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A25423 An helpe to better hearts for better times indeavoured in severall sermons, wherein the zeal and fervency required in Gods services is declared, severall hinderances discovered, and suitable helps provided : all out of Gods treasury ... / by John Angier. Angier, John, 1605-1677. 1647 (1647) Wing A3164; ESTC R24183 170,864 660

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mindeed men in reference to Gods service 3. Sundry carriages about and in the publike worship of God that do expresse despising of it 1. Comming too late and going away too soon some come not till the worship of God is begun till the Word be read and Psalms be sung yea some not till praier be ended and some go away before Sermon or praier or at least the blessing be finished I would know of these whether they do not think that that which is past when they come and behinde when they go away is part of Gods worship as well as that whereat they are present and whether their presence at that part doth not manifest their respect they cannot deny but what they neglect in the beginning or ending of publike Assemblies comming too late or going away too soon is Gods worship and their presence would shew their respect therefore their absence doth expresse disrespect despising if it be not necessary and so is sin And I do not call that necessary absence from the beginning which is caused by mens oversleeping themselves or not minding how the morning passeth or having more busines to do on the sabbath-Sabbath-day morning then can well be done in due time or spending that time in private duties which should be spent in publike N●r do I call that necessary absence from the ending which is caused not by ordinary infirmity of body or unusuall faintnes and weaknes but from spirituall fulnes the usuall cause the a●fection is cloied why should they tarry any longer they have preaching enough and praier enough or from vanity of minde that cannot endure to be fixed long in any way be it never so good they must have change though they change from the better to the worse from Gods house to the ale-house from the assembly of Saints to the society of sinners from the speciall presence of God to the speciall presence of Satan for in the ordinances God is specially present and to go from them is specially to transgresse therefore specially to go into Satans presence for he hath most to do where God hath least When men therefore are walking and talking in the Church or Chappell-yard or lying along in the grasse or going homeward when the Word of God is in hand they sin in despising the worship of God and little know that they go into the midst of the Devils Kingdom and power 2. Kneeling down or putting the hat and hand before the face to pray when the Word is in reading or Psalms are in singing or the Word in preaching a thing much used in some places and held to be a point of great devotion This private praying is a sin for it is a despising of the worship of God in hand That such private praying is a despising of Gods publike worship in hand is evident from the open and manifest neglect of it not onely is the minde withdrawn in the sight of God but the body also in the sight of men disrespect is cast upon the worship of God in the sight of men It will be answered that we do indeed not attend unto the worship in present use for a time but it is not out of purpose or desire to neglect Gods worship but out of respect to and desire of better preparation for the same hereby To this I say of the intention alone I will not speak which I conceive to be very good in many that use it unlesse that good intention could make a good action but that the action performed with this good intention is a despising of Gods worship I prove for it doth thrust publike worship out of its season and puts private in the room when publike and private worship stand in choice it takes to private it puts more vertue and efficacy into private for heart preparation then into p●blike It is an errour and too much sleighting of Gods publike worship to think that singing with the Congregation if they be singing when we come in will not fit us to sing and reading the Word with them will not fit us to read and hearing the Word preache● will not fit us to hear better then private praier for shall they be judged to be instruments of all other spirituall good and not of preparing the h●●●t if unprepared 3. Sitting elected and chosen without any necessity in ti●e of publike praier we have exa●ples of kneeling and standing in publikē praier but not of sitting Nehem. 9.2 They stood and confessed their sinnes and the iniquities of their fathers and ver 5. the Levites bid the people stand up Standing is the reverence that a servant expresseth to his Master kneeling the reverence and worship that a subject expresseth to his Prince but sitting is a gesture of familiarity and honour I remember not that any of the godly in solemn private praier did sit but they kneeled or lay along or stood That of David 2 Sam. 7.18 Divines interpret continuing before the Lord. See Tremel upon the place and Piscator Indeed our Saviour and his company being set down on the grasse to eat meat did crave a blessing sitting which doth warrant the like custom in this Countrey where they usually sit down to meat before they crave a blessing but 1. That was no solemn praier as that in Gods publike worship i● but a short blessing of the creatures which yet our Saviour did reverently perform for he lift up his eies to Heaven 2. It is one thing to pray shortly being s●t without change of the gesture and another thing to make choice of that as a praier-gesture in Gods solemn worship i. e. when others do chuse to kneel or stand for a man to chuse to sit in this case it shews a sleighting of Gods worship because a man chuseth a gesture of familiarity in praier wherein a man comes neerer God then in any ordinance and in publike praier wherein for examples sake we should be more reverent Lest any should take advantage or be unsatisfied about sitting at the Sacrament becau e I say sitting is a gesture that doth not expresse that reverence let me answer in a word and by the way 1. Had we not the example of Christ and his Apostles in the first institution for some kinde of sitting it were more considerable 2. It sufficeth that it is a gesture of freedom and honour such as parents admit their children unto and friends their friends though farre under them It is meet we should goe to God humbly he may with his honour allow us more freedom when he comes to us 3. Though sitting in it self be not a gesture of reverence yet they that sit may sit reverently And it is an ordinary phrase to our children sitting before their betters that they should sit reverently that is fitly composing all the parts of their bodies as those that had an awe of their betters and would expresse their respect of them If sitting therefore doth expresse the freedom and honour which God allows
in spirituall actions because a man in them did come nearest to God and had most to do with him the fountain of comfort therefore the curse of sorrow is most found in spirituall actions because in them naturally a man is furthest from God and doth ●east expresse him And though the godly do finde much sweetnesse and comfort in holy duties more then in other actions yet they tast of the curse here more then elsewhere they finde more travill trouble and sorrow attending spirituall actions then any other the sweat of their browes and wearines of their bodies is not so troublesome as the pain of their hearts in holy duties their generall calling is more sorrowfull and bitter then their particular an harder matter to keep their thoughts close to good duties then to their particular callings their mindes are more vexed and their bodies more tired in good performances then with so much labour any where else If most disquiet from within and from without be found in spirituall actions then there is most cause of spirituall sloth This spirituall sloth that hinders our fervent performance of good duties is improved and increased sundry wayes 1. By ignorance of three things 1. Our necessity and want of spirituall actions we see not what need we have to pray much and hear much because we naturally want Gods favour grace apart in heaven and they that are renewed have but little grace much to do with it and much opposition against it yet know not what need they have of the increase of grace When our Saviour commandeth his Disciples Matth. 6.31 33. to take no thought saying what shall we eat or what shall we drink or where withall shall we be clothed But first seek the kingdome of God and his righteousnes doth he not give us to understand that they and so we are more sensible of wants for our bodies then for our soules that we had need be called from the one unto the other 2. Ignorance of the worth and excellency of holy duties which have a worth above other actions inasmuch as they are commanded in the first place do require more expression of grace do more immediately concern God do bring more honour to him we do duties on Gods day and at other times because God commandeth them others do so and we are wont so to do but we look at them as mean work as poor imployment we do not see the hidden worth and excellency of them It is not in vain that the Lord saith Isa 58.13 they should call the Sabbath honourable It is one thing to keep the Sabbath and another thing to keep it as an high day a day of honour thinking our ordinary worldly thoughts words and works too mean and base for it we perform good duties but we know not the honour of them if we did we should not be ashamed of good speeches and actions as if they were matter of shame rather then honour 3. Ignorance of the benefit and good that redounds unto us by the performance of good duties as increase of our communion with God increase of his Image in us increase of peace and comfort increase of all other good things Why doth God so frequently use the argument from the benefit to move us unto performance of them but to declare our ignorance herein as well as to declare his bounty and to meet with our self-love and desire of our own good If we know experimentally the trouble and toil of good duties and not so well know our want the worth and benefit of them how should we but be backward unto them as disquieting us without any great necessity worth or benefit to countervail that disquiet 2. Spirituall sloth is improved and increased by false reasonings in our mindes For instance 1. Lesse frequencie in performing good duties and fervencie will serve the turne and if lesse will do what needs more Are not the hearts even of the godly apt to say what need we be so often in prayer and take so much paines with our hearts therein surely God is not so strict nor the way to heaven so streight Why doth the Apostle call for all diligence in the adding of grace to grace 2 Pet. 1.5 and in making our calling and election sure vers 10. but that we thinke a little will serve Why doth our Saviour call the way to heaven a strait gate and narrow way Ma●th 7.14 and command us to strive to enter in Luke 13.24 but that we are not easily possessed that so much paines is required in good duties as indeed there is especially others do cry out of them as prodigalls that take much paines in hearing praying and are not backward to say that they hope to get to heaven with lesse adoe and if lesse will not serve God helpe them That there is no need of so much paines in good duties they undertake to prove by experience others say they have done well others have done well in times past and do well now that take not so much pains spend not so much time in good duties labour not so much with their hearts were not such and such honest men were they not well thought of of the Church of God are they not gon to heaven dare you think otherwise yet they were not forward strict and precise as some they went on fairely and made not so great a noise and stirre in religion Are not such and such now well thought of you would be loath to think they do not fear God that they shall not go to heaven yet they do not so much as keep company with the godly you can discern in them no great labour and pains-taking for heaven one may therefore do well and get well to heaven where nothing will be wanting without so much adoe the labour then is well spared so saith sloth spare what one can but reason grounded upon experience saith a man may do well without so much labour therefore spare it This reasoning is false for suppose some have gotten to heaven and shall get to heaven that are not so diligent in good wayes and so shall do well in the end yet they do not so well in the way Who knows what smart their sloth costs them in life in time of sicknes in the houre of death who knows what peace comfort grace what heaven upon earth they deprive themselves of who knows how God in Ordinances would raise them up to heaven and come down from heaven unto them were they more carefull to take pains Nor do they so well in the end they shall have lesse grace and glory in heaven lesse of God and so be lesse happy They shall have a crown but not be set with pearls they shall sit in thrones but not so near the King of Kings as others they shall be filled with the rivers of Gods pleasures but their vessells shall not be so able to contain as others 2. There is no profit in performing good duties we
vanity when he seeth us that way disposed 4. Greive the spirit of God to see his Temple in that guise and dresse On the contrary a reverent behaviour of body that will 1. Beget respective thoughts in our mindes 2. Effect the like reverent carriage in others which will be helpefull to us 3. Take advantage from Satan when he seeth no opportunity 4. Content the spirit of God when he seeth his Temple in a comely habit and he will delight to be more there 5. Looke up to the Lord Jesus to make these considerations usefull and to effect more of this reverence in use He shewed the greatest respect that ever was shewed to Gods Ordinances when he whipped out the profaners of the Temple and he as head of the Church hath full●es to bestow Ob. Th● Ordinances ●●eme to be weake and foolish ●hin● and not to deserve such reverence for men to speake to God and God to speake his minde unto us by men a poore thing Ans The Apostle hath answered this to my hand 1 Cor. 1. ●5 The foolishnes of God is wiser then men and the weaknes of God stronger then men What though they may seeme foolishnes and weaknes grant them so to be yet they are Gods foolishnes and weaknes God can make that a strong way which is in it self weake and that a wise way which is in it self foolish that which hath the wisedome of God and the strength of God with it cannot be foolish cann●t be weake however it may seeme abstracted therefrom Gods wisdome is an infinite and hidden wisd●●e all of God is not there●o 〈◊〉 ●ke and foolish because we see not the strength and wisdome of it Let us conclude our blindnes folly and weaknes rather then charge Gods means of folly and weaknes CHAP. III. Of the second hinderance of instant worshipping of God wandring thoughts ISA. 29.13 Forasmuch as this people draw near me with their mouth and do honour me with their lips but have removed their hearts farre from me HAving finished the first hindrance of our instant worshipping of God despising of Gods worship we come to a second seated in the same faculty of the soul the minde and it is wandring or roving thoughts in Gods worship For the handling whereof I have made choice of this text wherein the Lord doth blame it in the Israelitish worshipers of him By heart here we are to understand the whole inward man the minde will affections for i● stands opposed to the whole o●t●ard man included in a pa●t expressed the mouth and lips In the like sense heart put alone is taken Mat. 15. ●9 out of the heart proceed evil thoughts murthers adulteries i. e. out of the whole inward man part whereof is the heart proceeds evil thoughts the work of the minde and murthers adult●ri●s the work of the will and a●●●tions manifested in the outward man I am particularly to speak of the absence of one power of the minde from God the thoughts N. The absence of our thoughts in Gods worship doth weaken our worshiping of God Wandring thoughts in Gods worship do hinder our earnest worshipping of God God complains here that his people drew near him with their mouths but their hearts were gone from him if the absence of the heart and particularly of the minde and more particularly of the thoughts of the minde did not weaken and hinder their worship why should the Lord complain of the absence Nay why should he punish the abs●nce so admirably as here he threatneth to do Mat. 15.7 our Saviour calleth them that worship God with their bodies and their heart farre from him hypocrites such worship therefore hath hypocrisy in it and the more wandring of minde the more hypocrisy and if so it is but weak worship The Lord by the Prophet doth particularly discommend the hearing of the wicked Ezek. 33.31 that so farre as concerned the outward man they did hear as well as a people could they came duly and sate respectively and attended and were somewhat affected with the Word as men are with pleasant musick but their hearts walked after their covetousnes their bodies were in one place but their thoughts and affections in another their bodies were sixed but their souls were roving and this made their hearing to become sinne and God to threaten that the day should come when they should know by lamentable experience that they had a Prophet and the Word amongst them and were hearers of it but sinned by the wandring of their hearts When David Psal 103.1 calls upon his soul to be exercised in the duty of praise he explaineth in the later end of the verse what he meaneth by soul all that is within me praise his holy Name If the duty of praise and so other duties have not all that within us and consequently our thoughts it hath not its due and so Gods praise is short To this agrees that of our Saviour summing up all Commandements of the first Table in this one Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy soul and with all thy minde One branch of this love of God is the manner of worshipping God which must be with all the minde as well as all the heart and soul and if with all the minde then with all the thoughts of the minde and so much as the thoughts are absent in Gods worship so much love to God is absent therefore the worship of God is hindred Two things we must consider of for our understanding of this point 1. What wandring thoughts in Gods worship are 2. How wandring thoughts do hinder our earnest worshipping of God 1. What are wandring thoughts in Gods worship Ans We may know the nature of them by the description of the holy ghost in this place and in Ezekiel Isaiah describeth them by their place they are farr from God there is a distance betwixt God and them and that in opposition to the nearnes of the body to him those thoughts that are further from God in his worship then the body that are not busied about the same action that the body is are wandring thoughts and do hinder Gods worship Ezekiel describeth them by their motion and wandring their heart goeth or walketh after their coveteousnes when the body is set and sixed the 〈◊〉 in 〈◊〉 and thoughts are up and walking not about the service in hand but about other things These wandring thoughts according to the objects they are conversant about may be reduced to two heads Thoughts about evil things and thoughts about good things 1. Wandring thoughts about things evil in themselves thoughts simply and materially evil Amos 8.5 6. Thus the Iews are brought in Saying When will the new moone be gone and the sabbath why that they may sell corne and set forth wheat Is that all No there is a worse matter beside making the Ephah small and the shekel great and falsifying the balances by deceit That we may buy the poor
painfull to keep our mindes close to a duty and to let them rove and wander is an ease to us a signe of their vanity 2. Want of inuring and accustoming our selves unto good thoughts in ordinary course and to setlednes therein and accustoming our mindes to rove and wander to take their lawlesse and boundlesse liberty whereby their aversenes unto good thoughts is not weakned but their forwardnes unto vanity and wandring of thoughts strengthened custome is a second nature what we use our selves to will be ready and easy to us If we ordinarily disuse good thoughts we do not raise up our mindes to heaven in our callings upon sight of the creatures we do not parley and commune with our hearts in some holy spirituall conference when we lie down and when we rise up when we sit in our houses and when we walk by the way we shall finde that when we come to holy duties holy thoughts will be tedious and painfull for we strive against two natures one that sin hath brought and another that custom hath brought And suppose we have a new nature a little grace yet what will a little grace do against two natures on the other side if we use our selves to sinfull thoughts or to roving and wandring of minde we shall come to an art and trade of sinfull and vain thoughts they will easily come into our mindes in holy duties without any pains any study or devising there will be swarms and treasures there the minde by continuall use will have gotten a more perfect faculty and ability in such thoughts 3. An overfullnesse of earthly occasions or a fullnesse of thoughts desires and cares about a few occasions hindring or instead of dependence upon God When a mans hands are so full of occasions that his minde hath hardly room enough for the thoughts thereof at least in due time or when all a mans thoughts morning evening all the day long are taken up about that businesse he hath in hand that no spirituall thoughts can get place in the minde they will not be shut out in good duties those thoughts that have all place at other times will have some place in Gods worship Beside too much to do with the world or too much thought about the world will make all the faculties of the soul more ready and observant that way Some occasion amongst many will be neglected or an occasion might have been dispatched some other way and the memory will not be wanting to suggest it no not in midst of good duties Multitude of occasions or sollicitude about them have a power to pull the minde apeeces to divide it into parts that if the worship of God have any of the minde it shall have but a part When Martha was so sollicitous about providing for our Saviours entertainment he chides her Martha Martha thou carest and he useth a word that signifieth to cut into parts her soul was all apeeces with it and therefore unfit to hear till that care should be gone and her soul return unto it self Immoderacie of affection will breed immoderacie of thoughts if there be not a greater dependence If a man be sollicitous about good duties how he shall perform them how he shall pray how he shall hear and do not look up to God as able and willing to helpe him those thoughts will not rest nor lye still when the duty is in hand for a man seeth nothing to quiet his thoughts In like manner if a mans thoughts be taken up with his earthly occasions and he do not think and that much that God taketh care for him if he doth not often call to minde the promises of God the providence of God his preventing and succeeding providence what experiences he hath had of the same his carefull thoughts will not be quiet in holy duties for only two things can give any quiet to the minde 1. A mans own imployment about them 2. Assurance and remembrance of Gods care If a mans thoughts be full of his occasions he will forget Gods care therefore his thoughts will be ranging in duties for he hath nothing to quiet him but imployment about them his body cannot be imployed for that is about good duties he must let his minde therefore be casting and thinking about them in holy duties or else he will have no quiet of minde 4. Want of reverence did we look upon Gods worship respectively as a matter of that worth and weight that indeed it hath we would take heed that our thoughts be weighty 5. Want of preparation When we come with earthly thoughts with wandring mindes do not winde them up nor set them in tune by some spirituall thoughts by prayer how should they but worke after their naturall frames when we do not stir up the spiritualnesse of our mindes We must not thinke that we have good thoughts at command and alwaies ready unlesse our mindes were perfectly regenerate what we get now must be by the lusting of the spirit against the flesh Gal. 5.17 by strugling and striving 6. Want of watchfullnesse in duties 1. We do not watch our mindes that they do not wander but keep close to the duty 2. We do not watch our affections that they be affected and moved with the duty if they were affected they would keep the thoughts close 3. We do not watch our eies that they do not rove from one object to another for then they will minister matter of wandring to the minde And on the Lords day we do not watch our tongues that they speak not of the world and our eares that they hear not others speak of the world for if our tongue may have liberty to speak of the world and our ears to hear matters of the world spoken of save in case of some spirituall ends or use made thereof our mindes will be thinking of them 2. Satan hath his hand in wandring thoughts He comes to Church with us Zech. 3.1 He stood at Iosuas right hand to resist him he watcheth the best opportunity to hinder us The high-way side ground hearers have the word taken from them by the Devil How they understand it not when the Word is delivering the Devil fills their mindes with other thoughts that they do not attend to the Word nor know what is spoken some wandring thoughts he immediately casts in without any help of our corruption he is a spirituall wickednes therefore can conveigh himself into our spirits have communion and converse with them Such as come immediately from Satan discover themselves thus 1. By their suddainnes they are with us ere we are aware we cannot discern the rise of them other thoughts wherein our corruption hath an hand do come more leasurely and by degrees upon occasion of some object or some thing remembred or some thing represented to the minde we see their rise 2. By their sinfulnes ordinarily for comming immediately from Satan and being his children onely they must needs more lively expresse his
