteous though he overthrow Princes he is righteous because he seeth into all things and proceedeth upon certain knowledge of every mans case and condition He cannot erre in Judgement who hath no error in his Judgement nor any deviation in his will Secondly If the Lords eyes are upon all the wayes of men then certainly sinners whose wayes are evill shall never goe unpunished For if he have a principle of righteousnesse in him and an eye to see all their unrighteous wayes they cannot escape his justice Say to the wicked woe to him for he shall eate the fruit of his doings Isa 3.11 The righteous God knoweth the unrighteousnesse of man and therefore woe to the unrighteous man Thirdly Take this conclusion Then no godly man no good man shall goe unrewarded or loose the reward of that good which he hath done The Lord is righteous and he seeth every one that doth right or the righteousnesse of every mans way and it is his promise to reward the righteous therefore they shall be rewarded This is matter of strong consolation and great encouragement to all that are righteous If the Lord seeth all they doe nothing which they have well done shall be lost in the dark or lie in the dust God will bring forth their righteousnesse as the light and their just dealing as the noone day And as the knowledge which God hath of their wayes assureth the righteous that they shall be rewarded for so that they shall be assisted and protected in their doing righteousnesse The Prophet makes that inference in the place before-cited 2 Chron 16.9 The eyes of the Lord run too and fro through the earth what followeth to shew himselfe strong in the behalfe of them or as we put in the Margin strongly to hold with them whose heart is perfect towards him The Lord is alwayes strong and alike in strength his hand is not shortned at any time that he cannot save yet he doth not alwayes shew his strength but as he is strong so he will shew himselfe strong for the perfect or upright in heart that is he will act his strength to the utmost for the safety and assistance of those whose hearts are perfect with him So then as they that are good and doe good shall be rewarded for the good they have done so they shall be protected in the dangers and evills they incurre while they are doing good Another Prophet speakes both these inferences from this principle of the knowledge or
sight of God Jer 32.19 He is great in councell and he is mighty in working for his eyes are upon all the wayes of the sons of men to give to every one according to his wayes and according to the fruit of his doings Fourthly If the eyes of the Lord are upon all the wayes of the Children of men then the Lord will call all men to an account for their wayes Why doth he take notice of their wayes but to bring them to a reckoning That 's the Apostles conclusion Rom 14.12 So then every one of us shall give an account of himselfe to God God would not take an account of our wayes while we live if he did not intend to bring us to an account when we dye As the omniscience of God fits him to call every man to an account so it is an evidence that he will Why should our wayes and workes be strictly observed and recorded if they were not to be judged Fifthly This truth that the eyes of God are upon all the wayes of man should awaken every man to take heed as David resolved he would Psal 39.1 to his wayes Did we walke as remembring we are under his All-seeing eye O how circumspectly should we walke doth the Lord inspect our wayes O how should we inspect our owne wayes It argueth a great deale of Atheisme in the heart if not the grossest Atheisme yet Atheisme quo-ad hoc as to this or that thing while that which some are afraid to doe if a man yea if a child see them they are not afraid to doe though they heare that God seeth them To feare to doe a thing when the eye of a creature is upon us and yet to doe it notwithstanding God seeth us what is this but either an unbeliefe that the eye of God seeth us or a contempt of his All seeing eye This Divine Attribute the All-seeing eye of God wel wrought upon the heart by faith is enough to over-aw the sinfullnesse of our hearts And though the people of God have a higher principle upon which they forbeare the doing of evill then this because God will see it and punish it yet to keep the heart in a holy feare of doing evill upon that principle is both needfull and our duty The Apostle would not have servants doe their Masters commands with eye-service as men-pleasers It is indeed a baseness in a servant to doe his duty meerely because his Masters eye is upon him or to forbeare to doe what is against or beside his duty because his Master seeth him but how great is the impudence and wickedness of that servant who will not keep to his duty when his Masters eye is upon him So in this case meerely to forbeare doing evill because we heare God sees us is eye-service but how great is their wickedness who will not forbeare to doe evill though they heare and know that God seeth it Which Elihu confirmes yet further in the next words Vers 22. There is no darkness nor shaddow of death where the workers of iniquity may hide themselves This verse holds out that truth negatively which the former held out affirmatively There Gods knowledge of mans wayes was asserted here his ignorance or nescience of the wayes of man is denied There is no darkness c. The words seeme to be the prevention of an objection For some possibly might say 'T is true indeed God hath a large knowledge his eye seeth farre but we hope we may sometime be under covert or compassed about with such darkness that the Lord cannot see us Therefore saith Elihu there