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

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full assurance of understanding The best have but a fluctuating doubting knowledge of spiritual Truths Not a full assurance and Perswasion of them Therefore we need to ask Establishment Thirdly consider the Utility and Profit of it when once the Word is established to us we shall know how to Live and how to Dye and upon what terms to maintain Comfort and Holiness whereas otherwise men Live loosly and carelesly 4. Heb. 2. The Word Profited not not being mixed with Faith in them that heard it Until the word of God be owned as it is a divine and infallible Truth it hath no Efficacy upon us When it is received meerly by Conjecture as a Possible truth it works but weakly I but then it profits when we receive the word of God as the Word of God as a certain truth when the soul comes to determine surely these are truths in which I am deeply concerned upon which my eternal Life or Death doth depend without this God can have no service and we no Comfort but are at a great uncertainty of Spirit On the other side let me tell you that all our Coldness in Duty and all our Boldness in sinning it comes from unbelief 1. Our Coldness in Duty What 's the reason when God offereth such great things to us as the eternal enjoyment of himself Glory Comfort and Happiness as much as heart can wish that men are so dead hearted liveless and careless in the ways of God when our work is so good our ways so Excellent what 's the reason of all our Coldness and Carelesness in the Profession of Religion We have not a lively Sense of Eternity we do not bellive God upon his word if we did it would put Life into us Saith the Apostle 3 Phil. 14. This one thing I mind and I press towards the work Why For the prize of the high calling of God in Iesus Christ. When we mind our work seriously and above all other things not superficially and by the By when we can see the prize of our high calling as to run and hold the eye upon the mark then he presseth onward that he may not lose the garland So when we feel the rewards of Grace when we are perswaded of them this puts Spirit into us and encourageth us against all deadness and faintness I press on ward then with a great deal of vehemency and earnestly So 1 Cor. 15. 58. Be ye stedfast and unmoveable always abounding in the work of the Lord here is the description of a Godly man How shall we do to keep the heart in such an earnest frame By a sound Belief of the Promises for so it follows for as much as you know that your Labour shall not be in vain in the Lord If holiness doth not flourish there is a Worm at the Root Atheism and Unbelief lies at the heart and the want of such an assent to those great and glorious Promises which God hath made known to us in Christ. 2. Our boldness in sinning Why do men go on securely in ways of disobedience against God because they do not know whether the Word be true yea or no. If a man had Heaven and Hell in his Eye if he were soundly perswaded of these things certainly he would not venture the loss of Heaven for a trifle and would not upon such small temptations run the hazard of everlasting torments You cannot drive an ass the most stupid creature into the fire which is burning before his eyes So if these things were before our eyes we would not be so bold with God and so daring as we are Temptation to sin must needs prevail with us when we have not Faith for when the Temptation is strong and Faith weak where are we A man will yield to his base Lusts for there is present profit present pleasure and we have no undoubted certainty of the rewards of obedience and of the promises which are to be set against the Temptation But now when we consider we have so great and precious Promises this will make us cleanse our selves from all filthiness of flesh and Spirit we will not easily sin against God kick against the pricks and run upon danger laid before our eyes In vain is the snare laid in the sight of a Bird. Use 1. To reprove us for looking so little after the establishment of the Word There are many that content themselves with a loose profession of the name of Christ but are not established in a sound Belief of the Scriptures Ask them why they are of this and that Religion They have been taught so been brought up in it and so they might have been Mahometans upon the same account that they are Christians if they had been bred there where the name of Mahomet is of more request than the name of Christ. But then there are others that live by guess and carry on some natural Devotion but their Souls were never acquainted with the mystery of Grace never soundly established in it they have a conjecture There are others that can dispute for their Religion that see a reasonableness in the Christian Faith and why they should be of this Opinion rather than that I but their hearts were never subdued to God Hath the Spirit established Divine truths upon thy Soul and wrought these things upon thy heart hath it convinced thy Judgment awakned thy Conscience changed thy heart given thee any taste of Gods love in Christ drawn thee out of the World into near and sweet Communion with God truths are by him establisht to us and represented with evidence and power 1 Cor. 2. 4. Alas all else we can attain to is but cold and fruitless notion which will not warm the heart some cursory opinions that will not hold thy heart under the awe of God and guide thee in the paths of Holiness to eternal Life and therefore rest not in this that you have some knowledge concerning Christ and priviledges by him But are your hearts established have you a sence of these truths wrought in you by the Holy Ghost Use 2. It exhorteth us to use the means whereby the Word may be established 1. Chiefly observe Experiences how it is accomplished in the course of Gods Providence and inward feeling of thy own heart What answers of Prayer have you when you have been wrestling with God and putting his Promises in Suit at the Throne of Grace Every day God is fulfilling one Promise or another to train us up to look for more at his hands That we may trust him for our Inheritance and our final Blessing he first giveth us a proof of his Truth in lesser matters The more you observe the dealings of God with your own Souls and the fulfilling his Word to you the more will your heart be confirmed against Atheism and established in the belief of the Divine Authority of the Scripture It concerns us much to look to this that our hearts be firmly setled against Atheism especially when
God to command and how reasonable it is that we should obey the supreme being His will is the Reason of all things and who should give Laws to the world but the universal Sovereign who made all things out of nothing Whatsoever you are you received it from the Lord and therefore whatsoever a Reasonable Creature can doe you owe it to him you are in continual dependance upon him For in him you live and move and have your being Acts 17. 28. And he hath redeemed you called you to life by Christ 1 Cor. 6. 19 20. What know you not that your body is the Temple of the Holy Ghost which is in you which ye have of God and ye are not your own for ye are bought with a price therefore glorifie God in your body and in your spirit which are God's You owe all your time and strength and service unto him and therefore you should still be doing his will and abounding in his work 3. He injoyneth nothing but what is good Deuter. 5. 29. Oh that there were such a heart in them that they would fear me and keep all my commandments always that it might be well with them and with their children for ever Deuter. 6. 24. And the Lord commanded us to do all these statutes to fear the Lord our God for our good always that he might preserve us alive as it is at this day God hath tempered his sovereignty towards the Reasonable Creature and ruleth us not with a rod of Iron but with a Scepter of Love He draweth us with the Cords of a man Hos. 11. 4. That is with Reasons and Arguments taken from our own happiness Man being a rational and free Agent he would lead and quicken us to our duty by the consideration of our own benefit and when he might say only Thus shall ye doe I am the Lord yet he is pleased to exhort and perswade us not to forsake our own Mercies or to turn back upon our own happiness and to propound rewards that we may be encouraged to seek after him in that way of duty which he hath prescribed to us The reward is everlasting glory with the mercies of this life in order to it Heb. 11. 6. God is and he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him 4. How indispensibly Obedience to his Commandments is required of us As long as the heart is left loose and arbitrary such is the unruliness and self-willedness of mans nature Rom. 8. 7. The Carnal mind is enmity against God for it is not subject to the law of God neither indeed can be The Carnallist will not be held to his duty but leave that which is honest for that which is pleasing and be governed by his Appetite rather than his Reason therefore Faith hedgeth up his way sheweth him that without holiness it is impossible to see God Heb. 12. 14. That there is no coming to the End unless we take the way that there is no hope of Exemption or excuse for the breaches of his Law allowed but the plea of the Gospel which doth not evacuate but establish Obedience to God's Commands requireth a renouncing of our former conrse and a hearty Resolution To serve God in holiness and righteousness all our days Luke 1. 74 75. Our duty is the end of our deliverance In the Kingdom of Grace we are not our own Masters or at liberty to do what we will Christ came not only as a saviour but as a lawgiver he hath his Laws to try our obedience Heb. 5. 9. And being made perfect he became the Authour of eternal Salvation unto all them that obey him He came not to lessen God's Sovereignty or Man's Duty but to put us into a greater Capacity to serve God he came to deliver us from the curse and indispensible rigours of the Law upon every failing not from our Duty nor that we might not serve God but serve him without fear with Peace of Conscience and joy of Heart and requireth such a degree of Grace as is inconsistent with any predominant Lust and Affection 5. That God loveth those that obey his Law and hateth those that despise it without respect of persons Acts 10. 35. In every Nation he that feareth God and worketh righteousness is accepted with him Psalm 5. 5. Thou hatest all the workers of Iniquity Prov. 11. 20. They that are of a froward heart are an Abomination to the Lord but such as are upright in their way are his delight The more obedient the more God loveth us the less obedient the less God loveth us Therefore unless we love what God loveth and hate what God hateth doe his commands carefully and avoid the contrary we cannot be acceptable with him for God would not make a Law in vain but order his Providence accordingly 6. That one day we shall be called to an account for our conformity and inconformity to God's law There are two parts of Government Legislation and Execution the one belongeth to God as King the other as Judge Laws are but a shadow and the sanction a Mockery unless there shall be a day when those that are subject to them shall be called to an account and reckoning His threatnings are not a vain Scare-Crow nor his Promises a golden Dream therefore he will appoint a day when the Truth of the one and the other shall be fully made good and therefore Faith enliveneth the sense of God's Authority with the remembrance of this day when he will judge the World in Righteousness II. The Necessity 1. The Precepts are a part of the Divine Revelation the object of Faith is the whole Word of God and every part of divinely inspired Truth is worthy of all belief and reverence The word worketh not unless it be received as the Word of God 1 Thess. 2. 13. For this cause also thank we God without ceasing because when ye received the word of God which ye heard of us ye received it not as the word of Men but as it is in Truth the word of God which effectually worketh also in you that believe Now we cannot receive the Word as the word of God unless we receive all there are the same reasons to receive one as the other therefore if any part take good rooting the whole is received There may be a superficial affection to one part more than another but if there be a right Faith we receive all 'T is the engrafted Word that is effectual to the saving of our Souls Iames 1. 21. if we would ingraft the Word the Precepts must stir up answerable Affections as well as the Promises Every part must affect us and stir up Dispositions in us which that part is apt to produce if the Promises stir up Joy and Trust the Precepts must stir up Love Fear and Obedience The same Word which calleth upon us to believe the free Pardon of our Sins doth also call upon us to believe the Commandments of God for the regulating and
the plain handling of the Doctrines of Christian Religion according to the capacity of those that are weak in Knowledge and by Meat the more exact and curious handling those points Our weakness enforceth that we begin with the one but we must go on to the other for several reasons Partly because we are to grow in knowledge as well as other Graces 2 Pet. 1. 5. Give all diligence to add to your saith vertue to vertue knowledge Besides that knowledge that maketh way for Faith and Virtue there is a Knowledge to be added to it a great skill in divine things Partly because those obvious truths will be better improved and retained when we look more into them after-notions do explain and ground the former First we receive the Truth and after we are rooted and grounded in it Col. 1. 23. If ye continue in the Faith grounded and settled and be not moved away from the hope of the Gospel An half light makes us very unsettled in our course but when we grow judicious have a fuller and clearer apprehension of Truths we are the more confirmed against the errour of the wicked Whereas otherwise light chaff is carried about with every wind Partly because the more we understand a Truth the more dominion it hath over our Faith and Practice For God beginneth with the understanding and Grace is multiplyed by Knowledge 2 Pet. 1. 2. Grace and Peace be multiplied unto you through the Knowledge of God and of Iesus our Lord. A truth simply understood hath not such operation and Force as when it is soundly and throughly understood Love aboundeth with Judgment Phil. 1. 9. And this I pray that your Love may abound yet more and more in Knowledge and in all Iudgment Secondly There are first Principles and fundamental Doctrines that must be first taught in a plain and easy way I say some things are initial and fundamental others additional and perfective we must regard both the one in our entrance the other in our growth the one are called the first principles of the Oracles of God Heb. 5. 12 c. partly because they are first in order and first to be taught and learned partly because they are chief and fundamental Truths of the Gospel upon which the rest depend most conducing to salvation the foundation laid well the building will stand the stronger They are reckoned up Heb. 6. 1 2. Therefore leaving the principles of the Doctrine of Christ let us go on unto perfection not laying again the foundation of repentance from dead works and of faith towards God of the Doctrine of Baptisms and of laying on of hands and of the resurrection of the dead and of eternal judgment In the general he calls them the principles of the Doctrine of Christ. The Doctrine of Christ is the summ of Religion he that hath learned it well hath learned all In particular repentance from dead works is made the first or that a sinful Creature must turn to God by Christ before he can be happy The next is faith towards God believing the promises and priviledges of the Gospel and depending on him till they be accomplished Indeed in these two is the summ of Religion sometimes comprized Acts 20. 21. Testifying both to the Iews and also to the Greeks repentance towards God and faith towards our Lord Iesus Christ. So Acts 5. 31. Him hath God raised up to be a Prince and a Saviour for to give repentance to Israel and remission of sins Doctrine of Baptism it is the initiating Ordinance what it signifieth to what it obligeth Laying on of hands the way of Christs Officers entring into the Church Resurrection and last Judgment bindeth all 2. Because the prime truths are few and clear ignorant and unlearned people may know them they are milk Babes and Ignorants may swallow them as most easie of digestion Gods end in the Scripture being to guide his people to true happiness Those truths that are necessary to this end are few and clear and plainly set down that he that runneth may read them Though we reach not other Points yet if we get but to this door there is a great deal of profit Thirdly They which do not first learn these cannot profit much Some confused knowlege they may acquire but distinct clear and orderly understanding they never grow unto When men run before they can go they often get a knock They that were never well grounded are always mutable therefore before we are brought into the Chambers of knowledge we must stay in the Porch begin with most necessary things which are most clear and plain and thereby we are made capable of higher mysteries 2. Though all Christians must come to this pitch to know what is necessary to salvation yet we must not stay here nor always stay in the Porch nor always keep to our milk nor be always infants in understanding 1 Cor. 14. 20. Brethren be not Children in understanding Other things must be regarded or why hath God revealed them No part of Scripture is express'd in vain or at random but all by Divine direction though the first points are most necessary yet the rest are not superfluous but have their use 2 Tim. 3. 16. All Scripture is given by inspiration and is profitable for doctrine for reproof for correction for instruction in righteousness one part of Scripture as well as the other and maketh much for the encrease of spiritual knowledg comfort and godliness One part is milk another stronger meat but all is food for the soul. The grown are more ready to every good work more strong in the resistance of sin more stedfast in the truth therefore we should improve our knowledge If a man layeth the foundation and doth not carry on the building he loseth his cost therefore let us up to go on to perfection Use 1. Let us bless God for this door and porch that the Scriptures are so plain and clear in all things necessary to salvation Many complain of the difficulty and obscurity of Religion and the many Controversies that are about it and they know not what to chuse nor where to find the truth till the World be more of a mind It is true in some things there is difficulty but not in the most necessary things Pascimur apertis exercemur obscuris ibi fames pellitur hîc fastidium God has made his peoples way clear and sure in necessaries for which we have cause to bless his Name for exercising our diligence and dependance Something is difficult If those that complain of this difficulty would enter into the Porch that standeth open other things would soon be understood Whatever differences there are in Christendome all agree That there is one God Jesus Christ his only Son who dyed for the world and accordingly must be owned by his people that a man must be converted to God and become a new Creeture and walk holily or else shall never see God all are agreed in this Prepare
One hundred and Ninety SERMONS ON THE Hundred and Nineteenth PSALM PREACHED by the Late REVEREND and LEARNED Thomas Manton D. D. With a Perfect ALPHABETICAL TABLE Directing to the PRINCIPAL MATTERS Contained therein LUK. XXIV 44. All things must be fulfilled which were written in the Law of Moses and in the Prophets and in the Psalms concerning me Hic Psalmus est tanto praestantior quanto prolixior Muis. LONDON Printed for T. P. c. and are to be Sold by Michael Hide Bookseller in Exon 1681. Thomas Manton D. D. R White sculpsit To the READER 'T IS the Honour of the Evangelical Ministry that it was principally instituted for the service of God not as he is the Governour of the Earth but the Lord of Heaven and to prepare men by holiness for his eternal Kingdom And 't is an excellent favour of God to his Ministers when their labours are eminently useful for this blessed end This singular grace and priviledge God was pleased to confer upon his faithful Servant Dr. Manton whose life was spent in the most precious work of converting souls to Christ and preparing them for the Coelestial Paradise and since his retiring from the world by death his soul now enjoying the blessed rest above yet he remains with us in what was most valuable of him his excellent Sermons the productions of his holy mind and heart and the Pen having a larger extent than the Tongue in communicating them may be more beneficial to the Church than before The following Sermons were preacht by him in his usual course of three times a week which I do not mention to lessen their worth but to shew how diligent and exact he was in the performance of his duty Indeed his ordinary Sermons considering the substantial matter clear order and vigorous full expressions may well pass for extraordinary I cannot but admire the foecundity and variety of his thoughts that the same things so often occurring in the verses of this Psalm yet by a judicious observing the different arguments and motives whereby the Psalmist enforces the same requests or some other circumstances every Sermon contains new conceptions and proper to the Text. Some few Verses were not handled by him I earnestly pray that those who shall read these Sermons may taste the sweetness of the Divine Truths open'd in them and may be transform'd into the spirit of David by an inward feeling of the affections and verifying in their own breasts the words of the Holy Prophet W. BATES Christian Reader IT is somewhat difficult not to applaud that excellency which has first approved it self to our judgment Hence is it that though this work needs it not I will so far gratifie my own affections and comply with obtaining custom as to acquaint thee that if thou hadst my eyes and taste thou must admire its beauty and confess its sweetness much more when thou shalt use thy own more discerning eye and judicious palate The Matter of these Sermons is Spiritual and speaks the Author one intimately acquainted with the secrets of wisdom He writes like one that knew the Psalmists heart and felt in his own the sanctifying power of what he wrote Their design is practice beginning with the understanding dealing with the affections but still driving on the advancement of Practical Holiness They come home and close to the Conscience first presenting us a glass wherein we may view the spots of our souls and then directing us to that fountain wherein we may wash them away They are of an Evangelical complexion abasing proud corrupt nature and advancing free and efficacious grace in the conversion of Sinners The Exhortations are powerful admirably suited to treat with Reasonable Creatures yet still supposing them to be the vehicle of the holy Spirit through which he communicates life and power to obey them The manner of handling is not inferiour to the dignity of the Matter so plain as to accommodate the most sublime Truths to the meanest spiritual capacity and yet so elevated as to approve it self to the most refined understanding He knew how to be succinct without obscurity and where the weight of the Argument required it to enlarge without nauseous prolixity He studied more to profit than please and yet an honest heart will then be best pleased when most profited He chose rather to speak appositely than elegantly and yet the judicious do account propriety the choicest elegancy He laboured more industriously to conceal his learning than some others to ostentate theirs and yet when he would most veil it the discernnig Reader cannot but discover it and rejoice to find such a mass such a treasure of useful learning couched under a well-studied and artificial plainness But let the Reader take a taste of let him concoct and digest these spiritual Discourses and he shall say with the Sabaean Queen It was a true report I heard in my own land but behold the one half was not told me Or with the men of Sychar Now we believe not because of thy saying but because we our selves have proved and experienced their delicacies As one taste of honey will more effectually commend its sweetness than the most elaborate Oratory Those Ancients that had seen the first Temple wept bitterly when they saw the foundation of the second laid And perhaps some pious souls who have sate with great delight under the Authors Ministerial shadow and have found his fruit sweet to their taste may secretly shed a tear that though they here meet with the same Divine Truths the same spiritual matter yet they want the living voice the grateful elocution the natural eloquence in which that heavenly matter dropt or rather flowed from his gracious lips but let the same consideration which quieted the spirits of those Jews of old satisfie theirs God can fill this house also with his Glory And though the second Edition of the Temple fall short of the former in the beauty and symmetry of the structure yet can the Spirit flow from the Press as well as the Pulpit with this advantage that they may here in safety read what with great danger they formerly heard I have admired and must recommend to the observation of the Reader the fruitfulness of the Authors holy invention accompanied with solid judgment in that whereas the coincidence of the matter in this Psalm might have superseded his labours in very many Verses yet without force or offering violence to the Sacred Text he has either from the connexion of one Verse with its predecessor or the harmony between the parts of the same Verse found out new matter to entertain his own meditation and his Readers expectation nor do I observe more than twelve Verses in this large Psalm wholly omitted if at least they may be said to be omitted whose subject matter is elsewhere copiously handled Had the Reverend Author design'd these Papers for publick view he could not have flattered himself in a cavilling age that he should escape
