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

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full assurance of understanding The best have but a fluctuating doubting knowledge of spiritual Truths Not a full assurance and Perswasion of them Therefore we need to ask Establishment Thirdly consider the Utility and Profit of it when once the Word is established to us we shall know how to Live and how to Dye and upon what terms to maintain Comfort and Holiness whereas otherwise men Live loosly and carelesly 4. Heb. 2. The Word Profited not not being mixed with Faith in them that heard it Until the word of God be owned as it is a divine and infallible Truth it hath no Efficacy upon us When it is received meerly by Conjecture as a Possible truth it works but weakly I but then it profits when we receive the word of God as the Word of God as a certain truth when the soul comes to determine surely these are truths in which I am deeply concerned upon which my eternal Life or Death doth depend without this God can have no service and we no Comfort but are at a great uncertainty of Spirit On the other side let me tell you that all our Coldness in Duty and all our Boldness in sinning it comes from unbelief 1. Our Coldness in Duty What 's the reason when God offereth such great things to us as the eternal enjoyment of himself Glory Comfort and Happiness as much as heart can wish that men are so dead hearted liveless and careless in the ways of God when our work is so good our ways so Excellent what 's the reason of all our Coldness and Carelesness in the Profession of Religion We have not a lively Sense of Eternity we do not bellive God upon his word if we did it would put Life into us Saith the Apostle 3 Phil. 14. This one thing I mind and I press towards the work Why For the prize of the high calling of God in Iesus Christ. When we mind our work seriously and above all other things not superficially and by the By when we can see the prize of our high calling as to run and hold the eye upon the mark then he presseth onward that he may not lose the garland So when we feel the rewards of Grace when we are perswaded of them this puts Spirit into us and encourageth us against all deadness and faintness I press on ward then with a great deal of vehemency and earnestly So 1 Cor. 15. 58. Be ye stedfast and unmoveable always abounding in the work of the Lord here is the description of a Godly man How shall we do to keep the heart in such an earnest frame By a sound Belief of the Promises for so it follows for as much as you know that your Labour shall not be in vain in the Lord If holiness doth not flourish there is a Worm at the Root Atheism and Unbelief lies at the heart and the want of such an assent to those great and glorious Promises which God hath made known to us in Christ. 2. Our boldness in sinning Why do men go on securely in ways of disobedience against God because they do not know whether the Word be true yea or no. If a man had Heaven and Hell in his Eye if he were soundly perswaded of these things certainly he would not venture the loss of Heaven for a trifle and would not upon such small temptations run the hazard of everlasting torments You cannot drive an ass the most stupid creature into the fire which is burning before his eyes So if these things were before our eyes we would not be so bold with God and so daring as we are Temptation to sin must needs prevail with us when we have not Faith for when the Temptation is strong and Faith weak where are we A man will yield to his base Lusts for there is present profit present pleasure and we have no undoubted certainty of the rewards of obedience and of the promises which are to be set against the Temptation But now when we consider we have so great and precious Promises this will make us cleanse our selves from all filthiness of flesh and Spirit we will not easily sin against God kick against the pricks and run upon danger laid before our eyes In vain is the snare laid in the sight of a Bird. Use 1. To reprove us for looking so little after the establishment of the Word There are many that content themselves with a loose profession of the name of Christ but are not established in a sound Belief of the Scriptures Ask them why they are of this and that Religion They have been taught so been brought up in it and so they might have been Mahometans upon the same account that they are Christians if they had been bred there where the name of Mahomet is of more request than the name of Christ. But then there are others that live by guess and carry on some natural Devotion but their Souls were never acquainted with the mystery of Grace never soundly established in it they have a conjecture There are others that can dispute for their Religion that see a reasonableness in the Christian Faith and why they should be of this Opinion rather than that I but their hearts were never subdued to God Hath the Spirit established Divine truths upon thy Soul and wrought these things upon thy heart hath it convinced thy Judgment awakned thy Conscience changed thy heart given thee any taste of Gods love in Christ drawn thee out of the World into near and sweet Communion with God truths are by him establisht to us and represented with evidence and power 1 Cor. 2. 4. Alas all else we can attain to is but cold and fruitless notion which will not warm the heart some cursory opinions that will not hold thy heart under the awe of God and guide thee in the paths of Holiness to eternal Life and therefore rest not in this that you have some knowledge concerning Christ and priviledges by him But are your hearts established have you a sence of these truths wrought in you by the Holy Ghost Use 2. It exhorteth us to use the means whereby the Word may be established 1. Chiefly observe Experiences how it is accomplished in the course of Gods Providence and inward feeling of thy own heart What answers of Prayer have you when you have been wrestling with God and putting his Promises in Suit at the Throne of Grace Every day God is fulfilling one Promise or another to train us up to look for more at his hands That we may trust him for our Inheritance and our final Blessing he first giveth us a proof of his Truth in lesser matters The more you observe the dealings of God with your own Souls and the fulfilling his Word to you the more will your heart be confirmed against Atheism and established in the belief of the Divine Authority of the Scripture It concerns us much to look to this that our hearts be firmly setled against Atheism especially when
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
but this is a continual Feast a Dish we are never weary of Now who have this Feast the crooked the subtle the deceitful No but those that walk with a simple and plain-hearted honesty 2 Cor. 1. 12. This is our rejoycing the testimony of our Consciences that in simplicity and godly sincerity we have had our conversations in the world They have comfort in all conditions Acts 24. 16. Herein do I exercise my self always to keep a Conscience void of offence towards God and towards men Others are like Trees of the Forest every wind shaketh them but they are the Garden of God Cant. 4. 16. Awake O North Wind blow O South Wind upon my Garden that the Spices thereof may flow out Out of what Corner soever the wind bloweth it bloweth good to them Secondly Partly from the many promises of God both as to the world to come and this present life For the world to come the Question is put Psal. 15. 1. and it were well we would often put it to our hearts Lord who shall abide in thy Tabernacle Who shall dwell in thy Holy Hill 'T is answered He that walketh uprightly and worketh righteousness and speaketh the truth with his heart that backbiteth not with his tongue nor doth evil to his neighbour nor taketh up a reproach against his neighbour A man that maketh conscience of all his words and actions So the Apostle telleth us in the new Heavens and new Earth there dwelleth righteousness 2 Pet. 3. 13. Secondly For this world there are many promises take a taste this bringeth profit and is only profitable Prov. 10. 2. Treasures of wickedness profit nothing but righteousness delivereth from death Men think to do any thing with wealth and that naked honesty may be a cold they have food and Physick and friends and Honour alas how soon can God blow upon an Estate and make it useless to us make a man vomit up again his ill-gotten Morsels Iob 20. 15. He hath swallowed down riches and shall vomit them up again God shall cast them out of his Belly As a man that hath eaten too much though God permit him to get he doth not permit him to hold what he hath gotten unjustly There is a flaw in the Title will one time or other cast them out of possession Well then Riches profit not but what is profitable 1 Tim. 4. 8. Godliness is profitable to all things And this part of godliness righteousness that will prolong life and bring a blessing upon the soul of the righteous Prov. 10. 3. The Lord will not suffer the soul of the righteous to famish but he casteth away the substance of the wicked Another promise it bringeth preservation in times of difficulty and danger he that hath carried it righteously they know not how to lay hold upon him and work him any mischief Prov. 11. 3. The integrity of the upright shall guide him but the perverseness of transgressours shall destroy them So again Prov. 13. 6. Righteousness keepeth him that is upright in the way but wickedness overthroweth the sinner 'T is God keepeth us but the qualification of the person kept is to be observed 't is he that is just and honest We think 't is the way to danger because the eye of the flesh is more perspicuous than the eye of the spirit or mind and we are more apt to see what is and who is against us than what and who is for us Psal. 25. 21. Let integrity and uprightness preserve me for I wait on thee That which in the judgment of the flesh is the means of our ruine is indeed the means of our preservation So Isai. 33. 15. He that walketh righteously and speaketh uprightly c. Again for recovery out of trouble Pro. 24. 15 16. Lay not wait O wicked man against the dwelling of the righteous spoil not his resting place for the just man falleth seven times and riseth up again but the wicked shall fall into mischief They may be persecuted but not forsaken cast down but not destroyed There are strange Changes of Providence we are up and down but shall rise again with the wicked 't is not so Again for stability Prov. 10. 4 5. As the whirlwind passeth so is the wicked no more but the righteous is an everlasting foundation Wicked men being great in power rend and tear all things and bring down all things before them but they have no foundation the one is fleeting as the Wind the other is settled as the Earth So Prov. 12. 3. A man shall not be established by wickedness but the root of the righteous shall not be moved Wicked men get up seem high for the time but they have no root therefore soon wither they have no root as that Ambassadour when he saw the Treasure of Saint Mark said This hath no root All their policies secret friendships shall never be able to keep them up Ahab was told that God would root out him and all his Family he thought to avoid this threatning gets many Wives and Concubines by whom he hath seventy Children hoping that one of them would remain to succeed him he committeth their tutelage and education to the choicest of his Nobility Men of Samaria a strong Town but you see all this came to nought 1 Kings 10. So Prov. 10. 36. The righteous shall never be moved but the wicked shall not inhabit the earth Every man that is in good estate would fain make it as firm and lasting as he can these settle Polities contract friendships use all means to make their acquisitions firm and secure but pass by the main care which is to settle things upon a righteous foundation and therefore they shall not flourish So for posterity Prov. 11. 21. The seed of tho righteous shall be delivered So Prov. The wicked are overthrown and are not but the house of the righteous shall stand Prov. 20. 7. The just man walketh in his integrity his children are blessed after him All our care is for posterity man multiplied continued In short all manner of blessings Prov. 21. 21. He that followeth after righteousness and mercy findeth life righteousness and honour He findeth life Prov. 11. 19. As righteousness tendeth to life so he that pursueth evil pursueth it to his own death Prov. 12. 28. In the way of righteousness is life and in the path-way thereof there is no death Righteousness he shall have have righteous dealing from others Honour he shall have a good name in the world and be preferred when God thinks fit Use. Is to press us to do Judgment and Justice First As to our private dealing with others carry your selves faithfully and make conscience of justice and equity 1. Propound to do nothing but what is agreeable to righteousness and honesty Prov. 12. 5. The thoughts of the righteous are right but the counsels of the wicked are deceit Our evil purpose spoils all A good man erreth sometimes through ignorance incogitancy or violence of
upon us yet made we not our Prayer before the Lord our God You defeat the Dispensation now you should make up your former Negligence when we are pressed hard on all hands it should put an edge upon our Prayers otherwise our Afflictions will turn to a sad account When God sendeth a Tempest after us and this will not bring us back to him we are summoned to make our Appearance and will not come Ioab would not come till Absalom set his Barley Field on fire Use 2. To encourage us to come to God in our Afflictions now is a time to put the Promises in suit to begin an Interest if we have none to make use of it if we have any then our weakness and nothingness is discovered that we may more apply our selves to God and a time of need will be a time of help Psal. 46. 1. God is a refuge for us a very present help in Trouble that is when Trouble is Trouble indeed then therefore we should call for it most earnestly a necessitous Creature is a fit Object for Mercy You expound Providences amiss if you think Afflictions are a casting off no they are Gods Voice calling you nay his Hand pulling you to him Blessed seasons to bring God and us together then Gods aim is accomplished Hos. 5. 15. I will go and return to my place till they acknowledge their offence and seek my face in their affliction they will seek me early Isa. 26. 16. Lord in trouble have they visited thee they poured out a Prayer when thy chastening was upon them Afflictions do not work thus simply for then they would work upon all but as accompanied with some drawings of the Spirit every condition is blessed when it bringeth you nearer unto God though Crosses be great Trials to any yet if they chase us to the Throne of Grace God is not wholly gone but hath left somewhat behind him to draw us to him It is Desertion in point of Felicity but not in point of Grace Doctrine III. One great request of the Children of God in Prayer is that he would Consider their Affliction This David promiseth in the first place So elsewhere Psal 132. 1. Remember David O Lord and all his afflictions he beggeth God to take notice of his Person and Condition So also Psal. 25. 18. Look upon ●…p affliction and my pain and forgive all my sins he beggeth that his groanes might not be passed over So Hezekiah Isa. 37. 17. where many words are used to this effect Incline thine ear O Lord and hear open thine eyes and see and hear all the words that Senacherib hath sent to reproach the living God If God would but take notice hear and see all would be well And as for personal Calamities so in Publick and Church cases Psal. 80. 14. Return we beseech thee O Lord God of Hosts look down from heaven and behold and visit this Vine If God will but come and see it is enough So in the Lamentations Chap. 1. 9. O Lord behold my affliction for the enemy hath magnified himself So again ver 11. See O Lord and consider for I am become vile Yet again ver 20. Behold O Lord for I am in distress Thus do the Children of God lay open their Miseries before him in Confidence of his Pity But why do the Children of God press this point so earnestly as if they did doubt of his Providence and Omnisciency God knoweth all things and can forget nothing I Answer 1. Though God be not ignorant and unmindful of our Condition yet we are to put him in Remembrance Isa. 62. 6. Ye that make mention of the Lord keep not silence and give him no rest till he establish and till he make Ierusalem a praise in the earth Christ is the Advocate we are Solicitours and Remembrancers for others and humble Supplicants for our selves indeed in so doing we do not put God in mind but put our selves in Mind of the Providence of God which is most graciously conversant about us in our aflicted Condition which is a great Comfort and Support to us The moving of God to Consider begets Faith in us that he will Consider and so we wrestle with God that we may catch an heat our selves 2. The sight of Misery is a real Argument it is clear that we are to use Arguments in Prayer for God dealeth with us as rational Creatures and as such we are to deal too with him Now among Arguments our Afflictions and Miseries are real ones they have a Voice to work upon his Pity and to move him to have Mercy upon us he being inclined to Compassion his eye doth affect his heart as a Beggar to move pity will not only plead with his Tongue but uncover his sores so do the Saints lay open their Misery and unfold their Estate before the Lord for God so loveth his People that the very show of their Miseries moveth him to help them Thus God saith that he would shew mercy to his People for I have seen with mine eyes Zech. 9. 8. God seeth our Case and every degree of our Trouble is marked by him which bringeth it the nearer to his heart yea Gods People themselves are comforted under their saddest sufferings by the Lords seeing and marking thereof Psal. 10. 14. Thou hast seen it for thou beholdest mischief and spight to requite it with thy hand it is enough to them thou hast seen it So Psal. 31. 7. I will be glad and rejoyce in thy mercy for thou hast considered my trouble and known my soul in adversities It is a mighty comfort that God hath an eye upon them in particular and hath friendly Affections towards them 3. The Lord is said to consider when he doth in effect declare his not forgetting or remembring us for good and therefore though God cannot but see and consider our Trouble yet we cannot rest satisfied with it till by real effects he maketh it evident that we may know and all the World may know that he doth consider us and regard our condition and this is that which Saints beg so earnestly that he would by some act or work experiment the Truth or make it appear that he hath heard and seen and taken notice of our sorrows Though the Saints believe his omnisciency and particular Providence yet they cannot rest satisfied til they feel it by some effect by giving real support or help in need according to Covenant and so must all the places before mentioned be interpreted Use. When we or the Church of God or any of the People of God are in any distress 1. Let us go to God and beg that we may see and the World may see that he hath regard to us in our sorrows and doth not wholly pass us over To this end impress upon your hearts the belief of these two things the Eye of his Pity and the Arm of his Power 1. The Eye of his Pity which is more then bare omnisciency it
