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A35537 An exposition with practical observations continued upon the thirty-fifth, thirty-sixth, and thirty-seventh chapters of the book of Job being the substance of thirty-five lectures / by Joseph Caryl ... Caryl, Joseph, 1602-1673. 1664 (1664) Wing C776; ESTC R15201 593,041 687

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Lord hath not called thy name Pashur but Magor Missabib that is fear round about I will make thee a terror to thy self thy own Conscience shall be terrible to thee A man had better fall into the hands of the most cruel Tyrants in the World than into the hands of his own Conscience But when a man is a terrour to himself then to have the Lord a terrour to him likewise to have God appearing in terrible Majesty how dreadful is it The awakened Conscience of a sinner carrieth in it as a thousand witnesses so a thousand terrours and God in his anger is more terrible than a thousand consciences Secondly God is terrible to sinners in the day of outward trouble when as David speaks Psal 65.5 By terrible things in righteousness he answereth the prayers of his People When God is doing terrible things in the World how miserable is their case to whom God also is a terrour in that day A godly man when God is doing the most terrible things shaking Heaven and earth and as it were pulling the world about our ears yet because he finds God at peace with him he is well enough But as for impenitent sinners when God is doing terrible things what will become of them I may bespeak them in the words of the Prophet Isa 10.3 What will ye do in the day of your visitation and in the desolation which shal come from far to whom will ye flee for help and where wil ye leave your glory As if he had said wh● or what can be a comfort to you when God is a ●errour to you And therefore another Prophet fore-seing such a terrible day coming makes this earnest deprecating prayer Jer. 17.13 O Lord be not thou a terr●ur to me in the evil day I know an evil a terrible day is at hand but Lord I beg this of thee that thou wilt not be a terrour to me in that day if men should be a terrour to me and God a terrour too it would be in●upportable Yet thus it will be with the unrighteous when God doth terrible things in righteousness and such things he will do in the latter dayes Take heed lest God appear with terrible Majesty to you in such a day Thirdly How terrible is God to impenitent sinners when awakened in the day of death What is Death In this Book Death is called The King of Terrours Now if when Dea●h is making its approaches to a person who lives in a contempt of the wayes and word of God if when his breath sits upon his lips ready to depart and the King of Terrours is ready to tear his caul and to rend his heart-strings asunder if then I say God appears in terrible Majesty what condition will such a one be in To have Death the King of Terrours and the Living the ever-living God in terrible Majesty falling upon a poor creature at once is a thousand deaths at once Fou●thly What will sinners do in the day of judgment that will be a terrible day indeed The Apostle 2 Cor. 5.10 having said We must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ to receive according to what we have done in the body whether good or bad presently adds knowi●g therefore the terrour of the Lord we perswade men that is knowing how terrible the Lord will be to impenitent sinners to all whom he finds in their sins knowing this terrour of the Lord and how terrible the Majesty of the Lord will be to such in that day we perswade men we do all we can to pluck them out of their sins and turn them to God in Ch●ist Jesus who saves his people from their sins for to be sure that will be a most dreadful day to sinners Thus the M●j●sty of God will be terrible to the wicked and ungodly especially in these four dayes Only they who fear the Lo●d and take hold of his name by faith shall be able to stand befo●e his terrible majesty God will not be a terrour but a comfo●t to them ●hat fear him in every evill day Fu ●her the word as w●s shewed before signifies not only Majesty but Pra●se With God is ●errible praise dreadful praise Hence note First The Lord is most praise worthy With the Lord is praise The Psalmist every where s●ts fo th the praise-worthiness of God and presseth this duty upon us I shall not stay upon it only remember with the Lord is praise that is he is to be praised And from the attribute of his prai●e or that with the Lord is terrible praise Note Secondly Even in those things which the Lord doth most graciously for us and is to be highly praised by us even in th●se he is to be feared dreaded and reverenced God is to be praised not only with joy and thankfullness but with fear and reverence for with him is terrible praise It is the express word of Moses in his song after the destruction of the Egyptians in the Red Sea Exod. 15.11 Who is a God like unto thee glorious in holines fearful in praises We should not be affraid to praise God no we should be most forward to praise him but we should have a holy fear upon our hearts when we praise him Praise is the work of heaven from whence fear shall for ever be banished there will be perfect love and perfect love Casts out fear 1 Joh. 4.18 What-ever fear hath torment in it as all fear out of Ch●ist hath we shall have nothing to do with in that blessed life And even in this life praise which is the work of heaven on earth should be performed with such a spirit of love joy as is without all base tormenting fear we should have so much love to God in and for all the good things he doth for our soules especially ye and for our bodyes too in dealing out daily mercies that it should cast out all that fear which hath torment in it Yet there is a fear which should p●ssess our spirits while we are praising God a fear of reverence I mean which fear I doubt not will remaine in heaven for ever Glorified Saints shall praise God with that fear that is having an everlasting awe of the Majesty of God upon their hearts He is fearful in praises and therefore let us so praise him as remembering our distance so praise him as to be affraid of miscarrying in the duty and so instead of praising displease him in stead of honouring grieve him This duty of praise is very dreadful The Psalmist saith there is mercy or forgiveness with thee O Lord that thou mayst be feared Psal 130.4 Not only is the Lord to be feared in his wrath and in the executions of his justice but he is to be feared in his mercy in that greatest expression of his favour towards us the forgivness of our sins When we are in the highest exaltations of the mercy of God and of the God of our mercies yet then should our hearts be
the Sky takes occasion to give us a description of the Sky Hast thou with him spread out the Sky Which is strong and as a molten Locking-Glasse We have here two things considerable in the Sky First the strength of it Secondly the clearness of it But is the Sky strong that may be thought an improper and incong●uous Epithete The Sky seemeth to be a weak thing and the Ai● will scarce bear a feather yet saith he Hast thou with him spread out the Sky which is strong How are the Heavens or Sky strong Philosophers and Interpreters upon this place have largely discoursed the matter of the Heaven● which to our sence are a very thinn substance and therefore seem to have little strength in them I answer Though to sense and view the Sky or Heavens seem to have little strength in them yet indeed their strength is beyond that of Rocks and Mountains The learned Languages both Greek and Latine expresse the Sky by words which properly signifie strength and firm●ess Firmitas tribu●tur coelo propter immutabilitatem unde Septuaginta dicunt 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Latini Firmamentum and we following the Latine word commonly call it in our English tongue The Firmament as much as to say a firme thing When the Apostle would set forth the steadiness or as we translate the stedfastness of the faith of the Colossians he makes use of this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chap. 2.5 As if he had said I rejoyce to behold the firmament of your faith or that your faith is as fi●me as the Firmament Surely then the Sky or Firmament is very strong else the strength of faith which being strong is the strongest thing both actively and passively in the world had never been expressed by it The Heavens are said to be strong as saith is because of their lastingness and duration The Angels are pure Spirits they are purer and of a more spiritual substance than the Sky or Heavens yet they are strong so strong and powerfull that they are called Powers their strength is not a corporal strength of flesh and bone as ours and that of beasts is nor is it a strength by compactness of earthy parts as that of Stones and Metals is but 't is a strength of lastingness and activity arising from their