Selected quad for the lemma: heart_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
heart_n affection_n grace_n spirit_n 2,233 5 4.5134 3 false
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
A35943 A brief explication of the last fifty Psalmes from Ps. 100 to the end / by David Dickson ... Dickson, David, 1583?-1663. 1654 (1654) Wing D1394A; ESTC R31324 283,150 402

There are 20 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

21 22 23 24. And from the works of the fifth day Fishes greater and smaller v. 25 26 In the third place he bringeth arguments of Gods praise fr●m the preservation specially of living creatures v. 27 28 29 30. In the fourth place is the conclusion of the Psalme with some further reasons for praising of GOD v. 31 32 33 34 35. Ver. 1. BLesse the LORD O my soul O LORD my God thou art very great thou art cloathed with honour and majesty Here is the scope of the whole Psalme wherein he stirreth up his own soul and by his own example all others that have ears to hear to glorifie our God for his greatnesse and Majesty manifested in his works of Creation and Providence Whence learn 1. The Lord is to be praised by his children not only for his benefits bestowed upon them but also for his own glorious Majesty and greatnesse not only is he to be praised for the works of Redemption and Grace to his Elect children but also for the works of Creation and what he hath bestowed upon the creatures as this Psalme compared with the former doth teach us 2. Because men have oft-times the words of praise in their mouth and do care little to have their affection suitable to the work in their heart therefore when we go about to praise God we should stir up our spirits unto a Religious disposition as David doth here saying Blesse the Lord O my soul. 3. When we go about the work of ●ods praise we should consider his Majesty how great he is and worthy to be praised O LORD thou art very great 4. Then is the heart best fitted for Gods praises when the soul that is about the work of praise doth apprehend its interest in God and looketh upon him as reconciled and in Covenant with it self O Lord my God thou art very great 5. The praises of God do not depend upon tbe man that praiseth him but are fixed in God and flow forth from himself so clearly that none can be excused of ingratitude who do not acknowledge his glory Thou art cloathed with honour and Majesty Albeit God be invisible and unsearchable yet his honour and Majesty may be seen in his works which are as a garment both to hide him in one respect and hold him forth in another to be seen Thou art cloathed with honour and Majesty Vers. 2. Who coverest thy selfe with light as with a garment who stretchest out the heavens like a curtaine 3. Who layeth the beames of his chambers in the waters who maketh the clouds his charet who walketh upon the wings of the winde 4. Who maketh his Angels spirits his ministers a flaming fire In the second place are set down the Arguments for praising of God taken from the works of creation such as were wrought the first and second day whereof only so much is spoken as may lead us unto what is said more thereof in the History written by Moses Whence learne 1. The works of creation besides their natural use do serve for spiritual uses also to wit to furnish unto us the knowledge of God to edifie us in faith and stirre us up to glorifie the Maker as here doth appear 2. Among all the sensible creatures of God the creation of the light hath the first place for manifestation of his glory whether we look unto the brightnesse and admirable purity of it which cannot be polluted by any filthinesse whereupon it shines or the use it hath in operation upon and setting forth of the beauty of the r●st of the creatures therefore he beginneth at it here 3. Our thoughts of God should be higher larger more purified from bodily apprehensions and all imperfections then our thoughts of created light are when we look upon the light i●●u●inated all the world at once For as the garment of a King sheweth his Majesty and yet is no part of his substance or essence and in its nature is much inferiour to his worth so is the light nothing but Gods creature serving to shew forth his glory and is infinitly inferiour unto him Who covereth himself with light as a garment 4. As light filling the world is nothing but as the garment of the glorious Creator manifesting himself wirhin the compasse of the world to his creatures so the Heavens in their largest circle are but the Canopy cast about the seat of a King for he stretcheth out the heavens like a curtaine 5. This world is like a stately house which is divided in upper or lower roomes by joysts beames and plankes pu● between the lower roomes and the higher and the firmament sustaining the clouds is the first division Who layeth the beames of his chambers in the waters Or in the second region of the aire where the waters in the clouds are gathered and stored up as it were in th●ir distinct chambers for the severall uset which God hath for them 6. As the glory of Kings is to be seen when they go i● Coaches and their train is following them or when they ride on h●●●e-back with their followers attending the● so is the glory of the Lord seen when he maketh the weighty clouds having in them fl●uds of water to move from place to place as charets ab●ve our heads and not fall down at once He m●keth ehe clouds his chariot 7. The swift and unperceivable motion of the windes being raised by God from all parts in all places of the world doth serve as a shadow to point out the everywhere-presence of God Who walketh upon the wings of the winde 8. The Angels are the Lords creatures and do serve him at his pleasure as the winds and flaming fire do swiftly going where he commandeth them and in the fervour of their love to him dispatching every businesse committed to them Who maketh his Angels spirits and his Ministers a flame of fire 9. Great and glorious must our Lord Jesus be who is the Creator and Lord of Angels And maketh his Angels spirits Ver. 5. Who laid the foundations of the earth that it should not be removed for ever 6. Thou coveredst it with the deep as with a garment the waters stood above the mountaines 7. At thy rebuke they fled at the voice of thy thunder they hasted away 8. They go up by the mountaines they go downe by the valleyes unto the place which thou hast founded for them 9. Thou hast set a bound that they may not passe over that they turne not again to cover the earth From this to the 19th ver he describeth the third dayes work of the Creation prepared for the use of man and beast which were the sixth dayes work The preparation of the dwelling house of man and beast and other living creatures above the earth is set down in these five Verses Whence learn 1. The setling of the earth in a like distance on all hands from the circle of heaven compassing it round about and hanging of the earth in the midst of the
forth v. 12. and comfortably closed with assurance of the Churches victo●y by the assistance of God v. 13. Ver. 1. O God my heart is fixed I will sing and give praise even with my glory 2. Awake Psaltery and Harpe I my self will awake early In the thanksgiving of faith and promise of praise he composeth himself in the best frame of spirit unto the work and fitteeh himself by all meanes unto it Whence learn 1. It is our duty especially when we are about any piece of immediate spiritual worship to take heed what we are doing what the work is about which we are going who the Lord is with whom we have to do and how our heart is disposed that so we may approve our selves to God with the more comfort for this doth the Psalmists example teach us O God my heart is fixed I will sing 2. In Gods worship it is very needful we should have our mindes present without diversion and our affections composed and set rightly toward the Lord and the work in hand as here My heart is fixed 3. As a man first tuneth his instrument and then playeth on it so should the holy servant of God first labour to bring his spirit heart and affections into a solid and setled frame for worship and then go to work My heart is fixed or prepared firmely I will sing and give praise 4. As the glory of man above the brute creatures is that from a reasonable minde he can expresse what is his will by his tongue so the glory of the Saints above other men is to have a tongue directed by the heart for expressing of Gods praise I will sing and give praise even with my glory 5. That only is our glory wherein and whereby we do most glorifie God for this cause the tongue directed by a holy heart is here called Davids glory I will sing and give praise even with my glory 6. Under typical termes we are taught to make use of all sanctified meanes for stirring of us up unto Gods service for this the Psalmist intendeth when he saith Awake Psaltery and Harp 7. We our selves must first be stirred up to make right use of the meanes before the meanes can be fi● to stir us up therefore saith he I my self will awake early Ver. 3. I will praise thee O LORD among the people and I will sing praise unto thee among the Nations 4. For thy mercy is great above the Heavens and thy truth reacheth unto the clouds 5. Be thou exalted O GOD above the Heavens and thy glory above all the earth Here is the praise of God and the reasons thereof Whence learn 1. It is no small help unto the discharge of a duty to engage the heart unto God for the doing of it for in effect that is the most we can attain unto in this life but in the next life we shall have full vent for our will to praise God and shall follow our purpose with perpetual perseverance I will praise thee O Lord among the people 2. Sincerity hath confidence to professe its purpose before the Lord I will praise thee O Lord. 3. As it is the duty and desire also of a true worshipper that all the world should be stirred up to praise the Lord so it was the comfort of the Church of the Jewes to foresee the joyning of the Gentiles in the song and to see the Gentiles stirred up by the songs of the Jewish Church I will praise thee O Lord among the people and will sing praises unto thee among the Nations 4. The matter and reasons of Gods praise are higher then the worshipper can reach and larger then he can fathom and in special the mercy of the Lord toward his people is larger then the wide circle of Heaven Thy mercy is great above the Heavens 5. There is more stuffe and substance of good in the Lords promises then the sharpest-sigh●ed Saint ever did or can perceive for when we have followed the promise to finde out all the truth which is in it we meet with a cloud of unsearchable riches and are forced to leave it there for so much is included in this Thy truth reacheth unto the clouds 6. The height of our praising of God is to put the work of praising God upon himself and to point him out unto others as going about the magnifying of his own Name and to be glad for it as here Be thou exalted O God above the Heavens and thy glory above all the earth Ver. 6. That thy beloved may be delivered save with thy right hand and answer me After the praise of God from faith followeth the prayer of faith Wherein learn 1. The Church is the Lords beloved or the incorporation more loved then any thing else in the world therefore here called Thy beloved 2. Because the Church is Gods beloved the care of it should be most in our minde and the love of the preservation of it should draw forth our praye● most in favour of it That thy beloved may be delivered save 3. Whosoever is entrusted with any publick charge Civil or Ecclesiastick in a special manner should make the preservation and welfare of Gods people their chief aime and the chief matter of their prayer and the greatest sa●●●faction of their desires as here is done That thy beloved may be delivered save and answer me 4 As it is presupposed that the Church shall be frequently in danger so it is certain that her delive●y and preservation must be brought about by God in his way and by his power and God must be trusted with this work therefore saith he That thy beloved may be delivered save with thy right hand Ver. God hath spoken in his holinesse I will rejoyce I will divide Shechem and mete out the valley of Succoth 8. Gilead is mine Manasseh is mine Ephraim also is the strength of mine head Iudah is my Law-giver Here the Psalmist looketh unto the word of promise for his answer Whence learn 1. Supplicants must take the answer of their prayers from the Word of promise for he who findeth his warrant to pray hath his answer before he begin to pray for he prayeth according to the Will of God and so he hath his petition so doth David teach God hath spoken in his holinesse 2. Faith closing with a promise will furnish joy to the beleever before he enjoy the performance of it God hath spoken saith he I will rejoyce 3. The believer of a general promise may branch out the particulars in it which are not performed no lesse clearly then if they had been particularly expressed for so doth the Psalmist teach saying I will divide Sechem and mete out the valley of Succoth which thing came to passe as he believed and the whole Kingdome under him was now setled for his particular interest when this Psalm was composed but as it typified the reducing of the distracted parts of Christs Kingdom into the unity of Reformation and joynt
shew 3. As the Word of God only doth reveal true happinesse and the way to it so only they are blessed who choose the clear way of Gods Word to direct them to blessednesse and do make conscience sincerely to put this doctrine in practice Blessed are the undefiled in the way that walk in th● law of the Lord. 4. God hath testified in his Word how a man shall be pardoned of his sins reconciled to God and have right unto eternal life to wit by faith in the Messiah Jesus Christ and blessed is the man who doth hold this way fast Blessed are they who keep his testimonies 5. The true believer of Gods testimonies about the way of true blessedness doth studie to have communion with God and to grow in the fellowship of his grace sincerely They seek the Lord with their whole heart 8 As the blessed man holds fast the Lords testimonies for reconciliation and communion with God so he ordereth his conversation in the way which God in his Word hath prescribed eschewing sin and studying to please God They also do no iniquitie that is they are not workers of iniquity They walk in his way that is they aime and endeavour to follow the course which God doth prescribe 7. Albeit there be no man who sinneth not yet such as do flee to Gods grace offered in Christ for dai●y pardon and do set themselves to obey Gods directions set down in his Word are esteemed to be no workers of iniquity but men going homeward to God howsoever clogged with infirmities They also do no iniquity How so They walk in his wayes Ver. 4. Thou hast commanded us to keep thy Precepts diligently This doctrine the Psalmist applieth to himself and first acknowledgeth his obligation to follow the direction of the Lord in the obedience of faith v. 4. and then he wisheth to have grace to obey v. 5 6 7 And thirdly engageth himself to follow this course by promise and prayer v. 8. from the acknowledgement of his obligation to obey Gods Word Learn 1. The doctrine of faith and obedience set down in Scripture i● not left to our arbitrement but is enjoyned unto us by divine authority there is a command given forth unto us to believe in the Son of God and a command to follow the duties of love to God and man Thou hast commanded us to keep thy Precepts 2. Albeit the obedience of Gods Word had no promise of reward and albeit felicity were not proposed unto us as the gracious reward of the obedience of faith yet the very command it sel● and the authority of God should be a sufficient motive unto it which obligation as we should acknowledge so should we subject our selves unto it and say Thou hast commanded us to keep thy Precepts 3. Howsoever there be great