worshipping of God is to weaken that worship But to neglect preparation is to neglect that which the servants of God have practised as a way of due worshipping God Therefore to neglect preparation is to weaken that worship 3. God hath generally put it into the mindes of men as a point of wisdom to make preparation for matters of lesse moment Prov. 24 2● prepare thy work without and make it ready for thy self in the field and afterwards build thine house When men build an house they first bring materialls to the hill as we say and then fit and prepare those materialls that they may sit the work intended and then they build they do not build without preparation Pro. 21.31 The horse is prepared against the day of battell the horse is not used in battell out of hand nor will any ordinary common horse serve for that end but the horse is prepared against the day of battell by exercising unto warlike skill by fit keeping by harnessing Men prepare their ground by mannuring and plowing ere they cast in the seed Isa 28.24 25 26. Doth the plow-man plow all day to sowe doth he open and break the clods of his ground when he hath made plain the face thereof doth he not cast abroad the sirches and scatter the cummin and cast in the principall wheat and the appointed barley and the rie in their place And why doth he thus prepare the ground ere he sowe ver 26. for his God doth instruct him unto discretion and doth teach him Is it wisdom to prepare ere we build a materiall house for man to dwell in And is it not much more wisdom to prepare for that house that it want nothing which must entertain the God of heaven Isa 66.1 2. Heaven and earth are Gods he hath made them and they are ready prepared but what house will they make for God The Lord tells them what house he chuseth more then heaven and earth To him will I look that is poor and contrite and that trembl●th at my word a prepared heart to worship God is Gods ho●se a poor heart sensible of its emptines of grace a contrite heart that is ground to dust and powder in regard of sin and a heart that trembles at Gods word that is deeply affected therewith and wrought upon thereby Let me adde one instance more which comes a little more nearer to the matter in hand When we are to come to the house of God we prepare our bodies in regard of the company we come unto we wash our selves and change our apparell and see that it be clean we put on some clothes that were not worne since they were washed but are pr●pared in the week for that day and we should condemn a man of uncomelines rudenes of rashnes indiscretion that should come unprepared in body Nay many that go abroad all the week yet will not come to Church on the Lords day and all the reason is because they have no better clothes had they n●w clothes they would come as well as any and the reason why this doth hinder them is beca●●● a●l m●● t●ke ●●re to come i●●●●●l● 〈◊〉 th●s to the C●●r●h ●n● they should be 〈…〉 b●dy Nay more t●●● t●●●●●●t comely clo●●●● o● 〈◊〉 own do count it a lesse matter to humble themselves to borrow clothes then to come unhansom●ly Nay y●t a little furt●er many when they come to the Sacrament rather t●●n th●y will not have their bodi●s prep●●ed as they think they will deprive themselves of food necessary to the comfort of their bodies they will come fasting though our bl●ss●d Saviour and his Apostles did celebrate the Lords supper after they had eaten the passeover which I suppose was a competent meal for they were to be no more at it then could well make an end of the paschall lamb If the body cannot come well into the presence of man without preparation can the soul come well into the presence of God without preparation to worship him The body comes to meet men the soul to meet God the body men count unfit till it be prepared and is the soul sit without preparation shall we make the presence of men of greater consequence then the presence of God Beside the principall end why the body comes to Church is that the soul might meet with God and we trim the handmaid but not the mistris that which hath least use in the present occasion not that which hath most just as if you should trim the ho●se you ride upon to Church but not your selves which were a ridiculous thing This argument ther●fore doth conclude strongly and sensi●ly If matters of a lesse moment cannot be so well done without preparation then not the worship of God But lesse matters cannot so well be done without preparation as appears by instance Therefore not the worship of God God will at last day bring out me●s plowing to witnes against them and condemn them and this shall be so sensible and plain an argument that men shall have nothing to say As when the Lord said to the man that wanted the wedding garment Friend how camest thou hither not having a wedding garment What come a wedding and not have on a wedding garment The argument was so sensible and plain that he was speechles So when God shall say to us as he will do at the last day ●●i●nd didst not thou prepare thy ground for thy seed What and not thy heart for my worship This shall be so sensible and manifest an argument as men shall n t be a●le to say any thing against it but be spee●hles What is unpreparednes of heart to worship God It stands in three things 1. Rash●●s 2. Prophan●nes 3. Unaptnes or indisposednes 1. Rashnes a rash heart is an unprepared heart and begins the unpreparednes of the heart at the highest faculty of the soul the minde Eccles 5.2 Be not rash w●th thy mouth nor let thine heart be hasty to utter any thing before God God hath given a man a power to deliberate and consult with himself about matters what is fit to be done and what not fit how matters may best be done and hovv not and hereby the mold and patern of things is made in the minde according to which the outward man doth them and vvithout this a man is not fit to do any thing much lesse the vvorship of God for he doth the same in great part vvithout the soul is carried thereunto by the force of sense and blinde affection and herein represe●t●th the br●te beasts It is called Prov. 22.2 A devouring of holy things It is a snare to a man that devoureth holy things and after vowes to make enquiry When a man devoures holy duties performs them at all adventur●s considers not time nor place nor manner nor end such a man is in a snare the food he hath devoured is vvithin a net and hath an hook vvithin it evil vvill befall him after such duties anguish
continueth wearines doth continue and increase 2. It makes a man desire to change the present service for some other imployment a weary man would have new work to take away his wearines and to bring him contrary comfort and delight Can that be fervent service which a man thinks to be evil the end whereof he more desireth then the doing of it which he would change for any other imployment such service doth wearines make Quest It may be said you told us lately what some causes are of the wearines of the body in Gods service tell us now what the causes of the wearines of the soul are in the same service of God Answ 1. Remnants of corruption which do alwaies strive to draw the strength of the minde and affections another way and sometimes do prevail by our carelessenes and Satans watchfullnes Thus David when he was acted by corruption having looked too much upon the worlds prosperity and his own affliction without reflecting upon the end of both he was ready to throw off all the service of God Ps 73.13 Verily I have cleansed my heart in vain and washed mine hands in innocency if all the fruit of his piety be affliction and all the fruit of the worlds prophanenes be prosperity then hath David spent a deal of labour in vain and it is time to make an end but this was the faulse suggestion of corruption so Jer. 28.8 9. When he was mocked and reproached daily for his ministery he said he would make mention of the Lords name no more he grew weary of his ministery if he could see no better fruit of his labour but reproach he would give it over but then he was acted by corruption as appears by his bitter cursing the day of his birth Thus the godly have sometimes their spirituall sick sits and so are spiritually weary of spirituall things More particularly 1. Ignorance of the inward worth and excellency of Gods worship and service So much know so much desire and delight and no more we cannot desire and delight in what we know not for so we might desire and delight in evil as soon and as much as in good which cannot be we do but little know the good of Gods worship and so can but little delight in it and where is but little delight will be wearines 2. Imperfect suitablenes of soul to Gods worship suitablenes and agreement is the cause of desire and delight Amos 3.3 Can two walk together except they be agreed Can they desire and delight in one anothers company unlesse they suit and agree in disposition Prov. 27.19 As in water face answereth to face so doth the heart of man to man Why doth a man love some particular man with a more inward free strong love because as in water face answereth to face a man may see the image of his face in water the represented face hath the likenes of the true face So a man sees the image and representation of his own affections and dispositions in some more then in others he sees himself in him and every man loves himself more then others and consequently such men in whom he sees himself more then in others Psal 40.8 The more suitablenes and agreement the more desire and delight we are but in a small measure suitable to the worship of God because the Image of God is but in part renewed in us and if there be but a measure of likenes in us to Gods worship there will be but a measure of delight and therefore wearines present likenes alone doth exclude wearines beside there will be a measure of unlikenes and that naturally causeth wearines 3. Immoderate desire and delight in other things even lawfull callings occasions and comforts so in my text Why are they weary of the new Moon and of the Sabbath the reason is rendred That we may sell corne and set forth wheat and why should they sell corn that they might gather riches When they were in the midst of Gods worship they had a greater desire and delight to their callings and worldly busines the strength of their souls went that way therefore they were weary of Gods worship 4. So much earthly converse with our callings and earthly occasions I say earthly converse after the manner of men who are altogether earthly for it is not the use of our callings that draw our hearts from heaven to earth but the manner of our use of them when we do not set awork grace in them do not use them as an appointed way to fit us for Gods worship and therefore watch our hearts that they be not drawn too much unto the things we have to do with We do not use them with fear lest there be a snare in them we do not use them with dependance upon God with strife against our naturall earthly mindednes therefore they steal away our hearts 5. Over-length of duties there is but a measure of desire and delight in us therefore duties should have but a set time in heaven when our affections shall be perfect there shall be no time to measure duties by but they shall be immeasurable The measure of the affections is regulated by judgement and discretion when therefore duties are drawn out beyond discretion they are burdensom or indiscretion beside the soul hath other occasions to attend beside Gods worship even on the Lords day works of mercy and necessity if therefore time be taken up so that convenient time is not reserved for these the soul growes weary because it cannot do all its work so in a family duties are then wearisom when they do not consist with our particular callings 6. Absence of the all-filling and quickning spirit It is the spirit that quickneth the flesh profiteth nothing the words that I speak unto you they are spirit and life Joh. 6.63 As the body is dead without the spirit so the Ordinances without Gods quickning spirit it must both quicken our desire and delight and stirre up the good of the Ordinances Psal 84.10 11. David exceedingly prizeth a door in Gods house why the Lord is a sunne when there is such a presence of God that is both light and heat to discover the good in the Ordinances and to warm our hearts therewith then are they delightfull 2 Cor. 3.18 When the spirit shews us the face of God peace comfort grace in the glasse of the promise and so reflects the sunne upon us that whilst we behold Gods favour we are at peace with him whilst we behold his grace we are made gracious whilst we behold his comfort we are made comfortable then are the Ordinances delightfull but if the spirit be absent there is no affection stirring Vse This Doctrine doth manifest First that God hath but weak service at the hands of the most weak praying weak hearing because but weary service But because all will say they come willingly and cheerfully to Gods worship I will shew by severall instances as so many
arguments that the most are weary of Gods service some whereof will fall upon some and others upon others and one or other upon the most 1. That comming after the beginning of Gods worship and going away before the end of it which I blamed heretofore as an act of despising of Gods worship will prove wearines in this place Were it matter of delight Gods worship then the more of it the more delight the sooner men come the longer they stay the more delight if men come with the first and stay with the last they shall have more delight but if it be a burden the lesse of it the more delight Were man to go to a delightfull recreation they would be there with the first and stay with the last upon this ground lest they should lose part of their delight let not men say they have many hinderances when they should come and they have many things to hasten them when they should go home for delight would break thorow hinderances and make a man forget what would take him off Do not men forget their meat and sleep when they are about pleasant occasions And were the worship of God delighfull men would forget their occasions at home till the worship of God be ended 2. That allowance of the forenoon only on the Lords day to the worship of God and reservation of the afternoon by some which is a clipping of the Kings coin of heaven for the Sabbath is the Lords day in a speciall respect all the dayes of the week are Gods in respect of creation and end but the Sabbath is the Lords as the Kings coin is his it bears the Lords image of holines it is an holy day set apart from common use unto Gods worship to take away the afternoon of that therefore is to clip the Kings coin yea though a man should spend so much time in private reading as he is wont to spend in publike worship seeing therefore there is such variety of Gods Ordinances such convenient time of rest and refreshing between the forenoon and afternoon exercise and due and timely finishing of the afternoon exercise what but wearines doth keep men from it Nay many do take so liberally of Gods good creatures on that day which most will have on that day more then any other though it be fit for very few bodies that their bodies are made unfit to performe Gods service Suppose the day be cold or rainy as it doth sometimes fall out on that day and it may be to try whether that will keep men away would not delight break thorow will not men do the like for their callings and recreations 3. That hasty hearty and full speech of the world and worldly occasions on the Lords day in some when the service of God is finished morning and evening as if the Sabbath were a market day a day of bargening paying receiving rather then of worshipping of God or seeking the good of the souls of men If the Sabbath be holy then nothing must be spoken or done that day but what is directly holy or done directly for an holy end to further Gods worship to helpe our hearts Were not men weary of holy duties would they so soon be gotten to earthly occasions would they be so hot and fervent in the same would there not be some remembrance of the duties newly past but that men lay aside a burden when they finish them 4. The neglect of all private duties by some on the Lords day If they were not tired with and weary of Gods publike worship would they not pray in their families speak something of the word they have heard though it were the lesse the Sabbath being appointed only for holy duties But if a man should go from family to family how few should he finde that pray on the Lords day night or speak any thing of the word preached but spend the time in idle talking a signe they have enough of Gods service are tired therewith 5. The haste that some make out of the house of God into the alehouse wherein they can sit longer then at the worship of God All these things which fall upon the most some or other of them do shew what weary service God hath generally performed and consequently weak service 2. The weak service God hath done him by his own people for it is weary service as appeares 1. In that they are not so willing of the approach of the Sabbath that light is not so pleasant unto them they think it comes too soon could wish it would stay a little longer 2. Their hearts are not so chearfull in Gods service nay many times the Lords day is the saddest day in the week they are more merry before it comes and when it is gone then in it 3. They give too much way to wandring thoughts and affections in holy duties they are not so unpleasant and burdensome to them they do not strive against them 4. Secret wishings and desires that the Sabbath were gone to the end they might go about other occasions 5. Too much gladnes of the end of the Sabbath too much ease and rest in their hearts these things shew how weak service God hath because so weary 3. Their sin that take course to weary soul and body so as to make them unfit for Gods worship for they take course to weaken his worship they that overcharge their bodies with surfeting and drunkennes that overtire them with labour that suffer their affections to run at their will upon earthly things do take course that God might have but poore service to do God but poore service is a sin but to take course that God may have but poore service is a double sinnne that argues we are willing he should have but weak service or at least are carelesse of the strength of his worship 2. To reprove 1. Our generall wearines of Gods worship If we consider it it may shame us 1. A signe we have lost Gods creation Is it likely that God would make creatures on purpose for his service and make them so that it should be a burden to them when it was in his power to make them otherwise Thou art weary of the word of prayer canst rest no where dost continually wish the minister had done oh be ashamed God did not make thee thus thou hast lost his image wiped off his spot should a father take paines and be at cost with a childe to learn him the skill of some trade and he should have lost it when he should come to exercise it would he not be ashamed thou hast lost the skill of serving of God which God gave thee wherein he was at more paines and cost then in making the rest of his creatures Me thinks this should make men hang down their heads for shame when they finde themselves weary of Gods worship they were sometimes fit to do Gods service but now unfit 2. There is no matter of wearines in Gods worship for it
their sleeping when they should not and an intimation of punishment by present disquiet Sleep on now what could they now sleep No if you mark the following words behold the houre is at hand and the sonne of man is betrayed into the hands of sinners rise let us be going behold he is at hand that doth betray me How could they both sleep and rise and be going A signe our Saviour did intend to speak ironically i. e. to mock at their restlesse condition so bidding them to sleep that they might well perceive he intended no such matter which is the bitterest kinde of reproof jestingly to bid a man to doe a thing when he knowes he cannot doe it to make a rest of a mans trouble So when God shall cast men into restlesse co●ditions and they shall apprehend God bids them sleep now when yet they cannot sleep i. e. doth not pity their want of rest but rather mock at their misery as Prov. 1.26 how heavy will it be before Christ did thus bitterly reprove them their sleeping brought a confusion upon their hearts Mark 14.40 They knew not what to answer they had no excuse for themselves How much more when the godly are in affliction will it trouble and God shall then lay it home to their hearts 2. Consider that proverb of Solomon Chap. 23.21 Drousines shall cloath a man with raggs Is it not true spiritually as well as bodily Were not the Disciples ragged and uncomely when they fled from their Master and Peter especially a man of a poor torne and distracted soul when he denied his Master with swearing and cursing In like manner drousy Christians are ragged Christians of distracted spirits of uncomely conversations How can it be otherwise when they sleep out those Ordinances wherein they should put on the Lord Jesus How did Dalilah get God from Sampson but by getting him asleep and in his sleep causing him to break his Covenant with God by cutting off his locks So whilst men sleep in holy duties God goes from them and they are not awa●e for thus the way of intercourse between God and them is shut up 3. Hath not the spirit of God some respect to this sleeping in that Scripture-phrase which the godly have occasion to make use of in their afflictions finding somewhat suitable thereto in the providence of God Psal 44.23 Awake why sleepest thou oh Lord God sometimes doth no more for his people in affliction in their apprehension then a man asleep we call and cry desire others to call and cry for us times and daies doe passe over our heads yet God sleeps still he doth nothing for us our afflictions doe continue Doth not this suit our dealing with God we sle p in his service therefore he sleeps in our occasions When we are in affliction and none can help us but God and we cannot perceive that God doth take any course for us Now in Scripture God is said to sleep and when we finde it so have we not just cause to consider whether we have not slept in Gods service And if so God will not awake till we be hum●led for that sin As therefore ●e would have God wake and ●tirre about in our troubles when no body else can doe us good let us take heed of sleep●ng Prov. 28.9 He that turneth ●way his ear from hearing the Law ●ven his praier shall be abomina●ion doe not men turne away their ear from hearing the Law when they sleep in time of the preaching of the Word If God therefore will not come neer their praiers he will sleep as it were in their afflictions when they pray to him Quest How may we be help●d against sleeping in time of Gods worship Answ Somewhat must be done Before In time of the worship of God After The things to be done before are these ● Allow thy self conveni nt sleep the night before the Lords day doe not then ab●i●ge thy self that thy body should have cause to complain thou hast done it wrong therefore it must make bold with God Nor take too much that also will make thee lumpish 2. Moderation in diet feeblenes and faintnes thorow want of food will cause sleep so also will fullnes therefore doe thou so order thy fasting or feeding as experience tells thee will best conduce to thy waking 3. Moderation in weekly labour i. e. when we manage them with dependance upon God for wisedom strength and blessing Psal 127.2 So the burden somnesse in measure is ●aken away and our bodies have not that vexatious toil whereas if we think to carry our occasions with the strength of our own abilities the whole burden will lie upon us so shall we be overwearied and unfit to wake on the Lords day 4. Pray before thou come for Gods quickning spirit to thy soul that quickned will quicken thy body 5. Love not sleep It is a phrase the holy Ghost useth Prov. 20.13 It is one thing to take our naturall rest in time convenient another thing to have an affection to drouse and slumber when we should otherwise be imployed so we shall bring our selves to an habit and custom of dro●sinesse which will not be shaken off on the Lords day The things to be done in time of Gods worship are 1. Intention of soul and attention of body intend thy thoughts and affections to the Ordinance in hand and attend with eies and ea●s carelesnesse is the mother of drousinesse Prov. 19.15 2. Disease thy body If thou finde thy self drousy and shalt soule thy self to ease thou shalt increase thy drousines 3. Desire them that wake to watch over thee and chase away thy heavines by their freequent stirring of thee 4. Lift up an ejaculation to heaven in midst of thy heavines ●rom the bitternes of thy heart ●nd inward opposition of thy ●ullnes that help may come ●rom heaven though there be ●one upon earth The things to be done after Gods worship are 1. Family repetition of the word so should men discern how they wrong God his worship themselves and theirs when they finde all lost by sleep 2. Secret calling of our selves ●o account how we have spent ●he Sabbath so it would appear how ill sleeping becomes that day and the duties of it 3. Renew our godly sorrow for this sinne It worketh repentance change both in heart and life 2 Cor. 7.10 It is a work of the new man therefore doth mortify the deeds of the old man it is a fruit of the death of Christ therefore will dead this sinne of sleeping 4. Burden thy thoughts and affections with it the week thorow so shalt thou be weary of it on the Lords day but if it lie light the week thorow it will be no burden on the Lords day Object Here come old age in the last place to plead its infirmity Answ 1. Nature is infirm by age and so is corruption 2. There are promises of bringing forth fruit in age Psal 92.14 of renewing the youth as the