have There is a difference between a dead sea and a calm sea A stupid Conscience they may have not a quiet conscience The virtue of that Opium will soon be spent Conscience will again be awakened Use. Oh then let us put in for a share in this Blessedness There are two encouragements in the Service of Christ our Vails and our Wages our Wages should be enough the Eternal enjoyment of himself But oh we cry out of the tediousness of the way We have our Vails also that are not contemptible If a man should offer a Lordship or Farm to another and he should say The way is dirty and dangerous the Weather very troublesome I will not look after it Would you not accuse this man of folly that loves his ease and pleasure But now if this man were assured of a pleasant path and good way if he would but take a little pains to go over and see it this were gross folly indeed to refuse it Our Lord hath made over a blessed Inheritance to us upon Gospel-terms but we are full of prejudices in that to keep close to the rule may bring trouble and deprive us of many advantages of gain and we think we shall never see good day more But we are assured there is a great blessing goeth along with Gods yoke and we having a promise of the enjoyment of Gods presence where there are pleasures for evermore this should make us rowse up our selves in the Work of the Lord. SERMON II. PSAL. CXIX 2. Blessed are they that keep his testimonies that seek him with the whole heart IN this Psalm the Man of God begins with a description of the way to true blessedness In the former verse a blessed man is described by the course of his actions Blessed are the undefiled in the way In this by the frame of his heart Blessed are they that keep his testimonies that seek him with the whole heart The internal principle of good actions is the verity and purity of the heart Here you may take notice of two marks of a blessed man 1. They keep his testimonies 2. They seek him with the whole heart Doct. 1. They that keep close to Gods testimonies are blessed By way of Explication two things take notice of 1. The notion that is given to Precepts and Counsels in the word they are called his testimonies 2. The respect of the blessed man to these testimonies to keep them First The notion by which the word of God is exprest is Testimonies whereby is intended the whole declaration of Gods will in Doctrines Commands Examples Threatnings Promises The whole word is the testimony which God hath deposed for the satisfaction of the world about the way of their salvation Now because the word of God brancheth it self into two parts the Law and the Gospel this notion may be applied to both First To the Law in regard whereof the Ark is called the Ark of the Testimony Exod. 25. 16. because the two Tables were laid up in it The Gospel is also called the testimony the testimony of God concerning his Son Isa. 8. 20. To the law and to the testimony where Testimony seems to be distinguished from the Law The Gospel is so called because there God hath testified how a man shall be pardoned reconciled to God and obtain a right to eternal life We need a testimony in this case because it is more unknown to us The Law was written upon the heart but the Gospel is a stranger Natural light will discern something of the Law and pry into matters which are of a moral strain and concernment but Evangelical truths are a mystery and depend by the meer testimony of God concerning his Son Now from this notion of Testimonies we have this advantage 1. That the word is a full declaration of the Lords mind God would not leave us in the dark in the matters which concern the service of God and mans salvation He hath given us his Testimony he hath told us his mind what he approves and what he disallows and upon what terms he will accept of sinners in Christ. It is a blessed thing that we are not left to the uncertainty of our own thoughts Mic. 6. 8. He hath shewed thee O man what is good The way of pleasing and enjoying God is clearly revealed in his word There we may know what we must do what we may expect and upon what terms We have his testimony 2. Another advantage we have by this notion is The certainty of the word it is Gods Testimony The Apostle saith 1 Joh. 5. 9. If we take the testimony of men the testimony of God is greater It is but reason we should allow God that value and esteem that we give to the testimony of men who are fallible and deceitful Among men in the mouth of two or three witnesses every thing is established Deut. 19. 15. Now there are three that bear witness in heaven and three that bear witness on earth 1 Joh. 5. 7 8. We are apt to doubt of the Gospel and have suspicious thoughts of such an excellent doctrine but now there are three witnesses from heaven the Father Word and Spirit the Father by a voice Mat. 3. 7. And lo a voice from Heaven saying This is my beloved Son c. And the Son also by a voice when he appeared to Paul from Heaven Saul Saul why persecutest thou me And the Holy Ghost gave his testimony descending upon him in the form of a Dove and upon the Apostles in cloven tongues of fire And there are three that bear record on earth for he saith v. 10. He that believeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he hath the testimony in himself what is that The Spirit Water and Blood in the heart of a believer these give testimony to the Gospel The Spirit bears witness to the Gospel when it illuminateth the heart enabling us to discern the Doctrine to be of God to discern those signatures and characters of Majesty Goodness Power Truth which God hath left upon the Gospel and Water and Blood testifie when we feel those constant and sensible effects of Gods power coming with the Gospel 1 Thes. 1. 5. both by pacifying the Conscience and bringing joy and satisfaction and by sanctifying and freeing a man from the bondage of sin Water signifies Sanctification Ioh. 17. 17. Sanctifie them by thy truth The Sanctifying power of God that goes along with the Gospel is a clear confirmation of the Divine testimony in it Ioh. 8. 32. The truth shall make you free By our disintanglement from lust we come to be setled in the truth Gods testimony is the ultimate resolution of our faith Why do we believe because it is Gods testimony How do we know it is Gods testimony it evidenceth it self by its own light to the consciences of men yet God for the greater satisfaction to the world hath given us witnesses three from heaven and three on earth Every manifestation of God
knowledg when it is so apt to break out When these living waters run out of the belly it 's a sign of a good spring there Col. 3. 16. Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly in all wisdom teaching and admonishing one another It 's a sign we have gotten the riches of understanding for out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaks So Prov. 16. 23. The heart of the wise teacheth his mouth and addeth learning to his lips When our speech hath weight and worth in it and we are ready upon all occasions it argueth a good stock of the word You know a man that puts his hand in his pocket and brings up gold at every draught it 's a sign he hath more plenty of it than silver So when we are ready to bring out gracious discourses it argueth a treasure and stock within 2. It argueth a good esteem of the word Things that are dear and precious to us we use to discourse of them What we love admire and affect the tongue will be occupied about such things John 3. 31. He that is of the earth is earthly and speaketh of the earth And 1 John 4. 5. They are of the world therefore speak they of the world I know it is spoken in the first place of ordinary Teachers All men whose original is of the earth they savour of it in their speech when they speak of divine things there is some earthiness in it The other Scripture is meant of false Teachers they savour of the world all their teaching doth savour of their affections But both places give this general truth What a mans affections are upon it is most ready in his mouth Therefore it argueth we are affected with the word of God when we are declaring it upon all occasions 6. It is for our benefit to be talking of good things to others The breasts that are not suckt do soon grow dry but the more they are milked out and drawn the greater is the encrease so in spiritual things we gain by communicating By discourse truths are laid more in view We find in any art of common learning the more we confer about things with others the more understanding we get our selves Prov. 11. 25. The liberal soul shall be made fat and he that watereth shall be watered also himself It is spoken of Alms it is true of spiritual Alms as plain Experience shews by watering and refreshing others the more we are comforted and refreshed our selves The loaves were encreased in the dividing Solomon compares Conference to the whetting iron upon iron the more one iron is whet upon another both are sharpned so by Conference our gifts are encreased Earthly goods the more they are given out we have the less in view and visible appearance though God can increase them but now in heavenly and spiritual things in the very giving out to others they are encreased upon our hands USE 1. To shame us for our unprofitableness in our relations and converses for these are two things wherein a Christian should take occasion to declare the Judgments of Gods mouth 1. In our Relations that we do no good there in declaring the Judgments of Gods mouth to one another Surely every Relation is a Talent and you will be accountable for it if you do not improve it for your Masters use The husband is to converse with his wife as a man of knowledg 1 Pet. 3. 7. and the wife to gain upon the husband 1 Pet. 3. 2. and both upon the children and servants The members of every Family should be helping one another in the way to heaven With what busie diligence doth an Idolatrous Family carry on their way and their course See Ier. 7. 18. The children gather wood and the fathers kindle the fire c. saith the Lord. Every one will have his hand in the work and are quickning and inflaming one another Fathers Children Husbands Wives all find some employment or other about their Idolatrous Service O that every one would be as forward and zealous and helpful in the work of God O that we were as careful to train and set our families a work in a course of godliness Christians should reason thus What honour hath God by making me a Father a Master of a Family Every such a one hath a charge of souls and he is to be responsible It will be no grief of heart to you when by your means they become acquainted with God Ye are my Crown and my rejoycing says the Apostle of the Thessalonians converted by his Ministry It will be a crown of honour and rejoycing in the day of the Lord when you have been instrumental not only for their prosperity in the world but of their encreasing in grace 2. In our converses how little do we edifie one another If Christs question to the two disciples going to Emans were put to us Luke 24. 17. What manner of conversation had you by the way What cause should we have to blush and be ashamed Generally our discourse is either 1. Prophane and sinful there is too much of the rotten communication which the Apostle forbids Eph. 4. 29. Let no corrupt communication come out of your mouth but that which is good to the use of edifying that it may minister grace to the hearer Rotten discourse argueth a rotten heart Or 2. Idle and vain as foolish tales The Apostle bids Timothy 1 Tim. 4. 7. To refuse prophane and old wives fables or vain complements though we are to give an account for idle words Mat. 12. 36. Or else like the Athenians we spend our time in hearing and telling news Acts 17. 21. Or we please and solace our selves with frothy flashes of a wanton wit and jesting that is not convenient which the Apostle forbids Ephes. 5. 4. The praise of a Christian lyeth not in the wittiness but in the graciousness of his conversation That which is Aristotles vertue is made a sin with Paul foolish jesting You should rather be refreshing one another with what experiences you have had of the Lords grace that is the comfort and solace of Christians when they meet together But when men wholly give up themselves to move laughter all this is idle and vain discourse It is not enough to say it doth no hurt but what good doth it do doth it tend to the use of edifying A Christian that hath God and Christ and his wonderful and precious benefits to talk of and so many occasions to give thanks he cannot want matter to discourse of when he comes into company therefore we should avoid vain discourse Or 3. We talk of other mens matters or faults as the Apostle speaks of those 1 Tim. 5. 13. That wandred from house to house that not being idle only but tatlers also and busie bodies speaking things which they ought not Levit. 19. 16. Thou shalt not go up and down as a tale-bearer among thy people The Hebrew word signifies a Merchant or one
young or had more leisure and rest In that I have meditated and conferred You must continue still in a holy course To begin to build and leave unfinished is an argument of folly There is always the same reason for going on that there was for beginning both for necessity profit and sweetness We have no licence to slack and give over till all be finished Phil. 2. 12. Work out your own salvation otherwise all you do is in vain yet not in vain Gal. 3. 4. in vain as to final reward yet not in vain as to encrease of punishment You lose your cost your watchings striving prayings but you will gain a more heavy punishment so that it had been better you had never begun 2 Pet. 2. 20 21. For if after they have escaped the pollutions of the world through the knowledg of our Lord and Saviour Iesus Christ they are again intangled therein and overcome the latter end is worse with them than the beginning for it had been better for them not to have known the way of righteousness than after they have known it to turn from the holy commandment delivered to them You bring an ill report upon God your sense of the worth of heavenly things must needs be greater for your making trial and therefore your punishment for neglect the greater Into the Vineyard they came at several hours but all tarried till the close of the day Some called sooner some later but all held out till the end Heb. 6. 10 11. You have ministred and must minister you have prayed and must pray you have heard the word with gladness and must hear still Many in youth are zealous but when their first heats are spent grow worldly careless and ready to sound a retreat from God The fire of the Altar was never to go out so should the life and warmth and vigour of our affections to the word of God be ever preserved God is the same still and so is the word and therefore we should ever be the same in our respects to it The Devil in policy lets men alone for a while to manifest some respect to the ways of God that they may after do Religion a They are full of zeal strict holy diligent in attendance upon Ordinances he never troubleth them but is at truce with them all this while till they get some name for the profession of godliness and then he knoweth their fall will be the more scandalous and ignominious not only to themselves but to their profession They are forward and hot men a while till they have run themselves out of breath and then by a notable defection shame themselves and harden others 2. Compare it with the 13th verse I have declared now I will meditate To be warm and affectionate in our expressions of respect to the Word before others and to slight it in our own hearts argueth gross hypocrisie Therefore David would not only confer but meditate Many talk with others but not with their own soul. Commune with your hearts and be still True zeal is uniform when there is no witness but God it acts alike 3. Refer it to the 14th Verse David had spoken of his delight in the Law now that he would meditate therein in both not to boast but to excite others by his example that is to be understood all along when he speaketh of his diligence in and about the Law of God But mark first the word was his delight and then his meditation Delight causeth meditation and meditation encreaseth delight Psal. 1. 2. But his delight is in the law of the Lord and in his law doth he meditate day and night A man that delighteth in the Law of God will exercise his mind therein Our thoughts follow our affections It is tedious and irksome to the flesh to meditate but delight will carry us out The smallest actions when we have no delight in them seem tedious and burdensome It was no great matter for Haman to lead Mordecai's Horse yet a burdensome offensive service because it was against his will The difficulty that we find in holy duties lyeth not in the duties themselves but in the awkwardness of our affections Many think they have no parts and therefore they cannot meditate He that findeth an heart to this work will find an head Delight will set the mind a-work for we are apt to muse and pause upon that which is pleasing to us Why are not holy thoughts as natural and as kindly to us as carnal The defect is in the heart I have rejoyced in thy testimonies saith David and therefore I will meditate in thy statutes In the words there is a double expression of Davids love to the Law of God 1. I will meditate in thy precepts 2. I will have respect to thy ways Concerning which observe 1. In both the notion by which the word of God is expressed and diversified Precepts Ways The word precepts implieth Gods Authority by which the counsels of the word are ratified Ways implieth a certain direction for our walk to heaven There are Gods ways to us declared in his Promises so it is said Psal. 25. 10. All the paths of God are mercy and truth Our ways to God ver 4. of that Psalm Shew me thy ways teach me thy paths These are his precepts 2. Observe the one is the fruit of the other I will meditate and then I will have respect Meditation is in order to practice and if it be right it will beget a respect to the ways of God We do not meditate that we may rest in contemplation but in order to obedience Joshua 1. 8. Thou shalt meditate in the book of the law day and night that thou mayest observe to do according to all that is written therein So Phil. 4. 8 9. Think of these things do these things 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 when you cast up your accounts and consider what God hath required of you it is that you may set upon the work Meditation is not a flourishing of the wit that we may please the fancy by playing with divine truths Sense is diseased that must be fed with quails but a serious inculcation of them upon the heart that we may urge it to practice Nor yet an acquainting our selves with the word that we may speak of it in company Conference is for others Meditation for our selves when we are alone Words are but the female issue of our thoughts works the male Nor meerly to store our selves with curious notions and subtil inquiries study searcheth out a truth but Meditation improveth it for practical use it is better to be sincere than subtil 3. Observe this practical obedience is expressed by having respect unto the ways of God To respect Gods ways is to take heed that we do not turn out of them to regard them and our selves observe to do them Josh. 1. 8. and it is called elsewhere pondering our path Prov. 4. 26. ponder the path of thy feet that we
aetatis partem perdunt vacando intending their Sabbath time This is the sense of Nature to think all lost that is bestowed upon God Flesh and blood cryeth out What need this waste they cannot spare time from their Callings they have Families to maintain Oh let me tell you by serving God you drive on two cares at once Worldly Interests are cast in to the way of Religion and though not designed and intended by us these things are added to us For comforts and manifestations of God we have them many times in our recess and the privacy of our retirements in a more plentiful manner than elsewhere The Spouse inviteth the Bridegroom Cant. 7. 11. Come my beloved let us go forth into the field Upon which Bernard O sancta anima fuge publicum fuge an nescis te verecundum habere sponsum qui nequaquam tibi velit indulgere praesentiam suam coram aliis We have most experiences of God when we are alone with him and sequestred from all distractions of company and business solacing our selves with God Exod. 3. 1. Moses drove the sheep to the backside of the Wilderness and came to the Mount of God he goeth aside from the other shepherds that he might converse with the great Shepherd and Bishop of our souls and there he seeth the vision of the fiery bush Usually God cometh to us in our deep meditation when the soul is most elevated and fittest to entertain the comforts of his presence then we have sensible experience of God The standing spiritual benefits of Meditation are many It imprints and fastens a truth upon the mind and memory deliberate thoughts stick with us as a Lesson we have conned is not easily forgotten Civet long kept in a Box the scent remaineth when the Civet is taken out Sermons meditated on are remembred by us long after they are delivered It sets the heart a work The greatest matters will not work upon him that doth not think of them Tell them of sin and God and Christ and Heaven and Hell and they stir them not because they do not take these truths into their deep thoughts or if they be stirred a little it is but a fit while the Truth is held in the view of Conscience We had need inculcate things if we would have them to affect us The Steel must beat again and again upon the Flint if we would have the sparks flye out so must the understanding bear hard upon the will to get out any affection and respect to the ways of God It sheweth the beauty of Truths When we look upon them in trans●… we do not see half that is in them but upon a deliberate view it more appeareth As there is a secret grace in some that is not discerned but by much converse and narrow inspection It helpeth to prevent vain thoughts The mind of man is restless and cannot lye idle therefore it is good to imploy it with good thoughts and set it a work on holy things for then there will be no time and heart for vanity the mind being prepossessed and seasoned already but when the heart is left to run loose vanity encreaseth upon us Oh Christians Meditation is all it is the Mother and Nurse of knowledg and godliness the great instrument in all the offices of Grace We resemble the Purity and Simplicity of God most in the holiness of our thoughts Without Meditation we do but talk one after another like Parrots and take up things by meer hearsay and repeat them by rote without affection and life or discerning the worth and excellency of what we speak It is Meditation that maketh Truths always ready and present with us Prov. 6. 21 22. Bind them continually upon thy heart when thou goest it shall lead thee when thou wakest it shall talk with thee But I forbear 2. Whereby the mind is applied to serious and solemn consideration I add this to distinguish it from occasional Meditation and those good thoughts that accidentally rush into our mind and to note the care and attention of soul that we should use in such an exercise It is musing makes the fire burn glances or transient thoughts or running over a Truth in haste is not Meditation but a serious attention of mind It is not to take a snatch and away but to make a meal of Truth and to work it into our hearts Alas a slight thought that is like a flash of lightning gone as soon as come doth nothing Constant thoughts are operative and a Truth the longer it is held in the view of conscience the more powerful it is Deut. 32. 46. Set your hearts to all the words which I testifie among you this day A sudden thought may be none of ours it may be unwelcome and find no entertainment with us but set your hearts to it Luk. 9. 44. Let these things sink down into your hearts let them go to the quick Prov. 18. 1. Through desire a man having separated himself intermedleth in all wisdom Then is a man fit for these pure and holy thoughts for intermedling in all wise and divine matters when he hath divorced himself from other cares and is able to keep his understanding under a prudent confinement 3. Of the Truths which we understand and believe In Meditation we suppose the object understood for it is the work of study to search it out of Meditation to enforce and apply it and we suppose it believed and granted to be a Truth The work now is to improve our assent that it may have an answerable force and efficacy upon the soul. 4. It follows in the description For practical uses and purposes Meditation is not to store the head with notions but to better the heart We meditate of God that we may love him and fear him of sin that we may abhor it of hell that we may avoid it of heaven that we may pursue it Still the end is practical to quicken us to greater diligence and care in the heavenly life USE 1. To reprove those that are seldom in this work Worldly cares and sloath and ease divert us if we had an heart we would have time and leasure The clean beasts did chew the cud We should go over and over and over again the Truths of God in our thoughts But alas 1. Either men muse on trifles all the day their minds are full of chaff and vanity Oh! hast thou thoughts for other things and hast thou no thoughts for Gods precepts Hast thou not a God and a Christ to think of And is not salvation by him and everlasting glory worthy of your choicest thoughts You have thoughts enough and to spare for other things for base things for very toys and why not for God and the word of God why not for Christ and that everlasting Redemption he hath accomplished for us If a man would throw his meat and drink down the Kennel rather than give to him that asketh him the world would cry shame
we can bring our knowledg to act and have it for our use upon all occasions it urgeth us to practice Jam. 1. 25. Being not a forgetful hearer but a doer Most of our sins are sins of forgetfulness and incogitancy Peter would never have been so bold and daring and done what he did if he had remembred Christs prediction The Text saith Luk. 22. 61. When he remembred he wept bitterly A bad memory is the occasion of much mischief to the soul. When we do not call Truths to mind in their season and when fit occasion and opportunity is offered Memory is an handmaid to Understanding and Conscience and keeps Truths and brings them forth when called for USE is to press us to Caution Let us not forget the Word Helps to memory are 1. Attention Men remember what they heed and regard Prov. 4. 21. Attend to my sayings keep them in the midst of thy heart Where there is attention there will be retention Oh lay up truths with much earnestness and care Sensitive memory is seated in the hinder part of the head as one would say in a Chamber backward from the noise of the street Now oh lay up Truth safe and lay it out when ever you have need But Rational memory lyeth near the Understanding and Conscience in the midst of thine heart Reverence in the admission of the word helps us in the keeping of it Heb. 2. 1. Let us take heed to the things which we have heard lest at any time they slip from us If we did receive it with more heed we would retain it with more constancy lay them up keep them choicely 2. Affection that is a great friend to memory VVhat we esteem most we best remember Omnia quae curant senes meminerunt An old man will not forget where he laid his bag of gold Delight and Love will renew and revive the object upon our thoughts Here in the Text we have this Truth asserted I will delight my self in thy statutes I will not forget thy word Affection to Truths cometh from the application In a publick Edict a man will be sure to carry away what is proper to his case 3. Meditation We must be often viewing and meditating of what we have laid up in the memory It availeth not to the health of the body to eat much but to digest what is eaten Tumultuary reading and hearing without Meditation is like greedy swallowing much meat When little is thought on it doth not turn to profit This concocteth and digesteth what we have heard The more a thing is revolved in the mind the deeper impression it maketh 4. Beware of inuring the mind to vain thoughts for this distracts it and hindereth the impression of things upon it The face is not seen in running-waters nor can things be written in the memory unless the mind be close and fixed Lead is capable of engraving because it is firm and solid but Quicksilver because it is fluid will not admit it An inconsistent wandering mind reapeth little fruit from what is read or heard 5. Order is an help to memory Heads of Doctrine are as Cells wherein to bestow all things that are heard from the word He that is well instructed in the Principles of Religion will most easily and firmly remember Divine Truths Methodus est catena memoriae to link Truths one to another that we may consider them in their proportion 6. Get a lively sense of what you hear or read and you will remember it by a good token Psal. 119. 93. I will never forget thy precepts for by them thou hast quickned me They that are quickned by a Sermon will never forget such a Sermon 7. Holy Conference the speaking often of good things keeps them in the heart and the keeping of them there causeth us to speak to those that are about us 8. Get the memory sanctified as well as other faculties and pray for the Spirit for that faculty is corrupted as well as others SERMON XVIII PSAL. CXIX 17. Deal bountifully with thy servant that I may live and keep thy word IN the former part we heard of the virtue and excellency of the word and therefore how much the Saints desire to understand it meditate of it speak of it and transfer it into their practice Now whosoever will resolve upon such a course will necessarily be put upon prayer for mark how David's purposes and prayers are intermingled I will and I will and then presently prayeth again Deal bountifully with thy servant that I may live and keep thy word In this request observe 1. It is generally expressed together with his own relation to God Deal bountifully with thy servant 2. It is particularly explain'd wherein he would have this bounty expressed 1. In the prorogation of his life that I may live 2. In the continuance of his grace And keep thy word The one in order to the other David doth not simply pray for life but in order to such an end and the general request concerneth both parts yea rather the latter than the former That whilst I live I may keep thy word as counting that to be the greatest benefit or argument of Gods bounty to have an heart framed to the obedience of his will I might observe many things as 1. What a great honour it is to be Gods servant David a great King giveth himself this title Thy servant And Constantine counted it a greater honour to be a Christian than to be Head of the Empire 2. That all we have or expect cometh from Gods bounty to us So doth David express himself Deal bountifully with thy servant as intimating not only the measure but the rise and source of what he expected from God 3. That among all the benefits which we expect from the bounty of God this is one of the greatest To have an heart to keep his word 4. Gods word must not only be understood but obeyed for this is the meaning of keeping the word Joh. 14. 21. He that hath my commandments and keepeth them c. hath implyeth knowledg we must have them before we can keep them but when we have them we must keep them and do what we know But omitting all these points which will be more fitly discussed elsewhere I shall only point out two Lessons 1. The Cause of life and that is Gods Bounty 2. The End and Scope of Life Gods Service 1. The Cause of life Deal bountifully with thy servant that I may live Observe The prorogation of our lives is not the fruit of our merits but the free grace of God 1. Long life is in it self a blessing and so promised though more in the Old Testament than in the New when Eternity was more sparingly revealed That it is promised as a blessing is evident Prov. 28. 16. He that hateth covetousness shall prolong his days And in the fifth Commandment Exod. 20. 12. That thy days may be long in the land of the living So Psal. 91.
