Selected quad for the lemma: truth_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
truth_n prayer_n spirit_n worship_v 1,667 5 8.9917 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A52807 A compleat history and mystery of the Old and New Testament logically discust and theologically improved : in four volumes ... the like undertaking (in such a manner and method) being never by any author attempted before : yet this is now approved and commended by grave divines, &c. / by Christopher Ness ... Ness, Christopher, 1621-1705. 1696 (1696) Wing N449; ESTC R40047 3,259,554 1,966

There are 13 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

Stephen spake more than this while he saw Heaven through a shower of stones yet this was the sum of all The like Lesson learnt learned Luther whose last Prayer was this My Heavenly Father thou hast manifested Christ to me I have known him and taught him and love him as my life now draw my Soul to thy self I commend my Spirit into thy hands thou hast redeemed me O God of truth c. The like Lesson learnt most of the Holy Martyrs according to the Divine Counsel of 1 Pet. 4.19 Committing the keeping of their Souls as a most precious Depositum unto God as unto a faithful Creator who will rather unmake all by his Creating power than that any Soul which he hath given to Christ should be marr'd or miscarry Our Saviour committed his Soul to God both in his life 1 Pet. 2.23 and at his death Luk. 23.46 But what a wretch was that Huberus who dyed with those wicked words in his mouth I yield my goods to the King my Body to the grave and my Soul to the Devil On the contrary this hath always been the comfort of Dying Saints that they are assured Christ Jesus who dyed for them shall at their dissolutions receive their Souls into his safe and blessed custody to live with him who is the life and the God of the living Christ gave it as a Cordial to the penitent Thief dying with him on the Cross This day thou shalt be with me in Paradise Luk. 23.43 which was an answer to the penitents Prayer v. 42. Lord when thou comest into thy glory receive my Soul as one of thine into thy mercy and this is the double priviledge of every true Believer that they are born upon the wings of Prayer into every condition good for them while they live and that their Souls are born upon the wings of Angels into Abrahams bosome when they dye as Lazarus's Soul was Luk. 16.22 As the Palsey-man was let down in his Couch through the roof of the house by his loving Relations before Jesus Luk. 5.13 so is every good Soul taken up in an Heavenly Charet through the roof of his house and carried into Christs presence by these Heavenly Courtiers the Angels conveys it safe through the Air which is the Devils Territories as he is Prince of the Air Eph. 2.3 Not unlike as Gods Host the Angels conducted Jacob through all his dangers Gen. 32.1 2. 48.16 The Angels met Jacob as Servants meet their Masters or as Nurses meet their Nurse-Children The great King of Heaven commits his Children to the Tuition of Angels while they li●e Psal 91.11 They bare them all that time as the Nurses doth the Babes in their bosome always ready to secure them from the roaring Lyon that rangeth up and down to devour them they do fight for them in battle-aray against all their Enemies Dan. 10.20 and pitch their tents round about them night and day Psal 34.8 Then when the Nurse-Children come to be weaned and drawn off from the world their work there being done that their Father gave them to do Joh. 17.3 the Angels those Nurses carries them home at their Fathers command to their Fathers house through their Enemies Country into Abrahams bosome so that all Gods Children may call Death as Jacob did the place where he met the Angels Mahanaim because there the Angels do meet them as their Convoy when they dye securing their Souls from all those Pyrats the Devil's that would both intercept and despoil them yea safely transporting them into the Cape of Good Hope and into the Fair Haven of Everlasting Happiness 2ly More particularly the Soul of Man hath a manifold Excellency as 1. It hath a most Noble Original when the Lord God had made up Mans Body as the Potter furnisheth up his Vessel out of the Clay then he animated it by inspiring into it a living and Rational Soul or Spirit The Soul of Man is not deduced or derived out of any power in the matter of the Body nor made of any matter at all as his Body was and as the Soul of a Beast is which Solomon observeth as much differing the one from the other Eccles 3.21 but it is a Spirit Immaterial and Immortal so had its immediate Original from the Father of Spirits God who is a Spirit gave this Spirit or Soul to the Body by way of Infusion Superslation or Breathing upon it as out of his mouth that he might make him a perfect man consisting of an Earthly body and of an Heavenly Soul God indeed made the Brutes living Creatures but 't is not said that he breathed upon them the breath of life as he did upon Man Gen. 2.7 God Created the Souls of Beasts together with their Bodies out of those humours and vital Spirits which do exist in them and those humours corrupting that Spirit or Soul of Beasts which is but a vapour corrupteth also and perisheth but he made Man a more noble Creature than Beasts in two respects 1. In his Body erected to look up with our Eyes to Heaven 2. In his Soul not arising out of the Humours of the Body but infused from without even from God himself hence is he call'd the God of Spirits Zech. 12.1 Job 33.4 Num. 16.22 27.16 and this Spirit does not dye with the Body as that of Beasts doth but is separable from the Body and returns to God that gave it Eccles 3.21 12.7 to receive its doom from him either good or evil God is the Maker of Souls Isa 57.10 42.5 Jer. 38.16 2ly The Soul hath a most noble Nature as before insomuch that it was an old and an odd opinion that there was a Deity in it this was long since exploded for Heterodox by the Orthodox Aristotle Natures Secretary judged it a Divine thing however this is certain the Soul as to Matter is more excellent than the Heavens and as to Nature not inferiour to Angels 't is of such a Noble Nature that it is of near Allyance to the Divine Nature from whence it cometh 'T is a question in Philosophy whether a Fly be a more noble Creature than the Sun and 't is concluded in the Affirmative upon this ground because the Fly is an Animate thing the Sun is Inanimate and that which hath life in it must needs be more noble than that which hath it not though otherwise never so glittering and glorious 't is also disputed among Philosophers whether one Star be not of a more noble nature than the whole Globe of the Earth and this also is granted seeing Coelestia● Matter must needs be better than the Terrestrial which was but the dregs of the first Chaos How much more noble Nature is the Soul then of 3ly The Soul hath the most Noble Rank in the whole Creation God hath placed the Soul among all his other Creatures in the noblest condition it was the Soul that God gave dominion overall the works of his hands unto All
undertake to bring up in the knowledge of Christ were admitted to that ordinance also If the Law allowed of this Gen. 17. ver 12 13. much more doth the Gospel so which inlargeth the priveledges of Believers in all things and narrows them in nothing we have been in 1600. years possession and prescription of Baptizing the Infants of Believing Parents therefore we may more rationally require the Antipaedobapists to prove by any express place of Scripture that Children were not baptized by the Apostles when they baptized whole housholds and Nations according to their Commission Mat. 28.19 but it ought not to be proved by us we may better require their proof that there were no Children in Lydia's the Goaler's houshold or other the like Families by some express place of Scripture than they ask ours Especially considering how the phrase they and all theirs included the little Children Numb 16.27 33. and why not he and all his Acts 16.33 yea and Lydia and her house were baptized Acts 16.15 which the Syriack reads She and her Children c a non dicto ad non factum non valet Consequentia because 't is never said so we may not say it was never done so we are not told of any one Woman that ever received the Lord's Supper yet none doubts but many women did receive it c. The sixth Remark is Know'n faithfulness is the best ground of Union and Communion both Civil and Sacred If ye have judged me faithful saith Lydia come into my house v. 15. not unless ye Judge me so Upon no other account doth she desire it for Hypocrites are the botches of all Societies Here was no long time for Tryal of her faithfulness but all this was done and she baptized for ought appearing to the contrary while they were together at this private meeting from whence it may be observed what kind of believing gave admission to Baptism unto believers and to their housholds in that day Indeed she did demonstrate it in this that she constrained them with all Amicable violence to her House as the Disciples did Christ Luke 24.29 The Remarks upon the latter Action of Paul at Philippi namely his casting out a Spirit of Divination do follow And first This Damosel was undoubtedly possessed with the Devil by whose Inspiration she foretold future things to those that asked her N.B. This Pythonick Spirit was so call'd from Pythius an Epithet of Apollo who was wont to give answers to them that inquired at his Diabolical Oracles in Delphos c. Pytho comes from the Hebrew word Pathan which signifies a Serpent for the Hebrews had their Divinations in old time from Serpents and Pythius Apollo whom the Hebrews call Ob and Abaddon Rev. 9.11 and Deut. 18.11 and 1 Sam. 28.7 was first worshipped in Greece under the form of that Serpent which deceived our first Parents N.B. The Septuagint bible calls such as were possessed with this Divining Devil as the Witch of Endor that deceived Saul c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because the Devil spake out of their bellys for which cause also the Hebrews call them Oboth or Bottles because the Bellys of those Women who were thus made Use of by the Devil were swelled up as big as Bottles such an one was this Damosel The second Remark is The Devil in this Damosel indeavours to distract those Disciples of Christ as they went to prayer verse 16. that is as they went towards the place where their publick prayers were usually made this Spirit of Satan met them sometimes in the face and followed them at other times behind their backs