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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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not to know any thing save Jesus Christ the wisdom of the Father 1 Cor. 2.2 A man may desire meat drink silver gold yea his fancy can imagine new worlds but all is not comparable to true wisdome Reas 1. Because none of those things man can imagine or devise or desire can free him from Hell No ransom can doe it nor force It is a warning from Heaven must direct us how to escape Hell Who hath warned you to flee from the wrath to come Math. 3.7 Sure none but God 2. No such thing can shew us the way to Heaven Onely true wisdom out of Gods word can do it The scriptures onely can make a man wise unto salvation 2 Tim. 3.15 Use Cease desiring and imagining how to find out meanes of happinesse in the World and labour for true wisdom which onely can make thee happy A diver that stops his breath longest gets most pearles so he that breaths least for the world gets most wisdom VER 16. Length of daies is in her right hand and in her left hand riches and honour LEst any man should think that wisdom were needy and beggarly her self and could not bestow upon her fellows the riches promised she shews now that she knows what humane infirmity most needs and what men most desire and hath in a readinesse to bestow on them Thou fearest death poverty dishonour Wisdome hath long life riches honour to bestow upon thee if thou entertain her Wisdom or the Lord Iesus Christ is here set out unto us like some stately Queen sitting on a Throne with both hands full of good things to reward her faithfull servants The particular rewards shall be expounded in the words Length of daies A long life see on Verse 2. This is the first thing promised because it is the principall and riches and honour are but accessaries and can afford no comfort if life be taken away and but little if life be short And therefore also it is said to be in the right hand as the principall gift she hath to bestow Men most of all desire long life and riches and honour in the second place they could be content to live though poorly though in pain rather then to die they desire long life more then riches and fear death more then poverty There is no merchandise in the world how good soever nor pearles how pretious soever they be that can assure us of long life But the greatest traders are most affraid to die as having more to lose then other men and their death is more desired then other mens yea many lie in wait to kill them for their riches But wisdome will bring long life with it Is in her right hand This is said to be in the right hand because the right hand is preferred before the left and that for these reasons 1. Because it is ordinarily and in most men the strongest and nimblest 2. Motion begins at the right hand Porters lay their burden on the left shoulder because the right leg moves first Aristot de gressu animal 3. The right hand is for defence we fight with it 4. It is the place of honour Bathshebah was set on Solomon right hand 1. King 2.19 5. It is used as a token of faithfulnesse we give it in marriage and contracts 6. It is used to set out good successe as the left hand for bad Saepe sinistra cava praedixit ab ilice cornix The Raven often fortold left-handed that is bad things from the hollow Oak Though in the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the left be used for good successe It seemes the fashion of those countries was to prefer the left hand as Xenophon reports who saith they used to place their guests at the left hand as being neerest the heart Now in the Law earthly comforts were types of heavenly So was long life to an obedient child in the fift commandement a type of heaven else it were but a small blessing to live long here and then go to hell for ever Longitude dierum ●ter●itas est Non enim hic aliquid longum esse potest in tanta brevitate Length of daies is eternity For nothing can be long here in so much brevity Recuperus With long life will I satisfie him and shew him my salvation Psal 91.16 In sencelesse creatures long continuance is but a continuance of being not of comfort as in man but not in rocks the one is aeternitas the other aeviternitas 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Isid Pelus l. 3. ep 149 Eternity is eternal life 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is used 1. For a right hand Though Coniah were the signet upon my right hand Jer. 22.24 2. For power and strength which is exercised commonly with the right hand Thy right hand O Lord hath dashed in pieces the enemy Exod. 15.6 3. For the South because a man standing with his face to the rising Sun hath the south on his right hand And southern countries are more fertile northern on the left hand more barren Omne malum ex Aquilone All evil out of the North. The North and the South thou hast created them Psal 89.12 4. For Oaths or Covenants which were confirmed with the right hand Their right hand is a right hand of falshood Psal 144.8 That is they kept no covenants Here it is taken in the first sense And in her left hand Riches and honour are said to be in wisdomes left hand because though usefull yet not so usefull or good as life it selfe The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies 1. The left hand Toward Israels left hand Gen 48.13 2. The North because it is on the left hand if ones face be toward the rising Sun On the left hand of Damascus Gen. 14.15 that is on the North side of it Here it is taken in the first sense Riches Money and lands and temporal possessions These also are types of all sufficiency in heaven as Canaan the land flowing with milk and honey was And honor The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies respect from others it comes from a word that signifies to be heavy or weighty for honour as it arises from the weight of good qualities in men so it addes weight to men persons and makes them of greater account then others and this also may be a type of heavenly glory Yet good men oftentimes neither have long life riches nor honour Temporall promises are conditional and to be performed as they may stand with Gods glory and our good and what is wanting shall abundantly be made good in heaven Wisdome doth not bestow these earthly blessings alwaies on her followers yet oftentimes she doth wisdome is the ready way to obtain these and many thereby come from a poor low estate to a plentiful and high condition and enjoy it long in this world The sum of all is God rewardeth his with both hands promising eternall life and competent means in this life Christ the wisdome of the Father is immortall he hath overcome death and
wrong done to God by Idolatry is set out by this similitude Thou hast gone a whoring from thy God Hos 9.1 Reason 1. Because it wrongs him in his greatest propriety dearer to him then friends or children 2. It breaks the greatest obligation for he is her guide If he leave her she is in perpetual danger Her lovers having satisfied their lust will leave her 3. It may put the Husband to labour to provide for other mens children and is not that a great injury Vse Let women when they are tempted to wantonnesse think what wrong they do their Husbands So great that though they may repent and be pardoned by God yet they can never make their Husbands amends This is a soveraign antidote against Adultery 5. Doct. The Wise should be guided by her Husband Wives submit your selves unto your own Husbands Eph. 5.22 See the same words Col. 3.18 Reason 1. Because the Husband is the guide as in the text 2. He is the head and the body must not rule It were a monster in nature to see the body placed above the head Vse Let Wives be content to be subject A man that being sober overturns the ship and drowns the passengers is not fit to guide it when he is drunk If innocent Eve missed Adam Wives now in the state of corruption are not fit to guide but must be guided 6. Doct. An adulteresse sins against God as well as against her Husband She breaks the seventh Commandement where God forbids it and separates those whom God the author of marriage hath joyned together and joyn them together and joyns them together whom God hath separated Vse Let Wives think of this and of Joseph's carriage to prevent adultery saying How can I do this great wickednesse and sin against God Gen. 39.9 And if they be guilty let them say with David Against thee have I sinned Psal 51.4 And repent that they may be saved Vers 18. For her house enclineth unto death and her paths unto the dead The Wise-man proceeds to shew the greatnesse of the mercy of preservation from evill women by the greatnesse of the danger from which men are kept thereby That is from death it self which is most terrible in the thoughts of wanton persons and which if often thought of would keep them from wanton courses This danger is set out 1. In the kinde of it in this vers Death omnium terribilium terribilissimum The most terrible of all terrible things 2. By the irrecoverablenesse or hardnesse to return v. 19. For the first That the young man might see Solomon's counsel was not in vain he sets down the great mischief that befalls such as follow the Harlots wayes and enter into her house And how great evils he shall escape that comes not there is set out by the disorders of her house and deadly wayes of them that live there For the words For. This is no reason of the last vers why she wrongs her Husband and sins against God She did not do it that she might perish her self and undoe others but that she might satisfie her owne lust and covetousnesse But those words depend upon the beginning of v. 16. to shew the young man what a great mercy of God it was to keep him from the strumpets acquaintance and by consequence from utter destruction The Genevah translation reads surely As the same particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is translated Surely in vain the net is spread c. ch 1.17 And then it is an absolute sentence as if he had said Make account of nothing else but utter ruine if once thou enter into her house and joyn in her wayes Bain reads seeing And so ties it to the following v. as giving a reason why few return to wit because her house leads to death as if he had said to the young man If thou wilt not hearken to me but wilt enter into the Harlots house thou wilt finde death there and a great difficulty of returning Her house The filthy manners and wicked conversation used in her house For the word see on ch 1.13 Some understand it of the strumpet her self which leaving her husbands poor house lives with some adulterer in a stately house or hires one to entertain her lovers and thinks to live gallantly there but leaving her Husbands house hastens to the grave the house of darknesse and forsaking the covenant of her God goes to eternall darknesse But it is rather a caution to the young man to take heed of coming into her house because he shall find nothing there but death and destruction Enclineth Heb. boweth downward Not onely tends that way but with a descent and humiliation and laying low There is in her house a road-way to death and hell and that downward as men go down an hill apace not staying till they come to the bottome Vnto death It brings speedy death unto men both of soul and body And her paths See on v. 9. Vnto the dead