spiritualness Thus the Sky especially taking it for the Heavens above th● air is pure there is a spiritualness in its nature and so a strength of lastingness in it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fusile a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 suadere liqui sacere non a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 coar●are Merc beyond that of any earthly or elementary body The Heavens are not made up of contrary qualities as elementary bodies are In them heat and coldness moysture and driness are mingled together and these contending with each other at last subdue each other whence all elementary bodies become weak and corruptible The Heavens have some cognation with elementary bodyes yet without the contrariety of active qualities Heaven is like the Element of the Earth in regard of firmness and solidity it is like the water in regard of its moveableness it is like the air in regard of its pellucidness or clearness it is like the fire with respect to its activeness Heaven shines yet 't is without heat 't is solid yet without dryness 't is compact yet without moystness 't is diaphanous and pellucid yet without po es or those small and unsensible holes whereby swea● and vapours pass out of the body So then the Scriptu●e calls Heaven st●ong or firme not as grosse bodyes are called fi●me and strong bu● because of its perpetual consistency and as to nature indissolubility which doth the more highly advance and commend the power of God who hath given it a strength and firmness beyond that of R●cks and Adamants For how fluid and moveable soever the Heavens are to view yet they are the most strong and durable part of the whole Creation Hast thou with him spread out the Sky which is strong And as a molten Looking-Glasse Some ●ead these words as an en●●●●●nrence Which is strong as a m●lten Lo●king-Glasse So Mr Broughton Couldst thou make a Firmament with him of the ●●ir setled as Glasse molten We put it disti●c●● in two parts which is strong a●d as a molten Looking-Glasse Poe●● v●teres 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 app●llarunt Some of the old Poets u●ed a like Epithete concerning Heaven they called i● The Brazen Heaven What the Lord threatens as a judicial affl●ction Deut. 28.23 The Heaven that is over thine head shall be B asse that Heaven resembles in its natural constitution 't is like B●asse o● like a molten Looking-Glasse by reason of its shining brigh●ness That which we commonly call Glass or a Looking-Glass is molten of which we read Ex●d 38.8 M●ses made the Brazen Laver of the Looking-Glasses of the Women The godly women among the Jewes made a bette use of thei Looking-Glasses than to dress themselves by they off●red them to the service o God in the Tabe●n●cle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Est videre inde vijus sp culum R●b Kimhi in lib rad One of the J●wish Doct●●s wa●ns us to consider that the word which we rende● a Looking-Glasse may be taken for a look or for the appearance ●f a thing As if ●e had said The Heavens are not only strong but cleare L oking like or being o look on like a thing that is mol●●n Glasse is a diaphanous splendid body we may see through i● or see the representation of objects in it Thus th● Heavens are strong as steele and cleare as a molten Looking-Glasse Hence ●bserve Fi●st The Heaven are durable they are strong Secondly The Heavens are transparent they are as a Lo●k ng Glasse From this latter we may infer There is much to be seen in the Heavens They are a L●oking-Glasse which represent many things to us It hath been said The whole world is a Looking Glasse Se●ulum spoculum every Age we live in is a Looking-Glasse in which many both things and persons are discovered I may say much more the Heavens are a Looking Glasse wherein we may behold much of God and much of our selves And because the Heavens are called a Looking-Glasse it should mind us to look upon the Heavens they may mind us First What God is who hath made the Heavens Psal 19.1 The Heavens declare the glory of God and the Firmament sheweth his handy work We may see God by the Heavens First In his nature that he is pure and holy He that hath made such a pure thing as the Heaven is how pure is he There is no dirt in the Sky no filth in the Heavens no uncleanness there the dust or filth of this world can get but a little into the air it cannot reach the Heavens The purity of God is such as may shame the purity of the Heavens and make them blush though the Heavens are
the purest part of the world yet comparatively to God they are impure This Eliphaz asserts expresly Chap. 15.15 Behold he putteth no trust in his Saints yea the Heavens are not clean in his sight Biluad puts it yet further Chap. 26.5 Yea the Starrs which are the most pure and resplendent part of the Heavens are not pure in his sight Secondly The Heavens are a Glasse wherein we may behold the power of God How unconceiveable is his power who hath made such a Canopie and spread it over the heads of all Creatures And if the visible Heavens are so glorious what is the Heaven of Heavens The Heaven which we see is but the pavement of that which is unseen God hath made such a Ceeling for this House below as never needed mending or repaire he hath set such a Roof upon it as abides all weathers Thirdly We may see in this Glass the wisdome of God ●is wonderfull wisdome in contriving and fitting such a beau●ifu●l roof for this great House the Wo●ld We admire the skill and wisdome of Architects in some peices of their wo●k O the wisdome of God in this Fourthly We may see in the Heavens the unchangeableness of God If he hath made the Heavens of such a lasting nature that they have continued many thousand years without alteration surely then he himself hath continued and will continue for ever without change as he is at this day The unchangeableness of God infinitely exceeds that of the Heavens We find the Spirit of God by holy David infinitely preferring the God of Heav●n before the Heavens ●f God in his unchangeableness Psal 102.26 27. Of old hast thou laid the foundation of the Earth and the Heavens are the ●o●k of thy hands they shall perish but thou shalt endu●e yea all of them shall wax old l●ke a garment and as a vesture shalt thou cha●ge ●hem and they shall be changed but thou art the same The Heaven● have but a shadow of unchangeabl●ness compared with God W●th whom is no variableness nor shad●w of changing Fifthly In this Glass of the Heavens we may l●ok upon or contemplate the wonde full goodness of God to the so● of men Psal 8 3. When I consider the Heavens the work of thy singers the Moon and the Starr● wh ch thou hast ordained What is man that thou art mindful● 〈◊〉 and the son of man that thou visitest him When-eve● w● b● old the Heavens it should mind us of the mercy an● 〈◊〉 of God to man two wayes Fi st in making the H●avens 〈◊〉 use while he dwels on the Earth Secondly 〈◊〉 he h●●h p epared and provided him such a dwelling house when he shall leave this Earth 2 Cor. 5.1 We know that when the earthly house of this Tabernacle sha●l be diss●lved we ha●e a building of God an house not made with hands eternal in the Heavens Again The Heavens are a Looking-Glass wherein we may b●●old our selves First We may behold our weakness and impurity and so our unlikeness to the H●avens much more to the ●od of Heaven When ●pposi es are set one by o●●ver against the othe● they illustrate each other In the spotl●ss Heavens we may ●ee our spo●s The pure Heavens may shew us our im●u i●y Secondly As in the Heavens we may see what we a●e so what we should be The purity of the Heavens tells us we should be pure they tell us we should be heavenly-minded that is set our minds chiefly upon heavenly things yea that our minds should be like the Heavens pure and spotless It is said of the Church Cant. 6.10 Who is this that looketh forth as the morning fair as the Moon clear as the Sun Such in a qualified sense are all the parts and true members of the Chu●ch Shall a man say he hopes for an inheritance in the Heavens when his mind is earthly or when he minds only earthly things Worldly men are not only earthly-minded but their minds are earth and themselves are called earth Jer. 22.29 and Rev. 12.16 Surely then they are earthly On the other hand godly men should not only mind heavenly things but be a Heaven before they come to Heaven The Chu●ch on Earth is called Heaven Heb. 12.26 Yet once more I shake not the Earth only but also Heaven that is the Church state St John saith Rev. 12.7 There was war in Heaven But is there war in Heaven is it not all peace and joy th●●e How then saith that Scripture There was war in Heaven By H●aven there he means the Church on ea●th which is called Heaven First because there is not a more lively repres●ntation or resemblance of the highest Heavens which is the habitation of Gods holiness and of his glory than the Church here below which is a company of Saints and faithfull ones Secondly