AN HELPE TO BETTER HEARTS FOR BETTER TIMES Indeavoured in severall Sermons WHEREIN The zeal and fervency required in Gods service is declared severall hinderances discovered and suitable helps provided all out of Gods treasury brought forth at this time with earnest desire and in hope to revive the memory and reinforce the p●actice of the people to whom they were presented and for more publique use if the Lord please By John Angier Pastor at Denton-Chappel in Lancashire Imprimatur Edm. Calamy PSAL. 11● 2 Thy people shall be willing in the day of thy power Psal 40.8 I delight to doe thy will O my God Isa 64.5 Thou meetest him that rejoyceth and worketh righteousnesse Ioh 4.34 My meat is to doe the will of him that sent me and to finish his work Act 20 24. Neither count I my life dear to my self so that I might finish my course with joy Ioh. 2.17 The zeal of thine house hath eaten me up LONDON Printed by A. M. for Christopher Meredith at the Signe of the Crane in Pauls Church-yard 1647. TO MY BELOVED PEOPLE THE Inhabitants of Denton and Haughton and the places adjacent Beloved THere wanted not strength of discouragement to stifle this weak birth but the thoughts of my heart thorow divine assistance gave strength of incouragement to bring forth My heart told me how much the Saints have blessed God for the pious and plain books of the godly which were more hearty and lesse specious breathing Christ crucified and hearts crucified and what a power my soul hath found in that plainnesse and simplicity wherein they have sent abroad their pious practicall discourses as in their native dresse An over-bearing flood of thoughts followed speaking out the cause I have to set up some such pillar of thankfulnesse to my God who carried the work of my Ministry thorow inhibitions suspension excommunications in time of the height of the power and persecution of the Bishops Though I might not runne the race of one year at Ringly-Chappel whether I was first called and in that imperfect year was twice inhibited though in nine or ten years at Denton Chappel I preached not above two separated years to my best remembrance without interruption and in that time was twice excommunicated Though Sabbath-Assemblies were sundry times distractedly and sorrowfully broken up and my departure f●●m habitation and people often forced no means left in sight of returne yet thorow the fervent praiers of the Church whereto these hard afflictions were apparently serviceable God was graciously and effectually moved continually to renue liberty as they continually interrupted it they shut and God opened they shut and God opened till God would no more be troubled with them but took the keys of power out of the hands of upstart proud Shebna to give them to outed despised faithfull El●akim And no lesse cause have I to set a starre of observation to advantage Gods pra se upon divine providence preserving to admiration my * The like mercy God shevved me when the Parle of Derbey lay about Manchester almost a vve●k though the plundering Souldiers went as f●rre some other waies yet God turned them from us and gave us leave to keep the Nationall ●ast in ●●blique t●● very w●● house study and papers when some of Prince Ruperts plundering forces passed nigh the door in the year of our heavy visitation when his whole Army entred Stockport within three miles of us and no opportunity left for removing any thing nor any durst stay in the house to him we committed all by praier and at our returne we found nothing wanting not a door opened not a window broken Though in times past scarce a year passed but I was driven from home yet in these troubles I have rested at home thorow the multitude of his mercies all the time save one Moneth when the Princes forces ranged and reigned in our Country My soul shall make her boast in the Lord the humble shall hear thereof and be glad O magnify the Lord with me and let us exalt his name together Psal 34.2 3. For your sakes also having found help from God to labour so long and suffer so much I was willing to combate with mine own discouragements unto victory God hath kept you hitherto blessed blessed be his name in truth piety love and peace to my great comfort and incouragement in all my troubles and straightnesse in outward and earthly respects but I am afraid out of the abundance of my love to you and care for you in these dangerous times wherein many evil spirits are let loose for * I lo●k upon the distēpers of these times as a sharp correction to godly Ministers for their humiliation and better preparation for some other work as an effectuall tēptation to the people to discover those corruptions that being covered with the cloak of prof●ssion have lived and grown under powerfull O●di●●nces and as a signe and means of the removing of the Gospel at le●st by such instruments to desolate places the work of his servants fa●●●●g God will provide new and when wanton people are we●r ed with their own wayes the wayes of God will be the more precious affliction to godly painfull Preachers and for temptation to their hearers lest you being led away by the errour of the wicked should fall from your own stedfastnes and doe therefore pray and indeavour that you may grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Iesus Christ. If the quickning spirit shall quicken your affections and graces unto duties of communion with Christ the fountain of life the matter laboured in preaching and printing these Sermons he will quicken those duties to be condu●●-pip s of life whereas in ordinary experience dead hearts are suited with dead and unfru●tfull Ordinances the sad and dangerous experience of the present times I have sadly observed after the beginning of these unexpested glorious joyfull times of liberty after some more lively springings and workings both of hearts and Ordinances when the light brake out of darknesse and liberty out of bondage great deadnesse hath fallen continu●d and increased upon both hearts and Ordinances A main reason I take to be this the sharpning and whetting afflictions of the Church which forced their graces unto frequent and fervent exercise in holy duties being removed they have remitted their fervency not improving their liberties to that end that God improved their afflictions and God hath remitted his Spirit in Ordinances they have not stirred up their h●arts to take hold of God they have not rejoyced to work righteousnesse as sometimes and God hath not offered himself in Ordinances sent his Spirit to meet them nor given them his loves as sometimes To passe by the evidence of this sad r●p●rt found in the unhumblednesse and unaffectednesse of the godly in midst of so many pressing causes and under so great helps and the generall ineffica y of the Ordinances for conversion stay your selves and wonder
worth spirituall therefore above the reach of nature 1 Cor. 2.14.15 spirituall things are spiritually discerned therefore onely by spirituall men John 4.23 The true worshippers There are different apprehensions of Gods worship because different worshippers some true some false some in true light others in darknes some left in the darknes of nature others called into light 1 Cor. 1.23 24. The preaching of the Gospel to the Jewes a stumbling block to the Greeks foolishnes but to them that are called the wisdome of God and the power of God to them that are called out of darknes into marvellous light such as have a manifesting differencing discerning knowledge the godly know thus but in measure therefore esteeme but in measure 2. Where there is some knowledge of the worth of Gods worship yet there wants attendance to that light 2 Pet. 1.19 Ye do well to take heed as to a light that shineth in a darke place it is one thing to have light another thing to attend to it to heed it men forget they consider not the weight and worth of Gods worship Eccles 3.1 Keepe thy foot when thou goest to the house of God be more ready to hear there is an inconsideratenes in us in Gods worship we doe not deliberate about it because we are too thoughtfull about other things 3. The worship of God is contrary to nature because holy spirituall self-humbling and emptying this includes a defect of love to it and where love is wanting something will be imagined to worke disrespect That despising of Gods worship is an hinderance of fervencie and how it is an hinderance appeares 1. From consideration of the dependance of affections and endeavours upon the judgement if the thoughts be but low the affections and endeavours will be but low and on the contrary if the thoughts be high they will carry up affection and endeavours 2. It is against the nature of wisdome and therefore folly to bestow much affection and endeavour about things of small worth wisdome doth proportion affection and endeavours to the worth of things 3. The motive of the will is good the more or lesse good is apprehended the more or lesse the will is moved and so lesse or more fervencie of desire and endeavour If Gods worship be despised little good is apprehended and so little to move the will and affections if it be of little or no benefit as despisers apprehend why should we earnestly chuse it desire it take pains about it it will yeild small delight and satisfaction Desp si●g somet●●●s prev●●●●● to a totall neglect of duty much more to measure of neglect Vse 1. To convince of sinne the body of our people 1. Such as neglect Gods private worship reading and prayer in their families catechising and calling over the word which they have heard the fountaine of this neglect is d●spising they thinke it more honourable to be unpraid unread to leave children untaught the word unrepeated they thinke meanly of good duties that the practice of them comes out of simplicity and weaknes of judgement The greatnes of their sin in the effect and cause will the better appear if we consider Gods opinion of them and dealing with them 1. God thinks no better of them then of doggs swine Mat. 7.6 who trample under foot pearls brutish unreasonable creatures they are not base that pray but they that despise praier God makes account none will despise praier but doggs and swine such as are deprived of reason as farre below themselves as their thoughts are below Gods worship as if he should say Never take them for men and women again that tread under foot holy things that speak ill of reading conference praier God calls them doggs and swine so must we who can skill of nothing but the bones and akorns of the world 2. God will reject them when they would be most esteemed Heb. 12.16 17. Esau was rejected his suit was not regarded he despised the birthright and was himself despised when he would have had the blessing and though men prevail by earnest desires and tears to change the mindes of men yet he could not move the minde of God though he sought diligently with tears So men that despise praier or other parts of Gods worship when afterwards they would pray themselves or have others pray for them when they greatly need and earnestly desire the benefit of that worship they have despised they shall be rejected Prov. 1.24 25 28. Zech. 7.13 2. Such as come to the publike worship of Gods Word Sacraments Prayer but care not with what affections they come have no desire no delight there to be busied they bring their bodies but leave their hearts behinde them they trim and adorn their bodies but not their hearts They are farre from David spirit Psal 83.10 who esteemed one day in Gods house better then a thousand and again Psal 26.6 I will wash my hands in innocency and so will I compasse thine altar he will not come carelesly but with painfull preparation such as washing in the laver of repentance is clean hands become clean work these had rather be any where else then at Gods Ordinances any triviall occasion or idle company will keep them away they say Such as o●● 〈◊〉 desp●sing do neg●●ct private may d●spis●n ly perform publike worship they can spend the time as well at home in reading some good book or in discoursing about some profitable subject as in the ordinances used in publike Assemblies Did not authority command and generall example forcibly perswade and desire to avoid shame constrain they would not afford their company at all and when they do come they bring the same affections where with they go about other occasions And why so They see no good in preaching praier sacraments What profit is in them What good comes by them these have too low thoughts of Gods worship as if it were onely outward and did only deserve the worst part the presence of the body which is their sinne And how should they do otherwise who make their own blindenes the judge of the worth of Gods ordinances not the word of command not the person regarded not the promise annexed to the worship not the the presence therein manifested Iudge you is it not a despising of Gods worship to think that any affections are good enough if a man do but get out of his bed and have but so much time as to get him ready he is fit to go to the Assembly though he have no spirituall thoughts no sense of his unfitnes by reason of the sinnes of the week past no praier to God for preparednes of heart doth not such a man think meanly of God he would set his thoughts and affections more in order were he to go into the presence of a King or to do some publike action these sinfull low thoughts are fruitfull in low affections and actions these weak expressions do manifest such men to be weak
us as children and friends we may expresse our reverence otherwise by uncovering the head by gravity of countenance and behaviour in all the actions thereto appertaining 4. Neglect of singing Psalms wit● the Co●gregation a fa●lt in many indeed some through age or weaknes of body or want of voi●e cannot and are to be excused for will wh●n power is wanting is accepted of God But not to sing where we have no such impediment the case of very many is to despise that ordinance of God and so to sin for what doth hinder them but a mean and low esteem of this ordinance they want not strength or body nor voice What then Nothing but respect and esteem of the duty Indeed they are to be blamed who give occasion of this disrespect by altering the tune or singing before or after others but it doth not excuse them who are drawn hereby to disrespect Gods ordinance they should rather increase their esteem 5. Whispering one to another in time of praier singing reading or preaching Needles whispering in civill societies is a disrespect thereto for so the company and occasions in hand are neglected much more needlesly to whisper in holy Assemblies though no publike action be in hand is disrespective of them because more reverence is due thereto When we meet for publike ends private actions are unsuitable some to be talking in one place and some in another a publike expectation of publike exercises were more meet and a generall composing of our affections and behaviour fit for the same We should come into such places with a respect of those holy ends we come for and all our carriage till we depart thence should expresse to much Most of all doth it expresse disrespect to whisper to one another whil'st the service of God is in hand when we are speaking to him or of him or he speaking unto us to turn aside and speak one to another doth not suit with that reverence we owe to God Nay if we speak one to another of that which is in hand which is the fairest excuse that can be made yet if it take away our ear and affection from that which follows it doth shew a disesteem of Gods ordinance and so is sin Nay whatsoever doth but weaken our affection and attention to Gods worship as this must needs do at the least doth therein weaken our esteem and so make us sin 6. Smiling and laughing in time of Gods worship Judge you what Assembly more grave then an Assembly met at Gods command to worship him And would not smiling or laughing of some particular persons in a most grave Assembly argue a disrespect of the same doth it not argue a lightnes or inconsideratenes of the person or the lightnes of the matter both which do carry a disesteem of Gods worship God hath promised Zech 8.4 that the streets of Jerusalem shall be full of boies and girles playing therein but for men and women our boies and girles to be toying laughing and smiling when they are worshipping is a sleighty carriage arguing sleighty thoughts of Gods worship God may send such a sudden full and forcible joy into the heart that it may change the sadnes of the countena●ce into smiling but to laugh and smile though the ordinance gives no such occasion b●t from some vain thought that comes to the min●e or some ●olly a man seeth in others is a despisi●g of Gods holy things and so sinne The presence of betters might command more respect much more of Saints and Angels and most of all the presence of God himselfe 7. Standing up to gaze about We read that all the people stood up when Ezra opened the book of the law in the sight of them all Nehemiah 8.5 and when our Saviour had read his text the eyes of the people were fastned on him Luk. 4.20 but to stand up to gaze about us to see whom of our freinds we can espy or who comes in or what apparell others weare and that in time of singing of Psalmes or reading the word or preaching the word doth shew a disesteeme of Gods Ordinances Can we finde something more to be attended to then Gods worship a signe we thinke but meanly of that 8. Sleeping in time of Gods worship a thing which our neighbours equall to us would count a sleighting of them much more may God Suppose a man should be speaking to his neighbour or speaking some good of him in his presence or hearkning to his speech and he should fall asleep would he not look at it as a sleighty carriage how much more if a man should thus behave himself before his betters and especially before his Prince and cheif govenrour so is the case in publike worship either we are speaking unto God as in prayer or speaking of God as in reading the word and singing of Psalmes or hearing God speak to us as in the preaching of the word if we sleepe in all or any of these do we not shew that we lightly esteeme them that we do but little respect what we say unto God or of God or what he saith unto us which how great a sinne it is I leave to you to judge Not but that some by reason of age or weaknes of body or want sometimes of convenient rest or constitution of body may be subject to heavines who yet doe highly esteeme Gods worship but where there is a giving way unto this and it is not borne as a burden which for the present a man would shake off and after is humbled for it shewes a great disesteeme and disrespect of Gods worship 2. To humble Gods people in regard of the guiltines of this sinne meane and low thoughts of Gods worship In this sense we need Peters exhortation 1 Pet. 1.13 to gird up the loynes of our mindes our thoughts of Gods worship hang too loose and low and had need be girt up closer and higher We should call the sabbath the honourable of the Lord Isai 38.13 Glorious things are spoken of thee O city of God Ps 87.3 of the Church and Ordinances We should looke to our foote when we goe into the house of God Eccles 5.1 but our late comming our heavines our whisperings do shew that our thoughts are too low for were our thoughts higher our carriages would be more reverent This is our sinne and should be our shame And to humble us the more consider either there is much ignorance in us of the worth of Gods worship or much carelessenes of that worth we know or much corruption and but little grace much of the old man and but little of the new 3. To fortifie them that respect Gods worship against the speeches and carriages of them that disrespect them Many have a good esteeme of reading and prayer of private and Church ordinances but when they see and hear others sleight the same they pray not they read not they come not to the assembly but they speake ill of others that use
for silver and the needy for a paire of shoes and sell the refuse of the wheat It was not likely that they were so profane as to say so but they said so in their thoughts which whispering the Lord heard and so reports them these were wandring thoughts evil in themselves thoughts of deceit of falshood of oppression of injustice and that in the Sabbaths Thus wicked Jezebel 1 King 21.8 9 10. calls upon the Elders of Iesreel to proclaime a fast and in it to busie their thoughts about false witnesse and murther two men must come in and witnesse that Naboth blasphemed God and the King and then he must be carried out and stoned these things their thoughts must be busied about as the maine end of their fasting Our Saviour chargeth the Pharisees that they did devoure widows houses and for a pretence or cloke to hide it make long prayers in their prayers their thoughts did busie themselves about hiding their oppression and cruelty the main end of their praying Thoughts in themselves evil in time of Gods worship are most evil 1. Because they argue deepe hypocrisie for they are directly contrary to God yet covered over with shew of love to God To colour over great hatred of God with show of love is great hypocrisie 2. Great injury is done to God for in the very time that we should do service to him in a speciall manner we do speciall service to the devil 3. Deepe dishonour is put upon holy duties as if they had fellowship with sinne and could complie with it which doth indeede destroy their nature why else are these thoughts evil in themselves admitted when holy duties are in hand 4. Our spirits are specially poisoned hereby more then if we had them at another time because a greater curse goeth with them in that they abuse a time of blessing The devil is therefore the worst creature being corrupted because he was the best creature in creation and times of greatest blessing perverted are times of greatest curse Let a man abuse the sabbath time of prayer time of hearing with unclean drunken oppressing thoughts he shall be more accursed from God then if he had the same unclean drunken oppressing thoughts at another time and in other occasions for the sinne is aggravated from the time occasion and so the curse increased which well considered of would make us take heed how we spend the sabbath how we carry our selves in holy duties lest suffering sin to be stirred we become deeply accursed 2. A second sort of wandring thoughts in Gods worship are taken up about things lawfull and good in themselves and they are either Earthly good things Or spirituall good things 1. Wandring thoughts about earthly good things in Gods worship are such thoughts as are imployed about our particular callings or provision for our selves and children or about our pleasures and recreations thoughts warrantable and lawfull yea necessary at other times but now wandring thoughts because the minde is in other imployment God peremptorily saith that on the sabbath day we shall do no manner of work Exod. 20.10 If our hands rest and our thoughts be working is that no work Thoughts are as properly the labour and work of the minde as actions and doings are the work of the body Isa 58.13 God forbids us to finde our own pleasure on his holy day and do we not finde our pleasure by our thoughts Thoughts will frame the acting and enjoying of any pleasure or recreation If thoughts about earthly good things holden in time set apart for God are wandring and so sinnefull then in like manner such thoughts had in duties set apart for God are wandring and therefore sinfull When God complains of the Jews by the Prophet that their hearts went after their covetousnes in time of hearing the Word what doth he mean b●t that they were busy in thoughts and affections about worldly things which they so much desired though their bodies were absent from them 2. Wandring thoughts in Gods worship about spirituall good things are either such spirituall things as are impertinent and of a divers kinde from the duties in hand or such spirituall things as are pertinent of the same kinde and agreeable to the duty in hand Wandring thoughts in duty impertinent and of divers kinde are such as these When a man in time of hearing the Word hath thoughts of praier or of some Sermon th●t he heard at such a time in such a place how good it was and usefull unto him when a man in praier hath thoughts of preparation unto praier thoughts of meditation thoughts of hearing the Word Spirituall thoughts pertinent and of the same kinde with the worship in hand are not alwaies to be accounted wandring and sinfull thoughts As for example a man is hearing the Word of God and some thoughts come into his minde suitable to what is spoken some place of Scripture to the purpose or some place of Scripture inlightned to a man beyond what light the Minister giveth to it or something come to minde a man hath heard before to the same purpose A man also joins in praier with others and besides the thoughts of what is praied he hath other like thoughts of his own if these like thoughts do clear the duty in hand to the understanding do increase attention and affection to what is in doing they are not wandring thoughts but they are conserving thoughts thoughts that keep up and keep close the attention and affection to Gods worship and do prevent the weakning and wasting of the same and they are the work of the enlarging and establishing spirit which can at the same time suggest new thoughts and make them helpfull to us But if these pertinent and like thoughts do carry away the attention and take it wholly up that what is in hand is neglected and the thoughts lo●e the present duty and are long before they can recall themselves and finde the duty then ordinarily they are the work of Satan and corruption working as an Angel of light doing evil but in such a way as may not be discovered for who would suspect good thoughts in duty of the very same kinde to come from Satan and corruption I say if these like thoughts do carry away the attention they are ordinarily evil for God may and sometimes doth as experience proves so take up the thoughts and affections with something in the Word and praier that is suitable to the necessity of the soul that it can minde nothing else for the present but as the soul hath dwelt upon some matter of sorrow and been deeply humbled thereby so God will have a man dwell upon some matter of comfort till the heart be greatly refreshed thereby but this is more then ordinary we may not neglect any part of worship but God may imploy us about some part if he will this act is not voluntary or deliberate but the soul is carried thereto by the power of