spiritual light else they shall have no favour and relish Can sense which is the light of Beasts trace the workings or the flights of Reason Can you see a Soul or an Angel by the light of a candle there is no proportion between them So can a natural man receive the things of the Spirit he receives them not why because spiritual things must be spiritually discerned 2. There is not only blindness but obstinacy and prejudice When we come to judg by sense and reason the whole business of Christianity seems to be a foolish thing to a carnal heart To give up our selves to God and all our Interest and to wait upon the reversion of a happiness in another world which is doubtful whether there will be any such thing or no is a folly to him To deny present lusts and interests to be much in prayer and be often in communion with God is esteemed a like folly When the Apostle came to preach the Gospel to the Wits at Athens they scoffed at him they entertained his Doctrine as fire is entertained in wet wood with hissing and scorn To do all and suffer all and that upon the account of a happiness to come to a carnal heart this is but a fancy and a meer imagination 3. As blind and obstinate so we are apt to abuse truth Carnal hearts turn all to a carnal purpose As Spiders assimilate and turn all they suck into their own substance so doth a carnal heart turn all even the Counsels and Comforts of the word to a carnal purpose Or as the Sea whatever comes into it the sweet Rivers and droppings of the clouds turns all into salt water Hos. 14. 9. Who is wise and he shall understand these things prudent and he shall know them but the transgressors shall stumble therein As right excellent and as notable as the doctrines of the word are yet a carnal heart finds matter in them to stumble at he picks that which is an occasion of ruine and eternal perdition from the Scripture therefore the Apostle saith Eph. 4. 21. If ye have learned of him as the truth is in Iesus We are never right and truth never works as to regeneration but it 's only fuel for our lusts until we have learned it as it is in Jesus Carnal men undo themselves by their own apprehensions of the truths of God Luther calls some Promises bloody Promises because of the mistakes of carnal men by their perverse application Therefore that we may maintain an awe of God in our soul we need to be taught of God 4. We are apt to abuse our knowledg Saving-knowledg makes us more humble but carnal knowledg more proud Where it is in gift rather than in grace there men are puft up The more we know God or our selves by a divine light the more humble we shall be Jer. 31. 18 19. When I was instructed I smote upon my thigh I was ashamed even confounded because I did bear the reproach of my youth The more light we have from God the more we look into a vile heart When Adam's eyes were opened he runs into the bushes he was ashamed So when God opens the eyes and teacheth a Christian this makes him more humble 5. There needs Gods teaching because we are so apt to forsake when we have known the things of God Psal. 119. 21. The proud do err from thy commandments What 's the reason David was so stedfast in the truth he did not take it up from the teachings of man but from the teachings of God When a man leads us into any truth another man may lead us out again But now when God hath taught us and imprest a truth upon the heart then it is durable What 's the reason believers are not as fickle as others and not led away by the impure Gnosticks and like those Libertines now among us 1 Joh. 2. 20. Ye have an unction from the holy One and ye know all things They had an unction which came down from Jesus Christ upon their hearts and then a man is not led away by every fancy but begins to grow stable in spirit 6. We cannot tell how to master our Corruptions nor restore reason to its Dominion again 'T is not enough to bring light into the soul but we must have power and efficacy or true conversion will not follow Man's reason was to govern his actions Now all literal instruction is weak like a March-Sun which draweth up the vapours but cannot scatter them it can discover sins but cannot quell them Rom. 7. 19. When the commandment came sin revived and I died He could not tell how to bridle his lusts he found them more outrageous The good that I would do I do not and the evil which I would not that I do Thirdly The Benefit and Utility of Gods teaching When God teacheth truth cometh upon us with more conviction and demonstration 1 Cor. 2. 6. and so hath a greater awe and soveraignty Those that have made any trial can judg between being taught of God and men Those that are taught of men the charms of Rhetorick may sometimes stir up some loose affection but it doth soon vanish and wear away again but the work of God makes deep impression upon the soul and truths are then more affective Man's knowledg is sapless dry and unsavoury 2 Pet. 1. 8. For if these things be in you and abound they make you that ye shall neither be barren nor unfruitful in the knowledg of our Lord Iesus Christ. There may be an empty belief and a naked and unactive apprehension of Christ which stirs up no affection but the light which comes from God enters upon the heart Prov. 2. 10. it affects the whole soul. It doth not only stay in the fancy float in the brain but affect the heart And then it is renewing Man's light may make us more learned but God's light more holy We are changed by beholding the glory of God into the same Image 2 Cor. 3. 18. SERMON XIV PSAL. CXIX 13. With my lips have I declared all the judgments of thy mouth FOR the coherence of these words you may refer them either to the 11th or 12th Verse If to the 11th Verse there he speaks of hiding the word in his heart and now it breaks out in his tongue First it must be in the heart and next in the tongue First in the heart It is but hypocrisie to be speaking and talking of good things when we have not been refreshed and warmed by them our selves Christianity is not a Religion to talk of but to live by There are many rotten-hearted hypocrites that are all talkers like the Moon dark in themselves whatever light they give out to others or like Negroes that dig in rich Mines and bring up gold for others when themselves are poor The power of grace in the heart is a good foundation for grace in the lips This is the method and order wherein David expresseth it I
young or had more leisure and rest In that I have meditated and conferred You must continue still in a holy course To begin to build and leave unfinished is an argument of folly There is always the same reason for going on that there was for beginning both for necessity profit and sweetness We have no licence to slack and give over till all be finished Phil. 2. 12. Work out your own salvation otherwise all you do is in vain yet not in vain Gal. 3. 4. in vain as to final reward yet not in vain as to encrease of punishment You lose your cost your watchings striving prayings but you will gain a more heavy punishment so that it had been better you had never begun 2 Pet. 2. 20 21. For if after they have escaped the pollutions of the world through the knowledg of our Lord and Saviour Iesus Christ they are again intangled therein and overcome the latter end is worse with them than the beginning for it had been better for them not to have known the way of righteousness than after they have known it to turn from the holy commandment delivered to them You bring an ill report upon God your sense of the worth of heavenly things must needs be greater for your making trial and therefore your punishment for neglect the greater Into the Vineyard they came at several hours but all tarried till the close of the day Some called sooner some later but all held out till the end Heb. 6. 10 11. You have ministred and must minister you have prayed and must pray you have heard the word with gladness and must hear still Many in youth are zealous but when their first heats are spent grow worldly careless and ready to sound a retreat from God The fire of the Altar was never to go out so should the life and warmth and vigour of our affections to the word of God be ever preserved God is the same still and so is the word and therefore we should ever be the same in our respects to it The Devil in policy lets men alone for a while to manifest some respect to the ways of God that they may after do Religion a They are full of zeal strict holy diligent in attendance upon Ordinances he never troubleth them but is at truce with them all this while till they get some name for the profession of godliness and then he knoweth their fall will be the more scandalous and ignominious not only to themselves but to their profession They are forward and hot men a while till they have run themselves out of breath and then by a notable defection shame themselves and harden others 2. Compare it with the 13th verse I have declared now I will meditate To be warm and affectionate in our expressions of respect to the Word before others and to slight it in our own hearts argueth gross hypocrisie Therefore David would not only confer but meditate Many talk with others but not with their own soul. Commune with your hearts and be still True zeal is uniform when there is no witness but God it acts alike 3. Refer it to the 14th Verse David had spoken of his delight in the Law now that he would meditate therein in both not to boast but to excite others by his example that is to be understood all along when he speaketh of his diligence in and about the Law of God But mark first the word was his delight and then his meditation Delight causeth meditation and meditation encreaseth delight Psal. 1. 2. But his delight is in the law of the Lord and in his law doth he meditate day and night A man that delighteth in the Law of God will exercise his mind therein Our thoughts follow our affections It is tedious and irksome to the flesh to meditate but delight will carry us out The smallest actions when we have no delight in them seem tedious and burdensome It was no great matter for Haman to lead Mordecai's Horse yet a burdensome offensive service because it was against his will The difficulty that we find in holy duties lyeth not in the duties themselves but in the awkwardness of our affections Many think they have no parts and therefore they cannot meditate He that findeth an heart to this work will find an head Delight will set the mind a-work for we are apt to muse and pause upon that which is pleasing to us Why are not holy thoughts as natural and as kindly to us as carnal The defect is in the heart I have rejoyced in thy testimonies saith David and therefore I will meditate in thy statutes In the words there is a double expression of Davids love to the Law of God 1. I will meditate in thy precepts 2. I will have respect to thy ways Concerning which observe 1. In both the notion by which the word of God is expressed and diversified Precepts Ways The word precepts implieth Gods Authority by which the counsels of the word are ratified Ways implieth a certain direction for our walk to heaven There are Gods ways to us declared in his Promises so it is said Psal. 25. 10. All the paths of God are mercy and truth Our ways to God ver 4. of that Psalm Shew me thy ways teach me thy paths These are his precepts 2. Observe the one is the fruit of the other I will meditate and then I will have respect Meditation is in order to practice and if it be right it will beget a respect to the ways of God We do not meditate that we may rest in contemplation but in order to obedience Joshua 1. 8. Thou shalt meditate in the book of the law day and night that thou mayest observe to do according to all that is written therein So Phil. 4. 8 9. Think of these things do these things 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 when you cast up your accounts and consider what God hath required of you it is that you may set upon the work Meditation is not a flourishing of the wit that we may please the fancy by playing with divine truths Sense is diseased that must be fed with quails but a serious inculcation of them upon the heart that we may urge it to practice Nor yet an acquainting our selves with the word that we may speak of it in company Conference is for others Meditation for our selves when we are alone Words are but the female issue of our thoughts works the male Nor meerly to store our selves with curious notions and subtil inquiries study searcheth out a truth but Meditation improveth it for practical use it is better to be sincere than subtil 3. Observe this practical obedience is expressed by having respect unto the ways of God To respect Gods ways is to take heed that we do not turn out of them to regard them and our selves observe to do them Josh. 1. 8. and it is called elsewhere pondering our path Prov. 4. 26. ponder the path of thy feet that we
aetatis partem perdunt vacando intending their Sabbath time This is the sense of Nature to think all lost that is bestowed upon God Flesh and blood cryeth out What need this waste they cannot spare time from their Callings they have Families to maintain Oh let me tell you by serving God you drive on two cares at once Worldly Interests are cast in to the way of Religion and though not designed and intended by us these things are added to us For comforts and manifestations of God we have them many times in our recess and the privacy of our retirements in a more plentiful manner than elsewhere The Spouse inviteth the Bridegroom Cant. 7. 11. Come my beloved let us go forth into the field Upon which Bernard O sancta anima fuge publicum fuge an nescis te verecundum habere sponsum qui nequaquam tibi velit indulgere praesentiam suam coram aliis We have most experiences of God when we are alone with him and sequestred from all distractions of company and business solacing our selves with God Exod. 3. 1. Moses drove the sheep to the backside of the Wilderness and came to the Mount of God he goeth aside from the other shepherds that he might converse with the great Shepherd and Bishop of our souls and there he seeth the vision of the fiery bush Usually God cometh to us in our deep meditation when the soul is most elevated and fittest to entertain the comforts of his presence then we have sensible experience of God The standing spiritual benefits of Meditation are many It imprints and fastens a truth upon the mind and memory deliberate thoughts stick with us as a Lesson we have conned is not easily forgotten Civet long kept in a Box the scent remaineth when the Civet is taken out Sermons meditated on are remembred by us long after they are delivered It sets the heart a work The greatest matters will not work upon him that doth not think of them Tell them of sin and God and Christ and Heaven and Hell and they stir them not because they do not take these truths into their deep thoughts or if they be stirred a little it is but a fit while the Truth is held in the view of Conscience We had need inculcate things if we would have them to affect us The Steel must beat again and again upon the Flint if we would have the sparks flye out so must the understanding bear hard upon the will to get out any affection and respect to the ways of God It sheweth the beauty of Truths When we look upon them in trans●… we do not see half that is in them but upon a deliberate view it more appeareth As there is a secret grace in some that is not discerned but by much converse and narrow inspection It helpeth to prevent vain thoughts The mind of man is restless and cannot lye idle therefore it is good to imploy it with good thoughts and set it a work on holy things for then there will be no time and heart for vanity the mind being prepossessed and seasoned already but when the heart is left to run loose vanity encreaseth upon us Oh Christians Meditation is all it is the Mother and Nurse of knowledg and godliness the great instrument in all the offices of Grace We resemble the Purity and Simplicity of God most in the holiness of our thoughts Without Meditation we do but talk one after another like Parrots and take up things by meer hearsay and repeat them by rote without affection and life or discerning the worth and excellency of what we speak It is Meditation that maketh Truths always ready and present with us Prov. 6. 21 22. Bind them continually upon thy heart when thou goest it shall lead thee when thou wakest it shall talk with thee But I forbear 2. Whereby the mind is applied to serious and solemn consideration I add this to distinguish it from occasional Meditation and those good thoughts that accidentally rush into our mind and to note the care and attention of soul that we should use in such an exercise It is musing makes the fire burn glances or transient thoughts or running over a Truth in haste is not Meditation but a serious attention of mind It is not to take a snatch and away but to make a meal of Truth and to work it into our hearts Alas a slight thought that is like a flash of lightning gone as soon as come doth nothing Constant thoughts are operative and a Truth the longer it is held in the view of conscience the more powerful it is Deut. 32. 46. Set your hearts to all the words which I testifie among you this day A sudden thought may be none of ours it may be unwelcome and find no entertainment with us but set your hearts to it Luk. 9. 44. Let these things sink down into your hearts let them go to the quick Prov. 18. 1. Through desire a man having separated himself intermedleth in all wisdom Then is a man fit for these pure and holy thoughts for intermedling in all wise and divine matters when he hath divorced himself from other cares and is able to keep his understanding under a prudent confinement 3. Of the Truths which we understand and believe In Meditation we suppose the object understood for it is the work of study to search it out of Meditation to enforce and apply it and we suppose it believed and granted to be a Truth The work now is to improve our assent that it may have an answerable force and efficacy upon the soul. 4. It follows in the description For practical uses and purposes Meditation is not to store the head with notions but to better the heart We meditate of God that we may love him and fear him of sin that we may abhor it of hell that we may avoid it of heaven that we may pursue it Still the end is practical to quicken us to greater diligence and care in the heavenly life USE 1. To reprove those that are seldom in this work Worldly cares and sloath and ease divert us if we had an heart we would have time and leasure The clean beasts did chew the cud We should go over and over and over again the Truths of God in our thoughts But alas 1. Either men muse on trifles all the day their minds are full of chaff and vanity Oh! hast thou thoughts for other things and hast thou no thoughts for Gods precepts Hast thou not a God and a Christ to think of And is not salvation by him and everlasting glory worthy of your choicest thoughts You have thoughts enough and to spare for other things for base things for very toys and why not for God and the word of God why not for Christ and that everlasting Redemption he hath accomplished for us If a man would throw his meat and drink down the Kennel rather than give to him that asketh him the world would cry shame
trouble it is good to divert them to some other matter But every diversion will not become Saints it must be an holy diversion Psal. 94. 19. In the multitude of my thoughts within me thy comforts delight my soul. The case was the same with that of the Text when the Throne of iniquity frameth mischief by a Law as you shall see here when he had many perplexed thoughts about the abuse of power against himself But now where lay his ease in diversion Would every diversion suit his purpose No Thy Comforts of Gods allowance of Gods providing comforts proper to Saints Wicked men in trouble run to their pot and pipe and games and sports and merry company and so defeat the providence rather than improve it but David who was Gods servant must have Gods comforts So elsewhere when his thoughts were troubled about the power of the wicked I went into the sanctuary there I understood their end Psal. 73. 17. He goeth to divert his mind by the use of Gods Ordinances and so came to be setled against the temptation 2. Among all sorts of holy divertisements none is of such use as Gods word There is matter enough to take up our thoughts and allay our cares and fears and to swallow up our sorrows and griefs to direct us in all straits In brief there is comfort there and counsel there 1. Comfort whilst the word teacheth us to look off from men to God from Providence to the Covenant from things temporal to things eternal from men to God as Moses feared not the wrath of the King when he saw him that is invisible Heb. 11. 27. and Eccles. 5. 8. If thou seest the oppression of the poor and violent perversion of Iudgment and Iustice in a Province marvel not at the matter for he that is higher than the highest regardeth and there be higher than they There is an higher Judg that sitteth in heaven and if he pass sentence for us when they pass sentence against us we need to be the less troubled If he give us the pardon of sins and the testimony of a good conscience it is no matter what men say against us Psal. 40. 4. Blessed is the man that maketh the Lord his trust and respecteth not the proud nor such as turn aside to lyes Is not God able to bear you out in his work From Providence to the Covenant Providence is a very riddle we shall not know what to make of it till we gather principles of faith from the Covenant Heb. 13. 5. He hath said I will never leave thee nor forsake thee God over-rules all for good Rom. 8. 28. We know that all things work together for good to those that love God to those that are the called according to his purpose From things temporal to eternal 2 Cor. 4. 17 18. For our light affliction that is but for a moment worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory while we look not at the things which are seen but at the things which are not seen for the things which are seen are temporal but the things which are not seen are eternal Rom. 8. 18. For I reckon that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared to the glory that shall be revealed in us A Feather or a Straw against a Talent a man would be ashamed to compare them together 2. For Counsel A Christian should not be troubled so much about what he should suffer as what he should do that he may do nothing unseemly to his calling and hopes but be kept blameless to the heavenly kingdom Now the word of God will teach him how to carry himself in dangers to pray for persecutors fire is not quenched with fire nor evil overcome with evil how to keep our selves from unlawful shifts and means how to avoid revenge lying flattering yielding against Conscience or waxing weary of well-doing that we may not fight against Satan or his Instruments by their own weapons for so we shall be easily overcome The wicked shall not be so wise to contrive the mischief as a Saint instructed by the word is how to carry himself under it Psal. 119. 98. Through thy commandments thou hast made me wiser than my enemies Malice and Policy shall not teach them to persecute as Gods word to carry your selves in the trouble 3. The word must not be slightly read but our hearts must be exercised in the meditation of it A cursory reading doth not work upon us so much as serious thoughts In all studies Meditation is both the Mother and Nurse of knowledg and so it is of godliness without which we do but know Truths by rote and hearsay and talk one after another like Parrots but when a Truth is chafed into the heart by deep inculcative thoughts then it worketh with us and we feel the power of it Musing maketh the fire burn ponderous thoughts are the bellows that blow it up Eggs come to be quickned by sitting abrood upon them In a sanctifi'd heart the seeds of Comfort by Meditation come to maturity by constant Meditation our affections are quickned this turneth the Promises into marrow Psal. 63. 5 6. My soul shall be filled as with marrow and fatness when I meditate on thee in the night-watches It giveth more than a vanishing taste which hypocrites have USE 1. In all your troubles learn this method to cure them by gracious means Prayer or Meditation By meditation on the word of God that will tell you that we are born to trouble and therefore we should no more think strange to see Gods children molested here than to see a showr of rain fall after a sun-shine or that the night should succeed the day 1 Pet. 4. 12. Beloved think it not strange concerning the fiery trial as though some strange thing happened unto you It were strange if otherwise as if a man were told that his journey lay through a rough stony Countrey and should pass over a smooth Carpet-way Our way-mark is many tribulations Acts 14. 22. Through many tribulations we must enter into the kingdom of Heaven God had one Son without sin none without the Cross. 2. That afflictions though in themselves they are legal punishments fruits of sin yet by the Grace of God they are medicinal to his people 1 Cor. 11. 32. When we are judged we are chastened of the Lord that we may not be condemned with the world 3. We never advance more in Christianity than under the Cross Heb. 12. 10. They verily for a few days chastened us after their own pleasure but he for our profit that we might be partakers of his holiness Psal. 119. 71. It is good for me that I have been afflicted that I might learn thy statutes 4. Rather undergo the greatest calamities than commit the smallest sin Heb. 11. 25. Chusing rather to suffer affliction with the people of God than to enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season 5. That all crosses are
