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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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check our fears when trouble is near God is also near to counterwork our Enemies and support his People Zech. 3. 1 2. And he shewed me Ioshua the high priest standing before the Angel of the Lord and Satan standing at his right hand to resist him And the Lord said unto Satan the Lord rebuke thee O Satan even the Lord that hath chosen Ierusalem rebuke thee is not this a brand pluckt out of the fire Where there is Satan to resist there is an Angel to rebuke as extremities draw nigh God draweth nigh When Laban with great fury followed after Iacob God followed after Laban and stepped between them and commanded Laban not to hurt him When Paul was like to be torn in pieces in an uproar God runneth speedily to his help 2 Cor. 1. 9 10. But we had the sentence of death in our selves that we should not trust in our selves but in God which raiseth the Dead who delivered us from so great a death and doth deliver in whom we trust that he will yet deliver us When Danger cometh to be Danger indeed you will find him a present help Use. 2. To quicken us and encourage us actually to draw nigh to God with the more Confidence that is let us address our selves to converse with him in his Ordinances for his Favour Mercy and Blessing that we may not stand afar off but come boldly To this end Consider whither we come by whom we come in what manner we must come or draw nigh to him 1. To whom we draw near to God as reconciled in Christ. If God were inaccessible it were another matter but divine Justice being satisfied in Christ we come to a Throne of Grace Heb. 4. 16. Let us come boldly unto the throne of grace that we may obtain mercy and find grace to help in time of need Gods Throne is a Throne of Justice Grace Glory To the Throne of strict Justice no sinful man can approach to the Throne of Grace every penitent sinner may have access to the Throne of Glory no mortal Man can come in his whole Person his heart may be there so it is said Heb. 10. 19. Having therefore Brethren boldness to enter into the holiest by the blood of Iesus as Petitioners are admitted to the Prince in the Presence Chamber the way to the Throne of Glory lyeth by the Throne of Grace we pass by one unto the other In short Christ stood before the Throne of Justice when he suffered for our sins Penitent sinners stand before the Throne of Grace when they worship him in Faith after the Resurrection we shall ever stand before the Throne of Glory and ever abide in his Presence Our business now is with the Throne of Grace to give answer and dispatch our suites There is a threefold Throne of Grace the Typical which was the Mercy-seat Psal. 80. 1. Thou that dwellest between the Cherubims shine forth the Real which is Christ Being justified freely by his grace through the Redemption that is in Christ Iesus the Commemorative which is the Lords Supper where is a representation of Wisdom and Obsignation of the Grace of Christ in the New Testament This Throne of Grace is set up every where in the Church it standeth in the midst of God's People as the Tabernacle did in the midst of Israel For God is always in all places nigh unto such as call upon him in Truth Ioh. 4. 23. The hour is coming and now is when the true worshippers shall worship the Father in spirit and in truth for the Father seeketh such to worship him Access to God may be had every where therefore let us come 2. By whom we come by Jesus Christ Eph. 3. 12. In whom we have boldness and access with confidence by the faith of him upon the account of his Merit and Intercession We should come without fear or doubt to him de facto as if his blood were running afresh 3. How we come with a true heart Heb. 10. 22. Let us draw near with a true heart in full assurance of faith having an heart sprinkled from an evil Conscience and our bodies washed with pure water SERMON CLXX PSALM CXIX VER 152. Concerning thy Testimonies I have known of old that thou hast founded them for ever IN this Verse is a further Illustration of the last Clause of the former he had said there thy Commandments are ipsissima veritas now he amplyfieth that saying from Gods Ordination and Appointment Concerning thy testimonies I have known of old that thou hast founded them for ever The Prophet ends this Octonary and Paragraph with some triumph of Faith and after all his Conflicts and Requests to God goeth away with this Assurance that Gods word should be infallibly accomplished as being upon his own experience of unchangeable and unerring certainty Two things you may observe in the Words First The constant and eternal Verity of Gods Testimonies Thou hast founded them for ever Secondly Davids Attestation to it I have known of old that it is so What the Word of God is in itself and then what is the Opinion of the Believer concerning it 1. What the Scriptures are in themselves 1. For their Nature they are Gods Testimonies or the significations of his Will 2. For their Stability they are Founded there is a great Emphasis in that word and that by God thou hast founded them 3. For their Duration and everlasting Use in that word for ever of an Eternal Use and Comfort II. Davids Attestation or Perswasion of this I have known of old I here observe 1. His Perswasion 2. The date and standing of his Perswasion it was ancient I have known of old 1. His Perswasion I have known there is a twofold Knowledge the Knowledge of Faith and the Knowledge of Sense both agree with the words 1. The Knowledge of Faith I know that my Redeemer lives that is I believe it what we read concerning thy Testimonies other Translations read by thy Testimonies I have known by thy Testimonies the Septuagint 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 have been perswaded of this by thy Spirit out of the word it self 2. The Knowledge of Sense and Experience I my self have known by sundry Experiences heretofore which I shall never forget 2. The Date and Ancientness of this Perswasion of old it was not a late Perswasion or a thing that he was now to learn he always knew it since he knew any thing of God that God had owned his Word as the constant Rule of his proceedings with Creatures in that God had so often made good his Word to him not only by present and late but old and ancient Experiences Well then Davids perswasion of the Truth and Unchangeableness of the Word was not a sudden humour or a present fit or a perswasion of a few days standing but he was confirmed in it by long Experience one or two Experiences had been no Tryal of the Truth of the Word they might seem but a good hit
Alas if men were to sit brooding a Religion themselves what a strange business would they hatch and bring forth if they were to carve out the worship of God they might please themselves but could never please God Vain men indeed are ready to frame God like themselves and foolishly imagine what pleaseth them pleaseth him also they still conceive of God according to their own fancy And this was the reason why the wisest Heathens having no revelation no sense of Gods will but what offered it self by the light of nature they would imploy their wits to devise a Religion but what a monstrous Chimera and strange fancy did they bring forth Professing themselves wise they became fools Rom. 1. 22. Though they knew there was a great and eternal being by the light of nature yet the Apostle saith they became vain 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in their imaginations how this infinite being should be worshipped therefore what they carved out was not an honour but a disgrace they devised Gods and Goddesses that were Patrons of murder theft and all manner of filthiness and brought out Bacchus the God of riot and good-fellowship or the Patron of boon companions And Venus the Patroness of love and wantonness But now God hath shewed us his will he hath shewed us what is good and what he doth require of us Micah 6. 8. Now that the Gospel is a revelation from God it appears by the matter which is so suitable to the nature of God it hath such an impress of Gods Wisdom Goodness Power upon it that plainly it hath past God it is like such an infinite and eternal being as God is in the worship and duties prescribed it is far above the wisdom of meer man though very agreeable to those reliques of wisdom which are left in us So that this is that true Religion which surely will please God because it came from him at first and could come from no other And also besides the evidence it carrieth with it and the impress and stamp of God upon it we have the word of those that brought this Doctrine to us and if we had nothing else if they say Thus saith the Lord c. we are bound to believe them they being persons of a valuable credit that sought not themselves but the glory of him that sent them When the first messengers of it were men of such an unquestionable credit that had no ends of their own but ran all the extreme hazards and displeasures surely it cannot incline us to think they did seek God's glory by a lye Yea they did evidence their mission from God by miracles that God sent them surely this doctrine is from heaven I and still God in his Providence shews it from heaven both in his Internal government of the world he blesseth it to the comfort of the conscience or to the terrifying of the conscience for it works both ways Wicked men are afraid of the light lest their deeds should be made manifest Iohn 3. 20. and also to the comforting and setling the conscience that we may have great joy by believing in Christ. This for his Internal government And then his External government by answering of prayers fulfilling promises accomplishing prophecies Psal. 18. 30. As for God his way is perfect the word of the Lord is tried he is a buckler to all that trust in him Put God to the tryal by a regular confidence in an humble walking and he will make good his promises I and make good his threatnings When people are ripe for judgment God will fulfil the threatnings of his word and will accomplish what is spoken by the Prophets and Apostles and God will reveal his wrath from Heaven against all unrighteousness of men Rom. 1. 18. So that here are plain signs that this is a doctrine revealed from God and God can best tell us how he is to be worshipped and pleased Secondly Besides God's revelation it notably performs all that which a man would expect in a Religion and so suits the necessities of man as well as the honour of God Why 1. That is the true Religion which doth most draw off the minds of men from things temporal and earthly to things coelestial and eternal that we may think of them and prosecute them The sense of another world an estate to come is the great foundation upon which all Religion is grounded All its precepts and promises which are like to gain upon the heart of man they receive their force from the promise of an unseen glory and eternal punishments which are provided for the wicked and contemners of the Gospel The whole design of this Religion is to take us off from the pleasures of the flesh and the baits of this world that we may see things to come It 's the excellency of the Christian faith that it reveals the doctrines of eternal life clearly which all other Religions in the world only could guess at There were some guesses but still great uncertainty but obscure thoughts and apprehensions of such an estate But here life and immortality is brought to light through the Gospel 2 Tim. 1. 10. Alas there 's a mist upon it in all other representations they seem to see it yet see it not but this is brought to light in the Gospel it makes a free offer of it upon condition of faith in Christ Iohn 3. 16. it quickens us to look after it all its design is to breed in man this noble spirit by looking upon things that are above and not upon things on earth Col. 3. 1 2. and it endeavours with great power and perswasiveness that we may make it our scope that we may neglect all present advantages rather than miss of this and make it our great design that we may look not to the things which are seen but to the things unseen 2 Cor. 4. 17 18. This is the way of truth because we believe it will make the worshippers of it everlastingly happy which all men by nature have enquired about Now it is but reason that a man's work be ended before he receive his wages and if God will reward the vertuous that it should be in the other world for our work is not ended until we dye and we have a presagiency of another world there is another world which the soul of man thinks of Now this is that which Christianity drives at that we may look after our reward with God and escape that tribulation wrath and anguish which shall come upon every soul that doth evil 2. That doctrine which establisheth purity of heart and life as the only means to attain this blessedness certainly that 's the way of truth Psal. 24 3 4. Who shall ascend into the hill of the Lord and who shall stand in his holy place he that hath clean hands and a pure heart who hath not lift up his soul unto vanity There is no true holiness no subjection of heart to God but by the Christian
favour that often resort to him carry on a constant communion with him those that are waiting for his power and presence in his Ordinances these are the men God will own We are not fit to receive so great a blessing as Gods favour if we will not look after it with diligence 2dly Observe Those that would seek God aright must seek him with their whole heart But how is that Besides what hath already been spoken of it in the Second Use it noteth three things 1. Sincerity of aims 2. Integrity of parts 3. Uniformity of endeavours 1. Sincerity of aims Many pretend to seek God but indeed they do but seek themselves As those that followed Christ for the loaves that take up Religion upon base and carnal respects Ioh. 6. 26. Verily I say unto you Ye seek me not because ye saw the miracles but because ye did eat of the loaves and were filled There was much outward diligence but a false heart lurking under it their belly drove them to him Of all by-ends this is the worst and basest Vix diligitur Iesus propter Iesum Jesus Christ is scarce loved for Jesus sake Yet further those that prayed to God for corn wine and oyl and did not seek his favour and grace in the first place see what the Lord saith of them Hos. 7. 14. They have not cried unto me with their heart when they howled upon their beds They did seek God but yet it is counted howling They only minded the supply of outward wants and made prayer meerly to be an act of carnal self-love and then it is but howling such a noise as a dog or a beast would make when he wants his food Christians no doubt they were instant there was a world of earnestness they were affected when the stroke was upon them and seriously desired to get rid of it But they have not cried to me with their whole heart it was but such a sense of pain and want as the beasts have If there be any thing sought from God more than God or not for God we do not seek him with the whole heart but only for other uses 2. It notes integrity of parts We read in Scripture of loving God not only with the heart but with the whole heart and of believing not only with the heart Rom. 10. 10. but of believing with the whole heart Act. 8. 37. Because seeking of God is but a Metaphorical term by which Faith is exprest therefore let us see what it is to believe with the whole heart The Doctrine of the Gospel is not only true to work upon the understanding but it is good so as to move and draw the will 1 Tim. 1. 15. This is a faithful saying and worthy of all acceptation c. Not only a faithful saying that is a true Doctrine That Iesus Christ came into the world to save sinners but it 's worthy of all acceptation it 's an excellent Doctrine to ravish the will Now observe what a great deal of difference there is between men in believing Some that hear the Gospel and have only a literal knowledg of it so as to be able to talk of it so as to understand the words and syllables to know what it means they may have some clearness of understanding this way but there is not a sound assent There are others affected so with the Gospel as by the common influence of the Spirit they may assent to the truths delivered concerning God and Christ and Salvation by him yet do not give it entertainment in their hearts these may be said to seek God but not with the whole heart A speculative naked and cold assent they may have but that is not enough It 's not enough to see food that is wholesom but you must eat it nor is it enough to understand the Gospel and believe that it is true but we must embrace it it must be accepted else we do not believe with the whole heart The word is propounded to man as true now the truth made known may cause a speculative assent this may draw profession after it and this we call Historical Faith because we are no more affected with the Gospel than with an ordinary History which we read and believe The word is propounded again as good to move and excite the will Now there 's a twofold good the good of happiness and the good of holiness The good of happiness that which is profitable and sweet Then there 's the good of holiness Now there are many that look upon the Gospel as good and profitable because it offereth pardon and eternal life such comfort to the Conscience and such good to our whole souls We may be affected with it as a good Doctrine Naturally man hath not only a sense of Religion but he hath a hunger after Immortality and everlasting blessedness Therefore since the Gospel doth so clearly promote happiness it may be greedily catched hold of by those whose hearts are affected while they look upon it under these notions and they may be so far affected that they may for a while not only profess it out of danger but when some danger doth arise they may defend their opinions with some care yet this is not with all the heart why assoon as any great danger doth arise out of which there is no escape as Gibbets Fires Racks Ignominy and utter loss assoon as persecution arose saith Christ all this ardor and heat of spirit which they did formerly seem to have comes to nothing What 's the reason it vanisheth because they receive the Gospel rather upon those notions of interest and profit than of duty and holiness And the impression of the profitableness of the Gospel as a Doctrine of happiness was not so deeply rooted in them not so durable that the hope of the future good would be prevalent over the fear of present evil and danger There may be some desires of heaven in a carnal breast but they are easily blotted out by worldly temptations but the true desires of holiness are lasting and will prevail over our lusts 3. Believing with all the heart implies uniformity of endeavours Oftentimes the soul may be strongly moved and affected for the present and carried out to the Gospel under the notion of holiness but it is but the lighter part of the soul that is so moved not the whole heart therefore it is not durable The people meant as they spake when they were willing to come under the obedience of the Word God gives them that testimony The people have well said but O that there were such a heart in them Deut. 5. 28 29. They may receive it and may seem affected with it and have a sense of reformation but saith the Evangelist Luk. 8. 14. it brings no fruit to perfection It was not so deeply rooted as to prevail strongly over their carnal distempers And therefore here comes in another sort of men that are affected with the word as a holy
to meet together and after they had read the Word of God every one did acquaint one another with his weaknesses with his temptations and mutually asked counsel and comforted one another out of the Word of God and after this they concluded all with prayer and so every man went to his home These examples did we observe them they would be most useful to us we might drive on a trade to Heaven and be of very great profit in the spiritual life if the gifts of private Christians were managed without pride vain glory and without despising of the weak it would be of exceeding honour to God use and comfort to the Saints SERMON XV. PSAL. CXIX 14. I have rejoyced in the way of thy Commandments as much as in all riches THESE words may respect the 12th Verse as another argument wherewith to back his request Teach me thy statutes for I have rejoyced in the way of thy commandments as much as in all riches Many are for worldly wealth but I have other desires Lord teach me how to understand and keep thy statutes and this will be a greater benefit than any worldly possession whatsoever Or you may refer them to the 13th verse as a reason of his practice every man will be speaking of that wherewith he is delighted Lord thy testimonies are my rejoycing therefore I have and will be speaking of them upon all occasions Or this may be the fruit of what was mentioned before Those that are exercised about the word the study and practice of it and conference about it have a sweet sense of the goodness of it in their own souls so as they delight and rejoyce in it above all things and if we have not felt this effect it is because we are strangers to the word In the words there is 1. A Delight asserted 2. The object of it in the way of thy testimonies 3. The degree of it as much as in all riches By way of Explication The testimonies of God are his word for it testifieth of his will Now the Prophet saith not only I have rejoyced in thy testimonies but in the way of thy testimonies Way is one of the words by which the Law is expressed Gods Laws are ways that lead us to God and so it may be taken here The way which thy testimonies point out and call me unto or else his own practice as a mans course is called his way his delight was not in speculation or talk but in obedience and practice In the way of thy testimonies The degree as much as in all riches as much not to shew the equality of these things as if we should have the same affection for the World as for the Word of God but as much because we have no higher comparison This is that Worldlings dote upon and delight in now as much as they rejoyce in worldly possessions so much do I rejoyce in the way of thy Testimonies For I suppose David doth not compare his own delight in the word with his own delight in wealth but his own choice and delight with the delight and choice of others If he had spoken of himself both in the one respect and in the other the expression was very high David that was called to a Crown and in a capacity of enjoying much in the world Gold Silver Lands Goods largeness of Territory and a compound of all that which all men joyntly and every man severally doth possess yet was more pleased in the holiness of Gods ways than in all the world For what shall it profit a man to gain the whole world and lose his own soul Mat. 15. 26. Doct. A gracious heart finds more true joy in the way of Gods word than in all worldly things whatsoever To explain this consider 1. What this delight is 2. How a gracious heart finds more delight in the word of God than in all worldly things 3. The reasons why they do so I. What this delight is I shall give you several distinctions 1. There is a sweetness in the study of Gods word or when we give up our selves to attain the knowledg of it The very speculation and study produces a delightful tast for three Reason 1. Truth is the good of the understanding therefore when the faculty is suited with a fit object this correspondence causeth a rejoycing and delectation Prov. 24. 14. My son eat thou honey because it is good and the honey-comb because it is sweet to thy tast so shall the knowledg of wisdom be to thy soul when thou hast found it Every truth if it be but a Natural or Philosophical Verity when we come to consider and see it with our own eyes and have found it out by search and do not repeat it by rote only breedeth a delight Pleasure is applicatio convenientis convenienti so it is true in Theological truths we are the more affected with them the more they are represented with evidence to the soul. 2. Scriptural truths are more sublime than other truths and do ennoble Reason with the knowledg of them Deut. 4. 6. Surely this great Nation is a wise and an understanding people Such doctrines as we meet with in the word of God concerning Angels and the Souls of men the Creation and Government of all things the Redemption of men must needs affect the heart and breed a joy in the view and contemplation of them 3. Because these truths are suitable to our necessities To every man that hath a conscience it cannot but be very pleasing to hear of a way how he may come to the pardon of sins and sound peace of conscience solid perfection and eternal glory Man is naturally under fears of death Rom. 1. 32. and would be glad of a pardon weak and unable to find out or attain to moral perfection would be glad of an exact rule and groapeth and feeleth about for an everlasting happiness Acts 17. 27. So far as any thing is found to this purpose in the writings of men they have a marvellous force and influence upon us Any beam of this truth scattered in Plato or Socrates of mans Reconciliation with a holy and just God there is nothing in their writings the then World was under perplexity But yet of Moral Perfection and an Eternal state of Blessedness there were some glimmerings Now when these are represented to the understanding with such evidence and satisfaction as they are in the Scriptures where you have the only sufficient direction to true Happiness no wonder if they are greedily catched at Now this delight though good I speak not of because it may be in Temporaries who have a tast of the good word to invite them to seek for more Heb. 6. 4. and is a fruit of common illumination The stony ground received the word with joy Luke 8. 13. and though it may affect the heart yet if not above all riches it doth not prevail over carnal affections 2. There is a sweetness found in the way
my Law but they were counted as a strange thing God is the Author whosoever be the Pen-man it is a Writing from him to us Now to be strangers to it or little conversant about it argueth some contempt of God As to slight the Letter of a Friend sheweth little esteem of the Writer But now the Saints put it into their bosomes view it with delight it is Gods Epistle 2. In regard of its own excellency in three respects It is 1. Their Direction 2. Their Support 3. Their Charter 1. It is their Direction it is a light that shines in a dark place 2 Pet. 1. 19. The World is a dark place beset with dangers and ever and anon we are apt to stumble into the pit of destruction without taking heed to this light The Word discovereth to them evils that they may see them repent of them forsake them and sheweth us our ready way to heaven that we may walk therein It discovereth the greatest dangers and pointeth out the surest way to safety and peace They are called true Laws and good statutes Neh. 9. 13. to shew the full proportion that they bear to the soul. Verum and Bonum Truth and Goodness are proper for our most eminent faculties the understanding and will It doth a man's heart good to study these statutes A child of God that seeth others stumble and fall how may he stand and bless God for the direction of the word that God hath given him counsel in his reins that he hath a Clue to lead him out of those Labyrinths in which others have lost their way and know not how to escape 2. It is their Support The word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Basil expresseth it 't is Gods shop from whence they fetch all their Cordials in a time of fainting and so are freed from those fears and discontents and despairing thoughts under which others languish Psal. 119. 50. This is my comfort in my affliction thy word hath quickned me When a believer is damped with trouble and even dead at heart a Promise will revive him again Ver. 92. Unless thy law had been my delight I had perished in my affliction And many such like experiences the Saints have had The worth of the Word is best known in an evil time One Promise in the Word of God doth bear up the heart more than all the arguings and discourses of men though never so excellent In a time of temptation in the hour of death O what a reviving is one word of Gods mouth 3. It is their Charter that which they have to shew for their everlasting hopes There we have promises of eternal joy and blessedness under the greatest assurance and this makes way for strong consolation Heb. 6. 18. A man that hath a clear evidence to show for a fair Inheritance it is not irksome to hear it read or to look over it now and then as a covetous man is pleased to look into his Bills and Bonds which he has under hand and seal 2. This Delight will be of great use to them 1. To draw us off from carnal Vanities We have another delight and the strength of the soul runneth out in another way there will not be such room for worldly affections As fear is cured with fear the fear of men with the fear of God so is delight by delight delight in Gods statutes is the cure of delight in worldly things Love cannot lye idle it must be occupied one way or another either carried out to the contentments of the flesh or else to holy things Now if you can find a more noble delight there is a check upon that which is carnal Psal. 119. 37. Turn away mine eyes from beholding vanity and quicken thou me in thy way The enlargement of the heart straitens the flesh 2. It will take off the tediousness of Religious Exercises What we delight in is not irksome In Hunting Fowling and Fishing though there be as much labour as in our ordinary imployments yet we count the toyl nothing because of the delight in them We are very apt to be weary of well-doing and to tire in an holy course but now when it is our delight it goeth on the more easily In one sense we must make Religion our business in another our recreation our work to prevent slackness our recreation to prevent tediousness it is not a task but a pleasure USE 1. This informeth us of the ill choice that many men make of their Delights and recreations they must have Cards and Dice and foolish mirth to pass away the time or else idle stories and vain Romances a Christian is every where like himself he sheweth himself a Christian in his recreations as well as his business Castae deliciae meae sunt Scripturae tuae saith Austin Lord my chast delights are the holy Scriptures If we were as we should be it would be our recreation to understand our duty to contemplate the way of reconciliation to God by Christ and to take a view of our everlasting Hopes Were we seriously perswaded of the benefits which men have by the word that there is a sure direction to resolve our doubts and our scruples and the offers of a pardon and a glorious estate by Christ what need a Christian any other Recreation Will not the sense of Gods love and the hopes of heaven make us merry enough Indeed because of the weariness of the flesh we need temporal refreshments but here should be our great delight I will solace or recreate my self in thy statutes USE 2. Caution to us to fix our delight aright 1. It is a considerable affection All the affections depend upon Pleasure or Pain Delight or Grief the one is proper to the body the other to the soul which grow from the contentment or distast which we receive from the divers objects which we meet with If we love it is for that we find a sweetness in the object beloved if we hate we apprehend a trouble in what we hate if we hope we promise our selves an happiness or satisfaction in the possession of the thing hoped for if we despair it is because the thing cannot be obtained from which our contentment would arise Desire is of some good which we judg pleasing By Fear and Flight we shun things which we apprehend would breed us vexation So that in effect Delight sets all the other affections a-work 2. It is a choice affection more proper to Fruition than Use and therefore not for the means so much as end and so reserved for God who is the last End There are fruenda and utenda God and Heavenly things to be enjoyed but earthly things to be used for means those that are in the nearest vicinity to the end as the Law of God and Grace earthly things are to be used with a kind of indifferency and therefore should have little of our joy but our solid complacency must be in God next in the things of God
are some that a man had need teach them as he teacheth little children letter after letter and line after line little good done 2. In others there is a Grammatical knowledg but not a spiritual a repeating things by rote a talking of all that a Christian enjoyeth 3. Besides the Grammatical knowledg there is a Dogmatical knowledg when the truths of the word are not only understood but begin to settle into an opinion that we bustle for in the world An opinionative receiving of the truth is different from a saving receiving of the truth Many are Orthodox or have so much judgment and knowledg as to hold the Truth strictly but the heart is not possessed with the life and power of it Those are intended in Rom. 2. 20. An instructer of the foolish a teacher of babes which have the form of knowledg and of the truth in the law And such are described 2 Tim. 3. 8. Having a form of godliness but denying the power thereof It is not to be imagined that this is always in design though many times carnal men swim with the stream and take up with the opinions that are currant in their age but also out of conviction of judgment there is somewhat of conscience in it A sound judgment is a different thing from a sound heart The truths of God have great evidence with them and therefore a rational man being helped with some common work of the Spirit may close with them though they have no experience of the power and prevailing influence of them 4. Besides this Dogmatical knowledg by which we see round about the compass of Truths revealed in the word there is a gracious illumination when men are taught so as drawn to God Iohn 6. 44 45. and they do so understand Christs Doctrine as to apply and make a right use of it such a knowledg as is called not only sight but taste 1 Pet. 2. 3. If so be ye have tasted that the Lord is gracious and a feeling of what we understand Phil. 1. 9. And this I pray that your love may abound more and more in knowledg and in all judgment This sense and experimental knowledg is that which the Saints seek after 2. The Uses of this spiritual illumination And 1. To give us a clear sight of the Truths of God 2. An applicative sight 3. An affective sight 4. A transforming sight 5. Such a sense of the Truth as is prevalent over lusts and interests 1. A clear sight of the Truths of God Others have but an hear-say-knowledg gathered out of Books and Sermons and the common report which is made of Christ but he that is divinely enlightned drinks of the Fountain and so his draught is more fresh and sweet they do not talk of things by rote after others but it is written upon their hearts Heb. 8. 10. I will put my laws into their mind and write them in their hearts and so groweth more intimate and satisfactory and moving upon them 2. An Applicative sight not only knowledg but prudence Prov. 8. 12. I Wisdom dwell with Prudence Wisdom is the knowledg of Principles Prudence is an ability to apply them to our comfort and use that we may know it for our good Iob 5. 28. Many are right in generals but the Spirit doth not only reveal the Truths of the Gospel but applieth those Truths to awaken the conscience that was asleep in sin Many men that are unrenewed may be stored with general truths concerning the misery of man redemption by Christ the priviledges of a Christian but they do not reflect the light of these truths upon themselves so as to consider their own case and so it serveth rather for matter of opinion and discourse than for life and conversation it is not directive 3. An Affective sight Prov. 2. 10. When wisdom entreth upon thy heart which is the seat of affections it stirs up in the soul answerable motions to every truth Whereas when truths rest in empty barren notions without feeling and an answerable touch upon the heart the knowledg of them is like a Winters Sun that shineth but warmeth not the misery of man is not affective and Doctrines of Redemption by Christ are apprehended without any joy and relish 4. A Transforming sight 2 Cor. 3. 18. We all with open face beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord are changed into the same image from glory to glory even as by the Spirit of the Lord. It is a Light that is both Directive and Persuasive A man may hear the Gospel 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 when it is only known as a rule not as a means to convey the Spirit whereas a believer hears the Law 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Apostle preferreth the Gospel above the Law in the forementioned place for comfortableness perspicuity efficacy c. 5. It is a Light that prevaileth over our lusts and interests such a Light as hath fire in it to destroy lusts 1 John 2. 3 4. He that saith I know him and doth not keep his commandments is a lyar A true knowledg and sight of God is able to bridle lusts and purifie the conscience Therefore it is said He that doth evil hath not seen God Eph. 3. 11. hath not a true sight whatever speculations he may have about the nature of God Other light doth not check and controul vicious desires Reason is not restored to its dominion Rom. 1. 18. the reputed wise men of the world held the truth in unrighteousness Truth may talk its fill but can do nothing as a man that is bound hand and foot may rave and evaporate his passions but cannot relieve himself from the oppressor or the force that he is under II. Reasons that shew the necessity of this work 1. Spiritual blindness is natural to us as that man that was blind from his birth Iohn 9. 1. We are not all born blind in body but all in mind By tasting the tree of knowledg all Adam's sons have lost their knowledg Satan hath brought a greater shame upon us than Nahash the Ammonite would have brought upon the men of Iabesh Gilead in putting out their right eyes The eye of the soul is put out so as we cannot see the light that shineth in the word By the Fall we lost the true and perfect light of Reason but retain the pride of Reason It is no small part of our blindness that we cannot endure to hear of it Rev. 3. 17. Thou sayest I am rich and encreased with goods and have need of nothing and knowest not that thou art wretched and miserable and poor and blind and naked Man desireth to be thought sinful rather than weak and will sooner own a wickedness in Morals than a weakness in Intellectuals Men are dishonest out of choice and therefore think there is more of liberty and bravery in it but to be simple argueth imperfection Job 11. 12. Vain man would be accounted wise though man be born like a