because the Church while on Earth hath more to do in Heaven and for Heaven then in or for the Earth and that in three respects First Her birth is from Heaven being bo●n of God Secondly Her traffick is in and for Heaven The Apostle saith of himself and of all such as are truly the Chu●ch of God Phil. 3.20 Our conversation is in Heaven our trade is in Heaven Though we have business on Earth yet that which is our business indeed is in Heaven The Church hath more to do in Heaven than on Earth her paines and labours her cares and endeavours are more fo● heavenly than for earthly things They that bestow most of their labou● upon ear●hly things are earthly In all things we ought to be heavenly and in every thing we do we ought to be doing for Heaven Thirdly Because her Head and her Inheritance is in Heaven Here she is a stranger there is her home nor is she ever truly at home till she comes thither Thus as H●aven is a Glass wherein we may se what we ought to be now we should labour to be pure ●●●an and of an unvariable temper as the Heavens are so what we shall be and shall have hereafter 'T is such a Glass as God hath made for us to behold our selves in and above all to behold him●elf his blessed self in Let us dresse our selves by this Glasse every day Let it not satisfie us to look upon the Heavens that we may see and be taken with their own beauty and excellency as Philosophers do in their discourses of Heaven but let us see God in them let us see Grace and Glory in them The●e is so little of God in the discourses of Philosophers saith one that they are colder than the Frost and Snow of which they often discourse But let us see God in this Looking-Glass of the Heavens and therein also let us see our selves and learn to be fitting and preparing our selves for heavenly joyes and enjoyments We have never looked well upon or in this Glass till we have mended our dresse and are become better and more beautifull by looking in it JOB Chap. 37. Vers
and see And Behold with like attention the Clouds There is some difference among Interpreters about this word which we render Clouds The Hebrew properly signifies Thinnes but a Cloud is thick and consists of many Aireal vapors condensed into a body and therefore this word cannot well be translated a Cloud saith this Author but the thin Heavens that is the higher Heavens those above the Airy Heaven 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ut plurimum Aethera nubes signifi●at Bold Again The Clouds are lower than the Heavens they are neerest to us they are ingendred in the middle Region nor do they at any time rise higher than that Region Forasmuch then as Elihu is endeavouring by the consideration of the highness of Gods royal seat or of the vast distance as the Prophet speaks of the habitation of his Holiness and of his Glory from us to prove that neither any good we do can profit him nor any evil we do teach to his disadvantage therefore it may seem not to make much for the purpose of Elihu to call Job to behold the Clouds which are neer us comparatively though their distance from us be really very great but I conceive notwithstanding that Criticisme of the word and this reason we may well enough abide by the Translation which saith Behold the Clouds for though the Clouds are thicker than the Ai● yet they are but thin and are soon dispersed by winde and ratified by heate Again Supposing as indeed they do that the Clouds move in the lower part of the Heavens it encreaseth and hightens the sense of the words to the purpose for which Elihu makes use of them As if he had said Behold and see the Heavens the upper Heavens the Starry Heavens they are higher than thou yea behold the Clouds which are neerest to us and much very much below the Starrs those especially which Astronomers call the fixed Starrs yet do but behold the Clouds which at the top of some hills one may touch with his hand some describe great men hiding their heads among the Clouds Behold I say the Clouds which are lowest yet they are higher than thou they are beyond thy reach much more the Heavens most of all God who is higher than the highest Heavens Thou canst neither add to nor diminish or blemish the beauty of the Heavens thou canst not make a cloud better or worse What then canst thou do to or against the God of Heaven To convince Joh of this is the purpose of Elihu in calling him to the view of the Heavens Now forasmuch as Elihu invites Job to the view and Contemplation of the Heavens Note First It is our duty to study and meditate the natural works of God or his works in Nature Especially the Heavens which are so eminent a part of his works The Scripture calls some Starr-gazers such are they who study the Heavens to a very evil purpose drawing men off from their sole dependance upon God by foretelling the events of things and destinies of persons from the positions and motions of the heavenly Bodies or Luminaries This kind of Studying and Contemplating the Heavens is one of the greatest vanities under Heaven a vanity often reproved in the Scriptures of the holy Prophets thus to be Starr-gazers or Heaven-beholders is our sin but there is a Contemplation of the Starrs which is our duty and commendation Psal 8.3 4. When I consider in that great volume of the works of God the Heavens the work of thy fingers the Moon and the Starrs which thou hast ordained What is man that thou art mindfull of him c. David did both look and see he beheld the Heavens for a good purpose a godly purpose his own abasement and the advancement of the glory and goodness or of the glorious goodness of God in spreading such a Canopy sparkling with perpetual fires for him to walk under and do his work by And doubtless did we with enlightned eyes behold and see the natural Heavens we should become more spiritual and heavenly Secondly In that we have here three words look see and behold Note The works of God Especially the Heavens are diligently to be Considered We may look to the Heavens and not see we may see the Heavens and not behold them Let me here again mind the Reader of the Emphasis of that word it notes a looking unto or upon the Object as a Hunter looks for a Hare or a Fowler for a Bird how doth he pry and look into every tuft and bush So the word is used Jer. 5.26 Among my people are found wicked men they lay waite or they eye and behold as one that setteth snares they set a trap they catch men All the visible works of God much more the Heavens should be diligently considered lookt into seen and beheld It was a good Conclusion of one of the Ancients who said That man hath not looked unto Heaven In coelum ron suspicit qui coelum tantum aspicit Origen that hath only looked upon Heaven A bare look is not sufficient he must look with admiration or till he cannot forbeare to admire as the first Latine word in that sentence signifies properly A man may look upon a Picture and yet not behold it discerningly he may say that 's the picture of a man yet not consider the Art of the workman in drawing it he may see it is the picture of a man not of a beast at a look but he must see it exactly if he would find out the worth and workmanship o● it A man in passage as some speak may see a house yet not apprehend the Symmetry of the Plat-form the skill of the Architect no● the commodiousnesse of its Scituation to discern these calls for serious consideration and setled reviews As in the Natural works of God the Heavens made for man so much more in his Spiritual works the making of a Heaven in man or man Heavenly require our deepest thoughts and most studious re-searches O how many are there who look transiently upon those works of God who never see nor behold them never enter into the secrets of them many know some Truths yet never looked into any nor laboured to comprehend with all Saints or as all Saints ought to do what is the breadth and length and depth and he●ght of them and therefore attain not to that riches of the full assurance of understanding to the acknowledgement of the mystery of God and of the Father and of Christ as the Apostle speaks Col. 2.2 but are like children tossed to and fro and carryed about with every wind of Doctrine as the same Apostle describes them Eph. 4.14 Remember we are to look and see and behold the Natural wo●ks of God how much more the Spiritual Mysteries of the Gospel and the works of grace these indeed are to be looked upon and seen and beheld those other are not to be left unlooked upon Note Thirdly The Heavens are a Divine Glasse wherein