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
from the beginning as the good Angels continued in their first estate Men that are engaged in an evil course often continue in it without retractation they are no changelings always the same that 's no honour to them Luther when he was charged with apostasie for appearing against the Pope Confitetur se Apostatam esse sed beatum sanctum qui fidem Diabolo datam non servavit He confesseth he was an Apostate but a holy and blessed one that he did not keep touch with the Devil Constancy must ever be understood with respect to a right choice for to break faith with Satan is not matter of dishonour but of praise We must go on with an accurate prosecution for that giveth us experience and causeth us to find joy and sweetness and power in the truth and is a great means of constancy If men would be constant the next thing they must do is to practise that Religion they chuse and live under the power of it Holiness is a great means of constancy 1 Tim. 3. 9. Holding the mystery of faith in a pure conscience As precious liquors are best kept in clean vessels so is the mystery of faith in a pure conscience Men may be stubborn in their opinions out of natural courage and the engagement of credit and interests but this is of little worth without practical godliness their Orthodoxy and rightness in opinion will not bring them to heaven nor shall they be saved because they are of such a sect or party But then all must be closed up by persevering in our resolutions otherwise all our former zeal will be lost I have chosen the way of truth thy judgments have I laid before me and then now I have stuck unto thy testimonies O Lord put me not to shame 2 John 8. Look to your selves that ye lose not those things which ye have wrought All that a man hath done and suffered watching striving praying they come to nothing unless we stick to it and persevere Under the Law a Nazarite was to begin his days of separation again if he had defiled himself if he had separated himself for a year and kept his vow within two days of the year he was to begin all anew Numb 6. 12. and the interpretation of that type I cannot give you better than in the Prophets words Ezek. 18. 24. When the righteous turneth away from his righteousness and committeth iniquity all his righteousness that he hath done shall not be remembred When they turn head against their former profession it comes to nothing Thus you see what a perfect dependence there is between this Verse and the former In the words there is 1. A profession I have stuck unto thy testimonies 2. A prayer O Lord put me not to shame First For the profession I have stuck to thy testimonies Saith Chrysostom he doth not say I have followed thy testimonies but stuck or cleaved stuck so fast that nothing could remove him no difficulties tryals shakings he was still firm Doct. Those that have chosen the way of God and begin to conform their practice thereunto ought with all constancy to persevere therein First We have the same reasons to continue that we had to begin at first there 's the same loveliness in God's ways Christ is as sweet as ever Heaven is as good as ever if there be any difference there is more reason to continue than there was to begin why because we have more experience of the sweetness of Christ you knew him heretofore only by report and hearsay but now when you have walked in the way of holiness then you know him by experience and if you have tasted 1 Pet. 2. 2. then certainly you should not fall off afterwards Upon trial Christ is sweeter and the longer you have kept to conscience heaven is nearer and would a man miscarry and be discouraged when he is ready to put into the Haven Rom. 13. 11. Your salvation is nearer than when you first believed The nearer we are to the enjoyment of any good the more impatient in the want of it As natural motion we find swifter in the end because it 's nearer to the center but Violent motion is swiftest at first as when a stone is thrown upward it is swifter at first but when the impression of the external force is more spent then the motion is weaker It argues that you are not seriously through with God if you should break with him after some profession of his Name now your motion should be more earnest more strong towards him I speak this because we are so apt to cast off our first faith 1 Tim. 5. 12. and to lose our first love Rev. 2. 4. and to grow remiss and lazy and neglect our first works 2 Chron. 17. 3. Iehoshaphat is said to walk in the first ways of his father David We see many at the first are carried on with a great deal of affection and zeal and there are many promising beginnings of a very flourishing spring but yet they are no sure prognostications of a joyful harvest why consider with your selves we have the same reasons to continue as to begin yea much more as heaven is nearer In a marriage-relation true affection encreaseth but adulterous love is only hot while it is new If our hearts be upright with God we will encrease with zeal for his glory and love to his testimonies Secondly The danger and mischievous effects of apostasie and falling off that 's another reason why we should stick to his testimonies 1. It is more dishonourable to God than a simple refusal for you bring an ill report upon him as if he were not a good Master A wicked man that refuseth grace doth not so much dishonour God because his refusal is supposed to be the fruit of his prejudice but now you that cast him off after tryal your apostasie is supposed to be the fruit of your experience as if the Devil were a better Master when you have tried both you return to him again Tertullian in his Book de Poenitentia hath this saying After you have tried God you do as it were deliberately judg Satans service to be better or at least you do not find that in God you did expect Therefore the honour of God is mightily concerned and lies at stake when you fall off after you have seemed to begin with him with a great deal of accurateness And God pleads for himself and stands for his credit which seems to be wronged by this apostasie Ier. 2. 5. casting off his service for the Idols of the Nation What iniquity have your fathers sound in me that they are gone far from me And Mic. 6. 3. O my people what have I done unto thee and wherein have I wearied thee testifie against me What can you complain of God Is God hard to be pleased backward to reward What cause of distast have you found in him for implicitely you do as it were accuse him 2.
offence Christians what Religion is it you are of Is it not the Christian Religion whose great interest and work it is to draw you off from the concernments of the present world unto things to come The whole drift and frame of the Christian Religion is to draw mens hearts off from earthly things and to comfort and support them under the troubles inconveniences and molestations of the flesh therefore for a Christian to hope an exemption from them is to make the doctrine of the Gospel as incongruous and useless as to talk of bladders and the art of swimming to a man that never goes to sea nor intends to go off from the firm land 3. A great occasion to shake the faith of many is Scandals the evil practices of those that profess the name of God O! when they run into disorder especially into all manner of unrighteousness and iniquity and cruel things and make no conscience of the duties of their relations as subjects as children and the like it is a mighty offence and we that have to do with persons and sinners of all sorts find it a very hard matter to keep them from Atheism such stumbling blocks having been laid in their way Scandal's far more dangerous than Persecution There are many that have been gained by the patience courage and constancy of the Martyrs but never any were gained by the scandalous falls of professors Persecutions do only work upon our fear which may be allayed by proposal of the Crown of life but by scandalous actions how many settle into a resolved hardness of heart In crosses and persecutions a man may have secret likings of truth and a purpose to own it but by scandal She dislikes the way of God of Religion it self it begets a base and vile esteem thereof in the hearts of men so they are loose and fall off And this mischief doth not only prevail with the lighter sort of Christians but many times those which have had some taste it makes them fly off exceedingly Matt. 18. 7. There will be offences but wo be unto them by whom they come Christ hath told us all will not walk up to the Religion they own therefore we must stand out against this temptation Secondly Be fortified within by taking heed to the causes of apostasie and falling off from the truth either in judgment or practice What is there will make men apostates 1. Ungrounded assents A choice lightly made is lightly altered When we do not resolve upon evidence and have not taken up the ways of God upon clear light we shall turn and wind to and fro as the posture of our interest is changed First we must try all things then hold fast 1 Thes. 5. 21. Men waver hither and thither for want of solid rooting in truth they take up things hand over head and then like light chaff they are driven about with every wind of doctrine Eph. 4. 14. Half conviction leaveth us open to changes Iames 1. 8. A double-minded man is unstable in all his ways A man that seems to have a faith concerning such a thing then seems to have a doubt concerning such a thing sometimes led by his faith at other times carried away by his doubts If we have not a clear and full perswasion of the ways of God in our own minds we shall never be constant 2. Want of solid rooting in grace that is rooted in faith Col. 2. 7. or rooted and grounded in Love Eph. 3. 17. as to both it is said Heb. 13. 9. It is a good thing that the heart be established with grace that is by a sound sense of the love of God in Christ. A sweet superficial tast may be lost but a sound sense of the love of God in Christ will engage us to him O! we have felt so much sweetness and have had such real proof of the goodness of Christ that all the world cannot take us off The more experience you have and the deeper it is the more you will be confirmed The most of us content our selves but in a superficial tast When we hear of the doctrine of salvation by Christ we are somewhat pleased and tickled with it but this is not that which doth establish us but a deep sense of God's grace or feeling the blood of Christ pacifying our Consciences this is that which establisheth our heart and setleth us against apostasie 3. Unmortified lusts which must have some error to countenance them By an inordinate respect to worldly interests we are sure to miscarry A man governed by lusts will be at uncertainty according as he is swayed by the fear or favour of men or his carnal hopes 2 Tim. 4. 10. Demas hath forsaken us having loved this present world If a man hath love to present things if that be not subdued and purged out of his heart he will never be stable never upright with God It may be he may stand when put upon some little self-denial for Christ he may endure some petty loss or some tender assault I but at length the man will be carried away as Ioab that turned after Adonijah though he turned not after Absolom 1 King 2. 28. there will some temptation come that will carry them away though at first they seem to stand their ground as long as lust remains unmortified in the heart 4. Sometimes a faulty-easiness As there is an ingenuous facility The wisdom that is from above is gentle and easie to be entreated Jam. 3. 17. so there 's a faulty easiness when men cannot say nay when they change their Religion with their company out of a desire to please all and Camelion-like they change colour with every object Some are of such a facile easie nature soon perswaded into great inconvenience This faulty-easiness always makes bold with God and conscience to please men when we are of this temper Jer. 38. 5. The King is not he that can do any thing against you It is not a good disposition but baseness and pusillanimity It is observed of Chrysostome though a good man in the main yet he ran into many inconveniences why because he was through simplicity and plainness of his nature easily to be wrought upon Therefore though a good man in regard of the sweetness of his temper and converse should be as a Load-stone yet he should be also resolute and severe in the things of God Paul though they did even break his heart they could not break his purpose 5. Self-confidence when we think to bear it out with natural courage and resolution as Peter did Though all men forsake thee yet will not I. We are soon over-born and a light temptation will do it God gives men over that trust in themselves For the Lord takes it to be his honour to be the Saints Guardian to keep the feet of his Saints 1 Sam. 2. 9. He will be owned and depended upon 6. There 's an itch of Novelty when men are weary of old truths and
as the benefits that he bringeth with him He doth approve things upon good knowledg and cometh to a well setled resolution Another defect in wicked men is because the judgment is superficial and so come to nothing 'T is not full clear and ponderous 't is not a dictamen a resolute decree not ultimum dictamen the last decree all things considered and well weighed 2. God's Grace God doth never fully and spiritually convince the judgment but he doth also work upon the will to accept embrace and prosecute those good things of which it is convinced He teacheth and draweth they are distinct works but they go together therefore the one is inferred out of the other Drawn and taught of God both are necessary for as there is blindness and inadvertency in the mind so obstinacy in the will which is not to be cured by meer perswasion but by a gracious quality infused inclining the heart which by the way freeth this doctrine from exception as if all Gods works were meer moral suasion The will is renewed and changed but so as God doth it by working according to the order of Nature USE By all means look after this Divine illumination whereby your judgment may be convinced of the truth and worth of spiritual things 'T is not enough to have some general and floating notions about them or slightly to hear of them or talk of them but they must be spiritually discern'd and judg'd of for if our judgments were throughly convinced our pursuit of true happiness would be more earnest you would see sin to be the greatest mischief and grace the chiefest treasure and accordingly act God inlightning the soul doth 1. Take away carnal principles Many men can talk well but they are leavened with carnal principles as 1. That he may do as most do and yet be safe Mat. 7. 23. Many will say in that day Lord Lord have we not prophesied in thy name c. and then will I profess unto them I never knew you depart from me ye that work iniquity Prov. 11. 31. Behold the righteous shall be recompenced upon the earth much more the wicked and the sinner Exod. 32. c. 2. That he may go on in ungodliness injustice intemperance because grace hath abounded in the Gospel Tit. 2. 11 12. For the grace of God that bringeth salvation hath appeared to all men Teaching us that denying ungodliness and worldly lusts we should live soberly righteously and godlily in this present world And Luke 1. 75. That we being delivered out of the hands of our enemies might serve him without fear in holiness and righteousness before him all the days of our life 3. That he may spend his youth in pleasure and safely put off repentance till age But Eccles. 12. 1. we are bid to Remember our creator in the days of youth while the evil days come not nor the years draw nigh when thou shalt say I have no pleasure in them And Luke 12. 20. when the rich man said to his soul Soul thou hast much goods laid up for many years take thine ease eat drink and be merry God said unto him Thou fool this night shall thy soul be required of thee then whose shall those things be which thou hast provided Heb. 3. 7. Wherefore as the Holy Ghost saith To day if ye will hear his voice harden not your hearts c. Men think it is a folly to be singular and precise that 't was better when there was less preaching and less knowledg that small sins are not to be stood upon But God inlightning the soul maketh us to see the vanity and sinfulness of such thoughts 2. There is a bringing the understanding to attend and consider there is much lieth upon it Acts 16. 14. The Lord opened the heart of Lydia so that she attended unto the things which were spoken of Paul That is weighed them in her heart SERMON XXXVIII PSAL. CXIX 34. Yea I shall observe it with my whole heart I Come now to the last clause I shall observe it with my whole heart The Point is Doct. That it is not enough to keep Gods law but we must keep it with the whole heart Here I shall shew you 1. That God requireth the heart 2. The whole heart 1. God requireth the heart in his service the heart is the Christians sacrifice the fountain of good and evil and therefore should be mainly looked after without this 1. External profession is nothing most Christians have nothing for Christ but a good opinion or some outward prof●…on Iudas was a disciple but Satan entred into his heart Luke 22. 3. Ananias joyned himself to the people of God but Satan filled his heart Acts 5. 3. Simon Magus was baptized but his heart was not right with God Acts 8. 22. Here is the great defect 2. External conformity is nothing worth It is not enough that the life seem good and many good actions be performed unless the heart be purified otherwise we do with the Pharisees wash the outside of the platter Mat. 23. 25 26. when the inside is full of extortion and excess 'T is the heart God looketh after 1 Sam. 16. 7. For the Lord seeth not as man seeth for man looketh on the outward appearance but the Lord looketh on the heart Prov. 4. 23. Keep thy heart with all diligence for out of it are the issues of life Cast salt into the spring As Iehu said to Ionadab so doth God say to us 2 Kings 10. 15. Is thy heart right as my heart is with thy heart We should answer it is Men are not for obsequious compliances if not with the heart so neither is God Though thou pray with the Pharisee pay thy vows with the Harlot kiss Christ with Iudas offer sacrifice with Cain fast with Iezebel sell thine inheritance to give to the poor with Ananias and Saphira all is in vain without the heart for 't is the heart enliveneth all our duties 3. It is the heart wherein God dwelleth not in the tongue the brain unless by common gifts till he take possession of the heart all is as nothing Ephes. 3. 17. He dwelleth in our hearts by faith The bodies of believers are Temples of the Holy Ghost yet the heart will and affections of man are the chief place of his habitation wherein he resideth as in his strong Citadel and from whence he commandeth other faculties and members and without his presence there he cannot have any habitation in us the tongue cannot receive him by speaking nor the understanding by knowing nor the hands by external working Prov. 4. 23. Out of it are the issues of life 't is the forge of spirits He dwelleth not in temples made with hands Acts 7. 48. and Jer. 23. 24. Do not I fill heaven and earth saith the Lord He will dwell in thine heart and remain there if thou wilt give thy heart to him 4. If Christ have it not Satan will have it The heart of man is