lusts and worldly interests The next reason is because they must be spiritually discerned that is to know them inwardly throughly and with some relish and savour there must be an higher light there must be a cognation and proportion between the object and the faculty Divine things must be seen by a divine light and spiritual things by a spiritual light Sense which is the light of beasts cannot trace the workings or flights of Reason in her contemplations We cannot see a Soul or an Angel by the light of a Candle so fleshly wisdom cannot judg of divine things The object must be not only revealed but we must have an answerable light so that when you have done all you must say How can I understand without an Interpreter Acts 8. 31. And this Interpreter must be the Spirit of God Ejus est interpretari cujus est condere To discern so as to make a right judgment and estimate of things dependeth upon Gods help 4. When this blindness is in part cured yet still we need that God should open our eyes to the very last We know nothing as we ought to know David a regenerate man and well instructed prayeth to have his eyes opened for we need more light every day Luk. 24. 45. Then opened he their understandings that they might understand the Scriptures Christ first opened the Scriptures then he opened their understandings USE 1. To shew us the reason why the word prevaileth so little when it is preached with power and evidence their eyes are not opened Isa. 53. 1. Who hath believed our report and to whom is the arm of the Lord revealed No teaching will prevail till we are taught of God USE 2. What need we have to consult with God whenever we make use of the word in Reading Hearing Study In Reading when thou openest the Bible to read say Lord open mine eyes When thou Hearest beg a sight of the Truth and how to apply it for thy comfort Haec audiunt quasi somniantes Luther saith of the most In seeing they see not in hearing they hear not There was a Fountain by Hagar but she could not see it Gen. 21. 19. God opened her eyes and she saw a well of water and she went and filled the bottle with water and gave the Lad to drink So for Study it is dangerous to set upon the study of divine things in the strength of wit and human helps Men go forth in the strength of their own parts or lean upon the judgment of Writers and so are left in darkness and confusion We would sooner come to the decision of a truth if we would go to God and desire him to rend the vail of Prejudices and Interests USE 3. Is to press us to seek after this blessing the opening of the eyes Magnifie the creating-power of God 2 Cor. 4. 6. God who commanded the light to shine out of darkness hath shined in our hearts to give the light of the knowledg of God in the face of Iesus Christ. Make use of Christ Col. 2. 5. In whom are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledg Beg it earnestly of him the Apostle prayeth Eph. 1. 17 18. That the God of our Lord Iesus Christ the Father of glory may give unto you the spirit of wisdom and revelation in the knowledg of him The eyes of your understanding being enlightned that ye may know what is the hope of his calling c. Yea mourn for it in cases of dubious anxiety Iohn wept when the book of the seven seals was not opened Rev. 5. 4. Mourn over your ignorance refer all to practice Joh. 7. 17. If any man will do his will he shall know of the doctrine whether it be of God or whether I speak of my self Wait for light in the use of means with a simple docile sincere humble mind Psal. 25. 9. The meek will he guide in judgment and the meek will he teach his way Doct. 2. Those whose eyes are opened by God they see wondrous things in his word more than ever they thought Open thou mine eyes that I may behold wondrous things out of thy Law Law is not taken strictly for the Covenant of works nor for the Decalogue as a Rule of life but more generally for the whole word of God which is full of wonders or high and heavenly mysteries In the Decalogue or Moral Law there is wonderful purity when we get a spiritual sense of it Psal. 119. 96. I have seen an end of all perfection but thy commandments are exceeding broad and Psal. 19. 7 8. The law of the Lord is perfect converting the soul the testimony of the Lord is sure making wise the simple the statutes of the Lord are right rejoycing the heart the commandment of the Lord is pure enlightning the eyes A wonderful Equity Rom. 7. 12. The law is holy and the commandment is holy just and good A marvellous wisdom Deut. 4. 6. Keep therefore and do them for this is your wisdom and understanding in the sight of the Nations which shall hear all these statutes and say Surely this great Nation is a wise and understanding people In the whole word of God the harmony and correspondence between all the parts how the mystery grew from a dark revelation to clearer is admirable In the Gospel every Article of faith is a mystery to be wondered at the Person of Christ 1 Tim. 3. 16. Great is the mystery of godliness God manifested in the flesh justified in the spirit c. A Virgin conceiveth the Word is made flesh the redemption and reconciliation of mankind is the wonderful work of the Lords Grace It is the hidden wisdom of God in a mystery 1 Cor. 2. 7. We speak the wisdom of God in a mystery even the hidden wisdom which God ordained before the world to our glory And 't is called the mystery hidden from ages Eph. 3. 9. The glory of heaven is admirable Eph. 1. 18. The riches of the glory of the Inheritance of the Saints in light That a clod of earth should be made an heir of heaven deserves the highest wonder All these are mysteries So the wonderful effects of the word in convincing sinners 1 Cor. 14. 25. Thus are the secrets of his heart made manifest and so falling down on his face he will worship God and report that God is in you of a truth Heb. 4. 12. The word of God is quick and powerful sharper than a two-edged sword piercing to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit and joynts and marrow and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart It is a searching and discovering word John 4. 29. See a man that hath told me all that ever I did In changing sinners 1 Pet. 2. 9. That ye may shew forth the praises of him that hath called you out of darkness into his marvellous light Peter's getting out of prison was nothing to it In comforting Every Grace is a Mystery to depend upon
what we see not to be as a Rock in the midst of a storm dying yet we live as poor yet making many rich 2 Cor. 8. 9 10. All the operations of the Spirit are wonderful 1 Pet. 1. 8. Ioy unspeakable and full of glory Phil. 4. 7. Peace that passeth all understanding Rom. 8. 26. Groans that cannot be uttered 2. What Divine illumination contributeth to the sight of these wonders 1. It revealeth the truth of them which otherwise is incomprehensible to the flesh Matth. 16. 17. Flesh and blood hath not revealed it unto thee but my Father which is in heaven Without this no certain knowledg of Christs Person and Office 2. It more intimately acquainteth us with them Matth. 13. 11. To you it is given to know the mysteries of the kingdom of God to others it is not given All Gods works are full of wonder yet blind men cannot see them though the Sun shineth never so clearly A beautiful room into which there is but a crevise when we lay our eye close to it we see it USE 1. From hence we may learn That it is one degree of profit to see so much in the word of God as to admire it either at the mysteries of godliness or ungodliness which the word discovereth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They that are most enlightned have most cause to wonder for then they find Truths which exceed all common reason such as do not come into the minds of others or if they do they seem incredible USE 2. Is to encourage us to study the word the wonders of Gods works are many but the wonders of his word greater Quot articuli tot miracula the Papists say of Aquinas Sums But more truly may it be said of the word of God All the doctrines of the word are a continued mystery After man was fallen it came not into the head of any creature how to satisfie Justice to make up the breath On the folly of them that despise the word as curious Wits and Worldlings do as if it were a mean knowledg in comparison of what may be acquired from Aristotle and Plato or the Politicians of the world If there be in it some rudiments something common with other Writings yet there are greater things than these the deepthings of God 1 Cor 2. 11. never such a revelation made to the world And worldly men that despise this study of the word they despise that which Angels wonder at Eph. 3. 10. and desire to pry into 1 Pet. 1. 13. and make great matters of trifles The Sun of Righteousness is not he worth the beholding USE 3. Let us cease wondering at worldly things great Places Honours heaps of wealth fair Buildings as the Disciples Mark 13. 1. Master see what manner of stones and buildings are here 'T is said of Christ Col. 2. 9. In him dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily fulness of the Godhea●… Oh wonderful The people wondred at that mass of money provided by David to build God an House 1 Chron. 29. 7 8. Oh! but the unsearchable riches of Grace the rare plot of mans Redemption 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 how wonderful All in and about Christ is rare His name is Wonderful all the promises of God are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 exceeding great and precious promises 2 Pet. 1. 4. they transcend mans capacity It condemneth the stupidness of them that are nothing moved or taken with things so great and wonderful great in themselves and should be precious to us SERMON XX. PSAL. CXIX 19. I am a stranger in the earth hide not thy Commandments from me IN the 18. Verse David had begged Divine illumination Open mine eyes c. he doth not desire God to make a plainer Law but to give him a clearer sight That request he backs with three reasons in the following verses 1. His condition in the world I am a stranger in the earth Strangers in aforeign Countrey need guidance and direction 2. His earnest affection to the word ver 20. My soul breaketh for the longing that it hath unto thy judgments at all times David had an earnest longing to be acquainted more with the will of God 3. Gods judgments upon those that contemn the word Thou hast rebuked the proud that are cursed which do err from thy commandments It is dangerous to walk besides the Rule Rom. 1. 18. The wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men c. God hath owned both Tables he hath punished ungodliness a violation of the first Table and unrighteousness a violation of the second Table Here God hath declared how he will own his Name therefore he begs illumination Now the Text giveth you this first reason his condition in the world Here observe two things 1. A representation of his case I am a stranger upon earth 2. His request to God Hide not thy commandments from me 1. A representation of his case with respect to his quality what he was a stranger and the place where upon earth not in heaven he was familiar there And how a stranger upon earth in point of happiness I do not find here that which satisfieth my soul he had his home his rest elsewhere but not in point of service for he had much work to do Doct. Gods children are strangers upon earth and do so account themselves They live here as others do but they are not at home their hearts are above they do not take up their rest here they are strangers and account themselves to be so when they have most of worldly conveniencies First To open it Sometimes it may be understood in a Literal sense and sometimes in a Moral 1. Sometimes in a literal sense Thus the Patriarchs that had a wandring life and were forced to flit from place to place without any certain abode they confessed themselves to be strangers Iacob saith Gen. 47. 9. Few and evil have the years of my life been 2. Morally also and more generally it is true of the Saints they are strangers In some sense it is true of good and bad We are all travelling into another world and are every day nearer to Eternity As in a ship whether men sleep or wake stand or sit whether they think of it yea or no the voyage still goes onward So whatever we think and whatever we do we hasten towards death In this sense even wicked men may be strangers and pilgrims in condition though not in affection All men in condition will they nill they must into the other world as they yield to the decays of nature and every day they are a step nearer to their long home Heathens have had a sense of this notion saith one of them Ex hac vita discedo tanquam ex hospitio non tanquam ex domo I go out of this life as out of an Inn. Here we are but passengers not inhabitants to dwell But now to be strangers and pilgrims in affection
a poor little hearsay Knowledg availeth not They abhor themselves when they have more intimate acquaintance none so confident as a young Professor that knoweth a few Truths but in a weak and imperfect manner the more we know indeed the more sensible we are of our ignorance how liable to this mistake and that that we dare not trust our selves for an hour 4. Because of the profit that cometh by knowledg All grace from first to last cometh in by the understanding God in the work of grace followeth the order which he hath established in Nature Reason and Judgment is to go before the will and therefore when the work of Grace is first begun in us it beginneth in the Understanding Renewed in knowledg Col. 3. 10. So the encrease of grace 2 Pet. 1. 12. Grace be multiplied unto you through the knowledg of God and of Iesus Christ our Lord. As the beginning is by light so is all the gradual progress of the spiritual life strength to bear afflictions strength in conflicts is by powerful reasons yea the perfect change that is made in us in glory is by the vision of God We shall see him as he is and shall be like him If we had more knowledg of God and his ways we should trust him more fear him more love him more Trust him Psal. 9. 10. And they that know thy name will put their trust in thee for thou Lord hast not forsaken them that seek thee If God were more known he would be better trusted 2 Tim. 1. 12. I know whom I have believed I dare trust him with my soul. More feared 3 Joh. 11. Beloved follow not that which is evil but that which is good He that doth good is of God he that doth evil hath not seen God Right thoughts of God would not let us sin so freely one Truth or other would fall upon us and give check to the temptation as feared so loved more The more explicite thoughts we have of his excellency the more are our hearts drawn out to him Joh. 4. 10. If thou knewest the gift c. Christ would not lye by as a neglected thing if he were more known in all his worth and excellency USE The first Use is to press you to get Knowledg and look upon it as a singular Grace if the Lord will give you to understand and apply the comfort and direction of his Holy Word Joh. 15. 15. Henceforth I call you not servants for the servant knoweth not what his Lord doth but I have called you friends for all things that I have heard of my Father I have made known unto you To be taught the mind of God is a greater act of friendship than if God should give a man all the treasures of the world To make himself known so as you may love him fear him trust him When we can apply this for our comfort O then cry for knowledg lift up thy voice for understanding seek her as silver and search for her as for hidden treasures Prov. 2. 3 4. Go to God and be earnest with him Lord make me to understand the way of thy precepts We can walk in the ways of sin without a Teacher but we cannot walk in the ways of God And cry lift up thy voice We are earnest for quickning and enlargement but be earnest also for understanding Now a large prayer without endeavours is nothing worth Dig in the Mines of knowledg search into the Scripture do not gather up a few scattered notions but look into the bowels Silver doth not lye in the surface of the earth but deep in the bottom of it and will cost much labour and digging to come at it If we would have any good stock of knowledg which will prevent vain thoughts carnal discourse abundance of heart-perplexing scruples and doubts and much darkness and uncomfortableness of spirit it will cost us some labour and pains The more knowledg we have the more are we established against error 2 Pet. 3. 17. Ye therefore beloved seeing ye know these things before beware lest ye also being led away with the error of the wicked fall from your own stedfastness The more you have of this divine saving knowledg the greater check upon sin Psal. 119. 11. I have hid thy word in my heart that I might not sin against thee One Truth or another will rise up in defiance of the Temptation The greater impulsion to duty the more of the Law of God the more it urgeth the conscience Prov. 6. 22. It maketh us more useful in all our Relations 1 Pet. 3. 7. Husbands Dwell with them according to knowledg c. Parents Eph. 6. 4. Fathers provoke not your children to wrath but bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord. Friends Rom. 15. 14. And I my self also am perswaded of you my brethren that ye also are full of goodness filled with all knowledg able also to admonish one another Magistrates that they may discern Christs Interest Psal. 2. 10. Be wise now therefore O Kings be instructed ye Iudges of the earth When Solomon asked Wisdom the thing pleased the Lord. And lastly More comfortable in our selves that they may comfort and build up one another whenever they meet together USE 2. To press you to grow in knowledg None have such confidence and rejoycing in God as those that have a clear sight and understanding of his will revealed in his word Let your knowledg 1. Be more comprehensive At first our thoughts run in a narrow channel There are certain general Truths absolutely necessary to salvation as concerning our misery by sin and the sufficiency of Christ to help us but if we might rest in these why hath God given us so copious a Rule The general sort of Christians content themselves to see with others eyes get the knowledg of a few truths and look no farther why then hath God given so large a Rule Fundamentals are few believe them live well and you shall be saved This is the Religion of most This is as if a man in building should only be careful to lay a good foundation no matter for roof windows walls If a man should untile your house and tell you the foundation standeth the main butteresses are safe you would not like of it A man is bound according to his capacity and opportunity to know all Scripture the consequences of every Truth God may and doth accept of our imperfect knowledg but not when men are negligent and do not use the means To be willingly ignorant of the lesser ways of God is a sin VVe should labour to know all that God hath revealed 2. More distinct why Truths are best known in their frame and dependance as Gods works of Creation when viewed singly and apart every days work was good but when viewed alltogether in their correspondence and mutual proportion to each other were very good Gen. 1. 31. So all Truths of God take them singly are good but
were many false Gods worshipped The controversie about Religion mainly lay at first between the Iews and the Pagans the Pagans had their Gods and the Jews had the Lord God of Israel the only true God Yea among the Pagans themselves there was a great diversity every man will walk and sometimes a hot contention and many times there were hot contests which was the better God the Leek or the Garlick When Religion which restrains our passions is made the fuel of them and instead of a Judg becomes a party men give themselves up headlong to all manner of bitter zeal and strife and persuasion of truth and right which doth calm men in other differences are here inflamed by that bitter zeal every one hath for his God his service and party and the difference is greater especially between the two dissenting parties that come nearest to one another We read afterward when this difference ●…y more closely between the Iews and the Samaritans and Christ decides that Salvation was of the Iews The Iews were certainly the better party John 4. 20. Our father 's worshipped in this mountain and ye say that in Ierusalem is the place where men ought to worship Mount Sion or Mount Gerizim which was the Temple of the true God one or the other Then we read afterward among the Iews themselves in their private sects who were very keen against each other Pharisees and Sadducees and Paul though an Enemy to them both and was looked upon as a common adversary yet they had rather joyn with him than among themselves Acts 23. 8 9. Afterward you find the scene of Contention lay between the Iews and Christians Acts 14. 4. But the multitude of the city was divided and part held with the Iews and part with the Apostles There it grew into an open contest and quarrel And then between the Christians and the Pagans which was the occasion of that uproar at Ephesus Acts 19. I and after Religion had gotten ground and the way of truth had prevailed in the world then the difference lay betwixt Christians themselves yea while Religion was but getting up between the followers of the Apostles and the School and Sect of Simon Magus those impure Libertines and Gnosticks who went out of them because they were not of them 1 Iohn 2. 19. And afterwards in the Church-story we read of the Contentions between the Catholicks and the Arians the Catholicks and the Pelagians the Catholicks and the Donatists and other Sects And now last of all in the dregs of time between the Protestants and the Papists that setled party with whom the Church of God is now in suit As the rod of Aaron did devour the rods of the Inchanters so the word of God which is the rod of his strength doth and will in time eat up and consume all untruths whatsoever but for a great while the contests may be very hot and sharp Yea among those that profess a reformed Christianity there are the Lutherans and the Calvinists And nearer to us I will not so much as mention those invidious names and flags of defiance which are set up under which different parties do encamp at home Thus there ever have been and will be contests about Religion and disputes about the way of truth yea different opinions in the Church and among Christians themselves about divine truths revealed in the Scripture The Lord permits this in his holy and righteous Providence that the godly may be stirred up more to embrace truth upon Evidence with more affection that they may more encourage and strengthen themselves and resolve for God for when all people will walk every one in the name of his God we will walk in the name of our God for ever Micah 4. 5. And the Lord doth it that he may manifest the sincere that when Christ calls who is on my side who that are willing to stick to him whatever hazards and losses they may incur 1 Cor. 11. 19. There must be heresies among you that they which are approved may be made manifest among you I and that there may be a ready plague of strong delusion and lies for them that receive not the truth in the love of it 2 Thes. 2. 11 12. for damnable Errors are the dungeons in which God holds carnal souls that play the wantons and trifle with his truth and never admitted the love and power of it to come into their hearts Prop. 2. True Religion is but one and all other ways are false noxious and pestilent Eph. 4. 5. One Lord one faith one baptism There are many ways in the world but there 's but one good and certain way that leads to salvation So much the Apostle intimates when he saith He will have all men to be saved How would he have them saved 1 Tim. 2. 4. For there is one God and one Mediator between God and men the man Christ Iesus which text implies that salvation is by the knowledge of the truth or knowledge of the true way others tend to destruction And so God promiseth Jer. 32. 39. That he will give all the elect one heart and one way Though there be differences even in the Church of God about lesser truths yet there 's but one true Religion in the essence and substance of it I mean as to those truths which are absolutely necessary to salvation To make many doors to heaven is to set wide open the gates of hell Many men think that men of all Religions shall be saved provided they be of a good life and walk according to their light In these later times divers unsober Questionists are grown weary of the Christian Religion and by an excess of charity would betray their faith and while they plead for the salvation of Turks and Heathens scarce shew themselves good Christians The Christian Religion is not only the most compendious way to true happiness but it 's the only way John 17. 3. This is life eternal to know thee the only true God and Iesus Christ whom thou hast sent There 's the sum of what is necessary to life eternal that there is one God Father Son and Holy Ghost to be known loved obeyed worshipped and enjoyed and the Lord Jesus Christ to be owned as our Redeemer and Saviour to bring us home to God and to procure for us the gifts of pardon and life and this life to be begun here by the spirit and to be perfected in heaven This is the sum of all that can be said that is necessary to salvation certainly none can be saved without Christ for there is no other name under heaven whereby we can be saved but by Iesus Christ Acts 4. 12. and none can be saved by Christ but they that know him and believe in him If God hath extraordinary ways to reveal Christ to men we know not this is our Rule no Adults no grown persons can be saved but they that know him and believe in him And now Christ hath