It comes from a word that signifies to heal or cure by an Antiphrasis because the dead are past skill and cure of the Physician So a mountain mons à movendo because it moves not And a Wood lucus à lucendo because it wants light Wantonnesse takes men away from among the living and brings them to the dead in body and soul which have dyed before them either by a naturall death or by such like wanton courses as these men take Death and the dead here must include both spirituall and temporall death the grave and hell For it seems not a sufficient reason to keep men from adultery and from Harlots houses that they must die for this is common to all men A man may say as mockers do Let us commit adultery without any fear for nothing shall befall us which doth not befall the chastest men They must die as well as we It must needs therefore include hell also unlesse we should interpret it of a violent or early death which often befalls adulterers and may scare others more then hell For the one they see the other they beleeve not Many murders attend on adultery and ruine of whole families Others translate it unto the giants As the word is used Deut. 2.11 which also were accounted giants And then it comes from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to heal because they are strong and stout and need no Physician or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to be faint or weak because the very sight of them makes others faint as if they had the pangs of death upon them And by these giants some mean the devils the tormentors of adulterers in hell others understand men of great might and great rebels against God such as those in the old world who abused their strength to wickednesse and wantonnesse whose bodies are now in the grave and souls in the deepest place of hell To both which places adulterers must descend to keep such wicked wretches company in eternall misery whom in their life they have
pain Fools look at things present in the way wisemen foresee things future in the end A green way to a robbing place a calm passage to a rock or quick sand is perilous A riotous person wallowes in pleasure and dies in a prison Let Adulterers think of their end and they will have little pleasure in their sin 4. Doct. The destruction of impenitent adulterers is generall as well as certain Wheremongers and Adulterers God will judge Heb. 13.4 That may he said to them that is said to impenitent sinners Except ye repent ye shall all likewise perish Luk. 13.3 5. Raason Because the destruction of such is certain as was proved in the former point And then it must needs be generall If it be certain that man must die then all men must die except God extraordinarily dispense with some But this he never did to any impenitent sinner If it be true that man hath a reasonable soul then every man hath so though fools and mad men make little use of it So if it be certain that impenitent adulterers perish then it is generall and all such must perish Vse Let no man stand upon priviledges of birth wit wealth If he be an impenitent Adulterer he must die Let no man presume upon repentance He may be killed in the act as Zimri and Cosbi were Numb 25. 5. Doct. No hope of comfort from God here or hereafter for wanton persons till they repent Not here They were as fed horses in the morning every one neighed after his Neighbours wife Shall I not visit for these things saith the Lord and shall not my soul be avenged on such a Nation as this Jer. 5.8.9 Not hereafter 1 Cor. 6.9 10. Fornicatours and Adulterers shall not inherit the Kingdome of God And God accounts them such till they repent of their filthinesse Reason Because they live in a way of rebellion against God and by consequence make themselves Gods following their own will in all things Vse Let Adulterers give over their trade Who will follow a course of life that he were sure to have no comfort of in life or death 6. Doct. There are crosse wayes in the world paths of life and paths of death Crosse-wayes and gates Wide is the gate and broad is the way that leadeth to destruction But strait is the gate narrow is the way which leadeth unto life Mat. 7.13 14. There is a way of sinners and a law of the Lord Psol 1.1 2. Some walke in the one and some in the other Reason Because the ends are fully opposite Eternall weale eternall woe These shall go away into everlasting punishment but the righteous into life eternall Mat. 25.40 And sure the same wayes cannot lead to so different ends They are not suitable to them Vse Let secure persons take heed They think all shall go to heaven none to hell But they are deceived most go to hell The strait way is hardly found and by few the broad way easily and by many Mat. 7.13 14. Vers 20. That thou mayest walke in the wayes of good men and keep the paths of the righteous So much for the deliverance Now for the generall application of all for the good that will come to those that avoid the society of evill men and women Which is 1. Set out in this verse to be a preservation in such wayes 2. Illustrated 1. By the benefit of such wayes vers 21. 2. By the miseries that contrary wayes bring v. 22. For the first in this vers This is the last part of the Chapter wherein Solomon having before exhorted the young man to the study of wisdome now shewes the last benefit of it The end of our study of wisdome should be to walke in good wayes The benefit of all spoken before is here summed up together So that this verse depends upon v. 11 12 16. in this manner wisdome will deliver thee from all evill wayes words men and women that thou mayest more freely converse with good men in good wayes whereby much good may be learned For the words That It teaches us that Solomons end in teaching men how to get Wisdome to avoid all the former inconveniences was not that they should be idle but that they should go on in good wayes without interruption or incumbrances So the word is used Josh 4.24 That all the people of the earth might know the hand of the Lord that it is mighty that ye might fear the Lord your God for ever That thou mayest walke See on ch 1.15 In the way See on ch 1.15 Of good men That thou mayest follow the godly and virtuous examples of Patriarchs and Prophets and others that fear God and walke in his wayes But Where shall we finde these good men Our blessed Saviour tels us There is none good but one that is God Mat. 19.17 We answer God'y men though they be not perfectly good but have many imperfections yet being sincere are good in Gods account For men are counted good or bad in Scripture language not according to some particular act but according to their constant course and scope And keep See on v. 8. The paths See on ch 1.19 on the word wayes Of the righteous or Of the just The word is taken 1. For one perfectly just that is not guilty of any sin before God How should man be just with God Job 9.2 God hath made man upright Eccl. 7.29 2. For one just or righteous in his own opinion or the opinion of other men He that is first in his own cause seemeth just ch 18.17 3. For one truly just though not perfectly who intends in all things to deal justly and righteously with God and man And this is the common acception of the word in Scripture for there are none perfectly just upon earth So Neah was a just man Gen. 6.9 4. For one just in some particular cause They turn aside the just for a thing of nought Isa 29.21 She hath been more righteous then I Gen. 38.26 Here it is taken in the third sense for one truly just and righteous though not perfectly Figures Walke wayes paths Metaphors from travellers Keep A metaphor from Watch-men arguing care and constancy in walking in Gods wayes For men do not use to stand still to look upon wayes but to go on in them Therefore the same thing is set down in two different expressions of walking in and keeping Gods wayes In the former note 1. The act That thou mayest walke 2. The object in the way 3. The subject of good men In the latter observe likewise 1. The act and keep 2. The object the paths 3. The subject of the righteous 1. Doct. Men cannot walke in good wayes unlesse they leave bad It is as hard for men accustomed to do evill to do good as for an Ethiopian to change his ●kin or a Leopard his spots Jer. 13.23 No man can serve two Masters Ye cannot serve God and Mamnon Mat. 6.24 Reason 1. In generall Because good
and evill being contraries the one will keep out the other So cold keeps out heat and heat keeps out cold till it be overcome Foul water in a bottle keeps out good wine till it be poured out 2. In particular Evill thoughts keep out all thoughts of doing good The mind like the Smith can hammer but one iron at once 3. Evill words draw from good actions and corrupt good manners 1 Cor. 15.33 4. Evill deeds and practises keep from good courses They give a double impediment 1. By satisfying corrupt nature they steal away the affection from all good 2. By imploying it in evill they leave no time for good for men by nature never have pleasure enough in fin Vse 1. For discovery It shews us a reason why many are strangers to all good wayes because they are verst in evill and cannot leave it Can an husbandman look for a crop if he plow not up thornes and thistles Can a Gardiner look for good herbs if he weed not his Garden Will not Ivie if it be let grow overtop and kill trees No marvell then if evill doers follow not that which is good 2. For direction Let us by leaving evill wayes seriously shew that we intend to do good When one puls down an old house men think he means to build a new not else though he talk often of it Who will believe that a man means to live soberly or chastly that dayly haunts Taverns and wanton places Pythagoras his letter Y shewed that men going alike in their childhood afterwards if they followed evill forsook good 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ceasing from evill is the beginning of motion to virtue Chrysost 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Alienation from evill is an appropinquation to good Chrysost 2. Doct. It is not enough to avoid evill but we must also do good Cease to do evill learn to do well Isa 1.16 17. Depart from evill and do good Psal 34.14 Reason 1. Because forsaking evill is but a foundation for a greater building and no man can dwell in a foundation 2. Justice in all Common-wealths requires as many good offices as doing no harme So also in Gods Church 3. God gives us wisdome as to direct us how to avoid evill so to do good and that is the principall office of wisdome else none should be the better for it 4. The reward for avoiding evill is but privative escaping misery but the reward of doing good is positive eternall happinesse A beast nay a stone goes not to hell Vse Here is a lesson of spirituall ambition to teach us not to be content only to leave sin but to be in love with good wayes Not to be not miserable and avoid hell but to lay up for our selves treasures in heaven Mat. 6.20 3. Doct. One chief and principall end of wisdome is wel-doing Keep therefore and do them for this is your wisdome Deut. 4.6 These Commandements the Lord commanded to teach you that ye might do them Deut. 6.1 Reason 1. Because else no blessing attends upon our knowledge no more then upon a man that knowes what is good to preserve his life and by neglect thereof dies So do knowing and not doing men lose heaven If ye