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

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freedom and sovereignty 2. Sometimes to manifest the power of his grace both in the person that is endued with it and the power of his grace upon others As to the person himself in whom this wisdom is found when they are young the Lord doth shew he can subdue them by his Spirit and make their prejudices vanish enlarge their understanding and over-rule their heart 1 Iohn 2. 14. I write to you young men because ye are strong and the Word of God abideth in you and ye have overcome the wicked one In that slippery Age when Lusts were boistrous Temptations most violent and they usually uncircumspect and head-strong and give up themselves to an ungoverned licence yet then can God subdue their hearts and make them stand out against the snares of the Devil And then with respect to others when by the foolish he will confound the wisdom of the wise and blast the pride of man and cast down all conceit in external priviledges and give young ones a more excellent spirit than the aged as the Apostle intimates such a thing 1 Cor. 1. 26. Not many wise men after the flesh not many mighty not many noble are called But God hath chosen the foolish things of the world to confound the wise and God hath chosen the weak things of the world to confound the things that are mighty And our Lord Mat. 11. 25 26. Thou hast hid these things from the wise and prudent and revealed them unto Babes Even so Father for so it seemed good in thy sight Usually God will do so when he will punish the unfaithfulness of those that are in publick place and office The Law shall perish from the Priest and Counsel from the Ancient God will not take the usual way and course but will give his Spirit and graces of his Spirit to them and deny it to those that should be Builders Now what Use shall we make of this There may be an Abuse of such a Point as this and there may be a very good Use. To prevent the Abuse 1 This is not to be taken so but that there should be reverence shewed to the aged Job 32. 4 5 6. Elihu had waited till Iob's Friends had spoken because they were elder than he It is an abuse of men of a proud persuasion of their own knowledge and learning to despise the aged especially when they also have a competent measure of the same Spirit The Scripture speaks of Paul the aged certainly there is a reverence due to gray hairs And it argues a great disorder when the Staff of Government is broken and the established Order is overturned when a child shall behave himself proudly against the ancient Isa. 3. 5. And young men shall peark up to the despising of their Elders Deut. 28. And 2. this is not to be applied so to prejudice the general case of consulting with the Ancients which was Rehoboam's sin though God sometimes giveth wisdom to young men yet the usual course is that Iob 32. 7. I said days should speak and multitude of years should teach wisdom Certainly those that are old they are freer from passions bettered by use and experience and long continuance in study have more advantages to add to their knowledge therefore usually though the bodily eyes be dim the understanding may be most clear and sharp Use 2. The Use in general is twofold That young men should not be discouraged nor despised 1. Not discouraged We use to say youth for strength and age for wisdom but if they apply their hearts to Religion and the study of God's will and with knowledge join practice they may profit and so as they may be a means to shame those that are elder while they come behind them in many gracious endowments They are not to be discouraged as if it were too soon for them to enter into a strict course or grow eminent therein for God may glorifie himself in their Sobriety Temperance Chastity Zeal Courage and the setting their strong and eager spirits against sin it is a mighty honour to God Psal. 8. 2. Out of the mouth of babes and sucklings hast thou ordained strength because of thine enemies c. The graces of God in young ones do mightily turn to the praise of his glorious grace and God is admired in them and it is an honour and comfort to you also Eph. 1. 12. In Christ before me it is a just upbraiding to elder people that lie longer in sin 2. Nor yet should youth be despised 1 Tim. 4. 12. Let no man despise thy youth God's gifts should not be despised in any nor stir up rancor God may speak by them as he spoke by Samuel and to Samuel when he spoke not to old Eli. Having premised this let me come to apply it particularly though briefly it conduceth then 1. To the encouragement of youth to betake themselves to the ways of God O consider let us begin with God betimes do not spend your youth in vanity but in a serious mortified course This is your sharp and active time when your spirits are fresh therefore if your Watch is set right now you may understand more than the Ancients Give up your hearts to a religious course let not the Devil feast upon the flower of your youth and God be put off with the fragments and scraps of Satan's Table while you are young take in with God it 's a great honour to God and it will be an honour and advantage to you Mat. 11. 15 16. When the Children cry Hosanna to the Son of David and the Pharisees reproved him for it Christ approves of it saying Have ye never read Out of the mouth of babes and sucklings thou hast perfected praise When young ones take kindly it is a great blessing therefore is judgment hanging over this Nation that youth is so degenerated whereas formerly they were addicted to Religion now they are addicted to all manner of lusts and vanity Then it would be an honour and comfort to you the sooner we begin with God the more we glorifie God and the more praise to God Eph. 1. 12. That we should be to the praise of his glory who first trusted in Christ. They that get into Christ above others they glorifie Grace above others Rom. 16. 7. They were in Christ before me He that first gets into Christ he hath the advantage of others Seniority in Grace is a preferment as well as in Nature And then it is a great advantage Eccles. 12. 1. Remember thy Creator in the days of thy youth When we begin betimes with God we have more opportunity of serving and enjoying God than others have A man should bear the yoke in his youth Lam. 3. If the bent of our inclinations were set right in our youth it would prevent much and hinder the growth of sin Though a man cannot plant Grace in his heart that 's the Lord's own work yet it keeps sin in and prevents inveterate custom
them out of his presence they become the scorn of Saints and Angels Dan. 12. 2. And many of them that sleep in the dust shall arise some to everlasting life and some to shame and everlasting contempt But now the godly are bold and confident Psal. 1. 5. The ungodly shall not stand in the judgment nor sinners in the congregation of the righteous But the godly shall lift up their head with joy and rejoicing Now the Reasons of this Where sin is not allowed there is a threefold comfort 1. Justification 1 Joh. 1. 7. But if we walk in the light as he is in the light we have fellowship one with another and the blood of Iesus Christ his Son cleanseth us from all sin It is an evidence that giveth us the comfort He hath failings but they are blotted out for Christs sake 2. It is an evidence of sanctification that a work of grace hath passed upon us 2 Cor. 1. 12. For our rejoycing is this the testimony of our conscience that in simplicity and godly sincerity not with fleshly wisdom but by the grace of God we have had our conversation in the world and more abundantly to you ward Heb. 13. 18. We trust that we have a good conscience willing in all things to live honestly An universal purpose and an unfeigned respect hath the full room of an evidence 3. A pledg of glory to ensue Rom. 5. 5. And hope maketh not ashamed because the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost which is given unto us Use. It informeth us by the rule of Contraries That we deceive our selves if we look for any thing from sin but shame Rom. 6. 21. For the wages of sin is death Sin and shame entred into the world together How were Adam and Eve confounded after the fall Sin is odious to God it grieveth the Spirit but the person that committeth it shall be filled with shame In the greatest privacy sin bringeth shame Men are not solitary when they are by themselves there is an eye and ear which seeth and observeth them there is a law in our hearts which upbraids our sins to us as soon as we have committed them a secret bosom-witness 2. It informeth us what hard hearts they have that have respect to no commandments yet are not ashamed They have outgrown all feelings of conscience and so glory in their shame Phil. 3. 19. Whose end is destruction whose God is their belly and whose glory is in their shame who mind earthly things Erubuit salva res est By how much less they are ashamed now the more they shall be their shamelesness will encrease their shame Jer. 3. 3. Thou hadst a whores forehead thou refusedst to be ashamed The Conscience of a sinner is like a Clock dull calm and at rest when the weights are down but wound up it 's full of motion 3. Here is caution to Gods children The less respect you have to the Commandments the more shame will you have in your selves Partiality in obedience breaketh your confidence and over-clouds your peace Therefore that we may not blemish our profession let us walk more exactly So shall we not be ashamed when we have respect to all Gods Commandments SERMON VIII PSAL. CXIX 7. I will praise thee with uprightness of heart when I shall have learned thy righteous judgments IN this Verse David expresseth his esteem of the Word by telling what he would give for the knowledg and practice of it As we use to tell a man how thankful we would be if he would do thus and thus for us So Lord if thou wilt give me to learn thy righteous judgments then I will praise thee c. His promise of praise manifesteth his esteem which should affect our stupid hearts The Canon is now larger and the mysteries of the Word are more clearly unfolded If the Saints of God were so taken with it before when there were so scanty and dark representations in comparison of what is now O what honour and praise do we now owe to God! In this Verse observe 1. The Title that is given to the Word Thy righteous judgments 2. His Act of Duty about it or the benefit which he desireth sound erudition When I shall have learned 3. The fruit of this benefit obtained Then will I praise thee 4. The manner of performing this duty With uprightness of heart First The Title that is given to the Word Thy righteous judgments or as it is in the Margent the judgments of thy righteousness Hence observe Doct. Gods precepts are and are so accounted of by his people as righteous judgments or judgments of righteousness There are two Terms to be Explained 1. What is meant by judgments 2. By righteousness For the First Righteousness is sometimes put alone for the Word and so also Judgments as we shall find in this Psalm but here both are put together to increase the signification The precepts of the Word are called judgments for two Reasons 1. Because they are the Judicial sentence of God concerning our state and actions 2. Because of the suitable execution that is to follow First They are the Judicial sentence of God concerning our state and actions The judicial sentence that is they are the Decrees of the Almighty Law-giver given forth with an authority uncontroulable A man may appeal from the sentence of men but this is judgment this is as certain as if he were executed presently There is injustice and oppression many times in the Courts of men but there 's a higher than the highest regards it and there be higher than they Eccles. 5. 8. There may be another Tribunal to which we may appeal from the unjust sentences of men but there is no appeal from God for there is no higher Judicature Paschalis a Minister of the Albigenses when he was burnt at Rome cited the Pope and his Cardinals before the Tribunal of the Lamb. When we are wronged and opprest here we may cite them before the Tribunal of God and Christ but who can appeal from the Tribunal of Christ himself And then this sentence is concerning our state and actions 1 Our State whether it be good or evil The word sentenceth you now for instance If a man be in a carnal state Joh. 3. 18. He that believeth not is condemned already How condemned already In the sentence of the Law so he is gone and lost Every unbeliever such as all are by nature is condemned already having only the slender thread of a frail life between him and the execution of it The sentence of the Law standeth in force against him since he will not come to Christ to get it repeal'd This sentence standeth in force against all Heathens which never heard of Christ and are condemned already by the Law But now Christians or those that take up such a profession and have heard of the Gospel on them it is confirmed by a new sentence since they will not fly
to another Court to the Chancery of the Gospel and take sanctuary at the Lords Grace offered in Jesus Christ He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved but he that believeth not shall be damned Mark 16. 16. Again when it is good the sentence of the Word 't is judgment Rom. 8. 33. It is God that justifieth who is he that condemneth What hath the officer to do when a man is absolved by the Judg in Court Conscience is Gods Deputy Satan is Gods Executioner the Witness is silenced the Executioner hath no more to do when the Judg absolveth as God doth all by the sentence of the Gospel that are willing to come under Christs shadow 2 As the Word judgeth and passeth sentence upon our states so also upon our actions thought word or deed for all these in this regard come under the notion of acts 1. Thoughts they are lyable to Gods Tribunal which can be arraigned before no other Bar yet the Word doth find them out It doth not only discover the evil of them Heb. 4. 12. The word of God is quick and powerful and sharper than any two-edged sword piercing even to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit and of the joints and marrow and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart but judgeth and sentenceth them Ier. 6. 19. I will bring evil upon this people even the fruit of their thoughts Men have only a process against others either for words or actions but God hath a process against them for their thoughts Though in mens Courts thoughts are free as not lyable to their cognizance yet they are subject to another Judicature 2. Words Idle words weigh heavy in Gods Ballance God that hath given a Law to the heart hath also given a Law to the lips Mat. 12. 36. Every-idle words that men shall speak they shall give account thereof in the day of judgment Words will come to be judged either we are to give an account of them here or hereafter either to condemn our selves for them and seek pardon or to be condemned hereafter before God A loose and ungoverned tongue will be one evidence brought against men as a sign of their unrenewed hearts in the day of Judgment 3. All our Actions they are sentenced in the Word God hath declared his mind concerning them Eccles. 12. 14. God will bring every work into judgment Things will not be hudled up in that day God will not accept of a general bill of account by lump but every action he will judg it according to the tenor of his Word This is an amplification of the first reason why the word or precepts of God are called judgments because they are judicial sentences of God the Law-giver given forth with an authority uncontroulable concerning our estate and actions The next Reason is because of the suitable Execution that is to follow in this world and in the next 1. In this world It is an easie matter to reconcile the Word and Providence together for Providence is but a comment upon the Word and you may even transcribe Gods dispensations from the threatnings and promises of the Law The story of the people of the Iews might have been transcribed from the threatnings of the Law so that the Comminations of the Law were but as a Calender and Prognostication what kind of weather it would be with that people So still the Apostle makes the observation Heb. 2. 2. Every transgression and disobedience received a just recompence of reward Mark it is notable to observe how God hath been punctual in executing the sentence of every command the breach of it hath had a just recompence and reward as I might instance in all the Law of God Moses and Aaron if they will not sanctifie God according to the first Commandment they shall be shut out of the land of Canaan And if the people will have their false worship how will God punctually accomplish it that he will ruin them and their posterity So Rom. 1. 18. you have this general a little more specified God hath not only taken notice of the first Table but of the second The wrath of God is revealed from heaven not only against all ungodliness but unrighteousness of men c. God from Heaven hath owned both Tables and executed the sentence of the Law against sinners Hos. 7. 12. I will chastise them as their congregation hath heard If a man would observe Providence he might find not only Iustice in Gods Dispensations but Truth I rather note this because Gods Children may smart in this life for breach of the Law Though sentence of absolution takes place as to their persons and state yet in this life they may smart sorely for the breach of the Law In time of trial God will make the world know he is impartial that none shall go free but the sentence of the Word shall be executed Prov. 11. 31. The righteous shall be recompenced in the earth much more the wicked and the sinner Recompenced that is with a recompence of punishment so Peter reads it out of the Septuagint 1 Pet. 4. 18. And if the righteous scarcely be saved c. It is a hard matter to keep a righteous man from falling under the vengeance of God God stands so much upon the credit of his Word that he deals out smart blows and stripes for their iniquity here in this world 2. In the next world there is no other sentence given but what is according to the Word Ioh. 12. 48. The word that I have spoken the same shall judg you in the last day God will pronounce sentence then according to what is said now either to believers or unbelievers Well then upon these grounds you see the Execution is not only Judgment but the very Law is Judgment A man that is to be examined and tried for life and death would fain know how it would speed with him and how matters shall be carried before-hand God will not deal with you by way of surprize he hath plainly told you according to what rule he will proceed saith he The word which I have spoken the same shall judg you at the last day Use. I would apply this first term Iudgments thus to press us to regard the sentence of the Word more If you cannot stand before the Word of God how will you stand before Christs Tribunal at the last day Many times there 's a conviction in the Ore though not refined to full conviction and that discovers it self thus by a fear to be tried and searched Ioh. 3. 20. They will not come to the light lest their deeds should be disproved They that are loth to know are loth to search you can have no comfort but what is according to the tenor of the Word and no happiness but what is according to the sentence of the Word What the Word doth say to you as sure as God is true it will be accomplished to a tittle God
stands upon his word more than any thing when Heaven and earth shall pass away and be burnt up like a scroul not a jot of the word either Law or Gospel shall pass away If we did think of this with seriousness then one part of the Word would drive us to another we would run from the Law to the Gospel Sinners could not lye in a carnal state this Law is not only my rule but my judgment and believers could not be so listless and secure and negligent as they are in their holy calling their doom in the Word This would make them seek more earnestly for pardon and grace and make them strictly watch over their hearts and ways Either we do not believe that the Word is true or that God will be so punctual and exact as he hath declared We dream of strange indulgences for which we have no cause or else we would be more frequent at the Throne of Grace and more exact and watchful in the course of our conversations Secondly The next term to be opened is Righteousness another title given to the Word in this Psalm It is so called Heb. 5. 13. Unskilful in the word of righteousness And 2 Tim. 3. 16 17. It is profitable for instruction in righteousness But why is the Word called Righteousness Because it shews how a man shall be justified and how a justified man should approve himself both to God and man 1. It sheweth how a man shall be justified and accepted as righteous before God therefore the Word is called Righteousness This is a great secret and riddle which was hidden from the wise men of the world they could never have found it out by all the profound researches and enquiries of nature into natural things unless the Word of God had made it known it should still have been in the dark For Righteousness to plead for you and to find acceptance alas we should be thinking of going up to Heaven and going down into the deep no no the word is nigh thee Rom. 10. 8. This notion of the Righteousness of Christ was the best notion the world was ever acquainted with that when we all lay guilty obnoxious to the wrath of God and to the revenges of his angry Justice that then the Lord should reveal a righteousness even the righteousness of God which is by faith of Iesus Christ unto all and upon all that believe as the Apostle amplifies it Rom. 3. 22. What a rich and glorious discovery was this of the mind and counsel of God to poor sinners that he hath revealed such a Righteousness 2. The Word is called Righteousness because it shews how a justified man should approve himself both to God and man by a holy conversation It is the rule of moral righteousness 1 Ioh. 3. 8. He is righteous that doth righteousness in the judgment of the Word There is not only righteousness wrought by Christ for believers but also righteousness wrought by Christ in believers when a man doth exercise himself in performing his duties to God and man Use. Well then if we would be skilful in the matters of righteousness 1 Consult often with the Word which is the copy of Gods most righteous will A man needs go no further either for direction quickning or encouragement The world despiseth the plain directions of the Word and crieth up the notion of things and looketh for quainter conceits and things of a more sublime speculation If we should only bring Scripture and urge men by Gods authority and call upon them in Christs name and by Christs arguments this would be too low for them But this is to tax the wisdom of God He that hath the key of David knew what kind of wards would fit the Lock what directions what quickning notions and encouragements were fittest to be used in the case to gain men to a sense of their duty both to God and man and bring them into a way of righteousness 2 Do you manifest the Word to be righteousness Wisdom should be justified of her children Mat. 11. 19. You should evidence it to the carnal world by taking off their prejudices that the Word may be justified The world hath a suspicion now evidence it to the Conscience that it is a holy rule a perfect direction for righteousness The world prieth into the conversation of the Saints they live much by sensible things therefore declare and evidence it to be a righteous thing So much for the Title that is given to the Word of God thy judgments and righteousness Secondly We come now to his act of duty about the Word or the benefit which he desired When I shall have learned By learning he means his attaining not only to the knowledg of the Word but the practice of it It is not a speculative light or a bare notion of things Ioh. 6. 45. Every man therefore that hath heard and hath learned of the Father cometh unto me It is such a learning as the effect will necessarily follow such a light and illumination as doth convert the soul and frame our hearts and ways according to the will of God For otherwise if we get understanding of the Word nay if we get it imprinted in our memories it will do us no good without practice Doct. The best of Gods servants are but Scholars and studients in the knowledg and obedience of his Word For saith David which had so much acquaintance When I shall have learned The professors of the Christian Religion were primitively called Disciples or Learners Act. 6. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The multitude of the Disciples there seems to be the true definition of a Church the Genus and Difference The Genus is the community or multitude of men united among themselves as a Corporation City or Houshold The Difference or Form is Disciples those that gave up themselves to Christ to be taught and governed and to be instructed in this way and Doctrine So Act. 11. 26. it is said there The Disciples were called Christians first at Antioch Christians are the Disciples and to difference them from the Disciples of other men they are the Disciples of Christ. 1 The School that 's the Church where there are publick Lectures read to all visible Professors But the Elect getting saving knowledg they are not only taught of men but taught of God they have an inward light 2 The Book that 's the Scripture which is able to make wise to salvation to make the man of God perfect 2 Tim. 3. 16 17. Some run to tradition others cry up their own reason to the wrong of the Scripture they make Christ to be their Disciple rather than they his when they will not receive things upon his testimony and revelation as the Socinians 3 The Teacher is either supreme or subordinate The supreme teacher is Christ he is the great Prophet of the Church so it is said Ioh. 6. 45. They shall be taught of God This is such a teacher that
to meet together and after they had read the Word of God every one did acquaint one another with his weaknesses with his temptations and mutually asked counsel and comforted one another out of the Word of God and after this they concluded all with prayer and so every man went to his home These examples did we observe them they would be most useful to us we might drive on a trade to Heaven and be of very great profit in the spiritual life if the gifts of private Christians were managed without pride vain glory and without despising of the weak it would be of exceeding honour to God use and comfort to the Saints SERMON XV. PSAL. CXIX 14. I have rejoyced in the way of thy Commandments as much as in all riches THESE words may respect the 12th Verse as another argument wherewith to back his request Teach me thy statutes for I have rejoyced in the way of thy commandments as much as in all riches Many are for worldly wealth but I have other desires Lord teach me how to understand and keep thy statutes and this will be a greater benefit than any worldly possession whatsoever Or you may refer them to the 13th verse as a reason of his practice every man will be speaking of that wherewith he is delighted Lord thy testimonies are my rejoycing therefore I have and will be speaking of them upon all occasions Or this may be the fruit of what was mentioned before Those that are exercised about the word the study and practice of it and conference about it have a sweet sense of the goodness of it in their own souls so as they delight and rejoyce in it above all things and if we have not felt this effect it is because we are strangers to the word In the words there is 1. A Delight asserted 2. The object of it in the way of thy testimonies 3. The degree of it as much as in all riches By way of Explication The testimonies of God are his word for it testifieth of his will Now the Prophet saith not only I have rejoyced in thy testimonies but in the way of thy testimonies Way is one of the words by which the Law is expressed Gods Laws are ways that lead us to God and so it may be taken here The way which thy testimonies point out and call me unto or else his own practice as a mans course is called his way his delight was not in speculation or talk but in obedience and practice In the way of thy testimonies The degree as much as in all riches as much not to shew the equality of these things as if we should have the same affection for the World as for the Word of God but as much because we have no higher comparison This is that Worldlings dote upon and delight in now as much as they rejoyce in worldly possessions so much do I rejoyce in the way of thy Testimonies For I suppose David doth not compare his own delight in the word with his own delight in wealth but his own choice and delight with the delight and choice of others If he had spoken of himself both in the one respect and in the other the expression was very high David that was called to a Crown and in a capacity of enjoying much in the world Gold Silver Lands Goods largeness of Territory and a compound of all that which all men joyntly and every man severally doth possess yet was more pleased in the holiness of Gods ways than in all the world For what shall it profit a man to gain the whole world and lose his own soul Mat. 15. 26. Doct. A gracious heart finds more true joy in the way of Gods word than in all worldly things whatsoever To explain this consider 1. What this delight is 2. How a gracious heart finds more delight in the word of God than in all worldly things 3. The reasons why they do so I. What this delight is I shall give you several distinctions 1. There is a sweetness in the study of Gods word or when we give up our selves to attain the knowledg of it The very speculation and study produces a delightful tast for three Reason 1. Truth is the good of the understanding therefore when the faculty is suited with a fit object this correspondence causeth a rejoycing and delectation Prov. 24. 14. My son eat thou honey because it is good and the honey-comb because it is sweet to thy tast so shall the knowledg of wisdom be to thy soul when thou hast found it Every truth if it be but a Natural or Philosophical Verity when we come to consider and see it with our own eyes and have found it out by search and do not repeat it by rote only breedeth a delight Pleasure is applicatio convenientis convenienti so it is true in Theological truths we are the more affected with them the more they are represented with evidence to the soul. 2. Scriptural truths are more sublime than other truths and do ennoble Reason with the knowledg of them Deut. 4. 6. Surely this great Nation is a wise and an understanding people Such doctrines as we meet with in the word of God concerning Angels and the Souls of men the Creation and Government of all things the Redemption of men must needs affect the heart and breed a joy in the view and contemplation of them 3. Because these truths are suitable to our necessities To every man that hath a conscience it cannot but be very pleasing to hear of a way how he may come to the pardon of sins and sound peace of conscience solid perfection and eternal glory Man is naturally under fears of death Rom. 1. 32. and would be glad of a pardon weak and unable to find out or attain to moral perfection would be glad of an exact rule and groapeth and feeleth about for an everlasting happiness Acts 17. 27. So far as any thing is found to this purpose in the writings of men they have a marvellous force and influence upon us Any beam of this truth scattered in Plato or Socrates of mans Reconciliation with a holy and just God there is nothing in their writings the then World was under perplexity But yet of Moral Perfection and an Eternal state of Blessedness there were some glimmerings Now when these are represented to the understanding with such evidence and satisfaction as they are in the Scriptures where you have the only sufficient direction to true Happiness no wonder if they are greedily catched at Now this delight though good I speak not of because it may be in Temporaries who have a tast of the good word to invite them to seek for more Heb. 6. 4. and is a fruit of common illumination The stony ground received the word with joy Luke 8. 13. and though it may affect the heart yet if not above all riches it doth not prevail over carnal affections 2. There is a sweetness found in the way
a right understanding of the word of God I. What is meant by opening the eyes Before I come to the particular explication of the terms let me premise two observations 1. The Saints do not complain of the obscurity of the Law but of their own blindness The Psalmist doth not say Lord make a plainer Law but Lord open mine eyes blind men might as well complain of God that he doth not make a Sun whereby they might see The word is a light that shineth in a dark place 2 Pet. 1. 19. There is no want of light in the Scripture but there is a vail of darkness upon our hearts so that if in this clear light we cannot see the defect is not in the word but in our selves 2. The light which they beg is not any thing besides the word When God is said to enlighten us it is not that we should expect new Revelations but that we may see the wonders in his word or get a clear sight of what is already revealed Those that vent their own dreams under the name of the Spirit and divine light they do not give you mysteria but monstra portentous opinions not show you the wondrous things of Gods Law but the prodigies of their own brain unhappy abortives that dye as soon as they come to light Isa. 8. 21. To the Law and to the Testimony if they speak not according to this word it is because there is no light in them The light which we have is not without the word but by the word Now to the phrase the Hebrew signifieth unvail mine eyes There is a double work Negative Positive There is a taking away the vail and an infusion of light Paul's cure of his natural blindness is a fit emblem of our cure of spiritual blindness Acts 9. 18. Immediately there fell from his eyes as it had been scales and he received sight forthwith First the scales fall from our eyes and then we receive sight 1. There is a taking away the vail before we can have a true discerning of the mysteries that are revealed in the word of God 2 Cor. 3. 14 15. the Apostle speaking of the Iews saith But their minds were blinded for until this day remaineth the same vail untaken away in the reading of the Old Testament which vail is done away in Christ but even unto this day when Moses is read the vail is upon their hearts Now this vail is divers 1. The vail of Ignorance Though man hath Reason and is capable of understanding the sense and importance of the words that are used about the Mysteries of godliness yea and the matter too yet he gets not the saving-knowledg of them by his natural abilities There is a Grammatical knowledg and a Spiritual knowledg a man may know things Grammatically and literally that is ignorant of them Spiritually As a child may read the letters and words that doth not conceive of the sense so a man may know what is said concerning God and Christ and Sin and Grace the vanity of the creature the excellency of heaven and have yet no saving-knowledg of these things and therefore the Scripture useth the expression that they oversee in seeing as Acts 28. 26. Hearing ye shall hear and not understand seeing ye shall see and not perceive Though Truths are never so plainly delivered never so powerfully pressed and though they are capable to understand the words yet they do not take in the truth into their hearts so as to profit by it So Deut. 29. 2 3 4. Ye have seen yet ye have not an heart to see Most will declaim against the vanity of the creature evil of sin but they do not see with an affective heart-piercing light they have on them the vail of spiritual ignorance 2. The vail of Carnal knowledg and wisdom that puffeth up 1 Cor. 8. 1 2. by which seeing not we think we see This is a great hinderance to the entertaining of the word So Christ telleth the Pharisees who were conceited of their own knowledg Joh. 9. 39. For judgment am I come into this world that they which see not might see and they which see might be made blind The Pharisees were the Rabbies of the age the most seeing and learned men of that time Carnal men are puffed up with a conceit of their own abilities and so are obstructed by them from profiting by the Gospel 3. The vail of Prejudice and corrupt affections The passions of the mind Love and Fear Desire and Anger hinder us from judging aright in the things of God Our hearts are overcast with strong affections to the world and so cannot clearly judg either of practical truths or of the controversies of the age Not of practical truths When Christ had taught that they could not serve God and Mammon it is said Luk. 16. 14. And the pharisees that were covetous derided him Holy mortifying truths are unpleasing to a carnal ear though they be represented with never so much evidence How will men distinguish themselves out of their duty They shift and stretch and turn and wind hither and thither and prove truth to be no truth rather than part with their lusts So present truths as the Apostle calls them 2 Pet. 1. 12. when the dust of Interest is raised are not discerned The Orthodoxy of the world is usually an age too short 2 Cor. 4. 4. The god of this world hath blinded their eyes 4. The vail of carnal sense 2 Pet. 1. 9. He that lacketh these things is blind and cannot see afar off There are so many mists and clouds in the lower world that men cannot out-see time and without the Prospective of faith have a sight of Eternity Nature is short-sighted so inured to present things that we receive no light concerning things to come These are the scales that are upon our eyes 2. There is an infusion of light without which men of excellent wit and sharp understanding in other things are stark blind in the things of God What this light is will appear by the degrees of knowledg and the uses of this light 1. The degrees of knowledg 1. In some there is a simple nescience both of terms or notions and things as in those that have not a revelation or have not regarded it when the revelation is made As the Gentiles that have not a Revelation Eph. 4. 18. Having their understanding darkned being alienated from the life of God through the ignorance that is in them because of the blindness of their heart Or rude and ignorant Christians that have not the advantage of education so as to understand the notions in which the Doctrine of God is propounded Isa. 28. 9 10. Whom shall he teach knowledg and whom shall he make to understand doctrine them that are weaned from the milk and drawn from the breasts for precept must be upon precept precept upon precept line upon line line upon line here a little and there a little So sottish and brutish
24. 5. given to the children of men Psal. 115. 16. Here God will shew his bounty to all his creatures to beasts and all kind of men 't is sometimes the Slaughter-house and Shambles of the Saints They are slain upon earth Rev. 18. 24. a receptacle for elect and reprobate therefore here they have not their blessing our inheritance lyes elsewhere 3. There are all our kindred Ubi pater ibi patria where our father is there our Countrey is Now when we pray we say to him Our Father which art in heaven There are we strangers where we are absent from God Christ and glorified Saints and while we are here upon earth we have not such enjoyment of God There 's our Father it is his house Heaven is called our Fathers house and there 's our elder brother Col. 3. 1. Set your hearts upon things above where Christ is sitting at the right hand of God And there 's the best of our kindred and Family They shall sit down with Abraham Isaac and Iacob Mat. 8. 20. Well then the children of God they count themselves to be strangers here because their kindred are elsewhere 4. There they abide longest That we account our home where we abide An Inn cannot be called our home where we come but for a night and away but now there we are for ever with the Lord. Here we are in motion there is rest The world must be surely left If we had a certain term of years fixed yet it would be very short in comparison of Eternity All the time we spend here it is but a night but a moment in comparison of Eternity We live longest in the other world and therefore there 's our home Mic. 2. 10. Arise depart hence this is not your rest God speaks it of the Land of Canaan when they had polluted it with sin It is true of all the world Sin hath brought in death and there must be a riddance it is but a passage from danger Israel dwelt first in a wandring Camp before they came to dwell in Cities and walled Towns and the Apostle alludes to that Here we have no abiding City we look for one to come As the Israelites did look for walled Towns and Cities of the Amorites to be possest by them so here we have but a wandring Camp we look for a City And mark as it was with them in their outward estate so in the mysteries of their Religion they were first seated in a Tabernacle and then in a Temple in a Tabernacle which was a figure of the Church then in a Temple which was a figure of Heaven for you know as in the Temple there were three partitions the outward Court the Holy place and the Holy of holies so there are three Heavens the third heaven Paul speaks of the heaven of heavens and there 's the Starry heaven and the Airy heaven the outward Court This life being so frail so fickle we cannot call our abode here our home What is your life saith the Apostle it is but as a vapor Jam. 4. 14. a little warm breath turn'd in and out by the nostrils Job 7. 1. Is there not an appointed time for man upon earth his days are as the days of an hireling A hired servant you do not intend should live with you for ever you hire him for a day or two and when he hath ended his work he receives his wages and is gone so all our days are but a little while we do our service and then we must be gone Actors when they have finished their parts are seen no more they go within the Curtain so when we have fulfilled our course God furnisheth the world with a new Scene of Acts and Actors 5. The necessary exercise of their graces doth make them count their lives here but a pilgrimage and themselves but strangers upon earth viz. Faith Love Hope 1. Faith shews the truth and the worth of things to come Faith will make them strangers Heb. 11. 13. They saw these things and were perswaded of them and they counted themselves pilgrims and strangers O! were we perswaded of things to come we would be hastning towards them We cry home home we talk of heaven and eternity but we do not believe them Sense and reason cannot out-see time nor look above the clouds and mists of the lower world afar off in the Apostles phrase 2 Pet. 1. 9. but Faith shews the truth of things to come We that are here upon earth when we look to heaven the Stars seem to us but so many spangles O! but when we get into heaven and look downward the world then will seem but as a mole-hill that which now to sense seems such a glorious thing will be as nothing 2. The Love of Christ which is in the Saints makes them to account themselves as strangers A child of God cannot be satisfied with things here below because his love is set upon God Two things the heart looks after as soon as it is awakened by grace and Love puts us upon them both viz. a perfect enjoyment of God and a perfect obedience to God 1. That they may be with God and Christ. The Saints have heard much of Christ read much of him tasted and felt much of him they would fain see him and be with him Phil. 1. 23. If they had the choicest contentment the world could afford this will not satisfie them so much as to be there where Christ is and to behold his glory The Apostle thinks this to be motive enough to a gracious heart to seek things above for there Christ is at the right hand of God Love will catch hold of that Col. 3. 1. The place is lovely for Christs sake Love will not suffer them to count this to be their home Though Christ is present with them now spiritually while they are here yet the presence and nearness is but distance but a kind of absence being compared with what is to come and therefore this very presence doth not quench their desires but kindle them and sets them a longing for more All the presence the communion the sight of Christ they get now it is but mediate through the glass of the Ordinance 1 Cor. 13. 12. and it is frequently interrupted his face is many times hidden Psal. 30. 7. and it is not full as it shall be there Psal. 16. 11. But now in Heaven there it will be immediate God will be all in all and there it will be constant they shall be ever with the Lord and there they shall be satisfied with his likeness Psal. 17. 15. then they enjoy his presence indeed So that Love upon these considerations sets them a longing and groaning 2. As Love makes them desire the company of Christ so intire subjection to God they would have perfect grace and freedom from sin therefore are ever groaning O when shall we be rid of this body of death Rom. 7. 23. There is a final perfect estate