Peccatum 1 ocatur Deicidium appetens sc Deum destruere Sin is an enemy to God and would dethrone and thrust him out of the world therefore s●nners shall be dealt with as such as have highly hurt and wronged God Sinners have sometimes risen up to such expressions of wickednesse that they would even pull God out of Heaven it is in the nature of every sin and in the spirit of many sinners to do so they carry a dayly enmity in their hearts Therefore woe to those who say of God God is not hurt by our sins why then should we trouble our selves about them yes the Lord will at last let all sinners know he hath been concerned in their sins though they have not at all toucht his Essential Glory yet they have darkned and slurr'd the manifestations of his Glory And therefore I answer Secondly All those Scriptures before alledged importing that sin grieves God vexes him and is very burthensome to him all those are spoken either of God-man Jesus Christ who was made like unto us in all things except sin and is spoken of in the Historyes and Prophesies of the Old Testament Haec de Deo dicuntur 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 et intelligenda sunt 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 before he took flesh as having those in him sinlesse passions of anger and sorrow and grief which were found in him after he appeared in the flesh Or if expounded of God strictly considered then what is in those Scriptures spoken of God must be understo●d after the manner of men yet as becomes God who is without all passions and repentings Or they are to be understood not as importing Affections in God but Effects upon men When men sin God doth such things as angry men use to do such things as men do that are g●ieved with what others have done and repent of what themselves have done If grief anger repentance were properly wrought in God when we sin our sins must needs be some yea much annoyance to him But while man sees and feels such Effects as these passions produce the Lord is infinitely exalted above the least feeling of these passions he remains ever the same That 's it which Elihu signifieth and holds out to Job we may trouble one another and trouble our selves by sin but we cannot at all trouble God If thou sinnest what dost thou against him what unto him I shall conclude and gather up the sence of this Context in these four brief Deductions Take two of them Negatively and two Affirmatively First God doth not punish sinners in anger only though he be angry only with sin Secondly God doth not punish sinners at all for fear He fears none whom none can hurt The two Affirmatives take thus Fi st When God punisheth sin he doth it out of pure love to Justice or purely out of love to Justice Secondly God afflicts the godly in mercy 't is not because they have done him hurt but for their good Elihu proceeds further to prove that as Job could not hurt God by his sins so his righteousness and innocency were no advantage to him and therefore it must needs follow that his sins could only hurt and his righteousness only profit himself and such as were like himself Vers 7. If thou be righteous what givest thou h●m and what receiveth he at thy hands Vers 8. Thy wickedness may hurt a man as thou art and t●y righteousness may profit the son of man Elihu having shewed in the former verse that the sin of m●n cannot detract any thing from nor in the least hinder the happiness of God proceeds in the 7th verse to shew that the sinlesness yea that the righteousness of man cannot advantage nor advance the happiness of God And therefore lest he should seem to make both the sin and the righteousness of man to be of no use he states the matter in the 8th verse and tells us both to whom the wickedness of man is hurtfull and to whom the righteousness of man is profitable Thy wickedness may hurt a man as thou art and thy righteousness may profit the son of man but neither can thy wickedness hurt nor thy righteousness help or advantage God That 's the summe of these two verses Vers 7. If thou be righteous what givest thou him As if he had said There is no reason O Job that thou shouldest at any time as thou oftentimes hast proclaim thy own righteousness as if that added any thing to God Job was not ignorant of that But the speech of Elihu had this scope in it to reprove him for complaining that his goodness profited himself nothing because though he was far from wickedness yet he was afflicted whereas many wicked men prospered and lived in full content to which poynt his other friends had not answered And further Elihu urgeth Job with this because he had so industriously defended his own righteousness as if he would intimate that God was a gainer by it whereas if God at any time rewardeth our good deeds that proceedeth from his own goodness and Free Grace not from any obligation which we have put upon him by what we have done how well soever we have done it If thou be righteous what givest thou him This supposition if thou be righteous hath in it a grant if not an affirmation that a man may be righteous For though all men naturally or in nature are unrighteous yet thorough grace all men that is all men who receive grace are righteous And they who receive grace are righteous under a three-fold notion First they are righteous by an imputed righteousness or by the righteousness of another accounted to them and thus every godly man is righteous because freely justified Secondly they that have grace are righteous by an Inherent Righteousness by a stock or a principle of Righteousness planted in them at their Conversion In conversion not only the acts but the state and nature of a man is changed He who before was nothing but a bundle of unrighteousness becomes a righteous man that is he hath a ●ighteous principle planted in him and abiding with him Thus a godly man is righteous because he is sanctified Thirdly every man that hath grace is a Righteous man by a righteousness flowing out from him or by a practical righteousness he is righteous by the doing of Righteousness The former is Righteousness by Conversion this is Righteousness by Conversation and this slows from the former as the Apostle John speaks in his first Epistle Chap. 3.5 He that doth righteousness is righteous that is he is in a righteous state through Justification and hath righteousness planted in him through Sanctification And he that is thus righteous in his state is also a practiser of Righteousness in his way As it is said of that worthy paire Zachary and Elizabeth Luke 1.6 They were both Righteous walking in all the Ordinances and Commandements of God blameless Here was practical Righteousness they were righteous
teaching as ye may see vers 45. Every one therefore that hath heard and learned of the Father cometh unto me That is every one whom the Father hath vouchsafed to teach and instruct that man cometh to me that is he believeth and obeyeth the Gospel and submitteth both in judgment and practise Every one that hath heard and learned of the Father cometh to me There is not one whom God hath undertaken to teach that doth miscarry Isa 32.4 The heart of the rash shall understand knowledge or the heart of the hasty Now hasty and rash persons are heady and inconsiderate persons and therefore none of the wisest they usually have little judgment or discretion who are much in passion but God can make the heart of the rash to understand knowledge that is he can make them understand and know things aright who seem most uncapable of and are naturally at the greatest distance from a rightness of knowledge and understanding To close the Point take these inferences from the who I. First If God be such a teacher then stay not in the bare teachings of men What are the teachings of men to the teachings of God Though you should have an Angel from heaven to speak to you yet stay not in his teachings wait for the teachings of God Till ye are taught of God ye never learn to purpose Set your selves not only as in Gods presence but as under his Spirit to be taught wait for the moving of the Spirit in every ordinance as they did for the Angels moving of the waters who lay at the poole of Bethesda for healing Joh. 5.4 Secondly Seeing God teacheth thus paramount seeing none teach like him then submit to his teaching Do not question any of his rules of life or doctrines of faith they are all righteous and full of divine truth you cannot do amiss if you do nor believe amiss if you believe no nor miss of blessedness in doing and believing what he hath taught Thirdly Then appear as they who are taught of God You will say How or when doth it appear that we are or have been taught of God I shall answer that query in four things First If you are or have been taught of God his teaching unteacheh or emptyeth you that in a threefold respect First of your own carnal principles The great business of divine teaching is to unteach to take men off from their own Will and Reason from their own Rules as also from those Customes which they have received by tradition from their fathers If you would appear as taught of God you must lay down all these The teachings of grace empty the soul of what it hath taken up by Nature Secondly the teachings of God empty the soul of all self-righteousness If ye be taught of God ye will be nothing in your selves Paul before the teachings of God came had confidence in the flesh and boasted in his own righteousness but when he was taught