Selected quad for the lemma: truth_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
truth_n word_n worship_v year_n 35 3 4.3822 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A53569 Twenty sermons preached upon several occasions by William Owtram ...; Sermons. Selections Owtram, William, 1626-1679.; Gardiner, James, 1637-1705. 1682 (1682) Wing O604; ESTC R2857 194,637 508

There are 6 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

keep silence in the Church Now here I cannot but observe the most insufferable contradiction of the practice of the Roman Church to the Apostles determination The Apostles you see would not allow that the prayers of the Church should be uttered in an unknown tongue but there they pray in a tongue unknown unto the people The Apostle would not allow this no not in them who spake by immediate Inspiration they practise contrary to the Apostles express Decree and that where no such Inspiration can be pretended with the least appearance and shew of reason The Apostle supposes no man edified by the prayers which he doth not understand they either judge that a man may be edified by such prayers or that they may be duly used although the Church be not edified by them both which expresly contradict the Apostle If the Church of Rome be in the right then the Apostle is mistaken if the Apostle be not mistaken the Church of Rome doth grosly erre in judging such prayers edifie which St. Paul affirms cannot edifie or in judging them fit to be used in the Church although they do not edifie at all And is it not now a wonderful thing that they who so grosly so expresly contradict the Doctrine of Sr. Paul should boast themselves to be infallible Is it not yet a greater wonder that any who have had the education where the Scriptures are read in a known tongue should suffer themselves to be overborn into a belief that they are infallible who erre in so plain and clear an instance and in a thing of such concernment Certainly if men were not infatuated by most unreasonable lusts and passions they would never apostatize never adhere to such a Church as sound nay infallible in all her Doctrines who uses its publick Prayers and Offices in a tongue unknown unto the people a thing so contrary to common sense and to the practice of primitive times and to what the Apostle himself teaches in as full and clear and express words as any thing possibly can be spoken 2. But to proceed to the second kind of the extraordinary gift of prayer which was when a man received all the conceptions in prayer from an immediate Inspiration but so far used his understanding as to contrive the expression of them into a tongue known to them that heard him and into plain and easie expressions in that tongue Concerning this I must observe that it was a gift of the Holy Ghost peculiar to the Apostles times or at least to those that immediately followed as the rest of those miraculous powers and gifts were which God did then bestow on the Church to confirm the truth of Christianity I do not deny but that God doth still in some cases suggest to the minds of good men that is convenient for their condition and what it is they should pray for I do not deny but that when they fall into such straits as that they know not what it is best to pray for God doth direct and guide their minds by the assistance of his Spirit For as there is need of such assistance in such cases so God denies not what is needful to such persons And this is the meaning of the Apostle Rom. 8.26 Likewise also the Spirit helpeth our infirmities for we know not what to pray for as we ought He speaks in this place of times of great distress and danger when the Christians were often in such perplexities and doubts of mind that they knew not what to pray for at least with faith and resignation entire resignation to Gods will Now here it was that the Spirit of God directed them to pray for such things and in such a manner as might tend effectually to Gods glory though to their sufferings in the world And thus far I doubt not may we expect the like assistance of Gods Spirit in the like cases if we heartily pray for it But now for any man in these days to expect an immediate Inspiration of all the conceptions of a prayer such as the Apostles arid Prophets had in the primitive times of Christianity for any man to pretend to pray by the same immediate Revelation Whereby they prayed in the Christian Churches is a very groundless and great presumption And therefore when you hear men pray with a great torrent and flow of words you are not presently to imagine as divers ignorant persons do that such a man prays by an immediate Inspiration that what he speaks is just then dictated and suggested by the Holy Ghost as things were suggested to the Apostles unless he could also speak with tongues and heal the sick and cure the lame and in a word do such Miracles as they did and give the same proof of his Inspiration which they did evidently give of theirs which is a thing that is not done by any that now pretend