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A96523 Three decads of sermons lately preached to the Vniversity at St Mary's Church in Oxford: by Henry Wilkinson D.D. principall of Magdalen Hall. Wilkinson, Henry, 1616-1690. 1660 (1660) Wing W2239; Thomason E1039_1; ESTC R204083 607,468 685

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have seen this duty tracked by the foot-steps of Gods people let us goe and doe likewise In the third place to give in the demonstration of the Point I shall 3. The Doctrine demonstrated draw a threefold Argument from the necessity equity and utility of the duty 1. From the necessity of the duty Ye have need of patience that Arg. 1. Drawn from the necessity of this duty after ye have done the will of God ye might receive the promise And that is necessary Necessitate praecepti medii For Precepts the Psalmist exhorts R●st in the Lord and wait patiently for him fre● not thy self because of him who prospereth in his way because of the man who bringeth wicked d●vices to pass For evil deers shall be cut off but th●se that wait upon the Lord they shall inherit the earth And the Prophet Zephaniah exhorts Therefore wait ye upon me saith the Lord until Zeph. 3. 8. th● day that I rise up unto the prey for my determination is to gather the nations that I may assemble the Kingdoms to p●ur upon them mine indignati●n even all my fierce anger for all the earth shall be devoured with the fire of my jealousie Wait on the Lord be of good courage and Psal 27. 14. he shall strengthen thine heart wait I say on the Lord. Solomon counsels Say not thou I will recompence evil but wait on the Lord and he Prov. 20. 22. shall save thee David layeth a strict charge upon himself My soul Psal 62. 5. wait thou only upon God for my expectation is from him David could have taken opportunity to have revenged himself on Saul he had him as we say at his mercy but he waited Gods time The Lord 1 Sam. 24. 23. 1 Sam. 26. 23. saith he render to every man his righteousness and his faithfulnesse for the Lord delivered thee into my hand to day but I would not stretch forth mine hand against the Lords anointed David though he had an opportunity yet considered Saul was Gods anointed therefore he would not embrue his hands in his blood 2. Necessitate m●dii For waiting is an instrumental means Gods way of obtaining a grant of the thing desired Simeon waited for the consolation of Israel And behold there was a man in Jerusalem Luke 2. 25. whose name was Simeon and the same man was just and devout waiting for the consolation of Israel and the holy Gh●st was upon him The sons of God waited for their adoption And not onely they but our selves Rom. 8. 23. also which have the first-fruits of the spirit even we our selves groan within our selves waiting for the adoption to wit the redemption of our body And they wait for the coming of Christ So that ye come behinde I Cor. 1. 7. in no gift waiting for the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ Waiting prepareth us for the receiving of a mercy whereas murmuring querulous speeches do indispose us for a mercy Whineing strugling and quarrelling provoke God to lash us more but a quiet composed behaviour an humble submission to the will of God is a ready way to obtain the thing desired even a comfortable fruition of our expectation God is most ready to help his people when their hearts most long after him for so runs the Promise I will pour Isa 44. 3. water upon him that is thirsty and floods upon the dry ground I will pour my spirit upon thy seed and my blessing upon thine off-sppring After the Church was in pain and travel and endured many throws and hard labor in expectation of deliverance read the gracious answer Thy dead men shall live together with my dead body shall they arise awake and sing ye that awell in dust for thy dew is as the dew of hearbs Isa 26. 19. and the earth shall cast out the dead So that waiting works two things 1. It prepares us for a mercy it seasoneth our hearts and disposeth them for the entertainment thereof so that we are as Vessels throughly season'd 2. It sets a higher price and estimate on the mercy when it comes A mercy beg'd by Prayer waited for with Patience will of all others be the sweetest to us in the fruition Hannah had more children after Samuel but none so valued as Samuel the childe of her Prayers Now if deliverance and settlement to the Kingdom come as an answer of our Prayers O how welcome will the deliverance be It 's a comfortable experience recorded of the Church And it shall Isa 25. 9. be said in that day lo this is our God we have waited for him and he shall save us This is the Lord we have waited for him we will be glad and rejoyce in his salvation 2. The second Argument shall be drawn from the equity of the Argu. 2 Drawn from the equity of the duty duty It 's all the equity and reason of the World that we should wait upon God we are Creatures and is it not equal that the Creature should wait upon the Creator we are Servants and should not Servants wait upon their Masters Behold as the eyes of servants Psalm 123. 2 look unto the hands of their masters and as the eyes of a maiden unto the hand of her mistress so our eyes wait upon the Lord our God until that he have mercy upon us We are children and should not children wait upon their Father These relations intimate the equity of the duty we say that Relations though they be of least entity yet they are of greatest efficacy Doth not the Husband-man wait for the Harvest Doth not the Mother wait for the time of her deliverance Doth not the Patient wait upon the working of the Physick Now God is giving the Kingdom strong Physick a Purge to some a Vomit to others nay have we not just cause to fear that by reason of our Laodicean luke-warmness God will vomit us out of his mouth Let 's wait and see what God will do though we know not yet he knows the reason of his own proceedings God made Nebuchadnezzar a scourage to the Jews and God calls him his servant but because Nebuchadnezzar acted his own malice and revenge God will turn the wheel upon him Jehu was made an Instrument to root out Ahabs Family but because his heart was naught he aimed at the Kingdom for himself God threatens to avenge the blood of Jezre●l upon the house Hos 1. 4. of Jehu God may raise up one to punish another and when they have done God may find out a scourge to punish the punishers themselves These are Gods Acts his strange Acts for so are his judgements Isaiah 7. 20. God will have a razor for that purpose In the same day shall the Lord shave with a razour that is hired namely by them beyond the river by the king of Assyria the head and the hair of the feet and it shall also consume the beard And notwithstanding greatness of
eternall condition Thou didst not consider in that day those things that concerned thy peace Now if at that great day of judgement the righteous shall scarcely be saved where shall the wicked and sinner appear What will be the doome of ungodly men The Apostle tells us 1 Cor. 6. 9 10. and the Holy Ghost tells us of their doome Rev. 21. 8. Rev. 22. 15. At that day however wicked men have been flattered and idolized in this world they will appear vile and abominable The swearers are those dogs that are whipt out of the presence of God The drunkards are swine unclean beasts these shall not come to heaven The unclean persons are the goats these stand on Christs left hand and shall hear the sentence of condemnation pronounced against them Then will the wicked sinners wish that the mountains might fall upon them and that the hills might cover them from the face of the Lamb. The wicked shall appear in judgement but they shall not be able to stand in judgment I might further inlarg this Use but there are many who have in print bestowed fruitful pains on this argument as Carthusianus Drexelius Gerrard Vossius Alsted Among our own country men Babington Perkins Smith Bolton c. In an especial manner I commend to your serious reading and meditation that powerful and patheticall application concerning the day of judgement by the reverend and learned Dr. Hackwel in his 14th chapter and 8 Hackwell Apology ●ib 4. c. 14. last sections of his 4th book of the Apology for the power and providence of God in the government of the world I must professe that I conceive that Application which that worthy Dr. there useth to be one of the most full pithy and particular Applications of any that ever I met with-all on that argument I commend the perusal of that to you And in the second place I proceed to an use of instruction Let the Vse 2. Instruction cōsideration of the day of judgment be our instruction and put every one of us according to our several stations capacities in mind of the great duty incumbent upon us Let Magistrates from the consideration of the day of judgement be instructed in their duty to be a praise unto them that doe well and a terrour unto ●evil doers Let them execute justice impartially let them in the distribution of justice be like Levi who knew neither father nor mother nor brother nor sister Let not a Magistrate shew more pitty to a blasphemer then to a murtherer or theef considering that those that murther souls are the worst of murderers and those that robbe God of his honour are the worst of theeves Let Ministers be instructed in their duty to cry aloud and spare not to speak as the oracles of God to divide the word aright and walke aright Such as are Pastors and Doctors let them discard that Antiphrasis Pastores à non pascendo Doctores à non docendo That rotten distinction per se per alium will not excuse a lazy Minister at the day of judgement Let Governours Tutors and all that have the inspection over others remember the day of judgement It is Apostolical counsel Rom. 12. 8. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whether he be Secular or ●cclesiastical Ruler the duty is of weight by both sorts to be put in practise The Maxime is most true Every onthat ruleth ought to rule with diligence Let there not be any among you who as Diogenes his servant was called Manens à non manendo because he used to run away I say let not any be called Prafecti à non praeficiendo and Tutores à non tuendo ●emember the day of judgement Then those young-ones those Deposita Parentum charissima Pignora will be required of you Let all tradesmen be instructed in their duty from the consideration of the day of judgement to deal justly to use a just weight a just measure a just ballance a just ●phah Sophisticated wares false lights false weights adulterated wares cousenage in the trade will ly heavie upon their account at the day of judgement Let young schollars whose witts are green wanton and frothy remember the day of judgement then they would not adventure upon Platonick fansies vain speculations and bend their wits to m●intain them after they have discovered them for no other reason but that they are new discoveries like some new African monsters It 's a sad thing to consider that men now a daies bend their wits to be sceptical to defend any Chimaera or abortive issue of their sterile brains Men are so sool-hardy as they will venture upon any opinion any notion that so as Simon Magus designed they might be accounted some great ones like Erostratus that burnt Dianas Temple to get himself a name Many that have parts care not whether they imploy them for the truth or against it Hence it comes to passe that Judaisme Socinia●isme Familisme Enthusiasme all these shall have their patronage Many will plead for them and defend them with eagerness I will tell you a story though I use very few stories in a Pulpit which is recorded by Matthew Paris an historian of good repute among us There was one Simon Carnatensis a Master of Paris Anno 1201 who having most subtilly and acutely disputed about the Trinity some of his familiar friends perswaded him to put his disputation in writing that so the memorial of such excellent things might not be lost whereupon he proudly brake forth into this blasphemous speech O little Jesu how much have I confirmed and advanced thy Law in this Question but if I list to deal crosly I know how with stronger reasons and arguments to weaken and disprove the same Which proud blasphemous speech was no sooner spoken but hee was strucken dumb and became an errand I deot and stark fool and so made a Ludibrium a laughing-stock to all that saw him Let all wanton Scepticks Novelists and Platonicks take heed by this sad example Let this be their Warning-peece Now that I may more particularly set forth your duty I shall commend these serious lessons of special concernment for your instruction and practise 1. Let us entertain frequent and serious thoughts and meditations Less 1. Entertaine frequent and serious thoughts concerning the day of Judgement 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost Bosil concerning the day of Judgment It was a saying of Hierome that learned Father Whatsoever I am a doing whether eating drinking reading or writing me-thinks I hear the shril sound of the Archangels Trumpet summoning all flesh to appear and crying aloud Surgite mortui venite ad judicium Chrysostome profest that whatever others doe think of it for my selfe it makes me often tremble when I consider of it wherefore upon this very Text he saith that its a dreadful Judgment and a Tribunal to be trembled at When thou art tempted to sin be it Pride Passion Uncleanness Covetousness Oppression Dissimulation