of God he threw off all those Thirdly If ye are taught of God that will certainly unteach and empty you of all unrighteousness The Apostle speakes fully to that Ephes 4.20 21. Ye have not so learned Christ if so be that ye have been taught as the truth is in Jesus If ye have been divinely taught then this teaching hath emptyed you of the old man as of all self-righteousness so of all unrighteousness towards others It is impossible any should take in the teachings of God and yet hold any sinfull practisings Secondly divine teachings as they empty and unteach the soul so they keep it very humble Knowledg endangers us naturally to high thoughts of our selves and hath a tendency in it to p●ide 1 Cor. 8.1 Knowledge puffeth up but charity edifieth Take knowledge barely as received of men even the knowledge of divine things for ye may have a humane knowledge of divine things this usually makes the heart swell but the knowledge we have from the teachings of God makes us humble it will cause us to cry out as the Prophet did when the Lord appeared and let out a more than ordinary manifestation of his glory Isa 6.5 we are undone It was so with Job when the Lord had schooled him and made himself more fully known to him th●n ever before he presen●ly cried out Chap. 41.5 I have hea●d of thee by the hearing of the ear but now mine eye seeth thee wherefore I abhor my self in dust and ashes Nothing keeps the soul so humble as the teachings of God Where we see any proud of what they have learned it is an argument that either they were never taught of God or that as yet they have not understood his teachings Thirdly The teachings of God do not only empty and humble the soul but they transform the soul and change it into another thing than it was as to its state and qualities The teachings of God change not only our manners but our very natures they not only give a light to the Understanding but a newness to the Will new Affections new Desires This is it which the Apostle calls the new creature 2 Cor. 5.17 and that this creature is wrought to its highest perfection by the teachings of God he sheweth 2 Cor. 3.18 We all with open face beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord are changed into the same image from glory to glory as by the Spirit of the Lord. The glass wherein we have this sight of the glory of God is chiefly the Word The glory into which we are changed by those sights is our conformity to that holiness which shineth in the Word And this change is twofold First from sin to grace which is a degree of glory Secondly from glory to glory that is from a high to a higher and at last to the highest degree of grace Look what the Word is and calleth us to be that are we when taught according to the truth of the word by the power and Spirit of God Fourthly The teachings of God confirm the soul in that which is taught or we have learned If God teach any divine lesson that will stick We receive many lessons from men and let them slip as the Apostles word is Heb. 2.1 Doctrine taught us of God settles upon us we hold the substance of it and hold forth the fruit or power of it in every season of our lives yea if trouble or persecution arise for the truth they who are taught of God will hold it fast though they let go all they have in this world for it If God teach us the doctrine of Free Grace how we are justified by the righteousness of Jesus Christ without our own works If God teach us the doctrine of pure Worship how he is to be served and honoured according to his own will without the Traditions of men as Christ spake Mat. 15.9 If I say God teach us these or any other saving truths we cannot but hold them whereas they who have received them from men
hear the earth that is answer the necessities of the earth And as the heavens cannot give man rain so neither can the gods of mans making and placing there such are all the vanities or vain Idols of the Gentiles The prophet having shewed us that these cannot sheweth us who can give rain in the next words Art not thou he O Lord our God surely thou art he therefore we will wait upon thee for thou hast made all these things Solomon at the dedication of the Temple puts this as one special case wherein they were to apply to God by prayer 1 Kings 8.35 When heaven is shut up and there is no rain because they have sinned against thee If they pray c. then hear thou in heaven The prophet sends the people in that exigent to God Zec. 10 1. Ask ye of the Lord rain in the time of the later rain As if he had said if ye would have rain you must ask for i● and be sure ye ask it of none but him ask of the Lord. As it is God that gives out or with-holds the rain so he gives it our or with-holds it at the voice of prayer The Apostle saith of Elias Jam. 5.17 he was a man subject to the like passions that we are and he prayed earnestly that it might not rain and it rained not on the earth by the space of three years and six months and he prayed again and the heavens gave rain At hi● word the Lord stopt rain and at his word he gave rain Let us therefore confess that God is the author or father of the rain He causeth vapours to ascend from the ends of the earth he maketh lightnings for the rain Ps 135.7 He covereth the heaven with clouds he prepareth rain for the earth Ps 147.8 God covereth the heaven with clouds by drawing up vapours from the earth which are the matter of these clouds and in those clouds he prepares the rain by the rain sent down makes the grass to grow upon the mountains The encrease of vegetables is the effect of rain God hath the rain in his power and to acknowledge him in it is our duty Deus sibi Soli clavem pluvtae refervat Targ. Hierosol in cap. 3. Gen. 'T is a great part of our spiritualness to acknowledge God in naturals as well as spirituals or ●hat the key of the clouds as well as the key of the heart is in the hand of God and in his only One of the Antients speaking to this point said Let us not ascribe rain to the Saints much less to Witches Papists have their Saints to whom they pray for rain and Atheists go to Witches for rain The modest and moderate Heathen will ●ise up against such in judgement they ascribed rain to their gods though false gods they had Epethites or Titles of Honour for their Idols Imbriferi serenatores testifying their faith in them and dependance upon them for the showers of heaven they called them shower-bringing gods and fair-weather-making gods If heathens would yet asc●ibe the rain to their gods not to men not to any inferiour powers how abominable are they who professing the knowledge of Jehovah the only true God do not acknowledg him alone in this In times of drought many will say We hope we shall have rain when the Moon changeth or when the Wind turns now though there be somewhat in natu●e both in the change of the Moon and turn of the Winds as to the change of weather yet to speak much of or expect any thing from either argues some withdrawing of the heart from God and God to shew the folly of such hath often with-held the rain though the Moon hath changed more than once and the Wind turned to all quarters and passed through all poynts of the Compass Thirdly Let us take heed of provoking the Lord he can quickly st●p our Comforts those common outward comforts the rain and showrs of heaven and then as to this Life in how sad a case are we As the Lord hath not left himself without witness namely of his goodness in sending rain and fruitful seasons so he can quickly leave a witness of his Justice and displeasure or of his just displeasure by with-holding rain and as a consequent of that fruitful seasons from us Were it only to have rain and fruitful seasons we should take heed of displeasing God If a man had such power as to with-hold rain from your land you would take heed of di●pleasing him How dangerous then is it to provoke God who cannot only with-hold the rain from your land but can as the Scripture saith make the rain of your land to be powder and dust Deut. 28.24 that is give you powder and dust instead of rain When the rain is long with-holden the earth grows hard and being much trodden or traveled on dusty this dust being raised up by the wind shall come down instead of rain or that 's all the rain which I will give you The Lord hath our natural comforts in his hand as well as our spiritual and eternal Further As this with-holding of the rain sometimes so the holding up of the rain at any time shews the great power of God to hold the water in the aire is the work of God as much as to with-hold it from the earth The water is a heavy body and all heavy things tend downward is it not a wonder that such a mighty weight of water should hang in the aire and be there held up if it were not held there it would not stay there but come down and drown all What holds it up the Cloud is a thin substance yet it holds the water as well as the strongest vessel bound with hoopes of iron But by what power doubtless by the power of God The water hath no consistence in it self it is a fluid slippery body now what can hold the water that none of it leakes out but the power of God There are many millions of drops in one little cloud and every drop is of it self ready to slip away yet the whole cloud yeelds no more water then a rock till God orders it Let us contemplate the Almightiness of God who can hold such a mighty body of water in the aire or who as Job spake Chap. 26.8 b●●deth up the waters in his thick clouds and the cloud is not rent under them These notes arise from that translation which imports the Lords power in drawing the water f●om the earth as also in with-holding it from the earth when there is need and in holding it when there is no need We translate He maketh small the drops of ●ater Not only hath God made the body of the water which is one of the four general Elements of which all bodies are compounded and made but he makes the water into small drops or maketh small the drops of water Hence note That the water falls from heaven by drop● comes to pass by the
