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A95065 An exposition with practicall observations upon the three first chapters of the proverbs: grammaticall rhetoricall, logicall, and theologicall. As they were delivered in severall expository lectures at Christ-church in Canterbury. / By Francis Taylor, B. in D. Taylor, Francis, 1590-1656. 1655 (1655) Wing T273; Thomason E847_1; ESTC R207317 415,752 563

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quasi coagito Notat sereitatem Beeman To think is to bring thoughts trgether in the minde It notes seriousnesse Such is the care of the Wife how she may please her husband 1 Cor. 7.34 She casts this way and that way how she may give content So every wise woman buildeth her house ch 14.1 She studies in every businesse how to set every thing in order So the Carpenter studies how to set every thing in joynt Shall preserve thee As a buckler keeps from wounds v. 7. or as a guard which Princes and great men are wont to have about them for the safety of their persons Their souls shall be as safe as the bodies of those great ones who have a Band of men alwayes waiting on them Or as Cities that have a strong garrison to keep them from danger of assaults by the enemy Discretion shall preserve thee from all enemies and disasters Vnderstanding Carefull examination will give thee understanding to see what is fit to be done and what to be avoyded For the word See on v. 2. Shall keep thee See on v. 8. It shall keep watch and ward over thee It brings del●ght and safety The same thing spoken in the beginning of the v. in other words for assurance and to enlarge our affections to wisdome as if no words could sufficiently set out this benefit of preservation by it and to urge us to entertain it and rejoyce in it as in a most beautifull spouse If we so do it will shew us the way how to be free from sinfull courses Figures Preserve thee A Metaphor from persons or Towns kept by a guard Who are kept by the power of God through faith unto salvation 1 Pet. 1.5 The word signifies kept as with a band of Souldiers in a garrison The same benefit is twice inculcated Note 1. The preserver Diseretion and understanding 2. The act shall preserve shall keep 3. The person preserved thee He that joyfully entertains it and takes pleasure in it shall be kept by it 1. Doct. Men are subject to many dangers till they get wisdome He goeth after her straightway as an Oxe goeth to the slaughter or as a fool to the correction of the stocks Till a dart strike through his liver as a bird hasteth to the snare and knoweth not that it is for his life ch 7.22 23. Thou fool this night shall thy soul be required of thee then whose shall those things be which thou hast provided Luk. 12.20 Reason 1. Because their reputation is in danger and men had as leeve lose their life as their credit if they be generous Folly will give occasion of disgrace 2. Their goods and essate will be in danger which is a great losse How many lose them by folly breaking out into unseemly words and deeds 3. Their body and life is in danger which are dearer then credit and goods Skin for skin yea all that a man hath will be give for his life Job 2.4 Is not the life more then meat and the body then rayment Mat. 6.25 4. The soul is in danger and lies open to eternall misery Therefore sin which damns the soul is called folly He had wrought folly in Israel in lying with Jacobs daughter which thing ought not to be done Gen. 34.7 And wicked men that go to hell are chronicled for fools all over this Book of Proverbs And this is the greatest danger of all What is a man profited if he shall gain the whole world and lose his owne soul Matth. 16.26 Vse It discovers to us the cause of many troubles and calamities in the world want of wisdome to prevent the occasions I say not of all but of many for Gods servants are often persecuted without a cause and for tryall of their graces yet we may do well to attribute our sufferings to our folly as David did My wounds stink and are corrupt because of my foolishnesse Psal 38.5 2. Doct. Young men are most in danger of allurement For he speaks to his Son all along vers 1 2 c. He that is seduced by the Strumpet is said to be among the youths ch 7.7 Such are most subject to walk in the wayes of their heart and in the sight of their eyes Eccl. 11.9 Reason 1. Brcause they are more subject to be set upon by strumpets riotous theeves as having least gravity to keep such off My Son a young man if sinners intice thee ch 1.10 Old men they will not set upon so soon Nay the thought of an old grave man present might keep men from secret sins as the Heathen man said Think Socrates or Plato sees thee and thou wilt not commit folly 2. Young men have least wit and experience to resist such temptations and therefore Solomon writ his Proverbs to teach the young man knowledge and discretion ch 1.4 3. Because old men want fuel for many sins to be kindled by temptations and allurements They cannot exercise wantonness riotousness robbing killing for want of bodily strength The grassehopper to them is a burden and desire fails Eccl. 12.5 They cannot taste what they eat and drink nor hear the voyce of singing men or singing women 2 Sam. 19.35 Old men have seen the mischief that falls upon evill courses of life and