18. And ye shall be brought before Governours and Kings for my sake for a testimony against them and the Gentiles It is for a testimony and that should comfort them in all their sufferings Mark 14. 9. Verily I say unto you wheresoever this Gospel shall be preached throughout the whole world this also that she hath done shall be spoken of for a memorial of her The testimony is more valid as being confirmed by their Courage in troubles they are Principles that they will suffer for which as it is a warning to the professors of Religion that they should own no principles in a time of peace but what they would confirm by their avowed testimony in the extremity of trials so also it should convince their enemies in case they be put upon this exercise It is needful that every truth should have a sealed testimony that is we should not only vent opinions but be willing to suffer for them if God should call us out so to do God hath been ever tender of imposing upon the world without sufficient evidence and therefore would not have his people stand upon their lives and temporal concernments that thereby they may give greater satisfaction to the world concerning the weight of those truths which they do profess Secondly On the Persecutors part or the persons molesting so the causes are 1. Their ignorance and blind zeal Joh. 16. 2. They shall put you out of their synagogues yea the time cometh that whosoever killeth you will think that they do God good service They think it to be an acceptable service to God to molest and trouble those that are indeed his people Those Princes that sate and spake against David were not Pagans and men of another Religion but of Israel and it is often the lot of Gods people to be persecuted not only by Pagans and openly prophane men but even by men that profess the true Religion Pseudo-Christians Rev. 14. 13. those that pretend they are for God and his cause and seem to be carried on with a great zeal and do not oppose truth as truth but their quarrel is coloured by specious pretences 2. Their prejudices lightly taken up against the people of God Satan is first a lyar and then a murderer Joh. 8. 44. Ye are of your father the Devil and the lusts of your father ye will do he was a murderer from the beginning and abode not in the truth because there is no truth in him when he speaketh a lye he speaketh of his own for he is a lyar and the father of it By lyes he bringeth about his bloody design Christ was first called a Samaritan and one that had a Devil and then they did persecute him as such an one And as was observed before as Christians of old were covered with the skins of wild beasts that Dogs and Lyons might tear them the more speedily so by odious imputations Gods people are brought into distast with the world and then molested and troubled represented as a company of hypocrites and unjust dealers and under that cloak true Religion is undermined Now in the Persecutor this is faulty because they lightly take up every false suggestion and so Christians are condemned 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Iustin Martyr complained because of the common reproach without any distinct inquiry into their way and practice Nolunt audire quod auditum damnare non possunt 3. Their erroneous Principle in Civil Policy That Christs Kingdom and the freedom of his worshippers is not consistent with Civil Interests Whatever hath been the matter worldly Rulers have been jealous of Christs Interest and Kingdom as if it could not consist with publick safety and the civil interests of that State and Nation where it is admitted and suggestions of this kind do easily prevail with them Esther 3. 8. It is not for the Kings profit to suffer them and John 11. 48. If we let him alone all men will believe on him and the Romans shall come and take away both our place and Nation Reason of State is an ancient plea against the interest of Religion In the Roman Empire though the Christians were inconsiderable as to any publick charge yet they had a jealous eye upon them Iustin Martyr sheweth the reason of it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because they were often speaking of a Kingdom though they meant it of the Kingdom of heaven and were far enough from all Rebellion USE 1. It informeth us that we should not measure the verity of Religion by the greatness of those that are with it or against it This was one of the Pharisees arguments Do any of the rulers believe in him Joh. 7. 48. but this people that know not the law are accursed Alas men of Authority and great place may be often against Gods Interest James 2. 1. Have not the faith of our Lord Iesus Christ the Lord of glory in respect of persons Mark that title that is given to Christ the Lord of glory he is able to put glory enough upon his worshippers though they have nothing of outward pomp and splendor and not many mighty are called 1 Cor. 1. 26. Many will say they have none of quality to join with them none but ignorant people If a man had judged so in the first times when the Gospel came first abroad in the world would not Christianity it self have seemed a very contemptible thing Therefore a simple plain-hearted love to Christ and his Truth whether Powers be averse or friendly is that which is required of us 2. It reproveth those who are soon discouraged even with the reproach which base people cast upon the ways of God David stood both in the one temptation and in the other the reproach and contempt of the Vulgar and also when Princes sate and spake against him But to these we may say as Jer. 12. 5. If thou hast run with the footmen and they have wearied thee then how wilt thou contend with horses If we be such tender milk-sops that we cannot suffer a disgraceful word from the basest of the people what shall we do when we meet with other manner of conflicts and oppositions in the farther progress of our duty to God If we are tired out with the disgrace and affronts of these mean ones and cannot put up a scornful word at their hands without disorder what shall we do when we are to contest for Gods Interest with those great and masterly ones that are armed with Power and Authority and it may be the advantage of Laws against us Scommata nostra ferre non potes said the Antiochians to Iulian in another case quomodo feres Persarum tela Gods servants do often receive discouragement from the people and from Authority but the goodness of their Cause and the favour of God makes them joyfully persevere 3. It teacheth us what to do when this is not our case I have treated as this Scripture hath led me of the oppositions of Princes and worldly
done and especially is this found by experience when great trouble comes upon us by reason of sin There is some sin at the bottom God will bring out and until they come to clearness and openness with God the Lord still continues the trouble they are kept roaring and do not come to their peace Iob 33. 26 27. When a man is under trouble and the sense of sin doth not fasten on the heart he is not prepared for deliverance but when it comes to this I have sinned and it profits me not then God sends an Interpreter one among a thousand to shew unto man his uprightness 3. It prevents Satans accusations and Gods judgments It is no profit to cover our sins for either Satan will declare them or God find us out and enter into judgment with us It prevents Satan as an Accuser and God as a Judg. 1. It prevents Satan as an Accuser Let us not tarry till our adversary accuse There is one that will accuse you if you do not accuse your selves He that 's a tempter is also an accuser of the brethren Now Confession puts Satan out of office When we have sued out our pardon Satan is not an accuser so much as a slanderer Rom. 8. 33. Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect The Informer comes too late when the guilty person hath accused himself and sued out his pardon And 2. It prevents God as a Iudg. It is all known to God Psal. 69. 5. O God! thou knowest my foolishness and my sins are not hid from thee It is a folly to conceal that which cannot be hid God knows them how God may be said to know things two ways Either simply with respect to the perfection of his nature and so he knows all things or by virtue of his office and so God knows things judicially as Judg of the world he takes knowledg of it so as to punish it unless you confess it But in this kind of knowledg he loves to be prevented he will not know it as a Judg if we confess it when there is process against sin in our own consciences 1 Cor. 11. 31. If we judg our selves we shall not be judged When we accuse and judg our selves then God's work is prevented God is contented if we will accuse arraign judg and condemn our selves then he will not take knowledg of our sins as a Judg. The end of God's judging is Execution and punishment but the end of our judging is that we may obtain pardon Now consider whether you will stand at the bar of Christ not as a Saviour but as a Judg or you will judg your selves in your own heart Better sit as Judg upon your own heart than God should sit as Judg upon you therefore deal plainly and openly with him Thus I have explained what it is to declare our wavs it is an act of dependence to take God's leave blessing counsel along with us an act of friendship as to lay open our case to God and an act of brokenness of heart as declaring our sins and temptations For the reasons why if we would speed with God we should unfeignedly lay open our case before him 1. It argueth sincerity A hypocrite will pray but will not thus sincerely open his heart to God Psal. 32. 1. Blessed is he in whose spirit there is no guile No guile it hath a limited sense with respect to the matter of confession that doth not deal deceitfully with God but plainly and openly declares his case Many ways men may be guilty of guile of spirit in confession of sin either when they content themselves with general or slight acknowledgments as thus We are all sinners but they do not declare their ways Generals are but notions and as particular persons are lost in a crowd so sins lye hid in common acknowledgments Or else men take up the empty forms of others You shall see in Numb 19. the waters of purification wherewith a man had been cleansed if another touched it he became unclean Confessions are like those waters whereby one hath cleansed himself Now to take up others Confessions and the forms of others without the same affection feeling and brokenness of heart doth but defile us the more when the heart doth not prescribe to the tongue but the tongue to the heart or else men make some acknowledgments to God but do not uncover their privy sore they are loth to draw forth the state of their hearts into the notice and view of conscience This guile of spirit may be sometimes in God's children Moses had a privy sore which he was loth to disclose and therefore when God would have sent him into Egypt he pleads other things insufficiency want of elocution that he was a stammerer that he had not utterance I but his carnal fear was the main therefore see how God touches his privy sore Exod. 4. 19. Arise Moses go into Egypt the men that sought thy life are dead Why Moses never pleaded that he mentions other things that were true that he was a man of slow speech and his brother Aaron was fitter but he never pleads carnal fear but the Lord knew what was at the bottom So it is with Christians many times we will confess this and that which is a truth and we may humble our selves for it I but there 's a privy-sore yet kept secret Therefore this open-dealing with God is very necessary to lay open before God whatever we know of our state and way for then God will be nigh to us Out of self-love men spare themselves and will not judg and condemn themselves therefore they deny excuse extenuate or hypocritically confess O! I am a sinner and the like but do not come openly 2. It argueth somewhat of the spirit of adoption to put in the bill of our complaint to our heavenly Father to draw up an Indictment against our selves to judg that 's irksome but to put in a bill of complaint to a Friend or Father that savours of more ingenuity To tell God all our mind notes freedom and familiarity not such as is bold rude nor a dress of words but such as is grave serious proceeding from an inward sense of God and hope of his mercy 1 Joh. 3. 21. If our hearts condemn us not then have we confidence towards God then we can deal with him as one friend with another and acquaint him with all our griefs and wants A man had need walk exactly that would maintain his freedom with God There is a freedom as men may call it such as is bold rude and wretchless in words only but that which proceeds from confidence in God and his mercy that 's a fruit of close walking we cannot have it in our hearts without it 3. It is the way to make us serious and affected with our condition When we open our whole heart to God then we shall be more earnest for a remedy we content our selves with some transient
the children of God 2. It is a perversion of the Order of Nature The tongue is the Interpreter of the mind and therefore if the Interpreter of another man speak contrary to what he pronounceth there were a manifest wrong and disorder so when the tongue speaks otherwise than the man thinks there 's a great disturbance and deordination 3. We resemble Satan in nothing so much as in Lying and we resemble God in nothing so much as in Truth Falshood is the Devil's character Joh. 8. 44. He was a lyar from the beginning that is the first inventor of lyes as Iubal was the father of them that played upon the Harp the first Inventor and herein we most resemble Satan On the contrary there is nothing wherein a man resembleth God so much as in Truth Truth is no small part of the Image of God for he is called the God of Truth and it is said of him Tit. 1. 2. That he cannot lye It is contrary to the perfection of his Nature Nor command us to lye God hath commanded many other things which otherwise were sinful as to kill another man as Abraham to slay his Son to take away the Goods of others as Lord of all as when the Israelites spoiled the Egyptians of their Jewels but God cannot lye 't is against his nature Eph. 4. 24 25. Put off the old man which is corrupt according to the deceitful lusts and put on the new man which after God is created in righteousness and true holiness Then presently Wherefore put away lying speak every man truth with his neighbour Wherefore that is from your regeneration when the Image of God is planted in you So the same Col. 3. 9. Lye not one to another seeing that ye have put off the old man with his deeds There may be sin in the children of God but there should be no guile in them habituated guile is the old man that is deceitful the new man is framed to truth and according to the will of God 4. This is a consideration that God never dispenced with this Precept He hath upon special occasion dispenced with other Commands but never with the ninth With the seventh Commandment in the Polygamy of the Patriarchs and with the second in Hezekiah's Passover but a man must not lye for God Job 13. 7 8 9. because this Commandment hath more in it of the Justice and Immutable Perfection of God than others 5. By the light of Nature nothing is more odious We love a just and true man one that is without guile we acknowledg it as a Moral perfection but a Lye is counted the greatest disgrace we revenge the charge of it It is counted a base thing to lye why because it comes from fear and it tends to deceit both which argue baseness of spirit and are contrary to the gallantry of a man therefore it is shameful in the eyes of Nature and those that are most guilty of it cannot endure to be charged with it When the Prophet Micajah told Zedekiah of his lying spirit he smote him on the cheek 1 King 22. 23. So men take it ill to be charged with a lye We count it a shameful sin among men The old Persians had such a great respect to Truth that he that was three times taken with a lye was never more to speak in publick upon penalty of death 6. It is a sin that is most hateful to God therefore it should be far from the children of God We hate that most which is contrary to our nature so it is contrary to God's nature There are six things God hates and a lying tongue is one of them twice it is mentioned Prov. 6. 17. 19. and Prov. 12. 22. Lying lips are an abomination to the Lord but they that deal truly are his delight Now certainly because God hates it therefore we should hate it To will and nill the same thing that 's true friendship God hates it therefore a righteous man hates it Prov. 13. 5. A righteous man hateth lying but a wicked man is loathsome and cometh to shame 7. It 's a sin which God hath expresly threatned to punish in this life and in the life to come In this life Psal. 5. 6. Thou shalt destroy them that speak leasing And Prov. 19. 5. He that speaketh lyes shall not escape God will cut them off as not being fit for human society The first remarkable instance we have in the New Testament of God's vengeance was for a lye Acts 5. 5. yea it is one of the sins that draws down publick and national Judgments and therefore it is said Hosea 4. 2. By swearing and lying therefore doth the Land mourn And when God gives advice to his people how they should prevent his Judgments Zech. 8. 16 17. These are the things that ye shall do speak ye every man the truth to his neighbour execute the judgment of truth love no false Oath for all these are the things that I hate saith the Lord. When men have no care of their speeches when a people bind themselves by Oaths to do that which they mind not to perform or wilfully do not perform they are ripe for a Judgment And so in the life to come Rev. 21. 27. And there shall in no wise enter into it any thing that defileth neither whatsoever worketh abomination or maketh a lye And Rev. 21. 8. All lyars shall have their part in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone and Rev. 22. 15. For without are dogs and sorcerers and whoremongers and Idolaters and whosoever loveth and maketh a lye USE O then let us beware of all lying and dissimulation with respect to God and men Let our words consent with our minds and our minds agree with the thing it self A lye is most odious to God a proud look and a lying tongue and therefore a Christian that loves God shall he do that which God so expresly hates will you rush upon the pikes kick against the pricks and run against the Judgments of God a lying tongue shall not escape Nay God reckons upon his Children Isa. 63. 8. Surely they are my people children that will not lye Disappointment that 's the worst vexation God reckons upon it surely you will make Conscience of truth not only in your Oaths certainly that 's a barbarous thing to break the most sacred engagements that are among mankind therefore you will be careful to perform what you have sworn to the Lord with your hands lift up to the most high God but also in your promises and ordinary speeches Good men have been foiled by it David begs Keep me from a way of lying and it is a sin more common than we imagine it 's very natural to us Isa. 58. 3. As soon as we are born we speak lies before we could go we went astray and before we were able to speak we spake lies the seed of it was in our nature It is a sin most natural for it was
the occasion of the first sin and therefore we had need be cautioned against it Consider there is a lying to God in publick and private worship In publick worship How often do you compass him about with lyes We shew love with our mouths when our heart is at a great distance from God O how odious should we be to our selves if our heart were turned inside outward in the best duty and all our thoughts were turned into words for in our worship many times we draw near to God with our mouths when our heart is at a great distance As when their bodies were in the Wilderness their hearts were in Egypt so we prattle words without sense and spiritual affection Nay in our private worship we confess sin without shame we pray as if we cared not to be heard Conscience tells us what we should pray for but our hearts do not go out in the matter and we throw away our prayers as children shoot away their arrows which is a sign we are not so hearty as we should be We give thanks but without meltings of heart Custom and natural light tells us something must be done in this kind but how hard a matter is it to draw near God with truth of heart Again Would we not be accounted better than we are who would be thought as ill as he hath cause to think of himself We storm if others but speak of us half of what we speak of our selves to God therefore all had need look to it to be kept from a way of lying And for gross lying how far are we from being willing that should be accomplished which the Lord speaks of Zeph. 3. 13. The remnant of Israel shall not do iniquity nor speak lies neither shall a deceitful tongue be found in their mouth rather we may take up Davids complaint Psal. 12. 1 2. The godly man ceaseth the faithful fail from among the children of men they speak vanity every one with his neighbour with flattering lips and with a double heart do they speak Promises Oaths Covenants all broken and therefore so many jealousies because so much lying all trust is lost among us This lying is always ill but especially in Magistrates men of publick place Prov. 17. 7. Lying lips become not a Prince So Ministers Rom. 9. 1. I say the truth in Christ I lye not 2 Cor. 11. 31. The God and Father of our Lord Iesus Christ knoweth that I lye not Among private Christians are we not too rash in our suspicions and speak worse of others than they deserve do we not take up and vent reports without search it may be out of envy at the brightness of their profession Do not unwary Expressions drop from us much talk cannot be justified Are there not rash promises we make noconscience to mind and look after Many ways may we trace our selves in this sin of lying Therefore look to the prevention of it what remedies are there against it 1. Hate it do not think it to be a venial matter Psal. 119. 163. I hate and abhor lying not only hate it nor simply I abhor it but hate and abhor to strengthen and increase the sense and make it more vehement Where the enmity is not great against the sin the matter may be compounded and taken up O but I hate and abhor it and hate it with a deadly hatred Slight hatred of a sinful course is not sufficient to guard us against it 2. Love to the Law of God if that be dear to you you will not break it upon any light occasion In the Text Grant me thy law graciously If a man prize the Laws of God and would fain have them printed in the heart he will not so easily break them 3. Remember your spiritual conflict you never give Satan so great an advantage as by falshood and guile of spirit The Devil assaults by wiles but your strength lyeth in down-right honesty Eph. 6. 11. That ye may be able to stand against the wiles of the devil Satans strength lies in wiles but you must beat him down in sincerity The first piece of the spiritual armour is the girdle of truth that is the grace of sincerity whereby a man is to God and men what he gives out himself to be or seems to be This is that which will give you strength and courage in sore tryals O when Satan shall accuse and challenge you for your base hypocrisie then how will you hold up your heads in the day of spiritual conflict if you have not the girdle of truth But now uprightness gives us courage strength and stands by us in the very agonies of death 4. Heedfulness and a watch upon the tongue Psal. 39. 1. I said I will take heed to my ways that I sin not with my tongue Let us speak of what we think and think of what we speak that the mind may conform it self with the nature of truth 5. Avoid the causes of lying There are three of them 1. Boasting or speaking too much of our selves When men are given to boasting whatever thing of weight is done they were privy to it their hand was in the work in contriving and prosecuting the business their counsel was for it Nothing can be acted without their knowledg and approbation This spirit of vain-glory is the Mother of vain talking therefore of a lying tongue Psal. 12. 3. Flattering lips and the tongue that speaketh proud things are joyned together 2. Flattery or desiring of ingratiating themselves with those that are great and mighty in the world when they have mens persons in admiration Psal. 12. 2. With flattering lips and with a double heart do they speak So Hosea 7. 3. They make the king glad with their lyes To please their Rulers they sooth them up with flattering applause and fawning upon them 3. Carnal fear and distrust This was that which put David to his shifts in his dangers he was apt to fail and deal a little deceitfully in time of temptation and danger We had need pray to God to be kept from all ways and counsels that are contrary to Gods word The Scripture speaks Deut. 33. 29. of Counterfeit submissions to higher powers Thine enemies shall be found lyars unto thee thou shalt tread upon their high places the meaning is shall be subdued by thee So Psal. 18. 44. Strangers shall submit themselves to me Psal. 66. 3. 81. 15. and many other places The word implieth feigned submission Obj. But are we openly to profess our mind in all things in time of danger I answer Prudent concealment may be without fault but a professed subjection should be sincere for open and free dealing doth best become Gods Children It is true we are not bound to speak all the truth at all times to every person In some cases we may conceal something Luk. 9. 21. Our Saviour straitly charged them and commanded them to tell no body that he was the Christ. 1 Sam. 16. 2. When the Lord
The Law is an enemy to them that count it an enemy and a friend to them that count it a friend 'T is a rule of life to them that delight in it and count it a great mercy to know it and to be subdued to the practice of it But it is a Covenant of Works to them that withdraw the shoulder count it an heavy burden not to be born Well then which do you complain of the Law or your Corruptions What are you troubled with light or lusts A gracious heart groaneth not under the strictness of the Law but under the body of death not because God hath required so much but because they can do no more Doct. 3. That the Law is granted to us or written upon our hearts out of Gods meer grace Grant it graciously saith David I will do it saith God and God will do it upon his own reasons The Conditions of the Covenant are conditions in the Covenant and the Articles that bind us are also promises wherein God is bound to bestow so great a benefit upon poor creatures which doth encourage us to wait for this work with the more confidence We are sensible we have not the law so intimately so closely applied as we should have Lord grant it graciously It is his work to give us a greater sense and care of it SERMON XXXI PSAL. CXIX 30. I have chosen the way of truth thy judgments have I laid before me DAVID asserts his sincerity here in two things 1. In the rightness of his choice I have chosen the way of thy truth 2. In the accurateness of his prosecution Thy judgments have I laid before me First For his choice I have chosen the way of thy truth God having granted him his Law he did reject all false ways of Religion and continued in the profession of the truth of God and the strict observance thereof There are many controversies and doubtful thoughts among the sons of men about Religion all being varnisht with specious pretences so that a man knows not which way to chuse till by the Spirit he be enabled to take the direction of the Word that resolveth all his scruples and makes him sit down in the way which God hath pointed for him Thus David as an effect of Gods grace avoucheth his own chusing the way of truth By the way of truth is meant true Religion as 2 Pet. 2. 2. By whom the way of truth is evil spoken of It is elsewhere called the good way wherein we should walk 1 King 8. 36. and the way of God Psal. 27. 11. and the way of understanding Prov. 9. 6. and the way of holiness Isa. 55. 8. and the way of righteousness 2 Pet. 2. 21. Better they had not known the way of righteousness that is never to have known the Gospel which is called the way of righteousness It is called also the way of life Prov. 6. 23. And reproofs of instruction are the way of life and the way of salvation as Acts 16. 17. the Pythoness gave this testimony to the Apostles These are the servants of God which shew unto us the way of salvation Now all these expressions have their use and significancy for the way of truth or the true way to happiness is a good way shewed us by God who can only discover it and therefore called the way of the Lord or the way of God in the place before quoted And Act. 28. 25 26. it is manifested by God and leadeth us to God The Christian Doctrine was that way of Truth revealed by him who is prima Veritas the first Truth The ways wherein God cometh to us are his Mercy and Truth and the ways wherein we come to God is the way of True Religion prescribed by him it is the way of understanding because it maketh us wise as to the great affairs of our souls and unto the end of our lives and beings and the way of holiness and righteousness as directing us in all duties to God and man and the way of life and salvation because it brings us to everlasting happiness This way David chose by the direction of God's Word and Spirit Secondly There follows the evidence of his sincerity the accurate prosecution of his choice Thy judgments have I laid before me The Sept. read it I have not forgotten thy judgments By judgments is meant God's word according to the sentence of which every man shall receive his doom He that walketh in a way condemned by the word shall not prosper for God's word is Judgment and Execution shall surely follow and by this word David got his direction how to chuse this way of Truth and this he laid before him as his line his desire was to follow what was right and true not only as to his general course and way of profession but in all his actions and so it noteth his fixed purpose to live according to this blessed Rule which God hath given him To have a holy Rule and an unholy life is unconsonant inconsistent A Christian should be a lively transcript of that Religion he doth profess If the way be a way of Truth he must always set it before him and walk exactly The Points are two 1. That there being many crooked paths in the world it concerns us to chuse the way of truth 2. That when we have chosen the way of truth or taken up the profession of the true Religion the Rules and Institutions of it should ever be before us There are two great faults of men one in point of choice the other in point of pursuit Either they do not chuse right or they do not live up according to the Rules of their profession both are prevented by these points Doct. 1. That there being many crooked paths in the world it concerns us to chuse the way of Truth I shall give you the sense of it in these Eight Propositions or Considerations Prop. 1. The Lord in his holy Providence hath so permitted it that there ever have been and are and for ought we can see will be controversies about the way of truth and right worship There was such a disease introduced into the World by the full that most of the remedies which men chuse do but shew the strength and malign●… of the disease they chuse out false ways of coming to God and returning to him Micah 4. 5. All people will walk every one in the name of his God and we will walk in the name of the Lord our God for ever and ever Mark there is his God and our God and then all people noting their common agreement in error all people will every man noting their diversity as to the particular false way of Religion and worship which they take up to themselves when they turn their back upon the true God and the knowledge of him then they are endless in seeking out false Gods Jonah 1. 5. They cryed every man to his God Among Pagans even in one Ship there
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
been so long owned in the world and his knowledge so far propagated why should we dream of any other way of salvation To us there is but one God and one faith The good-fellow-gods of the Heathen could brook company and partnership but the true God will be alone acknowledged As the Sun drowns the light of all the Stars so Godwill shine alone No man can be saved without these two things without a fixed intention of God as our last end and a choice of Jesus Christ as the only way and means of attaining thereunto These things are set down in Scripture as of infallible necessity to salvation and therefore though there be several apprehensions and contentions about ways of salvation and righteousness yet there 's but one true Religion and all other ways are false Prop. 3. As soon as any begin to be serious they begin to have a conscience about the finding out this one only true way wherein they may be saved Alas before men take up that Religion which the chance of their education offers without examination or any serious reason of their choice they walk in the language of the Prophet according to the trade of Israel they live as they are born and bred and take up truth and error as their faction leads them or else pass from one Religion to another as a man changeth his room or bed and make a slight thing of opinions and float up and down like light chaff in a various uncertainty according as their company or the posture of their interest is changed But a serious and an awakened conscience will be careful to lay the ground-work of Religion sure they build for Eternity therefore the foundation needs to be well laid The woman of Samaria as soon as she was touched at heart and began to have a conscience she began also to have doubtful thoughts about her estate and Religion Christ had convinced her of living in Adultery by that means to bring her to God but now she would fain know the true way of Worship Joh. 4. 20. Our father 's worshipped in this mountain and ye say that in Ierusalem is the place where men ought to worship They that have a sense of Eternity upon them will be diligent to know the right way The same errand brought Nicodemus to Christ Joh. 3. 2. Master we know that thou art a teacher come from God He would fain know how he might come to God So the young Nobleman in the Gospel Matt. 19. 16. Good Master what good thing shall I do that I might have eternal life Though he disliked the bargain afterwards yet he cheapens it and asks what way he must take For a great while persons have only a memorative knowledg some apprehension which doth furnish their talk about Religion and after their memory is planted with notions then they are without judgment and conscience but when they begin to have a judgment and a conscience then it is their business to make Religion sure and to be upon stable terms with God Prop. 4. When we begin to have a conscience about the true way we must enquire into the grounds and reasons of it that we may resolve upon evidence not take it up because it is commonly believed but because it is certainly true not take it up by chance but by choice not because we know no other but because we know no better It is not enough to stumble upon Truth blindly but we must receive it knowingly and upon solid conviction of the excellency of it comparing doctrine with doctrine and thing with thing and the weak grounds the adversaries of the truth have to build upon The precepts of the word are direct and plain for this 1 Thes. 5. 22. Prove all things hold fast that which is good And 1 Joh. 4. 1. Try the spirits whether they are of God There must be trying and searching and not taking up our Religion meerly by the dictates of another The Papists are against this which argueth a distrust of their own doctrine they will not come to the waters of Jealousie lest their belly should swell and their thigh rot They dare not admit people to tryal and choice and give them liberty to search the Scriptures whereas Truth is not afraid of contradiction they first put out the light then would have men shut their eyes But what do they alledg since we are bidden to prove all things and to try the spirits That these places belong to the Doctors of the Church and not to the people But that exception is frivolous because the Apostolical Epistles were directed to the body of the people and they who are advised to prove all things are such as are charged to respect those that are over them in the Lord v. 12. and not to despise prophecies v. 20. and then prove all things v. 21. and in another place those that he calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 little children them he adviseth to try the spirits all that have a care of their salvation should thus do Eusebius doth mention it as one of the errors of Apelles that what he had taught them they should not pry into and examine but take it and swallow it And Mahomet forbids his followers to enquire into their Religion Object But is every private Christian bound to study Controversie so as to be able to answer all the adversaries of the Truth I answer No it is a special gift bestowed and required of some that have leisure and abilities and it it a duty required of Ministers and Church guides to convince gain-sayers and stop their mouths Ministers must be able to hold fast the truth the word is Tit. 1. 9. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 holding fast the faithful word it signifies holding fast a thing which another would wrest from us we should be good at holding and drawing to preserve the Truth when others would take it out of our hands otherwise he tells us Rom. 14. 1. Him that is weak in faith receive but not to doubtful disputations Yet every true Christian is so far to be setled in the true Religion and study the grounds of it that he may be fully perswaded in his own mind Rom. 14. 5. and may not be like chaff but may be at a certainty in the way of truth Surely the business is worthy our serious care Eternal life and death are not trifles therefore be not rash in this but go upon sure evidence 1. The Providence of God doth necessitate us to such a course Because there are different ways propounded to man therefore he must follow all or take up one upon evidence Not only in point of practice as life and death is set before us Deut. 30. 15. and the broad way and the narrow Mat. 7. 13 14. not only to counterwork the rebellions of the flesh and the way of wisdom and folly Prov. 9. No but in matters of opinion and controversie about Religion there will meet us several ways Ier.