crying after them and this the Devil did many days verse 16.17 18. N.B. And tho' he did only testifie the truth in his out-cries yet was it done for Divelish ends either 1. To draw men on to believe him in other things counterfeiting himself an Angel of Light 2 Cor. 11.14 or a Divine Spirit who praised the True Servants of the Lord and spake the truth at this time 2. To puff up Paul with Pride by his flattering him with those loud and frequent Acclamations whereby he would have tickled him into the sin of vain glory 3. Or at the least to make his own peace with Paul who he foresaw would cast him forth Thus is Satan willing to compound with those whom he is not able to conquer Bernard saith well Satan et si semel videatur verax millies est mendax et semper fallax If Satan speak truth but once he will lye often for it and is always deceitful in speaking true or false When he speaketh a lye he speaketh of his own John 8.44 but here he spake the truth as he did Mark 1.25 not to honour but to blacken Christ that he might both discompose the Apostles and make their Auditors jealous of the truth of that which so impure a spirit professed Laudari ab illaudato non est lans saith Seneca Good words from an evil mouth are not praise but dispraise An evil Spirit or evil man dissembling to be good is then worst of all c. simulata pietas est Duplex iniquitas Dissembl'd piety is double iniquity Some there be among men not unlike this evil Spirit who will sometime do good in appearance but it is that they may the better do mischief in Reality as Phil. 1.18 with 15.16 17. yet all is over-ruled for the Gospels furtherance v. 12. The third Remark is As our Lord had refused the Testimony of the Devil concerning himself not accepting of good words from so bad a mouth but muzzl'd it up Mark 1.25 and suffered not the Devils to speak verse 34. So Paul was grieved here verse 18. Eeither 1. For the Damsel's sake who could not but suffer much by being possessed with this evil spirit Or 2. For the sake of those who were seduced by the Devil in the Damsel c. Or 3. He was grieved mostly to hear the Father of Lyes speak so much and so oft one and the same thing to their great disturbance though it was matter of truth because every thing this grand Lyar speaketh is rendred suspicious even from the Speaker himself And as it is an usual and customary punishment put upon common Lyars among men that they are not believed no not when they speak the truth so Paul well knew that the Devil never speaks truth but with a devilish design to deceive others by that truth which he speaketh Therefore did Paul not only Reject the Testimony of this Lying Spirit that he might openly declare him to be the Father of Lyes and that he might Interdict all Saints from holding any kind of Commerce with the Devil but also did Eject him out of this Deluded Damsel saying I command thee in the name of Jesus Christ to come out of her verse 18. and he came out the same hour So far was Paul from taking any Joy in such a Testimony of truth from that Lying Spirit that it
and my Judgment-Hall which consisted at least of Three So by we is meant in the Hebrew succinct Speech God Three in One and One in Three Opera Trinitatis ad extra sunt indivisa All the Three Persons are undivided all concur in External Actions Hermes that antient Aegyptian who flourished before Pharaoh did acknowledge something of this Great Truth from whence he had his Name of Trismegistus for owning the Three great ones And the Heathen Sages after him had some blind Notions hereof as appeareth by Plutarch who reporteth that in Thebe a Town of Aegypt they worshipped a God whom they acknowledged to be Immortal and painted him in the likeness of a man blowing an Egg out of his mouth to signifie that he made the round World by his Word and Breath of his Mouth But Christian Faith reacheth farther than Heathens Reason for by Faith we understand that the World was made by the Word of God Heb. 11.3 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by Christ who is the Essential Word and the flowings forth as the word signifies or lettings out of Divine Wisd●● Power and Goodness for God was as it were contracted and contained all within himself from all Eternity but now in the Creation he becomes Deus expansus explicatus letting out himself to the Creature Thus Christ is called the Manifestation of God and the Declarer of the Father Joh. 1.18 John Baptist is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a voice but Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Word by which the world was made As Verbum est animi Index the Speech discovers the Spirit so Christ unbosoms the Father and the Creation is nothing else but the Creator unfolding himself and dispersing his Divine Essence into several Veins and Channels of the Creature Mundus Vniversus nihil aliud est quàm Deus Explicatus the world is onely God expressed the Invisible is clearly seen as in a Mirrour or on a Theater in things that are visible Rom. 1.19 20. as the Sun is beheld in the waters so is God in his works either by way of Negation Causality or Eminence per species Creaturea The second Enquiry is What is the Material Cause out of which all things were Created Answ God made something out of nothing and out of that something all things Nothing here is not taken privatively as 1 Cor. 8.4 an Idol is nothing to wit privatively as having nothing of a Divine Essence in it yet positively it is something that is Wood or Stone c. Nor 2. is it taken Comparatively as Isa 40.17 All the world is nothing to wit in comparison of the Great God But 3. 't is taken negatively and simply God having no praeexisting matter to work upon as the word Bara created signifies being a word in its proper sense proper and peculiar to God himself so should not be parasitically Attributed to the mightiest of men as too oft it is in Creating Earls Marquesses Dukes unless the Creators and the Created were both holy as God is and Man was There was nothing from Eternity besides God neither is God the Matter or any part of the Creature therefore the world was made out of nothing This puts the difference betwixt Creation and Generation this latter is a production of something out of something but the former of something out of nothing There be three principal Operators Art Nature and God That worker which needeth the fewest helps is the most perfect worker 1. Art needs many helps 2. Nature needs but few But 3. God needeth none at all God is the first Cause and the World was the first effect 'T is a Rule or Maxime Inter primam Causam primum effectum nil intervenit Nothing can come between the first Cause and the first effect therefore in the Creation there could neither be any praeexisting Matter nor any Coassisting Instruments God himself was both the Father and Mother of all Created Beings God was the Father of the World begetting it by his Word and both bringing it out and bringing it up in six days by the overshadowings of the Spirit Gen. 1.2 All this arises from the Efficiency of God who is a most pure Act and is Omnipotency it self is there any thing too hard for the Lord Gen. 18.14 Job knew that God could do every thing Job 42.2 All things but Lying Dying and denying himself are possible with God Matth. 19.26 his counsel shall stand and he will do all his pleasure Isa 46.10 What God pleaseth to do without all peradventure he is able to do as he is Omnipotent yet may we not argue from his power to his will but from his will to his power Though God be Omniscient Omnipresent and Omnipotent yet is he not Omnivolent he can do more than he will do he can do whatsoever he pleaseth yet he is not pleased to do whatsoever he can God by his Absolute power is able to do all things that are possible though he never do them he can by this unlimited power make a World and unmake it again in a moment he can of stones raise up Children to Abraham Matth. 3.9 c. but by his actual and ordinate power he doth that onely which he willeth to do whatsoever he willeth that he doth both in Heaven and Earth Psal 115.3 135.6 This power God hath limited by his own will wisdom and having freely limited himself according to his own Decree of Secret will and according to his word or revealed will he changeth not because he is unchangeable Jam. 1.17 Some things God can and will not as Matth. 3.9 26.53 Rom. 9.18 c. And some things God neither will nor can to wit such as contradict his Essence and import Impotency 't is safer to say such things cannot be done than that God cannot do them but whatsoever he willeth that he without impediment effecteth as he did the Creation of the world out of nothing Why therefore should it be thought a thing incredible either that God should raise the dead to life Act. 26.8 or that God should make world of nothing 'T is a received rule Quicquid est in Deo est Deus whatsoever is in God is God and so is that Esse posse operari non distinguuntur in Deo Gods Ess●nce Omnipotency and Efficiency are not to be distinguished in God save only as to our capacity Divine Essence being Almighty and a most pure act doth necessarily infer a Divine Efficiency which made the world of nothing the word of signifying not any Matter but only Order Creation was in Matter but not of Matter not of Matter praeexisting before but of Matter coexisting in the act of Creation The first Matter God made out of nothing was that Rudis indigestáque Moles called the confused Chaos a rude Draught and an undigested lump at the first as the Matter of all things that were afterwards to be Created This first Matter was all things in power yet nothing in act this
