Selected quad for the lemma: water_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
water_n word_n work_n zealous_a 41 3 8.7529 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
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

There are 29 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

but is compared also to things that are of absolute necessity bread and water It is called bread of life and water of life Bread of life we cannot live without it Job 23. 12. I have esteemed the words of thy mouth more than my necessary food Food is that which keeps us in life and enables us to action and work And as water Isa. 12. 3. With joy shall ye draw water out of the wells of salvation This is as water to a fainting Traveller Christians the soul is better than the body and eternal life is to be preferred before life natural therefore the necessities of the soul are greater and should be more urging than the necessities of the body The Famine of the Word is threatned as a very great evil Amos 8. 11. Now because the necessities of the Saints are so great therefore have they their hearts carried out with such longing after the Statutes of God And this necessity is not only at first when they are weak but it continueth with them as long as the imperfection continueth with them and till they come to heaven Every grace in a child of God needs encrease and support There is something that is lacking to their faith to their love to their knowledg 1 Thes. 3. 10. The Apostle saith That I might perfect that which is lacking to your faith They that are above Ordinances are not acquainted with their own hearts they are not men of spiritual experience they do not know the weaknesses and languishings a child of God is incident to it is wholly inconsistent to the nature of grace Wherever there is life there must be food because of the constant depastion of the natural heat upon the natural moisture Though the stomach be never so full at present yet anon it will be hungry again so because of the constant combat that is between the flesh and spirit whereever there is spiritual life it will be sensible of the necessity of food Well then it is hunger and necessity that sharpens appetite being sensible of spiritual languishing and need to repair strength daily therefore are their hearts carried out Thus you see the reasons of this vehement affection Secondly The reasons of the constancy of this respect 1. Because it is natural and kindly to the regenerate therefore as it is vehement so it is constant For it is not a light motion but such as is deeply rooted not a good liking but a through bent of heart it is that which setleth into another nature Now that which is as a Nature to us is known by its uniformity and constancy 2. They love the word for its own sake as it is Gods word therefore they ever love it Other men love it for foreign reasons as out of Novelty which is an adulterous affection or out of publick countenance as it is in fashion and repute and therefore are soon weary of it He that loves a woman for foreignreasons as Beauty and Portion when these cease his love ceaseth USE 1. Is to reprove the coldness and cursed satiety and loathing of the word of God that is abroad There is a plenty of means even to a surfeit Men are Gospel-glutted Christ-glutted and Sermon-glutted and therefore are at a very great indifferency and under a mighty coldness as to the word of God Usually we are more sensible of the benefit of the word in the want of it than we are in the enjoyment of it 1 Sam. 3. 1. The word of the Lord was precious in those days there was no open vision When the publick Ministry of the Prophets was rare and scarce then it was precious and sweet When the Papists denied the use of the Scripture in the Vulgar tongue O what would we give then for a little scrap and fragment of the word of God in English a Load of Hay for a Chapter in Iames. So in times of restraint how savoury is a godly Sermon But now visions are open men begin to surfeit of the word In semet ipsam saith Tertullian semper abundantia contumeliosa est Plenty lesseneth the price of things As in Solomon's time gold and silver were as dirt in the streets 1 King 10. 32. so the word of God though it be so precious and excellent yet when we have plenty of it line upon line precept upon precept by Gods indulgence then we begin to be glutted People grow wanton when they have abundance of means This is the temper of English professors at this day they are guilty of surfeiting of the word and that 's very dangerous either of a people or person Now that there is such a fulness and satiety appears partly By seldom attendance upon the word We do not redeem time to hear the word when brought home to our dores we seldom step out to hear it They use to say a surfeit of bread is most dangerous surely a surfeit of the bread of life is so When men are full and begin to despise the word as if not worth the hearing God usually sends a Famine to correct that surfeit of the Word Amos 8. 11 12. I will send a famine of hearing the word of the Lord and they shall wander from sea to sea and from the north even to the east they shall run to and fro to seek the word of the Lord and shall not find it Usually that is the way that God taketh for a glutted people that scorn and neglect the word when they might gather it like Manna from heaven every day they may ride many miles before they hear a sa●…oury Sermon and then those that were not for the word or desirous to be rid of it may long for a little comfort and reviving by it and cannot enjoy it 2. Men bewray this satiety and fulness of the word by fond affectation of luscious strains wholesome Doctrines will not down with them unless it be cooked and saweed to their wanton appetites O Christians the spiritual appetite desires 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the sincere milk of the word 1 Pet. 2. 2. unmixed milk give them plain simple milk without human mixtures and compositions The relish of the word is spoil'd by the garish strains of a frothy Eloquence A plain solid truth is more sutable to a gracious heart A man that hath a natural instinct to the word delights in the simplicity of it An Infant hath a distinguishing palate and knows the Mothers milk and pukes and casts when it sucks another so certainly if we had true spiritual life we would be delighted in the word for the words sake the more plain it is provided it be sound I am not for a loose careless delivering of Gods Message but it is the sound plain and wholsom Ministry which suits with a gracious appetite It argues a distempered heart when we must have Quails and Dainties and loath Manna Consider in heaven where we have the most simple apprehension of things we have the highest affection to them No need of
a Mountain Remember if the Devil can but get us to delay he hath us fast enough If he can but get us to put it off to day then to morrow then the next day shall be as that Austin when he had Conviction upon him he prays from his Conscience Lord mortifie my Lusts but not yet Satans morrow will never come There 's no end of delays He tells you of to morrow and another season but that season will never come 2. Let not the World choak the Word It is notable the choaking the good Seed which was scattered among Thorns Christ expounds it of the World now what of the World choaketh it Matth. 13. 22. he instanceth in the cares of the World And Luke instanceth in the pleasures of this Life he adds voluptuous living Luke 8. 14. And Mark hath it more generally the cares of this Life Mark 4. 19. and the lusts of other things choak the Word The meaning of all those places is this Many a man hath some beams of Light darted into his Bosom and he begins to have serious and anxious thoughts of his Eternal condition I but then the pleasures and cares of the World interpose and they must be first served and so the Conviction is lost Sometimes a man is full of business and cannot attend to carry on this Work at other times he is loth to forgoe his voluptuous course there 's some sport he must attend upon and so the Word is lost When you have Conviction upon you you are under God's arrest when you go and get out of the chains of Conscience without Gods leave you break prison All business must give way to your great business and follow that close till you come to some issue Matth. 8. 21. Follow me saith Christ suffer me first to go bury my Father nay saith Christ Let the dead bury the dead but do thou follow me How specious soever the work be we must call off our Souls Let not these beams of Conviction which are darted into your Bosom be quenched 3. Consult not with the Flesh as a friend in the case when your heart begins to work towards God Gal. 1. 16. Immediately I consulted not with Flesh and Blood It is notable the Word signifies to lay down a burden to lay down our cares and difficulties in a friends Bosom when a man hath any trouble upon him he communicates it to his Friend Now you have a burden upon you you begin to be sensible you are in a wrong course and must turn to God do not lay down your burdens in the Flesh's Bosom they will tell you this is but a pang and melancholy qualm and would furnish you with a great many seeming reasons to put it off frivolous excuses sloathful pretences carnal fears and idle allegations therefore consult not with the ●…lesh as with a friend in the case 4. Be not discouraged with tediousness and difficulty which upon a trial you will find in the ways of God Many that carry on their Convictions to a resolution and their good resolutions to some performance when they find it to be a difficult and tedious business a thing that is irksom to the flesh they throw up all and there 's an end of the Conviction that was upon them A Bullock at first yoaking is most unruly untill he be accustomed to it so afterwards Duty will be more sweet and easy if you will but take Christs yoak upon tryal you shall find it is a sweet Yoke Matth. 11. 29. and remember Difficulties in the service of God should rather excite than discourage Will you serve God with that which cost you nothing will you think to go to Heaven and not enter in at the strait Gate Remember this is one of our way-marks Counterbalance difficulty with reward and punishment and pains of duty with the pains of Hell the pleasure of Sin with the reward of eternal Life urge your Souls with the equity in Christ's ways and the filthiness and turpitude in those sinfull Courses 5. If you have discouragements from God and he seems to withdraw or withhold his Grace remember he is not at your beck if he gives nothing he oweth nothing If he should not give present comfort strength and help usually it may be so for your tryal We are never brought to a through Obedience until we come to this resolution Let God do what he will I will do what he hath commanded till we yield to God's Sovereignty and venture through his denials and the suspensions of his Grace As the Woman of Canaan he first answereth her not a word when he answers his Speech is more discouraging than his silence It is not meet to take the Childrens Bread and give it to Dogs She ventures through all these discouragements Christ yields at length O Woman great is thy Faith be it unto thee as thou wilt God will bring his Creatures to such a through Obedience You may have no visits of his Love no beam of his Grace though you meet with a dumb Oracle and he seems to cast you off and you have many fears yet venture through with a holy Obstinacy that you will not give over as Iob 13. 15. Though he kill me yet will I put my trust in him When you follow God with such an Obstinacy of Obedience though he should appear never so contrary yet we will incourage our selves in waiting upon him Thus be severe to your purpose 2. For Positive Directions 1. Observe the Call of God There are certain Seasons when God more especially doth approach the heart of a Sinner when Christ knocks Rev. 3. 20. Behold I stand at the door and knock How doth Christ knock by the motions of his Grace when the Word sets Conscience a work one time or other God meets with the heart of every man that lives under the Gospel so that his Conscience tells him I must be another man or I am an undone man for ever Then Christ knocks when Conscience is thus set a work when the Waters are stirr'd then is the time to put in for cure Now observe this that you may welcome the authority of his Truth To resist Christ in this work is a dangerous thing for a Woman to destroy the Child in the Womb is Murther so to resist Christ in this work that is going on towards the New Birth is Spiritual Murther 2. Be sure this work come to some effect To stifle Convictions that 's very dangerous There is no Iron so hard as that which hath been often heated and often quenched so no hearts so hard as those that have had many Convictions and have quenched them 1 Thes. 5. 20. Quench not the Spirit You have great qualms of Conscience Felix he tr●…bles I but it came to nothing many mens hearts are rouzed but it does no good A man that sleeps upon a Bridge may dream that he is falling into the Water and so dream that he may shake every Limb of him and
many of the Promises contradict sense as when the Soul is filled with anguish because of the guilt of sin 1 Iohn 1. 9. If we confess our sins he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and cleanse us from all unrighteousness And the power of sin 1 Thess. 5. 24. Faithful is he who calleth you who also will do it Supported in great distresses 1 Cor. 10. 13. He will not suffer you to be tempted above that you are able That we may be able to stand in the judgment 1 Cor. 1. 9. God is faithful by whom ye are called into the fellowship of his Son Iesus Christ. Here is a Christian 's great security and support God's Faithfulness testified by Christians now and in all Ages confessing they have found by their experience the Word of God to be true for they have transmitted Religion to us by their constant consent and left it to us under a seal of God's Faithfulness and therefore we should persevere in our duty to God 2dly As represented by an Emblem we should consider it for 't is an help to frequent Meditation as being always before our eyes and they are without excuse who see not God in this thing Every time we set foot on the ground we may remember the stability of God's Promises and 't is also a confirmation of Faith Thus 1. The stability of the Earth is the effect of God's Word this is the true Pillar upon which the Earth standeth For he upholdeth all things by the word of his power Psal. 33. 9. For he spake and it was done he commanded and it stood fast Now his word of Power helpeth us to depend upon his word of Promise God that doth what he pleaseth never faileth in what he promiseth We see plainly that whatever standeth by God's Will and Word cannot be brought to nought Whence is it how came this world to have a being 't is the work and product of that God whose word and promise we have in Scripture certainly the power of this God cannot fail 't is as easie for him to do as to say 2. Nothing appeareth whereon the globe of the earth and water should lean and rest Job 26. 7. He stretcheth out the north over the empty place and hangeth the earth upon nothing Now that this vast and ponderous Body should lean upon the fluid Air as upon a firm foundation is matter of wonder the question is put in the Book of Iob Chap. 38. 6. Whereupon are the foundations thereof fastned or who hath laid the corner-stone thereof Yet firm it is though it hang as a Ball in the Air. The Globe of the Earth is encompassed with the Regions of the Air and the Celestial Spheres and hath no visible support to sustain so heavy a Body hanging in the midst of so vast an Expansion yet God hath setled and established it so firm as if it rested on the most solid Basis and Foundation fitted so strange a place for it that being an heavy Body one should think it would fall every moment yet which whensoever we would imagine it it must contrary to the nature of such a Body fall upwards and so can have no possible ruine but by falling into Heaven Now since his word beareth up such a weight all the Churches weight and our own burden leaneth on the promise of God he can by the power of his Word do the greatest things without visible means Luke 7. 7. But say in a word and my servant shall be healed Therefore his people may trust his Providence he is able to support them in any distresses when no way of help and relief appeareth 3. The firmness and stability offereth its self to our thoughts The earth abideth in the same seat and condition wherein God left it as long as the present course and order of nature is to continue Psal. 104. 5. He hath laid the foundations of the earth that it should not be moved for ever God's Truth is as immoveable as the earth Psal. 118. 2. The Truth of the Lord endureth for ever Surely if the foundation of the earth abideth sure the foundation of our salvation laid by Jesus Christ is much more sure Heaven and earth shall pass away but not one tittle of the word and law of God till all be fulfilled Mat. 5. 18. If the Law given by Moses be so sure much more the promises of salvation by Christ. 2 Cor. 1. 20. For all the promises of God in him are yea and amen 4. The stability in the midst of Changes Eccl. 1. 4. One generation passeth away and another cometh but the earth abideth for ever When man passeth away the earth stayeth behind him as an habitation for other comers and abideth where it was when the Inhabitants go to and fro and can enjoy it no more All things in the world are subject to many Revolutions but God's Truth is one and the same The vicissitudes in the world do not derogate from his fidelity in the promises he changeth all things and is not changed though there be a new face of things in the world yet we have a sure Rule to walk by and sure promises to build upon and therefore in all conditions we should be the same to God and there is no doubt but he will be the same to us 5. In upholding the Frame of the World all those Attributes are seen which are a firm stay to a Believer's heart such as Wisdom Power and Goodness Wisdom Prov. 3. 19. The Lord by wisdom hath founded the earth by understanding hath he established the heavens Look on it 't is the work of a wise Agent So for Power this great Fabric is supported by his Almighty Power His Goodness is seen in that he hath made the earth to be firm and dry land that it may be a fit habitation for men this is a standing Miracle of Goodness Luther saith we are always in medio rubri maris kept as the Israelites were in the midst of the Red Sea The Psalmist telleth us Psal. 24. 2. He hath founded the earth upon the seas and established the world upon the floods That part of the world whereon we dwell would suddenly be overwhelmed and covered with waters were it not for the goodness of God for this the order of nature sheweth in the beginning of the Creation Gen. 1. 7. that next under the Air were the waters covering the whole Surface of the Earth but God made such Cavities in the Earth as should receive the waters into them and such Banks as should bound and bridle the vast Ocean that it might not break forth Gen. 1. 9. and so now by his Providence the water is beneath the Earth and the Earth standeth firm upon that fluid body as upon the most solid foundation which as it is a work of wise disposal and contrivance so an effect of the goodness of God for the preservation of mankind And though once for the sins of the world these