them in remembrance that God made their fore-fathers dwell in tents when he brought them out of Egypt as also to mind them that here they had no abiding place but were to seek one to come And as this place of publick worship so any place for private dwelling was called a tabernacle Surely I will not come into the tabernacle of my house until c. Said David Ps 132.3 that is into my house which though it be a royal Pallace yet I look upon it but as a movable tabernacle But doth God dwell in a movable house God is immovable he makes no removes yet wheresoever God is pleased to shew himself in his power and marvelous works there we may say his tabernacle is The tabernacle of God where this noise this mighty noise is made is nothing else but the Clouds before spoken of The Clouds are Gods tabernacle they are called so expresly by a word of very near cognation unto this Psal 18.11 He maketh the Clouds his pavilion A pavilion is an extraordinary tabernacle a pavilion is that tabernacle which is proper to a King or to the General of an Army Now saith the Psalmist He maketh the Clouds his pavilion In them he shews his power and glory They are also called the chariots of God Psal 104.3 Deut. 32.6 and he is said to come in the Clouds as a Prince in his chariot He came in a thick Cloud Exod. 19.9 and he descended in a Cloud Exod. 34.5 which here is called his tabernacle So then the Clouds together with all that middle region of the air where the rain now and fiery meteors are generated are in Scripture allegorically called the tabernacle of God because there he seems often to dwell or reside for the producing of many wonderful works upon this inferiour world We may take the word here in a double allusion unto a tabernacle or unto two sorts of tabernacles First There were ordinary tabernacles wherein men dwelt The ancient Hebrews dwelt in tents or tabernacles these were tabernacles for civil use or for habitation in allusion unto which the Apostle speakes of the body wherein the soul dwels 2 Cor. 5. When the earthly house of this tabernacle shall be dissolved we know that we have a building of God an hsuse not made with hands eternal in the heavens Secondly There were tabernacles for military use souldiers tents or tabernacles As the whole heavens so the clouds especially may be called the tabernacle of God in both respects they a●e his house wherein he sits unseen and doth wonders all the wo●ld over in them he sh●weth his power and appears glo●iously and as a great P●ince or mighty General he sends out his edicts and orders from the clouds he commands winds stormes tempests snow haile for several dispensations to go from thence according as his own infinite wisdom seeth fit and the cases of men require whether in wayes of Judgment or of mercy as Elihu tells us yet more distinctly at the 31th verse For by them saith he judgeth he the people he giveth meat in abundance The clouds are very fit and commodious for Gods use in any of these respects either for the terrifying and punishing of the wicked or for the helping and feeding of them that fear him Now forasmuch as the clouds are called the tabernacle of God upon these accounts Learn first There God is said to be especially where he especially workes God is no more in one place of the wo●ld than in another as to his being and existence for he is every w●ere he filleth heaven and earth We must not think that God is shu● up in the clouds as a man in his tabernacle but because God workes much in the clouds and doth great things by the rain thunder and lightening therefore the cloudes whence these Meteors issue are called his tabernacle Where-ever God works much he is said to dwell Why is God said to dwell with them that are of an humble and contrite heart even because he workes much in them and much by them So because many great works of God are done in the Clouds as we shall see more particularly hereafter therefore the Lord is said to dwell there as in his tabernacle Secondly When 't is said Who can understand the noise of his tabernacle Observe The most dreadful storms and tempests the roaring winds which we hear at any time are sent out by God they are the noise of his tabernacle They go when he saith go Psal 148.8 Stormy winds and tempests fulfilling his will We may think stormes of all thing● least under command and order yet they are under an exact order The most stormy winds go not an haires breadth besides or beyond the commission which God gives them As often as we hear the roaring noise of the wind much more of thunder let us remember 't is the noise of his tabernacle Vers 30. Behold he spreadeth his light upon it and covereth the bottom of the sea Elihu insists still upon the workes of God He spreadeth his light Some understand by this light the lightening and it is a great truth God wonderfully spreads the lightening upon the da●k clouds as if they were all in a flame That 's clear to the eye when it lighteneth and God is s●yd Psal 144.6 To cast forth his lightening which comes neer this word in the text he spreadeth it But because in the next ch●pter Elihu speakes purposely of the lightening therefore I shall not stay upon that sence here but decline it Rather take light in the common notion He spreadeth his light that is the light of the Sun which is eminen●ly called Gods Light upon it that is upon the cloud spoken of in the forme verse and so the two parts of this verse yeild us a de●crip●ion as I conceive of the weather-changes made by God When we have had much rain and stormes God can presently spread his light up●n the cloud that is cause the light and heat of the Sun to conquer the clouds and scatter them And he also covereth the bottom of the Sea That is by and by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he makes it very dark by the gathering of thick clouds even as dark as the bottom of the Sea whither the light cannot come or dark to the bottom of the Sea R●dices maris sunt profundissimae infimaeque illius partes The original is the roots of the Sea that is the lowest parts of the Sea which we significa●tly translate the bottom of the Sea Some explicate the whole ve●se He spreads his light upon the face of the whole heavens and spreads the waters over the Ocean so that no bottom can be seen scarcely found Mr. Broughton by the roots of the Sea understands the earth Another saith he makes mention of the roots of the Sea because the waters of the Sea are as it were the roots of the Clouds they chiefly supplying the matter of which they are made Vapours drawn from
a right rule Moses Deut. 32.15 calls the people of God collectively as one man Jeshuru● that is a people that are or should be right and upright with God Thus here he directeth it that is God doth as it were by a strait line level or take his aim when he dischargeth the Thunder in the Cloud As he that dischargeth his gun small or great or shoots an arrow levels and directs it at a mark so the Lord directeth it What is this it 'T is plain by what followeth in the latter part of the verse where the Lightning is expresly mentioned that he meanes the Thunder or the Thunder-bolt for the Clouds are in that case charged with bolts we have had many dreadful instances as well in ancient Histories as in our own time of Thunder-bolts like Bullets shot from the Clouds As if Elihu had said whither-soever the Thunder-bolt goeth to what quarter of the world soever 't is designed it receives commission and direction from God what to do and where to fall whom it shall smite or what mark it shall hit He directeth it under the whole heaven And his Lightning to the ends of the earth Naturalists define or describe Ligh●ning thus Fulgui seu coruscatio est flammae mic●tio ab exhalationi●us accensi● è nubibus erumpentibus exorta Arist 2. Meteor cap 9. 