unto it and therefore shews the pretence is vain and the Pretender to be deceived if not a cheat and Impostor likewise Is there then no way in these days whereby a man may truly be said to pray by the Spirit in the sense and language of the Scriptures and that in ordinary and common cases Yes that there is For 2. Such is that other way of praying which I have before mentioned to you which is when a man prays in the use of Faith and Hope and all the Graces of Gods Spirit and with such pious and good affections as are the effects of those Graces though not by immediate Inspiration that is to say the immediate dictate of the Spirit Such is the prayer our Saviour supposes in those words Joh. 4.24 God is a Spirit and they that worship him must worship him in spirit and in truth not carelesly and without attention not without the affections of the heart and inward sense of the mind and spirit as the Jews had worshipped him in former Ages but fervently heartily and sincerely Such is the prayer the Apostle mentions Eph. 6.18 where he requires them to pray always with all prayer and supplication in the Spirit that is with spiritual and holy minds with fervent and devout affections Like whereunto was that singing also which he represents in these words Speaking to your selves in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs singing and making melody in your hearts Eph. 5.19 Where you plainly see that the holy offices wherein the heart was moved and affected are said to be spiritual on that account See also Col. 3.16 Now concerning this way of praying by the Spirit wherein men pray in the use of Faith and with real and hearty and devout affections though not by immediate Inspiration I shall observe several things 1. That this way or manner of praying is grateful and acceptable to God This is in truth such a worship of God as our Saviour himself did understand when he said that they that worship God must worship him in spirit and truth This is the worship that God requires and therefore
judgment in them is not only the cure of Ignorance the first disease of the understanding but what is more than I said at first a powerful and a sovereign medicine to the distempers of our wills to all our inordinate lusts and passions Secondly Let us now proceed to the second malady of our minds from which it is a like deliverance and that is Scepticism and suspense in things both evident and useful to us for general assurance and general doubt to believe every thing and nothing at all are equal distempers of the mind although of very different kinds the one proceeding from vain confidence the other from the weak suspicions of a shattered and broken understanding There are some men that can make themselves believe any thing even that their senses are deceived though duly applyed to their proper objects and yet pretend the proof of this from a Doctrine which being grounded on miracle the proper object of our senses is grounded upon the truth of sense So do they that believe the Doctrine of Transubstantiation others had rather deceive themselves by the Sophistry of their own wits in nice and uncertain speculations than content or owne themselves to be ignorant in things the knowledge whereof is useless But then as it cannot be denied that this is a levity of understanding to pretend certainty in things uncertain So is it a more unhappy weakness and a greater craziness of understanding to doubt and suspend in those things which are both evident and useful likewise A man may doubt in things impertinent to life and happiness without any danger or fear either because he neither really is nor judges himself concerned in them but if he be doubtful in those things wherein his greatest concernments lie if he question the difference of good and evil if he call Divine Revelation in question if he doubt of the very truth of the Gospel if he scruple what Christ hath brought to light eternal life and immortality if he be under suspense and fear what is the way to life immortal if he question what he shall be hereafter happy or miserable or neither of both that is as the very brute that perishes if he be held in suspense and doubt of such important things as these what reelings and fluctuations of mind what anxieties and pangs of heart what irresolution in life and practice must these uncertainties bring upon him This is part of that very bondage from which our Saviour came to free us who was made partaker of flesh and blood that through death he might destroy him that had the power of death that is the Devil and deliver them who through fear of death were all their life time subject to bondage Heb. 2.15 Which very deliverance Christ hath wrought by the clear discovery and certain proof of life eternal and all the means of attaining to it for so hath he given us a firm foundation of clear and certain and stable judgment both in our duties and rewards and so delivered the minds of men from the bondage of suspense and doubt in their only true and great concernments Thirdly Now