nest it is all but the deceit of the heart and usually we find it to be so in the world Most men are better acquainted with other mens duties rather then their own with the Magistrates duties more than their own and so other mens sins more then their own But it is not so where zeal is unfeigned there it begins at home they will allow nothing in their own hearts that may be contraryto Gods interest and to the soveraignty of his spirit 2. Also in perfecting Holiness The whole business of the spiritual Life must be carried on in warmth and vigor Rom. 12. 11. Fervent in Spirit serving the Lord. It is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 seething hot in spirit Nothing done for God should be done negligently but affectionately To be luke-warm and key-cold that makes no work in Religion But when a man hath a great zeal for God O! then he profits and gets ground then sin decays grace is strengthned love is more rooted in his Heart every day and he doth more for God Paul profited in the Jewish Religion Gal. 1. 14. Why Because he was more zealous then others This is the man that will be the honour of Gods Ordinances that man that will shew forth the vertue and power of Religion when his heart grows warm for God and zealous for God II. Why we ought to look after a great and pure zeal if we have any Love to God and the Law of God and his Ways 1. Why a great zeal 1. Because it is not zeal else if it be not in some good degree for zeal is a great fire and a vehement flame not only Love but vehement Love it must needs be great Cant. 8. 6 7. For Love is as strong as death jealousie is cruel as the Grave Zeal is cruel as the grave read it so many waters cannot quench Love c. Mark our love to the ways of God should be of such a nature such a warm and zealous working of heart towards God that many floods cannot quench it that nothing can bribe it Surely the best things deserve the best affections therefore what ever we do in Religion and for God we should do it with all our might Eccl. 9. 10. 2. Otherwise it will not do the work Such as encreaseth with opposition as fire when you put on more fuel it grows more vehement so unless it be a zeal that grows earnest with discouragement alas it will soon be quenched We shall meet with many discouragements from within and without but when we can resolve with David the more they scoffed and opposed him he would be yet more vile 2 Sam. 6. 22. So the more trouble they meet with in the ways of God the more they will cleave to him and will please God though with the displeasure of men True zeal is enflamed with difficulties As Lime the more water they pour on the more it burns as Nehemiah's Courage it sparkled the more the more it was opposed should such a man as I flee Should I betray the Cause of God This is the true zeal when it sparkles by opposition As Paul the more they perswaded him the more he seemed to be bound in spirit to go to Ierusalem Acts 21. 13. Though they did even break his heart they could not break his purpose Such a zeal as is quenched with every drop of water and goes out with every flout and scorn will never do it therefore we had need have a great zeal that we may harden our selves against all oppositions we meet with in the way 2. It needs to be pure too such a fervent affection had need be right for since it makes men so active and resolute certainly it should go upon clear grounds I shewed before nothing hath done more mischief in the world than wild zeal it is like fire out of its place that sets all the House in a flame it doth not comfort and refresh those that have it but it destroys and consumes all But why must we have pure zeal 1. Because there is a false zeal and a self-seeking zeal which men have while they pretend much Love to God and good of souls but are really hunting after their own interest Gal. 4. 17. They zealously affect you but not well yea they would exclude you that ye might affect them that is they sought to rend their affections from Paul and from their faithful Pastors that they might affect them so he tells us Phil. 1. 15. Some indeed preach Christ even of Envy and Strife There may be a zeal that comes meerly out of Envy and Strife Iehu could say come see my zeal for the Lord 2 Kings 10. 16. 2. This false zeal doth a great deal of mischief It 's a dishonour to God to pretend to him and to put the varnish of our Cause upon God God himself is involved in the deceit Ier. 4. 10. It 's a strange expression to be used to God Ah Lord God surely thou hast greatly deceived this People the false Prophets did it in his name And it divides the Church as well as dishonours God Gal. 4. 17. They would exclude you that ye might affect them The meaning is they would rend you from the Body of the Christian Church and alienate the minds of Gods People so as to devote them to a Faction Phil. 1. 16. They preach Christ of Contention not sincerely supposing to add affliction to my bonds And it hardens the Persons themselves as Iehu boasted of his zeal and it was only self-seeking and the Lord counts it Murder Hosea 1. 4. Use. Have we this Pure zeal such a zeal as David speaks of There are many Notes by which it may be discerned as 1. When injuries done to God and Religion affect us more then injuries done personally to our selves when we carry our selves in an indifferency in our own Cause but not in Gods compare Numb 12. 13. with Exod. 32. 19. Moses could with a Meek Spirit bear all the injuries done to himself but could not contain himself when he saw injury done to God but breaks the Tables 2. When the same Enemies are Gods Enemies and ours David was sensible not of the inhumanity of his Enemies but that which most troubled him was because they were Gods Enemies and forsook his words David was not so much troubled at Absaloms Rebellion as dying in his sins 3. When there 's a Compassion mingled with our Zeal Fleshly Anger is all for destruction holy Anger is for Conversion when they grieve and seek to redress the matter 4. True zeal is Universal it is most against their own sins and the sins of those that are nearest and runs out upon weighty things But those that Tithe Mint and Cummin and neglect weighty things they have not true zeal There are many instances of this false disproportionate zeal of a Conscience taken up for a turn when there 's a partial Conscience in some things men are mighty scrupulous and strain at a Gnat
happiness will never attain to true peace and sound satisfaction of conscience nor to true grace or an hearty subjection to God but by consulting with the Word No other rule and direction will serve the turn 1. It is the only rule to teach us how to obtain true peace of conscience The whole world is become obnoxious to God and held under the awe of Divine Justice This bondage is natural and the great inquiry is how his anger shall be appeased Micah 6. 6 7 Wherewith shall I come before the Lord and bow my self before the high God shall I come before him with burnt-offerings with calves of a year old Will the Lord be pleased with thousands of rams or with ten thousands of rivers of oyl shall I give my first-born for my transgression the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul Now here is no tolerable satisfaction offered no plaister for the wounds of conscience no way to compromise and take up the controversie between us and God but by the Propitiation which the Gospel holdeth forth all this is effected The Gentiles were at a loss the Iews rested in the Sacrifices Which yet could not make him that did the service perfect as pertaining to the conscience Heb. 9. 9. Therefore they fled to barbarous and sinfully cruel customs offering their first-born c. There was no course to recover men from their intanglements and perplexities of soul how to pacifie God for sin but they were still left in a floating uncertainty till God revealed himself as reconciling the world to himself in Christ. Now no Doctrine doth propound the way of reconciliation with God and redemption from those fears of his angry Justice which are so natural to us with such rational advantages and claimeth such a just title to humane belief as the Doctrine of the Gospel Oh then if the young man would cleanse his conscience and quiet and calm his own spirit he must of necessity take up with the Word as his sure direction in the case Look abroad where will you find rest for your souls in this business of attonement and reconciliation with God What strange horrible fruits and effects have mens contrivances on this account produced What have they not invented what have they not done what not suffered upon this account and yet continued in dread and bondage all their days Now what a glorious soul-appeasing light doth the Doctrine of satisfaction and attonement by the blood of Christ the Son of God cause to break in upon the hearts of men The testimony of blood in the conscience is one of the witnesses the believer hath in himself 1 Joh. 5. 8. And there are three that bear witness on earth the Spirit the Water and the Blood And vers 10. He that believeth on the Son of God hath the witness in himself 2. It is the only rule of true Holiness Never was it stated and brought to such a pitch as it is in the Scriptures nor enforced by such arguments as are found there it requireth such an holiness as standeth in conformity to God and is determined by his will Now it is but reason that he that is the supreme Being should be the rule of all the rest It is an holiness of another rate than the blind heart could find out not an external devotion nor a civil course but such as transformeth the heart and subdueth it to the will of God Rom. 2. 15. If a man would attain to the highest exactness that a rational creature is capable of not to moral vertue only but a true genuine respect to God and man he must regard and love the Law of God that is pure A man that would be holy had need of an exact rule for to be sure his practice will come short of his rule and therefore if the rule it self be short there will no due provision be made for respects to God or man But now this is a rule that reacheth not only to the way but the thoughts That converteth the soul Psal. 19. 7. The Law of the Lord is perfect converting the soul. Take the fairest draughts of that moral perfection which yet is of humane recommendation and you will find it defective and maimed in some parts either as to God or men It is inferioris Hemisphaerii as not reaching to the full subjection of the soul to God There is some dead fly in their box of ointment either for manner or end 2. The Word is considerable as an instrument which God maketh use of to cleanse the heart of man It will not be amiss a little to shew the instrumentality of the Word to this blessed end and purpose It is the glass that discovereth sin and the water that washeth it away 1 It is the glass wherein to see our corruption The first step to the cure is a knowledg of the disease it is a glass wherein to see our natural face Iam. 1. 23. For if any be a hearer of the word and not a doer he is like unto a man beholding his natural face in a glass c. In the Word we see Gods Image and our own It is the copy of Gods Holiness and the representation of our natural faces Rom. 7. 9. What fond conceits have we of our own spiritual beauty but there we may see the leprous spots that are upon us 2 It sets us a work to see it purged it is the water to wash it out The word of command presseth the duty 't is indispensibly required What doth every command sound in our ears But wash you make you clean This is indispensibly required 1 Ioh. 3. 3. And every man that hath this hope in him purifieth himself even as he is pure And Heb. 12. 14. Follow peace with all men and holiness without which no man shall see the Lord. Some things God may dispense with but this is never dispensed with Many things are ornamental that are not absolutely necessary as wealth riches Wisdom with an inheritance is good so learning Many have gone to heaven that were never learned but never any without holiness 3 The word of promise incourageth it 2 Cor. 7. 1. Having therefore these promises dearly beloved let us cleanse our selves from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit perfecting holiness in the fear of God And 2 Pet. 1. 4. Whereby are given unto us exceeding great and precious promises that by these you might be partakers of the divine nature having escaped the corruption that is in the world through lust God might have required it upon the account of his Soveraignty we being his creatures especially this being the perfection of our natures and rather a priviledg than a burden but God would not rule us with a rod of iron but deal with rational creatures rationally by promises and threatnings On the one side he telleth us of a pit without a bottom on the other of blessed and glorious promises Things which eye hath not seen nor ear heard
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
open that and there first speak of the vehemency My soul breaketh for the longing that it hath It 's a Metaphorical expression to set forth the earnestness of his affection The Septuagint renders it thus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 My soul coveteth to desire thy judgments Desire is the stretching forth of the soul to the thing desired Now as things that are stretched out do break and crack in stretching so saith David my soul breaketh for the longing Here 's no respect to brokenness of heart in this place it is only strength of desire that is exprest and the expression is used the rather 1. Because affections when strong are painful and affect the body with impressions answerable thereunto 2. Not only the denial but the delay of satisfying the affection encreaseth the pain when they have not what they do desire they are even broken in heart as Prov. 13. 12. Hope deferred maketh the heart sick but when the desire cometh it is a tree of life like Apples of Paradise comforting and reviving Now the constancy and continuance of this desire is set forth in these words at all times not for a flash and pang but 't was the ordinary frame of his heart Doct. Gods children have a strong constant and earnest bent of affection towards his word 1. To open the nature of this affection 2. The Reasons of it First The nature there consider the Object the End the Properties and the Effects 1. The Object of this affection is the Word of God written or preached As it is written in the Scriptures so it is their constant exercise to read it and consult with it often Psal. 1. 2. But his delight is in the law of the Lord and in his law doth he meditate day and night And Joshua 1. 8. This book of the law shall not depart out of thy mouth but thou shalt meditate therein day and night As it is preached and explained they submit to Gods Ordinance in that also who hath appointed Pastors and Teachers as well as Prophets and Apostles Eph. 4. 11. Prophets and Apostles to write Scripture so Pastors and Teachers to open and apply Scripture therefore James 1. 9. They are swift to hear that is take all occasions for that end and purpose 2. For the End of this affection it is a sanctified subjection to God and strength and growth in the spiritual life 1 Pet. 2. 2. As new-born babes desire the sincere milk of the word that ye may grow thereby not meerly that you may know but that you may grow thereby not to replenish the head with notions but that you may encrease in spiritual strength and find more liberty of heart towards God 3. For the Properties of it you have them here in the Text 1. They must be earnest 2. A constant bent of heart 1. An earnest bent of heart Common and ordinary affection or desire after the word will not serve the turn not a faint and cold wish but such as hath heat and warmth in it It is good to see by what expressions the desires of the Saints are set forth in Scripture By the desire of Infants after the breast 1 Pet. 2. 2. they cannot live without it It is set forth also by the panting of the Hart after the water-brooks Psal. 42. 1. To meet with God in his word it is as a brook of water to a chased Hart it refresheth and revives it It is set forth by the desires of a longing woman vers 40. of this Psalm Behold I have longed after thy precepts The children of God are fond of nothing so much as of his Word and Ordinances It is set forth by the appetite which a hungry man hath toward his meat after a long abstinence Psal. 84. 2. My soul longeth yea even fainteth for the Courts of the Lord. Or as a weary traveller and thirsty man longeth after drink Psal. 63. 1. My soul thirsteth for thee c. Or as cool air to the weary Psal. 119. 131. I opened my mouth and panted for I longed for thy commandments A Metaphor taken from a man tired with running gaping for breath to take in some cool air and refreshing What think you of all these expressions are they strains and reaches of wit or the real experiences of the children of God The truth is we have such languid motions this way that we know not how to understand the force of such expressions therefore we think them to be conceits we that are so cold and indifferent whether we meet with God in his word yea or no. 2. As it is not cold so it is not fleeting but constant Many men have good affections for a while but they abide not as I shall give you some kinds 1. Some out of Error in judgment think the word of God is only fit for Novices as the Stancarists to enter us into the Rudiments of Religion but too low a dispensation for our after growth It is milk for babes they think but afterwards we must live immediately upon the Spirit But we see that David's affection ever carried him to the word not only at his first acquaintance with God but at all times as in the Text. 2. Some prize the word in Adversity when they have no other comforts to live upon then they can be content to study the word to comfort them in their distresses but when they are well at ease they despise it But David made use of it at all times in prosperity to humble him in adversity to comfort him in the one to keep him from pride in the other to keep him from despair in affliction the Word was his Cordial in worldly encrease it was his Antidote And so at all times his heart was carried out to the Word either for one necessity or another 3. Some during a qualm of conscience have an affection for holy things as we desire strong-Strong-waters in a pang not for a constant diet While the terrors of God are upon them nothing will satisfie them but the Word O send for Moses and Aaron then when the plague was upon them but as their trouble wears off so doth their affection to the Word of God It is fear that drives them to the Word and not love 4. Some out of a general sense of the excellency that is in the Word They go on smoothly for a while as Herod who heard gladly Mark 6. 20. so do many till the Word come to cross their lusts and touch their darling sin then they run to earthly pleasures again and out of a sense of difficulty and carnal despondency they give over the pursuit 5. Some are taken with the meer novelty Joh. 5. 35. Ye were willing to rejoyce in his light for a season while the Doctrine is novel and Ministers have countenance from great men as Iohn had from Herod and their gifts are in the flourish none but Iohn in their account but when the conceit of Novelty was gone and Iohn fell under the
we are dead and gone The word will tell you of promises made to you and your children and of Gods taking care of them In short God is a sun and shield and no good thing will he withhold c. Psal. 84. 11. There 's all manner of blessings adopted and taken into Covenant Look round about the Covenant look into the word of God there is nothing wanting for the comfort of believers in every condition there 's a promise to support and bear them up Now because of this comfort they have in the word of God therefore it quickens their desires 3. To supply and strengthen us It is our food Alas what a poor languishing Christian will a man be that doth not often make use of the word this strengthens him against corruptions quickens him in duties and gives success in conflicts The Sword of the Spirit is the choicest weapon It is the power of God to salvation Rom. 1. 16. And the word of his grace which is able to build us up Acts 20. 32. If our heart be dead in prayer here 's the Rod of Moses to strike upon the rock to make the waters gush out Therefore since we have such benefit by the word we should long and desire to get such a strong affection 2. Consider what benefit you will have by these desires after the word It will keep up our diligence and will make us exercise our selves therein Desire doth all that is done in the world digging for knowledg is tedious but the end sweetens it They that have an affection to the word shall never be destitute of success therein God will fulfil the desire of the Saints He that satisfieth the gaping of the young Raven will these desires A strong affection to the word is the argument that moves God Psal. 145. 19. He will fulfil the desire of them that fear him he also will hear their cry and will save them And if this desire be painful yet it is salutary and healthful to the soul. In this sickness there is health in this weakness there 's strength in this thirst comfort and in this hunger satisfaction For Means 1. Get a high esteem of spiritual enjoyments Valuation and esteem precedes desire Wicked men that value themselves by carnal comforts their souls run out with vehement longing that way A child of God that values himself by spiritual enjoyments by knowledg grace subjection to God that counts these his greatest benefits his main desire is to be acquainted with the word of God The word hath a subserviency to his end Poor low-spirited creatures that value themselves by the plenty of external accommodations they will never feel this longing after the word Prov. 8. 10. Receive instruction rather than silver and knowledg rather than choice gold 2. Let a man live in the awe of God and make it his business to maintain communion with him and then he will be longing after him This will shew the necessity of the word of God for his comfort and strength upon all occasions A lively Christian that is put to it in good earnest he must have the word by him to direct comfort and strengthen him As he that labours hard must have his Meals or else he will faint and be overcome by his labour We content our selves with a loose profession and so do not see the need of food have not this hungring longing desire after the bread of life Painted fire needs no fuel a dead formal profession is easily kept up but a man that makes it his business to maintain communion with him and much exercised to godliness is hungring and thirsting that he might meet with God SERMON XXII PSAL. CXIX 21. Thou hast rebuked the proud that are cursed which do err from thy commandments IN the 18th Verse the Prophet had begged divine illumination that his eyes might be opened to see more into the nature of the word He backeth that Petition with three Arguments The 1. is taken from his condition in the world I am a stranger upon earth The 2. Argument is taken from the vehemency of his affection to the word My soul breaketh c. A man that is regenerate as David was he hath not only some faint and languid motions towards holy things but a great and strong affection of heart My heart even breaketh for the longing c. In this Verse here 's the third reason Open mine eyes why because erring from the commandment is dangerous and bringeth us under Gods curse which will be executed by the rebukes of his Providence There have been ever some that opposed God but yet they have ever been blasted by God he hath always vindicated the contempt of his Law by the severe executions of his Justice upon the contemners of it Thou hast rebuked the proud We should not let pass Gods judgments without profit but the more the Law is owned from heaven the more intirely should we apply our selves to the obedience of it therefore this is one reason why David begs for light direction and strength For thou hast rebuked the proud c. therefore Lord teach me that I may not come under the rebukes of thine anger Some read the words in two distinct sentences Thou hast rebuked the proud and then Cursed are they which do err from thy commandments But it comes all to one with our reading therefore I shall not stand to insist upon examining the ground of this difference In the words observe 1. The term that 's given to wicked men the proud so commonly called in Scripture Mal. 3. 15. They call the proud happy yea they that work wickedness are set up 2. The instance and discovery of their pride They err from thy commandments 3. The evil state in which they are they are cursed Though the wicked are not presently punished yet they are all cursed and in time they shall be punished 4. The begun-execution of this curse Thou hast rebuked them that is punished or destroyed Psal. 6. 1. Rebuke me not in thine anger neither chasten me in thy hot displeasure The Points are 1. That the worst sort of proud creatures are those that do err from Gods Commandments for so is the description here The proud have erred c. 2. These proud ones they are cursed Those that continue in obstinacy and impenitency in their sins and errors they are under a curse 3. They are not only cursed but are also rebuked that is not only threatned but this curse shall be surely executed In this world 't is begun many times and in part executed but in the next fully and sorely Doct. 1. That the worst sort of proud creatures are those that err from Gods Commandments Here we must distinguish of Erring then of Pride First Of erring from Gods Commandments There is an erring out of frailty and an erring out of obstinacy 1. An erring out of frailty and so David saith Psal. 119. 176. I have gone astray like a lost sheep and again