the spirit of God These wandring thoughts in Gods worship imploied about things good in themselves earthly good or spirituall good things are therefore sinfull because wandring and therefore 1. Impertinent and so a part of disorder and confusion which God is not the authour of they are out of their place and ranke they should not come in when other occasions and duties take place they have no due place now they doe but usurp 2. Being wandring they are unseasonable out of their time and therefore undecent uncomely for time doth give a beauty to things 3. Being wandring they are distracting they goe from the duty in hand take away part of the souls strength and thereby weaken the performance of duty and thus pertinent thoughts sometimes gain the name of wandring thoughts from the effect because they make the soul to wander Having seen the nature and kindes of wandring thoughts in Gods worship Let us now consider how they do hinder our earnest worshipping of God Ans Two waies 1. As they weaken the inward power of the soul to worship God 2. As they weaken the assisting power of the spirit of God 1. Wandring thoughts do weaken the inward power of the soul to worship God and so hinder our fervent and affectionate worshipping of God First As they take up part of the minde so that Gods worship hath not the whole minde as it should have Thou shalt love the Lord with all thy minde A man doth not pray with all his minde nor hear with all his minde part is bestowed elsewhere let a river be parted into two streams and it cannot runne so full in both as it would in one No finite minde can be so strong about many objects at same time as about one Wandring thoughts make God to be worshipped with a divided parted minde with a piece of the minde therefore weakly 2. Wandring thoughts in worship do not onely take up part of the minde and so weaken the power of the soul to worship God but they do take off the minde from the worship in hand so God saith the heart is removed farre from me and their hearts goeth after their covetousnes that is the minde is much nearer such thoughts and more taken up with them then with the Word or praier the minde is wholly with them or at least chiefly with them As it is often seen when doggs are following an hare if a new one be started they follow that and leave the other so when we are praying reading hearing if new thoughts arise in our hearts we let go our thoughts of the duty and follow them and so God hath scarce a part of our minde in his worship if any it is the least part 3. Wandring thoughts do weaken the power of the soul to worship God not onely because they take up part of the minde and take off the minde from Gods worship but also because in so doing they take up and take off the affections and endeavours the desires and delights of the soul and the actions of the body What a man doth not think of he cannot desire or delight in and what he doth but little think of he will but little desire and delight in and consequently will take little pains about Thus wandring thoughts carrying away the minde from Gods worship do also carry away the affections and outward man and if God hath neither minde nor affections nor body or but little of them then he hath but weak service 2. Wandring thoughts do hinder our thorow worshipping of God as they do weaken the power of the assisting spirit in our hearts and that they doe three waies 1. As they draw us from present spirituall thoughts about the worship in hand which are the work of Gods spirit concurring with grace in the heart We cannot think a good thought in a duty without the assistance of Gods spirit All our sufficiency saith Paul 2 Cor. 3.5 is of God and he instanceth in the smallest power of the soul thoughts we cannot think any thing of our selves when therefore wandring thoughts do take us from such thoughts as the assisting spirit hath wrought in us doth it not weaken the power of the assisting spirit 2. Wandring thoughts being evil and sinfull do grieve the spirit of God and so weaken the assisting power of the spirit when a man is grieved he will have no minde to shew his love and power Ephes 4.30 Grieve not saith the Apostle the holy spirit of God unholines is contrary to the nature of the spirit therefore doth grieve it and wandring thoughts in holy duties are unholines because they separate the soul from God when the body comes near him they are therefore contrary and grievous to Gods spirit and makes it unwilling to shew it self 3. Wandring thoughts doe weaken the power of the assisting spirit of God Because they hinder us in the way of the spirit the Word Praier Sacraments wherein the spirit is wont to conveigh himself more unto us Wandring thoughts do prevent our carefull use of the ordinances and so a greater measure of the spirits assistance which we should have in those Ordinances were wandring thoughts absent If wandring thoughts do weaken the power of Gods assisting spirit in our hearts they must needs hinder our fervent worshipping of God for the exercise of the strength of our souls depends upon the assistance of the spirit But it may be demanded further what are the causes of these wandring thoughts and how comes it to passe that the godly are troubled with them in good duties that do so hinder them in the due worshipping of God Ans There is a three-fold cause of them 1. Our selves 2. Satan 3. God 1. We our selves are the causes of wandring thoughts in Gods worship How Surely many waies 1. As we have a remnant of originall corruption a root and stock yet living and fruit bearing and one fruit is evil thoughts Matth. 13.19 out of the heart proceed evil thoughts i. e. the heart being an evil tree It is the happines of a good tree to bring forth fruit in season Psal 1.3 good and seasonable good and it is the curse of corruption a bad tree to bring forth fruit out of season good thoughts but out of season More particularly sinne hath brought a vanity upon our mindes Ephes 4.17 and there is yet a remnant of it in us i. e. the more worth and weight and excellency is in a●y thing the lesse we in our mindes suit with it and the more light and empty any thing is the more our mindes agree thereto now thoughts on the by have not that worth and excellency in holy duties that pertinent thoughts inlarging our affections Besides the more any thing requires the fixing setling and holding close of the thoughts as good duties do the lesse do our mindes suit therewith our mindes are vain inconstancy variety change and alteration of thoughts do best please them Experience tells us that it is
good go forward and would have our communion with God in holy duties furthered we must look to our thoughts for they are the beginning 2. Our thoughts are the rise and well-spring of all evil No evil is at any time in tongue or life but was first in thought Such breakings out in tongue as men are ashamed of did first make a gap in the thoughts Actuall sins in Scripture are called inventions Eccles 7.9 God made man upright but he hath found out many inventions the first apostasy and fall of our parents was a finding out of many inventions Psal 99.8 He took vengeance of their inventions Actuall sins the sins of the outward man are therefore called inventions because f you follow any sin to the fountain and spring you shall finde it was an invention it began in a device an imagination Art thou aware that the furthest sin goeth the worse and would'st thou stop it in the beginning then look to thy thoughts regard them if any anger swearing lying come into thy tongue they will be first in thy thoughts and if thou wouldst keep them out of thy tongue thou must regard thy thoughts 3. Little dost thou or any man know to what one thought may grow be it good or evil behold saith the Apostle Iam. 3.5 how much a little fire kindleth a thought is but a spark yet a spark of fire that will kindle wonderfull much if not quenched there To see the stream and spring of some river a man would hardly believe that so great a stream came from so small a fountain The greatest good and evil that ever was in the world was at first but a little thought Thoughts therefore are to be regarded yea chiefly to be regarded If a good thought come into thy heart and thou cherish it and the spirit of God move upon it thou canst not tell what may proceed from it If an evil motion come into thy heart and thou let it go without controll and the Devil be suffered to hatch it it will grow to a monster of sin 4. Thou maiest sin in thought and not sin in word or deed but thou canst not sin in word or deed but thou must first sin in thought Sin in thought is more easily and suddainly committed and more independently then in word or deed therefore thoughts are chiefly to be looked unto Many will blesse themselves from such and such sins in life which others runne into and they look carefully to their steps not considering they may commit the same sin in their thoughts which they give liberty unto though not in life and therefore they should look first to their thoughts 2. Generall and common carelesnes of thoughts in Gods worship is to be reproved Is it not a fault for men to be careles how they worship God who is so great and so good so great that none is like him so good that he gives us rain from heaven and fruitfull seasons filling our hearts with food and gladnes yea giveth us his statutes and ordinances he hath not so dealt with all his people Is it not carelesnesse in Gods worship to be carelesse what we think therein whether good or evil whether impertinent good or pertinent Thus they rob God of a part of their soul who hath made all requires all and deserves all That there is a common carelesnesse in men of thoughts appears in that they do not set their thoughts in order when they come to Gods worship but rather bring that with them which may distract them viz. thoughts of meeting with such and such and speaking with them about some worldly busines and when they are there suffer their eies to wander and rove and to delight themselves with variety of objects They that take no care of their eies take no care of their thoughts for the eies do feed the thoughts the thoughts depend upon the eies God out of his care of his glory and our good spirituall temporall and eternall hath appointed his worship is it not our great sin to be carelesse of it Our own thoughts will in time accuse us and passe this reproof upon us when it shall be an evil day of affliction with us or when the word shall be a light in our mindes and a terrour in our hearts Time of sicknes is a time of thoughts then our hands and feet are bound onely our thoughts are at liberty which will then toil and busy themselves about our wandring in good duties and thereby vex and torment us The more carelesse we have been of our thoughts in Gods worship the more carefull will our thoughts be to disquiet us for conscience must and shall do its office and there is more matter of disquiet 3. The particular carelessenes of Gods people of their thoughts in Gods worship is particularly to be reproved their mindes are in part sanctified they know the weight of Gods worship the worth of good thoughts the evil of wandring thoughts how comfortable the one leaves the heart and how sad the other yet they take but little care to keep their minde close to Gods worship I speak not of that infirmity which doth follow necessarily upon the remainings of corruption and is common to all the godly some wandring thoughts in good duties but I speak of their carelessenes and negligence to prevent wandring thoughts whereupon follows store and abundance of them The former is their sin because unavoidable wandring thoughts are the fruits of our sin our first voluntary Apostasy from God but this is an addition of sin to sin an increase of sin not only a neglect of Gods worship but also a neglect of our first injuring of God and his worship by our fall For were we sensible of our sinfull frame of minde that doth as necessarily and naturally send out wandring thoughts as the fire doth heat were we troubled that we have brought upon our selves a necessity of wandring and roving from God in his worship we would take care that this originall corruption should not be fruitfull I appeal to the consciences of the godly do not your thoughts accuse you for carelessenes of your thoughts in Gods worship Were there nothing else to convince the godly of the carelessenes of their thoughts in Gods worship and their fault therein this were sufficient the fruit of their wandring thoughts What makes Sabbaths so wearisome to the godly but this that they cannot keep their thoughts to God the more the day and our thoughts suit the more contentment and delight therein and the lesse out thoughts and the day suit the more wearisome the day will be What makes the ordinances so unprofitable the hearts of the godly are not affected in the word in praier because of these wandring thoughts as the thoughts are taken up about any thing so the affections do work if the thoughts be but sleighty the affections will be but sleightly moved if the thoughts be deeply possessed with a thing the affections are strongly
moved Nay what is the cause of Gods absence in his worship that the godly cannot see him feel him have communion with him Surely wandring thoughts are the cause if not all the cause yet one cause and a first cause they carry away the soul from Gods worship and leave only the body and God is a spirit and doth converse with our spirits if they be absent God allso will be absent for there is no suitablenes between him and our bodies a meer bodily worship is sit onely for idol Gods that are all body God is a spirit and spirituall worship only doth agree unto him 3. To teach the godly and to presse them 1. In their soul-searchings and examinations to finde out their sins to remember their wandring thoughts in Gods worship which are no small part of the sinne of their souls especially when we come to look over the manner of the performance of holy duties forget not our wandring thoughts but consider them and look into them these do as well robbe and spoil the worship of God of its due as other sins these neglected in our hearts may make God angry with us and we not aware of the cause The more these are removed from the sight of others the more need we have to look after them because they are the more easily overskipped and forgotten they have the excuse of secrecy 2. In their humiliations to humble their souls for their wandring thoughts these are part of their sin an offence and injury to God therefore should be part of their humiliation Foure things considered may help our humiliation in this respect 1. We sin by wandring thoughts in all the ordinances of God none excepted in praier wherein we come neerest to God when we speak unto the highest majesty of some things our though●s are busy about other things yea in extraordinary praier when we specially separate our selves unto communion with God and have nothing or little to do with the creatures lest they should hinder us in the worship of God yet we cannot separate our selves from wandring thoughts nor in the word when God speaks unto us nor in the Sacraments when we come to binde our selves from wandring thoughts 2. We sin much by wandring thoughts in all parts of Gods worship If our wandring and pertinent thoughts were compared for the most part it were hard to say which would be the most so often do our hearts runne out in duty and sometimes long stay out ere they returne especially in such duties wherein we join with others to be sure our wandring thoughts would be found to be very many 3. We continually at all times do much offend by wandring thoughts in all parts of Gods worship though sometimes more then at other yet all times much not one time excepted 4. Though we offend so much in all the ordinances of God and so continually yet we are but little sensible of our sin this way We complain of our other sins in publique private and secret but litt●e do we complain of this sin though we offend more and more continually by it thē by words ordeeds 3. To labour in the use of all appointed and sanctified means to prevent wandring thoughts in Gods worship Though we cannot altogether prevent them yet let us do what we can though we cannot attain to what we desire yet it will be our comfort that we have done our duty Is not my doctrine argument sufficient that they weaken Gods worship i. e. make our praiers hearing crackt vessels that they cannot hold and carry that measure of glory to God that otherwise they would nor that good to us The very best thing we do or can do is to worship God We do well when for Gods sake we do right unto our neighbour but we do best when we worship God for we do that which is most his command the other is the second command but this is the first and great Commandement We do that which is most for Gods glory we do that which is nearest our work in heaven for there we shall worship God even when we shall have no outward works of justice or mercy to do one to another Should we not be carefull to do our best work the worship of God in the best manner and if in the best manner then with as much of our hearts as may be for they are the best part then take we heed our thoughts do not wander But beside let me use some other arguments to presse us to take heed of wandring thoughts in holy duties 1. They make a Christian to play the part of an hypocrite in Gods worship what is it to be an hypocrite but to seem to be that which he is not When we bring our bodies to the worship of God we seem to worship him earnestly but when our thoughts wander we do nothing lesse we seem to do that we do not and therefore play the part of an hypocrite so much as our thoughts wander in good duties so much do we as hypocrites do though our hearts be sincere yet herein we play the part of hypocrites This is contrary to the nature of grace which desires a man may have truth though he have never so little and may do what he doth in truth though he do never so little now the lesse our hearts wander the more truth we expresse in Gods worship and the more truth the more acceptable to Gods grace 2. Wandring thoughts considered in themselves and their own nature are a curse God may and certainly doth sanctify them to his own people to be means of humiliation of watchfulnes of more dependance upon Christ but in themselves they are a curse For what is a curse but separation from God the fountain of blessing the fountain of good in whose presence is all good nothing but good and out of whose presence is all evil nothing but evil Matth. 25.41 Depart ye cursed therefore cursed because they must depart from God never to come near him again Wandring thoughts they do carry the heart from God God comes near to his people in his worship wandring thoughts do carry the heart farre from the worship of God therefore farre from God So saith God they draw neer me with their mouths and honour me with their lips but their hearts are removed farre from me and the first instrument of removing of the heart is the wandring of the thoughts Will not the name of a curse prevail with us to perswade us to take heed of wandring thoughts Oh consider when wandring thoughts come to us in holy duties the curse comes and when they stay with us the curse staies with us We come to the Ordinances of God for a blessing and to have a curse instead of a blessing in time of blessing is a double curse Prophane ignorant Esau when the blessing was denied him he lift up his voice and wept he had so much understanding that he thought the blessing was worthy
having though it cost dear So on the contrary wandring thoughts being a curse are worthy preventing though it cost us tears to God yea many tears and much pains with our own hearts 3. The Lord hath threatned to punish these wandring thoughts which carry away the heart in his worship and make it only a bodily exercise without spirit and life with a secret but sure blasting of inward spirituall good that as God hath but a shadow and outside of worship so they shall have but a shadow and shew of spirituall wisdom and prudence Isa 29.14 Therefore the wisdom of the wise shall perish and the understanding of the prudent shall be hid Therefore why Because they have drawn neer to God with their mouths and have removed their hearts farre from him They gave God a body without an heart therefore he will give them a body without an heart the shape of wise men without wisdom and prudence a suitable judgement What is the reason that Christians are so much shadows and shews of Christians rather then substance and truth when they should come to bear injuries and wrongs to forget and forgive they can do it no more then other men when they should expresse their dependance upon God and submission unto God in willing and chearfull parting with comforts and friends when God will have it so they can no more do it then other men they hold comforts fast as if they should part with God and all when they part with them and they hold friends fast and will not let them go as if friends were made more to serve one another then to serve God and when friends and comforts are gon they grieve as if all their joy were gone When they should bear quietly the crosse and grieving passages of Gods providence as those who have learned in whatsoever state they are to be content knowing they are in heavines if need be they cannot bear but carry themselves as untamed heifers that would rather shake off the yoke then bear it they have the shew of these graces in their profession but they want that measure of substance the reason is because their service of God is more in shew then substance therefore they are Christians more in shew then substance As we spend our Sabbaths so will our week daies be spent and as we perform holy duties so will our conversation be Is it not a heavy judgement to be inwardly worse then we think our selves or others think us to be to be unable to use grace when we have most need to exercise it yet thus hath God threatned to afflict us and he will make his Word good if we suffer our thoughts to wander in his service Quest By what means may we prevent wandrings in Gods worship Answ First labour the increase of grace Heb. 13.9 It is good that the heart be established with grace i. e. with g●acious knowledge of old and well known truths which the Apostle opposeth to new and strange doctrine And when the Apostle would direct the people of God to keep their own stedfastnes yea though the errour of the wicked took course to draw them away He gives them counsell to grow in grace 2 Pet. 3.17 18. Which places do shew that grace is of an establishing setling nature and so indeed it is for 1. It is contrary to vanity and inconstancy being the nature of God who is stable and firm alwaies one and the same 2. It sets the soul in order puts every faculty into its place and sets it about its own proper office and so it doth establish 3. It doth establish as it is the work of the free or liberall spirit Psal 51.12 David praieth that God would establish him with his free spirit grace doth establish a man as it is the work of the free spirit because it maketh a mans spirit free and liberall like to the spirit of God to sleight earthly things in comparison and to minde heaven and heavenly things earthly things do unsettle they are themselves changeable and do change the thoughts and affections pitched upon them Let a man pitch his thoughts and heart upon his nearest friends he hath in the world to whom nature society interchange of love Christianity hath bound him yet his thoughts and affections placed upon these nearest friends shall change and not alwaies contitinue one and the same because they change and are not alwaies the same therefore the thoughts pitched upon them do change also spirituall and heavenly things are of the nature of the spirit and heaven steady and stable immoveable unchangeable therefore will establish the affections pitched upon them Now the more grace we have the more we shall minde heavenly things and so be the more established 2. Labour the increase of thy reverence and high esteem of the worship of God According to thy thoughts of the worship of God so much-what will thy thoughts be in it Psal 48.9 We have thought of thy loving kindnes oh God in the midst of thy Temple They professe their thoughts were busied about Gods loving kindnes in his Ordinances why so because of their high thoughts thereof ver 2 3. beautifull for situation the joy of the whole earth is mount Sion God is known in her palaces for a refuge And herein were they helped by the report of their fathers ver 8. as we have heard so have we seen in the City of the Lord of hosts they had seen Gods mighty presence and protection in and about his own Ordinances but they had also heard so and that before they had seen it To help our reverence of Gods worship it is good to talk with ancient Christians that have lived long before us to hear what they will say we may be helped by their experience when we have none or but little of our own and if we have experience of the worth of the Ordinances we may be further helped by their experience 3. Prepare our selves aforehand Prov. 18.1 Through desire a man having separated himself intermedleth with all wisdom if a man have a desire to meddle with matters of wisdom and would do it as becomes such occasions and as may be for profit he will first separate himself not passe immediately from common and triviall matters to matters of wisdom but he will have some time betwixt the leaving off of the one and taking to the other If we passe from our callings to Gods worship without separating our selves how is it ordinarily possible but that we should have the same thoughts in Gods worship that we bad in our callings There are some separating duties that do prepare unto others as examination meditation praier and they do prepare by stirring up the grace of God and providing an heavenly assistance to begin with us in the duty If thou canst not alwaies have separating time betwixt other occasions and Gods worship Yet have some separating thoughts ere thou enter upon the duty thou art not fit else to meddle
