Selected quad for the lemma: duty_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
duty_n heart_n love_n love_v 3,572 5 6.5737 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A65753 A vvay to the tree of life discovered in sundry directions for the profitable reading of the Scriptvres : wherein is described occasionally the nature of a spirituall man, and, in A digression, the morality and perpetuity of the Fourth Commandment in every circumstance thereof, is discovered and cleared / by Iohn White ... White, John, 1575-1648. 1647 (1647) Wing W1785; ESTC R40696 215,387 374

There are 12 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

but his own Spirit 1 Cor. 2.11 It is true concerning a mans mind seeing it is moved according to reason in order to the end which he proposeth to himself therefore one that knows another mans end may with some probability guesse at his thoughts and purposes tending to that end which Solomon implies in affirming that though counsell be hidden deep in the heart of man yet a man of understanding may draw it out Prov. 20.5 And so a man knowing that Gods main end in all his ways is his own honour may conclude that Gods law must be such as may direct men in those ways in which they may most glorifie God But what those particular directions must be it is impossible for men to guesse till God himself reveal them It is true that the very light of nature which God hath planted in every man will discover unto him some of the chief heads of the duties that he requires of him as to love the Lord with all our hearts and to fear and serve him Deut. 10.12 And to serve one another through love Gal. 5.13 But in what particular services we are to expresse our piety to God or love to men what man can prescribe or imagine For that the ways by which both these main duties may be performed are various and divers it is evident now to which of these different ways God would direct one it was impossible to guesse till God himself had made it manifest in his own word To give instance of this truth in some particulars Especially laws positive must needs bee given by God alone it was impossible for any man to conceive what ceremonies or outward acts God would accept and be best pleased withall in the duties of his worship No man could divine that the tree of life should be a Sacrament to Adam in Paradise or Circumcision to the Jews or Baptisme and the Lords Supper to Christians For ought any man could conceive to the contrary the Priesthood might have been setled upon the Tribe of Simeon as well as Levi. The rest of the Sabbath might have been fixed on the second or sixth day as well as on the seventh and on the first if God had so appointed it And for the duties of the second Table it was not of absolute necessity that God should establish such a kinde of subordination and subjection of one man to another as he hath done or give every man a propriety in his goods to possesse them as severall to himself or limit one man to one wife and ordain marriage for the onely way of propagation of mankinde seeing that although all these are fit and convenient yet God if hee had pleased might have given other rules for the governing and establishing peace amongst men and it was as lawfull for him to give the creatures what laws he pleased as to give them what natures he pleased So that seeing the law for the right ordering of the creatures depends meerly upon Gods will which cannot be known unlesse himself reveal it it must needs be granted which was first proposed that none could give the law to Gods Church but God himself Next if it had been possible 2ly Nor is it convenient that any other then God should give this law 1 For preserving Gods authority it was no way fit either for the advancing of Gods honour or for the furthering of mans good that any other should give that law then God himself Not fit for Gods honour in two respects First Gods authority could be no way so well preserved as by giving his own law to his people seeing all men acknowledge that giving of laws is an honour annexed to the highest power although the execution of them be committed to Magistrates of a lower degree It may be probably guessed that even heathen Law-givers by pretending either consulting with their gods in giving their laws or allowance of them by them acknowledged law-making to be a divine prerogative which yet is more fully manifested by this that we acknowledge no law to bee just that is not either founded on or consonant to Gods law either written in mans heart or delivered in his word So that it was fit that God should give the law to his own people to preserve his own authority amongst them Again it is requisite for Gods honour in another respect 2 And that we might have a perfect mirrour of him Which none could give but himself that none but God himself should give his own law to his people because none is able to give so perfect a mirrour of God as himself As for men we know none of them hath seen God at any time John 1.17 and it is so little a portion that they know of him Job 26.14 that it is impossible they should set him out as he deserves Now it is for Gods honour that hee should be expressed as fully as may be which neither is nor can be performed so exactly by any man as it may be by his law which represents unto us the image of his minde and will and gives us a more distinct knowledge of him then his works can doe Nay his word serves as a Commentary to his works as laying before us the rule according to which God orders all his ways so that by the help thereof we understand the righteousnesse and holinesse of all his acts as David did Psa 73.17 which he could not finde out before It is true indeed that the very works themselves praise God and shew him in his tender mercies Psal 145.5.8 in his mighty power Job 36.22 37.23 Godhead Rō 1.20 yea commonly in his righteousness in rewarding and punishing Psa 58.11 But they neither expresse him so distinctly nor consequently affect the heart so deeply as they doe when they are illustrated by the word as Job confesseth chap. 42.6 that he never saw God so clearly nor abhorred himself so much as when God described unto him his works in that conference Job 38. c. Wherefore seeing the image of God is most exactly expressed unto us in the word it is most fit that the word that represents him to us should be given by God himself who knowing himself best can give us the most perfect draught of his own face Besides these respects unto Gods honour in regard of mans good it was not convenient that the Scriptures which contain Gods law to his Church should be given by any other then God himself For first 3ly For mās good 1. To subdue his heart to obedience mans heart would hardly be brought to stoop to any power but Gods alone whose voice onely prevails upon the conscience and subdues the very thoughts and imaginations of the spirit which the voice of no man can doe Besides 2. To make his services accepted nothing can make our services performed to God or man to be duties of obedience but the undertaking of them upon Gods command which we do when we know the
Neither indeed are their writings compared with the Scriptures revealing the glory of God in the face of Christ 2 Cor. 4.6 so much as the light of a candle to the Sun shining at noon day As for the mystery of the Trinity it is generally acknowledged to bee a secret unsearchable by naturall reason or discoverable any way but by the revelation of the Word and Spirit Next unto God 2. The Creation of the world with the manner order of it may follow the Creation of the world which we likewise beleeve by faith Heb. 1.3 which although the Heathen upon the consideration of the creatures by the light of naturall reason were forced to acknowledge and consequently that it must be the work of a God yet that the creatures were made by Gods meere word finished in sixe days and created in such order as we finde mentioned Gen. 1. no Heathen man ever took upon him to relate neither seeing man was made the last of all creatures was it possible for him to divine what was done before he had any beeing wherefore the Scriptures so exactly describing the time means and order of the Creation must needs be the Word of the Wisdome of the Father who was brought forth ere the mountains were setled Prov. 8.25 present when he prepared the heavens ver 27. by his Father when he appointed the foundations of the earth ver 29 30. Thirdly the state of man before his fall 3. The history of mans fall and the consequents of it the whole history means and manner of his fall with all the circumstances thereof especially the corruption that it brought upon the whole nature of man which we tearm Originall sin together with the subjection of all men to the curse and wrath of God thereby and the manner how it is propagated both in the stain and guilt of it to posterity as they are things unsearchable by naturall reason so the memory of them being once lost together with the antiquities of the first times of the world or at least imperfectly and uncertainly delivered and related to posterity through so many hands as it must needs passe before the time of Moses it was impossible but the full and certain knowledge of them must be hidden from such as had no better light then that of nature to search them out wherefore we find that they are wholly passed over in all writings of Heathen men but in the Scriptures are clearly opened as far as they are necessary to be known which shews them to be the Word of God seeing they reveal these things that cannot be taught by humane reason Fourthly 4. Mans Redemption by Christ that wonderfull mystery of mans Redemption by Jesus Christ being a secret that never entred into mans heart 1 Cor. 2.19 was never so much as dreamed of by any naturall man neither doe we finde the least syllable of it in any Heathen mans bookes The truth is it seems so incredible a thing to flesh and blood that the Prophet not without cause when he begins to speak of this