therefore are not easily drawn to them Old birds will not be caught with chaffe Vse Take heed young men you think your selves strongest and you are weakest your strength and heat of blood will soonest draw you to folly for lust is strongest in young men by reason of natural heat Therefore Paul bids Timothy Fly youthfull lust 2 Tim. 2.22 Be not proud and carelesse but humble and watchful 3. Doct. When men get discretion and knowledge they will be free from many enormities into which others fall So the prodigall Son who fed on husks before when he came to himself found bread enough in his Fathers house Luk. 15.17 So the Angel of Laodicea might be freed from blindnesse poverty and nakednesse if he would follow Christs counsel Rev. 3.17 18. Truth hath a freeing power Ye shall know the truth and the truth shall make you free Joh. 8.32 1. Because Satan is daunted by repulses as he was by Christ Then the devil leaveth him Mat. 4.11 2. Wicked men give over soliciting when they see it cannot prevail as Joseph's Mistresse did who though she brought him to prison could not bring him to adultery Gen. 39. 3. Because men seeing the uglinesse of sin grow more wary and so escape snares A blinde man sees no rubs in the way but follows his guide carelesly He that sees looks at stumbling-blocks and goes beside them 4. God watches over such and men that have a guard are free from many dangers into which others fall If a Rulers word hath power Gods Word hath more Vse It shews a reason why some escape those sins and dangers that lay hold on other men and themselves had formerly incurred because they have got more discretion and true wisdome
imitated in sinfull courses The summe is That all the courses that are used in the house of the adulterers tend to death both of body and soul that so the young man if he love the safety of his own soul and body should take heed of coming there Figures Her house The sins comitted in her house The subject for the adjunct Her paths A Metaphor from Travellers often used in this Book Note 1. The hurt gotten in her house Death 2. The bad company it brings men to Dead and damned men worse then to bring men among Lazars in the Hospitall In the former observe 1. The word of coherence For. 2. The cause her house 3. The effect inclineth 4. The object unto death In the latter note 1. The way And her paths 2. The end unto the dead 1. Doct. Much hurt is gotten by conversing with lewd women If Samson were alive he would tell you how by Dalilah's acquaintance he loft his strength liberty sight lise besides the danger of his soul Solomon would inform you how he fell from God to Idolatry by such company and how thereby his posterity lost the greatest part of their Kingdome Reason 1. Because nothing can be expected from creatures but what their nature yeelds Fire will burn Seas drown Ravenous birds feed on carkasses Wilde beasts devour them Evil women are naught Evil trees bring forth bad fruit not good Mat. 12.33 35. All the houshold of the adulterers and all her wayes tend to death temporall and eternall as in the text 2. All men and women speak according to their disposition and employment Navita de ventis de tauris narrat arator Enumerat miles vulnera pastor eves Of Winds the Sea-man of his Bulls The Plow-man speaks his Wounds The Souldier reckons of his Sheep The Shepherd talk propounds A covetous man speaks of bargains a voluptuous man of games a proud man of titles an angry man of injuries a strumpet of wantonnesse Evil communication corrupts good manners 1 Cor. 15.33 Vse Letus observe the carriage of women and if we evidently see wantonnesse in their words and deeds set a crosse upon their houses with Lord have mercy upon them as over houses infected Cum foeminâ semper esse non cognoscere foeminam plus est quam mortuum suscitare Bern. in Cant. Serm. 65. To be alwayes with a woman and not to know a woman is more then to raise up a dead man Touch not pitch lest ye be defiled Ye have fire enough in your owne natures seek not fuell abroad The young man when he grows acquainted with strumpets hopes to spend his dayes merrily in fine houses and is suddenly carried to death and hell He looked for a storehouse of pleasure fine gardens c. and behold desolation The Heathen man could say Nolo tanti poenitentiam emere I will not buy repentance so deer And the Proverb is Caveat emptor Let the buyer beware It serves then to admonish us to take heed of haunting the company of Harlots lest we defile our selves and consent to their filthinesse We would not willingly come neer a rotten and ruinous house lest it should fall and bruise or kill our bodies There is more reason to avoyd the company of Harlots whose society may not onely break our bones but eternally damn our souls 2. Doct. Many miseries attend upon adultery It cost the Israelites and the Benjamites deer the losse of many thousand lives and almost the destruction of an whole Tribe Judg. 19. 20. 21. It cost David deer 2 Sam. 12. The losse of his childe the abuse of his wives a lasting sword on his house besides the rape of Tamar and rebellion of Absolon and Adonijah with the murder of Amnon Reason 1. Because it was death by Gods Law and so it is now by ours Lose life and lose all comfort 2. It is infamous all the world over No modest persons care for joyning with adul torous families 3. It breeds many quarrels between the Husband and the Adulterers Wives and Strumpets Adulterers one among another and Strumpets also 4. It brings many murders The adulterers will hunt for the pretious life chap. 6.26 The Husband enraged will kill the Adulterer ch 6.34 35. 