with wisdom 4. Accustom our selves to meditation so we shall get a skill of thinking well Meditation in its nature is the composing setling and congealing of our thoughts It is to our roving sluent mindes as a damme to running water when much water is gathered together the damme makes it there to stand So when many thoughts are gathered together in the soul meditation makes them there to stand keeps them from running out again The nature of it being a setling of the minde the effect of it must needs be so and the use of it frequently must needs perfect the effect more and more settle our mindes When Paul desired to have a good conscience alwaies the means he used was to exercise himself therein so Paul to Timothy 1 Tim. 4.7 Exercise thy self unto godlines the way to gain the trade and skill of godlines is to exercise our selves therein ver 15. M●ditate on these things give thy self wholly unto them that thy profiting may appear unto all If Timothy would be busied wholly in stirring up the gift of God all should see his profiting So if we would give our selves to meditation be much in it it would apparently settle our mindes It is made the property of a blessed meditating man to bring forth fruit in season Psal 1.3 Why so because he is as a tree planted by the rivers of waters As a tree planted by the rivers of waters cannot want fitnes to bring forth fruit in season b●cause it hath abundance of nourishment So the meditating soul cannot want fitnes to bring forth fruit in season good thoughts in holy duties because it is planted amongst Gods springs the fulnes of the assisting spirit 5. Adde to these watchfullnes wandring thoughts will not be prevented without watching Watch 1. Thy minde it needs watching for it is nimble therefore will soon be gone and go far in a little time 2. Watch thine eie a rolling eie a wandring heart if thou give libertie to thy eie that will set the minde at liberty Job 31.1 I have made a Covenant with mine eies why should I think on a maid the eie depends on the minde else why should he make one Covenant to binde them both So he argues I have made a covenant with mine eies why should I think It might be said though the eie be bound by covenant yet the minde is at liberty The answer is that the eie is the servant of the minde made to help that therefore in binding the eie the minde is bound for if it cannot have the help and service of the eie it hath not full liberty if the minde should not be bound why should the eie to which it serves 3. Watch thy ears when thou art hearing or praying the Devil will cause some sound or other to draw away thy ear he is that cunning charmer that labours to inchant our ears he will make us think that we hear some pleasant melody of our profit or pleasure or honour if we keep not our ears stopped with attention thickned with watchfullnes 4. Watch thy affections 1. That they be affected and moved with the duty in hand dead affections make a wandring minde if what is thought on do not affect the minde will think of something else that may affect this is one reason of wandring thoughts because present thoughts do not affect the minde doth naturally serve the affections the more they are delighted the more content the minde hath for it hath its ende if duties in hand delight not the minde will wander till it hath found matter of delight 2. Watch thy affections that they continue as they begin if they be affected A bowe continuing bent doth carry the arrow levell to the mark but if it slip the arrow wanders So if our affections continue in that vigour and life wherein they begin they will keep our mindes steady but if our affections tire and wax weary our mindes will rove Though by watchfulnes we cannot wholly prevent wandring thoughts yet we shall in part prevent them hereby we shall more easily discern them and resist them this is a way of command therefore a sure way Ob. But when we have used all means still we shall be troubled with wandring thoughts Answ True therefore when we have done God the best service in his Ordinances that is attainable these three things must allwaies follow 1. Sense of our failings 2. Recourse unto the Lord Jesus for renewment of repentance and pardon and increase of power 3. Confidence of Gods acceptance in and through Christ of what he enableth us unto CHAP. IIII. Of the third hinderance of instant worshipping of God unpreparednes PSAL. 57.7 My heart is fixed oh God my heart is fixed I will sing and give praise THis verse doth afford us an help and means to the better praising of God i. e. fixednes firmnes or preparation of heart and soul which gives us just ground to speak of another hinderance of our earnest worshipping of God viz. unsetlednes loosenes and unpreparednes of heart N. God cannot so well be worshipped without a fixed or prepared heart unpreparednes of heart doth weaken our worshipping of God What is said of thanksgiving which is one part of Gods worship is true of all for there is the same reason of one and of all Preparation of heart doth commend all thanksgiving even unto God himself and in like manner doth it commend all other parts of worship and the want of it doth discommend the worship performed and therefore discommend it because it doth weaken it for had the worship its full and due strength and worth without it how should the want thereof discommend But this is clear in the Text ver 8. That worship that is performed with a sleepy drousy body is a weak worship but the Psalmist here makes the awaking of the body to be the fruit and effect of the preparation of the heart awake my glory awake lute and harp I my self will awake early why so My heart is prepared the heart prepared and thereby awaked will awake the body To worship God therefore without a prepared heart is to worship him with a drousy body because with a drousy heart and therefore weakly Three things will fully manifest the truth of this point 1. The command of God for preparation see it both in ordinary and in extraordinary worship God requires preparation unto ordinary worship A generall command that reacheth unto all parts of ordinary worship expressely is the fourth Commandement There are foure things in that which do call for preparation 1. Remember the Sabbath day and he that setteth down no particular time when we should remember it means all time a signe there is somewhat more in that day then in other daies that we must remember it more then any other yea then all other surely for some end we must remember it 2. Keep it holy and ver 11. The Lord sanctified it there is a difference between this and other daies we
yea so change her into care that she would have hindred Mary also yea and charged it as a neglect upon our Saviour himself that he did not relieve her in this immoderate care Luk. 10.40 Master dost thou not care that my sister hath left me to serve alone bid her therefore that she help me her immoderate care made her think that Mary had too little care and our Saviour also Is not the reason rendered why cares immoderate do unfit us for Gods worship Luk. 21.34 Take heed that your hearts be not overcharged with surfeting and drunkennes and cares of this life Immoderate cares are to the soul as a surfet of drink too much drink unto the body the body is overcharged with it and so unfit for occasions so the soul is over-burdened with immoderate cares therefore unfit for a farther weight of Gods worship Why do cares choak the seed of the Wo●d Matth. 13.22 but because they choak the soil draw away the strength of the heart and affections When we are about our callings and enjoy the comforts of this life we lose our hearts in love and delight and if they have the strength of our joy and desire God cannot have it also No man saith our Saviour can serve two maste●s for he will love th● one and hate the other Matth. 6.24 Ye cannot serve God and mammon If these worldly good things have the best of our love God cannot also have it If we be at any time busied about the worship of God our hearts will go after our covetousnes the good things we have coveted will have our thoughts and affections when God should have them 2. We bestow too much time upon our callings Psal 127.2 It is vain for you to rise early to sit up late shewing that ordinarily our care is to gain all time for our callings and occasions hardly can we spare time daily for the worship of God and when the S●bbath doth approach all the time that we can any way get we lay hold of lest God should have too much no time will be allowed for preparation not only so long as light will permit men will they be labouring about their callings on saturday night but so long as sleep will suffer them when we are counselled Ephes 5.16 to redeem the time part of the meaning is out of the hands of our callings unlesse we can prove that they do not take up too much time Luk. 14.18 19. The foundation of their refusing to come to the supper the ordinances of God was this they could not spare time from their callings We bestow too much pains and labour about our callings too much spend the vigour and strength of our bodies that they become unfit to serve our souls in the worship of God What means our sleepy praiers every night in our families but the over-wearying of our bodies What means our sleepy Sabbaths but the overtiring of our bodies on the week daies 3. We cannot be fit to worship God without preparation because of Satans continuall main endeavour to make us unfit for Gods worship Satan is more Gods enemy then ours because God stands more directly opposite unto him then we do God is the greatest good Satan is the greatest evil What is more opposite to the greatest good then the greatest evil We have somewhat like Satan therefore he is not so great an enemy unto us God is altogether unlike him and contrary to him therefore he is an utter enemy to him so that though Satan will endeavour to unsit us for our own callings yet chiefly for Gods worship for that doth most concern Gods glory and in that he doth more immediately and fully oppose God When did Satan put that thought into Judas heart of betraying Christ but when the passeover did approach And experience tells the godly that they have never more confusion of thoughts then when they desire to meditate and to fit themselves thereby for praier 4. Unpreparednes of heart doth weaken the worship of God performed by us as it doth hinder the breathing and working of the spirit in our hearts If the spirit assist us not we shall but weakly worship God therefore it is said to help our infirmities in praier and so in other duties Rom. 8.26 Whereas the burden of duty is too heavy the spirit of God doth help to lift the burden If the soul come unpreparedly the spirit of God will not ordinarily assist 1. Because a lesser breathing of the spirit is neglected and will the spirit lay out more when lesser is not prized and improved The spirit of God doth allwaies move and provoke the soul unto all the will of God and therefore unto preparation if men therefore come without preparation they come w●th neglect of the spirits motion unto preparation and if lesse of the spirit be not improved will he be lavish of more assistance 2. The spirit will not ordinarily assist the unprepared heart because it is out of the way and road of the spirit the spirit of God is a spirit of promise Eph. 1.13 and is therefore conveighed to the soul in a way o● promise but the unprepared heart is out of the way of promise and therefore out of the way of the spirit Indeed the spirit of God will sometimes meet an unprepared heart in a duty but it goeth out of the ordinary way at such a time as it must do when we are out of the way the spirit of God must first come out of its ordinary way to us ere we can get into our way but the effect of the spirit meeting a soul unprepared is to make it ashamed of unpreparednes and more watchfull thereunto for time to come 3. Unpreparednes of heart doth weaken our worshiping of God as it doth give advantage to Satan to interrupt and hinder us in the same To what end serves preparation is not this a main end to prevent impediments in worship and Satan the master of them When the Apostle 1 Pet. 5.8 would have us be vigilant upon this ground that Satan walketh about seeking whom he may devoure doth he not give us to understand that the more carelesse we are the more advantage Satan hath against us and the more watchfull we are the lesse harme can he doe us This was our Saviours counsell to his three disciples in the garden in the very houre of temptation watch and pray that ye enter not into temptation implying that it is not sufficient for the preventing of Satans temptations to performe dueties unlesse we adde watching that we be fit to performe them It is not dueties that weaken Satan but dueties performed in the power of the spirit Gal 5.16 walke in the spirit and ye shall not fulfill the lusts of the flesh so much as we expresse the spirit we oppose sin and Satan The devil makes great advantage of dueties of mens hearing reading praying Into whom doth he enter with the unclean spirit but into the house that is
to be but as the Publican and the Heathen and the Publican and Heathen may hear the Word But all may not receive the Sacrament for that is the seal of the Covenant and the seal doth belong to none but them who by the Word are brought into the Covenant 2. Where there is a meeting of more Ordinances more preparation is required but where the Sacrament is administred together with the Word is a meeting of more Ordinances therefore more preparation is required were this Ordinance more frequently used men would better be acquainted with the preparation due thereto Quest Suppose a man come to Church on the Lords day and the Sacrament be administred there beyond his expectation whether may he receive not knowing of that aforehand to prepare himself for it Answ 1. If a man doubt whether he may receive lawfully or no he shall do best to forbear for in this case holds that of the Apostle Rom. 14.23 Whatsoever is not of faith is sin if a man do an action and knoweth not whether he shall do well or no he sinneth in that action for the rule of our obedience is the Word of God if therefore I do not know that such an action is according to the Word I do not obey in it and therefore sin 2. If thou be prepared for the Word thou art in measure prepared for the Sacrament for those duties of examination meditation praier which do prepare us for the Word do not onely stirre up those affections and graces that are more properly requisite unto the Word but those also that more peculiarly belong to the Sacrament 3. God may increase the beginnings of thy preparation by the Word further provoking and stirring up thy graces especially thy faith and repentance 4. Though there be some defect in thy preparation before thou didst come yet if thy hearts desire be set to seek and finde the Lord he will have such respect to the praiers of the Congregation that he will pardon thy unpreparednes and conveigh to thee the blessing so 2 Chron. 30.18 19 20. Many of the people whose hearts were prepared yet were ceremonially unclean did eat the passeover contrary to the law but Hezekiah praid for them saying The good Lord pardon every one that prepareth his heart to seek the Lord God of his fathers though he be not cleansed according to the purification of the sanctuary and God hearkened to Hezekiah and healed the people Quest Suppose there be a day of fasting kept and I know not of it till the morning of it whether may I go unto it it being an extraordinary duty and requiring extraordinary preparation and I unprepared not knowing of it Answ A day of fasting ought to be kept from even to even Levit. 23.32 therefore to be known before the morning and they that hinder such knowledge of it are like to bear their sinne 2. If thy soul be earnestly desirous to seek God in that Ordinance unwilling to misse the opportunity and sensible of thy unpreparednes the bare want of extraordinary preparation need not hinder thee if thou do not lie under the guilt of some sin unrepented of for thy unpreparednes is not through any neglect of him It is not bare want of such a measure of preparation that doth displease God so as to disrespect our duties but neglect and sleighting of it God requires no more then he gives had God given thee time of extraordinary preparation by fore-knowledge of the duty he would have required the same but having not given thee that time he will not require that Nay it may be God will specially prepare thy soul by want of speciall preparation humble and soften thy heart Ob. But the scrupulous heart as the most conscientious are will be ready to say If God would have had them to partake in the duty he would have given them time of preparation Answ Not so God may give thee the substance of preparation disposednes of heart but deny the circumstances of preparation viz. time and performance of preparing duties Preparation serves unto the worship of God the measure and time thereof cannot strictly be set down but the rule thereof is the measure of the souls unpreparednes God hath commanded extraordinary preparation for extraordinary duties because the heart usually is extraordinarily unfit but suppose by affliction or some other way the heart be more then ordinarily prepared then extraordinary preparation is not required for it is allready done some other way so if thy soul be much humbled and quickned by want of preparing time and means it is all one as if thou hadst them True it is God requires preparation as well as duty but preparation is the lesser part of Gods minde though a necessary part when therefore thou maiest do a greater part of Gods minde thou art not to neglect it though thou canst not do a lesser when that not doing of the lesse doth not proceed from any known and willing neglect of thine which alters the case For if a man have time and do not prepare he doth presumptuously not believingly p●rform holy duties To be sure this case may put the godly in minde what need they have to keep their hearts continually in a good frame that so they may have a continuall preparednes unto every good work Quest Suppose I labour in the use of means to prepare my heart and cannot finde it prepared what should I then do Answ 1. Thy soul may be prepared and thou not sensible of it it is the measure of preparation and evidence of the spirit in the heart that makes a man sensible of his preparation 2. Sense of preparation is a separable fruit of the use of the means part of the successe it is but may be separated from the use of the means when thou therefore hast prepared thy self thou hast done part of thy duty thou must not now stay from going about the Ordinances which is a further part of thy duty till thou be sensible of thy preparednes which is part of the successe and so Gods part thy duty is to prepare thy heart and when thou hast prepared to go about the worship though God for reasons best known to himself doth withdraw his part the sense and feeling of preparation Let a man examine himself and so let him eat not forbear when he hath examined himself because he findes not matters as he would Quest Suppose I finde God helping my heart in preparation and withdrawing himself in the worship prepared unto there my heart is dead carelesse what should I then do Answ 1. The godly are apt in experience to runne upon extreams if their heart be not assisted in preparation they are discouraged if they be much assisted they grow proud and confident therefore God withdraws himself sometimes in one way and sometimes in another that they might not be discouraged nor be confident Not be discouraged if they do not finde God in one way of promise yet they may finde