hand upon the Lad neither do thou any thing unto him We ●hould consider as * Nostrum est intent is mentibus considerare quam mirabiliter in ipso Articulo Deus Isaac revocaver ●● à morte in vitam Calv. Gen 33. 4. Calvin observes how God helpt in the very Article of time and delivered him from death to life What preservations and speciall Providences did Jacob mee● withall being delivered from Esau's rage when bloody intentions were turned into embraces Jacob feared least he would ●lay the Mother and Children yet by speciall Providence Esau ran to meet him and embraced him and fell on his neck and kissed him and they wept In Joseph there is a Series of Providences a conca●enation of preservations His brethren hated him and threw him into a pit And in that pit there was no water He was bought and sold by the Ishmaelites and Po●ipher cast in Prison and in the same Prison where were the Kings prisoners The chiefe Bu●ler and Baker were in the same prison They dreamed Joseph gave the Interpretation But yet Gods time of deliverance was not come Pharaoh dreames Joseph interprets his dreame and is advanced and made Ruler over all the Land of Egypt A f●mine f●ll out Joseph's brethren came to buy corne Joseph supplies them Stephen recites the History and acknowledgeth a speciall hand of Providence The Patriarchs mooved with envy sold Joseph into Egypt Gen. 50. 20 21. Acts 7. 9. but God was with him The History of Eliah is remarkable sometimes a Brook sometimes a Widdow woman sometimes the Angells themselves were his P●rveyors and the very Ravens those greedy Birds of prey brought him meate The History of the Jewes delivered from Haman is especially remarkable Haman utterly plotted their ruine He had the royall assent granted the day set Haman on purpose went to beg Mordecai for the Gallowes but see what intervened by the speciall hand of Providence On that night the King could not sleep and Esth 6. 1. he commanded to bring the book of records of the Chronicles and they were read before the King after reading whereof the King advanced Mordecai and made Haman his desperate Enemy to make the Proclama●ion And Esther being entertained Q●eene in the roome of Vasthi shee supplicated for her own life and the life of her people And the mischievous devices of Haman were turned ●pon his own pate and as he meated to others the same measure he received the Text expresly shewes So they hanged Haman upon the Gallowes Esth 7. 10. that he had prepared for Mordecai Then was the Kings wrath pacified The three Children in the fiery furnace Daniel in the Lions den Peter out of Prison were all miraculously delivered by the Ministery of Angells The Apostle Paul delivered when above forty had bound themselves with an oath in a conspiracy against him And Acts 21. 30 31. especially Acts 21. 30 31. We read of a wonderfull deliverance as we say between the cup and the lip And all the Citie was moved and the people ran together and they took Paul and drew him out of the Temple and forthwith the dores were shut and as they went about to kill him tidings came unto the chiefe captaine of the Band that all Jerusalem was in an ●proare By this Diversion the Lord wrought a signall deliverance for his servant Paul What deliverances had David at Keilah En-gedi even when Saul had hēm'd him in and as I may say had him in a Pound not likely to escape yet then by way of diversion he was delivered and Saul went 1 Sam. 23. 26 27. on this side of the mountaine and David and his men on that side of the mountaine and David made hast to get away for feare of Saul for Saul and his men compassed David and his men round about to take them But there came a messenger unto Saul saying hast thee and come for the Philistines have invaded the Land In that needfull Instant the Lord made a plain way for his servants escape I might Instance in many remarkable passages of Providence rerecorded in humane Authors The tide brought in shel-fish for the besieged Rochellers There was one Merlin who at the Parisian Massacre hid himselfe in a Hay Mow and every day a Hen laid an egge there by which he was kept alive Another was hid in a close hole and a spider weaved a web at the dore so the Persecutors went away But there is no necessity of lighting a candle to the Sun that went before No example may be compared to those which are recorded in the Word of God To Scripture examples I 'le adde Scripture reasons why doth God extend such speciall Providences towards his own people 1. Let us consider the high estimate and value God puts upon R. 1. The high Value God puts upon his Children Mal. 3. 17. Is 28. 5. Exod. 19. 5. Zech. 2. 8. them They are his Jewells They shall be mine saith the Lord of hosts in that day when I make up my Jewells and I will spare them as a man spareth his Son that serveth him They are a crown of glory and a diadem of beauty They are a peculiar treasure they are as deare unto him as the Apple of his eye 2. Consider the relations between God and the godly R. 2. Drawn from the Relation● between God and the godly They are his Children he their Father They are his adopted sons and daughters Now it is the duty of a Father to take speciall care for the preservation of his children They are his spouse and he their Husband For so the Lord professeth Turne O backsliding children saith the Lord for I am married unto you and Jer. 3. 14. I will take you one of a Cittie and two of a family and will bring you to Zion 3. All the promises of God are made unto the godly For R. 3. All the Promises belong to the godly Isa 43. 1 2. saith the Apostle all the promises of God are in Christ yea and Amen unto the glory of God by us Promises of Protection belong to Gods children Thus saith the Lord that created thee O Jacob and he that formed thee O Israel feare not for I have redeemed thee I have called thee by thy Name thou art mine When thou passest through the waters I will be with thee and through the rivers they shall not overflow thee when thou walkest through the fire thou shalt not be burnt neither shall the flame kindle upon thee Promises of direction are made to Gods children Thou shalt guide me with Psal 73. 24. thy counsell and afterward receive me to glory 4. All the Attributs of God put forth themselves for the good R. 4. All Gods Attributes belong to the godly Isa 51. 14. of Gods people viz. His mercy to pardon them his wisdome to counsell them his power to defend them as the Prophet Isaiah saith Feare not thou worme Jacob and yee men
Root and brought death unto all his Posterity And Christ was a common Root and brought life unto all his Posterity They urge likewise Joh. 1. 29. Behold the lamb of God which taketh away the sins of the world A. Those in the world whom he loveth washeth and justifieth it 's not universall not singula gen●rum but genera singulorum Compare this with Mat. 1. 21. And shee shall bring forth a son and thou shalt call his name Jesus for hee shall save his people from their sinnes The third false key is presumption of long life and mercy Neither A third false key Presumption of long life space nor grace are in thine own power God gave Jezabel space but denyed her grace Rev. 2. 21. And I gave her space to repent of her fornication and shee repented not This presumption hath ruined many a soule Many neglect their opportunities run their swinge and career in sinne and presume of mercy but the dore of mercy is shut against them and this key cannot unlock it Now God affords foure true keyes 1. Knowledge The eyes are opened to see the fountaine to 1. True key knowledge look up to the brasen serpent The knowledge of the worth of Christ provokes us to come to him God's people have inlightned judgements they are renewed in the spirit of their minds Eph. 4. 23. 2. Faith to believe that ther 's virtue enough in Christ to cure all 2. True key Faith our diseases both of body and soule Matth 9. 21. For shee said within her selfe if I may but touch his garment I shall be whole 3. Love And this will make us take many journies long and dangerous through fowle weather and it will sweeten all The 3. True key Love beloved object when enjoyed will make amends for all the waiting for it 4. Repentance mourning for sinne Repentance in us causeth 4. True key Repentance God to repent and make his bowels like the sounding of an Harp Jer. 31. 18 19 20. I have heard Ephraim bemoaning himselfe thus Thou hast chastised mee and I was chastised as a Bullock unaccustomed to the yoake turne thou mee and I shall be turned for thou art the Lord my God Surely after that I was turned I repented and after that I was instructed I smote upon my thigh I was ashamed even confounded I did b●are the reproach of my youth Is Ephraim my deare son Is he a pleasant child for since I spake against him I doe earnestly remember him still therefore my bowels are troubled for him I will surely have mercy upon him saith the Lord. You must understand these clave non errante not as if the fountaine was merited for any of these duties for when wee have done all wee can we must acknowledge that wee are unprofitable servants But God hath afforded these meanes keyes and helpes we must make use of them but may not make them our Christs and our Saviours 5. I will adde a 5th Praier This is a key to open and shut 5th True key prayer Heaven James 5. 17 18. Elias was a man subject to like passions as we are and hee prayed earnestly that it might not raine and it rained not upon the earth by the space of three yeares and six months And he prayed againe and the h●aven gave raine and the earth brought forth her fruit Pray that God would wash thee and cleanse thee Psal 51. 10. Create in mee O Lord a cleane heart and ren●w a right spirit within mee 3. I proceed to the third head propounded For whom is this 3. For whom is this Fountaine opened fountaine opened To give in my answer ' I le lay down this truth by way of corollary inferred from the premises That the fountaine of free grace is only opened to the adopted children of God This I shall open and apply briefly for opening whereof I shall propound these ensuing considerations 1. God from all eternity hath elected a peculiar people unto himselfe Consid 1. God from all eternity hath elected a peculiar people unto himselfe according to his owngood pleasure and purpose of his will Now election is of here and there one It 's an act of choice taking some and passing by others Jer. 3. 14. Turne O backsliding children saith the Lord for I am married unto you and I will take you one of a City and two of a familie and I will bring you unto Zion Like gleaning grapes Isai 17. 6. Yet gleaning grapes shall be left in it as the shak●ing of an olive tree two or three berries in the top of the uppermost bough foure or five in the utmost fruitfull branches thereof saith the Lord God of Israel This election hath no other motive but free love and grace Wee were in our blood Ezek. 16. 5 When I passed by thee and saw thee polluted in thy own blood I said unto thee when thou wast in thy blood live yea I said unto thee when thou wast in thy blood live No provision of faith or Repentance mooved God to set his heart upon us as appeares Rom. 9. 11. For the children being not yet borne neither haveing done any good or evill that the purpose of God according to election might stand not of work●s but of him that calleth c. This Postulatum being laid down for undeniable God from all eternity hath elected a peculiar people Hence I frame this syllogisme only the elect have interest in the fountaine of free grace and mercy But only God's adopted children are elect ergo they only have interest in it 2. There are a peculiar people who alone are justified by the free grace of God in Christ Rom. 5. 1. Being justified by faith wee have Consid 2. There are a peculiar poople justified by free grace p●ace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ Rom. 3. 24. Being justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Jesus Christ Now thus I argue Only justified persons have interest in the fountaine of Christ's blood But the sons of God by grace and adoption are only justified persons Ergo they alone have interest in the fountaine of Christ's blood Psal 32. 1 2. Blessed is hee whose trangression is forgiven whose sinne is covered Blessed is the man unto whom the Lord imputeth not iniquity and in whose spirit there is no guil● Iustification is a forensicall terme took from an earthly Tribunal where a person arraign'd and condemned is afterward by virtue of a pardon acquitted 3ly Consider there are a peculiar people effectually called Many Consid 3. There are a peculiar people effectually called have an outward calling and take upon them an outward profession few are inwardly and effectually called This the Apostle presseth 2 Pet. 1. 10. Wherefore the rather brethren give diligence to make your calling and election sure for if you doe these things you shall never fall There are a few and but a very few called out of the world partakers