for the vanity of the mind in applying itself to useless things the last disease of the understanding this also is effectually cured by the approbation of things excellent that is to say by sound judgment in all our duties and rewards for such a judgment cannot fall to divert our thoughts from needless things from vain speculations from idle subtilties from trivial questions from angry contentions and disputes about impertinent and useless things the itch whereof hath been an epidemical disease in the minds and understandings of men in most ages and professions in the Philosophers among the heathen in the Pharisees among the Jews in the Schoolmen among the Christians to say nothing of the Mahometan imposture which is a trifle from beginning to end multitudes of volumes have been written upon impertinent and trivial subjects multitudes of Libraries hive been filled with troublesome and unuseful rubbish with the ruines of humane understanding for all the vanity we find in books was first of all in the minds of men It was the complaint of one of the greatest of the heathen that all the Philosophers before Socrates imployed their studies in the speculation of those things which were of very small concernment and did not only all that while neglect the culture of life and manners but left the very things they studied in the same obscurity they found them in Socrates indeed made an attempt to transfer knowledge from useless things into the lives and manners of men and certainly the attempt was great but the success was not such but that still many professours of wisdom mispent their studies in useless trifles and obscurities the knowledge whereof made no man better nor ignorance any man ever the worse The same disease hath long reign'd among the Jews those of their writings that are most trifling fable in history and tattle in dispute so is their very Talmud itself are most of all valued amongst them This first began amongst the Pharisees and was so infections in that Nation and so difficult to be removed when it had once seized the mind that several Proselytes to Christianity abused themselves and troubled others with foolish questions and genealogies and contentions and strivings about the law which the Apostle reprehends as unprofitable and vain Tit. 3.9 These are the men whom he describes 1 Tim. 6.4 5. who were proud knowing nothing doting about questions and strifes of words whereof cometh envy strife railings evil surmizings perverse disputings of men of corrupt minds and destitute of the truth where by the way we may observe that they that made the greatest pretence of striving for truth lost piety nay truth itself while they pretended to strive for it Now I will not say that the same dust hath been raised by the Schoolmen among the Christians that the same vanity and curiosity hath had all the same effects But this I think I may aver that whatsoever wit the Schoolmen shew in the subjects whereupon they treat the choice of many of those subjects demonstrates a strange want of judgment But to what purpose is this discourse To clear the use to shew the necessity of sound judgment in the things the Apostle styles excellent in things pertinent to life and happiness which very judgment is in itself an effectual cure of all this vanity of understanding that diverts the mind from its proper food from solid useful pertinent truth from the knowledge of God and of our selves to trivial disputes and speculations which after all a man's pains and studies leave his mind vain and empty his temper proud and supercilious and his life for any thing gained by them utterly unreform'd and vitious So is not he that stedily approves the things that are excellent for the very excellency of these things throughly digested and approved clears his thoughts and feeds his mind and calms
reason is because our Saviour in his following discourse in this Chapter takes no notice of matter of history or prediction but only of matter of Law and Precept 2. And then further as the Law and the Prophets signifie the precepts delivered in the Books of the Old Testament so when our Lord assures his hearers that he came not to destroy those precepts his meaning is that he did not come to thwart or oppose or contradict them or any thing which God designed in them for so is the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 taken in several places of the Scripture 3. And lastly when he further adds that he came to fulfil those precepts his sense necessarily must be this that he came to advance and improve or accomplish whatsoever God intended in them Having now sufficiently cleared the sense of the words before us I shall proceed to shew the truth of the several parts contained in them 1. And first of all of the negative part I am not come to destroy the Law or the Prophets 2. And secondly of that which is affirmative But I am come to fulfil them In my discourse on both which parts it will be convenient to consider the several kinds of Laws or Precepts given to the Jews Moral Ceremonial