doctrine Joh. 17. 17. Sanctifie them by thy truth thy word is truth Hereby we know the word of God is truth because it is so powerful to sanctification Psal. 119. 140. Thy word is very pure therefore thy servant loveth it All Religions endeavour some kind of excellency but now the holiness that is recommended in other Religions is a meer outside holiness in comparison of what Christianity calls for We have a strict Rule high Patterns blessed encouragement it promiseth a powerful Spirit even the Spirit of the holy God to work our heart to this holiness that is required The aim of that Religion is to remedy the disease introduced by the fall All other Religions do but make up a part of the disease and the Gospel is the only remedy and cure Therefore this is the way of truth you should chuse 3. That doctrine which provideth for peace of conscience and freedom from perplexing fears which are wont to haunt us by reason of Gods Justice and wrath for our former misdeeds that doctrine hath the true effect of a Religion Man easily apprehends himself as God's creature and being God's creature he is his subject bound to obey him and having exceedingly failed in his obedience as experience shews he is much haunted with fears and doubts Now that 's the Religion that in a kindly manner doth dispossess us of these dreads and fears and comes in upon the soul to deliver us from our bondage and those guilty fears which are so natural to us by reason of sin And therefore in a consultation about Religion if I were to chuse and had not by the grace of God been baptized into the Christian faith and had the advantage to look abroad and consider then I would bethink my self Where shall I find rest for my soul and from those fears which lye at the bottom of conscience and are easily stirr'd in us and sometimes are very raging there 's a fire smothering within and many times it is blown up into a flame Where shall I get remedy for these fears I rather pitch upon this because the Holy Ghost doth Ier. 6. 16. c. as if he had said If you will know what is the good way take that way where you may find rest for your souls not a false rest that 's easily disturbed not a carnal security but where you may find true solid peace that when you are most serious and mind your great errand and business you may comfort your selves and rejoyce in the God that made you In a false way of Religion there is no establishment of heart and sound peace Heb. 9. 9. They could not make him that did the service perfect as pertaining to the conscience That certainly is the true Religion which makes the worshipper perfect as to the conscience which gives him a well tempered peace in his soul not a sinful security but a holy solid peace that when he hath a great sense of his duty upon him yet he can comfortably wait upon God And you know our Lord himself useth this very motive to invite men Matt. 11. 29. Come unto me all ye that are weary and heavy-laden and I will give you rest That is take the Christian Religion that easie yoke upon you and you shall find rest for your souls The Lord Jesus is our peace and the ground of our peace but we never find rest until we come under his yoke Christians search where you will there is no serious answer to that grand question which is the great scruple of the fallen creature Mic. 6. 7. how to appease angry Justice And we are told of those Locusts who are seducing spirits which come out of the bottomless pit Rev. 9. they had stings in their tails their doctrine is not soundly comfortable to the conscience Among others this is designed by those Locusts that half Christianity which is taken up by the light-skirted people which reflect upon priviledges only therefore there are such scruples and intricate debates But some advantage there is and some progress they may make in the spiritual life that cry up them without duties but they never have sound peace upon their souls unless the Lord pardon their mistakes and doth sanctifie their reflections upon those spiritual and unseen priviledges so as to check their opposite desires and inclinations It is best to be setled in God's way by Justification and Sanctification There is a wound wherein no plaister will serve for the cure but the way the Gospel doth take Consider altogether Christs renewing and reconciling grace the whole Evangelical truth this Gospel which was founded in the blood of Christ his new Covenant and sealed with God's Authority and doth so fitly state duties and priviledges and lead a man by the one to the other This is that which will appease the Lord. There is no setling of the conscience without it and therefore whatever you would expect in a Religion here you find it in that blessed Religion which is recommended to us in the Gospel or new Covenant there is such holiness and true sense of the other world which breeds an excellency and choiceness of spirit in men Prop. 7. Of all Sects and sorts among Christians the Protestant Reformed Religion will be found to be the way of truth why because there 's the greatest sutableness to the great ends the greatest agreement and harmony with God's revelation which they profess to be their only rule I say as to God's Worship there is most simplicity without that Theatrical pomp which makes the Worship of God a dead thing and so most sutable to a spiritual being and conducible to spiritual ends to God who is a Spirit and who will be worshipped in spirit and truth for there God is our reward and to be served by faith love obedience trust prayers praises and a holy administration of the Word and Seals more sutable to the genius of the Scripture without the Pageantry of numerous idle Ceremonies like flourishes about a great letter which do rather hide Religion than any way discover it yea betray it to contempt and scorn to a considering man Besides the great design of this Religion is to draw men from earth to heaven by calling them to a serious profession of saving truth Popery is nothing but Christianity abused and is a doctrine suited to Policy and temporal ends and it is supported by worldly greatness And then as to Holiness which is the genuine product of a Religion the true genuine holiness is to be found or should be found according to their principles among Protestants and Reformed not external mortification but in purging the heart And here is the true peace of conscience while men are directed to look to Christ's reconciling and renewing grace and not to seek their acceptance in the merit of their own works and voluntary penance and satisfactions and many other doctrines which put the conscience upon the rack And then all this is submitted to be tried
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
whatever it cost us 5. It reproves those that think to reserve their hearts notwithstanding outward compliance the way of truth being chosen is to be owned 2 Cor. 7. 1. the outward profession is required as well as the inward belief Rom. 10. 10. For with the heart man believeth unto righteousness and with the mouth confession is made unto salvation A man that should list himself among the enemies of his countrey and fight with them and say I reserve my heart for my countrey this is a mockage As if a Wife that prostitutes her body to another should tell her Husband she reserveth her heart for him Satan would have outward prostration he did not ask the heart but fall down and worship me USE 2. To press us to chuse the way of truth Take it up upon evidence and cleave to it with all the heart First Take it up upon evidence the evidence of Reason Scripture and the Spirit Reason will lead us to the Scripture the Scripture will lead us to the Spirit so we come to have a knowledg of the truth 1. Reason that 's preparative light and will lead the soul thus far It 's a thousand to one but Christianity is the way of God it will see much of God in this representation and if you should go on carnally carelesly neglecting Heaven and Christ Reason will tell you you run upon a thousand hazards that there are far more against you than for you in your sinful courses Stand upon the way Where may you find such likelihood of satisfaction or probability of salvation as in the Religion we have Either this is true or there is none That you should venture your souls rather here than elsewhere and at least that you should profess the Christian Religion as men go to a Lottery Reason will tell you thus A man that comes to a Lottery it is uncertain whether he shall have a Prize or no but it is but venturing a shilling possibly he may have a prize so Reason will tell you if it be uncertain whether there be a Heaven or a Hell yet it is a thousand to one there are both I may have a Prize and it 's but venturing the quitting of a few lusts that are not worth the keeping There are some Truths above reason but none contrary to it for grace is not contrary to nature but perfects it therefore there is nothing in the Gospel but what is agreeable to sound reason Reason will tell us there is no doctrine agreeth so much with the wisdom power goodness justice truth and the honour of God as that doctrine revealed in the Scripture 2. When Reason hath thus brought you to the Scripture there 's the great warrant of faith John 17. 20. They that believe in me through their word And Isa. 8. 20. To the law and to the testimony else there is no light in them That 's the sacred standard by which we should measure all doctrines and these will make wise the simple Psal. 19. The plainest meanest simplest man may find out the right way to heaven if he will consult with God's book diligently there he may become wise to salvation the veriest fool and simple man may be taught how to walk directly and safely this is the clue which brings us through all the labyrinths and perplexing debates in the world to consult with the word of God that we may not receive the truth upon man's credit but see the grounds of it with our own eyes He that finds the pearl of price must dig for it Matt. 13. 44. he must read the Scriptures be much in the study of God's book 3. The Scripture leads us to the Spirit because there are many mysteries in the Gospel difficultly known that will not be taken up by a sure faith without illumination from above Besides there are so many various artifices used by men to disguise the truth Eph. 4. 14. And besides there 's a connate blindness and hatred of truth which is natural to men and therefore it 's the Spirit of God must help us to make a wise choice Look as in practical things we shall never chuse the way of truth in opposition to the falsity of worldly enjoyments without the light of the Spirit therefore it is said Prov. 23. 4. Labour not to be rich cease from thine own wisdom If a man be guided by his own understanding he will chuse riches so also in matter of opinion when we lean to our own understanding we shall chuse amiss Iohn 16. 13. It is the Spirit of God that must guide us into all truth therefore you must beg his direction for if we that are so blind of heart be left to our own mistakes or the deceits of others left to the direction of our selves how easily shall we err Say Lord send out thy light and thy truth to lead me to thy holy hill Secondly As we should chuse the way of truth so cleave to it with all firmness and perseverance without seeking out any other way Iohn 6. 67 68. If you turn away from Christ where will you get a better Master change where you will you will change for the worse you will turn your back upon true comfort and true happiness for he hath all this So much for the first part the rightness of David's choice I have chosen the way of truth In the latter clause there you have his diligence and accuracy in walking according to the tenour of the true Religion Thy judgments have I laid before me By judgments is meant the precepts and directions of the word as invested with threatnings and promises for so the word contains every man's doom Not only the execution of God's Providence but the word shews what will become of a man Now these I have laid before me that is propounded them as the Rule of my life as the King was to have the Book of the Law always before him Deut. 17. 19. Doct. 2. When we have chosen the way of truth or taken up the profession of the true Religion the rules of it should be ever before us Three Reasons for this 1. To have a holy Rule and not a holy Life is altogether inconsistent A Christian should be a lively transcript of that Religion he doth profess A Christian should be Christ's Epistle 2 Cor. 3. a walking-Bible 2 Cor. 15. 16. shining as lights holding forth the word of life How not in doctrine but in practice A sutable practice joined with profession puts a majesty and splendor upon the truth If there are many doubts about the true Religion why they are occasioned by the scandalous lives of professors we reason from the Artist to the Art it self Look as there is a correspondence between the stamp and the impress the seal and the thing sealed so should there be between a Christian's life and a Christian's belief the stamp should be upon his own heart upon his life and actions his action should discover his
God failed not and surely he that hath been true hitherto will not fail at last 3. When the Word is performed in part it assureth us of the Performance of the whole 'T is an earnest given us of all the Rest 2 Cor. 1. 21. 22. For all the Promises of God in him are Yea and in him Amen A Christian hath a great many Promises and they are a performing daily God is Delivering Comforting Protecting him speaking peace to his Conscience but the greater Part are yet to be performed Present Experiences do assure us of what is to come Thus Stablish thy word that is make it good by the Event that I may learn to trust another time either for the same or other Promises or Accomplishment of thy whole Word Doct. That it is Matter of great Consequence to have the Word of God established to us or to be confirmed in a certain belief of his Promises David asketh it here as a very necessary thing Stablish thy word unto Servant give me Lord to look upon it as a stable and firm thing This will appear if you consider the Conveniency Necessity Utillity and the Profit of this Establishment First The Conveniency and Suitableness of it It is very convenient that we should build strongly upon a strong Foundation That sure truths should be entertained with a certain Faith and things taken as they are uttered There is Certitudo Objecti a certainty of the Object it self and Certitudo Subjecti The certainty of the Subject our being perswaded of the certainty of it the one warrants the other and both are necessary to our Comfort that is as the Word is certain in it self so it should be certain to us No matter how strong the Foundation be if the Building upon that Foundation be weak down it falleth The Word of God is stable in it self but if we are not perswaded it is so we are soon shaken with Temptations To stay a Ship from being tost upon the Rocks it is necessary the Anchor hold be good its self and be fastened upon somewhat that is firm therefore 6 Heb. 18. 19. 20. The Apostle speaks first of the Stability of the ground and then of the strength of the Anchor There 's a firm rocky Ground to build upon the Immutable Promises of God and a solid strong Anchor which is our Faith and Affiance As faith without the Promises is nothing but Groundless and Fruitless conceit so the Promises yield us no Comfort without faith The promises are Yea and Amen in Christ. 2 Cor. 1. 20. And then presently Now he which stablisheth us with you in Christ is God It is not sufficient that the Promises be Established but we mustbe Established upon them They are Yea and Amen in Christ but what 's that to us God may lose the glory of his Truth and we the comfort if we be not Established Second The Necessity of it will appear if we consider 1. How natural Unbelief is to us all and 2. How weak the Faith of most is 1. If we consider how natural Unbelief is to us it is a Sin we suck in with our Milk When our first Parents sinned against God his Word was not believed and thereupon the Sin was committed 3. Gen. 4. The Devil contradicted that which God delivered with his own mouth his Nay prevails above Gods Yea Ye shall not surely dye that was that which let in the first Sin And ever since it is very natural to us 3. Heb. 12. Take heed left there be an Evil heart of unbelief in you in departing from the living God Unbelief is the special part of the Hearts wickedness Partly because we have wronged God therefore are apt to suspect him for men are always jealous of those whom they have wronged and that they cannot mean well to them from whom they have received ill we have wronged God and therefore are suspicious of him and of his Good-will to sinners And partly because the truths of God lie cross to our Lusts and carnal Interest which maketh us so ready to pick Quarrels with him Ahab would not hear Micajah not because he prophecied False but Evil. Iohn 3. 20. They will not come to the Light lest their deeds should be reproved I say such strict Rules such close and quickening truths as God hath published in the Gospel men could wish they were not true that there were no Heaven nor Hell nor World to come and therefore because it lies so cross to our Lusts our wishes gain upon our understanding and blind us and we are not apt to believe these things Who will close with that which makes against him Men that are loath the Word of God should prove true are therefore slow of Heart to believe it 24. Luk. And Partly because ever since we were born we have been trained up to live by Sense and are affected only with the things we see hear and feel and therefore are little Skil'd in Faith which is the Evidence of things not seen 11. Heb. 11. which carrieth us to things above Sense to the concernments of another World In short then for these Reasons because it is natural to us to live by Sense to indulge our own Lusts and to suspect those whom we have wronged therefore Unbelief of God is so rife in the World 2. The necessity of Establishment in the Word of God will appear if we consider how weak the Faith of the most is There are few that entertain the Word as a sure and certain truth There are several degrees of Assent there is Conjecture Opinion Weakfaith and Faith that is stronger and that which comes up to an assurance of understanding as the Apostle calls it There is Conjecture or a lighter inclination of the mind to the Word of God as Possibly or Probably true a suspicious knowledge of things or bare guess at them when we go no higher than it may be so that all this is true which God hath spoken concerning Christ and Salvation There is beyond this Opinion when the mind is more inclin'd to think it true when we are so convinced of the truth of it that we are not able reasonably to Contradict it we think it true but there is still a fear of the contrary that it is not true which prevails over us and taints our Practice and weakens our Affections and withdraws them from things to come Then beyond this there is Faith or a firm and undoubted perswasion of the Truth of Gods Word which also hath it's Latitude There 's weak Faith which hath it's incident Doubts And there is beyond this receiving the Word in much Assurance as the experssion is 1 Thes. 5. 1. still we may increase higher in the degree of our assent for in this Life there is never so much but there may be more there is not so much Faith but there may be more There is something lacking to our Faith and it is not easie to grow up to the Riches of the
they were created Corruption is an imperious Master it will not suffer us to hear good things to be there where good things are spoken to accompany them that are good it hath them in so strait a custody they hate the means of their recovery They have many Masters Quot habet Dominos qui unum habere non vult Tit. 3. 3. For we our selves were sometimes foolish disobedient serving divers lusts and pleasures And Iames 4. 1. Whence come wars and fightings among you come they not hence even of your lusts that war in your members One Lust draweth one way another another way Covetousness Voluptuousness Ambition Uncleanness as when two Seas meet We have little reason to envy them for their free Life pity them rather How do their bruitish Affections hurry them What pains Aches in the Body wounds in the Conscience how many secret gripes and scourges No such Subjection no Slave so subject to the Will of his Lord as a Man to his Lusts and sinful Desires will speak think nothing but what Sin commands It is a besotting Slavery wicked Men remain in this Bondage with a kind of pleasure Gally-slaves would sain be free wish for Liberty Israel was in bondage in Egypt but they groaned under it The cry of the children of Israel is come up to me Here Men loath to come out of their Slavery and are enemies to those that would help them out Their Work is hard and oppressive loss of Name Health Estate They tire their Spirits rack their Brains and after all their drudging are cast into Hell Use 2. Do we walk at liberty 1. There was a time when we served Sin but being converted we change Masters Rom. 6. 18. Being made free from sin ye became the servants of righteousness If there be such a change it will discover it self 1. You will do as little Service for Sin as formerly for Righteousness Rom. 6. 20. When ye were the servants of sin ye were free from righteousness Righteousness had no share in your time thoughts cares you made no conscience of doing good took no care of it so now you do as little for Sin 2. Positively do as much for Grace as formerly for Sin ver 19. As you yielded your members servants unto uncleanness and to iniquity unto iniquity so now yield your members servants unto righteousness unto holiness as watchful as earnest as industrious to perfect Holiness as formerly to commit Sin It is but equal He that hath been Servant unto an hard and cruel Master is thereby fitted to be diligent and faithful in the service of a loving gentle and bountiful Master You can judge what a Tyrant Sin was shall not Grace have as much power over you now and will you not do as much for God as for your Lusts 2. What do you complain of as the Task and Yoke the strictness of the Law or the reliques of Corruption Rom. 8. 7. The carnal mind is enmity against God for it is not subject to the law of God neither indeed can it be compared with 1 Iohn 5. 3. This is the love of God that we keep his commandments and his commandments are not grievous What is a Bondage Sin or Duty Is the Commandment grievous or in-dwelling Sin The Apostle was complaining but of what the Purity of the Law No but the power of in-dwelling Corruption the Body of Death Rom. 7. 24. Oh wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from this body of death Which do your hearts rise against 3. What Freedom Luke 1. 74 75. That you being delivered out of the hands of your enemies might serve him without fear in holiness and righteousness before him all the days of your lives If you are enslaved to any one Lust you cannot walk at large Are your Gives and Fetters knocked off Have you that free Spirit Psal. 51. 11 12. Cast me not away from thy presence take not thy holy spirit from me restore unto me the joy of thy salvation and uphold me by thy free spirit SERMON LII PSAL. CXIX 46. I will speak of thy Testimonies also before Kings and will not be ashamed THE Man of God had prayed ver 43. That God would not take the word of truth utterly out of his mouth that is deny him the Liberty or the Grace the Opportunity or the Heart to make an open Profession of his Faith and Respect to God and his Ways This Suit he backeth with sundry Arguments 1. From his Hope ver 23. For I have hoped in thy judgments He had placed all his confidence in them and therefore would openly profess what Rule he lived by and what Expectations he had from God 2. His Resolution to persist in this course whatever befel him ver 44. So shall I keep thy law continually for ever and ever it would engage him to constancy to the end of his Life 3. From the alacrity and readiness of his Obedience as well as the constancy ver 45. And I will walk at liberty for I seek thy precepts Then we have true liberty 4. That no worldly Splendor or Terror should take him off from making this Confession if God would give him liberty and opportunity Two things hinder a free Confession of God's Truth Carnal Fear and Carnal Shame Both are obviated by the Resolution of the Man of God he would neither be afraid nor ashamed to recommend the ways of God to the greatest Princes of the World 1. The Terror of Kings or Men in Power may be supposed to be an hinderance to the free Confession of God's Truth therefore he saith I will speak of thy testimonies also before Kings 2. Carnal Shame may breed a lothness to own God's despised ways therefore he addeth I will not be ashamed David would neither be afraid nor ashamed if called thereto to make this open Confession to own God and his Truth 1. His Resolution against Fear deserveth a little opening I will speak of thy testimonies also before Kings The words may be looked upon as a Direction for them who are called to speak before Kings 〈◊〉 Men may be supposed to be called 1. Either by the Duty of their Office to speak to them in a way of Instruction Or 2. As convented before them in a Judiciary way to give an account of their Faith 1. In the first sense those who are called to instruct Kings ought with the greatest confidence to recommend the ways of God to them as that which will enhaunse their Crowns and Dignity and make it more glorious and comfortable to them and their Subjects than any thing else And so David's Resolution sheweth what Faithfulness becometh them who live in the Courts of Princes It concerneth Princes to be instructed Psal. 2. 10. Be wise now therefore ye Kings be instructed ye Iudges of the earth Few speak plainly and sincerely to them as Nathan to David 2 Sam. 12. 7. Thou art the man and God to David 2 Sam. 24. 13. Shall seven years
Father I have made known unto you 3. By our constancy in Prayer and earnest Supplication to know more of the Mind of God They will not be put off with other things God gave the Spirit to the rest of the Apostles but he gave the Purse to the Son of Perdition Men may have a fit of Devotion in their Prayers but their general Course is not answerable Matth. 6. 33. First seek the Kingdom of God if we seek it in good earnest we shall shew it in our Conversations and Demeanours Prov. 4. 7. Wisdome is the principal thing therefore get Wisdome and with all thy getting get Understanding This must be the chiefest thing that beareth sway in our Endeavours that we may know more of God's Mind in following our Suits uncessantly we must not be put off though God giveth other things you must not cease your Importunity Lord I expect something else from thy Goodness see Psalm 119. 132 133. Look upon me and be mercifull unto me as thou usest to doe to them that fear thy Name Order my steps in thy Word and let no Iniquity have dominion over me And Psalm 27. 7. Hear me O God when I cry with my voice have mercy upon me and answer me If we do not suffer this Desire to languish and die but still it be recommended to God daily my business is rightly to understand and perfectly to doe thy Will this is my one and great Request which I will ever and ever urge I cannot give over this Prayer till thou beest all in all and shewest me the utmost of thy Bounty We desire many things but we are soon put out of the humour as Children that seem passionately and pettishly to desire a thing but by presenting other things to them they are diverted and stilled but 't is not so with God's People As Naomi said of Boaz Ruth 3. 18. For the man will not be in rest until he have finished the thing this day So a Child of God will not be satisfied till his Desire be in some measure accomplished Secondly In what manner we should pray 1. With Earnestness slight Prayers bespeak their own denial Prov. 2. 1 2 3 4 5. My Son if thou wilt receive my Words and hide my Commandments with thee So that thou incline thine ear to Wisdome and apply thine heart to Understanding yea if thou cryest after Knowledge and liftest up thy voice for Understanding If thou seekest her as Silver and searchest for her as for hid Treasures Then shalt thou understand the Fear of the Lord and find the Knowledge of God 2. With Confidence he is wont to doe it for you Ask nothing contrary to his Nature we should come with a confidence of speeding there is in him a propensity and inclination to help us What would ye doe to an hunger-bitten Child if he cometh to you for a Knife or an Apple you would deny him them but not Meat to satisfy his hunger If for Bread to play with or Meat when he hath enough you would deny him not gratify his Fancy if he come to be taught his Book you would readily hear him So when we come not for temporal Things but spiritual Comforts when spiritual Comforts are not asked out of course and for forms sake yea not onely for Comforts but necessary Grace to doe his Will surely it cannot be that he should cast off them that love him and would fain be conformed to his Will that come humbly and long and pray and seek for his Grace 3. That this Confidence must be Evangelical he sets before his Eyes God's Goodness or Readiness to be gracious to all that call upon him so that all the hope we have to prevail should not be taken from any thing in us but something in God himself We must expect and ask Blessings from God for God and because of God's sake it is not for any good we deserve or have done or can doe that God taketh care of his weak foolish Children but for the glory of his Name his Grace and constant Goodness God is our Fountain our Reasons are his Goodness our End his Glory This is the true way of addressing our selves to God deprecating Sins for which he may harden us and remembring his Mercies on which we ground our Hope So doth David Psalm 25. 5 6. Lead me in thy Truth teach me for thou art the God of my Salvation on thee do I wait all the day Remember O Lord thy loving kindnesses and thy Mercies for they have been ever of old His eternal Love is assigned as the cause of all Psalm 23. 3. He leadeth us in paths of Righteousness for his Names sake Thirdly What should be the Grounds and impelling Principle of Prayer 1. A strong bent to please God and that all your Affections and Actions may be ordered so as to be acceptable in his sight Those that stand in awe of God are loth to offend him they may expect Direction and Light in all difficult Cases Psalm 25. 12. What man is he that feareth the Lord him shall he teach in the way that he shall choose Vers. 14. The secret of the Lord is with them that fear him and he will shew them his Covenant 2. A desire to injoy him for these things are valuable as they lead us to God Our solid Joy lieth not in outward things but in our Communion with God Psalm 139. 24. Lead me in the way everlasting And Psalm 73. 24. Thou shalt guide me by thy Counsel and afterward receive me to thy Glory Their Business is to be happy hereafter and well guided here that they may attain that Happiness Now there is an inseparable Connexion between our walking in the time of this Life and receiving into Heaven after this Life and he that is resolved to walk by the Rule of God's Direction may promise himself to be received into Glory after his Journey is ended So Psalm 43. 3. Send out thy Light and thy Truth to lead me to thy holy Hill They would fain take the nearest way to Heaven and follow God's Counsel in all things We have his Word continually to guide us in this way but we need also the assistance of his Spirit The promised Rest is much in their Eye and doth mightily prevail with them they would have God to be their Guide here that he may be their Rest hereafter SERMON LXXIX PSAL. CXIX 71. It is good for me that I have been afflicted that I might learn thy Statutes THE Context speaketh of Afflictions by occasion of Persecutions The Proud had forged a lie against him and involved him in many Troubles when in the mean time their heart was as fat as grease They wallowed in Ease and Pleasure but David kept right with God and yet his Afflictions do not cease God doth not presently take away Opposition because of our proud unhumbled unmortified Spirits though we hold fast our Integrity for the main therefore he comforteth himself in his
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