weaknesse even in reconciled soules and albeit there be some strong reliques of corrupt nature in them hindering them to do as th●y would yet God will have them aiming to keep hi● Precepts diligently making conscience of all duties to God and man of the smaller duties as well as of the greater and that on all occasions in all times places and companies with their best affection and strength Thou hast commanded us to keep thy Precepts diligently Ver. 5. O that my wayes were directed to keep thy statutes 6. Then shall I not be ashamed when I have respect unto all thy Commandments 7. I will praise thee with uprightnesse of heart when I shall have learned thy righteous judgements The Psalmist wisheth to have grace to obey 1. Because so he should not he ashamed nor disappointed of his hope v. 6. and also so he should be enabled to glorifie and praise God more perfectly v. 7. Whence learn 1. The Commandments of God are not grievous to the honest heart for albeit he be unable to do what he should yet it is the desire of his heart to do what is commanded O that my wayes were directed to keep thy statutes is his hearty wish 2. When we have received the general direction of Gods Word we have need of the effectual direction of Gods Spirit to apply the Word rightly to our particular actions O that my wayes were directed saith he 3. The holiest man is most sensible of his coming short in understanding and of his weaknesse to keep Gods commands and most desirous of Gods help as this example teacheth us No man shall ever have cause to repent of a sincere e●deavou●● 〈◊〉 obey Gods revealed will for howsoever he may suffer hard things from men and be mocked for his sincerity yet shall he not be disappointed of his hopes nor be confounded before God Then shall I not be ashamed when I have respect to all thy Commands 5. Sincerity must aime at universal obedience for to pretend to keep one command and to be found a misregarder of other commands is a matter of shame and a mark of unsoundness For then shall I not be ashamed when I have respect to all thy commands 6. As Gods Word and Commands are all righteous decrees in themselves and unalterable by men so are they seen to be such by those who know them best Even Gods righteous judgements 7. Men do praise God uprightly only in that measure that they are careful to frame their life to Gods Will for honour given to God with the mouth agreeth not with dishonour done to him in deeds in a mans life and conversation I will praise thee with uprightnesse of heart when I have learned thy righteous judgements 8. Sound praises of God are the fruit of soundness in piety and righteousness and the holiest of Gods servants are but Scholars and Students in the knowledge and obedience of both I will praise thee with uprightnesse of heart when I shal● have learned thy righteous judgements Ver. 8. I will keep thy statutes O forsake me not utterly From his engagement to observe this course Learn 1 Albeit our resolutions and purposes have no strength of themselves yet God requireth of us that we should with full purpose of heart cleave unto his service and this course he will blesse for so doth this practice teach us I will keep thy statutes that is I resolve to aime at upright obedience of thy Word for this is keeping of Gods statutes to endeavour to obey them 2. As he who is most upright in his resolution is most diffident of his owne strength to performe his resolution so is he also most earnest with God in prayer to enable him to do as he resolveth as this example doth teach us I will keep thy statutes O forsake me not 3. Albeit no man can be exempted from temporal desertions whereby his Christian graces may be tried and his corruptions mortified yet the beleever may both pray and expect that he shall not be deserted so as his faith should faile and his course of obedience should be cut off for so much doth this prayer promise O forsake me not utterly BETH
enclined naturally to lying but also we have so foully defiled our selves with the lying way of sinning that it is so much the more grace to finde any deliverance from it Grant me thy law graciously Ver. 30. I have chosen the way of truth thy judgements have I laid before me 31. I have stuck unto thy testimonies O LORD put me not to shame 32. I will run the way of thy Commandments when thou shalt enlarge my heart A sixth petition is to be saved from shame and comforted with the reason thereof because he had adhered to the obedience of the VVord and hoped to go on chearfully in the obedience thereof if God should be pleased by the removal of his feared reproach to comfort and enlarge his heart Whence learn 1. VVhen a man is about to resolve upon the way of his carriage in general or particular many rules and counsels will be suggested and offered unto him each of them having a pretence of some good so as a man had need to be well advised what course he chooseth and then only doth a man resolve rightly when he chooseth the way of obedience of Gods VVord which cannot deceive him I have chosen the way of thy truth 2. He that would have special direction in any particular trial must be a man resolved to follow the Rule of Gods VVord in all his wayes in general for otherwise he may be left without direction when he hath most need except he may say for the whole course of his life I have chosen the way of truth 3. The solid consideration that Gods Word is Gods decree may guard a believer against mens terrours and allurements and fix him in his right choice as here Thy judgements I have laid before me 4. As he who hath been most stedfast in trialls in not past danger of being driven from Gods Word so of all men it is greatest shame for such a man in trialls to quit his hold I have stuck to thy testimonies O Lord put me not to shame 5. In the triall of our stedfast obedience unto God there is no way to persevere except in the sense of our weaknesse and faith of Gods goodnesse we shall call on God to save us who will not suffer us to be confounded O Lord put me not to shame 6. The child of God is subject to bondage of spirit even after regeneration in sundry cases especially when God bringeth troubles upon him hideth his comfort from him and letteth forth appearance of wrath upon him as the straitening of Davids heart here doth import 7. As when a mans spirit is in bonds hardly can he walk in Gods service chearfully so when God sheweth his countenance and comforteth a man then all Gods service is easie I will runne the way of thy commandments when thou hast enlarged my heart 8. When the Lord giveth large comfort and looseth a mans affection from the spirit of bondage he useth to give also large measure of strength and activity in his service albeit not so large as the mans affection is I will runne the way of thy commandments when thou hast enlarged my heart HE Vers. 33. Teach me O LORD the way of thy statutes and I shall keep it unto the end In this section there are eight petitions according to the number of the verses From the first Learn 1. The narrow way of Gods obedience is hard to be found hardly kept and easily mistaken except God do teach us daily by his Spirit what he doth at any time teach us by his Word and therefore we have need again and again to pray Teach me O Lord the way of thy statutes 2. As the Lord requireth our perseverance in his service so our perseverance dependeth on his continued direction and assistance which the believer and daily supplicant for grace may promise to himselfe in Gods Name Teach me O Lord the way of thy statutes and I shall keep it to the end Vers. 34. Give me understanding and I shall keep thy law yea I shall observe it with my whole heart From the second petition Learn 1. There is no true wisdome except by the knowledge of Gods will revealed in Scripture and applied by him and this we should alwayes pray for Give me understanding 2. Where God becometh teacher the disciple may promise obedience Give me understanding and I shall keep thy law 3. As no service pleaseth God but that which a man desireth at least to do heartily so he that purposeth to persevere must purpose also to serve God affectionately Yea I shall observe it with my whole heart Vers. 35. Make me to go in the path of thy commandments for therein do I delight From the third petition Learn 1. Because there are innumerable by-paths from terrors and allurements without to make us decline from the obedience of God and we of our selves are both weak and subject to errors within us therefore should we be the more instant in prayer Make me to go in the path of thy commandements 2. As it is a faire grace of God to have pleasure and delectation in Gods service so he who hath gotten of God this grace may expect also direction and strength to go on in the path of Gods obedience for therein do I delight is given as a reason of his praying Make me to go in the path of thy commandments Vers. 36. Incline my heart unto thy testimonies and not to covetousnesse From the fourth petition Learn 1. As the most holy of Gods servants have in them the remainder of their natural stifnesse and aversnesse from the obedience of Gods Word so are they of all men most sensible of this sicknesse and most instant with God the only Physician to heal it Incline my heart unto thy testimonies 2. The heart cannot want some object whereunto it must cleave a man must love something and if the heart be not set on things spiritual and heavenly it will not faile to pitch upon things base and earthly as here is insinuated by opposition of covetousnesse to Gods testimonies 3. The love of Gods testimonies or of obedience to Gods Word and the love of base objects as the lust of the eye the lust of the flesh and the pride of life are inconsistent for the one is contrary to the other as here is shewn Incline mine heart unto thy testimonies and not unto covetousnesse Vers. 37. Turne away mine eyes from beholding vanity and quicken thou me in thy way From the fifth petition Learn 1. The sinful concupiscence of the heart hath defiled the externall senses and made them servants unto it selfe except God do heal both the heart and the senses as the petition Turne away mine eyes doth import 2. Albeit the corruption of the heart be deadly wounded yet it may soon recover life and strength by the external objects of the senses if watching over the external man be neglected as turn away mine eyes from beholding vanity doth import 3. Whatsoever doth draw
he pleaseth diverts the comfort of the fellowship of godly friends so he can bring them back again to us as the prayer doth import 3. Only they who with feare to offend God have the sound knowledge of Gods Word are fit comforters and strengtheners of the godly under persecution Let those that feare thee turne unto me and those that keep thy testimonies Ver. 80. Let my heart be sound in thy statutes that I be not ashamed The sixth duty of the afflicted is to studie above all things to be sincere in his carriage and in his defence of a good cause uprightly aiming to do what is right rightly and for the right ends Whence learn 1. Minde and heart in the best men are so perverted by natural corruption which is not fully abolished in any that not mans free will but Gods free grace must help this evil for this prayer Let my heart be sound in thy statutes doth import so much 2. Sound knowledge of the statutes and sound affection toward the statutes and a sound purpose in the following of the statutes must be joyned together in the Lords Martyrs Let my heart be sound in thy statutes 3. As the unsound heart will not bear out the good cause nor keep up with the godly in their good way but will fall off to his own shame so the upright man fleeing unto God in the fear of his owne weaknesse and suspicion of the deceit of his own heart shall be preserved from shame as this prayer importeth Let my heart be sound in thy statutes that I be not ashamed CAPH In this section is shewen how deep the persecuted servant of God may draw in his affliction before God give him comfort in the first foure verses thereof and how he should behave himself in that sad condition in the last foure Vers. 81. My soule fainteth for thy salvation but I hope in thy word 82. Mine eyes faile for thy word saying When wilt thou comfort me 83. For I am become like a bottle in the smoak yet do I not forget thy statutes 84. How many are the dayes of thy servant when wilt thou execute judgement on them that persecute me As for the first there are foure degrees of his deepnesse in distresse to wit fainting of faith almost failing of hope failing of the body and longing for death Whence learn 1. It is not strange to see God breaking the heart of his own childe with affliction even when he is suffering persecution that so his faith may be tried and trained unto more strength My soule fainteth 2. A beleever in God how afflicted soever he be seeketh not to be delivered but in a way allowed of God My soul fainteth for thy salvation or till thou deliver me in thy good way 3. The strength of the faith of the strongest of Gods servants will prove but small when affliction is great and Gods help is delayed My soule fainteth for thy salvation 4. Albeit the faith of the Lords children seem to faint yet it cannot die it cannot faile altogether for it looketh to the Word and thereby gathereth strength and hope My soule fainteth but I hope in thy Word 5. Albeit hope keepeth the eye of the minde so fixed upon the promise as it is ever looking for deliverance yet long delay of help maketh hope weak and ready to faint Mine eyes faile for thy word 6. Hope and patience and complaining unto God may stand altogether but they must never be severed from prayer Mine eyes faile for thy word saying When wilt thou comfort me 7. Longer exercise by trouble may affect the bodie of Gods dearest children so as wasting leanness may be seen on it I am become as a skin-bottle dried in the smoak 8. No trouble should drive us to sin but we should choose rather to pine away in affliction then to be freed from it with sin I am become like a bottle in the smoke yet I do not forget thy statutes 9. It is good in time of persecution or affliction whatsoever to have an eye both on the Promises and on the Precepts for the looking to the Promise doth encourage to hope and the eyeing of the Precepts doth prove the hope to be sound The Psalmist hoped in the word v. 81. and v. 83. He forgate not the statutes 10. Albeit long affliction be able to make the believer weary of life and to desire to die yet must he yield unto God to live so long as he pleaseth How many are the dayes of thy servant 11. The delivery of the persecuted is ordinarily joyned with the punishment of the persecutors and the afflicted must wait till their cup be full When wilt thou execute judgement on them that persecute me Ver. 85. The proud have digged pits for me which are not after thy law 86. All thy Commandments are faithful they persecute me wrongfully help thou me 87. They had almost consumed me upon earth but I forsook not thy Precepts 88. Quicken me after thy loving kindnesse so shall I keep the testimony of thy mouth He sheweth yet further how he carried himself in this condition he layeth out his enemies carriage before God v. 85 86. and his owne stedfastnesse in extream danger v. 87. and prayeth for comfort that he may in his trial beare out v. 88. Whence learn 1. The course of persecutors is full of traps and snares whereby they studie to overtake the godly without fear of sinning in so doing The proud have digged pits for me which are not after thy law 2. As the common quarrel of the wicked against the godly is for keeping of Gods commands so the common comfort of the godly is that they have a good cause to defend All thy Commandments are faithful they persecute me wrongfully 3. The worse the cause and course is which our adversaries do follow the more hopeful may we be to be helped of God They persecute me wrongfully help thou me 4. It is a good meanes of courage and comfort and strength in persecution to lay the carriage and cause of us and of our adversaries before our eyes and compare them together by the Word and then lay them forth before God as the Psalmist doth here 5. Albeit the godly may run the hazard of losing all things they have in the earth yet that is the height of their hazard in defence of Gods truth for what they have in Heaven cannot be taken from them They had almost consumed me upon earth 6. No hazard of whatsoever we have in the world life lands goods friends liberty or what else can warrant a man to depart from the obedience of Gods command controverted between the persecutor and him They had almost consumed me upon earth but I forsook not thy Precepts 7. Through the infirmity of the flesh the feeling of the comforts of Religion and the freedome of following Gods service chearfully may be interrupted as quicken me here doth import 8. Whatsoever measure of spiritual life strength or