and Judicial apart or severally by themselves 1. And to begin with the negative part plain it is 1. In the first place That our Lord did no way contradict any moral precept of the Law but left his followers under perpetual obligations to obey all precepts of that kind All things saith he whatsoever you would that men should do to you do ye even so to them for this is the Law and the Prophets Matt. 7.12 Where we find him confirming that general rule which the Law and Prophets had delivered touching our duty towards our neighbours and consequently setling all particular acts of duty which the moral Law required toward them by the confirmation of that rule The same is done as to our duties both to God and man Matt. 22.37 39. where he establishes and approves the two great commands of the Law that we love God with all our heart and with all our mind and that we love our neighbour as our selves whereunto he presently adds these words on these two commandments hang all the Law and the Prophets These were the things which the Law and Prophets aimed at in all their precepts and exhortations and these hath Christ confirmed and ratified but no way prejudiced by the Gospel I say not now how much more holy rules of life our Lord hath given in several cases than were given by the Law or Prophets of that I shall give an account anon all that I now observe unto you is that an addition of higher precepts of obedience was no destruction or violation of those that were not so high as they but really an improvement of them just as the growth of a child to a man is no destruction but an improvement of the person or as a greater degree of vertues includes but doth not destroy the less from whence I conclude that although our Lord hath added perfecter rules of holiness than the Law or the Prophets had delivered yet he did not destroy them by so doing but further improved what they designed But the great difficulty doth not lie in reconcileing our Saviours words I came not to destroy the Law or the Prophets with what he did as to the moral part of the Law but with what befel its other branches namely the ceremonial and judicial both which parts fell to the ground after his coming into the World and what he did and suffered in it and yet in truth he did not destroy either of them in the sense wherein destruction is taken in these words that is to say he did not oppose or contradict them or otherwise behave himself toward them than was suitable to the mind and will of the Law-giver 2. He did not violate much less oppose any precept of the ceremonial Law but caused the Law it self to cease not by any opposition to it but by removeing all occasion of any further use of it as the Laws of war are not violated but cease and take no place in peace He introduced that very thing which the ceremonial Law designed the introduced the life and substance of those things which were foreshadowed in that Law and so he made it cease and vanish not by opposing or contradicting but by accomplishing the end of it as it will further appear to you when I shall shew how he fufilled it 3. Nor lastly did our Lord destroy that is violate or contradict the judicial part of Moses his Law namely the Law of the Jewish State for that Law fell of it self in the Jewish Common-wealth when the City of Jerusalem was destroyed when the generality of the people were carried away into captivity when the whole Government was dissolved and the Country became a Roman Province there was an end of that Common-wealth and so an end of those Laws whereby that Common-wealth was governed For the Laws of the Jewish Common-wealth were not given save only to the people of the Jews nor were they designed to continue longer than the Common-wealth it self continued so that when this was once dissolved those also fell of their own accord without any violation offered unto them by our Saviour from all which several considerations it plainly appears that he did not come to destroy or opose the Law or the Prophets or any precept contained in them and that he did not behave himself to either of them as one that came to oppose or thwart them So careful was he to give no scandal to create no real offence to the Jews by contradicting in any precepts moral ceremonial or judicial which the Law or the Prophets had established 2. Having shewed the truth of the negative part of our Saviours words which is that he came not into the World to destroy either the Law or the Prophets let us now proceed to give an account of the other part wherein he affirms that he came to fulfil them that is as I have before explained it to improve and accomplish what they contained and what was mainly designed in them And here proceeding in that method which I have used in the former part 1. I first observe that our blessed Lord fulfilled the moral part of the Law by giving stricter rules of holiness than either Moses or the Prophets had formerly given unto the Jews according to the received sense amongst the best of their Interpreters and no doubt in several cases stricter than Moses himself design'd and this is the sense wherein St Chrysostom and Tertullian and divers others of the ancient Christians affirm our Saviour to have fulfilled the moral Law as well as by personal obedience to it They teach that he filled up those vacuities that Moses had left in moral duties because the Jews were not able to bear them