for which the new creature was made and they are ever tending towards that happy state wherein they shall grieve God no more 3. Hope was made for things to come especially for our full and final happiness God fits us with graces as well as happiness not only grants us a glorious estate but gives us grace to expect it Hope would be of no use if it did not lift up the head and look out for a better Estate than the world yieldeth Hope fastens upon Gods title in the Covenant I am thy God Now God could not with honour take this title and give us no better than present things Heb. 11. 16. Wherefore God is not ashamed to be called their God for he hath prepared for them a city Mark the Apostles reason Many expound these words so as if the meaning were but this That they did only express Gods condescension that he would take his title not from the Potentates of the world but from a few wandring Patriarchs that God was not ashamed to be called their God Alas the words have a quite other sense rather it expresseth an answerable bounty Unless the Lord would give them something answerable to their hopes more than was visible in the lives of the Patriarchs God would be ashamed to be called their God Do but look upon the slenderness of their condition if that he gave them in the world were all their reward what is this to own that magnificent title I am the God of Abraham c. No now he hath something better than all the honours and riches of the world now he may fitly be called their God Christ builds the doctrine of the resurrection upon the same argument God is the God of Abraham c. therefore they shall have a blessed estate in soul and body Matth. 22. 32. To be a God to any is to be a Benefactor and that according to the extent and largeness of an infinite and an eternal Power USE 1. Are you strangers and pilgrims David and such as he was that were of his stamp counted themselves strangers upon earth If you be so 1. You will always be drawing home and would not desire to stay long from Christ. A traveller would pass over his journey as soon as he can and be hastning homeward Phil. 1. 23. I desire to be dissolved and to be with Christ. Is there any looking longing waiting for your blessed estate It is no hard matter to get a Christian out of the world his better part is gone already his heart is there Do your hearts draw homeward Are your desires stronger and stronger every day after eternal life Natural motion grows swifter and swifter still as it draws nearer and nearer its center So certainly a Christian if he had the motions of the new nature he would be drawing homeward more every day 2. What provision do you make for another world if you are strangers Many bestow all their labour and travel about earthly things and neglect their precious and immortal souls They are at home all their care is that they may live well here O Christians what provision do you make for heaven A traveller doth not buy such things as he cannot carry with him as Trees Houses Houshold-stuff but Jewels Pearls and such as are portable Our Wealth doth not follow us into the other world but our Works do We are travelling to a Countrey whose Commodities will not be bought with gold and silver and therefore are we storing our selves for heaven for such things as are currant there Men that make a voyage to the Indies will carry such Wares as are acceptable there else they do nothing Do you make it your business every day to get clearer evidences for heaven to treasure up a good foundation 1 Pet. 6. 8. and do you labour every day to grow more meet for heaven Col. 1. 12. That 's the great work of a Christian to get evidences and a meetness for heaven These are the months of our purification we are now to cleanse our selves for the embraces of the great God When we grow more mortified strict holy heavenly then we ripen apace and hasten homeward Psal. 84. 7. They shall go on from strength to strength c. every degree of grace it is a step nearer and therefore do you grow more meet for this blessed estate 3. In the fulness of your worldly enjoyments do you mind your Country He that was going pilgrim to Ierusalem cryed out O! this is not the holy City So whatever enjoyments you have do your hearts call you off and say Soul this is not thy rest this is not that thou shouldst take comfort in thou art bound for heaven Do you miss your Countrey and your Parents The men of the world would have their portion here here 's their rest but when you have most of the world at will are you strangers 1 Cor. 7. 31. Using this world as not abusing it that is so making use of Gods bounty as expecting a greater happiness How do we use the world as not abusing it When we use it as a type as a motive and as a help to heaven As a kind of Type The enjoyment of temporal things should stir us up to a more serious consideration of heavenly as the Prodigals husks put him in mind of bread in his fathers house The company of your Relations puts you in mind of the company of God and Christ. The Cities of the Amorites their Walled Towns put the Patriarchs in mind of a City which had foundations Heb. 11. 26. If an earthly City be so glorious what 's the heavenly City These are the comforts of a strange place You abuse them when you forget home and therefore take heed If the creature be sweet heaven is better And when you use them as a Motive to serve God more cheerfully the more you find him a good Master 1 Tim. 6. 17. Trust in the living God who giveth us richly all things to enjoy To make you more earnest in good works 2 Sam. 17. saith David there I dwell in a house of cedar and the ark of God within curtains When you have such kind of reasonings stirr'd up within you What do I for God that hath enlarged my house here And when you use them as a Help your Worldly enjoyments as Instruments of piety and charity Here 's a man's tryal what he doth in a full condition whether his heart be for home still yea or no when he hath the world at will if then he be treasuring up a good foundation and encouraging himself to serve God faithfully 4. What is your solace in your affliction and the inconveniences that you meet with in your pilgrimages Doth this comfort you Home will pay for all Heb. 10. 34. Ye took joyfully the spoiling of your goods knowing in your selves that ye have in heaven a better and enduring substance Do you reckon upon a more enduring substance Though the World frown upon you as
a step-mother yet you remember you have a better home From whence do you fetch your supports in any cross Doth this comfort you in the midst of the molestations of the World They do not know your birth your breeding your hopes nor your expectations Strangers may be abused in a foreign place when we come home this will be forgotten The Saints walk up and down like a Prince that travels abroad in disguise though he be slighted abused he doth not appear what he shall be You have a glorious inheritance reserved for you this is your Cordial and the reviving of your souls and that which doth your heart good to think of and so you can be contented to suffer loss and inconveniences upon these hopes The discourse between Modestus a Governour under Valens and Basil in Nazianzen his twentieth Oration is very notable I shall only transcribe what is exactly to the purpose in hand When he threatned him with banishment I know no banishment saith he who know no abiding-place here in the world I do not count this place mine nor can I say the other is not mine rather all is Gods whose stranger and pilgrim I am This was that which supported him in the midst of those threatnings Therefore from whence do you fetch your support 5. If Religion be kept up in heigth and majesty the World will count you strangers they will stand wondering at your conversation 1 Pet. 4. 4. Men gaze upon those that come hither in a foreign habit that do not conform to the fashions of the countrey and so a child of God is wondred at that walks in a counter-motion to the studies and practices of other men as one that is not conformed to the world Rom. 12. 2. What do you discover of the spirit of your Countrey so as to convince others Thus much by way of enquiry namely Whether we are strangers yea or no USE 2. Behave your selves as strangers here upon earth 1. Avoid fleshly lusts 1 Pet. 2. 11. these cloud the eye and besot the heart and make us altogether for a present good they weaken our desires of heaven 't is the Apostles argument As strangers and pilgrims abstain from fleshly lusts The flesh-pots of Egypt made Israel to despise Canaan and so this is that which will take off our hearts from things to come from the inheritance of the Saints in light and from that blessed estate God hath promised 2. Grasp not at too much of the World but what comes with a fair Providence upon honest endeavours accept with thanks 1 Tim. 6. 9. They that will be rich fall into temptation and a snare c. The Devil hath you upon the hip when you make that your business and scope not he that is but will be rich that fixes that as his scope Then the heart is filled with sins and the head with cares 3. If an Estate comes in slowly remember a little will serve our turns to heaven more would be but a burden and snare Those that have their portion here most of Worldly things what do they get by it a little belly-cheer Psal. 17. 14. and they leave the rest to their babes Dainty cheer is no great matter and to leave our posterity great is but to leave them in a snare Children are under a Providence and a Covenant as well as we and it is blasphemous to think we can provide for them better than God 4. If God give abundance rest not in them with a carnal complacency Psal. 62. 10. If riches encrease set not your heart on them Suffer not thy heart to rejoyce in them as your only portion so as to grow proud of them so as to count them your good things Luke 16. 25. you that are strangers have better things to mind 5. Keep up a warm respect to your everlasting home It is not enough to despise the world but you must look after a better Countrey Many of a slight temper may despise Worldly Profits their Corruptions do not run out that way Heb. 13. 14. We have here no abiding city but we seek one to come Desires thoughts and groans these are the harbingers of the soul that we send into the Land of Promise By this means we tell God that we would be at home 6. Enjoy as much of Heaven as you can in your Pilgrimage in Ordinances in the first-fruits of the Spirit in communion with Saints Grace is but young-Glory and joy in the Holy Ghost is the Suburbs of Heaven and therefore you should get somewhat of your Countrey before you come at it As the Winds do carry the Odors and sweet-smells of Arabia into the neighbouring-provinces so by the breathings of the Holy Ghost upon our hearts do we get a smell of the upper Paradise it is in some measure begun in us before we can get thither and therefore enjoy as much of Heaven as possibly you can in the time of your pilgrimage We have our taste here it is begun in union with Christ and in the work of grace upon the heart And in Ordinances Prayer brings us to the throne of grace it gives us an entrance into Gods presence Heb. 10. 19. the Apostle calls it a boldness to enter into the holiest by the blood of Iesus A Christian enters heaven while he is here in the world In the word preached Heaven is brought down to us The Gospel is call'd the Kingdom of Heaven And by reading we do as it were converse with the Saints departed that writ what we read Meditation it brings us into the company of God it puts our heads above the clouds amongst the midst of blessed spirits there as if we saw Jesus Christ upon the throne and his Saints triumphing about him Communion of Saints it is Heaven begun therefore you that are strangers should much delight there A man that is abroad would be glad to meet with his own Countrey-men we should be glad of company to go with us to Heaven these are to be our companions for evermore therefore we should converse with them here II. I proceed to the latter clause Hide not thy commandment from me Here 's his Request To make short work of it I shall endeavour to make out the connexion and sense of these words in these Propositions 1. Every man here upon earth especially a godly man is but a stranger and passenger Every man is so in point of condition he must go hence and quit all his enjoyments in the world wicked men whether they will or no but a godly man is so in affection and cannot be satisfied with his present state This I have insisted upon 2. It concerns him that is a stranger to look after a better and more durable state Every man should do so He that lives here for a while is concerned his greatest care should be for that place where he lives longest therefore Eternity should be his scope A godly man will do so Those whose hearts are not set
ruine We have instances of a Council gathered against Christ Joh. 11. 47. Then gathered the chief priests and the Pharisees a Council and said What do we for this man doth many miracles They meet together and plot the ruine of Christ and his Kingdom and they were those that were of chief Authority in the place Another instance Acts 4. 27 28. For of a truth against thy holy Child Iesus whom thou hast anointed both Herod and Pontius Pilate with the Gentiles and the people of Israel were gathered together for to do whatsoever thy hand and thy counsel determined before to be done There is their agreement to put Christ to death In the Old Testament Pharaoh and his Nobles Exod. 1. 10. Come on 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 let us deal wisely with them lest they multiply and it come to pass that when there falleth out any war they joyn also unto our enemies and fight against us and so get them up out of the land And against Daniel the Princes of the Persian Empire consult how to intrap him in the matter of his God Dan. 6. 4 5 6 c. 2. For abusing the Throne of Judgment and Civil Courts of Judicature to the molestation of the Saints I shall cite but two places Psal. 94. 12. Shall the throne of iniquity have fellowship with thee which frameth mischief by a Law It is no strange but yet no small temptation that the oppression of Gods people is marked with a pretence and colour of Law and publick Authority and the mischief should proceed from thence where it should be remedied namely from the Seat of Justice so Mat. 16. 17 18. Christ foretelleth they shall have enemies armed with Power and Publick Authority Beware of men for they will deliver you to the Councils and they shall scourge you in their synagogues and ye shall be brought before Governours and Kings for my sake Not only subordinate but supreme Governours may be drawn to condemn and oppress the godly In so plain a case more instances need not Reasons of it on Gods part and on the part of the Persecutors First On Gods part he permitteth it 1. To shew that he can carry on his work though Authority be against him and that his people do not subsist by outward force but the goodness of his Providence and so have the sole glory of their preservation When the Christian Religion came first abroad in the world not many noble nor many mighty were called the Powers of the world were against it and yet it held up the head and was dispersed far and near Falshoods need some outward interest to back them and the supports of a Secular arm but Gods Interest doth many times stand alone though God doth now and then make Kings nursing fathers and Queens nursing-mothers according to his promise Isa. 49. 23. Oftentimes the Church is destitute of all worldly props Mic. 5. 7. And the remnant of Iacob shall be in the midst of many people as a dew from the Lord as the showers upon the grass that tarrieth not for man nor waiteth for the sons of men Yea the power of the world is against it and yet it subsists Thus it was in the primitive times there were only an handful of contemptible people that professed the Gospel yet it got ground daily not by force of arms or the power of the long sword but by Gods secret blessing Ambrose giveth the reason why God suffered it to be so Ne videretur authoritate traxisse aliquos veritatis ratio non pompae gratiâ praevaleret lest this new Religion should seem to be planted with power rather than by its own evidence and the authority of men should sway more with the world than the Truth of God There is a wonderful encrease without any human concurrence as the Lord saith The remnant of his people shall be as a dew from the Lord that tarrieth not for man nor waiteth for the sons of men Without mans consent or concurrence So that God alone hath the glory of their preservation 2. That the patience of his people may be put to the utmost probation When they are exercised with all kind of trials not only the hatred of the vulgar but the opposition of the Magistrate carried on under a form of Legal procedure In the primitive times sometimes the Christians were exposed to the hatred and fury of the people Lapidibus nos invadit inimicum vulgus At other times exposed to the injuries of Laws and persecutions carried on by authority against them There was an uproar at Ephesus against the Christians Acts 19. and there seemed to be a formal Process at Ierusalem Acts 4. This latter temptation seemeth to be the more sore and grievous because Gods Ordinance which is Magistracy is wrested to give countenance to malicious designs and because it cuts off all means of human help and so patience hath 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 its perfect work James 1. 4. There are some glory in suffering the rage and evil word of the Vulgar for they are supposed not to make the wisest choice but when men of Wisdom and Power and such as are clothed with the Majesty of Gods Ordinance are set against us then is patience put to the utmost proof and whether we regard God or man most and who is the object of our fear those that have power of life and death temporal or him that hath power of life and death eternal 3. That his people may be weaned from fleshly dependencies and doting upon Civil Powers and so be driven to depend upon him alone Psal. 94. 20 21 22. Shall the throne of iniquity have fellowship with thee which establish mischief by a Law they gather themselves together against the soul of the righteous and condemn the innocent blood But the Lord is my defence and my God is the rock of my refuge There would not be such use of faith and dependance upon God if our danger were not great It is harder to trust in God with means than without means We are beaten out when outward helps fail otherwise we are apt to neglect God and then a world of mischief ensueth When the Emperor of the Romans began to favour the Christians poyson was said to be poured into the Church and in the sun-shine of worldly countenance like green timber they began to warp and cleave asunder and what Religion got in breadth it lost in strength and vigour Gods people never live up to the beauty and majesty of their Principles so much as when they are forced immediately to live upon God and depend upon him for their safety 4. That their testimony and witness-bearing to Gods truths may be the more publick and authentick in the view of the world This testimony is either to them for their conviction and conversion Mat. 24. 14. And this Gospel of the Kingdom shall be preached in all the world for a witness unto all Nations or against them Mark 10.
18. And ye shall be brought before Governours and Kings for my sake for a testimony against them and the Gentiles It is for a testimony and that should comfort them in all their sufferings Mark 14. 9. Verily I say unto you wheresoever this Gospel shall be preached throughout the whole world this also that she hath done shall be spoken of for a memorial of her The testimony is more valid as being confirmed by their Courage in troubles they are Principles that they will suffer for which as it is a warning to the professors of Religion that they should own no principles in a time of peace but what they would confirm by their avowed testimony in the extremity of trials so also it should convince their enemies in case they be put upon this exercise It is needful that every truth should have a sealed testimony that is we should not only vent opinions but be willing to suffer for them if God should call us out so to do God hath been ever tender of imposing upon the world without sufficient evidence and therefore would not have his people stand upon their lives and temporal concernments that thereby they may give greater satisfaction to the world concerning the weight of those truths which they do profess Secondly On the Persecutors part or the persons molesting so the causes are 1. Their ignorance and blind zeal Joh. 16. 2. They shall put you out of their synagogues yea the time cometh that whosoever killeth you will think that they do God good service They think it to be an acceptable service to God to molest and trouble those that are indeed his people Those Princes that sate and spake against David were not Pagans and men of another Religion but of Israel and it is often the lot of Gods people to be persecuted not only by Pagans and openly prophane men but even by men that profess the true Religion Pseudo-Christians Rev. 14. 13. those that pretend they are for God and his cause and seem to be carried on with a great zeal and do not oppose truth as truth but their quarrel is coloured by specious pretences 2. Their prejudices lightly taken up against the people of God Satan is first a lyar and then a murderer Joh. 8. 44. Ye are of your father the Devil and the lusts of your father ye will do he was a murderer from the beginning and abode not in the truth because there is no truth in him when he speaketh a lye he speaketh of his own for he is a lyar and the father of it By lyes he bringeth about his bloody design Christ was first called a Samaritan and one that had a Devil and then they did persecute him as such an one And as was observed before as Christians of old were covered with the skins of wild beasts that Dogs and Lyons might tear them the more speedily so by odious imputations Gods people are brought into distast with the world and then molested and troubled represented as a company of hypocrites and unjust dealers and under that cloak true Religion is undermined Now in the Persecutor this is faulty because they lightly take up every false suggestion and so Christians are condemned 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Iustin Martyr complained because of the common reproach without any distinct inquiry into their way and practice Nolunt audire quod auditum damnare non possunt 3. Their erroneous Principle in Civil Policy That Christs Kingdom and the freedom of his worshippers is not consistent with Civil Interests Whatever hath been the matter worldly Rulers have been jealous of Christs Interest and Kingdom as if it could not consist with publick safety and the civil interests of that State and Nation where it is admitted and suggestions of this kind do easily prevail with them Esther 3. 8. It is not for the Kings profit to suffer them and John 11. 48. If we let him alone all men will believe on him and the Romans shall come and take away both our place and Nation Reason of State is an ancient plea against the interest of Religion In the Roman Empire though the Christians were inconsiderable as to any publick charge yet they had a jealous eye upon them Iustin Martyr sheweth the reason of it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because they were often speaking of a Kingdom though they meant it of the Kingdom of heaven and were far enough from all Rebellion USE 1. It informeth us that we should not measure the verity of Religion by the greatness of those that are with it or against it This was one of the Pharisees arguments Do any of the rulers believe in him Joh. 7. 48. but this people that know not the law are accursed Alas men of Authority and great place may be often against Gods Interest James 2. 1. Have not the faith of our Lord Iesus Christ the Lord of glory in respect of persons Mark that title that is given to Christ the Lord of glory he is able to put glory enough upon his worshippers though they have nothing of outward pomp and splendor and not many mighty are called 1 Cor. 1. 26. Many will say they have none of quality to join with them none but ignorant people If a man had judged so in the first times when the Gospel came first abroad in the world would not Christianity it self have seemed a very contemptible thing Therefore a simple plain-hearted love to Christ and his Truth whether Powers be averse or friendly is that which is required of us 2. It reproveth those who are soon discouraged even with the reproach which base people cast upon the ways of God David stood both in the one temptation and in the other the reproach and contempt of the Vulgar and also when Princes sate and spake against him But to these we may say as Jer. 12. 5. If thou hast run with the footmen and they have wearied thee then how wilt thou contend with horses If we be such tender milk-sops that we cannot suffer a disgraceful word from the basest of the people what shall we do when we meet with other manner of conflicts and oppositions in the farther progress of our duty to God If we are tired out with the disgrace and affronts of these mean ones and cannot put up a scornful word at their hands without disorder what shall we do when we are to contest for Gods Interest with those great and masterly ones that are armed with Power and Authority and it may be the advantage of Laws against us Scommata nostra ferre non potes said the Antiochians to Iulian in another case quomodo feres Persarum tela Gods servants do often receive discouragement from the people and from Authority but the goodness of their Cause and the favour of God makes them joyfully persevere 3. It teacheth us what to do when this is not our case I have treated as this Scripture hath led me of the oppositions of Princes and worldly
a poor little hearsay Knowledg availeth not They abhor themselves when they have more intimate acquaintance none so confident as a young Professor that knoweth a few Truths but in a weak and imperfect manner the more we know indeed the more sensible we are of our ignorance how liable to this mistake and that that we dare not trust our selves for an hour 4. Because of the profit that cometh by knowledg All grace from first to last cometh in by the understanding God in the work of grace followeth the order which he hath established in Nature Reason and Judgment is to go before the will and therefore when the work of Grace is first begun in us it beginneth in the Understanding Renewed in knowledg Col. 3. 10. So the encrease of grace 2 Pet. 1. 12. Grace be multiplied unto you through the knowledg of God and of Iesus Christ our Lord. As the beginning is by light so is all the gradual progress of the spiritual life strength to bear afflictions strength in conflicts is by powerful reasons yea the perfect change that is made in us in glory is by the vision of God We shall see him as he is and shall be like him If we had more knowledg of God and his ways we should trust him more fear him more love him more Trust him Psal. 9. 10. And they that know thy name will put their trust in thee for thou Lord hast not forsaken them that seek thee If God were more known he would be better trusted 2 Tim. 1. 12. I know whom I have believed I dare trust him with my soul. More feared 3 Joh. 11. Beloved follow not that which is evil but that which is good He that doth good is of God he that doth evil hath not seen God Right thoughts of God would not let us sin so freely one Truth or other would fall upon us and give check to the temptation as feared so loved more The more explicite thoughts we have of his excellency the more are our hearts drawn out to him Joh. 4. 10. If thou knewest the gift c. Christ would not lye by as a neglected thing if he were more known in all his worth and excellency USE The first Use is to press you to get Knowledg and look upon it as a singular Grace if the Lord will give you to understand and apply the comfort and direction of his Holy Word Joh. 15. 15. Henceforth I call you not servants for the servant knoweth not what his Lord doth but I have called you friends for all things that I have heard of my Father I have made known unto you To be taught the mind of God is a greater act of friendship than if God should give a man all the treasures of the world To make himself known so as you may love him fear him trust him When we can apply this for our comfort O then cry for knowledg lift up thy voice for understanding seek her as silver and search for her as for hidden treasures Prov. 2. 3 4. Go to God and be earnest with him Lord make me to understand the way of thy precepts We can walk in the ways of sin without a Teacher but we cannot walk in the ways of God And cry lift up thy voice We are earnest for quickning and enlargement but be earnest also for understanding Now a large prayer without endeavours is nothing worth Dig in the Mines of knowledg search into the Scripture do not gather up a few scattered notions but look into the bowels Silver doth not lye in the surface of the earth but deep in the bottom of it and will cost much labour and digging to come at it If we would have any good stock of knowledg which will prevent vain thoughts carnal discourse abundance of heart-perplexing scruples and doubts and much darkness and uncomfortableness of spirit it will cost us some labour and pains The more knowledg we have the more are we established against error 2 Pet. 3. 17. Ye therefore beloved seeing ye know these things before beware lest ye also being led away with the error of the wicked fall from your own stedfastness The more you have of this divine saving knowledg the greater check upon sin Psal. 119. 11. I have hid thy word in my heart that I might not sin against thee One Truth or another will rise up in defiance of the Temptation The greater impulsion to duty the more of the Law of God the more it urgeth the conscience Prov. 6. 22. It maketh us more useful in all our Relations 1 Pet. 3. 7. Husbands Dwell with them according to knowledg c. Parents Eph. 6. 4. Fathers provoke not your children to wrath but bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord. Friends Rom. 15. 14. And I my self also am perswaded of you my brethren that ye also are full of goodness filled with all knowledg able also to admonish one another Magistrates that they may discern Christs Interest Psal. 2. 10. Be wise now therefore O Kings be instructed ye Iudges of the earth When Solomon asked Wisdom the thing pleased the Lord. And lastly More comfortable in our selves that they may comfort and build up one another whenever they meet together USE 2. To press you to grow in knowledg None have such confidence and rejoycing in God as those that have a clear sight and understanding of his will revealed in his word Let your knowledg 1. Be more comprehensive At first our thoughts run in a narrow channel There are certain general Truths absolutely necessary to salvation as concerning our misery by sin and the sufficiency of Christ to help us but if we might rest in these why hath God given us so copious a Rule The general sort of Christians content themselves to see with others eyes get the knowledg of a few truths and look no farther why then hath God given so large a Rule Fundamentals are few believe them live well and you shall be saved This is the Religion of most This is as if a man in building should only be careful to lay a good foundation no matter for roof windows walls If a man should untile your house and tell you the foundation standeth the main butteresses are safe you would not like of it A man is bound according to his capacity and opportunity to know all Scripture the consequences of every Truth God may and doth accept of our imperfect knowledg but not when men are negligent and do not use the means To be willingly ignorant of the lesser ways of God is a sin VVe should labour to know all that God hath revealed 2. More distinct why Truths are best known in their frame and dependance as Gods works of Creation when viewed singly and apart every days work was good but when viewed alltogether in their correspondence and mutual proportion to each other were very good Gen. 1. 31. So all Truths of God take them singly are good but
and so do the beasts yea many of the beasts excell us in the perfection of that kind of life Lions excell in strength Roes in swiftness Eagles in long age none of their pleasures are soured with remorse of conscience But the inward Spiritual life is called the life of God Ephes. 4. 18. 6. The inward life is the beginning of our life in heaven A glorified Saint and a Saint militant upon earth they both live the life of God and the life of grace is the same life for kind though not for degree and one that is glorified and one here upon earth differ but as a child and a man But now the life of sense and the life of grace differ as a Toad and a man not only in degree but also in kind 7. Yet further this is that great thing which God hath been at such great expence about to raise the being of the new creature John 6. 51. This is my flesh which I give for the life of the world The supports the strength of the inward man cost dearer than all other comforts whatsoever it must have nobler supports it must have the blood of Christ daily supplies from heaven but the other life is called the life of our hands Isa. 57. 10. We patch up to ourselves some conveniencies for the sensible life by labour and service here in the world Well then this is that which the children of God do mostly look after that the inward life may be kept free from annoyance and fit for the purposes of grace USE The Use of this is to chek our carnal and preposterous care for the outward man to the neglect of the inward How much are we for the outward man that it may be well fed and well cloathed well at ease as for the present life there 's all our care but not so careful to get the soul furnished with grace and strengthened and renewed by continued influences from Christ. Certainly if men did look after soul strength they would be more careful to wait upon God for his blessing You may know the disproportion of your care for outward things and for the inward man by these Questions 1. How much do you prize Gods day the means of grace opportunities of worship that are for the inward man The Sabbath day is a feast day for souls Now when men are weary of it it 's the most burdensome day of all the week round Amos 8. 5. When will the Sabbath be gone that we may set forth wheat It is a sign they are carnal when men count that day the only lost day as Seneca saith of the Jews they lost the full seventh of their lives speaking of the Sabbath day so carnal men think it is a lost day to them they look upon the Sabbath as a melancholy interruption of their affairs and business The Apostle Iames saith of those that are begotten by God Chap. 1. 9. that they are swift to hear certainly they that have an inward man to maintain another life than an outward and animal life must have the supply and will look after the comforts of it 2. Consider how differently we are concerned with bodily and soul concernments If the body be but a little diseased if we want an appetite to a meal or a little sleep in the night we complain of it presently we enquire what 's the cause and look for a remedy but what a wonderfull disproportion is there as to the soul 'T is a strange expression that 3 Epist. John 2. I wish that thy body prosper as thy soul prospers Alas we may say of the most O that their souls did prosper as their bodies as they flourish in the conveniencies of the outward man 3. What care have you for the inward man to adorn the soul to beautify it with grace that it may be of price and esteem with God or to fortify it with grace Now when all our strength and travel is laid out for that which doth not conduce to the inward life Isa. 55. 2. and we lay out our money for that which is not bread it is a sign we are wholly carnal We read in Ecclesiastical story of one that wept when he saw a wanton woman decking her self with a great deal of care to please her lovers saith he Have I been so careful to deck my soul for Christ Iesus 4. Do you take in spiritual refreshments even when afflictions abound 2 Cor. 1. 5. As the sufferings of Christ abound in us so our consolation also aboundeth by Christ then you are affected as the children of God whose heart and care runs out mainly for the inward man This in general Doct. 2. Secondly more especially observe He goes to God for strength Let me shew 1. What is this Spiritual strength 2. How it is given out 3. How God is concerned in it David goes to God Lord strengthen me First What Spiritual strength is It is Gods perfecting of his work Strength supposeth life therefore in general it is God's renewed influence when he hath planted habits of grace he comes and strengthens There is gratia praeveniens operans co-operans there is preventing-grace working-grace and co-working-grace Preventing-grace that is when God converts us when the Lord turns us to himself and doth plant grace in the soul at first Working grace that is when God strengthens the habit Co-working grace when God stirs up the act and helps us in the exercise of the grace we have First He plants grace into the heart then there 's a constant influence as the two Olive-trees in Zechariah were always dropping into the Lamps and then by excitation and co-operation he stirs it up Saith Austin Unless God gives us the faculties and unless he gives us the will we can do nothing and unless he concurs with the exercise of these faculties still we cannot work in the spiritual life as we ought to do and therefore first God infuseth grace and then strengthens grace first he worketh in us then by us First we are objects of his work then instruments To shew wherein the strength of the soul lies 1. There are planted in the soul habits of grace There are not only high operations of grace but permanent and fixed habits the seed of God that remaineth within us 1 Ioh. 3. 9. which cannot be the in-dwelling of the Spirit for this seed of God is some created thing Psal. 51. 10. Create in me a clean heart O God and it is something that grows 2 Pet. 3. 6. Grow in grace And therefore 't is evident there are habits of grace planted in the soul a good stock that we have from God at first called the good treasure of the heart Matth. 12. these habits of grace are called armour of God the shield of faith the helmet of salvation This is the strength of the soul. 2. But besides this there 's a continuance and an increase of these graces when the Lord confirms his work and perfects what