Powers against the people of God it may be you may judg it unseasonable but how soon it may be seasonable you cannot tell considering the spirit of enmity against the power of godliness Blessed be God that it is not so seasonable now But what use shall we now make of it 1. To bless God when he giveth Religious Rulers and such as are well affected to Religion It is a fulfilling of his promise Isa. 49. 23. And Kings shall be thy nursing-fathers and Queens thy nursing-mothers Gods Interest in the world is usually weak and his people like little children had need to be nursed up by the countenance and defence of worldly Potentates Now when they discharge their duty and do afford patronage and protection it should be acknowledged to Gods glory in whose hands their hearts are and the rather by us because of the iron yoke that was upon us and those hard task-masters under which we formerly groaned We have our own discontents as well as former ages but because all things are not as we could wish them shall we be thankful for none The liberty of Religion is such a blessing as we cannot enough acknowledg and doth sufficiently countervail other inconveniences Oh therefore let us not sowr our spirits into an unthankful frame by dwelling too much upon our discontents and private dissatisfactions it is a mercy that the Sword of Authority is not drawn against Religion When God meaneth good or evil to a Nation he usually dispenseth it by their Magistrates if good then he puts wisdom and grace into the hearts of those that govern or Government into the hands of those that are wise and gracious When he meaneth evil he sendeth them evil Magistrates Isa. 19. 4. The Egyptians will I give over into the hands of a cruel lord and a fierce king shall rule over them But when good Governours it is a mercy and a presage of good 2. To pity those whose case it is that Princes sit and speak against them as it is of many of the people of God now in the world When we suffer not by immediate and direct passion we should suffer by way of fellow-feeling and compassion It is charged as a great crime that those that were at ease in Sion were not grieved for the afflictions of Ioseph Amos 6. 6. compared with the first verse It may be used proverbially As the Butler forgat Ioseph when he was well at Court and his brethren did eat bread and little regard the afflictions of his soul when cast into the pit But I suppose them litterally because the half Tribe of Manasseh was carried captive by Tiglath Pilesar that they did not sympathize with them propter confractionem Ioseph for the breach made upon Ioseph God layeth affliction upon some of his people to try the sympathy of others as on Protestants in Poland the Emperors Dominions Savoy some parts of France and elsewhere 3. To be the more strict and holy and improve this good day of the Churches peace They that are not holy in a time of peace will not be holy and constant in a time of trouble Acts 9. 33. When the Churches had rest they walked in the fear of God and in the comforts of the Holy Ghost When we are not called to passive obedience and suffering our active obedience should be the more cheerfully performed Now where is it so our father 's suffered more willingly for Christ than we speak of him Our inward peace and comfort will cost us more in getting and therefore we should be more in service Oh let us not abuse this rest we have to the neglect of God or to vain contentions as green Timber warpeth and breaketh in the sun-shine The contentions of the Pastors saith Eusebius did usher in the Truth which was Dioclesian's Persecution 4. Here is Caution and a word of Counsel to the Princes of the Nations or the Heads of the people that now are met together and sit in Council Oh do not sit and speak against such as are Gods people that is Do not decree any thing against them Some would have the Magistrate to do nothing in Religion but that would leave things at a strange loose and disorder certainly you should at least provide for the liberties of Gods people that they should lead a quiet life in godliness and honesty 1 Tim. 2. 2. that they may be secured and the peace kept not only as to their Civil Interests but whilst they worship God according to their conscience which can never be as long as those swarms of Libertines are publickly tolerated which every day encrease in Number Power and Malice And again the great security of Magistrates lieth in an Oath of Fealty which only receiveth value from Religion therefore the Magistrate is concerned in what Religion is professed in a Nation as well as in things Civil But now whilst you interpose in Religion be sure you do not contradict or undermine Gods Interest and be not courted by any prepossessions of your own or the crafty insinuations of others to oppress by your sentence and suffrage those that fear God in the Land and do make conscience of their ways The Magistrates interposing in Religion is to me an unquestionable duty and yet to be managed with great caution Psal. 2. 10. Be wise now therefore O ye Kings and be instructed ye Iudges of the earth What by natural prejudices against the strict and more severe ways of Godliness what by private whispers and subtil disguises men may be tempted to oppose Christs Kingdom Cause and People therefore they should be wary as they would be faithful in their places and love their own souls to go upon sure clear grounds You are to promote Christs service otherwise you will be answerable for your neglect and yet you are to take heed lest whilst you think you do God service you subvert not his Interest and so you be answerable for your mistake To deal more particularly would be a diversion I only intend it as a warning and to shew you the necessity of consulting with those who are best able to judg in the case where your duty lieth II. David's Remedy But thy servant did meditate in thy statutes Doct. The best way to ease the heart from trouble that doth arise from the opposition of men of Power and Place is by serious consulting with Gods word Because the time will not bear a large prosecution I shall open the force of this clause in three Propositions 1. An holy divertisement is the best way to ease the trouble of our thoughts Certainly it is not good altogether to pore upon our Sorrows a diversion is a prudent course David did not meerly sit down and bemoan the calamity of his condition and so sink under the burden but runneth to the word As Husbandmen when their ground is overflowed by waters make Ditches and Water-furrows to carry it away so when our minds and thoughts are overwhelmed with
and saith unto him We have found the Messias and Philip called Nathanael and saiah unto him We have found him of whom Moses in the Law and the Prophets did write Iesus of Nazareth the son of Ioseph 2. For the edification of others Luke 22. 32. And thou being converted strengthen thy brethren True grace is communicative as fire c. 3. For our own profit He that useth his knowledg shall have more Whereas on the contrary full breasts if not sucked become dry In the dividing the loaves encreased All gifts but much more spiritual which are the best are improved by exercise Well then 1. Get a sense and experience of God's Truths and then speak of it to others That which we have seen we are best able to report of God giveth us experiences to this end that we may be able to speak of it to others None can speak with such confidence as those that have felt what they speak Christ saith those that come to him shall not only have a spring of comfort themselves but flow forth to others Joh. 7. 38. He that believeth on me as the Scripture hath said out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water IV. Point In our desires of knowledg it is meet to propound a good end As David here beggeth understanding that he might see and discover to others what he had found in God's Law To know that we may know is foolish curiosity to know that we may be known is vanity and ostentation to see that we may sell our knowledg is baseness and covetousness To edifie others this is charity to be edified our selves this is wisdom Good things must be sought to a good end Ye ask and receive not because ye ask amiss to consume it upon your lusts Jam. 4. 3. All things must be sought for to holy ends to glorifie God much more spiritual gifts The only good end is God's glory Open thou my lips that I may shew forth thy praise Psal. 51. 15. We are to desire knowledg that we may the more enjoy God and the more glorifie him There is a natural desire of knowledg even of Divine knowledg but we must look to our ends that we may grow in grace 1 Pet. 2. 3. that we may be more useful for God not meerly to store the head with notions or to vaunt it over others as having attained more than they no it should be only to do good to our own souls and to save others Rom. 15. 14. I am perswaded that ye are filled with all knowledg and able to admonish one another But now to make a market of our knowledg or to use it for our vile ends that 's naught Not for boasting ostentation curiosity and vain speculation but for practice should be our end When we improve our stock well we please God and shall have eternal profit our selves SERMON XXIX PSALM CXIX 28. My soul melteth for heaviness strengthen thou me according to thy word ACHRISTIAN should neither be humbled to the degree of dejection nor confident to the degree of security and therefore he is to have a double eye upon God and upon himself upon his own necessities and upon God's Alsufficiency You have both represented in this Verse as often in this Psalm his Case and his Petition 1. His Case is represented My soul melteth for heaviness 2. His Petition and Request to God Strengthen thou me according to thy word First His Case My soul melteth for heaviness In the Original the word signifies droppeth away The Septuagint hath it thus My soul fell asleep through weariness Probably by a fault of the Transcribers one word for another My soul droppeth It may relate 1. to the plenty of his tears as the word is used in Scripture Job 16. 20. My friends scorn me but mine eye poureth out tears unto God or droppeth to God the same word so it notes his deep sorrow and sense of his condition The like allusion is in Joshua 7. 5. The heart of the people melted and became as water Or 2. It relates to his languishing under the extremity of his sorrow as an unctuous thing wasteth by dropping so was his soul even dropping away Such a like expression is used in Psal. 107. 26. Their soul is melted because of trouble and of Jesus Christ whose strength was exhausted by the greatness of his sorrows it is said Psal. 22. 14. I am poured out like water all my bones are out of joint my heart is like wax it is melted in the midst of my bowels Be the allusion either to the one or to the other either to the dropping of tears or to the melting and wasting away of what is fat and unctuous it notes a vehement sorrow and brokenness of heart that 's clear his soul was even melting away and unless God did help him he could hold out no longer Doct. That Gods children oftentimes lye under the exercise of such deep and pressing sorrow as is not incident to other men David expresseth himself here as in a languishing condition which is not ordinary My soul droppeth or melteth away for heaviness The Reasons of the point are three 1. Their burdens are greater 2. They have a greater sense than others 3. Their exercise is greater because their reward and comfort is so great First Their burdens are greater than others as temptation desertion trouble for sin The good and evil of the spiritual life is greater than the good and evil of any other life whatsoever As their joys are unspeakable and glorious so their sorrows are sometimes above expression A wounded spirit who can bear Prov. 18. 14. Common natural Courage will carry a man through other afflictions O! but when the arrows of the Almighty stick in their heart Iob 6. 3. that's an unsupportable burden According to the excellency of any life so are the annoyances and the benefits of that life Man that hath a higher life than the beasts is more capable of delights and sorrows than Beasts are of pain and pleasure and so a Christian that lives the life of faith he is more capable of a higher burden Consider they that live a spiritual life have immediately to do with the Infinite and Eternal God and therefore when he creates joy in the heart O what a joy is that and when God doth but lay his hand upon them how great is their trouble Sin is a heavier burden than affliction and the wrath of God than the displeasure of man Coelestis ●…ra quos premit miseros facit humana nullos Evils of an eternal influence are more than temporal therefore must needs be greater and more burdensome Secondly They have a greater sense than others their hearts being intendered by Religion None have so quick a feeling as the children of God why because they have a clearer understanding and more tender and delicate affections 1. Because they have a clearer understanding and see more into the nature of things than those that are drowned
it is done away this David might intend But rather in a way of sanctification when the fault or blot is done away This is mainly intended as appears by the Antithesis or opposite request and grant me thy Law graciously that is let it be imprest upon my heart that such a temptation may be prevented for the future Let me observe Doct. That lying especially a way or course of lying should be far from Gods people David begs the removal of it as most inconsistent with the temper and sincerity of a Child of God Examine 1. What is lying 2. Upon what grounds this should be far from a Child of God First What is lying Answ. Lying is when men wittingly and willingly and with purpose to deceive signifie that which is false by gestures actions but especially by words The matter of a lye is a falsehood but the formality of it is with an intention to deceive therefore a falsehood is one thing a lye another then we lye when we not only do or speak falsely but knowingly and with purpose to deceive Now this may be done by gestures as when a scorner counterfeiteth the posture of one that is praying or as when David feigned himself to be distracted scrabling upon the doors of the gate spitting upon his beard 1 Kings 21. 1. and in the Pagan story Iunius Brutus was taxed for reigning himself a fool to save himself from Tarquin Aquinas saith Gestures are a sign by which we discover our minds But because these are but imperfect signs and speech is the usual instrument of Commerce therefore in words do we usually vent this sin Now in our words we are said to lye two ways Assertorily or Promissorily 1. Assertorily in a matter past or present when one speaketh that as false which he knoweth to be true and that as true which he knoweth to be false which is called speaking with a double heart in Scripture Psal. 12. 2. with a heart and a heart that is when we have one heart to furnish the tongue with what is false and another heart to conceive of the matter as it is An instance of this falsehood in our assertions or untrue relating of things done is Ananias and Saphira who brought part of the money for which he sold his pos●…ion instead of the whole therefore Acts 5. 3. Why hath Satan filled thy heart to lye unto the Holy Ghost in keeping back part of the price It was a lye because there was a false assertion in saying that it was the whole and it was a lye to the Holy Ghost partly as being pretended to be done by his motion when they were acted by Satan counterfeiting spiritual actions or a lye against the Holy Ghost because the Holy Ghost being last in order of the persons is fitly represented as conscious to our ways and the workings of our hearts it is in condescension to us because it is most conceivable to us to reflect upon him as knowing our hearts and all the workings of our souls Rom. 9. 1. I say the truth in Christ I lye not my conscience also bearing me witness in the Holy Ghost and when the Psalmist speaks of hiding himself from God he saith Whither shall I flee from thy spirit Psal. 139. 7. Or else a lye to the Holy Ghost because of his presidency and superintendency over Church-affairs Acts 13. 2. The Holy Ghost said Separate me Barnabas and Saul for the work whereunto I have called them and Acts 20. 28. Take heed to the flock over which the holy Ghost hath made you overseers Now because this was an Ecclesiastical or Church-case therefore they are said to lye to the Holy Ghost as one that is to supply Christs place It was not the sin against the Holy Ghost but a lye against the Holy Ghost 2. Promissorily we lye when we promise things we mean not to perform This is a great sin Paul spent the great part of a Chapter to excuse himself because he was necessitated by Providence to break promise of coming to Corinth 1 Cor. 5. 16 17 18. It was grievous to him that he should seem to use lightness and not make good his word though he were hindred by the Providence of God vain and empty promises wherein we make a great shew of kindness to others without any intent to perform is a great sin Prov. 19. 22. The desire of a man is his kindness and a poor man is better than a lyar What 's the meaning some read it that which is desired of a man is kindness you come to a man in power and great place and beg his favour in such a business and request and they are too apt to promise you I but a poor man is better than a lyar you shall find among these great men very little faith The desire of a man is his kindness or that which a man should do in a great and high condition is to shew you kindness But now many that covet the praise and reputation of it are very forward in promises but fail in performance therefore a poor man that loves you and is an honest neighbour and will do his best is a surer friend and a thousand times better than such lying great men that only give you good words and sprinkle you with Court holy Water Now there 's a lying to men and a lying to God First A lying to God which is the worst sort because it argues Unbelief and Atheism low thoughts of God as if he were not Omniscient did not know the heart and try the reins How do we lye to God Partly when we put him off with a false appearance and make a shew of what is not in the heart as if he would be deceived with outsides and vain pretences So Hosea 11. 12. it is said Ephraim compasseth me about with lies and the house of Iudah with deceit God can see through and through all fair shews and will not be mocked We are said to lie to God when we perform not those professions and promises which we made in a time of trouble O when chastnings are upon us then the vows of God are upon us Men think they mean as they speak they are not conscious of the secresie of their hearts Psal. 78. 36. They flattered me with their mouth and they lied unto me with their tongues Their hearts were not sincerely set against sin whatever professions of repentance they made When there 's a restraint upon our corruptions then we think our selves hearty and serious because moved a little towards God Moral integrity is when we intend not to deceive but there was no supernatural sincerity to perform as the event shewed They were only the fruit of the present pang therefore it was said they lyed unto him with their tongue So Ezek. 24. 12. She hath wearied her self with lyes and her scum went not forth out of her speaking of her promises when the pot was over the fire there seemed to be offers