Gospel thus stated hath more stability than the foundations of Heaven and Earth Therefore expect nothing to be altered for thy sake the Gospel constitution it was setled long before thou wert born and it is an unalterable decree which cannot be reversed All this is spoken to confute them that look upon the Gospel as true and to be believed till they meet with something which crosses them and then they hope it is not so In short God is true when he promises true when he threatens true when he commandeth Or thus If the Gospel Covenant be false thou hast no ground of hope if true it doometh licentious sinners to eternal destruction SERMON XCV PSAL. CXIX VER 90. Thy faithfulness is unto all generations thou hast established the earth and it abideth THese words contain a Truth which is 1. Asserted 2. Represented by a fit and lively Emblem Thou hast established the earth and it abideth He had before said Thy word is setled in the heavens now he speaketh of it as manifested in the earth Here the constancy of God's Promises was set forth by the duration and equal motion of the heavenly bodies now by the firmness and unmoveableness of the earth God's powerful Word and Providence reacheth to the whole world this lower part here upon earth as well as the upper part in Heaven DOCT. That in all Ages God ever shewed himself a true God and faithful in all his Promises 'T is here confirmed by Experience and represented by an Emblem 1. God's Faithfulness relateth to some Promise wherein he hath engaged himself to his People Heb. 11. 11. She judged him faithful who had promised It is his Mercy to make Promises but it is his Faithfulness and Truth to fulfill them His Truth is pawned with the Creature till he discharge it Micah 7. 20. 2. His Truth dependeth upon his unchangeable nature but 't is confirmed to us by experience His unchangeable nature Heb. 6. 18. If a promise can be made out to be of God we have no more reason to doubt of it than of the nature and being of God yet quoad nos 't is confirmed by experience Psal. 18. 30. The word of the Lord is a tryed word We are led by sensible things and what hath been done doth assure us of what shall be done or may be expected from God 3. That therefore God hath been ever tender of his Truth that the event may answer the promise and we might know that God that hath been faithful and kept touch with the world hitherto will not fail at last The Heathens ascribed a double perfection to their gods 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So the true God is known by his Mercy and his Fidelity he never failed to perform his part of the Covenant with any Psal. 138. 2. I will praise thy Name for thy loving kindness and thy truth for thou hast magnified thy word above all thy Name As he hath made us admirable and great promises of giving his Son and with him all things so he will certainly perform all to the utmost importance of them The matter of his word is mercy and loving kindness and in the performance thereof there is great truth and fidelity as he hath made great and excellent promises so he performeth them most punctually So that in fulfilling his Word God will be known above all that is named or famed or believed or apprehended and spoken of them here is his great glory and excellency 4. That the Experience of all Generations doth confirm God's Faithfulness in his promises for 't is said in the Text His faithfulness is unto all generations in the Hebrew it is from generation to generation The Point may be amplified by two Considerations First That some Promises have been received by one Generation and fulfilled in another Secondly That the same common promises have been fulfilled to the Faithful in all Ages First That some promises have been received by one Generation and fulfilled in another when the matter so required as for instance Israel's going out of Egypt Gen. 15. 13 14. And he said unto Abram Know of a surety that thy seed shall be a stranger in a land that is not theirs and shall serve them and they shall afflict them four hundred years And also that Nation whom they shall serve will I judge and afterwards they shall come out with great substance Compare now Exod. 12. 41. And it came to pass at the end of the four hundred and thirty years even the self-same day it came to pass that all the hosts of the Lord went out from the land of Egypt Thirty years were added because of their Fathers dwelling in Canaan but God kept touch to a day So for the promise of the Messiah and calling the Gentiles that God fulfilled in due time and sent a Saviour into the world Gal. 4. 4. In the fulness of time God sent his Son When the Scepter was gone from Iudah Gen. 49. 10. when the Crown was possessed by Herod a Tributary and Foreigner during the Roman Monarchy which at length Christ should utterly destroy Dan. 2. 35. Nebuchad-nezzar had a Vision of an Image of four different Metals the head of gold arms and breasts silver belly and thighs brass and the feet part iron and clay while he beheld the Image and surveyed it from head to foot he saw a stone hewen out of the mountain without hands which stone smote the Image not upon the head breast or belly but upon the feet of iron and clay upon which it vanished away and the stone became a great mountain and filled the whole earth This Vision Daniel expounded of four Gentile Kingdoms which should succeed one another with great extent of dominion The first of the Babylonians which then was The second of the Medes and Persians The third of the Grecians The fourth of the Romans which subdued all the other and because possessed of the riches and glory of the former during this last Kingdom was the stone hewen out of the mountain and smote the iron feet this stone was the Kingdom of the God of Heaven which Christ set up but not to trouble you with mysteries and nice debates the Apostle telleth us Rom. 15. 8 9 10. That Iesus Christ was a Minister of the Circumcision for the truth of God to confirm the promises made to the Fathers And that the Gentiles might glorifie God for his mercy as it is written For this cause I will confess to thee among the Gentiles and sing unto thy Name And again it is said Rejoice ye Gentiles The Event in all these cases afterwards did speak for its self so in all that is yet to come we should depend upon the Veracity of God as the calling of the Iews the destruction of Antichrist a more ample effusion of gifts on the Church together with a dilation of its borders as the Patriarchs all dyed in faith Heb. 11. 13. Having not received the promises but having seen
converting power of the Word they are a secondary confirmation of the truth of the Word to us I tell you why I put in that Word a secondary confirmation they are not a primary for we must believe the Word before we can feel its efficacy and find it to be effectual to us and therefore the primary grounds of Faith are the impressions of God upon the Word the secondary are the impressions of God upon the heart now I have felt the vertue and power of the truth upon my soul and all the world shall not draw me from it I must have a primary confirmation of the truth of the Word before I can believe and before it can work in me The ●…stle saith 1 Thess. 2. 13. Ye received the Word not as the word of man but as the Word of God which effectually worketh in you that believe First I receive it as the Word of God by some Marks and Notes and Characters some impress of God upon his Word somewhat God hath left of himself in the Word and that awes my heart to reverence it there I receive it upon my heart but when it works in me mightily I have a secondary confirmation When I have eyes to see the impress of God upon the Word then I feel the power of it and when I have felt the power of it it 's confirmed in my soul 1 Cor. 1. 6. When we feel the blessed effects the quicknings and comforts of the Word it 's a mighty help to Faith So 1 Iohn 5. 10. He that believeth on the Son of God hath the witness in himself What is that witness in himself why the witness of the Spirit applying the blood of Christ to the Conscience sanctifying and quickning the heart then he hath the witness in himself and is more confirmed that Jesus is the Christ and the Word of God is true and cannot easily be divorced from it he hath felt the effects of it in his own heart Col. 1. 5 6. For the hope that is laid up for you in heaven whereof ye heard before in the word of the truth of the Gospel and knew the grace of God in truth We guess at things before and have but a wavering Faith such as may let in some work upon the Soul then we know it in truth then it is more fully made good to us by the convincing comforting and sanctifying Spirit that evidenceth it to our Souls and this can be no other but the truth of God this makes our Faith more strong and rooted and we may be confirmed in the hope and belief of the Gospel and may not easily be removed therefrom 2. Take Faith in the other Notion for a dependance upon God for something that we stand in need of every manifestation of his grace it should be kept as an experience by us for afterwards when that frame may be away when God may hide his face and all dead in the soul. As David in his infirmity remembred the years of the right hand of the most High and former experiences of God Psal. 77. 10. As he in an outward case for outward deliverances remembred the former help and succors he had from God so we may remember former grace and former quickning There are many ups and downs in the spiritual life for even the new Creature is changeable both in point of duty and in point of comfort Now it 's a mighty confirmation when we remember what God hath done First In point of duty Sometimes you shall find you are dull and heartless under the Ordinances of God in reading and hearing you find little life lazy and almost indifferent whether you call upon God in secret or hear the Word or join in the communion of Saints no relish in any duty do it almost for custom-sake or at best but to please your Consciences you must do it and you drive on heavily not for any great need you feel of them or good you find by them or hope you expect from them Now it is of great use to remember how I have waited upon God formerly and he hath quickned refreshed and comforted me and therefore it is good to try again to keep up our dependance upon his Ordinances when this dulness seizeth upon the soul and this listlesness when Conscience is sleepy and the heart hangs off from God remember I have been quickned 2. If it be in point of comfort fears and sorrows why is there no Balm in Gilead no Physician there Hath not God relieved in like straits before and given in fresh consolations when you have bemoaned your selves and opened your case before him There are none acquainted with the spiritual life but have many experiences both of deadness and comfort Now one is a great help against the other that our hands may not wax faint and feeble God that hath comforted may comfort again and why should I neglect his appointed means No I will continue there and lie at the Pool where the waters have been stirred 2. They are of Use again to stir up our affections to God and his Word 1. To increase our love to God O! we should keep the impression of his kind manifestation still upon the heart that the mercy may be continually acknowledged surely 't is a favor that God will manifest himself to us and own us in our attendance upon his Word and other duties The Lord Jesus promiseth it as a great blessing Iohn 14. 21. He that loveth me and keepeth my commandment shall be loved of my Father and I will love him and will manifest my self to him Now then when any such sensible favor is vouchsafed to us we should not forget it but lay it up as a continual ground of thankfulness and love to God Cant. 1. 4. We will be glad and rejoice in thee we will remember thy love more than Wine When God hath treated us most magnificently in his Ordinances either at his Table or Word and God hath refreshed and revived our Souls O! we will remember this and lay it up for the honor of God and knit our hearts in a greater love to God 2. It is of great Use to increase our love to the Word for the excellency and worth of the Word is found experimentally by Believers so that their love and estimation of it is more fixed and setled upon their hearts so that they purpose to make use of it always for their Comfort and direction it is a great encouragement when formerly they have found comfort and life thereby The Apostle to settle the Galatians that began to waver that were apt to be overcome by their Judaizing Brethren to settle them in love to the Gospel he puts them to the question Gal. 3. 2. This only would I learn of you Received ye the Spirit by the works of the Law or by the hearing of Faith The Spirit of Regeneration with all his comforts and graces are not conveyed to you by the doctrine of the
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
a circumstance the Word written not a dead letter but can sufficiently evidence it self to be of God de jure it hath the same power still though de facto not always so received and so owned by the sons of Men but only by those that are enlightned by the Spirit to see this evidence You find by daily experience every ingenious Author leaves an image and impress of his own spirit the mark of his genius upon every work that he doth We can say of an Exquisite Painting by some secret Art in it this is the hand of such a great Master Now can it be imagined that God should put his hand to any work and leave no signature or impress of it upon that work it cannot be imagined for it must be either because he could not or because he would not that God could not cannot be said without blasphemy Can Men shew the wisdom and learning they have attain'd to in every work and cannot God who is the Father of lights and the Fountain of wisdom insinuate such secret marks and notes of his wisdom and divine authority into that writing he took care should be pen'd for the use and comfort of the world that it might be known to be his And that he would not that cannot be believed neither He that is so willing to shew man what is good so willing to reveal himself to the reasonable creature can we imagine he would so wholly conceal himself that there should be no stamp of himself upon that doctrine to move our reverence and obedience but receive it from the testimony of such a Church Therefore surely there is enough in the Word to discover God to be the Author The Apostles when they went abroad to work Faith all the fruit that they expected from their Preaching was from this self-evidencing light which was discovered in their doctrine therefore doth the Apostle say 2 Cor. 4. 2. Not handling the Word of God deceitfully but by manifestation of the truth commending our selves to every mans conscience in the sight of God They did not commend themselves to the consciences of Men meerly by the Miracles which they wrought though that also was some Seal of their Commission and that they were authoriz'd and sent by God to preach those things to the world but by the manifestation of the truth commending themselves to every mans conscience So the Apostle reckons up many things approving our selves as the Ministers of God by the word of truth 2 Cor. 6. 4. Therefore certainly there is somewhat in the truth deliver'd that will sufficiently make out it self to be of God and when they render the reason why this Word was not received it was not for want of evidence as if this truth could not sufficiently be known to be of God but because Men were blinded with their lusts and carnal affections for so he saith 2 Cor. 4. 3 4. If our Gospel be hid it is hid to them that are lost In whom the God of this world hath blinded the minds of them which believe not c. Which shews there is a light in the Gospel by which it can discover itself and if this light be hidden from the eyes of Men it is because their minds are blinded by their own lusts and carnal affections Now if the certainty of truth will draw affection certainly those truths which are conveyed in the Word of God should gain upon our hearts and draw affection why because these are sublime supreme and weighty truths and come in with a great deal of evidence upon the hearts of Men. 2. If Goodness can gain the hearts and affections of Men the Word of God is good as well as true There 's a double desire in Man a desire of truth and a desire of immortality to know the truth and to enjoy the chiefest good the happiness of the intellect of the understanding that lies in the contemplation of truth and the happiness of the will in the enjoyment of good In the state of Innocency this was represented by the Tree of Life and the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil to suit these two capacities and desires that were in the heart of Man The Tree of Life to suit his desires of happiness and the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil to suit his desires of truth Under the Law this is set forth by the Candlestick and the Table of Shew-bread and in the Gospel by the Sacrament of Baptism which is called an enlightning Hebr. 10. 32. After you were enlightned that is after you were baptized and the Lord's Supper Light and Life they are the two great things Man looks after as a reasonable Creature to get more Light and then Life that he may enjoy God Now we are still at a loss for satisfaction of these desires until we meet with the Word of God where there is primum verum the supreme truth and summum bonum the chiefest good and therefore the directions of the Word are called true Laws and good Statutes Nehem. 9. 13. True Laws all words of truth so to perfect the understandings of Men and good Laws very suitable to their will and inclination and so bear a full proportion with the desires of a reasonable Creature So 1 Tim. 1. 15. This is a faithful saying and worthy of all acceptation The Gospel is a faithful saying there 's truth to perfect the understanding and then worthy of the chiefest embraces of our wills and affections As there is plain certain clear truth in the Word of God a satisfaction to the understanding in the view of truth so there is also a full compliance with the motions of the will which the Scripture offereth Now two things there are the Scriptures do reveal which are good for Men and cannot be found elsewhere and all the world have been puzled about them how to find them out 1 Reconciliation with God 2. Salvation or Eternal Happiness 1. Reconciliation with God This is the grand enquiry of the guilty creature wherewith God shall be appeased satisfied and we reconciled to him he being offended by our sin Micah 6. 8. How Justice shall be satisfied and Men that are obnoxious to the wrath of God may come to have delightful communion with him this is the great scruple that troubleth the Creature and all the false Religions in the World were invented for the removing and assailing this doubt and scruple and appeasing the hearts of Men as to these fears of divine justice Now we can nowhere be satisfied but in the way of Reconciliation and Peace which is tendred by God himself to repenting sinners through the mediation of Christ Jesus Natural conscience will make us sensible of sin and wrath and we have no ransom to pay it and all other creatures cannot help us for they are debtors to God for all they have and can do how then shall God be satisfied how shall we escape this vengeance This fear would have remained
glory Use 2. Reproof 1. Of those that walk in the midst of this light and yet perceive no more of the things of God than if they were in darkness these lose the Benefit which God vouchsafeth to them Iohn 1. 5. The light shineth in darkness and the darkness comprehendeth it not And Iohn 3. 19. The light is come into the world and men loved darkness rather than light It had been better for them they had never heard of the Scriptures and that God had never set up such a lamp in the Church These men believe the Word of God is a light and a lamp yet never take care of nor give heed to it they are careless and never measure their actions according to this Rule 2. It reproves those that set up another Rule and look for an infallible Interpreter 1 Those that set up Reason instead of the Word of God Alas this is an imperfect Rule these men would bring down all things before the Tribunal of their own Reason these are not Disciples of Christ but Masters they will not be taught by the directions of the Word but by their own dark hearts I have told you the Candle of the Lord did burn bright within us but alas now 't is weakned by sin it is an imperfect irrational thing we can never be saved by it 2 Others are guided by their Passions and Lusts this is their direction and their lamp this will surely lead them to utter darkness If you live after the flesh you shall dye Rom. 8. 13. 3 Some take the counsel and example of others this will leave them comfortless and make them fall into the snare 4 Some go to Witches in straits as the Prophet reproves such Isa. 8. 19 20. Should not a people seek unto their God 5 Others expect new Revelations from Heaven to counsel them they would converse with Angels now God hath spoken to us by his Son Gal. 1. 8. If an Angel from heaven should bring another Gospel than that which we have preached unto you let him be accursed Use 3. Caution To enterprize nothing but what you have a Warrant for out of the Word of God When you are going about any action say Where 's my warrant If I do it upon my own brain I must stand to my own hazard and all the evil that comes upon me it is the fruit of my own counsel Numb 27. 21. The Priest was to ask counsel of the Lord who shall go out and who shall go in And 1 Sam. 23. 9 10. To do things with a doubting Conscience with an uncertainty whether it be good or bad it is a sin for whatsoever is not of faith is sin still seek your direction from the Word Use 4. It exhorts us to bless God and be thankful for this light Isa. 9. 2. The people that sate in darkness saw great light There is the same difference between the Church and other places as there was between Egypt and Goshen Exod. 10. 23. Here is light and in other places thick darkness What a mercy is it that we have present direction a light to guide us here in grace that will bring us to glory Give thanks to God for so great a benefit 2. Walk according to the directions of the Word walk in the light Ephes. 5. 8. believe it Heb. 4. 2. the true and infallible truth that came out of God's mouth and then apply it say this truth which is spoken is spoken to me Mat. 13. 37. and urge thy heart with the duties of it this was spoken for our learning be persuaded of this truth and so walk and so do and you shall not find any miscarriage 1 Cor. 15. 58. Here 's my warrant and my direction I will keep to it though it expose me to many hazards and straits I know it will be made up at last it will not be lost labor to do what God biddeth thee to do SERMON CXIV PSAL. CXIX VER 106. I have sworn and I will perform it that I will keep thy righteous judgments IN the former Verse David had commended the Word for a sure direction it is a light and a lamp how so not only by God's designation and appointment but by Davids choice It was a light to my feet and a lamp to my steps Now in this Verse he speaks of his firmness and constancy to that choice I have taken thy Word for my guidance and direction and there he did resolve to stick his constancy was grounded upon a vow or upon a promissory Oath which he saw no cause to retract or repent of I have sworn and I will perform it c. In which words you may observe 1 The strength of David's resolution and purpose expressed in his Oath not I must or I will keep but I have sworn c. 2 The matter of this purpose or Oath and that was to keep God's judgments 3 One great motive and reason that inclined him so to do in the word Thy righteous judgments the marvellous equity that was to be observed in the things commanded by God 4 The conscience that lay upon him of observing this Oath I will perform it As if he had said I saw a great deal of reason to make the promise so solemnly to God and I see no reason at all to retract it Four Points I shall observe 1. That it is not only lawful but good and profitable to bind our selves to our duty by a Vow solemnly declared purpose and holy Oath so David I have sworn 2. That this help of an Oath or Vow should be used in a matter lawful weighty and necessary I have sworn saith David but what hath he sworn To keep thy righteous judgments A great duty which God had enjoined him in his Covenant 3. Those that are entred into the Bond of a holy Oath must religiously observe and perform what they have sworn to God I have sworn and I will perform 4. That we may perform our Oaths and lie under a sense and conscience of our Engagements to God it is good that they should be often revived and renewed upon us for so doth David here recognize his Oath I have sworn that c. Doct. 1. That it concerns us sometimes to bind our selves to God and the duty that we owe to him by an Oath 1 That it is lawful so to do appears from Gods Injunction and the practice of the Saints 1. From God's Injunction He hath commanded us to accept of the Gospel Covenant and not barely so but to submit unto the Seals and Rites by which it is confirmed which submission of ours implieth an Oath made to God Baptism is our Sacramentum Militare Sacramental Vow our Oath of Allegiance to God and therefore it is called 1 Pet. 3. 21. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The answer of a good conscience towards God an answer upon God's demands in the Covenant God does as it were in the Covenant of Grace put us to the question Will
ever II. The evidence of that Choice For they are the rejoycing of my heart I call it the evidence for so it is a proper demonstration that he took Gods Precepts for his heritage this is the mark and sign of it they are the rejoycing of my heart it did his heart good to think of his heritage and what an ample Portion he had in his God I. Let me speak first of his Choice Whence this Observation It is the property of Believers to take Gods Testimonies for their heritage In the management of which Truth I shall shew 1. What are Gods Testimonies 2. What it is to take them for an heritage 3. The reason why it is their property to do so First What are Gods Testimonies Any Declaration of his Will in Doctrine Precepts Threatnings Promises The whole Word 't is the the testimony which God hath proposed for the satisfaction of the World It is Gods Deposition or Testimony to satisfie men what is his mind and will concerning their salvation Gods Testimony is the publick Record that may be appealed unto in all Cases of doubt Psal. 19. 8. The Statutes of the Lord are right rejoycing the heart c. The testimonies of the Lord are sure making wise the simple By the Statutes of the Lord is meant in general the whole Counsel of God delivered in the Word But then more specially and chiefly they imply the Evangelical or Gospel Part of the Word the Promises of the Covenant of Grace Isai. 8. 20. To the Law and to the Testimonies Testimony in this sence is contradistinguish'd to the Law or Gods Precepts what is required of us thus the Ark of his Testimony is called by that name Mark this Notion of calling the Word Gods Testimony it shews us what regard we should have to the Precepts and Promises of God you need regard them it is Gods Testimony to you and then against you Christ would have his Word preached as a testimony against them Mat. 24. a testimony to them that they might know Gods Mind and then if it were not received a testimony against them at the last Day when God comes to Judgment the Sinner will be without an excuse but will not be without a testimony every Sermon will rise up against him in judgment it will be a testimony for their Conviction And as we should regard his Precepts so it shews in what regard his Promises are which are chiefly his testimony therefore it is said Iohn 3. 33. He that hath received his testimony hath set to his Seal that God is true You give God the Glory of his Truth by venturing your Souls upon his testimony whereas otherwise you make him a Liar a Blasphemy which is most contrary to the Glory of his Being 1 Iohn 5. 10. He that believeth not makes God a Liar Look upon the Promises as Gods Testimonies you may urge it to your own heart and to God We may urge it to our own heart when we are full of doubts and troubles here we have Gods testimony to shew for it Why do ye doubt O ye of little Faith Here 's Gods testimony Nay it is a testimony under an Oath that the Heirs of Promise might want no satisfaction Heb. 6. 18. If we had but Gods bare word it should beget Faith for God stands much upon his truth but we have his Oath his Hand and Seal why after such a solemn assurance shall I make God a Liar as being in doubtful suspence And they are a testimony which you may produce to God himself Lord thou hast said and here 's a Promise wherein thou hast caused me to hope I expect nothing but what thou wilt perform Look as Tamar shewed the Tokens to Iudah when he was about to condemn her shewed him the Ring and the Staff as a testimony and said Whose are these Gen. 28. 25. You put God in mind o●… his P●…ise here 's the testimony he hath called you to these hopes whereby you should wait upon him how shall we take it here for the Precepts of God or the Promises or both Surely the Precepts of the Word are the Heritage or the Gospel and Treasure of the Church a Treasure not to be valued and every single Believer is to take up his share and count them his Treasure and his Heritage No man can take the promissory Part of the Word for his Heritage but he is to take the mandatory Part also As in every Bond and Indenture the Conditions must be kept on both sides so if you should take it for the whole Covenant of God wherein God is bound to us and we to God there were no incongruity Yet the Notion of an Heritage is most proper to the Promises and these are the rejoycing of our Soul the foundation of our solid comfort and hope the Promises are a witness in our hearts how he stands affected to us of which we are most apt to doubt through our unbelief Natural Light will convince us of the Justice and Equity of his Precepts therefore by the special use of the Word the Promises of God are called his Heritage Again the Promises are put for the things promised and Testimonies for the things contained and revealed in them for the Promises properly are not our heritage but they are the evidences the Charters which we have to shew for our Heritage The Blessings of the Covenant are properly our Heritage and the Promises are the Assurance and Conveyances by which this Heritage is made over to us As we say a Mans Estate lies in Bonds and Leases meaning he hath these things to shew as his right to such an Estate so the Promises that is the Blessings contained or the Testimony revealed there they are the things a Believer takes for his Portion Thus I have shewed what is meant by the testimonies of God Secondly What is it to take them for our Heritage There are two words Heritage and I have taken them The word Heritage first notes the substance of our portion or what we count our solid and principal Estate Secondly it notes our right and propriety in it Thirdly The kind of tenure by which we hold it Fourthly Many times actual possession Now saith David I have taken that implies actual choice on our part We are not born Heirs to this Estate but we take it we chuse it for our portion And mark he doth not say they are but I have taken them for my heritage Every Believer cannot say these are mine they are my heritage for every one hath not assurance but yet every one should say I have taken them there I look for my happiness for every Believer is alike affected though not alike assured David doth not here so expresly mention his interest though that is implied as his choice Briefly to take Gods testimony for our heritage implies four things 1. To count them our chiefest portion let others do what they will this is my share my lot my portion saith
he that builds upon the Sand when the winds blow and beat upon the House down it falls Earthen Vessels when they come to be scowred the varnish and paint wears off Or by some scandalous fall for that which is lame will soon be turned out of the way Heb. 12. 13. This deceitfulness 1. Is contrary to God who is a God of truth Psal. 31. 5. the Authour of truth Ephes. 4. 24. Created after God in righteousness and true holiness and a lover of truth Psal. 51. 3. Thou desirest truth in the inward parts So that it is a great affront to God when men deal falsly Ier. 5. 3. O Lord are not thine eyes upon the truth Is not that the thing thou lookest after in all the works of men This is all in all with God 2. It is contrary to Justice Charity and common ingenuity it destroys the Commerce between man and man Ephes. 4. 25. Put away lying speak every man truth with his Neighbour for ye are members one of another It is unnatural and monstrous by lying and deceit to circumvent one another it is as for one part of the Body to destroy another It is a sin not only unseemly for a Christian but it tends to the overthrow of all humane Society fidelity and mutual trust being the ground of all commerce Now God will pour out his Judgments upon them Use. Let this teach us to carry it sincerely both to God and men for craft will not always succeed The more real worth in any the more openly and fairly they carry it But for Motives 1. You will never else have true solid comfort until you are real without dissembling before God and men 2 Cor. 1. 12. For our rejoycing is this the testimony of our Conscience that in simplicity and godly sincerity not with guile and fleshly wisdom we have had our conversation in the world Truth breeds joy and comfort of heart when a man is sincere and acts according to his Conscience 2. You will never hold out without it your Mask will fall off Iames 1. 8. The double minded man is unstable in all his ways wavering unconstant up and down off and on with God A Hypocrite is compared to a Rush that grows in the mire Iob 8. 12. pluck it up it soon withers they are like Reeds shaken with every wind And you can have no approbation and acceptation with God God likes those that are sincere Behold an Israelite indeed in whom there is no guile Who are those who have pardon of sin sealed up to their Souls O blessed is that man that can say his sins are forgiven him Who is that man In whose spirit there is no guile that is without dissimulation fraudulency and guile this man enjoys acceptance with God pardon of sin justification before God And the contrary will certainly bring down an heavy Judgment SERMON CXXX PSAL. CXIX VER 119. Thou puttest away all the wicked of the Earth like dross therefore I love thy testimonies IN these words we have 1. Gods dispensation 2. The effect it had upon David's heart In the first branch we have 1. The Character by which they are described All the wicked of the earth 2. The esteem God hath of them they are dross 3. A suitable Providence dealt out to them intimated thou puttest them away like dross Note I. That the wicked are men of the earth There are common reasons why we are all men of the earth Our original is earth made of the dust of the ground Gen. 2. 7. they are but a little Earth or red Clay fashioned into the form of a man an handful of inlivened dust Our abode and service is here Iohn 17. 4. I have glorified thee upon Earth and at our end and dissolution we are turned into Earth again Eccl. 12. 7. Then shall the dust return to the Earth as it was Psal. 146. 4. his breath goeth forth he returneth to his Earth Princes as well as others must look to be dissolved into dust again But in an especial respect are wicked men said to be of the Earth and that in contradistinction to the people of God Rev. 13. 10. Gods witnesses tormented the dwellers upon earth that is those that are out of the true Church in Antichrists Kingdome so Revel 13. 8. And all that dwell upon the Earth shall worship him whose names are not written in the book of life of the Lamb. As on the contrary they that dwell in the Church are said to be in Heaven Revel 13. 6. And he opened his mouth in blasphemy against God to blaspheme his name and his tabernacle and them that dwell in heaven So Rev. 18. 20. Rejoyce over her thou heaven and ye holy Apostles But why are they thus characterized Because here they flourish Ier. 17. 13. Their names shall be written in earth grow great and of good reckoning and account here Iudas had the Bag they prosper in the world Psal. 73. 12. Behold these are the ungodly who prosper in the world Here they are respected 1 Iohn 4. 5. They are of the world and speak of the world and the world heareth them Here their hearts and minds are Matth. 6. 19 20. It is their natural frame to be worldly they only savour the things of the world preferment honour greatness 't is their unum magnum here is their pleasure and here is their portion their hopes and their happiness A Child of God looketh for another inheritance immortal and undefiled Use 1. Is to wean us from present things which the wicked enjoy more than the righteous and which certainly are but poor things in comparison of our happiness Set your affections on things above not on things in the earth Col. 3. 2. affect them not as your happiness and last end Psal. 17. 14. Their portion is in this life affect them not in competition with heavenly things but in subordination Matth. 6. 33. affect them not inordinately but so as to part with them when God will Iob 1. 21. Naked came I out of my mothers womb and naked shall I return thither the Lord gave and the Lord hath taken away blessed be the name of the Lord affect them not so as to use unlawful means to get them Prov. 28. 8. He that by Usury and unjust gain encreaseth his substance he shall gather it for him that will pity the poor affect them not so as to put your selves upon the temptation of getting or keeping them by unjust means 1 Tim. 6. 9. But they that will be rich fall into temptation and a snare and into many foolish and hurtful lusts which drown men in destruction and perdition Prov. 28. 20. He that maketh haste to be rich shall not be innocent affect them not so as to be backward to good works But whoso hath this worlds goods and seeth his Brother have need and shutteth up his bowels of compassion from him how dwelleth the love of God in him 1 Iohn 3. 17. 1 Sam. 25.