his fat and Cain was a wicked one 1 Joh. 3.12 And said he would not give God his fat but his lean his Service was superficial only feigned service his heart was not in his work as afterwards So it was rejected but Abel serv'd God with the best of his flock and with the best of his heart too so found Acceptance with the Lord. Hence may be inferred 1. None must rest in External acts of Worship a man may be a worshiper of God with outward worship yet be a wicked man as Cain was 2. The families of good men may have in them bad worshippers Adam had his wicked Cain Noah his cursed Cham Abraham his scoffing Ishmael and Isaac his profane Esau yea our blessed redeemer had the Devil Judas in their families This Apology Augustin made to qualifie a foul fault committed in his Family saying Nescio quo evadam c. I know not how to shift it off I pray instruct c. in my family yet must I not expect my house better than those holy Patriarks or my Lord and Master himself The third Inference is That there will he close Hypocrites in the Church of God as well as in our houses some that say they are Jews but are not the Angel of the Church doth find them Lyars Rev. 2.9 Some mens sins go before hand to Judgment and some mens sins follow after 1 Tim. 5.24 'T is not improbable but that Cain might live long in a form of worshipping God in his Fathers house before he was discovered at this sacrifice to be an Hypocrite 'T was long ere Judas was discover'd for an Hypocrite in Christ the second Adams Family So it might be with Cain in that of the first Adam tares will be among the Wheat But 3. Moses records this History to declare the Disagreements and Contentions that do arise about Religion in the World We find here that Abels religion was approved but Cains was disapproved this breeds such a difference and occasions such a Quarrel a● could not be carry'd off without Blood This Difference of Religion did break out into Murder Hence may he Inferred 1. That Quarrels about religion are the greatest Quarrels in the World according to Luthers saying Odia religiosorum sunt acerbissima the Dissentions about Religion are the most irreconcileable dissentions and according to Christs saying There shall be five in one house divided three against two and two against three he came not to send Peace but rather division Luk. 12.51 52 53. Not as if the Gospel of Peace did of it self kindle any fires v. 49. But this falls out by the Strength of mans corruption and becomes thereby an accidental thing as the Sun melts Wax but hardens Clay It draws forth the fragrancies of many sweet Flowers yet doth it make the Dunghil to Stink abominably Oh how did the Aegyptians abhor the Israelites for their worshipping of God in a differing manner from their Worship Exod. 8.26 And how did Jezabel swear Elijahs Death for his opposing her worship of Baal 1 Kin. 19.1 2. Oh what Bloody Persecutions were there in the primitive times of the Gospel not only from the Heathen worshippers against Christians but also from the Arrians against the Orthodox in the time of Athanasius whose life they uncessantly sought by many forged falshoods Oh what animosities arose betwixt the Mother and the Son to wit Constantinus Copronymus and his Mother Irene about worshipping of Images insomuch that the Son depos'd the Mother and the Mother bereaved the Son both of his Eyes and of his Empire she put out her Sons Eyes and cast him into Prison where he died for grief So lost his Life as well as sight and Crown The 2. Inference is This affordeth us the clear and true Character of the True Religion from the false Outrage and Cruelty is the Black Brand wherewith Gods Word Stigmatizeth the false and formal Religion and here it begins shewing how Cain did most maliciously oppose Abel but Abel offered no affront at all to Cain for the Badge and Cognizance of true Religion is Meekness and Love Where the Power as well as the Form of Godliness is it teacheth to bless them that curse us and to pray for them that persecute us Luk. 6.28 Rom. 12.17 Whereas blind and Superstitious Zealots know no bounds in their rage against those that differ from them and oppose their superstitious fooleries Not to insist upon the ten primitive persecutions which arose from heathens men of an Heterogeneous and Different Profession but to instance only in two 1. The Followers of Arrius 2. The Followers of Antichrist both being beyond the Heathen as believing in the true God Yet 1. Such was the rage of the Arrians those Heterodox Christians against the Orthodox that they persecuted them to Death and devised many Hellish Stratagems to take away the Life of that Blessed Champion of the Truth Athanasius while he only oppos'd their Lying Doctrine in denying the Godhead of Christ 2. The Antichristians or Church of Rome have even outvy'd and out-done the Arrians in Barbarous and Bloody Butcheries as Ecclesiastical History does abundantly Testifie And Christs words hold true of them concerning their Descent and Parentage that they are the Children of them that kill'd the Prophets of a Viperous Generation Mat. 23.31 Yea their cursed cruelties against Righteous Abel's v. 35. do plainly proclaim to the World that they are Descended from Bloody Cain who was a Worshipper of God as well as good Abel yet was he a Worrier of his Godly Brother whose Devilish Spirit in them hath been Murdering their Innocent Brethren in all Places and Ages since the Rise and Reign of Antichrist and will be so doing until his Ruine That Whore of Rome is drunk with the Blood of Saints as I shew at large in my Antidote against Popery in that Title of the Romish Religion is a Bloody Religion To add no more here save only an Instance in those Scarlet Days of Queen Mary in our Land whose Reign did swim in a Sea of Blood How did her Popish Prelates even glut themselves in the Gore of poor Protestants and not only warming their blind Zeal with Burning the Bodies of the Living but Tyrannizing also over the Bones of the Dead as of Bucer and others which they took out of their Graves and Burnt them as if every Bone had been an Heretick into Ashes Whereas on the other hand Religion in Truth and Sincerity hath always been full of Mercy and when the true Church hath been in Misery by the malice of her Persecutors she hath not rose up in Rebellion against them but always accounted preces lachrymas her Prayers and Tears to be her best Weapons never falling upon her Adversaries with Fire and Faggot as they do upon her Thus we see three grand Reasons why Moses Records this History yet further Moses minds us herein of two great Truths 1. That every Man should have his particular Calling Cain himself was
argueth A Mediator is not a Mediator of one Gal. 3.20 but sin became the Make-bate and set God and Man at odds and variance as Mans Eating Forbidden Fruit was the Transgression of God his Makers Law and when God was one party offended and Man was the other party offending then there was need of a Mediator ☞ NB. 1. If the penitent Prodigal found compassion in his Earthly Fathers Bowels without any Mediator to intercede for him notwithstanding his high offences 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 how much more may we if truly penitent hope to find compassion in our Heavenly Fathers Bowels Psal 103.13 and Mat. 7.11 having a Mediator and such a Mediator as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God-Man Christ Jesus is whom the Father heareth always John 11.42 and answers him with good words and comfortable Zech. 1.13 Oh sweet 2. Miserable is the condition of those that never took hold of this Covenant of Grace Isa 56.4 6. but hopes to be saved by the Covenant of Works their good deeds cannot outweigh their bad ones Job 9.3 c. If they would wage War against Divine Justice with Ten Thousand good Works 't will War against them with Twenty Thousand bad ones and overcome them contrà 3. No better are they that have no Interest in Christ the Mediator who is our peace Eph. 2.13 and by whom all blessings come John 1.16 17. Eph. 1.7 Psal 68.18 and Eph. 4.8 2 Cor. 2.20 The third Difference betwixt the Covenant of Works and that of Grace is In the former Divine Acceptation begins at the Action and so goeth on to accept of the Person the Work renders the Worker or the Person working acceptable to God but in the latter this Divine Acceptation first begins with the Person and then goes on to the Action the Work cannot be accepted before the Worker be so in the beloved one Christ Eph. 1.6 In the Covenant of Works God accepts the Person for the Work or Actions sake but in the Covenant of Grace God accepts respects and rewards the Work or Action for the Persons sake This may be thus Illustrated The Tenure of the Covenant of Works runs thus Do and live upon which Father Ambrose hath an excellent Gloss saying God the Creator called all his Created things good and very good at the end of every Days Creation yet when he had Created Man he speaks not one word of the goodness of his Creature Man not so much as Tob good much less Meod Tob very good and why so saith he Homo priùs probandus quàm approbandus c. Man must first be proved before he be approved but alas Man bal Jalin non pernoctavit abode not one Night as the Hebrew signifieth in his Honourable Estate Wherein he was Created Psal 49.12 He failed in his Action so God accepted not of his Person But the Tenure of the Covenant of Grace runs thus Believe and live The VVorker must be a Believer before the VVork can find Acceptance according to that saying of Father Augustine omnia opera Infidelium sunt tantùm splendida peccata all the Works of Unbelievers are no better than shining sins their very praying a Religious Action as well as Plowing a Civil Action is an abomination to the Lord Prov. 15.8 with 21.4 As Copress will turn Wine or Milk into Ink so Unbelief turns all their Natural Civil Moral or Spiritual Actions into Sin their Plotting and Plowing mischief Hos 7.15 and 10.13 is Iniquity and not only so but whether they Plow or Play or Pray or Eat or Sleep to the Impure and Unbelieving all things are impure Tit. 1.15 Their very Incense stinks of the Hand which Offereth it Isa 1.13 14 15. though of it self it be a most sweet and precious Perfume Yea their own Table much more the Lords Table becomes a Snare to them Psal 69.22 and their very Prayer though materially good is formally bad and becomes sin Psal 109.7 whereas the Prayer of the Righteous whose Persons are first accepted is Gods delight Prov. 15.8 his Melodious Musick even to a Charm or Inchantment as the Hebrew word Lachash Isa 26.16 signifieth unto his Ears Psal 18.6 as Honey-drops to his Taste Cant. 4.11 and his most fragrant perfume to his Smell Psal 141.2 Insomuch that God-hearing Prayer as if charmed with their Prayers breaks out into these words saying Ask of me concerning my Sons and concerning the work of my hands command ye me Isa 45.11 Oh the latitude of that Royal Charter What improvement may fervent Faith make thereof Luke 18.1 7. Jam. 5.16 17. This great Truth concerning the Persons Acceptance before the Action of any can be accepted may be exemplified by sundry Scripture Instances As First Gen. 4.4 and Heb. 11.4 God had respect to Abel and to his Offering c. Gods Respect was there and then first to his Person and then to his Oblation his Sacrifice was Respected by and accepted of God because himself was justified by Faith first Abel was a Believer and one under Grace in his Person hereupon Divine Respect or Acceptance being first to himself ascended