in thy way These two Prayers joyn'd together speak thus much if you be too busie about Vanity it will bring on a Brawn and Deadness and so you need to go to God for quickning And Christ tells his disciples Luke 21. 34. Take heed of being over-charged c. The soul is mightily distempered by too free a Liberty of the delights of the Flesh for Surfeiting and Drunkenness must not be taken there in the gross Notion 3. Let us take heed that we do not lose it by our Sloathfulness and Negligence in the spiritual Life Isa. 64. 7. There is none that stirreth up himself to take hold of thee As in a Watch one Wheel protrudes and thrusts forward another so when we are diligent all is lively in the Soul but when we are not active and serious in a Godly course all goes to Rack An Instrument though it be never so much in Tune yet laid by and hung up it grows out of Order Wells are sweetet for draining Our Graces if we keep not them awork lose their Vitality if we do not stir up the Grace of God 2 Tim. 3. 6. they are quite quenched when we grow careless and neglectful of our Souls we lose this Activity of Grace 4. Vain and Dead-hearted Company and Converse are a very great means to damp the Spirit and quench the Motions of the heavenly Life We should Provoke one another to good Works Heb. 10. 24. There is great Provocation in good Examples but we grow Lazy Formal slight by imitation Others profess Knowledg yet are Vain Dead-hearted so are we we have adopted it into our Manners and leven one another by this means There should be a holy Contention who should be most forward in the ways of Godliness and excel in our Heavenly calling this keeps Christians lively Saul when he was among the Prophets he Prophecied but when we converse with Dead-hearted company it breeds a great Damp. You read in Isa. 41. 6. 7. how the Idolaters encouraged one another it was when the Isles was to wait for the Messiah that they should not faint but get up their Idols again after Christ had got a little footing among them and shall not the Children of God encourage and keep up the life of Zeal one in another Use 2. Exhortation It presseth you to divers Duties 1. To see a need of quickning Though life received gives Power to act yet that Power must be excited by God No creature doth subsist and Act of it self All things Live Move and have their Being in God There is a Concurrence necessary to all created things much more to the New-creature Partly because of the internal indisposition of the Subject in which it is alas Grace in the Heart is but like fire in Wett-wood Partly by reason of External impediments Satan is ready to cast a Damp upon thy Soul so that the Lords grace is still necessary for us 2. Ask it of God All life was at first in him Originally and ' it s an Emanation from him The Apostle proves Christs God-head from this because In him was Life Iohn 1. 4. But is this a good Argument Doth that prove therefore he was God may we not say of the meanest Worm in it is Life but he means Originally he was the fountain of Life And still he keeps it in his own hands and conveys it to all Creatures every moment even to the lowest Worm Iohn 5. 26. For as the Father hath life in himself So hath he given to the Son to have life in himself The Power of quickning and keeping of life it belongs to God He hath it Originally from himself he gives it to others 1 Tim. 6. 13. he that quickneth all things Worms Men that gives Life to them is God 3 Except this Grace in and through Jesus Christ who hath purchased it for us who gave his Flesh to be meat indeed and his Blood drink indeed Iohn 6. 55. Who rose again that we should walk in newness of Life Rom. 6. 4. Who ascended to pour out the Spirit upon us Iohn 7. 38. 39. Therefore when we find Deadness Spiritually look to receive this life from Christ. 4. Rouse up your selves There are Considerations and Arguments to quicken us Certainly a man hath power and faculty to work truths upon himself to stir up the Gift and Grace that is in us 2 Tim. 1. 6. We must not think Grace works necessarily as fire burns whether we will or no that this will enliven us but we must rouze and stir up our selves as Psal. 42. 5. There are many considerations by which me may awaken our own Soul from the Love of God from the Hopes of Glory by which Christians should stir and keep their Spirits awake and alive towards God and Heavenly things Use 3. If quickning be so necessary it presseth us to see when ever we have received any thing of the vitality of Grace Sence Appetite and Activity we may know it by these things when there 's a sence of Sin in-dwelling as a Burden Life is strong then when it would expel its Enemy Rom. 7. 24. When there is an Appetite after Christ and his Graces and Comforts When there 's a greater Activity a bursting and breaking forth towards Religious Duties it is a sign Grace is strong in the heart for the Spirit is to be a fountain of living waters always breaking out Iohn 7. 38. When we are more fruitful towards God when it is ready to discover it self for the Glory of God then the heavenly life is kept in good plight For these things we should be thankful to God for he it is that awakeneth you SERMON XLVII PSALM CXIX Verse 41. Let thy Mercies come also to me O Lord even thy Salvation according to thy Word IN this Verse you have the Man of God in Straights and begging for Deliverance In this Prayer and Address to God you may observe 1. The Cause and Fountain of all Thy Mercies 2. The Effect or thing asked Salvation 3. The Warrant or Ground of his Expectation according to thy Word 4. The effectual Application of the Benefit asked Come also unto me The Sum of the Verse may be given you in this Point Doct. That the Salvation of God is the fruit of his Mercy and effectually dispensed and applied to his People according to his Word There is a twofold Salvation Temporal and Eternal 1. Temporal Salvation is Deliverance from Temporal Dangers Exod. 14. 13. Stand still and see the Salvation of the Lord. 2. Eternal Deliverance from Hell and Wrath together with that positive Blessedness which is called Eternal Life Heb. 5. 9. And being made perfect he became the Author of eternal Salvation to all them that obey him The Text is applicable to both though possibly the former principally intended 1. I shall apply it to Salvation Temporal or deliverance out of Trouble Then observe 1. the cause of it Thy Mercies Gods Children often fall into such streights that
Apostle of our Profession The Christian Religion is a Confession not a thing to be smothered and kept in secret or confined to the Heart but to be openly brought forth and avowed in Word and Deed to the Glory of Christ If a man should content himself to own God in his heart what would become of the Church of God and all his Ordinances and the Assemblies of his People among whom we make this open Confession 1. This Confession is necessary as well as the inward Belief because God hath required it by an express Law which Law is confirmed by a Sanction of great weight and moment the greatest Promises on the one hand and the greatest Penalties and Threatnings on the other That there is an express Law for Confession besides what hath been said already see 1 Pet. 3. 15. Sanctifie the Lord God of Hosts in your Hearts and be ready always to give an answer to every one that asketh you a Reason of the Hope that is in you with meekness and fear where they are required not only to revere God in their Hearts but to be ready to own him with their mouths and to give a Testimony of him when it should be demanded Yea that sanctifying God in their Hearts is required in order to the Testimony given with their Mouths that having due and awful thoughts of God they may not be ashamed to own him before men Now this is backt with the greatest Promises and on the other side with the severest Threatnings God hath promised no less than Salvation to those that confess him Matth. 10. 33. Whosoever will confess me before Men him will I confess also before my Father which is in Heaven Father this is one of mine he will do them more honour than possibly they can do him and Rom. 10. 10. With the Mouth Confession is made to Salvation Salvi esse non possumus saith Austin nisi ad salutem proximorum etiam ore profiteamur Fidem We cannot be Saved unless we profess the Faith that we have On the other side the neglect of Profession either out of Shame or Fear is threatned with the greatest penalties Mark 8. 38. Whosoever shall be ashamed of me and my Words in this adulterous and sinful Generation of him also shall the Son of Man be ashamed when he cometh in the Glory of his Father with his Glorious Angels Then when all shadows flee away and we would crouch for a little favour that Christ should be ashamed of us these were Christians but cowardly and dastardly ones I cannot own them to be of my Flock and Kingdom Oh how will our faces gather blackness the same is Luke 9. 26. Whosoever shall be ashamed of me and of my Words of him shall the Son of Man be ashamed when he shall come in his own Glory and in his Fathers and of the holy Angels So for Fear 2 Tim. 2. 11. If we suffer we shall also Reign with him if we deny him he will deny us So that you see it is not a matter of small moment whether we confess or no but a thing expresly enjoyned by God and that upon Terms of Life and Death 2. This Confession is of great use as conducing much to the Glory of God and the good of others 1. The Glory of God which should be the great scope and end of our Lives and Actions is much concerned in our confessing or not confessing what we believe When we boldly avow the truth it is a sign we are not ashamed of our Master Phil. 1. 20. According to my earnest expectation and hope that in nothing I shall be ashamed but that with all boldness as always so now also Christ shall be magnified in my Body whether it be by Life or by Death Ministry or Martyrdom he calls this a magnifying of Christ whereas flinching concealing halfing the Truth denying Confession it is called a being ashamed of Christ Luke 9. 26. Whosoever shall be ashamed of me and of my words as if his Name were a thing base unworthy not to be owned 2. The Good of others and their Edification is concerned in our confessing or not confessing No man is born for himself and therefore is not only to work out his own salvation but as much as in him lieth to procure the salvation of others and to bring God and his Truth into request with them therefore not only to believe with the heart that concerneth himself but to confess with the mouth that concerneth the good of others when we own the Truth though it cost us dear that tendeth to the furtherance of the Gospel Phil. 1. 12. 13. For I would ye should understand Brethren that the things which happened unto me have fallen out rather unto the furtherance of the Gospel so that my Bonds in Christ are manifest in all the Palace and in all other places c. But when we dissemble that is a scandal and a stumbling block to others whom we justifie and harden in a false way as Peter fearing them of the Circumcision dissembled and the Iews dissembled with him insomuch that Barnabas was carried away with their Dissimulation Gal. 2. 12 13. Men of publick Fame and Favour when they are not men of courage and of self-denying Spirits their temporizing may do a great deal of hurt and like a Torrent or Stream carry others with them Oh! let us beware of this Zuinglius saith Ad aras Iovis Veneris adorare sub Antichristo fidem occultare idem est As well worship before the Altars of Jupiter and Venus as hide our Faith under Antichrist Fear and weakness excuseth not the Fearful and Unbelieving are put with Murderers and Sorcerers and Idolaters and sent together to the Lake that burneth with Fire and Brimstone Revel 21. 8. Use 1. To reprove them that think it to be enough to own the Truth in their Hearts without confessing it with their Mouths This Libertinism prevailed at Corinth where they thought they might be present at Idols Feasts as long as in their Consciences they knew that an Idol was nothing The Apostle argueth against them 2 Cor. 6. and concludes his Argument thus 2 Cor. 7. 1. Having therefore these Promises dearly Beloved let us cleanse our selves from all filthiness of the Flesh and Spirit To pretend to serve God in my heart whosoever thinks so mocketh God and deceiveth himself he that warreth with the Enemies of his Prince and is as forward in Battel as any of the rest can he say I reserve the King my Heart and Affections Or when a woman prostituteth her Body to another will the Husband be content with such an Excuse that she reserveth her Heart for him God is not a God of half of a man he made the whole Body and Soul and will be served with both he bought both 1 Cor. 6. 20. Ye are bought with a price therefore Glorifie God in your Body and in your Spirits which are Gods Therefore you should not only
necessary 1. To know the Mind of God and understand our Duty A superficial Knowledge hath no efficacy and hold upon us therefore by deep Meditation Search and Study we come to be more thorowly acquainted with the Mind of God revealed in his Word We are bidden Prov. 2. 4. to dig for knowledge as for silver Mines do not lie in the surface but in the bowels of the earth Every day we should get more knowledge Rom. 12. 2. Be ye transformed by the renewing of your minds that ye may prove what is the good and acceptable and perfect will of God And Ephes. 5. 17. Be not unwise but understanding what the will of the Lord is Now we cannot know this without a serious search and enquiry into the Rule of Duty There must be an accurate search Spiritual Knowledge will not drop into our mouths There are many Clouds of Ignorance and Folly that yet hover in the Minds of Men and they are dispelled more and more by a sound study of the Scriptures 2. To keep up a fresh Remembrance of our Duty Oblivion and Inconsideration is a kind of Ignorance for the time Though we habitually know a thing yet we do not actually know a thing till we consider of it Eccles. 5. 1. They consider not that they do evil So Hosea 7. 2. They consider not in their hearts that I remember all their wickedness That which we consider is always before us but that which we consider not is forgotten laid by and the Notions which we have about them are as it were laid asleep they work not But now frequent Meditation keepeth these things alive 3. Meditation is necessary to enkindle our Affections Affections are stirred by Thoughts as Thoughts by Objects The Truth cannot come home to our Hearts till we think of it again and again We have no other natural way to raise Affection and we must not think that Grace worketh like a Charm in a way contrary to the instituted Order of Nature No the Heart of Man must be besieged with frequent and powerful Thoughts before it will yield to God and give entertainment to his Truth and Ways There is no coming at the Heart but by the Mind and the Mind must be serious in what it represents to gain the Heart that is we must meditate The Devil watcheth our Postures he seeketh to catch these thoughts out of our Mind as soon as he seeth that we begin to be serious Mat. 13. 19. 4. Meditation is necessary to shew our Love I will lift up my hands also to thy commandments which I have loved and I will meditate in thy statutes Psal. 1. 2. His delight is in the law of the Lord and in his law doth he meditate day and night Psal. 119. 47. And I will delight my self in thy commandments which I have loved The Mind will muse upon what we love as Thoughts stir Affections so Affections stir up Thoughts for in all Moral things there is a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a pleasing Object will be much revolved in our mind and frequently thought of The Use is for Direction to us When you have heard the Word remember what you hear and apply it to your selves by serious inculcative Thoughts So when you read the Word do not onely understand it but think of it again and again Deut. 32. 46. Set your hearts to all the words which I testifie among you this day saith Moses to the Israelites So Christ Luke 9. 44. Let these sayings sink into your hearts Truths never go to the quick of the Affections but by serious and ponderous Thoughts You will not lift up your Hands till the Truth sink into the Heart You read Chapters hear Sermon after Sermon they do not stir you or it is but a little for a fit like a Man that hath been a little warming himself by the Fire and goeth away and is colder than he was before Oh Christian this Means is not to be neglected no more than Reading and Hearing because of its great use both for first Conversion and continual Quickening 1. For first Conversion A Man cometh to himself by serious Thoughts of those great and important Truths which are delivered in the Word of God Luke 15. 17. And when he came to himself he said c. Psal. 22. 27. All the ends of the world shall remember and turn unto the Lord. Psal. 119. 59. I thought on my ways and turned my feet unto thy testimonies 2. For continual Quickening Musing maketh the Fire burn The greatest things will not move us if we do not think of them Rom. 8. 31. What shall we then say to these things If God be for us who can be against us Job 5. 27. Lo this we have searched so it is hear it and know thou it for thy good The benefit of sound Doctrine consists in the application thereof by the Hearers When Men have spent their time and strength to find a good Lesson for us shall not we think of it SERMON LV. PSAL. CXIX 49. Remember thy word unto thy servant upon which thou hast caused me to hope IN the Words Observe 1. His Prayer and humble Petition to God Remember thy word God is said to remember when he doth declare by the Effect that he doth remember He sometimes seemingly forgets his promise that is to appearance carrieth himself as one that doth forget 2. His Argument is taken 1. From his Interest Thy servant 2. From his Trust and Hope which is expressed 1. As warranted 2. As caused 1. As warranted by his Word that gave him ground of Hope and Comfort 2. As caused by his Influence upon which thou hast caused me to hope The Word his Warrant the Spirit his Anchor Would God raise up such an Hope meerly to defeat it The Word concurred to this Hope as it offered 1. A Command to believe 2. The Promise of the Eternal and Immutable God to build upon The Influence of his Grace concurred for he that maketh the Offer in the Word doth also work Faith in the Believer and inclineth his Heart to apply the Promise and trust in it for faith is the gift of God Ephes. 2. 8. In short here is a Promise believed and pleaded and both confirm our Faith in the fulfilling and granting of it Doct. That Believers may humbly challenge God upon his Word and seek the full performance of what he hath promised This Point that it may be managed with respect to this Text I shall give you these Considerations 1. That God delighteth to promise Mercy before he accomplish it Which sheweth these things 1. His abundant Love God's Heart is so kindly affected to his People that he cannot stay till the accomplishment of things but he must tell us aforehand what he meaneth to do for us Isa. 42. 9. Before they spring forth I will tell you of them Long before there was any sight of such things or means that might produce them So that his Promise is an eruption
