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A29696 London's lamentation, or, A serious discourse concerning the late fiery dispensation that turned our (once renowned) city into a ruinous heap also the several lessons that are incumbent upon those whose houses have escaped the consuming flames / by Thomas Brooks. Brooks, Thomas, 1608-1680. 1670 (1670) Wing B4950; ESTC R24240 405,825 482

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we then put off God with a part of a day Shall we be worse than the Heathens Shall we act below Heathens Shall nature shall blind devotion do more than Grace The Lord forbid But Th●rteenthly You must sanctifie the Sabbath by such an abstinence or moderate use of all your lawful comforts con●entments and enjoyments as may tender you most apt and fit for the sanctification of the Sabbath Let your moderation ●e known among all men alwayes but especially on the Lords day be moderate in your eating drinking entertainments Phil. 4. 5. c. Oh how do many by their immoderate use of lawful comforts on this day indispose and unfit themselves for the duties of the day It is a Christians duty every day to eat and drink soberly Titus 2. 11 12. The grace of God which bringeth salvation hath appeared to us teaching us to live soberly in this present world It is both the duty and the glory The Greeks call Sobriety the Keeper and Guard of Wisdom of a Christian to be temperate in his diet A little will satisfie nature less will satisfie Grace though nothing will satisfie mens lusts Sobriety is a gift of God whereby we keep a holy moderation in the use of our dyet Prov. 23. When thou sittest to eat c. consider diligently what is before thee and put the knife to thy throat That is be very careful and circumspect in taking thy food bridle thine appe●i●e take heed thou dost not exceed measure He may endanger his health his life his soul that gives way to his greedy appetite Some read the words thus For th●u putt●●t a knife to thy throat if thou be a man given to appetite Thou shortnest thy life and diggest as it were thine own grave with thine own teeth Meat kills as many as the Musket the Board as the Ch●ysost Sword I know that the bodies stomacks callings constitutions and climates wherein men live differ and therefore In the hot Eastern Countreys men have lived long with par●hed Corn and a Cake but their example is no rule for us Phil. 3. 18 19. no such particular Rules as to eating and drinking can be laid down as shall be binding to every one Yet this is certain that a man that eats or drinks so much on the Lords Day as oppresses nature and as unfits him for praying working or hearing work or reading work or closet work that man is guilty of intemperance Such who feed till they unfit themselves for service are Belly-Gods Paul wept over such in his day and so should we in ours Thou shouldst use thy food O Christian as a help and not as a hinderance to thee in thy Christian course A full belly never studies well nor never prayes well nor never hears well nor never reads well nor never repeats well nor never doth any thing well either on the Lords day or any other day What a shame is it to see a Christian a slave to his palate on any day but especially on the Lords day I may use the creatures so as to support and chear nature but not so as to clog it and weaken it and debase it I may use the creatures as my servants but I must never suffer them to be my Lord. Daniel was very temperate in his diet Though there was not a greater born of a woman than John the Baptist yet his Dan. 1. 8. Matth. 11. 11. fare was but Locusts and wild-honey A little bread was Basils provision Hilarion did seldom eat any thing till the Sun went down and then that which he did eat was very mean Jerom lived with cold water and a few dry'd Figgs And Augustine hath this expression concerning himself Hoc L●b 10. Confessionum me docuisti Domine c. Thou Lord hast taught me this that I should go to my meat as to a medicine his meaning was that he went to his meat not to satisfie his appetite but to repair nature And Luther made many a meal with Bread and ● He●ring Socrates Anacharsis Cyrus Caesar Herodicus Augustus and many other Heathens were very temperate in ●h●ir diet The old Gaules were very sparing in their diet ●nd used to fine them that out-grew their Girdles These H●athens will one day rise in judgement against those nominal Christians who are intemperate both upon the Lords day and other dayes also But Fourteenthly and lastly You must sanctifie the Sabbath ●y abst●ining from speaking your own words The Spouses lips are like a thread of Sc●rlet they are red like a thread of Cant. 4 3. scarlet in discoursing of a crucified Christ and they are thin like a thred of scarlet and not swelled with frothy empty worldly discourses on the Lords dayes or on other dayes Such words as will neither profit a mans own soul nor better ●thers are not to be spoken on the Lords day It is Gods express pleasure that we should not speak our own words on his day Isa 58. 