know these things happy are yee if ye do them Joh. 13.17 Not else 2. Because a curse followes upon knowledge without practise Cursed is he that confirmeth not all the words of this Law to do them Deut. 27.26 That servant which knew his Lords will and prepared not himself neither did according to his will shall be heaten with many stripes Luk. 12.47 Vse 1. To blame those that use their knowledge to do evill they can never get good by it but the more harme They only know how to undoe their soules So the Adulterer hath wit to b●naught which others want 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Apollodorus And let the door be shut with barres But no workman can make the door so strong that a cat or an Adulterer cannot enter So the Adulterer takes advantage of day and night In the darke they dig through houses which they had marked for themselves in the day time Job 24.16 2. To exhort us to make the best advantage of our knowledge for well doing Then we hit the marke otherwise we misse it This is the conclusion of this Chapter and shewes the end of the former Precepts of avoiding hurt by bad men and women that we might do good Artium omnium finis est benè viverdi disciplina quam vitâ magis quàm literis nobiles sunt secuti The end of all arts is the discipline of living well which noble personages have followed more in life then in learning Tusc qu. l. 4. Optimus quisque maluit facere quàm dicere Every excellent man had rather be doing then talking Salust At Athens a grave man coming into the Theater no man rose to give him place though they knew they ought to have done it by the City law The Lacedemonian Ambassadors being there the old man coming toward them they rise and give him the chief place At which the people gave a great shout and one of the Lacedemonians to their shame spake thus Ergo Athenienses quid sit rectum sciunt at illud facere ex toto negligunt Belike then the Athenians know what is right and yet altogether neglect to do it Valer. l. 10. c. 5. 4. Doct. Wisdome not only shewes a man how to avoid evill but also how to do good If thou encline thine ear unto wisdome then shalt thou understand righteousnesse and judgment and equity yea every good path Ch. 2.29 I have set before you life and death blessing and cursing therefore chuse life that both thou and thy seed may live That thou mayest love the Lord thy God and that thou mayest obey his voice c. Deut. 30.19.20 Reason 1. Because it perfectly shewes us the difference between good and evill that we may not mistake the one for the other So cannot naturall principles civill education nor morall Philosophy 2. It shewes us the means of escaping the one and pursuing the other what occasions are to be avoided or taken what helpe to do both is to be had from Gods word and Spirit Vse Let us labour to get this true wisdome Men give much money with their children and children serve many years to learne a Trade to avoid poverty and get wealth We then should spare for no cost nor labour to get true wisdome to direct us to flie all evill and doe all good 5. Doct. It is safer to imitate good men then bad Looking unto Jesus the authour and finisher of our faith who for the joy that was set before him endured the crosse despising the shame and is set down at the right hand of the throne of God Heb. 12.2 Follow the faith of your teachers considering the end of their conversation Heb. 13.7 Reason 1. Because the way of good men is better then the way of bad men A fair way of
he hates Ye that love the Lord hate evill Psal 97.10 6. Doct. If men will not for their owne sakes forsake sin they should do it for their childrens sake God promises good to children if their parents be obedient O that there were such an heart in them that they would fear me and keep my commandements alwayes that it might be well with them and with their children for ever Deut. 5.29 Therefore they must take heed they bring not evill on their children by disobedience Manasseh brings destruction on Jerusalem after his death though he repented in his life Surely at the commandement of the Lord came this upon Judah to remove them out of his sight for the sins of Manasseh according to all that he did 2 King 24.3 And Ahab brought Gods judgement on his posterity though he humbled himself Seest thou how Ahab humbleth himself before me Because he humbleth himself before me I will not bring the evill in his dayes but in his Sons dayes will I bring the evill upon his house 1 King 21.29 Reason 1. Because much evill may come on our posterity for our sins as hereditary diseases poverty losses crosses 2. Our affection is great to our children We prefer them before friends and many times before our selves Why then should we doe any thing to hurt them Vse It teacheth us to bewail the madnesse of those parents that are so fond of their children that they love the ground the better they tread on and yet live in those sins that shorten their childrens dayes and lay them under ground before their time by nature They give them bad examples and no correction for their sins and so are accessary to their ruine Let us be wiser and give good example and correction to our children and then may we look to see much good of them Which God grant to all godly parents through Jesus Christ our onely Lord and Saviour Amen CHAP. III. VER 1. My Son forget not my law but let thine heart keep my commandments THe order of Solomon is to be observed he had formerly exhorted the young man to seek after Wisdome and shewed him what evils it would preserve him from now he gives him some directions how to practise what he should be taught and shews what good he should get by it He had disswaded him from cruelty in the first Chapter and from adultery in the second now he perswades him to piety and equity in this Chapter and lest the keeping of so many precepts imposed upon the young man should trouble him he promiseth in general and afterwards interlaceth in particulars divers promises of good and sure rewards to allure him to audience and obedience Solomon had a floud or a wood of words a Sylva Synonymorum and therefore urges the same things with elegant variation of phrase as a Father often inculcats the same things daily in other words to affect his child the more that so what works not upon him at first may at last The two first verses are a general preface to the rest of the Chapter wherein is 1. an exhortation in the first verse 2 ly a promise to set it on Verse 2. For the words My Son see on Chap. 1.18 He often useth the amiable name of a Son intimating that he speaks not as an Enemy nor a Neighbour or Friend or Master or King but as a loving Father to his beloved child And wel might he call the hearer or reader his Son on whom he had bestowed so many godly instructions and whom he goes on to instruct stil like a Father Forget not See on Chap. 2.17 Let my law stick fast in thy memory whatsoever thou forget either children businesse or whatever els is deer unto thee be sure thou forget not my Law sooner forget musick and singing as the godly Jews would rather forget them then Jerusalem Psal 137.5.6 My Law See on Chap. 1.8 Here it is taken for those good instructions Solomon gave and which are written in this book therefore he calls it his Law which being agreeable to Gods Law his children were tyed to observe So Gods law is called Moses Law Mal. 4.4 This book is a Law how to guide our life containing many excellent practical instructions But. See on Chap. 1.25.2.22 an opposition between keeping and forgetting Let thine heart See on Chap. 2.2 The heart here may be taken for the memory which is the chest of the soul or rather for the wil which is King in the Soul and to which the understanding is councellor and the affections are servants Keep See on Chap. 2.11 Keep them both in memory and life He speaks not of a bare remembring but of a practical keeping also shewing that it is not profitable for us to have them in our heart unlesse we also exercise them in our conversation The sum is that we must remember these precepts to keep and do them Deut. 7.12 For remembring the law in the heart without practising it in the life will not bring the blessing annexed Ver. 2. Length of daies c. Thou must remember them so that thou hearcily practise them and that thy heart not only have the knowledge of them ready upon all occasions but also be ever studying for occasions and how to do them My commandments See on Chap 2.1 Thou must not only look to this book in general but have respect to every particular direction in it that concernes thee then shalt thou be like Zechariah and Elizabeth walking in all the commandments and ordinances of the Lord blamlesse Luke 1.6 And maist conclude with the Psalmist Then shal I not be ashamed when I have respect unto thy commandements Psalm 119.6 The sum is as if Solomon had said Thou hast heard O my Son that thou art not able by thine own pains and study to get Wisdome but thou must get teachers and accommodate the ears both of thy soul and body to their words yet is not this enough to make thee wise but thou must also retain those instructions in thy memory ready for practise when opportunity shal be offered Figures none Note 1. A prohibition 2. An Exhortation In the former note 1. The person spoken to Myson 2. The thing forbidden Forget not 3. The Object My Law In the latter observe 1 The opposition or rather augmentation But Or it may be read Yea See on Chap. 2.22 Be so far from forgetting that thou remember to practise my Commands on all occasions 2. The agent Let thine heart 3. The Act. Keep 4. The object My Commandments 1. Doct. Great affection ought to be in a teacher He must look upon his hearers as upon his Children This is Paul● tone My little Children Of whom I travail in birth again Gal. 4.19 Wherefore Because I love you not God knoweth 2 Cor. 11.11 I will glad●y spend and be spent for you though the more abundantly I love you the lesse I be loved 2 Cor. 12.15 Spoken as by an indulgent Father This is Iohns