5. It brings bastards which is a disgrace to posterity 6. It procures disinheriting of Children when men suspect their Wives want of chastity 7. It breeds diseases in the body and shamefull ones too as characters of that wickednesse 8. It brings poverty on the state by Gods curse or the Whores covetousnesse For by means of a whorish woman a man is brought to a piece of bread ch 6.26 Vse Think of the many mischiefs that attend upon adultery when thou art tempted to it A needfull theam for we naturally look not at sin as it is in it self but as it is to us not in its odious and filthy nature as we should doe though no danger followed it but in its hurtfull effects which is to fear the smoak more then the fire Yet so to look at it may be profitable to keep us from the fin if not for hatred of it yet for fear of the ensuing mischiefs Think with thy self there is great danger and much wickednesse in adultery else God which is so mercifull would never punish it with a double death temporall and eternall Remember that all conversing with strumpets tend to destruction And though she speak flattering words yet shamefull death follows adultery as well as theft or murder In Adrian's Gymnasium or place of exercise Venus is set forth as the ancientest of the Destinies not spinning the thread of life but cutting it asunder Quid Venus est quaeris est antiquissima Parca Filáque mox resecans at neque nens eadem Thou askest what Venus is She is The ancient'st Destiny That quickly cuts the threads of lise But knits them not truly Plutarch writes of a Temple inscribed Saerum Veneri homicidae Sacred to Venus the Man-stayer Chrysostome on Psal 50. saith What is an whorrsh woman but a sepulchre and the common burying place of mankinde is her house And in Rome because old Harlots were not permitted openly they harboured in caves of earth called Fornices from whence the word Fornication cometh and in this regard it is fitly sald in the text Her house enclineth unto death and her paths unto the dead To the grave an hole in the earth where the dead are laid A dark place fit for sin and fit for punishment Terence calls Harlots Cruces because they crucifie men Venery is deaths quickest Harbinger Pope John 12. being taken with an Adulteresse was stabbed to death by her Husband A●xander the Great and Otho the third lost their lives by their lusts But how many alas by this means have lost their souls fleshly lusts do in an especiall manner fight against the soul 1 Pet. 2.11 And nothing hath enriched hell so much saith one as beautifull faces Let the young man think on these great examples
here meant See more on Chap. 1.33 Figures In thine own eyes 1. A metonymie of the cause for the effect In thine eyes that is in thy sight So it is translated Chap. 1.17 in the sight of any bird Heb. in the eyes as the margin there shewes and so it might have been translated here 2. A metaphor In thy sight that is in thy judgment For the judicial faculty is the eye of the Soul The Soul passes sentence on things by judgment as the body by sight so Gods eyes are on good men though poor I wil look to him that is poor and of a contrite spirit Isa 66.2 The eyes of the Lord are upon the righteous Psal 34.15 So are Davids Mine eyes shal be upon the faithful of the land Psal 11.1.6 It signifies approbation Depart A metaphor from a traveller that being in a wrong way leaves it to go in a right path So must we leave those sinful waies in which we walk naturally Note 1. A lesson of humility 2. of the fear of God 3. of avoiding evil In each of these is an act and an object in the first the act is Be not wise the object in thine own eyes In the second the act Fear the object the Lord. In the third the act And depart the object from evil Doct. 1. A good man should look into his own condition to know the truth of it else he may soon think better of himselfe then there is cause Give diligence to make your calling and election sure 2 Pet. 1.10 Let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fal 1 Cor. 10.12 Reas 1. Because there is a difference of mens conditions else no need of search Some are in the broad way to hel others in the narrow way to heaven 2. We are all naturally in the worst condition and should therefore take notice of it and seek to get out of it 3. It may be doubtful whether we be out of it or no because of the likenesse between common and saving graces There is in wicked men sometimes some kind of repentance and faith There is a way which seemeth right unto a man but the end thereof are the waies of death Chap. 14.12 Try which is right 4 It is a difficult thing to discern for a wicked man may go far in outward performances and forward profession Use 1. To tax all such as have no mind to look into their spirituall condition they are forward to cast up their books to know their temporal estates and upon every distemper to advise with the Physician for their bodies for fear of a disease breeding in them only the poor soul is neglected