is no darkness nor shaddow of death where the workers of iniquity may hide themselves The Prophet gives a parallel proofe and testimony of this knowledge of God both in the affirmative and negative part of it Jer 16.17 where he first asserts that God seeth all mine eyes are upon all their wayes and then denyeth that any thing is a secret unto him They are not hid from my face neither is their iniquity hid from mine eyes These latter words of the Prophet are of the same signification with these of Elihu There is no darkness c. We may take darkness two wayes First for naturall darkness that darkness which spreads it selfe over the face of the earth upon the going downe of the Sun 't is the privation of Light Secondly there is artificiall darkness that darkness which men make to hide themselves and their actions in from the eye of God or man many are very skillfull yea and successefull in making shaddowes to hide their actions from men They cover the evill which they have done with such cunning excuses or flat denyalls and they cover what they purpose to doe how foule soever under such faire trappings of words and specious pretenses they glosse their worst actions and intentions with such appearances of good that the wisest and best sighted men cannot finde them out When Absalon had a most unnaturall as well as a most disloyall purpose to rayse a tebellion against his king-father he coloured it with a devout profession of performing a vow This was artificiall darkness 'T is reported by the naturall Historian of a little fish which seeing its enemy neare casts out a kinde of blackness from it selfe which darkens the water and so escapes the danger Thus men indeed hide themselves from man and they would hide themselves from God too but there is no darkness neither naturall nor artificiall that can cover their wayes from his eye No Nor shaddow of death The importance of this expression hath been opened more then once in this book chap. 3.5 chap 10.21 chap. 12.22 chap. 28.3 therefore I shall not stay upon it here only consider when he saith There is no darkness nor shaddow of death by shaddow of death he means extreamest darkness If there be any darkness as Job speaks chap. 10.22 like darkness it self and whose light is as darkness that is it The metaphor is taken from the grave where the dead being buried have not the least glympse ray or shine of light coming in to them death wraps us up in extreamest darkness And we finde in Scripture the shaddow of death put first to express the extreamest of spiritual darkness or the darkest spiritual state Isa 9.2 The people that walked in darkness have seen a great light they that dwell in the land of the shaddow of death upon them hath the light shined that is they that were wrapped up in the ignorance utter unbelief of God in Christ to these is Christ the true light of God the Sun of righteousness preached and openly revealed and they pressed to the receiving of him that their souls may live further as the shaddow of death is put for the worst of spiritual evils or to note man's natural state before conversion so likewise it is used in Scripture to note the worst of his spiritual evils who being converted is in a spiritual state He that is in a
which is a farther description of the heart of man in a state of Nature Hence Note That which a natural man knoweth of the will of God he will not consider unless it be to reject and turn from it I saith Wisdome Prov. 1.24 25. have stretched out my hand as a Teacher doth to his hearers or disciples and no man that is no meer natural man regarded they set at nought my counsel and would none of my reproof Let me say what I would they would at most but give me the hearing they would not consider it though the light shined in upon them and they could not chuse but see somthing yet they would not sit down and rowl it in their thoughts and work it upon their hearts to finde out the excellency of what they saw It is a very great measure of sinfulnes not to know the wayes of God but not to consider what we know but lightly to pass it by that is a greater measure of sinfulness Thirdly comparing this assertion concerning wicked men they would not consider any of his wayes with their practice in the former part of the verse they turned back from God and with the effect of it in the verse following they made the cry of the poor to come up to him c. Observe The reason why men are so wicked and act so wickedly is because they minde not the Word of God They who consider not the rule of the Word are far both from righteousness towards man and holiness towards God If once a man throw aside the Word of God where will he stay He will neither abide in any wayes of holiness nor will he abide in any wayes of righteousness they cannot make conscience of the wayes of God who will not consider the wayes of God We have this clear character of a wicked man Psal 50. he is one that will possibly take the covenant of God in his mouth he will be talking of it his tongue may be tipt with it but vers 17. he hateth instruction and casteth the words of God behinde his back He that would consider a thing holds it before his eye and keeps it as much as he can in sight therefore the Lord when he would assure Zion how much he did consider her case though she had said a little before God hath forsaken me and my God hath forgotten me yet presently the Lord saith Isa 49.15 16. Can a woman forget her sucking childe that she should not have compassion on the son of her wombe Yea they may yet will not I forget thee what follows Behold I have graven thee upon the Palms of my hands thy walls are continually before me As