by adding higher rules of holiness for as he established the New Covenant upon better promises than those the Old was built upon so he gave sublimer and higher precepts than those that were given in the Old If the Law and the Prophets forbad murder murder committed by the hand our Saviour stifled it in the heart for he hath forbiden causeless anger I say unto you whosoever is angry with his Brother without a cause shall be in danger of the judgment Matt. 5.22 If Moses condemned adultery in the body our Lord condemns the very impurity of the mind and styles it the adultery of the heart ye have heard that it hath been said by them of old thou shalt not commit adultery but I say unto you that whosoever looketh on a woman to lust after her hath committed adultery with her already in his heart v. 27 28. If the Law of Moses allowed divorce upon small disgusts and animosities our blessed Lord doth not allow it save only in the case of Adultery which is the peculiar and proper breach of matrimonial obligation v. 32. of the same Chapter If the Law allowed a retaliation of evil for evil an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth our Lord hath forbidden us to resist evil v. 39. that is to say to revenge it for not to resist the evil done us is to give place to the wrath of our Enemy and this is the same as not to avenge it and so we learn from St Paul's words Rom. 12.19 Dearly beloved avenge not your selves but rather give place unto wrath for it is written vengeance is mine I will repay saith the Lord. If the Law and the Prophets forbad perjury our Lord hath forbidden all swearing in our common and ordinary conversation let your communication be yea yea nay nay for whatsoever is more than these cometh of evil v. 37. If the Law allowed to hate an Enemy that is to say any person of the seven Nations whom God had devoted to destruction our blessed Lord hath commanded us to love our Enemies I say unto you love your Enemies bless them that curse you do good to them that hate you and pray for them that despitefully use you and persecute you v. 44. of the same Chapter Thus hath he fulfilled the moral Law by filling up several vacuities that Moses was forced to leave in it in condescension unto the Jews and to the hardness of their hearts and by adding higher rules of holiness than the Law or the Prophets had delivered 2. Now to proceed in the second place to the ceremonial part of the Law this did our Lord fulfil likewise and that also two several ways 1. By personal obedience to it and all the rights therein enjoyned whereunto he freely became subject He was circumcised the eighth day according as that Law enjoyned he was redeemed by a certain price being a Son and a First-born he observed the feasts prescribed in the Law yea and that of the dedication also although but of humane institution as appears in the history of the Gospel he did and permitted to be done in and upon his own Person whatsoever it was that Law required whence he is said to have been made of a woman made under the Law that is to say subject to all its Rites and Ceremonies Gal. 4.4 2. But secondly there is another way wherein our Lord fulfilled the ritual part of the Law which was by accomplishing all those things and introduceing all those graces which were typically figured and shadowed in it That had a shadow of good things to come and not the very Image of the things that is to say not the things themselves Heb. 10.1 and so is the word effigies taken by no worse an Author than Tully himself nos solidam et expressan effigiem virtutis nullam tenemus but Christ introduced the very things which were foreshadowed in that Law His Priesthood was antitype to that of Aaron his Sacrifice to the Sacrifices of the Law his entrance into heaven it self to appear in the presence of God for us to the High Priests entrance into the Holy of Holies on the solemn day of expiation the expiation made by his Sacrifice to that which was made by those of the Law the spiritual purity of the Gospel to the legal washings and purification and abstinences from things then impure the eternal rest that he hath prepared for the people of God to the Jewish Sabbaths and new moons all which things were only shadows of things to come and so the Apostle himself assures us Col. 2.16 17. Let no man therefore judge you in meat or drink or in respect of an holy day or of the new moon or of the Sabbath days which are a shadow of things to come but the body is of Christ that is to say Christ introduced the things themselves which were but shadowed in the Law by typical figures and similitudes which is likewise the meaning of these words John 1.17 The