13. N●r speaking thine own words Caesar passing through the streets of Rome and seeing many of the Ladies Pluta ch in the life of Pe●icles playing with little Dogs Monkies and Baubones askt them if the women in that Countrey had no children So when men spend the Lords day in playing sporting toying or talking of this or that trifle of this or that person of this or that fashion of this or that vanity we may ask them whether they have no God no Christ no Heaven no Promis●s no Experiences no Evidences to talk of There are Matth. 12. 36. Alexander forgave many sharp swords but never any sharp tongues c. many idle talkers of every idle word that men shall speak they shall give an account at the day of Judgement An idle word is a profuse or needless word used rashly or unadvisedly wanting a reason of just necessity bringing neither honor to God nor edification to others nor conducing to any profitable end And as there are many idle talkers so there are many over-talkers and they are such who spend a hundred words when ten will serve the turn And as there Eccles 5. 2 3. are many over-talkers so there are many that are only talkers that can do nothing but talk To fall under the power Prov. 14. 23. or scourge of these mens tongues is to fall under no easie persecution And as there are many that are only talkers so there are many that are unprofitable talkers The beginning of the words of their mouth is foolishness and the end of his Eccles 10. 13. talk is mischievous madness And as there are many unprofitable talkers so there are many unseasonable talkers that place one word where another should stand A wise man Eccles 8. 4. discerneth time and judgement And as there are many unseasonable talkers so there are many rash talkers who speak Chap. 5. 2. first and think afterwards God hath set a double bar about the tongue the teeth and
five thousand of his Army in one night Eighthly By slighting of divine warnings you will tempt Satan to tempt your souls he that dares slight divine warnings will stick at nothing that Satan shall tempt him to yea he does to the utmost what lyes in him to provoke Satan to follow him with the blackest and sorest temptations Ninthly He that slights divine warnings dams up all the springs of mercy Psal 81. 11. to the end Jer. 7. 23 24 25 26 27 28 29. 34. Isa 13. 14 15 16. and turns the streams of loving-kindness and favour another way Tenthly and lastly Slighting of divine warnings will be the Sword that will wound you and the Serpent that will sting you 〈◊〉 the Worm that will be still gnawing upon you especially 1. When your consciences are awakned 2. When you shall lye upon a dying bed 3. When you shall stand before a Judgment-seat Fourthly and lastly When you shall awake with everlasting flames about your ears Upon all these considerations take heed of slighting the warnings of God that you are under this day But Seventhly and lastly God inflicts great and sore J●d●ments upon Persons Cities and Countries to put the world in mind of the General Judgment Who can think upon the Conflagration of our late glorious City and not call to mind the great and terrible day of the Lord Psal 50. 3 Our God shall come and shall not keep silence a fire shall devour before him and it shall be very tempestuous round about him As God gave his Law in fi●e so when he comes to Judgment in fire he will require it to shew himself a Judge and Revenger of it and to bring the world to a strict account for Eccle. 12. 13 14. Exod. 20. 18. Heb. 12. 18 19 20 21. their breaking of it In the promulgation of the Law a flaming fire was only on Mount Sinai but when Christ shall come to execute vengeance on the transgressors of it a●l the world shall become a Bonfire In the promulgation of the Law there was fire smoak thunder and an earthquake but when Christ shall come in flaming fire to revenge the breaches of it the Heavens shall be dissolved and the Elements shall melt with servent heat so that not only a few Cities and Kingdoms but all this lower World shall be of a flame and therefore if any of the wicked should be so weak as to think to secure themselves by creeping behind the Lord they will but deceive themselves for the fire shall not only devour before him but it shall also devour round about him When an unquenchable fire shall be kindled above the sinner and below the sinner and round about the sinner Rev. 6. 15 16 17. Jer. 5. 14. how is it possible that he should escape though he should cry ●ut to the Rocks and the Mountains to fall upon him a●d to cover him from the wrath of the Lamb Isa 66. 