a man had the Philosophers stone if he used it not he would have no gold A known medicine helps not if not taken keep then good precepts actually as wel as cordially in deed as wel as in heart they that do not so forget them or at least keep them not delight thy selfe with keeping them in thine heart and honour thy God with observing them in thy life Doct. 6. Such precepts must be practised heartily Thou Solomon my son know thou the God of thy father and serve him with a perfect heart and with a willing mind 1 Chron. 28.9 Servants obey in all things your Masters according to the flesh not with eye service as men-pleasers but in singlenesse of heart fearing God And whatsoever ye do do it heartily as to the Lord and not unto men Col. 2.22 23. Ye have obeyed from the heart the form of Doctrine which was delivered you Rom. 6.17 〈◊〉 Reason 1. Because the heart is the fountain of life Dead services please neither God nor men It is like the speaking of Parrots Acceptable service to God must be reasonable service Rom. 12.1 It is like the Fountain of joy and comfort and therefore where it is not men can have no comfort in any thing they do Use See where your hears are when ye do what Parents and Teachers advise you If ye do it unwillingly it is not thank-worthy VERSE 2. For length of daies and long life and peace shall they adde unto thee THe Exhortation was in the former Verse The promise to encourage us to obedience is in this That men might with more courage endeavour to obey Solomons wise directions God joynes the reward to the work and promises those things which all men but especially young men most of all desire and long for and are most dear to men of tender years to wit a long quiet and happy life Some distinguish the three things promised thus That by length of daies should be meant a life on earth as long as may be drawn out by any strength of nature By long life or years of life eternall life in another world By peace peace of conscience But they may rather be understood thus By length of daies may be understood a life that lasts long By long life or years of life an healthfull life By peace a prosperous life For the words For. See on Chap. 19. A reason of the former Exhortation Length of daies They bring a long life to a man not beyond the time appointed by God but as God hath determined so by his blessing he gives long life to those that obey him This is understood of bodily life here which the Law also promises in the first commandment The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Day in Scripture is used 1. For a naturall day confisting of 24 hours Neither eat nor drink three daies Est 4.16 2. For an artificiall day opposed to the night The greater light to rule the day and the lesser light to rule the night Gen. 1.16 In the plurall for a long day and circular till that day come again a full year This man went up out of his Citty 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 From daies to daies which ver 7 is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 year by year 4. For a certain time especially to come In that day shall this song be sung in the land of Judah Isa 26.1 5. For a time of trouble Remember O Lord the children of Edom in the day of Jerusalem who said Rase it Rase it even to the foundation thereof Psal 137.7 Their day is come the time of their visitation Jer. 50.27 Here it is taken in the first sense for naturall daies And. See on Chap. 2.9.22 on the word But long life Heb. Years of life For life see on Chap. 2.19 Lest any man should think that long life may be miserable he saith not years of sicknesse or weaknesse which are but puttings off or rather years of death but years of life that is of health and strength Non est vivere sed valere vita It is not worthy the name of a life barely to live but to be in health and strength So a life in Heaven is called eternall life whereas a life in Hell which lasts as long is called the second death And peace Lest any thing should be wanting to a long and healthfull life peace is added And well too for the shortest life is best without peace By peace is meant prosperity riches liberty So the Hebrews use the word And he said unto them Is he well And they said He is well Heb. Is there peace to him There is peace Gen. 29.6 Go see if it be well with thy brethren Heb. See the peace of thy brethren Gen. 37.14 And indeed prosperity is the fruit of peace adversitie of war Shall they adde to thee They shall prolong the years of thy life health and wealth Not forgetting but observing Gods commands will do all this The sum is If thou slight not my commands but observe them thou shalt have a long healthfull and prosperous life Long life without health is troublesome and health without other comforts of life cannot give content Observe Figures none 1. The word of coherence For. 2. The benefits Length of daies and long life and peace A long healthfull and prosperous life 3. The means of procuring these is obedience Shall they adde unto thee 1. Doct. God might have required full obedience without rewards yet he promiseth large ones That he might require it without reward appears in the preface of the commandements Obey for I am Jehovah that gave thee thy being Thy God in covenant with thee That brought thee out of the Land of Aegypt A great benefit Out of the house of bondage A great deliverance That he will give full rewards appears in the end of the second and fifth Commandements Forsake Idolatry and worship me aright For I shew mercy to thousands of them that love me and keep my Commandements Honor thy Father and thy Mother that thy daies may be long in the land which the Lord thy God giveth thee So he promises Abraham to be his shield and exceeding great reward Gen. 15.1 For the first part That God may require obedience without any reward appears 1. Because hee is not any way indebted to us for our obedience He hath all of himself and nothing from us Nor gets no addition of happinesse by our obedience 2. We are indebted to him for all the good things we have as Life Health Food Goods World Heaven we have all from him and that of free grace And it is strange for a debtor to require mony of his creditor wee cannot then merit any thing from him that cannot adde any thing to him neither doth he need any thing Hee that merits of another must some way supply his wants Sacrifices could not do it And if they could do it he need not take them of us that owes all the cattell of the World Psal
them up that they may be ready in time of need Keep by meditation what is got by study VER 22. So shall they be life unto thy Soul and grace to thy neck UNto the former exhortation are added many gratious promises of life and honour in this Verse and of safety Verse 23.24 He shews hereby what good wisdome brings to the soul body and estate it brings life honour security He had said as much before verse 18. but in a similitude She is a tree of life here he speaks more plainly she is life it selfe and that to the Soul also For the words So shall they To wit wisdome and discretion well kept and followed Verse 21. Be life Be the means to bring spirituall life into thy soul and to keep it there For life see on verse 2. Vnto thy Soul See on Chap. 1.18 on the word lives And grace to thy neck See on Chap. 1.9 Only take notice of the strange note of the Popish English Doway Bible which reads Grace to thy jaws and in the margin thus Merit for the words of thy mouth So willing are Popish writers every where to take a sleight occasion to set up mans merit and pull down Gods grace forgetting that these two are contrary If the reward be of grace then not of works if of works then not of grace Rom. 11.6 So if of grace as in the Text then not of merit as in the Popish note However it is very strange to call grace merit Figures Life The cause or means of life unto the soul the cause for the effect Note 1. What they bring to the soul 2. What to the body In the former observe 1. The cause So shall they To wit Wisdome and discretion 2. The effect Be life 3. The object Unto thy Soul In the latter note 1. The gift And grace 2. The subject of it Vnto thy neck Doct. 1. A foolish Soul is a dead Soul Having the understanding darkned being alienated from the life of God through the ignorance that is in them because of the blindnesse of their heart Eph. 4.18 Reas 1. Because there is no life in the Soul till knowledge come into it There was no living creature in the world till light was made God clears the understanding before he rectifie the will and affections he keeps the same method in the little world that he did in the great world We are no better by nature then the Ephesians of whom the Apostle speaks in the place newly cited As the body is dead without the soul so the Soul is dead without wisdome which is the soul of the soul Though the Soul be the life of the body yet it selfe is dead if without knowledge and such a man differs not from a beast unlesse it be in being subject to eternall miserie That a man then may live spiritually and not sensually like a beast it is the gift of heavenly wisdom and thy soul hath life with God if thou keep wisdomes precepts although thy flesh be pressed down under the discipline of correction or of the fear of death it selfe 2. Because as the foolish soul hath no life being without justification so it can have no health nor strength being without sanctification Health is a second life without which the first is a burden Better not to live then to live in pain or weaknesse 3. It hath no spirituall breath and without breath no life It cannot breath out prayers nor praises to God 4 It hath no spirituall motion and all living things move in one way or another dead things do not No motion to any spirituall duty till wisdome take possession of the soul Use 1. Pitty those thousands of poor souls that walk in the world yet are spiritually dead Ignorant men think dead bodies walk but we know dead souls walk Many are like scpulchers that have only the names of living men written on them 2. See if thy soul be not one of these dead souls If thou have not true wisdome thou hast a name that thou livest and art dead Rev. 3.1 It is not thy great birth wealth nor strength that can make thee alive it must be wisdome Doct. 2. Wisdome makes the soul live Keep my commandements and live Chap. 7.2 Hear and your soul shal live Isa 55.3 Reas 1. From the confession of the heathen Is proprie vereque homo est cujus omnis in anima rationali substantia existit Qua propter quicquid extra hunc hominem sit id ad se minimè pertinet Plato in Alcibiade He is properly and truly a man all whose substance is in the reasonable soule wherefore whatsoever is out of this man that belongs not to him in his own account 2. From the contrary Folly is the death of the soul sin that kills it is commonly called folly in Scripture 3. From the beginning of life Wisdom is as it were the seed of spirituall life 4. From the Progresse it maintaines the life of the soul as meat doth the life of the body Use 1. Take pains to get true and heavenly wisdome What pains doth the Husbandman take to get his seed into the ground he plows and sows What pains do poor men take for food they work hard early and late and all or almost all for the belly So do thou for wisdome And as the merchant runs through pain and perill for wealth so do thou for understanding 2. Spare for no cost to get it The husbandman Tradseman Merchant drive on their trades with great cost wisdoms trade is better It concerns eternity Spare then no cost to get and keep it 3. Doct. Wisdom is a great grace to any man The wise shall inherit glory ver 35. of this Chap. They shall be an ornament of grace unto thy head and chaines about thy neck Chap. 1.9 Reason 1. Because it is a sign of worth and dignity in a man Men nobly born or in great place wear gold chains and jewells Wise men are Gods children of the highest birth and more honoured with spirituall graces and holy behaviour then any other can be with gold and silver though never so rich costly They need not fear coming into Gods presence nor disgrace from men for good men will reverence them though they be never so mean and none will contemn them but wicked men which are themselves the most contemptible of all the creatures 2. Because it doth adorn men as gold-chains do Such as are beautifull themselves are more beautifull in costly dressings A wise man is more worthy to be looked at then Agrippa with all his pompous train that was but a fancy as the Greek text calls it He came 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with much fancy Act. 25.23 A wise mans honour is reall Use It discovers the blindnesse of worldlings who cannot see this heavenly wisdom as moles and earthworms see not the Sunshine Let us then account those most honourable that have most of this heavenly wisdom though they want worldly