Here 's 1. The sin deprecated Remove from me the way of Lying 2. The good supplicated and asked Grant me thy Law graciously In the first clause you have his Malady David had been inticed to a course of lying In the second we have his Remedy and that 's the Law of God First let me speak of the evil deprecated there Observe 1. The Object The way of lying 2. Gods act about it Remove from me c. First for the Object The way of lying It is by some taken generally by others more particularly 1. For those that expound it more generally they are not all of a mind Some think the way of lying is meant Corruption of Doctrine others of Worship others apply it to disorders of conversation some take it for Error of Doctrine false opinions concerning God and his Worship which are called lying and so opposed to the way of truth spoken of in the next verse I have chosen the way of truth Heresie and false Doctrine is called a lye Ezek. 13. 22. Their diviners speak lies So John 2. 21. A lye is not of the truth and the word used The way of lying is elsewhere rendred a false way v. 104. and 128. there is the same expression Now this he desires to be removed from him because it sticks as close to us as our skin Error is very natural to us and man doth exceedingly please himself with the figments of his own brain All practical Errors in the world are but man's natural thoughts cryed up into a voluble opinion because backed with defences of Wit and Parts and secular Interests and other advantages they are but our secret and privy thoughts which have gotten the reputation of an opinion in the world for we speak lyes from the womb even in this sense we suck in erronious principles with our milk Nature carrieth us to wrong thoughts of God and the ways of God and out of levity and inconstancy of spirit we are apt to be carried about with every wind of Doctrine by the sleight of men Now to this sense the latter clause will well agree Keep me from a way of lying that is keep me from falling into error and mistakes about Religion for he begs that the law may be granted to him or a certain stated rule without which all things are liable to deceit and imposture And according to this sense Austin beggeth that he may neither be deceived in the Scriptures nor deceive out of them Nec fallar in iis nec fallam ex iis let me never be mistaken my self nor cause others to mistake Again By a way of lying some understand false worship for an Idol is a lye Isa. 44. 20. Is there not a lye in his right hand meaning an Idol By others a course of sinning for a way of sinning is a way of lying for it deceives us with a conceit of happiness which we shall never enjoy therefore Eph. 4. 22. Put off the old man which is corrupt according to the deceitful lusts Lusts are called deceitful because they promise what they never perform they flatter us not only with hopes of impunity but much imaginary comfort and satisfaction O but it 's a lye Satan deceived our first Parents pretending to shew them a way of Immortality whereas that brought death to the world Most go this way Remove from me the way of lying that is the way of sin and the rather because the Septuagint translation read it thus Remove from me the way of Iniquity and Chrysostom in his gloss He means Every evil deed should be removed from him or it proves a lye in regard of all those flatterings and blandishments by which it enticeth the soul. Nay there 's a parallel place seems to make good this sense Prov. 30. 8. When Agur prays against sin Remove from me vanity and lies meaning a course of sin Thus it is taken more generally 2. Those that take it more particularly for the sin of lying or speaking falsly in commerce they again differ Some take it passively keep me from frauds or deceits of other men because it seems to be a hard thing to ascribe a way of lying to a child of God therefore they rather take it passively But this is to fear where no fear is But David begs that he might be kept from a way of lying that it might not settle into a way that 's his meaning Therefore I rather take it actively that he might not run into a false and fallacious course of dealing with others Now why would David have this way of lying removed from him Three Reasons 1. Because of the inclination of his corrupt nature We had most need pray to be kept from gross sins as Psal. 19. 13. Keep back thy servant also from presumptuous sins We need not only pray against lesser sins or spiritual wickednesses but from gross sins carried on presumptuously against the light of Conscience So Col. 3. 5. Mortifie your earthly members c. What members doth he speak of not worldliness and unbelief only but he speaks of adultery uncleanness inordinate affections and the like and the Children of God if they do not deal with God for grace against their gross sins they will soon know to their costs Jesus Christ warned his own disciples those that were trained up in his School those that were to go abroad and deliver his Gospel to the world Luke 21. 34. Take heed lest your hearts be overcharged with surfeiting and drunkenness c. A candle newly blown out easily sucks light and flame again and we that are newly taken out of the dominion of sin into a state of grace may suck light and flame again therefore we had need pray against gross sins 2. Because he had been tripping and guilty in this kind In the story of David you may trace too much of this way and vein of lying as his feigning to Abimeleck the Priest 1 Sam. 25. 8. and to Achish 2 Sam. 27. 8. compar'd with vers 10. his perswading Ionathan to tell his Father he was gone about such a business Now this we may learn when we are foiled by any sin we should take heed lest we settle into a way and course of sin for in every sin as there is culpa the fault or the transgression of the Law and reatus the guilt or obligation to punishment so there is macula the blot an inclination to sin again in like manner as a brand once on fire is more apt to take fire again By every act of sin the Law of God is lessened our carnal inclination is increased therefore we had need be earnest with God Lord keep me from a way of lying 3. Man is strongly inclined to lying it sticks close to our nature so that God must remove it from us as more fully afterwards Thus for the Object a way of lying Secondly Gods Act about it Remove from me Sin is removed either in a way of Justification when the guilt of
conforms it self to the body and only adheres to objects visible corporeal As water being put into a square vessel hath a square form into a round vessel hath a round form so the soul being infused into the body is led by it and accommodates all its faculties and operations to the welfare of the body And thence comes our ignorance averseness of s●…ul from holiness unruliness of appetite and inclination to sensual things In short without grace a mans mind is carried headlong after worldly vanities As water runs where it finds a passage so the soul of man being destitute of the Image of God finds a passage towards temporal things and so runs out that way 2. As man is thus corrupted and prone to worldly objects by natural inclination so by invelerate custom As soon as we are born we follow our sensual appetite and the first years of mans life are meerly governed by sense and the pleasures thereof are born and bred up with us and deeply ingraven in our natures and by constant living in the world conversing with corporeal objects the taint increaseth upon us and so we are more deeply dyed and setled in a worldly frame and we live in the pursuit of honour gain and pleasure according as the particular temper of our bodies and course of our interest do determine us Ier. 13. 23. Can the Ethiopian change his skin or the Leopard his spots then may ye also do good that are accustomed to do evil Custom is as another nature and hardly left We find by experience the more we are accustomed to any course of life the more we delight in it and are weaned from it with a very great difficulty Every act disposeth the soul to the habit and after the habit or custom is produced then every new deliberate act adds a stiffness of bent or sway unto the faculty into which the custom is seated and the longer this evil custom is continued the more easily are we carried away with temptations that suit it and more hardly sway'd to the contrary Now this stiffness of will in a carnal course is that which the Scripture calls hardness of heart and a heart of stone for a man is ensnared by these customs and of all customs covetousness or worldliness is the most dangerous Why because this is a sin of more credit and less infamy in the world And this will multiply its acts in the soul most and works uncessantly Having hearts exercised with covetous practices 2 Pet. 2. 14. Well then these lusts being born and bred up with us from our infancy they plead prescription Religion that comes afterward and finds us biass'd and prepossest with other inclinations which by reason of long use is not easily broken and shaken off as upon trial when ever we are call'd upon or begin to apply our selves to the ways of life we shall be easily sensible of this stiffness of heart and obstinacy that bends us another way Thirdly The heart being thus deeply engaged to temporal things or things base and earthly it cannot be set upon that which is spiritual and heavenly for David propounds these things here as inconsistent To thy testimonies Lord and not to covetousness If the heart be addicted to worldly things it is necessarily averse from God and his testimonies for the habitual bent of the heart to any one sin is inconsistent with grace or a through obedience to Gods will That which the heart is inclined to hath the throne Now when we enquire after grace Have I grace or no Have I the work of God upon my heart The question is not what there is of God in the heart but whether that of God hath the throne Something of God is in the heart of the wickedest man that is and something of sin in the best heart that is therefore which way in the sway the bent the habitual and prevailing inclination of the soul what hath the dominion Sin hath not the dominion for ye are not under the Law but under Grace Rom. 6. 14. What hath the prevalency of the heart Though the Conscience takes part with God as it may strongly in a wicked man yet which way is the bent of our souls And as all sin in its reign is inconsistent with grace so much more worldly affections Mat. 6. 24. No man can serve two masters c. It is as inconsistent as for a man to look two ways at once And the Chaldee on this very Text Incline my heart to thy testimonies read it and not unto mammon You cannot be inclined to God and manimon 1 Joh. 2. 15. If any man love the world the love of the Father is not in him The world draws men from the love of God and from his service And labour after temporal things deadens and hindreth us from looking after things which are eternal and we lose the relish of things to come and things spiritual the more the love of worldly things doth increase upon us The School-men say of worldliness it is that which most of all draws us off from God as our last end and chief good and make us cleave to the Creature therefore it is called Adultery and Idolatry Adultery Jam. 4. 4. as it draws away our love delight and complacency from God and Idolatry Col. 3. 5. as it diverts our trust and placeth it in Wealth and sublunary things The Glutton or Sensualist's love is withdrawn from God and therefore his belly is said to be his God Phil. 3. 19. Interpretatively that 's a man's God which is the last end of his actions and upon which all his thoughts affections and endeavours run most But now covetousness is not only a spiritual fornication and adultery which draws off our affections from God but Idolatry Considering our relation in the Covenant it is spiritual adultery and above this 't is idolatry because men think they can never be happy well nor have any comfortable being unless they have a great portion of these outward things Fourthly This frame of heart cannot be altered until we be changed by God's grace why for there is no principle remaining in us that can alter this frame or make us so far unsatisfied with our present state as to look after other things that can break the force of our natural and customary inclinations There are three things which lye against the change of the heart towards God 1. There 's Nature which wholly carrieth us to please the flesh and inordinately to seek the good of the body Now nature cannot rise higher than it self and determine it self to things above its sphear and compass As the Philosopher saith of water it cannot be forced to rise higher than its fountain Our actions cannot exceed their principle which is self-love But besides this 2. There 's Custom added to Nature which makes it more stiff and obstinate so that if it may be supposed that Conscience is sensible of our mistake and ill choice and some weighty
a greater portion of worldly things and that sets you upon carking and if you have not this you cannot see how you and yours can be provided for Cure this how by Gods Promises 1 Pet. 5. 7. Cast all your care upon him for he careth for you Cannot you trust God upon security of a Promise Cannot you go on in well doing when the Lord hath said I will never leave thee nor forsake thee Cure it by observing the usual course of Gods Providence God provides for the young Ravens he clothes the Lillies It is Christs argument will he be more kind to a Raven than a child Will he take more care of a flower than of a Son one that is in Covenant with him Cure it by holy maxims and considerations Remember all dependeth upon Gods blessing Luk. 12. 15. Take heed and beware of covetousness How should we do so For a mans life consisteth not in the abundance of the things which he possesseth Alas all is in Gods hand both being and well-being life and estate and all things else God can soon blast abundance and can relieve us in the deepest wants He can give you a sufficiency in your deep poverty 2 Cor. 8. 2. If you should go on carking and caring and feathering your nests God may take you off or set your nests on fire A little serves the turn to bring us to Heaven And when our desires are moderate God will not fail Prov. 16. 8. Better is a little with righteousness than great revenues without right 2. For discontent with your portion that you may not always be craving more meditate upon the baseness and vanity of worldly things They do but deceive us with a vain shew they cannot give us any true joy of heart or peace of Conscience or security against future evil they cannot give you health of body nor add one cubit to your stature nor one day to your lives now should we disquiet our selves for a vain shew shall there be such toil in getting such fear of losing when they are of no more use to us in the hour of death When you need strength and comfort most all these things will leave you shiftless helpless if they continue with you so long Nay reason thus the more estate the more danger the greater charge lyeth upon you Larger gates do but open to larger cares There is more duty more danger more snares more temptations When you have more you will be more difficultly saved It is a truth pronounced by the Lord of Truth That it is a hard matter for a rich man to enter into the Kingdom of Heaven It will be more hard to keep the flesh in order to guide our spirits aright in the ways of God If you must needs be coveting labouring and carking you are called to better things Ioh. 6. 27. Labour not for the meat which perisheth but for the meat which endureth unto everlasting life Covet the best gifts 1 Cor. 12. 31. Be as passionate for grace as others are for the world If once you were acquainted with these better things it would be so with you you would never leave the fair and fresh pastures of grace for the barren heath of the world If you did once tast the sweet of Heavenly things then let dogs scramble for bones and scraps you have hidden Manna to feed upon the sense of Gods love to look after hopes of everlasting glory wherewith to solace your souls If once you did tast of these everlasting riches you would do so 1 Tim. 6. 10 11. There are many that through the love of mony have erred from the faith and pierced themselves through with many sorrows But thou O man of God flee these things and follow after righteousness godliness faith love patience meekness Let the men of the world whose portion and happiness lyeth here scramble for these things but you that profess your selves Children of God follow after all the gifts and graces of the Spirit let that be your holy covetousness to increase in these things SERMON XLII PSAL. CXIX Vers. 37. Turn thou away mine Eyes from beholding Vanity and quicken thou me in thy way DAvid still continueth his requests to God for Grace and intituleth him to the whole Work He had prayed before that God would incline his Heart Now that he would Turn away his Eyes from beholding worldly Vanities In this Prayer there are two Branches the one concerneth Mortification the other Vivification 1. Turn away Then Quicken c. The first request is for the removing the Impediments of obedience the other for Addition of new degrees of Grace These two are fitly joyned for they have a natural Influence upon one another unless we turn away our Eyes from Vanity we shall soon contract a deadness of Heart Nothing causeth it so much as an inordinate liberty in carnal Vanities when our affections are alive to other things they are dead to God therefore the less we let loose our Hearts to these things the more lively and Chearful in the work of Obedience On the other side the more the Vigour of Grace is renewed and the Habits of it quickned into actual exercise the more is Sin mortified and Subdued Sin dieth and our Senses are restored to their proper use These two requests are fitly joyned Let us consider them asunder 1. Turn away mine Eyes from beholding Vanity There observe 1. The Object Vanity 2. The Faculty mine Eyes 3. The Act of Grace desired The removing of this Faculty from this Object 1. The Object Vanity Thereby is meant carnal and worldly Things worldly Pleasures worldly Honour worldly Profits all these are called Vanity because they have no solid happiness in them and do so easily fade and Perish Thus 't is said Prov. 31. 30. Favour is deceitful and Beauty is Vain The same is true of any other Transporting Object Vanity of Vanities all is Vanity Eccle. 1. 2. and Iob. 15. 31. Let not him that is deceived trust in Vanity for Vanity shall be his recompence Rom. 8. 20. The Creature is made Vanity By vanity there is understood the vain things of the World which do so often deceive us as to the happiness they promise 2. The Faculty is mentioned the Eye t is Imployed and commanded by the Heart But this inkindleth new Flames there and as it is set a work by it so it sets the Heart a work again It is the Instrument of increasing Sin in us 3. The act Turn away Our evil delight is too apt to fix it and become a Snare to us till God cureth both Heart and Sense by Grace He prayeth not from beholding it altogether but from beholding as a Snare Doct. It concerneth those that would walk with God to have their Eyes turned away from worldly things I shall give you the meaning in these Propositions 1. He that would be quickned carried out with Life and Vigour in the ways of God must first be Mortified dye unto Sin The
of the Priests at Ierusalem that when Faustus Cornelius and Furius and Fabius broke into the City with their Troops and rushed into the Temple ready to kill them yet they went on with the Rites of the Temple as if there had been no such thing And strange is that other instance of the Spartan Youth that held the Censer to Alexander while he Offered Sacrifice a coal lighting upon his arm he suffered it to burn there rather than by any crying out of his would disturb that Worship these Instances are a shame to Christians that we do no more fix our hearts when we are in the Service of God Use 2. The Second Use is to press us to this piece of Mortification even to turn away your eyes from beholding Vanity To help you in it you must 1. Take Iobs course Iob 31. 1. I made a Covenant with my eyes Iob and his eyes were in Covenant there was a Covenant between heart and eyes eyes be you Faithful to my Soul that there be nothing that may stir up Carnal and Impure thoughts that there be no unclean objects that may fire my heart Oh the fool-hardiness of this age Some will smile at this kind of Discipline to be so strict and precise Why is Sin grown less dangerous or is Mans nature more wise and strong or are we better fortified against Temptations are our hearts in a better posture than the Servants of God of old Surely no and therefore set a watch upon your eyes that sin break not in upon your heart 2. Gonsider the Vanity of the things we dote upon and take in by the eyes So saith David Turn away mine eyes from heholding Vanity they are poor vain perishing things yet they suit too well with our Senses And consider what Solomon saith of these things Wilt thou set thine heart upon that which is not We inflame our hearts with these things and Lust putteth a lovely face upon the object that suteth with it but alass what are they whatever they seem to the beholder 't is but Vanity Psal. 39. 6. Man flattereth himself in a vain shew All the Splendor and Beauty of it is but Vain 1 Cor. 7. 31. The Fashion of this World passeth away 't is but an empty thing flying bubbles though the World is of some use to us in our Pilgrimage yet poor things they are as that for them we should neglect our duty to God and grow less lively therein or have our hearts withdrawn from God 'T is the Temptation that maketh them seem comely When these alluring Vanities are before our eyes Lust puts a gloss upon them but consider what they are indeed and in comparison of those things from which they tempt you namely Heaven and Eternal Blessedness 3. Consider the Cursed issue of these things of letting loose thy eye and heart to vanity When you please the eye you wound the heart and make you unfit for your great Account Eccles. 11. 9. Rejoyce O young man in thy Youth and let thy heart chear thee in the days of thy Youth and walk in the ways of thy heart and in the sight of thine eyes yet know that for all these things God will bring thee to Iudgement Go drench and steep thy Soul in carnal delights When thy wandring and wanton eye doth influence the Lusts of thy heart and they begin to boyl up when thou hast not denied thy self any thing thy heart can wish and thine eye look upon put in a little cool water to stop the boyling and raging of thy Lust remember that God will bring thee to Judgment though thou dost now smother thy Convictions and drown thy Reason in these sensual delights yet God will call thee to an account for all thy time and parts and strength and wit and talents intrusted with thee 4. Pray as David doth here Turn away mine eyes he calleth upon God for the assistance of his Grace and Psal. 141. 3. Set a watch upon the door of my lips He that bendeth and inclineth the heart by his Grace to look after better things must also bridle the senses 't is Lust sets the eye awork and causeth a deep complacency and delight in carnal things and that is cured only by Gods grace Mark 10. 27. therefore go and beg this mercy of him 5. Constant watchfulness alas we cannot open our eyes but we meet with a temptation a door open for Satan to enter by and therefore we had need diligently and constantly to watch especially when Lusts are like to be stirred Lots Wife might not look towards Sodom but Abraham was bidden to look upon it It was no temptation to him but it was to her she had her heart hankering after it Gen. 19. 17. compared with verse 28. When we are in danger of a Temptation we should keep a severe and strict hand upon the Senses that they may not dwell unnecessarily upon alluring objects 6. We have renounced the Pomps and Vanities of the World in Baptism and shall our eyes and hearts run after them this is implyed in our Baptism for Baptism is called the answer of a good Conscience towards God 1 Pet. 3. 21. 'T is an answer to Gods demand in the Covenant God puts us to the Question whether we will renounce the World and the Vanities and Pleasures thereof Now when we have renounced these things shall our eyes and our hearts run after them Shall we turn the Senses against God who gave us the use of them Yea against our Souls To shame you that have been no more Faithful to your Baptismal Vow consider what Heathens have done Basil relateth of Alexander a young man in the heat of Blood and in the flower of his age refused to see Darius's Daughter 'T is a shame saith he for him that hath conquered so many men to be conquered by a Woman 'T is said of some Heathen that he put out his eyes that they might not be a snare to him We have Grace that we may not use such Violence to our Nature but certainly the eyes of our Lusts should be put out you see our Baptism engageth us If Heathens those that never came under such an ingagement to God if they by the light of Nature saw that the guarding of the Senses was an help to the Soul it concerns us much more to renounce the Pomps and Vanities of the World Secondly We come to the Request quicken thou me in thy way By quickning is meant the actuation of the Spiritual Life he beggeth Grace to perform his Duty to God with chearfulness liveliness and zeal Doct. Quickning is very necessary for them that would walk in Gods ways I shall not consider it here as a Prayer to God or as 't is a blessing to be asked of God but as 't is necessary to obedience and here I shall inquire 1. What Quickning is 2. Shew the necessity of it 1. What Quickning is 't is put for two things 1. 'T is put for Regeneration
it in their conversation God will not take it planted in our hearts if we do not obey him in those things that are contrary to our Interests and natural Affections When God tryed Abraham that was to offer his Isaac Gen. 22. Now I know that thou fearest me since thou hast not withheld thine only Son c. why was Abraham unknown to God before that time As Peter told Christ Lord thou knowest all things cannot God see the inward Springs and Motions of our Souls and what Affections are there Could not God tell what was in Abraham But now I acknowledge For God will not acknowledge it in this sense untill we express it They are the true Servants of God that have his fear planted in their hearts and express it upon all occasions SERMON XLIV PSALM CXIX Verse 39. Turn away my Reproach which I fear For thy Iudgments are Good IN these Words you have 1. A Request Take away my Reproach 2. A Reason to inforce it For thy Iudgments are good First for the Request Turn away roul from upon me so it signifies He was cloathed with Reproach now roul from me my Reproach some think he means Gods condemnatory Sentence which would turn to his Reproach or some remarkable rebuke from God because of his Sin Rather I think the Calumnies of his Enemies and he calls it my Reproach either as deserved by himself or personally lighted upon him the Reproach which was like to be his Lot and Portion in the World through the Malice of his Enemies The Reproach which I fear that is which I have cause to expect and am sensible of the sad Consequences of it Secondly For the Reason by which this is enforced For thy Iudgments are good There are different Opinions about the Formality of this Argument Some take the Reason thus Let me not suffer Reproach for adhering to thy word thy word which is so good But David doth not speak here of suffering Reproach for Righteousness sake but such Reproach as was likely to befall him because of his own Infirmities and Failings Reproaches for Righteousness sake are to be rejoyced in but he saith this I fear and therefore I suppose this doth not hit the reason neither the other Sence Why should I be looked upon as an evil doer as long as I keep thy Law and observe thy Statutes Others judge badly of me but I appeal to thy good Judgment Others by Judgments understand Gods dealings Thou dost not deal with men according to their desert Thy dispensations are kind and gracious Rather thus By Judgments are meant the Ways Statutes and Ordinances of God called Judgements because all our words works thoughts are to be Judged according to the sentence of the Word now these it is pity they should suffer in my Reproach and Ignominy This is that I fear more than any thing else that can happen to me I think the reason will better run thus Lord there is in thy Law Word Covenant many Promises to encourage thy People and therefore Rules to provide for the due honour and credit of thy People Take it so I shall with respect to the necessities of the People of God insist a little upon the former clause and observe this point That Reproaches are an usual but yet a great and grievous affliction to the Children of God They are usual for David saith my Reproach Even this holy man could not escape it the Censures of his Enemies and they are grievous for he saith which I so fear First That they are usual David often complains of it in this Psalm and mentions it as one great evil to God Verse 22. Remove from me Reproach and Contempt for I have kept thy Testimonies And again Verse 42. So shall I have wherewith to answer him that reproacheth me for I trust in thy Word And V. 69. The Proud have forged a lye against me God may let loose a barking Shimei upon a holy David and therefore doth he so often complain of Reproaches so else where Psal. 31. 13. For I have heard the Slander of many Sundry sorts of Persons made him their Butt upon which they spent and let fly the Arrows of Censure and Reproach Psal. 25. 15. The Abjects gathered themselves together against me they did tear me and ceased not Tear me meaning in his name that was rent and torn in pieces with their Reproaches the Abjects gathered themselves c. Base dust will many times be flying in the faces of the Children of God and Ieremiah tells us I have heard the defaming of many And Iob and other Servants of God yea our Lord himself was reviled he endured the contradiction of Sinners many a bittter Reproach even of the highest crimes against either Table there were objected to him Blasphemy and Sedition the highest Crime against the First and the highest Crime against the Second Table the Son of God that was so meek innocent just and did so much good in every place yet he met with odious aspersions therefore we cannot say that they are faulty because they are aspersed since this hath been the portion of the most eminent Godly persons and after that we are told Psal. 64. 3 4. They whet their tongue like a Sword and bend their Bo●…s to shoot their Arrows even bitter words that they may shoot in secret at the Perfect Perfection meets with Envy and Envy vents it self by detraction and when men cannot reach the heighth of others by a holy imitation then by odious imputations they seek to make them as vile low and base as themselves Thus it is an usual affliction Secondly It is a grievous affliction for the man of God that was after Gods own heart he saith the Reproach which I so feared It is called Persecution Gal. 4. 29. compared with Gen. 21 9. and you shall see it was mocking and reproach The scourge of the tongue is one of the basest persecutions that the Children of God are tryed withal and they are called cruel mockings Heb. 11. 36. There is as much cruelty and as deep a wound many times made by the Tongue of Reproach as by the Fist of Wickedness To confirm it by Reasons Reproach must needs be grievous because 't is against Nature and against Grace 1. 'T is against Nature contempt is a heavy thing to bear and as honour is more grateful to some Persons so Reproach is more grievous than many ordinary Crosses Many would lose their goods Cheerfully yet are grieved with the loss of their Names According to the Constitution and frame of mens Spirits so they are affected some with Shame more than with Fear There seems to be Excellency and Gallantry in sufferings which are honourable and many can bear that but the best Spirits are deeply affected with Shame and disgraceful Punishment is more dreadful than a painful one Jesus Christ that had all the innocent affections of humane Nature and upon occasion shewed them he took notice of Mockings and Reproaches
it is exercised about noble Objects the Favour of God Reconciliation with him and the Hope of Eternal Life all these as belonging to us and it is excited by an higher Cause the Spirit of God and lastly it giveth us a sense of what we had but a guess before We know the grace of God in truth Col. 1. 6. we know it so as to taste of it 3. The fundamental or bottom Cause of this Delight is exprest which I have loved There is a precedent Love of the Object before there can be any Delight in it Love is the Complacency and Propension of the Soul toward that which is good absolutely considered abstracting both from Presence and Absence Desire regardeth the Absence and Futurition of a Good Delight the Presence and Fruition of it It is impossible any thing can be delighted in but it must be first loved and desired None can truly delight in Obedience but such as desire it By nature we were otherwise affected counted his Commands burdensom because contrary to the desires of the Flesh Rom. 8. 7. The carnal mind is enmity against God for it is not subject to the law of God neither indeed can it be But when the Heart is renewed by Grace then we have another Love and another Bias upon our Affections 1 Iohn 5. 3. This is love to keep his commandments and his commandments are not grievous To others they are against the bent and the hair and too tedious but Love maketh way for Delight II. Reasons why a gracious Heart doth love and delight in the Commandments of God 1. The Matter of these Commandments sheweth how much they deserve our love and delight The Matter respects either Law or Gospel 1. That which is strictly called the Moral Law is the Decalogue a fit Rule for a Wise God to give or a Rational Creature to receive a just and due Admeasurement of our Duty to God and Man The World cannot be without it To God that we should love him serve him depend upon him delight in him that we may be at length happy in his Love The Law is holy just and good not burdensom to the Reasonable Nature but perfective Surely to know God to love him and fear him and trust and repose our Souls on him and to worship him at the time in the way and manner appointed is a delightful thing and should be more delightful to us than our necessary and appointed Food To Man Justice Charity Micah 6. 8. He hath shewed thee O man what is good and what doth the Lord require of thee but to do justly and to love mercy Hos. 12. 6. Keep mercy and judgment Now all kind of Justice should not be grievous either Political Justice between the Magistrates and People How should we live else This maintaineth the Order of the World Private Justice between Man and Man Mat. 7. 12. Therefore all things whatsoever ye would that men should do to you do ye even so to them Family-Justice between Husband and Wife Parents and Children Masters and Servants how else can a Man have any tolerable degree of safety and comfort 1 Pet. 3. 7. Likewise ye husbands dwell with them according to knowledge Then for Mercy there is not a pleasanter Work in the World than to do good it is God-like A Man is as an earthly God to comfort and supply others Acts 20. 35. It is a more blessed thing to give than to receive And Blessedness is not tedious the Work rewards it self The satisfaction is so great of doing good and being helpful to others that certainly this is not tedious 2. The Gospel it offereth such a sutable Remedy to Mankind that the Duties of it should be as pleasant and welcom to us as the Counsel of a Friend for our recovery out of a great Misery into which we had plunged our selves In the Law God acteth more as a Commander and Governour in the Gospel as a Friend and Counsellor Surely to those that have any feeling of their Sins or fears of the Wrath of God what can be more welcom than the way of a Pardon and Reconciliation with God whom his Word and Providence and the fears of a guilty Conscience represent as an Enemy to us Surely this should be more pleasant than all the Lust Sport and Honours and Pleasures of the World Here is the Foundation laid of Everlasting Joy a sufficient answer to the Terrors of the Law and the Accusations of a guilty Conscience which is the greatest Misery can befal Mankind In short That the Matter of God's Commands deserves our Delight and Esteem is evident 1. Because those that are unwilling to submit to them count them good and acceptable Laws When their particular Practice and sinful Customs have made them incompetent Judges of what is fittest for themselves in their health and strength yet their Conscience judgeth it a more excellent and honourable thing in others if they can deny the Pleasures of the Flesh and overcome the Temptations of the World and deny themselves the Comforts of the present Life out of the hopes of that which is to come Such are accounted a more excellent and better sort of Men Prov. 12. 26. The righteous is more excellent than his neighbour He hath more of God and of a Man than others as he hath a freer use of Reason and a greater command of his own Lusts and Passions There is a Reverence of such darted into the Consciences of wicked Men Mark 6. 20. Herod feared Iohn knowing that he was a just and holy man and observed him 2. Because of the Sentiments which Men have of a holy sober godly Life when they come to die and the disallowance of a dissolute carnal Life Iob 27. 8. What is the hope of the hypocrite though he hath gained when God taketh away his soul Psal. 37. 37. Mark the perfect man and behold the upright for the end of that man is peace When Men are entring upon the Confines of Eternity they are wiser the fumes of Lust are then blown over their Joys or Fears are then Testimonies to God's Law 1 Cor. 15. 56. The sting of death is sin and the strength of sin is the law It is not from the Fancy or Melancholy of the dying Person nor his Distemper that his Fears are awakened but his Reason If it did onely proceed from his Distemper Men would be rather troubled for leaving Worldly Comforts than for Sin No it is the apprehension of God's Justice by reason of Sin who will proceed according to his Law which the guilty Person hath so often and so much violated and broken They are not the ravings of a Fever nor the fruits of natural Weakness and Credulity no these Troubles are justified by the Law of God or the highest Reason 3. By supposing the contrary of all which God hath commanded concerning the embracing of Vertue shunning of Vice If God should free us from these Laws leave us to our own choice
and great Concord among the Professors of the Gospel they were rare and unfrequent Before Mens Senses were benummed with the frequent Experiences of God's Power and the customary Use of Religious Duties and the Notions of God were fresh and active upon their Hearts they were not heard of but when the Profession of Christianity grew into a form and National Interest and men fell into it by the chance of their Birth rather then their own choice and rational Conviction the Church was pestered with this kind of Cattel But especially are they rife among us when men are grown weary of the Name of Christ and the ancient Severity and Strictness of Religion is much lost and the memory of those Miracles and wonderfull Effects by which our Religion was once Confirmed almost worn out or else questioned and impugned by subtle Wits and Men of a prostituted Conscience Therefore now are many Mockers and Atheistical Spirits every where who ask where is the promise of his coming question all and think that there are none but a few credulous Fools that depend upon the Hopes of the Gospel 2. Their Obedience to his Precepts And so whosoever will be true to his Religion and live according to his Baptismal Vow is set up for a sign of contradiction to be spoken against It is supposed the mocking by the Heathen of the Iews is intended in these words Lam. 4. 15. Depart ye it is unclean depart depart touch not when they fled away and wandred The Words are somewhat obscure but some judicious Interpreters understand them of the detestation of the Iewish Religion their Circumcision their Sabbaths c. But however that be certainly the Children of God are often mocked for their strict Obedience as well as their Faith 3. Observe the Degree greatly The Word noteth continually the Septuagint translate it by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Vulgar Latine by usque valde and usque longe They derided him with all possible bitterness and ●…y by day they had their Scoffs for him so that it was both a grievous and a perpetual Temptation 2. His Constancy and Perseverance in the Duty that is set forth 1. By the Rule in the Word thy Law If we have God's Law to justify our Practice it is no matter who condemneth it we have God's Warrant to set against man's Censure It must be God's Way wherein we seek to be approved otherwise our Reproach is justly deserved if it be for Obstinacy in our own Fancies 2. The firmness and strictness of his Adherence I have not declined The Word signifies either to turn aside or to turn back Sometimes it is put for turning aside to the right hand or to the left as Deuter. 17. 11. Thou shalt not decline from the way which they shall shew to thee to the right hand or to the left Sometimes for turning back Iob 23. 11. My feet have held his steps his way have I kept and not declined neither have I gone back from the commandment of his lips As it is taken for turning aside it noteth errour and wandring as it is taken for turning back it noteth Apostasie and Defection Now David meaneth that he had neither declined in whole nor in part understand it of his Faith all their Scoffs and bitter Sarcasmes did not discourage him or tempt him to forsake his hold or let goe the Comfort of the Promise Understand it of his Obedience he still closely cleaved to God's way A Declining implyeth an Inclining first Well then David did not onely keep from open Apostasie but from declining or turning aside in the least to any hand Testimonies we have of his Integrity in Scripture 1 Kings 14. 8. David kept my commandment and followed me with all his heart to doe onely that which was right in my sight His great Blemish is mentioned elsewhere 1 Kings 15. 5. David did that which was right in the eyes of the Lord and turned not aside from any thing which he commanded him all the days of his life save onely in the matter of Uriah the Hittite However the Derision of his Enemies made him not to warpe Doct. That a Christian should not suffer himself to be flouted out of his Religion either in whole or in part Or No Scorn and Contempt cast upon us should draw us from our Obedience to God In the managing of it observe 1. That an Holy Life is apt to be made a Scorn by Carnal men 2. That this as it is an usual so a grievous Temptation 3. That yet this should not move us either to open Defection or partial declining I. That an Holy Life is apt to be made a Scorn by Carnal Men and they that abstaine from Iniquity are as Owles among their Neighbours the Wonder and the Reproach of all that are about them To evidence this I shall give you an account of some of the Scorns which are cast upon Religion with the Reasons of them 1. Some of the Scorns are these 1. Seriousness in Religion is counted Mopishness and Melancholy When men will not slant it and rant it and please the Flesh as others doe but take time for Meditation and Prayer and Praise then they are Mopish 2. Self-denial when upon Hopes of the World to come they grow dead to present Interests and can hazard them for God and can forsake all for a naked Christ the World thinketh this humorous Folly To doe all things by the Prescript of the Word and live upon the Hopes of an unseen World is by them that would accommodate themselves to present Interests counted Madness 3. Zeale in a good Cause is in it self a good thing Gal. 4. 18. It is good to be zealously affected always in a good thing but the World is wont to call Good Evil. As Astronomers call the glorious Stars by horrid Names the Serpent the Dragon's Taile the greater or lesser Bear the Dog-star so the World is grosly guilty of Misnaming God will not be served in a cold and careless fashion See Rom. 12. 11. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fervent in spirit serving the Lord. But this will not suit with that lazy and dull pace which is called Temper and Moderation in the World 4. Holy Singularity as Noah was an Upright Man in a corrupt Age Gen. 6. 9. Noah walked with God And we are bidden not to conform our selves to this world Rom. 12. 2. Now because they would have none to upbraid them in their sins and to part ways and the number of the Godly is fewer they count it a Factious Singularity in them that walk contrary to the course of the World and the stream of common Examples 5. Fervour of Devotion and earnest conversing with God in humble Prayers is call'd Imposture and Enthusiasm The World who are wholly sunk in Flesh and Matter are little acquainted with these Elevations and Inlargements of the Spirit think all to be Imposture and Enthusiasm And though praying by the Spirit be a great Priviledge Iude 20.