for pleasure and that man for riches and he for honour and he for preferment the Lords children should be seeking grace to serve God as the Psalmist did I cried with my whole heart hear me O Lord and I will keep thy statutes 2. When the conscience can bear witnesse of hearty seeking of grace to serve God the Supplicant may confidently call for and expect comfortable quickening of his spirit unto Gods service as the comparison of this verse with the 149. verse doth shew 3. Whatsoever spiritual grace we seek of God we should seek it earnestly for if we seek it so as if we did not regard whether we obtained our request or not such seeking should under-value the grace which we seek I cried with my whole heart Vers. 146. I cried unto thee save me and I shall keep thy testimonies Another branch of the argument is because he did not pray for delivery out of his trouble for satisfaction of his natural desire but that he might give further proof of his purpose to obey Gods Word Whencee learn The conscience of a sincere purpose to seek God may encourage us to seek both consolation and lively ability to serve him I cried unto thee save me and I shall keep thy testimonies Vers. 147. I prevented the dawning of the morning and cried I hoped in thy word A third branch of the argument is because out of hope to finde the fruit of Gods promises he had been early about the duty of prayer Whence learn 1. Prayer should be earnestly followed and with no small diligence in using of the meanes specially of prayer so the Lords children come by their holy desires as here we see I prevented the dawning of the morning and cried 2. Looking unto the Word doth furnish faith and hope and faith and hope do furnish prayer or else the Supplicant might soon faint I cried I hoped in thy Word Ver. 148. Mine eyes prevent the night-watches that I might meditate in thy word A fourth branch of the argument is because when his nights rest was broken by troubles he did meditate on Gods Word when his persecutors were securely sleeping Whence learn 1. The difficultie wherein the Lords children are cast many times doth bereave them of their nights rest Mine eyes prevent the night-watches 2. The time which solicitude doth take from our sleep is to be spent upon prayer and meditation of Gods Word and not upon perplexing thoughts Mine eyes prevent the night-watches that I might meditate in thy VVord Vers. 149. Heare my voice according unto thy loving kindnesse O LORD quicken me according to thy judgement This is the main petition in this section put up for renewing and encreasing in him the vigour of spiritual life by faith in the Word wherein he giveth a second reason of this his prayer taken from Gods kindnesse expressed in his promises Whence learne 1. Albeit a man had no special promise of help in a particular exercise of trouble yet the consideration of Gods mercy and loving kindnesse manifested in general in his Word is a sufficient ground to strengthen his hope to be helped Hear my voice according to thy loving kindnesse O quicken me according to thy judgements 2. As the feeling of spiritual deadnesse doth argue life and sense in Gods children so doth it fit a man for renewed influence and sense of spiritual life O Lord qu●cken me according to thy testimonies Vers. 150. They draw nigh that follow after mischief they are far from thy law 151. Thou art near and all thy Commandments are truth The third reason of his petition is because his enemies were ready to do him a mischief and were far from regarding Gods law but he believed God was the more n●ar to deliver him and that his Word was true and therefore he desireth renewed vigour of spiritual life Whence learn 1. The more near that danger is the more ground of confidence have Gods children in their danger to call and hope for the influence of his Spirit They draw near that follow after mischief 2. The further the enemies of the godly are from Gods law and the nearer they are to do a mischief the nearer are Gods children to finde the communion of the life of God They draw near that follow after mischief they are far from thy law 3. For the consolation of a sufferer for righteousnesse it is necessary to believe Gods readiness to deliver him and to believe the truth of Gods Word whereby his cause is justified for the following of Gods command is a pledge of Gods assisting of him and delivery also no lesse then a promise Thou art near and all thy Commandments are Vers. 12. Concerning thy Testimonies I have known of old that thou hast founded them for ever A fourth reason of the petition is because he had long since experience of the everlasting stability of Gods testimonies and therfore craveth to be quickned according to them Whence learn 1. The faith of the stability unchangablenes of Gods Word in general is a good meanes of applying and making use of the passages thereof in particular Concerning thy testimonies I know that thou hast founded them for ever 2. By-past experience of the truth of Gods VVord is an encouragement to hope for help in like trials afterward Concerning thy testimonies I know of old that thou hast founded them for ever RESH Vers. 153. Consider mine affliction and deliver me for I do not forget thy law In this section he prayeth for delivery out of his affliction and for quickening of him by consolation and spiritual ability to serve God till the delive●y came and to strengthen himself in the hope of obtaining this he bringeth forth eight reasons of his petition The first is the conscience of his adherence unto and endeavour to obey the Lords Word Whence learn 1. Albeit the Lord cannot but see and consider our trouble yet we can hardly rest satisfied till he by real effect make it evident that he piti●th us in our affliction and delivereth us out of it Consider mine affliction and deliver me 2. As no trouble or tentation should drive us from the obedience of Gods Word so the more closely we adhere to the Word in the obedience of faith the more may we be assured to be delivered Deliver me for I do not forget thy law Ver. 154. Plead my cause and deliver me quicken me according to thy Word He urgeth the same petition and insinuateth a second reason for it from the Lords engagement by his Word to be Advocate for him to deliver him and to quicken him Whence learne 1 Albeit the godly under persecution have a good cause yet they cannot plead it except God their Redeemer shew himself as Advocate for them therefore prayeth the Psalmist Plead my cause 2. When God the Redeemer pleadeth a mans cause he doth it to purpose really and effectually Plead my cause and deliver me 3. Except the Lords Clients shall finde new influence from
compassed about with trouble on all hands yea he may faint under the burden and be as a dead man for thus much David presupposeth may be his condition afterward Though I walk in the midst of trouble 3. How great soever and how many soever straits and difficulties the believer can forecast and foresee he may promise to himself as great and a● many supplies of strength and deliveries from God Though I walk in the midst of troubles thou wilt revive me that is thou wilt put new life and comfort in me 4. Against the power and wrath of adversaries Gods power and good-will is a sufficient guard succour and relief Thou shalt stretch forth thine hand against the wrath of mine enemies and thy right hand shall save me Vers. 8. The LORD will perfect that which concerneth me thy mercy O LORD endureth for ever forsake not the works of thine own hands The sixth reason of his giving thanks and praise is his confidence of the Lords constant continuing with him and making him to persevere in Gods obedience unto the end which he closeth with a prayer that he may persevere Whence learn 1. The believers heart cannot be quiet till it be sure of perseverance and of this he may be made assured for the same Spirit of grace which hath made him see the Lords engagement for him in time past can give certainty of the continuing of Gods grace in time to come The Lord will perfect that which concerneth me He findeth a work of Gods love to him already begun and then gathers hence that the Lord wil perf●ct that work of grace which he hath begun 2 The believer doth not build his hope of perseverance upon any strength or constancy in himself but upon the unchangeablenesse of Gods eve●lasting mercy as here David sheweth unto us The Lord will perfect that which concerneth me why and upon what ground is he so confident Thy mercy O Lord endureth for ever 3. True assurance of perseverance must be joyned with the sense of a mans own weaknesse and unworthinesse and ill deserving if God should deal wi●h him in justice yea it must be joyned with dependance upon God in faith and prayer and use of the meanes for such was the assurance which David had who after that he hath said The Lord will perfect that which concerneth me subjoyneth forsake not the work of thine own hands which importeth so much 4. Faith hath alwayes for its own strengthening to make use of all bonds betwixt God and it self as a creature and in special as a new creature that seeing his calling and gifts are without repentance he would make out the work of grace and salvation where he hath begun it as David teacheth us Forsake not the work of thy own hands PSALME CXXXIX DAvid being wickedly slandered and persecuted by his adversaries findeth his zeal kindled against them and l●st his own hearts corruption should deceive him as being carnal in this matter he presenteth his heart unto God the all-seeing and every-where-present Judge of the secrets of all hearts and he presenteth also his adversaries both persons and cause with his own carriage toward them to be tried by God praying that himself may be directed toward life everlasting In the first place the Omniscience of God is declared v. 1 2 3 4 5 6. In the next the Omnipresence of God with his Omniscience is set forth v. 7 8 9 10 11 12. In the third place the reason is given of Gods so exact knowledge of all the secrets of his heart because the Lord did forme and fashion him in so wonderfully wise and powerful a way as he could neither expresse nor comprehend v. 13 14 15 16 17 18. In the fourth place he confesseth to God his judgement of wicked men and his hatred of their wayes making God who is the searcher of hearts Witnesse and Judge of his sincerity Corrector and Director of his course toward everlasting life v. 19 20 21 22 23 24. Vers. 1. O LORD thou hast searched me and known me Ver. 2. Thou knowest my downe-sitting and mine uprising thou understandest my thought afar off 3. Thou compassest my path and my lying down and art acquainted with all my ways 4. For there is not a word in my tongue but lo O LORD thou knowest it altogether 5. Thou hast beset me behinde and before and laid thine hand upon me 6. Such knowledge is too wonderful for me it is high I cannot attain unto it In his acknowledging of Gods Omniscience and perfect knowledge of every thing in him and in his betaking himself unto God for clearing of him comforting of him and bearing him through all calumnies and reproaches Learn 1 The godly may sometimes be so overclouded with calumnies and reproaches as they cannot finde a way to clear themselves before men but must content and comfort themselvs with the testimony of a good conscience and with Gods approbation of their integrity as here David doth saying O Lord thou hast searched me and known me 2. As the knowledge which the Lord hath of us is most accurate having as it were a perfect searching joyned with it so the belief of this point is necessarily to be applied to our selves that it may rule our conversation breed us comfort and peace and confidence in our approaches unto God whosoever be against us as Davids example here doth teach us 3. The Lord is acquainted with all the motions of the external man the meanest gesture of the body falleth under his cognition and observation Thou knowest my down-sitting and my uprising 4. What advisements we are upon what consultations and deliberations we are about the Lord knoweth all perfectly before we conclude any thing Thou understandest my thoughts afarre off 5. The Lord doth not only observe our aime and scope but also how we purpose to convey out matters and how we go on and proceed in accomplishing of our purposes what rule we follow or reject from the morning to the evening Thou compassest my path and my lying down 6. The Lord knoweth us so well as the best knowledge which our entire friend can have of us with whom we do communicate our minde and who knoweth all our designe and way to go about it is but a shadowing similitude of Gods knowledge of us Thou art acquainted with all my wayes 7. There is not a word which we speak either idle or to purpose but the Lord considereth it perfectly For there is not a word in o●r tongue but lo O Lord thou knowest it altogether 8. We are so inclosed within the view of Gods beholding of us and so compassed by his providence and so powerfully ruled by his power as we cannot turne this way or that way but we are still in his sight and under his disposing of us as he seeth fit Thou hast beset me behinde and before and laid thy hand upon me 9. The knowledge which God hath of us and of our wayes is so
in God and to teach what stirring up should be of the affections and powers of our soul and one of another unto Gods worship what harmonie should be among worshippers of God what melodie each should make in himself singing to God with grace in his heart and to shew the excellency of Gods praise which no meanes nor instrument nor any expression of the body joyned thereto could sufficiently set forth and thus much is figured forth in these exhortations to praise God with Trumpet Psaltery Harp Timbrel Dance stringed instruments and Organs loud and high sounding Cymbals Ver. 6. Let every thing that hath breath praise the LORD Praise ye the LORD In the twelfth exhortation pointing at the party called upon to praise God Learn 1. Living creatures which draw breath and give unto and take from God their life afresh every moment in their breathing do above all visible creatures speak most to the praise of Gods wisdom power in framing and preserving of them Let every thing that hath breath praise the Lord. 2. Of all living creatures men are most bound to praise God as they in whom God in the Creation and in their several generations from age to age did and doth breath the Spirit of life and of all men those are most bound to praise God on whom he hath bestowed his holy Spirit and howsoever the Lords works in all men shall speak to his praise how wicked soever men shall be yet only renewed souls in whom God hath breathed his Spirit as the word breath in the Original may bear shall voluntarily and sincerely praise God Let every thing that hath breath praise the Lord. 3. The Spirit of the Lord when he gave the Psalmes to the Church of the Jewes had an eye toward the rest of the world of whom he was in his appointed time to exact this Song of praise and so we who are Gentiles brought unto the society of the Church are bound to joyne in the work with them and when we are joyned and when all who are to be converted are joyned yet are we all too few to bear up this Song of Gods praise and therefore to shew this it is said Let every thing that hath breath praise the Lord. 4. When we have said all we are able to say for Gods praise we are but to begin again anew for this are we taught by the renewing of the exhortation in the close of sundry Psalmes and here also at the end of all the Psalms Praise ye the Lord. And after us must all the creatures come in their own kinde and order to offer up praise also as we are taught Rev. 5. v. 12. where after that elect Angels and Saints whose number was ten thousand times ten thousand and thousands of thousands had sung their Song saying With a loud voice Worthy is the Lamb that was slaine to receive power and riches and wisdom and strength and honour and glory and blessing Then it followeth v. 13. And every creature which is in heaven and on the earth and under the earth and such as are in the sea and all that are in them heard I saying Blessing Honour Glory and Power be unto him that sitteth upon the Throne and to the Lambe for ever and ever FINIS BOOKS newly printed by RALPH SMITH Master HVTCHESONS Exposition of Obadiah Ionah Micah Nahum Habakkuk and Zephaniah A Practical Discourse of Prayer shewing the Duty Necessity and the several sorts of Prayer by Mr. THOMAS COBBET The CHRISTIANS CHARTER shewing the Priviledge of Believers the third Edition very much inlarged by Mr. WATSON Minister of Stephens Walbrook Also Mr. WATSONS Treatise of CHRISTIAN CONTENTMENT the second Edition