by the Scriptures which apparently are acknowledged by them to be the Word without running to unwritten traditions and the authority of men Again all this is recommended with the special presence of God as to gifts and graces blessing these Churches continually more and more Therefore if ever a man will find rest for his soul and be soundly quiet within himself here he must fix and chuse and take up the way of truth Popery is but Heathenism disguised with a Christian name their penal satisfactions are like the gashing and launcing of Baal's Priests their Mediators of Intercession are like the doctrines of Demons among the Gentiles for they had their middle Powers glorified Heroes their Holy water suits with the Heathen Lustrations their costly offerings to their Images answer to the Sacrifices and Oblations to appease their gods which the Idolaters would give for the sin of their souls adoring their Reliques is like the respects the heathens had to their departed Heroes And as they had their Tutelar gods for every City so these their Saints for every City and Nation their S. Sebastian for the Pestilence their Apollonia for their Tooth-ach and the like It is easie to rake in this dirt It was not for the Devil's interest when the Ensign of the Gospel was lifted up to draw men to downright Heathenism therefore he did more secretly mingle the Customs and Superstitions of the Gentiles with the food of life like poyson conveyed in perfume that the souls of men might be more infected alienated and drawn from God Popery doth not only add to the true Religion but destroys it and is contrary to it Let any considering man that is not prejudiced compare the face of the Roman Synagogue with the beauty of the Reformed Churches and they will see where Christianity lyes there you will find another Sacrifice for expiation of sin than the death of Christ the Communion of the Cup so expresly commanded in the word of God taken away from the people reading the Scriptures forbidden to Laicks as if the word of God were a dangerous book Prayers in an unknown language Images set up and so they are guilty if not of primitive Idolatry which all the water in the Sea cannot wash them clear of yet certainly of secondary Idolatry which is the setting up an Idol in God's Worship contrary to the Second Commandment the Image of the Invisible God represented by stones and pictures Invocation of Saints and Angels allowed the doctrine of Transubstantiation contrary to the end of the Sacrament works of Supererogation Popes pardons Purgatory for faults already committed as if Christ had not already satisfied Papal Infallibility not only contrary to faith but sense and reason their ridiculous Mass and Ceremonies and many such human inventions besides the word and against it But the Protestants are contented with the simplicity of the Scriptures the word of God and the true Sacraments of Christ. Therefore you see what is the way of truth we should stick to Prop. 8. That in the private differences among the professors of the Reformed Protestant Religion a man is to chuse the best way but to hold charity towards Dissenters In the true Church in matters of lesser moment there may be sundry differences For until men have the same degree of light it cannot be expected they should be all of a mind Babes will think one thing grown persons will have other apprehensions sick persons will have their frenzies and doubtings which the sound cannot like The Apostle's rule is Phil. 3. 15 16. Let us therefore as many as be perfect be thus minded and if in any thing ye be otherwise minded God shall reveal even this unto you c. There are two parts of that Rule the perfect must be thus minded they that are fully instructed in the mind of God they must practise as they believe strings in tune must not be brought down to those that are out of tune But if others tainted with error do not give a through assent to all divine truth yet let us walk together saith the Apostle so far as we are agreed God that hath begun to enlighten them in other things will in time discover their mistakes Thus far the true Christian Charity takes place This should be our Rule Here we are agreed in the Christian Reformed Religion and in all the points of it let us walk together so far and in lesser differences let us bear with and forbear one another in love I speak now of Christian toleration for the Magistrates toleration and forbearance how far he is to interpose that 's another case Eph. 4. 2. With all lowliness and meekness with long-suffering forbearing one another in love What is bearing with one another not conniving at their sin or neglecting ways to reclaim them or forbear our profession when God calls us to it they are great cases how far profession may be suspended and how far it may be carried on but to restore them with meekness to own them in those things wherein they are owned by God not to practise that Antichristian humor which is now gotten into Protestantism of unchurching unministring unchristianing one another but to own one another in all those things wherein we are agreed without imposing or censuring not rending into factions not endeavouring to destroy all that we may promote the particular interest of one party to the prejudice of the whole but walking under one common Rule and if others shall prove peevish and if angry brethren shall call us bastards and disclaim us as not belonging to the same Father we ought not to reject them but still call them brethren if they will not joyn with us we cannot help it yet they are brethren notwithstanding that disclaim and how pettishly and frowardly soever they carry themselves in their differences a good Christian should take up this resolution their tongue is not Christs fan to purge his floor though they may condemn things which Christ will own to bear their reproofs and love them still for the iniquity of their carriage doth not take away our obligation to them As in the relation of Inferiors we are bound to be obedient to the froward as well as to the gentle Parents and Masters so in the duties that are to pass between equals we are to bear with the froward and to overcome their inclinations For though we have corruptions that are apt to alienate us and will put us upon furious passions uncomely heats and divisions yet God forbid we should omit any part of our duty to them for uncharitable brethren are brethren still SERMON XXXII PSALM CXIX 30. I have chosen the way of Truth thy judgments have I laid before me I Come now to answer an Objection which may be made Obj. But if you be so earnest to maintain unity among your own Sects why do you separate from the Papists who are Christians as well as you and own many things of Christianity wherein
as the benefits that he bringeth with him He doth approve things upon good knowledg and cometh to a well setled resolution Another defect in wicked men is because the judgment is superficial and so come to nothing 'T is not full clear and ponderous 't is not a dictamen a resolute decree not ultimum dictamen the last decree all things considered and well weighed 2. God's Grace God doth never fully and spiritually convince the judgment but he doth also work upon the will to accept embrace and prosecute those good things of which it is convinced He teacheth and draweth they are distinct works but they go together therefore the one is inferred out of the other Drawn and taught of God both are necessary for as there is blindness and inadvertency in the mind so obstinacy in the will which is not to be cured by meer perswasion but by a gracious quality infused inclining the heart which by the way freeth this doctrine from exception as if all Gods works were meer moral suasion The will is renewed and changed but so as God doth it by working according to the order of Nature USE By all means look after this Divine illumination whereby your judgment may be convinced of the truth and worth of spiritual things 'T is not enough to have some general and floating notions about them or slightly to hear of them or talk of them but they must be spiritually discern'd and judg'd of for if our judgments were throughly convinced our pursuit of true happiness would be more earnest you would see sin to be the greatest mischief and grace the chiefest treasure and accordingly act God inlightning the soul doth 1. Take away carnal principles Many men can talk well but they are leavened with carnal principles as 1. That he may do as most do and yet be safe Mat. 7. 23. Many will say in that day Lord Lord have we not prophesied in thy name c. and then will I profess unto them I never knew you depart from me ye that work iniquity Prov. 11. 31. Behold the righteous shall be recompenced upon the earth much more the wicked and the sinner Exod. 32. c. 2. That he may go on in ungodliness injustice intemperance because grace hath abounded in the Gospel Tit. 2. 11 12. For the grace of God that bringeth salvation hath appeared to all men Teaching us that denying ungodliness and worldly lusts we should live soberly righteously and godlily in this present world And Luke 1. 75. That we being delivered out of the hands of our enemies might serve him without fear in holiness and righteousness before him all the days of our life 3. That he may spend his youth in pleasure and safely put off repentance till age But Eccles. 12. 1. we are bid to Remember our creator in the days of youth while the evil days come not nor the years draw nigh when thou shalt say I have no pleasure in them And Luke 12. 20. when the rich man said to his soul Soul thou hast much goods laid up for many years take thine ease eat drink and be merry God said unto him Thou fool this night shall thy soul be required of thee then whose shall those things be which thou hast provided Heb. 3. 7. Wherefore as the Holy Ghost saith To day if ye will hear his voice harden not your hearts c. Men think it is a folly to be singular and precise that 't was better when there was less preaching and less knowledg that small sins are not to be stood upon But God inlightning the soul maketh us to see the vanity and sinfulness of such thoughts 2. There is a bringing the understanding to attend and consider there is much lieth upon it Acts 16. 14. The Lord opened the heart of Lydia so that she attended unto the things which were spoken of Paul That is weighed them in her heart SERMON XXXVIII PSAL. CXIX 34. Yea I shall observe it with my whole heart I Come now to the last clause I shall observe it with my whole heart The Point is Doct. That it is not enough to keep Gods law but we must keep it with the whole heart Here I shall shew you 1. That God requireth the heart 2. The whole heart 1. God requireth the heart in his service the heart is the Christians sacrifice the fountain of good and evil and therefore should be mainly looked after without this 1. External profession is nothing most Christians have nothing for Christ but a good opinion or some outward prof●…on Iudas was a disciple but Satan entred into his heart Luke 22. 3. Ananias joyned himself to the people of God but Satan filled his heart Acts 5. 3. Simon Magus was baptized but his heart was not right with God Acts 8. 22. Here is the great defect 2. External conformity is nothing worth It is not enough that the life seem good and many good actions be performed unless the heart be purified otherwise we do with the Pharisees wash the outside of the platter Mat. 23. 25 26. when the inside is full of extortion and excess 'T is the heart God looketh after 1 Sam. 16. 7. For the Lord seeth not as man seeth for man looketh on the outward appearance but the Lord looketh on the heart Prov. 4. 23. Keep thy heart with all diligence for out of it are the issues of life Cast salt into the spring As Iehu said to Ionadab so doth God say to us 2 Kings 10. 15. Is thy heart right as my heart is with thy heart We should answer it is Men are not for obsequious compliances if not with the heart so neither is God Though thou pray with the Pharisee pay thy vows with the Harlot kiss Christ with Iudas offer sacrifice with Cain fast with Iezebel sell thine inheritance to give to the poor with Ananias and Saphira all is in vain without the heart for 't is the heart enliveneth all our duties 3. It is the heart wherein God dwelleth not in the tongue the brain unless by common gifts till he take possession of the heart all is as nothing Ephes. 3. 17. He dwelleth in our hearts by faith The bodies of believers are Temples of the Holy Ghost yet the heart will and affections of man are the chief place of his habitation wherein he resideth as in his strong Citadel and from whence he commandeth other faculties and members and without his presence there he cannot have any habitation in us the tongue cannot receive him by speaking nor the understanding by knowing nor the hands by external working Prov. 4. 23. Out of it are the issues of life 't is the forge of spirits He dwelleth not in temples made with hands Acts 7. 48. and Jer. 23. 24. Do not I fill heaven and earth saith the Lord He will dwell in thine heart and remain there if thou wilt give thy heart to him 4. If Christ have it not Satan will have it The heart of man is
humana doctrina sed magis floret It spread far and near the first Reformation what small beginnings it had 2. There are Judgments strange Providences by which God breaketh Opposition either changing the hearts of Men or else cutting them off in the mid-way when his Wrath is kindled but a little Psal. 2. 12. They dash against the Corner-stone God will shew himself mighty and powerful in promoting the word of Truth and will carry on the Kingdom of Christ over the backs of his Enemies Doct. IV. We should not give over dealing with God though he is pleased to desert us in some passages of our Tryals that he may not forsake us utterly Many of Gods choicest Servants have been tripping Psal. 73. 21. As for me my feet were almost gone my steps had well nigh slipped but they recover themselves again Peter fell for a time but afterwards groweth bold Once timerous Peter but Acts 4. 13. When they saw the boldness of Peter and John The Martyrs that were permitted for a while to deny the Truth yet were not permitted to deny it utterly they bewailed their faults and suffered the more couragiously 1. It is fit the Creatures should know themselves therefore God will humble us and in part leave us to our own fears but not wholly leave us destitute of Grace as the Nurse seemeth to let the Child fall that he may clasp the more strongly about her 2. It is fit the World should know that a zealous defence of the Truth comes not from natural Stubbornness and Pertinacy but from Divine Assistance therefore God sheweth what the Flesh would do how it would shrink in the confession of the Truth if it were permitted to prevail 3. It is fit we should see the necessity of continual dependence after Grace received we have not always the same presence of mind so as to plead for God but only as he is pleased to influence us our case doth change and alter ebb and flow as it pleaseth God Use. Not to be severe against those that fail out of infirmity nor to cast them off for God doth not pity them rather than censure them let us help them out of the Mire unhumbled hearts that are puft up with Pride and Confidence in their own strength when out of the Temptation may judge it a task of no great difficulty to carry it with courage and will readily condemn others of Cowardise and Back-sliding who ride not out the Storm with as much Courage and Chearfulness and Resolution as they conceive themselves would do Iob 4. 5 6 7. Now it is come upon thee and thou faintest it toucheth thee and thou art troubled is not this thy fear thy confidence and the uprightness of thy ways thy Hope but an humble heart acquainted with sufferings will not judge so he is sensible of weakness and how hard it is for Flesh and Blood to deny it self and to prefer a good Conscience before safety and worldly increase how ready it is to faint under a continued Cross how crafty to find out evasions to beguile it self into a way of sin that they pity the poor tempted man In the Primitive times Novatus and his followers denyed those that had fallen to be received into the Communion of the Church though upon Repentance Doct. V. They will not be utterly overcome in their Tryals that hope in Gods Iudgments Why 1. Because this hope will teach us to wait upon the Lord untill he shew us better things Psal. 62. 1. My Soul wait thou upon the Lord for my Expectation is from him they can tarry a little while and so are not carried away with the violence of the present Temptation It is an inclination to present things that undoeth us Demas hath forsaken us and loved this present World Now when we can wait for future things the soul is stayed and kept from Apostacy We read of the patience of Hope 1 Thes. 1. 3. And the Apostle saith Rom. 8. 15. If we●…o hope for that we see not then do we with Patience wait for it he that believeth a better condition is not dejected with present evils 2. It fortifieth the Soul against present difficulties so as they do not unsettle but quicken us it hath an Apprehension that the good is hard to be obtained therefore it gathereth all the force and strength of the Soul to resist it For the Nature of Hope See the Sermon on the 114 Verse Well then Hope in Gods Judgments Consider who hath made the Promises is it not God whose word cannot fail of its effect Rom. 4. 20 21. He staggered not at the Promise of God through unbelief but was strong in Faith giving Glory to God and being fully perswaded that what he had promised he was able also to perform And then consider how he standeth affected to us doth not he love us And also in what Relation he is obliged to us as a Father And then consider what doth the Promise say And how it maketh for his Glory to accomplish it what plentiful means he hath in store to bring to pass what he hath spoken And What a Potent and Wise Intercessor we have to Plead our Cause at the right hand of the Father and to mind him still of whatever concerns our comfort SERMON L. PSALM CXIX Verse 44. So shall I keep thy Law continually For ever and ever FIrst David Prays for Deliverance Verse 41. Let thy Salvation come c. Next he prays if he might not have Deliverance yet a little Liberty to own God in the time of his trouble Take not the word of Truth utterly out of my mouth and with what Argument doth he enforce it In the Close of the former verse he had Pleaded I have hoped in thy Iudgments Now he pleads his stedfast purpose to serve God conceived in the form of a Vow So shall I keep thy Law c. They that hope in Gods Promises must have a tender regard to his Precepts First he saith I hope in thy Iudgments then I shall keep thy Law The tender regard of Gods Precepts how what to talk of them only No. As in the former Verse he speaks of the word of Truth in his mouth so here he speaks of keeping and observing the Law in his Practice to shew we should not own God in word only but in deed also He spoke of Profession there and now we are to fill up our Profession with answerable Practice So shall I keep thy Law continually for ever and ever The Text contains a Promise of Obedience 1. The matter Promised I shall keep thy Law 2. The manner and constancy of that Obedience continually for ever and ever Mark the Promise of Obedience is brought in by way of Argument So shall I keep so that is this will encourage me this will enable me 1. The granting of his requests would give him encouragement when God answers our hope and expectation Gratitude should excite and quicken us to give him all
of our Interest in Eternal Life They differ in Effects Peace is an Approbation for the present Joy in the holy Ghost a pledge and beginning of that endless Joy we shall have hereafter 2 Cor. 1. 22. Who hath also sealed us and given the earnest of the spirit in our hearts And Rom. 8. 23. We our selves also who have the first-fruits of the spirit even we our selves groan within our selves waiting for the adoption to wit the redemption of our body Both together shew that there is no such solid Comfort as in the obedience of God's Commandments certainly more than in all the Pleasures of Sin yea more than in all the Enjoyments of the World whoever have proved them both will find it so Many have proved the Pleasures of Sin but never yet found what comfort is in mourning for Sin Many have proved the Comforts of the World but never yet proved what is the Joy of a good Conscience and the sweet Pleasure of a godly Conversation 2. There is a particular Experience when born out in the Confession of Truth in the time of tryal A Man that out of love to God's Commands hath endured Troubles and Tryals and hath overcome Temptations will see more cause to love these Commandments and to encrease his Obedience to them than ever before in ordinary Temptations Psal. 19. 11. Moreover by them is thy servant warned and in keeping of them there is a great reward When they see that Divine Truth is like to bear out it self and Man that doth confess it in such cases they feel the excellency of God's Truth and the Power of God sustaining them that confess it therefore embrace heartily the Lord's Commands and take pleasure in his Ways The Lord appealeth to this Experience Micah 2. 7. Do not my words do good to him that walketh uprightly Have not you found the Fruit answerable Therefore the Children of God value and esteem and look upon them as the greatest Means of their Safety and Comfort 6. Because of their love to God they have a value for every thing which cometh from God and leadeth to him Common Mercies point to their Author and their main end is to draw our Affections to him and enable us in his Service but these are apt to be a snare and are used as an Occasion to the Flesh But here is a greater Impression of God on his Word and Laws their use is more eminent to direct us to God therefore are valued above ordinary Comforts Iob 23. 12. I have not gone back from the commandment of his lips I have esteemed the words of his mouth more than my necessary food They are his Commandments therefore dear to us who hath obliged us so much in Christ whose Love they believe and have felt The Word is wholly appointed to maintain the Life of Grace in us Use 1. Is to shew us how to bring our hearts to the obedience of God's Commands 1. Love them if we would keep them Nothing is hard to Love An Esteem will quicken us to the Obedience of them 2. Delight in them for then all goeth on easily Delight sweetneth every thing though in themselves toilsom or tedious as Fowling Hunting Fishing Delight never mindeth Difficulties The reason why the Commands are grievous is want of Love and Delight Use 2. Sheweth of what kind our Obedience must be free and unconstrained when we are not forced to our Duty but do willingly delight in it and the Law that prescribeth it and do bewail our daily failings Many doe some external Works of Obedience but not with an inward delight but out of custom or compulsion God never hath our Heart till he hath our Delight till we willingly abstain from what may displease him and chearfully practise what he requireth of us when it is grateful to obey and all Pleasures to this are nothing worth SERMON LIV. PSAL. CXIX 48. My hands also will I lift up to thy commandments which I have loved and I will meditate in thy statutes IN the Morning we opened one Profession of David's Respect to the Word of God now follows another He would employ all his Faculties about the Commandments of God which is his last Argument His Mind for here is Meditation promised his Heart for here is Love asserted his Tongue for that is his original Request which occasioned all these Professions and here his Hands his Life My hands also will I lift up c. Observe 1. The Ground or Cause of his Respect to the Commandments of God in that Clause Which I have loved 2. A double Effect I will lift up my hands to thy commandments and I will meditate in thy statutes 1. Lifting up the Palms or Hands is a Phrase of various use 1. For Praying Psal. 28. 2. Hear the voice of my supplications when I cry unto thee when I lift up my hands towards thy holy oracle Lam. 2. 19. Lift up thy hands towards him for the life of thy young children c. Hab. 3. 10. The deep uttered his voice and lift up his hands on high Thence the Apostle 1 Tim. 2. 8. I will therefore that men pray every where lifting up holy hands without wrath and doubting 2. For Blessing others Aaron lift up his hands towards the people and blessed them Or for Praising or Blessing God Psal. 134. 2. Lift up your hands in the sanctuary and bless the Lord. So Psal. 63. 4. Thus will I bless thee while I live I will lift up my hands in thy name 3. For Swearing or Vowing Gen. 22. 14. I have lift up my hand to the most high God that is sworn So Rev. 10. 5. The Angel lift up his hand and swore So of God Psal. 106. 26. Therefore he lifted up his hand against them to overthrow them in the wilderness that is swore they should not enter into his rest 4. For setting about any Action especially of weight Gen. 41. 22. Without thee shall no man lift up his hand that is attempt or do any thing So Psal. 10. 12. Arise O Lord lift up thine hand forget not the poor that is Set to thine active hand for their assistance So Heb. 12. 12. Lift up the hands that hang down and the feeble knees that is Set actively and vigorously about the Christian Task To this Rank may be also referred what is said Mat. 6. 3. Let not thy left hand know what thy right hand doth The Hand is the Instrument of Action Now all these Sences might be applied to the present Place 1. Praying for God's Grace to perform them 2. Blessing God as we do for our daily food giving thanks for them 3. Vowing or promising under an Oath a constant Obedience to them But the Commandments are not the proper Object to which the Acts of Praying Blessing Swearing are directed but God It is not I will lift up my hand to God but thy commandments We ought indeed to bless God and praise God for the Blessings we receive by his
in a dark place 2 Pet. 1. 19. The love of the World will misleade us our own Reason will often leave us comfortless the Examples of the best are defective but the Word of God will give comfortable Direction to all that follow the direction of it under all their Crosses Confusions and Difficulties Psal. 119. 105. Thy word is a Light unto my feet and a Lanthorn to my paths Light is comfortable it is no small satisfaction that I am in God's way and have his Word for my Warrant 3. It propoundeth the Examples of their Country-men and sets forth their Heroical Acts and encourageth us to imitate their Fortitude and Self-denyal Heb. 6. 12. Be followers of them who through Faith and Patience inherit the Promises many things are to be done and suffered before we attain the end Now it is a great Comfort to trace the footsteps of the Saints all along in the Way in which we go Heb. 12. 1. Wherefore seeing we are compassed about with so great a cloud of Witnesses let us lay aside every weight and the sin which doth so easily beset us and let us run with patience the race that is set before us If God did call us to walk in an untrodden Path it might be cumbersome and solitary now it is very obliging and encouraging to consider in what way they have been brought to Heaven before us 4. It hath many seasonable Cordials against fainting by the way Alas when we are in deep pressures our hearts are apt to sink but the Word assureth us that we shall have all things necessary for us that our Heavenly Father seeth what is best for us and that if we faithfully wait upon him our Afflictions and Rubs in the way shall be a means to bring us to our Journeys end 2 Cor. 4. 17. Our light Affliction that is but for a moment worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of Glory and that for the present our Tryals are not inconsistent with his Love 2. On the Believers part there are Reasons of this Comfort and Rejoycing 1. There needeth a spiritual Frame of heart for a carnal Man's Rejoycings and Relishes are suitable to the Constitution of his Mind Rom. 8. 5. They that are after the Flesh do mind the things of the Flesh and they that are after the Spirit the things of the Spirit It is an infallible Rule to the worlds End every one cannot say thy Statutes are my Songs no they must have other Solaces and a Man's temper is more discerned by his Solaces than by any thing else they that have not purged their Tast from the dreggs of Sense the trash of the Flesh-pots of Egypt will ever be pleasing to them in the heavenly Pilgrimage and being inveigled with the baits of the Flesh the Promises are like withered Flowers to them or as dry Chips it is the spiritual Heart that is refreshed with spiritual Songs 2. This Word must be received by Faith for it is Faith that enliveneth our Notions of things and maketh them work with us Heb. 11. 13. These all dyed in Faith not having received the Promises but having seen them afar off and were perswaded of them and embraced them and confessed that they were Strangers and Pilgrims upon the Earth our Affections follow Perswasion 1 Pet. 1. 8. Whom having not seen we love in whom though now ye see him not yet believing ye rejoyce with Ioy unspeakable and full of Glory Rom. 15. 13. Now the God of Hope fill ye with all Ioy and Peace in believing 3. This Word must be improved by Reading Hearing but especially by Meditation and Singing 1. Meditation when it is sweet and lively stirreth this Joy Delight begets Meditation and Meditation begets Delight There is a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in moral as well as natural Things Psal. 1. 2. His delight is in the Law of the Lord and in his Law doth he meditate day and night And Psal. 119. 97. Oh how love I thy Law it is my Meditation day and night And vers 15 16. I will meditate in thy Precepts and have respect unto thy ways I will delight my self in thy Statutes I will not forget thy words These follow one another Affections are not excited but by deep and pondering thoughts 2. By singing Psalms we draw forth this Delight Col. 3. 16. Let the word of God dwell in you richly in all wisdome teaching and admonishing one another in Psalms and Hymns and spiritual Songs singing with grace in your hearts to the Lord. Eph. 5. 18 19. Be not drunk with wine wherein is excess but be filled with the Spirit speaking to your selves in Psalms and Hymns and spiritual Songs singing and making melody in your heart to the Lord. Drunkards when filled with the spirit of Wine sing wanton Songs and those who are filled with the wine of the Spirit will praise God with spiritual Songs This is a Duty of importance a delightfully way of being instructed by our Refreshment God would give us strength but this is neglected or cursorily performed by Christians We will complain of the want of a Spirit in Prayer we should do so in singing coldness in this holy Exercise argueth a deadness of Faith and a coldness in true Religion We should express our Joy this way 4. Above all this Comfort is found in ready Practice and Obedience There is a Comfort I confess in Speculation but not so deep and intimate as in Practice The one is but a Tast inviting to the other which giveth us a fuller draught The bare Contemplation and view of any concerning and weighty Truth is very ravishing to those that bend their minds to Knowledge Prov. 24. 13 14. My Son eate thou honey because it is good and the honey-comb which is sweet to thy tast So shall the knowledge of Wisdome be to thy Soul Every Truth is Objectum Intellectus much more divine Truth but now in Practice the Impression is doubled We get Comfort and joy raised in our Consciences our Lives and Light do not jarre we are at full quiet in our Minds apprehending our selves to be in God's way Psal. 119. 14. I have rejoyced in the way of thy Testimonies as much as in all Riches Use 1. To shew you that the People of God need not envy the Wicked for their Delights and Pleasures they have chaster and sweeter Delights God's Statutes are their Songs Where the Heart is spiritual they can find Delight enough in the Word both as their Charter and their Rule and need not turn aside ●…o vain Mirth a portion in the Promises will yield Pleasure enough vers 111. Thy Testimonies have I taken as an heritage for ever for they are the rejoycing of my heart 2. To reprove those that reckon these things a Burthen the holy talking of Heaven and Godliness maketh worldly Men ever heavy and out of humour it is not their Delight but it should not be so with the Children of God A Child of