higher than the highest regardeth and there be higher than they Who can break the power of the greatest The poor and indigent have none to owne them to resent the things done unto them but God who is the supream Lord will not fail to owne them 2. Consider The injustice of such dealing as being contrary to that rule of Reason Quod tibi non vis fieri alteri ne feceris Every man should do as he would have others do to him Put your self in their case Take this rule quite away and there is nothing so false bad cruel that you would not be drawn to think or say or do against your Brother Uncharitableness and want of sympathy with us in our troubles much more insulting over us in our miseries we look on it with detestation and shall we oppress and afflict others when we have power so to do Those that profess themselves Christians should be far from this sin Means 1. The fear of God should bear rule in our hearts Iob 31. 23. For destruction from God was a terrour to me and by reason of his highness I could not endure Levit. 25. 17. Ye shall not therefore oppress one another but thou shalt fear thy God for I am the Lord your God We should be afraid to do them injury as if a strong party able to repay injuries were ready to be avenged upon us for it 2. Take heed of envy covetousness pride revenge these are ill Councellors Ahab envies Naboth's Vineyard and covets it and that put him upon oppressing him So Hos. 12. 7. He is a merchant the ballances of deceit are in his hand he loveth to oppress So take heed of pride Psal. 10. 2. The wicked in his pride doth persecute the poor So when persons are of a revengeful temper it will put them upon oppression and persecution for every fancied or supposed affront offered to them the enemy and avenger go together Psal. 8. 2. 3. Think of Changes that pride may not be without a Curb nor affliction without a Comfort 'T is the proud oppress who are drunk with their wealth and outward prosperity The Lords people are not troubled by humble Souls that are sensible of their mutableness and frailty but by those who little think of these things and how hard it fareth with them that fear God II. Here are the persons to inflict it The proud Doctr. The proud are they that especially persecute the Godly Who are the proud 1. Generally those that obstinately stand it out against God and the methods of his Grace Neh. 9. 16. But they and our fathers dealt proudly and hardened their necks and hearkened not unto thy Commandments and Verse 29. Yet they dealt proudly and hearkened not to thy Commandments Jer. 13. 17. My soul shall weep in secret for your pride 2. More especially those that are too well conceited of themselves seem by their affecting to meddle with things too high for them Psal. 131. 1. Lord my heart is not haughty nor mine eyes lofty neither do I exercise my self in great matters nor in things too high for me murmure under crosses quarrel with Providences finding fault with all Gods sayings and doings trust in themselves that they are righteous Luke 18. 14. scoff at others for their godliness Psal. 119. 51. The proud had me greatly in derision Psal. 10. 2. The wicked in his pride doth persecute the poor ready to brawl on all occasions Prov. 23. 10. Only by pride cometh contention would have all to stoop to them are stiff in their opinions boasters lessening the gifts of others impatient of admonition 3. The particular pride here mentioned when men are high minded and trust in uncertain riches drunk with their prosperity So oppressing in their Honour and Greatness as if they would trample all others under foot and crush them at pleasure These are merciless and pitiless disdain the poor whatsoever presence of God they have with them we are filled with the scorning of them that are at ease SERMON CXXXV PSAL. CXIX VER 123. Mine eyes fail for thy salvation and for the word of thy righteousness IN the former Verse David spake as one under oppression here he setteth forth his longing and waiting for deliverance In the Words we have I. The act of Faith together with the object of it His eyes were to the salvation of God II. The defect and weakness of his Faith and Gods delay implied in the occasion of it Mine eyes fail III. The ground and support of his soul in this exercise The word of thy righteousness By salvation is meant temporal deliverance His eyes were to this salvation that is he did with faith and patience wait for it But in waiting his eyes failed that noteth some deficiency and weakness but his support during all this was the word of Gods righteousness that word wherein God promised salvation and deliverance to them that are oppressed And he calleth it the word of his righteousness because he is one that kept it justly and faithfully as if he had said Surely God is righteous and is no more liberal in promises than faithful in performing therefore though mine eyes even fail yet I will keep looking and longing still for his salvation I begin with the ground of his faith and the support of his soul which is the word of promise Doctr. That Gods word wherein he hath promised deliverance to his suffering servants is a word of righteousness There are three things in the promise Veritas Fidelitas Iustitia Fidelity Faithfulness and Righteousness 1. Verit●… Sincerity or Truth in making the promise according to which God doth really intend and mean to bestow what he promiseth For God is not as man that he should lye neither the son of man that he should repent hath he said and shall he not do it or hath he spoken and shall he not make it good To lye is to speak a falshood with an intention to deceive this cannot be imagined of God What need hath he to court a Worm or to mock and ●…ater us into a vain hope what interest can accrue to him thereby Yea the purity of his Nature will not permit it Tit. 1. 2. According to the hope of eternal life which God that cannot lye promised before the world began He will as soon cease to be God ●…s cease to be true for his truth is his Nature he is truth it self Man that is mutable and hath an interest to promote by dissembling may put on a false appearance and speak what he never meaneth but God cannot do so for he is truth it self essentially so in the abstract can admit of no mixture though Creatures may Light it self admitteth not of any darkness but as it is in Subjects so it doth But God is truth and in him is no falshood at all Now of all lies a promissory lie is the worst it is greater than an a●…ertory lie An assertory lie is when we speak of a thing past or
blind guesses Promises are the eruptions and overflows of Gods love he cannot stay till accomplishment but will tell us aforehand what he is about to do for us that we may know how to look for it Use 2. Is to exhort us to rest contented with Gods word and to take his promises as sure ground of hope I shall shew you how you should count it a word of righteousness what is your Duty and that first you are to delight in the promise though the performance be not yet nor like to be for a good while Heb. 11. 13. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 being perswaded of them they embraced them Oh how they hugged the promises at a distance and said in their hearts O blessed promise this will in time yield a M●…siah Iohn 8. 56. Your father Abraham rejoyced to see my day and saw it and was glad Y●… hold the blessing by the root this will in time yield deliverance Heb. 6. 18. not only yield comfort but prove comfortable Psal. 119. 111. Thy testimonies I have taken f●… an heritage for they are the rejoycing of my heart For your Duty Secondly You are to rest confident of the truth of what God hath promised and be assured that the performance will in time be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 11. 13. Faith is not a failable Conjecture but a sure and certain Grace Rom. 8. 28. We know that all things shall work together for good to them that love God So Psal. 140. 12. I know that God will maintain the Cause of the afflicted and the right of the poor There is a firm perswasion I know I shall find this to be a truth Men who are conscionable and faithful in keeping their word are believed yet being men they may lye Rom. 3. 4. Let God be true and every man a liar Every man is or may be a liar because of the mutableness of his Nature from interest he will not lye but he can lye If we receive the testimony of men the testimony of God is greater Surely God cannot deceive or be deceived He never yet was worse than his word Thirdly You are to take the naked promise for the ground of your hope however it seem to be contradicted in the course of Gods Providence when 't is neither performed nor likely to be performed 't is his word you go by whatsoever his dispensations be Many times there are no apparent evidences of Gods doing what he hath said yea strong probabilities to the contrary 'T is said Rom. 4. 18. That Abraham against hope believed in hope 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Abraham had the promise of a Son in whom all the Nations of the Earth should be blessed but there was no appearance of this in Nature or natural hope of a Child both he and Sarah being old yet he believed 'T is an Antanaclasis an elegant Figure having the form of a contradiction he goeth upon Gods naked word Then Faith standeth upon its own Basis and Legs which is not probabilities but his word of promise Every thing is strongest upon its own Basis which God and Nature have appointed For as the Earth hangeth on nothing in the midst of the Air but there is its place Faith is seated most firmly on the word of God who is able to perform what he saith Fourthly This Faith must conquer our fears and cares and troubles Psal. 112. 7. He shall not be afraid of evil tidings his heart is fixed trusting in the Lord. He must fix the heart without wavering Psal. 56. 4. In God I will praise his word in God have I put my trust I will not fear what man can do unto me The force of Faith is seen in calming our passions and sinful fears which otherwise would weaken our reverence and respect to God Fifthly Above all this you are to glorifie God publickly not only in the quiet of your hearts but by your carriage before others Iohn 3. 33. Put to his Seal that God is true 't is not said Believed or professed but put to his Seal We seal the truth of God as his Witnesses when we confirm others in the faith and belief of the promises by our joyfulness in all conditions patience under crosses diligence in holiness hope and comfort in great streights Numb 20. 12. God was angry with Moses and Aaron because ye believe not to sanctifie me in the eyes of the Children of Israel We are not only to believe God our selves but to sanctifie him in the eyes of others as when the Thessalonians had received the word in much assurance in much affliction and much joy in the Holy Ghost The Apostle telleth them They were examples to all that believed in Achaia and Macedonia 1 Thess. 1. 5. The worthiness and generousness of our Faith should be a confutation of our base fears but a confirmation of the Gospel But we are so far from confirming the weak that we offend the strong and instead of being a confirmation to the Gospel we are a confutation of it Use 3. Is reproof to us that we do no more build upon this word of righteousness 1. Some count these vain words and the comforts thence deduced fanatical illusions and hopes and joys phantastical impressions Psal. 22. 7 8. All they that see me laugh me to scorn they shoot out the Lip they shake the head saying He trusted on the Lord that he would deliver him let him deliver him seeing he delighted in him Nothing so ridiculous in the worlds eye as trust or dependance or unseen comforts Ungodly Wits make the life of Faith a sport and matter of laughter 2. Some though not so bad as the former they may have more modesty yet as little Faith since they are all for the present world present delights present temptations With many one thing in hand is more than the greatest promises of better things to come 2 Tim. 4. 10. they have no patience Afflictions are smart for the present Heb. 12. 11. No affliction for the present seemeth joyous but grievous Yea they do not deal equally with God and man If a man promise they reckon much of that Qui petat accipiet c. They can tarry upon mans security but count Gods nothing worth They can trade with a Factor beyond Seas and trust all their Estates in a mans hand whom they have never seen and yet the word of the infallible God is of little regard and respect with them 3. The best build too weakly on the promises as appeareth by the prevalency of our cares and fears If we did take God at his word we would not be so soon mated with every difficulty Heb. 13. 5 6. Let your conversations be without covetousness and be content with such things as you have for he hath said I will never leave thee nor forsake thee So that we may boldly say The Lord is my helper I will not fear what man can do unto me There would be more resolution in trials more hardness
Entrance The word Petack signifieth door gate or opening The expression giveth us occasion 1. To distinguish of Truth in Scripture There is Ostium and Penetrale the Porch of Knowledge and the secret Chambers of it The Porch I should take for the first vital essential necessary Truths that concern Faith and Practice those are obvious to every one that looketh into the Scriptures The inner Chambers are those more abstruse points that do not so absolutely concern the life of Grace but yet conduce ad plenitudinem Scientiae serve for the encrease of Knowledge Those that are in the Porch and have not as yet pierced into the depths of Scripture may yet have so much light as to direct them into solid Piety 2. Every door hath a Key belonging to it so hath this a Key to open it which Christ hath in his keeping Rev. 3. 7. He hath the Key of David which openeth and no man shutteth and shutteth and no man openeth The Officers of the Church are in part intrusted with it for the good of the Church Christ saith Luk. 11. 52. The Lawyers had taken away the key of knowledge and entred not into the Kingdom of God themselves and them that were entring in they hindered Such unfaithful ones hath every age almost afforded that shut the door of Knowledge against the people Papists that lock up the Scriptures in an unknown tongue are grosly guilty of it Others that hinder plain and powerful preaching cannot excuse themselves from being accessary to this guilt yea those that obscure the plain word of God by Philosophy Traditions of men or careless handling Tertullian complained long ago of those qui Platonicum Aristotelicum Christianismum proeudunt Christianis 3. By this Door opened there is entrance and so cometh in our word This Entrance may be understood or actively passively when the word entreth into us or we enter into it First Actively when the word entreth upon a mans heart and maketh a sanctified Imression there as the expression is Pro. 2. 10. When wisdom entreth into thy heart and knowl●…dge is pleasant to thy Soul This entrance of the word bringeth Light with it the first Creature God made was light so in the new Creature therefore it concerns us to know what manner of entrance the word had upon us 1 Thes. 1. 9. For they themselves know of us what manner of entring in we had unto you and how ye turned to God from Idols to serve the living and true God Secondly Passively when men do first enter upon the study of the word It may be read the entrance into thy Word as well as of thy Word when once acquainted with it and the first rudiments of Knowledge we should soon discern the Lords mind in the necessary Truths that concern Faith and Practice Secondly The other question is what is meant by the Simple The word is sometimes used in a good sense sometimes in a bad 1. In a good sense 1. For the sincere and plain hearted Psal. 116. 6. The Lord preserveth the simple I was brought low and he helped me 2 Cor. 1. 12. For our rejoycing is this the testimony of our Conscience that in simplicity and godly sincerity not with fleshly wisdom but by the Grace of God we had our Conversation in the world and more abundantly to you-wards 2. For those that do not oppose the Presumption of carnal wisdom to the pure light of the word so we must be all simple or fools that we may be wise 1 Cor. 3. 18. If any man among you seemeth to be wise in this world let him become a fool that he may wise That is in simplicity of heart submitting to Gods conduct and believing what he hath revealed The Septuagint in the text 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it inlighteneth and giveth understanding to the Babes and so they often translate this word Babes or little ones thence Christs saying Mat. 11. 25. I thank thee O Father Lord of heaven and earth because thou hast hid these things from the wise and prudent and hast revealed them unto ●…abes Nor to worldly wise but babes in comparison not to conceitedly wise but those that are sensible of their own Ignorance 2. In a bad sense for the Ignorant 1. In the general every man is naturally dull and ignorant in divine things Iob 11. 12. Vain man would be wise though man be born like a wild asses colt For grossness as well as untamedness So every man is simple 2. Those that are naturally weak of understanding or of mean capacity Prov. 1. 4. To give subtilty to the simple to the young man knowledge and discretion Prov. 8. 5. O ye simple understand wisdom and ye fools be ye of an understanding heart In all these senses may the Text be made good I take the last chiefly intended Observations 1. Observe somewhat from that word the Entrance Doctr. I. That in getting knowledge there is a Porch and Entrance that we must pass through before we can attain to deeper matters As in Practice there is a Gate and a Way Mat. 7. 14. Because strait is the gate and narrow is the way that leadeth to life An Entrance and a Progress An Entrance by Conversion to God and a Progress in a course of holy walking So in Knowledge there are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The first Principles of the Oracles of God or some Elements and afterwards deeper mysteries Milk for babes as well as meat for stronger men Heb. 5. 12 13 14. For when for the time ye ought to be teachers ye have need that one teach you again which be the first principles of the oracles of God and are become such as have need of milk and not of strong meat For every one that useth milk is unskilful in the word of righteousness for he is a babe But strong meat belongeth to them that are of full age even those who by reason of use have their senses exercised to discern both good and evil There is an order in bringing men to knowledge First There is something obvious and lyes uppermost in all Truths that is soon understood and this we put into Catechisms we must teach as able to bear Mar. 4. 33. And with many such parables spake he the word unto them as they were able to hear it Indeed afterwards we come to dig into the mines of Knowledge and to dive deeper as choice Metals do not lie in the surface but in the bowels therefore we should not content our selves with a supersicial search but dig as for Treasure in a Mine Prov. 2. 4. If thou diggest for her as silver and searchest for her as for hid Treasures So Paul 1 Cor. 3. 1 2. And I Brothren could not speak unto you as unto spiritual but as unto carnal even as unto babes in Christ I have fed you with milk and not with strong meat for hitherto ye were not able to bear it neither yet now are ye able By Milk he meaneth
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
thy heart for entertaining the light and power of these truths and in due time God will shew thee other things In the mean time bless God that whatever is necessary is plain to them that are docile and heedful and willing to do the will of God As in the world the most necessary things are at hand the less necessary are hidden in the bowels of the Earth so in Scripture necessaries are facile and easie 2. Let us use this method in learning and teaching of others In learning our selves First Be sure to get a clear understanding of and firm assent unto the main plain truths of Scripture That there is one God Heb. 11. 6. He that cometh to God must believe that he is That Jesus Christ is the Son of God Iohn 17. 3. This is life eternal that they might know thee the only true God and Iesus Christ whom thou hast sent It is a corner truth that enliveneth all Religion Matth. 16. 16. Thou art Christ the Son of the living God then Upon this Rock will I build my Church John 6. 69. We believe and are sure that thou art Christ the Son of the living God This is the great enlivening truth that hath influence both on faith and obedience We must believe that he is able to bring us to God Iohn 14. 6. Heb. 7. 25. and must be obeyed Heb. 5. 9. that every man needeth this Christ to bring him to God Acts 4. 12. There is a necessity of his merit that God may be propitious of his Spirit as the foundation of a new life that we may be reconciled to God that we should live holily because there is a day of account when every one shall receive according to his works We should bestow more cost upon the main truths to get a clear distinct knowledge of them there must be a removing of Rubbish and digging to lay the foundation of the knowledge of the principles of the Doctrine of Christ before there can be any safe building or going on unto perfection Heb. 6. and firm assent to them For he is the best Christian that doth most clearly understand and firmly believe these things Not the Opinionist the Disputer he that best promotes the interest of his party or side which are the distempers now afoot in Christendome Those truths well accepted would so purifie the heart as we should sooner discern Gods interest in other things and be able to find out that So for teaching our Children God reckons on it from his people Gen. 18. 19. For I know Abraham that he will command his Children and his houshold after him and they shall keep the way of the Lord to do Iustice and Iudgment Deut. 6. 6 7. And these words that I command thee this day shall ●…e in thy heart and thou shalt teach them diligently unto thy Children and shalt talk of them when thou sittest in thy house and when thou walkest by the way when thou liest down and when thou risest up Train them up in wholesome truths in the nurture and admoni●…ion of the Lord Ephes. 6. 4. how to carry themselves towards God in matters of Religion how towards men in righteousness civility and good manners chiefly that they may be instructed in the knowledge of Christ and salvation by him 3. Let the entertainment we have upon our first entrance into the study of Religion encourage us to follow on to know the Lord that we may see more into his mind and counsel concerning us When we are first serious we have notable experience of light and comfort and power this is a bribe to draw us on further more light for it is a growing thing Prov. 4. 18. The path of the Iust is as the shining light that shineth more and more to the perfect day more taste 1 Pet. 2. 3 4. If so be that ye have tasted that the Lord is gracious to whom coming as to a living stone c. It should sharpen and put an edge upon our desires more power Iames 1. 18 19. Of his own will begat he us with the word of truth that we should be a kind of first-fruits of his creation wherefore my beloved brethren let every man be swift to hear slow to speak slow to wrath You saw the entrance and your first acquaintance with the word succeeded well Doctr. II. By the word of God we get light or our understandings are enlightened Prov. 6. 23. For the Commandment is a lamp and the Law is light and reproofs of instruction are the way of life 1. Light is a great benefit This is the perfection of the rational Nature the benefit that we have above the Beasts He teacheth us more than the Beasts of the field They are guided by instinct ruled by a Rod of Iron we have Reason and in it more resemble God who is light and in him is no darkness at all 1 Iohn 1. 5. we come nearest to our happiness in heaven it is called The inheritance of the Saints in light Col. 1. 12. Our knowledge is perfected and the vision of God is our happiness 1 Cor. 13. 12. For now we see through a glass darkly then face to face now I know in part then I shall know even as also I am known 2. This light hath excellent properties First It is lux manifestans it manifesteth it self and all things else How do I see the Sun but by the Sun by its own light how do I know the Scripture to be the Word of God but by the light that shineth in it commending it self to my Conscience So it manifests all things else By this light a man may see every thing in its own colours it layeth open all the frauds and impostures of Satan the vanity of worldly things the deceits of the heart the odiousness of sin Ephes. 5. 8. 13. All things that be reproved are made manifest by light for whatsoever doth make manifest is light It sets out the odiousness of sin as a breach of Gods most holy Law enmity against the Great God the procurer of his eternal wrath Nothing manifests things as this light doth Secondly It is lux dirigens a directing light that we may see our way and work As the Sun lighteth man to his labour so doth this direct us in all conditions Psal. 119. 105. Thy word is a lamp unto my feet and a light unto my paths It directs us how to manage our selves in all conditions in prosperity adversity in all affairs paths steps in all the particular actions of our life it filleth us with spiritual prudence the wayfaring the fool a man of parts that is a stranger the man of mean parts all may meet with plain and clear directions hence to guide them in the way to Heaven Thirdly It is lux vivificans a quickening light Lux est vehiculum influentiarum Joh. 8. 12. I am the light of the world he that followeth me shall not walk in darkness but shall have the light of
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
also bearing witness and their thoughts the mean while accusing or else excusing one another As long as we have these hearts that we have we cannot wholly except against the Justice and Equity of these Laws and Rules of Commerce between God and his Creatures It is true all truths are not alike evident but they that seriously mind the one will be led on to the other at least will find none contrary to such Conclusions as may be drawn from principles naturally known and will be encouraged to go on till God reveal more to them This is so evident that the wiser any among the heathen are the nearer they come to this Rule and have framed something like it for the regulation of men though with great mixtures of their own folly The perfect discovery of Mans duty God reserved to himself and his own Writings else where there is but fict a rectitudo and pict a Iustitia poor Counterfeits in the Laws of Civil Nations and Institutions of Philosophy Sapientia eorum abscondit vitia non abscindit there was only a little hiding and disguising of sin that it might not appear too odious In short the less knowledg any Nation or Society of men have of this Law the more brutish and barbarous they have been and so accounted to be by all that have known what civility and humane converse mean And on the contrary the more polite and civil the nearer they came to it Whom would you judge to be more civil the Romans or the Scythians the wife and good man or the Sot and Fool Even among us the more punctually any keepeth to this Law the more he differeth from others as much as an Angel from a Man or a Man from a Beast The righteous is more excellent than his Neighbour Prov. 12. 26. It is as clear as the Sun whether men will or nill they must acknowledge it and do when they are serious for they approve them while they hate them wish their latter end like theirs intrust them more than others presume more from them than others Out of all I conclude That the very frame and constitution of the reasonable and immortal Soul and Body of Man doth dictate the Equity and Justice of this Law and it doth result from the Image of God wherein man was created Thirdly That Law is just and righteous the violation of which men judge to be justly punished I use this Argument because under punishment men are serious for it rubbeth up and reviveth the sense of a Divine Power Now for the violation of this Law God hath judged Persons Families Nations and Kingdoms and Conscience is sensible of the Justice of Gods Judgments exercised upon them God is clear when he judgeth Psal. 51. 4. his eminent Judgments carry light and conviction with them and wherefore have his Judgments been executed Rom. 1. 18. For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men who hold the truth in unrighteousness Heb. 2. 2. Every transgression and disobedience received a just recompence of reward There is a fear after some notorious breach even in those that are not acquainted with God a shyness of his Presence ever since Adam run to the Bushes so it is All which doth seal the righteousness and truth of this Law and how justly God may reckon with us about it Fourthly There is an intrinsecal righteousness in all the Duties commanded in Gods Law Besides the will of the Law-giver there is a Justice in the things themselves By what measure will we take Justice We usually understand it to be to give every one his due So doth the Law it commandeth us to give God his due and man his due Love is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the fulfilling of the Law The Law is comprized in one word Love to love God himself and his Neighbour is there not Justice in all this The natural relation we have to God calleth for love to him for he made us and is the strength of our lives and the length of our days Deut. 30. 20. That thou mayst love the Lord thy God and that thou mayst obey his voice and that thou mayst cleave to him for he is thy life and the length of thy days Self-love and self-preservation if that be not a natural principle nothing is Our Neighbour we are bound to love because of Consanguinity they are our own flesh and blood and God hath bidden us to do to them as we would to our selves Matth. 7. 12. Therefore all things whatsoever ye would that men should do unto you do ye even so to them for this is the Law and the Prophets There is an universal Consanguinity between all Mankind which hath its root in the communion of one and the same Nature and in the dependance and derivation from one common Stock The eminence of the Divine Nature is the foundation of the honour which we tender to it and the equality of our nature is the foundation of the Justice which we use to one another So that here are natural immutable Obligations and grounds of right Go to particulars How equal is it that we should acknowledge but one God They are drunk that see double strangely depraved that see more That we should not worship him before an Idol which is very apt to taint our minds with a gross opinion of God as if he were some limited finite Being It is a great lessening of reverence to see what we worship Not to take Gods Name in vain by a false Oath that breedeth Atheism and contempt That there should be a day to remember the Creator of all things every days work is no days work but there must be a limited time For reverence to Parents all Nations call for it For Murder Adultery Stealing false Accusations Mans interest will teach him the necessity of those Laws that forbid these things Contentation is a Guard to all the rest it is fit the God of the Spirits of all Flesh should give a Law to the Spirit Thou shalt not covet Yet this is the Law of God to which Scripture is subservient and all the admonitions reproofs exhortations dehortations examples directions histories of the obedience and vertue of some with their rewards of the disobedience apostasie rebellion of others with their punishments all is to inforce this Law The Doctrine of Christ and redemption and reconciliation by him I bring not under this first Head because that is a favour and priviledge and the Justice and Equity of Gospel Precepts will soon appear when once we have consented to the Law that it is good But of that in the next Head Thirdly For the truth and faithfulness of Gods Testimonies This may be considered either in revealing or performing making or making good his promises First For truth and faithfulness in making such offers and promises of pardon and eternal life in case of obedience and threatning a curse and everlasting punishment in case of