judgement will follow Else God were not true neither would his threats be at all regarded 2. Doct. Gods judgements never come without a cause They never did so as appears 1. In Gods letting man lose his image who had so shamefully abused it So rebellious Citizens lose their priviledges 2. In laying the curse on man and his posterity The ground is cursed for Adam's fin Gen. 3.17 So traitors and their posterity are tainted in blood and their lands confiscated 3. In the destruction of the old world by the flood The cause was because the earth was filled with violence Gen. 6.13 4. In the destruction of Sodome by fire and brimstone from heaven because their sin was very grievous Gen. 18.20 5. In Jerusalems destruction by the Romans for killing the Prophets Luk. 13.34 35. 6. In the ruine of the seven Churches of Asia Rev. 2. 3. Neither will Gods judgements ever fall on any without just cause The fall of Babylon will be very just Rev. 18.24 For in her was found the blood of Prophets and of Saints and of all that were slain upon the earth So will the destruction of Antichrist and Popery be most just for deceiving many Rev. 19.20 The end of the world and losse of all worldly comforts Luk. 17.26 27. Hell it self will justly fall upon unmerciful men that relieve not the poor Mat. 25.41 42. Vse Let us give God the glory of his justice in all his judgements So doth the Psalmist sing Righteous art thou O Lord and upright are thy judgements Psal 119.137 So the Emperor Mauritius confessed in the same words when he saw his children murdered before his face and was himself after them to be slain by Phocas Many can do it in generall and for judgements on others that are loth to do it in their owne case in particular But Gods people stick not to shame themselves to honour God O Lord righteousnesse belongeth unto thee but unto us confusion of faces Dan. 9.7 The Lord is righteous for I have rebelled against his commandement Lam. 1.18 3. Doct. God calls us to repentance many wayes I. By verball wayes as 1. By admonitions shewing us we are out of the way Ye have not obeyed my voyce Why have ye done this Judg. 2.2 2. By reproofs chiding them for their fin● He makes them worse then Oxen and Asses and calls them a sinful nation with other opprobrious names Isa 1.3 4. 3. By dehortations calling them from their finfull wayes Wash you make you clean put away the evill of your doings from before mine eyes cease to do evill Isa 1.16 4. By disswafions urging them by reasons to forsake their sins I have no pleasure in the death of him that dyeth saith the Lord God wherefore turne your selves and live ye Ezek. 18.31 5. By threats terrifying them I will not drive them out from before you but they shall be as thorns in your sides Judg. 2. v. 3. 6. By promises alluring them I should soon have subdued their enemies and turned my hand against their adversaries Psal 81.14 II. By spirituall wayes As 1. By checks of conscience Their conscience bearing witnesse and their thoughts accusing one another Rom. 2.15 2. By monitions of his Spirit Behold I stand at the dore and knock if any man hear my voyce and open the dore I will come in to him and will sup with him and he with me Rev. 3.20 III. By reall wayes As 1. By examples I ●btained mercy for a pattern to them which should hereafter beleeve 1 Tim. 1.16 2. By judgements on others Aholah is delivered into the hand of her enemies that Abolibah might be warned Eze. 23.9 10 11. So Gods judgements on the rebellious Israelites in the Wildernesse are examples to us upon whom the ends of the world are come 1 Cor. 10.11 Belshazzar must be slain because he knew what befell his Father yet repented not Dan. 5.22 3. By judgements on themselves I have diminished thine ordinary ●ood and have delivered thee unto the will of them that hate thee Ezek. 16.27 4. By mercies I drew them with cords of a man with bands of love and I was to them as they that take off the yoke on their jaws and I laid meat unto them Hos 11.4 Vse Let us bewail the desperatenesse of our natural condition whom none of those calls will draw to God 4. Doct. Many refuse Wisdomes call Three grounds to one are naught Matt. 13.4 c. The invitation to the heavenly Kings Sons wedding is slighted by those that were invited But they made light of it and went their wayes one to his farm another to his merchandise Matth. 22.5 Reason 1. Because some are in love with their owne inventions This evill people which refuse to hear my words which walk in the imagination of their heart Jer. 13.10 2. Because others are in love with worldly pleasures profits or preferments Vse Let us not follow the multitude in refusing Gods call Say not I will not be fingular Why should I regard it more then they I shall scape as well as my neighbours Consider who calls God who is great and good can and will prefer thee He may say more truly then Balak Did I not earnestly send unto thee to call thee Wherefore camest thou not unto me Am I not able indeed to promote thee to honour Numb 22.37 Consider to what he calls To holinesse which is most commendable to happinesse which is most profitable Follow holinesse without which no man shall see the Lord Heb. 12.14 5. Doct. We are by nature far out of Gods way A call will not be heard nor a beck regarded They are all gone aside Psal 14.3 They are all gone out of the way Rom. 3.12 The Ephesians were once without God in the world Eph. 2.12 Yea the Fathers of the Patriarchs were Idolaters Josh 24.2 Reason 1. Because we are gone clean out of hearing We regard not Gods Word 2. We are gone clean out of fight which is further out of the way for men cannot hear so far as they can see We regard not Gods works 3. We are gone far in the wayes of the world The further in a by-way the further out of the high-way 4. We are gone far in the wayes of Satan The further men go in a contrary way the further are they out of the right way Vse Let us blesse God the more for bringing us into the right way when we look upon other mens dangerous errors Such were some of you 1 Cor. 6.11 Yea all of us We our selves also were sometimes foolish disobedient c. Tit. 3.3 Such we should have been still if God had not wonderfully reclaimed us Insult not then over others but pity them and pray for them and thank God heartily for reducing you 6. Doct. The generality of men regard not the fignes whereby God calls them to repentance They regard not outward means as rain and fruitfull seasons Act. 14.17 Jer. 5.24 nor the sending of Christ to
us willing to give good counsell This they may give that have no silver nor gold and it is worth giving And then may we say as Peter in another case Silver and gold have I none but that which I have good counsel which is better give I unto thee Act. 3.6 2. It should make us willing to take good counsell We would take good money of any why not good counsell which is far better though given by mean men 3. It shews us the excellency of the Ministery whose main end is to give good counsell to miserable men yea the best counsel We love them that will shew us the way to live with comfort here much more should they highly be esteemed that teach us the way how to live for ever How beautifull are the feet of them that preach the Gospel of peace and bring glad tydings of good things Rom. 10.15 It is also one of Christs titles he is called Counsellour Isa 9.6 2. Doct. Though good counsell be very profitable yet are some so bad that they will not take it So Elie's Sons hearkened not to the voyce of their Father 1 Sam. 2.25 So Rehoboam forsook the counsell of the old men 1 King 12.8 Reason 1. Because of love of sin Men love not them that speak against their friends 2. Because of custome in fin This stops mens ears to good counsels 3. For pride of heart They think it a disparagement to be guided by others as if they were not wise enough to guide themselves 4. For prejudice Either they that counsel them are inferiour and so thought not wise enough nor good enough to advise or such against whom they have taken displeasure and so think they speak out of ill will or else they are aged and would have them grave before their time as in Terence Volunt nos illicò nasci senes They would have us old men as soon as we are born Or lastly they are Ministers and would bring all under their girdle Vse Let us like good counsell the better because many despise it The greater part are seldome good husbands for the world much lesse for heaven Wicked mens despising Gods law made David love it the more They have made voyd thy law therefore I love thy commandements above gold yea above fine gold Psal 119.126 127. 3. Doct. It is a dangerous condition not to hearken to good counsell Elie's Sons not hearkening to the good counsell of their Father was a signe the Lord would stay them 1 Sam. 2.25 So saith the Prophet to Amaziah I know that God hath determined to destroy thee because thou h●st not hear●ened to my counsel 2 Chr. 25.16 Reason 1. Because it layes a man open to spirituall evils a● to hardnesse of heart My people would not hearken to my ●●yce so I gave them up unto their owne hearts lust and they walked in their owne counsels Psal 81 11 12. 2. It ●ayce a man open to temporall evils So saith Jeremy to Zedekiah If thou wilt not go forth to the King of Babylons Princes th●n shall this City be given into the hands of the Chaldeans and they shall burn it with fire and thou shall not escape out of their h●●● Jer. 38.18 3. It brings death here as it did to good Josiah He was warned to avoyd the danger but would not 2 Chron. 35.21 c. 4. It brings eternall death 2 Thess 1.8 They that obey 〈◊〉 the Gospel must perish for ever Vse It reproves those that not only are naught of themselves but also so bad that they are past all good counsell They lay themselves open to many rocks and quicksands Their condition is very bad and well-nigh desperate 4. Doct. Reproof although it seem rough is very profitable David desires it as an excellent oyl Psal 141.5 Paul requires it for a good end Rebuke them sharply that they may be sound in the faith Tit. 1.13 Reason 1. Because it is a glasse to shew us our sins when we cannot see them our selves nor admonition will not make us look into our selves If a Fathers telling wil not serve he must chide 2. It is a bridle to keep us from sin for time to come when no warning will serve For it carries anger with it in the reprover and shame in the reproved Vse Let us not be offended at reprovers but love them Reproofs may work when promises exhortations admonitions will not 5. Doct. Though reproof be very profitable yet many regard it not Vzziah was wroth when reproved by the Priest 2 Chr. 26.19 The Jews regarded not Isaiah's reproof Isa 1.4 5. Asa was wroth with the reproving Seer and puts him into prison 2 Chr. 15.10 They hate him that rebuketh in the gate Amos 5.10 Ahab cryes out to Elijah Hast thou found me O mine enemy 1 King 21.20 Nulli grata reprehensio Reproof is a bitter pill it goes down with few men Reason 1. Because it is a kind of disgrace unto them and an accusation of folly Had they done well they needed not to have been reproved 2. It crosses their decrest sins and men cannot abide to be crossed in what they love Vse Let us shew our selves wise men by looking rather what is profitable for us then what is pleasing to us Intemperate persons feed on ill meats and die sober men forbear and live So must we in spirituall things Look on reproofs as profitable look off the bitternesse of them and be amended by them 6. Doct. It is a dangerous condition to reject all reproofs Poverty and shame shall be to him that refuseth instruction but he that regardeth reproof shall be honoured ch 13.18 If the ear that heareth the reproof of life abideth among the wise Prov. 15.31 then he that rejecteth it must dwell among fools Reason 1. Because then Gods Word hath delivered them over to Gods sword which is very sharp If Gods Word be sharper then any two edged sword Heb. 4.12 which yet can kill a man how sharp is Gods sword then 2. Such a man may take David's oath safely As the Lord liveth there is but a step between me and death 1 Sam. 20.3 Nothing but some heavy judgement between him and hell Little else likely to recover him He is like a man at Sea some three inches from death Vse It blames them that think they are safe because no reproof will stir their conscience This is their misery not their liberty No Canon will make a dead man afraid yet a living man is far better No danger will fright a mad man yet a man in his wits is in a far better condition Hearken then to reproof that ye may live in safety Vers 26. I also will laugh at your calamity I will mock when your sear cometh The causes of their miseries were expressed before the grievousnesse thereof is expressed in these words and those that follow They should be comfortlesse helplesse and ruined God would shew himself righteously unmercifull to them They had despised calls becks counsels