15 16. For behold the Lord will come with fire and with his chari●ts like a whirlwind to render his anger with fury and his rebuke with flames of fire For by fire 〈◊〉 by his sword will the Lord plead with all flesh and the slai● 〈◊〉 the Lord shall be many There is nothing more fearful or formidable either to man or beast then fire Now when God comes to execute his Judgments and to take vengeance on the wicked in this life as some curry the words or in the other life as others curry the words he will come in the most terrible and dreadful manner imaginable he will come with fire and he will render his rebuke with flames of fire or with fiery flames as some say or with flaming fire as others say 2 Thes 1. 7 8. And to you who are troubled rest with us when the Lord Jesus shall be revealed from heaven with his mighty Angels in flaming fire taking vengeance on them that know not God and that obey not the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ Beloved that Christ will come to Judgment in flaming fire is no Politick invention found out to fright men from their pleasures nor no Engine of State devised to keep men tame and quiet under the Civil powers nor no Plot of the Minister to make men melancholy or to hurry them into a blind obedience but it is the const●nt voice of God in the blessed Scriptures 2 Pet. 3. 10-12 But the day of the Lord will come as a thief in the night in the which the heavens shall pass away with a great noise and the elements shall melt with fervent heat the earth also and the works that are therein shall be burnt up Looking for and hasting unto the coming of the day of God wherein the heavens being on fire shall be dissolved and the elements shall melt with fervent heat Pareus is of opinion that that Pareus in Rev. 16. 18. fire that shall set all the world in a flame at last will be kindled and cherished by lightning from Heaven The Earth being smitten with lightning from Heaven shall be shaken and torn into ten thousand pieces and by fire utterly consumed now the Earth shall quake the Sea roar the Air ring and the World burn Now you shall look no way but you shall see fire you shall see fire above you and fire below you and fire round about you Christ● fi●st coming was at Luke 2. 8. to vers 15. Psal 71. 6. tended with a general peace and with Carols of Angels he came as rain upon the mown grass silently sweetly into the world then a babe cryed in the manger but now Judahs Lyon will roar and thunder in the Heavens Then he came riding on an Asses Colt but now on the Clouds Then he was attended with twelve poor despised Apostles but now he shall be waited on with many score millions of Angels At his first coming he freely offered grace and mercy and 2 Thes 1. 7. pardon to sinners but now he will come in flames of fire to execute wrath and v●ngeance upon sinners and 't will be no small honour to Christ nor no small c●mfort to the Saints nor no small torment to the wicked for Christ to comes in flames of fire when he comes to Judgment Saul Acts 22. 8. was astonished when he heard Jesus of Nazareth but calling unto him out of Heaven Herod was affrighted when he thought that John Baptist was risen again The Philistines Mark 6. 16. 1 Sam. 21. 9. Numb 7. 10. were afraid when they saw Davids Sword The Israelites were startled when they saw Aarons Rod And Juda was ashamed when he saw Thamars signet and staff and Belshazzar Dan. 5. 5. was amazed when he saw the hand-writing upon the Wall The Carthaginians were troubled when they saw Scipio's Sepulchre and the Saxons were terrified when they Hollingsheds Chron. saw Cadwallon's Image Oh how terrified amazed and confounded will wicked men be when they shall see that Christ whom they
will not speak the truth they have taught their tongue to speak lyes and weary themselves to commit iniquity Verse 9. Shall I not visit for these things saith the Lord Shall not my soul be avenged on such a nation as this Verse 10. For the mountains will I take up a weeping and wailing and for the habitations of the wilderness a lamentation because they are burnt up so that none can pass through them neither can men hear the voice of the cattel both the fowl of the heavens and the beasts are fled they are gone Verse 11. And I will make Jerusalem heaps as London is this day and a den of dragons and I will make the cities of Judah desolate without an inhabitant Verse 12. Who is the wise man that may understand this and who is he to whom the mouth of the Lord hath spoken that he may declare it for what the land perisheth and is burnt up like a wilderness that none passeth through The Jews had so inured and accustomed Jer. 13. 23. their tongues to speak lyes they had got such a haunt a habit and custom of lying that they could not leave it And ●his was the procuring cause of that dreadful and utter devastation that befel their City and Country Hes 4. 