wonder asks who hath beleeved his report Esa 53.1 and the Apostle tels us that when it was preached the learned Grecians accounted it foolishnesse 1 Cor. 1.27 or a meere phantasie Now that which seems incredible to reason when it is known was very unlikely to be found out by reason at the first before it was known If there were no more but this that this wonderfull work proceeded meerly from the free motion of Gods will without any other cause moving thereinto then his own love and compassion as Christ himself affirms Iohn 36.16 And the Apostle 1 Iohn 4.10 how could any man divine what God purposed in his own heart before he had wrought it unlesse himself had revealed it So that it must needs be granted that this word which sets out unto us the mystery of our Redemption by Christ must be the Word of God himself Lastly 5. The benefits thereof the condition into which man is redeemed by Christ is another mystery hidden from the eyes of all that see by no clearer light then that which naturall reason yeelds them It was utterly impossible for any man Uniō with Christ Adoption Justification Renovation by the light of nature to have discovered our mysticall union into one body with Christ by the Spirit our adoption by grace to be the sons of God our Justification by faith through the imputation of Christs righteousnesse our Renovation or new birth wherein our hearts are changed by the effectuall working of the spirit Resurrection of our bodies to glory the restitution of our bodies to life again with a change from the state of corruption to incorruption of naturall and earthly bodies to spirituall and heavenly and our glorious and ever blessed condition to be enjoyed hereafter in the immediate and everlasting fruition of God in the highest heavens Wherefore we finde not so much as any mention of these things among any of the Heathen unlesse perhaps they stumble upon the immortality of the soul which yet they rather dream of then understand distinctly Wherefore the Scriptures revealing unto us so clearly all these things which naturall reason could neither teach nor comprehend must needs be acknowledged to be the Word of God It appears then hitherto 2ly Many rules of life 1. The inward disposition of the heart toward God in fear love faith that the principles of faith laid down in the Scriptures must needs be acknowledged to be revealed by God and not by man The same truth will be evidently manifested in the rules of practise if they be duly weighed To begin with the duties to be performed unto God and first with the affections and right disposition of the heart The Apostle tels us we cannot beleeve on him of vvhom vve have not heard Rom. 10.14 and the Psalmist affirms that they onely trust in him that know his name Psal 9.10 and we know that it was the lively representation of God unto him that strook that deep impression of fear into Iobs heart and made him vile in his own eyes To bee wrought in us only by the full discovery of God unto us Iob 40.4 42.5 6. The truth is those holy affections of love fear and affiance in God cannot be grounded on any other then a true and distinct knowledge of him which as we have seen already the light of naturall reason could never discover so that none can prescribe unto us the right disposing of the heart towards God in those holy affections of love fear and faith in him but the same that can reveal unto us the right knowledge of himself As for the outward duties of worship 2. And outward duties of worship that they cannot be devised by men but must be appointed by God himself the very light of nature taught Heathen men themselves Wherefore we finde that those forms of worship which they observed the wisest amongst
them either took from the Sibylls books or from some other directions pretended to be given by the Gods themselves Neither can we possibly be assured that such rites as we worship God withall In the observation of the Sabbath use of the Sacraments c. are accepted unlesse God himself prescribe them as we see he did the whole form of ceremoniall worship in the Leviticall law and the Sabbath and Sacraments both in Paradise and under the Gospel by our Saviour Christ And for the services which are to be performed to men first we finde little in the Precepts of such as are meer Moralists concerning that fountain of those duties whence they ought to flow which is love without which none of them is accepted 1 Cor. 13.3 Neither doe we finde that measure of love required by them which our Saviour commands to love our neighbour as our self Mat. 5.44 wherein he affirms we go beyond naturall men and consequently implies that we doe more then naturall reason teacheth whence it will follow that the law which requires that duty was not given by man and therefore must needs be acknowledged to be the Precept and Word of God and not of man Nay beyond all this 3. Most of all self-deniall which nature never taught we find that Gods Word requires of us the deniall of our selves and that every way both of our own vvisdome to prescribe as the Lord requires his people to do not vvhat is right in their own eyes Deut. 12.8 but what is right in the eyes of the Lord their God Deut. 13.18 and of our own ability to undertake and perform as our Saviour requires us to bring forth fruit in him vvithout vvhom vve can doe nothing Iohn 15.5 and of our own ends as the Apostle tels us that vve must bring forth fruit unto God Rom. 7.4 that he may be glorified Mat. 5.16 and therefore the Prophet cals Israel an empty Vine because he brought forth fruit to himself Hos 10.1 whence it is that our Saviour makes this self-deniall the first step to Religion Mat. 16.24 A duty that humane reason is so far from prescribing that it cannot so much as allow and submit unto it when it is prescribed and that because it cannot finde out mans emptinesse and weaknesse the ground on which self-deniall is founded or at least sensibly acknowledged Wherfore the Scriptures which require that duty which is so contrary to the principles of nature must needs be the Word of God Thus we see that the subject which the Scriptures handle is above the pitch of humane wisdome whether vve look to the grounds of faith or rules of practise which are layed down therein The true knowledge of God vvhom the world hath not known the great and glorious works of the worlds Creation vvith the time manner and order thereof And of mans Redemption after his fall and corruption thereby together with the state into which he is redeemed to be mystically united to Christ by the Spirit which gives him interest in his merits and righteousnesse makes him Gods childe by adoption and an heir of glory The duties of fear love and affiance in God all grounded on the true knowledge of him And lastly the service of love to man binding him to love his neighbour as himself yea his very enemies and above all things to deny himself So that the Scripture discovering those things which naturall reason could never finde out must needs be acknowledged to be delivered by God himself and to be his Word MARK III. Of the powerfull effects of the Scriptures upon mens hearts which discover them to be the Word of God THe two former Markes of the Scriptures which manifest them to be the Word of God appear as it were in the face and body of that sacred volume this third Mark is taken from the wonderfull and supernaturall effects that they work upon the heart and conscience which are such as cannot possibly be performed by any other then a divine Power These effects may be reduced unto three heads First the wounding and terrifying Secondly the converting and renuing Thirdly the comforting and reviving of the heart Neither of which being possible to bee wrought by the power of man as we shal manifest by and by it must needs be granted that the Scripture which produceth such wonderfull effects is not of man but of God seeing we know no cause can work an effect greater and of an higher nature then it self To begin with the first The first Effect of the Word the pricking of the heart Differing from naturall terrours the terrours and prickings of heart which are caused in men by Gods Word It cannot be denyed but there may be and are sometimes wrought in mens hearts some naturall terrours which may cause in them much unquietnesse but between such naturall passions and these spirituall agonies which are wrought by the word there will appear a wide difference if they be well examined and that more ways then one 1. In the grounds upon which they be raised 2. In the effects produced by them The grounds of naturall terrours 1. A naturall sense of sin 2. A naturall acknowledgment of Gods Justice Holinesse and Power which may be easily made manifest by observing first the grounds whence either of them doe arise And secondly the effects which the one and the other produce in those on whose hearts they make impression with the different consequents that follow thereupon Concerning the grounds upon which terrours are raised in mans heart the causes of such as are naturall appear to be evidently different from those which raise spirituall passions For we cannot be ignorant that every man by nature having imprinted in his heart some rude notions at the least both of good and evill and withall some acknowledgement of Gods Justice Holinesse and Power and having besides a conscience within his own breast sitting as Judge to passe censure upon his own ways and actions before which his thoughts accuse or excuse one another as the Apostle speaks Rom. 2.15 must needs have usually some sense of every known sin either more or lesse Whence it follows that the more the conscience is illightned and by that means awakened to look back upon a mans own sin and the wrath of God lying upon him for sin and his powerfull revenging hand pursuing him the more he must of necessity be distracted in his thoughts with fearfull terrours which may cause his life to hang before him All working in the heart fears of punishment Deut. 28.65 and to be bitter unto him and yet these terrours as arising from naturall principles are meerly naturall being caused by a naturall sense of sin and acknowledgment of Gods wrath and fear of his own danger thereby which any man may have by nature From this apprehension of the guilt of sin The grounds of spirituall terrours and fear of the punishment that follows it the causes that affect a godly