A BRIEF EXPLICATION Of the last Fifty Psalmes From Ps. 100. to the end BY DAVID DICKSON Professor of DIVINITY in the COLLEDGE of EDENBURGH COL 3.16 Let the Word of Christ dwell in you richly in all wisdom teaching and admonishing one another in Psalmes and Hymnes and spiritual Songs singing with grace in your hearts to the Lord. Imprimatur EDMUND CALAMY LONDON Printed by T.R. and E. M for Tho. Iohnson at the golden Key in S. Pauls Church-yard An. Dom. 1654. TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE THE EARLE OF Cassills Grace and Peace through Christ Iesus My Right Noble Lord ONe of the speciall motives of my resolution to follow this work in parcells was the apparent hazard that if in this time of trouble and of my old age I should have delayed to put forth some part of it till all had been ready the whole might have been miscarried or marred by some passage of providence which might have befallen me But seeing it hath pleased the Lord to spare my life and my health and my liberty in his service as I wanted not the example of grave Authors before me to divide the whole Book of the Psalmes into three fifties and to dedicate every part to severall persons So I judged it good thrift to take occasion thereby to testifie my bound duty and respect to so many of the Noble friends of Sion as I could overtake and that with a minde to honour all the rest who have put their shoulder to the work of setling Religion and the Kingdome of Christ among us whose labours albeit they should have no other fruit in our time then the right stateing of the question between us and all adversaries of the true doctrine worship and discipline of Christs house as it is set down in the Confession of faith in the directory for publick worship and in the Rules of Government of Christs Church drawn forth from Scripture warrant yet even that much is worth all the expense of whatsoever is bestowed by any or all the Lords worthies upon Religion And howsoever the Lord doth claime and call for the whole glory of this work to himselfe alone by staining the pride of the glory of all instruments whereof he hath made use about it as now appeareth lest the glory due to himselfe in all and every one of the passages of promoting the same should be ecclipsed yet will he never utterly reject this service nor disallow the upright endeavours of his servants therein but will in his own time and way both advance it and bear witnesse to his faithfull servants in and about it wheresoever he hath a minde to keep house or to Reigne as King in Sion Yea he will also make it known to the world that as on the one hand he will not want a visible Kingdome in the world though not of this world so on the other hand that his Kingdome shall be so farre from hindring the civill Government of Magistrates where it hath place that by the contrary it shall be a chiefe prop and pillar of every Kingdome where it is received In this number of upright promoters of the Kingdome of Christ Your Lordship hath been alwayes looked upon all the time of our late troubles as one very eminent and I since my first admission into your Lordships acquaintance have observed your constant care and endeavour as to know what was the right indifficile questions so also to hold it fast according to your power after you had discovered it Which as it may be your Lordships comfort so is it your commendation and all mens duty to do the like especially in this dangerous time wherein sinnes practised and not repented of are so severely and justly punished by Gods giving over the impenitent to the open professing and defending of their unrepented faults for God in justice and wisdom has suffered the hedges of his Vineyard to be broken down and the holy discipline of his house to be so set at nought by all sorts of persons that every spirit of errour having open way to come in at the breach he might thereby try and exercise all his people who stand in Covenant with him by Profession and reclaim or punish such as live in errour And no wonder that he so should do for when there is so little use made of the holy Ordinances of Religion when the Scriptures are either not read or not esteemed of when the forme of godlinesse is separated from upright endeavour to feel and shew forth the life and power of it when the grace of the Gospel is turned into wantonnesse and men are become so much the more bold to sin as they do heare much of the mercifulnesse of God when every divine truth is either not beleeved at all or received only with humane and temporary faith when Christ is looked upon by many only as a man and not as God manifested in the flesh not as the eternal Son of God who from everlasting was with God and was God Co-worker in the Creation with the Father and the Spirit when Christ is confessed to be Christ but not employed as Mediatour or as if men had need of him not made use of in his Offices when many do cast open their soules unto and seek after another spirit then the Spirit of truth the Comforter the Holy Ghost who according to the Scriptures both wounds and heales the consciences of beleevers and sanctifieth the heart and conversation of all them that come to God through Christ. In this time I say when these and many other ungodly practices of men walking after the imagination of their own heart do so abound what wonder ir it that the Lord hath let loose so many unclean spirits as no history can shew more in so short a time in any age or in any place of the world by whose ranging up and down among us God is about to make manifest the stability and sincerity of the faith of them who are approved and to take trial of others in whom such damnable practices as by the doctrine of devils are now openly defended will be found unrepented whether after they shall hear their ungodly pranks maintained and patronized by some Sect-master Heretick or Schismatick they will abhor such abominable doctrine and repent their owne former mis-deeds which have spoken the language of some of those vile errours Or whether they will justifie their own faults according as their Sect-masters do teach them to do either by despising all the Ordinances and lifting themselves above the same or by rejecting the commands and cords of the moral Law will loose themselves from the obedience thereof as if Christ had freed the believer from the command and authority of the Law no lesse then from the Covenant and curse thereof or by blaspheming the Scripture will cry down the truth and the use and power of it or by calling every truth in question will exempt themselves from the bonds of all Religion or will walk
after the imagination of their own heart and make their own conceits their Oracle their fancie their faith and their lusts their God or will by opposing one or other of the Persons of the Godhead deny and separate the indivisible Essence of one God in three Persons or by receiving the doctrine of some of those many lesser antichrists which are in the world will incorporate themselves in the great mystical body of that one Antichrist spoken of in Scripture or in a word will by rejecting the truth and not receiving of it in love when it is offered bring in upon themselves strong delusions and give a powerful possession of themselves to the devil whereby he may so rule in them as to make them vent whatsoever hell can devise to the dishonour of God and Christian Religion that all such may be damned as for their not receiving the truth in love so also for their taking pleasure in unrighteousnesse according as the Apostle did prophecie should come to passe 2 Thess. 2.11 12. In such a time therefore as this is wherein the Lord is manifesting who are of God and who not who do know God and who not who do follow the Spirit of truth and who are led by the spirit of errour and is deciphering them by this infallible mark which the Apostle giveth 1 John 4.6 that the one giveth a beleeving and obediential eare to the Penmen of holy Scripture the other doth not so what a mercie yea what an honour and happinesse is it for the Lords children to make such use of a setled Ministry which is the great gift of Christ bestowed upon his Church as not to be carried about with every winde of doctrine Eph. 4.11 12 13 14. not to be led away with the errour of the wicked nor fall from their own stedfastnesse but to grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ 2 Pet. 3.17 18. Which grace and honour and happinesse that it may not only continue with your Lordship but also be granted to all those that love our Lord Jesus Christ in sincerity is the prayer of Your Lordships ready Servant in the Gospel DAVID DICKSON THE EPISTLE TO THE Reader CHRISTIAN READER IN the two former parts of this work I have spoken my minde to thee in relation to this brief Explication of the Psalmes I will not here keep thee up in the entry of this last part nor say any more unto thee save this It is our bound duty to bless him that inhabiteth the praises of Israel who will have all the Mourners in Sion to be comforted and who as he hath prepared in this mountain unto all people Isa. 25.6 a feast of fat things a feast of wines on the lees of fat things full of marrow of wines on the lees well refined by bestowing Christ and the unsearchable riches of his grace upon every Penitent who fleeth to him for delivery from sin and wrath so hath he also prepared to every such soul the excellent songs of Sion to encrease their festival gladness and for evidencing of his purpose to give unto them everlasting joy after this life is ended hath put in their hands for their comfort in every condition wherein they can be in this present life and valley of tears this sweet-smelled bundle of Psalmes wherein he hath made his works of mercy and of judgement the pawnes of his promises for compleat happiness unto them and also of the utter overthrow and perdition of all their enemies and hath appointed both mercy and judgement to be the matter as of their joy so of his owne glory in the Church to be lifted up as a sacrifice upon the Altar Christ Iesus by the voice of his people singing with grace to him both alone and in company and making melody in their hearts therefore as in the changes of our own particular private condition we have liberty to choose for our use such parts of the Psalmes as do speak most near to our present case So let us be bound in publick meetings of the Church to joyne with the Congregation in singing every truth uttered by Gods Spirit in the Psalmes as we are directed by the Minister and mouth of the meeting for glorifying of him who hath done promised threatened and taught whatsoever is therin expressed Remembring that his Praises are the pillars of our faith and that his joy is our strength and that those calves of our lips are acceptable sacrifices to God through Iesus Christ in and for whom I am thy Servant in the Work of the Gospel DAVID DICKSON A BRIEF EXPLICATION Upon the last Fifty Psalmes PSALM CI. DAvid not being as yet entered in possession of his Kingdome doth by direction of the holy Spirit fall upon a consideration of the duties of a righteous Prince which he setteth down as a rule to be followed by himself and all Magistrates obliging himself to endeavour to conforme his Government thereto wherein he is but a type and shadow of Christ in whom alone the perfect performance of the duties here promised are to be found The principal duties which David undertaketh to discharge may be for orders sake reduced to the number of eight according to the number of the verses Ver. 1. I Will sing of mercy and judgement unto thee O LORD will I sing The first duty which he undertaketh is to delight himself in all royal vertues required for the Government of good or bad subjects and to make those duties his Song and to approve himself to God for the sincerity of his intention in this undertaking Whence learn 1. All the duties of righteous Government may be comprehended under these two heads mercy and judgement for mercy taketh in the care of the poor needy oppressed or injured and judgement taketh in the care of equity and righteous dealing among the subjects with the rewarding of the good and punishing of evil doers mercy provideth for all good things which the subject needeth and judgement provideth for their security and for removing whatsoever evill may trouble them I will sing saith he of mercy and judgement 2. Such as are designed unto any calling especially any publick charge should prepare themselves for it partly by laying before themselves the duties belonging to the right discharge of such a calling and partly by bending of their hearts and laying engagements on their spirits for the faithful discharge thereof for so much doth Davids example here teach us 3 Duties of a mans calling should both be studied unto and discharged with some chearfulnesse and readinesse of minde for I will sing of mercy and judgement importeth so much 4. As it is expedient for the peoples better acceptance of a man to a publike charge that his purpose to discharge his duty therein be published so also it is expedient for the mans stirring up and fastening to his duty that he engage his heart unto God for so doth Davids example teach us Unto thee