1 2 3. Hear the Word of the Lord ye children of Israel for the Lord hath a controversie with the inhabitants of the land because there is no truth nor mercy nor knowledge of God in the land By swearing and lying and killing and stealing and committing adultery they break out and blood touch●th blood Therefore shall the land mourn and every one that dwelleth therein shall languish with the beasts of the field and with the fowls of heaven yea the fishes of the sea also shall be taken away This people made it their common practice to lye they were given up to a course a trade of lying which God here threatens to punish with an extream and universal desolation A lye is a voluntary and wilful telling of an untruth with a purpose to deceive so that three things are required to the nature of a lye 1. There must be an untruth and falseness in the thing 2. This untruth must be known to be so he must be conscious to himself that it is false 3. He must have an intent and purpose to utter this falshood with a desire or design to deceive another by it Augustine makes eight sorts of Lyes but the School-men reduce all to three 1. Is jocosum the sporting Lye 2. Is officiosum the helpful Lye 3. Is perniciosum the pernicious and hurtful Lye First There is mendacium jo●osum the sporting Lye and this is when men will lye and tell untruths to make men sport to make men merry Of this sin the Prophet Hosea complains Chap. 7. 3. They make the King glad with their wickedness and the Princes with their lyes Courtiers frame It is a received opinion in these days that Qui nescit dissimulare nescit vivere fictions and tell ridiculous stories to delight Princes Among many Courtiers loud lyes are esteemed ornaments and elegancies of speech and none are accounted sosweet and pleasant in their discourse as those that can tell the most pleasing lyes but such Mirth-mongers and Mirth-makers may do well to remember that such kind of mirth will bring bitterness in the end If for every idle word that men shall speak Math. 12. 36. Phil. 5. 4. they must give an account in the day of Judgment then surely much more for every lying word And if foolish talking and jesting be condemned then surely lying talking and jesting shall be much more condemned if not here yet in the great day when all lying Jesters shall hold up their hands at Christs Bar. Now were there none within nor without the Walls of London that were guilty of merry lyes of sporting lyes But Secondly There is mendacium officiosum the officious lye the helpful lye and that is when a man lyes to help himself or others at a pinch at a dead lift When men lye either Exod. 1. 15. to the 20. Josh 2. 1. to vers 9. 1 Kings 13. 14. to 27. to prevent some danger they fear or else to bring about some good they desire then they tell an officious lye Thus the Egyptian Midwives lyed and thus Rahab lyed and thus the old Prophet lyed who contrary to the command of God perswaded the man of God to go back and eat bread with him under the pretence of a divine Revelation And thus Gen. 27. 19. Jacob told his father an officious threefold lye but he hardly ever had a merry day a good day after it for God followed him with variety of troubles and his sorrows like Jobs Messengers came posting in one after another even to his dying day that both himself and others might see what bitterness is wrapt up in officious lyes Solon reproving Thespis the Poet for lying Thespis answered him that it was not material seeing it was but in sport then Salon beating the ground with his staff said If we commend lying in sport we shall find it afterwards in good earnest In all our bargains and dealings let us make it our wisdom and our work to remember That we must not do evil that good may come yea we Rom. 3. 8. must not tell a lye to save all the Souls under Heaven The Prisciallanists in Spain a most pestilentious Sect taught in Augustines time That it was lawful to lye for the helping of a good cause and for the propagating of the Gospel and for the advantage of Religion But Augustine consuted them and stoutly asserts in two Books That we are not to tell an officious lye to tell a lye for no hurt but for good though it were to save all the world Will ye speak wickedly for God and talk deceitfully for him saith Job to his Job 13. 7. friends A man may as well commit fornication with the Moabites to draw them to our Religion or steal from the rich to give to the poor as lye to do another man a good turn Nepos reporteth of Epaminondas a noble man of Thebes and a famous Warriour that he would never lye in jest nor in earnest either for his own or anothers gain This refined Heathen will one day rise in Judgment against such kind of Christians who take a great pleasure in officious lyes Now were there none within nor without the Walls of London that delighted themselves in officious lyes But Thirdly and to come closer to our work There is mendacium perniciosum the pernicious and hurtful Lye and Gen. 39. 13. to the 20. 2 Kings 5. 22 23. this of all lyes is the worst When men will lye out of a design to hurt to cheat to defraud or to make a prey of those they deal with this is the forest of all lyes Now how rampant was this sort of Lying among all sorts of Citizens before London