sheweth that we are all Strangers here for if here we do not live for ever and yet we have Souls that will live for ever there must be some other place to which we are tending The Body is dust in its Composition and Resolution Eccles. 12. 7. Then shall the Body return to the Earth as it was Nature may teach us so much but Faith that assureth us of the Resurrection of the Dead doth more bind this Consideration upon us We are Mortal and all things about us are liable to their Mortality and therefore here we must be still passing to another Place 2. Here we have no Rest Micah 2. 10. Arise and depart hence for this is not your Rest that is hereafter Heb. 4. 9. There remaineth therefore a Rest for the People of God Our Home we count the place of our Repose Now there is no Rest and Content in this World which is a place of Vanity Misery and Discomfort Yea to the Children of God there are stronger Motives than Crosses to drive them from the World daily Temptations and our often falling by them Crosses are grievous to all but Sin is more grievous to the Godly and nothing makes them more weary of the World then the constant indwelling and frequent outbreaking of Corruption and Sin Rom. 7. 24. Oh miserable Man that I am who shall deliver me from the body of this death The Apostle was exercised with many Crosses but this doth make him complain in the bitterness of his Soul not of his Misery but of his Corruption which he found continually rebelling against God Many complain of their Crosses that complain not of Sin to loath the World for Crosses alone is neither the Mark nor Work of Grace a Beast can forsake the place where he findeth neither Meat nor Rest but because we are sinning here whilst others are glorifying God this is the trouble of the Saints 3. They believe and look for a better Estate after this life is over 2 Cor. 5. 1. We know that if our earthly House of this Tabernacle were dissolved we have a building of God an House not made with hands eternal in the Heavens No Man can be a right Sojourner on Earth who doth not look for an abode in Heaven for that which doth most effectually draw off the heart of Man from this World is the Expectation of a far better State in the World to come 2 Cor. 4. 18. While we look not at the things which are seen but at the things which are not seen for the things which are seen are temporal but the things which are not seen are eternal Heathens could call the World an Inn but they had onely glimmering Conceptions of another World A Christian that believeth it and looketh for it on God's Assurance he is onely the joyfull Stranger and the Pilgrim Common Sense will teach us the necessity of leaving this World but Faith can onely assure us of another they are Believers and Expectants of Heaven 4. They do not onely look for it but seek after it We reade of both looking and seeking Heb. 11. 14. They declare plainly that they seek a Country Heb. 13. 14. Here we have no continuing City but we seek one to come Seeking implyeth Diligence in the Use of Means all the Life of a Christian is nothing but the seeking after another Country every day advancing a step nearer to Heaven and therefore their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 their Conversation is said to be in Heaven Phil. 3. 20. This is their great business upon Earth to doe all to eternal Ends all other Works and Labours are but upon the bie and subordinate to this Their main care is to obtain this blessed Condition therefore they use Word Sacraments that they may grow in Grace Faith Repentance New obedience Every degree in Grace is another step towards Heaven Psal. 84. 4. Blessed is the man whose strength is in thee in whose hearts are the ways of them vers 6. They goe from strength to strength every one of them in Zion appeareth before God Some of the Sains are in Patria others in Via still bending homeward 5. Because they are so the Children of God are dealt with as Strangers Difference of scope and drift will procure alienation of Affection 1 Pet. 4. 4. Wherein they think it strange that you run not with them to the same excess of Riot speaking evil of you And Iohn 15. 19. If ye were of the world the world would love its own but because ye are not of the world but I have chosen you out of the world therefore the world hateth you Other cannot be expected but that the Servants of the Lord should be ill-rewarded and treated here not onely out of the Worlds Ignorance they know not our birth breeding expectations hope 1 Iohn 3. 2. Beloved now are we the Sons of God but it doth not yet appear what we shall be but we know that when he shall appear we shall be like him for we shall see him as he is but Enmity as the different Carriage of the one puts a disgrace upon the course of Life which the other do affect the one fixeth their home here the other looketh for it elsewhere and the World is sensible this is an Excellency and therefore those that are at the bottom of the Hill envy and malign those that are a-top Use. Are we thus minded There are two sorts of men in the World the one is of the Devil and the other is of God for all men seek their Rest and Happiness on Earth or Rest in Heaven Naturally Men were all of the first Number for the Rational Soul without Grace accommodateth it self to the Interests of the Body but when sublimated and transformed by Grace the World cannot satisfy it and it can find nothing there which may finally quiet its desires for the new Life infused hath other aimes and tendencies As Saints are new born from Heaven so for Heaven and therefore the new Nature cannot satisfy it self in the injoyment of the Creature with the absence of God The Apostle saith while at home in the Body we are absent from the Lord 2 Cor. 5. 6 7. In this Life we are not capable of the glorious Presence of God it is not consistent with our Mortality And our being present with him in the Spirit is but a Tast that doth provoke rather then cloy the Appetite Rom. 8. 23. Our selves also which have the first-fruits of the Spirit even we our selves groan within our selves waiting for the Adoption to wit the Redemption of our Body These Tasts do but make us long for more they are sent down from Heaven to draw us up to that place of our Rest where this Glory and Blessedness is in fullness Now which sort are you of the City of God or under the Dominion of Sathan and the power of worldly Lusts 1. There are some that take up here and never consider whence they are nor whither they are
a-going as Christ saith I know whence I am and whither I goe They look altogether for the present and if they be well for the present they are contented Alas in what a miserable Case are these Men though they mind it not they seem to me to be like Men that are going to Execution A Man that is going to the Gallows for the present is well hath a great Guard to attend him an innumerable multitude of People to follow him you would think that hardly could a Man be such a Sot and Fool as to think all this should be done for his Honour and not for his Punishment and should onely consider how he is accompanied but not whither he goeth Many such Fools there are in the World that onely consider how they are attended and provided for but never consider whither they are a-going Oh Wretch whither goest thou may we say to one that should pride himself in the resort of Company to his Execution dost thou not see thou art led to Punishment and after an hour or two these will leave thee hanging and perishing infamously as the just reward of thine Offences So many that shine now in the pomp and splendour of worldly Accommodations and are merry and jocund as if all would doe well alas poor Creatures whither are they a-going Iob 21. 12 13. They take the Timbrel and the Harp and rejoyce at the sound of the Organ they spend their days in wealth and in a moment go down into Hell Ye still live and are going to Punishment but mind it not but your Wealth and Honours and Servants and Friends will all leave you to your own doom and yet you are merry and jocund as if your Journey would never end or not so dismally as if you were hastening to a Kingdom and not to an eternal Prison one moment puts an end to all their Joy for ever 2. There are others that wean their hearts from this World and make it their Care that they may carry themselves becoming their celestial Extraction as their Souls were from above by Creation so all their Hopes and Desires and Endeavours are to attain to that Region of Spirits much more as being renewed by Grace do they aim at the Perfection and Accomplishment of that Life which is begun in them and so being made partakers of the Divine nature do they escape the Corruption that is in the world through Lust 2 Pet. 1 4. they are convinced of a better Estate than the World yieldeth and believe it and look for it and long for it and labour for it Now of which number are you or if you cannot decide that because more goeth to the assuring of our Interest than the World usually taketh to be necessary for that end and purpose of which number do you mean to be will you be at home in the World or seek the happiness of the World to come that is in other terms do you mean to be Pagans under a Christian name or Christians indeed you have but the name if you be not Strangers and Pilgrims here upon Earth All Christ's Disciples indeed are called to sit loose from the World and to have an high and deep sense of the World to come as to the other World they are no mere Strangers and Foreigners but fellow Citizens with the Saints and of the Houshold of God Eph. 2. 19. They are of a Family part of which is in Heaven and part on Earth Eph. 3. 15. of whom the whole Family in Heaven and Earth are named some of their Brethren have got the start of them and are with God before them but the rest are hastening after as fast as they can They are sufficiently convinced that the Earth is no place for them they are strangers there and the contentments thereof uncertain and perishing but they are no strangers to Heaven and the blessed Society of the Saints whose privileges they have a full right to now and hope one day to have as full a Possession and an intimate Communion with their Father and all their Brethren Now that you may resolve upon this and carry your selves sutably I shall 1. Give you some Motives 2. A Direction or two 1. Motives 1. He that taketh up his Rest in this World or any earthly thing is but an higher kind of Beast and unworthy of an immortal Soul The Beasts have an instinct that guideth them to seek things convenient for that Life which they have and therefore a man doth not follow the Light of Reason that seeketh to quiet his mind with what things the World affordeth and onely relisheth the contentments of the carnal and bodily Life that is satisfied with his Portion here Psalm 17. 14. All their business and bustle is to have their wills and pleasure for a little while as if they had neither hopes nor fears of any greater things hereafter Psalm 49. 20. Man that is in honour and void of understanding is as the beast that perisheth because he meerly inclineth to present satisfactions for Reason is as a middle thing between the Life of Faith and the Life of Sense it were no great matter whether you were Men or Dogs or Swine if Reason be onely given you for the present World and present satisfactions all your Sense of the World to come and Conscience is as good as nothing 2. None are of so noble and Divine a Spirit as those that seek the heavenly Kingdom Amongst men the Ambitious who aspire to Crowns and Kingdoms that aim at perpetual Fame by their Vertues and rare Exploits are judged Persons of greater Gallantry than Covetous muck-worms and bruitish Epicures yet their highest thoughts and designs are very base in comparison of Christians who by patient continuance in well-doing seek for Life Glory and Immortality Rom. 2. 7. and whom nothing less will content than the injoyment of God himself Their desires are after him Psalm 73. 25. whom have I in Heaven but thee and who is there on Earth I desire besides thee So that as Man being immortal should provide for some place of perpetual abode so herein the Christian excelleth other men that nothing less will satisfie him than what God hath promised his People hereafter The Threshold will not content him nothing but the Throne 3. What a sorry Immortality mock Eternity do they choose instead of the true one when they neglect the pursuit of this heavenly Country If they look no higher than this World all that they can rationally imagine is perpetuating Themselves and their Names and Posterity by successive Generations Psalm 49. 11. Their inward thought is that their Houses shall continue for ever and their Dwelling-places to all Generations they call their Lands by their own names This is styled Nodosa Aeternitas when they live in their Children after death but alas to how few mens share can this fall and those who may in likelihood expect it who are Lords of fair Rents fair Lands Houses and Heritages how
runs low by being parted and disperst in several Channels but God that is Infinite cannot be lessened 4. He is an Eternal Good and so the most durable Portion He is my Portion for ever Psal. 73. 22. The good things of this life are but like Flowers they be for a Season and then they wither they are perishing and of a short continuance we carry away nothing of it in our hands when we goe to the Grave when we leave all other Portions and Inheritances then we begin to take possession of this Portion yea at that time when Men see the vanity of making other things their Portion a Child of God sees the happiness of his Portion at death Death blows away all vain deceits then carnal Men begin to perceive their error when their Portion comes to be taken away from them then what indignation have they upon themselves for the folly of their choice how the World hath deceived them A Godly Man hath the beginning here then he comes to have a consummate and most perfect enjoyment of it Death cannot separate us from our Portion Indeed it separates us from all things that with-hold us from it but it 's a means to perfect our union with God and make way for our full fruition of him Well then if this be that which is required in a Portion that it be Good there is none Good but God he is Originally Independently Chiefly Infinitely and Eternally Good and therefore there is reason why we should choose God for our Portion Secondly That a thing be our Portion it is necessary that we have an Interest in it and Title to it not only that it be good but that we may claim it as ours for that 's that which sweetneth every thing to us that it is ours to use Now God is not onely Good but he is also ours he makes over Himself to us in Covenant Gen. 17. Therefore we may lay claim to Him as a man to his Patrimony or Inheritance to which he is born and say Lord thou art mine Zech. 13. 9. I will say it is my People and they shall say the Lord is my God As God owns an Interest in them so they own Him He is my God I will be thy God so saith God in the Covenant it is more then if God had said I will be thy Friend thy Father these are notions of a limited Sence But I will be thy God that hath an Infinite importance a greater weight and efficacy in that expression I will be thy God that is I will do thee good in a way of an Infinite and Eternal Power And that 's the reason why Christ proves the Resurrection from thence Matth. 22. 32. I am the God of Abraham c. for to be a God to any is to be a Benefactor to them and a Benefactor becoming an Infinite and Eternal Power Therefore certainly it assures us of greater things then this life affords something becoming a God to give If God be Abrahams God a God to his whole Person his Soul is not Abraham then it strongly proves the Resurrection of the Body then Abraham both Body and Soul must have a happiness greater then this Life can afford Hence that expression of the Apostle Heb. 11. 16. God is not ashamed to be called their God These words seem as if they did express Gods condescension as if He would be called the God of a few Patriarchs No the meaning of the Words is this in regard of the slenderness of their present condition God could not with honour what be a God to Iacob and suffer him to have such a wandering Life He might be ashamed to be their God if he had not better things to bestow upon Him But He hath provided for them a City a heavenly Kingdom Not onely given them that which they enjoyed in houses their Flocks and Herds which were multipl●…ed these were slender things to take up the whole significancy of that Expression I will be their God But now God is not ashamed to be called their God that is God can with honour and without shame take that Title upon Him for he hath everlasting happiness in the World to come to bestow upon them Thus what ever God is hath or can do it is thine Look as the Apostle saith Heb. 6. That when God had no greater thing to swear by he swore by Himself so we may say when he had no greater thing to bestow upon his People he gives and ●…estows Himself as fully and wholly made over himself to every believing Soul so that they have as full a plea and sure right to God as any man hath to his Patrimony to which he was born I will act answerably becoming an Infinite Power and Goodness for thy Good This is the significancy of that ample and glorious Expression which God useth in the Covenant of Grace As when a Covenant was made between the King of Israel and the King of Iudah the tenour of it was my Horses are as thy Horses my Strength as thy Strength 1 Kings 22. So whatever is God's is ours for our benefit and what is ours is God's for his Service Mark God not onely saith I will be yours but be a God that is I will act like a God In pardon of sin Hos. 11. 9. I will not return to destroy Ephraim for I am God and not man He will not pardon as a man but as a God Mans patience is soon spent and soon tired what seven times a day forgive my Brother But he will pardon as a God And so when he Sanctifies he will Sanctifie as a God 2 Pet. 1. 4. By his Divine Power he hath given unto us all things that pertain unto Life and Godliness And so in Defence and Maintenance which is part of the Covenant I will Feed Maintain Protect thee as a God that is not as one that is to be limited in the course of second Causes when he please he can give us Water not only out of the Fountain but out of the Rock when there is nothing visible to supply and maintain you then I will be a God then He will glorify us like a God like an Infinite and Eternal Power For as God is an Infinite God so he gives us a far more exceeding weight of Glory and as an Eternal God he gives us an Eternal weight of Glory 2 Cor. 4. 17. The Glory he bestows upon us suits with the Infiniteness and Eternity of his Essence As it is said of Arauna●… that was of the Royal extraction of the Iebusites He gave like a King to a King worthy of his Blood and descent he had a generous mind so God will give like a God therefore he not onely saith I will be thine but be thy God You think it much when you view a large compass and can look abroad and say all this is mine but one that hath chose God for his Portion hath much more to say God is mine
turn to the Lord. You have more knowledge more experience you get more comfort you would be more profitable to others more usefull to God if ever God touch your hearts and once you come to experiment what an excellent thing it is to live in Communion with God you will be sorry you began no sooner Paul complains that he was as a man born out of due time 1 Cor. 15. 8. and so had not the advantage of seeing Christ in the Flesh untill he shewed himself to him from Heaven in the Vision upon his Conversion You lose many a comfortable sight of Christ because you were so late acquainted with him And it is said of Andronicus and Iunias Rom. 16. 7. they were in Christ before me Certainly he that is first in Christ and sooner call'd to Grace hath the advantage of us An early acquaintance with God gives us advantages both in point of Enjoyment and Service In point of Enjoyment peace comfort joy in the Holy-ghost A man would not want these things they are so valuable in themselves the want of them is an incomparable loss to us Certainly they would have been much better then all those Flesh-pleasing Vanities that you dote upon and keep you from Christ. A man that hath for a long while wasted his time and strength in driving on a pedling trade when he is acquainted with a more gainfull course Oh saith he that I had known this sooner so none have any taste of the wayes of God but they will wish so Oh that I had sooner renounced my carnal delights and betaken my self to the service of God Then advantages in point of Service What honour might we have brought to God what good done to others if we had begun sooner Oh saith one had I but the time to spend again which I trifled away in the Devils service What use might I have made of the vigour and freshness of my Youth and q●…ckness of my Parts for God and the large track of time which I spent in Sin and Vanity Every day in a carnall state was a loss of opportunity of Service the glorifying of God the great end for which you were made Reason 3. There is danger and hazard in delay and putting off a business of such concernment as Conversion to God and his wayes is upon such uncertainties For the understanding of the force of this Reason 1. Let us determine that this is a business of the greatest concernment and that will shew us the folly of our delayes for certainly the greatest work should first be thought of Now if you will believe the Word of God that will tell you the Salvation of your Souls should be your main care Matth. 6. 33. Seek first the Kingdome of God and his righteousness c. Psal. 27. 4. One thing have I desired of the Lord and that will I seek after c. Whatever is neglected this is a business that must be looked after And Luke 10. 42. One thing is needfull Let us argue from these places Certainly that which is necessary should be preferred before that which is superfluous A man would take care to get Meat rather than Sauce and would prefer his Business before his Recreation That which is Eternal before that which is Temporal It is not necessary we should be great and rich in the World Within a little while it will not be a pin to chuse what part we have acted here But it is necessary we should be gracious holy and acquainted-with God in Christ that 's our business Again that which is Eternal should be preferred before that which is Temporal You count him a fool that is very exact and carefull to get his room in an Inn furnished when he neglects his House where his constant abode is In the other World there 's our long Home and if all our care should be here for the present Estate where we tarry but for a night but a little while and neglect Eternity our everlasting happiness that were a very great folly That which is Spiritual which concerns our Soul should be preferred before that which is Carnal and Corporal and onely concerns the Body for the better part should have the most care As for instance a man that is wounded and cut through his cloaths and skin and all will sooner look to have the wound closed up in his Body than the rent made up in his Garment So the Distempers of the inward Man should be first cured before we look after the outward Man which is as it were the Garment and Cloathing for these outward things shall be added Here 's your Work to please God not satisfie the ●…lesh This is that which concerns us not onely for a while but for ever and concerns the inward Man This is the grand business of concernment therefore we should delay other things rather than delay the Work of our Salvation yet usually all other things have a quick dispatch and this onely is neglected and lies by the Wall 2. That this business of concernment is left upon great hazard and uncertainty 1. Life is uncertain He that does seriously consider the uncertain shortness of the present Life how can he delay a moment lest he be call'd home to God before his great errand for which he was sent into the World be done Many of you when you seriously think of it would not for a thousand worlds die the next day so unprovided unfurnished with promises evidences experiences and yet it may be so that that may be the time when they shall be called home to God This life is but a vapour Iames 4. 4. a little warm breath turned in and out by the Nostrils that is soon choaked and stopt And thou knowest not what will be on the morrow Prov. 27. 1. As that devout Person said when he was invited to a Meal the next day to come to morrow to a Feast I have not had a morrow for these many years We have no security for the next day but our own word and he that hath nothing but his own word to secure him is very weakly secured Life is short and we make it shorter by continuing in Sin It is uncertain if there were a fixed time and period wherein we knew our continuance should be in the World then we should be tempted to wallow freely in our carnal Lusts and entertain Sin a little longer and put off repentance till hereafter But God hath left Life upon great uncertainties the hand of Providence may soon crop you off long before you come to your Flower None are nearer to destruction than those that promise themselves a longer time in Sin Luke 12. 19. Thou hast Goods laid up for many years but thou Fool this night thy Soul shall be required of thee God loves to disappoint secure careless Souls that promise themselves a longer Life without his leave he will break in upon a suddain A poor careless Sinner would ●…ain keep his Soul a
little longer No it is demanded now he doth not give it up but it is taken away from him Reason with thy self as Isaac Gen. 27. 2. I allude to it Behold now I am old I know not the day of my death make me savoury meats that my Soul may bless thee before I die So reason I have spent so much time in the world and I know not the day of my dissolution when God will call me home Oh let me go to God that he may bless me before I die 2. You know not whether the means of Gra●… shall be continued to you or no and such affectionate offers and melting entreaties Acts 13. 46. Since you put away the word of God from you you judge your selves unworthy of everlasting Life God will not always wait upon a lingring Sinner but will take the denial and be gone They judge themselves unworthy of that Grace they pass Sentence upon themselves 2 Cor. 6. 1 2. Now is the accepted time now is the day of Salvation we beseech you receive not the Grace of God in vain God hath his seasons and when these are past will not treat with us in such a mild affectionate manner The means of Grace are removed from a people by strange Providences when they have slighted the offers of Grace Luke 13. 7. These three years I came seeking fruit on this Fig-tree and finde none cut it down why cumbreth it the ground In that Text there 's first God 's righteous expectation These three years I came seeking Fruit. He was the dresser of the Vineyard they were the three years of his Ministry as by a serious harmonizing the Evangeli●…ts will appear that he was just now entring upon his last half year they had his Ministry among them 2 Their unthankfull frustration I find none nothing answerable to what means they enjoyed 3 God's terrible denunciation Cut it down why cumbreth it the ground God will root up a people or remove the means and therefore will ye leave it upon such uncertainties 3. There 's an uncertainty of Grace 2 Tim. 2. 25. If God peradventure will give them repentance to the acknowledging of the truth It is a meer hazard it may be he will it may be not It is uncertain whether the Spirit of God will ever put in your Heart a thought of turning to God again Gen. 6. 3. My Spirit shall not always strive with man The Spirit of God strives for a long while follows a Sinner casts in many an anxious Thought troubles and shakes him out of his carnal quiet and security but this will not always last Ah Christians there are certain Seasons if we had the skill to take hold of them there is an appointed fixed time when God is nearer to us then at another time and we shall never have our Hearts at such an advantage Isa. 55. 6. Call upon him while he is near and while he may be found There are certain Seasons which are times of finding Some are of opinion that there are certain Seasons when a Man may be rich if he will when God offereth him an opportunity for an Estate in the World if he knew the time and how to take hold of it Certainly to those that live under the means of Grace there 's a time of finding when God is nearer to them than at another time and therefore will you slip that and leave it upon such great uncertainties 4. There 's an uncertainty in this we are not certain of having the use of our natural Faculties we may lose our Understandings by a stupid Disease and God may bring a Judgment upon those that dally with him in the work of Repentance It is an usual Judgment upon them that while they were alive did forget God when they come to die to forget themselves and have not the free use of their Reason but invaded with some stupid Disease die in their Sins and so pass into another World Reason 4. The Fourth Reason is the great mischief of delay 1. The longer we delay the greater indisposition is there upon us to embrace the Ways of God Oh Christians when we press you to Holy things to turn your selves to the Lord you begin to make some Essay and then are discouraged and find it is hard and tedious to Flesh and Bloud and so you give over Now mark if it be hard to day it will be harder the next so the third onward for it is hardness of heart that makes the Work of God hard Now the more we provoke God the more we resist his Call the more hard the Heart is the impulsions of his Grace are not so strong as before and the Heart every day is more hardned As a Path weareth the harder by frequent treading so the Heart is more hard the Mind more blind the Will more obstinate the Affections more engaged and rooted in a course of Sin Ier. 13. 23. Can the Ethiopian change his Skin or the Leopard his Spots then may ye also doe good that are accustomed to doe evil O to break off an inveterate Custom is hard A Plant newly set is more easily taken up than a Plant that hath taken root When we grow old and rotten in the way of Sin it will be much harder for us than now it is the longer we lie soaking here in Sin the farther off from God 2. We provide the more discomfort for our selves Always the proportion of our Sorrow is according to the measure of our Sins Whether it be godly Sorrow the sorrow of Repentance or desparing Sorrow those Horrours which are imprest upon us as a Punishment of our Rebellion and Impenitency in both sences you still increase your Sorrow the more you sin For the sorrow of Repentance it is clear that Sorrow must carry proportion with our Offences She that had much forgiven wept much Certainly it will cost you the more Tears a greater humbling before God the longer you continue in a course of Sin against him And for the sorrow of Punishment you are treasuring up wrath against the day of wrath Rom. 2. 5. your Burthen will be greater and more increased upon you It is too heavy for your Shoulders already to bear why should we adde to the weight of it Either our sorrow of Repentance will be greater or the anxious sense of our Punishment for in both God observes and God requires a proportion 3. Consider how unfit we shall be for God's service if we delay a little longer when our strength is spent and vigour of youth exhausted when our Ears grow deaf Eyes dim Understanding dull Affections spent Memory lost is this a time to begin with God and to look after the business of our Souls Certainly he that made all that was our Creatour deserves the flowr of our strength Eccles. 12. 1. when the tackling is spoil'd and Ship rotten is that a time to put to Sea or rather when the Ship is new built Shall the Devil feast upon
preference of Christ above other things Phil. 3. 7 8 9. I count all things loss for the excellency of the Knowledg of Christ c. Christ is apprehended as more necessary for the Soul it cometh to him under an apprehension of a deep want and with a broken-hearted sense of misery we are undone without him We are not so though we want or lose the World God can repair us here will at last save us without these things Luke 10. 42. but one thing is needfull Christ is esteemed more excellent the rarest Comforts of the World are but base things to his Grace but dung and dross in comparison not onely uncertain but vain and empty as to any real good Iob 27. 8. For what is the hope of the Hypocrite though he has gained when God taketh away his Soul Christ is more beneficial to a poor Sinner in him alone true Happiness is to be found therefore we must suffer any thing rather than offend our Saviour Rom. 8. 39. No Creature is able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Iesus our Lord. 2. No true Love Religion without self-denial in one kind or another is a Christianity of our own making not of Christs We call out the easie safe part of Religion and then we call this love to God and love to Christ. No the true Christian love is to love God above all Now one branch of loving God above all is to part with things near and dear to us when God calleth us so to doe We must be contented to be crucified to the World with our Lord and Master Matth. 10. 37. He that loveth Father or Mother or Son or Daughter more than me is not worthy of me An underling love Christ will not like or accept 2. On this condition we possess and enjoy the good things of this World namely to part with them when God calleth us thereunto We are not absolute Owners but Tenants at will Haggai 2. 8. The silver is mine and the gold is mine saith the Lord of Hosts The absolute disposal of the Riches and Wealth of the World belongeth unto God who hath all these things with the power to dispose of them as he pleaseth Therefore he is to be eyed acknowledged and submitted unto in the ordering of our Lot and Portion Hos. 2. 9. I will return and take away my Corn in the time thereof my Wine in the season thereof and will recover my Wool and my Flax given to cover her nakedness God still retaineth the dominion of the Creatures in his own hand and we have but the Stewardship and Dispensation of them he will give and he will take away at his own pleasure They are deposited in our hands as a trust for which we are accountable therefore if God demand there should be an Act of voluntary submission and subjection on our part If we enjoy them as our own by an original right exclusive to God we are Usurpers but not just Possessors we have indeed a subordinate right to prevent the incroachment of our fellow Creatures but that is but such a right as a man hath in a Trust or a servant to his working Tools Surely God may dispose of his own as he will if we give it for God's Glory or lay out our wealth in his Service God's right must be owned 1 Chron. 29. 14. For all things come of thee and of thine own have we given thee If God take it away by immediate Providence it was his own Iob 1. 21. The Lord gave and the Lord hath taken away if by men if we lose any thing for God it is his own that we lose 3. Our gain in Christ is more than our loss in the World both here and hereafter So his promise Mark 10. 29 30. Verily I say unto you there is no man that hath left house or brethren or sisters or father or mother or wife or children or lands for my sake and the gospels but he shall receive an hundred fold now in this time houses and brethren and sisters and mothers and children and lands with persecutions and in the world to come eternal Life Our Religion promiseth us Spiritual recompence in this World and Eternal in the other but exempteth us not from Persecutions He that hath an heart to quit any thing for Christ shall have it abundantly recompensed in the world with a reward much greater in value and worth than that which he hath forsaken sometimes more and better in the same kind as Iob's estate was doubled and Valentinian that left the place of a Tribune or Captain of Souldiers for his conscience and got that of an Emperour If not this he giveth them a greater portion of his Spirit and the Graces thereof more peace of Conscience and joy in the Holy Ghost and this is an hundred fold better than all that we lose Now this we have with persecution Iohn 16. 33. These things have I spoken unto you that in me you might have peace in the World you shall have Tribulation But then for the World to come then all shall be abundantly made up to us in Eternal Life when we shall reign with Christ in his heavenly Kingdom This is all in all to a Christian that which is lost for God is not lost Surely in Heaven we shall have far better things than we lose here 4. Because the wicked never overcome but when they foil us of our Innocency Zeal and Courage The victory of a Christian doth not consist in not suffering or not fighting but in keeping that which we fight for a Christian is more than a Conqueror Rom. 8. 37. Scias hominem Christo deditum mori posse vinci non posse He may lose goods lose life yet still he overcomes whilst he is faithfull to his Duty Those that were as Sheep appointed to the slaughter and killed all the day long they were oppressed and kept under yet were more than Conquerors The way to conquer is by Patience and Zeal though we be trodden down and ruined not by getting the best of opposite factions but by keeping a good Conscience and Patience and Contentedness in sufferings If God be honoured if the Kingdom of Christ be advanced by our sufferings we are victorious Rev. 12. 11. They overcame by the blood of the Lamb and by the word of their Testimony and they loved not their lives unto the death That is an overcoming indeed to dye in the quarrel and be the more glorious Conquerors As long as a Christian keepeth the faith whatever he loses in the contest he has the best of it 2 Tim. 4. 7. I have fought a good fight I have finished my course I have kept the faith c. Our victory is not to be measured by our Prosperity and Adversity but our faithful adherence to God though the Devil and his Instruments get their will over our bodies and bodily interests yet if he get not his will over our Souls we conquer and