we fear such as eat and drink any thing and have no regard of diet that they wil be sick and such as love not to look into their debt-debt-bookes that they wil be bankrupts So we may fear that they are yet in their natural estate that look not whether they be out of it or no. 2. To exhort us to be more diligent to search out our spiritual then our worldly or bodily condition that we may not be deceived in our selves To move us to seek to know our spiritual condition truly let us think of these motives 1. That the spiritual estate is best we look more after health then wealth because the body is better then the estate the Soul is much more better then the body 2. Because it is a more lasting estate Every man prefers a see-simple before a lease Heaven lasts longer then any fee-simple infinitely more then it doth beyond a lease Follow then Master Greenhams counsel Of all prisoners often visite thine own soul Doct. 2. A good man should not think highly of himself David did not he professed as much before God Lord my heare is not haughty nor mine eyes lofty neither do I exercise my selfe in great matters or in things too high for me Psal 131.1 He would keep none such in his house Him that hath a high look and a proud heart wil I not suffer Psal 101.5 Reas 1. Because an high conceit of our own wisdome and parts cannot stand with the fear of God which is required in this verse And therefore this it set before it as a removal of a great let of it which i● selfe liking It wil never agree with Gods fear which among other grounds ariseth out of the sight of our own vilenesse compared with Gods greatness and Majesty such an opinion then of our own wisdome would make us rebels against God and disobedient 2. It cannot agree with departing from evil which also is required in this verse for it makes men secure in their actions not trying them before hand whether they be good or evil because we trust too much to our own wisdome and so bring them not to Gods Law to be examined which is the only true touch-stone Also it will make a man seek out witty shifts and devices to excuse his sins that so he may continue in them So the Pharisees had their Corban to bring in gain from children by neglect of Parents Mark 7.11.12 3. It shewes and upholds ignorance in a man It shewes it because wisemen discern their ignorance but fooles see it not Menedemus aiebat multos navigare Athenas qui primum essent sapientes deinde fieri sapientiae amatores deinde Rhetores postremo idiotas In Philosophia quo magis profeceris eo minus turgebis fastu Plutarch ut à Maximo citatur Serm. de ignorantia Menedemus said that many sailed to Athens who first were wise to wit in their own eyes and after that became lovers of wisdome then Oratours and last of all Idiots they faw their own folly which they could not discern before In Philosophy by how much the more you profit the lesse will you swell with pride It upholds ignorance because he that thinks himselfe wise thinks it a base and unbeseeming thing to learn of others Familiaritèr domestica aspicimus semper judicio favor officit puto multos potuisse ad sapientiam pervenire nisi putassent se pervenisse Quis unquam sibi ipsi verum docere ausus est Quis inter blandientium adulantiumque positus greges plurimum tamen sibi ipsis assentatus non est Senec. de ira lib. 3. c. 36. We look familiarly at things at home and favour alwaies hinders judgment I suppose that many might have attained to wisdome had they not thought they had attained it already Who ever durst teach himselfe truth Who being placed among the flocks of fawning and flattering companions hath not yet most of all flattered himselfe And therefore Solomon here desiring to have his precepts regarded perswades the young man not be wise in his own eyes 4. It is the cause of all errors and heresies the broachers whereof are observed in Ecclesiastical histories to be learned men proud of their wisdome and in his qui sibi credunt Daemon saepè propheta fit Climachus Grad 3. In them that beleeve
opinion of wisdom whereof he had given so large commendations before and gives more afterwards in this Chapter propounding more benefits that will come hereby Wisdom is a treasure inestimable wonderfull profitable and full of pleasure as we have heard and still may hear out of this book when we see that Solomon is not content with the former praises whereby he hath declared unto us the profit and pleasure that they have which are possessed with wisdom but doth admonish us in the text carefully to keep it For the words My Son See on Chap. 1.1.8 Let not them Some carry it back to the words foregoing and conceive that Solomon charges the young man to be carefull to think often of Gods wisdom appearing in the Creation of Earth Heaven Water and Air ver 19.20 But it is rather to be referred to the words following in this verse requiring him to remember such precepts of wisdom and discretion as Solomon had or should teach him in this book His end being to bring the young man to get wisdom hee urgeth this as a principall means Thus the antecedent follows Psa 87.1 2. His foundation is in the holy Mountains The Lord loveth the gates of Zion Depart Be forgotten For things forgotten by us are departed from our minds From thine eyes From the eyes of thy mind Let them