by the Scriptures which apparently are acknowledged by them to be the Word without running to unwritten traditions and the authority of men Again all this is recommended with the special presence of God as to gifts and graces blessing these Churches continually more and more Therefore if ever a man will find rest for his soul and be soundly quiet within himself here he must fix and chuse and take up the way of truth Popery is but Heathenism disguised with a Christian name their penal satisfactions are like the gashing and launcing of Baal's Priests their Mediators of Intercession are like the doctrines of Demons among the Gentiles for they had their middle Powers glorified Heroes their Holy water suits with the Heathen Lustrations their costly offerings to their Images answer to the Sacrifices and Oblations to appease their gods which the Idolaters would give for the sin of their souls adoring their Reliques is like the respects the heathens had to their departed Heroes And as they had their Tutelar gods for every City so these their Saints for every City and Nation their S. Sebastian for the Pestilence their Apollonia for their Tooth-ach and the like It is easie to rake in this dirt It was not for the Devil's interest when the Ensign of the Gospel was lifted up to draw men to downright Heathenism therefore he did more secretly mingle the Customs and Superstitions of the Gentiles with the food of life like poyson conveyed in perfume that the souls of men might be more infected alienated and drawn from God Popery doth not only add to the true Religion but destroys it and is contrary to it Let any considering man that is not prejudiced compare the face of the Roman Synagogue with the beauty of the Reformed Churches and they will see where Christianity lyes there you will find another Sacrifice for expiation of sin than the death of Christ the Communion of the Cup so expresly commanded in the word of God taken away from the people reading the Scriptures forbidden to Laicks as if the word of God were a dangerous book Prayers in an unknown language Images set up and so they are guilty if not of primitive Idolatry which all the water in the Sea cannot wash them clear of yet certainly of secondary Idolatry which is the setting up an Idol in God's Worship contrary to the Second Commandment the Image of the Invisible God represented by stones and pictures Invocation of Saints and Angels allowed the doctrine of Transubstantiation contrary to the end of the Sacrament works of Supererogation Popes pardons Purgatory for faults already committed as if Christ had not already satisfied Papal Infallibility not only contrary to faith but sense and reason their ridiculous Mass and Ceremonies and many such human inventions besides the word and against it But the Protestants are contented with the simplicity of the Scriptures the word of God and the true Sacraments of Christ. Therefore you see what is the way of truth we should stick to Prop. 8. That in the private differences among the professors of the Reformed Protestant Religion a man is to chuse the best way but to hold charity towards Dissenters In the true Church in matters of lesser moment there may be sundry differences For until men have the same degree of light it cannot be expected they should be all of a mind Babes will think one thing grown persons will have other apprehensions sick persons will have their frenzies and doubtings which the sound cannot like The Apostle's rule is Phil. 3. 15 16. Let us therefore as many as be perfect be thus minded and if in any thing ye be otherwise minded God shall reveal even this unto you c. There are two parts of that Rule the perfect must be thus minded they that are fully instructed in the mind of God they must practise as they believe strings in tune must not be brought down to those that are out of tune But if others tainted with error do not give a through assent to all divine truth yet let us walk together saith the Apostle so far as we are agreed God that hath begun to enlighten them in other things will in time discover their mistakes Thus far the true Christian Charity takes place This should be our Rule Here we are agreed in the Christian Reformed Religion and in all the points of it let us walk together so far and in lesser differences let us bear with and forbear one another in love I speak now of Christian toleration for the Magistrates toleration and forbearance how far he is to interpose that 's another case Eph. 4. 2. With all lowliness and meekness with long-suffering forbearing one another in love What is bearing with one another not conniving at their sin or neglecting ways to reclaim them or forbear our profession when God calls us to it they are great cases how far profession may be suspended and how far it may be carried on but to restore them with meekness to own them in those things wherein they are owned by God not to practise that Antichristian humor which is now gotten into Protestantism of unchurching unministring unchristianing one another but to own one another in all those things wherein we are agreed without imposing or censuring not rending into factions not endeavouring to destroy all that we may promote the particular interest of one party to the prejudice of the whole but walking under one common Rule and if others shall prove peevish and if angry brethren shall call us bastards and disclaim us as not belonging to the same Father we ought not to reject them but still call them brethren if they will not joyn with us we cannot help it yet they are brethren notwithstanding that disclaim and how pettishly and frowardly soever they carry themselves in their differences a good Christian should take up this resolution their tongue is not Christs fan to purge his floor though they may condemn things which Christ will own to bear their reproofs and love them still for the iniquity of their carriage doth not take away our obligation to them As in the relation of Inferiors we are bound to be obedient to the froward as well as to the gentle Parents and Masters so in the duties that are to pass between equals we are to bear with the froward and to overcome their inclinations For though we have corruptions that are apt to alienate us and will put us upon furious passions uncomely heats and divisions yet God forbid we should omit any part of our duty to them for uncharitable brethren are brethren still SERMON XXXII PSALM CXIX 30. I have chosen the way of Truth thy judgments have I laid before me I Come now to answer an Objection which may be made Obj. But if you be so earnest to maintain unity among your own Sects why do you separate from the Papists who are Christians as well as you and own many things of Christianity wherein
Poverty with a Promise Captivity with a Promise is better then Health Riches Liberty without one yea Death with a Promise is better then Life What you possess without a Promise you may lose when most secure Luk. 12. 19 20. I will say to my Soul Soul thou hast much goods laid up for many years eat drink and be merry But God said unto him Thou fool this night shall thy Soul be required of thee then whose shall those things be that thou hast provided But in the eye of Faith that which we hope for is more then that which we possess for we have God's Word it is set before us Use 1. Is for Information 1. How likely it is that the Children of God will be excercised with Afflictions because God in his Word hath laid in so many Comforts before-hand a full third of the Scriptures would be lost and be as Bladders given to a man that stands on dry Land and never meaneath to goe into deep Waters Man is born to trouble as the sparks fly upward Job 5. 7. Many think they come into the World not to bear Crosses but to spend their dayes in Pleasure but alas how soon do they find themselves mistaken and confuted by Experience If Life be any thing lengthened out it is vexed with the remembrance of what is past or trouble of ●…at is present or fear of what is to come The first part of our Life we know not our 〈◊〉 in the middle we are filled with Cares and Sorrows our last burdened with Weakness and Age. But now the godly are more appointed to troubles because God will try their Faith perfect their Patience train them up for a better World they are now hated by the World 2 Tim. 3. 12. Yea and all that will live godly in Christ Iesus shall suffer Persecution Acts 14. 22. We must through much tribulation enter into the Kingdom of God He that would not be exempted from the Hopes of Christians he must not look to be exempted from the Troubles of Christians 2. The Excellency of the Word of God and the Religion it establisheth it containeth store of sure Comforts and when all other Comforts can do us no good then the Word of God affordeth us Relief and Support Bare humane Reason cannot find out such grounds of Comfort in all their Philosophy it doth not penetrate to the inwards of a Man it will tell us it is in vain to trouble our selves about what we cannot help Ier. 10. 19. it is an evil and I must bear it that we are not without fellows others suffer as much as we doe c. But the Word of God giveth us other Consolations the Pardon of Sin the Promises of a better Life that if we lose Temporal things we shall have Eternal that we would not fear the Threatnings of Men having the Promises of God c. nor Death which hath Life at the back of it these are Comforts indeed When David was even dead in the Nest the Word that was not so clear then in these Points as now revived him what would he have said if he had known the Gospel so fully as we doe how should we be affected that live in so much Light Use 2. Is for Reproof 1. To those that seek other Comforts 1. In the Vanities of the World this is too slight a Plaster to cure Man's Sore or heale his Wound the Comforts of this World appear and vanish in a moment Every blast of a Temptation scattereth them it must be the Hope and Injoyment of some solid satisfaction that can fo●…y the heart and breed any solid and lasting Comfort and this the World cannot give unto us But in the Word we have it Alas what is a dream of Honour or the good Will and Word of a Mortal man Everlasting Glory is as much above all these as the Treasures of a Kingdom before a Child's Toyes Maygames vain Pleasures are gone before we well feel that we have them 2. Or in Philosophy that cannot give a true ground of Comfort That was it the Wise men of the World aimed at to fortify the Soul against Troubles but as they never understood the true ground of Misery which is Sin so they never understood the true ground or way of Comfort which is Christ. That which Man offereth cannot come with such Authority and Power as that which God offereth The Light of Reason cannot have such an Efficacy as Divine Testimony This is a poor Moon-light that rotteth before it ripeneth any thing In short They were never acquainted with Christ who is the Foundation of Comfort nor the Promise of Heaven which is the true Matter of Comfort nor Faith which is the Instrument to receive Comfort so that you leave the Fountain of Living water for the Dead puddle of a filthy Ditch if you think the Writings of the Heathens will comfort you and revive you and neglect the Word of God that brings rest for the Soul 3. Those are to be r●…oved that are under a Spiritual Institution and profess to keep to it and do so little honour it either by their Patience or Comfort or Hope under Troubles Wherefore were the great Mysteries of Godliness made known to us and the Promises of the World to come and all the Directions concerning the subjection of the Soul to God and those blessed Priviledges we enjoy by Christ if they all be not able to satisfie and stay your Heart and compose it to a quiet submission to God when it is his pleasure to take away your Comforts from you What Is there no balm in Gilead is there no physician there Will not all the Word of God yield you a Cordial or a Cure Oh consider what a disparagement you put upon the Provision Christ hath made for us as if the Scripture were a weaker thing than the Institutions of Philosophy or the vain Delights of the World But what may be the Reasons of such an obstinacy of Grief 1. Sometimes Ignorance They do not study the Grounds of Comfort or do not remember them for Oblivion is an Ignorance for the time Heb. 12. 4. Have ye forgotten the exhortation that speaketh to you as children They are like Hagar had a well of comfort nigh and yet ready to die for thirst The Scripture hath Breasts of Comfort so full as a Breast ready to discharge it self and yet they are not comforted 2. They indulge and give way to the present Malady hug the Distemper and do not consider the evil of it As Rachel refused to be comforted Ier. 31. 15. 3. They do not chide themselves ask the Soul the Reason cite it ●…fore the tribunal of Conscience which is one way to allay Passions Psal. 42. 5. Why ar●… 〈◊〉 so disquieted O my soul They look to the Grievance not to the Comfort as that which is of no use They aggravate the Grievance and lessen the Love of God Are the consolations of God so small with thee Iob 15.
Recreations when and how to pray what time for our Callings what for Worship when to speak when to hold our peace when to praise and when to reprove how to give and how to take when to scatter when to keep back or withhold and to order all things aright requireth a sound Judgment that we carry our selves with that gravity and seriousness that exactness and tenderness that we may keep up the Majesty of Religion and all the World may know that he is wise by whose Counsel we are guided But alas where this sound Judgment and Discretion is wanting we shall soon offend and transgress the Laws of Piety Charity Justice Sobriety Piety and Godliness will not be orderly we shall either be guilty of a prophane neglect of that course of Duty that is necessary to keep in the Life of Grace or turn Religion into a sowre Superstition and rigorous course of Observances Charity will not be orderly we shall give to wastfulness or withhold more than is meet to the scandal or prejudice of the World towards Religion Not perform Justice we shall govern to God's dishonour obey to his wrong punish with too much severity or forbear with too much lenity our Reproofs will be Reproaches our Praises Flattery Sobriety will not be orderly we shall deny our selves our necessary Comforts or use them as an occasion to the Flesh either afflict the Body and make our selves unserviceable or wrong the Soul and burden and oppress it with vain Delights In short even the higher Acts of Religion will degenerate our Fear will be turned into Desperation or our Hope into Presumption our Faith will be a light Credulity or our search after Truth will turn into a flat Scepticism or Irresolution our Patience will be Stupidness or our Constancy Obstinacy we shall either slight the hand of God or faint under it so that there is need of good Judgment and Knowledge to guide us in all our ways 2. Why this is so earnestly to be sought of God the thing is evident from what is said already but farther 1. Because this is a great defect in most Christians who have many times good Affections but no Prudence to guide and order them they are indeed all Affection but no Judgment have a Zeal but without Knowledg Rom. 10. 3. Zeal should be like Fire which is not onely fervidus but lucidus hot but bright a blind Horse may be full of Mettle but he is ever and anon stumbling Oh then should we not earnestly seek of God good Knowledge and Judgment the Spirit of God knoweth what is best for us in the Scriptures he hath endited Prayers Phil. 1. 9. This I pray that your Love may abound more and more in Knowledge and in all Iudgment That our Love and Zeal should have a proportionable measure of Knowledge and Judgment going along with it And Colos. 1. 9. That ye may be filled with the Knowledge of his Will in all Wisdome and spiritual Understanding And again Colos. 3. 16. Let the word of God dwell in you richly in all wisdome These places shew that it is not enough to have warm Affections but we must have a clear and a sound Mind 2. The Mischief which ariseth from this Defect is so great to themselves to others and the Church of God 1. To themselves 1. Without the distinguishing or discerning act of Judgment how apt are we to be misled and deceived they that cannot distinguish Meats will soon eat what is unwholsome so if we have not a Judgment to approve things that are Excellent and disapprove the contrary our Fancies will deceive us for they are taken with every slight appearance as Eve was deceived by the Fruit because it was fair to see to Gen. 3. 6. with 2 Cor. 11. 3. For I fear lest by any means as the Serpent beguiled Eve through his subtilty so your minds should be corrupted from the simplicity that is in Christ. Our Affections will deceive us for they judge by Interest and profit not Duty and Conscience The Affections are easily bribed by those bastard goods of Pleasure Honour and Profit 2 Cor. 4. 4. In whom the God of this world hath blinded the minds of them which believe not The consent of the World will deceive us for they may conspire in Errour and Rebellion against God and are usually the opposite party against God Rom. 12. 2. And be not conformed to this world but be ye transformed by the renewing of your minds Good men may deceive us true and faithfull Ministers may erre both in Doctrine and Manners as the old Prophet seduced the young one to his own Destruction 1 Kings 13. 18. He said unto him I am a Prophet also and an Angel spake unto me by the word of the Lord saying Bring him back with thee into thy house that he may eat bread and drink water But he lied unto him In what a wofull plight then are Christians if they have not a Judgment and a Test to tast Doctrines and try things as the Mouth tasteth Meats how easily shall we take good for evil and evil for good condemning that which God approveth and approving that which God condemneth 2. Without the determining Act of Judgment how fickle and irresolute shall we be either in the Profession or in the Practice of Godliness Many Mens Religion lasts but for a pang it cometh upon them now and then it is not their constant frame and constitution For want of this purpose and resolute peremptory decree for the Profession of Godliness there is an uncertainty levity and wavering in Religion Men take up Opinions lightly and leave them as lightly again Light Chaff is carried about with every wind Eph. 4 14. That we henceforth be no more Children tossed to and fro and carried about with every wind of Doctrine by the slight of men and cunning craftiness whereby they lie in wait to deceive If we receive the Truth upon the credit of men we may be led off again and we shall be ready to stagger when Persecution cometh especially if we see those men from whom we have learned the Truth fall away if we have not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a stedfastness of our own 2 Pet. 3. 17. Beware lest ye also being led away by the errour of the wicked fall from your own stedfastness Men should have a stedfastness proper to themselves not stand by the stedfastness of another the examples of others the countenance or applause of the World or the Opinion of good men but convincing Reason by which their Minds may be inlightened and their Judgments set for God So for Practice we are off and on unstable in all our ways why because we content our selves with some good Motions before we have brought our hearts to this Conclusion to choose God for our Portion and to cleave to him all in hast they will be religious but suddain imperfect Motions may be easily laid aside and given over by contrary
correction He made Iacob and Laban meet peaceably Gen. 31. and in the next Chapter Iacob and Esau. Use is Direction to us in these Times when there are such distances and alienation of hearts and affections between the People of God 1. Let us not be troubled at it overmuch Godly men were estranged from David either being mislead by delusions and false reports or loth to come to him because of his Troubles and low condition And partly because 't is no strange thing for a good man to be forsaken of his Friends so Job 6. 15 16 17. My brethren have dealt deceitfully as a brook and as the stream of brooks they pass away which are blackish by reason of the ice and wherein the snow is hid What time they wax warm they vanish when it is hot they are consumed out of the way So David Psal. 31. 11. I was a reproach among all mine enemies and a fear to mine acquaintance Yea so Christ himself I know the Temptation is very great Man is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a sociable creature To go alone in our duty is very hard but we ought not to look on our selves to be alone while God is with us Iohn 16. 32. Christ is a pattern of all dispensations as well as trials Heb. 13. 5. I will not leave thee nor forsake thee He is so far from forsaking that he will not leave us 2. Let us recommend the case to God Zeph. 3. 9. That they may call upon the Name of the Lord to serve him with one consent Rom. 15. 6 7. That ye may with one mind and one mouth glorifie God Wherefore receive ye one another as Christ also received us to the glory of God Non sunt ista litigandi sed orandi tempora Beg a coalition of all those that fear God that laying aside prejudice they may turn one to another The Spirit of Concord is God's gift Christ prayeth John 17. 21 22. That they may be one as thou Father art in me and I in thee that they also may be one in us that the world may believe thou hast sent me And the glory which thou gavest me I have given them that ●…ey may be one as we are one 3. Let us carry it so that the Children of God may have no occasion to turn from us Scandalous sins are roots of bitterness Heb. 12. 15. Lest any root of bitterness springing up trouble you and thereby many be defiled Encourage the Godly to pray for you Heb. 13. 18. Pray for us for we trust we have a good conscience in all things willing to live honestly To love you Good men are not unworthy of our Prayers and uncapable of the benefit of them the more you excel in Grace the more they will delight in you Psal. 16. 3. But to the saints that are in the earth and to the excellent in whom is all my delight SERMON LXXXVIII PSAL. CXIX VER 80. Let my heart be sound in thy statutes that I be not ashamed IN this Verse we have first A Petition Let my heart be sound in thy statutes 2dly An Argument from the fruit and effect of granting it That I be not ashamed that is then I shall not otherwise I certainly shall be ashamed He would avoid that inconveniency that was so grievous to him in the eyes of wicked men In the Petition I shall take notice 1. Of the Person praying David 2. His Qualification intimated in the word My heart 3. The Person prayed unto intimated in the word Thy. Secondly Here 's the Benefit asked A sound heart in which you have 1. The Nature of it 2. The Value of it DOCT. That Sincerity and Soundness in an Holy Course is a great Blessing and earnestly to be sought of God in Prayer This will appear if we consider the Benefit asked the Nature and Value of it First The Nature of it What is a sound heart It noteth reality and solidity in grace The Septuagint hath it Let my heart be without spot and blemish What is here Let my heart be sound It implieth the reality of Grace opposed to the bare Form of Godliness or the fair Shows of Hypocrites and the sudden and vanishing Motions of Temporaries 1 I shall briefly shew what it is not by way of opposition 1. 'T is opposed to the form of godliness 2 Tim. 3. 4. Having a form of godliness but denying the power thereof Their Religion is only in shew and outside as Apples that may be fair to see to in the Skin but rotten at the Core so their Hearts are not sound within When we are sound within as well as beautiful without this is the sound heart when not only in shew and appearance we are for God but in deed and truth Solinus telleth us That the Apples of Sodom are to sight very beautiful and fair but the compass of the rine doth only contain a sooty matter which flitters into dust as soon as touched This is a fit Emblem of an Hypocrite or an Heart not sound with God Or as the Priests under the Law they were to look whether the Sacrifices were sound at heart otherwise they were to be rejected Lev. 22. 22 23. So David here begs a sound heart in God's statutes lest it should be rejected of God The world thinketh if there be a little external Conformity to the Law of God it is enough O no! there must be a sound heart no other principle of Obedience pleaseth God 2. This sound Heart is opposed to the sudden pangs and hasty motions of Temporaries The graces of Temporaries are for matter true but slightly rooted and therefore are not sound There wanteth two things in the graces of Temporaries first a deep and firm radication 2dly an habitual predominancy over all lusts First A deep and firm radication Temporaries are really affected with the Word of God and the offers of Christ and life by him but the tincture is but slight and soon worn off They have the Streams of Grace but not the Fountain a Draught but not the Spring John 4. 14. The water that I shall give him shall be a well of water springing up to everlasting life A dash of Rain or a Pond may be dried up but a Fountain ever keepeth flowing They have something to do with Christ he giveth them a visit but not that constant communion he doth not dwell in their hearts by faith Eph. 3. 17. nor take up his abode there 't is but a slight tincture not a deep and permanent die of holiness or a constant habitual inclination to that which is holy just and good There is not the remaining seed 1 Iohn 3. 9. there is a great deal of difference between sudden motions stirred up in us by the Spirit and the remaining seed that is a constant disposition of heart to please God Secondly An habitual predominancy over all lusts Temporaries still with those kind Graces which they have retain their interest in the world and