help for therefore is it repeated and laid down here for the last part of pouring out his soul My dayes are like a shadow that declineth and I am withered like grasse Ver. 12. But thou O LORD shalt endure for ever and thy remembrance unto all generations In the second part of the Psalme he striveth to comfort himself in the hope of grace to be shewn to the Church by seven arguments The first is because God hath purposed to perpetuate the memorial of himself unto all generations and endureth for ever to see it done Whence learn 1. There is ground of hope to believers in the saddest condition of the Church for albeit beleevers be mortal yet God in whom their life is hid is eternal But thou O LORD shalt endure for ever 2. Because God will have his Name known in all generations and will have his Word and Ordinances of Religion made use of among men for preserving the memory of his attributes works and will therefore the Church must continue from age to age Thou shalt endure for ever and thy remembrance unto all generations Ver. 13. Thou shalt arise and have mercy upon Zion for the time to favour her yea the set time is come The second argument of his hope that God will shortly have mercy on his Church is because the time of the seventy years set for their captivity was now almost expired Whence learn 1. It is good reasoning from Gods unchangeablenesse to conclude a change of the sad condition of the Church afflicted from a worse unto a better Thou shalt endure for ever and therefore thou shalt arise and have mercy upon Sion 2. As the Lord hath set times for exercising his people with affliction so also set times for comforting of them again which time when it is come God will have mercy on them whom he hath afflicted Thou shalt arise and have mercy upon Sion for the set time to favour her for the set time is come Ver. 14. For thy servants take pleasure in her stones and favour the dust thereof The third argument is because the Lords people had a great affection to re-edifie the Temple lying now ruined Whence learn 1. It is no new thing to see the outward face of Religion and holy Ordinances defaced for the Temple of Ierusalem is here lying in the dust of a ruinous heap 2. The Ordinances of Religion shall not be utterly abolished but so much thereof shall be preserved as may serve for the furtherance of Reformation and re-edification of his Church in Gods appointed time as here the Temple is ruined but there are stones reserved for a new building 3. When the ordinances of God are at the lowest and most deformed in the eyes of the world they are and should be most lovely and looked upon with most estimation and affection of Gods people Thy servants take pleasure in her stones and favour the dust thereof 4. It is a good ground of hope that God will shortly repaire the ruines of Religion when he provides builders and doth put into their hearts a love to set upon the work of reformation as the Psalmist reasoning here doth teach us Ver. 15. So the Heathen shall feare the Name of the LORD and all the Kings of the earth thy glory The fourth argument of hope is from the promised Conversion of the Gentiles to whom the true Religion was to be transmitted in Gods own time by the means of restoring of the Church of the Jewes unto their wonted priviledge Whence learn 1. The enlargement of the knowledge and fear of God among them that know him not should be the aime and encouragement of zealous Reformers to use all means which may conduce for Reformation for so much we are taught in the Psalm●sts example desiring the restauration of the Church of the Jewes that the Gentiles might be brought in and by hope of the Conversion of the Gentiles giving hope of restauration unto the scattered Church of the Jewes for So the Heathen shall feare thy Name is the reasoning of the Psalmist 2. When the Lord is pleased to arise for restoring of his afflicted people unto comfort and of Religion unto its own beautie he can work so as Kings shall feare and tremble to see Gods care of his own despised people for so saith he The Heathen shall feare thy Name and all the Kings of the earth thy glory Ver. 16. When the LORD shall build up Zion he shall appear in his glory The fifth argument of his hope is from the glory which God should have in restoring of his Church Whence learn 1. Whatsoever instruments the Lord useth in the gathering of his Church he will have himself seen to be the builder thereof for it is the Lord here that shall build up Sion 2. As the glory of the Lord is obscured when his Church is scattered so when he sets up his own ordinances again his glory doth appear yea and that more then if his Church had not been scattered When the Lord shall build up Zion he shall appear in glory 3. The connexion of Gods glory with the salvation of his Church is a comfortable ground of hope that howsoever the Church be demolished yet it shall be restored and repaired again for When the Lord shall build up Zion he shall appear in glory importeth so much Ver. 17. He will regard the prayer of the destitute and not despise their prayer The sixth argument of hope is from the Lords respect to the prayers of his people Whence learn 1. The Lords people do reckon themselves destitute and desolate when they have not the face of a Church and do want the publick Ordinances of Religion which are the tokens of the Lords presence among them for especially in relation to their scattering from Ieru●alem and the Temple doth the Psalmist here call them destitute or desolate 2. When the Lords people are scattered one from another they can trust one another and meet together at the throne of grace by their prayer presented before God as here the faithful scattered in captivity do meet in a joynt Petition for the building up of Sion the destitute have their prayer put up in Gods hearing He will regard the prayer of the destitute 3. Albeit the Lords people be desolate and destitute of all earthly comfort and help and be despised by the world yet their persons and prayer are in estimation with God He will regard the prayer of the destitute and not despise their prayer Ver. 18. This shall be written for the generation to come and the people which shall be created shall praise the LORD 19. For he hath looked down from the height of his Sanctuary from Heaven did the LORD behold the earth 20. To heare the groaning of the Prisoners to loose those that are appointed to death 21. To declare the Name of the LORD in Zion and his praise in Ierusalem 22. When the people are gathered together and the Kingdoms to serve the
sanctified and set apart for Gods peculiar They are the Lords anointed 9. They who both by Covenant and special calling to the holy Ministery have charge to declare the Lords will unto the world are owned of God as his Prophets and are fenced with a strict caveat given to all men by God how great soever that they harme them not Touch not mine anointed and do my Prophets no harme And upon all these aforesaid considerations God is to be thanked and praised by his people Vers. 16. Moreover he called for a famine upon the land he brake the whole staffe of bread 17. He sent a man before them even Ioseph who was sold for a servant 18. Whose feet they hurt with fetters he was laid in iron 19. Vntil the time that his Word came the Word of the LORD tried him 20. The King sent and loosed him even the ruler of his people and let him go free 21. He made him Lord of his house and ruler of all his substance 22. To binde his Princes at his pleasure and teach ●is Senatours wisdome In the second rank of reasons of Gods praise taken from the care the Lord had of the posterity of Abraham Isaac and Iacob in bringing them into Egypt and preserving of them there Learn 1. Every plague and in special famine is a servant of God ready at a call to come forth and execute his judgement Moreover he called for a famine on the land 2. No food can be had except God do furnish it and no food when it is given can feed except God give a powerful blessing with it when that is removed bread feedeth not He brake the whole staffe of bread 3. The way of the Lords performing of his Covenant is not such as carnal reason would prescribe by giving probable meanes of bringing it to passe but the way he chuseth is such as may try the faith of his children to wit by seeming to do the contrary As here the Patriarchs having the promise of the land of Canaan shall not be suffered to be so much as sojourners in it but must leave it and go elsewhere He called for a famine on that land which might seem to make it in lesse request and by the famine also did force them to go where ●hey might finde bread 4. Whensoever the Lord doth bring his children into straits and difficulties he maketh provision for their sustenance in their straits and deliverance from the same When the Lord was to bring his people into Egypt he provided so as they should have a friend at Court before they came He sent a man before them even Ioseph 5. Whatsoever may be the intent of men or devils in troubling of Gods children God hath a hand in every thing which doth befal them how accidentally soever it may seem to come Iosephs coming down to Egypt is called Gods message He sent a man before them even Ioseph 6. That which men dw sinfully for satisfacti●n of their own lusts God doth holily and wisely for his own ends by Iosephs brethren their selling of their brother to be rid of him God sendeth Ioseph into Egypt to provide for their livelihood He sent a man before them they sold him for a servant 7. It is not strange to see the man whom the Lord mindeth to exalt most humbled before he be exalted and cast into prison before he be lifted up to liberty Ioseph was sold for a servant whose feet they hurt with fetters 8. When the Lords servants are entered in the trial of their faith they may look to be soundly searched before they have ended their trials and that by sharp affliction as Ioseph was tried Whose feet they hurt with fetters he was laid in iron 9. The afflictions and trials of Gods children will not end when they could wish but they have a set measure and time determined of God He was laid in irons until the time came c. 10. There is a secret word of Gods decree and providence for ending of the affliction of Gods children which God bringeth forth to light in his own time and until this come his servants must lie in bonds as Ioseph lay in iron till the time that his word came that is till God made his decree manifest about the loosing of him 11. Before affliction shall end the manifested work of Gods providence in affliction must put the afflicted to the trial of all that is in him and trial must go before deliverance The word of the Lord tried him 12. The time appointed in Gods decree to send delivery to his afflicted children is made manifest in the effectual moving of instruments and meanes of delivery and in this case if need be Kings shall be set on work for the delivery of the Lords children The King sent and loosed him 13. Such as are bound ignominiously for righteousnesse shall be one way or other loosed honourably The Ruler of the people let him go free 14. When the Lords people are humbled sufficiently God doth raise them up and sometime even in a visible manner before the world as here Ioseph is by the King of Egypt made Lord of his house and Ruler of all his substance 15. As Gods children are exalted for the benefit of those over whom they are set so should they manage and maintain their honour and power by doing good to their inferiours as Ioseph did who was exalted To binde Pharaohs Princes at his pleasure and teach his Senators wisdome Ver. 23. Israel also came into Egypt and Iacob sojourned in the land of Ham. 24. And he increased his people greatly and made them stronger then their enemies 25. He turned their heart to hate his people to deal subtilly with his servants After Ioseph the rest of the family is brought down into Egypt who sojourned there and were preserved till they grew a strong people and then began their affliction as a preparation to their out-birnging Whence learn 1. Albeit a man hath wrastled with God in prayer and gotten his blessing yet may he be tossed in the world by troubles Israel also came into Egypt 2. The heires of the promise and the Lords dearest children may be made sojourners among wicked people even in their old age when they need most to be at rest Iacob sojourned in the land of Cham. 3. As when the Lords people grow up unto any considerable number among idolaters it is no strange thing if they finde enmity so it is no strange thing in Gods way to make them grow the more in number and power the more they be opposed yea and to make them under oppression and persecution to become mightier then their adversaries He encreased his people greatly and made them stronger then their enemies 4. The hearts of all men are in Gods hand to turne them whither he pleaseth to love or hate as their affections may serve best his holy purposes He turned their heart to hate his people 5. The trouble and exercise of Gods
In this section first he propounds this doctrine the Word of God is the only rule and effectual instrument of renewing and sanctifying of an unrenewed man and the only way to finde the efficacy of the Word is to studie to conforme a mans minde will and actions thereunto v. 1. And then in the next place to the end he may teach men to make use of this doctrine by his example he sheweth the sincerity of his owne endeavour by seven evidences in the seven following verses Ver 9. Wherewithal shall a young man cleanse his way by taking heed thereto according to thy Word In the doctrine about the meanes of regeneration and reformation of life Learn 1. As all men are from the birth polluted with sin so should they early and timously be sensible of this evil and seek for the remedy of the running issues of sin for here it is presupposed That a young man should cleanse his way 2. Seeing death is uncertain and sin groweth stronger through custome seeing justice is the more provoked the longer men shall continue in sin seeing no age is fitter to serve Satan then youth being enclined to take liberty to be headst●ong self-willed and given to despise grave admonition and no age hath more excuses to continue in ●in to its own perdition therefore no age hath more need of remedy from God then youth hath and this is imported in the question Wherewith shall a young man cleanse his way 3. Seeing youth is loose inconsiderate and unattentive seeing the way of obedience is slippery and many by-paths are offered to the way-faring man seeing danger of perishing is great and many are the enemies of mans salvation who are alwayes seeking whom they may devoure and seeing no reconciliation can be made with God no forgiveness of sin can be obtained no solid sanctification nor salvation can be had except the Word of God be held for the only rule of direction of faith and conversation therefore no meanes can be To cleanse the young mans way but by taking heed thereto according to thy Word Vers. 10. With my whole heart have I sought thee O let me not wander from thy Commandments After he hath set down the rule of a young mans Conversion and conversation he offereth himself as an example to follow this rule and here are the first and second evidences of his sincerity in aiming at this way The first is the conscience of his upright seeking of God and the second evidence is his prayer to be preserved from wandering from the way of Gods obedience Whence learn 1. The sight of what others have attained unto is a great encouragement to young Scholars in Gods schoole for to encourage the young man the Psalmist sh●w●eth here his own profiting in his study 2. Sensiblenesse of a mans own imperfections sins and dangers and seeking in unto God all-sufficient for relief of sin and misery and for a daily more and more near communion with God is a mark of sincerity in Religion With my whole heart have I sought thee 3 The more experience a man hath in the wayes of God the more sensible is he of his own readiness to wander insensibly by ignorance and unadvertance from the wayes of God but the young souldier dare run hazards ride into his adversaries camp and talk with tentations being confident he cannot easily go w●ong he is not so feared as David here crying O let me not wander 4. To be diff●●ent of our own wit and strength and to depend upon God instantly praying to be kept in and recalled from wandring proveth the sincerity of the purpose of holinesse O let me not wander from thy Commandments 5. The going on of the beleever in the course of obedience and his living the life of God is not from what he hath received before but must flow from present influence of grace sustaining what was given before and from grace furnishing fresh supply drawn forth by prayer as this prayer O let me not wander doth testifie Ver. 11. Thy word have I hid in mine heart that I might not sin against thee The third evidence of his sincere endeavour to cleanse his way by taking heed thereto according to his Word is the laying up of the Word by faith in his heart Whence learn 1. It is not sufficient to have the Word of God in brain-knowledge and common memory for not wit and memory but the heart is the chest to keep it in I hid thy Word in my heart 2. Seeing it is impossible to keep sin out of the heart void of the Word of God it is necessary for the servant of God to lay up the Lords Word in his heart by faith and honest affection to it Thy Word have I hid in my heart that I should not sin against thee 3. It is a proof of our sincere endeavour to profit by the Word of God in the course of sanctification to be careful that we let not the Word of God slide from us that we be not spoiled of it by feare of men or force of tentation that we be not deceived by Satans wiles that we suffer it not to go by our negligence and forgetfulness of it and that we be careful to approve our selves to God in our love to the Lords Word and estimation of it as of a most precious Jewel as here we see Thy VVord have I hid in my heart that I should not sin against thee Ver. 12. Blessed art thou O LORD teach me thy statutes A fourth evidence of his sincerity in making use of the Wo●d of God is his blessing God for the knowledge he hath received of it joyned with prayer for encreasing the measure thereof Whence learn 1. It is a mark of sincerity of obedience to be thankful for what measure we have received and to be seeking to encrease as young birds receive their food and cry for more Blessed art thou O Lord teach me thy statutes 2. Beside all external teaching we have need of inward and effectual teaching from God to make knowledge lively and fruitful Teach me thy statutes 3. The goodness of God and his readiness to blesse more and more is a ground of encouragement to seek a greater measure of his blessing Blessed art thou O Lord teach me thy statutes Vers. 13. With my lips have I declared all the judgements of thy mouth A fifth evidence of his sincere endeavour to make use of Gods Word is his care to edifie others and glorifie God by the knowledge and experience which he had of it Whence learn 1. The revealed will of God in Scripture should be the matter of our speech and conference with others With my lips have I declared all the judgements of thy mouth 2. The Word of God in Scripture should be looked upon as the sentence of the supreme Judge uncontrollable and unalterable by any creature and whereby men must judge of all truth and look to be judged by it for therefore it