Law was given by Moses but grace and truth came by Jesus Christ he brought in the very life and substance of what was but pictured in the Law and thus he fulfilled the ritual part of Moses his Law as well as personal obedience to it 3. Now for the judicial part of the Law whereby the Jewish State was governed I need not say how our Lord fulfilled it by submitting himself both to the Roman and Jewish Magistrate He was contented to pay tribute he suffered himself to be apprehended by the Officers sent to this purpose he suffered himself to be tried and sentenced and yielded himself to the Execution of the sentence unjustly passed upon him and though he could not owne the guilt yet did he quietly receive the punishment for he was led as a lamb to the slaughter and as a sheep before her shearers is dumb so opened he not his mouth Isa 53.7 But the way whereby he did more especially fulfil the judicial Law of Moses was by introducing the royal Law of universal love and kindness which if observed would more effectually attain the end of humane Laws than all the wisdom force or power which can accompany and attend them The end of all political Laws is only the safety and the prosperity of the Common-wealth that men may live in mutual peace that every man may possess and enjoy his life and estate and reputation and whatsoever belongs unto him without the trouble of fraud or violence from other persons all which ends would more sucessfully be attained by the Law of universal love peculiarly setled by our Lord than by the wisest of humane Laws and the strictest execution of them those can but bind the outward man they cannot change the hearts of men those can but tie the hands of violence and muzzle the mouth of the wild beast they cannot alter and mend his nature nor make him further abstain from injury than the fear of punishment and revenge may put a restraint
R. White Sculp ●ELMUS OUTRAMUS S.T.P. S ti Petri apud Westmonasterienses Canonicus TWENTY SERMONS PREACHED upon Several Occasions BY WILLIAM OWTRAM D.D. Prebendary of Westminster and one of his MAJESTIES Chaplains in Ordinary Printed after the Authors own Copies LONDON Printed by J. M. for Richard Chiswell at the Rose and Crown in St Paul's Church-Yard 1682. TO THE READER Reader IT is well known that the Author of these following Sermons could never he prevailed upon either by the Intreaty of his Friends or the Authority of his Superiours though very much urged by both to publish any of his Sermons in Print and his nearest Relations would have paid that respect to him in this as in all other things to have denyed them to the Publick for the sake of his own Judgment in this matter had not a forward Bookseller only to serve the ends of his own profit thrust out into the World Six Sermons under his name not many Months after his Death To promote the Sale of which he indeavours in an Epistle before them to make the Reader believe that although as he confesses they were taken from the Author by a Short-hand-man many years since yet they were allowed and corrected by himself That they were agreeable to his sense And that there was no other more perfect Copy to be procured If all this had been true What right had the Bookseller and his Short-hand Friend by this to publish them in the name of this Author Did the Author Correct them for the Press Or is it sufficient to justifie the publishing of such Discourses under a Mans name because they are agreeable to his sense Or if no other Copy could be procured was it therefore necessary to publish this But this pretence was so far from being true that whosoever has been abused by this Publisher so much as to buy and look into those Sermons will find that they are so far from being Corrected by the Hand of this Author that they were never Corrected by any That they are so far from being agreeable to his sense that in very many places they are no sense at all And the Publisher knows very well that he never inquired of any of the Authors Relations for any Copies or Papers remaining in their hands If he had he might have been shewed Three Sermons upon the first Text Heb. 10.38 whereas he has published but Two of them and those two put together as one and that so imperfect so incoherent and so ungrammatical that the Reader must be very kind if he would excuse the Author in many places as well as the Printer One might point to mistakes in almost every Page some of which are very absurd and intolerable But in regard some Friends of the Authors have thought fit to collect a Volume of his Sermons upon Theological Subjects amongst which it will be most proper to insert these upon the 10th of the Hebrews concerning the Life of Faith in connection with other Discourses of Faith it is sufficient to acquaint the Reader that these shall be reprinted after the Authors own Copy In like manner the Publisher if he had consulted the Authors Friends might have seen that the Second and Third Sermons of Providence upon St. Matt. 10.29 are but a part of his Discourses upon that Subject