is pleasing in his sight and that is the ready way to come to Knowledge and sound Judgment Iohn 17. 17. Sanctify them through thy Truth thy word is Truth John 3. 21. He that doth truth cometh to the light that his deeds may be made manifest that they are wrought in God Men that have a mind to maintain an Opinion or suffer an evil Practice are prejudiced and byassed by the Idol that is in their hearts and so do not see what may be seen and what they seem to search after Therefore David urgeth this as an Argument in the latter end of the Text I have believed thy Commandments That is to say Lord I know this Word is thine and I am willing to practise all that thou requirest The great thing that is to be aimed about Knowledge is not onely that we may know and be able to jangle about Questions or that we may be known and esteemed for our knowledge but that we may practise and walk circumspectly and in evil days and times know what the will of the Lord is concerning us to desire knowledge as those that know the weight and consequence of these things as I shall shew more fully hereafter Those that would have good Judgment and Knowledge must be willing to understand their Duty and practise all that God requireth that they may neither doe things rashly and without knowledge and deliberation for then they are not good how good soever they be in themselves Prov. 19. 2. Also that the Soul be without knowledge is not good Or doubtingly after Deliberation For he that doubteth is in part condemned in his own mind Rom. 14. 23. And he that doubteth is damned if he eat We must have a clear Warrant from God or else all is nought and will tend to evil Then it is the Spirit of God satisfieth these desires when we earnestly desire of him to be informed in the true and perfect way Iohn 6. 45. They shall be all taught of God He hath suited Promises to the pure and earnest desire of Knowledge Then it is the Lord who sendeth means and blesseth means as he sent Peter to Cornelius Acts 10. and Philip to the Eunuch Acts 8. All is at his disposal and he will not fail the waiting Soul He hath made Christ to be Wisdome for this very end and purpose that he might guide us continually 1 Cor. 1. 30. But of him are ye in Christ Iesus who of God is made unto us Wisdome and Righteousness and Sanctification and Redemption 3. You must seek it in the Word that maketh us wise to Salvation and by the continual study of it we obtain Wisdome and Discretion There we have the best and safest Counsel It maketh wise the simple Psalm 19. 7. No case can be put so far as it concerneth Conscience but there you shall have satisfaction Col. 3. 16. Let the word of God dwell in you richly in all Wisdome You must not content your selves with a cursory reading but mark the end and scope of it that you may be made compleatly wise by frequent reading hearing Meditation upon it and conferring about it There you find all things necessary to be believed and practised therefore you must hear it with Application reade it with Meditation 1. Hear it with Application the Lord blesseth us in the use of instituted means both light and flame are kept in by the breath of preaching Where Visions faile the People perish men grow bruitish and wild It is a Dispute which is the sense of Learning the Ear or the Eye by the Eye we see things but by reason of innate Ignorance we must be taught how to judge of them Iames 1. 19. Wherefore my Brethren let every man be swift to hear take all occasions And we must still apply what we hear Nunquid ego talis Rom. 8. 31. What shall we then say to these things Job 5. ult Loe this we have searched so it is hear it and know thou it for thy good Heb. 2. 3. How shall we escape if we neglect so great Salvation Return upon thine own heart 2. Reading Scriptures is every man's work who hath a Soul to be saved Other Writings though good in their kind will not leave such a lively impression upon the Soul All the moral Sentences of Seneca and Plutarch do not come with such force upon the Conscience as one saying of God's Word God's Language hath a special Energy here must be your study and your delight Psalm 1. 2. His delight is in the Law of the Lord and in his Law doth he meditate day and night 2 Tim. 3. 16 17. All Scripture is given by inspiration of God and is profitable for Doctrine for Reproof for Correction for Instruction in Righteousness that the man of God may be perfect throughly furnished unto all good works These make you wise unto Salvation your Tast is not right when you relish and savour humane Writings though never so good more than the Word of God A draught of Wine from the Vessel is more fresh and lively that Conviction which doth immediately rise out of the Word is more prevailing We suspect the mixture of Passion and private Aims in the Writings of others but when Conscience and the Word are working together we own it as coming from God himself besides those that are studying and reading and meditating on the Word have this sensible advantage that they have Promises Doctrines Examples of the Word ready and familiar upon all occasions others are weak and unsetled because they have not Scriptures ready In the whole work of Grace you will find no weapon so effectual as the Sword of the Spirit Scriptures seasonably remembred and urged are a great relief to the Soul No diligence here can be too much If you would not be unprofitable sapless indiscreet with others weak and comfortless in your selves reade the Scriptures We have sic scriptum est against every Temptation Besides you have the advantage to see with your own Eyes the Truth as it cometh immediately from God before any art of man or thoughts of their head pass upon it and so can the better own God in what you find 4. Long use and exercise doth much increase Judgment especially as it is sanctified by the Spirit of God You get an habit of discerning fixing directing guiding your ways 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 5. 14. Who by reason of use have their Senses exercised to discern good and evil As men of full age by long use and exercise of the Senses of seeing smelling tasting have acquired a more perfect knowledge to discern what food is good and wholsome and what is unwholsome so by much Attention Studying and Meditation men who have exercised the intellectual Faculty to find out the scope and meaning of the Word of God do attain a more discerning Faculty and understand better the Truth of the Word and can judge what Doctrine is true and what false and more easily apprehend
out into leaves the baits of the Flesh must be taken from us that our gust and rellish of heavenly Things may be recovered The Use is to caution us against our Murmurings and taxing of God's Providence How few are there that give him thanks for his seasonable Discipline and observe God's Faithfulness and the Benefit they have by Afflictions but rather murmur repine and fret through Impatience If it be good to be afflicted let us accept of it for Good is matter of choice Levit. 26. 41. If their uncircumcised hearts be humbled and they then accept of the punishment of their Iniquity Now all Affliction on this side Hell is good as 't is a lesser evil hic ure hic seca if God will cut here burn here lance here as a Chirurgion that we may not be destroyed for ever corrected that we may not be condemned 1 Cor. 11. 32. 'T is good as it is a means to Good for the end putteth a loveliness also upon the means though things in themselves be harsh and sowre We must not consider what things are in themselves but what they are in their reduction tendency and final use so all things are yours Crosses Deaths 1 Cor. 3. 18. all their Crosses yea sometimes their Sins and Snares by God's overruling We lose the benefit of our Affliction by our Murmurings Repinings Faintings carnal Sorrows and Fears an impatient distrustfull Mind spoileth the working of God Tribulation worketh Patience and Patience Experience 'T is not the bare Affliction worketh but the Affliction meekly born Let us not misconstrue God's present way of dealing with us there may be a seeming harshness in some of his dealings but yet all things considered you will find them full of Mercy and Truth Murmuring is a disorder in the Affections misinterpreting in the Understanding to prevent it 1. Consider you must not interpret the Covenant by God's Providence but God's Providence by his Covenant Certain it is that all New Covenant-dispensations be Mercy and Truth Psalm 25. 10. our Crosses not excepted by them God is pursuing his Covenant and eternal Purpose concerning our Salvation There is sometimes a seeming Contradiction between his Promises and his Providences Word and Works his Voice is sweet like Iacob's but his Hands rough like Esau's Goe into the Sanctuary and God will help you to reconcile things Psalm 73. 16 17. otherwise the difficulty will be too hard for you The Children of God that have suspected or displeased him have always found themselves in an Errour Isa. 49. 14 15. His Promise is the light side his Providence is the dark side of the Cloud Psalm 77. 19. Thy way is in the Sea and thy path in the deep waters and thy footsteps are not known We cannot trace him nor find out the reason of every thing which God doth onely in the general That he doth all things well Mark 7. 37. nay what is best 2. We must distinguish between a part of God's Work and the end of it We cannot understand God's Providence till he hath done his Work he is an impatient Spectatour that cannot tarry till the last Act wherein all Errours are reconciled Iohn 13. 7. What I do thou knowest not now but hereafter thou shalt know No wonder if we are much in the dark if we look onely to present sense and present appearance then his Purposes are hidden from us he bringeth one contrary out of another Light out of Darkness Meat out of the Eater God knoweth what he is a doing with you when you know not Ier. 29. 11. I know my thoughts to give you an expected end When we view Providences by pieces we know not God's mind for the present we see him it may be rending and tearing all things therefore let us not judge of God's Work by the beginnings till all work together Our present State may be very sad and uncomfortable and yet God is designing the choisest Mercies to us Psalm 31. 22. I said in my hast I am cut off from before thine eyes nevertheless thou heardest the voice of my Supplications when I cried unto thee Psalm 116. 11. I said in my hast all men are liars Hast never speaketh well of God nor his Promises nor maketh any good Comment upon his Dealings 3. We must distinguish between that which is really best for us and what we judge best for us Deuter. 8. 15 16. Who led thee through that great and terrible Wilderness wherein were fiery Serpents and Scorpions and Drought where there was no water who brought thee out water out of the Rock of Flint Who fed thee in the Wilderness with Manna which thy Fathers knew not that he might humble thee and that he might prove thee to doe thee good at the latter end Other Diet is more wholsome for our Souls than that which our sick Appetite craveth 'T is best with us many times when we are weakest 2 Cor. 12. 10. When I am weak then am I strong Worst when strongest 2 Cor. 26. 16. When he was strong his heart was lifted up to his own destruction Lot chose Sodom a fair and pleasant Situation but you know what inconveniencies he met with there Many times the Buffettings of Satan are better for us than a Condition free from Temptations so is Poverty Emptiness better than Fulness loss of Friends than the injoyment of them Use 2. Is of Information 1. By what note we may know whether God chastens us in anger yea or no whether our Crosses be Curses The Cross that maketh thee better cometh with a Blessing 't is not the sharpness of the Affliction we should look to but the improvement of it the bitter Waters may be made sweet by experiences of Grace if we are made more godly wise religious 't is a good Cross but if it leave us as careless and stupid or no better than we were before that Cross is but a preparation to another if it hath onely stirred up our Impatience done us no good God will follow his stroak and heat his Furnace hotter 2. It informeth us that 't is our Duty not onely to be good in Afflictions but we must be good after Afflictions David when escaped saith 'T is good for me that I have been afflicted Wicked men are somewhat good in Afflictions but assoon as they are delivered they return to their old Sins As Mettals are melted while they are in the Furnace but when they are taken out they return to their natural hardness but the godly are better afterwards 3. That every Condition is as the Heart is Afflictions are good if we have the grace to make a good use of them Look as the good Blessings of God by our Corruption are abused to wantonness and so made hurtfull to us so Crosses that are evil in themselves when sanctified are good All things are sanctified to us when we are sanctified to God Other things that would be Snares prove Helps and Incouragements are great Furtherances the Creature is
nor forsake thee And 1 Cor. 10. 13. God is faithful who will not suffer you to be tempted above that you are able to bear but will with the temptation also make a way to escape that you may be able to bear it To the eye of sense we are lost and gone and have no helper but God is never wholly gone Hagar set herself over against the Lad would not go too far from him God seems to throw us away but he keeps himself within sight he will not totally or finally forsake us 6. That God's usual way is by Contraries The Gospel-way to save is to lose Ioh. 16. 25. Mat. 16. 25. He that will save his life shall lose it and whosoever shall lose his life for my sake shall find it Ioseph was made a Slave that he may be made Governor of Egypt His Brethren sell him that they may worship him And he is cast into Prison that he may be preferred at Court Thus God by Shame bringeth to Honour by Misery to Happiness by Sorrow to Comfort and by Death to Life to teach us to hope against hope Rom. 4. 18. and to trust in him though he kill us Job 13. 15. For Death is ours as well as other things If Calamities shorten our lives they hasten our glory Persecution is the nearest way to Heaven in the eye of Faith and the Sword of the Enemy is but the Key to open the Prison doors and let out the Soul which hath long desired to be with Christ. 7. That 't is better to suffer than to sin In suffering the offence is done to us in sinning 't is done to God The evil of suffering is but for a moment the evil of sin for ever In suffering we lose the favor of men in sinning we hazard the favor of God Suffering bringeth inconveniency upon the Body but sinning upon the Soul The sinful estate is far worse than the afflicted Heb. 12. 28. The evil of Sufferings for the present the evil of Sin for afterwards 8. That Holiness Faith Meekness and Patience are better Treasures than any the world can take from us Certainly a Christian is to reckon himself by the inward man if he hath an healthy Soul he may the better dispense with a sickly Body 3d Epist. Iohn 2. If the inward man be renewed 2 Cor. 4. 16. If sore Troubles discover reality of Grace Sound and saving Faith discovered to the Soul is better worth than the worlds best gold 1 Pet. 1. 9. If carnal sense were not quickest and greatest we would judge so and not look to the sharpness of the affliction but to the improvement of it If the bitter water be made sweet if you be more godly wise and religious 't is enough Heb. 12. 11. No affliction for the present seemeth joyous but grievous nevertheless afterwards it yieldeth the peaceable fruit of righteousness to them that are exercised thereby If the loss of worldly comforts make us apply our selves to heavenly consolations if being disburdened of worldly incumbrances we go on in our way of serving God with more liberty and delight and when our dangers are greatest we draw near to God and adhere to him most closely and being persuaded of his love vigilancy and power with these and such kind of thoughts will a man be stocked who is with seriousness and delight conversant in the Scriptures and so will go on undisturbed in the course of his obedience 2 These things must be improved by meditation so saith David I will meditate on thy precepts 1. Sleepy Reason is unuseful to us and Truths lie hid in the heart without any efficacy or power till improved by deep serious and pressing thoughts Non-attendency is the bane of the world Mat. 13. 19. When any one heareth the word of the kingdom and understandeth it not then cometh the wicked one and catcheth away that which was sown in his heart Those invited to the Wedding Mat. 22. 5. made light of it Men will not suffer their minds so long to dwell upon holy things as to procure a good esteem of them then in seeing they see not and in hearing hear not as when you tell a man of a business whose mind is taken up about other things A sudden carrying a Candle thorough a Room giveth us not so full a survey of the Object as when you stand awhile beholding it A steady contemplation is a great advantage Attending is the cause of believing when we grow serious Acts 16. 14. Whose heart the Lord opened that she attended to the things spoken by Paul Acts 17. 11. And these were more noble than they of Thessalonica in that they received the word with all readiness of mind If People would often return to cosinder they would not be hardned in sin Psal. 4. 4. Commune with your own heart upon your beds Hagg. 1. 5. Now therefore thus saith the Lord of hosts consider your ways God's complaint was They would not consider his ways Job 34. 27. Isa. 1. 3. My people doth not consider Running thoughts never work upon us nor leave any durable impression like the glance of a Sun-beam or a Wave When the Soul is besieged by a constant battery of Truths it yieldeth but a mind scattered upon impertinent Vanities groweth not up to any considerable strength of faith or joy or comfort or holiness 2. God will not be served by the bie and at hap-hazard David taketh a resolution to study his duty The more deliberate our resolutions are the better Psal. 119. 59. I thought on my ways and turned my feet unto thy testimonies We shall never stumble upon a good course by chance Isa. 56. 4. And choose the things that please me Not take them upon some sudden motion but after mature and serious deliberation 3. To divert the mind from other things Afflictions and Troubles stir up a multitude of thoughts in us Psal. 94. 19. In the multitude of my thoughts Sometimes self-oppressing thoughts carking thoughts envious thoughts and repining at God's Providence the object of our trouble is ever before us Now there is no way to get rid of these but by exercising them upon better things Troubles make us concerned about matters of weight they employ our minds usefully which before were scattered to impertinent vanities Psal. 39. 3. My heart was hot within me whilest I was musing the fire burned That our minds may not be a prey to inordinate passions we pore upon the trouble and the heart is heated like an Oven stopped up and therefore keep the mind well employed 4. Frequent meditation keepeth our principles in view and memory We are apt to forget in our sorrows Heb. 12. 5. And ye have forgotten the consolation 'T is not ready at hand to support us in the time of Trouble A seasonable remembrance of Truths is a great relief to the Soul 't is the Spirit 's office 3 That Afflictions and Molestations have a great tendency and subserviency to promote and advance these
it so it is hear it and know thou it for thy good 1 A sound belief for it is reality that will work upon us Affection is always according to the strength of the persuasion 2 There must be application All kind of operation is by the touch The nearer the touch the greater the vertue so the more close they are upon the heart and touch and concern us the more they work upon us 3 There must be consideration we must seriously revolve these things in our mind and debate with our selves as for instance what a strict and precise account we are to give at the day of Judgment the inexpressible pains of hell and ineffable joys of Heaven generally we do not believe these things If we were persuaded there were a Heaven and Hell if we did think of them with application and say soul thou must one day go either to Heaven or Hell thou must one day appear before God and be put under a sentence of everlasting death or receive a sentence of everlasting life If we did consider them with serious and with inculcative thoughts is it indeed so then let me consider what I must do This reasoning and debating and whetting these truths upon the heart would work upon us and we should sooner see the fruit As Elisha stretched himself often upon the Shunamite's Son and kept stretching himself till the child began to wax warm and sneezed and then he opened his eyes So we should spread truth upon the heart till affection begin to quicken it Use 1. Reproof and that of three sorts of Persons 1. Those that go musing of vanity all the day and never can find a thought for God for Christ for the Covenant or for the great truths of the Word They have thoughts and to spare for other things Do those love the word of God and never spend a thought about it Prov. 6. 21. If the Word were bound upon us as a Jewel and chain then when thou goest it would lead thee when thou sleepest it would keep thee and when thou awakest it would talk with thee The word would ever be running upon our minds if we had any hearty affections to it Christians think with your selves have you thoughts for other things and none for God Christ Heaven and everlasting glory would you count him to be a charitable man that should throw away his meat and drink into the kennel rather than give him it that needs and asks it So would you count him to be a godly man one that hath a sincere love to God that hath thoughts he knows not what to do with but casts them away upon every idle toy and base inconsiderable thing and not a thought for God to suffer his thoughts to run waste yea run riot in envious repinings or unclean glances or revengeful or proud imaginations that can have thoughts for such trifles and never a thought for God and forget him days without number Ier. 2. 32. Have these affections to the Word of God 2. It reproves those persons to whom good thoughts are looked upon as a burden and melancholy interruption and when they rush into their minds are thrown out again like unwelcome guests These seem to be described by those words Rom. 1. 28. They did not like to retain God in their knowledge When men like not to entertain thoughts of God if they fasten upon our hearts we soon grow weary of them Christians to a gratious heart one that loves God and his Word thoughts of God and holy things are very comfortable and sweet Psal. 104. 34. My meditation of him shall be sweet But when they are so unwelcom and seem so troublesom to your souls have you a love to them To be weary of the thoughts of God it is to degenerate into Devils for it is part of the Devils torment to think of God They believe and tremble The more explicite thoughts they have of God the more is their horror increased If it be so with you judge whether you have this affection 3. Those that read and hear but do not meditate in order to affection and practice This duty must have its turn too if you will ever manifest affection and increase affection you must take some time to meditate and season your thoughts Iames 1. 24. For he beholdeth himself and goeth his way and straightway forgetteth what manner of man he was They lay aside thoughts of what they hear and read and so go into their old course again When you hear or read any thing of the Word of God the greatest part of the task is yet behind you are to meditate to exercise your thoughts therein When men hear and do not meditate it is like the seed which fell upon the path way Matth. 13. The fouls of the air came and picked it up When you do not labour to cover it to get it into your heart by deep and ponderous thoughts the Devil comes and takes it away again when you work it not into your souls Bare hearing leaves but little impression unless we debate and revolve it in our minds God spake once and I heard it twice saith Iob. He had it not only at the first delivery but at the rebound he went it over again in his thoughts Use 2. Information It informs us why we are so backward to meditate it is for want of love Oh how love I thy Law and then 't is my meditation all the day You think 't is want of time and want of parts and abilities I tell you 't is want of Love It is but a vain boasting and the greatest hypocrisie to say we love the Law of God and never exercise our minds therein For where there is love it will command our thoughts and if once you have found a heart you will find time abilities and thoughts to bestow upon holy things Love sets all the wheels of the Soul a work and therefore the great reason why meditation is so difficult is we have not such strength and such ardor of affections to the things of God The difficulty doth not lye in the duty it self but in the auckardness of our hearts to the duty you can muse upon other things why not muse upon that which is holy Use 3. To press you to shew love to the word of God this way by often meditating upon it Meditate upon the Doctrines Promises threatnings Man's misery Deliverance by Christ Necessity of Regeneration then of a Holy life the Day of Judgment Fill the mind with such kind of thoughts and continually dwell upon them A good man should do so and will do so He should do so Iosh. 1. 8. and he will do so Psal. 1. 2. O do not begrudge a little time spent this way for hereby we both evidence our love to the Word and increase it But to quicken you hereunto 1. The more the heart is replenisht with holy meditation the less will it be pestered with worldly and carnal thoughts The