make their soules weake and so weary of the duty When Moses chod with Aaron and his sonnes Levit. 10.17 to the end because they had not eaten the sacrifice in the holy place that day his sonnes were destroyed his answer was Had I eaten it would it have been accepted Why not oh he could not have done it with any chear and comfort so heavy a hand of God having lately befallen him and therefore he should have been weary of the service and then God would not have accepted it if thus the heart be weary having no desire or delight the body will be weary for that followes the disposition of the soul the soul carrieth the body with it which way so ever it goeth There is a wearines proper to the body when the strength thereof is spent and the spirits exhausted and so the body is left weak and feeble and so weary of any further action because it hath no strength There is a foure fold cause of exhausting the strength of the body and so making it weary of Gods service 1. The or●ginall corrupt disposition of the body by reason of sinne whereby it withholdeth and dryeth up it's strength from that which is good but freely expendeth it upon that which is evil Thus naturally the eyes had rather looke upon a company of sinners then a company of Saints see a company in the ale-house rather then in Gods house prophaning the Lords day then serving him the eare had rather hear evil then good the feet had rather walke to any sinnefull meeting on the Lords day then to the house of God Rom. 6.19 20. The Apostle saith We naturally give our members instruments of unrighteousnes there is no unwillingnes in us but we readily part with them all at sinnes motion nay we are free from holines will have nothing to do with that not any part of our bodies but we are servants of sinne all for sinne And this disposednes to withhold the strength of our bodies from Gods service and to give it unto sinne remains in part in the godly 2. The strength of the body is spent in sinnefull actions sometimes Jer. 9.3 They weary themselves to commit iniquity Particularly the sins of uncleannes and drunkennes do wast the strength of the body Prov. 5.11 The holy ghost tells what shall be the end of the unclean person a mournfull end thou mourne at the last when thy flesh and thy body are consumed And doth not experience tell that men are forced to ly in their beds or keep their houses on the Lords day because they have drunk so hard in the week or on saturday that their bodies are weak and tired The sinne of idlenes doth weaken the body strength used doth encrease and not used doth decay beside the nourishment taken for want of exercise doth turne to corruption and so rather weaken the body then nourish it none more weary of any imployment and of the service of God then idle persons 3. The strength of the body is exhausted sometimes by naturall distempers sicknesses diseases either such as are continually with men which is the case of some or such as lie upon the body at particular times onely the case of others 4. Sometimes foregoing recreations and businesses of mens callings do so spend the body that it hath no strength lest for Gods service The body thus wearied will reflect upon the soul 1. In regard of sympathy agreement and like affection between soul and body what the body delights in the soul doth in measure delight in and what the body is weary of the soul will in measure be weary of 2. As it doth expresse and act the wearines of the soul by reason of sin for so the wearines of the soul is increased and the contrary strength of the soul desire and delight weakned 3. As it is an unfit instrument to expresse the desire and delight of the soul if those affections may not be expressed they will decay and weaken 4. As by the eies and ears it doth let in new objects of delight the soul by sin is new fangled will entertain them and so grow weary of former delights The soul doth expresse its wearines 1. By letting loose thoughts and affections it will not keep them bound but suffers them to wander about for refreshment 2. In thinking the service hard painfull grievous 3. In thinking the time long that is spent therein wishing the same at an end The body doth expresse its wearines 1. By restlesnesse it cannot rest in any position or gesture of it but as a door upon the hinges turns first one way and then another 2. By letting the eies and ears loose to all objects to chuse their delights where they please 3. By speeches too if occasion serve as here they are brought in saying when will the new moon be gon If they did onely say so in their hearts yet God saw they would say so with their tongues if occasion were offered therefore he sets it down so How doth wearines weaken our worshipping of God 1. Wearines in the very nature of it is weaknes a deniall an absence of strength and actions performed in weaknes must needs be weak wearines denies the strength of the minde Can a man think well of what he is weary It denies the strength of the will Can a man be willing of that he is weary of What be willing of a burden It denies the strength of the affections a man will neither desire nor joy in what he is weary of and if the strength of the soul be denied the strength of the body also will be denied and that service which hath neither strength of soul nor strength of body must needs be weak service 2. As it is contrary to the spirit 1. To the nature of it which is a spirit of liberty and freedom a spirit of desire and delight a spirit of Adoption opposed to a spirit of bondage Rom. 8.15 The spirit of a childe which a spirit of love a childe doth his fathers commands with desire and delight he loves his father joyes in him therefore in his commands 2 Cor. 9.7 God loves a cheerfull giver wearines being contrary to the spirit must needs damp that hinder the assistance of it in worship 2. To the work of it 2 Cor. 3.17 Where the spirit of the Lord is there is liberty sin is compared to cords Prov. 5.22 to a snare 2 Tim. 2.26 because it takes away a mans liberty and free will unto that which is good when God calls a man to any duty his will is not in his own power he is not able to move thereto no not in desire God therefore is said to work the will Phil. 2.13 there is no will till God work it But when the spirit of God comes into the heart it breaks the cords and snares sets the will at liberty unto God 2 Cor. 8.3 The Churches of Macedonia were willing of themselves to minister to the Saints to
their power yea and beyond their power How came that to passe ver 1. We do you to wit of the grace of God bestowed upon the Churches of Macedonia their outward bounty proceeded from abundance of grace within 1 Cor. 15.10 I laboured mort abundantly then they all yet not I but the grace of God in me abundant labour and wearines are contrary but the grace of the spirit makes a man labour abundantly wearines therefore being contrary to the work of the spirit must needs weaken the work of it and so the service of God 3. To the testimony of it the Word of God is the testimony of the spirit for holy men spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost what the word saith in this case is the testimony of the spirit the word saith 1. That forwardnes unto good duties is our duty when it saith Christ hath purified unto himself a people Zealous of good works Tit. 2.14 Hath Christ been at cost and pains to make us pure for that end and are we not bound to endeavour unto that end he hath laid it as a duty upon Ministers to put their people in minde that they be ready unto every good work Tit. 3.1 That they charge such as have ability to be ready to communicate willing to distribute 1 Tim. 6.17 18. a signe that not onely the duties themselves are our duties but readines and willingnes therein also 2. The word saith that cheerfullnes in duty is Gods delight 2 Cor. 9.7 He loveth a cheerfull giver Isa 64.5 The Lord cannot as it were contain himself till the soul come to him that worketh righteousnes with joy but he will go to meet him as we out of joy cannot contain our selves but we must runne to meet them we delight in when we espy them comming towards us 3. The word saith that the waies of wisdom are waies of pleasantnes and all her paths are peace ●rov 3.17 Christs yoke is easy his burden is light Matth. 11.30 The Commandements of God are not grievous 1 Joh. 5.3 4. The word saith that forwardnes and delight in good actions is beneficiall 2 Cor. ● 6 He that soweth bountifully shall reap bountifully full handed works shall have full handed reward 1 Cor. 15.58 alwaies abounding in the work of the Lord knowing that your labour shall not be in vain in the Lord If the Lord be the rewarder the most abundant service shall not want a reward wearines doth contrary the severall branches of this testimony of the spirit Is willing and cheerfull service our duty wearines denies it If it be our duty to be willing and obedient why are we weary Where is our obedience Is God delighted with cheerfull service wearines denies it Who would be weary of that which is Gods delight of that which is so good that it joys God himself Is the way of God an easy pleasant way wearines denies it Who is weary of ease nd pleasantnes Is the way of God a beneficiall way wearines saith to the contrary Who is weary of benefit wearines therefore doth make the spirit of God a liar which unworthy dealing must needs hinder the spirit in the heart 4. To the honour of the spirit of God wearines doth cast reproach and dishonour upon the spirit in two things 1. As if it did not dispose and fit them inwardly whom it sets awork as if it did not work the will in them by whom it requires the work to be wrought for what is the ground of wearines in the person but unfitnes unsuitablenes unto the work and is it not a dishonour to the spirit to set unfit persons to work Are we not his workmanship unto good works he doth inwardly fashion us thereunto should a man go to work with an instrument and not first fit it with hand and edge should it not shame him wearines saith that God takes up unhandled unedged instruments to do his work which is a dishonour to him 2. Wearines of good duties doth cast dishonour upon the spirit as if his work had wearying properties and so were worse then Satans work or our own work which do not so weary Wearying properties are these three Hardnes Harshnes Hurtfullnes Why doth a work weary but because it is hard and difficult doth cost much pains and labour more then can well be afforded or is harsh unpleasant uncomfortable or is hurtfull no profit no benefit in the same but the contrary Thus wearines saith of the work the spirit of God doth set us about which must needs be a dishonour to the spirit of God who is the best master therefore appointeth the best wo●k contrary to his wisdom goodnes justice Will it stand with his wisdom to set us about work too hard for us Will it stand with his goodnes to set us about evil work No work but evil work is wholly uncomfortable Will it stand with his justice to make us labour in vain and to no profit Hath he not promised to the contrary And is he not righteous to make good his promise yet wearines doth at same time cast dishonour upon the wisdom goodnes and justice of the spirit and must not such dishonour hinder the work of the spirit in the heart 3. Wearines doth weaken our fervent worshipping of God as it doth dispose and fit us for the work of sin and Satan in Gods worship which will weaken the worship we perform Wearines doth dispose us for the work of corruption a weary soul is fit for wandring thoughts and wandring affections a weary body is fit for change of objects fot new sights and sounds it is naturall to man to seek refreshment elsewhere when he is weary Corruption doth alwaies work in holy duties to hinder us in the same but when the man is weary it works with advantage he is in a corrupt temper fit for corruption now it may prevail more then at another time Wearines fits us for Satans work for his inward suggestions for his presenting of objects to withdraw us the heart is weary therefore fit for new work there is small ability to resist him and he walketh to and fro seeking whom he may devoure a great part of his work is to watch advantage against us When we are at best he will hinder us much more when we are so fit to be hindred 4. Wearines doth weaken our fervent worshipping of God as it produceth certain other effects both in opinion and affection 1. In opinion it makes a man think the worship of God evil if not in it self yet to him at least at this particular time what a man is weary of he apprehends to be an evil to him for no man is weary of good and suitable good for suitable good is delightsome therefore not wearisom 2. In affection 1. Wearines makes a man desire the end of the work rather then the work what a man is weary of he would have finished that his wearines might be at an end for whilst the work
of the streets they doe not onely pray in the Synagogues and in the corners of the streets but they love to pray there they have an affection thereto a delight therein why not in regard of the duties themselves or Gods glory but their own ends that they may be seen of men get praise and glory to themselves 3. Unregenerate men may have some affection to and delight in the service of God by reason of some work of the spirit of God upon them for the time As 1. A work of illumination giving some clear discerning of that good is in Gods worship more then in any other imployment and the apprehension of such good whilest it lasteth will somewhat stirre the affection 2. Awaking and exciting the conscience to do its office which by promises of good on the one hand and threatnings of evil on the other assisted by the spirit of God hath a power to command the desire and delight of the soul to work Felix his conscience awaked by the preaching of Paul stirred his affection of fear And when the conscience doth charge it upon the affections as a duty to joy in Gods worship and to be willing unto it a duty which God will reward the contrary whereto God will punish it may forcibly compell and draw out the affections 3. Lifting up the affections of desire and delight by an heavenly power of experience As a man which dips his finger in some sweet liquour and tasteth the sweetnes of it doth afterward desire and delight therein So God doth by the work of his spirit sometimes drench the affections of unregenerate men in the sweetnes of his worship doth so make their affections and the good of the Ordinances to meet that they feel and taste a sweetnes which make them affected afterward to the means thereof Heb. 6.4 5. Such as afterward fall away may taste of the powers of the world to come may dip their finger in the rivers of the pleasures of Heaven But this work of the spirit making unregenerate men willing to and cheerfull in the worship of God is rather a work upon them then in them a forced work not naturall rather a flash then a fire of affection The affections are lifted up not altered and changed acted onely by an outward principle the work of the spirit the experience the spirit hath forcibly and powerfully wrought not by an outward and inward principle both the spirit of God and the suitablenes of the affection to that which is good as in the godly If this were well considered that mens natures have no affection to that which is good it would keep them from priding themselves in their knowledge wisdom wit gifts it would keep them from pride in beauty and trimming their bodies considering there is no part of the body but gives it self away to sin and is wholly unwilling to bestow it self in the service of God 2. As there is great cause that unregenerate men should grow out of love with themselves on the one hand so in love with the image of God on the other hand that and that onely can affect their hearts with Gods worship for Gods Image is that in the heart which the law of God is in the book of God Act. 13.22 I have found a man after my own heart saith God of David which shall fulfill all my will David was therefore fit to fulfill all Gods will because his heart was after Gods own heart and what this is to be after Gods own heart we shall know if we consider David expressing his willingnes to do the will of God in other terms Psal 40.8 I delight to do thy will oh my God yea thy law is within my heart David therefore delighted to do Gods will outwardly because he had the law of God within in his heart Who would not have an heart like Gods heart an heart adorned with the good law of God Till thou have this heart thou canst not from within taste sweetnes in and readily come unto the worship of God Oh therefore thou that findest thy self in an unregenerate condition and the worship of God a burden to thee go to God tell him that indeed it was his goodnes to make thee after his image in Adam when thou couldest willingly and cheerfully have served him but it was thy sin in Adam to make away that image which now thou perceivest the want of tell him he hath promised to wri e his law in the hearts of his people a second time pray him to make good that promise to thee thou canst not else serve him with thy heart as the good will be thine so the glory will especially be his 2. Having thus spoken to the unregenerate to perswade them to grow out of love with themselves and in love with the Image of God as the way to grow in love with Gods worship and so to remedy their wearines let me now turn my speech to the people of God who are sensible of wearines bear it as a burden and would gladly be rid of it and that upon this ground which they are well aware of because it hinders them in Gods worship Let me first exhort and then direct them to get rid of this wearines in a greater measure First let me exhort them and for that end I will use a double argument 1. The first shall be my Doctrine Wearinesse makes us perform weak service unto God which every childe of God hath great reason to remedy The weight of this first argument will appear if we consider Time Past Present Future or to come 1. Time past we may call to minde that before God brought us home to him we did the work of sin both willingly and cheerfully Eph. 2.3 The Apostle saith of the converted Ephesians that in times past they had their conversation in the lusts of the flesh fulfilling the desires of the flesh they were willing to do whatsoever corruption desired would deny it nothing if that did but desire it must be done Tit. 3.3 Paul puts in himself and Titus and the rest of the godly and saith We our selves were sometimes foolish disobedient deceived serving divers lusts and pleasures not onely had we to do with sinfull lusts and desires but pleasures sweet sins that did bring us delight and joy and these we served were commanded by them they were our masters and we did them as willing and cheerfull service as ever servant did his Master The Holy Ghost speaking in the language of young men that will not be reclaimed from their sinfull waies saith Let thine heart chear thee in the daies of thy youth and walk in the waies of thine heart not onely doe young men and others walk in the waies of their hearts but their hearts are cheered therein Prov. 10.23 It is a sport to a fool to do mischief and all unregenerate men are fools Paul saith of himself Titus and the godly before conversion they were foolish And cannot we
remember that we shewed our selves fools by making a sport of sin of Sabbath breaking of filthy speaking of cruell exercises as bear-baiting cock-fighting men quarrelling and the like Have we not gon merrily from the Church on the Lords day unto some unlawfull meeting and sinfull recreation 2. Adde hereto that we had no desire or delight in any good sin had not some of our will and joy onely but all of both Gods service had none at all no not a small measure It may be we forced our selves to pray to hear the Word and to do other good duties because our parents would have us or law did call upon us or we were ashamed to neglect the same but no will had we thereto Nay have we not spoken ill of praying going to Sermons making profession living strictly a signe what our will was to such courses It was that lay heavy upon Paul after his conversion that he persecuted the Church spake ill of them and did ill to them and that for well doing and that with zeal abundance of willingnes and delight 1 Cor. 15.9 I am not meet to be called an Apostle because I persecuted the Church of God Phil. 3.6 Concerning Zeal persecuting the Church he did not onely persecute them for well doing but he did it with zeal with an ardent affection This is the description of all unregener●te men Tit. 1.16 They are unto every good work reprobate not onely doth God reject them and make no account of them when they come to doe any religious work but they also in their own natures are sit to reject and to cast away rather then to embrace and to do what is good and not some good works onely that are most difficult and spirituall but every good work 〈◊〉 Amos 3.10 They know not to do right saith the Lord they have neither skill nor will to do right 3. Adde to both the time spent in willing and cheerfull service of sin most of us have spent more time then we have to spend in the service of God vve know vvhat is past and that much is past but vve know not hovv little is to come Put all together Have vve vvillingly and cheerfully served sin vvhen vve had no vvill at all to good and that longer time for ought vve knovv then vve have to spend in Gods service and shall vve doe God vveak service What after vve have served sin vvith our strength shall vve allovv our selves in such poor service unto God as vve vvould not put off sinne vvith What considering that the time of sinnes service is past and therefore sure but the time of Gods service is uncertain because to come shall we proclaim to all the world that sinne was a better master then God by our more wearisome service of God then sin 2. Let us consider time present and therein two things 1. God hath put into us a principle of willingnes and cheerfullnes in his service a new nature which wants nothing but stirring up and improving and we should be more affectionate and lively in Gods service this appeares in that the Apostle calls upon Timothy 2 Tim. 1.6 to stirre up the gift of God there was an holy fire of grace in him which did but need stirring up were the ashes but blown from it it would flame Heb. 12.1 He calls upon the godly to lay aside every weight and the sinne that doth so easily beset them and runne with patience the race set before them there is in them an active and cheerfull disposition a joyfull running in the race of godlinesse were the cloggs of sinne and earthly cares and comforts removed Heb. 10.24 He calls upon them to provoke unto love and good works every one his Neighbour and every one his brother there is love in the godly which is a fountain of good works which needs only provoking and spurring on That the godly are no more cheerfull therefore in Gods service is carelessenes want of taking paines and doth not that make our sinne much greater 2. We do expect that God should willingly and cheerfully meet us and do us good in his ordinances if we want counsell comfort grace provision safety The godly have not onely prayed to God in case of their necessity but they have added their desire that God would not keepe silence but when they have spoken to him in prayer that he would speake again to them by his spirit word and providence when they have spoken their troubles that he would speake comfort when they have spoken their doubts that he would speake counsell when they have spoken their wants of grace that he would speake supply When God hath withdrawn himself from his people though seeking him in his Ordinances they have been exceedingly troubled Cant. 5.6 did not the spouse faint because shee could not finde her beloved when shee sought him Psal 44.24 doth not the Church thinke that God forgets her oppression and affliction forgets how ill matters goe with her because he doth not hear her prayers Nay have not the godly desired a speedy answer without delay Psal 143.7 Hear me speedily They have desired God to make haste and not to tarry Psal 70.5 make haste unto me make no tarrying which shews they desired that what God did for them he would do it cheerfully and willingly for slacknes is usually a signe of unwillingnes Nay when the occasion of their praying hath been some temporall outward affliction present they have begged the favour of God as if that had been the onely thing wanted Psal 80.3 It was salvation from enemies that the Church desired but shee especially prays again and again for the face of God to shine upon her cause thy face to shine and we shall be saved Psal 143. was penned by David in regard of the persecution of his enemies vers 3.12 yet he earnestly prays vers 6.7 that God would not hide his face that God would cause him to heare his loving kindnes in the morning which shews whatsoever God should do for them whether preventing of evil or removing of evil they desire God would do it lovingly and heartily and the love wherewith he doth it doth them more good then the mercy it self It is the frame of the heart of the godly thus to desire God cheerfully to meet with them in ordinances God must come off with every mercy cheerfully and give us his love more then the mercy and shall we come off heavily with the services we perform to him What equity is in this God must do our mindes and desires cheerfully and we his minde wearily do we more desire and value the Lords love then his mercies and will not the Lord looke more at our love then the duties we perform It argues too much self love too little love to God to desire all may come from God to us heartily but to let all go from us to God grudgingly 3. Consider the time to come and therein also 2. things 1. We looke for