'T is a bright shining caused by exhalations fired in and violently breaking out of the Clouds The Hebrew is his light The Sun is the fountain of Light and that is eminently Gods Light but the Light here spoken of is not the ordinary Light shining in the Air by the rising of the Sun this Light is Ligh●ning which is a sudden flas●ing or breaking forth of light from the Clouds as when a gun is fired or discharged a light flasheth from it such is that which Authors of all sorts call Lightning and here the Scripture calls his Lightning At the 3d Verse the Thunder was called his Voice the Voice of God and in this the Lightning is called his Lightning Elihu appropriates it unto God himself his Lightning This Lightning hath more than light in it it hath heat and fire in it though we do not alwayes feel it yet many have the effects of heat and fire appearing sadly upon them And this is such a fire as water cannot quench and therefo●e we often read in Scripture Ignis sua natura in verticem surgit si nihil illi prohibet assendet fulmen autem cadit eadem necessitate qua excutitur nihil itaque dubii relinquitur qui● divina illi virtus insit Seneca of Lightning joyned with the Rain Psal 135.7 Jer. 10.13 Jer. 51.16 which may be remark't as one of the wonders of it There is a second that the Lightning is said to fall from heaven When the disciples brought a report back to Christ what g●eat things they had done what conquests they had got over evil spirits Christ answered Luke 10.18 I saw Satan like Lightning fall from heaven Lightning falls from he●ven for though Lightning of its own nature being fiery should ascend yet it descends through the power of God Naturalists observe it as a wonder that the Lightning should descend Seneca demonstrates it could not be unless there were a divine power in it that the Lightning should come down from heaven and as Elihu said before he directeth it or the Thunder under the whole heaven so we are here to take up that word again and say He directeth his Lightning To the ends of the earth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A●a proprie avium est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sept. Here is the act and the extention of the act to the ends of the earth the Heb●ew is the wings of the earth so the word is used Gen. 1.21 God created great whales c. and every winged fowl The ends of the earth are called the wings of the earth because they are the farthest out-stretchings of the earth as a bird when she flies stretcheth out her wings to the utmost They are also called The corners of the earth Ezek. 7.2 Thou son of man thus saith the Lord God unto the land of Israel an end the end is come upon the four corners of the land the Hebrew is upon the four wings or ends of the earth as if he had said an end is come upon the East and West North and South These four wings or extreams of the earth are the same which Christ called the four winds Mat. 24.31 where speaking of the Resurrection at the last Judgment he shews how all that are raised shall be brought to one place or general Session and he shall send his angels with a great sound of a trumpet and they shall gather together his Elect from the four winds from one end of heaven to the other that is from the four ends corners skirts or wings of the earth The utmost extreamity of a garment or of a land according to the Hebrew is called the wing of it Now forasmuch as Elihu represents God thus directing both the Thunder and Lightning Observe first All the motions of the Creature even the most violent and to appearance contingent motions of the Creature are under the direction yea under the dominion of God Thunder and Lightning go the way which God appointeth and chalketh out to them they move not of themselves they move not whither men or devils would have them but whither God would have them The Devils I grant have great power in the Air yet 't is limited by and wholly subordinate to the will and power of God As the reasonable creatures and their motions that is the motions of Men and Angels are under the direction of God as Jeremiah speaks Chap. 10.23 It is not in him that goeth to direct his own steps The Hebrew useth a word there which may be rendred to prepare to establish or to confirm neither of which are in him that goeth we render it according to the present text it is not in him that goeth to direct his own steps who directs them then It is God that directs the steps of man It is not in the power of man to direct his own steps he is not able to do it and besides that he hath not the liberty or priviledge to do it he may not do it he ought not to do it 't is the duty as well as the safety of man to leave the direc●ion of his wayes and steps to God 'T is God that directs the steps of man yea the indirect steps of man are under the mighty power of God the very wandrings of men are under the guidance of God the motions yea commotions the actions and the most disturbed actions of man are under a most certain disposure and disposition of God When men do they know not what God knows and orders what they do Now I say as God directs reasonable creatures men or angels so unreasonable creatures in their motions the
we count i● a mercy in ho● seasons And such is the goodness o● God that in t●ose places where the heat is most troublesome there are many cool B●iezes We read Gen. 3.8 of the cool of the day or as the Margin hath it the wind of the day implying that the extream heat of the day is usually asswaged and cooled by the wind The Prophet Jer. 14.6 describing a time of drought saith The wild Asses did stand in the high places they snuffed up the wind like Dragons To snuffe the wind in time of drought is a great refreshing wind refresheth the body as well as food and 't is some refreshing in famine or want of food Thirdly The wind is a Rain-bringer We say when the wind riseth there will be rain Thus 1 Kings 18.45 before the mighty rain which Elijah foretold we read of a wind The Heaven was black with clouds and wind and there was a great rain When Elisha told those three Kings distressed for want of water Ye shall not see wind neither shall ye see rain yet that valley shall be filled with water 2 Kings 3.17 he thereby implyed that wind is the ordinary fore-runner of rain We indeed translate Prov. 25.23 The North wind driveth away the rain yet we put in the Margine The North wind bringeth forth the rain It is true of both the wind scattereth and driveth away the rain the wind also bringeth rain Fourthly The wind causeth vegetables to flourish A sweet gale of wind is not only good for man and beast but for the grass and for the herbs for plants and trees the blowing of the winds maketh them flourish in allusion unto which the Church speaks Cant. 4.16 Awake O North wind and come thou South blow upon my garden that the spices thereof may flow out that is that my Graces my faith in thee 〈◊〉 love to thee c. may put forth and appear The spiritual wind the breathings of the Spirit draw forth spiritual fruit from the heart and in the life of believers as the natural draws forth the natural fruits of the Earth Fifthly The winds are beneficial and helpful for the drying up of the waters they make the earth clean as well as the air It is said Gen. 8.1 ●fter the whole world was drowned God made a wind to pass over the earth and the waters asswaged The wind is a dryer as well as the Sun Sixthly There is a great use of the winds as to artificials What mighty things are done by the wind By it Mills are turned to grin'd Corn a Land and Ships are moved to carry bo●h Men and Merchandiz● at Sea there were hardly any passing from Nation to Nation 〈◊〉 dis-joyned by water but by the advantage or help of winds by the help of winds Merchants bring treasure and precious things from one end of the earth to the other These and many more are the common benefits of the winds for which the Lord brings them out of his treasures Secondly The winds have their evil effects God sends them somtimes for a pl●●●e o● in a way of Judgment Fi●st Winds 〈◊〉 ●●●ect the air the Lord can send as a cleansing so a co ru●ting ●ind Secondly As wind b●ings rain so it hinders or blows away the rain Thi dly The Lord sends the wind to break and overthrow all that st●nds before it What doth not the whi●lwind overthrow Houses and Trees at Land are blown down Goodly Ships at Sea richly laden have been sunk and over-set by tempestuous winds God sent a whirlwind out of his treasure which caused the Mariners in Jonah to cast their Merchandize into the Sea and Jonah himself too What cross and tempestuous winds did the Apostle Paul meet with in his voyage to Rome Acts 27. Further That the Lord bringeth the winds out of his treasure is matter of great comfort to all that have an interest in the Lord He can command the winds for them and against their enemies the wind cometh out of his Chamber and it shall do as he commandeth It is said Nahum 1.3 The Lord hath his way in the whirlwind and in the storm and the clouds are the dust of his feet That is he ruleth whirlwinds he walks in and works by the whirlwind and by storms