charity Phil. 4. 5. Let your moderation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 be known unto all men whether it be fear or honour that be due Rom. 13. 7. Render therefore to all their dues Tribute to whom Tribute is due Custom to whom Custome fear to whom fear honour to whom honour Or good will ver 8. Owe no man any thing but to love one another Secondly For truth You are to adhere to the truth not to be carried about with every wind of Doctrine by the sleight of men and cunning craftiness whereby they lye in wait to deceive but speaking the truth in love ye may grow up unto him in all things which is the head even Christ Ephes. 4. 14 15. To speak nothing but truth in your ordinary communication Ephes. 4. 25. Wherefore putting away lying speak every man truth with his Neighbour To perform what you promise though to your loss Psal. 15. 4. He sweareth to his own hurt and changeth not Thus should the whole course of our lives express the properties of the Word Use 3. To shew the reason why men are so backward in obedience so prone to what is evil so uncomfortable in trouble We do not believe that the testimony of God is righteous and true very true every tittle of it but we are slow of heart to believe therefore is the faithfulness and truth of the Word inculcated Christ saith Believest thou this John 11. 25. Could we believe the word more what advantage should we have in the spiritual life what fear of God what joy of faith what readiness of obedience But we cannot depend upon Gods word and therefore are easily shaken in mind Our hearts are like a Sea one Wave riseth up after another We must be fed with sense and God must do all immediately or else we are apt to sink under our discouragements SERMON CLVI PSALM CXIX VER Cxxxix My zeal hath consumed me because mine Enemies have forgotten thy Words IN these words you may observe 1. Two different persons 2. A different carriage mentioned 1. Two different persons are spoken of David and his Enemies By Enemies is not to be understood those only that were troublesome to himself but those who were an opposite party to God who opposed themselves against God and Godliness these without any breach of the Law of love may be counted Enemies Ps. 139. 21 22. Do not I hate them O Lord that hate thee And am not I grieved with those that rise up against thee I hate them with a perfect hatred I count them mine Enemies It is a comfort and satisfaction to the godly to have no enemies to themselves but such as are enemies to God also such as rise up against God 2. There 's a different carriage mentioned and asscribed to these two parties on the one side Oblivion and Forgetfulness of Gods Law on the other side zeal 1. On the Enemies part oblivion and forgetfulness of Gods Word The Word of God is not effectual usually but where it is hid in recent memory They have forgotten thy Word a proper phrase to set forth them in the bosom of the visible Church who do not wholly deny and reject the Word and Rule of Scripture but yet live as though they had forgotten it they do not observe it as if God had never spoken any such thing or given them any such Rule They that reject and contemn such things as thy Word enforceth surely do not remember to do them 2. On David's part here is mentioned zeal or a flagrant affection which is set forth 1. By the vehemency of it 2. By the cause of it 1. By the vehemency of it my zeal hath consumed me It was no small zeal that David had but a consuming zeal Vehement affections exhaust and consume the vital Spirits and wast the body The like expression is used Ps. 69. 9. The zeal of thy House hath eaten me up Strength of Holy Affections works many times upon the Body as well as the Soul especially zeal which is a high degree of Love and vents it self by a mixture of grief and anger What a man loves he would have it respected and is grieved when it is dishonoured and under disrepute Both have an influence upon this consuming this wasting of the Spirits that is spoken of in the text because they had lessened and obscured the Glory of God and violated his Law and there was in him a holy care ardour and earnest endeavour to rectifie this abuse and awaken them out of their security and reduce them to their duty 2. Here was the Cause of it Why was David so much wasted pined consumed and troubled Because they have forgotten Thy Word the contempt of God and the offence of God sate nearest his heart as if he had said I should more patiently bear the injury done to my self but I cannot be coldly affected where thy glory O Lord is concerned since I have had a tast of thy grace and felt the benefit of thy Word I cannot endure it should be contemned and it much moves me to see Creatures so mad upon their own Destruction and to make so light of thy Salvation Thus was David consumed not at the sight of his own but at other mens sins and not at others in general but them his enemies that they should make void the Law of God Such was his love to the Word that he could not endure the contempt and violation of it and such was his Compassion to the souls of men that it grieved him exceedingly to see any of the workmanship of God to perish to be captivated to the World to be made Factors for the Devil and fuel for hell fire and to be so violent for their own Destruction Doctrine That Great and Pure Zeal becomes those that have any affection for the Word and for the Ways of God Here is a great zeal for David saith my zeal hath consumed me it prey'd upon his spirit And here 's a pure zeal for he mentions not personal injuries but disrespect to Gods Word when the same men are our Enemies and Gods Enemies we should be more zealous for Gods cause then our own Now both the greatness and purity of his zeal did arise from his love to the Word as appears from the precedent and subsequent verses in the precedent verses he had told them just and upright are thy testimonies and very faithful therefore zeal hath consumed me because this Word should be slighted and contemned And it appears also from the following verse thy Word is very pure therefore thy servant loveth it He was troubled to see such a holy and pure Word to be trampled under foot and especially that those seem to disown it he doth not say they deny it who had generally profest to live under this rule that they made light and disregarded the precepts in which I found so much comfort and delight In the prosecution of this point I shall 1. Shew what is true Zeal
Faith and Love to the Word and therefore they never feel the power of it It cometh with power when it 's the Evidence of the Spirit 1 Cor. 2. 4. humane credulity breedeth no true love to the Word of God 2. This love 't is not a bare approbation of Purity and Holiness many approve that which they never chuse and follow None in the face of the Church can be such a wretch as not to think that 't is a good thing to be holy that strictness is commendable Mark 6. 26. Herod reverenced Iohn There is an excellency in Holiness and it winneth esteem even there where 't is not embraced Purity 't is a stricture of Gods Majesty and so 't is feared Where 't is not loved it breedeth an awful respect in wicked men Natural Conscience so far doth homage to the Image of God and doth incline men to think well of holiness and to shew some respect to it 3. 'T is not a pang or passionate delight as some when the Word falls upon them they may be stirred a little 't is not a love that is controulable or easily overcome by other loves Iohn 5. 45. How can ye believe that seek honour one of another As Herod rejoyced in Iohns light for a Season and Mark 6. 20. he loved Iohn's preaching but he loved his Herodias better and therefore off goes Iohns head The love that he had 't was controulable by a higher Love Unless we be so addicted to the Word that it prevaileth over all contrary inclinations we do not love the Word Whether it be sensuality or pride or convetousness it will be casting off the dominion of the Word Iohn 8. 37. My Word hath no place in you it doth not sink down into their hearts that it may bring forth fruit in their lives Secondly Positively what is it then 1. 'T is such a love as causeth us to wait at Wisdoms gates to consult with the word upon all occasions to read it hear it meditate on it as the great Instrument of Sanctification You will take it for your Counsel Psalm 119. 4. That we love we will be thinking on often and exercising our minds in it Ps. 1. 2. But his delight is in the Law of the Lord and in his Law doth he meditate day and night Oh how few love the word thus Few read and delight in the Scriptures because of the Purity and Holiness that is in them They read them for disputes sake or to know the mystery or to be able to hold up an Argument but as they serve to make us pure and heavenly who loves them so As they forewarn us of sin and quicken to grace and love to God Psalm 19. 10 11. Thy word is sweeter then Hony or the Hony-comb because by them thy Servant is forewarned then we love the word when we love it for this reason 2. We love the Word when we are chary of Transgressing it or doing any thing contrary to to the tenour of it We are bidden to keep the Commandment as the Apple of the Eye Prov. 7. 2. The Eye is a tender thing offended with the least dust Oh! take heed of offending the word of God Fear of offending is a sure note and effect of love So he that loves God he feares the Commandment Prov. 13. 13. Whoso despiseth the word shall be destroyed but whoso feareth the Commandement shall be rewarded A wicked man maketh no bones of a Commandment regardeth not what the word saith but doth according to the bent of his own Will Those that will turn their back upon a Commandment for the least Temptation they have no true love to the word of God But now a godly man is one that feareth a Commandment he is afraid to do any thing against the express will of God If a Commandment stands in his way t is as much as if an Angel with a drawn Sword stood in his way as the Angel stood with a drawn Sword in Balaams way they had rather have all the world against them then the word against them Isaiah 66. 25. This awful regard of the word of God 't is a good evidence of our love to it 3. Then we are said to love the word when we chearfully and readily delight to do what it requireth in order to the glory of God and our own Salvation That 's love For true love is not only notional but practical 1 Iohn 2. 4. He that saith I know him and keepeth not his Commandments is a lyar and the Truth is not in him Our love to God is known by our obedience to him So our love to the word is known by our obedience to it And therefore we love the word in good earnest when we observe it readily and diligently what ever it costs us Rom. 6. 17. Ye have obeyed from the heart the form of Doctrine that was delivered to you Look as there is a cold love to a mans Brother when we say be clothed be warmed So there is a pretended love to the word that endeth in talk and not in action Which is as if a man should hope to pay his debts by the noise of money and instead of opening his purse to shut it as ridiculous it is to think to put off our duty with good words 4. 'T is a rooted affection a carnal man may have his affections moved and be a little stirred with this pure Doctrine but he is soon put out of humour he is not changed by it he hath not a constant Affection to God and Holy things Gal. 4. 18. It is good to be zealously affected always in a good thing To hold out to the end and still to keep up a warm respect to the word of God This is to love it to have the word ingrafted into the stock of corrupt nature Iam. 1. 21. 'T is not something tyed on but ingrafted into the soul it hath place in the heart II. Let me shew you why 1. The necessity of this love to the word appears Because without this love we cannot be accepted of God unwilling and constrained service is of little acceptation with him 1 Cor. 13. 1 2 3. If I should give my Goods to the Poor and my Body to be burnt and have not Charity it profiteth me nothing If a man hath never so many excellencies if he spend his Goods and Life and all for God without this sincere love to God and his ways all is nothing God doth not value men by the Pomp of their services but by the affection of their hearts in them he needeth not the service and he seeth the heart A man is pleased so his work be done willingly or unwillingly for he needeth the labour of the Slave but he seeth not into his heart But God hath no need of us and he seeth whether we give him the heart or no So that if we have not Charity all that we do is nothing 2. VVithout this love your work will be very
difficult grievous and irksome to you 'T is love maketh all things pleasant and easie and to go on roundly 1 Iohn 5. 3. For this is the love of God that we keep his Commandments and his Commandments are not grievous A love to the Commands of God will make us do them with chearfulness VVhen a man loves God it will be no grievous thing to serve him 'T is said in the 4th of Nehemiah and the 6. That the Building went on because the People had a mind to the work The building of the Temple was a difficult task to remove the rubbish and carry on such a vast piece of work But they had a mind to the work and then it went on Love to any thing makes it go on sweetly and chearfully as we use to say so in Gods service if we love the work we cannot count it difficult 3. You will never be constant with God without this love An unwilling servant is ever running from his work and he that hath not an heart fixed and set will find discouragement enough in heavens way They fell off that received not the Truth in the love of it 2 Thess. 2. 10. Fear hath Compulsion in it but it will not hold when the fear is worn of but love is a lasting affection when your hearts love holiness and and you love the work for the works sake Third Consideration 'T is not enough to love the word but we must look after the grounds and reasons of this love 1. Because a true love to the word is not blind but rational and may be justified Matth. 11. 19. Wisdom is justified of her Children All that love God and his Truth are able to plead for it If you are not able to shew your grounds and reasons for your love to the word your love is but customary Phil. 1. 9. I pray that your love may abound in all knowledge and judgment Such a love and zeal is commendable as hath a proportionable measure of knowledge going along with it When the Spouse had spoken so much of her beloved the question is propounded Cant. 5. 9. What is thy beloved more then another beloved that thou dost thus charge us Christians should be able to say what is their Christ and what is the Religion they do profess that there 's more in their Religion then in all Religions in the World 2. Because many love it upon wrong reasons there may be a natural and carnal love to spiritual things Look as a religious man in outward things rejoyceth spiritually so a carnal man in spiritual things rejoyceth carnally So Herod rejoyced in Iohns preaching with a humane passion Mark 6. 20. As he was a plausible preacher and a rare and pregnant interpreter of the Law This was but a carnal affection that is thus They may be pleased with notions and elevated strains of wisdom I remember a Moralist gives this similitude A Gallant going into a Garden prizeth Flowers altogether for the beauty of them but a Physician he looks after their use and vertue in Medicine but they both go to look after Flowers So a Godly man delights in the word of God 't is that he may be brought under the power of it and made more holy and heavenly minded But others go to hear an Argument rationally traversed or to hear Cadences of speech and pleasant language 'T is not enough to take a liking to things but we must know why Nay let me tell you that meer forreign and external reasons may sway us to delight in the word when Religion is in request and groweth in fashion and becometh matter of reputation 't is no great matter to be an honourer and admirer of it Simon Magus will be a disciple and turn Christian too when the whole City of Samaria listened to the Apostles and embraced their Doctrine Acts. 8. When there was so great an outward affluence 3. The more we view the grounds and reasons the more our love is encreased 'T is clear the Will and Affections are moved by the understanding and that Ignorance is the cause of the Contempt of the Lords grace If thou knewest the Gift Iohn 4. 10. We Love and Fear and Hate and Joy according to the apprehensions that we have of things And therefore the more knowledge we have the more love Phil. 1. 9. I pray that your love may abound in all Knowledg if thou dost not encrease in knowledge thou wilt never increase in affection 2 Pet. 1. 2. Grace and Peace be multiplyed unto you by the knowledge of God and Iesus Christ our Lord. Now The more these grounds and reasons are drawn forth in the view of Conscience the more thy love is stirred as the more we beat the steel upon the flint the more the sparks fly out Fourth Consideration Of all the grounds and reasons of our love to the word of God the most noble and excellent is to love the Word for its purity 1. Because this sheweth indeed that we are made partakers of the divine Nature 2 Pet. 1. 4. For I pray you mark when we hate evil as evil and love good as good we have the same love and hatred that God hath It sheweth that the soul is changed into the likeness of God when we love a thing for its purity God hath no interest to be advanced by the Creature he loves them more or less as they are near or further off from his glorious being When once we come to love things because they are pure 't is a sign that we have the same love that God hath 2. This argueth a sutableness of heart to what God requireth for things affect us as they sute with us They that are after the flesh savour the things of the flesh Rom. 8. 5. The pure will only delight in pure things but Swine delight in puddles they that have the Spirit of the World they must have worldly pleasure and honour but the pure will delight in the word of God 1 Cor. 2. 14. The natural man receiveth not the things of God and because they are not sutable to him First We love things as sutable to our necessity and then we love them upon interest and afterwards as sutable to our disposition Now it argueth a good frame of heart and a deep sense of Gods interest when we love the word because 't is so pure A man first loves the word customarily because he is born there where that Religion is in fashion and then when he beginneth to have a Conscience he loveth it for pardon and peace as it offers a Saviour his own happiness self love puts him upon seeking after God then afterwards his heart is suted to Gods Will and there is something of kin in his heart to the Will of God revealed without and he loveth it for its suitableness of Nature unto the Will of God 3. To be sure this love is no way questionable but is an undoubted Evidence of right and sound love to
part of Mankind fear the Prince more than God and the Gallows more than Hell If every vain thought or carnal motion in our hearts were as the cutting of a finger or burning in the hand men would seem more afraid of that then they are of Hell Nay I will tell you men can dispense with Gods law to comply with Mans. Hos. 5. 11. Ephraim is oppressed and broken in Iudgement because he willingly walked after the Commandment A little Danger will draw men into the snare when Hell will not keep them from it Oh let us Rouze up our selves Is not Man Gods Subject Is not he a more powerful Sovereign than all the Potentates in the World Doth he not in his Word give Judgment on the Everlasting estate of men and will his Judgment be in vain Hath not God appointed a day when all matters shall be taken into consideration If you can deny these Truths go on in sin and spare not but if Conscience be sensible of Gods Authority oh break off your sins by Repentance and walk more cautiously for the time to come Every sin is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Ioh. 3. 4. a breach of Gods Eternal law and will God always wink at your disloyalty to him Nothing remaineth to be spoken to but the last Clause Thy Law is truth Doctrine Gods Law is Truth 1. I shall shew in what sense 't is said to be Truth 2. The Reasons why 't is Truth 3. The end of this Truth First In what sense 't is said to be Truth 1. 'T is the Chief Truth there is some truth in the laws of Men and the writings of Men even of Heathens but they are but sorry Fragments and Scraps of Truth that have escaped since the Fall But the Truth of the Word is transcendent to that of bare Reason here are truths of the greatest Concernment matters propounded that are very comfortable and profitable to lost sinners 1 Tim. 2. 16. Here Moral Duties are advanced to the highest Pitch Deut. 4. 6. Keep therefore and do them for this is your Wisdom and your understanding in the sight of the Nations The end of these is not only to regulate your Commerce with men but to guide you in your Communion with God and help you to the Everlasting Enjoyment of him 2. 'T is the only Truth that is the only Revelation of the Mind of God that you can build upon 't is the Rule of Truth A thing may be true that is not the Rule of truth There is veritas regulata veritas regulans the Word is the measure and standard and they are true or false as they agree or disagree with it Every Custom and Tradition must be tryed upon it from the beginning it was not so from the beginning my Christianity is Jesus Christ. We must not attend to what others did but what Christ did who is before all every dictate of reason must be tryed by it for here is the highest reason It is written to make the Man of God perfect or else it cannot guide you to your happiness 2 Tim. 3. 15 16. Every Revelation must be tryed by it Gal. 1. 8. If an Angel or Man bring any Doctrine if it differ from or be besides the written Word 't is a cursed Doctrine This is the Rule 3. 'T is the pure Truth in it there is nothing but the Truth without the mixture of Falshood every part is true as truth it self 't is true in the Promises true in the Threatnings true in the Doctrines true in the Histories true in the Precepts true in the Prohibitions God will make it good to a tittle True in Moralities true in the Mysteries of Faith not only true in Duties that concern man and man but in the sublimer truths that concern commerce with God where Nature is more blind Psal. 19. 9. The Testimonies of the Lord are true and righteous altogether 'T is true where a Carnal Man would not have it true in the Curses and Threatnings If Gods Word be true wo to them that remain in a sinful way they shall find it true shortly and feel what they will not believe 'T is true where a godly man feareth it will not be true no Promises contradicted by sense but will prove true in their performance Whatsoever in the hour of Temptation Carnal Reason may judge to the contrary within a while you will see your unbelieving fears confuted 4. 'T is the whole Truth it containeth all things necessary for the Salvation of those that yield up themselves to be instructed by it Ioh. 14. 26. He shall teach you all things and remember you of all things Ioh. 16. 13. Lead you into all Truth In all things that pertain to Religion and our present Conduct towards everlasting Happiness Therefore nothing is to be hearkned to contrary to what God hath revealed in his Word there is no room left for Tradition nor for extraordinary Revelations all that is necessary for the Church is revealed there 't is a full perfect Rule Reasons 1. From the Author God is a God of Truth and nothing but Truth can come from him for God cannot lie Tit. 1. 2. The truth of the law dependeth upon the truth of God therefore it must needs be without Error yea it corrects all Errour if God could deceive or be deceived you might suspect his Word 2. The matter it self it commends its self to our Consciences by the manifestation of the truth 2 Cor. 4. 2. Approving your selves by the Word of truth 2 Cor. 6. 7. If the Heart be not strangely perverted and become an incompetent Judge by obstinate Atheisme and corrupt Affections it cannot but own these truths to be of God if our Gospel be hid 't is hid to them that are lost 1 Cor. 4. 4. 3. The end of it which is to regulate man and sanctifie man Now it were strange if he should be made better by a lie and a cheat Ioh. 17. 17. Sanctifie them by thy truth thy word is truth Certainly 't is the most convenient Instrument to reduce man to his Wits and make him live like a Man 4. It pretends to be the law of God it is so or else it would be the greatest cheat in the World for it speaketh to us from God all along and by vertue of his Authority None can be so bruitish as to think that the wisest Course of Doctrines that ever the World was acquainted with is a meer Imposture Use 1. Is to commend the Word of God to us we cannot have true Doctrine nor true Piety nor true Consolation without the Scriptures Not true Doctrine Isa. 8. 20. To the law and to the testimony if they speak not according to this word there is no light in them 'T is to be condemned of Falshood if not according to the Word you cannot have true Holiness for Holiness is but Scripture digested and put in Practice Iam. 1. 18. The Foundation of the spiritual life is laid in
the Word Scripture Faith and Scripture Repentance are still fed by the Word It teacheth us how to believe and how to repent and how to pray and how to live especially the Heavenly Life and there can be no true Comfort and Peace without the Word Rom. 15. 4. That ye through Patience and Comfort of the Scriptures might have hope 2. Use. We should consider the Truth of the Word partly in the general for the strengthening and settling of our Faith and to make it more clear and solid and certain Eph. 1. 13. In whom ye trusted after that ye heard the Word of Truth When boisterous Temptations would carry us to some evil which God hath forbidden and severely threatned that the point of the sword of the Spirit be put to the bosome of it Deut. 29. 19 20. 2. When you are settling your souls as to the main point of Acceptance with God 1 Tim. 1. 15. This is a faithful saying and worthy of all Acceptation that Iesus Christ came into the World to save sinners of whom I am chief The Word will never deceive them that seek Righteousness there 3. When difficulties arise that oppose the promise or expectation of relief according to the promise you should urge the truth of the word in the very face of difficulty thy law istruth Take Pauls instance Act. 27. God by Promise gave all that sailed with Paul in the Ship their lives yet how many difficulties came to pass At first when they were in the Adriatique Sea for so many days and nights and had neither seen Sun nor Stars they knew not where they were nor whether they should go here was little appearance of Gods making good his word to Paul Another Difficulty fell out they feared they were near some Countrey they sounded and found they were near some land but what land they could not Conjecture and were afraid of being split in pieces against the Rocks but the Shipmen that knew the danger of these Seas they must go out of the Ship they would make use of their long Boat and so they were ready to miscarry in the sight of the land but Paul prevented them And after 't was day the men were spent because of long fasting and conflicting with the Waves they could not ply the Oar. Another difficulty they were where two Seas met they run the Ship a ground and resolved to kill Paul and the rest of the Prisoners lest they should swim to land but the Captain willing to save Paul prevented that purpose And so at length they came all to shore though followed with difficulty upon difficulty God made good his Promise to a tittle ver 44. Pray observe how Paul urged Gods Promise against the greatest difficulties as sufficient ground of encouragement to expect relief ver 25. for I believe God that it shall be even as it was told me SERMON CLX PSALM CXIX VER 143. Trouble and Anguish have taken hold of me yet thy Commandments are my delights IN the Words we have I. Davids Temptation Trouble and Anguish have taken hold of me II. Davids Exercise under that Temptation thy Commandments are my delight III. The Benefit of that Exercise notwithstanding the greatness of the Temptation Yet 'T is propounded with a non obstante I. The Temptation was very great for he speaketh of Trouble and Anguish The joyning of Synonymous Words or words of a like import and signification increaseth the sense and so it sheweth his affection was not ordinary Yea both these words have their particular use and emphasis Trouble may Imply the outward Tryal and the difficulties and streights he was in Anguish Inward Afflictions the one the Matter of the Trial and the other the sence of it The other expression also is to be observed have taken hold of me in the Hebrew have found me so the Septuagint renders it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the Vulgar Latin out of them tribulatio et angustia invenerunt me have found me that is come upon me as the expression intimateth Troubles are said to find us because they are sent to seek us out and in time will light upon us We should not run into it but if they find us in our duty we should not be troubled at them Sometimes in Scripture we are said to find trouble and sometimes trouble to find us We are said to find trouble David said Psal. 116. 3. I found trouble And so now here in the Text Trouble and Anguish found him There is no difference or if any the one noteth a surprize Trouble findeth us when it cometh unlooked for our finding it noteth our willingness to undergo it when the Will of God is so especially for Righteousness sake II. Davids Exercise under this great Temptation thy Commandments are my delights Where we have 1. The Object thy Commandments The Commandment is put for the Word in general which includeth Promises as well as Precepts the whole Doctrine of Life and Salvation However the property of the form is not altogether to be overlooked even in the Commandments or the Conscience of his Duty he took a great deal of Comfort 2. The Affection Delight He had said before that he did not forget Gods statutes when he was small and despised ver 141. now he delighted in them This was his great love to the Word that he could find sweetness in it when it brought him trouble such sweetness as did allay all his sorrows and overcome the bitterness of them 3. The Degree Delights in the plural number He did greatly delight in it Omnis oblectatio mea saith Iu●…ius Thy Commandments to me are instead of all manner of delights and pleasure in the World III. The next is the Opposition of this Exercise to that temptation yet 'T is not in the Original but necessarily Implyed and therefore well inserted by our Translators to shew that the greatness of his Streights and Troubles did not diminish his Comfort but Increase it rather The Points are these First God ●…th it necessary sometimes to exercise his People with a great deal of Trouble Secon●…●…his Trouble may breed great Vexation and Anguish of Spirit even in a gracious ●…rt Thirdly Notwithstanding this Trouble and Anguish gracious Hearts will manifest their graciousness by delighting in the Word Fourthly They that delight in the Word will find more Comfort in their Afflictions than Troubles can take from them or such sweetness as will overcome the sense of all their Sorrows This was alwayes Davids help to delight in the Word and this brought him Comfort though in deep Troubles For the First Point That God seeth it necessary sometimes to exercise his People with a great deal of Trouble Though they are highly in Favour with God yet they have their share of Troubles as well as others This is true if you 1. Consider the People of God in their Collective Body and Community which is called the Church 'T is the Churches name Isa. 54. 11 12. Oh