Life 1 Pet. 1. 23. He hath begotten us not by corruptible but incorruptible Seed c. Iames 1. 18. He hath begotten us by the word of Truth 2 Pet. 1. 4. To us are given great and precious Promises that we might be made partakers of the divine Nature John 17. 17. Sanctify them through thy Truth thy Word is Truth All this is said of the Word 't is the means to sanctify us the immortal Seed the beginning of the New life the divine Nature to make us live after a God-like manner therefore 't is better than thousands of gold and silver A Child of God findeth a greater Treasure in one Chapter of the Bible than worldly Men in all their Lands and Honours and large Revenues A poor Christian meeteth with more true Gain in a Sermon than others can in their Trades while they live God begetteth him at first by the Word of Truth and giveth him there the supply of the Spirit therefore be swift to hear much in reading and meditation day and night Oh there is the true Treasure the Pearl of price there their Souls become acquainted with God 2. It directeth us and keepeth us from being carried away with every deceit of Sin Psalm 119. 105. Thy word is a light unto my path and a lamp unto my feet Here are Directions for all Cases here is a general Direction 't is a light to our path and sheweth us what to doe in particular Actions 't is a lamp to our feet So 133 verse Order my steps in thy word and let no iniquity have dominion over me 'T is the Word prevents the reign of any one Sin To have a sure Rule to walk by in the midst of so many Snares and Temptations is a greater favour than to injoy the greatest affluence of worldly Felicity 3. It supporteth us in all our Afflictions and Extremities All the Wealth in the World composed and put together cannot yield us that true Contentment and Satisfaction which the Word of God doth to the obedient Soul Wealth cannot allay a grieved Mind nor appease a wounded Conscience The Word directeth us where we may find rest for our Souls Ier. 6. 16 Goe ask for the good old way and you shall find rest for your Souls We lose our selves in a maze of Uncertainties till we come to the Word of God Mat. 11. 28. Come unto me all you that are weary and heavy laden and you shall find rest for your Souls here is ease for the great wound and maim of Nature The great maim of Nature is Sin now where shall we have a Plaister for this Sore but onely in the Word of God So for particular Afflictions Rom. 15. 4. That ye through the patience and comfort of the Scriptures might have hope Comfort is the strengthening of the Mind or the fortifying the Mind when 't is vexed and weakened with doubts fears and sorrows I had fainted in my Affliction unless thy word had quickened me Psalm 119. 50. The Comforts of the World appear and vanish in a moment cannot firmly stay and revive the Heart every blast of Temptation scattereth them Philosophy and natural Reason cannot give us true ground of Comfort that was it they aimed at how to fortify the Soul and keep it quiet notwithstanding Troubles in the Flesh but as they never understood the true ground of Misery which is Sin so neither the true ground of Comfort which is Christ. That which Man offereth cannot come with such power and authority upon the Conscience as that which God offereth and bare Reason cannot have such an efficacy as divine Testimony and the Law of God's Mouth This Moonlight rotteth before it ripeneth Fruits but the Word acquainteth us with Christ who is the Foundation of Comfort with the Spirit who is the efficient cause of Comfort with the promise of Heaven which is the true matter of Comfort with Faith the great Instrument to receive it 3. Let us look to the Duration there is a vanity and uncertainty in all these outward things they soon take the wing and leave us in sorrow If they continue with us till death then they have done all their work Wealth may bring you to the Grave but it can stead you no farther then Wealth is gone but Horrour doth continue Luke 16. 24. Son in thy life time thou enjoyedst thy good things these good things are onely commensurate with Life Sometimes they do not last so long but when we must leave the World and lanch out to those unknown Regions Iob 27. 8. how miserable shall we be Worldly Comforts will fail us when we have most need of them as Ionah's Gourd when the Sun scorched him So in the hour of Death what will Bags of Gold doe then but now on the other side Wisdome is better than Gold and Silver because with her are durable Riches and Righteousness Prov. 8. 18 19. therefore my fruit is better than gold yea than fine gold and my revenue than choise silver If a man would labour for any thing labour for that which is Eternal Iohn 6. 27. No Treasure can be compared to eternal Life and this the Word assureth us of II. Let us now come to examine why the Children of God value it so 1. Because they are enlightned by the Spirit when others have their Eyes dazzled with an external splendour and their Judgment is corrupted by their Senses 'T is not Ignorance undoes the World so much as want of spiritual Prudence spiritual and heavenly Things can onely be seen in the light of the Spirit without which we can neither discern the truth or worth of them in order to choice 1 Cor. 2. 14. The natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit and therefore till we have this illuminating and sanctifying Light of the Spirit we shall not make a good Choise for our selves Eph. 1. 17 18. The Apostle prayeth That the Lord would give you the spirit of Wisdome and Revelation The eyes of your Understanding being inlightened that ye may know what is the hope of his Calling and the riches of the glory of his Inheritance in the Saints That saving Knowledge of divine Mysteries which causeth us to prefer and choose them above other things comes from the spirit of Wisdome and Revelation otherwise in seeing we see not There is a perfect contradiction many times between speculative and practical Knowledge the common Wisdome and Knowledge of divine Mysteries is a Gift that cometh from the Spirit much more this spiritual discerning 2. They are affected with their true Necessities Our real Necessities are the Necessities of the Soul bodily wants are more urging and pressing upon us but these are more dangerous therefore Gold and Silver which supplieth our bodily Necessities is not so welcome to them as the Law of God's Mouth which provideth a remedy for their Soul defects How to be justified how sanctified is more than what shall we eat and drink and wherewith shall we be cloathed
usually Soul-necessities are overlooked We regard them not or conceit we are well already Rev. 3. 17. Thou thoughtest thou wast rich and increased with goods and hadst need of nothing and then we have no relish for the offered Remedy The Word of God is the offered Remedy to repair our collapsed State The Gospel is not onely true but worthy to be imbrac'd 1 Tim. 1. 15. but who will imbrace it but the sensible Sinner for 't is offered as a Remedy to the Sick and Deliverance to the Captive 't is not enough to see the Excellency of things but we must see our Necessity of them There are two hinderances that prejudice our Salvation Either the Necessity and Excellency of the Gospel is not considered or the Truth and Reality of it is not believed 3. They measure all things with respect not to this World but the World to come 'T is an high point of Religion to doe all things and regard all things for eternal Ends 2 Cor. 4. 18. Looking not to things seen that are temporal but to the things which are not seen which are eternal Making this our scope and doing all to this end Gold and Silver are the most valuable things in the World what cannot Gold and Silver buy in this World but there is another World and Believers look to things unseen Within a while it will not be a pin to choose whether we have injoyed much or little of this World 's good things but much will lie upon this whether we have obeyed God and glorified God and accepted of Christ. The use of Gold and Silver ceaseth in the World to come these things are not currant in Canaan nor accounted of in our heavenly Country therefore Money should be a vile thing instead of Grace we can carry away none of these things with us when we die Eccles. 5. 15. And surely that which hath no power to free us from Death to comfort us in Death or goe with us into another World after Death is no Happiness or solid Tranquillity 4. They have had trial and experience of the Word what a Comfort and Support it hath been to them 1 Pet. 2. 2 3. As new-born babes desire the sincere milk of the word that ye may grow thereby If so be ye have tasted that the Lord is gracious There is an Appetite followeth the New nature and makes us desire spiritual Food Phil. 1. 9 10. And this I pray that ye may abound in all knowledge and in all Iudgment That we may approve the things that are excellent When the Spirit giveth us a tast of the goodness of those things offered in the Word of God a tast of divine Truth in our Souls when we find these Comforts verified in us then we come to approve the things that are Excellent above all other things Psalm 119. 11. Thy word have I hid in my heart that I might not sin against thee We never know the worth of the Word till we come to make trial of it by Practice and Experience The pleasure of the Word we find in practice and the comfort and support of it in deep Afflictions 't is not so with the World try it and loath it 't is more in fancy than fruition because the Imperfections which formerly lay hid are discovered but the more intimately acquainted with the Word of God the more we prize it we see there is more to be gained there than in all the World besides Use 1. Is to reprove and disprove those that prefer Gold and Silver before the Word of God this is done by four sorts 1. This is grossly done by those that revolt from the profession of the Truth for the World's sake 2 Tim. 4. 10. Demas hath forsaken us and embrac'd the present world that betray the cause of Religion as Iudas sold his Master for thirty pieces of Silver or by those who will transgress for a small hire the Devil needeth not offer great things to them when they will accept of less with thanks for two pence or three pence gain will profane the Sabbath or wrong their Neighbour Is the Law of God's Mouth dearer to them than Gold and Silver surely no they may flatter themselves with love to the Word but when they can violate it for a Trifle for a pair of Shoos 't is a sign that a little gain gotten by iniquity of Traffick is sweeter to them than all the Comforts of the Promise 2. 'T is done by them that will not forsake any thing for the Word's sake but when they are put upon an apparant Trial here is Gold and Silver and there the Law of God's Mouth what will you doe obey God or comply with your Interests you shew your Love by leaving the one rather than the other as Moses counted the reproach of Christ better treasure than the riches of Egypt Heb. 11. 26. Christ's worst is better than the World 's best The Thessalonians shewed their Love when they received the Word in much Affliction but when you decline Duty and are loth to hazzard your Interests 't is evident what you prefer To some this may be a daily Temptation If I should be conscionable in my Calling I should be poor keep touch and honesty in all things it would turn to my loss How many are discouraged from the Ways of God and discharging a good Conscience by Inconveniency 3. This is also in part done by them who turn back upon the Word and Ordinances of God for gains sake and fix their residence there where they can neither enjoy God nor his People nor the Comfort of his Ordinances as Merchants who remove for Traffick and settle their abode there where the true Religion is not professed it may be suppressed with extremity of rigour especially when they send Youth thither and Novices and Persons not grounded in the Faith This is like turning a Child loose among a company of contagious Persons or setting an empty Pitcher to crack before the fire Commerce and Traffick with Infidels or Persons of a false Religion is lawfull but to make our constant Residence where there is no Liberty for reading and hearing the Word of God no Liberty of Worship and Ordinances cannot be excused from Sin You make Religion to stoop to Gain I will not urge so high and heroical an Instance as Moses Heb. 11. 25. Choosing rather to suffer afflictions with the people of God than injoy the pleasures of sin for a season but of a Iew since the time of their Degeneration I have once and again read of one Rabbi Ioseph who being allured with the hope and call to a place of great gain to teach Hebrew where there was no Synagogue is said to have brought forth this Scripture for his Answer and Excuse The Law of thy Mouth is better to me than thousands of gold and silver let us Christians remember it and consider the pertinency of it 4. 'T is more refinedly done by them who by earthly
of them Credit and honour before the world what is more uncertain than the Peoples affections They that cry Hosanna to day will cry Crucifie him to morrow Pleasures they are gone as soon as they come and when they are gone they are as a thing of nought but that they leave a sting in the conscience and a sadness in the heart Riches take wings and flie away Prov. 23. 5. You can be no more confident of them than of a Flock of wild Fowl that pitcheth in your Field Honour is soon gone Haman is one day high in favor the next day high upon the Gallows Strength and Beauty are soon assaulted by diseases 't will be matter of sense better believe it than try it then it will prevent a great deal of vexation and the shame of disappointment Seldom doth a Man act the same part in the world for a year together now joyful anon sad now children then none now married anon in a widowhood condition 'T is much in the desire and thoughts of natural men to have a perpetual enjoyment of this life and the comforts of it but it will never be they perish and we must dye and when we are gone our glory will not be remembred Solomon recordeth his experience of the vanity of all earthly things O! that we would believe it without trying conclusions you that are so eager after the world what will you think of it when 't is parting from you or you from it will they then be found to be such excellent things as you once deem'd them to be O no! at last you must come to this I have seen an end of all perfection and then you will say O how hath the world deceived me I have laboured for nought Secondly I have seen that is with a spiritual eye this should be observed and improved by faith Many are sensible of the vanity of the creature but are not a jot the wiser Psal. 49. 13. This their way is their folly yet their posterity approve their sayings They are sensible of the folly of their Ancestors but yet do not mend by it We should not only see with our eyes but understand with our hearts When the wise man went by the field of the Sluggard he saw it overgrown with Thorns and Nettles and the stone-wall thereof broken down Prov. 24. 32. I saw it and considered it well I looked upon it and received instruction We should profit by every thing In this sense we may gather Figs of Thistles and Grapes of Thorns especially should we observe the vanity of all sublunary things Eccles. 7. 2. 'T is better to go to the house of mourning than to the house of feasting for this is the end of all men and the living will lay it to heart We should make a good use of these occasions a man seeth his own end in the end of others and by their death is admonished of his own frailty and mortality 't is a sad sign when this is not considered Isa. 42. 25. Yet he laid it not to heart Isa. 26. 11. Lord when thy hand is lifted up they will not see but they shall see They shall be forced to take notice of what now they will not when God's hand is upon them to their utter confusion Thirdly I have seen Happy they that have such eyes but alas there is a great deal of difference between the sight of the senses and the sight of the understanding when we see things with our eyes there is a natural blindness or brutishness or a vail upon our hearts that we mind them not Men have eyes to see but they have not an heart to see So God complains Ier. 5. 21. They have eyes and see not ears and hear not So Deut. 29. 3 4. The great temptations which thine eyes have seen and the signs and those great miracles Tet the Lord hath not given you an heart to perceive and eyes to see and ears to hear unto this day So Isa. 6. 9 10. And he said go and tell this People hear ye indeed but understand not and see ye indeed but perceive not Make the heart of this people fat and make their ears heavy and shut their eyes lest they see with their eyes and hear with their ears Though things be never so plainly delivered so powerfully pressed so apparently verified and so they see and hear and receive no more benefit than if they had never heard nor seen it God witholding and withdrawing the efficacy of his spirit whereby it might be beneficial to them for good So Isa. 42. 20. Seeing things but thou observest not opening the ears but thou hearest not They see the wonderful works of God but do not consider them as wise people ought to do Isa. 1. 3. The Oxe knoweth his owner and the Ass his Masters crib but Israel doth not know My people doth not consider Ezek. 12. 2. Thou dwellest in the middest of a rebellious house which have eyes to see and see not they have ears to hear and hear not That is they make no use of them but strive and endeavour to put it out of their minds So Iohn 9. 39 40 41. And Iesus said for judgment I am come into this world that they which see not might see and they that see might be made blind And some of the Pharises which were with him heard these words and said unto him are we blind also Iesus said unto them if ye were blind ye should have no sin but now ye say we see your sin remaineth There is a great deal of difference between the sight of believers and unbelievers the one sees with an understanding heart the other without it In the one there is a free ready and sincere use of their disciplinable senses that they may learn his word and walk in his ways that they may profit in the knowledge of God and so get understanding and spiritual prudence The other are brutish ignorant or idle negligent and forgetful they shut their eyes and their ears are uncircumcised and so they know not what they know The causes of this are first non-attendency or inadvertency prejudicate opinions and rooted lusts hinder their profiting Look as the Sun Moon and Stars though they move with a most swift and rapid motion seem to a vulgar eye to stand still or at least to move very slowly So these sublunary things though they are always passing yet the inward thought of worldlings is that they shall endure for ever Oh labour then for this spiritual and heart affecting sight If a man could behold this world in the light of a divine knowledge he would find it to be but a vanishing shadow Though the vanity of the creature be a plain truth and taught by daily experience and is easily and commonly acknowledged yet it is not easie to make this truth have a deep impression upon the hearts of men They are naturally unwilling to admit thoughts of a change Amos 6. 2. because
then 't is broad for its duration and continuance First 'T is broad for use A Man may soon see to the bottom of the Creatures but the wisdom and purity and utility of the Word of God and the Mysteries therein contained and the spiritual Estate that we have thereby you cannot see to the end of that it extendeth to all times places persons actions and circumstances of actions it hath an unconceivable vastness of purity and spirituality But you will say there is a set number of Precepts how say you then 't is exceeding broad Their use is large and 't is here put for the whole Word of God Adoro plenitudinem Scripturarum tuarum saith Tertullian Here are Remedies for every malady and a plentiful Storehouse of all comforts satisfaction to every doubt nothing pertaining to the holiness and happiness of Man is wanting nothing requisiter to direct comfort and support men in all conditions prosperity adversity health sickness life death what shall I say 'T is the Word that sanctifies all our comforts 1 Tim. 4. 5. 'T is the Word that maintaineth our lives Mat. 4. 4. 'T is the Word that fitteth us to an immortal being 1 Pet. 1. 23. We cannot easily express the comprehensiveness of it and the benefit that we have by it When all earthly things fail the Word will be a sure Comforter and Counsellor to us it doth not only tell us what we should do but what we shall be In short the Word of God describeth the whole state of the Church and the world and what shall become of it in the world to come There is a foolish curiosity that possesseth many in the world who desire to know their destiny and what is in the womb of futurity as the King of Babylon stood upon the head ways to make divination Now let this curiosity be turned to some profitable use nothing deserves to be known so much as this what shall become of us to all Eternity If the question were Shall I be rich or poor happy or miserable in this world it were not of such great moment for these distinctions do not out-live time but the question is of great moment Whether I shall be eternally miserable or eternally happy 'T is a foolish curiosity to know our earthly state the misery of which cannot be prevented by our prudence or foresight but it concerneth much to know whether we are in a damnable or saveable condition while we have time to remedy our case and this the Word of God will inform you of assuredly Well the Commandment is exceeding broad This is the Word that discovereth to you the nature of God and the holy Angels the souls of men the state of the world to come who is the Author of Scripture God thy Commandments the matter of Scripture God 't was not fit that any should write of God but God himself What is the end of this Word God Why was this Word written but that we might everlastingly enjoy the blessed God As Caesar wrote his own Commentaries so God when there was none above him of whom he could write he wrote of himself by Histories Laws Prophesies and Promises and many other Doctrines hath he set himself forth to be the Creator Preserver Deliverer and Glorifier of Mankind and all this is done in a perfect manner Men mingle their imperfections with their Writings though holy and laudable for their names yet they discover themselves in all they do their words and speeches are never so perfect but there is something wanting and here you can find nothing but God here God hath written a Book whose works are perfect nothing can be added nothing taken away To say there is an idle word in Scripture is great blasphemy saith Basil. We have no reason to run to humane inventions for the Word prescribeth every duty every thing that is to be believed and done in order to salvation Open the Gap once and there is no end one brings in one thing and then another and from hence comes all the Ceremonies that do abound in the Church 't is not only most perfect but most profitable and containeth all kind of learning Common Crafts will teach us how to get our Bread but this how to get the Kingdom of Heaven Law preserveth Estates the Testament of Men this the Testament of God the Charter of our inheritance Physick cureth diseases of the body this afflicted minds and distempered hearts Natural Philosophy raiseth Men to the contemplation of the Stars but this to the contemplation of God their Maker By History we come to know of the rise and ruine of Kingdoms States and Cities by this the Creation and Consummation of the world Rhetorick serves to move affection this to kindle divine love ●…oetry causeth natural delight this delight in God no writing like this Secondly As it hath a breadth for use so for duration and continuance 't is the eternal truth of God that shall live for ever Mat. 5. 18. Heaven and earth shall pass away but not one jot or tittle of the law shall fail So Mat. 24. 35. Heaven and earth shall pass away but thy Word shall not pass away But how doth the Word continue for ever Not the Word it self but 1. The Obligation and Authority of the Word continueth for ever 't is an eternal Rule of Faith and Righteousness to the Church that 's more stable than Heaven and Earth Let me shew you how the Doctrine is perpetual The original draught is in God himself the substance and matter of the Moral Law is perpetual viz. namely the perfect love of God and of our Neighbor but the form is not we shall have no need of precepts and prohibition and promises and threatnings in the light of Glory which we have need of in the light of Grace Fierce Horses need a Bridle and there is other kind of Discipline for Children when grown up than when young When they are young we correct their bodies but when they are grown up we correct and punish them by disinheritance The Prop is removed when the thing standeth fast upon its own Basis when we come to Heaven we have intuitive apprehensive knowledge we shall have no other Bible but the Lamb's face many things that are necessary by the way are not necessary when Faith is changed into Vision and Hope into Fruition Scripture is necessary as letters to the Spouse from her Beloved while absent when present there is no such need We need not a Bond when payment is made so Scripture is the Indenture between us and God here but when that is past we shall not need Scripture 2. 'T is eternal in the ●…ruit it bringeth forth the blessing of eternal life to them that keep it and obey it 2d Epistle of Iohn chap. 2. For the truths sake that dwelleth in us and shall be in us for ever So Iohn 8. 51. He that believeth in me shall never see death Why holy men dye as well