never step out of thy memory no more then jewells that hang in thy sight ver 3. Do not think of them onely at leisure times but meditate of them continually Keep wisdom once gotten as charily as men do things which they affect so much that they will never let them go out of their fight but watch them perpetually as God doth Zion Behold I have graven thee upon the Palmes of my hands thy walls are continually before me Isa 49.16 Let them be as the delight of thine eyes on which thou canst never look enough as the Prophets wife was to him I take away from thee the desire of thine eyes Ezek. 24.16 For eyes see on Chap. 1.17 on the word sight Keep Constantly in thy memory and ready for practise For the word see on Chap. 2.8 Sound wisdome H●b Essence or Being See on Chap. 2.7 And discretion See on Chap. 1.4 Figures A metaphor in Eyes taken from the eyes of the body and applyed to the soul Let thy heart look upon them by meditation Note 1. The negative part 2. The affirmative In the negative or prohibition observe 1. The person spoken to My son 2. The action forbidden Let them not depart from thine eyes Wisdomes precepts must not be forgotten as if they were out of sight and out of mind In the affirmative or injunction note 1. The act Keep 2. The object Sound wisdom and discretion Doct. 1. Wisdome once gotten must never be forgotten This is one of the last lessons of the old Testament Remember the Law of Moses my servant c. Hos 4.4 It is required in the new Remember how thou hast received and heard and hold fast Rev. 3.3 Reas 1. Because of the excellency of wisdome shewed before we do not easily forget things excellent either for beauty or use Who forgets the virgin he is in love withall or the medicine that heals him 2. For the profit of them we easily forget things that bring no gain but who forgets his gold or trade though he be old Sirs ye know that by this craft we have our wealth Acts 19.25 3. Because of the losse that followes on the losse of wisdome which is very great the losse of all those good things which wisdom would procure for us temporall spirituall or eternall besides the losse of memory it selfe that when it hath unburdened it selfe of that which is good will easily forget meaner things 4. Because of the danger that followes this forgetfulnesse it will bring all those evills in the world which wisdome retained might prevent He that forgets his medicine must bear his pain It will also bring eternall misery in another world Use 1. To reprove such as have lost more knowledge then they have left whose blossomes were fair but are fallen off they are like many witty tradsmen that spend money as fast as they get it 2. To exhort us to remember the good things we have gotten Motives 1. Wisdomes precepts cost us much pain to get and should not then easily be lost we strove against natures streams to get it 2. We look for much good by it which will be lost with it Means 1. Think often of wise instructions especially the principall So Archers think often of the mark Pilots of the guiding starre travallers of the marks of the way The Jews wore Phylacteries to keep Gods commandements in their memories Numh. 15.38.39 The way is hard to hit and dangerous to misse 2. Set your affections upon them else other things will take you off from thinking of them Children easily forget what they learn play takes them off Men are serious in what they like As the stone on the still waters makes circles one after another and so the former perish so doth businesse put out wisdoms precepts 3. Speak often of wise things A Master learns by teaching scholars 4. Practise them No man forgets his trade while he is able to work in it To conclude this point think how carefull worldly parents are to call upon their children to keep transitory riches and take notice how gently and often Solomon calls upon us in this book not to forget wisdomes precepts lest we lose spirituall profit here and eternall glory hereafter offered to us and so perish eternally and then forget wisdome precepts if thou canst Doct. 2. Wisdoms precepts must be dear to us As dear as silver and as pretious as hid treasures Chap. 2.4 Dearer then silver gold rubies Chap. 8.10 11. Reas 1. Because they have been so alwaies to Gods people as the delight of their eyes without which they could not be satiated nor satisfied So they were to David O how I love thy Law it is my meditation all the day Psal 119.97 So to Paul I count all things but losse for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord. Phil. 3.8 2. Because they are so to them in all conditions the pleasures of prosperity cannot take off their affection from them nor the crosses of adversity Use To reprove those who set light by wisdoms precepts many books will down with them and human histories but Gods word is sleighted by them Doct. 3. Wisdoms precepts must be carefully laid up by us So did David Thy word have I hid in mine heart Psal 119.11 So did the Virgin Mary His Mother kept all these sayings in her heart Luke 2.51 Reas 1. For direction in time of prosperity for then our waies have much danger in them 2. For consolation in time of adversity of which we have much need Use Let us do with wisdoms precepts as worldly men do with needfull instruments not throw them about the house but lock