that two different constructions may be made of the same place of Scripture importing both of them a sense Orthodox and indifferently agreeing with the circumstances precedents and consequents of the Text. We may take which we please or both if need be In such a case a man is at liberty to embrace which he thinks best so he condemn not the other or to make use of them both for instruction and meditation as conceiving that the Holy Ghost who could in those as well as in other places have spoken more distinctly hath left those places of doubtfull construction to supply us with more variety of matter for our use and edification We meet sometimes with Parables and similitudes Similitudes must be extended no farther then the Holy Ghost intends them Nor any principles of truth built upon them which we must be carefull to extend no farther then the Holy Ghost intends them and that may be easily discerned by the occasion and by the scope of the Text. Now these similitudes being used for illustration by the holy Spirit we may easily make use of them so far but it is not so safe to build any principle of truth upon them which is not confirmed by other clear places of Scripture Where we find heavenly things expressed by earthly as when God is said to come down Resemblances of spirituall things by earthly must be understood spiritually to depart to sit to stand to have parts of an humane body when the state of glory is called a kingdome wherein men are said to have houses thrones c. we must understand the resemblances spiritually not according to the nature of those things by which they are resembled So Gods hand notes his power his eye his providence c. which also we must not proportion according to the scantness of a man but extend according to the infinitenesse of a God CAP. XIII Directions for raising observations out of the Scriptures for our owne instruction and edification ALl wise men in their writings as they do in other actions First propose unto themselves a scope or end at which they aime especially Secondly in relation thereunto they make choice of matters and subjects fit for that end which they propose unto themselves Thirdly those matters which they intend to handle they digest and dispose in such a method and Lastly they express and set them out in such phrases and forms of speech as may best fit the matter which they have in hand Seeing therefore God in these holy writings which we call the Scriptures speaks to men after the manner of men as he must do For raising observations out of Scripture 1. Search after the scope 2. Take notice of the matter 3. Observe the order 4. The phrases or expressions if he will be understood by them we must necessarily in the First place search after the end and scope at which he aims principally in these books Secondly we must take notice of the matters or subjects which he handles therein Thirdly we must carefully observe the order and method and Lastly the words and phrases of speech which the Lord makes choice of in expressing and setting down those things which he delivers in this sacred Volume Now the generall scope which God aims at in these holy writings which we call his word is that which he also proposeth unto himself in all his works The generall scope of Scripture is to make God known namely to make himself known unto men that they may honour him as God advancing him alone in their hearts and believing in and serving him alone may by that means further their own salvation That this is the end of the Scriptures is clearly testified by our Saviour himself Joh. 5.39 who upon this ground exhorts us to search the Scriptures because in them saith he ye think that is you make account you have eternall life and they are they which testifie of me And that which is spoken of the history of Christ Joh. 20.31 that it was written that we might beleeve him to be the Son of God and beleeving on him might have eternall life may be truly verified of God himself and of the scope of his word in generall For these purposes For which end Gods spirit handles subjects fit for it Recording his works and for the furthering of these ends God makes choice of and handles in the Scriptures such subjects as may make him best known unto us Such as are all his wares works as well of Creation as of Providence in the administration supporting and disposing all that he hath made Especially in the government of his Church 1. His lawes 2. The application of them by the Prophets especially in the government of his Church Secondly his Laws and Precepts which he hath given to his people for the right ordering of their waies Thirdly we have in the Prophesies the Application of these Laws and of the Sanctions annexed thereunto unto the manners and conditions of the people to whom they are delivered together with the histories both of the godly prospering in the waies of Gods service and of the wicked perishing in their rebellions Psal 92.15 Hos 14.9 1 Cor. 10.6 All discovering his glorious attributes In all which the Lord hath wonderfully discovered unto us his power goodness wisdome faithfulnesse justice and mercy The consideration whereof must needs or ought at least to work our hearts to a firm adherence to him To win us to adhere to him in faith love and feare in faith love and fear and quicken us to all duties of obedience in which he requires to be served unto which we are wonderfully encouraged by such examples as are layed down before us in the Word which manifest the righteousness and holiness of God rewarding every man according to his deeds so that all the waies of the Lord are right and the just shall walk in them but the transgressours shall fall therein Hos 14.9 SECT I. Of the subject matters handled in the Scripture and first of Gods works THe Scriptures in recording setting out before us the history of Gods works In the work of creation is manifested Gods begin first with the creation of the world with all things therein by his mighty word wherein is discovered unto us Eternity first Gods eternity who was before all things Psal 90.2 yea before time it self in which they were created and therefore must needs be from everlasting Secondly Self-being we may take notice of his self being who being before all things and giving being to all things must necessarily be of himself and could not otherwise have imparted that being to the Creatures which he had not in and of himself Thirdly we discover his free and overflowing bounty Bounty whom nothing could possibly move to create the world but his own goodnesse and who in creating it hath furnished and stored it with such infinite variety of all
It is objected that the Rest commanded in the fourth Commandement was a figure of Christs rest in the grave and therefore is now banished with the rest of those shadowes We answer this typicall relation to Christ Answer was accidentall to the Sabbath not essentiall That was accidentall to the Sabbath it was a Sabbath before it was a Type for it was a Sabbath before Christ was looked upon as a sacrifice for sin that is before man had fallen and consequently before there was any need of our Saviours resting in the grave Seeing therefore it was a Sabbath before it was a type it may remaine a Sabbath though the type be taken away They will it may be grant that there must be a rest from labour upon the Sabbath day Objection 2 but the strictness of that rest such as the Jews observed The strictnesse of the rest enjoyned the Jewes is taken away is ceremonious and abolished The rest say they to be observed of us Christians is only for publike worship and no longer so that the remainder of the day after publike duties are ended is free and then men are at liberty to make use of the time remaining for recreations or for any secular affaires as occasion shall required In answer hereunto we have shewed already that although publike worship be principally yet it is not solely provided for in this Law which as we have proved out of Esay 58.13 reacheth to our private carriage also And the Law calls the whole day the Sabbath or rest of the Lord that is both commanded by him and consecrated to him For the whole week being distributed into seven parts sixe are allowed for labour and the seventh is consecrated unto God which therefore must be a naturall day as the other sixe are To replie that we are not bound by that Law is to begge the question But why should not Christians be bound to rest the whole day as well as the Jews The Jews not bound to rest but for holy duties Surely if the Sabbath were a type of Christs rest in the grave yet there could be no type in a whole day as there was in Jonas his three daies So the rest of the whole day having no type in it is not abolished for that cause What then was it a part of the burthen of those ceremonious observances from which Christ hath freed us To give the fuller answer hereunto let us examine what rest was enjoyned the Jewes that we may discover wherein the burthensomenesse of that rest consisted First I conceive no man will think that the Jewish rest was a totall cessation from all action like that in the Aegyptian darknesse Exod. 10.23 as if men after the publike exercise were to sit still and to do nothing Was it then a ceasing from labours to follow sports that the Sabbath might be like the feast of the Calfe Exod. 32.6 or was it rest from worldly labours to fit men give them the more leisure to attend holy duties Such a rest indeed the Law requires For which we have as much need of rest as they and the Sabbath to be kept holy Now if this were all that God required of the Jews to rest that they might be exercised