the Lord. 3. Good counsell to be hearkened to for direction of life 4. Reproof to be regarded when we sin that we may reform For the words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 For that Heb. In stead of that For their sin they shall be punished They hated knowledge See on v. 2 4 22. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And have not chosen To wit in their prosperity when they might and should have done it they did refuse to doe it or despise it as v. 24 30. The fear of the Lord. See on v. 7. Figures none Foure causes of judgement are here set down Two in this vers Two in the next In this vers 1. Hating knowledge 2. Not choosing the fear of the Lord. In the next 1. Refusing counsell 2. Despising reproof In the first note 1. The word of coherence For that 2. The act they hated 3. The object knowledge In the second note 1. The act and did not choose 2. The object The fear of the Lord. The same things having been spoken of and handled before vers 7 22 25. I shall onely insist upon some generalls 1. Doct. Repetitions in Scripture are usefull Compare Phil. 3.1 with Phil. 4.4 Rejoyce in the Lord rejoyce in the Lord alway and again I say rejoyce I will not be negligent to put you alwayes in remembrance I think it meet as long as I am in this Tabernacle to stir you up by putting you in remembrance 2 Pet. 1.12 13. The same thing repeated in two verses Reason 1. They are great helps to the memory Often reading imprints them deep there Therefore in the Gospels the same Histories Miracles Precepts and Doctrine of Sacraments are repeated The same things are often found in the second Epistle of Peter and Jude 2. They are great helps to the understanding because of some different expressions and additions As in the doctrine of the Sacrament of the Lords Supper some things are added 1 Cor. 11. which are not in the Gospels 3. They are great helps to the affections Every new reading with delight works more love or joy or sorrow or fear The oftener men view what they love the more they like it 4. They are great helps to practice The more we see things in Gods Book the more desirous we are to see them in our lives Vse 1. It reproves the queasie stomachs of the people that had rather hear falshoods under a glittering colour of new truths then the same things inculcated on their souls though never so sound They like the same meat again and again especially if the sauce and dressing differ a little and why not then the same points of religion 2. It calls upon Ministers to presse the same truths Religion follows not new fashions as Clothes do Hence come errors for want of a good foundation Plantas saepius adaquare conducit Primas Gardeners often water their plants with the same water God lays downe the reasons now the second time why he destroyes these ungodly men 2. Doct. God cleers himself abundantly in his Word of the destruction of ungodly men Had not God cause to destroy the old World See Gen. 6.11 The earth was corrupt before God and the earth was filled with violence God examines the cause of Sodom and condemns them justly Genefis 18. So he deals with Israel 2 King 17. with Judah 2 Chr. 36. with the Church of Ephesus Rev. 2. with Laodicea Rev. 3. Reason 1. Because sin the cause of it is from us and not from God He neither compels nor counsels nor allures nor consents to it but forbids it and threatens to punish it O Israel thou hast destroyed thy self Hos 13.9 2. It is justice in God to punish sin and not cruelty as in a Judge to condemne murderers 3. God foretells their destruction in his Word and by his Ministers 4. He useth many means to prevent it By mercies judgements ordinances checks of conscience Vse 1. It blames those who lay their dishonour upon Gods head He will lay it back on theirs as Solomon did Joab's murder and Shimei's curse Their bloud shall return upon the head of Joab 1 King 2.33 The Lord shall return thy wickednesse upon thine owne head 1 King 2.44 God will say as Paul I take you to record that I am free from the blood of all men Act. 20.26 In Sin-offerings the persons hand that brought it was to be laid on the head of it and not the Priests to shew that God was not the cause of death but the sinner 2. Give God the glory of his judgements publick or particular on others or our selves He smites not without a cause Say with the Church The Lord is righteous for I have rebelled against his commandement Lam. 1.18 I will bear the indignation of the Lord because I have sinned against him Mic. 7.9 Knowledge is put before the fear of God as a foundation 3. Doct. There is no fear of God where there is no knowledge Who knows the power of thine anger according to thine anger so is thy fear Psal 90.11 Who is the Lord that I should obey his voyce to let Israel go I know not the Lord neither will I let Israel go Exod. 5.2 Reason 1. Because knowledge is the light of the soul Men cannot work without light Nor affections do their part without knowledge Ignoti nulla cupido Men love not desire not fear not hope not without knowledge of the object 2. Knowledge is the guide and mover of the soul It shews arguments to fear God as well as whom to fear So the great wheel of the Jack makes the rest to go if it be still the rest are so There is then no fear of God without knowledge Vse No marvell that many are so destitute of the fear of God They dare swear and lie They are Ignoramusses They know not Gods power else they durst not do it nor his goodnesse else they would not do it 4. Doct. Many care neither for the knowledge nor fear of God Israel doth not know my people doth not consider Isa 1.3 The unjust Judge did not fear God nor regard man as himself confesseth Luk. 18.4 Reason 1. Because knowledge and the fear of God are difficult to obtain There are so many things to be known and so high above Nature and Art that they are not easily reached And the fear of God is harder to get then knowledge For many get the one and never come to the other 2. They crosse our corruptions and curb them The fear of God keeps men from many sins to which their corrupt nature would lead them Joseph would not wrong his Brethren for saith he I fear God Gen. 42.18 But so did not I because of the fear of God Neh. 5.15 Joseph lacked not power nor opportunity onely Gods fear kept him back Knowledge flies in mens faces after they have sinned Ignorant men are quiet after sin because they know not that they have done amisse Vse Be not offended at hard usage from ungodly men
both labour in sin Gain he looks for from it His Motto is Dulcis ●dor lucri è re qualibet Gold smels well though raked out of a dunghill He can gain by wantonnesse oppression lying flattery c. Vse Here is an help to judge of our estate Is our way a way of sin or of goodnesse We must not try our selves by one act either to cleer our selves for one good act or to condemne our selves for one bad one Our course of life must cleer or condemne us 5. Doct. Abundance of troubles shall come upon wicked men The back-slider in heart shall be filled with his owne wayes Prov. 14.14 Many sorrows shall be to the wicked Psal 32.10 Reason 1. Their fins bring on them store of spirituall evils as shame grief despair wherewith the mind is overburdened as the flomach overprest with meat and made fick of a surfet 2. Bodily evils as diseases pains c. 3. Their ill life brings an ill death violent or despairing 4. Wicked men cannot be filled with sin here but they must be filled with misery in hell A way of sin here and a way of eternal sorrow there Vse It declares to us what is the portion of sinners They take great content in sinfull wayes as if they were the onely free and happy men but their end will be misery 6. Doct. Ungodly men have many devices to undoe themselves So Achitophel and Judas were wise enough to hang themselves Reason 1. Because God overpowers them in their owne way and beats them at their owne weapons and takes them in their subtilty He countermines and voyds their mines He taketh the wise in their owne craftinesse 1 Cor. 3.19 2. Because their Wisdome is imperfect They know not how to prevent all dangers Vse See the misery of wicked men Their wittends to self-destruction Vers 32. For the turning away of the simple shall slay them and the prosperity of fools shall destroy them Wisdome having in the former vers set out the effect to wit the destruction of ungodly men here she concludes her threatnings with another cause of it This vers gives a reason why wicked men shall be so horribly and inevitably destroyed And therein both expounds the former verse and gives answer to a secret objection It might be demanded Who are they that shall eat of the fruit of their labours The answer is in the text simple ones and fools that turn away from Wisdomes instructions It might be further demanded But how shall they eat of the fruit of their labors The answer is in the Text again They will slay them and bring them to destruction But then it may be objected Wicked men thrive most and they that slight Wisdomes counsels grow richest The answer is ready It may be so but yet it will turn to their destruction in the end as the Oxe to be slain goes in the best pastures The Sun-shine of prosperity ripens the sin of the wicked Bernard calls it Misericordiam omni indignatione crudeliorem A mercy that he had no minde to as being worse then all cruelty What good is there in having a fine Suit with the plague in it As soon may a man miscarry upon the soft sands as upon the hard rocks For the words For. It gives a reason of what was said before See on v. 9. They cannot justly complain of my severity because they themselves are the cause of their owne ruine They will not be taught how to