honey There was somewhat of Prophetical Vision in these things but generally it is carried not an outward and literal eating but a spiritual taste relishing the sweetness of it Well then the Word must not only be read and heard but eaten What 's this spiritual eating of the Word Three things are in it and all make way for this taste 1 Sound Belief 2 Serious Consideration 3 Close Application He that would have a taste of spiritual things these three things are necessary 1. That there be a sound Belief of it Men have not taste because they have not faith we cannot be affected with what we do not believe Heb. 4. 2. The Word profited not not being mixed with faith in them that heard it What 's the reason Men have no taste in the doctrine of God and in the free offers of his grace It is not mingled with faith and then it wants one necessary Ingredient towards this taste So 1 Thes. 2. 13. Te received the Word of God which effectually worketh also in you that believe If you would have spiritual sense Faith makes way for it we must take the Word as the Word of God When we read in feigned Stories of inchanted Castles and golden Mountains they affect us not because we know they are but witty Fictions pleasant Fables or idle Dreams and such Atheism and Unbelief lies in the hearts of men against the very Scriptures and therefore the Apostle seeks to obviate and take off this 2 Pet. 1. 16. We have not followed cunningly devised fables intimating there is such a thought in man's heart Certainly if men did believe the mystery that is without controversie great that God hath indeed sent his Son to redeem the world and would indeed bestow Heaven and eternal happiness upon them they would have a greater taste but they hear of these things as a Dream of Mountains of Gold or Rubies falling from the Clouds If they did believe these glorious things of Eternity their hearts would be ravish'd with them 2. As Faith is necessary so serious Consideration by which we concoct Truth and chew them and work them upon the heart that causeth this sweetness by knocking on the Flint the sparks flie out those ponderous and deep inculcative thoughts of divine and heavenly things makes us taste a sweetness in them When we look slightly and superficially into the Word no wonder we do not find this comfort and sweetness but when we dig deeply into the Mines of the Word and work out truths by serious thoughts and search for wisdom when we come to see truth with our own eyes in its full nature order and dependance this is that which gets this taste Prov. 24. 13 14. My son eat thou honey because it is good and the honey comb which is sweet to thy taste So shall the knowledge of wisdom be unto thy soul when thou hast found it When men are serious look into the nature and see all truths in their order and dependance then they will be like honey and the honey comb this makes way for this sweet taste 3. There is necessary to this taste close Application For the nearer and closer things touch one another the greater their efficacy so the more close you set the Word home upon your own hearts the more it works Iob 5. 27. Know it for thy good break out thy portion of the bread of life look upon these promises and offers of grace as including thee these commands speaking to thee and these threatnings as concerning thee look upon it not only as God's Message in common but urge it upon thy soul. Ier. 15. 16. It was unto me the rejoicing of my heart There must be a particular application of these things These things are necessary to this taste with respect to the Object as there must be eating a taking into the mouth if we would taste so th●…e must be a digesting or working upon the Word by sound Belief serious Consideration close Application 2. As to this taste there is somewhat necessary as to the Soul or Faculty we must have a Palate qualifi'd for these delicates Now there 's a double qualification necessary to this taste an hungry Conscience and mortifi'd Affections 1. An hungry Conscience Without this a Man hath a secret loathing of this spiritual food his taste is benummed but to an hungry Conscience the Word is sweet when he is kept in a constant hungring after Christ and his Grace Prov. 27. 7. The full soul loatheth the honey comb but to the hungry soul every bitter thing is sweet Cordials they are nauseous things to a full stomach O but how reviving comfortable and sweet are they to a poor broken heart The first time that we got this taste it was when we were under the stings of a guilty Conscience then God came and tender'd his grace to us in Christ he sent a Messenger one of a thousand to tell us he fiath found a ransom and that we shall be deliver'd from going down into the Pit that he will spare us and do us good in Christ Jesus then the man's flesh recovers again like a child's Iob 33. 23. When men have felt the stings of the second death and God comes with a sentence of life and peace by Christ how sweet is it then Now though we have not always a wounded Conscience yet we must always have a tender Conscience always sensible of the need of Gospel support we came to this first relish of the doctrine of eternal life and salvation by Christ when we lay under the sentence of eternal death 2. The heart must be purged from carnal affections for until we lose our fleshly savor we cannot have this spiritual taste Rom. 8. 5. They that are after the flesh do savor the things of the flesh the word may be translated so A carnal heart relishes nothing but carnal things worldly pleasures worldly delights now this doth exceedingly deaden your spiritual taste Spiritual taste is a delicate thing therefore the heart must be purged from fleshly lusts for when fleshly lusts bear sway and doth relish the garlick and onions and flesh pots of Egypt your affections will carry you elsewhere to the vanities of the world and contentments of the flesh Look as sick men have lost their taste and that which is sweet seems sowr and ungreateful to a distemper'd appetite so a carnal appetite hath not this taste from the Word of God to a carnal heart it 's no more savory than the white of an Egg yea it is as gall to them but now to others it is exceeding sweet it is their joy the life of their souls Well then you see what is this spiritual taste that relish which a renewed soul hath for spiritual comforts Use. To persuade you to get this taste and when once you have got it take heed you do not lose it 1 It concerns you very much to get this taste take these Arguments 1. It is a
something without to draw you forward Nature thrusteth Occasion inviteth but Grace interposeth and checketh the motion Gal. 5. 17. The spirit lusteth against the flesh 't is against the bent and inclination of the New Nature there is a back Biass Ioseph had a temptation we read of occasion inviting but not of Nature inclining but presently his heart recoiled The heart of man is seldome without these counterbuffs 't is an advantage to have the new Nature as ready to check as the old Nature to urge and solicite 1 Iohn 3. 9. He cannot sin for his seed remaineth in him 2. In putting on the heart upon Duties that are against the hair and bent of corruption Such acts of obedience as are most troublesome and burthensome to the flesh as are laborious costly dangerous Laborious as private Worship wrestling with God in Prayer holding the heart to Meditation and self-Examination sluggish Nature is apt to shrink but love constraineth 2 Cor. 5. 14. Spiritual Worship and such as is altogether without secular encouragement that 's tedious to work truth into the heart to commune with God to ransack Conscience 't is troublesome but thy striving will overcome it So there is costly and chargeable work as Alms Contributions to publick good there must be a striving to bring the heart to it Then for actions dangerous as publick Contests for Gods Glory or keeping a good Conscience though with cost to our selves our great work is to keep the will afoot Nature is slow to what is good a Coachman in his journey is always quickning his Horses and stirring them up so must we quicken a sluggish will do what we can though we cannot do all that we should the will must hold up still A Prisoner escaped would go as far as he can but his Bolts will not suffer to make long Journies but yet he thinketh he can never get far enough so this will is a disposition that puts us upon striving to do our utmost for God 2. The matter resolved on To perform thy Statutes always unto the end Uniform obedience always or all his days As long as life lasteth we must be always ready to observe all Gods Commands which notes the continuity of our obedience sincerity and perpetuity of it We are to engage our hearts by a serious resolution to serve him and that not by fits and starts but always not for a time but to the end Resolve to cleave to him to hold him fast that he may not go to keep our hold fast that we may not go Take notice of the first decays and let us keep our hold fast and bewail often the inconstancy of our hearts that we are so unconstant in that which is good Every hour our hearts are changed in a duty What a Proteus would man be if his thoughts were visible in the best duty that ever he performed Rom. 7. 18. Evil is present with me but how to perform that which is good I find not our Devotion comes by pangs and fits now humble anon proud now meek anon passionate not the same men in a duty and act of a duty unstable as water Compare it with Gods constancy his unchangeable nature his love to us that we may be ashamed of our levity from everlasting to everlasting God is where he was the same the same to those that believe in him Secondly This to the end Gods Grace holdeth out to the end so should our obedience He that hath begun a good work will perfect it c. Consider how unreasonable it is to desire God to be ours unto the end if we are not his Psal. 48. 14. He is our God for ever and ever he will be our Guide till death He doth not lay down the conduct of his Providence So Psal. 73. 24. Thou shalt guide me with thy Counsel and afterwards receive me to Glory We can give nothing to God our obedience is but a profession of homage if God be always in our eye we shall be always in his We receive life breath and motion from him every moment he sustaineth us every day and hour yieldeth new mercy God watcheth over us when we are asleep yet how much of our time passeth away when we do not perform one act of love to God! The Devil is awake when we sleep to do us a mischief but the God of Israel never slumbereth nor sleepeth how can we offend him Let us then take up this serious resolution To perform Gods Statutes always to the end SERMON CXXIV PSAL. CXIX VER 113. I hate vain thoughts but thy Law do I love THere are in men two great influencing affections Love and Hatred one serves for choice and pursuit the other for flight and aversation The great work of Grace is to fix these upon their proper objects if we could but set our love and hatred right we should do well enough in the spiritual life Man fallen is but the Anagram of man in innocency we have the same affections but they are misplaced we love where we should hate and hate where we should love our affections are like a member out of joint out of its proper place as if the arms should hang backward If men knew how to bestow their love and hatred they would be other manner of persons than now they are In the Text we are taught what to do in both by Davids example see how he bestowed his love and hatred I hate vain thoughts but thy Law do I love Love was made for God and for all that is of Gods side his Law his Ordinances his Image c. but hatred was made for sin All sin must be hated of what kind and degree soever it be Every drop of water is water and every spark of fire is fire so the least degree of sin is sin Thoughts are but a partial act a tendency towards an action and yet thoughts are sin Of all the operations of the soul the world thinketh a man should be least troubled about his thoughts of all actual breaches of the Law these are most secret therefore we think thoughts are free and subject to no tribunal Most of the Religion that is in the world is but mans observance and therefore we let thoughts go without dislike or remorse because they do not betray us to shame or punishment These are most venial in mans account they are but partial or half acts What! not a thought pass but we must make conscience of it this is intolerable Once more of all thoughts vain thoughts would escape censure A thought that hath apparent wickedness in it a murtherous or an unclean thought a natural Conscience will rise up in armes against it but vain thoughts we think are not to be stood upon Oh but David was sensible that these were contrary to the Law of God transgressions as well as other thoughts and therefore inconsistent with his Love to God I hate vain thoughts Secondly He bestows his love on the Law Naturally
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
disobedience Surely there is no doubt in all this because they are revealed by God who is the supreme and original Truth and who neither is nor can be deceived for Gods understanding is the rule and measure of all other truths nothing is true but what is constant to his knowledge And he cannot deceive us that will not agree with the goodness of his Nature and love to Mankind therefore he is called God that cannot lie Tit. 1. 2. Secondly In making good God hath given us the most solemn assurance Heb. 6. 17 18. God willing more abundantly to shew unto the Heirs of promise the immutability of his counsel confirmed it by an Oath that by two immutable things in which it was impossible for God to lie we might have strong consolation He hath demitted himself to the terms of a Covenant given us a Seal Rom. 4. 11. And he received the sign of Circumcision a seal of the righteousness of faith Pledge 2 Cor. 1. 22. Who hath also sealed us and given the Earnest of his Spirit in our hearts He hath stood upon his truth above all things Psal. 138. 2. I will worship towards thy holy Temple and praise thy Name for thy loving kindness and for thy truth for thou hast magnified thy Word above all thy Name One part of the Word verifieth another in one part you have the promise in another the accomplishment the great promise of sending Christ Heb. 10. 5 6 7. Wherefore when he cometh into the world he saith Sacrifice and Offering thou wouldest not but a Body hast thou prepared me In burnt Offerings and Sacrifices for sin thou hast had no pleasure then said I Lo I come to do thy will O God He would not go back being willing to keep the promise afoot It was on our part a hand Writing against us in testification of our guilt and need of expiation but on Gods part an Obligation of Debt to pay our ransome Still he accomplisheth promises in the return of prayers and though the great payment be in the other World yet here God remembreth us still accomplishing the intervening promises and giving proof of his truth So that they that are acquainted with his Name will never distrust him Psal. 9. 10. They that know thy name will put their trust in thee for thou Lord hast not forsaken them that seek thee They that have known his way and the course of his dealings will have a confidence in him Prop. 5. They that would receive the Word as the Word of God must be soundly convinced of and seriously consider this righteousness and faithfulness in the Testimonies which he hath commanded for till then the Word worketh not on them 1 Thess. 2. 13. For this cause also thank we God without ceasing because when ye received the Word of God which ye heard of us ye received it not as the word of men but as it is in truth the word of God which effectually worketh also in you that believe And till then they are but customary Christians and can never rightly believe nor obey Iohn 4. 42. Now we believe not because of thy saying for we have heard him our selves and know That this is indeed the Christ the Saviour of the world First their Faith depends on the common Tradition or the testimony of the Church afterwards on the sure ground of the Word it self in which they find such clearness and efficacy that they cannot but yield to God The authority of man is nothing to it when our Faith is bottomed on a surer ground the authority of God speaking in his Word 1. There must be sound conviction or belief of this This is called The acknowledgment of the truth Tit. 1. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And Col. 2. 2. The riches of the assurance of understanding to the acknowledgment of the mystery of God and of the Father and of Christ. An assurance that God will keep touch with me that he will not delude me in the terms propounded in the Gospel This full perswasion of the truth of Gods Testimonies we must all aim at and seek after The assurance of my interest and my salvation is another thing and yet that I am not to neglect but with this I am to begin 2. There must be serious Consideration for that improveth all truths and maketh them active and effectual Gods Complaint of his people is That they will not consider Isai. 1. 3. The Oxe knoweth his Owner and the Ass his Masters Crib but Israel doth not know my people doth not consider They do not lay truths in the view of Conscience Food without mastication and chewing nourisheth not A thing not considered doth profit as little as if not believed as a forgetting God is a kind of denying of him Seriously then debate it with your selves You must consider the authority of God Authority is that right which a Superior hath to prescribe to such as are under him Doth God usurp upon you when he giveth you a Law or hath he left you in the dark that you do not know whether this be his Law yea or no Are there no strictures of his Majesty in the very oeconomy and frame of it Can any but a God speak at such a rate And for his Justice hath he commanded any thing to your hurt No it is all for thy good Deut. 6. 24. And the Lord commanded us to do all these Statutes to fear the Lord our God for our good always And for his Truth Men may deceive and be deceived and though they often speak truth they do not always so but God seeth by his own light not by discourse but vision Truth is his Nature from which he can no more swerve than from himself and what need he court a Worm and flatter us Thus should we urge our hearts Use 1. Let us owne and improve the Word as a righteous and faithful Word which God hath commanded for our good 1. Owne the authority of it It is not an arbitrary thing the Truths revealed imply a command to believe them the Duties required imply a command to obey them Mat. 17. 5. This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased hear ye him God hath commanded us to hear Christ to believe in his name to love one another 1 Iohn 3. 23. And this is his Commandment That we should believe in the name of his Son Iesus Christ and love one another as he gave us Commandment As we value his Word and would one day see his face with comfort we should bind his precepts upon our hearts Say to thy soul As thou wilt answer it to God another day take care of this 2. Owne and improve the righteousness of his Testimonies Man having a total and absolute dependance upon God God might govern us in what manner it pleased him for it is just That one may do with his own what he will Matth. 20. 15. But what hath the Lord required of thee but to love him