secondly to his Sacrifice Whereas on the contrary Cain was an Unbeliever and not under Grace and therefore though he Offered as well and as good as Abel God having no respect for his Person had as little for his Offering Gen. 4.5 But unto Cain and his Offering God Respected not Cain was under the Covenant of VVorks which was first made betwixt an holy God and an holy Man wherein Man stood upon his own Legs and by his own strength and in his own Person without a Priest to bear his Sin to Offer his Sacrifice Adam had no more need of a Priest in his Representative Covenant wherein he represented all Mankind descending from him than the Angels have in their Personal Covenant so called because they had not their Being by Descent as Mankind hath but were all Created at once to wit while both Adam and Angels stood in their Integrity but when that Covenant was broken Abel being a Believer had a Back-door and a Surety or High-Priest 1. To present his Person as to stand in his stead to bear his Name both upon his heart and upon his shoulders 2. To offer his Sacrifice c. This gave Acceptance to his Person and Offering but Cain was an Unbeliever and all such men have no more benefit by an High-Priest than the Devils have only to Men there is a possibility and not unto them while they continue under this broken Covenant he was under the Covenant of Works as appeareth by Gods saying to him If thou dost well shalt thou not be accepted Gen. 4.7 Under which Covenant there can be no Acceptation of the Person while there is found any Imperfection in the Work not transmitted to a Surety Gal. 3.10 Cursed is every one that continueth not in all things contained in the Law any one failure in the Work procures a Curse on the Person This therefore is the
'twixt Devilish and Divine Dreams 1. Dreams from the Devil have a tendency to discover some future and secret things which belong not to us Deut. 29.29 but are left lock'd up in Gods Closet whereof he alone not the Devil hath the Key and 't is always in his keeping whereas the whole Duty we owe to God and Man is revealed in Gods Word To study this and to practise it the Devil despites and despises and he therefore gives us an Avocation from it by suggesting his Dreams concerning a Curious and Vain Knowledg of things not meet to be known that we may presumptuously pry into Gods Ark of secret matters and pretendedly boast thereof though no way profitable either to our selves or others This is a Science falsely so called 1 Tim. 6.20 which indeed is Ignorance and not only puffeth up question-sick Souls but always produceth Evil effects and we must therefore pray against such Dreams that God lead us not into Temptation c. 2. Dreams from the Devil do inflame the minds of Men to Lust and Revenge c. always tending to some sin or other as Nocturnal Pollution c. By this means the Bodies as well as Minds of Carnal Sinners are frequently defiled and sometimes Holy Saints may be likewise polluted by impure Dreams for the Devil of whose Devices we are not Ignorant 2 Cor. 2.11 may at some time take an advantage of a pretious Saint to fasten that sin upon him while asleep as he did upon Righteous Lot to commit Incest with his own Daughters which he cannot prevail with them to commit when awake A Notable Example hereof also we have in Cassianus Collat. 22. Cap. 6. Who tells of a certain Brother keeping his Body in subjection and duly preserving his Chastity by daily Temperance and Circumspection in all humbleness of Soul yet was he upon a time so deluded by the Devils Wiles in his Sleep when he had been solemnly preparing his Soul for Communion with his God he found his Body defiled while he was asleep with an Impure Flux This calls loud on us for Prayer and Watching 3. Dreams from the Devil draw off Mens minds from the pure Worship of God to Idolatry Heresie and all Abominations Therefore such Dreamers are expresly forbid by God in Deut. 13.1 A Dreamer of Dreams publickly obtruding his damnable Errors for Divine Truths to draw Men from God though he give a sign which by Gods permission may come to pass as Jannes and Jambres seem'd to turn Water into Blood Exod 7.22 or as the Jesuit to persuade the Indians to embrace Popery should commend it to them by a sign of assurance foretelling that the Sun shall be Eclipsed at such a time to confirm his Doctrine though they being ignorant of the constant causes hereof in the common course of the Heavens and how Eclipses continually occur in the two Nodes of the Dragons Head and Tail may by this Jesuitical Trick be deceived yet both these signs though they come to pass of Jannes and of the Jesuit are no better than cheats the latter being a Natural and the former a Diabolical work before both which the Divine Word whereby we must try the truth of all signs seeing some are fallacious 2 Thes 2.9 ought always to be preferred Such Deceivers and Dreamers God hath Doomed and Damned to die Deut 13.5 and chap. 18.20 Jer. 14.15 and Zech. 13 3. c. Add a Fourth Character to all the aforesaid three differences to wit Diabolical Dreams may be known as Diabolical Tentations are when 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sent of God or of the Devil If Dreams be First Transcendently gross in themselves as High Atheism that there is no God Psal 14.1 or that God is such an one as our selves Psal 50.21 Psal 58.1 or for sorry Man to affect a Deity as Gen. 3.5 All which are against the common dictates of Natures light and therefore must be Satans injections and not Gods 2. Irksom and execrable to the Soul which trembles at them when suggested as Blasphemy and Cursing God Job 1.11 So Sodomy Buggery c. which ought not to be named among Saints without utmost abhorrency and likewise Self-Murder or the Murdering of Innocent persons 1 Sam. 16.15 and 18.10 c. The thoughts only thereof should make our Hairs start up and our Hearts fall down yea and our whole Flesh to shrink and shrivel The light of Nature condemns such Monstrous Sins and the Life or Law of Nature helps the very Gentiles to do those things contained in Gods Law Rom. 2.14 c. 3. Violent as well as Sudden like a Flash of Lightning giving the Tempted no time to consider or the Temptation and the Tendency of it the Tempters Fiery Darts Eph. 6.16 sometimes hurry away the Soul into Sin ere ever it be aware therefore our gaining time against them and not closing too soon with them to the Burning of our Hands and Hearts as half a Victory over them Gods way is to lead gently Isa 40.11 well knowing Jacob's tender Flock cannot march Lord Esau's hasty pace Gen. 33.13 making many stops as the Star did that guided the Wisemen Mat. 2.2 7.9 But the Devils way is to hurry headlong by Violence he did thus with Christs Body by Divine permission from place to place Mar. 4.5 8. And thus with the possessed Man Luk. 8.29 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he was driven of the Devil as the Horse is with the Rider so the Greek signifies and thus he did with the Herd of Swine Mat 8.32 making them run violently down a steep place Thus also he doth with the Souls of Men 2 Pet. 2.17 which are driven by the Devils Tempest 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies so dreadful a Storm as made Christs Disciples though Seamen cry out when raised by the Prince of the Air Mat. 8.25 4. Furious as Saul was to kill every one in his way when this Evil Spirit was upon him 1 Sam. 19.9 10. 5. Pertinacious that cannot be shaked off as Paul did the Viper Act. 28.5 That which Satan put into Judas's Heart was an obstinate Evil done deliberately and out-faceing the All-seeing Eye of his own Master saying Is it 1 c. 6. Insulting thus the Devil 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Buffeted or Boxed Paul 2 Cor. 12.7 and so shamefully scoffed him that he prayed he might depart from him Piscator says it may be taken properly not figuratively Indeed the precise Indivisible point of the difference betwixt the Scum of our own depraved Spirits which naturally boyls up of it self in us and the suggestions of Satan either in our Dreams while asleep or in Tentations when awake is hard to Assign but Satan's in a word are usually as above and against the Inclination of our own Natures and against the Light of our own Consciences c. The Third sort of Dreams are the Divine and purely Spiritual call'd 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Divinitus Immissa sent of God to Men to good Men
Death he seem'd to run to it and by seeking to shun the shelves should ●ow most likely be split upon this Rock Laban as a Lion had some shamefac'dness in him saith a Rabby but Esau as a Bear had none at all Jacob therefore Prays sends Messengers sends Presents and submits c. And all to pacifie this chafing Bear robb'd of his two Whelps to wit the Birth-right and the Blessing He that meets with such a Beast will not strive with him for the Wall but be glad to scape by him with any lawful condescentions For I fear Jacob's fear was not a sudden and involuntary violent fear such as wise Men are naturally subject unto upon the noise of some dreadful crack of Thunder or upon the news of some unexpected strange and horrible Casualties out of which they again recover themselves whereas Fools as the Stoick Epictetus observeth do abide in the same fear still sometimes to a Distraction but Jacob's fear was a judicious and setled fear as may appear by his careful and threefold Preparation 1. For War 2. For Prayer 3. For Presents In all which he did well placing his Prudence and Prayer in a way of Subserviency and Subordination to Gods Providence which is the proper place The Third part of his Prayer is The Arguments he pusheth on his Petition with and they are in number seven placing his particular Petition not in the Head but in the Middle of them The first is taken from the Divine Covenant v. 9. where he is Gods Remembrancer reminding him of that Covenant which God had struck with Abraham and his Seed so pleads and puts in for his own part thereof as his Seed Saying as it were Lord thou hast been graciously present with my Grandfather and with my Father Oh! be not absent from me both their and thy Son As thou hast deliver'd them out of all evil so deliver me Remember thy Covenant if not my Congregation Psal 74.19 20. Jacob herein doth as it were Appropriate God calling him the Tutelar God of his Fathers Family their Domestick Deity or Daemon that he might the more pathetically profess him to be his peculiar God too The second Argument is drawn from a Divine Command as the first was from a Divine Covenant