And as we may take it properly so metaphorically that i●●●in the most tempestuous dispensations and providences when the world is as it were in an Haricane as boysterous winds in some places are called In the greatest concussi●n● and confusions whether of things or persons the Lord carrieth on his work in a regular course As the great tossings of the air by natural winds so the greatest tossings of affairs by the st●ong and various passions of mens spirits in the wo●ld which we may call civill winds yea whirlwinds are unde● the ordering of divine power and wisdome The Prophet Isa 17.13 admonisheth the wicked to take heed and give glory to God For saith he the Nations shall rush like the rushing of many waters But God shall rebuke them and they shall flee far off and shall be chased as the chaffe of the mountaines before the wind and like a rolling thing before the whirlwind A rolling thing is unsteadfast at all times and a whirlwind will make that roul and tumble which is very steadfast it maketh Trees to shake it maketh strong Towers tremble Now if the whirlwind causeth things that are fixed and strong to shake and move what will it do to those that are light and unfixed rolling things That which is as men judge fixt and steady as a Rock shall be as a rolling thing before the whirlwind of the Lords displeasure The Margin of our Bibles calls this rolling thing Thistle-down We know what the down of a Thistle is which at ●ome seasons of the year falls off and is the lightest thing imaginable When there is not a breath of wind stirring the Thistle-down will stir roll and move from place to place what then think you will become of Thistle-down before a mighty wind a whirlwind The wicked shall be as Thistle-down before the whirlwind but the people of God need not fear for as 't is said of the Sea so of the wind his way is in it he rules the proper and he rules the metaphorical whirlwinds which toss and tumble the state and affaires of this world To close this matter We may take notice of several wonderfull things in and about the wind and because Elihu ranks this among the great works of God who doth marveilous things which we comprehend not Nulla propemodum regio est quae aliquem ventum ex se Nascentem circa se cadentem non habeat Sen l. 5. Natur quest c. 17. Plin l. 1. cap. 47. In iusula Lesbo Oppidum Mytilene magnificè aedifi●atum est sed imprudentèr positum quod in ea civitate cum Aaster flat homines aegrotant Vitru l. 1. c. 5. not only in Thunder and Lightning in Snow and
signifies every believer a Servant 238 Service and Worship often the same in Scripture 237. God expects our se●vice and then especially when we suffer under his hand 237. To serve God what or the service of God described 238 239. To se●ve God our Freed●m 240. Service of God pleasant and easie in a twofold respect 240. Service of God not lean but pr●fitable 240 241 Sight of God two-fold immediate mediate and that by a threefold means 102. The sight of God or his discovery of himself to us very sweet to the the soul 104 Signes of changes in the weather and other natural things 424. Inferences from it as to other th●ngs 424 Signes why given by God 549 Sin how sinful it is to say there is no profit in leaving sin 17. The benefit or profit of leaving sin 19. God receives no hurt or damage by the sin of man how many or how great soever his sins are 31. Yet sinners shall be dealt with as if they had hurt him and why 31. How the sins both of good and evil men turn to the glory of God 32. Sin considered in a threefold opposition 33. Sin d●th six things to God yet cleared how no damage to him 34 35 36. The least sin hurtful 47 48. Sin hurts the whole Creation but chiefly man 48 49. The sad effects of sin as well as the filthy nature of it should move us to avoid it 48. Sin hurts others but th●se most who commit it 49. Sin is v●cal 92. God doth not severely mark the sins of his people 116. Sin mans work 224. God doth not suffer sin to grow potent in his people 226. There is an excessiveness in some sins 227. In what sence sin may reign in a righteous man 228. Sin may be seen and not the exceedingness of it 228. The exceed●ngness of sin shewed in three things 228 2●9 Sin a vain thing how 234. God will not indulge sin in any 293. Sin should have no respect 321. Sin not to be chosen in any case 324. Sin strictly taken cannot be chosen 325. Vpon what accounts sin is chosen by many 325 326. They make a very bad choice who choose sin rather than affliction 372. Sin worse than any the worst affliction 330 331 Singing an act of Praise 352 Skie two things considerable in it clearness and strength 568. How the skie may be said to be strong 569 Snow what it is 469. When it usually falleth 469. Six things wonderful concerning the Snow 472. Snow how like w●ol shewed in three things 472 473. Sno● and Rain at the command of God 474 Sodomites how expressed in the Hebrew 271 Song in the night what 70 71 73 Soveraignty of God over all creatures three Inferences from it 14 20 Soul how taken in Scripture 268 South why expressed by a word that signifies a secret place 487. Whirlwinds come from it 488 Sparing mercy God will not spare his own if they obey not 252 Speaking two things of great use in it 139. Speaking of two sorts 232 233 Spirits of men weighed ●y God 552 Standing-still two-fold that of the mind to what opposed 527 Star-gazers their vanity 27 Stormes in the hearts of men allayed by God 562 Streight who may be said to be in it 282. No streight so great but God can deliver out of it 283 Strength of heart wherein it consists 175. 183. Strength of wisdom in God two-fold 175. There is no strength against the Lord. 311 Suddenness of divine Judgments 300 Sufferings did not hurt the Martyrs and why 51 Sun in its brightness cannot be looked upon 602 Swearing the Lords saying as much as his swearing 549 Sword how taken in Scripture 252 T Tabernacle what 407 408 Teacher God is pleased to be a Teacher of his people 338. The teachings of God above all teachings 339. How God exceeds all Teachers shewed in seven things 339 340. Three Inferences from it 342. Several Evidences of our having been taught of God 342 343 344. Teaching 'T is mans shame when he acts not according to the teachings of God 82. Teaching is to make us knowing 576. There are two sorts of persons who call for teaching 577 Terribleness of God to sinners in four dayes 609 Thundering Legion 460. Thunder a terrible thing 436. Thunder the Voyce of God 440 442. Thunder called the Voyce of God in a twofold respect 442. Six Inferences from it 443. Word of God like Thunder shewed in five things 444. Thunder Gods Hera d. 454. Thunder how it followeth L●ghtning 454. Why we see the Lightning before we hear the Thunder 454. Six degrees or s●rts of Thunder 455. Thunder described 457. Marvels in Thunder 460. The effects of the Word like those of Thunder 461 462. Two Inferences from it 464 Tiberius the Romane Emperour his Character 630 Time at the dispose of God 379 Trembling what 436. Great appearances of God should make us tremble 437. A fourfold trembling 437 438 Troubles are streights 281 282 Trusting in God a Duty in darkest times 112. T●ust in God fixes the heart 113. Some not to be trusted 114. We should trust God more upon experience of what he hath wrought 365. The Eternity of God a gro●nd of trusting him 380 Truth will prevail though many be against it 23. No matter if we are alone so Truth be on our side 23. Some speak Truth with false hearts others speak falsly with a true heart 153. To speak truth a high commendation of the Speaker 154. Truth taught us by God four effects of it 342 343 344. Some Truths are specially to be attended to 524 U Valentinian his zeal and advancement 213 Vanity what a●d who 92 Visiting of three sorts 119 Unde●standing how an unde●●●an●ing man may be said not to unders●a●d 81 Uprightness That which is not done uprightly will not be done constantly 266 W Waiting on God in hardest times 112 113. Warnings G●d gives them before he sends great Judgme●ts 425 426. Warning God gives wa●ning before he strikes 455 Water of two s●rts 388. Wa●er held up in the Air by the Power ●f God 392 Way of God what it is 345 Whirlwind what 489 Wickedness what 47 Wicked men out of Gods Protection he takes not care of them 189. How God doth and doth not preserve the lives of the wicked 189 190. Wicked not so much preserved as reserved 191. Wicked men of two sorts 192. Their life sad 192. God will at last utterly destroy them 193. God will not be taken off by any outward respect from destroying them 301 Winds four Cardinal 487. What the Wind is 489. Winds come at Gods appoyntment 489. God makes a twofold use of the Wind. 490. Six uses of it for mercy or for the good of man 490 491. Winds the Broomes of Heaven 490. Afflicting effects of the Wind. 492. Seven Wonders observable in the Winds 493 494. What the Wind is 598. Causes of the Wind. 599. Life preserved by the Wind. 599. Spirit of God compared to the Wind. 601 Wise