in hearing reading praying c. Is this the liberty Christ hath purchased unto us that we may be lesse godly then they lesse frequent in prayer and other holy duties then they For if we are bound at least to equall if not to go beyond them in our exercise in those holy duties we have as much need of rest from ordinary employments as they had This will be made more evident unto us if we lay before us these five particulars First 1. As having a more weighty ground for observing this holy rest our ground of consecrating the Sabbath is as great and weighty and more cleer and evident to us then it was to the Jews seeing Gods mercies towards man are more cleerly represented us in mans redemption then they could be to them in the worlds creation and conservation Secondly 2. And are as much bound to advance Gods majesty as they 3. And more helps then they 4. And as much need to prevent distractions as they 5. And our duties are as many or more then theirs the majesty and greatnesse of God to whom we consecrate this day is as fully manifested to us as to them Thirdly our helps and means for the raising up of our spirits to an holy rejoycing in God are greater and more effectuall then they were unto them Fourthly we need as much as they all helps to prevent the distraction of our minds and to the quickning of our spirits Lastly our exercise in spirituall and holy duties is in all respects as much or more then theirs So that if all be laid together the observing of a whole day of rest for our exercise in holy duties is as usefull and as needfull to us Christians as it was heretofore to the Iews To cleer this point yet more fully 1 Private prayer and reading let us lay before us the right manner and order of performing the duties in which the Sabbath day is to be sanctified First therefore all men must needs grant that the private exercises of prayer reading Gods word and meditation which are constantly to be used on other daies are not to be neglected but ought rather to be enlarged on the Sabbath day 2. Recordation of Gods mercies generall and Particular Again as the Sabbath ought to be a day of gladnesse and rejoycing in God Psalm 118.24 for all his mercies to man in generall so it is a time of recounting his extraordinary favours to our own souls in particular which will be of speciall use to quicken and fill our hearts with the love of God by tasting the sweetnesse of his goodnesse and to carry us on with more cheerfulnesse and life of spirit in the performance of all the duties of that day both private and publike Thirdly 3. Preparation to publique duties for the publike duties themselves they can never be rightly performed without precedent preparation David will wash his hands in innocency and so compasse Gods Altar Psal 26.6 and Solomon tels us we must take heed to our feet when we enter into Gods house Eccles 5.1 and bethink our selves of the majesty and greatnesse of that God before whom we present our selves and of our own vilenesse that are but dust and ashes Gen. 18.27 nay which is worse unclean and filthy persons Isa 64.6 unworthy to stand before a God that hath pure eyes and the Apostle tells us of superfluity of naughtinesse that must be laid aside when we come to hear that we may receive the word with meeknesse Jam. 1.21 into an honest and good heart Luk. 8.15 Meditations by which we must prepare our hearts in our private exercises of reading Gods word and prayer much more in these which are more solemn and publike Again
to be taken away For as for those allegations that the rest of the Sabbath was a type of Christs rest in the grave and a part of the Iewish bondage how little force they have we have shewed before Now then if it evidently appear to all that will consider things with any indifferency by all that we have said that neither the resting from our labour one day in seven nor the continuing of that rest for the whole day nor yet the strictnesse of any rest enjoyned by the fourth Commandement are either as ceremonious or upon any other ground to be altered neither that the particular day of rest which now by Christs resurrection is altered from the last to the first day of the week is there commanded otherwise then in a generall rule equally communicable both to the Iewish and Christian Sabbath there appears no necessity of granting any thing to be mutable in this fourth Commandement more then in any of the laws of the Decalogue It hath been intimated before that mens mistake of the right interpretation of the fourth Commandement hath been a great occasion of questioning the perpetuity and immutability of the morall law and of how dangerous consequent it is to admit that there is any thing mutable therein experience teacheth us when we find how ready men are to embrace and hold that dangerous errour of casting aside the whole law and that so far as to deny it to be a rule of direction unto us Christians in the course of our practice whereby they open a wide gap to all licentiousnesse and by that means overthrow the very life and power of godlinesse to the high dishonour of God and to the extream perill of their own souls so that we see how neerly it concerns all such as have any true zeal for the furthering of Gods honour and their own salvation and their brethrens to endeavour by all the means that they can the establishing and maintaining of this truth that the morall law given by God to Adam in the beginning and renewed afterwards by Moses upon mount Sinai is an everlasting rule left by God unto his Church for the right ordering and guiding them in all their ways The premises then being duly weighed and layed together we have a sufficient ground to argue in this manner All the laws written in the Decalogue are morall and immutable in all things But the fourth Commandement concerning the observation of the Sabbath day is one of the laws of the Decalogue Therefore this law of the Sabbath is perpetuall and unchangeable in all things which are concerned therein And so much concerning the morality and perpetuity of the fourth Commandement in the Decalogue by way of digression SECT IV. A continuation of the consideration of the rest of the Laws recorded in the Scripture with such instructions as may be drawn from them HAving now established the perpetuity of that Law which we call Morall in all the Commandements thereof it is time to returne to that from which we digressed namely the delivering of rules for our direction in drawing out observations from the Laws recorded in Scripture for our instruction and there being three kinds of these Laws Morall Judiciall Ceremoniall as we have shewed before of these the Morall law comes first to be considered Now that Law being given to Adam the roote of mankind and that not so much to his person as to the nature of man which was wholly in him when he received this Law from God and consequently binding all those who are partakers of that nature it must needs be acknowledged that whatsoever commands we find therein we must guide our selves by as the rule of our practice Which that we may the better doe it will be needfull to lay before us some rules All duties to God and man are commanded in the Morall Law that may direct us in the right interpretation of these Commandements Before we give these rules it will be necessary to lay before us this evident ground of truth that these ten words as they are called comprise all the heads of duties to be performed both to God and man This is clearly manifested by our Saviours answer to the Lawyer that tempted him Luke 10.26 enquiring what he might doe to inherit eternall life to whom Christ replies that whatsoever duty was needfull to the attaining thereof was to be found in the commandements where he wils him to seek it Now these precepts being delivered in such briefe expressions as they are it must needs follow that every one of the tearms in them must needs be of exceeding large comprehension First therefore Rules for interpreting the Law whereas we find these Laws of the Decalogue penned some in the form of a command and most of them in the forme of a prohibition Rule 1 we must conceive that under every command there is implied a prohibition of whatsoever is contrary to what is commanded All the Commandements forbidding any sinne command the contrary duty and commanding the duty forbid the opposite sin and in every prohibition a command of all duties opposite to that which is forbidden For example in the second Commandement which under the name of Images forbids the inventing or using of any form of worship of mans devising there is withall commanded the worship of God according to his own will in the use of the ordinances prescribed and warranted by his Word as prayer and hearing of the Word receiving the Sacraments c. And in the third Commandement under the prohibition of taking Gods name in vaine is commanded the taking up of it with all holy reverence and feare Secondly Rule 2 under the name of any duty commanded there is required not only the performance of the outward act of that duty The Law besides the outward act requires the obedience of the heart but withall the inward obedience of the heart to the Law which requires it Rom. 6.17 and the letting out of all the affections of the soule in the performance of it as Psal 119.167 the Prophet professeth that his soul had kept Gods Testimonies and that he did love them exceedingly whence it is that both our Saviour Christ and his Apostles after him both comprise all duties commanded in the Law under the name of Love being an affection of the heart and tell us that the holy affection of love is the fulfilling of the Law Rom. 13.10 implying that whatsoever the act be which we perform yet if it proceed not from that holy disposition of the heart And the use of all helps to any duty commanded it is not answerable to the Law Againe together with the duty commanded in any Law there is required the use of all helps and meanes which may further us thereunto on the other side where any sinne is forbidden there the inward roote of that evill And forbids the originall corruption of the heart with all motions flowing from thence even as far
