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A25886 Englands Eben-ezer, or, Stone of help set up in thankfull acknowledgment of the Lords having helped us hitherto : more especially for a memoriall of that help which the Parliaments forces lately received at Shrewsbury, Weymouth, and elsewhere : in a sermon preached to both the honourable Houses of Parliament, the lord mayor and aldermen of the citie of London being present, at Christ-Church, London, upon the late solemne day of thanksgiving, March 12 / by John Arrowsmith ... Arrowsmith, John, 1602-1659. 1645 (1645) Wing A3775; ESTC R200016 25,663 39

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his praying thrice aday Evening and morning and at noon will I pray and cry aloud But as on purpose to put his soule in tune here that in heaven it might make the better musick he multiplies prayses even to seven times in a day Psal. 119 164. Seven times a day doe I praise thee becanse of thy righteous judgements The Application hereof followeth What now remains O ye principall men Lords Commons and Citizens but that you be exhorted to have a principall hand in this duty of praysing God for his help and called upon to doe what ye ought both for the substance of the work and manner of performing it 1 For the substance of the work Know and remember that God must be praysed with your hearts your parts your lips your lives and your estates 1 With your hearts Psal. 103. 1. Blesse the Lord ô my soule and all that is within me blesse his holy name The deepest springs are wont to yeeld the sweetest waters they are the sweetest thanks that proceed from a depth within For as Seneca well the value of thanks resolves it selfe wholly into the frame and disposition of the heart 2 With your parts You are men of great and vast abilities ô consecrate them all to God The Spirit of man Solomon saith is the candle of the Lord Prov. 20. 27. Suffer not your bright candles to burn downwards imploy not your parts in the things of this world altogether not at all in the things of hell left they sweal quite away without doing any considerable service to God or man Great parts are like great Ordnance if the Fort wherein they are planted bee yeelded up to Jesus Christ they 'r of excellent use against the Serpent and his seed But so long as Satan holds the Fort no men more mischevous to the Church than those that have the best naturall and acquired abilities yea none in so dangerous a condition in reference to their own soules I must be bold to tell such as abuse their wits and other endowments in the service of Satan against the truth that their lightsome candles will but serve to light them to hell and their large parts to enlarge their condemnation there 3 With your lips Psal. 51. 15. O Lord open thou my lips and my mouth shall shew forth thy praise The tongue is called a mans glory partly because speech is a thing wherein men excell beasts and partly because it is given him to glorifie God withall Prayse and thanks should be offered up when ever we draw neere to him in any duty particularly when ever we pray Phil. 4. 6. Be carefull for nothing but in every thing by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your request be made known unto God with thanksgiving Expect no acceptance of those prayers wherein there is not some spice of that Prayer without prayse is a censer without burning coals from which there can no sweet savour ascend 4 With your lives for therein lies the life of thankfulnesse He is the most thankfull that is the most fruitfull Christian There must be Gratiarum actio a doing of thanks Else if our thanks be not accompanied with obedience we doe but play Jews-play with Christ saying Haile King of the Jews and smiting him Physitians iudge of the heart by the arme feele the pulse that they may know the state of the vitals How beats the pulse of thy conversation according to that will God judge of the soundness or sickliness of thy constitution Would you render reall thanks Remember what you have lately sworn namely to goe before each other in the example of a reall reformation The Lord had caused the Land to passe under a rod a rod that fetch'd bloud at every lash before we would be brought into the bond of that Covenant Beleeve it he that whipt us to it will whip us for it if it be not kept The curses ingrost in that flying roll Zech. 5. will be sure to over-take us for swearing falsely by the name of the Lord 5 With your estates Honour the Lord with thy substance Prov. 3. 9. Christ will never trust Judas more The Saints are now his purse-bearers and from them it is expected that they should willingly disburse when ever the Lord hath need in his members This is the duty of every day especially solemne days of thanksgiving Eat the fat and drink the sweet and send portions unto them for whom nothing is prepared for this day is holy unto our Lord neither be ye sorry for the joy of the Lord is your strength Nehem. 8. 10. That joy which enlargeth the heart at such a time should take away straitnesse of hand Thanksgiving dayes should be giving dayes Upon the first day of the week let every one of you lay by him in store as God hath prospered him saith Saint Paul prescribing an order concerning the collection for the Saints 1 Cor. 16. 1 2. Why upon the first day of the weeke Chrysostome hints to this reason because then in the use of those Ordinances that were dispensed on the Lords day the spirits of Christians resenting the goodnesse of God more then at other times would be more ready to give the Saints a taste of theirs You that have this worlds good shut not up your bowels now from those of Melcomb Weymouth and Plymouth that need so much and deserve so well Let the consideration of those late mercies we have received be a means to open all obstructions of heart and purse and to procure mercie from you for those persons by whom and places where we have received them 2 For the manner This great worke of praysing God must be performed unanimously and cheerfully 1 Unanimously We should all glorifie God with one minde and with one mouth Rom. 15. 6. which is utterly impossible so long as through difference in opinion and affection that event is looked at as a crosse by one which appears a rich blessing to another There will hardly be one mouth where there is not one mind God will hardly be glorified where there is not a sweet conjunction of both Cleopatra dissolved an union of great price and dranke it in an health to Marcus Antonius Divisions are Satans Drinke-offerings No such drinkers of health to hell as dissolvers of union If my soule might have its wish I should not desire what Austin did to see either Paul in the pulpit or Rome in its pomp but the thing I would beg should be Union Next to a full and clear sight of its own union to Jesus Christ my soule should long for nothing more in all the world than union of the King to his Parliament of the godly throughout the Kingdom among themselves Who ever lives to see these things may sing his Nunc dimittis with Simeon Lord now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace for mine eyes have seen thy salvation 2 Cheerfully Psal. 149. 5 6. Let the