escape was some while after 2 By giving in spiritual Manifestations to the Soul though he doth not give the particular Mercy prayed for As when upon the prayer he reviveth the soul of him that prayeth Iob 33. 26. He shall pray unto God and he will be favourable to him and he shall see his face with joy The Lord giveth them the light of his Countenance and special discoveries of his love or support till the Mercy come Psal. 138. 3. In the day when I cryed thou answeredst me and strengthenedst me with strength in my Soul Support is an Answer such an Answer had Paul My Grace is sufficient for thee Or when the heart is quieted though we do not know what God will do with our requests yet satisfied in the discharge of our Duty and that we have commended the matter to God So it is said of Hannah When she had prayed her Countenance was no more sad 1 Sam. 1. 18. And Phil. 4. 6 7. Be careful for nothing but in every thing by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God and the peace of God which passeth all understanding shall keep your hearts and minds through Iesus Christ. Sometimes by a secret Impression of Confidence or a strong inclination to hope well of the thing prayed for Psal. 6. 8. The Lord hath heard the voice of my weeping Or Experiences as they that travailed to Ierusalem passing through the Valley Baca they met with a Well by the way Psal. 84. 6. a sweet refreshing thought or some help in the Spiritual Life by serious dealing with God some Consideration to set you a work or some new ingagement of the soul to God as a recompence of the Duty some Principles of Faith drawn forth in the view of Conscience not shewed before Some truth or other presented with fresh Life and vigour upon the heart 3. Sometimes by way of Commutation and Exchange and so God doth answer the prayer though he doth not give the mercy prayed for When he giveth another thing that is as good or better for the party that prayeth though not in kind the same yet in worth and value as good This Commutation may be three wayes First In regard of the Person praying David fasts and humbleth and melteth his soul for his Persecutors Psal. 35. 13. and it returned into his own bosom was converted to his own benefit his fasting had no effect upon them but his Charity did not lose its reward David prayeth for his first Child by Bathsheba but that Child dieth and God giveth Solomon instead thereof 2 Sam. 12. 15. Noah Daniel Iob shall save their own Souls Ezek. 14. 14. Your peace shall return to you again Luk. 10. 5 6. the Comfort of discharging their Duty Secondly In regard of the matter Carnal things are begged and Spiritual things are given Acts 1. 6 7. The Apostles asked him wilt thou at this time restore the kingdom to Israel They did not receive the Kingdom to Israel but received the promise of the Spirit Moses would fain enter into Canaan with the People Deut. 3. 23 24. And God said let it suffice thee speak no more of this matter but God gave him a Pisgah sight and ease of the trouble of Wars We would have speedy riddance of Trouble but God thinketh not fit as showers that come by drops soak into the Earth better then those that come in a Tempest and Hurricane We ask for Ease in Troubles and God will give Courage under Troubles Lam. 3. 55 56 57. I called upon thy name O Lord out of the low dungeon Thou hast heard my voice hide not thine ear at my breathing at my cry Thou drewest near in the day that I called upon thee thou saidst Fear not His gracious and powerful Presence in Trouble was enough Christ was heard in that he feared Heb. 5. 7. not saved from that Hour but supported and strengthened in it Iob sacrificed prayed for his Children when they were Feasting Iob 1. 5. and though they were all destroyed God gave him Patience verse 22. for in all that befell him he sinned not nor charged God foolishly Thirdly In regard of means we pray such means may not miscarry God will use other As Abraham would fain have Ishmael the Child of the Promise but God intended Isaac Gen. 17. 18. O that Ishmael might live before thee Thus doth God often blast instruments we most expect good from and maketh use of others to be Instruments for our good which we did least expect it from God may give us our Will in Anger when the Mercy turneth to our hurt Therefore the kind of Gods Answer must be referred to his own Will in all things for which we are not to pray Absolutely and when we have discharged our Duty endeavoured to approve our Hearts to God take what Answer he will give Doct. 2. From the manner of praying with the whole Heart the Saints have the more confidence of being heard in Prayer David alledgeth his crying with the whole heart as an hopeful intimation of a gracious Answer 1. Because a Prayer rightly made hath the assurance of a Promise the Promise is Ioh. 16. 24. Ask and you shall receive that your joy may be full Now this beareth no exception but that we ask according to his Will 1 Ioh. 5. 14. Si bona petant boni bene ad bonum Good men asking good things in the name of Christ for a good end thou canst not miss 2. Where there is sincerity and fervency we have two witnesses to establish our Comfort and Hope the Spirit of God that knoweth the deep things of God and the Spirit of Man that knoweth the things that are in man Gods Spirit who stirreth up these groans in us Rom. 8. 26 27. He that searcheth the heart knoweth the mind of the Spirit because he maketh intercession for the Saints according to the will of God And the Testimony of our own Spirits that we have done our part and discharged our Duty and so have true Joy and Confidence Iob 16. 19 20. My witness is in heaven and my record is on high My friends scorn me but mine eye poureth out teares to God 3. God doth not use to send them away comfortless that call upon him in spirit and truth because by one grace he maketh way for another by the grace of Assistance for the grace of Acceptance Psal. 10. 17. Lord thou hast heard the desire of the humble thou hast prepared their heart thou wilt cause thine ear to hear Where God hath given an Heart to speak he will afford an ear to hear for God will not lose his own work he cannot refuse those requests which are according to the direction of his Word and the motions of his holy Spirit when they are brought to him Use. This exhorteth us to look more after the manner of praying An earnest and sincere prayer cannot miscarry judge by this and you cannot want
proper to say are Just and Righteous than to say are Truth His Commandments are Just as the Rule of our Duty they are just as the Rule of God's Process but the word Commandment is not taken strictly for the mandatory part of the Word but it is put for the whole Covenant his Precepts invested with Promises and Threatnings the Commandments thus considered with the Promises and Threatnings annexed are true Yea mark the Emphasis of the Phrase Truth it self The Happiness promised to them that make Conscience of their Duty will be made good and so the Punishments on them that offend God will be inflicted Now the joyning of these two Clauses seemeth to speak thus much I know that thou art near me because thy Word is Truth God in his Providence seemeth to be absent sometimes from his People but upon the Assurance of his Word we must believe him near I say God seemeth to be far off from his People for who would think that the God of Peace and all Comfort should dwell with them that are broken in Spirit Isa. 57. 15. For thus saith the high and holy One that inhabiteth Eternity whose name is Holy I dwell in the high and holy place with him also that is of a contrite and humble spirit to revive the spirit of the humble and to revive the heart of the contrite ones Or that the Author of all Felicity should be present with them that are harassed and exercised with such sharp Afflictions and hunted up and down in the World but because God hath promised it Isa. 43. 2. When thou passest through the waters I will be with thee and through the rivers they shall not overflow thee when thou walkest through the Fire thou shalt not be burnt neither shall the flame kindle upon thee We should be satisfied with it his Word is Truth whatever Sense and Reason saith to the contrary neither distance of place nor afflictedness of condition do hinder his nearness to us Quitting all other points I shall only insist on this one Doctrine That it is the Priviledge and Happiness of God's Children to have God near unto them upon all occasions My great business will be to explain what this nearness is and then you will soon find it to be the great Happiness and Priviledge of the Saints First What is this nearness Secondly How is it brought about First What is this nearness 1. God is not said to be nearer to them than others in regard of his Essence for so he is everywhere present nullibi inclusus nullibi exclusus so an Heathen described God to be a great Circle whose Centre is nowhere and Circumference everywhere and in the Prophet he telleth us Ier. 23. 23 24. Am I a God at hand saith the Lord and not a God afar off do not I fill Heaven and Earth can any hide him in secret places that I shall not see him saith the Lord He filleth all things with his Essential Presence he is in Earth in Heaven and under the Earth Psal. 139. 7 8. Whither shall I go from thy spirit and whither shall I flee from thy Presence if I ascend up into Heaven thou art there if I make my bed in Hell behold thou art there if I take the wings of the morning and dwell in the uttermost parts of the Sea even there shall thy hand lead me and thy right hand shall hold me God is here and there and everywhere the Heavens do not confine and inclose his Being nor the Tumults of the Earth exclude it in this sense God is alike near to all things they that cannot endure the presence and thought of God where will they go from him They may run away from God as a Friend but they cannot escape him as an Enemy te non amittit nisi qui dimi●…t qui te dimittit quo fugit nisi a te placato ad te iratum Men may shut God out of their hearts and yet he is there do what they can and will be found there one day in the dreadful Effects of his Anger 2. Not in regard of his general Providence and common Sustentation for so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he is not far from every one of us for in him we live and move and have our being Acts 17. 27 28. This general Presence and providential sustentation is vouchsafed to all his Creatures without which they could not subsist nor move nor act so all things are inclosed under the hand of his Power and are still under his disposing 3. It is meant of his friendly and gracious Presence and those eminent and gracious effects of his Power and Goodness which he is pleased to afford his People So God is sometimes said to be nigh unto his People and they are said to be a People near unto him the Lord is said to be near unto them Psal. 34. 18. The Lord is nigh unto them that are of a broken heart And again Psal. 145. 18. The Lord is nigh unto all them that call upon him and to all that call upon him in truth Deut. 4. 7. What Nation is so great who hath God so nigh unto them as the Lord our God is in all things that we call upon him for The Lord is said to be nigh because he is always ready to hear their Prayers and to direct them in their doubts comfort them in their sorrows defend and protect them in all their dangers and deliver them in all their Troubles On the other side they are said to be a People near unto God Psal. 148. 14. He also exalteth the horn of his people the praise of all his Saints even of the Children of Israel a people near unto him Because they are the special Objects of his Mercy and Favour and as to the actual intercourse that passeth between God and them God is said to draw nigh to them as they are said to draw nigh to God Iam. 4. 8. Draw nigh to God and he will draw nigh to you and so drawing nigh to us on God's part signifieth his Grace and Blessing and drawing nigh on our part our Duty Love Fear Delight and Reverence of God Well then it is meant of his friendly gracious Presence vouchsafed to his People 4. This nearness may be understood of his visible Presence in his Ordinances or of that spiritual inwardness and saving Union and Communion that is between God and his converted People or those that are brought home to him by Christ and are the members of his Mystical Body In some sense it is the Priviledge of the Visible Church to have God near them because they have the signs of his Presence among them as in the former place Deut. 4. 7. What nation hath God so nigh unto them It was the common priviledge of the Nation in comparison of the Pagans about them who were a People afar off and strangers to the Covenants of Promise So Ier. 14. 9. Thou O Lord God art in the midst of
the rebelling flesh within will make him turn out of the way and how can such a one hold out with God when his way to heaven is a continual Warfare But on the other side a man that is a Christian and a servant of God by Choice his course is likely according to his choice because he is fixt upon Evidence he knowes he is upon sure ground and depending upon God he will not miscarry And therefore Ioshua when he would engage the Israelites to continue faithful with God he draws them on to a Choice and then saith Ioshua 24. 22. Ye are witnesses against your selves that ye have chosen the Lord to serve him and they said We are witnesses It much strengthens the Bond when a man binds himself freely and willingly and he makes himself the more culpable and the more inexcusable if he do not observe it 3. They will carry on the work of their Heavenly Calling with the more Ease and Delight because a choice is nothing else but the inclination of the Soul guided by Reason strengthned by a Purpose and quickned and actuated by our Love This Reason justifies our choice Purpose binds it makes it firm but now here comes Love which makes it easie and sweet to do what we have resolved upon A resolute Traveller will go through his Journey and overcome the tediousness of it his mind is set to finish it let him have what Way or Weather he will so a Christian will overcome his difficulties when his heart is enclined to this course it is his own choice and he will hold to it It is a hard heart that makes the work hard but when the Will is engaged a firm Resolution of the Will is the life of our Affections and to Affection all is easie Use. I. To shew That they act upon a wrong Principle who are not good and yet do good out of Chance To this end I shall shew you 1. That a Man may do good by Chance and not be good 2. A Man may do good by Force and yet not be good 3. That some do good out of Craft and Design but to do good out of Choice doth only discover the Truth and Sincerity of Religion 1. Some do good by Chance As 1. The Man that taketh up Religion by Example barely and Tradition not out of any sound Conviction of the Truth and Worth of it Thus many are Christians by the chance of their Birth in those Countries where the Name of Christ is professed and had in Honour and the main Reason into which their Religion is resolved is not any Excellency in its self but the Custom and Tradition of their Forefathers Ioh. 4. 20. Our father 's worshipped in this Mountain And 1 Pet. 1. 18. Forasmuch as ye know that ye were not redeemed with corruptible things as silver and Gold from your vain conversation received by Tradition from your fathers 'T was hard to reclaim them from their inveterate Customs This is the Religion in which they have been born and bred 'T is true that Tradition from Father to Son is a Duty and a Means to bring us to the Knowledge of the Truth and that Christianity is such an Institution as doth so clearly evidence its self to be of God and speaketh to us of such necessary and weighty matters that it cannot but a little rowse and affect the mind of him that receiveth it however he receiveth it But most men do but blindly and pertinaciously adhere to it as that Religion wherein they have been born and bred without any distinct knowledge of the worth of it So that if there be any goodness in their Christianity as their Profession is good in itself They are but good by chance for upon the same reasons they are Christians if they had been born elsewhere they would have been Mahometans or Idolaters 2. Not only these but also those who stumble upon the Profession of Religion they know not how and those who in a Pang and sudden Motion are all for God and for Heavenly things but this vanisheth into nothing as Fire in straw which is soon kindled and soon out This is a free-will Pang not a choice the heart is not habitually inclined and devoted unto God Ioh. 6. 34. Oh that I might die the death of the righteous Numb 23. 10. Such kind of wishing of holiness as a necessary means there may be as well as happiness These are accidentally stirred up in us 2. Some do good by force These also are of two sorts such as are forced by the fear of Men or of God 1. Forced by the fear of Men because they dare not be bad with credit and security as Fear of Parents Tutors and Governours 2 Chron. 24. 2. Ioash did that which was right in the sight of the Lord all the dayes of Iehojadah the Preist He did that which was right as to external Acts but after Iehojadahs death he revolted from the Lord 2 Chron. 24. 17 18. So fear of Magistrates as Iosiah compelled them to stand to the Covenant therefore Ier. 3. 10. Yet for all this her treacherous sister Iudah hath not turned unto me with her whole heart but feignedly Fear of the times when set for Religion Esther 8. 12. Many of the people of the land became Iews for the fear of the Iews fell upon them 2. Forced by the Fear of God A little unwilling service may be extorted from them by the force of a convinced Conscience There is a slavish kind of Religiousness arising from a fear of Punishment without any love and delight in God Men may be against God and his Wayes when fear onely driveth them to them They do something good but had rather leave it undone they avoid some sins but had rather practice them By the spirit of bondage they are brought to tender some unwilling service to Christ and their only Motives are fear of Wrath and Hell and a sight of the curse due to sin The falseness of this Principle appeareth 1 Because 't is most stirring in a time of eminent Judgements when they are sick and like to dye Isa. 26. 9. When thy judgements are abroad in the earth the inhabitants of the world will learn Righteousness Ier. 2. 26. In their affliction they will cry Arise and save us Mettle in the furnace is very soft but take it out and it returneth to its old hardness See Psal. 78. 34 35 36 37. The sense of present devouring Wrath and the Terrors of an Angry God may drive men to some Temporary acts of Devotion these proceed only from the Natural fear of Death and love of Self-preservation This may put a stand for a while to their former wayes of Provocation and incline them to seek God with some diligence in the outward forms of Religion but it produceth no stedfastness in the Covenant As if there had been some weak effect upon them as if it brought them for a while to some temper of Piety but it
535 Affections must be purged and quickned p. 532 Affections sensitive differ from the solid Complacency of the Soul p. 85 Affections when strong are very painful p. 121 Affections strong constant and earnest towards Gods Word a mark of a Child of God p. 121. 898. expressed by 1. Opening the mouth 2. Panting 3. Longiug p. 897 Affections spiritual their Objects End and Properties p. 121 122 Affections carnal to be avoided p. 566 Affection to Gods Word for its innate Goodness and Truth p. 623 Affections false and slashy p. 122 Affections not nullified but rectified by Grace p. 807 884 Affections of the mind usually expressed by Words proper to the bodily senses p. 671. 897 Affections follow apprehensions p. 685. 234 They are good or evil according to their objects p. 1006 Affections spiritual will take all occasions to Remember Gods Name p. 374 Four things about our affections considerable p. 252. 253 Afflictions God is always just in them p. 509. 510. Yet Patient and Moderate p. 510 511 Afflictions long and sharp usually attended with either 1. Impatience or 2. Revenge against instruments or 3. The using indirect means for redress or 4. Despondency or 5. Questioniug our Interest in God or 6. Atheistical and despairing Thoughts p. 555 556. 465. 835 836. 843 Afflictions sanctified advance holy Thoughts p. 526 Prayer p. 714. They are good in what respects p. 484 Afflictions may be long and grievous before deliverance comes p. 150 157. 537. 835. 711 712 713. Three Agents in the Afflictions of Gods People 1. God 2. Satan 3. Wicked men p. 537 538. In afflictions Gods end is to reduce us into the right way p. 463 464. To humble and purge us 711 712. 510 Afflictions of great use to the converted and unconverted p. 464 465. 510 Why God afflicts his Children so sorely p. 711 712 Afflictions their necessity p. 157. 591. 487. And Utility p. 461 462 463 464. 484. 711 712. Afflictions encrease our Comforts in Gods Word p. 888 Afflictions though great are alleviated by the Consolations of the Word p. 148 Choisest Saints have their afflictions p. 965 Afflictions are great Priviledges p. 424. 481 Afflictions work not for good of their own Nature but by the Spirit of God p. 465 466. 487 They should bring us to God by Prayer p. 968 Age one age sees more then another p. 650 Age brings wisdom by experience p. 650 Aged ought to be reverenced p. 654 Aggravation of sin to Vow and not perform it p. 704 Allow we must not allow our selves in the least sin p. 34 Aides of Grace either necessary or liberal p. 221 Alphonsus King of Arragon his Counsellours p. 148 Allurements and Terrors of the VVorld means to draw us from God p. 1031 All sufficiency of God encourageth 1. Our dependance on him 2. Our subjection to him p. 587 588 It makes him the Souls only portion p. 385 Ancients VVho p. 650 Anger wrath envy how they differ p. 520 Anger of God when discovered bespeaks Holy awe and dread p. 808 Anger at the Violation of Gods Law a Note of true Zeal p. 853 Anger and hatred of Sin how they differ p. 878 Anger against the sin and pity to the sinner shews a well tempered zeal p. 931 Anger and Passion in discourse renders it evil p. 1064 Anguish of Spirit even in gracious souls caused by great Troubles partly from Nature Partly from Grace p. 884 Answers of Prayers to be duly observed p. 168 and why Reasons ibid. p. 905 906 907 Answer of Prayer either in kind or value p. 169 167. 908 909 Gods Children are earnest for answers of Prayer p. 905 Answer of a good Conscience what it signifies p. 699. Answer of Prayer neglected proceeds from either 1. Heedlessness 2. Atheism 3. Distrust 4. Disesteem of Gods favour p. 906 Great evil effects of such neglect p. 906 907 Antecedency of Gods work before Mans work p. 221 Antinomians who deny the Law to be a Rule p. 4 Antiperistasis in grace as well as Nature p. 871 Antiquity should not sway against Truth p. 650 Apostacy one ground of it the not Receiving the Truth in the love of it p. 67. Vid. Distrust As also from our inbred Corruption p. 803 Dissuasives against Apostacy p. 871. 341 342 Evil consequences of Apostacy p. 210. 342. Apostacy is bestial and brutish p. 1100 Apostacy caused from 1. Errors 2. Persecutions 3. Scandals p. 343. Vid. Back-sliding Defection Appeal to God on a double account p. 522 No appeal from Gods Judgement p. 38 Many pretend to serve God that cannot appeal to him p. 306 Appetite follows life and holy desires spring from a new Nature p. 304 Application of mercy personally called coming to God p. 517 Application of the Word by Faith p. 768 Application of Providence to their own selves a mark of Gods Children p. 811 Application of Gods mercies to our own souls p. 318. 517 Effectual application of mercy p. 517 Approbation of God a great Comfort under reproach p. 301 Approbation of Gods Law by the sanctified Judgment p. 34. 752 Means to bring our hearts to approve Gods Law p. 877 Approbation of purity without chusing it is not sufficient p. 861. 708. 223 Approbation of that in our selves which we condemn in others an evil character p. 3 Arbitrary God is so in gifts not in Judgments p. 934 Arts and Sciences not comparable to Gods word for the obtaining of true VVisdom p. 650 Arrogance in discourses odious to God p. 1064 Ascribe all to God p. 43. 552 Arguments to prevail with God 1. From his mercy 2. His Truth p. 941 Ask Gods Counsel his Leave and Blessing p. 31 Ask of God saving knowledge of Divine things p. 895 Grounds of it ibid. How Temporal deliverance is to be asked p. 923 Ashamed of God Christ and his Gospel Reasons of it Arguments against it p. 311 Assaults of Satan make assisting grace necessary p. 780 Assurance strengthned by perseverance p. 342 Astray the best of Saints apt to go astray p. 1102 Reasons 1. Present imperfection 2. Remainders of Corruption p. 1102 1103. Not totally and finally p. 1106 Assistance of God necessary to preserve both habitual and actual grace p. 789 Attributes of God in a Conflict about sinners p. 320 Atheistical persons are great deriders of Saints for 1. Their Faith 2. Obedience p. 336 Atheism to observe Gods signal Judgements on the wicked a Cure of it p. 798 A man may have Atheism enough to question Providences when ther 's Faith enough to justifie God p. 836 Avenger God is the Avenger of breach of Vows Oaths and Covenants p. 704. 705. Averseness of the heart from God a Cause of the delaying of Repentance p. 408 Averseness of Heart in coming to God makes us need not only leave to come but power to come p. 953 Audience of God how manifested how procured p. 166 St. Augustines Prayer about the Scriptures That he might neither be deceived in them nor deceive others by