Cap. 5. That the Scriptures containe all things necessary to salvation Pag. 63 Cap. 6. Of the scope of the Scriptures which is Gods Glory and mans Salvation Pag. 70 Cap. 7. That they which read the Scriptures must be men of spirituall mindes Pag. 76 Sect. 1. The description of a spirituall man Pag. 78 Sect. 2. Of the spirituall mans operations Pag. 86 Sect. 3. Of Faith and the two sorts of Faith Historicall and Iustifying Pag. 90 Sect. 4. Of Spirituall experience other meanes of comprehending things spirituall Pag. 115 Cap. 8 Of the choice of fit times for reading the Scriptures Pag. 125 Cap. 9. Of particular preparation before reading Pag. 133 Cap. 10. Of reverend attention and heedfull observation in reading the Scriptures Pag. 141 Cap. 11. Of duties after reading the Scriptures especially Meditation and Prayer Pag. 149 Cap. 12. Directions for the right interpretation of the Scriptures Pag. 160 Cap. 13. Directions for raising observations out of the Scriptures for our owne instruction and edification Pag. 169 Sect. 1. Of the Subject matters handled in the Scripture and first of workes Pag. 172 Sect. 2. Of the Laws given by God to his Church and recorded in Scripture Pag. 197 Concerning the Morality of the fourth Commandement Sect. I. That the Law of the Sabbath in the fourth Commandement is Morall and therefore perpetuall Pag. 213 Sect. II. Answer to the Arguments against the institution of the Sabbath in Paradise Pag. 133 Sect. III. The morality and perpetuity of the Sabbath proved out of the fourth Commandement Pag. 253 Sect. IV A continuation of the consideration of the rest of the Laws recorded in the Scripture with such instructions as may be drawn from them Pag. 300 DIRECTIONS FOR THE PROFITABLE Reading of the Scriptures CAP. I. Of the necessity of preparation thereunto THat the reading of the Scriptures is nothing else but a kind of holy conference with God Preparation in the reading of the Scriptures wherein we enquire after and he reveals unto us himself and his will we shall manifest more fully hereafter when we shall shew that these holy writings are the Word of God himself who speaks unto us in and by them 1. Inforced 1 t Frō the presence of God with whom we confer in reading Wherefore when we take in hand the Book of the Scriptures we cannot otherwise conceive of our selves then as standing in Gods presence to hear what he will say unto us So much the Prophet seems to imply Psal 73.17 when he expresseth his consulting with Gods Word by that phrase of going into the Sanctuary of God for there indeed was Gods Word kept that is going in unto God as going into the Sanctuary is tearmed 2 Sam. 7.18 these kinds of expression seem to imply that when we betake our selves to the reading of the Scriptures we come in unto God or stand in his presence to enquire at his mouth Now with what reverence it becomes us to stand in Gods presence Requiring therefore of us due reverence in performing that duty 1. From the Majesty of God appears not onely by Jacobs fear after he knew God was in the place where he lay Gen. 28.16 17. but farther by the caveat given by Solomon to take heed to our feet when we enter into Gods house Eccles 5.1 and that upon a double ground partly because God is in heaven ver 2. that is high and full of Majesty and consequently to be attended with reverence 2. From the sense of our defilements and inabilities and fear and partly because we have shooes on our feet which God warns Moses to put off Exod. 3.5 when he stood in his presence that is to speak in S. James his phrase we have filthinesse and superfluity of naughtinesse in our hearts which must be laid aside that when we come unto God to be taught by him we may receive his word with meeknesse James 1.21 So that both the Majesty and Holinesse of God whose eyes are purer then to behold evill Hab. 1.13 and the corruptions and defilements of our own hearts necessarily require an heedfull 2ly Frō the inconveniences that follow neglect of such preparation and carefull preparation of our selves before we enter into Gods presence to enquire at his mouth and look into his word The necessity of this preparation when we read the Scriptures will be yet more evident if we observe the ill consequents which follow the neglect of this duty in such persons as either wholly or too often omit it who boldly entring into Gods presence 1 Unfruitfulnesse in our selves and handling the holy things of God with unwashen hands that is reading his word with unsanctified and unprepared hearts as they come unto the work without due reverence so they return for the most part without fruit 2 Discredit of the word it self and by that means bring up an ill report upon the sacred ordinance of God as if it were a dead letter without any quickning power at all unsavoury food without nourishment unfruitfull seed that yeelds no encrease Secondly 3 Discouragement to others by the same means they weaken the hearts of such as might be encouraged to undertake this holy exercise from the use whereof they are much deterred when they observe some of those that are frequent in the practise of this duty remain still ignorant unfruitfull dead-hearted and disconsolate And lastly 4 Discomfort to our selves they occasion discomfort to themselves when notwithstanding the use of this means they finde themselves ever learning and never come to the knowledge of the truth remaining still either in ignorance or in disobedience of heart at least in much deadnesse of spirit without zeal life or activity in holy duties Thus we cannot but observe with grief of heart an exercise in it self every way usefull fruitfull and comfortable if it be duly and conscionably performed by the neglect of carefull preparation become not onely unfruitfull and unprofitable but besides by necessary consequent unpleasant distastefull and burthensome to those that use it To manifest the necessity of due preparation in reading the Scriptures much more might be spoken and many more ill consequents might be observed that are occasioned by the neglect thereof But the considerations already mentioned are sufficient to evince the usefulnesse and necessity of such a preparation Taking that therefore for granted that this duty of preparation when we undertake the reading of holy Scriptures must be performed our next work must be to give directions for the manner and order how the Readers heart must be fitted to the performance of this task which cannot well be done without taking knowledge of the nature of that word which is to be read and of the end and scope at which it aims That the observation of the nature of Gods word which we read 2 Directed by considering 1. the nature of the Scriptures may much farther us in this duty of preparation to the reading
the all-sufficiency of God may be more admired as Isa 51.12 13. Psalm 146.3 4 6. manifesting that they were nothing at the first have nothing now but what is borrowed from God and that too in a very scant proportion So that if we enquire where wisdome power sufficiency and perfection are to be found the depth saith it is not in me the sea answers it is not in me all creatures they have heard the fame thereof Job 28.22 but onely the mighty Creator of heaven and earth hath possessed all these things in the beginning of his ways Thus the Word sets out riches mens strong City Prov. 18.11 to be nothing Prov. 23.5 strong wals no better then ripe figges that fall into the eaters mouth Nah. 3.12 horses and chariots a broken reed Psal 20.8 unable to save a man Psa 33.17 honour an empty breath gracing no man without wisdome Psal 49.20 men lighter then vanity Ps 62.9 Princes but a puffe Psal 146.4 nay whole Nations but as the dust of the ballance Isa 40.15 nothing nay lesse then nothing ver 17. Thus the Scriptures setting God and the creatures one against another like a foil under a diamond God in his absolute and transcendent perfections the creatures though excellent by the beauty that God hath given them yet empty weak and contemptible compared with God doe advance his glory beyond comparison So that as the height of heaven is seen by this that when wee have climed the top of some high mountain which when we stood in the low valley seemed to touch the skye we find our selves to be as far from heaven as we were before So when we have beheld the greatest excellencies of the most admired creatures it is no more in comparison of Gods perfections then if we had seen the basest worm By these divers ways doe the Scriptures advance Gods honour and throw down all creatures at his foot The next scope of the Scriptures The secōd scope of the Scriptures our salvation furthered 1. Proposing the meanes thereof is the furthering of mans salvation which they effect two ways First by proposing the means of salvation and secondly by winning our hearts to entertain them First then they present unto us God himself offering life and salvation in Christ that beleeving in him we might have eternall life John 3.16 Next the Scriptures propose the rules of an holy life being the way that leads to salvation and so serve for a guide to direct us Psalm 119.105 A Counsellor to advise us ver 24. shining out unto us as a light in a dark place 2 Pet. 1.19 discovering unto us the way and the crooked paths on either side of it leading to death and destruction The next means by which the Scriptures further our salvation 2. Winning our hearts to embrace it by the Spirit accompanying it is by winning our hearts to embrace and seek it which it performs by the Spirit that accompanies it for that onely quickens the soul Iohn 6.63 by giving us a taste of the heavenly gift and enabling us to comprehend with all Saints the breadth length depth and heighth thereof Eph. 3.18 whereupon we desire and seek it with all our souls Withall it causeth us to relish Gods Gommandements which we finde sweeter then