which it will be most proper to put together and publish if at all in a Volume of the Attributes of God upon which the Author has several Sermons But besides that these are but apart of his Meditations upon Providence they are also very broken and imperfect in many places though the Short-hand-man has endeavoured according to his skill in Divinity to supply and fill them up Of the three following two of them cannot yet be found amongst the Authors Papers so that it is very doubtful whether they be his or no and therefore the Publisher besides the wrong he has done the Author and the World too in exposing his labours imperfectly has also very probably fathered upon him those that are none of his The just indignation which the Authors Friends have taken to this injurious dealing of the Publisher together with Reports brought frequently to their ears of a design of other persons to publish other of his Sermons inclined them though they are sensible against the Authors own opinion to set forth a Volume at present according to his own Copies And these Twenty being lately preached upon particular occasions and some of them in the most august and solemn Audience and all of them designed to obviate the evils of the Age and to secure Men in the belief and practice of the true Religion are thought not improper to be first offered to the publick view The Author was sensible by what Artifices what degrees and what parties of Men this most excellent constitution of the Church of England is endeavoured to be undermined and denying to no Man the liberty of Disquisition and Discourse he understood the strength both of their Arguments and their Interest And the Reader may discern by these Sermons that he apprehended our danger to arise of late from a confederacy it may be one cannot say but a complication of enemies Papists Libertines and Dissenters but chiefly from the first who imploy the two latter to work under them and to weaken the Church of England one by Prophaneness and the other by Separation that so they may argue against the sufficiency of our constitution to maintain good Life and preserve Unity and dispose those who are of no Religion and no Church to become Proselytes to theirs Amongst the Libertines may be reckoned that sort of Men who though indeed they have natural conviction of a supreme Being pretend to more wit than to be satisfied with the Authority of our Blessed Saviour and so because they have no good opinion of the Truth of his Religion they neglect Religion in general for what Theist was ever known to live according to the Principles of natural Religion to which notwithstanding he owns himself obliged For the Dissenters they have many different Opinions amongst themselves some of which are here taken notice of either ex proposito in some Sermons or by the by in others So that the whole Collection is an Antidote Very seasonable for the malignity of the Age and by the blessing of God may have some profitable effect from the Press as by the testimony of the Hearers they had from the Pulpit and they are offered to the world for that end not as a Character of the great abilities of the Author and his great Accomplishments in almost all kinds of Science but as an instance of his Zeal for the Truth and goodness of the Christian Religion in general and the Church of England in particular especially in this juncture His extraordinary skill in Rabbinical Learning and the use and service of it to the Confirmation and Illustration of the Christian Theology he has made appear to the learned World
some years since with great propriety and accuracy of style in his Book De Sacrificiis wherein he hath also given a proof of his profound skill in the highest points of the Divine Wisdom But what his abilities were in other parts both of Divine and Humane Knowledge he had not leisure enough from his Ministerial labours to let the world know Nor have I ability to make it sensible how great they were or to represent the Gravity Sobriety Simplicity Truth and plainness of his Conversation his Devotion to God and his Charity to the Neighbourhood especially the sick and afflicted His indefatigable Industry in his private Studies as well as in the publick offices of his Profession and his readiness to impart and communicate the effects of his mighty pains and industry to his Friends His Civility and Beneficence to Learned Foreigners His Respect and Reverence to his Superiors together with his Humility and Candor to his Equals and Inferiors Which excellent Vertues as they rendred him very valuable and useful to the world whilst he was alive so they will imbalm his memory now he is dead All that needs further to he added is to beg thy pardon Reader for the Errata of the Press which are too many and to desire that if a Sermon of the Authors upon the Sin against the Holy Ghost or any other be in thine or any other hand that thou knowest thou would please to restore or send notice of it to the Printer that it may be inserted in another Collection TEXTS OF THE SERMONS