withall Christ is infinitely to be valued as more precious than all the Wealth in the World 3. A Well-grounded Resolution in the Truth 1 Thess. 5. 2. Prove all things hold fast that which is good When we take up the Ways of God upon fashion or half Conviction or probable Reasons and do not resolve upon sound evidence we are in danger to be shaken when it is a costly thing to be a sincere Christian but when Conscience is soundly informed then all things give way to Conscience If the Wicked spoile us of our goods they should not spoile us of our best Treasure which is a good Conscience Whatever power they have by Gods permission over our outward Estates they have no power over our Consciences that is the best Friend or the worst Enemy No Bird singeth so sweetly as the Bird in our Bosoms here Heaven or Hell is begun and the solaces of the outward Life are nothing to this 4. A Contempt of the World our earthly Affections must be mortified and that upon a twofold account 1. One that they may freely part with them For if they be over-valued our Affliction will be according to the degree of our Affection Mark 10. 26. He was sad at that saying and went away grieved for he had great possessions We cannot so freely resign them to God and leave all for Treasure in Heaven 2. That we may more intirely depend upon God Heb. 13. 5. Let your Conversation be without covetousness and be content with such things as ye have for he hath said I will never leave you nor forsake you Till the Heart be purged from carnal Affections the Promises of God have little force and respect with us A little satisfieth a contented and a weaned mind and he can the better cast himself upon God's Providence 5. A sound Belief of God's Providence this hath a great influence upon a free parting with our Estates for our Conscience sake Heb. 11. 8. By Faith Abraham left his Country Kindred Possessions and blindfold trusted himself with God's Providence This Principle was made use of when the King was troubled about the hundred Talents 2 Chron. 25. 9. saith the man of God the Lord is able to give thee much more than this God's Providence is enough for a gracious Heart Indeed it is hard to maintain such a Faith in Providence when exposed to great injuries we are apt to doubt of it Godliness seemeth to be neglected by him Psal. 73. 13. Verily I have cleansed my heart in vain and washed my hands in innocency doth God know but a Christian must believe in hope against hope 2. Remedies by way of Consideration 1. They cannot rob us of spiritual and eternal Riches of the Fear of God Love of God Treasures in Heaven are out of their reach Matth. 6. 19 20. Lay not up for your selves Treasures upon Earth where moth and rust doth corrupt and where Thieves break through and steal But lay up for your selves Treasures in Heaven where neither moth nor rust doth corrupt and where Thieves do not break through or steal Your joy shall no man take from you John 16. 22. heavenly Things can never be taken from their owners 2. If they cannot take away our God and Christ we shall be certainly happy All things in the World depend on God and Christ The favour of the Lord maketh rich Prov. 10. 22. without his Blessing nothing prospereth All Judgment is in the hands of Christ Iohn 5. 22. He hath the Government of the World or Dominion over all things which may conduce to help or hinder his Peoples Happiness Things are not left to their arbitrement or uncertain contingency but are under the government of a supream Providence in the hand of him that loves us 3. Tryed Friendship is most valuable Iames 1. 12. Blessed is the man that endureth Temptation for when he is tried he shall receive the Crown of life which the Lord hath promised to them that love him 4. If we suffer with Christ we shall also be glorified with him Rom. 8. 17. If so be that we suffer with him that we may be also glorified together SERMON LXX PSAL. CXIX 62. At midnight I will rise to give thanks unto Thee because of thy righteous Iudgments IN these words observe three things 1. David's holy Imployment or the Duty promised giving thanks to God 2. His Earnestness and Fervency implied in the time mentioned at midnight I will rise rather interrupt his sleep and rest than God should want his praise 3. The Cause or Matter of his Thanksgiving because of thy righteous Iudgments Whereby he meaneth the Dispensations of his Providence in delivering the Godly and punishing the Wicked according to his Word Where observe 1. The Term by which these Dispensations are expressed Iudgments 2. The Adjunct righteous Iudgments 1. For the Term Iudgments they are so called partly because they are God's judicial acts belonging to his Government of the World partly because they are dispensed according to his Word the sentences of which are also called Judgments There are the Judgments of his Mouth and of his Hand Psalm 119. 13. With my lips have I declared all the Iudgments of thy mouth 2. The Adjunct righteous or the Judgments of thy Righteousness so called because they are all holy just and full of equity 1 Doct. One special duty wherein the people of God should be much exercised is Thanks giving 2 Doct. That God's Providence rightly considered we shall in the worst times find much more cause to give thanks than to complain 3 Doct. That an heart deeply affected with God's Providence will take all occasions to praise God and give thanks to his name both in season and out of season 1 Doct. One special duty wherein the people of God should be much exercised is Thanksgiving This Duty is often pressed upon us Heb. 13. 15. Let us offer the sacrifice of praise continually which is the fruit of our lips giving thanks unto his Name There are two words there used Praise and Thanksgiving generally taken they are the same strictly taken Thanksgiving differeth from Praise They agree that we use our voice in Thanksgiving as we doe also in Praise for they are both said to be the fruit of our lips what is in the Prophet Hosea chap. 14. 2. calves of our lips is in the Septuagint the fruit of our lips and they both agree that they are a sacrifice offered to our supream Benefactour or that they belong to the Thanks-offerings of the Gospel but they differ that Thanksgiving belongeth to Benefits bestowed on our selves or others but in relation to us Praise to any Excellency whatsoever Thanksgiving may be in Word or Deed Praise in Words onely Well then Thanksgiving is a sensible acknowledgment of Favours received or an expression of our sense of them by Word and Work to the praise of the bestower The Object of it is the Works of God as beneficial unto us or to those who
it to whom he pleaseth We were at first endowed by him with a reasonable Soul and Faculty of Understanding Iohn 1. 4. In him was life and this life was the light of man All Life is of God especially that Life which is Light The Reasonable Soul and the natural Faculty of Understanding cometh from him and if it be disordered as it is by Sin it must be by him restored and rectified it is all God's gift Now Man is fallen from that Light of Life wherein he was created his Maker must be his Mender he must goe to the Father of Lights to have his Light cleared Iames 1. 17. and his Understanding freed from those mistakes and errours wherewith it was obscured All Knowledge is from God much more saving Grace or a sound Knowledge of the Mysteries of the Gospel Many Scriptures speak to this Iob 32. 8. There is a Spirit in man and the Inspiration of the Almighty giveth understanding Though the Dyal be right set yet it sheweth not the time of the day except the Sun shineth so the Spirit of man will grope and fumble in the clearest Cases without a divine Irradiation God inlighteneth the Mind directeth the Judgment giveth Understanding what to doe or say So he challengeth it as his Prerogative Iob 38. 26. Who hath put wisdome into the inward parts or given understanding unto the heart The exercise of the outward Senses is from God who gives the seeing Eye the hearing Ear much more the right exercise of the internal Faculties an understanding Heart is much more from the Lord Prov. 2. 6. The Lord giveth wisedom out of his mouth cometh knowledge and understanding Dan. 2. 21. He giveth wisdome to the wise and knowledge to them that know understanding Certainly all true Wisdome is from above Iames 3. 17. The wisdome that is from above is first pure c. he distinguisheth there between the Wisdome that is not from above and that which is from above Man hath so much Wisdome yet left as to cater for the Body and the concernments of the bodily Life called thine own wisdome Prov. 23. 4. therefore he saith verse 15. This Wisdome descendeth not from above but is earthly sensual devilish but for Wisdome that concerneth the other World and our everlasting concernments that is of God that 's from above The Wisdome that is exercised in pure peaceable fruitfull self-denying Obedience all that have any of this Wisdome should acknowledg God and all that would have it should depend upon him and run to the Fountain where enough is to be had Man's Wit is but borrowed and he holdeth it of God Vitia etiam sine magistro discuntur he needeth no Teacher in what is evil and carnal but in what is holy and spiritual he needeth it 2. It is a singular favour to them on whom God bestoweth this heavenly wisdom and so puts a difference between them and others It is a greater sign of friendship and respect to them than if God had given them all the world Mark 13. 11. To you it is given to know the mysteries of the Kingdom of God but to others it is not given This is no common benefit but a favour which God reserveth for his peculiar people so Iohn 15. 15. I have called you friends for all things which I have heard of my Father I have made known to you That is the highest argument of friendship not to give you wealth and honour and greatness but to give you an inlightened mind and a renewed heart God may give honour and greatness and a worldly estate in judgment as Beasts fatted for destruction may be put into large pastures but he doth not teach his Statutes in Judgment it is a favour though he useth a sharper discipline in teaching Psalm 44. 12. Blessed is the man whom thou chastenest and teachest him out of thy Law If God will teach his Child not onely by the Word but by the Rod and useth a sharp discipline to instruct in the lesson of Christianity it is a greater favour than if God did let him alone and suffer him to perish with the wicked in his wrath The prosperity of wicked men is so far from being a felicity to them that it is rather the greatest Judgment and to be punished and rebuked by God for all that we do amiss and thereby to be reduced to the se●…se and practice of our Duty is indeed the greatest favour and mercy of God and so the most valuable felicity and evidence of Gods tender care over us so Prov. 3. 31 32. Envy not the oppressor and choose none of his ways for the froward is an abomination to the Lord and his secret is with the righteous You are depressed and kept bare and low but your adversaries flourish and grow insolent you cannot therefore say God hateth you or God loveth them if the Lord hath given you the saving knowledge of himself and his Christ and onely given them worldly happiness it is a great token of his love to you and hatred to them that you need not envy them for you are dignifyed with the higher priviledge 3. Prayer is the appointed means to obtain it There are other means by which God conveyeth this heavenly wisdom as by study and search dig for wisdom as for silver and for understanding as hid treasures Prov. 2. 4. Dig in the mines of Knowledg Attend upon the word which is able to make us wise unto Salvation Mark 4. 24. Take heed what or how ye hear with what measure ye mete it shall be measured to you and unto you that hear shall more be given But all are sanctified by Prayer Prov. 2. 3. Cry for knowledge and lift up thy voice for understanding Bene orasse est bene studuisse saith Luther so to pray well is to hear aright God giveth understanding by the ministry of the Word but he will be sought unto and acknowledged in the gift otherwise we make an Idol of our own understanding Prov. 3. 5. Trust in the Lord with all thine heart and lean not upon thine own understanding in all thy wayes acknowledge him and he shall direct thy paths Let us not make a God of our own wisdom do not seek it in the means without Prayer to the Lord let not us study without Prayer nor you hear without Prayer nor go about any business in your general and particular callings without Prayer II. Prop. This benefit cannot be too often nor too sufficiently asked of God 1. Because of our want we never know so much but we may know more of God's mind and know it better and to better purpose To know things as we ought to know them is the great gift 1 Cor. 8. 2. If any man thinketh that he knoweth any thing he knoweth nothing yet as he ought to know that we may be more sanctified more prudent and orderly in governing our hearts and lives that we may know things seasonably when they concern us in any
that are comfortable though they have things sparingly though they have of the meanest yet they have that which is good for them So Psalm 84. 11. No good thing will he withhold He may keep us low and bare feed us Cibo extemporali as Lactantius but that is good for us If it were good for us to have larger revenues and incomes we should not want them The true and absolute ground of all submission is to think that which God sendeth is good be it prosperity or adversity the having or wanting Children or other comforts 2. The next measure is this that Good is to be determined by its respect to the chief Good or true Happiness Now what is our chief Happiness but the Injoyment of God Our Happiness doth not consist in outward comforts Riches Health Honour civil Liberty or comfortable Relations as Husband Wife Children but in our Relation to and Acceptance with God other things are but additional Appendages to our Happiness Matth. 6. 33. Affliction taketh nothing from our Essential solid Happiness rather helpeth us in the Enjoyment of it as it increaseth Grace and Holiness and so we injoy God more surely That is Good that sets us nearer to God and that is Evil which separateth us from him therefore Sin is Evil because it maketh an estrangement between us and God Isa. 59. 2. But Affliction is good because many times it maketh us the more earnestly to seek after him Hosea 5. 16. In their Afflictions they will seek me right early Therefore every Condition is Good or Evil as it sets farther off or draweth us nearer to God that is Good that tendeth to make us better more like unto God capable of Communion with him conduceth to our everlasting Happiness So It is good that a man ●…ear the Yoke from his Touth Lam. 3. 27. that he be trained up under the Cross in a constant obedience to God and subjection to him and so be fitted to entertain Communion with him In Afflictions conduce to this end they are good for then they help us to ●…joy the chief Good 3. That Good is not always the Good of the flesh or the Good o●… outward prosperity and therefore the Good of our condition is not to be determin●… by the interest or the Flesh but the welfare of our Souls If God should bestow upon us so much of the Good of the outward and animal life as we desire we could not be said to be in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●…tion if he should deny us Good Spiritual We should lose one half of the 〈◊〉 of the Co●…nt by doating upon and falling in love with the rest the flesh is import●… to be p●…sed but God will not serve our carnal turns We are more concerned as a Soul 〈◊〉 a Body Heb. 12. 10. He verily for our profit that we may be partakers of his holiness Certain it is God will chasten us for our Profit What do we call Profit the good things of this world the great Mammon which so many worship if we call it so God will not he meaneth to impart to us Spiritual and Divine Benefit which is a participation of his own Holiness And truly the People of God if they be in their right temper value themselves not by their outward Injoyments but their inward by their improvement of Grace not the injoyment of worldly Comforts 2 Cor. 4. 16. For this cause we faint not but though our outward m●…n perish our inward man is renewed day by day A discerning Christian puts more value upon Holiness wrought by Affliction than upon all his Comforts So that though Affliction be Evil in it self 't is good as sanctified 4. A particular Good must give way to a general Good and our personall benefit to the advancement of Christ's Kingdome The good of the Church must be preferred before our personal contentment Paul could want the Glory of Heaven for a while if his continuance in the Flesh were needfull for the Saints Phil. 7. 24. To abide in the Flesh is more needfull for you We must not so desire Good to our selves as to hinder the Good of others All Elements will act contrary to their particular for the conservation of the Universe That may be Good for the Glory of God which is not Good for our personal contentment and ease Now the Glory of God is our greatest Interest if it be for the Glory of God that I should be in pain bereft of my comforts my sanctified subjection to the will of God must say 't is Good Iohn 12. 27 28. there you have expressed the innocent inclination of Christ's humane Nature Father save me from this hour and the overrulling sense of his duty or the obligation of his office but for this cause came I to this hour We are often tossed and tumbled between inclination of Nature and conscience of Duty but in a gracious Heart the sense of our duty and the desire of glorifying God should prevail above the desire of our own Comfort Ease and Safety and Welfare Nature would be rid of trouble but grace submits all our interests to God's honour which should be dearer to us than any thing else 5. This Good is not to be determined by present feeling but by the Judgment of Faith Affliction for the present is not pleasant to natural sense nor for the present is the fruit evident to spiritual sense but 't is good because in the issue it turneth to good Rom. 8. 28. All things work together for good While God is striking we feel the grief and the Cross is tedious but when we see the end we acknowledge 't is good to be afflicted Heb. 12. 11. No affliction for the present seemeth joyous but grievous but afterwards it yieldeth the peaceable fruits of righteousness A good present is the cause of joy and an evil present is the cause of sorrow but there are two terms of abatement the sorrow is from the present sense and the conceit of the sufferer When we are but newly under the Affliction we feel the smart but do not presently find the benefit but within a while especially in the review 't is Good for me 't is matter of Faith under the Affliction 't is matter of sense after it Good Physick must have time to work that which is not good may be good though it be not good in its nature 't is good in its seasonable use and though for the present we see it not we shall see it Therefore Good is not to be determined by seeling but by Faith The Rod is a sore thing for the present but the bitter root will yield sweet fruit If we come to a person under the Cross and ask him what is it good to feel the lashes of God's correcting Hand to be kept poor and sickly exercised with Losses and Reproaches to part with Friends and Relations to lose a beloved Child sense will complain But this poor Creature after he hath been Exercised and Mortified and gotten
and Troubles but have much peace and quietness of spirit in believing Rom. 15. 13. Now the God of all hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing 3. As Peace exceedeth Consolation so doth Joy exceed Peace and begets a more notable sense of it self in the Soul In Peace all things are quiet so as we feel no anxious tossings of mind no gripes and fears of an accusing Conscience but in Joy true Joy more some lively motions of heart accompanied with a more lively pleasure and delight In Peace the Soul is in such a condition as the Body is when nothing paineth us but in Joy as when the corporeal Senses are mightily moved with such things as delight and please them as at a Feast the Soul is filled with perpetual suavities so great many times as cannot be told 1 Pet. 1. 8. Ioy unspeakable and full of glory Well then This is Comfort if you consider it with respect to the sense of God's Love or the hopes of glory such a lightning and easing of the heart as sheweth it self in alacrity in God's service and courage in Tribulations 1. These Comforts though not absolutely necessary to Salvation yet conduce much to the well-being of a Christian and therefore not to be despised 'T is as Oyl to the Wheels Iob. 15. 11. If neglected and not sought after with earnest diligence they are despised which cannot be without great sin 2. It follows after holiness as heat doth fire The Oyl of grace will breed the Oyl of gladness There are certain spiritual Pleasures which do attend a course of Obedience Holiness is our work Comfort our reward Holiness is God's due Comfort our profit and interest Acts 9. 31. Walked in the fear of God and comfort of the Holy Ghost Grace carrieth us out to honour God Love to him breedeth Comfort 'T is strange if it be not so there is some unusual impediment 3. Though our main Comfort be in Heaven yet whilst we are here in the world we have some foregoing Consolation as an earnest and pledge of more to ensue and as the solace of our Pilgrimage Psal. 117. 54. Here is not onely the offer but the sealing of Pardon and Peace to the Soul 4. Comfort is more needfull at some time than at others and God dispenseth it suitably to our tryals necessities and wants In great Afflictions and Temptations there is a larger allowance because they need greater Comforts 2 Cor. 1. 5. a drop of Honey is not enough to sweeten a Hogshead of Vinegar The Lord reserveth the Comforts of his Spirit for such a time The more humble and frequent in Prayer Grace is more exercised drawn forth into the view of Conscience 2. Comfort is to be asked of God for 't is his proper gift 'T is his Name The God of all Comfort 2 Cor. 1. 3. and 2 Cor. 7. 6. The God that comforteth those that are cast down 'T is well that our Comforts are in the hand of God we should have little of it if it were in the disposal of the Creature Consider 1. That natural Comforts are the gifts of God 1 Tim. 1. 17. He giveth us richly all things to enjoy and sets forth the bounds of our habitation where and how much we shall have and giveth and taketh these things at his pleasure raising up some from the Dunghill pulling down others from the Throne of Glory 1 Sam. 2. 7 8. That Prosperity may never be without a Curb nor Adversity without a Comfort God will acquaint the World with such Spectacles now and then All things are at his dispose 2. That moderate delight and contentment that we have in our earthly Blessings is his allowance The Creature without God is like a deaf Nut when we crack it we find nothing Eccl. 2. 24 25. and Eccl. 3. 13. 'T is the gift of God and 't is one of the chiefest earthly mercies that in this valley of Tears where we meet with so many causes of grief and sorrow we take comfort in any thing Without this a Crown of Gold will sit no easier than a Crown of Thorns upon the head of him that weareth it yea a Palace becomes a Prison and every place an Hell to us 'T is not abundance of Honour that makes a man happy but Comfort Luk. 12. 15. If God send leanness into the Soul or a spark of his wrath into the Conscience all is as the white of an Egg unsavory A secret Curse eateth out all the contentment of it He that liveth in a Cottage is happier than he that liveth in a Palace if he have Comfort there 3. For spiritual Comfort which ariseth either from the sense of his Love or the hope of Glory we cannot have one drop of it but from God His Spirit is called the Comforter All the World cannot give it if he doth not give it us He hath an immediate and soveraign power over the hearts of men if he frown nothing can support us When the Sun is gone all the Candles in the World cannot make it day We can procure our own sorrow quickly bu the onely can comfort us None but Divine comforts are Authentick 3. The means of conveying and procuring this comfort 1. The means of conveying it on Gods part is his word David pleadeth that where the remedy of his misery was discovered and offered We read often in this Psalm how David revived his comfort by the Word and Rom. 15. 4. Comfort of the Scriptures There is the matter of true spiritual comfort 1 Cor. 14. 31. That all may learn and all be comforted This follows from the former God is the God of comfort And we should not have the heart to come to him unless he had opened the way to him by his promise The World cannot give it to us Philosophy cannot The word of God can And this comfort is both strong and full for measure and matter 1. Matter There the Death of Christ is laid down as the foundation of comfort If we consider God as Holiness it self and we nothing but a mass of sin and corruption you will see there can be no reconciliation without satisfaction given Mercy must see Justice contented one Attribute must not destroy another Justice hath no loss 't is fully satisfied in Christ and that 's the ground of our comfort 2 Cor. 1. 3. There are the promises of deliverance protection support the liberties and privileges of Christians laid forth These are the breasts of comfort Isa. 66. Suck of these and be satisfied In short our great comforts are God's presence with us while we are in these Houses of Clay Our presence with God in his Palace of Glory 1 Thes. 4. 17 18. We shall ever be with the Lord. And comfort one another with these words Secondly The means on our part receiving the sweet effects of Gods mercy and word and that is Prayer We cannot have it without dealing with God in an humble manner Whatever God giveth he will
useful and refreshing when used in the day but if kept all night it perished and was useless It was useful in the Wilderness but ceaseth when they came to Canaan Uses are many First comfort to the Godly for their own particular He is an eternal God that ordereth and guideth all things that he may bring them to their eternal felicity and will in time admit them into it Psal. 48. 14. For this God is our God for ever and ever and he will be our guide even unto death After death he will be their God still death doth not put an end to this relation for God is Abraham's God when he is dead Matth. 2●… 32. God is the same still both in himself and to those that believe in him he will constantly guide them all the days of their life and after death receive us to the everlasting enjoyment of himself and revive our dust Oh what a blessedness is this to have an interest in such an eternal God! 2. As to the Community and Society to which they do belong God's Eternity is the Churches stability and so 't is urged in Scripture Mal. 3. 6. For I am the Lord I change not therefore ye sons of Iacob are not consumed Psal. 102. 27 28. Thou art the same and thy years shall have no end The children of thy servants shall continue So when the flourishing of the wicked is spoken of when they spring as grass Psal. 92. 8. But thou O Lord art most high for evermore If they be high God is higher and they are but upstarts to him their power is of a late rise and short continuance So Psal. 93. 2. Thy throne is established of old thou art from everlasting God's Throne is as eternal as his Being So Lam. 3. 17. Thou O Lord remainest for ever and thy throne from generation to generation Is the life of thy Enemies long God endureth for ever Is their power great 't is but dependent God had power before them and will have power when they shall be no more Second Use Is Terror to the wicked Heb. 10. 31. It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God They may out-live other Enemies but they cannot out-live God who abideth for ever to avenge his quarrel against them and judge you if his Controversie against them be not just since they are such impious Fools and Brutes as that they prefer the creature before the Creator and chuse temporal things rather than everlasting and prefer Earth before Heaven and the satisfaction of their bodily lusts before the saving of their souls Can you blame God of any injustice in dooming them to everlasting misery What part of the punishment would you have relaxed the Loss or the Pain the Loss is double of God's favor or their natural comforts Would you have God admit those to the sight and everlasting fruition of himself who never cared for him Or return again to their natural comforts that they may eternally run Riot with them or abuse them to an occasion of the flesh Or is it the pain Would you have God take off that when the sin and impenitent obstinacy doth still continue since they preferred a temporal good before that which is eternal and would sell their birthright for one morsel of meat Heb. 12. 16. How just is it for God to make them everlastingly to lie under the fruits and effects of their own evil choice Third Use. Is to press us to seek after the everlasting fruition of this blessed and ever glorious God because many live as if they had never heard of things eternal most live as if they did not believe any such thing the best do not improve those things as they ought therefore I shall a little insist upon a quickening exhortation to stir you up to seek an eternal happiness in God 1. As we are reasonable Creatures we were made for Eternity for God hath given us an immortal spirit and there is no proportion between an immortal soul and temporal things it cannot be content with any thing that shall have an end for then we may survive our happiness if we had souls that would perish it would be more excusable to look after things that perish What will you do when your Souls shall be turned out of doors when ye fail Luke 16. 9. To what Region will the poor shiftless harborless Soul betake it self when you dye All your thoughts that concern the present world perish and if you did perish too it were no such great matter But you shall live and what will you have to comfort your selves if you have not an interest in the Eternal God in whose hands will you be if you have slighted him while you were upon earth and the eternal happiness he offereth to us and could not find enough in God and his Eternal Salvation to take off your hearts from the pleasures and vanities of the world Can you expect that he will favour you and be kind to you 2. Eternity is made known to us Christians and clearly set before us in the doctrine of the Gospel 2 Tim. 1. 10. he hath brought life and immortality to light through the gospel Nature hath but guesses at it the Law but shadows but here 't is clearly certainly and fully revealed You know that you have an Eternal God to please and an infinite and eternal reward to expect The whole drift of our Religion is to call us off from Time to Eternity from this world to a better Christ came not to settle us here in a state of prosperity nor to make this world our Rest and Portion but to draw us up to God and Heaven 3. The same Religion sheweth that we are already involved in an Eternal misery and stand under a sentence binding us over to the Curse and Everlasting wrath of God Ioh. 3. 18. He that beleiveth not is condemned already and this is the Condemnation that light is come into the world and men love darkness more than light because their deeds are evil God hath offered Life and Immortality to them who have so miserably lost it and involved their souls in Eternal death Therefore if we know what it is to be liable to the wrath of an eternal God and to be interessed in the hopes of eternal glory we should awaken and be more serious in a business of such concernment 4. You will shortly be summoned to give an account Luke 16. 2. You have received so much from me such Riches Honours Parts Sufficiencies such Invitations to draw you home to me what will you answer Nay there is not only a little time between you and Judgment but a little time between you and Execution nothing but the slender thread of a frail life which is soon fretted asunder and will you can you sleep in sin so near Eternity and laugh and dance over the brink of Hell you cannot soon enough flee from wrath to come 5. Consider what poor deluded