and swallow a Camel it discovers the hypocrisie that lights upon the Professors of Religion full of hainous out-cries upon small things yet dash upon things that are against the fundamentals of the Covenant SERMON CLVII PSALM CXIX VER 140. Thy Word is very pure therefore thy servant loveth it THere are three things in this Verse 1. The Excellency of the Word Thy Word is very pure 2. Davids respect to it Thy Servant loveth it 3. The Connexion between both in the illative particle Therefore 1. The Excellency of the Word Thy Word is very pure That which we render very Pure signifieth tryed in the Fire and refined the Septuagint reads it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Thy Word is set on Fire and so you may see it explained Psal. 12. 6. The words of the Lord are pure words like Silver tryed in a Furnace of Earth purified seven times The expression may import two things First the infallible certainty of the Word And secondly the exact purity First The Infallible certainty of the Word As Gold indureth in the Fire when the dross is consumed Vain conceits comfort us not in a time of trouble but the Word of God the more 't is tryed the more you will find the excellency of it the Promise is tryed as well as we are tryed in deep afflictions but when 't is so it will be found to be most sure In the Old Translation 't is thy word is proved most pure Psalm 18. 30. The Word of the Lord is tryed he is a buckler to all them that trust in him So Prov. 30. 5. The word of the Lord is pure he is a shield to all that trust in him as pure Gold suffers no loss by the fire so the promises suffer no loss when they are tryed but stand to us in our greatest troubles Secondly It notes the exact perfection of the Word there is no dross in Silver and Gold that hath been often refined so there is no defect in the Word of God 2. Here is Davids respect to the Word speaking of himself in the third person he saith Thy Servant loveth it The Children of God love the Word and the duty and Obedience it prescribeth so as effectually to follow it that 's love and none but that 3. Here is his reason for it Therefore I love it because 't is pure wicked men hate it and slight it for this very reason the Word of God so is pure that it ransacks their their Consciences and therefore they cannot indure it The Carnal mind is not subject to the Law of God neither indeed can be Rom. 8. 7. But the Saints do the rather imbrace it wicked men could wish it were less strict that it might be calculated to their turns but the Children of God love it for this reason Doctrine That Gods Children see such purity in his Word that therefore they value it and love it exceedingly The point will be made good by four Considerations 1. That the Word of God is pure 2. That this pure Word must be loved and esteemed by us 3. That we must not only love Gods Word but see why we love it 4. Among all the grounds and reasons of our love to the Word of God this is the most noble and excellent to love it for its purity For the first of these That the Word of God is pure yea as 't is superlatively expressed in the text 't is very pure that will appear in two respects 't is pure in it self and it maketh us pure 1. 'T is pure in it self because 't is an holy rule fit for God to give and us to receive exactly comprizing the whole duty of man We need not seek elsewhere for direction in order to true happiness Psal. 19. 8. The Commandment of the Lord is pure enlightening the Eyes as Mettal refined from all dross So here is not the least mixture of errour folly or falshood not the least Corruption or flaw to be found in it as in all other Books of humane Composure All other Writings come as short of the Scripture as a Coal doth of the Sun The whole Art and Design of this Holy Book is to advance the Spiritural and Heavenly Life and not to fashion our outward carriage a little for converse with men but to bring us into Fellowship and Communion with God and to direct us to do all things from holy principles in a holy manner to holy ends There is no dead fly in this box of Oyntment no blemish of Weakness and Imperfection it hath the manifest Impress of the Author left upon it and is the Copy of that exact holiness which is in God himself 2. The Word is very pure as it maketh us pure if we diligently attend unto it Ps. 119. 9. By what means may a young man cleanse his way By taking heed thereunto according to thy Word 'T is not said by what means may a young man guide his way as if he were yet to chuse or were as white paper indifferent to any impression But by what means shall a young man cleanse his way Mans heart naturally is a sink of sin and he delighteth to wallow in this puddle as Swine do in the Mire he hath gotten a tang and smatch of the old Adam Now is there no way to make his Heart and his Way clean Yes if he will take Gods Counsel and direct his Life according to the Word A young man that is in the heat and strength of his lusts he may be cured and cleansed Christ prayeth Iohn 17. 17. Sanctifie them by thy Truth thy Word is Truth The work is Gods but he doth it by the Truth or his Will revealed in the Word He hath reserved the power of his spirit for this dispensation and way of Institution of Mankind A moral Lecture may make a man change his Life but 't is the Word of God that changeth his Heart his spirit goeth along with his word So Iohn 15. 3. Now you are clean through the Word that I have spoken unto you The Word is the Instrument of purifying sinners and to get rid of their sins But how doth the word make us pure As 't is an appointed Instrument of the spirit and as 't is an accommodate instrument to such an end and purpose 1. 'T is an appointed instrument by which the spirit will work 1 Pet. 1. 22. Ye have purified your Souls in obeying the Truth through the Spirit 'T is the spirit of Christ that powerfully worketh it but yet in and by the Truth he worketh by his own means he will not joyn his assistance with other things The sum of what I would say is this 't was meet that God should give a rule to his Creatures or else how should they know his will and then 't was meet he should honour his Rule by owning it above all other Doctrines by the concomitant operation of his spirit that this might be a Constant Authentick proof of its divine Authority The
Wicked alive in some sense II. When is the Word deeply imprinted upon our Minds That is discovered by two things sound Belief and serious Consideration when 't is strongly Believed and often duly Considered 1. When 't is strongly Believed or else it worketh not for all things work according to the Faith we exercise about them 1 Thes. 2. 13. The Word of God which worketh effectually also in you that Believe Did we believe that our Eternal Condition did depend upon the observance or non-observance of this Rule we would regard it more Psal. 119. 66. Teach me good Iudgment and Knowledge for I have believed thy Commandments Lord I believe I must stand or fall by this Rule and therefore let me know all my Duty so Heb. 11. 13. Being perswaded of these things they imbraced them We have not a thorough perswasion about these things our perswasions about Eternal things are very weak when Gods expressions about it are very clear and strong Most men guess at a World to come but are not thoroughly perswaded They have a loose or general opinion that the Scripture is the Word of God the Rule by which they shall be tryed but do not soundly assent to it and receive it as the Word by which they shall be Judged at the last day Iohn 12. 48. Christ pronounceth as the Word pronunceth There is a Non-contradiction but not an active and lively Faith this and nothing but this bindeth the Will and Conscience to obedience 2. Often Considered David still insists upon this the Everlasting Righteousness of Gods Testimonies 'T is as if he had said I have said it already and I will repeat it again and again 'T is constant thoughts are Operative and musing maketh the fire burn Green wood is kindled not by a flash or spark but by constant blowing Deep Frequent and Ponderous thoughts leave some impression upon the Heart the greatest matters in the World will not work much upon him that will not think upon them All the Efficacy is lost for want of these ponderous thoughts Why are all the offers and invitations of Gods Grace of so little effect Math. 22. 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they made light of it they would not take it into their care and thoughts Why do all the injunctions and precepts of God work no more Men will not consider in their hearts Deut. 4. 39 40. all the Comminations of God Psal. 10. 22. and therefore he calls upon them Now consider this ye that forget God lest I tear you in pieces and there be none to deliver It 's for want of this that all the promises of God of Heaven and Happiness work so little upon us 2 Tim. 2. 7. Consider what I say and the Lord give you understanding in all things The truth lieth by neglected unimproved till consideration take it up and lay it in the view of Conscience and then it worketh Till we take it into our thoughts we have no use of any truth therefore set your hearts seriously to consider of these things III. Why the Everlasting Righteousness of Gods Testimonies should be deeply imprinted in our Minds 1. It Establisheth our Judgments against vain Fancies and the humour of other Gospeling The Apostle saith Gal. 1. 8. Though we or an Angel from Heaven preach any other Gospel to you then that we have preached unto you let him be accursed 1 Tim. 6. 3. If any man teach otherwise c. There are some that expect speculum spiritus sancti a greater measure of light beyond what the Spirit now affordeth new Nuntioes from Heaven to assoil the doubts of the perplexed World No the present Rule leadeth a Believer all along in his way to Heaven other and better Institution shall not be cannot be Christ promised to bless this Doctrine to the Worlds end Matth. 28. 20. I will be with you to the end of the World to guide and succour them Christ prayed for no others but those that believe through their Word Ioh. 17. 20. this Word which the Apostles have consigned to the use of the Church An Angel is accursed if he should bring any other Doctrine Gal. 1. 8. There is no other way of Salvation given or to be given Act. 4. 12. if an Angel should hold out another way believe it not The Apostle propounds an Impossible case to shew the certainty of this way 't is good to be sure of our rule now this Consideration helpeth that 2. Because it bindeth and helpeth to Obedience partly as it sheweth the absolute necessity of Obedience because the terms of Salvation are indispensibly fixed and will Everlastingly stand in force therefore I must yield to God or perish The soul cometh off most kindly to the wayes of God when 't is shut up unavoidably without all hope of escape and evasion but by yielding to Gods Terms The Lord will have the World know that there is no hope of a dispensation Mark 16. 16. He that believeth shall be saved and he that believeth not shall be danined The Terms are peremtorily fixed there is no relaxation in the Gospel-Covenant Now this doth bind the heart exceedingly to consider verse 152. of this Psalm Concerning thy Testimonies I have known them of old thou hast founded them for ever And partly as it urgeth to speediness of Obedience You will not get better Terms for the Righteousness of Gods Terms is Everlasting as good yield at first as at last The Laws of Christianity are always the same and your heart is not likely to be better by delay Your standing out were more Justisiable in the account of Reason if you could get better Terms Partly as it ingageth to seriousness whilst it carrieth the mind off from the vanities of the World into the midst of the World to come I am not to mind what will content me for the present but what will profit me for ever Holiness will abide when other things fade My ways are to be scanned by an eternal Rule some distinctions will not outlive time as Rich and Poor High and Low but the distinction of Holy or Un-holy Sanctified or Un-sanctified these abide 1 Pet. 1. 24. All flesh is grass and the glory of Man as the flower of grass the grass withereth and the flower thereof falleth away but the word of the Lord indureth for ever Nothing stirreth us up more to provide for a better Life than to consider the uncertainty of the Worlds Glory and the Everlastingness of Gods Approbation according to the rule of his Word When all things are dissolved we are to be tryed by a Rule that will never fail Our Pomp and Honour and Credit and all things that we hunt after in the World are soon blasted but the Gospel tells us of things that are everlasting Everlasting Torments and Everlasting Bliss and therefore our thoughts should be more about them Isa. 55. 2. Why do you spend your money for that which is not bread and your labour for that which
are my Meditation We see things in transitu and know them only by hear-say without Meditation To move the Will we had need deal seriously with our own hearts e're we can gain them to a Consent Thoughts are the spokesmen that make up the Match between the Soul and the Temptation they were given for the like office in good things they are the first Acts of the Soul to set a-work all the rest Things lye by till we take them into our Thoughts and Consideration at leisure that we may know what is their tendency and how they concern us You cannot Imagine the Gospel should work as a Charm and Convert us we know not how before Consent and Choice There is a propounding and debating of terms the greatest matters will not work on him that doth not think of them God and Christ and Heaven and Salvation are looked upon in a cold and remiss manner without this serious Consideration And to excite and quicken and stir our Affections Meditation is useful We complain of deadness and we our selves are the Cause because we do not rouse up our selves excite and compel our selves expostulate with our selves Isa. 64. 7. And there is none that calleth upon thy name and stirreth up himself to take hold of thee Man hath a power to whet Truths upon his own heart and if he will not make use of it and reason for God with our selves we are justly left under the power of deadness and stupidness of Spirit 2. 'T is a great help to our Graces Faith takes root by Meditation Matth. 13. 5. The seed forthwith sprang up because it had no deepness of earth A careless slight heart is no fit soil for Faith to grow in 2. Hope is made lively by Consideration of the thing hoped for 3. Charity is inflamed by the sight and frequent view of Divine Objects in their Beauty and Amiableness 3. The Duties of Religion Reading and Hearing are effectual by Meditation The Use is for Exhortation to press you to Meditation 't is the Mother and Nurse of Knowledge and Godlinss the great instrument in all the Offices of Grace otherwise we take up things by hear-say this digests them and maketh them our own 1. It preventeth vain thoughts both as it stocketh the heart with Truth for good seed thick set and well rooted destroyeth the weeds and as it seasoneth the heart with a Gracious disposition and inureth it more to holy thoughts whereas those that do not use to Meditate how are their Minds pestered with swarms of vain thoughts which wholly divert it and turn it aside from God Man is mindless of holy things and if they turn into the heart by accident their entertainment is cold and careless as a man would be used that cometh into an house full of enemies 2. How great an affront is it to God to omit this part of Communion with him it is irkesome to think of him Saints find it otherwise Psal. 104. 34. My meditation of him shall be sweet Some God is said to be near in their Mouth and far from their Reins Ier. 12. 2. frequently spoken of but seldom considered by them That soul that hath a sincere and unfeigned love to him will take some time to solace itself with him alone to be sure God taketh it kindly at our hands Mal. 3. 16. A book of remembrance was written for them that feared the Lord and thought upon his name that have frequent and high thoughts of God in their hearts without which Love will presently languish and grow cold 3. What a neglect it is of Gods Messages of Love that you will not consider them Matth. 21. 5. And they made light of it And Heb. 2. 3. How shall we escape if we neglect so great Salvation He hath laid out all his Eternal thoughts upon a way of Salvation and manifested it to you and you entertain it with so much scorn that you will not set your minds to it and think it worthy a few sad and sober thoughts What Is it so tedious to think a thought of your own greatest Concernments Surely Man is strangely deprav'd to refuse this 4. What a likely means Meditation is to do you good I know 't is the Lord inclineth the Heart and our Thoughts work no further than God is in them yea he giveth us to think 2 Cor. 3. 5. But as it is our Duty so 't is a very proper means to improve our Graces and our Comfort for a constant steady continued view of truth surely will work more than a glance A transient view cannot leave such an impression upon us as a steady view We taste things better when they are chewed than when they are swallowed whole Meditation goeth over things again and again and pryeth into every part And as 't is a constant light so 't is an argumentative Consideration of things When one scale is not heavy enough we put in weight after weight till we gain our point bring off the Heart from such a vanity ingage it to such a pursuit by our own arguings with our selves Prov. 12. 14. A man shall be satisfied with good by the fruit of his own mouth Acts 17. 11 12. And these were more noble then they of Thessalonica in that they received the word with all readiness of mind and searched the Scriptures daily whether these things were so Therefore many believed because they had searched with all readiness of Mind 5. This is an Argument should prevail with Gods Children that we may know our growth in Grace by the frequency continuance and efficacy of holy thoughts At first good thoughts are few and rare the heart is so crouded with vanity that there is no room for God or his Word for these things keep their interest in the heart and draw the mind after them so that dayes pass over our heads and we forget God Psal. 10. 11. Or if they arise in our minds they find little entertainment there but are gone as soon as they come 'T is the Policy of the Enemy of our Salvation to draw our minds from one thing to another that good thoughts may pass over without fruit and benefit Or if we force our selves to continue they do not warm the heart only weary the brain But now when truths are ever with us they improve us Psal. 119. 98. Thou through thy Commandments hast made me wiser then my Enemies for they are ever with me Prov. 6. 22. When thou goest it shall lead thee when thou sleepest it shall keep thee and when thou wakest it shall talk with thee We have them always ready and at hand They that are sound at heart can pause with delight on heavenly things 'T is a good note of some progress 't is a sign the heart is heavenly carried out with a strong and prevailing love to heavenly things that earthly profits and vain pleasures have not such a hand over us as they were wont to have You have gotten the mastery
we should let them slip for if the word spoken by Angels was stedfast and every transgression and every disobedience received a just recompence of reward how shall we escape if we neglect so great Salvation The word spoken by Angels was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was only worth questioned no but the truth also because so little believed therefore so little thought of less desired least of all pursued and sought after 2 Pet. 1. 16. We have not followed cunningly devised fables when we made known to you the power and coming of the Lord Iesus but were eye-witnesses of his Majesty Use. Oh study to be informed more and more of this great Truth le ts think of and often consider the unerring Certainty of the Scripture 'T is a Truth not to be supposed and taken for granted but known that you may build sure Man is apt to suspect Evangelical Truths as being cross to his Lusts and Interests You will find it of use not only in great Temptations when we are apt to question all Psal. 73. 13. but in ordinary practice in every Prayer Heb. 10. 22. Let us draw near with a true heart in full assurance of Faith 'T is not an Assurance of our particular estate or our Title to Eternal Life but a full Assurance of the Word and Promise of God that is necessarily required in every one that will draw nigh to God Let us ask in faith nothing doubting Iam. 1. 7 8. 2. Do not content your selves with a light Credulity but grow up to a full perswasion 2 Tim. 3. 14. But continue thou in the things which thou hast learned and hast been assured of knowing of whom thou hast learned them And Col. 2. 2. That their hearts being comforted being knit together in love and unto all riches of the full assurance of understanding Not a fluctuating doubting Knowledge but a full perswasion of the Truth of the Gospel Luk. 1. 4. That thou mayest know the certainty of those things wherein thou hast been instructed Col. 1. 23. If thou continue in the faith grounded and settled and be not moved away from the hope of the Gospel a rooted perswasion that 't is the undoubted Truth of God the firmness of Faith should answer the firmness of Gods Word There are several degrees of Assent Conjecture Opinion weak Faith and receiving the Word in much Assurance 1 Thes. 1. 6. There is Belief Confidence Assurance and full Assurance Belief is grounded on Gods Word in general and all the Truths and Propositions therein contained Confidence on the Promise the one goeth before the other Fidelity is before Dependance and Belief for the Promise is first a Truth and so to be considered before it can be conceived under the formal notion of a Promise full Assurance is grounded on the Fidelity and Immutability of God no man believeth so far but he may believe more Doct. III. That Experiences of former times should give us encouragement to trust God for what is future Thy Testimonies I have known of old saith David So the Children of God make use of them See Davids Instance 1 Sam. 17. 36. Thy servant slew both the Lion and the Bear and this uncircumcised Philistian shall be as one of them Moreover David said the Lord hath delivered me from the paw of the Lion and the paw of the Bear and he will deliver me out of the hand of this Philistine Thus he argueth from former experience to future deliverance I trust in the same God who is able to give the same strength and why should I not look for the same success So Iacob Gen. 32. 10 11. I am not worthy of the least of all thy Mercies and of the Truth thou hast shewed to thy servant for with my staffe I passed over this Iordan and now I am become two bands deliver me I pray thee from the hands of my brother Esau. So Psal. 23. 5 6. Thou hast prepared a table for me in the presence of mine enemies Surely goodness and mercy shall follow mee all the dayes of my life He hath been good to me and if it be for his glory he will be still good to me he hath been my God and will be my God and shall be my God for ever 2 Cor. 1. 10. Who hath delivered from so great a death and doth deliver in whom we trust he will yet deliver us In all respects of time we stand in need of deliverance when one is past another cometh there have been dangers there are dangers and there will be dangers but God hath doth and will deliver It is a Trade God hath used an Art he is versed in and never at a loss about Our God is a God of Salvation and is excellent in working of it Reasons of the Point I. Gods Constancy and Unchangeableness God is the same alwayes like himself for Mercy Power and Truth he is never at a loss what he hath done he can do and will do I am is Gods Name not I have been or shall be his Providence is new and fresh every Morning Lament 3. 23. God is but one God Gal. 3. 20. Alwayes like himself as he hath delivered so he doth and will Isa. 59. 1. Behold the Lords hand is not shortned that he cannot save neither his ear heavy that he cannot hear No decay in him when we give to another we give from our selves we waste by giving the Creatures are at a stint and soon spend their allowance but God cannot be Exhausted there is no decrease of Love and Power no wrinkle upon the brow of Eternity II. Experience begets Confidence Rom. 5. 3. And patience experience and experience begets hope The heart is much confirmed when it hath Faith and Experience of his side If we were as we should be the Promise should be beyond all Experiences for it is the Word of him that cannot lye Experience addeth nothing to the certainty of the Promise nor any Authority to it only in regard of our weakness 't is an help and sensible Confirmation against our distrustful Cares and Fears Sense and Experience is not the ground of Faith we must believe God upon his bare word yet 't is an encouragement Ioh. 20. 29. Because thou hast seen me thou hast believed Then more encouraged when felt Christ. We have a double proof and experience 1. What God is able to do for us 2. What God will do again when his own Glory and our need requireth it 1. We know what God can do former Deliverances are as so many Monuments and significations of his Power Isa. 51. 9. Awake awake O arm of the Lord art not thou he that cut Rahab and wounded the Dragon awake and put on strength as in the ancient dayes Rahab is Egypt Psal. 87. 4. the Dragon Pharaoh Ezek. 29. 3. the Dragon or Crocodile of Egypt Can he do this and not do that Upon every experience we that learn by sense should be more strongly perswaded of Gods Power 'T