but when they are got up into the Air. When Gods children are out of their course of duties when they are in Meseck and have their habitation in the Tents of Kedar their spirits are dumpish But when their hearts are set in a right frame when they are exercising holy Duties amongst the society of Saints then are their hearts chearful then are their spirits revived then are they merry indeed 4. Thou complainest of Gods peoples sadness maybe it 's thy company that makes them so They hear thee Swear see thee Drunk O Consid 4. Bad company cause Gods peoples sadness how this troubles them It so troubles the children of God to see any dishonor offered to God as they cannot be merry Psal 119. 136. Rivers of waters run down mine eyes because they keep not thy law But let them come amongst Believers and joyn with them in religious Exercises their wonted joy comes to them again Then their joy is above the joy of Harvest and the dividing of the spoil with the mighty 5. It is not Religion that makes Gods children sad but because Consid 5. Gods people are sad because they are no better they are no more religious They grieve that they can grieve no more They are sorry that they are no more sorry for their sinns They finde many failings they want former Love-tokens and feelings then they mourn and cry out Restore to me the joy of thy salvation They want Gods gracious countenance wherefore they cry out Psal 4. 6. There be many that say Who will shew us any good Lord lift thou up the light of thy countenance upon us 6. This Joy is secret an inward thing which strangers shall not Consid 6. Joy is a secret inward thing intermeddle withal A worldly man cannot judge of this Joy Rev. 2. 17. To him that overcometh will I give to eat of the hidden Manna and will give him a white stone and in the stone a new name written which no man knoweth saving he that receiveth it The joy of the godly is not in outward flashes nor is it to be measur'd by outward aspect This is a hidden thing which so ravisheth their hearts as they cannot utter it Saul could not be merry without a Musitian nor Ahab without Naboth's Vineyard nor Gardiner that bloody Persecutor till he had receiv'd the news of the Martyrs death A godly Mans v Fox Acts and Monum in Q. Mary's Raign joy proceeds from no outward principle A covetous man joys and takes pleasure in his Barns heap'd with Corn and Coffers cramm'd with Gold A voluptuous man joys in Cards Dice Hauks Hounds A Drunkard in his Cups An ambitious man in his Titles Pedegree Preferments But a godly man can rejoyce and be merry without all these His joy ariseth from another principle even the reconciled countenance of God in Jesus Christ Now these Objections being remov'd and my passage thus cleared I come in the second place to prove the truth of the Doctrine 2. The Doctrine proved by particular instances by particular instances And I shall instance in particular Scriptures which give testimony to this truth then in particular persons who by their own experience subscribe to the truth of it And lastly I shall survey the particular ways of godliness and discover the pleasantness of them all and so from an Induction of Particulars sufficiently numbred I shall collect this universal Conclusion That all the ways of godliness are ways of pleasantness 1. For Scripture Testimony meer Quotations would fill a Sermon 1. By Scripture Testimony But I shall gather sparingly from the heap Prov. 22. 17. Bow down thine ear and hear the words of the wise and apply thine heart unto my knowledge for it is a pleasant thing if thou keep them within thee If Pleasure consists in Honors then Wisdom affords it abundantly Prov. 4. 7 8 9. Wisdom is the principal thing therefore get wisdom and with all thy getting get understanding She shall give to thine head an ornament of grace a crown of glory shall she deliver to thee Exalt her and she shall promote thee she shall bring thee to honor when thou dost embrace her Prov. 8. 15 16 17 18 and 31. By me Kings reign and Princes decree Justice By me Princes rule and Nobles even all the Judges of the earth I love them that love me and they that seek me early shall finde me riches and honor are with me yea durable riches and righteousness If Life be a pleasure it 's to be found in Wisdom verse 35. For whoso findeth me findeth life and shall obtain favor of the Lord. If there be pleasure in Singing and Rejoycing it 's promised to the people of God Isa 51. 11 12. Therefore the redeemed of the Lord shall return and come with singing unto Zion and everlasting joy shall be upon their head they shall obtain gladn●ss and joy and sorrow and mourning shall flee away I even I am he that comforteth you who art thou that thou shouldst be afraid of a man that shall die and of the son of man which shall be made as grass I 'le instance in particular Persons who by experience confesse the ways of godliness ways of pleasantness They call the Sabbath a delight Isa 58. 13 14. If thou turn away thy foot from the Sabbath from doing thy pleasure on my holy day and call the Sabbath a delight not doing thine own ways nor finding thine own pleasure nor speaking thine own words then shalt thou delight thy self in the Lord. Nehemiah accounts the joy of the Lord their strength Neh. 8. 10. Then he said unto them Go your way eat the fat and drink the sweet and sena portions unto them for whom nothing is prepared for this day is holy unto our Lord neither be ye sorry for the joy of the Lord is your strength So Habakkuk cap. 3. 17 18. Although the fig-tree shall not bl●ssom neither shall fruit be in the vines the labor of the Olive shall fail and the fields shall yield no meat the Flock shall be cut off from the f●ld and there shall be no Herd in the stalls yet I will rejoyce in the Lord and will joy in the God of my salvation So David danced before the Ark with all his might He makes it the Character of a blessed Man Psal 1. 2. But his delight is in the law of the Lord and in his law doth he meditate day and night And his counsel is Psal 37. 4. Delight thy self also in the Lord and he shall give th●e the desires of thine heart And his own practice is Psal 40. 8. I delight to do thy will O God yea thy law is within my heart Psal 94. 19. In the multitude of my thoughts within me thy comforts delight my soul Psal 119. 16. I will delight my self in thy statutes I will not forget thy word ver 35. Make me to go in the path of thy commandments for therein do I
1. 3. Because of the savour of thy good oyntments thy name is as oyntment poured forth therefore do the virgins love thee Cant. 4. 13 14. Thy plants are an orchard of pomgranates with pleasant fruits camphire with spikenard Spik●nard and saffron calamus and cynamon with all trees of frankincense myrrhe aloes with all the chief spices As for instance Faith is a sweet pleasant Grace it s our life nothing sweeter then life Hab. 2. 4. The just shall live by faith So Hope is sweet pleasant Pro. 10. 28. The hope of the righteous shall be gladness but the expectation of the wicked shall perish Then patience is sweet for it sweetens all hardships and bears all crosses It makes a vertue of necessity Heb. 10. 36. For ye have need of patience that after ye have done the will of God ye might receive the promise Likewise Love is pleasant for it by a Divine Alchimy turns the basest Metals into gold Cant. 8. 6 7. Set me as a seal upon thine heart and as a seal upon thine arm for love is strong as death Many waters cannot quench love neither can the floods drown it Another delightful Grace is Meekness A meek spirit is chearful and reviv'd amidst storms of persecution And so is Humility Passionate and Proud men take no joy in any thing they are of Haman's humor But meek humble self-denying spirits are full of joy and tranquility when the minde is quieted and setled whatever makes against it there 's something to make for it something coming in to support the soul and carry it on chearfully There 's the exercise of no Grace but it 's joyous and delightsom to Gods children Faith Hope Patience Love Meekness Humility are the delight of Gods children 4. Lastly There 's much delight and joy in obedience to Gods 4. There 's much delight and joy in obedience to Gods commandments commandments O how love I thy law Thy law is my delight said David All the Duties of obedience are pleasant to Gods children When the Spouse is once drawn she will be a running Cant. 1. 4. Draw me and I will run after thee So David Psal 119. 32 77. I will run the ways of thy commandments when thou shalt enlarge my heart It was Pauls delight in the place above mention'd and it was Davids rejoycing Psal 119. 14 15 16. I have rejoyced in the ways of thy testimonies as much as in all riches I will delight my self in thy statutes and not forget thy word Obedience to the commandments is easie to Gods children They do it with as much delight as David danced before the Ark. But profane persons do duties as Phaltiel followed Mic●l 'T is said 1 John 5. 3. This is the love of God that we keep his commandments and his commandments are not grievous 'T is easie with Gods children to forbear Swearing they covenant with their tongues It 's easie to forbear Whoredom they covenant with their eyes It 's easie to keep the Sabbath for they call it a delight It 's easie to hear the word and tarry it out patiently for it is a joy unto them Matth. 11. 28 29 30. Come unto me all ye that are weary and heavy laden and I will give you rest Take my yoke upon you and learn of me for I am lowly and meek For my yoke is easie and my burthen is light Do not therefore discourage any from the ways of Religion as the Spies did from entring into Canaan You can subscribe to this by experience you can do much more work when your spirits are chearful when you do your business willingly A chearful minde will facilitate the weightiest enterprize Many use Recreations to refresh their spirits And Recreation may not be us'd otherwise then as a File to Devotion Now the practice of holy Duties is the godly mans recreation It was Christs meat and drink to do his Fathers work and so it is of the godly Therefore they Pray Read Hear Meditate and live chearfully Their souls are delighted and quieted in the performance of duty Carry home this truth with you that there 's more real sollid joy in the ways of Religion then all the delightful ways in the Universe And Oh! that this might stir your affections to be in love with the ways of godliness I now come to the confirmation of the Point by some evident Demonstrations 1. Whatever pleasure men finde in the world is much more to Demonst 1. No pleasure in the world like to the pleasure of godliness be found in the ways of godliness Prov. 3. 14 15. For the merchandise of it is better then the merchandise of silver and the gain thereof then fine gold She is more precious then rubies and all the things thou canst desire are not to be compared unto her Prov. 8. 14 15. Counsel is mine and sound wisdom I am understanding I have strength By me Kings reign and Princes decree justice I shall instance in all the senses The eye takes delight in beautifull Objects It 's a pleasant thing to behold the Sun the Light is pleasant but no such beauty as in the ways of God Solomon speaks much of the Ruby and compares Wisdom to it for its resplendent Lustre Could the beauty of godliness be seen with these eyes they would be dazled Excellens sensibile corrumpit si sensū The eye of man hath seen stately Buildings rich Treasures precious Commodities but the eye of Faith in a Believer seeth the holy Trinity the Throne of God In comparison whereof the bravest sights in the World are nothing even less then nothing 2. The eare is delighted with melodious musicke Men love to heare a skillfull Musitian But in a transcendent manner the eares of the godly are delighted with hearing the word the strong cryes and prayers of God's people the singing of Psalmes Psal 89. 15. Blessed is the people that know the joyfull sound they shall walk O Lord in the light of thy countenance Some antient Philosophers phansied musick in the Orbes and Intelligences to wheel them about That opinion is much controverted amongst themselves But this is an undoubted truth that there 's no musick so delightfull to the eare as duties of religion They are pleasant to God's eare For hee loves to heare his people praying and should not they bee pleasant to ours And besides what wee heare of God now is but for a moment what wee shall heare heareafter shall bee to eternity When the damned are a roaring skriking howling blaspheming cursing weeping and heare nothing else Then the Saints shall heare Hallelujah's praising singing and joyne themselves in a Celestiall Consort 3. The tast shall bee delighted in the ways of godlinesse Gluttons and drunkards delight much in their tast Curious tasts will not bee pleased but with sweet and delightfull things Now O Christian get another tast a spirituall relish of heavenly thinges Psal 34. 4. O tast and see that the Lord is good