Gospel thus stated hath more stability than the foundations of Heaven and Earth Therefore expect nothing to be altered for thy sake the Gospel constitution it was setled long before thou wert born and it is an unalterable decree which cannot be reversed All this is spoken to confute them that look upon the Gospel as true and to be believed till they meet with something which crosses them and then they hope it is not so In short God is true when he promises true when he threatens true when he commandeth Or thus If the Gospel Covenant be false thou hast no ground of hope if true it doometh licentious sinners to eternal destruction SERMON XCV PSAL. CXIX VER 90. Thy faithfulness is unto all generations thou hast established the earth and it abideth THese words contain a Truth which is 1. Asserted 2. Represented by a fit and lively Emblem Thou hast established the earth and it abideth He had before said Thy word is setled in the heavens now he speaketh of it as manifested in the earth Here the constancy of God's Promises was set forth by the duration and equal motion of the heavenly bodies now by the firmness and unmoveableness of the earth God's powerful Word and Providence reacheth to the whole world this lower part here upon earth as well as the upper part in Heaven DOCT. That in all Ages God ever shewed himself a true God and faithful in all his Promises 'T is here confirmed by Experience and represented by an Emblem 1. God's Faithfulness relateth to some Promise wherein he hath engaged himself to his People Heb. 11. 11. She judged him faithful who had promised It is his Mercy to make Promises but it is his Faithfulness and Truth to fulfill them His Truth is pawned with the Creature till he discharge it Micah 7. 20. 2. His Truth dependeth upon his unchangeable nature but 't is confirmed to us by experience His unchangeable nature Heb. 6. 18. If a promise can be made out to be of God we have no more reason to doubt of it than of the nature and being of God yet quoad nos 't is confirmed by experience Psal. 18. 30. The word of the Lord is a tryed word We are led by sensible things and what hath been done doth assure us of what shall be done or may be expected from God 3. That therefore God hath been ever tender of his Truth that the event may answer the promise and we might know that God that hath been faithful and kept touch with the world hitherto will not fail at last The Heathens ascribed a double perfection to their gods 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So the true God is known by his Mercy and his Fidelity he never failed to perform his part of the Covenant with any Psal. 138. 2. I will praise thy Name for thy loving kindness and thy truth for thou hast magnified thy word above all thy Name As he hath made us admirable and great promises of giving his Son and with him all things so he will certainly perform all to the utmost importance of them The matter of his word is mercy and loving kindness and in the performance thereof there is great truth and fidelity as he hath made great and excellent promises so he performeth them most punctually So that in fulfilling his Word God will be known above all that is named or famed or believed or apprehended and spoken of them here is his great glory and excellency 4. That the Experience of all Generations doth confirm God's Faithfulness in his promises for 't is said in the Text His faithfulness is unto all generations in the Hebrew it is from generation to generation The Point may be amplified by two Considerations First That some Promises have been received by one Generation and fulfilled in another Secondly That the same common promises have been fulfilled to the Faithful in all Ages First That some promises have been received by one Generation and fulfilled in another when the matter so required as for instance Israel's going out of Egypt Gen. 15. 13 14. And he said unto Abram Know of a surety that thy seed shall be a stranger in a land that is not theirs and shall serve them and they shall afflict them four hundred years And also that Nation whom they shall serve will I judge and afterwards they shall come out with great substance Compare now Exod. 12. 41. And it came to pass at the end of the four hundred and thirty years even the self-same day it came to pass that all the hosts of the Lord went out from the land of Egypt Thirty years were added because of their Fathers dwelling in Canaan but God kept touch to a day So for the promise of the Messiah and calling the Gentiles that God fulfilled in due time and sent a Saviour into the world Gal. 4. 4. In the fulness of time God sent his Son When the Scepter was gone from Iudah Gen. 49. 10. when the Crown was possessed by Herod a Tributary and Foreigner during the Roman Monarchy which at length Christ should utterly destroy Dan. 2. 35. Nebuchad-nezzar had a Vision of an Image of four different Metals the head of gold arms and breasts silver belly and thighs brass and the feet part iron and clay while he beheld the Image and surveyed it from head to foot he saw a stone hewen out of the mountain without hands which stone smote the Image not upon the head breast or belly but upon the feet of iron and clay upon which it vanished away and the stone became a great mountain and filled the whole earth This Vision Daniel expounded of four Gentile Kingdoms which should succeed one another with great extent of dominion The first of the Babylonians which then was The second of the Medes and Persians The third of the Grecians The fourth of the Romans which subdued all the other and because possessed of the riches and glory of the former during this last Kingdom was the stone hewen out of the mountain and smote the iron feet this stone was the Kingdom of the God of Heaven which Christ set up but not to trouble you with mysteries and nice debates the Apostle telleth us Rom. 15. 8 9 10. That Iesus Christ was a Minister of the Circumcision for the truth of God to confirm the promises made to the Fathers And that the Gentiles might glorifie God for his mercy as it is written For this cause I will confess to thee among the Gentiles and sing unto thy Name And again it is said Rejoice ye Gentiles The Event in all these cases afterwards did speak for its self so in all that is yet to come we should depend upon the Veracity of God as the calling of the Iews the destruction of Antichrist a more ample effusion of gifts on the Church together with a dilation of its borders as the Patriarchs all dyed in faith Heb. 11. 13. Having not received the promises but having seen
waters were appointed to break out and overwhelm the earth yet God hath firmly promised that they shall never be so again wherein his Truth is also verified and applied to the Covenant of Grace Isa. 54. 9. For this is as the waters of Noah to me for I have sworn that the waters of Noah shall no more go over the earth so have I sworn that I would not be wrath with thee nor rebuke thee The Covenant of Grace is as sure as the Covenant made after the deluge so that we cannot look upon this Earth but as an Emblem of those Attributes which confirm our Faith in waiting upon God till his Promises be fulfilled to us Use. Let us be then more firmly persuaded of God's Faithfulness that we may depend upon it both for his preserving the Church and our selves in the way of our duty till we enjoy our final reward 1. For the preservation of Christ's Kingdom God's Faithfulness chiefly appeareth in the Government of his Church or spiritual Kingdom and this is a Kingdom that cannot be moved when all things else are shaken Heb. 12. 28. Having received a kingdom that cannot be shaken Christ cannot be an Head without Members a King without Subjects And we are told Mat. 16. 18. That the gates of hell cannot prevail against it Many disorders happen but let us depend upon the faithful God The world was well guided before we came into it and other Generations have had experience of God's Faithfulness though we complain that we see not our signs nor any tokens for good 2. For the preservation of our bodies to the heavenly Kingdom we have many discouragements within and without but while we persevere in our duty God will not fail us his word is as sure as the earth 2 Thess. 3. 3. The Lord is faithful who shall establish and keep you from evil God hath promised not only to give us our final reward but to secure and defend his people by the way that they be not overcome by the evils they meet with in their passage SERMON XCVI PSAL. CXIX VER 91. They continue this day according to thine ordinances for all are thy servants THE Prophet is proving the Immutability of God's Promises from the conservation and continuance of the whole course of Nature he had spoken of it by parts now conjunctly apart first of the Heavens ver 89. of the earth v. 90. Now both together They continue c. In the words we have two things 1. An observation concerning the continuances of the courses of Nature They that is the Heaven and the Earth Heaven doth continue in its motion and Earth in its station according to the Ordinance of God that is by vertue of that Order wherein he placed things at first Psal. 148. 6. He hath established them for ever and ever he hath made a decree which shall not pass As he ordained at first by his powerful decree so Heaven and Earth is still continued God's Laws are fixed for the government of all Creatures and in the manner and to the end for which God appointeth them they stand and continue 2. The Reason For all are thy servants The Reason saith more than the Assertion and therefore doth over and above prove it not only the Heavens and the Earth but all things which are contained therein from the Angel to the Worm they all serve God they attend upon him as their supreme Lord and Master every moment DOCT. That it is a great help to Faith to consider God as the Omnipotent Creator Preserver and absolute Governor of the World disposing of all things as he pleaseth This is the Meditation which the Psalmist produceth and exposeth to our view in this Verse His Creation is implied in that Thine Ordinances when God first setled the course of Nature by a wise and powerful Decree His preservation in those words They continue this day The course of Nature is so setled that it doth not fail to go on according to God's Decree every thing standeth or falleth according to God's command and the Order first setled by God still obtaineth his Decree is not yet out of date His being the absolute Governor of the world in these words For all are thy servants which implieth his Sovereign Dominion and Empire over all the Creatures as his servants who are at the beck of his will To evidence this to you more fully consider there are in God two things Power and Authority Might and Right First By Power we mean a liberty and sufficiency in God to do whatever he will With God all things are possible Mat. 19. 26. or take the Negative which bindeth it the stronger Luke 1. 37. With God nothing shall be impossible 2dly Authority or Dominion or a Right over all things to dispose of them at his own pleasure In this Right there are three Branches 1. A Right of making or framing any thing as he willeth in any manner as it pleaseth him as the Potter hath power over his own clay to form what vessel he pleaseth of it this Right God exercised in his Creation Rev. 4. 11. Thou hast created all things and for thy pleasure they are and were created This was his absolute freedom and sovereignty to create all things according to his own pleasure 2. A Right of having or possessing all things so made and framed by him for God is owner and possessor of whatever he made since he made it out of nothing Heaven ●…is his Earth is his so Angels Man Beasts Gold Silver all things he challengeth as his right Psal. 115. 16. The heaven even the heavens are the Lords 'T is the Lord's to dispose of not only the lower but the highest Heavens which he hath provided for his own Palace and Court of residence So the earth is the Lords and the fulness thereof Psal. 24. 1. This whole lower world is his by right of Creation and providential preservation and so are all the sorts of Creatures with which he hath replenished it it was by him produced at first and every moment continued and preserved And so the Angels are his they are called his Ministers or Servants Psal. 104. 4. He maketh his angels spirits his ministers a flame of fire Though he is able to do all things by himself or administer the whole world as he at first created by a word by saying and it was done yet he pleaseth to make use of the ministry of Angels who some of them in subtle bodies of air others of fire come down to execute his commands upon earth Men are his creatures and his possession we are not Lords of any thing we have neither life or limb nor any thing Our bodies and our souls are his 1 Cor. 6. 20. Christ had power to lay down his life and take it up again but no meer man hath he is accomptable to a higher Lord who hath an absolute uncontroulable Right to dispose of us according to his own pleasure He killeth
easily diverted and control'd by other and higher desires and you can be satisfi'd and take up with something beneath Christ and Christ is not the precious and onely one of your souls you have not that impression which amounts to a hearty work 2 Another impression is a thorow hatred of Sin and serious watchfulness and striving against it when you seek to cast it out of your soul with indignation Hos. 14. 8. To hate every false way Psal. 119. 104. when you are continually groaning under it Rom. 7. 24. and seek to weaken it more and more for they that are Christs have crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts thereof Gal. 5. 24. This is a sensible impression left upon the soul. 3 A lively diligence in the spiritual life Though you cannot tell how God brought you in yet if you keep up a lively diligence in serving God and with the Twelve Tribes instantly serving God day and night Acts 26. 7. and you are always working out your own salvation with fear and trembling Phil. 2. 12. and you are hard at work for God If this holy care be the constant business and drift of your Lives you have the Effect of this Conversion though the first impression of it be not so sensible SERMON XCIX PSAL. CXIX VER 94. I am thine save me For I have sought thy precepts IN these words you have 1 David's Plea I am thine 2 His Request Save me 3 His Argument to make good his Plea I have sought thy precepts His Plea is taken from God's interest in him I am thine His Request is for safety to be saved either from wrath to come or from temporal danger rather the latter for he seeth trouble lie in wait for him therefore save me And then the evidence of that interest which may serve as an argument to set on the Request I have sought thy precepts Let me speak of these in their order and first of David's Plea I am thine Doct. 1. That God hath a special People in the world whom he will own for his David as one of this number saith to God I am thine By a common right of Creation all things are Gods 1 Chron. 29. 11. Heaven and earth is thine and all that is therein He made all and therefore by a just right he is Lord of all Psal. 24. 1. The earth is the Lords and the fulness thereof Now as to this general right God is no more bound to one than to another there is no great priviledge in this to be Gods in this sense for so are the Cattel upon a thousand hills As we are his by Creation we cannot say with David I am thine save me for he that made them will not save them if they have no other title and interest in him Isa. 23. 11. Thus by Creation all things are Gods But more especially men Ezek. 18. 4. All souls are mine God hath a peculiar interest in the reasonable creatures as their Maker Governor and Judge And yet further his Church are his by general Profession all the Members of the visible Church may say Lord We are thine and that is some kind of Plea for their safety and protection Isa. 63. 19. We are thine thou never bearest rule over them they were not called by thy name So may all the Members of the visible Church speak to God yet more particularly there is a remnant in the world that are his by a nearer interest and they are the Saints or New Creatures who are his peculiar People Tit. 2. 14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 All the World else they are but as the lumber of the house but these are his treasure a man is more chary of his treasure than of his lumber yea they are his jewels Mal. 3. 17. precious and dear to him and of special interest in his heart and affection they are the first-fruits of his creatures Jam. 1. 18. The first-fruits were the Lord's Portion Now these God doth peculiarly take to be his Portion and his and valueth them more than all the world besides Let us see the grounds of his special interest in them wherefore are they his He hath elected them before all the world Iohn 17. 6. Thine they were and them thou gavest me They were his by eternal election and choice and they are purchased and bought by Christ therefore called a purchased People bought them with a price 1 Cor. 6. 19 20. and upon this ground they are said to be Christs 1 Cor. 3. 23. Now as they are Christs and Gods by Purchase they are also his by Conquest and Rescue from Satan Prisoners in War belong to the Conqueror Luke 11. 21. The strong man that holdeth captive the carnal part of the world they are his Goods but the stronger than he shall come and bind him and take away his Goods They were Satans but by rescue and conquest the Prey falls to Christ Col. 1. 13. Who hath delivered us from the power of darkness and translated us into the kingdom of his dear Son Once more They are his by effectual calling and work of his grace Eph. 2. 10. We are his workmanship created in Christ Iesus unto good works c. So the Title is changed by the right of the New Creation Again They are his by Covenant we chuse him to be our God and the Lord chuseth us to be his peculiar People Hos. 2. 23. They acquiesce in him as their all sufficient Portion and surrender and give up themselves to his use and service This is that which is chiefly intended nere namely That we are his by contract and resignation for so David saith Lord I am thine All this doth abundantly make good God hath a special People in the world whom he will own for his The grace by which we are inclined to resign up our selves to God that slows from Election through the Redemption of Christ by sanctification of the Spirit but the Grounds Reasons and Motives for which we dedicate our selves to God they are his right in us by Creation and Redemption it is but fit God should have what he hath made and bought we are his Creatures his Purchase therefore we are his USE I. For Tryal Are we of the number of God's peculiar People As David said to the Egyptian To whom belongest thou Whence art thou 1 Sam. 30. 13. So if the Question should be put to you Whence are you To whom do you belong Can you answer Lord I am thine I belong to thee If it be so then 1. When did you solemnly dedicate your selves to him If you be Gods can you remember when you first took your Oath of Allegiance to him There is a solemn time of avouching one another when God avouched you to be his People and you avouched God to be your God Deut. 26. 17 18. Thou hast avouched this day the Lord to be thy God and to walk in his ways and keep his statutes and his commandments and judgments and
that wisdom Again a necessary good is to be prefer'd before an arbitrary now one thing is necessary Luke 10. 42. It is not necessary to be rich to live in pleasure to wallow in delights within a while we shall not be a Peny the better for these things It is not necessary to have so great a plenty of worldly accommodations it is not necessary to our happiness hereafter nor to the comfort of our lives for the present to have so much here Now see who is the wiser Man he that looks no higher than to some subordinate end or he that fixeth upon the last end He that pitcheth upon some limited good or he that pitcheth upon the most universal good that will yield him all things He that pleaseth his fancy with toys or he that looketh after a solid benefit He that taketh care for his body or he that minds his soul He that mindeth that which is accessary or indifferent to his happiness or he that mindeth that which is mainly necessary He that looketh after a perishing vanity or he that mindeth eternal happiness Certainly if there be a God and this God can do all things and our happiness lies in the enjoyment of him he is the wisest Man that takes God for his Portion and makes it his business to keep in with him and so doth a child of God Thus wisdom is seen in fixing our aim 2 Wisdom lies in the choice of apt and proper means and that is to take the Word for his Rule First God for his Portion then the Word for his Rule To presume of the end without using the means is folly therefore next to a good end and scope there must be a good path Now that we might not grope blindfold and wander up and down in fond Superstitions God hath given us his Word to instruct us in all things which concern our duty and our danger and to make us every way wise to salvation 2 Tim. 3. 15. If our happiness lies in the enjoyment of God it is meet God should appoint the way how we should come to him We should have been at a great loss if the Lord had given us grace to fix upon him as our end if he had not given us a Rule we could not find out our way But now God hath so exactly chalk'd it out That a Fool shall not err therein Isa. 35. 5. Such plain directions as makes wise the simple Psal. 19. 7. A plain Rule found out by the wisdom of God and so stated for all and peremptorily commanded to all that the most simple that will give up themselves to God's direction they shall find it Now who are wise they that walk in the way of their own hearts or they that will take God's direction in his Word Those that will live according to the counsel of God's Word or those that will fashion their lives according to the course of this World or according to the customs and examples of carnal Men like themselves Who is wiser they that will enquire after the mind of God who is wisdom itself and can best judge of wisdom and folly or they which shape their course according to the secular wisdom that prevails in the world and which hath often failed in its end who the wiser Man he that hath taken God's counsel and can never be deceived or those that walk according to the course of this world and find themselves wholly to be deceived Psal. 49. 13. This their way is their folly yet their posterity approve their sayings They will imitate that folly which hath been so fatal and so mischievous to others and think themselves happy Many carnal Men when they died they all-to-be-fooled themselves and lamented it that they had taken no more care to please God and walked no more closely with him that they had been more busie about worldly things than they had been for their precious and immortal souls therefore surely the children of God are wiser than their opposites that give up themselves to the vanity of carnal Pursuits 3 Wisdom lies in a vigorous prosecution of fit means to the best end without which all is nothing It is in vain to be sensible of our end and to be convinced of our way unless we mind to walk in it Many carnal Men will say that their happiness lies in the enjoyment of God that the Scriptures are the Word of God and his directions to attain that happiness but their folly lies in this that they have not a hearty consent to take this Word for their Rule and give up themselves to the directions thereof Prov. 17. 16. Wherefore is there a price in the hand of a fool to get wisdom seeing he hath no heart to it that is such means and such opportunities given them to be happy but that 's a price in the hands of a Fool his heart hangs off from the way and therefore here 's the great effect of wisdom when we do with all our hearts give up our selves to God that he may take his own way with us to make us happy for ever Wisdom lies in obedience Deut. 4. 6 7. Keep therefore and do them for this is your wisdom c. The World will say it is a simple course to be so nice scrupulous and precise but God tells you it is your wisdom and they that keep his statutes are a wise and understanding People The Devil fills us with all kind of prejudices against Religion To such as love ease he represents difficulty and the yoke of Christ to be a tedious yoke If they love honour he tells them of reproaches and disgrace If they affect wisdom he telleth them it is a low doctrine beneath the sublimity of their parts and abilities Now God assureth you this is your wisdom and understanding So Iob 28. 28. And unto man he said Behold the fear of the Lord that is wisdom and to depart from evil is understanding There 's an enquiry there in that Chapter where wisdom is to be sound and it is resolv'd that it is nowhere to be found but in a strict obedience not in the knowledge of the secrets of nature not in the crafts and policies of the world not in the plots and contrivances of the wicked not in dexterity to get wealth but in keeping God's Commandments with all preciseness and care Briefly this dextrous and effectual prosecution of the means which lead to our end lies in three things and so accordingly we may know wisdom all these are call'd wisdom in Scripture 1. In diligence and constant labour in the spiritual life When a Man makes Religion his work then he is a wise Man true to his end There are a company of notional Fools in the world that make Religion their talk but do not make it their work that can talk at as high a rate as others they have a naked approbation of the things of God but do not lie under the power and dominion
of them Eccles. 10. 2. A wise man's heart is at his right hand A speech which seems to be contrary to the natural posture of the heart in the body for the heart both of the one and the other is towards his left but a wise Man's heart is at his right hand The right hand is that which is ready for action so a wise Man is ready and prepar'd to obey every good work When Men are diligent serious and hard at work for God working out their salvation with fear and trembling then are they thorowly wise 2. It lies in circumspection and watchfulness when we are very heedful lest we be turned out of the way and that we do not any thing that is contrary to the Will of God therefore it is said Ephes. 5. 15. See that you walk circumspectly not as fools but as wise When is a Man a Fool and when a wise Man when we are careful in all things to practise according to our light to walk exactly according to the Rules of God's Word these are the only true wise whatever the world thinks of them The more circumspect Men are the more the world counts them Fools crazy-brains and judge it to be a fond scrupulosity to expose themselves to scorning and trouble for that which they call a nicety But the less circumspect the more foolish and the more wary and more desirous to see God's Word this is wisdom that 's the reason why it is said The fear of the Lord prolongeth days Prov. 10. 27. When Men once come to stand in awe of God when they are afraid to do any thing that may displease God and look for a Warrant and Rule and desire to know the mind of God in every action these are wise Men. 3. This wisdom lies in self-denial or being at some cost and charge to compass our end A godly Man knows his end will recompence him sufficiently at last the enjoyment of God will pay for all It is a part of folly not wisdom to have great aims and designs and loth to be at charges He that will not be at the cost will never bring any weighty matter to pass So he is call'd a wise Merchant That sold all for the pearl of price Mat. 13. 46. Surely Heaven is worth something therefore if you are call'd to despise the delights of the flesh the honours of the world to part with them to be dead to temporal interests it seems the greatest folly in the world but indeed it 's the truest wisdom saith Lactantius Usually wisdom dwells at the sign of folly Why because all wisdom puts Men upon some Self-denial Carnal Men count it folly for a Man to be dead to his conveniences and worldly concernments and that upon the pursuit of invisible things that lie in another world But this indeed is the greatest wisdom there is no wisdom without some self-denial Carnal Men they have a self-denial a cursed one none deny themselves so much as they they part with Heaven Christ Peace and serenity of Conscience all the hopes all the comforts of the Spirit meerly to please the flesh and gratifie their interest in the world all is to compass the pleasure profits and honours of the world and so to dig for Iron with mattocks of Gold waste precious things to compass them that are vile and contemptible Well then let us see who are wise they that are working out their salvation or those that are pleasing the flesh they that are wary and circumspect and loth to break with God or those that run blindfold upon the greatest dangers and go like an ox to the slaughter or as a fool to the correction of the stocks Prov. 7. 22. Who are wise those that sell all for the Pearl of price or those that part with their birth-right all their hopes in God and present sense of his love for a little temporal convenience Thus I have proved the first thing namely That the Children of God are wiser than their Enemies as to their general choice SERMON CIV PSAL. CXIX VER 98. Thou through thy Commandments hast made me wiser c. I Come now to the second Consideration They are wiser than their Enemies as to security against their attempts and that enmity and opposition that they carry on against them they are far more safe by walking under the covert of God's protection than their Enemies can possibly be to have all manner of worldly advantages I shall prove it by this Argument Because they are more prepared and furnished as to all Events A godly wise Man is careful to keep in with God he is more prepared and furnished can have a higher hope more expectation of success than others have or if not they are well enough provided for though things fall out never so cross to their desires 1 As to Success Who hath made wiser provision think you he that hath made God his Friend or he that is born up with worldly props and dependencies They that are guided by the Spirit of God or they that are guided by Satan Those that make it their business to walk with God step by step or those that not only forsake him but provoke him to his face Those that break with Men and keep in with God or those that break with God Surely a child of God hath more security from Piety than his Enemies can have by secular Policy whereby they think to over-reach and ruine him The safety of a child of God lieth in two things 1. God is his Friend 2. As long as God hath work for him to do he will maintain him and bear him out in it 1. God is his Friend and that must needs be a Man's wisdom when he complies with the will of him upon whom he depends All things do absolutely depend upon the Providence of God he hath wisdom strength and dominion over all Events the wisdom of God is on his side and therefore it is but the wisdom of Men against him If the difference only lay between Men and Men the craft and policy of their Enemies and their own craft and policy the Scales would soon break of their Enemies side for they are wiser in their geration Luke 16. They have great abilities and great malice which sharpens Mens understandings they have a large conscience and more liberty to do what they will so that a Child of God is gone if it were to oppose craft with craft and usually they carry their matters more subtilly laying hidden snares and profound counsels whereas the Children of God carry it simply and plainly But then there is a wise God to act for a foolish People And sometimes God may give his People great abilities as Ioseph was wiser than his Brethren Moses wiser than the Egyptians Daniel than all the Magicians of Babylon but yet usually parts and secular wisdom are given to the Enemies Only a Child of God hath this point of wisdom above the Enemies he taketh in
climb up a Ladder for execution or are carried to the top of a Rock that they may be thrown down from thence to be broken in pieces Psal. 73. 18. Surely thou didst set them in slippery places thou castedst them down into destruction II. That the wicked of the earth are as dross They are so in these respects 1. As to external shew they seem to be a part of the substance or metal but indeed they are but the filth of the metal which is wont to be consumed with fire that the metal may be purged This is fitly applied to the degenerate members of the visible Church that have only a shew of the purity of Religion but are corrupt in Faith and manners ungodly and unrighteous There are Disciples in shew and Disciples in deed Iohn 8. 31. some that live and some only that have a name to live but indeed are dead Revel 3. 4. There is a Jew outwardly and inwardly of the Letter and of the spirit Rom. 2. 28 29. there are branches in Christ by an external visible union that bring forth no fruit Iohn 15. 2. Some are Christians in name by external visible Communion others by real implantation into Christ. It concerneth us to see whether we be dross or metal living members of Christs mystical Body or only equivocally called Christians because of some loose pro●…sion of Christs name 2. Dross is intermingled with purer metal and maketh one mass with it The wicked and the godly live together in the visible Church they are never totally severed till the great day of separation or general Judgment when the Sheep and the Goats are put apart some on Christs right hand and some on his left Here in the world as in the finest metal there is some dross and in the same field there is Chaff and Corn Matth. 13. 29. We should not leave the flowr for the Chaff but leave the Chaff that we may be pure Grain 3. In Gods esteem they are refuse drossy worthless things Ezek. 22. 19. Thus saith the Lord because ye are become dross poor unprofitable Creatures The Church and people of God because of their excellency are compared to Gold and Silver so Rev. 21. The seven golden Candlesticks As Gold is the most precious metal so is the Church much esteemed by God called Gods Jewels Mal. 3. 17. as a Diamond among an heap of Pebbles Gods Jewels of whom the world is not worthy Heb. 11. 38. his peculiar people Tit. 2. 14. God maketh no such reckoning of wicked men dross is cast away as good for nothing and all the wicked of the Earth are but as dross to so much good metal But all his Saints are much set by as the filings of Silver and Gold are precious What a difference is there between the Judgment of God and the Judgment of the world The men of the world esteem the Saints to be 1 Cor. 4. 13. the off-scowring and filth of all things as the sweeping of the City to be cast forth to the Dung-hill Whereas themselves are so indeed in Gods account but reprobate Silver Jer. 6. 30. or rather dross which is the refuse of Gold and Silver Therefore their contempt is not to be regarded how great soever they be though Potentates high in honour and place yet if ungodly and wicked God reckons them to be vile persons Dan. 11. 21. dross worthless souls Men are not valued by God for their secular interests but moral qualifications The Potentates of the Earth are not valued as his princely but holy ones The righteous is more excellent than his neighbour Prov. 12. 26. God puts the highest price upon them they are Coin and Medal who bear his own Image 4. They are consumed in tryals as Dross consumeth in the fining and trying of metals solid metal endureth but the dross is consumed which holdeth true of wicked men in two respects First Their seeming goodness is lost and the difference is seen between them and those that are sincere sound and searching Judgments discover Hypocrites as the lightness of a building is seen in a storm Matth. 7. 27. When the Rain descended and the Floods came and the Winds blew the house fell and great was the fall of it So God in the Metaphor of the Text is often said to melt and try his people Ier. 9. 7. to discover the dross from pure Gold Hirelings will soon prove Changelings when God tryeth them to purpose Secondly Their imaginary felicity vanisheth into smoke they perish the meanest as well as the greatest Thou puttest away all the wicked of the Earth like dross they are consumed in the fire of Gods wrath and destroyed Ezek. 22. 20. As they gather Silver and Brass and Iron and Lead and Tin into the midst of the furnace to blow the fire upon it to melt it so will I gather you in mine anger and in my fury and I will leave you there and melt you but of this by and by Use. Let us see what we are real members of Christs Mystical Body yea or no. The wicked of the earth are as dross and the godly are the finest sort of metals To move you to consider what you are 1. Ordinarily the visible Church is so mixed that the generality thereof is unsound Zach. 13. 8. Two parts thereof shall be cut off and dye and I will bring the third part through the fire and refine them as silver is refined and try them as gold is tryed There is but one part in three sound and it were well the proportion were found every where and therefore we had need to consider who shall be saved and found faithful Luke 13. 23 24. And one said unto him Lord are there few that shall be saved and he said unto them Strive to enter in at the strait gate for many shall seek to enter and shall not be able We had need be the more earnest because the most miscarry 2. The tryals will be searching we must pass through the fire and then what will become of the dross Rev. 3. 10. An hour of temptation shall come upon all the world to try them that dwell upon earth And alas are we able to brook the fiery tryal 1 Pet. 4. 10. Few Professours will be able to abide it when we are to part with the sweetest of our earthly comforts yea and it may be life it self which maketh us capable to enjoy them 't is no strange thing that it should happen to us 1 Pet. 4. 12. 't is as usual as violent storms at Sea or tempestuous weather in winter when God is upon reckoning with his people such things may be expected 3. The best of us will be found but dross if God would deal with us in extremity so much of corruption cleaveth to us and so many hidden lusts do we cherish and indulge that would soon become a root of apostasie if God did not hold an hand of Grace over us but God will not be extream Isai.