should lye becalmed That some Ships should come into harbour top and top gallant and that others should sink down at the same harbours mouth before they should be able to get in is all from the Decree of God and that Law that he has laid upon the winds That terrible temp●stuous wind that affrighted the Disciples and that put them not only to their wits end but also to their faiths end was allayed by a word of Christs mouth Matth. 8. 26. He arose and rebuked the winds and the Sea and there was a great calm O Sirs when London was in flames and when the winds were high and went their circuits roaring and makeing a most hideous noise how easie a thing had it been with Jesus by a word of his mouth to have allayed them but ●e was more angry with us than he was with his D●●ciples who were in danger of drowning or else he would as cer●ainly have saved our City from burning by rebuking the winds and the flames as he did his Disciples from drowning by rebuking the winds and the Seas I have b●en the longer upon this fourth particular that you may the more easily run and read the anger of the Lord in those furious flam●s and in that violent wind that has laid our City desolate 'T is true Astrol●gers ascribe the motions of the winds to special Planets The E●st wind th●y ascribe to the Sun the West wind to the Moon the South wind to Mars and the N●rth wind to Jupiter but those that are wise in heart by what I have said concerning the winds may safely and and groundedly conclude that God alone hath the S●pream power of the winds in his own hand and that he alone orders directs and commands all the motions of the winds And therefore let us look to that terrible hand of the Lord that was lifted up in that fierce wind that did so exceedingly contribute to the turning of our City into a ruinous heap B●t Fifthly C●●●ider the extensiveness of it How did this dreadful fire spread it self both with and against the wind Within the Walls of the City there were eighty one Parishes consumed For every hour the fire lasted there was a whole Parish consumed ●ill it had gained so great a force as that it despised all mens attempts It quickly spread it self from the East to the West to the destruction of houses of State of Trade of Publick Magistracy besides Mynes of Charity it spread it self with that violence that it soon crumbled into ashes our most stately Habitations Halls Chappels Churches and famous Monuments Those Magnificent Structures of the City that formerly had put stops and given ch●cks to the furious fl●m●s falls now like stubble before the violence of a spreading fire This fire like an Arm of the Sea or like a Land-flood broke in suddenly upon us and soon spread it self all manner of wayes amongst us it ran from place to place like the fire and ha●l in Aegypt now 't was in this Street and anon in that Now this Steeple is on fire and then that Exod. 9. 13 Now this place of Judicature is laid in ashes and then that Now this Hall is in flames and then that Now this Parish is burnt down to the ground and then that Now this Ward is turned into a ruinous heap and then that Now this Quarter of the City is level wi●h the ground and then that Now this Gate of the City is demolished and consumed and then that The adversary hath spread out his band upon Iam. 1. 10. all her pleasant things saith the Prophet lamentingly and and we may say sighingly the fire hath spread out its hand upon all our pleasant things upon all our pleasant Houses Shops Trades Gardens Walks Temples c. The Plague the year before did so rage and spread that it emptied many thousand houses of persons and now this dreadful fire hath so spread it self that it has not left houses enough for many thousands of persons to dwell in there being more than 13000. houses destroyed by the furious flames Sin is of a spreading nature and accordingly it had spread it self over all parts of the City and therefore the Lord who delights to suit his Judgements to mens sins sent a spreading fire in the midst of us The merciless flames spreading themselves every way in four dayes time laid the main of our once glorious City in ashes a Judgement so rem●●kable and past president that he that will not see the hand of the Lord in it may well be reckoned amongst the worst of Athe●sts But Sixthly Consider the impartiality of it It spared neither Sinners nor Saints young nor old rich nor poor honourable nor base bond nor free Male nor female buyer nor seller borrower nor lender God making good that word Isa 24. 