Job 12. 3 4. he 's sensible how cheap an esteem they had of him Job 12. 3 4. He was as one mocked of his neighbour The remedies they apply to Job 13 4. him are worse then his disease he speaks plainly to them Job 13. 4. But ye are forgers of lies ye are all Physitians of no value He 's surrounded with miseries he 's like a very Skeleton all his Bones may be told he lives a dying life Mark his Question Job 13. 14. he gives in an excellent Answer and Resolution Job 13. 15. But that which renews his grief is Gods hiding his face from him if men fail him and despise him he can easilier brook that he stands upon his vindication quoad hominem but if God be angry and account him an enemy there 's his grief that 's the wound indeed v. 24. He further expostulates the matter v. 25. i. e. Wilt thou break that which hath no power A leaf is a weak thing it s driven too and fro Wilt thou set thy power against weakness and wilt thou pursue the dry stubble that will be soon on a flame and consumed Now Job is inquisitive after the cause God is angry but there 's good cause for it God writes bitter things against him but youthful sins are call'd to remembrance and now reckoned for in old Age. The words read are a heavy Charge or a Bill of Indictment against Divis 1. 2. 1. 2. 3. a Delinquent wherein you have two generals 1. The Charge it self 2. The Sentence given upon it In the Charge you are to consider of the matter or thing charged 1. Iniquities 2. The aggravation of them drawn from the Age that commits them they are sins of youth 3. The person against whom this Charge was drawn viz. against Job In the Sentence given you have here set down sore afflictions which Job reckons as exceeding heavy upon him which may be represented by these aggravations 1. These are not ordinary afflictions but bitter things 2. They 1. 2. 1. 2. are assured and made firm to him two ways 1. By writing there is as it were a writing drawn firm and sure 2. By possession And makest me to possess as if he had authentick * Scribis tand●m sententiaque tuâ manu sigillo munis ut acerbissunâ morte plectar Pineda in Loc. Ascribis sive imputas mihi quae admisi in juventute quorum non recordor amplius Vatabl. Rev. 10. 10. Writings and Livery and Seisin given for these bitter things Now in handling this Scripture I shall first premise an Explication of the words then draw forth a point of Doctrine and prove it and so conclude with particular Application For Explication of the words these Queries are to be resolved 1. What is meant by bitter things in the Text some understand by bitter things the evil of sin and indeed sin is a very bitter thing Deut. 29. 18. It is called a root that beareth gall and wormwood There 's an Exposition of this place Heb. 12. 15. where it is called a root of bitterness Though sin be sweet in the acting yet there will be bitterness in the end like the Roll which was sweet in the mouth but bitter in the belly This is a plain truth that sin will bring all bitterness to the soul yet I shall rather incline to † Malim acerba intelligi supplicia dolores gravissimos qui bus discruciatur Merc. Mercers Exposition By bitter things he understands bitter punishments and grievous sorrows wherewith Job was afflicted And this I take to be the proper meaning you shall hear Job complaining of terrors pouring out his soul c. Job 30. 15 16 17 18 19. Now amongst several kindes of savours bitterness is most offensive to the Pallate Bitterness is spoken of and applyed to sad afflicted conditions Ruth 1. v. 20. Call me not Naomi i. e. pleasant and delectable but call me Marah i. e. Bitter for the Ruth 1. 20. Lord hath dealt very bitterly with me Afflictions in themselves are very grievous and bitter most distasteful to the Pallate No chastening for the present seemeth to be joyous but grievous So then Heb. 12. 11. by bitter things we are to understand those sad crosses and bitter afflictions which were incumbent upon Job those Arrows of the Almighty which stuck fast in his sides all evils of punishment or chastisement 2. What 's meant by writing of bitter things This saith Learned Q. 2. Scribendi verbum judiciale ●uto ut Grae●i dicunt Merc. in Loc. Mercer is a judicial phrase the Graecians were wont to write these Sentences in their judicial proceedings Writing alludes to that which in Civil Law is an a●cusation called Libelling It s the usual course of Law to bring in Charges or Bills of Indictment in writing against the Offender * Caryl In locum A Reverend Divine observes on the place That God hath a double Book and both in a Figure he hath a Book of resolved Decrees and a Book of his acted Providences This Book of his acted Providences is but a Transcript of the former Job is to be understood of this latter Book of Providences in which God writ bitter things against him By Writing Chrysost Chrysostome understands The firm and irrevocable Decree of the Judge This writing is firm and stedfast 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith John 19. 22. Dan. 6. 8. Job 31. 35. Pilate which is as if he should say It is written under my hand it shall stand like the Laws of the Medes and Persians which alter not Jobs wish gives a good gloss to our assertion Job 31. 35. where he marketh that that his Adversary had written a Book against him The Laws of Draco were written in Blood and the Decrees of God against Job as he conceived were written with gall and wormwood 3. Why doth Job make such peculiar mention of the sins of his Q. 3. youth * Quidam in locū existimāt suae Adolescentiae peccata vocare quae à filiis suis Adolescentulis perpetrata fuissent Pineda in Loc. Job 1. 5. Why is such a brand of Infamy put upon young men For Answer Pineda mentions That some think that God imputes his childrens sins unto him as if he were remiss in his duty towards them And the version of the 70. seems to favor this sense 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. Thou hast imposed or laid upon me But this sense is foreign though God doth punish Children for their Parents and Parents for their Childrens sins yet I conceive it not so to be understood here and we have a good warrant for a more charitable opinion of Job c 1. v. 5. because we read he sanctified his sons Job here is to be understood speaking of his own personal sins Sins of Infancy and Childhood could not so well be remembred but youthful sins may more easily be called to remembrance Ita Jobus ipse
us to repentance to Dan. 4. 27. break off our sins by repentance that our tranquillity may be lengthned and that there may be a healing of our errors The use we are to make is that of the Apostle 1 Cor. 10. 6. Now these things were our examples to the intent we should not lust after evil things as they also lusted Let us not pass uncharitable censures upon others as greater sinners for greater sufferings but remember that except we Luke 13. 5. repent we shall likewise perish Seventhly and lastly Let us consider how the Spirit of God 7 The Spirit strives by personal judgements strives by personal Judgements inslicted on our selves There is a Judgement of chastisement and a Judgement of revenge God sends Judgements by way of revenge upon the wicked of the World but by way of chastisement unto his own children When God takes away thy riches and other outward comforts as a childe a wife c. by these the Spirit of God strives with thee and sends thee to God to inquire into the cause and walk more closely and humbly with God and thy duty is to pray to God to teach thee what thou understandest not If God send thee a sore disease a grievous pain suppose the Stone Strangury Collick c. by all these the Spirit strives with thee and reads thee a Lecture of thy Mortality and warneth thee to make a serious and speedy preparation for death Afflictions are sent by God as Scullions to scour away the rust and canker of Gods children They are the Shepheards Dogs to bring home the straying Sheep Luther saith Afflictions teach us to understand Scripture Where God teacheth with the rod there he bestoweth a choice blessing Psal 94. 12. Blessed is the man whom thou chastenest O Lord and teachest him out of thy Law God sends affliction on an errand Go affliction take down such a mans pride goe awaken another from his security Affliction is Gods Ordinance and with the same hand he gives Jesus Christ that he gives correction to his own children Thus the Spirit strives by personal judgements and afflictions The use we must continually make is Heb. 12. 5 6. My son despise not thou the chastening of the Lord nor faint when thou art rebuked of him for whom the Lord loveth he chasteneth and scourgeth every son whom he receiveth Hence saith the Apo●●le Rom. 5. 3. We glory in tribulation knowing that tribulation worketh patience and Jam●s 1. 2. My brethren count it all joy when ye fall into divers temptations The rod hath a voice and we are call'd upon Mich. 6. 9. Hear ye the rod and who hath appointed it Thus you have heard how Gods Spirit strives by its motions by the Ministery of the Word the checks of Conscience tenders of Mercy exercise of patience and long-suffering inslicting of exemplary and signal Judgements upon others and personal Judgements upon our selves Now the Lord give us his Grace and teach us to make much of and cherish the strivings of his holy Spirit and let us all deprecate the fearful judgement in the Text My spirit shall no longer strive with you Iudgement and Mercy Set forth from Gen. 6. 3. HAving dispatcht those two Particulars according to my Serm. 3. at St. Mary's Oxon Jan. 19. 1651. Three Reasons of the Doctrine Reas 1. From the Text because man is flesh method propounded in the unfolding of this Text In the third place I am to enquire into the Grounds and ●easons for the further confirmation of the Point Amongst many that may be given I shall reduce the Reasons of the Text into three Heads The first shall be drawn from the very reason in the Text for that he also is flesh Man is corrupted by reason of sin Man was created statu integro in integrity and innocency resembling the Image of God in righteousness and holiness but now statu corrupto by reason of Adams prevarication he became depraved in the faculties of his soul and all the members of his body and they are become instruments unto wickedness The Holy Ghost sets forth sinful man in a full Character Psal 14. 1 2 3. The fool hath said in his heart there is no God they are corrupt they have done abominable works there is none that doeth good The Lord looked down from Heaven upon the children of men to see whether there were any that did understand and seek God They are all gone aside they are become altogether filthy there is none that doth good no not one Suppose we heard the Lord thus expostulating the case Is this man Is this he that I advanced to the highest rank of visible Creatures whom I created after mine own Image whom I endowed with noble faculties an understanding the bright luminary of the soul to know his Maker and a will to obey him Is he now become flesh fleshly in his imagination fleshly minded Doth he walk after the flesh minding the things of the flesh Hath he thus turn'd Apostate rebell'd against his Lord and Maker This charge being all very true wherefore should I have any more to do with him wherefore should my Spirit strive with vile sinful flesh Thus God might plead and in judgement withdraw the strivings of his holy Spirit Betwixt the spirit and the flesh what agreement can there be The Spirit will not thus be unequally yoaked since man is become thus fleshly thus depraved such a degenerate Plant so corrupt its just with Gods spirit to strive no longer with man By flesh in Scripture is comprehended a Mass of corruption Apostoli verba docent haec duo affectuum genera esse opposita Quae ut intelligamus constitutū fit affectum carnis nihil aliud esse quam usum virium humanaru● semotâ gratiâ Affectus autem spiritus est impulsus divini afflatus usus gratiae Christi Pet. Mart. in Loc. man in his worst estate Rom. 8. 5. They that are after the flesh doe minde the things of the flesh What is predicated of it v. 6 7 8 9. To be carnally minded is death because the carnal minde is enmity against God So then they that are in the flesh cannot please God And what an Antithesis is there between flesh and spirit v. 13. For if ye live after the flesh ye shall die but if ye through the spirit do mortifie the deeds of the body ye shall live The same disproportion there is as between death and life heaven and hell salvation and damnation That God strives with any is a great mercy that the Spirit waits knocking at our doors when as he might knock us down dead O great mercy But when the Spirit strives and flesh resists its motions the Spirit spends his sacred breath wooing us and inviting us to do good unto our own souls and the carnal minde bids defiance unto the Spirit of grace when notwithstanding all the beseechings wooings and sollicitations of the Spirit the flesh rebels carnal