little patience will discover it As poysonous Ingredients in a Medicine take them singly and they are destructive but as tempered with other things by the hands of a skilful Physician so they are wholesome and useful Heb. 12. 11. No affliction for the present seemeth joyous but grievous The Rod is a sowre thing for the present but wait a little this bitter root may yield sweet fruit God can so over-rule it in his Providence So Psal. 119. 71. It is good for me that I have been afflicted that I might learn thy Statutes Ask a man under the Cross Is it good to feel the lashes of Gods correcting hand No but when he hath been exercised and found lust mortified the world crucified and gotten evidences of Gods favour then it is good that I have been afflicted 4. This good is not to be determined by feeling but by Faith Psal. 73. 1. Yet God is good to Israel and to such as are of a clean heart God is good to his people however he seem to deal hardly with them sence judgeth it ill but faith saith it is good it seeth a great deal of love in pain and smart There is such a difference between faith and sense as there was between Elisha and his Servant 2 King 6. 15 16. the Servant saw the Host of the enemies but he did not see the fiery Chariots and Horsemen that were for his help Elisha saw both so Believers see not only the bitterness that is in Gods chastenings but the sweet fruits in the issue Faith can look at the pride and power of wicked men as a vain thing when they are in the height of their power and greatness Iob 5 3. I have seen the foolish taking root but suddenly I cursed his habitation that is prophetically not passionately foretelling evil not wishing it When they were taking root as themselves and other worldly men thought I judged him unhappy foretold his end and destruction There is much of the spirit of prophecy in faith When others applaud make little gods of them he looketh through all their beauty riches and honour Psal. 92. 7. When the wicked spring as the Grass and all the workers of iniquity do flourish it is that they shall be destroyed for ever Grass will wither and dry up of its own accord especially when there is a Worm at the root Their very prosperity as it ferments their lusts and hardeneth their hearts is a means to draw on their destruction Psal. 39. 5. Man in his best estate is vanity Then when they seem to have all things under their feet who could harm them So that none dare open the mouth move the wing or peep yet God can easily blast and whip them with an unseen scourge 5. Good is of several sorts temporal spiritual eternal First Temporal Good Cross accidents conduce to that Gen. 50. 20. Ye thought evil against me but God meant it unto good to bring to pass as it is this day and to save much people alive The Egyptians and themselves had wanted a preserver if Ioseph had not been sold and sent into Egypt If a man were to go to Sea in a voyage upon which his heart was much set but the ship is gone before he cometh but after he heareth that all that were in the ship are drowned then he would say This disappointment was for good As Crassus's Rival in the Parthian War was intercepted and cut off by the craft of the Barbarians had no reason to stomach his being refused Many of us have cause to say Periissem nisi periissem we had suffered more if we had suffered less In the Story of Ioseph there is a notable scheme and draught of Providence He is cast into a Pit thence drawn forth and sold to the Ishmaelites by them sold into Egypt and sold again what doth God mean to do with poor Ioseph He is tempted to Adultery refusing the temptation he is falsly accused kept for a long time in ward and duress All this is against him who would have thought that in the issue this should be turned to his good that the prison had been the way to preferment and that by the pit he should come to the Palace of the King of Egypt and exchange his particoloured Coat for a Royal Robe Thus in temporal things we get by our losses and God chuseth better for us than we could have chosen for our selves Let God alone to his undertaking and he will manage our affairs better than we looked for Secondly Good spiritual Heb. 12. 10. For they verily for a few days chastened us after their own pleasure but he for our profit that we might be partakers of his holiness What do we call profit The good things of this World and the great Mammon which so many worship No some better thing some spiritual and Divine benefit a participation of Gods holiness Then we profit when we grow in Grace and are more god-like when we are more concerned as a soul than a body It is a good exchange to part with outward Comforts for inward holiness If God take away our peace and give us peace of Conscience we have no cause to complain If our outward wants be recompensed with the abundance of inward Grace 1 Cor. 4. 10. and we have less of the World that we may have the more of God and be kept poor that we may be rich in faith Iam. 2. 5 6. if we have a healthy soul in a sickly body as Gaius had 3 Iohn 2. if an aking head maketh way for a better heart doth not God deal graciously and lovingly with us Thirdly Our eternal Good Heaven will make amends for all that we endure here This mainly is intended in Rom. 8. 28. All things shall work together for good to them that love God And then in the 29 th and 30 th Verses he presently bringeth in the golden Chain Whom he did predestinate them he also called and whom he called he justified and those whom he justified them he also glorified So 2 Cor. 4. 17. This light affliction which is but for a moment worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of Glory it shall either hasten or secure our glorious estate A man may lose ground by a temptation his external good may be weakned his soul suffereth loss but this warneth him of his weakness and quickeneth him to stand upon his watch and to look up more to Christ for strength against it Or it may be cut off and perish in the affliction but then his glorious estate cometh in possession 6. That may be good for the Glory of God which doth not conduce to our personal benefit and the Glory of God is our great interest Iohn 11. 27 28. Now is my soul troubled and what shall I say Father save me from this hour but for this Cause came I unto this hour father to glorifie thy name Then there came a voice from Heaven saying I have both
found out 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a first mover and a first cause but when and how the world was made they were left in uncertainties which was first the Egg or the Hen the Oak or the Acorn Heb. 11. 3. Through faith we understand that the worlds were framed by the word of God so that things which are seen were not made of things that do appear A child is taught more than they could find out by their profound researches So concerning the Fall of Man Conscience will inform us of a distinction between good and evil and Heathens by the light of Nature could speak of Vertue and Vice as moral perfection and a deordination but nothing of sin and righteousness relating to a Covenant and whence this mischief began they knew not They complained of Nature as of a Step-mother observed an inclination to evil more than to good that vices are learned without a Teacher that man is born into the world crying beginneth his life with a punishment but the first spring and rise of evil was a secret to them but clearly discovered to us Rom. 5. 12. Wherefore as by one man sin entered into the world and death by sin and so death passed upon all men for that all have sinned Mans restitution and redemption by Christ is wonderful indeed 1 Tim. 3. 16. And without controversie great is the mystery of godliness God was manifest in the flesh justified in the spirit seen of Angels preached unto the Gentiles believed on in the world received up into glory This could not be found by man how could they know the free purposes of Gods Grace unless God revealed them This is the Mystery of Mysteries which Angels desire to pry into 1 Pet. 1. 12. So excellent and ravishing a Mystery is this plot of salvation of lost sinners by Christ incarnate that the very Angels cannot enough exercise themselves in the contemplation of it So union with Christ and communion with him a Mystery that Nature could never have thought of Gods keeping a familiar correspondence with his Creatures Gods dwelling in us our dwelling in God 1 Iohn 4. 13. Hereby we know that we dwell in him and he in us because he hath given us of his spirit Words we should not dare to have used if God had not used them before us it would have lookd like blasphemy to speak so if we had not the warrant of Scripture So the resurrection of the body and life eternal they are all wonders 2 Tim. 1. 10. But is now made manifest by the appearance of our Saviour Iesus Christ who hath abolished death and brought life and immortality to light through the Gospel Heathens might dream of a life after death but could never understand it distinctly It is brought to light Their wise men saw it like the blind man who saw Men walking like Trees or a Spire at a distance no clearness no certainty Lord thy testimonies are wonderful Thirdly It is wonderful for purity and perfection The Decalogue in ten words compriseth the whole Duty of man and reacheth to the very soul and all the motions of the heart All the precepts of morality are advanced to the highest perfection Those fragments and sorry remainders of the light of Nature that have escaped out of the ruines of the Fall will shew us the necessity of a good life But the word of God calleth for a good heart a regeneration as well as a reformation not only abstaining from acts of sin but lusts 1 Pet. 2. 11. Dearly beloved I beseech you as Strangers and Pilgrims that ye abstain from fleshly lusts which war against the soul. Not only the outward work but the spirit that is weighed in the ballance of the Sanctuary Prov. 16. 2. All the ways of a man are clean in his own eyes but the Lord weigheth the spirits It mightily establisheth faith fear and love to God as the essential Graces When we consider Duty in the lump we have no admiting thoughts but when we look abroad into all the parts and branches of obedience whereunto the Law diffuseth it self then the holiliness which the Law requireth is admirable then we see it no easie matter to serve this holy and jealous God it is no easie matter to go to the bottom of this perfection Fourthly It is wonderful for the harmony and consent of all the parts All Religion is of a piece and one part doth not interfere with another but conspireth to promote the great end of subjection of the Creature to God The Law hath a mighty subserviency to the Gospel and the first Covenant shutteth up the sinner immediately under the curse that mercy may open the door to him The Gospel is first darkly revealed and still it groweth as the light doth till noon-day At first an obscure intimation The seed of the woman to Abraham In thy seed which after was repeated to Isaac to cut off Ishmael then to Iacob to cut off Esau yet not what Tribe Gen. 49. 10. The Scepter shall not depart from Iudah nor the Lawgiver from between his feet till Shilo come yet not what Family of Iudah to David 2 Sam. 7. 13. I will establish the Throne of his Kingdom for ever then Isai. 7. 14. Behold a Virgin shall conceive and bear a Son and call his name Immanuel then Iohn the Baptist Iohn 1. 29. Behold the Lamb of God which taketh away the sin of the world points with a finger to Christ. This while in short the Scriptures do so set forth the mercy of God as that the duty of the Creature is not abolished so offers Grace as not to exclude our care and use of means Justification and Sanctification promote one another all is ordered with good advice 2 Sam. 23. 5. Although my house be not so with God he hath made with me an everlasting Covenant ordered in all things and sure Thus the wonderful harmony order and consent of all the parts with respect to the great end which was the glorifying of God and the subjection of the Creature demonstrate the wonderfulness of Gods testimonies The glorifying of Gods Grace and Mercy in those that are saved and his Justice in those that are damned With respect to this God made man upright furnished with abilities to do his will but mutable and in case of a Fall to begin with a new Covenant He will have his mercy honoured without prejudice to his justice the comfort of the Creature established so as Duty not abolished not all of commands nor all of promises but these interwoven that they may serve one another A Promise at the back of a Command to make it effectual Command besides a Promise to cause humbling neither looseness nor rigour If the Covenant had been left to our ordering it had been a confused business Now it is wonderfully suited God keepeth up his Dominion and Sovereignty notwithstanding his Grace and condescension Justice hath full satisfaction yet Grace glorified Fifthly Wonderful for the
power of it There is a mighty power that goeth along with the Word of God and astonisheth the hearts of those that consider it and feel it 1 Thess. 1. 1. 5. Our Gospel came to you not in word only but in power and in the Holy Ghost By this power it doth not only fill the head with Notions but pierceth the heart alarms the Conscience awakens the Affections Heb. 4. 12. The word of God is quick and powerful sharper than any two-edged sword piercing even to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit and joints and marrow and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart This power was seen in the wonderful success of that Doctrine and Religion which the Scriptures do establish It hath diffused and spread it self like Leven in the Mass and Lump throughout all parts of the known world within the space of thirty or forty years or thereabouts Hesterni sumus saith Tertullian tamen omnia vestra implevimus Urbes Insulas Castella Municipia Conciliabula Castra Tribus Decurias Palatium Senatum Forum sola vobis relinquimus Templa We are but of yesterday and yet how are we encreased Christians are found in all places Cities Villages Isles Castles free Towns Councils Armies Senate Markets every where but in the Idol-Temples Such a wonderful encrease and success was there in a short time The Apostle Col. 1. 6. The word of the truth of the Gospel is come unto you as it doth to all the world and bringeth forth fruit as it doth also in you The Doctrine it self is contrary to Nature it doth not court the senses nor woo the flesh it offereth no splendor of life nor pleasures nor profits but biddeth deny all these things and expect persecution Mark 16. 24. If any man will come after me let him deny himself and take up his Cross and follow me It only telleth us of spiritual comforts and the recompences of another world Mahomet allured his Followers with fair promises of security and carnal pleasure their wind and tide went one way Man is credulous of what he desireth but Christ telleth us of denying our selves taking up the Cross cutting off right hand and plucking out right eye rowing against the stream of flesh and blood bearing out Sail against all the Blasts and furious Winds without here is nothing lovely to a carnal eye This was the Doctrine It taught the proud world humility the uncharitable world love of their enemies the unchast world that a glance is Adultery Matth. 5. 25. Whosoever looketh on a woman to lust after her hath committed Adultery with her already in his heart the revengeful world to turn the other cheek to the Smiter the covetous man to be liberal not to cark and take thought for worldly things but to lay up treasures in Heaven the dissolute world to walk circumspectly in all godliness and honesty The persons and instruments that were to manage the Doctrine were in the worlds eye contemptible a few Fishermen destitute of all worldly props and aids of no power wealth secular wisdom authority and other such advantages as are apt to beget a repute in the world yet they preached and converted many Nations though they had no publick interest were not backed with the power of Princes as Superstitions are wont to prevail by their countenance and example Every one seeketh the Rulers face but the Gospel had gotten firm footing in the world long e'r there was a Prince to countenance it there were many to persecute it none to profess it As the instruments were poor so the persons that received their message Iames 2. 5. Hearken my beloved brethren hath not God chosen the poor of this world rich in faith and heirs of the kingdom which he hath promised to them that love him 1 Cor. 1. 26. Ye see your Calling Brethren how that not many wise men after the flesh not many mighty not many noble are called When destitute of worldly succours and supports it held up head Ne videretur authoritate traxisse aliquos veritatis ratione non pompae gratia praevaleret saith Ambrose It was much it should hold up head yea the powers of the world against it bonds and sufferings and deaths did abide for them every where that professed this way Horrible tortures Never did War Pestilence and Famine sweep away so many as the first persecutions poor Christians were murthered and butchered every where yet still they multiplied as the Israelites did in Egypt under oppression or as a Tree lopped sends forth more sprouts As without worldly interests they had not such gifts of Art Eloquence and Policy as the world with whom they had to deal all was carried on in a plain way without pomp of words Paul was learned but he laid aside his ornaments lest the Cross of Christ should be of none effect 1 Cor. 2. 4 5. And my speech and my preaching was not with inticing words of mans wisdom but in demonstration of the spirit and of power that your faith should not stand in the wisdom of men but in the power of God They were to deal with men of excellent parts and learning some of which received the Gospel This plain Doctrine was set afoot in that part of the world where Arts and civil Discipline most flourished at that time and were in their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Thus as Aaron's Rod devoured the Magicians Serpents so was the Gospel too hard for the wisdom of the world it prevailed not by force of Armes and the power of the long Sword as all Dotages do and Superstitions are planted but overcame by the blood of the Lamb and by the word of their testimony and they loved not their lives unto the death Rev. 12. 11. Christs Sword is in his mouth Psal. 8. 2. Out of the mouths of Babes and Sucklings hast thou ordained strength because of thine enemies that thou mightest still the enemy and the avenger This way seemed to the world a novel way they were levened with prejudices and bred up by long custome which is a second Nature in the worship of Idols 1 Pet. 1. 18. For asmuch as ye know that ye were not redeemed with corruptible things as silver and gold from your vain conversation received by tradition from your fathers Men keep to the Religion of their Ancestors with much reverence Christ did not seize upon the world as a Wast is seized upon for the next Owner The Ark was to be set up in the Temple that was already occupied and possessed by Dagon Before Christ could be seated in the Government of the Nations first Satan was to be dispossessed and Superstitions received by a long tradition and prescription of time were to be removed the Wolf hunted out Thus the power great But this is past and gone There is a wonderful power that goes along with the Word First A power to humble and terrifie those that scoffed at the Miracles Acts 2. 37 When they heard
of the World which have their portion in this life As for me I will behold thy face in righteousness I shall be satisfied when I awake with thy likeness Christ gave his Spirit to the rest of the Disciples and the Purse to Iudas he had the keeping of the bag that was the worst Gods dearest Children usually have the least in this World that they may look higher as Levi had no portion among his Brethren because God would be his portion Others have more plentiful Accomodations for Back and Belly they are better Clad their Tables more plentifully furnished and supplied larger portions for their Children they that look to save any thing or get any thing by Religion but the saving of their Souls are fouly mistaken if we have more than others Religion calleth for more disbursements Charity and liberal distributions exposeth to Troubles Religion moderateth our desires and forbids all unjust ways of acquiring Wealth calleth upon us to forsake all for a good Conscience Therefore they that follow Christ out of a design to be rich in this World lose their aim not but that Hypocrites sometimes make a Market of Religion but then God is Angry and they and the Church too payeth for it at last not but that Religion bringeth in Temporal supplies Mat. 6. 33. First seek the Kingdom of God and his righteousness and these things shall be added unto you 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 food and raiment it bringeth in God may give some a more plentyful allowance especially if they be Faithful Stewards then they are intrusted with more but generally they are mean and small or if they have more of this Worlds goods they have their Afflictions in other kinds 2. 'T is necessary to cut off the provisions of the Flesh and the fuel of their Lusts a rank soil breedeth Weeds and when we sail with a full stream we are apt to be carried away with it We either glut our selves with the Pleasures of the Flesh or grow proud and hanker and linger after the Pomp and Vanities of the World and neglect God And therefore God is fain to diet us and to keep us bare and low as he is said to cut Israel short 2 Kings 10. 32. When he streightned their Coasts and Borders so for our cure we need not only internal Grace to abate the Lust but external Providence to catch away the Prey and Bait by which it is fed The wise Man saith not only give me grace but give me neither Poverty nor Riches Prov. 30. 8 9. and Gal. 6. 14. by whom the World is Crucified to me and I unto the World Both parts are necessary riches are a great Temptation we would root here and grow Sensual Worldly and Proud if God did not snatch our Comforts from us when we are apt to Surfet of them a plentiful portion of Temporal things is Spiritually Dangerous 3. That they may be more sensible of his displeasure against their sins and scandalous Carriage by which they have dishonoured him and provoked the pure eyes of his glory Never have scandals faln out but some great Woe followed Matth. 18. 7. Woe to the World because of offences Therefore God hath brought his People low that he may vindicate his Name which through their means is Blasphemed Rom. 2. 24. and make his People sensible of their sin the World shall know that he doth allow sin no more in them than others and therefore though they were as the signet upon his finger he will pluck them off and make them feel the smart of their wandrings Amos 3. 2. You only have I known of all the Families of the Earth therefore I will punish you for all your iniquities They that have been so near and dear to him the World might think he did approve their sins if he did not manifest his displeasure at them Usually their sins go nearest his heart and meet with the sorest vengeance Deut. 32. 19. When the Lord saw it he abhorred them because of the provokings of his Sons and of his Daughters Their relation to God their priviledges and the consequences of their actions aggravate their sins And therefore God is most quick and severe in punishing their sins We complain we were brought low but were not our Provocations first very high The most Religious cannot wipe their mouths and excuse themselves as faultless Oh what a sad part hath been lately acted upon the Publick Stage What a trade have many driven for themselves under a mask of Religion What breaches in the body of Christ uncharitable divisions making a profession of the Name of Christ for Carnal ends 4. That we may learn to live upon the Promises and learn to exercise suffering Graces especially dependance upon God who can support us without a temporal visible Interest Compare Rev. 12. 11. And they overcame him by the bloud of the Lamb and by the word of their Testimony and they loved not their lives to the death Rev. 13. 7. And it was given unto him to make War with the Saints and to overcome them and power was given him over all Kindreds and Tongues and Nations You shall see how the Enemies overcome and the Saints overcome The seed of the Woman and the seed of the Serpent The Beast raiseth the World against the Saints and prevaileth over their Bodies he overcomes them by spoiling them of Liberty Lives and Temporal Estate but they overcome by adhereing to Truth and resisting his Temptations and their own Corruptions even in the lowest Estate by Suffering So for other Graces Patience Meekness Self-denial Spiritual Comforts as the Stars in their order fought against Sisera so all graces are exercised in their turn Rev. 13. 10. Here is the Faith and Patience of the Saints that is a time to act these Graces a full Third of the Scriptures would be lost which containeth Comfort for Afflicted ones if God did not exercise them with Temporal Afflictions 5. That God may convince the Enemies that there is a people that do sincerely serve him and not for carnal selfish Ends. Iob 1. The Carnal World suspect private selfish worldly aims and designs in all that we do and attribute all our Duties to Interest being themselves led by Interest they cannot think others are led by Conscience Men are apt to suspect and maligne what they will not imitate There is sometimes too much advantage given many are Mercenaries only esteem the ways of God when beneficial to them Ioh. 6. 26. Ye seek me not because ye saw the Miricles but because ye did eat of the Loaves and were filled Therefore it is needful to heighten the price of Religion when it is too cheap a thing to be a Christian. This God doth by bringing his People low that the World may see some will cleave to him in all conditions not only when his wayes are befriended but when frowned upon God will glorifie himself and his Truth by their Constancy 6. That his glory may be more
yourselves in this Psal. 103. 17. The mercy of the Lord is from everlasting to everlasting upon them that fear him and his Righteousness upon Childrens Children Yea not only in the changes of your outward Condition is here an everlasting spring of comfort but also in the Ups and Downs of your spiritual condition and the clouds which now and then darken your Comfort and Hope in God In a time of Desertion we seem to be dead and cast off yet remember God loves to be bound for ever 2 Sam. 23. 5. Although my house be not so with God yet he hath made an everlasting Covenant Though we are not so punctual exact and faithful but are subject to many Errors and Failings yet God will mind his Eternal Covenant Psal. 89. 33 34. Nevertheless my loving kindness will I not utterly take from him nor suffer my faithfulness to fail my Covenant will I not break nor alter the thing that is gone out of my Lips Death doth not dissolve it nor desertions break it off Now for the second Notion by which the Word of God is expressed thy Law from whence Observe Doctrine That the Word of God hath the Nature and Force of a Law 'T is often so called in Scripture not only the Decalogue which is the abridgement of all Moral Duties but the whole Scripture is Gods Law Isa. 51. 4. A law shall proceed from me and Psal. 1. 2. His delight is in the law of God And the Gospel is called the law of Faith Rom. 3. 28. Here I shall shew you how necessary it was that God should give man a Law both as we are considered apart and with respect to Community And then shew that the Word hath the force of a Law 1. Consider man apart Surely the reasonable Creature as 't is a Creature hath a superior to whose Providence and ordering it is subject so all the Creatures have a law by which the bounds of their motion are fixed and limited Psal. 148. 6. He hath established them for ever and ever he hath made a decree which shall not pass Prov. 8. 29. He gave the Sea his decree that the waters should not pass his Commandment The Sun Moon and Stars are under a law all the Creatures are ballanced in a due proportion and guided and fixed in their Tract and Course by an unerring hand which is a kind of law to them As a Creature Man is subject to the direction of Gods Providence as other Creatures are but as a reasonable Creature he is capable of Moral Government for so he hath a Choice of his own a power of refusing Evil and choosing Good Other Creatures are ruled by a rod of Iron necessitated to what they do by an act of Gods Power and Sovereignty but man being a voluntary Agent is governed by laws which may direct and oblige him to good and warn and drive him from evil This law was at first written upon mans nature and that was sufficient while he stood in his integrity to guide him and inable him to serve and please God in all things propounded to him The law written on the heart of man was his Rule and Principle But that being obliterated by the Fall it was needful that God should give a new law to guide man to his own blessedness and to keep him from erring The Internal principle of Righteousness being lost the laws of men could not be sufficient for they have another end which is the good of humane Society They aim not at such a supernatural end as the enjoyment of God their laws reach no further than the ordering of mens outward Conversations and meddle not with the inward workings and motions of the heart of which they can take no Cognisance these may be inordinate do a great deal of mischief Therefore as the Wise God directed men to give laws to order mens Actions so he would himself give laws to order the Heart which man cannot reach Lay all these together and there is a necessity that God should give a law to man 2. But much more if you consider Man in his Community as he is a part of that spiritual Community called a Church All Societies of men from the Beginning of the World have found the establishing of Laws the only means to preserve themselves from ruine There is no other way against Confusion and would God leave that society which is of his own Institution that of which he is the Head and in which his honour is concerned without a law Deut. 32. 9. The Lords portion is his People which was set apart to serve him and to be to him for a Name and a Praise surely a people that have God so near them and are in special Relation to him have their laws by which they may be governed and preserved as to their Eternal good unless we should say God took lesse care for his own people then for others This necessity is the greater because this Society is spiritual though made up of visible men yet combined for spiritual ends Commerce and Communion with God and that mostly in their spirits which maketh this society the hardest to be governed and this the most seattered and dispersed of all societies throughout all parts of the Earth and therefore should be knit together with the strongest bonds Surely then there needeth a Common law whereby they may be united in their Conjunction with Christ the head and one another that it may not be broken in pieces And this to be given by God that he may preserve his own Authority and Interest among them This law is the Scripture those sacred digests in which God hath discovered not only his Wisdom and Justice but his Will and Imperial Power what he will have us do The one sheweth the Equity the other the Necessity of our Obedience surely this is his law or none The Church to whom the law was given God hath constituted the keeper of its own records never acknowledge another nor can any other make any Tolerable pretence Now having brought the matter home 2dly I shall shew you wherein it hath the Nature and force of a law as we commonly take the Word and here I shall 1. Shew you wherein it agrees 2. Wherein it differs from the ordinary laws of men 1. Wherein it agreeth 1. A Law is an act of Power and Sovereignty by which a Superior declareth his Will to those that are Subject to him There are two branches of the supream power Legislation and Jurisdiction giving the law and governing according to the law so given And so Gods power over the reasonable Creature is seen in Legislation and in the administration of his Providence there is his Jurisdiction In the Scripture he hath given the law and he will take an account of the observance of it in part here at the petty Sessions hereafter more fully and clearly at the Day of General Judgment But for the present here is Gods power seen over
2 Chron. 1. 12. This will bring other things with it be Importunate take no Nay Prov. 2. 9. Cry for knowledge lift up thy Voice for understanding 'T will not come at the first Call follow God as the blind Man Mark 10. 5. Lord that my eyes may be opened that I may receive my sight So be earnest with God that the eyes of your Understandings may be opened that you may have such a sight of Heaven as that your Affections may be set upon things above such a sight of Hell as that ye may flee for Refuge as if the Avenger of Bloud were at your heels Without this there can be no true Piety Psal. 14. 3. There is none that understandeth there is none that seeketh after God Nay there can be no Salvation without this Isa. 27. 11. It is a people of no Understanding therefore he that made them will have no mercy upon them c. Ignorant people have a saying he that made them will save them but 't is said they have no understanding therefore he that made them will not save them and therefore beg of God that he would break in upon your Minds with the lively light of his Spirit II. Here is the Person asking this Request David one well acquainted with God and his Ways Doctrine None know so much of God and his Wayes but they still need to know more Petitions for understanding do not only become beginners but grown Christians Three Reasons of this Point 1. That we may escape the deceits of a subtle Devil who lyeth in wait for us and assaults us on every hand and maketh great advantage of the Relicks of our Ignorance The Devils are called Eph. 6. 12. Rulers of the darkness of this World The dark part of the World is the Devils Territory and so much of Ignorance as is in the Children of God so much advantage hath Satan against us 2 Corinth 2. 11. Lest Satan should get an advantage for we are not ignorant of his devices The more me know the less Advantage the Devil hath of us he layeth snares for us where we least suspect 2. That we may serve an Holy God with that exactness and diligence as will become his Excellency The fault of the Heathen was that when they knew God they glorified him not as God Rom. 1. 21. because they knew so little they did not improve the knowledge they had and this is true in some degree of every Christian God would be more loved feared trusted served did we know more of him the clearer our sight the warmer our hearts will be in his service 1 Chron. 28. 9. Know thou the God of thy Fathers and serve him with a perfect heart and willing mind If we did know God we would devote our selves to his service 3. That we may be prepared for our everlasting estate by degrees Our everlasting estate is called the inheritance of the Saints in light Now we grow more meet for it by increasing in holiness Prov. 4. 18 19. The path of the Iust is as the shining Light that shineth more and more to the perfect day the way of the wicked is darkness they know not at what they stumble The Just man is like the light that increaseth as the day groweth The wicked are like the Night that encreaseth to thick darkness till at last they fall into utter darkness Use. Well then Let not only poor ignorant Creatures or young Beginners take up Davids prayer but also grown Christians of longer standing go to God and say Give me Understanding Partly because practical knowledge is never at a stand knowing of things as we ought to know them 't is possible for a man to see round about the compass of revealed truths Though extensively no more truths are to be known yet intensively we may know them better The best are defective in their knowledge And Partly too because 't is a very satisfactory thing to be sure we are in Gods way in some nice debates 't is hard to discern Gods Interest when all circumstances must be considered and Temptations hinder the sight of our Duty And Partly that we may Justifie the wayes of God against Cavils Matth. 24. 24. We have to do with men that would even puzzle the very Elect if it were possible III. To whom is this Petition made To God Doctrine If we would have the knowledge of Divine things we must seek to God I will give you some grounds of this Partly because he is the Fountain of Knowledge the first Mind or Intellect called in Scripture the Father of Lights Iames 1. 17. He is the Sun that must not only shine on us to make us see things but shine through us to make us be inlightened our selves Ours is but a participation now to shew whence we receive all God will be asked And partly too because God gave the Rule and therefore he must Interpret it ejus est interpretari cujus est condere He can best shew his own meaning and therefore in all doubtful cases repair to him especially since he hath undertaken in necessary Cases Ier. 31. 34. For they shall all know me from the least to the greatest and loveth to be imployed by his People for that end and purpose Once more without his Spirit the clearest light we have hath no efficacy Rom. 1. 18. He will have it sought I come to the Third and last thing the Fruit and Benefit and I shall live I shall explain the Words in the prosecution of this point Doctrine The saving knowledge of Gods Testimonies is the only way to live There is a threefold Life I. Life Natural II. Life Spiritual And III. Life Eternal In all these Considerations may the Point be made good I. Life is taken for the Life of Nature or the Life of the Body or Life Temporal called this life in Scripture 1 Cor. 15. 19. 1 Tim. 4. 8. Among outward things nothing is more precious than Life it maketh us capable of enjoying what the World can afford to us we give all that we have to preserve it Iob. 2. 9. Indeed in Competition with Worldly things we do well to value it but not in Competition with our Duty and Love to Christ so we must not count our Life dear to us Act. 20. 24. I count not my life dear to me And Luk. 14. 26. Whosoever hateth not Father and Mother c. and his own Life Out of the Conscience of our Duty to Christ we must be willing to expose it for he can give us a better Life Ioh. 11. 24. but otherwise so far as we can preserve it with our Duty it must be precious to us and we must seek the Interests of it Well then in this sense 't is no unbecoming thing for a Christian to say Give me understanding that I may live My Life present which mine Enemies seek to take from me this Life is from God both Originally and in a way of constant Preservation God
multitude though they have Power yet they have no Authority But when the Rulers were set against them and persecuted them with Edicts and Punishments then the greatest Havock was made of them To see Gods Ordinance abused maketh the Trial the more grievous The Godly should be defended by their Governours for therefore they are called the shields of the Earth Psal. 49. 9. But now when they persecute them for Righteousness sake 't is a sore but no strange Temptation They may do so partly out of Ignorance 1 Cor. 2. 8. Which none of the Princes of this world knew for had they known it they would not have crucified the Lord of glory And partly out of Prejudice and blind Zeal so the Corner-stone is refused by the Builders Psalm 118. 22. applyed to Christs Persecutors Acts 4. 11. The stone that was set at nought by you builders is become the head of the Corner And partly by the instigation of Evil Men. Wicked men labour to ingage those who are in power against the People of God and make them odious to them Prov. 29. 10. The bloud-thirsty hate the upright Flattery giveth the first onset to the work of Impiety Acts 24. 1 2 3. And partly because Riches and Power efferate men swell them with pride fill them with enmity against the ways of God Psal. 123. 4. Our soul is exceedingly filled with the scorning of those that are at ease and the contempt of the proud Well then let us not be dismayed though great men be prejudiced against us and we have powerful Enemies in Church and State Matth. 10. 17 18. But beware of men for they will deliver you up to the Counsels and they will scourge you in their Synagogues and ye shall be brought before Governours and Kings for my sake for a Testimony against them and the Gentiles Though we be persecuted with Censures Civil and Ecclesiastical and both Judicatures thunder against us Iohn 16. 1 2. These things have I told you that you should not be offended they shall put you out of the Synagogue Yea the time cometh when they that kill you think they do God good service 'T is a stumbling block to see Power which is of God bent against God and his Interest the Beast in the Revelations pushed with the Horns of the Lamb but Christ hath told us of these things before-hand that we should be fore-armed against them Christs Followers must not only look for injuries from wicked men in a tumultuous way but ordinarily carried by fixed Judicatures thrown out of the Church by Excommunication and out of the World by Death Let us Bless God that our Rulers deal more Christianly by us and let us not irritate them but shew all Love and Meekness and Obedience and let the mild Government of our Gracious Soveraign move us to pray to God for the Continuance of his Life and the Prosperity of his Affairs 't is but a necessary Gratitude that we should pay him for the Rest and Peace we enjoy under him 3. The Malice and Groundlesness of this Persecution without cause David did not suffer for his Deserts as an Evil doer he had done nothing disobediently against Sauls Authority when he had spared him in the Cave he giveth him an Ample Testimony 1 Sam. 24. 17. Thou art more righteous then I for thou hast rewarded me good but I have rewarded thee evil Again he had another Testimony when he surprized his Camp sleeping 1 Sam. 26. 21. Return my son David I will no more do thee harm because my soul was precious in thine eyes behold I have played the fool and have erred exceedingly Theodoret expoundeth this of the next Verse with application to these passages When David found Saul asleep he would not kill him and this was more Comfort to him than if he had slain and obtained all their Spoiles Observe we may the better represent our Case to God when we suffer without a Cause then our Sufferings are clean Sufferings more Comfortable to us and Honourable to God 'T was Daniels glory that they could find no occasion or fault against him but only in the matter of his God Dan. 6. 4 5. Blamless Carriage disappoints the Malice of wicked men or shameth them Cajus Sejus vir bonus nisi quod Christianus Now a pretended Crime doth not take away the glory from us Saul pretended that David was an Enemy to his Life and Crown but David declared the Contrary by Word and Deed he might have slain him twice Put to silence the ignorance of foolish men 1 Pet. 2. 15. There may be in Mans Court a Cause which before God is no just Cause as when we are punished for the breach of Law which is contrary to our Duty to God Psalm 94. 20. Shall the throne of iniquity have fellowship with thee which frameth mischief by a law Well then whatever we suffer let it be without a Cause there is cause enough on Gods part to afflict and strike us for our sins but on Mans part let us not procure Sufferings to ourselves by our Provocations We shall hereby have more peace in Sufferings and bring more honour to Religion 1 Peter 3. 17. For it is better if the will of God be so that ye suffer for well-doing then for evil-doing 1 Peter 4. 15 16. But let none of you suffer as a murtherer or a theif or as an evil-doer yet if any suffer as a Christian let him not be ashamed but let him glorifie God in that behalf Surely Christs Cross is more comfortable than the Cross of Barabbas Secondly Let us come to his gracious frame of heart to stand in Awe of the Word but my heart standeth in awe of thy Word Doctrine 'T is a gracious frame of Heart to stand in Awe of the Word of God Gods People are often described by it Iob 13. 13. Whoso despiseth the word shall be destroyed but whoso feareth a commandment shall be rewarded There are many fear a Judgment when to visible appearance it is like to tread upon the heels of sin yea and some fear a Threatning at least when it is like to be accomplished but who fears a Commandment but a Gracious Heart this is reason enough to draw back if a Commandment stand in the way 't is more than if there was a Lion in the way or a band of Armed Enemies or an Angel with a drawn Sword such as stood in the way to stop Balaam they have a deep Reverence of Gods Authority and dare not break through when God by his Law hath fenced up their way So Isaiah 66. 2. To him will I look that is of a poor and contrite spirit and trembleth at my word A man that is affected according to his doom and sentence passed in the Word if the Word speaketh bitter things or the Word speaketh Peace accordingly the man is affected this is the Man that God will look at Ezra 9. 4. Then were assembled unto me every one that