prayer nor his mercie from me Psal. 66. 19 20. We may in reference to them all erect a second Eben-Ezer for herein also the Lord hath helped us both helpt us to pray and helpt us to speed A third mercie is the Lords defeating their enemies and that so as to make Israel instrumentall for its own preservation in the 10. and 11. verses The Philistims drew neere to battail against Israel but the Lord thundred with a great thunder on that day upon the Philistims and discomfited them and they were smitten before Israel And the men of Israel went out of Mizpeh and pursued the Philistims and smote them c. We are assembled this day to praise God for shewing the like favour to us in more then one or two places It may be observed out of Scripture that the Lord hath still been delighted in taking to himselfe a denomination from some fresh and recent mercie In one of the first ages of the world he is styled the possessor of heaven and earth as having not long before made the one for his throne and the other for his footstool After he had revealed himselfe by many promises to the Fathers he is frequently called the God of Abraham Isaack and Iacob When he had newly broken the yoke which Pharoah had put on his peoples neck then I am the Lord saith he that brought thee out of the Land of Egypt out of the house of bondage Having at another time delivered the same people from Babylon he renews in his stile the memoriall thereof Jer. 16. 14 15. The dayes come saith the Lord that it shall no more be said the Lord liveth that brought up the children of Israel out of the Land of Egypt but the Lord liveth that brought up the children of Israel from the land of the North After the Word was made flesh the amiable Title which the New Testament gives him is this The God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ It is not long since he was pleased to crown the endeavours of our men of war with a triple victory that so with a threefold cord of love he might draw us to thankfulnesse Let him therefore be styled at least for this day The God of our Parliament and of their forces at Scarborough at Shrewsbury and at Weymouth I am not able to parallel our success with theirs in all things The chapter tels us of a defeat occasioned by miraculous thunder here was none such onely an artificiall thundering on both sides and that on ours blest to the discomfiting of our enemies Yea our three Commanders in chief in those three fore-mentioned places what were they else but to use the Poets expression Tria fulmina belli yet in two particulars they may be compared 1 Israels victory which the Text relates to was unexpected They were met together at this time to consult and not to combate not to fight and kill but to fast and pray to reforme and not to embattail themselves Yet now doth God give up their enemies into their hands Tell me was not the gaining of Shrewsbury unexpected by all men here the regayning of Weymouth a thing which but few of us had in our hopes Hath not the Lord in both these yea and at Scarborough done terrible things which we looked not for Have we not received Weymouth especially as Abraham did Isaack even from the dead may we not say upon this occasion mutatis mutandis as the man in the parable did of his son Luk. 15. 32. It is meet that we should make merry and be glad for this thy brother was dead and is alive again was lost and is found 2 Israel got the victory though the Philistims had the advantage It seemeth by the tenour of the story that full men set upon such as were fasting armed men upon such as were naked Israel for ought we read being furnished with no other weapons but their prayers and tears and sacrifices Onely when the Philistims were discomfited by the thunder they 't is thought took up the weapons that fell from their amazed enemies and with them did execution in the pursuit 'T is easily found which side the advantage was on at Weymouth Were not our numbers inconsiderable were not the few men we had well-nigh spent and worne out with watching and other military duties yet did they prove more then conquerors by getting not onely victory but booty recovering what they had lost before and withall possessing themselves of what the enemy had laid in Let us therefore bestow another Eben-ezer upon this and say once more Hitherto the Lord hath helped us I hasten to the third and last observation viz. That principall men are to have a principall hand in the duty of praysing God for his help Climbe we up to the full explication of this truth by certain steps which are these Every creature is made to praise God in its kind Men are more bound to this duty then other creatures Christians more then other men Professors eminent for their places in Church or State more than other Christians 1 Every creature is made to prayse God in its kinde Prayse ye him Sun moon prayse him all ye stars of light prayse him ye heavens of heavens and ye waters that be above the heavens Prayse the Lord from the earth ye dragons and all deeps Fire and haile snow and vapour stormie winds fulfilling his word mountains and all hils fruitfull trees and all Cedars beasts and all cattell creeping things and flying fowls Psal. 148. 3 4 7 8 9 10. They doe it accordingly Psal. 19. 1. The heavens declare the glory of God and the firmament sheweth his handy work 2 Men are bound to this duty more then other creatures O that men would prayse the Lord for his goodnesse for his wonderfull works to the children of men Let them exalt him also in the congregation of the people prayse him in the assembly of the Elders Psal. 107. 31 32. The whole world is a musicall instrument every string is so tuned as to be fitted for resounding the great Creators prayse But man of all visible creatures is the onely musician that knows how to play upon this instrument The rest can prayse God but Objective by being the objects of mans meditation They doe all bring as it were their severall sacrifices unto him and lay them down at his feet he is the Priest that must offer them up for the whole Creation 3 Christians more then other men That place in Psal. 65. 1. deserves more then ordinary consideration Prayse wayteth for thee ô God in Sion The Saints poure out their hearts to day in thanksgiving to God the next day yea it may be the next houre there comes a shoale of new mercies hee must be acknowledged also in them and therefore prayse is said to wait till the blessing arrive as being at hand ready to be tendred upon all