1 2. Behold the Lord maketh the earth empty and maketh it waste and turneth it upside down and scattereth abroad the inhabitants thereof And it shall be as with the people so with the Priest or with the Prince for the Hebrew word signifies both as with the servant so with his Master as with the maid so with the Mistris as with the buyer so with the seller as with the lender so with the borrower as with the taker of usury so with the giver of usury to him In the day of the Lords wrath that was lately upon us all orders ranks and degrees of men suffered alike and were abased alike the furious flames made no difference they put no distinction between the Russet Coat and the Scarlet Gown the Leathern Jacket and the Gold Chain the Merchant and the Tradesman the Landlord and the Tenant the Giver and the Receiver There is no difference Fire hath made Equal the Scepter and the Spade Ezek. 20. 47. Behold I will kindle a fire in thee and it shall dev●ur every green Tree in thee and every dry Tree the flaming fl●me shall not be quenched and all faces from the South to the North shall be burnt therein I have in the former part of this Treatise given some light into these words The fire the flames in the Text takes hold of all sorts of people rich and poor Lord and Lad high and low great and small strong and weak wise and foolish learned and ignorant Commanders and Souldiers Rulers and ruled So did the late lamentable fire in London take hold of all sorts and degrees of men as the Citizens have found by sad experience The fire like the Duke of Parma's Sword knew no difference ' twi●● Robes and Rags 'twixt Prince and Peasant Eccles 9. 1 2. 'twixt honourable and vile 'twixt the righteous and the wicked the clean and the unclean 'twixt him that sacrificed and him that sacrificed not 'twixt him that sweareth and him that seareth an oath The Judgement was universal the blow reacht us all the flames brake into every mans house such a dreadful impartial universal fire eyes never saw before
or else a waiting upon the Lord in his publick Ordinances Fire in th● night is terrible to all but mostly to such whose spirits and bodies were tired out in the preceding day Wasting and destroying Judgements are sad any day but saddest when they fall on the Lords Day For how do they disturb distress and distract the thoughts the minds the hearts and the spirits of men So that they can neither wait on God nor wrestle with God nor act for God nor receive from God in any of the duties or services of his day And this the poor Citizens found by sad experience when London was in flames about their ears Certainly the anger and wrath of God was very high and very hot when he made his day of rest to be a day of labour and disquiet When his people should have been a meeting hearing reading praising praying For the Lord now to scatter them and to deliver them their substance and habitations as a prey to the devouring fire what dos this speak our but high displeasure That the fire of Gods wrath should begin on the day of his rest and solemn Worship is and must be for a lamentation In several of those Churches where some might not preach there God himself preacht to the Parishioners in flames of fire And such who loved darkness rather than light John 3. 19. Exod. 19. 16 17 18. because their deeds were evil might now see their Churches all in a flaming fire What a terrifying and an amazing Sermon did God preach to his people of old in Mount Sinai when the Mount burned with fire And so what terrifying and amazing Sermons did God preach to the Citizens on his own day when their Temples and their habitations were all in flames Instead of holy rest what hurries were there in every street yea in the spirits of men Now instead of takeing up of Buckets men in every Street take up arms fearing a worse thing than fire The Jealousies and Rumors that fire balls were thrown into several houses and Churches by such that had no English tongues but out-landish hands to make the furious flames flame more furiously were so great that many were at a stand and others even at their wits end Now relations friends and neighbours hastened one another out of their houses as the Angels hastened Lot out of Sodom Gen. 19. 15 16 17. Such were the fears and frights and sad apprehensions that had generally seized upon the Citizens Not many Sabbaths before when men should have been instructing of their families what bonfires what ringing of Bells and what joy and rejoycing was there in our Streets for burning the Dutch Ships in their Harbour where many English and others were highly concerned as well as the Dutch little did they think who were pleasing and warming themselves at those lesser fires that the great God would in so short a time after kindle so great a fire in the midst of their Streets as should melt their Bells lay their habitations in ashes and make their Streets desolate So that those that were so jolly before might well take up that sad lamentation of weeping Jeremiah The Lord hath swallowed up all the habitations of Jacob and hath not pittied he hath thrown down in his Lam. 2. 