escape it though they have not wit enough of themselves to do it Others read it But as it is translated ch 9.18 But he knoweth not that the dead are there And then they understand the former vers thus God will suffer wicked men to eat of their labours and prosper for a time but will destroy them in the end by their owne prosperity The former reading agrees best with the scope which is neer threatning 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The turning away Some take it to be meant of turning away from God and goodnesse to error and wickednesse of life Others take it for their turning away from seeking after heaven to look after the world So Demas forsook Paul having loved this present world 2 Tim. 4.10 Others take it for turning away from Wisdomes counsels given before which they are charged withall v. 25.30 An unwillingnesse to be taught by Gods Ministers And that agrees well with what went before When men will not be taught by Gods Ministers destruction follows 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Of the simple See on v. 4.22 Shall slay them Shall destroy themselves 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And the prosperity The word fignifies quietnesse and abundance which useth to follow peace Of fools See on v. 22. Shall destroy them Shall lay them open to death temporal and eternall This is Scripture language In the day thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die Gen. 2.17 Figures Turning away A Metaphor from a Traveller that misseth his way Shall slay them Shall be the cause of their death A Metaphor from an Executioner So also in Destroy them Wisdome sets down two causes of their destruction The first is an aversenesse to instruction The second is love of prosperity These two concur in most sinfull men and had before punishment answerable set down to wit Gods not hearing them and their destruction In the former note 1. The word of coherence For. 1. The act the turning away 3. The agent of the simple 4. The effect shall slay 5. The object them In the later observe 1. The cause And the prosperity of fools 2. The effect shall destroy them 1. Doct. God is content to give a reason of his judgements though he need not Here are two things to be proved 1. That God need not give a reason of his judgements 2. That God will give a reason of them neverthelesse For the first God need not give a reason of his judgements Who shall say unto him What dost thou Job 9.12 O man who art thou that replyest against God Rom. 9.20 The Potter need give no reason why one piece of clay is made a vessell of honour and another of dishonour Reason 1. Because God is of supreme authority Superiors need not give account to Inferiors of their proceedings Inferiors must to Superiors 2. He is in infite in justice No doubt but his judgements are all just though men do not alwayes understand the reason of them A man may be mis-informed or judge amisse out of passion but God cannot For the second God will give a reason of his judgements though he need not Reason 1. Because of his love to man being willing to inform him of his proceedings God will not hide his proceedings about Sodome from Abraham because he shall have a great posterity and will acquaint them therewith and so bring much glory to God Gen. 18.17 18. 2. For mans good that he may bring him to repentance How shall the Childe mend if the Father tell him not why he strikes
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
and tremble 3. Doct. Wantonnesse shortens mens dayer Give not thy strength unto women nor thy wayes to that which destroyeth Kings Prov. 31.3 The adulteresse will hunt for the precious life ch 6.26 Reason 1. Because it wasts a mans strength and when strength fails life will fail If fuell decay the fire goes out And thou mourn at the last when thy flesh and thy body are consumed ch 5.11 2. It breeds noysome diseases which oft-times prove incurable 3. It hath gluttony and drunkennesse for companions which alone can shorten mens lives much more accompanyed with wantonnesse Plures gulà quàm gladio periisse certum est It is an undoubted truth that more perish by the throat then by the sword 4. Strumpets kill men in private either for their money which they have about them or for want of money when all is spent lest they should be a burden to them on whom they have spent it Vse Let us quench lust with this water If our life be gone all is gone Men are at great cost to preserve life by physick They forbear many pleasing meats and keep a diet But no physick nor diet will keep an adulterer long alive Strumpets will waste more then those helps can do good If they do not yet may the Magistrates sword or Gods judgement do it The King of Babylon caused Ahab and Zedekiah to be rosted in the fire because they have committed villany in Israel and have committed adultery with their neighbors wives Jer. 29.22 23. 4. Doct. He that will scape an Harlot must keep out of her house Had not Joseph been in Potiphar's house he had not been in his Mistrisses danger Gen. 39. Joseph scapes by getting him out of the house The young man Prov. 7. is undone by going into the Harlots house Reason 1. Because her house is full of baits ch 7.16 17. Fine fare and ornaments 2. It hath locks and keyes and private opportunities of sinning Vse If ye know such houses keep out of them Strumpets like Cocks crow on their owne dunghills They count all their owne that comes within their dores Keep out then and be safe 5. Doct. The house of uncleannesse is the gatehouse of death Come not neer the dore of her house lest thou give thy yeers unto the cruel ch 5.8 9. Her house goes down to the chambers of death ch 7.27 Reason 1. In respect of spirituall death For what life of grace can be expected in a stews 2. In respect of corporal death and that many wayes as ye heard before The Strumpets house is the Devils armory wherein are weapons of all sorts to destroy men for the devill was a murderer from the beginning Joh. 8.44 3. In respect of eternal death both of soul and body Her house is like Sodom If Lot go not out of it he must be burned with fire and brimstone His condition that converses there grows still worse and worse His soul is dead his body will be soon dead and then no space for repentance and so he dies eternally Vse Pity those gallants that pity not themselves that go from their own houses into naughty houses and from thence to the grave and hell Out of a lesser and temporary fire into a greater and eternall 6. Doct. Adulterers go downward Her feet go down to death ch 5.5 And questionlesse her adulterer goes down with her Let not thine heart decline to her wayes for she hath cast down many wounded ch 7.25 26. Reason 1. Because they go downward in their strength as was shewed before 2. In their estates For much is spent upon strumpets to the impoverishing of themselves and theirs Vse Let such repent quickly lest they go so low that they never get up again Vers 19. None that go unto her return again neither take they hold on the paths of life The wounds gotten in the Harlots house which are deadly were set out in the former v. The ordinary neglect of them and irrecoverablenesse is set out in this v. For the words None Not onely her self but also all her customers are in danger of perishing Hebr. not all which in Scripture language is none As Psal 143.2 In thy sight shall no man living be justified Heb. not every one living See more on ch 1.24 on No man Some of the ancientest have hence concluded that adultery is an unpardonable sin But they forget that all manner of sin and blasphemy shall be forgiven unto men save onely the sin against the holy Ghost Mat. 12.31 Not none of any condition or none of all simply though the word be used both these wayes in severall places but none in comparison or very few So few return from adulterous courses that in respect of them which do not return they are as none So None calleth for justice Isa 59.4 There is none that calleth upon thy name Isa 64.7 That is very few do so He compareth them which are given to adultery to Souldiers that go into the war and there place and thrust themselves so forward that they are slain We say All the City went to see such a sight that is the most of them It may be some could not and others would not We know that David did repent of adultery but we read of few more that did it Some understand it that none do or can return by their owne wit or strength have they never so good naturall parts but by Gods extraordinary grace some may and do return But the former interpretation is better That go unto her That go in unto her to commit adultery with her A modest expression of a secret or foul action frequent in Scripture Jacob went in unto Leah Gen. 29.23 David had gone in unto Bathshebab Psal 51. in the title Or that go into her house to converse familiarly with him Or that go into an untimely death by wantonnesse Or figuratively that fall into her sinful wayes and so are spiritually dead She that liveth in pleasure is dead while she liveth 1 Tim. 5.6 That interpretation of few returners from adultery is best because he had spoken before of the sinful and deadly courses used in her house v. 18. And now he intimates that her snares are like lime-twigs they hold fast all that converse with her in her house and so fast that very few or none think of returning So that this vers is an explication men because they are so bewitched with the unlawful pleasure ● of her house that they scarce ever think of leaving those finful wayes while they live For the word Goe see on ch 1.26 on the word Cometh Return again Some understand it of returning to prosperity Gods judgement follows them for the most part and wastes them and their estate to the consumption of both But it is rather meant of returning by repentance leaving those sinful paths of death to walk in the good wayes of life as follows in this v. For the word see on ch 1.23 on the word Turn Neither take