honey to our mouths Ps 119.103 or at least provokes us to a longing desire after them as David opened his mouth and panted longing for them Ps 119.131 wishing that his ways were directed to keep Gods statutes Psal 119.5 craving Gods help to assist us therein to order our steps in his word Ps 119.133 promising to run the way of Gods Commandements when he shall enlarge our hearts Ps 119.32 afflicting our selves for our wandrings from them and praying to be brought back into a right way Ps 119.176 Thus Gods word stirs up the desires of the soul after God and Christ and thereby moves us to take hold of eternall life An effect of which none misse but such as reject and put it off from themselves with those Acts 13.46 CAP. VII Who they are that profit by reading the holy Scriptures that they must be men of spirituall mindes IT is an evident and known truth They must have spiritual minds that understand the Scriptures Because the Scriptures thēselves are spirituall that to the apprehending of any thing there must be a correspondence in nature between the faculty and the object that it apprehends as between light and the eye between meat and the taste Seeing therefore as we have made it evident already the most part of the matters handled in Scripture are spirituall it is impossible that they should be comprehended by any other then by a spirituall minde 1 Cor. 2.15 A naturall man being as uncapable of the right understanding of spirituall things as a beast is of rationall discourse That is both uncapable to comprehend them in their own nature and much more to approve them seeing he esteems them foolishnesse 2 Cor. 2.14 It is true Yet it is all mens duty to read and study them that the study of the Scriptures is every mans duty according to that generall exhortation John 5.39 seeing they were intended by God unto the whole Church whose revealed will is that all men should be saved and come to the knowledge of the truth 1 Tim. 2.4 And if all men are bound to doe the things revealed Deut. 29.29 it must needs be granted that they are bound to know them Wherefore it must necessarily follow that none can be excluded from the reading of the Scriptures in which those duties are prescribed All that we affirm is this But onely spirituall men profit by them as they ought that of those that doe and ought to read them none can profit by them as they ought unlesse they be men of spirituall mindes without which they can neither understand nor beleeve them such as mixe not the word with faith profit not by it at all Heb. 4.2 Notwithstanding Notwithstanding those that come not prepared with a good heart 1. May receive it while they are reading the endeavours of those that have not yet gotten such spirituall mindes are not altogether vain if there be in them any true desire to get the knowledg of those heavenly mysteries revealed therin For though they come not prepared with such an heart as is required when they take the work in hand yet God may give it them while they are about the duty as he opened Lydiaes heart while she was hearing S. Pauls Sermon Acts 16.24 and converted three thousand in hearing of Saint Peters Sermon Act. 2.41 Or the Spirit may afterwards bring those things to remembrance 2. Or the Spirit may bring them after to remembrace 3. Or at least they may by reading be restrained if not converted which they seemed to sleight at the first reading and may then work effectually by them as he dealt with his own Apostles Iohn 12.16 Or lastly though there follow no
duties wherein they please him Object But some feele no such Spirituall life in themselves 1 Chron. 29.9 and griefe at sinfull courses Psal 119.136 What shall we thinke then of the condition of those that feele no Spirituall life at all in themselves but are alwayes complaining that they are senselesse and dead I Answer Answ 1. Their cōplaints argue that they have it For dead men as they feele not so they complaine not that a wicked man may judge himselfe to be without Spirituall life by the very judgement of Naturall Reason or being convinced by the Word but such a man feeles not his deadnesse nor is grieved at it though he may be affected with the consequents of it sometimes nor labours to get life but he that grieves and is continually unquiet in such a seeming dead condition and labours all he may to get out of it manifestly discovers to others though himselfe discerne it not that there is yet life remaining in him ● For he that is once dead complaines nor grieves no more Yea the same persons 2. Their striving to move go on even in their greatest weaknesse farther discover some degree of Spirituall life remaining in them not onely by their striving to walke in God's wayes when they finde no ability to doe it with the Apostle Rom. 7.19 and though they cannot runne the wayes of Gods Commandements with that largenesse of heart they desire Psal 119.32 yet they move forwards according to their ability 3. Their griefe at Gods dishonour by themselves others and in the middest of their senslesnesse can be grieved both at foule dishonours done to God and at the miseries of his people As some persons being so weakned by sicknesse that they know not either what they doe or what is done unto them nor have any sense of their owne life yet are offended at the flashing of a candle in their eyes or a pinch or other violence done unto their bodies Wherefore we must needes grant a Spirituall Sense exercised in discerning good and evill Heb. By this Experience we discern 1. Good 1. God himselfe exceeding good 5.14 and by that a Spirituall Experience of both Of Good the Author whereof is God whom we taste to be Good 1 Pet. 2.3 Psal 33.8 by the experiments of his mercies in generall Psal 145.9 10. and to our selves in particular as David found in his owne case Psal 116.5 7. and righteous as he proves and shews himselfe experimentally by his workes Psal 58.11 especially faithfull to his servants By the same experience we finde the things given us of God to be good his Spirit 2. His coūsells and graces Psal 143.10 his Counsells good and that such bring great peace Psal 119.165 the work of Sanctification in us exceeding good in mortifying our corruptions in quickning to holinesse yea all the fruits of the Spirit love joy peace c. Gal. 5.22 Besides 3. The effects of his ordinances Prayer by this Experience we finde the good effects of Gods ordinances Prayer powerfull with God Psal 18.6 as appeares if not by a direct answer by message as Dan. 9.13 Act. 10.4 or voice from Heaven as Iohn 12.48 yet by reall effects Psal 116.2 3. and evidence to our own spirits Psal 66.19 20. which much easeth the heart The Word 1 Sam. 1.18 The Word searching the thoughts 1 Cor. 14.25 Heb. 4.12 Pricking the heart Act. 2.37 and subduing it to the obedience of Christ Act. 2.37 41. Converting the soule Psal 19.7 yea making wife to salvation 2 Tim. 3.15 wiser then all the World Psal 119.98 99 100. Comforting the spirit ver 50. By the same Experience we discerne evill 2ly By the same Experience we discern evill The vanity of all the creatures riches and honour which make one no better then a dogge that dies in a ditch Ps 49.20 and leave him a foole at last Ier. 17.11 Wisdome and whatsoever is admired amongst men Vanity Eccles 2.15 so that by experience one findes an end of all perfection Psal 119.96 the pleasures of sinne leaving a man in all evill Prov. 5.14 without fruit Rom. 6.21 sinne it selfe out of measure sinfull as the Apostle expresseth it Rom. 7.13 making a man a very beast Psal 73.22 Withall it makes one finde the corruption of his whole nature Psal 51.5 Abomination of his righteousnesse Isa 64.6 Inability to any good Rom. 7.18 even so much as to thinke any good thing 2. Cor. 3.5 This Experience wonderfully strengthens Faith This Spirituall Experience much 1. Strengthens faith when by the events we finde all things to be as we beleeved as the Israelites beleeved God when they saw the Egyptians drowned Exod. 14.31 and David knew that God favoured him by his deliverance Psal 41 11. and his confidence that God would deliver him was because God had delivered him 1 Sam. 17.37 see 2 Tim. 2.17 18. Secondly 2. Quickens Affection Experience wonderfully quickens affections by those sensible Objects which it discovers as the sight of Iosephs chariots wonderfully revived Iacobs heart Gen. 45.27 and Gods deliverances of David wonderfully encreased his love Psal 18.1 and 116.1 It is true indeed that Faith workes more stedfastnesse and firmnesse of adherence Markes of Spirituall Affections 1. When they are kindled by Spirituall objects but Experience usually breeds the greater strength of affections These Affections we may know to be Spirituall if First they be kindled by Spirituall objects such as are the Sense of Gods Love manifested unto us in the experiments thereof in pardoning our sinnes Psal 103.3 Luke 7.47 in guiding us by his Counsell Psal 73.24 mastering our corruptions preventing our errours 1 Sam. 25.32 griefe and feare for his displeasure Psal 77.7 8. occasioned by our sins Ezra 9.15 yea for his dishonour by other mens sinnes Psal 119.136.139 Secondly 2. When they are seasonable when they are answerable to Gods dealing with us rejoycing and mourning seasonably when God calls us to either Eccl. 7.14 not preposterously 3. When they keepe the heart humble and tractable as Isa 22.12 Thirdly when they keepe us within our bounds humble and tractable like the Psalmist Psa 131.2 in a reverend feare of Gods Majesty Lastly when they provoke and quicken us to holy duties not onely of Prayer or thankesgiving but generally of all service and obedience as they doe the holy Prophet Psal 116.16 17. It is true that Yet it is only the Spirit of God which must testifie to our spirits that they are such when all is done none can assure us that our affections and motions are Spirituall but the same Spirit which workes them in us which as it testifies with our Spirit that we are Gods children Rom. 8.16 so doth it assure us that we are moved by his Spirit It cannot be prevented but that many men will deceive themselves mistaking carnall motions for Spirituall as Iehu did 2 King 10.16 But although some men think they