fulfilled on earth but decreed in Heaven fixed and setled there by God's unalterable Purpose and Will 2. That in Heaven there is an Emblem of it 'T is usual in Scripture to set forth the stability and constancy of God's Word by this similitude as Psal. 89. 2. Mercy shall be built up for ever thy faithfulness hast thou established in the very heavens So when 't is compared with the Covenant of day and night Jer. 33. 20 21. Thus saith the Lord if you can break my Covenant of the day and my Covenant of the night that there should not be day and night in their seasons Then may also my Covenant be broken with David my servant So Ier. 31. 35 36 37. This sense I incline to because in the next Verse 't is compared with the stability of the earth Well then his Word is setled in Heaven partly because the Heavens stand fast by the same Word by which they were first made Gen. 1. 3 6. And God said Let there be light and there was light Let there be a firmament in the midst of the waters and divide the waters from the waters and it was so So Midrash Tillim And partly because the Being and Order of Heaven sheweth the setledness of God's Word as the Heavens were created and setled in a course which they constantly observe in their motions and this duration and equability in the motion is so exact that men can foresee Eclipses long before they happen therefore the Psa●…st saith Psal. 114 19. The Sun knoweth his going down that is keepeth so to the just Po●…ts of his Compass as if he were an intelligent Agent and knew the exact time when to set and rise Now when we lift up our eyes to Heaven and see how punctually and exactly the Order is observed which is once setled by God's Will even from the beginning of the world to this day no remarkable change hath been observed the heavenly bodies keep their tenour and course and by their constant motions distribute their light and influence to the world and this from their first Creation and all because he hath said It shall be so in the strength of his Word they abide This continuance of the Heavens sheweth the permanency of his Word DOCT. That God's Word is of an Eternal Truth and Immutable Constancy By his Word is principally meant the Gospel Covenant It is said by the Prophet Isaiah Chap. 40. ver 8. The grass withereth and the flower fadeth but the word of our God shall stand for ever And the Apostle Peter quoting and improving the same place saith The word of God is the Gospel preached unto you 1 Pet. 1. 24 25. And more especially the promise of eternal life for that is opposite to the fading glory of the present life and is the eternal effect of the Word of God abiding in our hearts when all other things fade and decay this blessed estate offered in and conveyed by the Gospel will not fail us 1. I shall give you the Reasons 2. The Emblem and Representation 3. The Profit and Usefulness of this Meditation 1. The Reasons In every Promise that it be certain and firm three things are required First That it may be made seriously and heartily with a purpose to perform it Secondly That he that hath promised continue in his purpose without change of mind Thirdly That it be in the power of him that promiseth to perform what he hath so promised Now of all these things there can be no doubt 1. Certainly God meaneth as he speaketh when he promiseth to give eternal life to those that believe and obey the Gospel There is no question but he is so minded when he hath written a Book to assure the world of it for what need God to cour●… the Creature with an imaginary happiness or to tell them of a glorious Estate which he never meant to bestow upon them Yea why should Amen the faithful Witness come from Heaven farther to assure us of it by his Doctrine dye the death to purchase it for us and afterward rise again and enter into that happiness which he spake of That our faith and hope may be in God 1 Pet. 1. 21. Why should he as soon as he was ascended give gifts unto men send forth messengers into the world to preach this doctrine and give notice of this blessed Estate to be had upon these terms and attest it by divers signs and wonders partly to alarum the drowsie world to regard it and assure the incredulous world of the truth of this salvation Heb. 2. 3 4. Not to believe that God is serious in all this is to make him a Lyar indeed yea to establish a Lye and Falshood with great Solemnity 2. That God doth continue his purpose is no doubt if we consider his eternal and unchangeable Nature Mal. 3. 6. For I am the Lord I change not therefore ye sons of Iacob are not consumed And James 1. 17. With him is neither variableness nor shadow of turning And what should alter his purpose Doth he meet with any thing that he foresaw not and knew not before God doth never repent and call back his Grant that he hath by this Act of Grace ensured Eternal Happiness to the Saints on such terms 1 Sam. 15. 29. For the strength of Israel will not lye nor repent for he is not a man that he should repent Psal. 110. 4. I have sworn and will not repent thou art a Priest for ever after the order of Melchisedech Christ is instated in full power of entertaining and blessing his faithful Servants which shall never be retracted To take off all doubt he hath given us double assurance his Word and his Oath Heb. 6. 17 18. God being willing more abundantly to shew to the heirs of promise the immutability of his counsel confirmed it by an oath That by two immutable things wherein it was impossible for God to lye we might have strong consolation who have fled for refuge c. God hath ever been tender of his Word above all that is famed or believed of God this is most conspicuous Psal. 138. 2. Thou hast magnified thy Word above all thy Name Now this needed not for an Oath is interposed in a doubtful matter but it sheweth God's extraordinary care for our satisfaction his good will is seen in the Promise his solicitude in the Oath In short God would never be so fast bound but that he doth continue his purpose 3. That he is able to perform it Mat. 19. 26. With God all things are possible Rom. 4. 21. Being fully persuaded that what God had promised he was able to perform Phil. 3. 21. According to the working whereby he is able even to subdue all things to himself He is able to find out a way whereby sinners may be reconciled sanctified subdued by his Spirit whereby his Interests may be preserved in them against the assaults of the Devil the World and the Flesh finally able to
raise our Bodies after eaten out by Worms and turned into dust Matters of Faith being chiefly or mainly future and to come and difficult to be performed therefore an express belief of God's Power is necessary To convert such an obstinate and to sanctifie such a sinful creature and to raise the dead are no slight things 2. The Emblem of this immutable constancy 't is setled in the Heavens it is not measured by the sloating estate of things here upon Earth but by the perfection of the Heavens which are free from all changes and chances 1. They are fit Emblems of the stability of the Word for they continue to be what his Word once made them to be There is no justling among the Stars but all obey God's Word and Law Psal. 148. 4 5 6. Praise him ye heavens of heavens and waters that be above the heavens Let them praise the Name of the Lord for he commanded and they were created He hath also established them for ever and ever he hath made a decree which shall not pass So that when a Believer looketh up to Heaven there he seeth the Book of the Creatures opened wherein he beholdeth God's constancy and certainty written in indelible characters God's powerful voice did first separate the waters from the waters and those celestial Bodies move in that order wherein God hath set them Now is not this an help to us when we open the Book of Scriptures and compare the one with the other how the stated course of Nature and the stated course of Grace agree with his Power For as long as you trust God's Word you can never fail for both Heaven and Earth are sustained by it Heb. 1. 3. He upholdeth all things by the word of his power All is easie to God for he preserveth the Heavens in that estate wherein they are governed and can preserve his people in the most difficult cases 2. God's Constancy and Truth doth appear in the Heavens also there is a witness there of his Eternal Truth for when he had once said Let there be Heavens c. they presently were and ever since have kept one constant tenour and course yea Heaven shall sooner fail than God's Word fail he will not retract what he hath once said and therefore his Word is more firm and stable than the Frame of Heaven and Earth Mat. 5. 18. Till heaven and earth pass not one jot or tittle shall pass from the law till all be fulfilled Mat. 24. 30. Heaven and earth shall pass away but my words shall not pass away So that God's Word is more stable than Heaven and Earth 3. The profit of this Meditation 1. That we may set the sureness of this Word against the diffidence and distrustfulness of our own hearts Luk. 24. 25. Slow of heart to believe Though God hath so firmly bound himself to the Creature by his own Word yet the Promise to us seemeth doubtful and uncertain especially when men are clouded with Troubles and Temptations for we look only to present sense and would not be put on any tryal Now it is comfortable to remember that the order and course of Nature is not so setled as the Grace of the Covenant is Let it have its course resolved and patient obedience will at length end in eternal happiness and therefore we should build surely upon a firm foundation that we may not stagger through unbelief but give glory to God Rom. 4. 20. 2. To comfort us when our hopes are delayed in due time the promise cannot want the effect Heb. 6. 12. There will be day and night summer and winter in their season therefore as in the night we wait for day and in the winter for summer so must we wait for our eternal consolation 3. To support us against the various changes in the state of worldly things Many things fall out in this world that breed trouble in us therefore if we should only look to the present state of things our hearts would float up and down but we must look to the immutable constancy of God's Word that 's a sure Rock for the anchor of hope to take hold on There is a sure Rule to walk by sure Promises to build upon if we would be everlastingly happy There are the sure mercies of David Isa. 55 3. The changes of this world perplex our Faith therefore we should not look to the instability of things below wherein there are continual vicissitudes but to the sure Covenant 4. Not only when our hopes are delayed and obscured by the changes and chances of this world but contradicted by contrary appearances God seemeth to cast us off to have no pleasure in us Now to bear up our Faith in the hardest condition that we may say Iob 13. 15. Though he slay me yet will I trust in him and believe in hope against hope we should remember the setledness and constancy of his Word The Promises stand firm in Heaven when they seem to fail on Earth God may cover himself with frowns and his dispensations may seem contrary to his intention as Ioseph spake roughly to his Brethren when he meant to discover himself to them or as Christ dealt with the woman of Canaan Mat. 15. But when there seemeth to be such a contradiction between the word and works of God when his voice is sweet like Iacob's and his hand rough like Esau's we must remember that the smart Rod is consistent with Covenant love Psal. 89. 32. And we must not interpret the Promise of God by his providential dealing with us but rather his dealing by his promises his promise being as the light part of the Cloud and his dealing as the dark part of it God is fulfilling promises by hard dispensations and sharp afflictions belong to his faithfulness Psal. 119. 75. Many times that is best for us not what we think best but what God thinks best The buffetings of Satan and oppositions of the world may be most wholsom to us though not most pleasing to the flesh 5. To wean us from the fading vanities of the world Isa. 40. 8. and 1 Pet. 1. 24. There is nothing firm and lasting in this world till we lift up our eyes to Heaven and seek an happiness in the promises 1 Iohn 2. 17. Our happiness lieth not in the present life but in the everlasting enjoyment of God In the Covenant all is setled and sure but in the world all is unstable and uncertain God's Covenant provideth for us eternal joy and bliss USE 1. To shew what contrary and different Conclusions the Carnal and Spiritual will draw from the same principles The Scoffers said 2 Pet. 3. 4. Where is the promise of his coming for since the fathers fell asleep all things continue as they were from the beginning ●…f the Creation Because the whole Frame of Nature had kept one constant tenour and course they plead for the Eternity of the World and the Falshood of the Promises Now David reasoneth
who value all things in order to the chief good and have weaned their hearts from the false happiness they have their end if they be brought nearer to God though by a bitter and sharp means First Use Is Reproof to four sorts 1. To those that know no comfort but what ariseth from the enjoyments of sense Alas these comforts are dreggy and base and leave a taint upon the soul Iude 19. Again they leave us destitute when we most need comfort Iob 27. 8. When other comforts forsake us and have spent their allowance the comforts of the Word abide with us Again these comforts increase our grief though for a time they seem to mitigate and allay it They are like strong waters that warm the stomach for the present but destroy the true temper and natural heat of it and leave it the colder afterwards they chear us a little but the end of that mirth is heaviness Oh! how much better are the comforts of God's Word which giveth us matter of joy in the saddest condition and do not only save us from desperation in troubles but make us rejoice in tribulation and can bring pleasure to us in our bitterest afflictions there are breasts of consolation for every distressed creature to suck at and be saved 2. It reproves them that think Philosophy as good or a better Institution than Christianity Certainly we should own the wisdom of God by what hand soever it is conveyed to us as Elijah refused not his meat though brought by Ravens But when this is done by men of a profane wit in a contempt of God we must convince them of their dangerous error and mistake and shew how compleat we are in Christ that we be not spoiled by the Rudiments of vain Wisdom or Philosophy Col. 2. 8. Surely God's comforts have greatest authority over the Conscience to silence all our murmurings Psal. 94. 19. Man speaks to us by the evidence of Reason but in Scripture God himself speaks to us and impawneth his Truth with us to do us good they knew not the true cause of trouble sin nor the true remedy Jesus Christ And surely those great mysteries of Christ as Procurer of Comfort the Spirit as the Applier Heaven as the Matter the Word as the Warrant Faith as the Means to receive all these are a more accommodate means to settle the Conscience than those little glimmerings of light which refined nature discovered They speak of submitting out of necessity little of reducing the heart to God and their very Doctrines for comfort were rather a Libel against Providence than a sure ground of peace and tranquility of mind and they taught men to eradicate the affections rather than to govern and quiet them and therefore keep up your Reverence to the Scriptures A Seneca may speak things more neatly and to the gust of carnal fancy but not with greater power and efficacy this is reserved for the Word 3. It reproves them that undervalue the consolations laid down in the Word as if they were but slender empty and unsatisfactory and would have some singular and extraordinary way of getting comfort Iob 15. 11. Are the consolations of God small with thee Is there any secret thing with thee God's ordinary way is the sure way the other layeth us open to a snare therefore they who undervalue the ordinary comforts of the Word obtained in a way of Faith and Repentance and close walking with God as Naaman undervalued the waters of Iordan and would have signs and wonders to comfort them they may long sit in darkness because if God comfort them not in their way they will not be comforted at all Now though God hath sometimes in condescension to his people granted them their desires as to Thomas yet it is with an upbraiding of their weakness and unbelief Iohn 20. 28. We should acquiesce in the common allowance of God's people lest we seem to reflect on the wisdom and goodness of God and lay open our selves to some false consolation and dream of comfort while we affect new means without the compass of the Word especially when we find not our expectations there speedily answered like hasty Patients readier to tamper with every new Medicine they hear of than submit to a regular course of Physick Gregory tells us of a Lady of the Emperor's Court that never ceased importuning of him to seek from God a Revelation from Heaven that she should be saved He answers Rem difficilem inutilem postulas It was a thing difficult and unprofitable difficult for him to obtain unprofitable for her to ask having a surer way by the Scriptures 2 Pet. 1. 19. than Oracles the adhering of the Soul to the promises is the unquestionable way to obtain a sound peace Luther as he confesseth was often tempted to ask a sign of the pardon of his sins or some special Revelation he tells also how strongly he withstood these Temptations Pactum feci cum Domino meo ne mihi mittat visiones vel somnia vel etiam angelos contentus enim sum hoc dono quod habeo Scripturam sanctam quae abunde docet suppeditat omnia quae necessaria sunt tam ad hanc vitam tam ad futuram I indented with the Lord my God that he would never send me dreams and visions I am well contented with the gift of the Scriptures 4. It shews how much they are to blame that are under a Scripture institution and do so little honour it by their patience or comfort under Troubles Wherefore were the great Mysteries of Godliness made known to us and the promises of the world to come and all the directions concerning the subjection of the Soul to God and those blessed priviledges we enjoy by Christ if they all be not able to satisfie and stay your heart and compose it to a quiet submission to God when it is his pleasure to take away his comforts from you Is there no Balm in Gilead Is there no Physician there Will not the whole Word of God yield you a Cordial or a Cure It is a disparagement to the provision Christ hath made for our comfort 1. Surely this comes either from ignorance or forgetfulness you do not meditate in the Word or study the grounds of comfort and remember them Heb. 12. 5. Have you forgotten the exhortation which speaks unto you as unto children Hagar had a Well of comfort nigh at hand yet ready to dye for thirst 2. You indulge a distemper and the obstinacy and peevishness of grief Ier. 31. 15. A voice was heard in Rama lamentation and bitter weeping Rachel weeping for her children and refused to be comforted Certainly you do not expostulate with your selves and cite your Passions before the Tribunal of Reason Psal. 42. 5. or else look altogether to the grievance not to the comfort aggravate the grievances extenuate the comforts you pitch too much upon temporal happiness would have God maintain you at your own rate Heb.