Word yea such an hearty affection as cannot easily be exprest 2. They that love the Word will be meditating therein continually It is my meditation all the day Doct. 1. That God's People have a great love to his Word yea such an hearty affection as cannot easily be exprest I will evidence that by two Considerations 1. The Word deserves this love 2. The Saints are ready to yield it 1. First The Word deserves it in respect of the Author the Matter and the Use in all these respects is the Word of God lovely First For the Author 't is God's Word and they love it for the Author's sake the signification of his mind as a Letter from a beloved Friend is very welcom to us Aristotle in his Rhetoricks mentioning the cause of delight saith thus They that love much when they are speaking of what they love or when they hear any thing of the party beloved or receive any thing from them it is a mighty delight and pleasure to them So it is in this spiritual love the Word is God's Epistle and Love-letter to our souls therefore for his sake it is the more welcome to us And upon this ground God complains of it that when he had written the great things of his Law to a People they were neglected and slighted and counted a strange thing Hos. 8. 12. I have written God is the Author whosoever is the Penman The Scriptures are a writing from him to us Now for us to be strangers to it and little conversant about it argues some contempt of God as to slight a Letter of a Friend shews little esteem of the Writer O the Saints they put it into their bosoms and it gains upon their hearts why it is God's Epistle it is my best Friend's Letter This is certain love God and you love his Law for the Author's sake it will be dear and precious to you Secondly The Saints have such a strong love to the Word of God because of the Matter in it revealed for it hath all the properties of a thing to be beloved 't is true good profound and full of depth and mysteries What would you desire in a doctrine to draw your hearts to it Truth goodness and profoundness of knowledge 1. If certainty of truth will draw love 't is to be found in the holy Scriptures for they are vouched by God himself to be true Psal. 19. 9. The judgments of the Lord are true and righteous altogether And the Gospel is called the Word of truth Ephes. 1. 13. After ye had received the Word of truth the Gospel of your salvation And Iohn 17. 17. Sanctifie them by thy truth thy Word is truth To improve these places thus Truth is the good of the understanding and without the knowledge of which we can have no tranquility of mind Now of all truths this is the chiefest it is not humane natural or inferior truth but a supreme divine truth ratified by God's authority such as nature could never have found out yea such a truth as carries its own evidence with it and shews how it comes from God and discovers itself to be of God As the Sun is seen by its own beams so the Word of God needs no other testimony than itself to commend its self to the Consciences of Men. Certainly it is such a truth as doth sufficiently evidence itself to be of God all God's works discover their Author and carry about with them their own demonstration not only his greater works upon which he hath imprest most of his wisdom and power but even his lesser works every worm and pile of grass shews who made it To an attentive and discerning eye a Man cannot look upon a Worm or consider a Gnat or any contemptible Creature but he shall see this was made by a wise God God hath left his stamp upon every one of his works and certainly upon his Word much more For he hath magnified his Word above all his Name Psal. 138. 2. There 's a more-clear discovery of the goodness wisdom and power of God than can be in any of his works for upon this he hath laid forth all the riches of his wisdom and goodness Therefore if there be in all creatures and works of God a self-evidencing light to discover their Author and that invisible Godhead and power by which they were made certainly there is somewhat in the Word of God to discover its Author because of this objective evidence which it hath in itself it is more sure than an Oracle or voice from Heaven 2 Pet. 1. 19. We have also a more sure word of prophecy more sure than what than that voice which he heard from Heaven This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased This was a confirmation indeed you will think and yet Peter that heard that voice telleth us that comparatively we have greater security from and by the Word of God not more sure in its self but as it is given in evidence to us so we have a more sure Word of prophecy A transient voice is more easily mistaken and forgotten than a standing authentique Record therefore we have a more sure ground to rest upon than ever hath been or can be given to sinners subject to forgetfulness jealousies and mistakes A voice from Heaven speaking to us by name might more easily be suspected to be anothers than the Lord's voice as when God called Samuel he suspected that it was the voice of Eli therefore an Oracle cannot be so sure safe and self-evidencing as this Word of God that he hath commended to us For if God should speak to us still from Heaven how should we be able to distinguish it from delusion or to know it was a voice from God Might not Satan cause a voice to be heard in the Air and deceive us Indeed the holy Men of God that immediately received those Voices and Oracles were certified that it was of God because there was some divine evidence which did accompany the Revelation and if there be the same impressions of God upon the written Word we have as much certainty as they yea more as we view the whole Revelation of God together and more deliberately consider the character and signature of God that is stampt upon it In short the Word when preached by Christ himself in person came in upon the hearts of men chiefly by this self evidencing light therefore it is said of Christ Mat. 7. 29. That he taught them as one having authority and not as the Scribes His Hearers were convinced of a Sovereign Majesty in his Speech proper to the Divinity of his Person and when the Officers were sent to apprehend him there was such an evidence in his Doctrine that they cryed out Never man spake like this man John 7. 46. And still there is the same evidence in his Doctrine written for the voice could add nothing to it and the writing can take nothing from it The voice is but
sin to them Paul saith Rom. 7. 12. The Law is holy and the Commandment holy and just and good What 's the meaning of this disjunctive the Law and the Commandment By the commandment he means that particular Law which had so strangely affect-ed him that had wrought such tragical effects upon his heart made sin revive disturbed him discovered himself to himself he loves that law which broke in upon his heart with so much power and evidence and stir'd up his affections Carnal men love the comfortable part of the word to be feasted with priviledges but that part which urgeth them to unpleasing duties or discovers their sins they love not 1 Kings 22. 8. He doth not prophesie good concerning me but evil therefore I will not hear him Though he was a Prophet of the Lord and came with the word of the Lord yet he never prophesied good to me that is such things as did please him Do you think that was the temper of that wicked King alone no it is the temper of every wicked man's heart Amos 5. 10. They hate him that rebuketh in the gate and they abhor him that speaketh uprightly All wicked men have such a disposition they hate that part of the Word which doth stir up their fears revive their doubts and is contrary to their lusts Iohn 3. 20. It 's their general disposition Every one that doth evil hateth the light neither cometh to the light lest his deeds should be reproved They shun that part of the Word whereby they might come to know themselves either they could wish such things were not sins or that they did not know them to be sins 2 Pet. 3. 5. For this they willingly are ignorant of A guilty soul hath a secret enmity to the word of God being loth to read his own doom there and be much occupied and employed in that which condemns and accuseth him as a man that hath light ware is loth to come to the ballance or a man that hath counterfeit coin is loth to come to the touchstone so they are loth to come too close and near the word of God that their whole course may be discovered to themselves None but a pure sincere heart can have such an universal Love to God's Law 4. If you love the word you will ever love the Word for the same reasons that drew your heart at first continues still Psal. 119. 20. My soul breaketh for the longing that it hath unto thy judgments at all times By Judgments is meant the word of God which is the rule of God's proceeding with sinners It was not for a pang only that he had that strong and vehement affection but it was a constant thing at all times it was the ordinary frame of his heart Many men have good affections for a while but they abide not with them For some have an adulterous affection only they may love the word of God while it is new for novelty sake Iohn 5. 35. Ye rejoyced for a season in his Light And Act. 17. 20. They flocked about Paul because he seemed to be a setter forth of new Doctrine This is but carnal love that is soon altered or else it may be they have some love to the Word during some qualme of Conscience and they may find some savour in it when they have a little trouble upon them as we desire strong water in a pang not as a constant dyet When they are under some working of Conscience then they run to the word but as soon as they can lick themselves whole again they slight it and their love to the word is gone As their trouble wears off so their affection is worn off These are driven by fearing the word and not by the love of it For a great while men are carryed on pleasingly in their love to the word but when it grates hard bears hard upon Conscience and meets with their lusts then they go away in discontent As Herod heard Iohn gladly for a while Mark 6. 20. until his Herodias was touched and then follows his darling sin again Their Love is to the word if carnal credit accompany it as Iohn was welcome to the Jews until he fell under Herod's displeasure The stony-ground received the word with much joy until the Sun arose with a burning heat Matth. 13. There are certain times when it is a credit to be religious and when the Gospel is befriended in the world then men will have some seeming affection but it dies away God's Children love the word for its own sake therefore they ever love it They which love the truth for foreign reasons because of novelty merely out of present necessity publick Countenance because it is in fashion and repute or because they thought the word would flatter them more in their sins than it doth these do not love the word Thus David's affection is asserted Secondly VVe have David's assertion demonstrated It is my meditation all the day Doct. 2. They that love the Word will be meditating therein continually There are two Grounds for this Love causeth it and Love is encreased by it 1. Love causeth it We are continually thinking of whatsoever we love Rich men that affect worldly things are always thinking of gathering substance and encreasing their worldly portion as that man Luk. 12. 17 18. was dialoguising and discoursing with himself Carnal Lovers are thinking of that they love and ambitious men are feasting their souls with imaginations and suppositions of worldly greatness pleasing themselves by framing Images in their minds and Warriers are thinking of battels and wars and Voluptuaries are thinking of sports and pastimes and a Child of God is thinking of holy things Love causes the soul to be more where it loves than where it lives it 's the best entertainment they can find for themselves to frame Images of things loved in their minds 2. As Love begets meditation so meditation cherishes love Meditation is the life of all the means of grace and that which makes them fruitful to our souls What 's the reason there is so much preaching and so little practice for want of meditation Constant thoughts are operative If a Hen straggleth out from he nest she brings forth nothing her Eggs chill so when we do not set a brood upon holy thoughts if we content our selves with some few transient thoughts and glances about divine things and do not dwell upon them the truth is suddenly put off and doth no good All actions require time and space for their operation if hastily slubber'd over they cool if we give them time and space we shall feel their effects So if we hold truths in our mind and dwell upon them there will be an answerable impression but when they come like a flash of lightning then they are gone and we run them over cursorily That truth may work there is required three things sound belief serious consideration and close application Iob 5. 27. Lo this we have searched
honey There was somewhat of Prophetical Vision in these things but generally it is carried not an outward and literal eating but a spiritual taste relishing the sweetness of it Well then the Word must not only be read and heard but eaten What 's this spiritual eating of the Word Three things are in it and all make way for this taste 1 Sound Belief 2 Serious Consideration 3 Close Application He that would have a taste of spiritual things these three things are necessary 1. That there be a sound Belief of it Men have not taste because they have not faith we cannot be affected with what we do not believe Heb. 4. 2. The Word profited not not being mixed with faith in them that heard it What 's the reason Men have no taste in the doctrine of God and in the free offers of his grace It is not mingled with faith and then it wants one necessary Ingredient towards this taste So 1 Thes. 2. 13. Te received the Word of God which effectually worketh also in you that believe If you would have spiritual sense Faith makes way for it we must take the Word as the Word of God When we read in feigned Stories of inchanted Castles and golden Mountains they affect us not because we know they are but witty Fictions pleasant Fables or idle Dreams and such Atheism and Unbelief lies in the hearts of men against the very Scriptures and therefore the Apostle seeks to obviate and take off this 2 Pet. 1. 16. We have not followed cunningly devised fables intimating there is such a thought in man's heart Certainly if men did believe the mystery that is without controversie great that God hath indeed sent his Son to redeem the world and would indeed bestow Heaven and eternal happiness upon them they would have a greater taste but they hear of these things as a Dream of Mountains of Gold or Rubies falling from the Clouds If they did believe these glorious things of Eternity their hearts would be ravish'd with them 2. As Faith is necessary so serious Consideration by which we concoct Truth and chew them and work them upon the heart that causeth this sweetness by knocking on the Flint the sparks flie out those ponderous and deep inculcative thoughts of divine and heavenly things makes us taste a sweetness in them When we look slightly and superficially into the Word no wonder we do not find this comfort and sweetness but when we dig deeply into the Mines of the Word and work out truths by serious thoughts and search for wisdom when we come to see truth with our own eyes in its full nature order and dependance this is that which gets this taste Prov. 24. 13 14. My son eat thou honey because it is good and the honey comb which is sweet to thy taste So shall the knowledge of wisdom be unto thy soul when thou hast found it When men are serious look into the nature and see all truths in their order and dependance then they will be like honey and the honey comb this makes way for this sweet taste 3. There is necessary to this taste close Application For the nearer and closer things touch one another the greater their efficacy so the more close you set the Word home upon your own hearts the more it works Iob 5. 27. Know it for thy good break out thy portion of the bread of life look upon these promises and offers of grace as including thee these commands speaking to thee and these threatnings as concerning thee look upon it not only as God's Message in common but urge it upon thy soul. Ier. 15. 16. It was unto me the rejoicing of my heart There must be a particular application of these things These things are necessary to this taste with respect to the Object as there must be eating a taking into the mouth if we would taste so th●…e must be a digesting or working upon the Word by sound Belief serious Consideration close Application 2. As to this taste there is somewhat necessary as to the Soul or Faculty we must have a Palate qualifi'd for these delicates Now there 's a double qualification necessary to this taste an hungry Conscience and mortifi'd Affections 1. An hungry Conscience Without this a Man hath a secret loathing of this spiritual food his taste is benummed but to an hungry Conscience the Word is sweet when he is kept in a constant hungring after Christ and his Grace Prov. 27. 7. The full soul loatheth the honey comb but to the hungry soul every bitter thing is sweet Cordials they are nauseous things to a full stomach O but how reviving comfortable and sweet are they to a poor broken heart The first time that we got this taste it was when we were under the stings of a guilty Conscience then God came and tender'd his grace to us in Christ he sent a Messenger one of a thousand to tell us he fiath found a ransom and that we shall be deliver'd from going down into the Pit that he will spare us and do us good in Christ Jesus then the man's flesh recovers again like a child's Iob 33. 23. When men have felt the stings of the second death and God comes with a sentence of life and peace by Christ how sweet is it then Now though we have not always a wounded Conscience yet we must always have a tender Conscience always sensible of the need of Gospel support we came to this first relish of the doctrine of eternal life and salvation by Christ when we lay under the sentence of eternal death 2. The heart must be purged from carnal affections for until we lose our fleshly savor we cannot have this spiritual taste Rom. 8. 5. They that are after the flesh do savor the things of the flesh the word may be translated so A carnal heart relishes nothing but carnal things worldly pleasures worldly delights now this doth exceedingly deaden your spiritual taste Spiritual taste is a delicate thing therefore the heart must be purged from fleshly lusts for when fleshly lusts bear sway and doth relish the garlick and onions and flesh pots of Egypt your affections will carry you elsewhere to the vanities of the world and contentments of the flesh Look as sick men have lost their taste and that which is sweet seems sowr and ungreateful to a distemper'd appetite so a carnal appetite hath not this taste from the Word of God to a carnal heart it 's no more savory than the white of an Egg yea it is as gall to them but now to others it is exceeding sweet it is their joy the life of their souls Well then you see what is this spiritual taste that relish which a renewed soul hath for spiritual comforts Use. To persuade you to get this taste and when once you have got it take heed you do not lose it 1 It concerns you very much to get this taste take these Arguments 1. It is a
are not to be charged upon the Gardener but the envivious man but if the Gardener lets them lye there and root there then it is his fault Use 2. Do we love the Law of God Do we aim at a compleat and intire subjection to the Will of God Do we desire to serve him in spirit Here 's the evidence do we hate vain thoughts We cannot be free from them but are they your burthen A Child of God is pestered with them though he hates them 1. Do we give them entertainment Ier. 4. 23. How long shall vain thoughts lodge within thee They may rush into a gracious heart but they do not rest there Wicked men may have good thoughts but do not give them entertainment take a snatch and away but do not make a meal upon any spiritual truth there is an occasional salute sometimes in wicked men of good things but their heart doth not dwell upon them 2. Do you make conscience of them Do they put you upon remorse caution watchfulness frequent recourse to God for pardon and Grace Acts 8. 22. Pray if perhaps the thoughts of thine heart may be forgiven thee Are you humbled for them as well as for other sins because these grieve the Spirit of God are conceived there where he hath his residence chiefly in the heart Doth this trouble you that the Spirit should be grieved Use 3. It presseth us to take care of our thoughts Thoughts fall under the Judicature of God's Word Heb. 4. 12. Thoughts are hateful to God The thoughts of the wicked are an abomination to the Lord Prov. 15. 26. And as they are hated of him so he knows them all it is his Prerogative to tell man his thoughts he understands our thoughts afar off Psal. 139. 2. What thoughts we have when we are walking praying employ'd in our Calling what comes in what goes out there is not a thought but God regards and God will reckon with us about our thoughts 1. Look more earnestly after a Principle of Regeneration Rom. 8. 5. They that are after the flesh employ their wisdom about the flesh they are contriving for the flesh savouring the things of the flesh and they that are after the Spirit savour the things of God savour spiritual things We must be renewed by the Spirit The ground brings forth weeds but not flowers of it self so our hearts naturally bring forth vain thoughts but they must be cultivated and drest we must be renewed in the spirit of our mind There is nothing discovers the necessity of Regeneration so much as this That we must take care of our thoughts Moral restraints may prevent the excesses of life or regulate the outward man If sin did lye only in words and deeds humane Laws and Edicts would be enough and we needed no other discipline to bring us to Heaven There are excellent Laws for bridling mans speech and practice for these things man can take notice of but he that is only good according to the Laws of men his goodness is too narrow is not broad enough for God It is the peculiar priviledge of that Judicature God hath set up to bring the thoughts under Look that there may be within you a spring of holy thoughts 2. Get a stock of sound knowledge The mind of man is always working and if it be not fed and supplied with good matter it works upon that which is evil and vain If there be not a plenty of good matter wherein to exercise your selves the Soul will necessarily spend it self in vanity of thoughts Now abundance of knowledge supplies and yields matter It is a good thing when our Reins instruct us in the night season Psal. 6. 7. in the darkness and silence of the night when we are taken off from all company books worldly employment and distractions of sense and the soul is left to it self to its own operations then to draw out knowledge and have our reins instruct us But men are barren of holy thoughts and so are forced to give way to vanity Deut. 6. 6 7. Bind them upon thy heart What then When thou awakest it shall talk with thee that is as soon as you awake before you have received images from abroad a man is to parly with his soul about the course of his service that day Words and thoughts are both fed by abundance in the heart Thoughts are but verba mentis words of the mind and words are but thoughts express'd and languag'd Now if a man would have these things present when he is lying down and sitting up then these words must be in his heart A man must have a good treasure within that he may bring forth out of his treasure things both new and old Mat. 13. 52. When the mind is the Store-house of truth he will ever be drawing forth upon all occasions He that hath more Silver and Gold in his pocket than brass Farthings brings forth Gold and Silver oftener than Brass so he that is stored with Divine Truths and full of the knowledge of the Lord his mind will more run upon these things and will often out of the treasure of his heart bring forth things that are good 3. Enure your selves more to holy meditation There must be some time to winde up the Plummets and lift up our hearts to God Psal. 25. 1. For want of this no wonder if mens thoughts are loose and scattered when they are left at randome when they are never solemnly exercised in consideration of Divine Truths verse 99. of this Psalm 4. Begin with God Psal. 139. 8. When I awake saith David I am still with thee As soon as we awake our hearts should be in Heaven we should leave our hearts with God over night that we might find them with God in the morning We owe God the first-fruits of our reason before we think of other things for every day is but the lesser circle of our lives We should begin with God before earthly things incroach upon us season your hearts with the thoughts of his holy Presence that 's the means to make the fear of God abide upon us all the day after and it is some recompence for those hours spent in sleep wherein we shewed not the least act of thankfulness to God to exercise our reason again and when we are awake we should be thinking of God SERMON CXXV PSAL. CXIX VER 114. Thou art my hiding place and my shield I hope in thy word IN these words you have 1. A priviledge which Believers enjoy in God and that is protection in a time of danger 2. David's right to that priviledge I hope in thy word From both the Note will be this Doct. They that hope in Gods word for the protection which he hath promised will find God to be a shield and a hiding place to them I. I shall speak Of the nature of Divine protection as it is here set forth under the notions of a shield and hiding place II. Of