trembled at the words of the God of Israel None so careful to redress Disorders to use all the means they can to prevent Judgment as those that Tremble at Gods Word and therefore they above others did Assemble to Ezra A Man hath gained a great Point when he doth not value his Condition by External Probabilities but by the sentence of the Word 'T is hopeful if the Word speaketh good unto it sad when the Word speaketh bitter things This man will be otherwise affected than the most are and more careful to please God Once more Ezra 10. 3. Those that tremble at the Commandment of our God Shechaniah referreth the Reformation to them These are Persons exactly Conscientious they make Gods Commandments their Rule and tremble at the apprehension of having any thing done against Gods Will None so fit as they to Judge of Cases of Conscience and to regulate Affairs men that inlarge themselves and do not stand so nicely on the Will of God will be more lax and complying with their own Lusts and the humours of Men. First I shall shew you what it is to stand in Awe of the Word Secondly Then give you the Reasons why they that are Godly will do so First What it is to stand in Awe of the Word We will determine it by opening the Circumstances of the Text. And I. Let us take notice of the seat of this Affection the Heart my heart standeth in awe of thy word A true Reverence of the Word of God must be planted in the heart or else all outward profession of respect is but hypocrisie Psal. 50. 16 17. Unto the wicked God saith what hast thou to do to declare my statutes or that thou shouldest take my covenant into thy mouth seeing thou hatest instruction and castest my words behind thy back Many may solemnly pretend to Piety and talk of it and perhaps Preach of it to others but do not exactly reform their Carnal practices they do but abuse themselves and deceive others so strangely are many bewitched with their own deceitfulness of Heart and power of Satan that they can without remorse of Conscience profess the true Religion pretend to a Covenant with God yet affront that Religion by being loose and scandalous and can break the Covenant without any scruple such are Contemners of Gods Word however they seem Reverencers of it That Psalm speaketh of the Collection of the Gospel Church Gather my saints together who have made a Covenant with me by sacrifice not that of Bulls and Goats but by Christ Jesus But many profane this Covenant and are carried away by every Temptation some as greedy Thieves and Extortioners some as filthy Adulterers some as Haters of Godliness some as injurious Slaunderers and Whisperers and Backbiters in the Christian World this prediction is too plainly verified the carnal Christian and the serious Christian profess respect to the same Bible to believe the same Creed to enter by the same Baptism to claim Priviledge by the same Covenant yet hate one another and are as contrary one to another as perfectly as Infidels and Pagans on the one side there is Mouth-respect to the Word on the other Heart-respect the one in outward Covenant with God the other brought into the Inner Court God beareth long with the former sort but will not bear alwayes So Ier. 12. 2. Thou art near in their mouth but far from their reins They profess thee in Word but deny thee in Heart and in Deed Draw near thee in Shew and Pretence as a People in League with thee but their Hearts Love and Affection are wholly estranged from thee And would take it ill to have their Religion disproved or questioned yet are not brought under the Power of it So Isa. 28. This people draw near unto me with their mouth and with their lips honour me but have removed their heart from me and their fear towards me is taught by the precepts of men Because of Tradition teaching by Authority maintaining or injoyning the worship of God a Worship and Respect to God they will have but such as doth not proceed from an impression upon their Hearts but only in Complyance with their Customs II. The Kind of the Affection standeth in awe There is a twofold Awe of the Word 1. One that driveth us from it 2. Another that draweth us to it 1. Fear and Awe of the Word which driveth us from it is spoken of Ioh. 3. 20 21. For every one that doth evil hateth the light neither cometh to the light lest his deeds should be reproved But he that doth truth cometh to the light that his deeds may be made manifest that they are wrought in God Carnal men who live contrary to the light of Nature and Scripture that they cannot indure any thing which should put them into a serious remembrance of God This is an effect of Legalisme and slavish Fear which as it bewrayeth itself in its carriage towards God himself so also in its Carriage towards his Saints and Word Towards God himself a slavish fear of God is alwayes accompanied with an aversation or a turning away from him as Guilty Adam was afraid of God and hid himself in the Bushes Gen. 3. 10. and still an unsound Conscience is shy of God and hangeth off from him So towards the Saints who have Gods Image Printed upon them they fear the Saints and hate them As Herod seared Iohn and put him to Death Mark 6. 20. Still men Maligne what they will not Imitate Natural Conscience in them doth homage to the Image of God shining forth in the lives of his People they see an excellency in them which they have not and because all those who keep up the Majesty of their Profession are Objects reviving guilt they hate them and if their hatred be more than their fear they destroy them when 't is in their power So for the Word they are afraid of the Word so as to stand at a distance from it and cannot indure it no more than sore eyes can the light of the Sun they have a mind to cherish their Lusts and carnal Practices and therefore hate the light which disproveth them as they that would sleep draw the Curtain to keep out the Light whereas on the contrary the Godly delight to have their wayes tryed and made manifest by this Light 't is a refreshing light to them but a reproving and discovering light to others it convinceth them to be what they are now they shun all means of searching and knowing themselves by wishing such things were not sin or not desiring to know them so and that there were not a God to punish them But a sincere man is otherwise affected he is Jealous and suspicious of himself he bringeth his work to Gods Ballance and cannot quiet his Conscience without Gods Acceptance 2. There is an Awe of the Word not that maketh us shy of it but tender of violating it or doing any thing contrary to it
7. 22. Doctrine III. That among other sins we must hate falshood and lying and all kind of frauds and deceits I. I shall open the particular Notion of Lying in the Text. II. Shew you the Reasons against it I. To open the particular Notion of Lying 1. In the Vulgar Accceptation and sense of it we take it to be speaking an Untruth or that which is False with an intention to Deceive Now this is a sin contrary to the New Nature Col. 3. 9. Lye not one to another since ye have put off the old man with his deeds 'T is not only contrary to that natural Order which God hath appointed between the Mind and the Tongue but to that Sincerity and true Holiness which is our great Qualification and the fruit of Regeneration Therefore God saith Isa. 63. 8. Surely they are my people children that will not lye God presumeth that his People will not deal falsely but speak as they think and think of what they speak as it really is and that Christians will not deceive and circumvent others since they are members of the same Mystical Body and should seek one anothers welfare as much as they do their own Eph. 4. 25. Wherefore put away lying speak every one truth with his neighbour seeing ye are members one of another No 't is more unseemly in a Christian more inconsistent with Grace In short no sin maketh a Man more like the Devil Iohn 8. 44. Ye are of your father the devil and the lusts of your father ye will do he was a Murtherer 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 liar and the father of it 2. Concealing the Truth which should be Confessed God would not have his People hide themselves in necessary Truths he would have them believe with the Heart and Confess with the Mouth Rom. 10. 9 10. And Christianity is called a Confession Heb. 3. 1. and all Christians are saved either as Martyrs or as Confessors But how far we are to Confess lesser Truth is a great Case of Conscience Certainly we must do nothing against a Truth not appear in the garb of a Contrary party nor must we lye hid when God in his Providence cryeth out Who is of my side who We read of some Iohn 12. 42. who believed in Christ yet they did not confess him lest they should be put out of the Synagogue for they loved the praise of Men more then the praise of God Faith is in a very weak Condition when Confession is not joined with it when men will not own Christ in troublous Times and appear in their own shape Men that have much to lose have many Worldly Considerations they think these lose more than they can gain and lose by the Praise of God rather than the Praise of Men. Now the sincere Christian saith in these Cases I hate and abhor lying 3. 'T is contrary to that Obedience to God which we do profess there is a practical Lye as well as a vertual Lye when our practices do not Correspond with our Profession there is a lye acted as well as a lye told So Ephraim is said to compass God about with Lyes Hosea 11. 12. To say we have fellowship with God and walk in darkness is a Lye 1 Ioh. 1. 6. A Lye that tendeth to the disgrace of Religion in opprobrium Christi 1 Ioh. 2. 4. He that saith I know him and keepeth not his commandments is a Liar and the truth is not in him So he that speaketh much of the Spirit and walketh after the Flesh. Reasons 1. God is a God of Truth God cannot nor will not Lye and his People must be like him 2. His Word is the Word of Truth his Law requireth Truth and all falsehoods and deceits are contrary to that Justice and Charity which it establisheth His Gospel is a Gospel of Truth Eph. 1. 13. After ye heard the word of truth the Gospel of your Salvation 3. He requireth and worketh Truth in the Reins and inward parts Psal. 51. 7. Behold thou desirest truth in the inward parts Use. Oh then hate and abhor Lying you cannot be accepted of God else Ier. 5. 3. O Lord are not thine eyes upon the truth You cannot have Grace in your own hearts 2 Cor. 1. 12. This is our rejoycing that in simplicity and godly sincerity we have had our conversations in the world nor long continue undiscovered before men Prov. 26. 26. His wickedness shall be shewed before the Congregation Let us not Lye to God in our Promises we make to him Psal. 78. 34 35 36. When he slew them then they sought him and they returned and enquired early after God and they remembred that God was their rock and the most high their redeemer Nevertheless they did flatter him their mouth and they lyed unto him with their tongues In your Worship do not compass him about with Lyes complain of burdens which you feel not express desires which you have not In your Profession do not make it a Vail and Cover for your Lusts. A wicked or carnal design is inconsistent with uprightness of heart As to men abhor all false and deceitful practices and speeches When the Apostle biddeth us abhor that which is evil he first saith let love be without dissimulation Rom. 12. 9. You are not to live by Interest but by Conscience Therefore abhor all Hypocrisie Falsehood Treachery which are unworthy any ingenious Man much more a Christian. SERM. CLXXVIII PSALM CXIX VER 164. Seven times a day do I praise thee because of thy Righteous Iudgments IN these words the man of God giveth further proof of his love and delight in the Word by praising God for that benefit His praise is illustrated First By the frequent repetition of that duty seven times a day do I praise thee Secondly The subject matter because of thy Righteous Iudgments i. e. Gods dispensations agreeing with his Word First The frequency of the duty seven times a day that is very often Numerus definitus pro indefinito a number certain put for an uncertain seven is often used for many as Levit. 26. 18. I will punish you seven times more for your sins That is not exactly seven but many and divers times Prov. 24. 16. A just man falleth seven times a day and riseth up again Prov. 26. 25. There are seven abominations in his heart 1 Sam. 2. 5. She that is barren hath born seven and she that hath many Children is waxed feeble So here I gave thanks to thee as often as I meditate of them Some of the Jewish Rabbins stick in the very literal number seven twice in the morning before the reading of the Law and once after it and at noon and so in the evening as in the Morning so Rabbi Solomon indeed elsewhere Psal. 55. 17. Evening and Morning and at noon will I praise the Lord but
therefore will be worshipped in Spirit and Truth Iohn 4. 23 24. 'T is agreeable to his spiritual Nature therefore shows and fashions have little respect with him but reality and substance for he searcheth the Heart and tryeth the Reins 't is not the bowing the body so much as the humble affectionate reverence and submission of the soul. God hath appointed service for the Body and so far as God hath appointed it we must submit to it but chiefly for the soul our Worship must be chiefly inward flowing from Grace ingaging the Heart in Gods service Bodily exercise is of little profit that Worship which is most agreeable to Gods nature is most pleasing to him he hath not eyes of Flesh and seeth not as man seeth Iob 10. 4. Therefore external duties without the inward exercise of the Spirit is scarce worthy the name of Worship to God He is not taken with the pomp of Ceremonies and external Observances 1 Sam. 16. 7. For man looketh on the outward appearance but the Lord looketh on the Heart Men are taken with external pomp and formalities they suit with their fleshly natures but the more spiritual the more suitable to God That which you do be it in Worship 't is not done unto God but unto men when the Heart is not in it Col. 3. 23. And whatsoever ye do do it heartily as to the Lord and not unto men Without the Heart all that we do is but a mocking of God giving him the shell without the kernel 3. Because the soul is the principal thing that swayeth the body and stirreth it up to all that it doth it being of itself a senseless block it followeth the disposition and inclination of the Heart I shall make it good in two Considerations First 'T is Fons actionum ad extra And Secondly 'T is Terminus actionum ad intra 'T is the Fountain of all actions that go outward from man towards God and the subduing the Heart to Gods Will is the end of all operations inward from God towards man First Fons actionum ad extra The Fountain of all actions that go outward from Man towards God all natural actions proceed from the Soul or Heart 'T is not the Eye that seeth nor the Ear that heareth nor the Hand that toucheth nor the Feet that walketh 't is the Soul seeth by the Eye and heareth by the Ears and toucheth by the hands and walketh by the Feet So in all moral actions the heart is all Prov. 4. 23. Keep thy Heart with all diligence for out of it are the issues of Life All our actions proceed thence all the evil that we do cometh from the Heart Matth. 15. 19. Out of the Heart proceed evil Thoughts Murthers Adulteries Fornications Thefts False Witness Blaspemies all that we speak and think and do followeth the frame of the Heart This is the burning furnace from whence the sparks fly the occasion of sin may be without but the cause of it is ever from the Heart 'T is the Heart that filleth the Eyes with Wantonness Pride and Fury and the Tongue with Blasphemy Slanders and Detraction the hands with blood So for good Actions Thoughts they come out of the good Treasury of the heart Matth. 12. 35. A good man out of the good treasure of the heart bringeth forth good things The tapp runneth according to the Liquor wherewith the vessel is filled that a man hath laid up in his heart that he layeth out in his Thoughts and Speeches and Actions 't is the heart that enliveneth all our duties and we act ever according to the constitution of our Souls 2dly 'T is Terminus actionum ad intra all Actions inward the aim of it is to come to the heart The senses report things to the phantasie the phantasie represents them to the mind that counsels the heart so in Gods operations upon us his business is to come at the soul Wherefore doth he speak and reason and plead but that we may hear And wherefore do we hear But that Truth may be lodged in the heart or Soul Prov. 4. 4. Let thy Heart keep my Precepts let thy heart receive my Words Ay then Gods Word hath its effect upon us we are never subdued to God till the heart be subdued the Word for a while may stay in the memory and 't is good when the memory is planted with the seeds of knowledge as Children receive the Principles of Religion in Catechismes but the end is not there at length they exercise their Understandings about them when they begin to conceive of what they learned by rote and aftewards they begin to have a Judgement and a Conscience These Truths begin to stir and awaken them but it must not rest there neither it soaketh further and wisdom entereth upon the heart Prov. 2. 10. Ay that was Gods aim to bring the work thither and then the cure is wrought with man Rom. 6. 17. Ye have obeyed from the heart that form of Doctrine which was delivered to you So this is the end of all the operations of Grace that the soul and heart may keep Gods Testimonies so where is it that Christ would dwell when he taketh up his abode and residence in us the Apostle will tell you Eph. 3. 17. That he may dwell in your hearts by faith Till he get possession of the heart all is as nothing he will not dwell in the body only that is the Temple of the Holy Ghost at large there is an Holy of Holies a more inward place where he will dwell he will not dwell in the Tongue or in the Brain Memories or Understandings unless by common gifts But the Heart the Will and Affections of Man are the chief place of his residence there he dwelleth as in his strong Cittadel and from thence Commandeth other Faculties and Members So that the heart is the beginning and ending of the whole work of Religion from thence come all holy actions and thither tend all holy gracious operations 4. 'T is thy hearty Soul-service that will only bear weight in the ballance of the Gospel there may be many defects in the action yet if the heart be right God will accept the Will for the Deed and you will find Comfort in that another day when you most need it Isa. 38. 3. Remember now O Lord I beseech thee how I have walked before thee in truth and with a perfect heart Hezekiah had his infirmities and failings but his heart was upright Heb. 13. 18. Willing in all things to live honestly that 's a Gospel good Conscience and will yield comfort to you God accepts the Will without the Deed but never the Deed without the Will Infirmities may overtake the action but when the heart is unfeignedly set to serve God we shall be accepted We allow grains to true but not to counterfeit Gold the Church pleadeth Isa. 26. 8. The desire of our soul is to thy name and to the remembrance of thee When we follow