sin to them Paul saith Rom. 7. 12. The Law is holy and the Commandment holy and just and good What 's the meaning of this disjunctive the Law and the Commandment By the commandment he means that particular Law which had so strangely affect-ed him that had wrought such tragical effects upon his heart made sin revive disturbed him discovered himself to himself he loves that law which broke in upon his heart with so much power and evidence and stir'd up his affections Carnal men love the comfortable part of the word to be feasted with priviledges but that part which urgeth them to unpleasing duties or discovers their sins they love not 1 Kings 22. 8. He doth not prophesie good concerning me but evil therefore I will not hear him Though he was a Prophet of the Lord and came with the word of the Lord yet he never prophesied good to me that is such things as did please him Do you think that was the temper of that wicked King alone no it is the temper of every wicked man's heart Amos 5. 10. They hate him that rebuketh in the gate and they abhor him that speaketh uprightly All wicked men have such a disposition they hate that part of the Word which doth stir up their fears revive their doubts and is contrary to their lusts Iohn 3. 20. It 's their general disposition Every one that doth evil hateth the light neither cometh to the light lest his deeds should be reproved They shun that part of the Word whereby they might come to know themselves either they could wish such things were not sins or that they did not know them to be sins 2 Pet. 3. 5. For this they willingly are ignorant of A guilty soul hath a secret enmity to the word of God being loth to read his own doom there and be much occupied and employed in that which condemns and accuseth him as a man that hath light ware is loth to come to the ballance or a man that hath counterfeit coin is loth to come to the touchstone so they are loth to come too close and near the word of God that their whole course may be discovered to themselves None but a pure sincere heart can have such an universal Love to God's Law 4. If you love the word you will ever love the Word for the same reasons that drew your heart at first continues still Psal. 119. 20. My soul breaketh for the longing that it hath unto thy judgments at all times By Judgments is meant the word of God which is the rule of God's proceeding with sinners It was not for a pang only that he had that strong and vehement affection but it was a constant thing at all times it was the ordinary frame of his heart Many men have good affections for a while but they abide not with them For some have an adulterous affection only they may love the word of God while it is new for novelty sake Iohn 5. 35. Ye rejoyced for a season in his Light And Act. 17. 20. They flocked about Paul because he seemed to be a setter forth of new Doctrine This is but carnal love that is soon altered or else it may be they have some love to the Word during some qualme of Conscience and they may find some savour in it when they have a little trouble upon them as we desire strong water in a pang not as a constant dyet When they are under some working of Conscience then they run to the word but as soon as they can lick themselves whole again they slight it and their love to the word is gone As their trouble wears off so their affection is worn off These are driven by fearing the word and not by the love of it For a great while men are carryed on pleasingly in their love to the word but when it grates hard bears hard upon Conscience and meets with their lusts then they go away in discontent As Herod heard Iohn gladly for a while Mark 6. 20. until his Herodias was touched and then follows his darling sin again Their Love is to the word if carnal credit accompany it as Iohn was welcome to the Jews until he fell under Herod's displeasure The stony-ground received the word with much joy until the Sun arose with a burning heat Matth. 13. There are certain times when it is a credit to be religious and when the Gospel is befriended in the world then men will have some seeming affection but it dies away God's Children love the word for its own sake therefore they ever love it They which love the truth for foreign reasons because of novelty merely out of present necessity publick Countenance because it is in fashion and repute or because they thought the word would flatter them more in their sins than it doth these do not love the word Thus David's affection is asserted Secondly VVe have David's assertion demonstrated It is my meditation all the day Doct. 2. They that love the Word will be meditating therein continually There are two Grounds for this Love causeth it and Love is encreased by it 1. Love causeth it We are continually thinking of whatsoever we love Rich men that affect worldly things are always thinking of gathering substance and encreasing their worldly portion as that man Luk. 12. 17 18. was dialoguising and discoursing with himself Carnal Lovers are thinking of that they love and ambitious men are feasting their souls with imaginations and suppositions of worldly greatness pleasing themselves by framing Images in their minds and Warriers are thinking of battels and wars and Voluptuaries are thinking of sports and pastimes and a Child of God is thinking of holy things Love causes the soul to be more where it loves than where it lives it 's the best entertainment they can find for themselves to frame Images of things loved in their minds 2. As Love begets meditation so meditation cherishes love Meditation is the life of all the means of grace and that which makes them fruitful to our souls What 's the reason there is so much preaching and so little practice for want of meditation Constant thoughts are operative If a Hen straggleth out from he nest she brings forth nothing her Eggs chill so when we do not set a brood upon holy thoughts if we content our selves with some few transient thoughts and glances about divine things and do not dwell upon them the truth is suddenly put off and doth no good All actions require time and space for their operation if hastily slubber'd over they cool if we give them time and space we shall feel their effects So if we hold truths in our mind and dwell upon them there will be an answerable impression but when they come like a flash of lightning then they are gone and we run them over cursorily That truth may work there is required three things sound belief serious consideration and close application Iob 5. 27. Lo this we have searched
first declinings are a cause of all the rest remitting your watch and spiritual fervor by degrees you do not walk with such a strait foot he that looketh to the House to keep it tight and in constant repair prevents the fall of it 2. If through our infirmity we miscarry at any time we must not persist in a wrong course but reclaim speedily not depart wickedly Psal. 18. 21. not lie in the dirt when we have caught a fall There is a departing out of infirmity and a departing wickedly A Candle sucketh light if presently kindled again the longer we lie in our sins the worse the more care and the more speedy the more likely to succeed when there is any breach between us and God not lie in it 2dly As to publick Actions We live in changeable times but it is well that we have a sure Rule this may stablish your hearts if governed by sense and interest with what a gracious face shall we appear to the world Though you meet with troubles for being exact and punctual as to principles of Conscience and many disappointments from God yet in the issue that will be found to be the best course for you and yours Now when you see your duty for which you must consult both with Word and Spirit take heed of two things 1. Unbelief Heb. 3. 12. Take heed lest there be in any of you an evil heart of unbelief in departing from the living God The cause of Apostasie is Unbelief they do not look upon God's directions as judgments Men that look to the present face of things cannot see things to come and so miscarry Hezekiah in the midst of dangers and difficulties was steddy to God 2 Kings 18. 5 6. He trusted in the Lord God of Israel He clave to the Lord and departed not from following him but kept his commandments which the Lord commanded Moses Every duty hath a sanction invested with promises and threatnings therefore as there needeth obedience to make conscience of the precept so faith to believe the sanction which doth enliven the duty and keep our hearts under the awe of it 2. Mortification For till there be an indifferency to all events in temporal things we shall ever be departing and turning off from God sometimes allured out of our obedience sometimes afrighted out of it therefore till dead to worldly accidents and interests we are easily turned out of the way Heb. 12. 13. Lest that which is lame be turned out of the way That which is lame feeble and fearful good men may be carried away thus as Peter Too weak and unconstant are the best of men the least blast of temptation will make them leave off the course of well-doing and without respect had to conscience or credit openly to desert it For fear of man's offence Peter slippeth from his duty fear of losing applause or incurring hatred with men maketh us venture on God's dishonour unmortifi'd lusts make us more tender of our selves than of God Second Point That Divine Teaching causeth Constancy For therefore David saith I departed not for thou hast taught me Here 1. What it is to be taught of God 't is often spoken of in Scripture Isa. 54. 13. All thy children shall be taught of the Lord. John 6. 45. All taught of God Now God teacheth outwardly by his Word but inwardly by his Spirit these two must not be severed Our hearing is necessary Eph. 4. 21. If so be ye have heard him and have been taught by him as the truth is in Iesus The ordinary means of hearing him preached and set forth in the Gospel and publick Ministry and by that means doth Christ make use of it to teach us by his Spirit so Iohn 6. 45. Heard and learned of the Father it doth not seclude a teaching Ministry in the Gospel but it is said 1 Thes. 4. 9. Ye your selves are taught of God to love one another And 1 Iohn 2. 27. But the anointing which ye have received of him abideth in you and ye need not that any man teach you but as the same anointing teacheth you of all things and is truth and is no lye and even as it hath taught you ye shall abide in him It is a Rhetorical insinuation the Negative to be understood comparatively man 's teaching is nothing to what you have already by the Spirit On the other side much more doth it not exclude the Spirit upon whom the efficacy dependeth God teacheth by men but the effect is from his grace Mark 16. 20. They went forth preaching the Word the Lord working with them 1 Cor. 3. 6. Paul may plant and Apollo water but God giveth the increase The internal efficacy working by external means Docet Spiritus Sanctus sed per verbum saith Ferus docent Apostoli sed per co-operationem Spiritus Sancti God worketh in and by the means 2. Inwardly God teacheth two ways 1. By common Illumination 2. Special Operation 1. Common Illumination barely enlightning the mind to know or understand what he propoundeth by his Messengers so Rom. 1. 20. God shewed it to the Heathen For the invisible things of him from the creation of the world are clearly seen being understood by the things that are made even his eternal power and Godhead so that they are without excuse But then 2dly By way of special Operation effectually inclining the will to embrace and prosecute duties so known Ier. 31. 33. I will put my law in their inward parts and write it in their hearts This way of teaching is always effectual and persuasive now in this sense they are taught of God that they do not only get an ear to hear but an heart to understand learn and practise Secondly Why this teaching is the ground of constancy 1. They that are thus taught of God see things more clearly than others do God is the most excellent Teacher One man seeth a thing by candle-light another by day-light he seeth most clearly that seeth by noon-day The light of the Spirit doth clearly manifest things both Object and Faculty The Unction teacheth us all things 1 Iohn 2. 20. 2 Cor. 3. 18. A distinct clear abiding light Carnal men are blind 2 Pet. 1. 9. How sharp sighted soever in other things yet blind they do not see so as to affect their hearts 2. They know things more surely and with certainty of demonstration whereas others have but dubious conjectures and loose and wavering opinions about the things of God Iohn 6. 69. We believe and are sure that thou art that Christ the Son of the living God John 17. 8. Known surely that I came out from thee The many temptations and assaults we meet with need such a certain apprehension 3. This teaching is so efficacious and powerful as that the effect followeth Psal. 86. 11. Teach me thy way O Lord I will walk in thy truth 1 Cor. 2. 4. 'T is a lovely teaching causing us to cleave to what is taught 4. God reneweth this
count the worst of Christ better than the best of the world Heb. 11. 26. Esteeming the reproach of Christ greater riches than the treasures in Egypt Not only the Graces of Christ or the benefits of Christ but the reproaches of Christ. So much is the world lessened and the desires of Grace encreased The heaviest part of Christs Cross is sweeter than the worldly plenty where sin accompanieth it Use 1. To press us to get this esteem and love of the Word above all earthly things by what names soever they are called whether Gold or fine Gold Considerations 1. The word of God containeth the true Riches in comparison of which all other things are but a shadow 2. Except Gods word be clearly esteemed above earthly things it is highly contemned You would think your selves highly sleighted if once it should be put to the question whether you or an Ass or a Swine be better The Case is as clear whether it be better to have a Childs toy or Land of inheritance You think it a disparagement of their reason 'T is so to compare spiritual things with carnal Prov. 16. 16. How much better is it to get Wisdom than Gold and to get Understanding rather to be chosen than Silver 3. The word of God observed and obeyed bringeth all earthly things along with it Gold and fine Gold so far as they are necessary and good for us Matth. 6. 33. But seek ye first the Kingdom of God and his righteousness and all these things shall be added unto you And 1 Tim. 4. 8. Godliness is profitable unto all things having a promise of the life that now is and of that which is to come It hath all kind of promises it doth not come empty handed it bringeth in a portion in this life and blessing in these outward things 4. How constant the word is and in one tenour 2 Cor. 1. 20. All the promises of God in him are Yea and in him Amen unto the glory of God by us But worldly things are uncertain 2 Sam. 19. 43. And the men of Iudah answered the men of Israel and said We have ten parts in the King and we have also more right in David than ye Compare this with the next words 2 Sam. 20. 1. Sheba blew a trumpet and said We have no part in David neither have we inheritance in the Son of Iesse The people cry Hosanna to Christ and presently after crucifie him Peter once made a glorious confession of Christ and afterwards a gross denial Paul was received as an Angel by the Galatians Gal. 4. 14. My temptation which was in my flesh ye despised not nor rejected but received me as an Angel of God even as Christ Iesus but afterwards accounted an enemy verse 16. Am I therefore become your enemy because I tell you the truth Nebuchadnezzar flourishing in a Palace of Gold Dan. 4. 30. Is not this great Babylon that I have built for the house of my Kingdom by the might of my power and for the glory of my Majesty But a voice came to him from Heaven ver 31. O King Nebuchadnezzar to thee it is spoken The Kingdom is departed from thee Use 2. Have we such an esteem and affection to the word of God Then 1. We will do that which in other Cases a greater love would encline us to do Otherwise it is but a Complement we will diligently exercise our selves in the word of God Labour is the fruit of love Remembring your labour of love 1 Thess. 1. 3. He that doth not take more pains in the pursuit of heavenly things than of carnal doth not love the one above the other for love is industrious Iohn 6. 27. Labour not for the meat that perisheth but for that meat which endureth unto everlasting life What a deal of pains do men take for a little pelf to heap up treasure and fill their houses with the good things of this world and spend all their time and wit their care and strength on outward things The stream runneth stronger for the world when there is no proportionable care taken for the benefits which the word offereth God maketh offer of Grace and Glory Men are as those that travel by water and see buildings ashore and praise them as they pass by but never enter into them never look after them more If you are ready and earnest in the pursuit of the one careless and cold in the other you think no time enough for the one but grudge all time for the other it is a sign the one hath a greater share in our hearts than the other We are to seek worldly things in some measure because God hath appointed every one some work to do but when there is such a manifest disproportion between our seeking the one and the other it sheweth which way our souls bend if a nice difference that hardly distinguisheth it give suspicion more especially when such a manifest disproportion 2. We will part with the one for the others sake If carnal things can withdraw us from the pursuit of heavenly things Heb. 12. 16. As Esau who for one morsel of bread sold his birthright and heavenly things cannot make us to part with carnal things Many make void the Law to seek riches and wealth 2 Tim. 4. 10. Demas hath forsaken us having loved this present world break Gods Commands for a small hire and do so constantly frequently easily it is a sign they do but complement and speak from their judgments not from their hearts when they say they love God better than the world or fine Gold the chiefest excellency of it Would a man dispense with his obedience to the Word and be thus affected What is deliberately habitually preferred that hath the greater love We can neglect our Duty to God trample upon God Christ Heaven Scripture Conscience Duty in the way to make speed after worldly things 3. Wherein do we place the happiness of us and ours To carnal men nothing is so dear as their present prosperity Do you value your selves to be more happy when you have a little Grace and sense of Gods love than if you had all the world Psal. 4. 6 7. There be many that say Who will shew us any good Lord lift thou up the light of thy countenance upon us Thou hast put gladness in my heart more than in the time that their Corn and their Wine encreased And for your Children do ye rejoice to see them great or good Many are delighted to see their Children thrive in the world do well in the world but careless whether they have Grace yea or no. If you take the world still as a great part of your felicity it is a sign you have low thoughts and respects for the Word of God SERMON CXL PSAL. CXIX VER 128. Therefore I esteem all thy precepts concerning all things to be right and I hate every false way IN this Verse a Child of God is set forth by two marks I. His
by mourning for this Carnal men are hot in their own cause cold in Gods Gods Children are quite otherwise cold in their own cause and hot in Gods Therefore they are deeply sensible when Gods honour is weakned Moses was the meekest man upon Earth yet he brake the Tables How doth this agree The injuries that were done to himself he could look upon with a meek quiet spirit easily put them up but when he saw the people bring dishonour to the name of God then he hath a high and deep affection They cry out Iosh. 7. 9. Lord what wilt thou do for thy great name So Psal. 115. 1. Not unto us O Lord not unto us but unto thy name give glory They go to God not to advance our faction and interest we are brought very low yet the wrath of man shall praise thee Thy name is dear and precious they are sorry to see any prophane it God hath abundantly provided for their respect he hath bid all men love them when he bid us love one another So that in effect all the respects of the world are devolved upon one person And they would have all men love God and honour God Secondly It comes from their compassion and pity and love to men O it grieves them to see so many that do not grieve for themselves and their eyes are wet because yours are always dry I tell you weeping saith Paul Phil. 3. 18. Compassion over the miserable estate of such Teachers and those that are led by them they and whole Droves run after fancies that endanger their souls False Teachers and their Proselytes should not only fall under our indignation but our pity They are Monsters in nature that want Bowels much more in Grace Religion doth not harden the heart but mollifie it Jesus Christ was made up of compassion and all Christians partake of Christs spirit Phil. 1. 8. God is my record how greatly I long after you all in the bowels of Iesus Christ. Pray mark Paul had got some of Christs bowels and let me tell you they were tender ones Compassion towards others and weeping over their sins is somewhat like the love of Jesus Christ. He would take our burthen upon himself when he was not interested so the spirit of Christ worketh in all his Members he hath distributed his bowels among them and therefore they cannot but long for the salvation of others yea their heart is broken and mollified with Christs compassion to them and therefore long for fellows in the same Grace Though they have received personal and private injuries yet they pity their case and mourn for them 'T is matter of humiliation and lamentation 2 Cor. 12. 21. When I come again I fear my God will humble me among you and that I shall bewail many which have sinned already and have not repented of the fornication uncleanness lasciviousness which they have committed It is matter of grief to see so many thousands perish or in a perishing condition Thirdly This disposition cometh from the antipathy and zealous displeasure that is in their hearts against sin They know what sin is the greatest enemy that God and Christ and their own souls have in the world It was sin that made Angels become Devils it was sin that blew up the sparks of Hell fire it was sin that opposed God that crucified Christ it is sin that grieves the Spirit of God and therefore they mourn when sin gets Proselytes A man cannot endure to see a Toad or Viper near him your hearts rise when you see them creep upon another so do the hearts of the Children of God rise that their enemy and Gods should find such respect and entertainment in the world It is said of the Church of Ephesus Rev. 2. 2. That she could not bear those which were wicked And David saith Ps. 101. 3. I hate the works of them that turn aside They know this will grieve the spirit of God that this will press him as a Cart is pressed with sheaves and shall God be pressed and burthened and they not troubled It cannot be They that love the Lord will hate evil Psal. 97. 10. both in themselves and others Fourthly This disposition comes out of a sagacity of faith and serious foresight of the effects of sin They know what sin will come to and what is the danger of it therefore when they see sin encreasing Rivers of water run down their eyes Wicked men tremble only at the Judgment of God but good men tremble at his Word and therefore they mourn when others fall into danger of the threatning When Ezra plucked his beard and was in such a zealous indignation against the sins of the people bewailing them before the Lord Ezr. 9. 4. Then were assembled unto me every one that trembled at the words of the God of Israel At fasts others are sleight and obdurate they look on threatning as a little mock Thunder they are not sensible of the danger I may set forth this by that allusion 2 Kings 8. 11. The Prophet Elisha wept when he saw Hazael that he looked wishly on his face till he blushed The man of God wept and Hazael said Why weepeth my Lord And he answered Because I know the evil thou wilt do unto the Children of Israel their strong holds wilt thou set on fire and their young men wilt thou slay with the sword and wilt dash their Children and rip up their women with child and Hazael said But what is thy servant a Dog c. So when the Children of God look upon sin they know by the complexion of it what will be the dreadful effects This will be bitterness in the issue in time this will produce pestilences famine fire sword and all other mischiefs and judgments and expressions of the angry indignation of the Lord. They foresee a Storm when the Clouds are but a gathering therefore they tremble when they see them This is the sagacity of faith Now carnal men on the other side look upon the threatnings of Scripture but as words of course used as in way of policy that God only would awe and scare them but doth not purpose to condemn them But Faith is sagacious Look as to the promises Faith is the substance of things hoped for the evidence of things not seen So as to the threatnings the same evidence of things not seen The Apostle doth not only instance when he had given the general description of the objects of hope for the recompence of reward but he instances in the threatnings Noah being moved with fear prepared an Ark c. They know however men sleight the word of God one day it will be found true and therefore when they see men add sin to sin they are troubled The Word is as sure as execution and works upon them accordingly They have all things in a near view the nearer the objects of our faith are in our view the more they stir up our affections Dangers and death