servants they are they do nothing but what their master commandeth and what he commandeth they see reason to obey Second Branch Give me understanding that I may know thy testimonies This is subjoined to the former Plea First Because David would not be a servant in name and title only but in deed and in truth and therefore would fain know his duty Secondly To shew the difference between Gods servants and the servants of other Lords who command us Prov. 14. 25. The Kings favour is towards a wise servant they see them wise find them wise and then love them but God must begin with us his favour maketh us wise Doctr. Gods best Servants think they can never enough beg Divine illumination David doth often enforce this request Reasons 1. Our blindness in the matters of God is a great part of our spiritual misery Ephes. 5. 8. Ye were sometimes darkness There is a Veil lying upon our hearts not easily removed and taken away All the mischief introduced by the Fall is not cured at once but by degrees as spiritual strength encreaseth we grow up into it so spiritual light The maim of the understanding as well as the will is not wholly cured till we come to Heaven for here we know but in part till God give us understanding we are utterly blind the best of Gods servants have cause to acknowledge it in themselves the remnants of ignorance and incredulity The Apostle biddeth them to adde to faith vertue to vertue knowledge that is skill to manage the work of our heavenly Calling 2. None are so sensible of this blindness as they 'T is some proficiency in knowledge to understand our ignorance Prov. 30. 2 3. Surely I am more bruitish than any man and have not the understanding of a man I neither learned wisdom nor have the knowledg of the holy The most knowing see they need more enlightening The best of our knowledge is to know our imperfections 1 Cor. 8. 2. He that thinketh he knoweth any thing knoweth nothing as he ought to know 3. There is room for encrease for in the best we never know so much of Gods ways but we may know more Hos. 6. 3. Then shall we know if we follow on to know the Lord. Prov. 4. 18. But the path of the Iust is as a shining light that shineth more and more unto the perfect day True sanctified knowledg is always growing If we sit down with measures received 't is a sign we do not know things as we should know them Christ grew in knowledge not in Grace for the fulness of the Godhead dwelt in him bodily Practical knowledg is never at a stand though a man may see round the compass and light of saving truth yet he may know them more spiritually and more feelingly 4. The profit of Divine Revelation as to these three things First A clear discerning of the things of God not a confused Notion as the blind man in the Gospel saw men as Trees walking So 2 Cor. 4. 6. For God who commanded the light to shine out of darkness hath shined in our hearts to give the light of the knowledg of the Glory of God in the face of Iesus Christ. And 1 Iohn 5. 20. And hath given us an understanding that we may know him that is true Every degree of knowledg is Gods gift What other men see confusedly we see more distinctly in this light Secondly Firm assent Then shall I know thy testimonies know them from others that have not Divine Authority 'T is the spirit of Wisdom and Revelation that openeth our eyes to see the truth and worth of heavenly things contained in the promise Ephes. 1. 17 18. The father of glory may give you the spirit of wisdom and revelation in the knowledg of him the eyes of your understandings being enlightened that ye may know the hope of his calling and the riches of the glory of the inheritance of the Saints in light And Matth. 16. 17. Flesh and blood hath not revealed these things unto thee Humane credulity we may have upon the report of others the evidence of the truths themselves but this firm assent is the fruit of Divine illumination Thirdly Hearty practice Let thy testimonies not only strike my ear but affect my heart command my hand let me know them so as to do them for otherwise our knowledge is little worth God doth so direct that he doth also enable us to approve our obedience to him sincerely and faithfully There is a knowledge that puffeth us up 1 Cor. 8. 1. which yet is a gift and floweth from the common influence of the Spirit Ier. 22. 16. Was not this to know me saith the Lord But there is a greater efficacy in practical knowledge such as warmeth the heart with love to the truths known Iohn 4. 10. If thou knewest the gift c. Such a light as proceedeth from the gracious influence of the Spirit Use 1. Let us be often dealing with God in prayer that our judgments may be enightened with the understanding of the word and our affections renewed and strengthened unto the true obedience of it beg for that lively light of the Spirit 1. We need it In how many things do we erre in the things which know how weak are we both as to sound judgment and practice The Apostle saith We know but in part 1 Cor. 13. 9. We are but of yesterday and we know nothing Job 8. 9. Therefore we have need to go to the Ancient of days that he may teach us knowledge and kindle our Lamps anew at the Fountain of light Alas we take it in by drops or by degrees as a tender and sore eye must be used to the light We have but little time to get knowledg in and do not improve that little time we have 2. We have leave to ask it Iam. 1. 5. If any man lack wisdom let him ask it of God and why do we not seeing we have a liberty to ask it 3. God hath promised to bestow it he will give his spirit to them that ask it Luke 11. 13. And to beget Faith in us If ye then being evil know how to give good gifts to your Children how much more shall your heavenly father give the holy spirit to them that ask him Here is a notable Argument he reasoneth and promiseth And Prov. 2. 3. we must cry for knowledg Well then let us be earnest that we may not miss that which is to be had for asking beg for an heart to know Ier. 24. 7. I will give them an heart to know me that I am the Lord. Use 2. It informeth us That there is somewhat more than the Word necessary to give us knowledge God must not only reveal the Object but prepare the Subject David having a Law beggeth understanding that he might know Gods testimonies The literal sense and meaning of the words may be understood by common gifts and ordinary industry unless men be exceedingly blinded and
worthy to be believed The Summ is God hath his Testimonies extant their Authority is inviolable and their Justice and Truth immutable Some read Praecepisti Iustitiam Testimoniorum tuorum fidem valde Thou hast highly charged and earnestly commanded the righteousness and faithfulness of thy Testimonies as referring to our Duty But most Translations agree with ours Our duty indeed may be inferred but I shall not make it the formal interpretation of the place In the Texture of the Words in the Hebrew these Attributes are given to the Word it self Doctr. They that would profit by the word or rule of faith and manners which God hath commanded them to observe should look upon it as righteous and very faithful So did David here and elsewhere Psal. 19. 9. The Iudgments of the Lord are true and righteous altogether I shall make good the Point by these Considerations Prop. 1. That our faith and obedience must be well-grounded or else they will have no firmness and stability The want of a foundation is the cause of many a ruinous Building Men carry on a fair and lofty Structure of profession but when the Winds of boisterous temptations are let loose upon them all is blown down because they build upon the Sand and not upon the Rock They take up this profession without sound evidence and conviction in their Consciences and so they are not grounded or setled in the faith Col. 1. 23. not rooted and grounded in love Ephes. 3. 7. They take up Religion sleightly not looking into the reasons of it upon Tradition or vulgar esteem they are not undoubtedly perswaded that it is the very truth of God The good Seed withered that fell upon the stony ground because there was no depth of Earth Matth. 13. 5. no considerable strength of soil to feed faith Prop. 2. Faith and obedience cannot be well-grounded but on such a Doctrine as is true and righteous for who can depend on that which is not true or who can obey that which is not righteous Truth is the only sure foundation for faith to build upon and righteousness for practice Faith considereth truth Ephes. 1. 13. In whom ye trusted after that ye heard the word of truth the Gospel of your salvation And that righteousness is that which bindeth to practice we may gather from Psal. 119. 128. Therefore I esteem all thy Precepts concerning all things to be right and I hate every false way The Word commandeth nothing but what is just and righteous Prop. 3. This true and righteous Doctrine must be backed with a strong and powerful Authority not only recommended to us but strictly and severely enjoyned for two reasons First Because otherwise it will not be observed and regarded but be lookt upon not as a binding Law but as an arbitrary direction There is difference between a Law and a Rule A bare Rule may only serve to inform our understandings or to give direction but a Law is a binding Rule a Rule with a strong Obligation The Word of God is not his counsel and advice to us only but his Law that men may examine and regard it with more care and diligence God hath interposed his authority Psal. 1. ●…9 4. Thou hast commanded us to keep thy precepts diligently And in the Text Thy Testimonies which thou hast commanded God hath commanded us to believe all truths revealed to obey all duties required and if God commandeth there is good reason why he should be obeyed Secondly Divine authority is one means to evidence the righteousness and truth of what is to be believed and obeyed The righteousness for if God who is my Superior and hath a full right to govern me according to his own pleasure doth command me any thing it is best that I should obey it without reply and contradiction yea though I see not the reason of it Acts 17. 28. For in him we live and move and have our being All Creatures have their Being not only from him but in him and therefore sometimes God giveth no other account of his Law but this I am the Lord Lev. 22. 2 3. Speak unto Aaron and to his Sons that they separate themselves from the holy things of the Children of Israel and that they prophane not my holy name in those things which they hallow unto me I am the Lord. Say unto them Whosoever he be of all your Seed among your Generations that goeth unto the holy things which the Children of Israel hallow unto the Lord having his uncleanness upon him that soul shall be cut off from my presence I am the Lord. Therefore it gives rules of practice to be embraced with all the heart as holy just and good Gods authority is founded upon the total dependance of all Creatures upon him and upon his infallible Wisdom Truth and Goodness by which he hath right to prescribe all Points of Faith to be believed and assented to upon his own testimony without contradiction 1 Iohn 5. 9. If we receive the testimony of man the testimony of God is greater A man that would not deceive us we believe him upon his word though he may be deceived himself but God doth not deceive nor can he be deceived by the holy God nothing can be given but what is holy and good and thereupon I am to receive it Prop. 4. This Divine authority truth and righteousness is only to be found in Gods Testimonies which he hath commanded or in Gods Word First There is a God-like authority speaking there and commanding that which it becometh none but God to command who is the universal King and Sovereign For it speaketh to the whole World without respect of persons to King and Beggar rich and poor Male and Female without reservation of Honour or distinction of Degrees The Word looketh on them as standing before God on the same level Iob 34. 19. He accepteth not the persons of Princes nor regarded the rich more than the poor for they all are the work of his hands And speaketh to them indifferently and equally Exod. 20. 3. Thou shalt have no other Gods but me Which is not the voice of any limited and bounded Power but of that which is supreme transcendent and absolute And by these Laws he bindeth the Conscience and the immortal souls of men Psal. 19. 7. The Law of the Lord is perfect converting the soul. Men may give Laws to the words and actions because they can take cognizance of them but the Word giveth Laws to the thoughts Isai. 55. 7. Let the wicked forsake his way and the unrighteous man his thoughts Matth. 5. 28. Whosoever looketh on a woman to lust after her hath committed Adultery with her already in his heart And the internal motions and affections of the heart how we should love and fear and joy and mourn 1 Cor. 7. 30. They that weep as though they wept not and they that rejoyce as though they rejoyced not Of these things God can only take notice the power
Indeed men that wholly forget God in Prosperity will not find his Word a delight in Adversity Psalm 30. 6 7 8. In my prosperity I said I shall never be moved Lord by thy Favour thou hast made my Mountain to stand strong Thou didst hide thy face and I was troubled I cryed unto thee O Lord c. 2. They prepare us for them The sweetness of the Word is best perceived under the bitterness of the Cross God and his Word are never so sweet to the Saints as in Adversity Psalm 94. 19. In the multitude of my thoughts within me thy comforts delight my Soul And 2 Cor. 1. 5. As the sufferings of Christ abound in us so our consolation also aboundeth by Christ. Use. Let no Calamity drive you from the Commandements for there you will find more delight than trouble can take from you 1 Ioh. 3. 1 2. Shall the Reproach of Men have more power to make us sad than the Honour of being Gods Children hath power to make us Joyful Let us be ashamed that we can delight no more Iames 1. 2. My Brethren count it all Ioy when yee fall into divers Temptations Matth. 5. 12. Rejoyce and be exceeding glad for great is your reward in Heaven For so persecuted they the Prophets which were before you And 1 Thes. 1. 6. Yee became followers of us and of the Lord having received the Word in much Affliction with Ioy of the Holy Ghost SERMON CLXI PSALM CXIX VER 144. The Righteousness of thy Testimonies is Everlasting give me Understanding and I shall live IN these Words First The Excellency of the Word is again acknowledged The Righteousness of thy Testimonies is Everlasting Secondly A Prayer is thereupon grounded give me Understanding Thirdly The Fruit and Benefit of being heard in that Prayer and I shall Live Because the Righteousness of the Word is Everlasting therefore we should beg Understanding and this sound Understanding maketh way for Life First He beginneth with the Praise of the Word the Righteousness of thy testimonies The Word of God is contemned by none but such as know not the Excellency of it both in its own nature and the fruits of it The sum of the whole Octonary is here repeated Doctrine That the Righteousness and everlasting Righteousness of Gods Testimonies should be deeply imprinted on our Minds and often thought of by us This stuck so in Davids Mind that he could hardly get off from the Meditation Here I shall shew you I. Wherein the Everlasting Righteousness of Gods Testimonies consisteth II. What it is to have them deeply imprinted upon our Minds and when they are so III. Why they should be deeply imprinted upon our Minds I. Wherein the Everlasting Righteousness of Gods Testimonies consisteth Answer In two things in the Tenour of them and in the Effects 1. In the Tenour And In that those Terms which God dealeth with us are never Repealed but stand in force to all Eternity 'T is an Everlasting truth that he that believeth in Christ shall be saved and that without Holiness no man shall see God The Moral part of the Word is unchangeable and shall never be altered the same Duties and the same Priviledges do alwayes continue Our Lord telleth us Matth. 5. 18. Till Heaven and Earth pass away one jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the Law till all be fulfilled The truth of the Doctrine of the Law and Prophets is more firm and stable than the frame of Heaven and Earth Heaven and Earth may be dissolved and made void but his Law shall never be made void both in that part wherein he comforts us by his Promises and that part wherein he sets down our Duty we are Eternally obliged to Obedience and God hath Eternally obliged himself to Reward and Bless There is an Everlasting and Unchangeable Ordinance by which we are bound to God and he hath bound himself to us We should not change and God will not having past his Word to us The Everlasting Obligation on us dependeth on Gods Authority the Everlasting Obligation on Gods part dependeth on his own Truth and Veracity And though we are poor changeable Creatures God hath interposed his Authority Mal. 3. 6. I am the Lord I change not Iam. 1. 17. In him there is no change or shadow of turning God would change if his truth was changed but that is Everlasting 'T is not in the Power of men to annihilate and change the Law they may break the Law but they cannot annihilate and change the Law Though it be not fulfilled by them yet it shall be fulfilled in them and upon them And God will not Annihilate the Law for God cannot change or deny himself in those things wherein he hath ingaged his Truth to the Creature he is Immutable and Infallible Another Expression is Ier. 33. 20 21. If you can break my Covenant of the day and my Covenant of the night that there shall not be day and night in their Seasons then may also my Covenant be broken with David my Servant the one shall not fail no more than the other God compareth the firmness of his Covenant with those things that are most unalterable the standing of Heaven and earth the constant Course of Night and Day The Ceremonial Law was not abrogated till fulfilled in Christ. This is Gods last Will the Terms of Life and Salvation are still the same other Conditions are not to be expected 2. In regard of the Effects These Testimonies endure for ever both in a way of Grace and Glory In a way of Grace the Word worketh in the Heart an Eternal principle and carries us beyond Temporal things 2 Cor. 4. 18. 1 Pet. 1. 23. Being born again not of corruptible Seed but incorruptible the Word of God which liveth and abideth for ever The Word worketh in us an Eternal Principle which will abide with us as the root of Everlasting Blessedness They that have served God faithfully shall not be deprived of Eternal Glory Now in Glory the Word abideth for ever for though the Souls of men are Immortal yet they have not in them a principle of Blessed Immortality Sin is the root of Eternal Perdition but Grace of Incorruption and Eternal Happiness The Wicked though the substance of their Soul and Body shall not be annihilated but upheld unto all Eternity by the mighty Power of God in the midst of Eternal Torments yet all their Glory and Pleasure shall be consumed and they themselves shall ever languish under the Wrath of an highly provoked and then irreconcilable God 1 Ioh. 2. 17. He that doth the will of God abideth for ever The wicked shall indure by the Word of God 't is a living death in regard of the execution of Eternal Wrath upon them that reject it and the performance of Everlasting Blessings which are promised to them that receive and obey it this will abide when other things fade The Word of God keepeth the Godly and
over your thoughts that the best and dearest of them you can imploy for God with great Fervency and Continuance other matters do not find better welcom nor so easily justle them out of doors By all this it appears 't is a most profitable duty Doctrine II. That a gracious heart will take all occasions to set itself a-work on holy things and sometimes in the Night David did frequently rowse up himself in the Night to solace his Soul with thoughts of God this was a frequent and cheerful exercise and imployment to him First I shall prove this argueth a gracious frame of Spirit Secondly Shew you some Reasons why we should meditate sometimes in the Night First It argueth a gracious frame of Heart to take all occasions to set our minds a-work on holy things for there are three things in it 1. Plenty of Divine Knowledge the Heart is well stocked and can entertain it self without help from abroad Psal. 16. 7. I will bless the Lord who hath given me counsel my reins also instruct me in the night season He had laid up a great deal of truth in his Reins or inward parts and when sleep fled from his eyes out it came So Prov. 6. 21. Bind them continually upon thy heart and tye them about thy neck to be always ready and present with us 'T is an excellent thing to have a good treasure in our hearts Matth. 12. 35. A good man out of the good treasure of his heart bringeth forth good things Many a mans heart is stuffed with vanity and then he is vain in his thoughts and vain in his discourses and vain in his actions yea the Word of God doth not dwell in him richly Col. 3. 16. Then your thoughts are very scant and barren as he that hath more brass farthings in his pocket then Gold or Silver will more easily pull them out at every turn Our leanness of soul and difficulty to Meditate cometh from the want of a stock of Knowledge 2. It argueth Spiritual delight and strong love Psal. 1. 2. But his delight is in the law of God and in that lawdoth he meditate day and night Did we find such Comfort as David did we would break our sleep for that end He that delights in the Word is much Conversant in it for ubi amor ibi animus All the time his necessities can spare he will spend it in these private and spiritual exercises Many mens time hangs upon their hands they do not know how to spend the Summer day nor the Winter night but one that hath a strong Affection to holy things he rather wants time such is his solace and delight in God He beginneth his heaven upon earth and all the time he can get he is spending this way but if we find no such comfort and repose of Soul in Meditation no wonder that we are so averse from it Our thoughts follow our Affections delight will set the mind a-work when others are sleeping securely he mindeth his Salvation 3. It argueth sincerity Psal. 17. 3. Thou hast proved mine heart thou hast visited me in the night thou hast tryed me and shalt find nothing In the night when darkness concealeth me from the eyes of men then I exercise my self in spiritual thoughts Many put on Religion as a disguise in the day in publick actions they personate a Zeal and act a devout part but that is to be sincere when God hath a great share in our closest privacies and retirement Secondly Sometimes take the Night as a special occasion Psal. 63. 6. When I remembred thee upon my bed and meditate on thee in the night watches Psal. 77. 6. I call to remembrance my song in the night There is a double help for Meditation in the Night 1. Solitude then we are alone and therefore fittest to Meditate when no body disturbs us 2. The silence of the night is also an help when nothing is heard or seen to distract attention Use. What Use shall we make of this We cannot lay a burden upon your Consciences and by way of absolute necessity exact these Nocturnal Meditations from you only in the General 1. As much as our strength and natural necessities will permit we should be meditating Night and Day it may be a shame to us that many Tradsmen are up afore day to follow their callings and that they should excel us The Christians had their morning Hymns to Christ in the times of Persecution 2. We may press you to the Affection though not to the Season to be stored with good matter and to have a strong delight in this work and sincerity to make Conscience of private Duties 3. If we wake in the Night and our rest is broken off then to exercise our selves in holy thoughts many times it falleth out that we cannot sleep now we should spend the time in Meditation and prayer not in vain thoughts or entertaining our selves with carnal musings or perplexing and anxious thoughts about the troubles that we are under 4. If David waked in the night how much are they to blame that snort and sleep in the day even in the time of Worship when others are entertaining Communion with God surely if they had earnest Affections this could not always be The Example of Eutychus should deter these Act. 20. And there sate in the window a young man named Eutychus being faln into a deep sleep and as Paul was long preaching he sunk down with sleep and fell down from the third loft and was taken up dead Matth. 26. 40. What could not ye watch with me one hour Doctrine III. That Meditation of the Promises is very seasonable when the answer of our Prayers is denied For this is very powerful to support our fainting hopes and to cheer and revive our drooping spirits There is support in the Word and comfort in the Word therefore we should much Meditate on the Promises at such a time The best holdfast that we have of God is by his Promise Whatsoever his dispensations be this will give satisfaction enough though you cannot find what you would his word is certain though no appearance of performance his Word is sure enough to fasten upon The grounds of Faith are more sweet and satisfactory the more they are examined and lookt upon SERMON CLXVII PSALM CXIX VER 149. Hear my voice according to thy loving-kindness O Lord quicken me according to thy judgment IN these Words you have I. Davids Prayer II. The grounds of his support or his Incouragements in asking I. His Prayer is double 1. General for Audience Hear my voice 2. Particular for Quickening Quicken me II. His Incouragements and grounds of Confidence in asking are also two 1. Gods Loving-kindness 2. His Judgment Both together imply the Loving-kindness of God manifested in the Word or expressed and ingaged in the Promises The Points are Three Doctrine I. One Blessing which the Children of God do see a need often and earnestly to ask of God is
Sin Oh that men did regard this as they ought considering that to despise Commandments is to despise the Lord himself and what it is for poor Worms to despise the God of Heaven and Earth Nay that God that is our Judge He hath power to cast both Body and Soul into Hell Fire the God whom we are bound by so many Ties to Obey 2. When swayed by Delight and Profit against the Course of our Duty Esau sold his Birth-right to keep him alive yet despised it Gen. 29. 31. And Heb. 12. 16. 3. The Case is more aggravated when we cast a Precept behind our Backs for a light Pleasure or small Profit the greater is our Contempt to break with God for a little Trifle sell the Righteous for a pair of shoes Use. II. Is to press us to get this blessed frame of heart to stand in Awe of the Word 1. 'T is a great curb in actual Temptations Gen. 39. 9. How then can I do this great wickedness and sin against God 2. 'T is a great help in Reading and Hearing Acts 10. 33. Now therefore we are all present before God to hear all things that are commanded thee of God 3. A great help in Humiliation and suing out our Pardon Psal. 130. 3 4. If thou shouldest mark iniquity who could stand but there is forgiveness with thee that thou mayest be feared For Means to get this Awful frame of Heart 1. Faith is necessary sundry Articles of Religion have influence upon it Gods Power Matth. 10. 28. Fear not them that can kill the body but fear him that can cast both body and soul into hell fire God's Providence that he observeth humane Affairs and accordingly doth Reward and Punish Hos. 7. 2. And they consider not in their hearts that I remember all their wickedness now their doings have beset them about before my face And Heb. 2. 2. And every transgression and every disobedience received a just recompence of reward A day of Judgment Rom. 2. 5. But after thy hardness and impenitent heart treasurest up wrath against the day of wrath and the revelation of the righteous judgment of God Eternal recompences of Heaven and Hell or the state of the World to come Those who believe not these things are bold and venturous and out of a daring Confidence will put it to the Trial whose Word shall stand Gods or theirs Ier. 44. 28. And all the remnant of Iudah that are gone into the Land of Egypt to sojourn there shall know whose word shall stand mine or theirs which shall be fulfilled or made good Heb. 11. 8. By faith Noah being warned of God of things not seen as yet being moved with fear prepared an ark to the saving of his house 2. Love is necessary for Reverence ariseth from Love David was afraid to displease so good a God to whom bound by so many Ties Surely Love breedeth a greater tenderness than a bare sense of danger Hos. 3. 5. Fear the Lord and his goodness That which maketh a wicked man presumptuous maketh a Child of God Awful he hath to do with a good God and therefore would not offend him nor cross his Will 3. An humble penitent Spirit is necessary for this frame of Heart Iosiah when he heard the words of the Law he rent his Clothes 2 Kings 22. 11 19. Because thy h●…rt was tender and thou humbledst thy self before the Lord when thou heardest what I spake against this place I have heard thee saith the Lord. And 2 Chron. 34. 27. Because thy heart was tender c. Troubled at Gods Anger to some nothing is of less Consideration with them 4. A good stock of Knowledge or frame of Divine Truths Psal. 119. 11. Thy word have I hid in my heart that I might not sin against thee Prov. 6. 21 22. Bind them continually upon thy heart and tye them about thy neck when thou goest it shall lead thee when thou sleepest it shall keep thee and when thou wakest it shall talk with thee A Treasure of knowledge not only got by heart but impressed on us by his Spirit the great New-Covenant-blessing Heb. 8. 10. is Gods Law written upon the Heart by the finger of the Spirit as before on Tables of stone on the directive and imperative powers the Heart and Mind and this maketh us conformable to it in Heart and Life Gods Law is said to be in the Heart of the Godly that maketh them willing to obey Psal. 40. 8. His law is in my heart Tender to offend Psal. 37. 31. The law of God is in his heart none of his steps shall slide He loveth what is commanded and hateth what is forbidden he hath a sense of it to keep from usual guilt 5. Advised Consideration and Watchfulness Let thine eyes look right on and thine eye-lids streight before thee ponder the path of thy feet and let all thy wayes be established When you are about to do any thing examine and consider it whether God alloweth it yea or no Will it please or displease honour or dishonour God If he disallow forbear how safe profitable or comfortable soever it be if he allow it then engage this holy Fear must never be laid aside Phil. 2. 12. Work out your salvation with fear and trembling 1 Pet. 1. 17. Pass the time of your sojourning here in fear SERMON CLXXVI PSALM CXIX VER 1●…2 I Rejoice at Thy Word as one that findeth great Spoil IN the Text First An Assertion or Declaration of his delight in the Word I Rejoice at Thy Word Secondly An Illustration of it by a Similitude taken from those who have gotten some notable Prey and Booty as one that findeth great Spoil First The Similitude is very expressive taken from the joy which a Conquerour in Battel doth find in the Spoil of his defeated Enemies The same similitude is used Isaiah 9. 3. They joy before thee according to the joy in Harvest as men rejoice when they divide the Spoil He speaketh there of the highest joy in a time of Peace joy of the harvest is the greatest joy In a time of Warr victory obtained after an hazardous Fight and rich spoil and booty gotten to heighten that joy several circumstances concur 1. Deliverance after a doubtful conflict No man goeth to War but carryeth his life in his hands and the event is very uncertain now when 't is unexpectedly determined on our side there is great rejoycing 2. The joy of victory especially to be victorious in a Battel 3. There is Booty and Spoil whereby men are enriched and so profit as well as pleasure 4. The joy of Honour and Triumph over faln Enemies 5. Peace and Ease from toil All these make the joy of victorious men in a Battel to be a great joy Secondly 'T was a fit similitude for David to use who was a great Warrior and so a man not unacquainted with the joy of victory A gracious heart spiritualizeth every occasion that falleth out in their ordinary