as duty yet they fell asleep and were thereby hindred Whence I note N. Sleep is an hinderance to commanded fervency in Gods worship Sleep in time of Gods worship is an enemy to fervency therein It was the duty of the Disciples in this place to watch and pray i. e. to pray fervently to pray with the use of all helps unto the same Christ gave them command so to do he stood in need of their help as an Ordinance of God his command was to watch with him and his reproof that they did not watch with him but they were hindred by sleep they did not pray at all that we read of if they did yet not so fervently and diligently as there was cause for then our Saviour would not have reproved them I remember but one onely instance in this case in the book of God a young man that fell a sleep at a Sermon in the night and in his sleep fell down from a third loft and was taken up dead Act. 20.9 A passage in the Acts of the Apostles which God would have recorded to be a warning to all Sermon-sleepers Where was that young mans attentive hearing vvhen he was fallen into a dead sleep For our better instruction concerning this truth let us enquire two things 1. What may be the causes of sleep in time of Gods worship 2. How sleep doth hinder our earnest worshipping of God Quest What may be the causes of sleep in time of Gods worship Answ We will begin with the causes of the Disciples sleeping in this place they are two Instrumentall Principall The Instrumentall cause Luke reporteth and Matthew there were two instrumentall causes 1. The weaknes and infirmity of the body Matth. 26.41 The spirit ind●d is willing but the flesh is weak Though the soul be not perfect yet it hath a greater perfection then the body the power of will in the soul goes beyond the power of performance in the body The body is not allwaies ready when the soul is willing to do good The spouse Cant. 5.2 doth acknowledge that she did sleep when her heart did wake she had good affections inwardly which yet wanted outward expressions So here there was a waking heart in these Disciples a will to watch with Christ but the body was vveak and infirm It vvas now night the time appointed for mans rest Psal 104.23 The body knows its time is spent in the occasions of the day cannot well vvork day and night both therefore it falls asleep when it should watch and pray at such time the case of these Disciples 2. The second instrumentall cause of their sleeping vvas sorrow of heart Luk. 22.45 He found them sleeping for sorrow We finde our Saviours own testimony concerning their sorrow Joh. 16.6 Because I have said these things to you sorrow hath filled your heart Speech of his departure from them did fill their hearts vvith sorrow so no doubt vvhen he told them of his grief that his soul vvas exceeding sorrowfull unto the death it did increase their grief for they did exceedingly love him as appears in that he spends foure vvhole chapters J●h 14 15 16 17. to comfort these vvith the rest against his leaving of them and having communicated unto these over and beside their known losse of him his present extream affliction it bred in them a sympathy of sorrow vvhich filled their heads and eies vvith moisture and so with sleep The p●incipall cause of this their sleeping vvhen they should have praied fervently vvas the vvithdrawing of divine assistance vvhich could and vvould have strengthned the infirmity of their bodies and have kept their sorrovv from excesse That this vvas so appears 1. By the consideration of the persons that did sleep they vvere specially chosen to be vvith Christ and had not long before expressed more confidence then the rest and God is vvont to desert the confident 2. By our Saviours reproof of them Matth. What could ye not watch with me one houre What not so small a tim● Hovv then vvill ye drink of my cup Hovv vvill ye die with me Where is the strength you boasted of This he spake specially to Peter who had expressed more confidence then the rest so Mark hath it Mark 14.37 He saith unto Peter Simon slee●est thou couldst not thou watch one houre Where is thy ability not to be offended because of me though all men be offended surely it is gone 3. By our Saviours speech unto them declaring the cause of their sleeping the spirit indeed is willing but the flesh is weak as if he had said because you finde some freedom and readines of will you think you can do any thing Indeed your regenerate will stands bent to all the will of God but little doe you know what impediments and hinderances you have and what help and assistance you need from heaven to doe that which you have a generall will unto God withdrew his assistance and left them to their own weaknesse that they might better know their weaknesse who were confi●ent of strength for their humili●tion This appears 1. In that he suffered them thus to saile not once onely but twice and thrice not barely to sleep but to sleep after exhortation unto watching yea after reproof for sleep yea after a second reproof Here was weaknesse indeed to adde sin to sin notwithstanding the use of means after means to reform 2. By our Sav●ours putting them in minde of their weaknes upon occassion of their sleeping a signe they did forget it and these failings did put them in remembrance thereof 3. By the effect the sense of their second sleeping after reproof had in them Mark 14.40 They wist not what to answer him they were troubled and confounded in themselves This was a sit means to humble these self-confident Apostles not to exercise grace in ordinary course is matter of humiliation but not to exercise grace when we have most need to exercise the same in the worship of God for our own good and the good of others is matter of greater humiliation To sin at any time is matter of abasement but to sin in time of time of speciall sorrow and affliction yea to adde sinne unto sin when we should adde one expression of grace unto another is more matter of abasement to be worst when we should be best how evil is it To these we may adde some other causes of sleeping in time of Gods worship 1. Slothfulnesse Prov. 19.15 Sl●thfullnesse casteth into a deep sleep It is the effect of slothfullnesse and refusall of labour to make a man heavy and ●●mpish Labour doth dissolve and dispell vapours doth re●resh and lighten the body and make it fitter for action but sloth and idlenes doth fill the body with humours particularly when a man doth not make a labour and pains or praying and hearing doth not stirre up and put forth soul and body but is carelesse in the same he contracts an heavines and dulnes whereas attention unto duties
thou canst not doe so know it is no unmannerlinesse nor presumption to help thy betters against sin and to doe them a good turne God did never forbid thee to help thy betters to see their faults and to help them against them but hath commanded thee rather to doe unto them as thou wouldst should be done to thy self If thou have Gods command thou doest not presume and if thou help them against ill manners such as sleeping is thou doest expresse good manners 3. Thy care must be to do it respectively unto thy betters so as it may appear to them and others that it proceedeth out of love and is carried with respect do it in the least way of notice with care to hide it from observation 1 Tim. 5.1 rebuke not an elder but exhort him as a father that religion that teacheth duty to superiours doth also teach a respective carriage in the same that both the duty may be done to them to the utmost and their honour at the same time maintained Ob. 4. I am loth to awaken them that sleep lest I should put them to shame whilst others thereby take notice of their sleeping Ans Wake them therefore as privately as thou canst so it be done if thou canst with the skirt of love cover their infirmity and helpe them out of it both thou shalt do a double office of love 2. But suppose tho● cannot waken them without notice and so without shame yet it is better shame shou d rest upon them then sinne nay it may be shame when they perceive it is taken notice of may prevail much to keep them awake 3. Where a publike cause of shame is found in measure as sleeping is in a publike place and in publike duties if publike shame follow no wrongs done they may thank themselves Nay there is a due place of putting them to open shame that sinne openly 1 Tim. 5.20 Them that sinne rebuke before all men that others also may fear this indeed belongs to publike persons but private persons may occasionally put others to shame in a publike place without any fault at all or stepping out of their place Ob. If I do awake them they will sleep again and again and ●o it is to no purpose I therefore ●eave because I see it doth no good Ans 1. If they fail in their duty yet do not thou fail in thine our Saviour found his di●ciples asleep again after he ●akned them the first and second time yet he did not leave them sleeping but wakened them still If thou must renew thy act of love in forgiving till ●eventy times seven times Matth. 18.22 much more the act of love in awaking them that sleep for that is a greater act of love And where awake●ng will not keep awake it may be usefull to add admonition at some other time when they are awake which may take more ●mpression then continuall shaking of a sleepy head Ob. I waken them till they be angry with me should I not then forbear Ans That anger must not cause thee to forbear for it is not at the action but the disquiet of it as a patient may be angry at the smarting of physick and yet not at the physician nor the physick it is therefore rather the anger of the drousinesse of the person then of the person 2. This anger is not an advised deliberate act but a sudden and violent motion which will not only cease when a man better considers of it but will turne unto love Prov. 28.23 He that reproveth a man shall finde more favour in ●he latter end then he that flattereth with his lips this priviledge 〈…〉 hath the more it is looked into the more worth and excellencie ●here is in it when they have ●onsidered both their sleeping ●nd thy waking of them the ●arelessenesse of themselves and ●hy care of them they will ●eare good will unto thee in●●ead of anger they will be an●ry at themselves but favour ●hee be disquiet with them●elves but quiet towards thee when they have put off passion ●nd put on wisdome when A●igail had talked to David not ●nly wisely but so long till his ●assion was gon he acknow●edged her a blessed woman 5. The fifth and last use is so perswade us all to take heed ●f sleeping in Gods worship If we have any care of the wor●hip of God this exhortation must prevail with us for sleeping expresseth an utter carelessenesse of Gods service for it hinders both soul and body Because this particular needeth urging and I know not when I shall have the like occasion therefore I will use three sorts of arguments 1. To all in generall 2. To unregenerate men by themselves 3. To the people of God by themselves The arguments that concern all are these 1. That proverb of Solomon chap. 10.5 He that sleepeth in harvest is a sonne that causeth shame All men bestirre themselves in harvest and if a man sleep then all his friends are ashamed of him for sleep now is most unseemly and uncomely now men have most need to wake and work there is most occasion and most benefit And is not every Lords day an harvest day a day of spirituall plenty wherein men may store their souls if therefore they sleepe on that day Gods Ministers and people will be ashamed of them what sleep when there is most work to do in the busiest season when most good is to be gotten sleeping therefore is a shamefull sinne and if we have any shame in us unlesse we care not what we do nor who see us in our uncomelinesse let us shake off sleeping 2. It is a sorrowfull disquieting sinne the end of sleeping in Gods worship will be disquiet There is a three fold time even in this life wherein such sleeping will disquiet 1. Time of the want of those ordinances wherein we have slept when men shall wish they had but those sermons and prayers they have slept out how heavy will it be when men shall think that had they the ordinances now they would wake in them whereas when they enjoyed them they slept how heavy will it be when men shall think the ordinances are not so much gon or taken away by force but they have slept them away it hath been their voluntary carelesse doing had they waked they still had injoyed them 2. A second time is the time of their conscience awaking upon some other occasion the more sinnefull rest soul or body have had the more miserable disquiet when the conscience is awaked by divine light and power to do it's office the soul may be arested at Gods suit specially for some one sin but then will God take his advantage to lay upon the soul other sinnes for God stores up trouble as men store up sinne that it comes by heaps when it comes 3. Time of the want of sleep in sicknes Then as the bodies of men shall tosse from side to side so their mindes shall roll from thought to thought
shall fare no otherwise no better in performing them then if we neglected them Job 21.15 What profit should we have if we pray unto him We say in our proverb as good sit for nought as work for nought this keeps men from the work and labour of prayer a conceit there is no profit in it they see no good come of it they that pray much and spend much time in religious exercises are as poor in the world as much despised and afflicted as any yea and more Mal. 3.14 Ye have said it is vain to serve God and what profit is it that we have kept his ordinances and walked mournfully before the Lord of hosts They are not ashamed to say that it is vain to serve God an unprofitable way and they undertake to prove it by their own experience they have kept Gods Ordinances and have mourned for their failings yet have found no benefit things have gon no better with them Jer. 44.17.18 they speak their mindes fully since they left off burning incense to the Queen of heaven they wanted all things and were consumed with famine and sword but when they did burn incense to the Queen of heaven they had plenty of victuals were well and saw no evil so the godly have times of temptation wherein carnall reason assisted by Satan doth prevail to make them think and say all their sincerity is in vain and the pains they have taken in Gods service Psal 73.13 Verily I have clensed my heart in vain and washed mine hands in innocency he thought that neither the purity of his heart nor innocency of his conversation was to any purpose he should be never the better for it Nay because the more they pray and walk in the use of Gods means sometimes the worse matters are with them in providence are they not ready to reason from sense that there is no benefit in precisenes and strictnes This is a false reasoning Psal 19.11 There is reward and great reward If so small a matter as a cup of cold water given for Gods sake shall not go unrewarded how much lesse greater matters Gods righteousnes is ingaged Heb. 6.10 He may as soon cease to be righteous as leave unrewarded the labour of his peoples love 3. So much pains and care about good duties will hinder the particular calling and so the benefits of this life and bring poverty And though the godly do not expressely say so as others will yet would they not take more pains about good duties if they did think it would not hinder their particular calling and profit which they are so sensible of This is a false reasoning for though carefull and fervent performances of duties may take up more time yet if it bring a double blessing what losse will there be That it is thus we may see in the case of the Iewes Hag. 1.2 They did not refuse to build the Temple and therein to take care of the Lords worship but they were carelesse of it and for carelessenesse he doth reprove them This people say the time is not yet come the time that the Lords house should be built at present they wanted opportunity and hoped they should have opportunity afterward but would not try whether opportunity would serve See how this carelessenes of Gods service did redound to the frustrating of all their care about their own occasions vers 6. ye have sown much and brought in little he that earneth wages earneth wages to put it into a bagge with holes their labour did not prosper they were not the richer for their sowing and labouring they looked for much and it came to little vers 9. I did blow upon it I called for a drought Why because my house is wast and ye run every one to your own house Their too much care of their own occasions and carelessenes of Gods service got them nothing but it lost them much Chap. 2.16 17. When one came to a heap of twenty measures there were but ten when one came to the presse fat to draw out fifty vessels there were but twenty When come doth not prove doth not fill men do not consider that this is because they take more care about their own matters then Gods service It follows I smote you with blasting and mildew and with hail in all the labours of your hands when mens corn is spoiled with blasting and mildew and hail they do not consider it is because they are carelesse of Sabbaths and Ordinances of God more carelesse of his service then their own occasions on the other side see how care of Gods service brings a blessing upon our occasions vers 18 19. Consider from this day that the foundation of the Lords Temple was laid consider it from this day I will blesse you And that they may know that the Lord doth blesse them because of their care of his worship he addeth Is the seed yet in the barn Is it already past Gods blessing yea as yet the vine and the fig-tree and the pomgranet and the Olive tree hath not brought forth Zach. 8.10.11 before this time there was no hire for man nor any for beast but now I will not be as in the former dayes for the seed shall be prosperous c. so that what time Gods service takes up from our callings it will abundantly make up in blessing and it must needs be so for all successe is Gods Psal 127.1 Except the Lord build the house they labour in vain that build it and where God is best served he will bestow the most blessing 4. The comfort will not countervail the sorrow the ease the difficulty the rest the labour Thus much we may gather from the sluggards speech Eccl. 4.6 Better is a handfull with quietnesse then both the hands full with travell and vexation of spirit He thinks the filling of both hands will not be answerable to the pains taken therein the lesse he hath the lesse disquiet and the more the more disquiet and that disquiet will not be exceeded by comfort and quiet but the vexation seems to him more then the quiet therefore one handfull is rather to be chosen then both because the lesse he hath the lesse disquiet So much also is implied in the spouse her answer to Christ calling on her to awake out of the bed of security arise and open to him Cant. 5.3 I have put off my coat how shall I put it on I have washed my feet how shall I defile them Had she thought the benefit would have countervailed the trouble she would not have made that exception This is a false reasoning for it saith Christ hath not purchased so much as sin hath deserved 5. As the difficulty of good waies is unavoidable so unconquerable not possible to overcome it the evil and discomfort of good waies is destroying Prov. 22.13 The slothfull man saith their is a Lyon without the difficulties of his way are as unable to be overcome as a Lyon he shall be slain
but feeble hands and knees which we shall finde to be a labour 2. The direct opposition that is found against fervent worshipping of God both within us and without us The opposition within us is corruption a disposition contrary not one onely disposition of coldnesse in good duties but many dispositions many seeds of sin all these are one nature they have had longer time of groath in our hearts then grace they lie at the very root of grace as suckers at the root of a tree to suck away the nourishment some of them are ever working every act doth weaken grace Rom. 7.23 I finde a law in my members warring against the law of my minde Not onely doth corruption work in the parts of the body which the Apostle calls the members but it works in opposition to grace as an adversary to it on purpose to foil and overthrow it 1 Pet. 2.11 Abstain from fleshly lusts Why they warre against the soul they doe not onely work in the soul but warre against the spiritualnes of the soul to make it wholly sensuall and carnall The opposition without us is 1. Satan who is our adversary as gracious because therein we are contrary to him When we were perfectly fit to worship God and he had lesse advantage against us yet he was never quiet till he had utterly made us unfit to worship God how much more will he now indeavour to make us unfit when we are in some measure fit again and he hath more advantage against us When the Apostle Rom. 16.19 20. had told the Romans of the commendation of their obedience every where and had exhorted them to be wise unto that which is good how seasonably doth he adde The God of peace shall bruise Satan under your feet short for they might have objected what an enemy Satan was to them how he did blinde and befool them and oppose them in what they should shew wisdom in as indeed he did Satan is Gods enemy he would have God to have no service at all much lesse fervent service the more service God hath the lesse he hath and the better service God hath the worse he hath for no man can service two masters No finite being can bestow it self wholly two waies at the same time Did not Satan himself set upon our Saviour who was perfectly able to worship God with desire that he would worship him and promised to give him all the Kingdoms of the world and the glory of them in way of recompence which shewed his enmity unto Gods worship to be such that he cared not what he gave had he it in his power so he could hinder God of his service 2. Our particular callings and the comforts of this life which are not in themselves opposite to Gods service for God hath made and appointed nothing contrary unto himself but subordinate to himself and a furtherance in his service our callings as God hath commanded them and the comforts of this life as they are Gods good creatures and blessings have a fitnesse in them to help and further us in Gods worship but corruption doth make more advantage of them then grace because of our carelesnesse in the use of them and want of exercising the grace of God in the use of them and so they rather hinder us then further us 3. The common and generall sinfulnesse of the times and places in which we live this is as much cold water poured upon the fire of our love Mat. 24.12 Because iniquity shall abound the love of many shall wax cold A flood of iniquity will a thousand to one cool and abate the heart of the warm hearted for in respect of men they have many hinderances and but few helps Example hath a great force in us especially if it be generall for so it is the more example particular and singular forwardnesse and strictnesse is observed reproved and reproached Solitarinesse in any way is uncomfortable and so weakning two are better then one and more better then a few This opposition within us and without us is therefore strengthened because it is not scattered and divided but united If Satan be divided against Satan his kingdom cannot stand Matth. 12.26 Satan and corruption doe not work seve●ally by themselves in opposition to Gods service but jointly both together Satan works in and by corruption Matth. 16.22 23. When Peter diswaded our Saviour from going up to Jerusalem there to suffer saying Master pity thy self these things shall not be unto thee our Saviour answereth Get thee behinde me Satan for thou savourest not those things which be of God but those things which be of men He did perceive Satan working in Peters carnall disposition which loves ease but cannot endure trouble Luk. 22.31 32. Satan hath desired to winnow you as wheat our Saviour saw that Satan would work with Peters carnall worldly fear to make him so shamefully deny his Lord and Master So Satan doth work with our corruption in the use of our callings and outward comforts to make us sin in them Satan doth sometimes cast in temptations over and besides and without our corruption but he doth ordinarily assist and work with our corruption 3. Fervency in Gods worship will not be had without diligence because to make grace fervent and lively there must be assistance and influence from heaven Rom. 8.26 The spirit helpeth our infirmity for we know not how to pray as we ought Jude 20. Praying in the Holy Ghost we cannot pray without the assistance of Gods Spirit Cant. 4.16 Awake O North-winde and come thou South blow upon my garden that the spices thereof may flow forth our graces though the seed of them have taken root in our hearts yet will not put forth without the winde of heaven which bloweth where it listeth without the Spirit of God doth breath upon them The assistance of the spirit will not be had without diligence these two goe together and depend one upon another our diligence and Gods assistance Phil. 2.12 13. Work out your salvation for it is God that worketh both the will and the deed God will no otherwise work in us then as we work with him The slothfull mans talent was hid in a napkin no use made of it The spirit will not breath in us without our diligence and pains 1. Because the spirit is at pains to assist and strengthen grace will he take pains for us and will he allow us to take no pains for our selves he is at pains in his Ordinances at pains by afflictions at pains to oppose corruption to watch advantages to help grace Shall the spirit take pains for us and we be idle 2. It agrees and suits well to the worth and dignity of the spirits assistance to cost pains Shall common matters and matters of price be had with one and the same labour doth it not better agree to the worth of things that different worth should challenge different labour the lesse worth in things