carry them with expedition the day of their Massacre was appointed viz. on the thirteenth day of the Month Adar The news hereof was cause of great sorrow and perplexity to the Jews Esther and her Maids fasted Mordecai cries and rends his cloathes but withall Mordecai puts Esther in mind to do what she could for prevention Who knoweth whether thou art come to the kingdome for such a time as this Esth 4. 14. A very good argument to make the best use of that providence and prize put into her hands to bee the Jews Advocate After fasting and praying she is steel'd with courage and heroick resolution and so she resolves then will I goe in unto the King which is not according to the Law and if I perish I perish Esth 4. 16. She goeth into the inward Court the King holds forth the Golden Scepter he asks her what her request was shee invites the King and Haman to a Banquet the King and Haman go to her Banquet the King bids her make her request she invites the King the second time and in the mean time Haman braggs of that great honour put upon him whereas the banquet indeed proved but a snare to him The Queen impeacheth Haman of a bloody Plot the King was wroth with Haman they cover Hamans face the Chamberlain informs of a Gallows that Haman had made for Mordecai by the Kings appointment hee was forthwith hanged thereon Further yet to reverse the mischievous device of Haman upon Esthers supplication the Scribes were called and the Posts sent with letters to give liberty to the Jews to stand upon their guard Hamans ten Sons were hanged so that the devices of that wicked Haman fell upon his own pate now the day of sorrow being turned to a good day from a day of mourning to a day of joy and rejoycing it 's high time to set a special mark upon so special a deliverance to set time apart for the commemoration of so eminent a deliverance and this was their practice in the words of the Text. The Jews ordained c. which words containe an institution of Divis two Festivall daies in memorial of that wonderfull deliverance from Hamans intended massacre wherein you have first the names 1. The Names given to the solemn Feasts or Eucharistical dayes Purim i. Lots Pur the Persian word signifies a Lot in Hebrew it signifieth to disappoint and in Greek it signifieth fire the Lot was cast for destruction of the Jews but it fell not on those upon whom the enemy would have cast it it was disappointed and therefore as a Learned B. Andrews man wittily observes that the God of the Hebrews gave an Hebrew Pur to the Persian Pur disappointing the Persian Lot so though it was cast it was not suffered to light upon the people of the Jews and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth fire which was intended to blow up the Parliament blessed be God did not singe any of their garments neither did the smel of fire passe upon them Secondly the strict observation of those daies it 's said should 2. The observation of the dayes not fail among the Jews c. The 70 render the words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They take care that they and their children after them every Generation Family and Province and City should keep these dayes thus they hand them over to Posterity and transmit these Records of Deliverance to their childrens children and would have the memory of them perpetuated from generation to generation Thus you have heard the deliverance and the duty ensuing thereupon from the example of the Jews in my Text I commend one observation unto your practise which compriseth the sense of the Text That its the duty of a delivered people to keep mercies upon record and make a thankfull remembrance of signall deliverances and Doct. perpetuate the memoriall thereof from generation to generation This takes in the scope and drift of this Text It 's a word spoken ●n due season the Lord make it as profitable for us as it is spoken seasonably unto us Neither doe we tread in untrackt p●ths I might enlarge my self in a cloud of witnesses We have many Parallel examples of Nations and persons delivered who in perpetuam rei memoriam have set a mark upon the place and upon the day resolving never to let slip the remembrance of the mercies or deliverances vouchsafed never to pass an Act of Oblivion of the loving kindness of the Lord. As for instance the Israelites made Songs of Thanksgiving in memorial of their deliverance from Pharaoh Exod. 15. and from Jabin and Sisera Judg. 5. Jehoshaphat and his people met together at the valley of Beracah to ●raise the Lord. Goliahs sword was kept as a trophy of victory 2 Chr. 20. 26. The Israelites set up stones as Pillars for the remembrance of the drying up of Iordan they used to set a mark upon the place and call it Eben-ezer 1 Sam. 7. 12. And for personal deliverances sometimes they gave significant names as Laeah called her fourth Sonne Judah Now saith she will I praise the Lord. Hezekiah made a Poem of gratitude Is 38. 9. David made multitudes of Psalmes for peculiar deliverances as we may read Psal 7. Ps 18. Ps 34. Ps 52. Ps 54. Ps 57. Ps 59. and least his memory should faile the 38 Psalm and the 70 Psalm have one and the same inscription A Psalme of David to bring to remembrance I need adde no more examples you have here given you good measure full prest and running over Let us goe and do likewise Likewise we have variety of Scripture precepts in this particular there 's a special injunction Deut. 32. 7. Remember the dayes of old There was a special command Deut. 16. 1. Observe the Month of Abib And to remember Amalek as we may read Deut. 25. 17. 18. compared with Exod. 17. 14. The self-same numerical day must be Chronicled Ezek. 24. 2. Balack's and Balaam's mischievous plot are to be remembred Mich. 6. 5. ● Chronicle is required Ps 102. 18. And now let 's enquire into the grounds of this Doctrine Some reasons thereof may be these 1. Because the name and honour of God is from eternity to eternity Reas 1. Because Gods name and honour is from eternity to eternity and it s an evidence of our love to God when wee desire that Gods name may out-live ours Wee poor creat●r●s dust and ashes live but a little while in this world and what 's our life but a vapour a hands-breadth a flower swister than a Weavers Shuttle ●e must therefore tell of the goodness of God in the ears of our children and let them tell it in the ears of their children let 's make a Chronicle of Gods deliverences and leave behind us a standing Record that when we are dead and rotten the memo●ial of Gods deliverances may be reviv'd and the remembran●e of them never faile The Mariners used to hang
opinion of Religion and think any thing will serve as if any thing were good enough for God Such a slight service was done by Gehazi he went on before and layd his staffe upon the child and there was no appearance of life in the child but the Prophet Elisha layd his hand on the childs hand his mouth on the childs mouth c. and in good earnest set upon the work and the spirit of the child revived It 's the observation of a Reverend Mr. Jerem. Burroughs and precious Divine that of all spirits hee desired to be delivered from a frothy spirit it 's therefore a matter of lamentation and ought in good earnest to be bewailed to consider with what irreverence formalities and slightnesse of the spirit many set upon duty some will pray partly between sleeping and waking so drowsily that they can scarce pronounce their words aright Others will mumble over a few words of course in their beds Neither of these think of that reverence that belongs to the great God of heaven and earth and that he requires the Male the best we can offer unto him A third Impediment is a worldly spirit A heart swallowed up Imped 3. A wordly spirit with the love of the world will never give God the best such spirits wil grudge any thing for God because the world hath seized on their spirits and took up their affections Their breath words conversations even all favours of the world Now this love of the world is the root of all evill and enmity against God Demas forsook the Apostles society The young man preferred earthly treasures before heavenly where the world sits close and the heart is enamoured with the love of the world there Christs riches and his excellencies are undervalued A fourth Impediment is an unbeleeving heart Christ is not a Imped 4. An unbeleeving heart whit regarded amongst unbeleevers onely beleevers account him precious 1 Pet. 2. 7. He that knew the worth of the pearl of price and beleeved there was such vertue in it sold all to purchase it Mat. 13. 46 47. These Impediments being removed some speciall duties ought to be practised 1. Alwaies set before thine eyes the great God of heaven and Dut. 1. Set God before thine eyes earth as omnipresent pure and omnipotent who seeth knoweth and searcheth all hearts This consideration will make thee afraid to present any thing vile and refuse unto so great so holy a Lord God How thou prayest in thy closet what thy secret reserved thoughts are what thy intentions are in any duty all are naked unto that great and glorious Majesty with whom thou hast to deale 2. Labour for sincerity of heart That 's it which will carry thee Dut. 2. Labour for sincerity of heart through all brakes bryars difficulties and perplexities whatsoever It 's said Asa's heart was upright there 's a neverthelesse put in 2 Chron 15. 17. It 's this which comforted Hezekiah when the sentence of death was past against him 2 King 20. 3. It 's that which God requires even truth in the inward parts Ps 51. 6. It 's that which is the cause of rejoycing 2 Cor. 1. 12. Nathaniels character to be an Israelite indeed without guile Joh. 1. 47. The upright are they which love Christ Cant. 1. 4. And they are Gods delight Prov. 11. 20. Their Tabernacle shall flourish Prov. 14. 11. Their high way is to depart from evill Prov. 16. 17. They walk surely Prov. 10. 9. and no good thing will God withhold from them Ps 84. 11. Their end is peace Psal 37. 37. Upright walking with God will carry a man through all troubles whatsoever and in life and death will yeeld matter of abundance of consolation 3. Embrace the present season of Grace Seek ye the Lord whilst Dut. 3. Embrace the present season he may be found call ye upon him whilst he is near Isa 55. 6. Now give God your strength and marrow and lay aside all delayes Apologies and Procrastinations 4. Be much in Prayer and Supplication that what ever thou Dut. 4. Be much in Prayer dost what duty whatsoever service thou offerest unto God that he would accept thee through Jesus Christ As the Ancients held the Plough and prayed so hear and meditate on Gods Word keep the Lords Sabboth holy and pray for a blessing upon all from heaven Blesse Lord his substance Deut. 33. 11. 5. Make Religion thy work the grand design thou drivest Let Dut. 5. Make Religion thy work thy generall calling as a Christian have the preheminence of thy particular calling in the world Seek first the Kingdome of God Mat. 6. 33. The last Use is for Consolation unto those who to the utmost in Vse 5. For Consolation sincerity of heart endeavour to walk before the Lord. Thus Enoch walked with God Gen. 5. 24. Zachary and Elizabeth walked in Gods Commandments blameless Luk. 1. 6. David was a man after Gods own heart Yet the best of Gods children have their failings Jacob confest himself not worthy of the least of Gods mercyes c. David confest himself as foolish as a bruit Beast and wise Agur acknowledged that he had not the understanding of a man It 's a great cause of greif and a burthen to the spirits of Gods dearest children to consider how much they faile in duties Their dulnesse deadnesse disorder of spirit much afflicteth them What I shall further adde shall be comprised in these ensuing considerations Consid 1. Infirmities are incident to the best 1. Infirmities are incident unto the best of Christians I sleep saith the Spouse Paul complains of a body of sin and of flesh and of an antipathy between flesh and spirit 2. Gods children allow not themselves in sinne but mourn Consid 2. Gods childrē allow not themselves in sin Consid 3. Sincerity is accepted Consid 4. Where sincerity is there is an endeavour after more grace Consid 5. Others examples are not just standards Consid 6 Perseverance shall obtaine the Crown for sinne Sinne is their exceeding great grief and burthen 3. Where the heart is sincere it is accepted a willing mind is accepted 2 Cor. 8. 12. 4. Where the heart is sincere it is not contented with what it hath already attained but labours for more grace Phil. 3. 13 14. 5. Consider that others examples and attainments are not that standard for every one to measure himself by No examples but that of Jesus Christ is every way authentique Some will say on one hand Such and such goe no further and will not this serve my turne others say such goe so farre and if I cannot come near them I may justly suspect my self to be an Hypocrite Neither this nor that must determine us 6. And lastly consider that Perseverance shall obtain the Crown Rev. 2. 15. Many beginne well and fly back Of all Apostates are most hated by God But as for such who persevere in Grace and