if the Lord had said you may be sure I will consider your case for I have you here pourtrayed upon the palms of my hands and am alwayes viewing your walls either as ruin'd and demolished to move me to pity or in that strong beautiful model according to which I purpose to raise them up again or re-build them Thus I say both God and man intending to consider any thing have it alwayes before them but what a man hath no minde to consider he casts it behinde his back thou castest my words behinde thy back saith God to the hypocrite and when once the hypocrite hath got the word behinde him then he is ready for any wickedness vers 18 19 20. When thou sawest a thief thou consentedst with him and hast been partaker with the adulterer c. Whence was all this he had cast the word behinde his back It is David's question Psal 119.6 Wherewithal shall a young man cleanse his way The answer is By taking heed thereto according to thy word that is by continual eying of the word and of his way and by comparing them together They that will make right work must be alwayes eying the rule if once you lay by the rule you will make but crooked or bungling work When the rule of righteousness is laid by righteousness is laid by too These mighty men of whom Elihu speaketh would not consider any the holy wayes of God and you see what ill favour'd work they made what soul wayes they walked in Fourthly The Text doth not say they would not consider some or such and such of his wayes but any of his wayes Hence Note A wicked man liketh delighteth in or loveth no one way of God better or more then another He is as much out with all as with any they are all alike to him that is he likes none of them they would not consider any of his wayes He that hateth one truth of God hateth all truth though possibly his hatred is not called out or acted against some truths and he that hateth one law of God hateth all his laws though possibly his lusts are not drawn out against some of them The reason why the Apostle James saith chap. 2.10 Whosoever shall keep the whole Law and yet offend in one point is guilty of all is because if a man hath a minde to sin against one branch of the law that evil principle will carry him to sin against any branch of it If he be not stopt from without he findes no stop within against the worst of sins as it is a sin Fifthly We translate any the Original word is all his ways which imports a refusing of every one of his wayes there are several Scriptures of a like sence Psal 103.1 2. O praise the Lord and forget not all his benefits that is forget not any one of his benefits not that a man shall be excused though he forget many of the benefits of God or half his benefits if so be he forget not all or remember some but when that Scripture saith forget not all his benefits the meaning is forget not any one at all Thus here they considered not all his wayes that 's the letter of the Text and so Mr Broughton translates that is none of them Taking that reading and the Scripture sence given of it it gives us this useful Observation That unless all the wayes of God be considered and obeyed there is not any one of them considered or obeyed God will not be obeyed by halves he must have entire obedience universal obedience or he owneth none there is a band or tye between all the commandments of God and unless you keep them all you break them all they that submit not to all submit to none of his laws It is not enough for a man to say he is no adulterer if he be a thief or to say he is not a murderer if he bears false witness He that doth the one in act doth the other in his heart nothing hinders him but the absence of a temptation or of an opportunity the Law doth not Further they would not consider any of his wayes Who were they No fools I dare say either in their own opinion or in the opinion of men Doubtless those mighty men spoken of by Elihu were
they do whether they give almes or pray or fast is not for the glory of God but that they may have glory of men and be pointed at for charitable and holy persons Praise or glory with men is the food of hypocrisie If the hypocrite have but an applause from and acceptance with men he doth not look after acceptance with God which above all things a sincere heart looketh after and laboureth for In this we labour saith the Apostle 2 Cor. 5.9 that whether present or absent we may be accepted of him that 's the highest ambition of a sincere heart but the hypocrites ambition is to be accepted of and to have praise among men and therefore hypocrites are more troubled if at any time they fail in expressing themselves to men then because which they do at all times they fail and faulter in their affections to God whereas he that is sincere and honest with God can bear it well enough though he hath not such plausible expressions towards men because he knoweth his affections stand right with God That great Macedonian Alexander having run many hazards in war turned himself to his souldiers and said What pains have I taken what dangers have I under gone only to be praised and cryed up by you As many in their worldly actings aime only at their own praise so do this sort of hypocrites in their spiritual and holy actings they pray and hear and deal about their almes for applause with men What the Histosian writes of the Camelion is most true of them they live by the ayre and are fed with the vapours of an earthly praise Secondly Others most of all the mighty of whom Elihu is discoursing act for God in the out-side of Religion to get an opportunity of revenge upon men they put on a fair shew of godliness that they may have a fairer advantage to let out their