are in the right way when they are wide of it yet that lets not another man who is in the right way to know and be assured that he is in it This large Description of the nature of a Spirituall man The use of this description of a spirituall man is of singular use both for the encouragement of those that find themselves in some good measure answerable to this patterne that is here set before them to goe on with cheerfulnesse in the study of the Scriptures and in all other holy duties required of them As also for the awakening of others who when upon examination they finde themselves out of this blessed condition may labour with earnest desires and fervent prayers to beg that Spirit at Gods hands that may make them such as finding themselves while they remaine otherwise in a dangerous condition in which neither Gods word nor any of the rest of his ordinances can profit them as they ought CAP. VIII Of the choice of fit Times and Seasons for Reading the Scriptures THere is a season to every purpose under the Sunne saith the wise man Eccl. 3. the observation whereof not onely addes grace unto every good action but many times facilitates the work it selfe which we have in hand and makes it more easie to be compassed The consideration whereof ought to move us in such a weighty work as is the study of the Scriptures to enquire what times and seasons may be most conveniently chosen out and set apart for the exercising of our selves in this so holy a duty No time limited by God for the study of the Scriptures but the Sabbath It is true that besides the Sabbath day God hath limited to men no certain time for the duties of Prayer and study of the Scriptures only we have generall commands to be frequent and continuall in Prayer Eph. 6.18 1 Thess 5.17 and diligent in meditation of the Word Iosh 1.8 of both which we have examples in the practise of holy men Only in generall the often exercising of our selves therein is required Psalme 58.17 Dan. 6.10 Psal 119.97 But the particular times for either duty which are impossible to be directed by any generall rule are left to be determined by Christian wisdome Now times either for Prayer or Reading may be either constant and set Times for studying the Scriptures are 1. Occasionall or uncertain and occasionall For there are times wherein God calles us extraordinarily to Prayer Isa 22.12 either in afflictions felt Iames 5.13 or feared Psalme 116.3.4 and 50.15 or for mercies expected Dan. 9.2 3. or already received Psal 18.1 and 116.12 13. The like occasions we may meet withall for searching the Scriptures to resolve us in doubts Psalme 73.17 To comfort us in afflictions Psalme 119.50 To direct us in matters of advice Psalme 119.24 To guide us in our way verse 105. To assist us in temptations Eph. 6.17 Such or the like occasions may cause us to have recourse to the word extraordinarily besides the ordinary studies of it to make us wise unto salvation and furnish us to every good work 2 Tim. 3.15.17 For the constant and daily study of the Scriptures is required 2. Set and constant And that for All men not onely of the Ministers of the word Tim. 4.15 17. Magistrates Deut. 17.19 although indeed it concernes them above others but besides of all John 5.33 and that by a kind of necessity considering mens ignorance in matters appertaining to godlinesse Psal 73.22 Prov. 30.21 the difficulty of understanding things that never entred into mans heart 1 Cor. 2.9 and the great necessity of attaining the knowledge of those things which are the grounds of Faith the Rules of practice and the power of God to salvation Rom. 1.16 Nay Even such as have attained some good measure of knowledg if we had attained to some good measure of the knowledg of the Mysteries of godlinesse by the Word yet how we should be ready in the use thereof either for directing our own waies Psal 119.50.105 for admonishing others Col. 3.16 for defence in time of temptation with our Saviour Mat. 4.4.7.10 for comforting our Brethren 1 Thess 4.18 for examining our teachers doctrine with the Bereans Acts 17.11 unless besides the knowledge of the Scriptures we keep them fresh in memory by continuall meditation and often perusing of that volume which being so large as it is must of necessity take up some reasonable portion of time daily for this exercise In limiting this time for Reading the Scriptures respect must be had both to Order In choosing times for reading Scriptures we must respect and Proportion For the former godly men have accustomed to begin the day with religious exercises as with Prayer Psal 5.3 and 88.13 and Psal 55.17 1. The Order 1. The morning is a sit time for Prayer Reading the Morning was one of the three times wherein David presented his prayers unto God Now although Prayer and Reading of the Word be two distinct exercises yet that they mutually help one another is most manifest and consequently are fit to be joyned together For the Word ministers matter of Prayer and is the ground of our Petitions who have no promise to be heard unless we ask according to Gods wil 1 Io. 5.14 which is no where revealed but in the word which therefore strengthens our faith in Prayer Again Prayer must needs awe us with the reverence of Gods Majesty and consequently prepare our hearts to tremble at Gods word in reading it which God is well pleased withall Isaiah 96.2 The fitnesse of the Morning for these exercises is evident 1. As it is fit to honour God with the first of our time not only because the first of our time as of all things else belongs unto God whose service ought to be our speciall and chiefest care but besides 2. The heart in the morning is freest from worldly thoughts because the heart being then most free from worldly thoughts is fittest for holy meditations And withall when in the beginning of the day the heart of a man is seasoned with holinesse and with the feare of God he findes himself the better fitted to walk humbly with him all the day after It is very fit to close up the day with these duties wherewith we began it 2. It is good to close up the day with these holy exercises The Evening was one of Davids times for Prayer Psalme 55.17 and 141.2 and Isaaks as it seemes Gen. 24.63 Then indeed it is fit to passe our accompts with God concerning our carriage the day before that having made all our reckonings even with him we may with assurance lay down our selves to rest in peace Now we have already intimated how fit it is to joyne Prayer and Reading together so that if the Evening be a fit time for Prayer it must be acknowledged to be fit for Reading also The Mornings then and Evenings
in it we must labour earnestly to work our hearts to the love of those Counsells of God which we embrace by faith for their Righteousnesse Psal 119.128 Purity ver 140. Perfection ver 96 97. and especially for the usefulnesse and wonderfull benefit of them to our selves that we may desire them with all our soules Psal 119.131 and delight and rejoyce in them ver 162.174 To this purpose it will be needfull to set before us the wonderfull efficacy of the Word which not only counsells Psal 119.24 and directs us in our waies v. 105. but helps us farther in clensing them ver 9. in quickning the spirit ver 93. giving wisdome v. 98 99 100. converting the soul Ps 19.7 bringing great reward that we obtained by observing them ver 11. and great peace which they have that love them Psal 119.165 These eminent excellencies of the Word set before us in such particulars cannot choose but make these heavenly counsells precious in our eyes as they are to holy David Psal 119.72.127.162 and bring the soule to delight in them exceedingly Such fervent affections This will make us serious in devising how we may put the counsels of God in practise if they once quicken a mans spirit cannot choose but move him to advise seriously with himselfe how he may bring both his heart and practise to conforme to those holy counsells and directions which he finds laid before him in Gods Word wherupon he must necessarily fall to the considering of his disposition condition employments and occasions and to the devising of a way how to frame out of the Word rules to himself for the ordering of them aright according to the mind and will of God with the Prophet David Psal 119.59 bethinking himself what means he may make use of to that purpose taking the Word with him as a light in his hand to guide his steps Psal 119.105 joyning to the company of godly persons v. 63. chasing away the wicked that might withdraw him vers 115. and this he doth with all speed vers 60. with a resolution to hold on in this holy course to the end vers 112. unto which he binds himself by a solemn vow and covenant v. 106. A man having thus resolved upon the practise of such duties as the Word prescribes For which end we are to take hold of the first Opportunities offered must embrace the first opportunity offered unto him to put his resolution in execution Partly because Opportunities are not alwaies presented and besides because the time of this life which is allotted for the practise of the duties required is short and the duties themselves are many wherein the more we abound the more we increase our reward and further our account at the last day 2 Cor. 9.6 And lastly because the inlargement of the heart is requisite to the running of the way of Gods Commandements Psalme 119.32 which therefore it will be needfull for us to make use of when it comes upon us knowing that we cannot command it when we will Now in setting to the Practise of such duties as the Word prescribes although we must have respect to all Gods Commandements after Davids example Psalme 119.6 for that is our Righteousnesse Especially for those duties which are layed before us in Reading the Word Deuteronomy 6.25 yet seeing all duties cannot be performed at once we must take