Persecution do expugne or assault Gods love to us but not our love to God For this maketh us cleave to him whatever Temptations we have to the Contrary Do but consider what you are to love 1. We are to love God there it beginneth love God once and then you will take nothing ill at his hands how smart soever his chastenings be they come from a God that loveth you and whom your Souls love Rev. 3. 19. As many as I love I rebuke and chasten Now they will not stumble at Gods dispensations be they never so cross to their expectations and desires But then 2. We must love the Law of God be satisfied with our Duty whatever cometh of it Next to a sincere love to God there must be a sincere love to his holy Law as the right way to eternal blessedness and then Temptations will have but little force upon us for they do not love their Duty for forreign Reasons but for its own sake So that whether it be befriended and countenanced in the World or hated and despised 't is all one they love the Law upon its own Evidence as it is recommended by God and is a sure direction to true happiness Iob. 17. 9. The righteous shall hold on his way and he that hath clean hands shall be stronger and stronger He meaneth notwithstanding all the Troubles and assaults which he endureth they are not scandalized at Gods dealings or permitting them to be thus dealt with but doth persevere in a course of Godliness this is the way wherein he delighteth 3. He loves the Brethren 1 Ioh. 2. 10. He that loveth his brother abideth in the light and there is none occasion of stumbling in him They together with us uphold Christs Interest in the World the Coals by lying together inkindle one another and so are the better kept from having their Zeal quenched or being insnared by the manifold Temptations in the World 4. By this love the love of the World and its prosperity is much abated 1 Ioh. 2. 15. Love not the world nor the things which are in the world for if any man love the world the love of the Father is not in him This man cannot part with all when his Duty calleth for it Till we despise Worldly things we are still liable to take offence All our disquiet cometh from too great love of the World and too little love of the Word of God all this is spoken to shew you that 't is want of love wherefore men are so easily taken off and this love beginneth with the love of God then goeth on to his Word and the Obedience it calleth for and is strengthened by our love to the Saints and is an higher love than that it can be controuled by the love of the World Secondly This blessed peace hath an influence upon it upon a twofold account 1. This is an experience of the good of that way which the World speaketh evil of you cannot perswade a man against his Experience that honey is bitter when he has tasted the sweetness of it 1 Pet. 2. 3. They know the Grace of God in Truth they have found much comfort and peace in these ways Most men know Religion and Godliness but by hear-say or looking on the Testimony of Christ was never confirmed in them but these have tryed it and know the good of Religion by Experience therefore they cannot be so easily offended as others are who have only licked the Glass but never tasted the honey The pleasure they find in the Duties and Exercises of Godliness will with them infinitely out-weigh all the transient Delights and Advantages that are propounded or offer themselves as the bait to any unlawful practice 2. The particular nature of this Experience it is Peace which doth guard heart and mind Phil. 4. 7. that they are not disturbed or distracted by any thing that befalleth them but enjoy a Calm in their Souls whatever storms overtake them or befal them in the way of their Duty Eph. 6. 15. Having our feet shod with the preparation of the Gospel of peace This is the Gospel shoe there is no going to heaven without it and this is peace that is peace with God when all is quiet within and the quarrel is taken up between God and us we can the better bear the frowns of the World and he calleth it the Gospel of Peace because it mainly dependeth on the Terms of Grace revealed to us in the Gospel the law discovereth the enmity and the breach but the Gospel discovereth how peace may be had He calleth it also the preparation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because this peace breedeth a firm and ready resolution to go through all difficulties crosses and hardships Acts 21. 13. I am ready not only to be bound but to die at Ierusalem Well then this is the fruit of Peace and Friendship between God and sinners it breedeth a resolution to hold on our way to heaven notwithstanding crosses and continual hardships and allayeth the bitterness of all Worldly Trouble Thirdly There is Gods Providence and Care over them who is concerned in the Protection of all that love his law and take care to love and please him On the one side God sometimes threatneth the wicked that he will lay stumbling-blocks before them Ier. 6. 21. that is bring those things upon them that shall be a means of ruine to them On the other side Ier. 31. 9. that he will lead the penitent believer in a strait way that they shall not stumble we must not omit Gods Concurrence for it is his Promise that nothing shall offend them His People are very near and dear to him Our Lord telleth us in his discourse against offending them that their Angels do always behold the face of his father which is in heaven Matth. 18. 10. that is though the Angels be appointed to be their Guardians on Earth yet they have their continual returns and recourse to Gods glorious presence to make Requests or Complaints in their behalf or to receive Commands concerning them for as God seeth fit they are imployed in service for the benefit of those little ones I remember Solomon saith Prov. 12. 21. There shall no evil happen to the just but the wicked shall be filled with mischief We can easily understand that the wicked shall be overwhelmed with Gods judgments but how shall no Evil happen to the Righteous since their Troubles are many The meaning of the place is as Augustine well glosseth non ut non eveniant sed ut non noceant they do not stumble at Afflictions nor are they deserted by God as others are God moderateth the Evil 1 Cor. 10. 13. or removeth it Psal. 125. 3. or turneth it to good Rom. 8. 28. Now by this gracious dealing of God it cometh to pass that nothing doth offend them those that depend on the favour of Men and the uncertainties of a worldly condition how many Troubles are they exposed unto Therefore
Pressures 1. The Suitableness they are suited to this happiness wrought for this very thing 2 Cor. 5. 5. Every thing hath a propension to the place for which God framed it 't is the Wisdom of God to put all things in their proper places as every Creature is placed in that element which is suitable and answerable to its Composition and Frame as Fishes in Water Fowles in the Air. Gods Children are framed for this very thing therefore have an inclination and a tendency thither As Heaven is prepared for them so in some measure they for it Rom. 9. 24. aforehand prepared unto Glory And Col. 1. 12. Made meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the Saints in light They grow more dead every day to the Interests and Concernments of the Animal Life and have a greater agreeableness to this happiness 2. Experience Rom. 8. 23. We that have the first fruits of the Spirit groan wit hin our selves waiting for the Adoption to wit the redemption of our body A Christian here is unsatisfied and longeth for a better and purer state of Bliss and Immortality Light Life Peace Joy one dram of Grace is more precious than all the World but yet it setteth them a longing for more the first fruits sheweth us what the Harvest will be and a tast what the Feast will prove here we get a little knowledge of God a sight of him in the Ordinances a Twi-light discovery of Christ a Look through the Lattice Cant. 2. 9. a little Glance of his Face when neither doth he let the Believers in to him nor doth he come out to them this Glance maketh them long for more So that in effect they send up the same Message to Christ which his Mother and Brethren did because of the press thy mother and thy brethren stand without desiring to see thee Tell him thou standest here without but desirest to see him So for the Communion we have with Christ 't is but a tast 1 Pet. 2. 3. If so be ye have tasted the Lord is gracious but that tast is very ravishing and delightful Here we get a little from him in an Ordinance but that little is as much as we can hold but there he is all in all here our holiness is not perfect the seed of God remaineth in us but there it groweth up to perfection as every spark of Fire tendeth to the Element of Fire 3. Our Pressures and the Miseries of the present Life 2 Cor. 5. 4. Being burdened we groan We are pressed under an heavy weight burdened both with Sin and Misery and both set us a groaning and a longing as men in a Tempest would fain be set ashoar as soon as they can 1. Sin to a waking Conscience and a tender Gracious Heart is one of the greatest burdens that can be felt Rom. 7. 24. Oh wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from this body of death If any had cause to complain of Afflictions Paul much more he was Whipped Imprisoned Stoned in perils by Land and Sea but Afflictions did not sit so close to him as sins the body of Death was his greatest burden and therefore did he long for Deliverance If others go away silently under their load the Children of God cannot as light and love increaseth so sin groweth a greater burden to us They cannot get rid of this cursed inmate and therefore are longing for their final Estate when sin shall gaspe its last they long for the parting day when by putting off the Flesh they shall put off sin and dwell with God 2. Miseries the Children of God have not divested themselves of the feelings of Nature are not grown sensless as stocks and stones The Apostle telleth us Rom. 8. 20 21 22. that the whole Creation groaneth because 't is under Misery and Vanity 'T is a groaning World and Gods Children bear a part of the Consort they groan and desire earnestly their full Deliverance Few and evil are the days of the years of my Pilgrimage said holy Iacob Gen. 47. 9. Our dayes are Evil therefore 't is well they are but few that in this Shipwrack of mans Felicity we can see Banks and Shores and a landing place where we may be safe here is our Travail but there is our repose we would sleep too much here and take up our rest if sometimes we did not meet with Thorns in our bed III. Reason The End and Use of this Longing and Desiring 1. 'T is an earnest Desire it maketh us industrious and stirreth up and keepeth up our endeavours after another World Phil. 3. 20 21. But our Conversation is in heaven from whence we look for a Saviour the Lord Iesus Christ who shall change our vile body that it may be fashioned like unto his glorious body according to the working whereby he is able to subdue all things unto himself Where there is a lively expectation there men drive on a Trade for another Country Desire is the Vigorous bent of the Soul and so beareth us out under all the difficulties of Obedience If we do not desire we will not labour nor seek it in the first place and if our desires be weak and feeble they are controled by every Lust abated upon every difficulty whatever gets your heart that will command your endeavours for as a mans desire is so is he 2. To make us Constant notwithstanding Troubles Reproaches Persecutions Matth 11. 12. The violent take it by force They will have no nay they must have it whatever it cost them though sore Troubles and Persecutions yet if we may get Heaven and Glory at last 't is enough but where a thing is coldly and carelesly desired every thing puts us out of the humour IV. The State and Condition of the present World 't is called Gal. 1. 4. The present World The Pleasures of it are meer dreams and shadows and the Evils of it are many and real Gods Children are Pilgrimes here and hardly get leave to pass thorough as Israel could not get leave to pass through Edom Sometimes they meet with such bitter and grievous Persecutions which make them weary of their lives as Elijah requested for himself that he might die 1 King 9. 4. or as the Spirits of the Israelites were filled with Anguish because of their hard task Masters God will give his People Rest hereafter but before the Rest cometh they are sorely Troubled 1 Thes. 1. 6 7. And ye became followers of us and of the Lord having received the word in much Affliction with joy of the Holy Ghost so that ye were ensamples to all that believe in Macedonia and Achaia Nay the Company that we go with to Heaven are apt to fall out by the way and to deal perversly one with another Unministering Unchurching Unchristianing one another Impaling inclosing the Common Salvation and justleing one another out of the way to Heaven so that the Church which should be Terrible like an Army with Banners Marching to
to God to prolong their Lives a while Rom. 15. 31 32. Now I heseech you Brethren for the Lord Iesus Christs sake and for the Love of the Spirit that ye strive together with me in your Prayers to God for me that I may be delivered from them that do not believe in Judea and that my service which I have done for Jerusalem may be accepted of the Saints that I may come unto you with joy by the VVill of God and may with you be refreshed 4. To breed up their Children in the Nurture of the Lord and that they may be usefull in their Familyes as Iacob desired to see Ioseph 5. We may beg it that we may not fall into the Hands of Men lose our Life by Murtherers Psal. 31. 15. My Times are in thy Hand deliver me from the hand of mine Enemyes and from them that persecute me The Dispensation of all Mercies Comforts Troubles Life Death are in Gods Hand not in Mans Power therefore we pray that it may rest there that we may not be given up to the Will of those that hate us All These Desires have a respect to the Glory of God and if conceived with submission and trust that God will do what is for the best they are all lawful Use of all 1. Exhortation it presseth you 1. To Consecrate your selves to God Rom. 12. 1. I beseech you therefore Brethren by the Mercies of God that ye present your Bodies a Living Sacrifice Holy acceptable unto God which is your Reasonable Service Under the Law the Bodyes of Beasts were to be slain yours is a Living Sacrifice both were set apart for God the one to dye the other to live to God 2. Having given up your selves to God use your selves for God there will be an enquiry what share God hath in your Time Acts. 27. 23. The God whose I am and whom I serve 3. Praise the Lord with Heart Mouth and Life a Christians Conversation is nothing but an Hymn to God 1 Pet. 2. 9. But ye are a Chosen Generation a Royal Priest-hood a Holy Nation a Peculiar People that ye should shew forth the praises of him who hath called you out of darkness into his Marvellous Light The Virtues of God his Attributes 4. When ●…er you pray for continuance of Life in any danger or distress either for your self or others propound this as the end not so much for our own Satisfaction as the honour of God A Christian is not content to have the use of the benefit to himself alone 1. For Self Every man desireth Life the whole World would all and every of them put this request to God Let my Soul live but very few consider why they should live Some desire Life only to please the flesh and that they may enjoy the Delights of the present World A Brutish wish A Heathen could say He doth not deserve the name of a Man qui unam diem velit esse in voluptate c. Certainly not of a Christian that would desire Life merely to enjoy the Delights of the flesh These would not leave their Hogs Trough to go home to their Father Some there are who desire Life to see their Children well bestowed or to free their Estate from incumbrance and are loth to part from their Natural Relations Wife Children Friends This is a natural Respect and should be subordinate to an higher End Though this Desire keeping its place may be Lawful yet out of its place sinful We use to profess Psal. 73. 25. Whom have I in heaven but thee and there is none upon earth that I desire besides thee In short two Motives I will urge why the Glory of God should have the chief Respect in our Affections 1. The benefit it giveth Hope of prolonging Life if this desire be true and real And it giveth certain Assurance of not perishing for ever The one it doth for God doth all things with respect to his Glory Psal. 119. 94. The other also for he will glorifie those that glorifie him 2. This is the Temper of a sincere Christian surely to a Believer 'T is a piece of Self-denial to be kept out of Heaven longer Therefore it must be sweetned with some valuable Compensation something there must be to calm the Mind and contentedly to spare the enjoyment of it for a while Now next to the good pleasure of God which is the Reason of Reasons there is some Benefit we pitch upon there is nothing worthy to be compared but our service If God may have Glory if our Lives may do good a Gracious heart must be satisfied with Gracious Reasons 2. For others If we make it our Request we must have the same Aims in this Case that the Faith and Grace of others may benefit them Mar. 2. 5. When Iesus saw their faith he said unto the sick of the palsie thy sins be forgiven thee Now in such Requests bare natural Reasons should not move us but that God may not loose an Instrument of his Glory and that his Power and Providence may be more seen in the World in the Recovery 'T is good to beg of God for God Psal. 115. 1. Not unto us but unto thy Name give glory It should be accounted as a Mercy unto us Phil. 2. 27. For indeed he was sick nigh unto death but God had mercy on him and not on him onely but on me also least I should have sorrow upon sorrow 5. This End is known by the Use in Having and submission in asking 1. The use in Having how we use a Mercy when we have it if we do indeed live to the Glory of God and the rather for these Experiences 2. Submission in Asking whether we sight or are Crowned Work or receive our Reward For God is the best Judge of what is most for his own Glory Use. II. Is Direction but of this See Verse the 17. I come now to the second Point Doctrine II. That Gods Iudgments are a great help and relief to his People who desire to praise him even when they are in danger of their lives Here I shall shew I. What are Gods Judgments II. How they are an Help I. What is the meaning of Misphalim Judgements here 1. God Governeth the World that is called Judgement Psal. 9. 7. 8. He hath prepared his Throne for Iudgment he shall judge the world in righteousness he shall minister Iudgement in uprightness So Ioh. 5. 22. When the Government is put into the hands of Christ 't is said For the Father judgeth no man but hath committed all Iudgment unto the Son 2. God governeth the World according to this Word there is his Judgment concerning Things and Persons stating what is good and evil The Reward of the one and Punishment of the other Psal. 19. 9. The Iudgments of the Lord are true and righteous altogether The Precept is the Rule of our Duty the sanction of Gods Process Therefore in Scripture the Punishments of the wicked are
in our hearts when he is present warming comforting quickning guiding directing the Soul in the way to Life Now God by withdrawing will shew us the folly of our Wisdom and the weakness of our Strength and the Pride of our Humility and the passionateness of our meekness Divines distinguish of dissertion they say that there is disertio correctiva disertio erudativa a dissertion by way of correction and a dissertion by way of Instruction Sometimes by way of Correction because of former sins or some unkindness or ungracious dealing with God God withdraws and there 's a dissertion by way of Instruction to teach us to know the Soveraignty of Grace and to know our own Weakness usually both go together in the same dispensation It 's very hard almost to imagine that the same dispensation should not be both Instructive and Corrective but the Reason why they distinguish thus is this because some dispensations are more clearly for correction and others more clearly for instruction but usually they go together We provoke the Lord by some slight or unworthy dealing with him and then the Lord corrects us and corrects us that he may instruct us to see our all depends upon him and how he should be prized in these things 4. Reason is some special Disease it may be not yet cured in our going astray like a lost Sheep even though our Hearts be right in the main with God It may be some Corruption too that they cherished some carnal interest which is too near and dear to us either Worldly ambitious or sensual Lusts. Though these Reign in the unconverted yet they dwell too much in a Heart that is Gracious and so may prevail sometimes to turn us away from God something there is which we may call our Iniquity Ps. 18. 23. Though in the General we keep our selves from it as an upright Heart will yet it may sometimes foyl us Use. 1. Let us stand upon our Guard O let us not leave the Boat to the stream for there is an erring straying disposition in a great measure left in the People of God Consider Satan is subtle and assiduous in tempting 1 Pet. 5. 8. He goes about like a roaring Lion he is searching up and down after the Prey and an unwary and unmortified Soul soon falls into his snare The Flesh is ready to close with the Temptation as soon as it is presented and therefore the best of Gods Children had need be circumspect and diligent Watch and Pray that you enter not into Temptation Mat. 26. 41. lest you be surprized unawares by some sin or other There is enough Corruption in every one of you to betray you to it if you be not aware and your resisting Graces are very weak and imperfect in degree and which is one consideration more the danger of a fall is very great for thereby God is dishonoured 2 Sam. 12. 14. and your own peace is mightily riffled Psal. 32. 3 4. My moisture was turned into the drought of Summer and I was filled with roaring all the day long Yea and a stumbling block is laid before others and you may destroy those for whom Christ died and woe be to men by whom offences come Math. 18. 7. Under the Law the Lord ordered that if two men strove and hurt a Woman with Child that her fruit departed from her he should surely be punished To hinder Birth was counted Murder so to hinder those that are coming on by any sins of yours in a way to Life If the offence be foul you may feel it long afterward as an old bruise is felt upon every change of Weather and this sin may cost you dear though your Salvation be secured This should make us stand upon our Guard it shews that a Christian should live in constant Vigilancy and daily conflict with sin and deny the desires of the Flesh that he may love God and live to him Use. 2. It shews us the need of the New Covenant wherein the pardon of sins is Established All the Saints that ever lived have had their failings and what would become of them even of Gods own Children if there were not a forgiving God and a gracious Covenant a way found out to remit their offences Ps. 130. 3. If the righteous God should call us to a strict account how could the best of his Children stand before him so Ps. 143. 2. It would go ill with all the world if strict Justice of Law were still in force All are Guilty and all must Perish the Holy Humblest Soul cannot abide the Trial of that Court not only Gods Enemies but his Servants cannot the good they do it cannot be laid in ballance against the Evil it would yield no relief as to remission and pardon plainly if the Guilt of sins remain upon us our Duties will not compensate with our sins But such was the Lords Mercy that when we all like Sheep had gone astray the Lord found a Ransom for us and laid upon Christ the Iniquity of us all Isa. 53. 6. that there might be pardon for poor Creatures 3. It teacheth us again the necessity of dependance upon Gods Care and Power for our spiritual preservation Of all Creatures sheep need a shepherd so do we a spiritual shepherd to keep us from straying to reduce us from our wandrings to weaken our Distemper to drive away the Wolfe In short these two considerations will enforce the necessity of dependance the indefatigable malice of Satan and the unknown weakness and imperfection of the Saints 1. The indefatigable malice of Satan and his unwearied diligence in tempting us to sin his hatred and envy against God and Mankind is such that he leaves no man untempted he would not leave the Lord Christ untempted Especially in some regards above others he labours to draw the Children of God into sin because he knows their sins by reason of their Profession will give great occasion of scandal to the weak and blasphemy to the prophane and wicked Now as his power is very great so is his subtilty and diligence That which Hannibal said of Marcellus perfectly agrees with him whether he gives or takes the foyl he ever renewes and reinforceth the fight When Iob had carried it very innocently in his prosperity in a dangerous time yet try him in adversity Iob 1. 12. nay when he had carried it off in a very grievous Trial as the loss of his Goods and Children Iob 2. c. 2. The weakness and imperfection of the Saints how easily if we take not more diligent heed and care may we fall into Sins both with respect to the weakness of our understandings and perverseness of our affections 1. Our Understanding is so weak that we are ignorant of many things necessary to be known for we know but in part 1 Cor. 13. 12. And if we know something in general we do not know it as we ought to know it 1 Cor. 8. 2. How is that Either we
them p. 185 Augustus Caesar his way to prevent hasty and rash judgment p. 410 Avoiding evil company not enough except we chuse good p. 777 Authority of God the Reason of our Obedience p. 23 24 Authority of God to be eyed in our Obedience and why p. 24 25. God urges his authority p. 26. 35 Authority and Power might and right in God p. 584 Authority of God speaking in his word p. 939-940 Awakening of holy desires means to obtain it p. 309 310 Awakening of Prayer by suspending mercy p 548. Awakening of God by Prayer p. 860 Awe standing in awe of Gods word a mark of Gods Children p. 997. VVhat is it to stand in awe VVhy we must stand in awe of Gods VVord p. 997 998 Awe of Gods word twofold p. 998 999. Reasons p. 1008 B. BAck-sliding Causes of it 1. From without 1. Errors 2. Persecutions 3. Scandals 2. From within 1. Ungrounded assent 2. Ungrounded Profession 3. Unmortifyed Lusts. 4. Easiness of temper 5. Self-confidence p. 343 Baites and Snares in all Conditions p. 780 Baptism the answer of a good Conscience p. 45 Begin with God early p. 763 Beginnings of sin to be suppressed p. 344 Begging grace to Obey a sign that the Commandement is not greivous but our lust p. 29 Behold A note 1. Of admiration 1. Demonstration p. 302 Beleivers only take Gods Testimonies for their heritage p. 743 Beleivers are Princes in disguise p. 743. They are Heirs of the World ibid. They have a Covenant right to all their outward mercies ibid. Beleiving with the whole heart what it is p. 15 Beleiving falls under a Command p. 24 Beleiving gives us hold of God p 544 Benefactor God is so 1. To all 2. To his own p. 569 Benefits of God are all for our profit and Gods glory p. 1093 Bent of the Heart p. 122. Vid. frame of the Heart Blamelessness required in those that reprove others p. 855 Blessed man his Characters 1. Keeping Gods Testimonys 2. Seeking God with the whole heart p 8 Blessed or Cursed whom Christ pronounces such in the last day p. 10 Blessedness the Aim of all rational Creatures Pagans Christians good men evil men p. 1. 224 Blessedness a true notion of it necessary to be got by all men p. 1. We may be right in the Doctrine when we are erroneous in the Practise of blessedness p. 3. Sincere Constant Uniform Obedience the way to blessedness p. 3 Blessedness lies in the enjoyment of God p. 69. Gods blessedness is in himself what it is p. 69 Blessedness in this life annext to sincere Obedience p. 7 Blessings spiritual flow from special love p. 42 Blessings to be expected according to the Tenor of the Covenant p. 788. 317 Blessings Temporal not absolutely to be expected p 317 Blessing God respects his benefits to us p. 42 Blessing God for mercy the way to have more p. 422 Blindness spiritual is natural to every man p. 110 It is worse then natural blindness ibid. It is our great misery p. 852 Blind obedience of Papists to their Superiours p 26 Blood and VVater how they bear Witness p. 9 Body God must be served with the soul as well as with the body Reasons p. 1043 1044 Boldness grounded in innocency p. 36. Boldness in Duties Distresses Death p. 36 Boldness in Confessing and Professing Gods ways an excellent gift of God p. 309. Causes of it p. 310 1. Faith 2. Love to God 3. Fear of God 4. A sense of the other World ibid Bond upon man to God threefold 1. Natural 2. Voluntary 3. Sacramental p. 701 Born again Vid. Regeneration Bountifulness of God to all his Creatures especially to his Saints p. 70 Bounty and Mercy of God a great encouragement to ask any spiritual gifts p. 437. How they differ ibid. Breast-plate of a Christian is Righteousness p. 818 Brethren love of the Brethren a duty p. 1032 Broken heart in confession of sin argues one right in the main p. 1106 Building on the Righteousness of Gods Word what p. 832 Reproof to them that do not build on Gods faithfulness p. 833 Business They that would be blessed must make it their business sincerely to seek after God p. 11 Business discovers the man p. 18. They are blessed that make it their business to avoid all sin ibid. Mark of one that makes Religion his business ibid In all business God must be sought to 1. For his leave 2. His Counsel 3. His blessing p. 58 Prayer is made our Business 1. When it is secret 2. Early 3. Vehement and earnest p. 921 C. CAll of God to be observed p. 412 Calling general and particular they help one another p. 847 Calumniatory discourses forbidden p. 1064 Calumnies against Religion will not long prevail with Rational men p. 339 Comforts against them p. 301 Cares of the World drive out duty p. 32 Carriage we must glorify God before others by it p. 1086 Carelessness in Prayer The Reasons of it p 900 901 Care ess walking Cured by Reproach p. 296 Casc of Conscience p 603. Two great Cases p. 222 Cases of Conscience about Confessing lesser Truths p. 1011 Case how its lawful to rejoyce in Gods Judgements p. 347 Carnal pleasures nothing to Spiritual p. 313 Carnal and spiritual sorrow their difference p. 177 Carnal love to spiritual things p. 863 Carnal Principles what they are p. 235 Carnal and spiritual hearts argue contrarily from one and the same principle p. 757 576 577 Carnal walking cured by Reproach p. 139 Carnal Compliance p. 542. 713. 774 Carnal fear and Carnal Policy p. 644 645 Carnal affections are heady and hasty p. 836 Cause A good Cause well managed may expect Gods protection p. 813. 818. Causeless persecution p. 996 Cause that comes in debate threefold 1. Inter hominem hominem 2. Inter hominem diabolum 3. Inter hominem Deum p. 972. 973. Caution to Magistrates p. 146 Cautions about speedy setting upon duty p. 411 412 Caution against murmuring under affliction p. 485 Against carnal fear and carnal policy p. 644 Caution needful that we be not carried away by example p. 866 Censures of the Church separate the dross from the Gold p. 804 Censuring cured by Reproach p. 139. 297 Censure of mens persons under Gods judgments evil p. 796 Change of exercise good not change of affection p. 95 Change of State may be without change of affection p. 156 Changes 1. In Mens affections 2. In Gods dispensations are ballanced by the Comforts of Gods unchangable Word p. 892 Changes are to be expected in our lives p. 3 Chastening whether in anger or no p. 486 Chearful service to God What it is p. 753 Charity to be maintained toward those that differ from us in lesser matters p. 200 Child of God known by two marks p. 870 Children of God such as fear God and hope in his Word p. 501 Vid. Heirs of Promise Children Why threatned in the second Commandment p. 852 Children desire things passionately and
beast maketh its moan when 't is in pain But much more will his compassion shew it self to his people when they bemoan themselves in a spiritual manner Ier. 31. 18. 20. I have heard Ephraim bemoaning himself what then My bowels are troubled for him I will surely have mercy upon him saith the Lord. When Ephraim was bewailing his sins God taketh notice of it and returneth an answer full of fatherly affection that he would surely shew him mercy Gods compassion proceedeth from Love as the cause and produceth Relief as the effect Secondly The next word is Kindness that noteth the bounty of God or his free inclination to doe good without our merit and against our merit The cause is not in us but himself We draw an ill picture of God in our mind as always angry and ready to destroy No! The Lord is kind and that many times to the unthankfull and to the evil Luke 6. 35. We should all inlarge our thoughts more about Gods mercifull Nature that we may love him more that we may not keep off from him As long as we think he delighteth in the Creatures misery or seeketh occasions of man's ruine and destruction God is made hatefull No! You must conceive of him as one that is kind that doth not afflict willingly nor grieve the Children of men Lam. 3. 33. but is ready to doe good upon all occasions We need not fear any hurt from God but what we willingly bring upon our selves He destroyeth not humble Souls that lie at his feet and would have mercy upon his own terms Secondly What incouragement this is to the people of God 1. 'T is an incouragement because the object of mercy is misery Mercy is favour shewed to a miserable person Now the more sense of our misery especially of our true misery which is sin the greater hopes So that the broken-hearted are more capable of his mercy than others are God will revive the spirit of the contrite ones ●…sa 57. 15 16 17. He taketh care to comfort them and to look after them what ever be neglected Isa. 60. 2. None are so apt to presume of mercy as the careless nor none less capable of mercy or more deserve judgment While we make nothing of sin 't is easy to believe mercy In a time of peace sin is nothing Vanity and Carnality nothing a negligent course of profession nothing vain talk idle mispence of time pleasing the Flesh with all it craveth is nothing and there needeth no such niceness and strictness God is mercifull but when the conscience is awakened and we see our actions with their due aggravations especially at the hour of death and when earthly comforts fail then 't is hard to believe Gods mercy Sin is a blacker thing than they did imagine and they find it another manner of thing than ever they thought of and the same unbelief that now weakens their faith about their Duty and what belongeth to their Duty doth now weaken their faith about their comfort and what belongeth to their comfort Those that now question precepts will then question promises Well then the careless and negligent are not capable objects of the tenders of mercy but the sensible and the contrite and the serious these are the fittest objects though they think themselves farthest off from mercy Those that have a deep sense of their own unworthiness most see a need of mercy and most admire mercy Gen. 32. 10. They see that mercy doth all that there is somewhat of the pity and kindness of God in all things vouchsafed They apprehend they are alwayes in some necessity or in some dependance and they are unworthy and that it is at Gods mercy to continue or take away any comfort they have Health Liberty Strength all is dipt in mercy continued in mercy restored at mercy Secondly It is an incouragement to us because the Scripture saith so much of this mercy in God Id agit tota Scriptura ut credamus in Deum saith Luther 't is natural to him 1 Cor. 1. 3. The father of mercies not Pater ultionum but misericordiarum he is as just as he is mercifull but he delighteth in the exercise of one attribute more than the other Micah 7. 18. The other his strange work There is a fulness and plenty abundant mercy 1 Pet. 1. 3. and Psal. 51. 1. According to the multitude of thy tender mercies Our wants are many and so are our sins onely plentifull mercy can supply and overcome them They are tender mercies compared with those of a Father and Mother Of a Father Psal. 103. 13. As a Father pitieth his Children so doth the Lord pity those that fear him We need not much intreat a Father to pity his Child in misery An earthly Father may be ignorant of our misery as Iacob in Iosephs case an earthly Father pitieth foolishly but God wisely when 't is most for our benefit An earthly Fathers pity may goe no farther than affection and cannot always help his Children and relieve their misery But God as he is Metaphorically said to have the affection so he hath an alsufficient power to remove any evil present or avert that which is imminent With that of a Mother Isa. 49. 15. Can a Woman forget her sucking Child that she should not have compassion on the Son of her Womb yea they may forget yet I will not forget thee saith the Lord. In the general passions in Females are more vehement especially in humane Creatures the Mother expresseth the greatest tenderness and largeness of love God hath the Wisdome of a Father and Bowels of a Mother Mark 'T is not to an adopted Child but to her own Son her sucking Child that hangeth on her Breast cannot subsist without the Mothers care Mothers are wont to be most chary and tenderly affected towards them poor helpless Infants and Children that cannot shift for themselves Nature hath impressed this disposition on them Suppose some of them should be so unnaturall as to forget their sucking Babes which is a case rare to be found yet I will not forget you saith the Lord. They are durable compassions his compassions fail not Lam. 3. 22. They are continual mercies supplying daily wants pardoning daily failings bestowing daily mercies Oh that the miserable and the wretched those that find themselves so could believe this and plead this and cast themselves in the arms of this mercifull Father Surely the Penitent are not more ready to ask than he to give Therefore let us come boldly to the Throne of Grace Heb. 4. 16. Let not our Sins keep us from him our Misery rather than our Worthiness is an object of his mercy Thirdly His mercy is more to his People than to others There is a general mercy and a special mercy 1. There is a general mercy by which God sustaineth and helpeth any Creature that is in misery especially man so Christ calleth him mercifull as he sheweth himself kind to the unthankfull and evil
Luke 6. 36. Had it not been for this mercy the World had been long since reduced into its ancient Chaos and the frame of Nature dissolved 2. There is a special mercy which he sheweth to his People Pardoning their Sins sanctifying their Hearts accepting their Persons So of his mercy hath he saved us Tit. 3. 4 5. Quickned us Eph. 2. 4 5. God who is rich in mercy for his great Love wherewith he loved us even when we were dead in Sins hath quickened us together with Christ. This sheweth God hath more mercy fo●…●…is People than for others Now this is a great incouragement he that took pity upon us in our lost Estate and did then pardon our Sins freely will he not take pity upon us now we are in the state of Grace and have our sins pardoned Surely he will shew mercy unto us still in forbearing the punishment due unto us or in mitigating his corrections or sweetning them with his Love What matter is it who hateth us when the Almighty pityeth us and is so tender over us 2. The satisfying effect which is comfort Here I shall shew 1. What is comfort 2. That Consolation is the gift and proper work of God to be asked of him 1. What is comfort 'T is sometimes put for the object or thing comfortable Sometimes for the disposition of the subject or that sense and apprehension that we have of it 1. The object or thing comfortable and so comfort may note 1. Deliverance and temporall Blessings these things are comfortable to the senses and in a moderate proportion and with submission they may be asked of God That comfort is put for deliverance many Scriptures witness Take these for a tast Psal. 71. 21. After deep and sore troubles thou shalt increase my greatness and comfort me on every side So Psal. 81. 17. Shew me a token for good that they which hate me may see it and be ashamed because thou Lord hast holpen me and comforted me So Isa. 12. 1. In that day thou shalt say O Lord I will praise thee though thou wast angry with me thine anger was turned away and thou comfortedst me In all these places comfort is put for temporal deliverance which is an effect of Gods mercy and may be an object of the Saints Prayers 'T is lawfull to deprecate afflictions There are but few of the best of Gods Children that can hold out under long troubles without murmuring or fainting 2. An other object of comfort is the pardon of Sins or a sense of Gods special love in Christ wrought on our hearts This is matter of comfort indeed This is the principal effect of Gods mercifull kindness in this life and the great consolation of the Saints as offering a remedy against our greatest evil which is trouble that ariseth from guilt and sin This obtained filleth them with joy and peace Psalm 4. 6 7. puts gladness into our hearts To feel Gods love in the Soul Rom. 55. is the Heaven upon Earth which a believer enjoyeth which allayeth the bitterness of all his troubles Heaven above is nothing but comfort and the comforts of the Spirit are Heaven below God keepeth not all for the life to come 3. An other object of comfort is our happy estate in Heaven which puts an end to all our miseries Rev. 7. 19. God shall wipe away all tears from our eyes Rev. 21. 4. There shall be no more death nor sorrow nor crying nor any pain Luke 16. 19. In thy life time thou receivedst thy good things and Lazarus evil things but now he is comforted and thou art tormented We have not our full comfort till we come to Heaven In the world there still is Day and Night Summer and Winter Here is a mixture of Mourning and Joy but there all comfort Matth. 5. 4. Fourthly The highest and chiefest object of our comfort is the Lord himself 1 Sam. 30. 6. David comforted himself in the Lord his God Though all things else fail this should satisfie us Though we have little health no friends no outward supports to rejoyce in yet thou hast God whose favour is Life and who is the Fountain of Happiness and the centre of the Souls rest The prophet when reduced not onely to some streights but great exigencies Hab. 3. 18. Yet I will rejoyce in the Lord I will joy in the God of my Salvation The joy of sense is in the Creature the joy of Faith is in God Thus we may consider comfort objectively All that I shall say farther is this that we should take heed what we make to be the object of our solid comfort Luke 10. 24. They are carnall men that wholly place their comfort in earthly things in the pleasures and honours and profits of the world Luke 6. 24. Woe to you that are rich for ye have received your consolation They have all here and can look for no more and if disappointed here they are utterly miserable There are consolations arising from good things exhibited but more in good things promised Everlalasting Consolations 2 Thes. 2. 16. 2. Let us consider it subjectively Comfort 't is the strengthening of the mind when it is apt to be weakened by doubts fears and sorrows as by patience we are kept from murmuring so by comfort we are kept from fainting 'T is the strength stay and support of the heart against any grievance whereby it is likely to be overcome There are three words by which that delightfull sense of Gods favour as a stay and strengthening to the heart is expressed Comfort Peace and Ioy. Comfort is that sense of his love by which the sorrows that arise from the sense of sin and the sears of Gods Justice are not altogether removed and taken away yet so mitigated and allayed that the Soul is not overwhelmed by them but hope doth more prevail This is the nature of Comfort that it doth not altogether remove the Evil but so alleviate and asswage it that we are able to bear it with some alacrity and chearfulness and this is the common state of Believers answerable to the ordinary measure of Faith which God giveth his Children Though they are assaulted with Sorrows Doubts and Fears yet they have that true and solid ground of Comfort in the Promises which begets some hope and expectation towards God and when the conslict groweth grievous God of his mercy allayeth the storm by the working of his comforting Spirit 2. There is Peace which is another Notion which implyeth Comfort but withall a more full degree of it for Peace doth so settle and calm the Conscience that they are assaulted either with none or very light Fears It may be explained by external Peace External Peace is that state of things which is not troubled with Wars from abroad or intestine Tumults and Confusions at home for some long space of time A Truce is a shorter respite but a Peace is a long calm and quiet So when we are not assaulted with Doubts