is called The judgement of his mouth 3. As the conscience of communicating of our knowledge and our spiritual gifts is a means of encouragement to seek a greater measure so it is an evidence of the sincerity and fruitfulness of what knowledge we have Teach me thy statutes with my lips have I declared all the judgments of thy mouth Ver. 14. I have rejoyced in the way of thy testimonies as much as in all riches The sixth evidence of his sincere endeavour to conforme his way to Gods Word is his joy in Gods service Whence learn 1. Delight in Gods service and worship is a mark of sincere obedience of his Word I have rejoyced in the way of thy testimonies 2. Spiritual joy in spiritual objects farre exceedeth any joy in worldly possessions I have rejoyced in the way of thy testimonies more then in all riches 3. It is a most sure joy which ariseth from the conscience of practical obedience and not from contemplation only I have rejoyced in the way of thy testimonies Ver. 15. I will meditate in thy Precepts and have respect unto thy wayes 16. I will delight my self in thy statutes I will not forget thy word The seventh evidence of his sincere endeavour to conforme his way unto Gods Word is his engagement to set his heart toward Gods Word in time to come and not to rest upon any thing already past and done Whence learn 1 Sincerity of our obedience present and past is proved best by joyning of our hearty resolution and purpose to go on for time to come I have rejoyced I will meditate I will delight in thy statutes 2. It is a profitable meanes to grow in grace to meditate on Gods Word I will meditate on thy Precepts 3. Meditation is then fruitful when in our conversation we have respect to the wayes of God set down in his Word whereupon we have meditated I will have respect unto thy wayes 4. In meditation on the Word and endeavour to make use of it in our life we will easily wax weary except we make this course our delight I will delight my self in thy statutes 5. Meditation will faile and delectation will wax cold except the Word be treasured up in a sanctified memory I will not forget thy Word Thus a copy is cast for a young man to cleanse his way and to make his life comfortable GIMEL In this section he prayeth the Lord for continuance of his life that he may have occasion of further service which he desireth may be done by him and for this end also he prayeth that he may have a deeper insight in the mysteries of Gods Word v. 17 18. And these two petitions he presseth by three reasons v. 19 20 21. He prayeth also for clearing of his innocency and for removing reproach from him for other three reasons v. 22 23 24. Ver. 17. Deal bountifully with thy servant that I may live and keep thy word 18. Open thou mine eyes that I may behold wonderous things out of thy law From the first two petitions Learn 1. As lengthening of life is the good gift of God in it self and no small benefit to the man who purposeth to employ it well so life may be lawfully prayed for Deal bountifully with thy servant that I may live 2. As the end of our life should be that God may be served so life should not be desired not loved except for that end but willingly laid down rather then we should forsake his command Deal bountifully with thy servant that I may live and keep thy Word 3. A faithful servant should count his by-past service richly rewarded by being employed yet more in further service as this prayer teacheth Deal bountifully with thy servant that I may live and keep thy Word 4. The whole Word of God is a law a Canon or rule whereby we should square our faith and conversation for it is here called also Thy law 5. We by nature are blinde and cannot see the light which doth shine in the Word of God till he open our eyes to behold it therefore prayeth he Open thou mine eyes 6. The Word of God is full of wonders high and heavenly mysteries and he who seeth them best doth wonder most Open thou mine eyes that I may behold wondrous things out of thy law Vers. 19. I am a stranger in the earth hide not thy Commandments from me 20. My soul breaketh for the longing that it hath unto thy judgements at all times 21. Thou hast rebuked the proud that are cursed which do erre from thy Commandments Of the three reasons of his petition one is because he is but a stranger here except for service another is because he longeth much to know more of Gods Word The third is because he seeth Gods vengeance following them who studie not to serve God Wh●nce learn 1. Albeit the believer live on the earth yet he is not at home so long as he is on the earth I am a stranger in the earth 2. Whatsoever possession a godly man hath in the earth were it a Kingdome he should be a stranger for the matter of estimation of or affection to any thing on earth I am a stranger in the earth 3. Acquaintance with the Word of God is able to make up all the losses of the pilgrim and to season all his griefs it is able to supply the room of friends and counsellors to furnish light joy strength food armour and defence and whatsoever else the pilgrim needeth for the Lords Word shall either bring all these good things to the pilgrim or lead him to God where he shall finde them all I am a stranger in the earth hide not thy Commandments from me 4. There is a hiding of the Word of God when meanes to hear it explained by Preachers are wanting and there is a hiding of the comfortable and lively light of the Spirit who must quicken the Word unto us and from both those evils may we and should we pray to be saved Hide not thy Commandments from me 5. Albeit the godly be the dearest souls unto God of all men in the world yet will he exercise them with heart-breaking especially for spiritual causes that so he may raise in them an estimation of his own presence and furnish work in the mean time to their faith My heart breaketh for the longing which it hath unto thy judgements 6. It is not every faint and cold wish which maketh a beleever profit in Gods school there must be some heat and earnestness in holy desires and this affection as it may not be cold so neither must it be fle●ting but constant My heart breaketh for the longing which it hath at all times 7. These are proud men before God who are not penitent for their sin and are not subjected to his obedience for so are they here called 8. The Word of God condemneth the proud and pronounceth a curse upon them so long as they continue proud and impenitent
comfort can be abated and diminished by affliction the renewed sense of Gods love and friendship to us which we should seek after always can easily restore and recompense it Quicken me after thy loving kindness so shall I keep the testimonies of thy mouth LAMED In this section he sheweth first how he was comforted under persecution by faith in Gods Word and to this end he commends the worth of the Word of God or of the Scripture for foure reasons The first is because of the stability of it in heaven v. 89. The next for the durable usefulness of it in every age of the Church v. 90. The third is because by Gods Word the earth is established v 90 91. The fourth is because of his own experience of comfort and strength by it in his affliction v. 91. And in the next part he expresseth his thankfulnesse in the rest of the verses of this section Ver. 89. For ever O LORD thy word is setled in heaven 90. Thy faithfulnesse is unto all generations thou hast established the earth and it abideth 91. They continue this day according to thine ordinances for all are thy servants 92. Vnlesse thy law had been my delight I should then have perished in mine affliction In his setting down his comfort which he had by faith in the Word and what estimation he had of the Scripture Let us learn 1. God hath given unro us his Word to bear up our faith in every hardest condition and it is a sure rock which wil not fail us whatsoever appear or howsoever we do faile or faint For ever O Lord thy word is established 2. Albeit the effect of Gods Word doth not appear sometime but is over-clouded with trouble and tentations yet it is sure and fixed by Gods decree unalterable in heaven and cannot want the effect in due time For ever O Lord thy word is setled in heaven 3. The stability of the Lords Word depends upon the stability of Gods truth and faithfulness which because he is absolutely unchangable his VVord is so also Thy faithfulness is unto all generations 4. The truth of God is not alwayes hid up in heaven but in all generations the truth of the VVord and the faithfulness of God who hath spoken it is from age to age made manifest among men Thy faithfulness is unto all generations 5. The stability of the earth is nothing but the effect of Gods VVord and the stability of the earth and frame of the world is a pawne of the stability of Gods VVord Thou hast established the earth and it abideth 6. As heaven and earth do continue in their motion and station and do serve God as his Word hath ordained so should we do They continue this day according to thy Ordinances for all are thy servants 7 Affliction draweth forth the worth of Gods Word which otherwise could not be known and lets it be seen that the Word of God is able to save a sinking man in tribulation Unlesse thy law had been my delight I should then have perished in my affliction 8. The Word of God being received by faith is able not only to save the believer from desperation in trouble but also to make him rejoice as he who is feeding on delicates as experience hath proved Unlesse thy law had been my delight I should have perished in mine affliction Ver. 93. I will never forget thy Precepts for with them thou hast quickened me 94. I am thine save me for I have sought thy Precepts 95. The wicked have waited for me to destroy me but I will consider thy testimonies 96. I have seen an end of all perfection but thy Commandment is exceeding broad In the latter part of this section he sheweth his thankfulness first by engaging his heart to the faith and obedience of the Word v. 93. Then by dedication of himself unto God as his servant to be saved by him v. 94. Thirdly by engagement of his heart to continue against all persecution in the obedience of the Word v. 95. And fourthly by commendation of the Word above all things in the world v. 96. Whence learn 1. The worth of the Word of God is found so excellent in the experience of the believers that their experience doth sixe and settle their estimation of it their love to it and their purpose to make use of it alwayes I will never forget thy Precepts for with them thou hast quickened me 2. The believer is the Lords peculiar servant bound to him by the bonds of Creation Redemption and Covenant and it is his duty thankfully to reckon his interest and right in God and Gods interest in him for his own encouragement and for Gods praise I am thine 3. When a mans faith is strengthened about his own interest in God then may he be confident to pray to God and to expect for salvation temporal and eternal from him I am thine save me 4. Honest endeavour to obey Gods commands how weak soever doth prove the believers interest in God and confirmeth his hope to be saved by him I am thine save me for I have sought thy Precepts 5. Persecutors of Gods servants for obedience to Gods Word are in effect murtherers both of soul and body in driving them to forsake Gods commands The wicked have waited for me to destroy me 6. The trouble which the godly sustain by persecutors should drive them to search more deeply into the Word of God and to harden themselves against all that the persecutors can do and every comfort given to them from the Word should do the same But I will consider thy testimonies 7. The use of all things visible is temporal but the use and benefit of the Scripture is everlasting all things visible have their own perfections in their own kinde and do extend some of them to one temporal use others of them to another use but the Word of God extendeth in its kinde to all uses which may bring blessedness in this life and in the world to come A man may satisfie himself in the contemplation of the worth and vertue of any thing which is visible in the world but the riches of the Word of God is unsearchable the deep wisdome of God in the Scriptures is unscarchable and the perfection of the Scripture is above all comparison I have seen saith he an end of all perfection but thy Commandment is exceeding broad MEM. Ver. 97. O how love I thy law it is my meditation all the day He goeth on in this section to commend the VVord of God and to shew his estimation of it for eight reasons The first is because it hath gained the affection of his heart unto it so as he cannot but continually dwell upon the meditation of it VVhence learn 1. As the Scripture in it self is most lovely for the Author matter and use thereof so is it most affectionately loved by the beleever and none can either expresse or judge how great is his affection to it