SERMON I. Isaiah xxxiij 6. And Wisdom and Knowledge shall be the stability of thy Times Fol. 1 SERMON II. Psalm lxviij 28. Strengthen O God that which thou hast wrought for us fol. 33 SERMON III. Philip. i. 27 28. That ye stand fast in one Spirit with one mind striving together for the Faith of the Gospel and in nothing terrified by your Adversaries fol. 60 SERMON IV. St Matth. vi 23. If therefore the Light that is in thee be Darkness How great is that Darkness fol. 89 SERMON V. St Matth. xvi 18. And the Gates of Hell shall not prevail against it fol. 110 SERMON VI. 1 Cor. xiv 15. What is it then I will pray with the Spirit and I will pray with the understanding also fol. 129 SERMON VII 1 John iij. 3. And every Man that hath this hope in him purifieth himself even as He is pure fol. 149 SERMON VIII Galat. v. 13. Ye have been called unto Liberty only use not your Liberty for an occasion to the flesh fol. 171 SERMONS IX X. St Luke xij 1. Beware ye of the Leaven of the Pharisees which is Hypocrisie fol. 194.216 SERMON XI St John xiv 1. Ye believe in God Believe also in me fol. 237 SERMON XII Philip. i. 10. That ye may approve things that are excellent fol. 261 SERMON XIII St John vij 17. If any Man will do his Will he shall know of the Doctrine whether it be of God or whether I speak of my self fol. 290 SERMON XIV Malachi i. 6. If then I be a Father where is mine honour And if I be a Master where is my fear fol. 309 SERMON XV. St Matth. v. 17. Think not that I am come to destroy the Law or the Prophets I am not come to destroy but to fulfil fol. 334 SERMON XVI Psal cxix 59 60. I thought on my ways and turned my feet unto thy Testimonies I made haste and delayed not to keep thy Commandments fol. 355. SERMONS XVII XVIII 1 John iij. 7. Little Children let no Man deceive you he that doth Righteousness is Righteous even as he is Righteous fol. 390.411 SERMON XIX St Luke xvi 8. For the Children of this World are in their Generation wiser than the Children of Light fol. 432. SERMON XX. St Matth. vi 21. For where your Treasure is there will your heart be also fol. 453 The First Sermon ISAIAH 33.6 And wisdom and knowledge shall be the stability of thy times The whole verse is thus And wisdom and knowledge shall be the stability of thy times and strength of salvation The fear of the Lord is his Treasure ALthough the effects of the great calamities which we have suffered in this Nation namely those of a raging Pestilence a devouring Fire several grievous and bloody Wars be in some measure now removed yet were the minds and thoughts of men never more disturbed or more uneasie than now they are The reason hereof seems especially to be this namely that most desperate Plot which was designed to murder our Prince and to overthrow our Laws our Liberties our Religion our Spiritual as well as our Temporal welfare This and the fears that it hath awakened sit so close upon mens hearts and give such sensible apprehensions of future troubles and calamities that we enjoy not what we have we find no ease or satisfaction in any thing which we as yet possess We have indeed a Peace at present but it is unsetled and uncertain we have a Religion and that reformed according to the word of God but it is dangerously undermined We have good Laws to preserve our Liberties and just Rights but know not how long we may retain them we have a good and fruitful Land but are not without all apprehensions of dispossession or at least of great disturbance in it Which things being so it should seem our present fears and troubles arise not so much from the sense of any present want as from the uncertainty of what we have not from the evils we feel at present but those we fear may fall upon us that is to say from the instability of the times This was the thing which cast my thoughts upon the words I have now read and made them seem to be suitable to the present occasion Now these seem to have been delivered after Sennacherib had spoiled Hezekiah of his treasures to make conditions of Peace with him but before his Army made its approaches toward Jerusalem which it seems it did in a little time after the making of that Peace as may appear 2 Kings 18.13 14 15 16 17. Which false dealing of Sennacherib is noted and censured by the Prophet in the beginning of this Chapter Isaiah 33.1 Woe to thee that spoilest and thou wast not spoiled and dealest treacherously and they dealt not treacherously with thee The case in short seems to be thus Sennacherib had invaded Judah assaulted and taken the fenced cities as it is recorded 2 Kings 18.13 He so distressed both Hezekiah and his people that he freely offered to submit to what conditions Sennacherib would please to impose upon him Return from me says Hezekiah and that which thou puttest on me I will bear v. 14. These conditions were so hard being no less than three hundred talents of Silver and thirty talents of Gold that he was constrained to make them good by giving Sennacherib as well the treasures of the Temple all the Silver found in the House of the