malice and vent their spleen When either a real or supposed injury falls upon an impotent and impatient spirit malice will provoke to give that back which charity teacheth to forgive The tyrannie of this passion gives no rest to the discontented soul all methods shall be studied and stratagems devised to content hatred by the compassing of revenge and when common projects fail the habit of zeal and religion shall be put on that the conceived malice may be let out Such a man will cloath himself with the garments of piety that he may cover the instruments of cruelty and do a mischief unsuspected Saul was a hypocrite and false with God yet how did he encourage David to follow the War and fight the Lord's battels against the uncircumcised Philistines 1 Sam. 18.17 whereas Saul sought not the honour of God at all nor the overthrow of the Philistines so much as the overthrow of David his intent was to take his own revenge upon David rather then Gods revenge on them for he hoped David would one time or other over-act his valour against the Philistines and lose his life to win honour and reputation How religiously did Abner who was a great Prince as David called him urge the promise of God to make David King 2 Sam. 3.18 and yet 't is plain in the Text that his designe was to revenge himself upon Ishbosheth who had put as he thought an affront upon him rather then to be instrumental for the fulfilling of the promise of God to David Jezebel a great Queen proclaimed a Fast which is one of the highest acts of Religion while her purpose was only to get an opportunity to feast her self upon the destruction of Naboth and to drink his innocent blood Herod a King Matth. 2.8 desired to have the young childe Christ that he might come and worship him but his designe was to murder him and because he could not have his will to kill him alone he resolved to kill him in the multitude commanding all the infants of such an age to be slain lest he should escape We have a sad instance of this in two of the Patriarcks Gen. 34. I do not say they were hypocrites but I say they acted a high strain of hypocrisie and put on a religious pretence for the compassing of revenge Dinah Jacobs daughter being deflowred by Shechem he sued to have her for his wife and would wipe off the stain of his lust by a legal marriage old Hamor pleaded for his son and Jacob was willing enough 't is like to salve the credit of his daughter but the sons of Jacob answered Shechem and Hamor his father deceitfully v. 13. and they said we cannot match with you except you be circumcised and so become Proselytes to our Religion If Shechem will be of their family he must be of their faith they stood not upon their sisters joynture the matter stuck only upon a scruple of conscience What argument of greater zeal for God could they have given then this Yet while these religious words were in their mouths they had bloody swords in their hearts And all this pretence for circumcision was only that they might have an advantage to come upon them in their soreness and destroy them which as the holy story tells us they soon after effected Thirdly Hypocrites often designe worldly gain and ayme at the purse more then at God in all their holy services Many take up a profession of Religion as all men take up a Trade that they may get a Living by it the Apostle speaks of such 1 Tim. 6.5 who ●urpose that gain is godliness whereas he saith vers 6. Godliness with contentment is great gain they say Gain is godliness And all they look at by their profession of godliness is worldly gain Religion is often made as the Apostles word is 1 Thess 2.5 a cloak of covetousness and he professeth in the same place that in the dispensation of the Gospel he had not used his Ministery as such a cloak God was his witness but there are many against whom though men cannot yet their own consciences do and God will witness that their appearance in Religion is but the hiding of or a cloak for their covetousness Hamor and Shechem used no other argument to perswade their Citizens to take upon them the seal of the Covenant but only this Shall not their cattel and their substance and every beast of theirs be ours Gen. 34.27 And it seems the very mention of their own emolument overcame them they thought it a bargain well made to sell a little of their blood at so high a rate and to exchange their foreskins for so many head of Cattel And hence it is that among those seven sorts of Pharisees collected out of the Talmud the first are called Pharisaei Shechemitae receiving it seems both their Order and Denomination from these Shechemites because as they turned Hebrewes so these became Pharisees upon the hopes of worldly benefit And such were those Pharisees in truth whatsoever their Title was who as was touched before devoured widdows houses and