way set down for sanctifying of men and for the saving of such as follow the way prescribed of God for salvation and the punishing of such as despise the way of life p●esc●ibed are very righteous when they are well considered Upright are thy judgements 2. The way of righteousnesse set down in Scripture and of execution made according to it may be demonstrated by the essential righteousnesse of Gods nature because as he is righteous so must his Word and working conforme the●eto be righteous also Righteous art thou O Lord and ●pright are thy judgements Vers. 138. Thy testimonies that thou hast commanded are righteous and very faithfull The second reason of the petition is because the testimonies of Scripture which God hath commanded us to believe and obey are not only righteous but also very faithfull which can never faile a man that believeth and obeyeth them Whence learn 1. To the end that our faith and obedience may be solidly grounded we must hold for a foundation that the Scriptures are righteous and true and that every truth revealed therein doth include a command to believe it and every duty of men declared therein includeth a command to obey it Thy testimonies which thou hast commanded are righteous and very faithfull 2. It is needfull for a believer to labour to have the impression of the truth and righteousnesse of the Word of God in Scripture stamped on his own heart by freequent meditation and acknowledgement thereof as the Psalmists example here doth teach us Ver. 139. My zeal hath consumed me because mine enemies have forgotten thy words The third reason of the petition is because his zeal to the commands of God was so great as the opposition which his enemies made unto them did torment him and such zeal required growing knowledge Whence learn 1. Zeal had great need of sound knowledge that it misccary not and he that findeth zeal kindled in his breast should labour to informe himselfe well as the Psalmist doth v. 144. and here My zeal hath consumed me because mine enemies have forgotten thy word 2. Holy affections are able to work upon the body no lesse then common and natural affections My zeal hath consumed me 3. The contempt and misregard of the Word of God perceived in any especially in professors within the visible Church is a just reason of zeal a just cause of grief and anger against such workers of iniquity My zeal hath consumed me because mine enemies have forgotten thy word Ver. 140. Thy word is very pure therefore thy servant loveth it The fourth reason of his petition is because he seeth such holinesse and unmixed truth in Gods Word as he cannot choose but love it and therefore must pray that he may know more of it VVhence learn 1. The Word of God is a Word clean from all mix●●re of flattery or falsehood tried to be true in the experience of all ages Thy word is very pure 2. New contemplations of the excellency of the Word of the Lord draweth forth new commendations of it and raiseth fresh affection of love to it Thy word is very pure therefore thy servant loveth it Ver. 141. I am small and despised yet do I not forget thy precepts The fifth reason of his petition is because the Word of God held up his heart and comforted him against all the contempt of men Whence learn 1. The godly may readily lose reputation at wicked mens hands when they will not comply with their wickednesse I am small and despised 2. Albeit we do lose estimation for adhering to the Word of God yet the Word should not lose estimation for that with us I am despised yet do I not forget thy precepts Vers. 142. Thy righteousnesse is an everlasting righteousnesse and thy Law is the truth The sixth reason of his petition is because everlasting righteousnesse and everlasting truth is in Gods Word and may be found in experience by it Whence learn 1. This is the excellency of the Law of God above all the lawes of men that not only it is righteous at the first giving out but also righteous in all ages and times Thy righteousnesse is an everlasting righteousnesse and thy law is truth 2. The righteousnesse which God hath devised and set down in his Word to justifie sinfull men is an everlasting righteousnesse even the righteousnesse by faith in Jesus Christ borne witnesse unto by the Law and the Prophets Thy righteousnesse is an everlasting righteousnesse and thy Law is truth 3. It is good for the setling and strengthning of the holds of our faith to consider again and again what excellent profit may be had by it and how true it is as here the Psalmist doth Ver. 143. Trouble and anguish have taken hold on me yet thy Commandments are my delight The seventh reason of his petition is because the Word of God hath been his delight when trouble and vexation hath befallen him for obedience of it Whence learn 1. The believer is not exempted from outward trouble for righteousnesse nor from the vexation and inward anguish of spirit which may follow it Trouble and anguish have taken hold on me 2. After that the believer hath felt his own weaknesse and the force of trouble he may expect victory over trouble and to be rid from the vexation of it and brought even to rejoycing in tribulation yet thy Commandements are my delight Vers. 144. The righteousnesse of thy testimonies is everlasting give me understanding and I shall live The eighth reason of his petition is because life everlasting is to be had by the everlasting righteousnesse set down in Gods VVord therefore he prayeth to have more understanding thereof that is to have more clear knowledge and more strong faith in Gods testimonies Whence learn 1. This is the main Doctrine in all the Word of God to teach men concerning everlasting righteousnesse or how a man is justified before God therefore is this again repeated Thy righteousnesse or the righteousnesse of thy testimonies is everlasting 2. The belief or saving understanding of this Doctrine bringeth eternal life to the believer and for this end being joyned as the last reason with the former seven reasons it should make a man seek to grow in the faith or in the saving knowledge of the testimonies of God set down in his Word Give me understanding and I shall live COPH. Vers. 145. I cried with my whole heart heare me O LORD I will keep thy statutes In this section he falleth on another maine petition unto God for restoring unto him and encreasing in him the vigour of spiritual life by his Word v. 149. and to presse this petition he useth foure arguments some going before some following after it The first argument hath foure branches the first is because he had prayed earnestly before for quickening of him that so he might be enabled to serve God Whence learn 1. When the world is crying Who will shew us any good thing this man wishing
condition worse or better it must not take up the room in our affection which is due to the Church it must not make us forget the affliction of Ioseph for that were to provoke God to make those benefits uselesse unto us which did divert us from sympathy with the Church If I forget thee O Ierusalem let my right hand forget her cunning or if the Church of God and the good of it be not preferred above our own private contentments it shall be righteousnesse with God to turn the meanes of our private contentment to be the means of our private grief If I do not remember thee let my tongue cleave to the roof of my mouth if I preferre not Ierusalem to my chief joy 4. To seek mens favour with the det●iment of any point of Religion or to consent unto mens encroachment upon matters of Religion that we may have their favour or that we may be freed from their trouble or sit at more ease under them is to forget God and his Church and our respects which we owe to God and to his Church as we are taught by the example of the Jewes refusing to sing Psalmes at the Babylonians desire or direction and expounding their obedience to the Babylonians in this point to be nothing else but a forgetting of Ierusalem and a denying of their Religion if they should have yielded Vers. 7. Remember O LORD the children of Edom in the day of Ierusalem who said Rase it rase it even to the foundation thereof 8. O daughter of Babylon who art to be destroyed happy shall he be that rewardeth thee as thou hast served us 9. Happy shall he be that taketh and dasheth thy little ones agaenst the stones In the imprecation used against the enemies of the Church and in particular against their false brethren the Edomites who helped on their affliction and against the Babylonians who were the chief oppressors of them Learn 1. False brethren are the chief instruments of persecution of the true members of the Church whensoever they finde occasion a● the Edomites the posterity of Esau did prove in the destruction of Ierusalem Remember O Lord the children of Edom. 2. Whosoever do delight in the Churches calamity and do endeavour the Churches ruine by word or deed by their stirring up of others to afflict them or by any oppression which may tend to the Churches prejudice when the Lord is visiting her their sinne shall not be forgotten of God in the day when the Lord judgeth his people but shall be severely punished Remember O ●ord the children of Edom in the day of Ierusalem 3. No lesse will suffice the adversaries of the Church then the utter ruine and rasing of it to the ground Who said of Ierusalem Rase it rase it even to the foundation thereof 4. The estate of the Church at the worst is better then the estate of Babylon or any estate of her adversaries how prosperous soever at the best for albeit the Church be in captivity and oppressed yet she shall not be destroyed but it is not so with her adversaries but O daughter of Babylon who art to be destroyed 5. Faith is neither blinded by the prosperity of the wicked nor by the adversity of the Church but doth see through the prospect of the Lords Word both her approaching delivery of the Church and the ruine of her enemies for O daughter of Babylon who art to be destroyed doth shew unto the captive Jewes so much 6. As the enemies of Gods Church have measured out unto the Lords people so it shall be measured back again and more for a reward unto her adversaries Happy shall he be that rewardeth thee as thou hast served us 7. There is an happinesse wherein blessednesse doth not consist which neither is a part or branch of blessednesse nor a proper mark of blessednesse but only signifieth some happinesse in the consequence of a mans work tending to the glory of God and good of his Church and such is the happinesse of the Medes and Persians here spoken of who whatsoever were their corrupt intentions in their warre did work albeit not as religious servants yet as Gods instruments a good work of justice upon the oppressors of Gods people and a good work of delivery of the Lords people Happy shall he be that taketh and dasheth thy little ones against the stones 8. Albeit it be a sinfull thing to satisfie our carnall affection in the misery of any man yet it is lawfull in Gods cause to wish that God be glorified albeit in the confusion of his enemies and here great need is to have the heart well guarded with the fear of God for wherwise to allow the dashing of little ones against the stones might make a man guilty of savage cruelty PSALME CXXXVIII THis Psalme is Davids thanksgiving unto God and praising of him for the experience he had of his love and faithfulnesse The promise of praise or thanksgiving is set down v. 1. and six reasons are to be subjoyned in the verses following which are closed with a prayer in the end of the Psalme Vers. 1. I Will praise thee with my whole heart before the gods will I sing praises unto thee In the promise of praising God Learn 1. It is a part of our thankfulnesse to engage our heart to praise God for after-time when we finde that all the thanks we can give for the present are short of our duty or desire to praise him I will praise thee saith David 2. As sometimes the believer will finde his heart set at liberty in Gods worship which at another time he will finde to be in bands so should he take the opportunity of an enlarged heart to runne in the way of Gods service as David doth here I will praise thee with my whole heart 3. Albeit the faces of Princes Rulers and Magistrates use to lay some restraint upon the liberty of speech which men use to take before mean persons and albeit Princes ordinarily love rather to hear themselves praised by flatterers then to hear either God or man magnified in their audience yet a heart enlarged with the sense of Gods Majesty greatnesse and goodnesse will not stand to confesse and proclaim Gods truth greatnesse and goodnesse and other points of his praise in the audience of the greatest men on the earth pu● case they should think themselves cried down and more lightly esteemed of by this meanes Before the Lord will I sing praise to thee Ver. 2. I will worship toward thy holy Temple and praise thy Name for thy loving kindnesse and for thy truth for thou hast magnified thy Word above all thy Name He engageth himselfe also unto the publick ordinary worship of God according to Gods command and then giveth the reasons of his engagement Whence learn 1. Worshipping of God in secret is indeed necessary but it is not sufficient for the man who mindeth thankfulnesse to God except he follow the publick meanes also and
framing of our bodies God knoweth what he is making neither darknesse nor distance of heaven from earth nor any other impediment doth hinder him in his working My substance was not hid from thee when I was made in secret 11. The making of a mans body of so many bones arteries veines sinewes c. is a most curious piece of work I was curiously wrought in the lowest parts of the earth 12. God seeth th●ngs before they be made and his purpose to make hath no lesse clearnesse of kn●wledge of the thing to be made then the subsistence of it when it is made can give and God in his decree to do knoweth the thing to be done as fully as when it is done Thine eyes did see my substance yet being imperfect and in thy book all my members were written which in continuance were fashioned when as yet there was none of them 13. The Lords decrees of things to be done are so clear so determinate so certain as if the description and history of the thing already come to passe were written in a book for so much doth the comparison taken from a written book to shew the nature of Gods decrees Import In thy book all my members were written which in continuance were fashioned when as yet there was none of them 14. There is rare wisdome to be learned out of Gods decrees and works How precious are thy thoughts unto me 15. What pains a man taketh in the searching thereof is well recompensed with pleasure and profit as Davids experience doth teach 16. We should studie this wisdom till we finde it sweet and then lay it up as a precious jewel in our minde when we have found it How precious also are thy thoughts unto me O God 17. All Gods revealed decrees are the matter of the beleevers comfort and his joy how harsh soever they seem to the unbeliever and unrenewed man How precious also are thy thoughts unto me O God 18. The particulars of Gods purpose and decreed will toward his own children which from time to time do come to light as they are revealed by the daily execution of them are innumerable How great is the summe of them if I should count them they are more in number then the sand 19. Albeit the most vigilant of the Saints sometimes fall in drowsinesse and sleepinesse of Spirit that they cannot perceive Gods presence with them and care of them and love unto them yet when the Lord wakeneth up their soules and reneweth their spiritual senses they are forced to see and acknowledge that the Lord doth never leave them even when they least perceive his presence For when I awake I am still with thee doth import all this Ver. 19. Surely thou wilt slay the wicked O God depart from me therefore ye bloody men 20. For they speak against thee wickedly and thine enemies take thy Name in vain In the last place he confesseth his judgement of and affection toward his adversaries and offereth all to be searched and approved of God and himself to be directed thereafter unto life everlasting and first he sheweth his judgement of his adversaries and the reason of his abhorring the fellowship of their courses Whence learn 1. Where we perceive wickeddesse to reign there we may be assured destruction will follow Surely thou wilt slay the wicked O God 2. When we do passe our judgement of mens persons and courses we had need to conform our judgment unto what we know the Lord will allow as here the Psalmist doth directing his speech to God 3. When the Lord will comfort his servants under persecution he will let them see not only their own blessednes