efficacy of the word is a pledge of the truth of it 2. 'T is a Commodious Instrument for this End and Purpose for there is a Wisdom in all Gods Institutions He that looketh upon an Axe will say this is an instrument made to cut So he that looketh upon the Scriptures must needs say this is a means to purifie The Word is more Morally accommodated to work upon the heart of man then any other Instrument Means or Doctrine in the World Now the Word doth so commodiously serve for this purpose because there are 1. Such pure Precepts 2. Such pure Examples 3. Such great helps to Purity 4. Great encouragements to Purity 5. Such great Terrours to disswade men from sin 1. There are pure Precepts setting forth the Nature of that Purity that is pleasing to God and so on the one hand they serve to humble us for our natural filthiness for verum est Index sui et obliqui Truth sheweth it self and discovereth errour also Iam. 1. 23. 'T is such a pure Doctrine that it sheweth a man his natural face and discovers soul spots And on the other side by these Precepts and Doctrines we are urged and injoyned to seek after true Purity and Holiness of the right Constitution 1 Tim. 1. 5. The end of the Commandment is Charity out of a pure heart and a good Conscience and Faith unfeigned The Word telleth us God will be served and that he will be served with a pure heart the right End and Scope of the whole Law as 't is a Gospel Rule is love to God and Man flowing from a sincere and renewed heart and a good Conscience rightly informed of Gods Will and Faith unfeigned apprehending the Grace of God towards us in Christ our Redeemer So that you see there is required of us not only good Actions but good Principles and Ends. The Apostle telleth us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the work of the Law was written upon Mans heart Rom. 2. 14. Natural Conscience will take notice of some gross Acts urge to some external Conformity and show of Duty But the Word of God taketh notice not only of acts but the frame of the heart not only of sins but also of lusts If ever there were an instrument fitted to do a thing the Word is fitted to make men pure and holy Briefly then the Word requireth purity of Heart and Life that we should be pure in heart Matth. 5. 8. Blessed are the pure in heart for they shall see God and pure in Life Blessed are the undefiled in the way Ps. 119. 1. you have both in one place Iam. 4. 8. Cleanse your hands ye sinners and purifie your Hearts ye double minded both must be cleansed both heart and hands But we must first begin with the Heart The Heart is that polluted Fountain from whence floweth all the pollution of Life Matth. 15. 19. Out of the Heart proceed evil thoughts Murthers Adulteries Blasphemies c. 'T is in vain to cleanse the out-side unless the Heart be cleansed and therefore the Scripture presseth us to wash our hearts from wickedness Ier. 4. 14. There is the difficulty 'T is more easie to heal an outward wound than to stanch an inward bleeding and the cause is within The purity of the outside is loathsome to God unless the heart be cleansed 't is more easie to prevent disorders in our Conversations than to cleanse our hearts and therefore the Scripture mainly calleth upon you to purge out sin out of the heart Matth. 23. 26 27. Therefore the great design of the Word of God with which it travaileth is to get the heart clean as Elisha when he would cure the brackishness of the Waters cast falt into the Fountain so doth the Word of God seek to cleanse the hearts of men and all its wooings and pleadings and intreaties tend to this 2. There are pure Examples and Patterns we miscarry by low Examples and grow loose and careless seeing others to be so therefore the Word is still to keep us humble under our defects unsatisfied with our present measure always contending and striving towards the mark it propoundeth all manner of examples to us It propoundeth the example of God 1 Pet. 1. 15. Be ye holy as he that hath called you is Holy in all manner of Conversation God is holy in all his ways and Righteous in all his works and so should we be And the Scripture presseth us to be holy as Christ is holy 1 Iohn 3. 3. He that hath this hope in him purifieth himself as Christ is pure 'T is impossible there should be an exact equality yet some answerable Conformity there should be God is essentially immutably infinitely holy He loveth himself so much as he can be loved His Essence and his Being is the same with his Holiness Our Holiness is a superadded Quality Gods Holiness is like a vessel of pure Gold where the substance is the same with the lustre but our holiness is like a vessel of Earth gilded with Gold the substance is one thing the varnish another But yet this God and Christ must ever be before our Eyes we must be holy as he is holy we must always be encreasing in holiness We must come into an abiding state of holiness There must be some kind of Conformity between God and us and Christ and us and head and members must be all of a piece He will shoot farther that aimeth at a Star than he that aimeth at a shrub So he will be more holy that doth as God doth than he that doth as sinful Creatures do like himself Nay the Scripture propoundeth the example of the Saints Heb. 6. 12. We need all kind of examples As we need high and glorious examples that we may not rest in any low degrees and beginnings of purity So lower examples that we may not be discouraged and think it impossible And therefore the Saints of God are propounded to us Men and Women of like affections with us the same natural interests and we the same grace with them the way to heaven is a troden path all along you may see the foot-steps of the Saints before you 3. The Scripture offereth great Helps to purity Christ dyed to purchase it for us Ephes. 5. 27. He gave himself for us that he might Sanctifie and Cleanse us by the washing of water through the Word And God hath promised to give this clean heart to them that seek after it and undertaketh to give what he requireth Ezek. 36. 25 26 27. I will sprinkle clean water upon you and you shall be clean from all your filthiness and from all your Idols will I cleanse you A new heart also will I give you and a new spirit will I put within you and I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh and I will give you a heart of flesh And I will put my spirit within you and cause you to walk in my Statutes and ye shall keep my judgements
If we did not think Gods Eye a Fancy and fond Conceit we would at least walk more humbly It would trouble us exceedingly if men had a Window into our Hearts in a time of Prayer why not because God seeth How watchful are we not to incur the penalty of mans Law but offences against God are lightly passed over With what Copiousness and flowings of Language will men inlarge themselves in Prayer when in Company and how sleight and overly in Closet Duties if not wholy neglective of them which is in effect to say our heavenly Father seeth not in secret SERM. CLXXXIV PSALM CXIX VER 171. My Lips shall utter praise when thou hast taught me thy Statutes IN the two former Verses he had prayed First For an increase of saving Knowledge Verse 169. Secondly For Deliverance out of his Trouble Ver. 170. He reinforceth his Request by a promise of Thankfulness if he could get a gracious Answer to that My lips shall utter praise c. In the Words we have First A Resolution of Praise My lips shall utter praise Secondly The Reason and Occasion of it when thou hast taught me thy Statutes First A Resolution of Praise The word for uttereth praise signifieth that praise should break from him as water boileth and bubbleth up out of a Fountain Indeed words come from the abundance of the heart Matth. 12. 34. either from the plenty of spiritual Knowledge Ioh. 4. 38. as a Fountain yieldeth water so his knowledge breaketh out into praises or from the plenty of spiritual Affection rather from the great esteem of the benefit or fulness of Joy at the thought of it 't is a great Priviledge to be delivered from Blindness and Ignorance To you 't is given to know the misteries of the Kingdom of God Matth. 13. 11. Now they that have a spiritual gust and taste are so affected with it that they cannot be enough thankful for it and 't is notable that this thankfulness is promised upon granting the first request Doctrine Divine Illumination is so great a gift that all who are made partakers of it are especially obliged to praise and thanksgiving This will appear by these Considerations I. That upon the receipt of every Mercy we should Praise God there is an equity in it for this is Gods pact and agreement with us Psal. 50. 15. Call upon me in the day of trouble and I will deliver thee and thou shalt glorifie me We are forward in supplications but backward in gratulations all the Lepers could beg health but one returned to give glory to God Luk. 17. 18. Self-love puts us upon Prayers but the love of God upon Praises Now we should be as much affected or rather more in the receiving mercies as we were in asking mercies because before we knew it only by guess and imagination but then by actual feeling and experience of the Comfort of it Therefore to seek and not to praise is to be loving to our selves II. Those that have received most from God are most bound to honour him and praise him for the Return must carry some proportion with the Receipt 2 Chron. 32. 25. Hezekiah rendred not according to the benefit done unto him Not according to the kind only good and not evil for good but according to the degree Great Mercies require great Acknowledgements she loved much to whom much was forgiven her and she loved little to whom little Luk. 7. 47. More sins pardoned more mercies received God expecteth more Love more Praise more Thanksgiving And Luk. 12. 48. For unto whomsoever much is given of him much shall be required and to whom men commit much of him will they ask the more Christ pleadeth the equity from the practice of men the more helps the more work and service we expect he should come sooner who rideth on horseback than he that cometh on foot so the more light and knowledge God vouchsafeth the more Honour and Glory he expecteth from us III. That we should praise God especially for spiritual benefits Usually those are overlooked but they deserve the greatest acknowledgment these are discriminating and come from special Love Corn Wine and Oyl are bestowed upon the World but Knowledge and Grace upon his Saints these are the favour of his peculiar People Psal. 106. 4. Remember me O Lord with the favour that thou bearest to thy people O visit me with thy Salvation To have the Favourites Mercy is more than to have a common Mercy Protection is the benefit of every subject but intimate and near admission is the priviledge of special Favourites Love and Hatred cannot be known by the things before us Eccl. 9. 1 2 3. Christ gave his Spirit to the good Disciples the keeping of the purse to Iudas 1. Partly Because these concern the better part the inward man 2 Cor. 4. 16. He doth us more favour that healeth a wound in the Body than he that soweth up a rent in the Garment is not the body more than Raiment the Soul more than the Body and the Soul as furnished with Grace more than the Soul only as furnished with natural gifts and endowments 2. And partly Because these are brought about with more ado than temporal favours God as a Creator and merciful upholder of all his Creatures doth bestow temporal Blessings upon the ungodly World even upon heathens who never heard of Christ yet saving Grace he bestoweth only as the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ Eph. 1. 3. with respect to the Merit of Christ who was to purchase these blessings before he could obtain them 3. And partly Because they are pledges of Eternal Blessings and the beginning of our Eternal Well-being Ioh. 6. 27. These and eternal Blessedness are so linked together that they cannot be separated Rom. 8. 29 30. For whom he did foreknow he also did predestinate to be conformable to the Image of his Son that he might be the first fruits among many brethren Moreover whom he did predestinate them he also called and whom he called them he also justified and whom he justified them he also glorified And Phil. 1. 6. Being confident of this very thing that he which hath begun a good work in you will perform it until the day of Iesus Christ. 4. Partly Because these incline and fit the heart for Praise and Thanksgiving the one giveth occasion to Praise God the other an heart to Praise God outward mercies give the occasion to praise God these the diisposition other mercies the motives these the preparations these dispose the heart to it Psal. 119. 7. I will praise thee with uprightness of heart when I have learned thy righteous Iudgments here they dispose the Lip and open the Mouth Psal. 51. 15. O Lord open thou my lips and my mouth shall shew forth thy praise The work of grace doth set our lips wide open in the magnifying and praising of God Grace is the matter of Gods praise and also giveth a ready Will to praise
sweetness in it to Confer together of holy things Rom. 1. 12. That I may be comforted by the mutual faith of you and me Holy discourse doth refresh more than vain and foolish jesting 't is a far sweeter thing to talk of the Word of God and those spiritual and heavenly things which are contained therein than to spend the time in vain and foolish jesting or discoursing about meer Worldly matters should any thing be more delightful to a Christian than Christ and Heaven and the Promises of the World to come and the way that leadeth thither and should it be burdensom to talk of these things which we profess to be our only hope and joy certainly our Relish and Appetite is mightily depraved if we think so judge our-selves in a Prison when we are in good Company who remember God and when they invite you to remember him with them will you frown upon the motion because 't is some check and interruption to your Carnal Vanity 4. The well ordering of our Words is a great point of Christianity and argueth a good degree of Grace He that bridleth his tongue is a perfect man Iam. 3. 2. Death and Life are in the power of the Tongue saith Solomon Prov. 18. 21. upon the good or ill use of it a mans safety doth depend Not only temporal safety but eternal Matth. 12. 37. By thy words shalt thou be justified and by thy words shalt thou be condemned These Evidences are brought into Judgment therefore it concerneth us to see what our Discourses are as well as our actions Solomon often describeth the righteous by his good Tongue Prov. 10. 13. The mouth of the righteous bringeth forth wisdom And Prov. 12. 18. The tongue of the wise is health Use. I. Is Reproof It reproveth us for being so dumb and tongue-tyed in holy things We can speak liberally of any subject only we are dumb in spiritual matters which concern our Edification we shew so little Grace in our Conferences because we have so little grace in our hearts Alas many that profess Religion their talk is little different from other mens as if they were ashamed to speak of God or had nothing to say of him and for him I do not alwayes bind you to talk of religious things but sometimes it bindeth Now when is it your Tongues speak of the Word in a serious and affectionate manner Can you love God and never put in a word for him Can you see or hear God dishonoured and suffer your mouths to be sealed up with a sinfull ●…nce that you should not have a word to speak in the cause of God Use. II. Is to Exhort us to be frequent and serious in our discourses of God and spiritual heavenly things For means to help us 1. Divine Illumination to teach others the way of God requireth that we our selves should be taught of God then it cometh the warmer and fresher when we speak not by here-say only but experience as heart answereth to heart so the renewed heart in him that heareth to the renewed heart in him that speaketh and we shew others what God by his illuminating grace hath first shewed us it savoureth of that Spirit that worketh in both he will easily kindle others who is once on fire himself The word passeth through others as water through an empty Trunk without feeling they may speak very good things but they do but personate and act a part but when we have been in the deep waters and God hath bound up our wounds we can more feelingly speak to others 2. A sight of the excellency of the Word and a value and esteem thereof the reason in the Text for all thy Commandments are righteousness We are apt to speak oftenest of those things which we most affect Did not your Souls grow out of relish with these Holy Spiritual and Excellent things your speeches about them would be more frequent lively serious and savoury for we cannot conceal our Affections Our coldness in speaking to others of these spiritual and heavenly things cometh from want of this perswasion that all his commandments are righteousness For they who are perswaded of the excellency of the Word will be talking of the sweetness of its Promises continually 3. A Stock of Spiritual Knowledge Matth. 12. 35. A good man out of the good treasure of his heart bringeth forth good things Every man entertaineth his Guests with such Provisions as he hath 'T is the Word which enableth us to edifie our selves and others with holy Conference the more store the more we have to bring forth upon all occasions Col. 3. 16. Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly in all wisdom teaching and admonishing one another A plentiful measure of Gospel Knowledge enableth us to direct and instruct others there all Wisdom is made plain things revealed which cannot be found else-where that which may by long search be found else-where is made ready to our hands and brought down to the meanest Capacity The Heart is the Fountain from whence the Tongue doth run and flow and when the Heart is well furnished the Tongue will be employed and exercised 4. Zeal for the Glory of God and Love to others Souls we should communicate to others what we have learned our selves David would not reserve his knowledge to himself Teach me and my tongue shall speak of thy word Fire turneth all about it into Fire Mules and all Creatures of a Bastard Race do not Procreate Davids Maschil Psal. 32. Title is to instruct others True good is diffusive in itself our Candle enlightened should enlighten others When Philip was called he inviteth Nathaniel to come to Christ Iohn 1. 45. Andrew calleth Simon True Grace sheweth itself in Zeal to promote the Kingdom of Christ and the good of our Neighbours Souls and the new Nature seeketh to multiply the kind and such as are brought to Christ will be careful to invite others 5. Wisdom is necessary Col. 4. 6. Let your speech be alwayes with grace seasoned with salt that you may know how to answer every man that is seasoned with the salt of Holy and Divine Wisdom that it may be savoury and acceptable to the Hearers and both Delight and Edifie Without this Holy Skil and Wisdom how often is Conference turned into Jangling or meer Babling 6. Watchfulness and heed otherwise Corruption will break out in Pride in a vain ostentation of parts Passion in some heat of Words Worldliness and Sensuality in diverting from Holy Conference to that which is Carnal and Worldly Discontent in some unseemly Expressions of Gods dealings with us Indiscretion and Folly in a multitude of impertinent Talk Psal. 141. 3. Set a watch O Lord before my mouth keep the door of my lips The Tongue must be watched as well as the Heart all Watching will be to little purpose unless God bridle and direct our Tongue that nothing break out to his Dishonour There must be a constant Guard that nothing