more speciall care for the present not only of those things which our imployments in our particular callings or incident occasions press upon us but of those also which the Word which we have read or heard directs unto conceiving that God thereby more especially commends them unto us for that present We know that we are not onely to do what God hath commanded In all our Practise we must observe not only what is commanded but withall as it is commanded but besides to do it as he hath commanded Deut. 5.25 without turning aside to the right or left hand verse 32. that is to perform the duties which God prescribes in such Manner Forme and Order as he requires them to be done Wherefore he that desires to be accepted in his Obedience ought to set the Word of God before him as David doth his judgments Psalme 18.22 as a man doth the coppy by which he writes This is done by keeping the rules given us in the Word fresh in our memories reviving them by often meditation This use David made of the Word which he caryed alwaies with him as a Lanthorne to direct him in every step Psalme 119.105 having it ever with him verse 98. and having respect to his statutes continually verse 117. Thus it behoves us to make use of the Word after we have read it Examining our waies how neere they come up to the rule or come short of it But withall because we know the rules thereof are not only given for direction but besides for examination of our waies it will be good for us to call our selves daily to account how our practise answers the rules that are from time to time set before us in reading or hearing the Word Both that on the one side we may be incouraged in conforming our practise to the Law and rejoyce in the grace of God working in us with thankfulnesse That wee may be either thankfull or humbled and on the other side when we find that we have swarved from the duty required and the rule set before us we may be humbled and grieved for our failings and driven to seek unto Christ to make up our peace and may pray more earnestly for Gods assistance to look better to our waies for time to come as David doth Psal 119.131 132 133 176. I make no question but that the consideration of these directions given for the profitable reading of Scriptures will work diversly upon divers persons * 1. Obj. Such a strict rule will discourage some 1. As conceiving it impossible to be followed 2. Or requiring more time then can be spared 2. Object And others to mourne when they come short of what is prescribed To the first 1. The difficulty ariseth from their unwilling minds 2. As much time may be spared from their vanities To the second 1. We deal with a gratious Father who accepts a willing mind 2. Only we must endevour to come as neer to the rule as we may Some conceiving the rules impossible to be observed in that exact manner as is prescribed or at least that such a strict observation of them will cause greater expence of time labour then they are willing to spare are deterred from the performance of the duty as the Jewes were from following our Saviour upon the hearing of his Sermon Joh. 6.60 61. Some others men of tender hearts may pondering all these duties in their thoughts be driven to mourn in secret when they find their own performances so unanswerable to the rules formerly delivered and may doubt whether they are accepted or no. To
represented to the Jews Christ to come as did their Passeover sacrifices scapegoat c. or they were outward shadows of inward sanctification such as were many of their washings separating and cleansing of leapers c. As for the former sort of these which under divers types point us out Christ to come we are more particularly to observe that they represent him as a sacrifice for sin a lamb slain from the beginning of the world the scape-goat sets out the fruit of his suffering the utter removing from us carrying away our sins into the wildernesse that they may never appear nor be remembred against us any more the like representations we have in many of the rest By which we learn that as from the beginning there was no other name by which men might be saved but only the name of Jesus Christ promised to our first Parents expected by the Patriarchs and both to them after they were formed into a state represented many ways although under figures and shadows so they were to expect salvation by him no other way but by his death nor any other salvation then by taking our sins upon him and thereby making our peace with God his Father This consideration is a great means to strengthen our faith when we are compassed with so great a cloud of witnesses testifying that truth which we believe in all ages from the beginning The second sort of ceremonies are such as are under the figures of washings 2. As under legall washing sanctification is shadowed we are taught to cleanse our selves in drawing neer unto God legall separations and purifications and the like represented to the Iews that inward purity and cleansing of the heart which God requires in all his people especially those that draw neer unto him in the performance of such duties of his worship as he hath commanded unto this the Psalmist alludes in that expression of his Psal 26.6 as likewise doth the Prophet Isa 1.16 Now although we are freed from those outward ceremonies the observation thereof notwithstanding seeing we are every way as much bound as the Iews ever were to labour after inward holinesse and the cleansing of our selves from all filthinesse both of the flesh and of the spirit and the keeping of our hearts and consciences pure and undefiled we may and ought by the reading of these laws to be stirred up to the practice of that inward duty of sanctification which those outward ceremonies represented especially when we draw neer unto God in those holy exercises of prayer that we may lift up holy hands as we are exhorted 1 Tim. 2.8 and in hearing purging out of all naught inesse and superfluity of malitiousnesse as we are warned Jam. 1.2 that we may receive the word with meeknesse into honest and good hearts Luk. 8.15 in which only it is fruitfull and so in other like duties In generall all those ceremonies of what kind soever 3. The burthensomnesse of those ceremonies may encourage us to more cheerfulnesse in our more easie services whether types of Christ or shadows of inward holinesse being every way so burthensome as Saint Peter affirms Act. 15.10 both in respect of toilsome labour and of the great charges and expence about them And when all was done being so dark and obscure that the Children of Israel could not look unto the end of that which is abolished as the Apostle speaks 2 Cor. 3.13 that whole frame of service and worship wherein the Iews were exercised being compared with those ordinances which Christ hath left unto us so easie so cheap so few in number and yet so plain that now we behold as with open face the glory of the Lord 2 Cor. 3.13 14. the reading of that law of ceremonies and the comparing of their manner of worship in them with ours may teach us two things Acknowledging thankfully the liberty purchased to us by Christ First to raise up our hearts to a thankfull acknowledgement of Gods great mercy to us who hath been pleased by Iesus Christ to take off that heavy yoke from our shoulders and to set us at liberty in comparison of them Galat. 5.1 which should be a great inducement unto us not only to bear but to take up that easie yoke as he himself calls it Matth. 11.29 and to be constant in the cheerfull use of those holy and quickening ordinances which Christ hath left unto his Church and that without any wearinesse at all or any murmuring at our condition Secondly seeing those laws had no more but shadows of good things to come And bewailing our blindnesse in this cleer sunshine of the Gospel but had not the things themselves as the Apostle speaks Heb. 10.1 and even those shadows too but in carnall ordinances as they are called Heb. 9.10 whereas we now have the things themselves and those also represented unto us in a more spirituall way Let it be in the reading of those ordinances and comparing them with the writings of the Evangelists and Apostles wherein both Christs himself and the things freely given us by God in him are so fully and cleerly set before us that he that runs may read them be an effectuall means to move us to reflect upon our selves that bewailing our blindnesse in so clear a light shining out unto us like the Sun in his strength and our deadnesse of heart in the use of these spirituall and quickning means which the Lord hath so gratiously afforded unto us May be stirred up to labour for more knowledge as having more effectuall means to obtain them we may with all earnestnesse and constancy labour to attain to a greater measure of knowledge faith and of every other grace and unto more fruitfulnesse in every good work especially unto more life and fervency of affection in the duties of Gods worship One thing more it may be fit for us to take into consideration in the reading of the ceremoniall law which is this 5. Though we use not the ceremonies themselves yet we may draw rules from them for our direction Howsoever those ceremonies be abolished yet wheresoever they are directed to an end which is common to us with them there though we observe not the ceremony it self yet we from them draw a rule which may be of use unto us in the duties of our worship As for example our Ordinances and the Jewish agree in this that as they are holy so they ought to be kept holy and free from pollution by excluding unclean persons from the use of them The care of this under the law was committed to the Priests who had the charge of the holy things and are therefore justly taxed for neglect of their duty in not keeping strangers and uncircumcised persons from the sanctuary from those holy things that were offered therein Ezek. 44.7 8. Now seeing our ordinances are in all respects as holy as those of the Iews were the charge of keeping their holy things undefiled