inconsistent with an unholy life p. 207 Rule must always be set before us p. 208 why ibid. Bless God for a Rule and walk exactly by the Rule p. 807 698 Enemies to the word as a Rule 1 they that set up Reason instead of the word 2 Passions and Lusts 3 Example 4 they that go to Witches c. 5. they that expect new Revelations p. 698 Rulers when religious a signal Blessing to a people p. 145 560 Rulers are not to be provoked p. 996 Running the ways of Gods Commandments what it imports p. 225 S. SAcrament what it signifies p. 699 Saints love the word 1 because their hearts are suited to it 2 they have tasted its goodness p 627 Sacrifices three things required in them p. 722 Safety none in Apostacy from the truth but Perseverance in it p. 788 637 It lies in two things p. 642 Sanctification of Afflictions a greater mercy thanDeliverance outof them p 470 592 it hath 2 parts p. 1040 Sanction of the Law inPromises and Threatnings p. 350 Salvation the word variously taken in Scripture p. 536 537. Temporal and eternal p. 1035. 314 It denotes sometimes temporal deliverance p. 830 Salvation is far from the wicked p. 980. both in a temporal and eternal Notion ibid. 1081 1087 Salvation is the fruit of mercy p. 314. 315 Satisfaction in Gods providential government p. 542 It is not to be had without enjoyment of God p. 13. 386. Qn. what it is that will satisfie and content our Souls p. 926 Satans design in afflicting Gods people p. 538 He is subtle and diligent in tempting p. 1105 Satans baits are Profit and Pleasure p. 85 Satan resembled by lying p. 188 Scandalous Terms put upon the best parts of Religion p. 337 Scandals given either by word or deed p. ●…030 Scandals never fall out in the Church but some notable woe follows p. 867 Scandals an enemy to Perseverance p. 212 Scandal is either Active or Passive p. 1022. 1029 Schism a great evil p. 201 Protestants not guilty of schism in separating from Papists and Popery p. 201. 202. Scorns and scoffs must not draw us from Obedience p 337 why Religion is scorned p. 338 Scorn a grievous Temptation p 339 vid. Contempt Scripture reveals 1 Reconciliation 2 eternal Life not elsewhere revealed p 624 625 Scripture is the Churches Book p 41 It is to be highly prized p 645 In opposition to 1 Tradition 2 carnal Reason p 41 It s Excellency p 66 67 It is a Record and a Calendar p 77 Qu. how we know the Scriptures to be Gods word p. 960 961 vid. word of God It gives directions in all Cases p. 153 It is for the strong as well as for the weak p. 697 Scripture before it was compleat as now yet had promises for support of the Soul p. 181 Scripture Truths of two sorts p. 888 Scripture affords 1 true Doctrine 2 true Piety 3 true Consolation p 879 622 Four main ends of Gods giving the Scripture 1 to secure the Truth 2 that it might last to all Ages 3 for converting sinners 4 for trial of Faith and Manners p. 694 6●…2 Seasons of mercy neither too soon nor too late p. 551 Seasons when God eminently calls to consider our ways p. 401 Seasons for particular duties p. 445 637 638 925 374 Sealing to Gods Truth as Witnesses what it is p. 832 832 Searching the heart a mark of one that hath Respect to all Gods Commandements p. 36 Seventimes denotes many times Numerus definitus pro indefinito p. 1013 Secret Prayer as well as publick a Duty p. 904 021 It hath Promises of Reward p. 921 Arguments to press to secret Prayer p. 922 Secret Duties argue sincerity p. 374 Security carnal will leave us ashamed at last p. 786 It is a note of pride p. 521 It 's a cause of delaying Repentance p. 408 Seducers the most dangerous Company p. 777 See a man may see and yet be blind p. 617 Seeds two seeds at enmity from the beginning p 414 326 Seeking God implies that God is not wholly gone p 927 Seeking God arises from a sence of the want of God p 11 When we find not God in one Ordinance we must seek him in others p. 12 It 's the end of our Creation ibid. To seek any thing from God above God more than God or not for God is brutish p. 13 It is a mark of election to seek God p. 14 It 's not in vain to seek God p. 13 how to seek him p. 927 Six Arguments to move us to seek God p. 14 Encouragements to seek Gods Favour p. 927 Directions for a due seeking of God p. 14 Seeking God the last way of seeking our selves p. 14 Gods Children are a Generation of seekers p. 57 58 59 922 Self-Conceit p. 296 Self-denial a main part of wisdom p. 641 Self self-fulness leaves no room for Grace p. 29 Self-seeking argues false Zeal p. 856 Self-Confidence a Reason of Apostacy p. 213 Sense of Gods goodness what it is why we must keep a sense of it p. 472 473 474 Sense and Faith are opposed p. 546 Sense of sin renders Gods Mercies exceeding great p. 994 Comforts from Sense are base and dreggy p. 593 Outward Senses betray the heart p. 278 Sense discovers the vanity of created Excellency p. 616 Senses spiritual what they are p. 671 672 How they differ from the natural Senses p. 672 673 Sentence of our State and Actions is by the judgment of the word p. 38 39 Servant of God who he is p. 289 a good Argument p. 289 Servant of God A good Plea for Deliverance why p. 610 846 611 Arguments to perswade us to clear up this Relation p. 612 637 638 Characters of Gods Servants 846 847 851 514 Shame two fold p. 36 it entred with sin p. 37●… 214 215 Shame is caused by Disappointments p. 522 785 215 216 Shame is a fear of just Reproof p. 534 We may be ashamed either before our own selves or others p. 534 and that upon the account either 1. of Scandal or 2. of punishment ibid. Sheep are creatures subject to stray p. 1099 Man compared to a sheep in several Respects p. 1101 Christ a tender Shepherd of straying sheep p. 1107 Shield God is the Shield of his people and what that imports p. 766 Sight of God to walk as in Gods sight a rule of sincerity p. 1051 It is a good means for keeping Gods Precepts ibid. Sight of Believers and Unbelievers how they differ p. 617 Sight spiritual denotes Faith p. 672 Simple Simplicity in a good or evil Sense p. 889 Sin is not imputed to the renewed p. 17 Sins incident to a condition of trouble p. 843 Sin separates from God p. 18 It is contrary to the blessed Trinity p. 20 Contrary to the New-Nature p. 21 It is of an encroaching Nature p. 21 In sin three things 1. the Fault 2. the Guilt 3. the Blot p. 21 185 Sin never goes single p. 317. v. other mens sins Sin
heard all these things and derided him They flouted at him when he hung on the Cross Matt. 27. 39 to 44. They that passed by him reviled him wagging their heads and saying Thou that destroyest the Temple and buildest it in three days save thy self if thou be the son of God come down from the Cross. Likewise also the Chief Priests mocking him with the Scribes and Elders said He saved others himself he cannot save if he be the King of Israel let him now come down from the Cross and we will believe him He trusted in God let him deliver him now if he will have him for he said I am the son of God The Thieves also which were crucified with him cast the same in his teeth So Acts 17. 32. Some mocked and said What will this Babler say Well then since it is an usual Evil which God's Children have suffered it should be the less to us Little can the Wicked say if they cannot scoff and little can we endure if we cannot abide a bad word There needs no great deal adoe to advance a Man into the Chair of Scorners if they have wickedness and boldness enough they may soon let fly 2. This as well as other Afflictions are not excepted out of our Resignation to God We must be contented to be mocked and scorned as well as to be persecuted and molested It is mentioned in the Beatitudes Matt. 5. 11. Blessed are you when men shall revile you and persecute you and say all manner of evil falsly against you for my sake 3. Railing and Calumniating will never prevaile with Rational and Conscientious Men to cause them to change their Opinions To leave the Truth because others raile at it is to consult with our Affections not our Judgments Solid Reasoning convinceth our Judgments but Railery is to our Affections and a Rational Conscientious Man is governed by an inlightened Mind not perverse and preposterous Affections Eph. 5. 17. Be ye not unwise but understanding what the will of the Lord is Therefore an Honest man will not quit Truth because others raile no he looketh to his Rule and Warrant A Man will not be railed out of Errors nay often they are the more rooted because ill-confuted 4. It is the Duty of God's Children to justify Wisedom Matt. 11. 19. Wisedom is justified of her Children What is it to justify Wisedom Justification is a Relative word opposed to Crimination so to justify is the work of an Advocate or to Condemnation so it is the work of a Judge The Children of Wisedom discharge both parts they pleade for the Ways of God and exalt them so much as others deny them they value them esteem them hold them for good and right When they are never so much condemned and the more despised the more zealous the Saints will be for them I will yet be more vile 5. Carnal men at the same time approve what they seem to condemn they hate and fear Strictness Mark 6. 20. Herod feared Iohn because he was a just man and an holy and observed him They scoff at it with their Tongues but have a fear of it in their Consciences they revile at it while they live but what mind are they off when they come to dye then all speak well of an Holy Life and the strictest Obedience to the Laws of God Numb 23. 10. Let me die the death of the righteous and let my last end be like his Matt. 25. 8. Give us of your Oyl for our lamps are gone out Oh that they had a little of that Holiness and Strictness which they scoffed at whilst they were pursuing their Lusts. How will men desire to die as carnal and careless Sinners or as mortified Saints Once more They approve it in Thesi and condemn it in Hypothesi All the Scoffers at Godliness within the Pale of the visible Church have the same Bible Baptism Creed pretend to believe in the same God and Christ which they own with those whom they oppose All the difference is the one are real Christians the other are Nominal some profess at large the others practise what they profess the one have a Religion to talk of the others to live by Once more They approve it in the Form but hate it in the Power A Picture of Christ that is drawn by a Painter they like and the forbidden Image of God made by a Carver they will reverence and honour and be zealous for but the Image of God framed by the Spirit in the hearts of the Faithfull and described in the lives of the Heavenly and the Sanctified this they scorn and scoff at 6. Their Judgment is perverse not to be stood upon They count the Children of God foolish and crack-brain'd the Crimination may be justly retorted their Way is Folly and Madness for they goe dancing to their Destruction Though there be a God by whom and for whom they were made and from whom they are fallen and that they cannot be happy but in returning to him again yet they carry it so as if there were no misery but in Bodily and Worldly things no Happiness but in pleasing the Senses The beginning progress and end of their Course is from themselves in themselves and to themselves They pour out their hearts to inconsiderable Toys and Trifles and will neither admit Information of their Errour nor Reformation of their Practice till Death destroy them They neglect their main business and leave it undone and run up and down they know not why like Children that follow a Bubble blown out of a shell of Soap till it break and dissolve Now should those that are flying from Wrath to come and seeking after God and their Happiness be discouraged because these Mad and Merry Worldlings scoff at them for their diligent Seriousness surely we should deride their Derisions and contemn their Contempt who despise God and Christ and their Salvation Should a Wise man be troubled because Mad-men raile at him if they glory in their shame Phil. 3. 19. we must not be ashamed of our Glory nor ashamed to be found praying rather then sinning If they think you fools for preferring Heaven before inconsiderable Vanities remember they can no more judge of these things then a Blind man of Colours 7. If some dishonour others will honour us who are better able to judge Psal. 15. 4. In whose eyes a vile person is contemned but he honoureth them that fear the Lord. Some have as low an Opinion of the World as the Carnal World hath of the certainty of God's Word They who labour to bring Piety and Godliness into a creditable Esteem and Reputation will pay an hearty honour and respect to every good and godly man 2 Cor. 6. 8 9. By honour and dishonour by evil report and good report as deceivers yet true as unknown yet well known as dying but behold we live as chastened and not killed contumeliously used by some and reverently by others vilified and contemned counted
Deceivers by some yet owned by others as Faithfull Dispensers of the Truth of God not esteemed and looked on by some by others owned and valued thus God dispenseth the lot of his Servants 8. A Christian should be satisfied in the Approbation of God and the Honour He puts upon him Iohn 5. 44. How can ye believe that receive honour one of another and seek not the honour that cometh from God onely If God hath taken him into his Family and hath put his Image upon him and admitted him into present Communion with him and giveth him the Testimony of his Spirit to assure him of his Adoption here and will hereafter receive him into Eternal Glory this is enough and more then enough to counterballance all the Scorn of the World and the disgrace they would put upon us If God approve us should we be dejected at the Scorn of a Fool is the Approbation of the Eternal God so small in our Eyes that every thing can weigh it down and cast the ballance with us Alas their scorning and dishonouring is nothing to the honour which God puts upon us 9. There is a time when the promised Crown shall be set upon our Heads and who will be ashamed then the Scoffer or the Serious Worshipper of Christ God is resolved to honour Christ's Faithfull Servants Iohn 12. 26. He that honoureth me him shall my Father honour He will honour us at Death that is our private entrance into Heaven but he will much more honour us more publickly at the day of Judgment when we shall be owned Rev. 3. 5. I will confess his name before my Father and before his Angels and Christ shall be admired for the glory he puts upon a poor Worm 2 Thess. 1. 10. when he shall come to be glorified in his Saints and to be admired in all them that believe The Wicked shall be reckoned with called to an account by Christ Iude 14 15. The Lord cometh with ten thousand of his Saints to execute Iudgment upon all and to convince all that are ungodly among them of all their ungodly deeds which they have ungodlily committed and of all their hard speeches which ungodly sinners have spoken against them yea judged by the Saints 1 Cor. 6. 2. Do ye not know that the Saints shall judge the world Psal. 49. 14. The upright shall have Dominion over them in the morning That is in the Morning of the Resurrection the Saints shall be assumed by God to assist in Judicature and shall arise in a glorious manner when the Earth shall give up her dead If this be not enough for us to counterballance the Scorn of the World we are not Christians Use. It is to perswade us to hold on our Course notwithstanding all the Scorns and Reproaches which are cast upon the despised wayes of God Now to this end I shall give you some Directions 1. Be sure that you are in God's Way and that you have his Law to justify your Practice and that you do not make his Religion ridiculous by putting his glorious Name upon any foolish Fancies of your own A man that differs from the rest of Christians had need of a very clear Light that he may honour so much of Christianity as is owned and may be able to vindicate his own particular way wherein he is ingaged The World is loth to own any thing of God and needless dissents justify their Prejudice I know a Christian is not infallible besides his general godly Course he may have his particular Slips and Errours yet because the World is apt to take Prejudice we should not but upon the constraining evidence of Conscience enter upon any wayes of Dissent or Contest lest we justify their general hatred of Godliness by our particular Errour 2. Take up the Ways of God without a Bias and look straight forward in a Course of Godliness Prov. 4. 25. Let thine eyes look right on and thine eye-lids straight before thee That is look not asquint upon any Secular incouragements but have thine Eye to the end of the Journey make God as thy Witness so thy Master and Judge 3. Take heed of the first Declinings God's Saints may decline somewhat in an hour of Temptation and yet be sincere in the main Now Evil is best stopped in the beginning Heb. 12. 3. Consider him that endured such contradiction of sinners lest ye be weary and faint in your mind Weariness is a lesser and Fainting an higher degree of Deficiency I am weary before I faint before the vital power retireth and leaveth the outward part senseless 4. Since the Proud scoff encounter Pride with Humility Mocking is far more grievous to the Proud who stand upon their Honour then to the Lowly and Humble Therefore be not too desirous of the applause of Men especially of the blind and ungodly World make no great matter of their Contempt and Scorn or Slander SERMON LVIII PSAL. CXIX 52. I have remembred thy Iudgments of old O Lord and have comforted my self THE Man of God had complained in the former Verse that the Proud had him greatly in Derision his help against that Temptation is recorded in this Verse where observe 1. David 's Practice I have remembred thy Iudgments of old 2. The Effect of that Meditation and have comforted my self The Explication will be by answering two Questions 1. What is meant by Mishphatim Iudgments The word is used in Scripture either for Laws enacted or Judgments executed according to those Laws The one may be called the Judgments of his Mouth as Psam 105. 5. Remember the marvellous works that he hath done his wonders and the Iudgments of his Mouth the other the Judgments of his Hand As both will bear the name of Judgments so both may be said to be of old His Decrees and Statutes which have an eternal equity in them and were graven upon the heart of Man in Innocency may well be said to be of old and because from the beginning of the World God hath been punishing the Wicked and delivering the Godly in due time his Judiciary Dispensations may be said to be so also The matter is not much whether we interpret it of either his Statutes or Decrees for they both contain matter of Comfort and we may see the ruine of the Wicked in the Word if we see it not in Providence Yet I rather interpret it of those Righteous Acts recorded in Scripture which God as a just Judge hath executed in all Ages according to the Promises and Threatnings annexed to his Laws Onely in that sense I must note to you Judgments imply his Mercies in the Deliverance of his Righteous Servants as well as his Punishments on the Wicked The seasonable interpositions of his Relief for the one in their greatest Distresses as well as his just Vengeance on the other notwithstanding their highest Prosperities 2. What is meant by Comfort Comfort is the strengthening the Heart against Evil when either 1. Faith is
feet and path First In general observe this It is not a light to our brains to fill us with empty Notions but a light to our feet to regulate our practice and to guide our actions Ier. 6. 16. He doth not say hearken after the true Religion but walk therein For a man to study the Scripture only to satisfie curiosity only to know what 's right and good and not follow it with all his heart is but to make a rod for his own back and doth but cause his own condemnation to be sore and terrible Luke 12. 47. To be able to dispute for truth and not lie under the power of it to avoid Heresie and live in Vice will never bring him to Heaven Gal. 6. 16. It is not them that are able to talk of it but to walk according to this rule not to play with it but to work with it Knowledge and practice must be joined together they do never well asunder but excellent together Secondly In our Practice 1 Our Path our general choice A man that consults with God's Word The Lord will teach him the way that he shall chuse Psal. 25. 12. Every thing appointed to an end must have all things absolutely necessary to that end else it is not perfect in its kind though perfect to guide us to eternal life therefore it must contain all things that belong or conduce to that end It is not a Rule given us to be rich or safe but to be eternally happy 2 As 't is a light to our path so to our feet How in the particular actions that we perform and in the particular conditions that we pass through 1. In the particular actions that we perform Every action we go about must be guided by the Word why because obedience in particular actions we are most apt to miscarry in Many are wise in generals but in particulars they quite mistake their way We have general Notions that we must be holy ay but we are not holy in all manner of conversation 1 Pet. 1. 15. In every creek and turning of your lives in all your actions of eating drinking sleeping and waking we are to be mindful and respect the command of God in all these No path of a Christian's conversation but ought to savor of grace and holiness not only his religious but his common and civil actions Every action is a step to Heaven or Hell for this life is compared to a walk and in a walk every step brings us onward in our way Briefly in every act either sin or grace interposeth therefore we had need look to every step and still to walk according to Rule 2. It guides us in all the conditions that we pass through In every Age here 's milk for the weak and strong meat for men of ripe age In every calling from the King to the lowest Beggar In every state of life adversity prosperity still here 's light for you There are two Parties whose interest it is to decry the clearness of Scripture Papists and Libertines Papists they are afraid to stand to this tryal they would bring all to the judgment of the Church therefore 't is for their interest that the Scriptures were not a clear safe and a full direction Libertines they decry the clearness of Scripture upon several grounds Those that plead for a boundless Toleration what 's their great Argument Nothing is certain in Religion If the Word be a clear Rule then c. SERMON CXIII PSAL. CXIX VER 105. Thy Word is a lamp unto my feet and a light unto my path HEre I shall answer five Objections that are made by Cavellers Object 1. First If it be so clear a Light why do men so often mistake that have the Scriptures and consult with them yea why is there such differences among good men Answ. I answer in general There is Light in the Scriptures but there is darkness in men that are conversant about them The Object may be well represented when the faculty is not well disposed There are defects in them to whom this discovery is made though they have light yet they want eyes the Sun giveth light enough though blind men cannot see it the Word doth whatsoever is necessary on its own part To the beholding of any thing by the outward sense there must not only be light to make the object conspicuous but also a faculty of seeing in the eye blind men cannot see at noon-day nor the sharpest sighted at midnight There is light in the Scriptures surely for God would not deal hypocritically with us that are his people if he hath given us a rule he would not wrap it up in darkness so as we should not know his meaning so that the defect is in us This in general But secondly there are many causes of mens mistake 1. Some come to the Word with a presumption of their own wit and leaning upon their own understanding as if that should discover the whole counsel of God and these God never undertook to teach Psal. 25. 9. The meek will he guide in judgment and the meek will he teach his way Those that in an humble sense of their own nothingness depend upon his direction them will he teach Iam. 1. 21. Receive with meekness the ingrafted Word of God We have caution given us and admonitions against pride and arrogance and self-dependence Prov. 3. 3 4 5 6. 2. Many bring their prejudicate Opinions along with them and are biassed and prepossessed before they come to the Word of God and so do not so much take up the sense which the Scriptures offer as seek to impose their own sense on them and regulate the Scriptures to their own hearts not regulating their hearts and principles and senses according to the Word of God Optimus ille lector est qui dictorum intelligentiam saith Hilary expectat c. That mind which is preoccupied with evil opinions and enslaved to preconceived conclusions they do not take any thing from the Word but impose something upon it which God never revealed there If the weights be equal yet if the balance be not equipendent wrong may be done They come with an Idol in their own hearts Ezek. 14. 2. as those that would ask counsel of the Lord that were resolved beforehand Ier. 42. While we look through the Spectacles of our own fancies and preconceptions the mind poisoned with Error seemeth to see what we see not 3. Some search the Scriptures not out of any love to the truth or to know the mind of God but to oppose it rather and so seek a pretence from thence to justifie their private faction in way of opposition against God The Devil gets Scripture to wrest it to his own purpose Mat. 4. 6. They read not to be better but to cavil and put a greater varnish upon the Devil's cause as Iulian did search the Scriptures to pick an advantage against the true Religion and scoff at them that profest it and
Herod enquired after the place where Jesus was born not to adore him but to kill him Mat. 2. 8. Our great Rule is Iohn 17. 17. Sanctifie them by thy truth thy Word is truth When you come to study the Scriptures to be the better for them and not to cavil then you are in the way to find profit from them 4. Some come to the Word leavened with some carnal affections and so their hearts are blinded by their lusts and passion 2 Cor. 4. 3 4. If our Gospel be hid it is hid to them that are lost In whom the God of this world hath blinded the minds of them which believe not There is evidence enough in the truth but their hearts are wedded to their sins and so cannot see it they are ambitious and seek after honour and worldly greatness and the whole bent and scope of the Scripture being against their design they can never have a perfect understanding of it their hearts are full of Avarice Earthly-mindedness and some other beloved sin that they cherish which doth defile all that they touch even the very Word of God Hagg. 2. 13. A man that was unclean by a dead body whatsoever he touched was also unclean even holy things And Tit. 1. 15. To the impure all things are impure And so by the just judgment of God are blinded and hardned in their own prejudices for the light they have hindreth them from discerning the truth 5. Some content themselves with some superficial apprehensions and do not dig deep in the Mines of knowledge and therefore no wonder they mistake in many things Prov. 2. 4 5. If thou seekest her as silver and searchest for her as for hid treasures Then shalt thou understand the fear of the Lord and find the knowledge of God No excellent things are to be had without pain and industry and search certainly the knowledge of God's Word must cost us great pains 6. Where men are right in the main and give diligence to know God's mind there will be mistakes in lesser things All have not parts alike and gifts and graces alike and therefore there is some variety of opinions and interpretations of Scripture among the godly wise Every man is not so happy to be so well studied nor hath not that ability to understand nor so furnished with acquired helps of Arts and Tongues nor such a degree of the Spirit There is a difference in age growth and experience among good men some are Babes and some grown in years in Christianity Phil. 3. 15. Grace is bewrayed in knowledge as well as in holiness Object 2. If there be such a Light in the Scriptures what need is there of the Spirit Answ. I answer The Scriptures are the means of Light the Spirit is the Author of Light both together enlighten the eyes Psal. 19. 8. These two must be taken in conjunction not in exclusion To pretend to the Spirit and neglect the Scriptures makes way for Error and fond conceits Isa. 8. 20. To the law and to the testimony if they speak not according to this Word it is because there is no light in them Light is not contrary to Light so to study the Scriptures and neglect the Spirit who searcheth out the deep things of God 1 Cor. 2. 11. leaveth us in darkness about God's mind The object to be known is fixt in the Scriptures but the faculty that knoweth must be enlightned by the Spirit There is a literal understanding of the Scriptures and a spiritual understanding 1 Cor. 2. 14. Now as to the spiritual understanding of them there needs the Spirit for the natural man cannot understand the things of the Spirit so that here is a fair correspondence between the Word and the Spirit Object 3. If the Scriptures be so plain what need the Ministry I answer Answ. 1. It is God's institution and we must submit to it though we could see no reason for it That it is God's institution it is plain for he hath set some in the Church not only Apostles and Prophets but Pastors and Teachers to apply Scriptures to us And 1 Cor. 1. 21. It pleased God by the foolishness of preaching to save them that believe If there were no reason but this because it is God's institution we should submit to it 2. The use of the Ministry is to explain and vindicate truth Men darken counsel with words and render plain things obscure by their litigations and unprofitable debates Now they are set for the defence of the truth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Phil. 1. 7. And the Ministry must be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Tit. 1. 9. Able to convince the gainsayers good at holding and drawing it is the humane help for weak understandings The Eunuch was reading and could not tell what to make of it then God sent him an Interpreter Acts 8. Now God's help should not be despised when he will employ men to salve doubts to guide us in our way to Heaven we should thankfully accept of it rather than quarrel at the institution 3. They are of use to apply Generals to particular Cases and to teach us how to deduce genuine Inferences from those truths laid down in the Scriptures Mal. 2. 7. In this sense it is said The Priests lips should preserve knowledge and they should seek the Law at his mouth for he is the messenger of the Lord of Hosts God hath appointed this office to some to solve the doubts that do arise about particular Exigences and Cases and to make out the mind of God to his People otherwise they need go no farther than the Tables and Books of Moses to seek the Law but God hath appointed some in the Church that are skill'd in consequences and deductions to raise matter therefrom so that it is a Minister's work to open and explain Scripture 4. There is a use of the Ministry to keep Doctrines still afoot in the Church and to keep us in remembrance Ministers are the Lord's remembrancers it is a great part of their office to mind People of their duty The Word is a Light but it must be set in the Candlestick of the Church they are to hold out the Light for our direction and guidance 5. There is a peculiar blessing and efficacy to a Christian from their calling Mat. 28. 20. Lo I am with you to the end of the world Object 4. It is said 2 Pet. 3. 16. That there are some things hard to be understood therefore how should it be a clear Rule to us Thereupon many take occasion to tax the Scriptures of obscurity and cry out that nothing is certain in Religion and so hinder and discourage men from the study of the Word Answ. 1. I answer The Apostle saith there are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 some things hard to be understood but doth not say there are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 things that cannot be understood not there are things impossible to be understood but there 's some difficulty in