and thankfulnesse of the Elders Sibi victorias non attribuunt sed totum Deo ascribunt qui vires ipsis ad vincendum suggessit They do not attribute their victories to themselves but ascribe all to God who gave them strength to overcome Plinie reports that the Roman Generall after a Victory brought in his Garland and laid it in Jupiters lap in the Capitoll David doth the like speaking of his great preparations for the building of Gods Temple Who am I and what is my People that we should be able to offer so willingly after this sort for all things come of thee and of thine own have we given thee 1 Chron. 29.14 He ascribes all to the true God Non magnum est humil●m esse in abjestione sed magna prorsus rara virtus humilitas honorata Bern. in Cant. Ser. 33. It is no great matter to be humble in a low estate but it is certainly a great and a rare vertue for men in honor to be humble Non mirum est si ventus pulverem secum ferat rapiat Nos pulvis sumus Anselm de solitudine No wonder if the wind carry and snatch away the dust with it We are dust 4. Doct. A good man must seek for strength from God not in some of his actions alone but in all even in the least Without me ye can do nothing Ioh. 15.5 Reason The strength to do the least things is from God even to breath He giveth to all life and breath and all things Act. 17.25 And he can take it away when he please and so spoile all our actions His breath goeth forth he returneth to his earth in that very day his thoughts perish Psal 146.4 Use It reproves those who pray not to God for a blessing on their ordinary labours Onely they seek unto him in difficult cases when they are at their wits end as Seamen pray in a storm Psal 107.27 28. It may be they pray not before they work and therefore God lets them be forty years as the Israelites in the Wildernesse about that which might be done in fourty daies 5. Doct. Such as seek for Gods help may expect Gods blessing Cail upon me in the day of trouble I will deliver thee Psal 50.14 Jabez called on the God of Israel saying Oh that thou wouldest blesse me indeed and enlarge my coast and that thine hand might be with me and that thou wouldest keep me from evil that it may not grieve me And God granted him that which he requested 1 Chron. 4.10 Reason 1. He will make thy waies right 2. He will make them full and compleat 3. He will make them successefull Use See the reason why many mens waies prosper not They go on in their own strength God is not in all their thoughts Ps 10.4 So Pharaoh went desperately into the Sea and was drowned Ps 136.15 They seek not for strength from God and God will not blesse them 6. Doct. The chief director of our waies for good is God I have raised him up in righteousnesse and I will direct his waies he shall build my City Isa 45.13 I will direct their work in truth Isa 61.8 Reason 1. Because the wisest man in the world canot direct his own waies so as to make them alwaies succeed well O Lord I know that the way of man is not in himselfe it is not in man that walketh to direct his steps Ier. 10.23 2. God hath wisdom enough to guide us through all difficulties Use Do nothing without Gods direction in his word A man that had an house to build would in all things follow the direction of a skilfull workman lest he lose his cost So let us follow Gods guidance Else all our labour is lost None desires to go astray out of his way except he be first gone out of his wits Every man will rather take a guide to directhim the right way and give money to that end If we be careful to acknowledge God in our waies we shal not wander out of them for we shal have a trusty guide who offereth himselfe freely in the Text to direct our paths God led the Israelites through the wildernesse not the shortest but the safest way So wil God do for all them that make him their guide The Athenians conceived that their Goddess Minerva turned all their evil counsels into good to them the Romans thought their Goddesse Videlia set them again in the right way when at any time they were out All this and more then is undoubtedly done by the true God for all that commit their waies unto him and depend upon him for direction and successe Then may we conclude This God is our God for ever and ever he wil be our guide even unto death Psal 48.14 VER 7. Be not wise in thine own eyes fear the Lord and depart from evil IN this verse is a scale of duties consisting of three steps Mans forsaking his own wisdome leads him to the fear of God and the fear of God keeps him from sin A promise of health followes in the next verse for the words Be not wise See on Chap. 1.5 In thine own eyes See on Chap. 1.17 on the word sight For the phrase being wise in our own eyes is being so in our own conceit as the Doway Bible reads it and it comprehends these particulars under it that a man should not think himselfe sufficiently wise so as by that he should be able to guide himselfe in all his actions to know what is right what wrong what successe will follow good or bad and that he hath a deeper reach then other men and is able to dive into the greatest matters Solomon doth not say be not wise for then should he contradict other scriptures and himselfe too that bid us labour for wisdome his meaning is not then that we should not seek to understand scripture and to be able to give a reason of all we do and know when we judge aright of things and when not for that were to make a man a beast but that he should not think himselfe wiser then other godly men nor at any time oppose his own wisdom to God take heed alwaies that his judgment be not blinded by natural ignorance or selfe-love it differs a little from leaning to our own understanding Verse 5. This is the cause that the effect we lean to our own understanding because we are wise in our own eyes This is in the judgment that in the affection of confidence this is Theorical that is Practical There may also be a Meiofis in it think meanly of thy selfe take notice of thine own ignorance and think other men wiser then thy selfe fear the Lord. See on Chap. 1.7 And depart The word signifies to turn away from a thing which a man dislikes From evil It is put 1. for evil of sin which is the cause 2. of trouble which is the effect He that avoides the first shal escape the last the first is
eyes stand out with fatnesse Psal 73.7 c. Yet he saw they were set on slippery places c. verse 18. There is great odds between a Bullock kept wel for labour and an Oxe fatted for the slaughter and between a body fat and flourishing by good meat and an other swelled with tumours by bad So Joshua and Caleb died in Canaan in a good old age who obeyed God when thousands of Rebels died in the Wildernesse Use 1. To reprove those that spend much money in Physick and yet overthrow the health and strength of their bodies by sinful courses they forget the Text A godly life is health to the navil c. 2. To perswade us to use this new prescript for bodily health Most men love to try new medicines yet this new perhaps to us is as old as Solomon and hath found many a probatum est both in Scripture and in after times Physicians need not be angry with me for this prescript for God would have their art used also but this never to be neglected There is none of us but if we were assured the Physicians potion would heal would take it though troublesome and hard We are wont to say There is nothing but I will do it so I may recover health Use this direction and thou shalt be sure either to have health here or happinesse in heaven Doct. 2. Health is a great blessing It is the first question we ask concerning our friends Art thou in health my brother 2 Sam. 20.9 Is he wel Gen. 29.6 It is the answer to the same question Thy servant our father is in good health Gen. 43.28 Reason 1. No other earthly comfort is pleasing without it Wee take no content in friends children wealth in sicknesse 2. The contrary shews it Great and lasting diseases are very burdensome Use Praise God for it that thou liest not groning in thy bed sick of the stone or gout or some other painfull disease but art able to goe about thy businesse and take comfort in thine Remember it is a great mercy and undeserved be thankfull for it and walk worthy of it 3. Doct. Bodily strength is a great blessing It is commended in Davids worthies and in Sampson Reason 1. It serves for a mans own defence The weakest goes to the wall 2. For the defence of our Country which would bee over-run by cruel enemies if stout souldiers did not defend it Use It is then lawfull to pray for strength of body so it bee with submission to the will of God 4. Doct. The more full our health and strength is the greater is the blessing His hand was restored whole as the other Mar. 3.5 Immedintely the man was made whole and took up his bed and walked Ioh. 5.9 Are ye angry at me because I have made a man every whit whole on the Sabbath day Ioh. 7.23 Reason Because it is so in all blessings spirituall and corporeall The greater measure the greater blessing if not abused Use Let such as have compleat health and strength endeavour to do God more and greater service then weaker men Else have they a greater account to give of these Talents VERSE 9. Honour the Lord with thy substance and with the first fruits of all thine increase IN this Verse is a costly commandment for the maintenance of Gods worship more heavy then the former because it toucheth the purse And lest men should think that the way to beggar themselves as many doe he addes a suitable reward Verse 10. a great and unlooked for increase So much doth Gods judgements differ from mans For the words Honor. Shew that due respect thou owest to God Our cost for Gods worship must not be done for by-ends or that wee may get glory but that God may be honoured And indeed though God need it not nor wee can adde nothing to him thereby yet God counts himself honoured not onely by our humble confession of our own folly and confidence in his bounty spoken of before but also by using those outward means which God gives us to maintain his worship and service In maintaining whereof seek his praise not thine else hee accounts thou dost not honour him but thy self The Lord. See on Chap. 1.7 With thy substance With thy wealth For the word see on Chap. 1.13 Bain an English man a Cambridge Scholer but professour at Paris accurately distinguishes betweene 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 substance and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 increase The former signifies Wealth as Gold and Silver which we do not use immediately for food or apparell and increase intends the yearly income of corne cattell fruit All these are Gods blessings and God must bee honoured with them all But it must be thy substance not other mens gotten by thy labour or by gift or inheritance not by defrauding or oppressing others And with the first fruits See on Chap. 1.7 on the word Beginning It is the same word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the originall It may be taken for the first or for the best of our crops or Harvest Of all Not of some See on Chap. 1.13 Thy increase For the word see on the words before in this Verse With thy substance Some bring in here giving to the poor and the vulgar Bible very boldly addes it in the Text Dapauperibus Give to the poor of the first of all thy corn or fruits But the translator forgot that all the first fruits were for Aaron and his sons and for them to eat Numb 18.9 10. And the poor might no more eat of them then the rich And here it is worth the noting that the Doway Popish English translation the Ape of the vulgar for the most part here leaves it and reads Give to him that is to the Lord. Here it is meant of Leviticall dues at the time of the writing of it as tithes in the beginning of the Verse and first fruits in the end of it And by the rule of equity requires cost for the maintenance of Gods worship and the furtherances of it under the new Testament For by these is God more immediately honoured then by giving to the poor Thus men doe homage to God in paying dues to Gods Ministers required by the Laws where they live and by gifts to pious uses in their life or at their death Figures none Note 1. An Act. Honour 2. The Object The Lord. 3. The matter wherewith God is to be honoured which is double 1. With thy substance 2. With the first fruits of all thine increase In which observe 1. The Subject Of thine increase 2. The Adjuncts 1. Of quality With the first fruits 2. Of Quantity All. 1. Doct. Men must bee at cost to maintain the service God Bring ye all the tiths into the storehouse that there may be meat in mine house Mal. 3.10 See Davids resolution I will not offer burnt offerings unto the Lord my God of that which doth cost me nothing 2 Sam. 24.24 Reason 1. Because we owe so