in himself but also the destruction of their enemies approaching as here we see 4. When we see destruction attending upon the way wherein others are walking we ought to keep off from fellowship with their unfruitful works or darknesse for otherwise whatsoever duties any special relations do call for at our hands David was very observant of them toward his greatest enemies but he separated from them only as wicked and as bloody and as they were on a course of perdition Depart from me therefore ye bloody men 5. When we have a controversie with the wicked we should take heed that private spleen do not rule us but that only our in●erest in Gods quarrel with them doth move us as the Psalmist doth here For they speak against thee wickedly 6. What the wicked do or speak against Gods servants for righteousnesse sake it is against God in effect They speak against thee and are thy enemies 7. Such as professe themselves to be the people of God and yet do persecute the godly unjustly under the colour of law or some specious pretences do in effect take Gods Name in vain Thine enemies take thy Name in vain Ver. 21. Do not I hate them O LORD that hate thee and am not I grieved with those that rise up against thee 22. I hate them with perfect hatred I count them mine enemies After declaring his judgement of his enemies he professeth his hatred to their persons qualified with wickednesse as is said Whence learn 1. There are some men who beside the common enmity which is in all men against God do oppose themselves in an eminent way against God and godlinesse as haters of God for this the text doth presuppose 2. Such as are perceived open enemies unto God we may lawfully hate them without breach of the law of love for the love which we owe unto God absolutely giveth warrant to hate them who oppose God comparatively Do not I hate them that hate thee 3. Injuries done against God should touch and affect us no lesse nearly then injuries done to our selves And am not I grieved with those that rise up against thee 4. When God is injured by our enemies we had great need to look to the sincerity of our affection that our hatred against them and our zeal for God and his truth be upright so as we may say with David I hate them with a perfect hatred I count them mine enemies Ver. 23. Search me O God and know my heart try me and know my thoughts 24. And see if there be any wicked way in me and lead me in the way everlasting When David hath searched himself and is approved of his own conscience he offereth himself over again to be searched by God Whence learn 1. As we have need to try our zeale when Gods quarrel and our interest are joyned that there be not some dregs of our ill humours mixed therewith so must we not rest upon the testimony of our own conscience in this case but must offer our heart to be searched of God over and over again and must intreat him to purge us of every corrupt mixture as David doth Scarch me O God and know my heart try me and know my thoughts 2. He had need to be sincere in all his wayes who craveth Gods approbation in
from them for a time yet they cannot debar them from seeking favour and pardon according to the Covenant of grace especially when they are studying to serve God as this example teacheth us And enter not into judgement with thy servant 5. There is no way of justification by the works of the Law neither before regeneration nor after but only by grace for David a man of singular holinesse saith En●er not into judgement with thy servant for in thy sight shall none living be justified to wit if thou enter into judgement with him according to the Law of works Ver. 3. For the enemie hath persecuted my soule he hath smitten my life down to the ground he hath made me to dwell in darknesse as those that have been long dead 4. Therefore is my spirit overwhelmed within me my heart within me is desolate The reasons of his prayer are two the first is taken from the miserable condition wherein the violence and oppression of the enemie hath driven him v. 3 4. the other is from his careful use of the meanes for finding grace v. 5 6. In the first reason Learn 1. After we have fled to Gods mercy according to the Covenant of grace for remission of sin we may confidently lay forth all our worldly trouble before God and hope for relief as here David doth 2. It is not strange to see the godly in a manner wracked by their persecutors and undone in their worldly condition for so was David served The enemie hath persecuted my soul he hath smitten my life down to the ground he hath made me dwell in darknesse as those that have been long dead and this he speaketh in regard of his being hunted from place to place and forced to hide himself in the wildernesse and at length to take banishment upon him and to live among idolaters in the land of darknesse 3. Troubles when they are long continued are able to daunt the natural courage of the stoutest of Gods servants for God for emptying of his owne children of self-conceit and humbling them in the sense of their own weaknesse useth to suffer trouble to have more weight then they could before-hand apprehend as here Therfore is my spirit overwhelmed within me my heart within me is desolate 4. How heavie soever trouble be found and how unable soever we finde our selves to bear it any longer yet must we not succumbe nor give over wrestling but must present our case unto the Lord as this example doth teach us Ver. 5. I remember the dayes of old I meditate on all thy works I muse on the work of thy hands 6. I stretch forth my hands unto thee my soul thirsteth after thee as a thirsty land Selah From the second reason of his prayer taken from the conscience of his diligent use of the ordinary meanes for finding comfort and relief Learn 1. The remembrance of our own former experience and of the experience of others of the Saints set down in Scripture which should have force to support our faith albeit we have nothing of our own experience is a fit exercise for a fainting soul under trouble as here we see I remember the dayes of old I meditate on all thy works 2. The meditation of the works of Creation and Providence is a fit meanes also to support our faith in Gods Word albeit we have no example nor experience of any who had been in the like condition before us for therein we shall finde the evidence of what the wisdom and Omnipotency of God can do in performing of promises I muse on the works of thy hands 3. Before we can draw profit by the pledges of Gods power apparent in his works we must resolve to meditate and muse upon them at leasure for a slight look of these will not draw forth the profitable use of them I remembered I meditate I mused saith David 4. With meditation upon Gods works earnest prayer must be joyned I stretch forth my hands unto thee 5. When faith seeth not only a promise of help but also by the experience of others who have been helped a probability also of its coming speed it raiseth a drought and longing for the fruit of the promise and keepeth the eye fixed upon God without looking for relief from any where else My soul thirsteth after thee as a thirsty land Ver. 7. Heare me speedily O LORD my Spirit faileth hide not thy face from me lest I be like unto them that go down into the pit In the rest of the Psalme he presseth this prayer in nine petitions more particular The first is for speedy deliverance the second for some blink of favour and both these have their reasons adjoyned in this verse Whence learn 1. Sore trouble and long delaying of Gods help is able to shake faith and weaken courage Hear me speedily O Lord my heart faileth 2. The beleever must never give over seeking of Gods help how nigh soever he be to failing and falling off Hear me O Lord my spirit faileth me 3. Faith maketh use of extreme dangers and instant destruction as of wings to mount it self up unto God for death and destruction cannot be so nigh but faith findeth time to flee to its refuge and run to God to interpose himself before destruction be executed●s Hear me speedily my spirit faileth 4. The Lords displeasure apprehended in trouble is more terrible then the trouble it self and the least intimation of his favour is very life and delivery for Hide not thy face from me was here Davids deepest distresse and the shewing of the least blink of Gods favour should have relieved him 5. The Lord will not suffer his childrens faith to be over set albeit he suffer it to be hardly assaulted Hide not thy face from me lest I be like to them that go down to the pit or lest I be like to them that perish 6. The sense of trouble and weaknesse in Gods children acknowledged before God is more able to bear them through from under their troubles then all the stupid stoutness● of contumacious mindes as the experience of this Champion David sheweth unto us Vers. 8. Cause me to hear thy loving kindnesse in the morning for in thee do I trust cause me to know the way wherein I should walk for I lift up my soule unto thee The third petition is for timous comfort in the Word of promise and the fourth is for direction in the way of Gods obedience and both have their reasons adjoyned in this verse Whence learn 1. The consolation which the believer doth seek is that which is promised in the Word and he will content himself with the comfort which cometh by hearing till the full effect of the promise come Cause me to hear thy loving kindnesse 2. That comfort is indeed early and sufficiently timous which cometh before we perish or despair Cause me to hear thy loving kindnesse in the morning 3. Trusting in God without comfort is a reason to perswade
to praise God to be still lying on him as this example of David in the close of the Psalme doth shew us 2. The Lord will be praised in our spirits and outwardly in our words and externall expressions also My mouth shall speak the praises of the Lord. 3. Some duties belong to some persons and other duties belong to other persons but the duty of praising the Lord is the duty of every man albeit only the believer giveth obedience to this Let all flesh blesse him 4. It is needfull that every worshipper of God in the discharge of praise remember their own frailty and be h●mbled Let all flesh blesse him 5. The duty of praising and blessing God must be so holily discharged as the Lord may be honoured in effect Let all flesh blesse his holy Name 6. Such as praise God and b●esse him heartily shall follow this exercise for ever Let all flesh blesse his holy Name for ever and ever PSALME CXLVI THis Psalme is a Psalme of praise wholly wherein when the Psalmist hath exhorted all men to praise the Lord he engageth himselfe to the work v. 1 2. Then he teacheth the way how to praise God in eff●ct to wit by renouncing all carnall confidence and trusting only in the Lord v. 3 4 5. Thirdly he giveth reasons both of trusting in God and praising of God and closeth as he begun with the same exhortation to praise God Vers. 1. PRaise ye the LORD Praise the LORD O my soul 2. While I live will I praise the LORD I will sing praises unto my God while I have any being From the stirring up of others and himselfe to praise God Learn 1. The duty of praising God is so necessary so deserved by God so profitable to us and so spiritual that we had need frequently to stirre up our selves and others unto it Praise ye the Lord. 2. For discharging the duty of praise all the powers of the soul must be stirred up the minde to meditate the memory to bring forth former observations the heart and affections for discharging of the duty in the best manner Praise the Lord O my soul. 3. Whatsoever concurrence we finde of others in the work of praise lesse or more let us set our selves seriously and heartily unto it and engage our own heart for it While I live I will praise the Lord. 4. There can be little heartinesse in this work till the soul lay hold on God by faith and embrace the Covenant of grace and so finde its own interest in God and then the soul will praise in earnest as the Psalmists example may shew us I will sing praises to my God while I have any being Vers. 3. Put not your trust in Princes nor in the son of man in whom there is no help 4. His breath goeth forth he returneth to his earth in that very day his thoughts perish He sheweth the way how to praise God really to wit by renunciation of all earthly confidence and fixing faith and trust on God alone for renouncing of all confidence in creatures he giveth reasons v. 3 4. and for trusting in God he giveth reasons by praising of God unto the end of the Psalme In the forbidding of carnall confidence Learn 1. What a man doth most trust in that he esteemeth most of and praiseth it in his heart most therefore doth the Psalmist set us upon God as on the right object of trust and diverteth us from the wrong that he may teach us to make God the only object of praise 2. Because the maine object of our carnall confidence naturally is man in power who seemeth able to do for us able to promote us to dignity and riches and to keep us up in some state in the world therefore must we throw down this idol● in particular that we may place our confidence in God the better Put not your trust in Princes 3. To cut off carnal confidence in man that neither mean men may trust in great men nor great men may trust in the multitude of mean men we must remember that no man is naturally better then his progenitors but such as his fathers were such is he that is a sinfall weak and unconstant creature Put not your trust in Princes nor in the son of man 4. The reason why we should not put trust in man is because he can neither help himselfe nor the man that trusteth in him when there is most need In whom there is no help 5. He that cannot deliver himselfe from death is not to be trusted in because it is uncertaine how soon death shall seize upon him His breath goeth forth he returneth to his earth 6. Whatsoever the good will or purpose or promise of any man can give assurance of all doth vanish when the man dieth In that every day his thoughts perish Vers. 5. Happy is he that hath the God of Iacob for his help whose hope is in the LORD his God In the exhorting of us to trust in God he giveth this encouragement unto it that he who trusteth in God may look for help and happinesse in him Whence learn 1. The only true object of our faith and confidence is God as he is revealed by his Word to his Church to wit The God of Iacob the God of Israel 2. Faith in God bringeth true felicity with it and help in time of need Happy is he that hath the God of Iacob for his help 3. Hope of help and happinesse from trust and confidence in God must be grounded upon the Lords entering in Covenant with us and becoming ours through the Mediator whose hope is in the Lord his God Vers. 6. Which made heaven and earth the sea and all that therein is which keepeth truth for ever 7. Which executeth judgement for the oppressed which giveth food to the hungry the LORD looseth the prisoners 8. The LORD openeth the eyes of the blinde the LORD raiseth them that are bowed down the LORD loveth the righteous 9. The LORD preserveth the strangers he relieveth the fatherless and widow but the way of the wicked he turneth upside down 10. The LORD shall reigne for ever even thy God O Sion unto all generations Praise ye the LORD For encouraging of us yet more to believe in God who offereth himselfe to be reconciled with us and to be our God in Christ he giveth other ten motives and as every one of them is a point of Gods praise so is it a prop and pillar to support the believers faith The first motive to believe in God and first reason of Gods praise is his omnipotency and al sufficiency made manifest by the work of creation and preservation of all creatures Which made the heaven and the earth the sea and all that therein is 2. The second motive to believe in God is another point of Gods praise to wit his faithfulnesse in making and keeping Covenant and performing his promises unto everlasting Which keepeth truth for ever 3. The third point of