2 3. wrath the strong holds of the daughter of J●dah he hath brought them down to the ground He burned against Jacob like a flaming fire which devoureth round about May we not soberly guess that there were as many strict observers and sanctifiers of the Lords Day who did turn away their feet from doing their Isa 58. 13. pleasure on Gods holy day and that did call the Sabbath a delight the holy of the Lord and honourable within the Walls of London as in a great part of the Nation besides Now for the Lord of the Sa●bath to kindle such a devouring fire in such a City and that on his own day O what extraordinary wrath and displeasure dos this speak out When God by his Royal Law had bound the hands of his people from doing their own works for him now to fall upon his strange work and by a flaming consuming fire to turn a populous City a pious City an honourable City and an Ancient City into a ruinous heap what indignation to this indignation O Sirs it highly concerns us to take notice of the Judgements of the Lord that fall upon us on any day but especially those that fall upon us on his own day because they carry with them more than a tincture of Gods deep d●spl●asure In the Council of Paris every one labouring to perswad● unto a more religious keeping of the Sabbath Day When Concil Paris lio 1. cap. 50. they had justly complained that as many other things so also the obs●rvation of the Sabbath was greatly decayed through the abuse of Chr●stian l●b●rty in that men too much followed the delig●●s of the world and their own worldly pleasures both wicked and dangerous They further add For many of us have been eye witnesses many have intelligence of it b● the relation of others that some men upon this day being about their husbandry have been strucken with Thunder some have been maimed and made lame som● have had their bodies even bones and all burnt in a moment with visible fire and have consumed to ashes and many other Judgements of God have been and are daily inflicted upon Sabbath Breakers Stratford upon Sluon was twice on the same day twelve moneth being the Lords Day almost consumed with fire The Theatre of Gods Judgements pag. 419 420. chiefly for prophaning the Lords Day and contemning his word in the mouth of his faithful Minister Feverton in Devons●ire whose remembrance makes my heart bleed saith my Author was oftentimes admonished by her godly Preachers that God would bring some heavy Judgement on the Town for their horrible prophanation of the Lords Day occasioned ch●efly by their Market on the day following Not long after his death on the third of April 1598. God in less than half an hour consumed with a sudden and fearful fire the whole Town except only the Church the Court-house and the Alms-houses or a few poor peoples dwellings where a man might have seen four hundred dwelling houses all at o●●e on ●ire and above fifty persons consumed with the flames And on the fifth of August 1612. fourt●en years since the former fire the whole Town was again fired and consumed except some thirty houses of poor people with the School-house and Alms-houses Now certainly they must be much left of God hardned in sin and blinded by Satan who do not nor will not see the dreadful hand of God that is lifted up in his fiery dispensations upon his own day But Tenthly and lastly Consider That the burning of London 10. is a National Judgement God in smiting of London has smitten England round the stroke of God upon London was When one member in the natural
times so dark intricate and mysterious that it will pose men of the most raised parts and of the choicest experiences and of the greatest Graces to be able to discern the wayes of God in them There are many mysteries in the works of God as well as in the word of God But Thirdly Sometimes Gods own people sin with others and therefore they smart with others Thus Moses and Aaron sinned with others and therefore they were shut out of Canaan and their Carkasses fell in the Wilderness as well as Numb 20. others Psal 106. 35. They were mingled among the Heathen and learned their works Verse 40. Therefore was the wrath of the Lord kindled against his people insomuch that he abhorred his inheritance Jer. 9. 25 26. Behold the dayes come saith the Lord that I will punish all them which are circumcised with the uncircumcised Egypt and Judah and Edom and the children of Ammon and Moab and all that are in the utmost corners that dwell in the Wilderness for all these Nations are uncircumcised Vid. Rom. 2. 28 29. and all the house of Israel are uncircumcised in the heart Such as were outwardly but not inwardly circumcised should be sure to be punished in the day of Gods wrath with those who were neither inwardly nor outwardly circum●ised When the good and the bad joyn in common provocations Ezek. 9. 