man of wickedness nothing but wickedness altogether wicked The Lord looking downe from heaven upon all the children of men in a state of nature● sayd There is not one that doth good no not one Take any wicked man he hath no good in him no not one good thought in him he is a man of Iniquity he is meere wickedness till he be changed till his heart be broken by Godly sorrow till he be united unto Christ by faith and through the Spirit I know this expression is used severall times in Scripture to note those men who are sinners of the first forme being not only sinners in their state but in the highest degree of activity Thus Antichrist is called The man of sin 2 Thes 2. And when the Prophet saith Isa 55.7 Let the man of iniquity turne from his evill way he meanes the worst of men Yet this is a truth every man in an unconverted estate is a man of iniquity he hath no goodness nothing of God in him he bears only the Image and impresse of the devill upon him Christ told the Pharisees who were high in reputation with the world for good men John 8.44 Ye are of your father the devill and the lusts of your father ye will doe The naturall man is so sinfull that he is meerly sin And sometimes a godly man speakes and doth as if he were so too Job spake like men of Iniquity Elihu proceedeth more fully to declare both the reason why he would have Job further tryed and likewise what he meant by his answers for wicked men Vers 37. For he addeth rebellion or trespass to his sin Nomine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 intelligitur peccatum ex errore commissum Nomine vero 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 scelus propriè rebellio Here are two words sin and rebellion the first which we render sin signifies sin in common the least transgression of the Law it is sin the least vaine thought of the heart the least idle word of the tongue is sin but every sin is not rebellion that hath many speciall markes or brands rather upon it To rebell is to sin with a high hand to rebell is to sin with a stiff neck to rebell is to sin with obstinacy and resolvedness of will he addeth rebellion to his sin But did Job rebell indeed I conceive the rebellion which Elihu chargeth Job with is not rebellion in a strict but in a qualified and comparative sense As if he had said Job sinned before but now his sin is heightened we see him now in words rising up against God complaining of his justice or as if he had dealt unjustly with him What he did in the time of his prosperity those slips falls which he had then weighed nothing as laid in the ballance with the intemperate speeches which he hath uttered in the day of his trouble He addeth rebellion unto his sin So we render as respecting what he was and had done before Others render it potentially not indicatively Let Job be tryed unto the end because of his answers for wicked men for otherwise he may adde rebellion to his sin we know not whether his corruptions may carry him if suffered to goe onne This is a more favourable reading of the text not as a charge of naturall but feared rebellion against God As if he had sayd I see the mans spirit is so entangled that if he be not well and wisely dealt with possibly he may come to adde even rebellion unto his sin and whereas he sinned before out of ignorance or imprudence he may shortly sin out of contumacy and perverseness Hence Note First There are sins of severall degrees Every man sinneth he that saith he hath no sin or doth not sin there is no truth in him 1 John 1.8 But every mans sin is not rebellion every man doth not rise up to that height and degree of sinning If any shall enquire when is a mans sin rebellion I answer First That mans sin grows to be rebellion whose will is much in it He that will sin rebells The Apostle Paul saith Rom 7.19 The evill which I would not that I doe This is the case of every godly man at his best he doth those evills which he would not this is not rebellion because the will of a godly man is changed and turned off from sin he can say the evill which I would not doe that doe I. Rebellion is the doing of that evill which we would Secondly In rebellion or in rebellious acts of sin there is much of the understanding as well as of the will that is a man seeth cleerely what he doth is sin or that the rule is against him to rebell is to sin against the light It is sayd in the 24th Chapter of this booke The wicked are of them that rebell against the light that is they cannot abide the light he means it there of the naturall light the adulterer and the thiefe cannot indure Sun or day-light it is much more true of mysticall light if he hath any light of knowledge he resists and rebells against it It s great rebellion to resist the receiving of light offered but 't is greater rebellion to resist light received sins against knowledge are rebellious sins Thirdly A rebellious sin is a sin against reproofe admonition and warning when we have been often told of such a sin and admonished of such an evill course and yet we will goe on in it here is rebellion such a man hath not only light in his understanding that what he doth is sinfull but this light hath been brought home to him and wrought upon him by reproofe counsell and admonition here is still greater rebellion Therefore in the proceeding of the Church spoken of Math 18. when an offending brother hath been reproved and told of his fault first in p●ivate by a particular brother then by two or three then by the whole Church if after all these admonitions and reproofes he doth not repent he is to be cast out as a rebel and accounted as a heathen or a publican Lastly As 't is rebellion when we sin as against the reproofes of man so against the providences of God and those of two sorts First When we sin against the favourable providences of God I meane those which are outward when God bestows many mercies and comforts upon us when he gives us health and riches in the world and fullnesse of all things then to sin against him is rebellion Deut 32.15 Jesurun waxed fat and kicked and rebelled against the Lord and lightly regarded the rock of his salvation When we have received many and great mercies then to grow vaine and wanton and nourish our selves as in the day of slaughter this is rebellion against God Secondly When the providences of God have broken us by this evill or that evill when we are broken in our estates broken in our names broken in our relations broken with sickness after sickness and yet persist in