saying Thou saidst unto me return ver 9. wherein he argues thus Lord thou knowest I did not depart from my Service in Syria upon my own Head neither by any rashness of my own Sentiments nor by the fond advice of any of my Relations either of my Wives or of my Children I am no Rogue nor Runagate 1 Sam. 25.10 that hath broke away from my Master as some evil Servants do before their time be out I have not been saith he like a Damm'd or stopt River that breaks its Banks or as some unruly Cattel that break both their Bands and their Bounds No I staid out my full time of my hard Service and stirr'd not a foot until I had thy Call Gen. 31.3 Seeing therefore it was not my precipitancy but thy precept that hath brought me into this great peril of my Brother Esau 't is but an equal and Righteous Challenge I make to claim relief from thee The third Argument is drawn from a Divine Promise as the second was from a Divine Precept urging Thou saidst I will do thee good ver 9. and 12. So Jacob interprets that Promise I will be with thee Gen 31.3 which indeed hath in it whatever Heart can wish or need require Promises must be prayed over God loves to be sued upon his own Bond to be burden'd with and importun'd in his own words Prayer is our putting Gods Promises into Suit 'T is neither Arrogancy nor Presumption to Burden God as it were with his Promise-Bonds As his Love mov'd him to make them so his Truth binds him to perform them and 't is our Duty to improve them as it was his Mercy to make them So Gods Mercy always calls for Mans Duty there is a sweet Reciprocation between them two we ought therefore to lay claim and make challenge in a way of Duty unto all that Aid and Assistance when we find our selves plung'd into perils which God hath promis'd to give us in a way of Mercy as Jacob doth here to whom this Promise of God I will be with thee was such precious Spice that twice he repeats it and ruminates upon it rolling it as Sugar in his Mouth and hiding it under his Tongue God spake it once he heard it twice as David did Psal 62.11 by an after-deliberate-reiterated Rumination and Meditation upon it He sucks and is satisfied with this Breast of Consolation Isa 66.11 He milks out or as the Hebrew signifies he wrings out as the hungry Child doth its Mothers Breast sucks so long as a drop will come and sucketh still till more cometh so Jacob the Patriarch here both presseth and expresseth Gods Promise squeezing out more comfort out of it than it seemed to contain 'T is very Remarkable how the Patriarch improves this Promise Veeheieh Gnimmak ero tecum I will be with thee Gen. 31.3 wringing it and squeezing out of it 1. Those words Veettibah Gnimmak ' benefaciam tibi I will do thee good or I will deal well with thee Gen. 32.9 And then again 2. These words Hetib Atib Gnimmak ' benefaciendo benefaciam tibi In doing good I will do thee good or I will surely do thee good v. 12. The Lord is good and doth good to Man even while he is evil and doth evil to God and Jacob here argues himself into an assurance that God would certainly do him good Mark well how kindly doth a Promise ripen grows both greater and mellower in the Hand of Faith which stretcheth and straineth it after an holy manner to the best and most happy advantage Could we but believingly pray over Gods Promises such Prayers would be nigh to God Night and Day 1 Kings 8.59 and he could as little deny them as deny his own Deity The exceeding great and precious Promises so called 2 Pet. 1.4 are the most fragrant and sweet-smelling Spices especially when well pounded by the Preaching of the Word to the Souls of Saints that are sick of Love 't is a sweet time with them when Christ brings them into his Banqueting-house stays them with the Silver Flaggons of his Wine-cellar the Holy Scriptures and comforts them with the Golden Apples that grow upon the Tree of Life the precious Promises Cant. 2.4 5. Then is Christs left hand under their heads and his right hand doth embrace them v. 6. and then it is when they are thus stayed and stablished under his Banner of Love when their Souls are thus satisfied with such transporting Joys that they can now be content to want what God will have them to want and to wait Gods time which is always the best time and his leisure for their Deliverance being hereby adjured themselves and they now adjuring others not to Dare the awakening
now need of this Noble Captain yet rather than have this young Proselyte discouraged in his new profession of the true Religion he would trust God with himself and his concerns in raising up other instruments for his assistance It seems David was none of those kind of Men who measure all things for their advantage and may they have their own self-ends they matter not what becomes of the weal of others Mark Fourthly David in order to Ittai's dismission gives him a Cordial Prayer Mercy and Truth be with thee words oft in David's mouth Psal 25.10 c. Wherein he wisheth him Covenant-kindness that God would reward his labour of love in his present willingness to wait upon him seeing saith he I in a manner d●posed am not able to requite thee therefore he prayeth God to perform all his precious Promises made to true Proselytes as well as to Israelites good to him that as God's Mercy moved him to make the Promises so his Truth might bind him to perform them to him for his Temporal Spiritual and Eternal welfare Mark Fifthly Ittai is such a fast and faithful friend to David that he will not be by any means shaken off but resolvedly replies Nothing shall part them save death only v. 21. A sure Friend is best seen in unsure matters Such friends that will be certain in Adversity as well as in Prosperity as one saith are gone on Pilgrimage and their return is uncertain N. B. David took Ittai's fixed fidelity so highly obliging that he made this very man one of his three Generals in that fatal and final Battle against Absalom Chap. 18.2 and doubtless it could not but much encourage David's dependency upon the Lord in his distress when he saw tho' his own native Subjects did desert him yet God had fetch'd in a forreigner from far that will be fixed for him and that a Man of a great figure able every way both for Courage and Conduct yea and if so as some say a King's Son too to fight for him as well as a King's Son to sight against him The Fourth Remark is the Ark's coming to David and his sending it back again to the City v. 23. to 29. Mark First When all the Countrey People beheld David trudging a foot over the Brook Kidron wherein he was a Type of Christ who passed over the same Brook when in danger of the Jews Joh. 18 1. as David was in danger of Absalom they truly simpathized with him and fell a weeping with a loud voice to see so good a King going into Banishment like a poor Pilgrim being in fear of an unnatural Son and while David's well-wishers were thus weeping here no doubt but Absalom and his Accomplices that resorted to hunt him out of both City and Country even all the Rascality were as much transported on the other hand with their mad merriments but that Hilary Term lasted not long but had a Returna brevi according to Lawyers Latin Mark Secondly The High-Priest and the Priests and Levites brought the Ark of God which was a pledge of his presence to counter comfort those disconsolate Mourners David and his Friends This was a very commendable Act in them thus to Countenance distressed David in despight of Ambitious Absalom when so many of their Predecessors had been so lately cut off by malicious Saul and only for their favouring David when Banished and came to begg a little Bread of them at Nob c. yet these their Successors dare own David in Danger and bring him the Ark that at it he might Consult then with God about Direction in his way and that the veneration of the Ark might likewise draw more Company to David both out of City and Country The Fifth Remark is King David's command to carry back the Ark of God ver 25 26 c. His Reasons were First Because he believed that in his Banishment God himself even the God of the Ark would be as a little Pocket-portable Sanctuary unto him as he promiseth Ezek. 11.16 and not withdraw his Powerful Presence and Protection from him both for his safety and for his success Knowing that when God denies means he supplies means when we cannot come to the Ordinances of God the God of Ordinances comes to us If David can but secure the substance he can better spare the shadow His Second Reason was Though the Ark's presence had wrought wonders in Dividing Jordan in Demolishing Jericho c. so was desirable enough to David in his Distress yet such a Reverence he bare to it as he justly thought it unfit to hurry it from place to place he knew not whither and to expose it to all the hazards that himself was like to be exposed unto His Third Reason was His Respect to the Priests whom he would not again expose to the Rage of Absolom as before he had done to the Fury of King Saul 1 Sam. 22. A Fourth Reason Lyra fancyeth That David had bid Abiathar ask Counsel of God at the Ark when it came hither but God gave no Answer whereby he knew God was not yet pacified The Fifth Reason is That rendred better by Peter Martyr namely David knew those faithful Priests might do him better service in the City than in his wandrings using this Dilemma saying Either God will bring me back or he will not for my foul offences I peaceably and patiently submit to his pleasure Hence the Sixth Remark is David saith to Zadock 't is not thy Duty to attend me in my Banishment but on the Ark in the Tent where I have placed it in the City and where thou mayest both pray and consult with God for me and also give me good intelligence of the Rebels Motions and Counsels by thy Sons which is of great consequence to my concerns I will hover in the Wilderness which was my haunt when I fled from Saul and where I found not God a Barren Wilderness to me Jerem. 2.31 Then they returned with the Ark but David went weeping and bare-foot taking an Holy revenge upon himself for his former Luxury and Impieties up to the top of the Mount of Olives that from thence he might look towards the Ark yet in sight not like to see it again in haste There he and his Friends wept and pray'd The Seventh Remark is God gave a speedy Answer to his Prayer for though he was told of Poyson Achitophel's deep reaches assisting Absolom yet God sent him in an Antidote Hushai to confound his crafty Counsels as David had prayed ver 30 31 to 37. Wherein Mark 1. David saith to Hushai be not thou a burden to me in my Banishment seeing provisions are scarce and seeing thou art Old fitter for Counsel than for War ver 33. Mark 2. David directs him to dissemble with the New King ver 34. N. B. This was one of David's errours in the extremity of his straits in not doing so exactly as he should which therefore God graciously pardoned and directed David's