walk in sincerity before the Lord these shall be happy unto all Eternity these having been faithfull unto the death shall receive a Crowne of Life * ⁎ * The End of the Second Decad. A THIRD DECAD OF SERMONS PREACHED TO THE VNIVERSITY AT St MARIES IN OXFORD By HENRY WILKINSON D. D. and Principall of Magdalen Hall in OXFORD 2 Tim. 1. 13. Hold fast the forme of Sound Words which thou hast heard of me in Faith and Love which is in Christ Jesus OXFORD Printed by W. H. for THOMAS ROBINSON Anno Domini M.DC.LX TO THE READER I HERE present unto thee Christian Reader A third Decad of Sermons of the same complexion with the rest answering those two immediatly preceding as face in water answers face By them the Author may be knowne to be one and the same man not varying a whit from his Principles by reason of vicissitude of times The first of these Sermons was preacht at the Publick Act and was formerly printed which notwithstanding the derision of some through the Incouragement and approbation of others whose Judgment I preferre many degrees before my owne is now againe presented to publick View in this second Edition None of the other sermons of this Decad and none of the two other Decads were ever yet printed before neither had now if some both Godly and Learned who are better able to judge had not thought farre better of them then I ever durst of any thing of my own notwithstanding what paines soever it cost me It 's farre from my Intention to justify my selfe but I shall alwaies with Jacob acknowledge my selfe not worthy of the least of all the mercyes and of all the Gen. 32. 10. truth c which the Lord through riches of mercy hath shewed unto me It cannot be denyed but ought to be acknowledged with renewed thankfulnesse that now adaies we have more helps on all hands if we had our eyes in our Heads and greater advantages then our Predecessors ever enjoyed since Printing came up And since the Gospell in it's Purity and Liberty was restored unto England as Reverend Latimer used to pray that God would restore the Gospell unto England once againe once againe We have variety of Prices both by printing and preaching put into our hands to get divine wisdome withall Oh! that we had this great mercy of mercyes vouchsafed to us that the Lord would bestow upon us such good hearts as to Husband and improove all those spirituall Talents for the best advantage of our immortall soules That saying of a Learned Author hath often come into my deliberate thoughts Ideo scribuntur omnes Libri ut unus emendetur conscientiae Now if by any thing that I have wrote the of Christians may thrive the better and be built up in their faith I have my desire accomplisht Not unto me not to the best of my paines and endeavours but unto the name of Jesus Christ be all the praise and glory It 's not my purpose to detaine thee Reader in a longer Epistle Only thus much I thought good to premise to assure thee that this last Decad is of the same stamp and breaths forth the same spirit and pursues the same plaine stile with those two which according to order went before The designe I only drive at as farre as I apprehend is the eternall good of mine and thine immortall soule so that our profitting may appeare unto all that some addition may be made unto our spirituall stature Be pleased therefore to read deliberately and to joyne prayer and meditation with reading Lay aside all prejudicate opinions and through the meannesse of the Instrument look with the eye of faith unto Jesus Christ the great Counsellour and Prophet who directs and instructs his people and guides them unto all truth And what ever good thou receivest give Christ the praise of all and set the Crowne upon his head alone And in thy serious addressesse unto the throne of grace remember him which in love to thy soule hath made these sermons publick Do not despise the day of small things undervalue not the Reare of the Christian Army Do not entertaine a slight opinion of any of the meanest yet faithfull Labourers in Gods Vine-yard who desires and endeavours to approove himselfe faithfull such a one I desire to be and remaine Thy servant and Brother in Christ Jesus HENRY WILKINSON The Contents of the Third Decad. SERM. I. 2 COr 5. 20. Now then we are Ambassadors for Chri●t as though God did beseech you by us we pray you in Christs stead be yee reconciled to God The Context expounded p. 2 3 4. The Text divided and expounded p. 5 6 7. The Doctrine handled by prooving and improoving all by particular Application p. 9. The Doctrine prooved first by Scripture p. 10 11. Then by three Reasons 1. From foure Properties of Ambassadors p. 12 13 14 15. 2. From the Benefit of a reconciled estate p. 16. 3. From the misery of an unreconciled estate p. 17. Vse for Exhortation 1. To Ministers p. 17 18 19 20 21 22 23. 2. To people p. 25. 3. Characters of a reconciled estate p. 27 28 29 30. Five Motives p. 31 32 33 34 35 36. SERM. II. HEb 1. 14. Are they not all Ministring spirits sent forth to Minister for these who shall be heires of salvation Text divided p. 38. Doct. It pleaseth God to make use of the Ministery of Angels for the good of his Children p. 38. Q. 1. What Angels are p. 39 40 41. Q. 2. How many sorts of Angel sthere p. 42 43. Q. 3. What are the offices of Angels p. 43 44 45 46. Q. 4. Whether every Saint hath a peculiar Angell keeper p. 46 47. Q. 5. What is the knowledge of Angels p. 47 48. Vse 1. For Information in 2 particulars p. 49 50. Vse 2. For Instruction in 3 particulars p. 50. Vse 3. For Consolation in 3 particulars p. 51. SERM. III. 2. CHron 16. 9. The eyes of the Lord run to and for throughout the whole earth to shew himselfe strong in the behalfe of those whose heart is perfect towards him p. 52. Text divided p. 53. Doct. 1. That there is a Providence of God which extends it selfe to the ordering and governing of all the creatures throughout the whole world p. 55. The Doctrine prooved by Scripture p. 55 56. And by 6 Reasons p. 57 58 59. Of the nature of Providence p. 59 60. Vse 1. For Confutation of Epicures c. p. 61. Vse 2. For Reproofe ib. Vse 3. For Instruction in 6 Duties p. 61 62. Doct. 2. As there is a generall providence towards all so there is a speciall distinguishing Providence towards all Gods children p. 62. Doctrine prooved by Scripture example p. 62 63. By 6 Reasons p. 64 65. Vse 1. For Reproofe p. 65. Vse 2. For Instruction p. 66. Vse 3. For Consolation six Duties prest pag. 66. 67. SERM. IV. I Sai 66. 6 7. Yee that make mention of the Lord keep not
the dore of the Sanctuary is yet opened and a * Ezra 9. 8. nail is yet left in the holy place you have bread in the morning and in the evening and more plenty of spirituall food on the Sabbath day and week daies then heretofore Much is given unto you and much required from you Where God hath sown so liberally he expects as plentifull an harvest Now you hear the joyfull sound even the word of reconciliation and substance of our Embassie is to intreat you to consider the value and dignity of your Heavenly born being soules and to seek after reconciliation otherwise you are undone to all eternity Now Christ holds out a white flag for a parley of peace now the King of Heaven holds out the golden Scepter O come and touch the top thereof and live The Port-cullis is not yet let down The Judge hath not yet vailed his face The dore of hope is not yet shut up the holy Ghost calls † Isa 55. 6. Seek the Lord whilest he may be found call upon him whilest he is neer ‖ 2 Cor. 6 2. Nemo tam divos habuit faventes crastinum ut possit sibi polliceri Senec. Now is the day of salvation None of us can promise to our selves a morrow no not the least moment of time and if we neglect this golden opportunity and season of grace offered we may never live to have another tendred unto us All the World cannot call back the least minute of time when once it is past it 's like a swift stream or an arrow out of a b●w not to be recalled Wherefore as you consult the eternal good of your immortal souls be intreated to improve all the prizes and Talents that God puts into your hands to get Wisdome withall When the Lord bids you seek his face O that your hearts with all readinesse might return this answer * Psal 27. 8. Thy face Lord will I seek God hath put this word into my mouth and here fixt my thoughts after I had severall other subjects in my eye and hath sent me on this very errand to treat on this great Theame of reconciliation unto God And now what message shall I return unto him that hath sent me What account shall I give at the last day of the entertainment of this word What shall I say more You have life and death set before you this day viz. The happinesse of a reconciled estate and the misery of an unreconciled estate O that the Lord would engage you all to make the better choyce by heark●ing unto this word of reconciliation and unfainedly embracing the same and so your souls shall live † 2. Tim. 2. 7. Consider what I have said and the Lord give you understanding in all things THE MINISTERY OF ANGELLS Heb. 1. 14. Are they not all Ministring spirits sent forth to Minister for them who shall be heires of salvation TO draw down the context to the text we are to Sermon 2. Preached at S. Marye's Oxon. Oct. 3. 1658. Vers 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Solis radii sunt ejusdem naturae cum sole ab eodem propagatione distinguuntur avelluntur nunquam hac Metaphorâ divinam filii naturam convenientissime expressit Apostolus Et character ●icitur expressa imago Archetypi Pareus in loc take speciall notice of the Excellency and dignity of Christ represented unto us in this chapter especially Vers 3. Who being the brightness of his glory and the express image of his person and upholding all things by the Word of his Power when he had by himselfe purged our sinnes sat down on the right hand of the Majesty on High And by way of Comparison the Apostle further inhanceth the honour and preheminence of Christ For after he had compared Christ with the Angells he sets the Crown on Christs head his name is more excellent than theirs Vers 4. 5. Being made so much better then the Angells as he hath by inheritance obtained a more excellent name then they For unto which of the Angells said he at any time Thou art my son this day have I begotten thee And againe I Will be to him a Father and he shall be to me a Son Christ is a Son the Angells his servants they may not be worshipped themselves but they must worship Christ Vers 6. 7. Let all the Angells of God worship him Of his Angells he saith who maketh his Angells spirits and his Ministers a flame of fire And further honour is ascribed to the Son which is not to Angells Vers 8. 9. Vnto the Son he saith Thy throne O God is for ever and ever a scepter of righteousnesse is the scepter of thy Kingdome Thou hast loved righteousnesse and hated iniquity therefore God even thy God hath anointed thee with the oyle of gladnesse above thy fellowes And further Christ is a Lord and Creatour the Angells servants and creatures Christ is advanced to the Throne He is the Soveraign Lord of all Vers 13. The Angells ministering spirits subservient to Christ and at his command and when commissionated by him helpfull and serviceable unto all the children of God It is demanded by way of interrogation in the Text Are they not all Ministring spirits c. Which scripture sets forth clearly the Protection of Angells their Ministery and serviceablenesse unto the children of God A point seldome taught yet very usefull comfortable and of singular concernment unto all the children of God! And being that its the duty of the Minister to declare unto people the whole councell of God that which hath oft been in my intention I shall now endeavour to handle with all the perspicuity that I can The words contain a question Are they not all Ministring spirits Divis which being resolved the answer is obvious that the Angells are all Ministring spirits More particularly we are to observe a Description of Angells 1. From their nature Spirits 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 implied 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 exprest 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. From their office Ministring 3. Their commission Sent. 4. Whose Ministers they are 1. Primarily Christs And secondarily Christs children 5. The universality All All the Angells Here 's the universality of the object and it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and universality of the subject all the Angells All that are heires none left out none exempted from the benefit of the service of all the Angells of God All that are heires of Salvation all Christs children have interest in their protection Many scruples may be made and many things require explication what requires opening shall be endeavoured in the enlargement of one intire doctrine whereon I purpose to fix Thus I propound it to you That it pleaseth God to make use of the Ministery of Angells for Doct. the good of his Children This is the point I aime at from this