to the house of God on the Lords day as they have done to go to the alehouse in the week dayes had they searched Gods book but as much as they have tossed the cards and tables yea it may be on the Lords day they had been Saints in heaven 3. To perswade the godly to shake off this sloth If we prize the manner of Gods worship and affect it we must do so if we care not how we pray or hear if we think any affections are meet for him we may continue our sloth We finde this commanded Josh 22.5 Take diligent heed to keep the commandment which Moses charged you to love the Lord your God to serve him with all your heart and with all your soul take heed and diligent heed Prov. 4.23 Keep thy heart with all diligence we finde it commended Act. 18.25 Apollo being fervent in spirit taught diligenly the things of the Lord. 2 Cor. 8.7 The Apostle makes it part of the commendation of the Corinthians that they did abound in all diligence Of our Saviour the head of the Church that he went about doing good Act. 10.38 he did not onely do good but was diligent therein To discourage the more from sloth and bring in love with diligence consider how the wisedome of the holy Ghost doth compare them in Solomons Proverbs all which comparisons we may improve with advantage against spirituall sloth and for spirituall diligence spirituall sloth being a greater sin and lying under an heavier curse and spirituall diligence being a greater grace and attended with an happier blessing 1. For wealth Prov. 10.4 He becometh poor that dealeth with a slack hand but the hand of the diligent maketh rich It holdeth especially true in spirituall riches the slothfull Christian is poor in grace the diligent Christian is rich hath store and abundance of precious grace Prov. 18.8 He that is slothfull in his work is brother to him that is a great waster if a man have a good stock of grace yet by slothfullnesse he will waste it not labouring to increase it he will diminish it Prov. 20.4 the slugard shall beg in harvest and have nothing they who have nothing of their own nor no interest in them that have something are poor indeed God will shut up the hearts of men towards slothfull Christians when they come to beg counsell and prayers when they come to complain of their spirituall wants and poverty 2. For honour see how they are compared Prov. 12.24 The hand of the diligent shall bear rule but the slothfull shall be under tribute A diligent Christian shall be a King in his own soul and amongst the people of God God will set him up give him authority and rule in their hearts they that can rule themselves are fit to rule others so do the diligent but the slothfull Christian shall be an underling in his own soul and amongst the people of God he shall be a slave and tributary to his lusts Prov. 22.29 3. For fruit of pains-taking see how they are compared Prov. 12.27 The slothfull man rosteth not that which he took in hunting but the substance of the diligent man is precious When a slothfull Christian hath taken some pains for want of taking a little more he loseth that pains as if an huntsman should take pains to kill an hare and then through lazines should suffer the dogs or some other to run away with it for instance a man is at pains to come to the house of God to pray in the word or prayer his heart is much affected he goes his way and thinks no more of it that man doth in great measure lose his labour but the substance of a diligent man is precious what he getteth by labour he doth not easily part with he makes precious account of it that help of heart which a diligent Christian findeth in the Ordinances of God he thinks oft of he improves by prayer by praise by treasuring up the same he can tell you what it cost him to get down such a corruption to get to such a frame of heart to obtain such a mercy how oft he praid how long he waited therefore he maketh a precious account thereof Lastly That which is not the least to discourage us from sloth it is full of pride and conceitednesse Prov. 26.16 put the wisdome of seven men together the sluggard conceits he goes beyond it and no wonder for he neither knows what he hath nor what he wants and ignorance is the mother and nurse of pride If a man knew the thoughts of sluggish Christians he should finde that they think all is well with them though a man may be able to convince them by reason that things cannot be well with them And the devil will not stick to tell them all is well to keep them from taking pains It is a misery to have an heart empty of good but to think an empty heart full is a double misery so is it with the slothfull Christian To help against sloth and unto diligence it will be usefull first To ponder these weighty considerations 1. Fervency in Gods worship and ease cannot possibly stand together whilst so great opposition remains both within us and without us 2. The difficulty and toil found in Gods service is a bitter afflictive fruit of sin Shall we not bear the burden we have brought upon our selves willingly though not cheerfully It is a signe sinne is pardoned when we have patience to bear the chastisement of sinne it is a great favour when there is a will to bear where there is no power to shake off 3. The deceitfull ease that proceeds from sloth is both Gods losse and thine and who would covet that ease whereby God and himself his best friends must lose 4. The more painfull the service of God is the more sweet for that sweetnes comes out of the strong it is the delightfull fruit of a powerfull conquest over corruption of more honour done to God of the condition of the promise performed with a greater measure of heavenly assistance 5. If sloth prevail in thy soul it will shut out diligence but at the same time it shuts in more disquiet then ease for sin is shut up in that ease the disquiet of lawfull labour is but affliction the ease of sloth is sin and sin is attended with more trouble then ease it will prove more easy to taste the sower of affliction then the sweet of sin 2. It will be usefull to inure our selves to the serious and thorough examination of our hearts and waies of our spirituall estate this will discover what need we have of diligence and what hurt sloth hath done us This cured Davids lazines Psalm 119.59 60. Though he were slow-paced in his obedience in the neglect of this yet when he was once past this difficult usefull duty he made haste he lost no time nor ground as formerly 3. It will be usefull not to cherish our pride by poring upon what we have atained but to strengthen humility by frequent and serious meditation of what we want and what is to be attained This helped Paul Phil. 3.13 14. what he was come to was behind him he could not so redily and constantly look upon that but what he was to come to was before him in his eye to alure and draw him forward Looke we also upon what is before us Hast attained some measure of fervency stay not gazing upon that but look right forth look onward dost see what thou wantst Look not so much upon thy work as thy patter● the affection not onely of the best of creatures upon earth but also and chiefly in heaven the spirits of just men made perfect yea the flaming Angels yea the Lord Jesus Christ who had zeal enough to carry him through the flames of hell to do his fathers will in whose brest alone that fire of heavenly love dwels that hath inflamed Saints on earth and Saints in heaven which we shall finde inflaming us more and more as we draw near to look upon him as our pattern with desire of imitation The close of all containing an help in all that hath gon before as prayer comes after the severall pieces of the spirituall armour to help our skill in all and the usefulnes of all Ephe. 6.18 may fitly be Davids prayer when the people were warm hearted in their offering to the building of the Temple for the publike solemn worship of God 1 Chron. 29.18 O Lord God of Abraham Isaac and of Israel our fathers keep this for ever in the imagination of the thoughts of the heart of thy people and prepare their heart unto thee Finis
the fore-kin was a superfluitie therefore to be cut off so sin is a superfluity wee may well spare it and it must be cut off when wee come to heare the word if wee would be clean 2. The heart is then un●lean and propha●e when it come to worship God not having laide aside earthly thoughts and affections these thoughts and affections are common not set apart unt●o Gods worship therefore do defile the heart in Gods worship because they make it common when it should be set apa●t for God Common is as well opposed to holy as sinfull 1. Sam. 21.4 There is no common bread under my hand but hallowed common or ordinary bread in comparison of hallowed bread is unholy and so common ordinary thoughts and affections inreference to holy worship are prophane and unholy and make the heart a prophane vessel Nehe. 13.17 Nehemiah did contend with the Nobles because they did prophane the sabbath How did they prophane the sabbath viz. in suffering wares to be sold and tradesmen to be imploied in their trades on the sabbath-day much more did they that were imploied in them prophane the sabbath and especially their hearts by intermedling with such occasions Isa 58. ●3 Thou shalt not do thine owne wayes nor finde thine own pleasure on my holy day the day and duties are Gods therefore the workes and word yea and thoughts and affections too must in a speciall manner tend to God upon that day This was shadowed by Gods command to Moses when he drew nigh to the bush where God did manifest himselfe in glory setting the bush on fire yet keeping it from being consumed put off thy shoes from thy feet Exod. 3 5. why For the place whereon thou standest is holy ●round Those shoes those affections whereby wee tread upon the earth converse with men and with earthly occasi●ns must be put off when wee come to Worship God else they will make our hearts unholy and uncleane because common 3. A third part of the unpreparednes of the heart is unaptnes or indisposednes suppose a man lie under one sin unrepented of and lay aside wordly thoughts and affections yet experience proves a man may be unwilling and backward to the Worship of God or may have an indifferencie or carlesnes of spirit that he could as well let it alone as do it a spirit of luke-warmenes that doth neither strongly incline to the Worship of God nor from it but stands in a middle way This unaptnes is not only a want of Grace without which a man wants a will for God works the will till God worke a will in a man to that which is good he hath none but also a want of readines in grace to be put in exercise in Gods worship by reason of spirituall sloth the case of the wise virgins who by reason of their slumbring had their lamps to trim when the bridegroom was comming ere they could be prepared the orbe of grace grew low and so their lampes of profession did burne obscurely they awaking and using the meanes got supplye of oyl from Christ and so their lamps recovered their brightnes and the want of that which Paul calls upon Timo●hy for 2. Tim. 1.6 Stir up the gift of God there are gifts and graces but they are like fire in the ash-heaps not fit to kindle and flame the ordinances of God being put to them because the ashes of security lye between grace and the ordinances of God unblowne away This we finde in Iacobs preparing of his family Gen. 35.2 First put away the strange gods that was all manifest and open sinne Secondly be ye clean i. e. from all ceremoniall pollutions Thirdly change your garments not onely put off those they had on but put on others The garments of the soule are the dispositions of the soule Isai 61.3 a garment of praise is opposed to a spirit of heavines a spirit of heavines is a sad or mournfull disposition a garment of praise on the contrary is a ioyfull and thankfull disposition We must change our garments put off our earthly and worldly dispositions thoughts desires cares about the world and not there rest but we must be clothed with heavenly thoughts affections graces have them in a readines to expresse themselves in the worship of God This is the wedding garment spoken of Matth. 22.2 for by the marriage feast there is meant all the ordinances of God word sacraments prayer for in all doth God give our soules liberall and honourable entertainment doth set all his dainties before us with great solemnity the wedding garment is our fitnes and disposednes unto the ordinances by reason of certain heavenly sutable dispositions in a readines in our soules appearing to Almighty God and in measure to the godly by our outward carriage and behaviour If we take Christ for the wedding garment as some do how doth he fit us for the ordinances but by imputing his righteousnes unto us which is our worth and communicating to us heavenly dispositions to make us meet They that put on wedding garments do first put off their ordinary common apparel and then put on comely pleasant apparel meet for such an occasion so when we come to the feast of Gods ordinances where God is the feast-maker and Christ the feast and Angels entertainers and attenders we must not onely put off our ordinary and common affections but we must put on such affections as are meet for the ordinances of God sanctified and holy affections for holy duties as reverence humility love repentance faith these in a readines do make the heart apt and disposed and these not put on by new care and diligence in use of meanes and dependencie upon Christ do make us unapt and indisposed and so unprepared If a man take not care to stirre up holy thoughts and holy affections when he cometh to the ordinances of God he hath an unprepared heart because his heart having no holy affections ready to meet and close with holy dueties hath no fitnes unto them because no present ready suitablenesse unto them It is one thing to have grace in the heart another thing to have it ready for exercise and so it is one thing to have a generall fitnes for the ordinances another thing to have a particular and present fitnes at this and that time for this and that ordinance A childe of God that hath grace in his heart hath a generall fitnes for the ordinances because the same holines that is in the ordinances is in his heart and they must needs fit one another but the same childe of God if his grace be not fit for exercise through some impediment at a particular time and in a particular ordinance may want a perfect and particular fitnes for that ordinance If this were not so a childe of God could never performe any duety unworthyly as to bring speciall judgements of si●knes ●eaknes and death upon them as the Corinthians did 1 Cor. 11 3● for a
particular act of unworthy receiving for God doth not so correct for unavoidable infirmities but for carelessnes for God did not so afflict them at other times there was some diffērence therefore betweene them at that time and at other times the difference was not in the frame and habit of grace for then they had not been truly godly therefore in the exercise of grace see it in an example There is a generall affection in fire allwayes to burne but suppose fire be covered over with ashes it is not fit to burne in that present state because it hath a present particular hinderance but when that is removed it will actually burne so Gods grace in our hearts hath a generall fitnes to worship God but when a spirit of security and sloth lyes upon the soul if ye bring the soule to the word to prayer it hath not a present fitnes for grace is not ready at this time to be exercised because hindered by security and sloth and therefore unprepared till that be removed Let us recollect what hath been said An unprepared heart to worship God is 1. A rash heart that doth not consider what a poore creature it is that doth worship what an high and holy God he is that is worshipped what an holy and high way Gods worship is that Christ is our strength and acceptance that God will be worshiped inwardly and spiritually th●t Gods glory and our soules good must be our speciall aimes in Gods worship 2. An unprepared heart is a prophane heart that comes to worship God in sinne unrepented of or in worldly thoughts and affections 3. An unprepared heart is an heart indisposed to exercise grace to put forth holy and gracious affections in the worship of God Quest It followes in the next place that we make enquiry after the reason why unpreparednes of heart doth weaken our worshiping of God or the manner how it doth it Ans An unprepared heart doth weaken the worship we performe three wayes 1. As it makes the soul an unmeet instrument to worship God If the soul cannot be sit to worship God without preparation then unpreparednes makes it unfit But the soul cannot be fit to worship God without preparation That I shall make manifest many wayes 1. Take the soul in the best preparation when the soul hath walked in all the preparing w●y of God and taken all the paines that humane frailty allow it will be but in measure fit because there will be but a m●asure of grace and readines to exerc●se grace in the heart perfection of these alone will bring perfection of fitnes to worship God We on earth pray that we may doe Gods will as it is done in heaven onely they that are in heaven are a perfect paterne of worshiping God Nay I appeale to the experience of the people of God when they have endeavoured to renew their repentance to pitch their thoughts and affections upon heavenly things to stirre up their graces and doe l●oke upon the r preparation with eyes awaked and cleare fighted in measure doe they not see but little preparation rather what they want then what they have there is such difference between the one and the other If the soul prepared hath but a measure of fitnes yea but a small measure then a soul without preparation cannot be fit at all 2. We cannot be fit to worship God without preparation because we continually disfit our selves between time and time of Gods service In the generall the flesh doth lust against the spirit uncessantly Gal. 5.17 As grace doth make a man willing to worship God and desirous to be imploied about that so corruption on the contrary doth make a man backward thereto nay forward to sin this is that Paul saith Rom. 7.21 When I would do good evil is present with me When his regenerate will chuseth good his unregenerate will out of hand chuseth evil And the effect of this lusting of the flesh against the spirit is this saith the Apostle ye cannot do what ye would though there be a will to be prepared for duty yet the corrupt will will hinder the act of the regenerate will or at least weaken it More particularly we do continually unfit our selves for the worship of God two waies 1. We sin continually in all our actions and every act of sin doth strengthen the habit and weaken the contrary habit of grace Not only we do sin necessarily and unavoidably but through carelesnes for want of watching to avoid occasions and to take hold of advantages against sin And the more of the will in sin the lesse opposition it meeteth with all the more doth it gather strength and weaken grace because grace is lesse exercised Isa 59.2 Your iniquities have separated between you and your God Sin doth not only separate us from God as a fountain of comfort but as a fountain of grace so that the more we sin the lesse communion we have with God in grace and the lesse communion we have with God in grace the more unfit to worship him It fares with us in this case as with Samson when he had given way that the hair of his head should be cut which was to break his covenant a sin rather of carelesnes then of presumption he thought to have risen up and gon from the Philistines as at other times but he knew not that God was departed from him sin had bereaved him of his strength So when we have been carelesse of our watch as we generally are and have let loose our thoughts affections speeches we think to pray hear meditate with the same spirituall life and strength that we have formerly done but we know not that God is absent from our hearts and so our strength is absent 2. We do specially unfit our selves for Gods worship by the use of our callings and the comforts of this life Neither our callings nor outward good things do of themselves unfit us to worship God for God would not then have given man a calling and set him in midst of outward comforts in innocency But we abuse our callings and comforts to make us unfit for Gods worship and that we do three waies 1. We spend too much affection upon them 2. Too much time 3. Too much labour 1. We bestow the strength of our affections upon our callings and outward comforts contrary to that of the Apostle 1 Cor. 7.30 31. and they that buy as if they possessed not and they that use the world as not abusing it teaching us a weaned affection from them we should be in regard of setting our hearts upon them when we are in the midst of them as if we wanted them But we not only use them but let our hearts go into them we too much care about them when we want them which made our Saviour take so much pains with his Disciples Matth. 6. from ver 25. to the end to prevent this did not care make Martha unfit to hear our Saviour
be for family worship and the more we worship God in our families the sitter we shall be for publike worship Quest 2. How may we remedy the wearines of our bodies Ans By the exercise of Temperance governed by watchfulnes 1 Thes 5.6 watch and be sober This watchfull advised observant Temperance must be exercised about Sleep Diet. Labour Recreation Some lesse sleep makes fitter for Gods worship some more some are more apt by lesse food some by more some more labour makes fitter some lesse we must carefully observe and accordingly order our selves too much recreation will make the body altogether sensuall and so loose that it will not be fixed in any ordinance Caution Let the godly be advised not too easily to hearken to the complaints of the body i. q. the soul may deceive us thereby we may rather suspect the complaints of the body in Gods worship and trust them else where for the soul is more apt to be weary in Gods worship and lesse weary in other works and the body is more apt to be weary in other works and lesse in Gods worship the soul is more weary of Gods worship because it hath lesse disposednes thereto and it is more spirituall and so lieth heavier upon the soul it is lesse weary of other works because it hath more disposednes unto them and they are more bodily and do not so lye upon the spirit the body is more weary of other worke because they take more of the body lesse weary of Gods worship because it is more spirituall and doth not so presse upon the body suspect therefore the complaints of the body in Gods worship and do not easily hearken unto them 2. There is time and place for the execution of an holy revenge upon the body It hath spent the whole day and it may be the night after that in sin therefore put it to make it do somewhat more for the service of God then it willingly would This is not cruelty but mercy to our bodies to constrain them to Gods ●ervice and that in some proportion to their service of sin 3. There is a necessity of beating down the body if we mean it should be helpfull to our souls if we too much favour them we do against our souls 1 Cor. 9. ult There is a danger that Paul himself may be cast away whilst he doth preach to save others if he do not beat down his body The occasions and comforts we daily converse with do give a strength to the body and the body gives a strength to sin Hence the fruit of the godly is more mellow and gracious in old age because the vigour of their bodies decaying the strength of sin is wasted CHAP. VI. Of the fifth hinderance of instant worshipping of God sle●ping MATTH 26.40 And he commeth to his Disciples and findeth them asleep I Now come unto another hinderance of our fervent serving of God which is sl●●p a sin that doth not onely hin●er our fervency in Gods worship but also at this time will hinder the means of redresse if not forborne A sin not onely doggs the carelesse who regard onely to have their bodies present at Gods worship but steals upon the godly yea the godly of most lively inward affections and therefore it may be of generall use to discover how it hinders our instant serving of God and the remedy thereof The coherence of my Text is this our Saviour knowing that the place of his solace in communion with God should be the place of his suffering Joh. 18.2 He resorteth to that garden which he was so accustomed to when he knew Judas would look for him rather then else-where and he takes with him his Disciples to the intent they should assist him in praier having lately received the strengthening passeover and Lords Supper this appears by his speech unto them v. 36. Sit ye here whilst I go and pray yonder He that biddeth us when we pray privately to enrer into our chamber to shut the door and to pray to our Father in secret Matth. 6.6 would not have disclosed his secret praying had it not been to provoke them unto praie● for they might easily apprehend if he had need to pray much more they for though he had more work to go thorow then they yet he had incomparably more strength then they his so difficult work was lesse to his strength then their so easy wo●k comparatively to their strength Three of his Disciples he takes unto more intimate and retired sympathy with him in his troubles these three Peter and the two sonnes of Zebedee he took rather then the rest as we may conceive because they had expressed most forward confident affection unto him he will try them that upon triall they might better know themselves and be humble Peter ver 33 34 35. professeth that he will not be offended because of the evil shall befall Christ though all be offended And when Christ tells him that he shall deny him thrice that night he believes himself rather then Christ and affirmeth that he will sooner die with him then deny him The two sonnes of Zebedee Matth. 20.20 21 22. desire to sit the one at Christs right hand and the other at his left in his Kingdom he asketh them whether they be able to drink of his cup and to be baptized with his baptisme they say they are able as little considering what they now answered as what they before asked when our Saviour had parted these three from the rest he began to be sorrowfull and very heavy he communicateth his sorrow to them and the extremity thereof My soul is exceeding sorrowfull even unto death he had as much sorrow as life could hold he exhorteth them to whom he had thus specially unbosomed himself that they would tarry in that place and watch with him As he was sensible of affliction so of comfort and the means thereof It became him to fulfill all righteousnes therefore not onely to pray himself but to resort to the praiers of others His suspended comfort must be recovered in Gods own way The weak Disciples may help their persect Saviour whilest he suffered as a sinner if they doe but watch But watching was not all that Christ aimed at that is a duty no further usefull then it seemeth for some other end Christ would have them watch that they might pray with him as ver 41. Watch and pray watching without praier had been but a waking idlenes Our Saviour himself goes a little further from them and praies earnestly that if it vvere possible the cup of his sufferings might be turned some other vvay He returneth again to his Disciples and findeth them asleep Though they had professed great love to him and great ability to expresse that love though he singled them out and told them his present great necessity and cald upon them to watch and pray i. e. to pray not drousily but fervently which in all these regards did presse upon them