own present wants but begs my last bit of me c. here 's not a word of such carnal Reasonings She doth not dispute but dispatch c. Hence Lavater Grotius Peter Martyr c. Admire the Strength of her Faith Mark 10. The kindness of this Widow in Baking the first Cake for Elijah was well requited with a Prophet's Reward Mat. 10.41 42. she afforded one Meal for him and He many to her and hers ver 15 16. neither the Meal in the Barrel nor the Oil in the Cruise was made less by daily use for three Years together which was the time of Elijah's absconding from Ahab in this place as He had hid himself for six Months in a Cave at Cherith as above N.B. This multiplying of Meal c. was Elijah's Third Miracle which Grotius compareth to those two Miracles of the blessed Messias in multiplying a few Loaves c. Mat. 14.19 and 15.36 Remark the Third is The History of Elijah's raising this Widow's dead Son to Life which was his Fourth Miracle c. This is described by many Circumstances of Time Place Means and Manner from ver 17 to ver 22. and the Event or Effect of this Miracle namely a farther Confirmation of this new Gentile-Proselytess's Faith v. 23 24. Mark 1. The time when this 4th Miracle was wrought some say was about two years after Elijah was entertain'd and maintain'd as well as absconded by this compassionate Widow Long had she lived under the mercy of this multiplying Miracle Now lest she should forget her self and be Exalted above measure her mercy must be mixed with misery and sickness is sent to kill her Son out-right which Famine only threatned to do an heavy cross now allays her high comfort Mark 2. Her passionate expostulation with the Prophet v. 18. in her extream perplexity she rashly imputes the death of her Son to the presence of the Prophet as if her Son could not have died if Elijah had not been her Guest Thus apt are we to mistake the grounds of our afflictions and to cast them upon wrong Causes Erpennius saith she was conscious to her self that she had not conversed with this most Holy Man so holily and reverently as she ought to have done in the midst of her passion saith Peter Martyr she retaineth her penitency acknowledging her sin was the Mother of her misery and feared the Man of God had complain'd to God of some miscarriage in her Mark 3. The place where this Miracle of raising her Son to life was wrought to wit upon the Prophet's Bed this Holy Prophet answers not passion with passion tho' he was of a fiery temper but calmly takes the dead Son out of its Mother's bosom and lays it upon his own Bed v. 19. that there he might in private pray the more fervently to procure his life again that as he had shut up Heaven from giving Rain so now must he open Heaven to return the Soul of her Son And indeed every word he poured out in Prayer v. 20. was a word of weight and wonder Peter Martyr observes every word is an Argument from the Topicks or Persons 1. From God whose Office it is to be kind to Widows and who is Lord of Life and Death so canst restore from Death to Life 2. From himself I am thy Prophet and thou art my God this will redound to my disgrace if unredress'd what will the World say But God bless me from entertaining God's Prophets if this be the effect thereof 3. From the Widow shall my God and my self requite her kindness with such an act of unkindness she is a Widow so a most passionate Lover of her Son and cannot subsist without her Son's support Let not this affliction of the loss of her Son be added to the affliction of her Widow-hood Mark 4. Elijah observed that old Rule Ora Labora Pray and Labour thus he did by stretching himself three times upon the dead Child v. 21. as if saith Lavater he would have hatch'd him alive as the Hen doth her Eggs but rather it was that his sense of the Carcasses coldness might heat his own heart the more into most fervent Prayer which at the third time prevailed Mark 5. As the means of the Miracle was Invocation and Incubation so the manner of it was by the Soul 's returning to the Body v. 22. which shews he was really dead by such a separation and that the Soul shall return to the Body at the Resurrection This is the First Instance we read of any that was raised from the Dead and this was Elijah's Fourth Miracle Mark 6. The Effect of all v. 23 24. teaching 1. The Immortality of the Soul 2. Effectual fervent Prayer avails much Jam. 5.16 3. To receive a Prophet is not in vain Mat. 10 41 42. 4. Her Faith by the Meal and Oyl which stagger'd at her Son's death was now confirmed by his reviving and 5. This evidences the truth Heb. 11.35 that Women received their dead raised to life again lastly Jerom thinks this Dead Son raised to life was Jonah the Prophet but others do think otherwise saith Peter Martyr however this truth appears that Miracles confirm Faith Heb. 2.4 and that those who work them in truth are sent of God Joh. 3.2 and 9.17.30.33 c. 1 Kings CHAP. XVIII THIS Chapter relateth Elijah's Embassage to King Ahab upon the account of procuring rain after such a long dreadful drought and dearth This Embassage consists of two parts First The Injunction and Secondly the Execution of it then follows the Event thereof Remarks first upon the Injunction as First The Time when ver 1. namely after Israel had laid gasping under a parching Drought and a destructive Famine for Three Years and Six Months James 5.17 in which time no doubt but many a Curse was belched forth by Baal's Worshippers at Elijah for his shutting up Heaven so long from Rain whereas he only had declared it as God's Judgment for their Idolatry 'T was God's Hand who only made use of Elijah's Tongue only to say what God would do chap. 17.1 Thus Embassadors suffer for the sake of their Master that sends them upon Displeasing Embassages They should have railed at their own Sins Remark the Second When Elijah had absconded so long at Cherith's Cave and Sarepta's Widow's God calls him forth from his Hiding-place and bids him Go shew thy self to Ahab with this Message 1. Acquaint him with the Cause of the Famine 2. Advise him to remove the Cause procuring it And 3. Promise him Rain upon his Reformation No Rain must fall saith Dr. Hall till Elijah be seen of Ahab he had carried away the Clouds with him and so must bring them again should Rain have faln in his absence and before his appearance then had it not been according to his word ch 17.1 God herein took care to maintain the Honour and Authority of his Prophet Remark the Third Is Elijah's undaunted Courage in venturing at God's command thus
and tired themselves in vain Elijah Jeers and Ridicules both their Persons Actions and Idols taunting them with saying Baal was so busie in pursuing his Foes that he had no leisure of attending his Friends c. N. B. Which teacheth that all Jesting is not unlawful faith Peter Martyr save that only which intrencheth upon Piety and good Manners saying that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which Paul condemns Eph. 5.4 is taken for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Salt Jests and Scurrility not for an inoffensive Vrbanity or a pleasant facetiousness of Speech Mark 7. When Baal's Priests end and can do nothing with all their ridiculous Endeavours all the day long then Elijah begins at the time of the Evening Sacrifice ver 30 to ver 40. who no doubt did all by divine Direction He 1. calls the People to come away from those falle Prophets that had so long seduced them unto him the true Prophet of God 2. He repairs the Altar of the Lord which Baal's Worshippers had demolished with twelve Stones representing the Twelve Tribes thereby renewing the Covenant betwixt God and Israel now when Ten Tribes were Apostatized ver 30 31 32. 3. He orders twelve Barrels of Water supposed to be fetch'd from the Sea near Carmel when the drought had dried up all their Land-Brooks to be poured upon the Wood and Altar to avoid all suspicion of any Collusion in hiding Fire any where under such a vast quantity of Water which ran upon the Altar and filled the Trench too that the reality of the Miracle might be made the more manifest by a greater fervency of such a Fire as to lick up all ver 33 34. 4. Then betakes he to Prayer for fire c. 36 37 38. wherein though the Prophets of Baal had cried loud yet this Prophet of God cried louder saying Hear me O Lord hear me well knowing that God and not Baal was the true Prayer-hearing God N. B. The Baalites Prayers had been long and tedious to a deaf dumb and dunghil Deity but Elijah's Prayer was short and pithy charging God with the care of his Covenant of his Truth and of his Glory N. B. Nor did his twelve Stones for repairing the Altar and his twelve Barrels of Water wherewith he filled the Altar and Trenches any less rebuke the Ten Tribes for falling off from the Two in the Worship of God N. B. This is beyond doubt that his strong Crys of Faith did reach the Throne of Grace and soon discover to Israel that Elijah's God was unlike Baal neither talking nor travelling nor pursuing nor sleeping not a God of such a narrow Uunderstanding as unable to mind two things at once But as he is the Creator so the Governor of all things both in Heaven and Earth and hath the command both of Fire and of Water at all times and as an Evidence hereof at this time he first sends fire to consume Elijah's Sacrifice and not only to lick up the twelve Barrels of Water that filled the Trenches by that flash of fire but after gives abundance of Water in a plentiful Rain also to remove the Judgment of Drought and Famine insomuch that when Israel saw the first Sign that God had answer'd by Fire to the Prophet's Prayers they cry out as fully The Lord and not Baal is God the Lord is God and he can give us Water as well as Fire if our Sins hinder not N. B. They might say Oh well is it with us that this fearful flash of fire hath not consumed our own flesh for our Idolatries as it hath done the flesh of the burnt Offering and licked up our Blood as it hath all the Water in the Trench and so they might acknowledge God's Mercy as they did his Power twice over ver 39. Remark the Sixth is the Execution of Justice upon Baal's Prophets and the return of Rain after a long Drought of Three Years and six Months from ver 40 to 46. wherein Mark 1. Elijah strikes while the Iron is hot he takes