highly obliged for this discovery 't is the work of God to give us Counsel and should be matter of perpetual Thanksgiving to us III. The Use for which this knowledge serveth 1. To entertain Communion with God for the present for by knowing him we come to enjoy him Psal. 17. 15. As for me I will behold thy face in rightcousness I shall be satisfied when I awake with thy likeness that 's more than to have a portion in this World And 1 Ioh. 1. 3. That which we have seen and heard declare we unto you that ye also may have fellowship with us and truely our fellowship is with the father and his son Iesus Christ. By Communion or Fellowship is not meant a society of Equals but the dutiful yet chearful attendance of an Inferiour on his Superiour the Creature on his Creator but yet so as that there is an holy intimacy and familiarity in it because we both love and are beloved of God in every Ordinance they draw nearer to God than others do for 1 Ioh. 1. 7. If we walk in the light as he is in the light we have fellowship one with another All our Duties are the Converse of a sanctified Creature with an holy God and an humble Creature dealing with the blessed God for a supply of all their wants They pour out their Souls to him and he openeth his Ear and Bosom unto them he teacheth them his way and they walk in his paths Isa. 2. 3. They walk in the Fear of his Name and the Comforts of his Spirit Acts 9. 31. they seek his Glory as their great End and live in the sense of his dearest love 2. To enjoy him for ever this is life eternal that they may know thee the only true God and Iesus Christ whom thou hast sent Ioh. 17. 3. Alas what is the knowing how to get Riches and Pleasures and the Vain-glory of the World to this Surely you that are taught of God your business is above other Mens while they drive on no greater Trade than providing for the Flesh or feathering a Nest that will quickly be pulled down they are providing for Everlasting Glory and Happiness They aim at nothing beyond this Life all their Cares are confined within the narrow bounds of Time and the compass of this World but these look higher and begin a life which shall be perfected in Heaven they are laying up treasure in Heaven IV. The manner of knowing things when taught of God they see things with greater Clearness and Certainty and Efficacy and Power 1. With greater Clearness Others know Words but they know Things and therefore know as they ought to know them They know the Grace of God in Truth Col. 1. 6. They have the spiritual discerning and that is a quite different thing from a literal discerning 1 Cor. 2. 14. He hath an experimental and sweeter knowledge than learned men that are ungodly He hath tasted that the Lord is Gracious the sweetness of his Love and the riches of his Grace in Christ. The Theory of Divine Knowledge though never so exact giveth us not this they have more of the Words and Notions but less of the thing itself they have the sign the other the thing signified they break the shell and the other eats the kernel they dress the meat but the others feed upon and digest it dig in the Mines of knowledge as Negroes but others have the Gold A rotten post may support a living Tree 2. With more Certainty There is a great deal of difference between taking up Religion out of Inspiration and out of Opinion or Tradition Faith is the gift of God but Credulity is received by the Report of Men. Men may guess at the truth by their own Wit they may talk of it by rote and according to what they read and hear from others but Divine Knowledge is the fruit of the Spirit Matth. 16. 17. Flesh and bloud hath not revealed these things unto thee but my Father which is in heaven Ioh. 4. 42. Now we believe not because of thy saying but we have heard him our selves and know indeed that this is the Christ the Saviour of the World And 1 Thes. 1. 5. For our Gospel came to you not in word only but in power and the Holy Ghost and in much assurance We never apprehend the Truth with any certainty nor can we discern Gods Impress on the Word but in the light of the Spirit Gods Illumination maketh our knowledge of things certain and infallible Know 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 assuredly Acts 2. 36. Ioh. 17. 8. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 'T is not a may be a bare possibility or likely to be a probability but it is sure to be and will be so a certainty that belongeth to Faith 3. For Efficacy and Power 1 Thes. 1. 5. For our Gospel came to you not in word only but in power and in the Holy Ghost Stephen a man full of faith and of the Holy Ghost Acts 6. 5. We are affected with the Truths we know yea transformed and changed by them 2 Cor. 3. 18. Changed into a Divine Nature 1 Pet. 1. 4. Our hearts are moulded and fitted for God and for every good work So that this is a benefit should be much acknowledged Use. I. Is to Inform us how the Saints do and should esteem this benefit of Divine Illumination In this Psalm they esteem it more than if God should bestow a great deal of wealth upon them See Psal. 119. 14. I rejoice in the way of thy Testimonies more than in all riches And 72 Verse More than thousands of gold and silver Once more they think themselves well a paid if they get it by sharp Afflictions though by loss of Health or Wealth Verse 71. It s good for me that I have been afflicted that I might learn thy statutes The reason is because they value it as a Mercy for which they can never enough be thankful Phil. 3. 8. Yea doubtless and I count all things to be loss for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Iesus my Lord for whom I have suffered the loss of all things and do count them but dung that I may win Christ The People of God have no reason to envy others that live in the Pomp of the World and the splendor of outward accommodations if he give them the saving knowledge of himself Prov. 3. 31 32. Envy not the oppressor and choose none of his wayes for the froward is an abomination to the Lord but his secret is with the righteous If God will teach us his Statutes though he keepeth us low 't is more to be one of Gods Disciples to be owned by him in an Ordinance than to live a Life of Pomp and Ease Secondly None are fit to praise God but those whom God hath taught Psal. 50. 16. What hast thou to do to declare my statutes or that thou shouldest take my covenant into thy mouth The new song and the old heart
we fail in particular application as the Heathens that knew there was a Divine an Eternal and Almighty Power in general yet were vain in their imaginations in their discourses and practical inferences Or if we should know how to use th●…se Truths if we know them habitually yet we do not actually consider here 's a great part of mans misery being hurried by a multitude of business or violence of Temptation that being laid asleep by the pleasures of the Flesh many times fall off Though men have a perfect knowledge of their Duty and how to apply it habitually yet actually do not consider their sin carries them away they consider not that they do evil Eccl. 5. 1. Thus for the understanding 2. Our Affections they are so apt to be led by Sense and not by right Reason that there 's many times great danger that in seeing we should not see lest seeing knowing and approving that which is better we should embrace and follow that which is worse act contrary to our Knowledge and Conscience Rom. 2. 18. Thou approvest the things that differ yet doest thus and thus Many have an approbation yet cannot bring forth Grace to victory cannot govern their hearts according to their speculative approbation Now if a man be such a blind indigent Creature it is his Wisdom still to look out of himself to lift up his Eyes to God that is the God of our salvation and our guide and defence all our Confidence must be in him IV. We learn hence the encouragement which one hath who is right for the main but hath run into some Errors of Life to apply himself to God to remedy that evil as the good shepherd who must seek the lost sheep and reduce him into the right way Here let me shew two things First Who are those that are right for the main and may look upon their sins as particular errors and frailties Secondly What encouragement they have to apply themselves unto the Lord. First Who are those that are right for the main and whose sins are infirmities such as Davids are represented to be here in this Text. for I will go no farther then the Text. To represent that in five things 1. Such as have a Conscience an awful sense of their Duty I do not forget thy precepts He had transgressed some of Gods Commandments but still he had a sense of his Duty that was kept alive in his heart that awakened him to return again to the Lord. 2. Such as have an habitual will to keep the Commandment of God though there be failings as David when he asks for his Servant seek thy Servant he acknowledged his Duty still Gods Children may sometimes go astray but not totally and finally They never fall so but there remains something that maintains Gods interest in the Soul 1 Iohn 3. 9. He that is born of God doth not commit sin he cannot sin c. he doth not sin so as to lie in sin the seed of God still remains and so is more easily reclaimed then others Look as in Nebuchadnezzars Vision there was represented a Tree that was to be cut down by the Watchman but yet the stump of the roots remained in the Earth Dan. 4. 23. that is in his melancholly when he crept of all four like Beasts I suppose there was not a transformation into a Beast he did lodg in the Forrest among Beasts and eat their kind of Food yet there was a stump of this great Tree that should bud and scent again there was a stock of humane nature that should recover and shew it self again So here though a Child of God behave himself like a bruit Beast and be mastered by his sense yet the root of the matter is still in him there is something that will put forth it self again Or as a spinster leaves a Lock of Wool to draw on the next thread so there is something left they do not wholly cast off the fear of God nor the Yoke No their souls are habitually bent to please God more then they are to sin I am thy servant 3. As here 's a Conscience of his Duty and an habitual will to serve God so here 's a broken hearted confession of his Error I have gone astray like a lost sheep and so a repentance of the sin committed It is grievous to a Child of God in the remembrance of it the sin is thereby more mortified and subdued 4. Here 's an unfeigned desire to return to his Duty and Grace humbly sought that he may be set in joint again Lord seek thy servant He would not remain in this condition still his desire was to do the Will of God and to live in no neglect and therefore he complains of his straying Disposition and would fain have it cured Lord seek thy servant 5. The Conscience of his sincerity was not wholly lost Mark not only the Conscience of his Duty but of his sincerity for he prays still to be sought as a sheep belonging to the Fold I am thine though I am gone astray Ioh. 10. 3. The sheep hear his voice Now this Evidence was yet left I am Lord thy servant and I do not forget thy Precepts He was willing to hear the Voice of God In grievous falls ●…is otherwise If a man fall grievously this doth not relate to any grievous fall then all were to begin anew that robs all our peace as David Lord create in me a clean heart Psal 51. 10. After his grievous fall he speaks as if all was lost David here professeth still his devotedness to God as his servant his love and respect to his Law as his Rule he could own such a thing in it it was an Evil that annoyed him but it had not rifled his Peace Secondly To speak of the Encouragement that we have to go to God if this be our Case as the Man of God here desires the Lord to seek him out and to bring him again into the right way Those that have gone astray yet should not keep off but run to their shepherd Seek thy Servant Why 1. We have a shepherd that loves us whereof he hath given full proof and demonstration in that he dyed for us Ioh. 10. 11. I am the good shepherd that laid down my life for the sheep He is not only the Great shepherd as called sometimes but the Good shepherd gave his Life in a way of Ransom to expiate our sins When he came to seek and save that which was lost his first work was to redeem them by his blood If he could find in his heart to redeem us by his blood and expiate all our faults he will recover us 2. It is one great part of his Office to reduce his People from their stragling Psal. 23. 1. The Lord is my shepherd what then ver 3. He receiveth my soul If the Lord be our shepherd it s a great part of his work to receive our souls We fall into the disease of sin
and swallow a Camel it discovers the hypocrisie that lights upon the Professors of Religion full of hainous out-cries upon small things yet dash upon things that are against the fundamentals of the Covenant SERMON CLVII PSALM CXIX VER 140. Thy Word is very pure therefore thy servant loveth it THere are three things in this Verse 1. The Excellency of the Word Thy Word is very pure 2. Davids respect to it Thy Servant loveth it 3. The Connexion between both in the illative particle Therefore 1. The Excellency of the Word Thy Word is very pure That which we render very Pure signifieth tryed in the Fire and refined the Septuagint reads it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Thy Word is set on Fire and so you may see it explained Psal. 12. 6. The words of the Lord are pure words like Silver tryed in a Furnace of Earth purified seven times The expression may import two things First the infallible certainty of the Word And secondly the exact purity First The Infallible certainty of the Word As Gold indureth in the Fire when the dross is consumed Vain conceits comfort us not in a time of trouble but the Word of God the more 't is tryed the more you will find the excellency of it the Promise is tryed as well as we are tryed in deep afflictions but when 't is so it will be found to be most sure In the Old Translation 't is thy word is proved most pure Psalm 18. 30. The Word of the Lord is tryed he is a buckler to all them that trust in him So Prov. 30. 5. The word of the Lord is pure he is a shield to all that trust in him as pure Gold suffers no loss by the fire so the promises suffer no loss when they are tryed but stand to us in our greatest troubles Secondly It notes the exact perfection of the Word there is no dross in Silver and Gold that hath been often refined so there is no defect in the Word of God 2. Here is Davids respect to the Word speaking of himself in the third person he saith Thy Servant loveth it The Children of God love the Word and the duty and Obedience it prescribeth so as effectually to follow it that 's love and none but that 3. Here is his reason for it Therefore I love it because 't is pure wicked men hate it and slight it for this very reason the Word of God so is pure that it ransacks their their Consciences and therefore they cannot indure it The Carnal mind is not subject to the Law of God neither indeed can be Rom. 8. 7. But the Saints do the rather imbrace it wicked men could wish it were less strict that it might be calculated to their turns but the Children of God love it for this reason Doctrine That Gods Children see such purity in his Word that therefore they value it and love it exceedingly The point will be made good by four Considerations 1. That the Word of God is pure 2. That this pure Word must be loved and esteemed by us 3. That we must not only love Gods Word but see why we love it 4. Among all the grounds and reasons of our love to the Word of God this is the most noble and excellent to love it for its purity For the first of these That the Word of God is pure yea as 't is superlatively expressed in the text 't is very pure that will appear in two respects 't is pure in it self and it maketh us pure 1. 'T is pure in it self because 't is an holy rule fit for God to give and us to receive exactly comprizing the whole duty of man We need not seek elsewhere for direction in order to true happiness Psal. 19. 8. The Commandment of the Lord is pure enlightening the Eyes as Mettal refined from all dross So here is not the least mixture of errour folly or falshood not the least Corruption or flaw to be found in it as in all other Books of humane Composure All other Writings come as short of the Scripture as a Coal doth of the Sun The whole Art and Design of this Holy Book is to advance the Spiritural and Heavenly Life and not to fashion our outward carriage a little for converse with men but to bring us into Fellowship and Communion with God and to direct us to do all things from holy principles in a holy manner to holy ends There is no dead fly in this box of Oyntment no blemish of Weakness and Imperfection it hath the manifest Impress of the Author left upon it and is the Copy of that exact holiness which is in God himself 2. The Word is very pure as it maketh us pure if we diligently attend unto it Ps. 119. 9. By what means may a young man cleanse his way By taking heed thereunto according to thy Word 'T is not said by what means may a young man guide his way as if he were yet to chuse or were as white paper indifferent to any impression But by what means shall a young man cleanse his way Mans heart naturally is a sink of sin and he delighteth to wallow in this puddle as Swine do in the Mire he hath gotten a tang and smatch of the old Adam Now is there no way to make his Heart and his Way clean Yes if he will take Gods Counsel and direct his Life according to the Word A young man that is in the heat and strength of his lusts he may be cured and cleansed Christ prayeth Iohn 17. 17. Sanctifie them by thy Truth thy Word is Truth The work is Gods but he doth it by the Truth or his Will revealed in the Word He hath reserved the power of his spirit for this dispensation and way of Institution of Mankind A moral Lecture may make a man change his Life but 't is the Word of God that changeth his Heart his spirit goeth along with his word So Iohn 15. 3. Now you are clean through the Word that I have spoken unto you The Word is the Instrument of purifying sinners and to get rid of their sins But how doth the word make us pure As 't is an appointed Instrument of the spirit and as 't is an accommodate instrument to such an end and purpose 1. 'T is an appointed instrument by which the spirit will work 1 Pet. 1. 22. Ye have purified your Souls in obeying the Truth through the Spirit 'T is the spirit of Christ that powerfully worketh it but yet in and by the Truth he worketh by his own means he will not joyn his assistance with other things The sum of what I would say is this 't was meet that God should give a rule to his Creatures or else how should they know his will and then 't was meet he should honour his Rule by owning it above all other Doctrines by the concomitant operation of his spirit that this might be a Constant Authentick proof of its divine Authority The
efficacy of the word is a pledge of the truth of it 2. 'T is a Commodious Instrument for this End and Purpose for there is a Wisdom in all Gods Institutions He that looketh upon an Axe will say this is an instrument made to cut So he that looketh upon the Scriptures must needs say this is a means to purifie The Word is more Morally accommodated to work upon the heart of man then any other Instrument Means or Doctrine in the World Now the Word doth so commodiously serve for this purpose because there are 1. Such pure Precepts 2. Such pure Examples 3. Such great helps to Purity 4. Great encouragements to Purity 5. Such great Terrours to disswade men from sin 1. There are pure Precepts setting forth the Nature of that Purity that is pleasing to God and so on the one hand they serve to humble us for our natural filthiness for verum est Index sui et obliqui Truth sheweth it self and discovereth errour also Iam. 1. 23. 'T is such a pure Doctrine that it sheweth a man his natural face and discovers soul spots And on the other side by these Precepts and Doctrines we are urged and injoyned to seek after true Purity and Holiness of the right Constitution 1 Tim. 1. 5. The end of the Commandment is Charity out of a pure heart and a good Conscience and Faith unfeigned The Word telleth us God will be served and that he will be served with a pure heart the right End and Scope of the whole Law as 't is a Gospel Rule is love to God and Man flowing from a sincere and renewed heart and a good Conscience rightly informed of Gods Will and Faith unfeigned apprehending the Grace of God towards us in Christ our Redeemer So that you see there is required of us not only good Actions but good Principles and Ends. The Apostle telleth us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the work of the Law was written upon Mans heart Rom. 2. 14. Natural Conscience will take notice of some gross Acts urge to some external Conformity and show of Duty But the Word of God taketh notice not only of acts but the frame of the heart not only of sins but also of lusts If ever there were an instrument fitted to do a thing the Word is fitted to make men pure and holy Briefly then the Word requireth purity of Heart and Life that we should be pure in heart Matth. 5. 8. Blessed are the pure in heart for they shall see God and pure in Life Blessed are the undefiled in the way Ps. 119. 1. you have both in one place Iam. 4. 8. Cleanse your hands ye sinners and purifie your Hearts ye double minded both must be cleansed both heart and hands But we must first begin with the Heart The Heart is that polluted Fountain from whence floweth all the pollution of Life Matth. 15. 19. Out of the Heart proceed evil thoughts Murthers Adulteries Blasphemies c. 'T is in vain to cleanse the out-side unless the Heart be cleansed and therefore the Scripture presseth us to wash our hearts from wickedness Ier. 4. 14. There is the difficulty 'T is more easie to heal an outward wound than to stanch an inward bleeding and the cause is within The purity of the outside is loathsome to God unless the heart be cleansed 't is more easie to prevent disorders in our Conversations than to cleanse our hearts and therefore the Scripture mainly calleth upon you to purge out sin out of the heart Matth. 23. 26 27. Therefore the great design of the Word of God with which it travaileth is to get the heart clean as Elisha when he would cure the brackishness of the Waters cast falt into the Fountain so doth the Word of God seek to cleanse the hearts of men and all its wooings and pleadings and intreaties tend to this 2. There are pure Examples and Patterns we miscarry by low Examples and grow loose and careless seeing others to be so therefore the Word is still to keep us humble under our defects unsatisfied with our present measure always contending and striving towards the mark it propoundeth all manner of examples to us It propoundeth the example of God 1 Pet. 1. 15. Be ye holy as he that hath called you is Holy in all manner of Conversation God is holy in all his ways and Righteous in all his works and so should we be And the Scripture presseth us to be holy as Christ is holy 1 Iohn 3. 3. He that hath this hope in him purifieth himself as Christ is pure 'T is impossible there should be an exact equality yet some answerable Conformity there should be God is essentially immutably infinitely holy He loveth himself so much as he can be loved His Essence and his Being is the same with his Holiness Our Holiness is a superadded Quality Gods Holiness is like a vessel of pure Gold where the substance is the same with the lustre but our holiness is like a vessel of Earth gilded with Gold the substance is one thing the varnish another But yet this God and Christ must ever be before our Eyes we must be holy as he is holy we must always be encreasing in holiness We must come into an abiding state of holiness There must be some kind of Conformity between God and us and Christ and us and head and members must be all of a piece He will shoot farther that aimeth at a Star than he that aimeth at a shrub So he will be more holy that doth as God doth than he that doth as sinful Creatures do like himself Nay the Scripture propoundeth the example of the Saints Heb. 6. 12. We need all kind of examples As we need high and glorious examples that we may not rest in any low degrees and beginnings of purity So lower examples that we may not be discouraged and think it impossible And therefore the Saints of God are propounded to us Men and Women of like affections with us the same natural interests and we the same grace with them the way to heaven is a troden path all along you may see the foot-steps of the Saints before you 3. The Scripture offereth great Helps to purity Christ dyed to purchase it for us Ephes. 5. 27. He gave himself for us that he might Sanctifie and Cleanse us by the washing of water through the Word And God hath promised to give this clean heart to them that seek after it and undertaketh to give what he requireth Ezek. 36. 25 26 27. I will sprinkle clean water upon you and you shall be clean from all your filthiness and from all your Idols will I cleanse you A new heart also will I give you and a new spirit will I put within you and I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh and I will give you a heart of flesh And I will put my spirit within you and cause you to walk in my Statutes and ye shall keep my judgements