of Israel I will help thee saith the Lord and thy Redeemer the holy one of Israel 5. The ministery of Angells is imployed for their defence The R. 5. The Ministery of Angells is imployed for the defence of the godly Heb. 1. 14. Angell of the Lord encampeth round about them that feare him and delivereth them Are they not all Ministring Spirits sent forth to Minister for them who shall be heires of Salvation And for the offence of their enemies as in the case of Senacherib and Herod who fell by the Angell of the Lord. 6. The Saints experiences are abundant proofe hereof Pa●l V. Ps 18. t●tle R. 6. Drawn from Saints Experiences speaks how God delivered him out of the hand of the Lion He spake of Nero that cruell Persecutor of the Church What Protections deliverances have Gods people met withall What Providences to supply their wants in the most needfull instant What deliverances from Fire Water Robbers Murtherers Great things can many of Gods children speak in this particular Time would faile me to produce those Instances which Saints experiences have abundantly afforded in this Particular This then being so this Doctrine may be serviceable for these uses 1. To reprove the madnesse and folly of wicked men who Vse 1. For Reproofe Ps 37. 32 33. set themselves in opposition against Gods children They labour to root out their memory and plot their utter ruine and destruction but though the wicked watcheth the righteous and seeketh to s●ay him the Lord will not leave him in his hand nor condemne him when he is judged Wicked men are limitted and can go not a jot further then God will permit them 2. Here 's matter of Instruction to the children of God Doth Vse 2. For Instruction God take the care of them Let them be sure to keep in Gods waies and walke according to the rule of his Word Let none neglect meanes appointed by God under any presumptions of Providence that would be a tempting of God You know how the Devill tempted Christ to leap down the Pinacle when as there was a paire of staires an ordinary way to go up and down Let none upon pretence of secret impulses of their owne spirits act any irregular thing upon Pretence of Providence Gods Providences do not contradict the rule of the word Let none distrust Providence in their greatest straits and difficulties God hath supplyed and is able still to supply He hath delivered and is able still to deliver Read two experiences one of David against the Lion and Beare Thy servant saith David to Saul slew both the Lion and the Beare and this uncircumcised Philistine 1 Sam. 17. 36 shall be as one of them Another deliverance we read is of the children of Israel against Pharaoh Thou didst saith the Psalmist divide the Sea by thy strength thou breakest the heads of the Dragons in Psal 74. 14. the waters Thou breake●t the heads of Leviathan in peices and gavest him to be meat for the people inhabiting the wildernesse This was spoken of Pharaoh and his host These examples drawn from experience and former mercyes should be as so many Ingagements to trust God for the time to come Here 's one Use more and that is for consolation unto Gods Vse 3. For Consolation children They are in Covenant and under the wings of speciall Providence As an Eagle stirreth up her nest fluttereth over her young Deut. 32. 11. spreadeth abroad her wings taketh them beareth them on her wings So the Lord alone did lead him and there was no strange God with him He promiseth to be their Rereward Then shall thy light Isa 58. 8. breake forth as the morning and thine health shall spring forth speedily and thy righteousnesse shall go before thee the glory of the Lord shall be thy Rereward This is an allusion to Gods carrying his children out of Egypt And the Lord went before them by day in a Exo. 13. 21. pillar of a cloude to lead them the way and by night in a pillar of fire to give them light to go by day and night Now against all despondencies feares doubts dangers let Gods children comfort themselves with the consideration of Gods speciall Providence God takes care and makes speciall Provision for them wherefore let them do their duty and leave all issues to God The duties are these 1. To study the Word and be well acquainted with it The Scripture is the sure Word of Prophesy certaine infallible we must trust and venture all upon it 2. To live by faith when sence failes let not faith faile Believe God is as good as his word Believe though sence and reason be non-plusd So did Abraham in the case of Sarah and so in the case of Isaac No life to that mentioned by the Apostle to live by the faith of the Son of God Gal. 2. 20. 3. To set the Spirit of prayer a working Pray for thy daily bread and for daily Protection So that thou maiest feele all coming in as an Answer of Prayer And a Samuel a child of prayer is the most welcome mercy 4. Beware of murmuring and repining when thou art delayed Eligat opportunitatem qui libere dat miseric●rdiam Aug. Learne to wait Gods time His convenient time is the best He helpes in the most needfull time Let him saith Augustine chuse the opportunity who so freely gives the mercy 5. What ever thou wantest be sure to be more thankfull then Efficacissimū pro Candid ato regandi genus est gratias agere Plin. Pan. Trajano dictus ever sor what thou hast received before Thankfulnesse is a cunning way of begging Put thy selfe in other mens cases and consider how thou aboundest in comparison of them Look into Prisons Poore mens cupboards and how oughst thou to pitty them in their wants and be thankfull for what thou enjoyest 6. Sixtly and lastly be still renewing thy title and clearing up thine evidences for heaven for the more thou securest that the more secure thou mayest be of this speciall distinguishing Providence For though I believe not but abhorre that opinion that Dominium temporale fundatur in gratiâ and I am farre from the Anabaptisticall opinion of thinking wicked men usurpers as having no right of Creatures to outward things yet I am fully assured that only the Godly have outward things sanctified through Christ With Christ they have all things And having Christ is that which makes a mercy to be a mercy indeed All Rom. 8. 32. 1 Cor. 3. 20 21. things are Yours saith the Apostle The wicked of the world have outward things ex largitate by common Povidence and bounty the godly have all ex promisso by Promise and Covenant Wherefore here lyes the great duty to get assurance that what ever we have we injoy as a Covenant mercy streaming to us through the blood of Jesus Christ for it is Christ alone that sweetens what ever
we injoy without him all is bitter with him every thing is sweet JERUSALEMS REMEMBRANCERS UNFOLDED ON A SOLEMNE FAST DAY Upon Isaiah 62. vers 6 7. Ye that make mention of the Lord keep not silence and give him no rest till he establish and till he make Jerusalem a praise in the earth UPON perusall of the 1. vers We shall find that Sermon 4. Preached at St. Marye's Oxon. Jan. 7. 1658. selfe same thing put into practice which is earnestly charged upon us as our grand duty in the Text for Zions sake c. Which words some learned expositors understand to be spoken of the Prophet Isaiah whose prayers were incessant in the behalfe of Jerusalem But I rather concurre with Scultetus Scultet Muscul Musculus c. Who understand them spoken of God promising and not of the Prophet praying For the words are a prophecy of Israels deliverance out of Babylon and of the glory and happinesse that shall be put upon the Church of God And Zion and Jerusalem are a Type of the Christian Church So that God will neither let the world nor the Potentates therein rest untill there be a full cleare and conspicuous deliverance offered for the Church of God Hence the Gentiles shall take notice of such wonderfull works of God Vers 2. The Gentiles shall see thy righteousnesse Vers 2 and all Kings thy glory c. The Church that was so much afflicted Vers 3 and distressed shall be called by a new name vers 3. No more termed desolate but Hephtzibah and Beulah vers 4. And the moving cause of all this is Amor complacentiae For the Lord delighteth in Vers 4 them Which delight is amplified by a similitude Vers 5. For as Vers 5 a young man marryeth a Virgin so shall thy Sonnes marry thee And as the Bridegroome rejoyceth over the Bride So shall thy God rejoyce over thee For the accomplishment of this great work to make the Church a glorious Church the Lord raiseth up eminent Instruments Vers 6. I have set watchmen upon thy walls O Jerusalem Vers 6 Hieronym which shall never hold their peace day nor night c. Jerome understands Angells Prophets Princes Teachers And some conceive that faithfull Governours and faithfull Ministers are here meant by the watchmen of the walls even all such as are in publick place and authority who are diligent in their watch and importunate sollicitors such as will have no nay and will never cease begging but are constant day and night as well in bad as good times in pouring out their hearts in prayer in the behalfe of Jerusalem These things premised I resume the words of the Text wherein there 's offered to our consideration a charge of greatest concernment unto the watchmen For the Lord having promised such eminently usefull Instruments for the effecting these great things promised to Jerusalem and the Lord having given a Character of their fidelity that they shall never hold their peace but shall be busied in praying for or instructing of the people of God in their duty Now the Lord by an Apostrophe directs his speech to those watchmen and chargeth them with the maine duty of the Text Ye that make mention c. 1 Wherein are three things to be observed 1. The perrsons described by a note of distinction to whom Divis the charge is given yee that c. 2. The substance of their charge set down Negatively in two expressions 1. Keep not silence 2. Give him no rest 3. The main end and designe intended that Jerusalem should be made a praise in the earth 4. The duration and continuance of this charge or employment of these persons that make mention of the Lord keep not silence till Jerusalem be establisht i. e. Their prayer must so long continue and they may not cease till Jerusalem be establisht and the gracious promises accomplisht in behalfe of the glorious condition of Jerusalem Before I give you the Doctrines I shall for explication of the words resolve a few Queries 1. What is meant by those that make mention of the Lord Q. 1 Ans Calvin understands them of the Ministers that Preach the Word of God The 70. renders the words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And the vulgar edition renders it verbatim Qui reminiscimini domini Qui ad memoriam revacatis Dominum Tig●r Tran. So Jerome Vatablus Osiander And our Marginall note in our English translation is Ye that are the Lords remembrancers some conceive this speech to be an Allusion to that standing office in Kings Courts of Remembrancers Corn. A. Lapide upon the place tells us Corn A. Lap in Loc. that the Kings of Judah had Maskirim Admonitores whose office was to put the King in mind of weighty affaires Junius renders the words Qui commemoratis Jehovam Rememorantes Dominum So Vatablus and he gives a marginall note Qui reminisci facitis Domini I shall not peremptorily determine which is the best of these translations Neither shall I confine the duty of the Text only to Ministers They in an eminent manner are the Peoples mouth unto God and Gods mouth unto the people And this duty of being the Lords Remembrancers belongs to them not that God needs any putting in mind or remembrance but that he would have us do our duty by assiduous supplications Yet we may not exclude any of Gods children from practising the duty of the Text in presenting prayers making diligent addresses unto the Throne of grace Though it belong unto all godly men yet in a more speciall manner to Ministers So * Quamvis haec sententià ad pios omnes pertineat tamen praecipue Sacerdotes attingit Cal. Calvin on the place 2. What 's meant by not keeping silence giving God no rest Q 2 Ans These two come to one and the same effect implying that they ought to speak and continue importunate in speaking They should speak aloud and never give over speaking The words are Metaphoricall took from those who are indefatigable sollicitors and will take no deniall Here 's a Character of fervent prayer which gives the Lord no rest i. e. earnestly and incessantly plyeth the Throne of grace and will take no repulse Of this more anon 3. What is meant by Jerusalem Q 3 Ans For Answer Jerusalem is either taken litterally for the place and Metropolis of Judea or rather by a Meton●mia continentis as it signifies the whole body of the Inhabitants there or else Mistically for that Jerusalem which cometh down from above And this is either universall or particular The universall Church is the whole body of believers dispersed through the whole world The particular Church is that wherein we live And this according to judicious Carthwrights division is of one Nation or of a narrrower compasse And the same Learned Author gives distinct definitions of them both A Church saith he of one Nation is that which is gathered under one politick civill government A V.