hold of this Opportunity while the Peoples Hearts were warm with the fresh Conviction of this wonderful Miracle and bids them take those juggling Priests and let not one of them escape v. 40. and kill them at Kishon that their Blood might help to fill that River which their Idolatry had emptied by the Drought N. B. All this Elijah might lawfully do at God's direction and according to God's Law Deut. 13.5 and 18.20 for which like Justice Jehu is afterwards commended 2 Kings 10.28 and probably he had the consent of the King who found them Impostors and was assured of Rain when this Work was done c. indeed Luke 9.55 Our sweet Saviour rebukes that over-hot Spirit which would call Fire from Heaven to consume such as slighted him this he said was not suitable to the Gospel of Peace but Elijah was a Restorer of the Law c. Mark 2. After this Execution of Justice Elijah foretels Mercy was now coming ver 41. saying to Ahab Haste thou from Kishon up to thy Tent on Carmel and refresh thy self there after thy long fasting day The chief cause of the Drought being now removed God will send Rain therefore go eat thy Bread with joy and drink thy Wine with a chearful heart c. Eccles 9.7 For Col. Ha●non c. Hebr. I hear a Wind whistling in the Heavens and presaging abundance of Rain He heard this noise with the Ears of his Faith saith Osiander when none else did hear it Mark 3. Ahab now satisfied with news of Rain goes up to his Repast and Elijah goes up to his Prayer ver 42. minding more God's Glory in that great day's Work than his own Refreshment Josephus saith He prayed sitting but 't is otherwise expressed here He put his face between his knees the very posture saith Peter Martyr wherein the Babe layeth in the Womb with his Head between his Knees N.B. This was a Gesture of his deep Humility as unworthy to lift up his Eyes to God of his remembrance with thankfulness how he was brought to light from a miserable beginning at his Birth and now was about to be as it were born again after his three Years and half absconding in the Womb of Providence The Prophet prays for Rain in this posture which strained all the strings of his Head Heart and whole Body well knowing though God had promised Rain yet would he have his Prayer to fetch it and therefore no wonder if the Apostle say He prayed earnestly James 5.17 18. And though 't is not told us what he prayed yet this is Recorded his Prayer was so earnest that he opened Heaven by that Key Mark 4. The Prophet unwilling to break off his Prayer sends his Servant which Vatablus saith was the Widow of Sarepta's Son to watch the first rise of a vaporous Cloud out of the Sea ver 43. Elijah had pray'd saith Sanctius that the Fire might descend immediately for a speedy freeing of his own Faith and for
enabled to hear a Word of Comfort which was this that Cambyses had ●ay hindring God's Temple laid the Foundation of the Persians Empire's Ruine for God ●●ll send the Prince of Greece Alexander the Great and others before him to overturn 〈◊〉 Empire c. ver 20. N.B. They spoil'd the Persians Plots against the Jews fi●●●● them other Work than to hinder God's House Michael the Messiah Prince of his Church orders and over-rules the whole Vniverse for its good c. ver 21. Thus some Converts 〈◊〉 have three touches from the Hand of Heaven before throughly Comforted Dan. XI and XII REmarks First Upon Dan. 11. 't is an History as well as a Prophecy Mark 1. The Angel Gabriel revealeth from Christ unto Daniel after his Prayer Dan 9. and his Fasting three Weeks Dan. 10. whereby he was prepared to receive this Prophecy the plain Naked Truth which should suddenly and certainly come to pass ver 2. where saith Grotius c. this eleventh Chapter ought to begin and from thence Gabriel explains the former Vision of the Ram and of the He-Goat Dan. 8. speaking only of such Kings of Persia as either hindred or help'd the Temple Mark 2. He foretels that the Persian Monarchy which had obstructed the building of God's Temple should be destroy'd by Alexander the Great after it was come to its 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or heighth wherein it could bring into the Field even Millions of Men and cover the Seas with its Ships and thinking to drive down all before them ver 2 3. Mark 3. Then that Grecian Empire which swallow'd up the Persian when it seems in its Zenith and most Ruffling Grandeur expecting Embassadors at Babylon from all the World shall be broken like brittle ware and be divided into four of Alexander's Chieftains Cassander Antigonus Seleucus and Ptolomy ver 4. Mark 4. Then he foretels the Intestine Wars that should arise among those Successors of Alexander seven several times from ver 5 to ver 20. the last of which seven Wars was betwixt Ptolomy Philometer and Antiochus Epiphanes whom Gabriel calls a Vile Person ver 21. who should conquer Egypt ver 22 to 28. but be recall'd by Rumours ver 40 c. the Year before his Death his success ripen'd him for Ruine Mark 5. He foretels the sad State of the Jews all this Time who laying betwixt Egypt on the South and Syria on the North and so they were like Bread-corn betwixt two Mill-stones grinded to Powder during all those seven Wars aforesaid their marches to and fro being commonly through the Bowels of Judea but more especially by this Vile Antiochus not so much Epiphanes or Famous but Epimanes Infamous for his Madness against the Jews ver 28 30. to 39. and again ver 41 to 45. and 1 Maccab. Chap. 1.2.3.4.5 and 6. N.B. Though God's Church here went to wrack both by the North and by the South yet both North-wind and South shall blow good to it at last Cant. 4.16 God's Favour makes them Favonian or favourable Winds c. Remarks Secondly Upon Dan. 12. that brings in the Good and Comfort of the Church Mark 1. 'T is promis'd that Michael the strong Christ will protect his Church from the Persecutions of Antiochus that Type of Antichrist and deliver all his Elect Temporally or Eternally ver 1 2 3. Mark 2. Antiochus and so Antichrist's Time of Persecution is limitted more darkly ver 5 6. but more plainly upon Daniel's farther enquiry ver 8 to 12. The Man Christ Jesus ver 7. tells him the end shall not be till Time Times and half were over which he numbers fully in one thousand two hundred and ninety Days ver 11. before Antiochus's Death And then he adds forty five Days more ver 12. for some signal Mercy as that Victory Judas Maccabeus obtain'd about that time c. this Addition made the former to be one thousand three hundred and thirty five N.B. The number of the Beast Antichrist six hundred and sixty six if doubled make one thousand three hundred and thirty three and three Years and half make up one thousand three hundred and thirty five compleat Mark 3. Daniel is bid 1. To Seal up this Prophecy ver 4. the Secret of it was reserved to be made known in after Times And 2. He must be satisfied herewith and prepare for Death having a Promise both of Rest in his Grave and at his Resurrection out of it ver 9 13. here Daniel hath a kind Dismission from Troubles as Rev. 14.13 c. Esther CHAP. I. SOme General Remarks are requisite here before we come to the particular History As 1. Upon the Book 2. The Author And 3. The Time Remark the First In General concerning the Book it self whether it be Canonical is question'd by Athanasius and Nazianzen c. which they seem'd to doubt of because of the seven Apochryphal Fragments as so many Chapters were usually and abusively added and stitched to it I find indeed some Rabbins relate that when this Megillath or Volume of Esther comes to be read in it's course in the Jews Synagogues at their Divine Worship they have a Custome among them to cast only this Book of Esther upon the Ground before they read it and the Reason they render for their so doing is because they find not the Name of God or Lord in this whole Book But this Reason is in Truth no Reason if it be seriously consider'd what a Contexture of most eminent Passages and Acts of God's immediate Providences for relieving his Calamitous Church is contained in this History even such and so perspicuous as can scarcely be parallel'd in the whole Book of God any where or at any Time and Age. N.B. 1. This Book hath been constantly received as a part of the Canon of Sacred Scripture and reckoned among the Chetubin Hagiographa or Holy Writings by the Jewish Church notwithstanding the Name God or Lord be not named in it to which the Oracles of God were committed Rom. 3.2 that they might keep them carefully for and transmit them safely to Posterity and 't is more than probable yea it may be strongly presumed that the Jews were true to their Trust otherwise either our Lord Christ or his Holy Apostles who reproved their Rabbins for many other Corruptions c. would have rebuked them for their unfaithfulness in corrupting the Canon of the Scripture as a necessary Caution to the Christian Church N. B. 2. Rabbi Abraham the Spaniard relateth this Book of Esther is had in so much Reverence among the Jews that so oft as they do hear the mention of Haman's Name read in it they do even to this Day with their Fists and Hammers so beat upon the Boards and Benches as if they were beating upon Haman's Head it self to break out his Brains c. Remark the 2d in general concerning the Author of this Book N. B. 1. Sanctius saith out of Augustin and Isidore that Ezra was its Author But Bonartius answers