not allowed a ground of Comfort p. 37 All Sin must be refrained 1. notorious and plausible 2. inward and outward 3. pleasant as well as not pleasant 4. sins against both Tables 5. great and small p. 660 661 Sin weakens both Grace and Comfort p. 663 1040 Heynousness of sin in breaking Gods Law striking at Gods being contradicting his Soveraignty p. 686 Sin removed 1. in Justification 2. Sanctification p. 185 Sin its Dominion p. 917 918 919 920 Differences of Sins p. 920 921 Sin brings trouble two ways 1 meritoriously 2. effectively p. 315 316 Sincere prayer must be sincere as well as fervent p. 902 909 910 Sincerity in prayer implies 1. Seriousness 2. Affectionateness 3. prevalency of those affections 4. universal Care to please God p. 903 Sincerity of Sanctification what it is p. 5 Marks of Sincerity 1. Carefulness to practice what we know 2. inquisitiveness to know more of our duty 3. to stand in awe of Gods Word p. 6 11 It makes God judge of its heart p. 627 Sincerity may be accompanied with failings p. 11 Sincerity and Integrity constitute the whole Heart p. 15 It aims at universal Obedience p. 33 59 It is to be asked of God with earnestness p. 530 It gives confidence with God p. 6 533 It keeps us good in bad times p. 866 Two Notes of Sincerity 1. the manner 2. the principle of Obedience p. 1042 Sinking under Burdens by looking on the bare Affliction p. 591 Prevented by considering that God is 1. Wise 2. Just 3. Good in afflicting p. 884. 885 Sinners the greatest when converted are the greatest mourners for the sins of others p. 930 Reasons ibid. Slander not only in the Deviser but the Receiver p. 141 299 300 Sleep there 's a surfeit in sleeping as well as eating p. 926 Slight prayers argue low thoughts of God p. 899 We are apt to be slighty in our prayers p. 915 Sluggish prayers teach God to deny p. 29 899 Snares of the Devil and wicked Men of several kinds p. 735 736 What use we are to make of these Snares p. 137 Song Gods word is our song in the house of our Pilgrimage p. 358 359 vid. Rejoycing Sorrow wasts the natural Spirits p. 554 176 It must be proportionable to sin p. 405 Sorrow of Gods Children greater than others why p. 177 Sorrow affect solitude joy company p. 503 Soveraignty of God must be submitted to p. 119. 789 God sometimes forsakes his people out of Soveraignty p. 51 Soveraignty of God in distributing wisdom p. 648 653 Soul is the Man p. 43 1093 God must be served with the Soul as well as the Body p. 1043 1044 Soul-Blessings are special Blessings p. 43 they are pledges of eternal Blessings ibid. to take ones Soul in his hand what the phrase imports p. 726 Souls life is Gods favour p. 518 Soul is 1 fons actionum ad extra 2. terminus actionum ad intra p. 1044 Soundness of heart what it is p. 530 531 532 Speedy turning to God necessary why p. 402 403 Pressed in general and particular p. 410 Speeding with God should make us come again p. 168 How to speed with God p. 162 H. Spirit is a spirit of Peace 1. as a Sanctifier 2 as a Comforter p. 1027 Spirit of God our Guide as the word is our Rule p. 8 152 153 Spirits work to draw the heart from earthly things to God p. 3 H. Spirit beareth witness to the Gospel p. 9 H. Spirit gives help as Christ gives leave to come to God p. 15 Spirit VVater and Blood how they bear witness p. 9 Spirit Word and holy Heart agree p. 934 H. Spirit gives 1. direction how to apply the Rule 2. to make a good choise 3. to act Grace 4 to manage civil Affairs p. 31 H. Spirit gives Liberty 1. from slavish Fears 2. from potent Lusts p. 304 H. Spirit encreaseth our delight in Gods Commandements p 316 H. Spirit the Author the Scripture the Means of Light p. 694 Spiritual seeing requires 1. that the object be clear 2. that the Organ be right p. 694 Spiritual Blessings call for praise why p 1057 Spiritual Blessings give us a heart to praise God temporal Blessings only give us an occasion p. 43 Spiritual sense and Life p. 671 672 673 It differs from the bare understanding p. 673 Spiritual Delight exceeds that in worldly things p. 87 593 There are three spiritual Senses chiefly 1. seeing 2. tasting 3. feeling p. 671 672 Spiritualizing common and earthly things p. 90 763 Springs of Comfort all in God by the word p. 514 Stability of the earth an Emblem of the Stability of Gods word p. 582 and of his Being 588. Stability of Gods Testimonies p. 889 890 620 956 957 Stability of Gods word opposed to the Creatures Vanity p. 618 620 Stablishing of the word to us two ways p. 284 how to get the word stablisht to us p. 287 288 Statutes of God what what it is to seek them p. 987 Strangers on Earth the Condition of all Gods Children p. 114 Men may be strangers on earth as to their Condition who are not so in Affection p. 114 Why Gods Children are and account themselves to be Strangers p. 114 115 116 How to carry our selves as Strangers in this world p. 118 119 Straights he that makes Conscience of Gods Commands may boldly seek help from God in his straights p. 1079 In all straights we are to delight in Promises p. 1035 Strength natural and spiritual both may fail as they are ours p. 538 Strength spiritual what it is how given out how God is concern'd therein p. 181 182 How to get spiritual Strength p. 182 183 Study the word but take God for your teacher p. 42 Arguments to study the Word p. 652 653 Study the word 1. not out of curiosity 2. nor meerly to be able to teach others 3. nor meerly for delight c. but in order to practice p. 68 68 Study Gods Name 1. what 2. how Stumbling preservatives against it p. 1032 v. scandal Stupidity under the Rod a great evil p. 159 It argues Stupidity to be careless in Prayer p. 906 907 Stupidity not to be affected with Gods Judgments on others p. 812 Subjection to God to be chosen before liberty p. 707 Subjection to God pressed from two grand Motives p. 308 309 Submission to Providence advanced by thanksgiving for received Mercies p. 421 Submission to Gods disposing and commanding Will p. 588 Submission to God 1. for the mercy 2. for the time of the mercy 3. for the way and means of it p 826 Suffering for Christ very reasonable who suffered such hard things for us p. 870 Suffering better than sinning p. 148 525 842 731 732 928 Sufferings are like to be long 1. when Reformation is rejected 2. when Deliverance would be a greater mischief 3. when there is a damp on the Spirit of Prayer 4. when god is about to punish us and we go not about to reconcile our selves to
must be used for God he made them bought them and if we belong to him we gave them up with other things to him We did not reserve our tongues when we resigned and surrendred our selves to the Lords use we did not make exception the same argument which holds good for the whole body why it should be possessed in sanctification and honour holds good for every part of it 1 Cor. 6. 12. Ye are bought with a price therefore glorifie God in your bodies and in your spirits which are Gods Thy whole is Gods thy spirit thy body and every part thy wit strength hand tongue is all Gods and therefore he expects to be glorified by thy tongue They were Rebels that said Psal. 12. 4. Our lips are our own who is Lord over us There is nothing we have that is ours but God's Our hearts are not our own to think what we will nor our tongues our own to speak what we will God expects service from the tongue otherwise we must be answerable for it when our Soveraign Lord calls us to an account Now it is strange God should have so clear a right to our speech and language and yet so little a share therein Give unto Cesar the things that are Cesars and unto God the things that are Gods Thy tongue and thy lips whose are they If thou couldst make thy tongue of thy self then thou mightst use it for thy self but since you had it from God you must use it for God But alas how little are men mindful of this Follow them all the day you get not one word of God from them they use their tongues as if they were their own not Gods 2. It is the glory of the tongue to serve God in this kind It is the most excellent member in the body when it is well used for the glory of God and edification of others therefore called our glory often in the Psalms Awake my glory that is my tongue and what is glory in the Old Testament is rendred tongue in the New Acts 2. Our tongue is our glory why because we have this advantage by it we may speak for God Therewith bless we God Jam. 3. 9. The benefit of speech it is our priviledg above Angels and Beasts Angels they have reason but no tongues and Beasts they have tongues but no reason to guide them and act them But now we have tongues and reason both that we may declare our Makers praise Surely this member and instrument was not given us to savour meats and drinks that is not the highest use of it but to express the senses and affections of the mind not to utter vain frothy frivolous things what an abuse is that but to comfort and instruct one another in the things of God It is our glory 3. Every creature hath a voice like it self and therefore so should the new creature have The Ox bellows the Ass brayeth Goats and Sheep may be known by their bleat and so is a man by the tenor of his discourse As the constitution of the mind is so are their words A wicked man hath a vain heart and therefore his discourse is idle and frivolous Prov. 10. 20. The tongue of the just is as choice silver but the heart of the wicked is little worth The antithesis shews it should have been said the tongue of the wicked is little worth but he would point at the cause of it the heart of the wicked There 's a quick intercourse between the tongue and the heart Now because the heart of the wicked is nothing worth all his thoughts and musings are vain he goes grinding chaff in his mind all the day his mind like a Mill is always at work not upon corn that it might be bread for his soul but upon chaff therefore because his heart is nothing worth his tongue is nothing worth The tongue of the just is as choice silver it brings in a great deal of treasure But take a wicked man all the workings of his heart his thoughts and discourses when summed up together the product and total sum at night is nothing but vanity The Lord seeth all their thoughts are but vain A vain heart will have vain speeches and so a cankered sinner will have cankered discourse as a putrid breath discovereth rotten lungs Every mans speech is as his humor is come to a covetous person he will be discoursing of Farms Oxen Bargains Wares and such like Come to an Epicurean Gallant to a Voluptuary and he will be telling you of Horses Games Dogs Meats Drinks merry company Go to the Ambitious they will be talking of Honours Offices and the like As they are of the flesh so their talk savours of fleshly things Every man hath a voice like himself he speaks according to the constitution of his mind Go to the discontented man he will be talking of his Adversaries telling of affronts wrongs and publick offences received But a godly man hath a voice too like himself he will be declaring the judgments of Gods mouth he will be speaking out of the word of God of things within his sphere and suitable to his kind Mat. 12. 35. A good man out of the good treasure of his heart bringeth ' forth good things Still the Tap runs according to the Liquor with which the Vessel is fill'd and a mans speech bewrays him of what kind he is and therefore since every creature hath a voice like himself so should the new creature have 4. I shall argue from the nature of Good which is communicative and loves to propagate it self Omne bonum sui diffusivum Luke 22. 32. Thou being converted strengthen thy brethren He had had experience of a changeable heart now go strengthen others Fire turneth all things about it into fire Leven pierceth through the whole lump So grace seeks to propagate and diffuse it self Therefore when the work of God is written upon a mans mind and laid up in his heart he will be declaring and speaking of it to others Naturalists observe that Mules and creatures which are of a Mungrel race do not procreate after their kind so the false Christians are not for propagating and enlarging Christs interest they are not so warm spiritual and heavenly in their discourses Andrew when acquainted with Christ calls Peter and both call Nathanael John 1. 41 45. We have found the Messiah Iohn calls his Disciples As a Hen when she hath found a Worm or a Barley-corn clucks for her Chickens that they may come and partake of it with her so a man acquainted with Christ who hath tasted that the Lord is gracious he cannot hold he will be calling upon his friends and relations to come and share with him of the same grace As they have more of God they will improve it for the comfort of others and are willing to take hold of all opportunities to this end 5. It discovereth plenty of knowledg and a good esteem of the word 1. Plenty of
knowledg when it is so apt to break out When these living waters run out of the belly it 's a sign of a good spring there Col. 3. 16. Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly in all wisdom teaching and admonishing one another It 's a sign we have gotten the riches of understanding for out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaks So Prov. 16. 23. The heart of the wise teacheth his mouth and addeth learning to his lips When our speech hath weight and worth in it and we are ready upon all occasions it argueth a good stock of the word You know a man that puts his hand in his pocket and brings up gold at every draught it 's a sign he hath more plenty of it than silver So when we are ready to bring out gracious discourses it argueth a treasure and stock within 2. It argueth a good esteem of the word Things that are dear and precious to us we use to discourse of them What we love admire and affect the tongue will be occupied about such things John 3. 31. He that is of the earth is earthly and speaketh of the earth And 1 John 4. 5. They are of the world therefore speak they of the world I know it is spoken in the first place of ordinary Teachers All men whose original is of the earth they savour of it in their speech when they speak of divine things there is some earthiness in it The other Scripture is meant of false Teachers they savour of the world all their teaching doth savour of their affections But both places give this general truth What a mans affections are upon it is most ready in his mouth Therefore it argueth we are affected with the word of God when we are declaring it upon all occasions 6. It is for our benefit to be talking of good things to others The breasts that are not suckt do soon grow dry but the more they are milked out and drawn the greater is the encrease so in spiritual things we gain by communicating By discourse truths are laid more in view We find in any art of common learning the more we confer about things with others the more understanding we get our selves Prov. 11. 25. The liberal soul shall be made fat and he that watereth shall be watered also himself It is spoken of Alms it is true of spiritual Alms as plain Experience shews by watering and refreshing others the more we are comforted and refreshed our selves The loaves were encreased in the dividing Solomon compares Conference to the whetting iron upon iron the more one iron is whet upon another both are sharpned so by Conference our gifts are encreased Earthly goods the more they are given out we have the less in view and visible appearance though God can increase them but now in heavenly and spiritual things in the very giving out to others they are encreased upon our hands USE 1. To shame us for our unprofitableness in our relations and converses for these are two things wherein a Christian should take occasion to declare the Judgments of Gods mouth 1. In our Relations that we do no good there in declaring the Judgments of Gods mouth to one another Surely every Relation is a Talent and you will be accountable for it if you do not improve it for your Masters use The husband is to converse with his wife as a man of knowledg 1 Pet. 3. 7. and the wife to gain upon the husband 1 Pet. 3. 2. and both upon the children and servants The members of every Family should be helping one another in the way to heaven With what busie diligence doth an Idolatrous Family carry on their way and their course See Ier. 7. 18. The children gather wood and the fathers kindle the fire c. saith the Lord. Every one will have his hand in the work and are quickning and inflaming one another Fathers Children Husbands Wives all find some employment or other about their Idolatrous Service O that every one would be as forward and zealous and helpful in the work of God O that we were as careful to train and set our families a work in a course of godliness Christians should reason thus What honour hath God by making me a Father a Master of a Family Every such a one hath a charge of souls and he is to be responsible It will be no grief of heart to you when by your means they become acquainted with God Ye are my Crown and my rejoycing says the Apostle of the Thessalonians converted by his Ministry It will be a crown of honour and rejoycing in the day of the Lord when you have been instrumental not only for their prosperity in the world but of their encreasing in grace 2. In our converses how little do we edifie one another If Christs question to the two disciples going to Emans were put to us Luke 24. 17. What manner of conversation had you by the way What cause should we have to blush and be ashamed Generally our discourse is either 1. Prophane and sinful there is too much of the rotten communication which the Apostle forbids Eph. 4. 29. Let no corrupt communication come out of your mouth but that which is good to the use of edifying that it may minister grace to the hearer Rotten discourse argueth a rotten heart Or 2. Idle and vain as foolish tales The Apostle bids Timothy 1 Tim. 4. 7. To refuse prophane and old wives fables or vain complements though we are to give an account for idle words Mat. 12. 36. Or else like the Athenians we spend our time in hearing and telling news Acts 17. 21. Or we please and solace our selves with frothy flashes of a wanton wit and jesting that is not convenient which the Apostle forbids Ephes. 5. 4. The praise of a Christian lyeth not in the wittiness but in the graciousness of his conversation That which is Aristotles vertue is made a sin with Paul foolish jesting You should rather be refreshing one another with what experiences you have had of the Lords grace that is the comfort and solace of Christians when they meet together But when men wholly give up themselves to move laughter all this is idle and vain discourse It is not enough to say it doth no hurt but what good doth it do doth it tend to the use of edifying A Christian that hath God and Christ and his wonderful and precious benefits to talk of and so many occasions to give thanks he cannot want matter to discourse of when he comes into company therefore we should avoid vain discourse Or 3. We talk of other mens matters or faults as the Apostle speaks of those 1 Tim. 5. 13. That wandred from house to house that not being idle only but tatlers also and busie bodies speaking things which they ought not Levit. 19. 16. Thou shalt not go up and down as a tale-bearer among thy people The Hebrew word signifies a Merchant or one
cross then their affection was spent 6. Some in case of dubious anxiety or in doubtful debates may desire to know the truth and be much and earnest in the study of the word but when they get above their scruples and in plain truths ordinary cases they neglect it Whereas David longed for the word of God at all times to feel the power of God accompanying it so as to find strength against his corruptions and that he might be established in waiting upon God This was the constant and stable desire of his soul. Thus you see the Word of God is the Object either read or preached The End of it is that they may grow in grace and that their hearts may be more subjected to God and may be strengthned in waiting upon him And the manner of this desire is vehement and constant not at times but it is the usual frame and temper of their hearts 4. The Effects of this desire what it worketh I will mention but two 1. It draws off the heart from other things Psal. 119. 136. Incline my heart unto thy testimonies and not unto covetousness implying that when the heart is drawn out after Gods testimonies it is drawn off from carnal pursuits Desires they are the vigorous bent of the soul and therefore as the stream of a River they can run but one way Our passionate desires of earthly things certainly will be abated if spiritual desires prevail in us for being acquainted with a better object they begin to disdain and loath other things 2. It maketh us diligent and painful in the use of means that we may get knowledg and strength by the Word Where strong desires are there will be great endeavours Prov. 8. 34. Watching daily at my gates waiting at the posts of my doors A man that hath a desire after grace and strength by the word of God will daily be redeeming occasions of waiting upon God It is but a slight wish not serious desire that is not seconded with answerable endeavours Having opened the nature of these desires let me shew the reasons of this vehement and constant bent of heart towards the word of God 1. Of the Vehemency 2. Of the Constancy First The Reasons of this Vehemency they are these Natural instinct Experience and Necessity 1. Natural instinct 1 Pet. 2. 2. As new-born babes desire the sincere milk of the word Children desire the dug not by instruction but instinct without a Teacher All creatures desire to preserve that life which they have and therefore by a natural propension they run to that thing from whence they received life Meer instinct carrieth the brute-creatures to the teats of their Dams and every Effect looks to the Cause to receive from thence its last perfection Trees that receive life from the Earth and the Sun they send forth their branches to receive the Sun and stretch their roots into the earth which brought them forth Fishes will not out of the water which breeds them Chickens are no sooner out of the shell but they shroud themselves under the feathers of the Hen. The little Lamb runs to the Dams teat though there be a thousand sheep of the same wool and colour as if it said Here I received that I have and here I 'le seek that I want By such a native inbred desire do the Saints run to God to seek a supply of strength and nourishment and the desire is very strong and vehement One thing have I desired of the Lord that will I seek after c. There were other things David might desire but this one thing his heart was set upon That he might enjoy constant communion with God in the use of publick Ordinances What is the reason of this I answer The spiritual nature you may as well ask What teacheth the young Lambs to suck as who taught the Regenerate to long for the Word What teacheth the Chicken to run under the wing of the Hen The cause of Appetite is not persuasion and discourse but inclination not argument but nature Appetite 't is an effect of life By natural tendency the new creature is carried out to its support from the word of God there to be comforted and nourished It shews that all who have not such a kindly appetite to the word of God that can relish nothing but meats drinks wealth vanity they were never acquainted with this new nature 2. Experience is another cause of this desire A child of God is not satisfied with a slight tast of the word but he desires more when he hath felt the comfort of it he is still longing to receive more from God James 1. 8. He hath begotten us by the word of truth What follows wherefore be swift to hear A man that hath had experience of the power of the word taketh all occasions he knows there is strength grace and liberty of heart to be found there so 2 Pet. 2. 3. As new-born babes c. if so be ye have tasted that the Lord is gracious Certainly a man that hath had any tast of communion with God will desire a fuller measure as by tasting of excellent meats we get an appetite to them Carnal men they do not know what it is to enjoy God in an Ordinance and therefore do not long for them they do not tast the sweetness of the word Psal. 19. 10. The statutes of the Lord are sweeter than the honey or the honey-comb The children of God find more true pleasure in the Ordinances in the statutes of God than in all things in the world though to carnal men they are but as dry sticks burdensome exercises the reason follows V. 11. Moreover by them is thy servant warned and in keeping of them there is great reward He commendeth the word from his own experience he had felt the effects and good use of it in his own heart he had been warned and had a great deal of comfort and refreshing by it therefore it is sweeter than the honey and the honey-comb So Psal. 63. 1 2. O God my soul thirsteth for thee my flesh longeth for thee what to do to see thy power and thy glory so as I have seen thee in the sanctuary He that hath had once a sight of God would not be long out of his company He compareth his desire of communion with God with hunger and thirst his desire is greater than the hunger and thirst that men suffer in a dry wilderness where there is no water to give refreshment He had seen God and would now see him again The remembrance of those former pleasures of the Sanctuary revived his desires so that besides Nature there is this Experience 3. The next cause is Necessity We should take delight in the word of God for its excellency though we stood in no need of it But our necessity is very great and this awakens desire The word is not only compared to things which make for conveniency of life as to Wine and Honey