the families of the earth be blessed and that in Isaac his seed should be called and yet he forgetfull of the promise betook himselfe to a broken refuge of lying and equivocation It was likewise another peice of Infidelity which caused Rebeccah and Jacob to use such indirect meanes to get the blessing God was faithfull that hath promised and he needed not their lyes to bring his work to passe yet Rebeccah gave Jacob Counsell and he fained himselfe to be his brother Esau but Jacob smarted full sore by his Exile and through Labans rigorous dealing It was Infid●lity in David to say in his heart that he should one day perish by the hand of Saul 1 Sam. 27. 1. Wherefore he betook himself to Achish King of Gath and there he met with difficulties upon difficulties as one wave of the Sea following another and varieties of dangers verifying our common English proverb leaping out of the frying pan into the fire Infidelity was in Zechary and therefore Luk. 1. 20. he was smitten with dumbnesse Thomas he must see before he believe This sinne is incident to the generation of the just but for this sinne Gods dearest children scape not unpunished But what shall we say of all speculative Atheists such as in their Judgments and opinions deny God Christ the Holy Ghost providence and Gods government in the world And what shall we say of those practicall Atheists who live without God in the world running into all sinnes and all manner of wickednesse these believe not the truth of the Word of God against swearers Zech. 5. 3. Nor do they believe that a flying Roll is against them to cut them off nor against drunkards Isa 28. 1. Read what Judgments the Scriptures pronounceth against them that believe not Joh. 3. 18. 2 Thes 2. 12. Heb. 3. 18. Jud. 5. I proceed to a second Use which is for Caution O beware of Vse 2. For Caution unbeliefe it s a grievous grand-damning sin other sinnes damne as well as this yet this throwes away the remedy and bolts the dore barres accesse stops the current of mercy Now multitudes flatter themselves with a false faith and so cheate themselves unto all eternity therefore there is great need to lay downe some previous Cautions which are these following 1. Beware of a fond vaine perswasion and presumptuous confidence Caution 1. Beware of a fond vaine perswasion many say all 's well with them and they believe as their Ancestors did before them and thus they flatter themselves into a fooles Paradise these vaine confident men never want woe to be confident upon Gospell promises is a sure bottome to stay upon but multitudes are confiddent by reason of outward riches honours pleasures prosperity c. because they have abundance of outward blessings hence they conclude that all shall be well with them unto eternity But this is a false consequence a plaine Non sequitur I am happy in this world therefore I shall be happy unto all eternity For a man may be eternally miserable though he enjoy abundance of outward things and he may be eternally happy though he may want them all By outward things no man can passe a certaine Judgment you read how the Idolatrous Jewes blest themselves in their condition Jer. 44. 17. That they had plenty of victualls when they burnt incense unto the Qeen of heaven But see their doome Vers 23. Thus many think all 's well with them though they runne their owne courses and follow the devises of their own heart by reason of the affluence of outward things but they deceive themselves 2. Beware of a Temporary faith Temporary believers may be Caution 2. Beware of a Tomporary faith Mr Bolton compared to the seed sowne on stony ground Matth. 13. 5 6. Which for want of root withered It s an instance of a Reverend Divine suppose saith ●he there be a Serving man following two Gentlemen when they part it will be knowne to whom that Servant belongs and whose Master he serves So when it comes to parting and loosing lossesse afflictions persecutions it will soon be known whose servants we are whether we serve God or Mammon whether we serve our selves or our lusts A Temporary Believer will pretend much in Halcyon times of peace and tranquility but when it comes to triall of suffering bearing slaunder ignominies or losse of riches for Christ then he is scandalized he will relinquish his profession and will not embrace Christ to his worldly disadvantages 3. Beware of distrusting Gods Word though it may seem long 3. Beware of di●trusting Gods Word in fulfilling what it promiseth Hab. 2. 3 4. Though the vision tarry wait for it Believers must wait Gods leasure And he that believeth maketh not hast The Lord promised that in Abrahams seed all the earth should be blessed this promise was long in fulfilling and Sarah according to the course of nature was unlikely to beare a child yet God accomplished what he promised to a tittle Gods workes seemes to runne crosse to his word as you may see by comparing Gen. 17. 19. with Gen. 22. 1 2. But our duty is to stay upon Gods Word though his workes may seeme 4. Weake Chri●tians must beware of curious Questions strange and unlikely to bring his word to passe 4. Let weake Christians especially beware of too high or curious Questions nice and doubtfull disputation● some loose themselves and dispute themselves into Atheisme and infidelity As for instance concerning themisteries of the Trinity Christs incarnation the procession of the Holy Ghost these are matters of our faith and not of our reasoning and disputing we must believe where sense and reason failes and because God saith it we must believe and obey not dispute his words and his commands These foure Cautions premised now in the third place I shall Vse 3. For Exhortation proceed to an Use of Exhortation Is unbeliefe such a speciall damning sinne O labour for faith There is no pleasing God without faith O! do not sleepe in a state of unbeliefe The best of Gods servants have unbeliefe in them but they complaine against it Bradford a rare mortified man complained much of his unbeliefe so we must complaine of our Infidelity we must search narrowly make hue and cry after our unbeliefe and labour to finde it out and having found it arraigne condemne and crucify it Two Motives I shall urge First I 'le draw some from the benefit of Faith Secondly From the mischiefe of unbeliefe 1. Le ts consider the benefit of Faith First It gives title and interest Motive 1. From the benefit of Faith to the promises all the promises are made unto believers Joh. 3. 16 36. Temporall promises are the portion of believers their basket and store is blessed Deut. 28. Lev. 26. Spirituall promises are the portion of believers and those promises of giving a new heart circumcising the heart c. are their portion Eternall promises are their
if unlawful happy art thou that God deprives thee of them 'T is a sign that the Parents have a tender love to their children when they take away a Knife from them for fear lest they should hurt themselves with it So 't is mercy when God cuts thee off and deprives thee of such Delights and Pleasures which if thou hadst liberty to enjoy therewith thou wouldst dishonor Almighty God Object 2. A second Objection is How are the ways of God ways of pleasantness when they require abundance of Humiliation brinish Tears sorrow for sin and is not this irksome and unpleasant A. There 's more sweetness in this which thou callest bitternesse I mean godly sorrow for sin then in all the pleasures of the world for as in the laughter of the wicked the heart is sorrowful so in the sorrow of the godly the heart laughs and rejoyceth Christ turns these Waters into Wine Call not the tears of repentance Marah but Naomi In the winding up we shall finde that the tears of repentance are not bitter waters but sweet refreshing waters Every tear in thy eye is a Pearl in Gods eye Every tear is exhal'd into Gods bottle All the laughter of the wicked is Risus Sardonicus Their greatest merriments are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luther hath an excellent saying Vna guttula malae conscientiae totum mare mundani gaudii absorbet But the godly rejoyce in their sufferings Rom. 5. 3. And not onely so but we glory in tribulations They have inward joy amidst outward sorrows VVhen their cheeks run down with tears they have a chearful spirit something they feel of comfort coming in They have a principle of Joy within them from the apprehension of Gods love in Christ and this swallows up all sorrows One glimpse of Christs countenance will swallow up an Ocean of sorrows And this will appear in two or three Particulars 1. The work of Humiliation hath the melting work of the Gospel The Law breaks but the Gospel melts the heart No such kindly working upon the heart as mercy bowels opened and the goodness of God To sin against these will deepliest affect the heart When a soul is humbled for sinning against mercy and goodness and the heart is melted and dissolved into tears there must be pleasantness and sweetness in these because they proceed from such a Principle even the Principle of the melting work of the Gospel and this cannot have much bitterness in it 2. The Soul in the work of Humiliation melting before the Lord easeth it self of abundance of sin We say Leves curae loquuntur Sen. Trag. ingentes stupent When people can shed tears thereby they ease their heart but when the heart is so opprest as the eyes cannot shed tears the sorrow or passion of the heart is greater and more dangerous By weeping for sin thou dost ease and rid thy self of abundance of sin thy heart feels some joy and draws and sucks some sweetness out of these bitter herbs 3. In the work of Humiliation there 's much delight because the soul hath much delight in looking back to that sorrow it hath had The wicked rejoyce in their pleasures the godly rejoyce in their tears Epaminondas went sad about the City when the Thebanes were a revelling when others have been in May-games and Merriments and lascivious Enterludes it will cheer up thy spirit that thou hast been sorrowing for thy sin Object 3. But thirdly it 's Objected That godliness puts us upon hard services we shall meet with many scandals great sufferings and persecutions for the name of Christ we shall meet with sore temptations and tryals Peradventure we may be brought to fry at a Stake for Christ How then can the ways of godliness be ways of pleasantness A. Notwithstanding the hardest sufferings that the heart of a godly man shall meet withal yet there 's that delight in the ways of godliness as to uphold the heart under all sufferings and carry it on sweetly How much did the Martyrs rejoyce They kist the Stake welcomm'd Fire and Fagot some of them leapt for joy wrote singular Letters for the confirmation of their Brethren Godlyness will carry thee chearfully through sufferings It will make thee account thy Chains as Ornaments thy Prison thy Palace thy Dungeon thy Paradise Gods people suck sweetness out of the bitterest hearbs They finde an Honey-comb in the carcass of Lyons They never see so much of God in prosperity as adversity Never do they feel more inward comforts then amidst outward sorrows for then God settles the tranquility of their spirits and the serenity of their consciences Christ appeared to Mary weeping to Jacob at Bethel to Elias after forty days fasting God brings forth his Cordials to his people in their forest tryals so that whatever sorrows hardships and troubles they meet withal abroad yet they have joy at home and though they may make many a hard meal yet a good conscience is to them a continual feast There 's one Objection more which I shall answer and then proceed Object 4. Some object from common experience When people come into the ways of godliness they do not finde that delight and joy as they had before The world observes them to be more melancholy and of a heavy dumpish spirit This is a meer calumny of the Devils raising to keep men off from the ways of God This is a great pull-back and Remora to the conversion of many souls I shall give a more full and I hope satisfactory Answer to the Objection in these following Considerations 1. Religion denys not civil courteous and affable behaviour Consid 1. Religion denys not civil behaviour Religion forbids not a chearful disposition Nay there 's a Judgement threatned to the contrary Deut. 28. 47. Because thou servedst not the Lord thy God with joyfulness and with gladness of heart therefore shalt thou serve thine enemies saith the Lord. A churlish Nabal is a dishonor to Religion Take heed therefore of discrediting the Gospel by your sad melancholy spirits lest the world bring an evil report upon the ways of godliness None have such chearful spirits as true Believers Their heart is full and must have a vent their tongues countenances carriages will shew that they have comfort in God But secondly consider thou maist mistake Gods children Thou Consid 2. Gods children are serious accountest that sadness and sorrow which is seriousness gravity and a stay'd compos'd carriage The carriage of Gods children must be sober and grave their words serious season'd with salt and their whole conversation must be such as may adorn their profession Phil. 1. 27. Onely let your conversation be as becometh the Gospell of Christ 3. Consider Gods people may appear sad because they are out Consid 3. Gods children are sad when out of their element of their element When the Fish is out of its element of Water it cannot enjoy it self Birds do not ordinarily sing upon the ground