Vol. 4. Page 44 Philosophers prime Patriarchs of Hereticks Vol. 4. Page 436 Piety compared to a Tower Vol. 4. Page 124 125 Providence over-ruling all Vol. 4. Page 17 The concurrence of its works Vol. 4. Page 43 The Prodigal Son Vol. 4. Page 135 136 The Punishment of notorious Sinners under the Gospel-Ministry Vol. 4. Page 347 Policy subservient to Piety Vol. 4. Page 432 Q R Reformation not all at once Vol. 4. Page 37 Righteousness natural or moral what Vol. 4. Page 115 116 Its insufficiency for Salvation Vol. 4. Page 116 117 Repentance to be Preached 117 Rewards above whether equal Vol. 4. Page 187 188 Reproofs singular kindnesses Vol. 4. Page 418 Rome Heathen less cruel than Pagal Vol. 4. Page 496 S Sabbath a means of sanctifying Grace Vol. 4. Page 423 Saints glorified know each other Vol. 4. Page 99 The good Samaritan Vol. 4. Page 120 121 Saul's famous Conversion Vol. 4. Page 365 One Sin makes way for another Vol. 4. Page 347 Requiring Signs an evidence of Hypocrisie Vol. 4. Page 92 Simony from Simon Vol. 4. Page 361 A famous Sorcerer Vol. 4. Page 406 Separation when lawful Vol. 4. Page 444 445 Sleeping at Sermons dangerous Vol. 4. Page 452 The Lord's Day Sabbath hinted at by Circumcision on the Eighth day Vol. 4. Page 21 Shiloh signifies a Secondine hence Christ so stiled Vol. 4. Page 9 Simony abhorred and corrected Vol. 4. Page 36 Sins of Great Men to be reproved Vol. 4. Page 41 Socinians refuted Vol. 4. Page 4 Syllogisms used to confute the Jews Vol. 4. Page 50 T Talents allowed to all Vol. 4. Page 178 A Thief converted at the Death of Christ 237.8 9. His Prayer Vol. 4. Page 238 A peculiar Time of Promises fulfilling Vol. 4. Page 14 Time of Christ's coming to comfort Zion Vol. 4. Page 513 Traditions pleaded against Truth Vol. 4. Page 86 Tranquillity of the Church short Vol. 4. Page 446 Tricks of Tyrants Vol. 4. Page 397 U Unbelief cleaves to the best heart Vol. 4. Page 90 Unbeliever's State most miserable Vol. 4. Page 252 Unconverted Men drive a Trade of Sin Vol. 4. Page 111 Unity of Ministers amiable Vol. 4. Page 395 Unanimity alone cannot authorize Opinions Vol. 4. Page 426 V Vanity used to effect great ends Vol. 4. Page 435 Divine Vengeance sleeps not always Vol. 4. Page 26 Believers call'd Vessels because rather Patients than Agents in Conversion Vol. 4. Page 372 The wise and foolish Virgins Vol. 4. Page 176 Vipers destroy each other Vol. 4. Page 490 W Waiting on God a duty Vol. 4. Page 14 The World a Warfare Vol. 4. Page 314 Man's way not in himself Vol. 4. Page 465 Weaknesses discovertd before the Power of Christ Vol. 4. Page 79 Wise men their Offerings to Christ as Prophet Priest and King Vol. 4. Page 25 A Word in season very good Vol. 4. Page 478 X Y Youth a sleepy Age Vol. 4. Page 453 Z Zeal with Revenge Vol. 4. Page 37 Blind Zeal Vol. 4. Page 355 356 An Exact Index of the Scriptures of the Fourth Volume upon the Old Testament GEnesis Chap. verse Vol. 4. page   5 3   9   15 1   513   22 14   400   32 10   17   37 23   215   49 10   9 Exodus chap. verse Vol. 4. page   2 26   25   3 2 3   261   7 3   428   8 15   196   18 21   219   19 16 18   101   34 19   97 Levit. chap. verse Vol. 4. page   14 4   46   25 23   242 Numb chap. verse Vol. 4 page   14 28   221   16 27   424   22 28   434   23 23   407   25 4   225 Deut. chap. verse Vol. 4. page   17 2 8 12   209   18 11   424   28 58   218   32 32 33   224   33 1   42   34 5 6   508 Josh chap. verse Vol. 4. page   2 19   437   10 12 13   401   14 6   42 Judg. chap. verse Vol. 4. page   6 37 39   415 Ruth chap. verse Vol 4. page   4 15   57 1 Sam. chap. verse page   2 2 243   14 39 226   21 9 43   26 10 27   28 7 424 2 Sam. chap. verse Vol. 4. page   7 10   198 2 Sam. chap. verse Vol. 4. page   9 1 3   43   15 11   508   21 6   225 1 Kings chap. verse Vol. 4. page   3 16   27   19 11 12   48 2 Kings chap. verse Vol. 4. page   6 18   408   7 9   208   19 29   400 1 Chron. chap. verse Vol. 4. page 2 Chron. chap. verse Vol 4. page   20 12   104   33 12   243 Ezra chap. verse Vol. 4. page   9 13   59 Neh. chap. verse Vol. 4. page Esther chap. verse Vol. 4 page   9 1   420   10 3   217 Job chap. verse Vol. 4. page   15 11   513   22 29   260   ●3 17   35●   42 2   269 Psalm   verse Vol. 4 page 18   5 193 22   6 7 8   232 45   2   34 76   10   40 84   11   511 103   13   137 105   19   25 118   20   36 119   96   116 128   1 2   511 Prov. chap. verse Vol 4. page   1 10 13   270   7 21 23   270   8 30   25   14 32   239   16 9   500   20 11   115   29 25   219   31 14   513 Eccles chap. verse Vol. 4. page   7 14   260 Cant. chap. verse Vol. 4. page   1 3   12   2 16   456   3 11   216 Isa chap. verse Vol. 4. page   1 12   36   2 2   15   7 14   12   11 4   196   26 20   114   42 8   402   53 4 5 6 11   8   65 24   401 Jer. chap. verse Vol. 4. page   2 2   137   7 11   36   10 23   114   23 6   117 Lam. chap. verse Vol. 4. page   1 12   231   3 30   205 Ezek. chap. verse Vol. 4. page   3 17 18   440   4 6   512   20 6   31   21 20   114   38 4 6   511   39 1   404 Dan. chap. verse Vol. 4. page   2 35 45   410   3 26   246   6 8   250   7 27   326   8 26   511   9 24 26   8 15   12 4 7 9   511 Hosea chap. verse Vol. 4. page   2 14   512   10 8   223   11 1   27 Joel chap. verse Vol. 4.
The Fourth Remark is Christ may seem to sleep and slight those whom he hath a mind and a purpose to relieve as his Disciples in the Storm Mat. 8.23 c. and those Blind Men who followed him crying out from Jairus's house to his own house yet takes he no notice of them all along in the open street to increase their importunity no sooner was he come into the house but he then answers their Eager and Earnest cries Christ knows how to comment his Mercy to Mankind citò data citò vilescunt lightly come by lightly set by what is easily obtained is mostly but little esteemed The Fifth Remark is Foregoing faith found in man makes him more capable of receiving the following favour of God Christ asks them Do ye believe I am able to do this They said yea Lord. They believed Christ's Incarnation calling him the Son of David which was a blessed prop to their Faith upon him as their Lord and Saviour c. The Sixth Remark is The Prayer of Faith hath a mighty prevalency with the Almighty God Thus Christ both graced and gratified the Syrophenician Woman whom before He had both reproached and repulsed by granting her request and giving her as it were the Key of his Treasury bidding her go into it and take what Mercy she liked most Mat. 15.28 There is no doubt saith a Grace Divine but Justifying faith is not beneath that which is Miraculous in the Sphere of its own activity and where it hath warrant from God's Word All things are possible to him that believeth Mark 9.23 Christ will do any thing for them The Seventh Remark is Though Christ was not tied to Means yet did he use Means in his Touching their Eyes with his hand then according to their Faith which was not vain it was done unto them their Eyes were opened by Christ's Touch which he could have Wrought by a Word of his Mouth to teach us not to Tempt God in neglect of means c. The Eighth Remark is All things are not to be made known at all Times nor to all Persons our Lord in his state of Humiliation was not Ambitious of Vain-glory. Therefore did he straitly charge them to silence 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he terribly threatned them from telling it abroad partly to teach both his Ministers and his Members not to be all for Fame and Name whereby to dazle the Eyes of others with admiration not valuing hidden Treasures The Heathen Poet saith Scire Tuum nihil est nisi te scire hoc sciat Alter And again Digito monstrari Dicier hic est to be pointed at for a brave man c. And partly because Capernaum was now fallen under a general unbelief and untowardness Mat. 11.23 so had rendred it self incapable tho' not of Christ's Presence yet of knowing his Miracles The Ninth Remark is Obedience to a general Command may be the sin of Disobedience as it crosses and contradicts a particular Command The general command was that they should declare the Glory of God 1 Chron. 16.24 Psal 96.3 and Isa 66.19 and these two Blind Men receiving now their sight could not but look upon their silence as the most sublime Ingratitude Ingratum si dixeris omnia the worst and the whole of sin should they conceal the greatness of his Grace towards them therefore they divulge it though against his will Some foolishly say Christ for bad them to stir them up the more what is this but to speak wickedly for God c. Job 13.7 making him who was Truth it self to dissemble As their divulging it was a doing against an express particular command it was certainly their sin though done from a pious intention for though a bad Aim may make a good Action bad as in Jehu's case yet a good Aim will not make a bad Action good as in Vzzah's Concerning the second Miracle here of Healing the possessed Dumb man we have these few Remarks 1. The end of one good Action should be the beginning of another No sooner were those blird men gone out of the house from Christ but immediately they brought in a man possessed with a Dumb Devil whom also Christ healed He was never weary with well-doing 't is pity we all are so soon so N. B. Note well Christ's Ministers should learn from their Master not to expect Rest till they come to Heaven the right Resting-place Rev. 14.13 No affronts or hard usages from his Adversaries did dishearten him from doing good though Dogs bark and leap at the Moon yet continues she her course So did he and so should we notwithstanding contradiction of sinners Heb. 12.3 in Villages as well as Cities The 2d Remark There be many gagg'd by a Dumb Devil at this day as this poor man was at that time Satan still puts his Stilling Gag into the mouths of men and women that they can neither pour out their prayers to God nor publish his praises nor profess his Truth to others They cannot utter themselves for others edification● The Spirit of Faith is not an in-dweller in the heart only but sits also upon the door of the lips 2 Cor. 4.13 I believed therefore have I spoken Psal 116.10 to wit in prayer confession and communication The Spirit of Faith observes no dumb or silent Meetings as some do in our day and as the Carthusian Monks did of old whose Orders were only to speak together once a week but true Christians have otherwise learned Christ Eph. 4.20 who teacheth them 't is a shameful neglect of duty when they speak not often one to another Mal. 3.16 that their Meetings together might be for the better and not for the worse 1 Cor. 11.17 Exhorting one another c. Heb. 10.25 The 3d Remark is 'T is better to be Dumb than to speak prophanely This man with his Dumb Devil was in a better case than those Proud Pharisees whose mouths the Devil had not gagg'd but made an open Sepulchre to belch out stinking and black Blaspheaus against our Lord's Miracles as if wrought by Magick Mat. 9.34 and 10.25 and 12.24 The vile person will speak villany Isa 32.6 as well as vanity Psal 12.2 and not only proudly Psal 17.10 grievous and mischievous things Psal 31.18 and 38.12 but wickedness it self Job 27.4 because the Devil tips his tongue but gags not his mouth whereas even a foul when he holdeth his peace is accounted wise Prov. 17.28 Job 13.5 and in an evil day the prudent keep silent Amos 5.13 not conniving at man's sin but acquiescing in God's Providence The 4th Remark is Such as are possessed with Dumb Devils must come to Christ to be dispossess'd thereof as this man here They must sit down at Christ's feet Mat. 15.30 where all his Saints do sit Deut. 33.3 then shall the Dumb speak Mat. 15.31 and they shall speak not the Language of Ashdod but the Language of Canaan Neh. 13.24 Christ will turn to them a pure Lip and Language that they