6. Rev. 18. 4. 1 Pet. 4 17. no wonder if they suffer in common desolations Though gross impieties like Pitch or Gunpowder enrages ●he fire yet the sins the infi●mities of Gods people add to the flame Not only Man●ss●s his blood-shed but also good H●z●kiahs pride and vanity of spirit boasting and glorying in his w●rldly riches brought on the Babylonish Captivity 2 Chron 32. upon the J●ws But Four●hly The people of God many times suffer in common calamities as they are parts and members of that Politick 2. Sam. 24. 10. 10 18. body that is punished The sins of a City a Society a Company o● a Nation may involve all the memb●rs in the same Judgement Though Lot was not guilty of the sins of Gen. 14. 12 16. Common ca●amities make no discrimination between persons and persons or houses and houses All com●on Judgements work according to their commission and according to their nature without dist●nguishing the righteous from the wicked Sodom yet Lot was carried away in the Captivity of Sodom as co-habiting with them And so though many of the precious Servants of the Lord in London were not guilty of those gross impieties that their neighbours were guilty of yet co-habiting either with them or near them they were burnt up and destroyed with them Achans Family were not guilty of Achans Sacriledge and yet Achans Family were destroyed for Achans Sacriledge The burning of London was a National Judgement and this National Judgement was the product of National sins as I have formerly proved Now mark though the people of God may be personally innocent yet because they are members of a nocent body they are liable to undergo the temporal smart of National Judgements Doubtless a whole City may be laid desolate for the wickedness of one man or of a few men that dwelleth in it Eccles 9. 18. One sinner destroyeth much good But Fifthly When good men who can't be justly charged with publick sins do yet fall with wicked men by publick judgements you must remember that God has several different ends in inflicting one and the same Judgements both upon the good and upon the bad The mettal and the dross go Zech. 13. 9. Eccl. 8. 12 13. both into the fire together but the dross is consumed and the mettal refined The stalk and the ear of corn fall upon the threshing floor under one and the same Flayl but the one is shattered in pieces the other is preserved From one and the same Olive and from under one and the same Press is crushed out both Oyl and d●egs but the one is tunn'd up for use the other thrown out as unserviceable The sam● Judgements that befall the wicked may befall the righteous but not upon the same accompt The righteous are cast into the Furnance for tryal but the wicked for their ruine The righteous are signally sanctified by fiery dispensations Jer. 24. 1 2 3 5. but the wicked are signally worsened by the same dispensations The very self same Judgement that is as a Load-stone to draw the righteous towards Heaven will be as a Mill-stone to sink the wicked down to Hell The Pillar of fire that went before Israel had a light side and a dark side Exod. 14. 20. the light side was towards Gods people and the dark side was towards the Egyptians Th● flames of London will prove such a Pillar both to the righteous and the wicked That will certainly be made good upon the righteous and the wicked whose habitations have been destroyed by Londons flames that the Greek Epigramm speaks of the Silver Ax the Ensign of Justice That Sword that cuts the bad in Twain The good doth wound and heal again Those dreadful Judgements that have been the Ax of Gods revenging Justice to wound and break the wicked in pieces shall be righteous mens cures and their Golden restoratives But Sixthly and lastly God sometimes wraps up his own people with the wicked in desolating Judgements that he may before all the world wipe off that reproach which Atheists and wicked men are apt to cast upon him as if he were partial as if he were a respecter of persons and as if his wayes Ezek. 18. 25. 29. Chap. 33. 20. were not just and equall God to stop the mouth of iniquity the mouth of blasphemy hath made his own people as desolate as others by that fiery calamity that has past upon them Such men that have been eye witnesses of Gods impartial dealing with his own people in those dayes when London was in flames must say that God is neither partial nor fond And let thus much suffice by way of Answer to this Objection The third Duty that lyes upon those that have been burnt up is for them in patience to possess their own souls and Luke 21. 19. quietly to acquiesce in what the Lord has done O Sirs hold your peace and bridle your passions and quietly submit to the stroke of Divine Justice When Aarons Sons were devoured by fire Aaron held his peace And will not Lev. 10. 2 3. The Hebrew word Damam ●ignifies sience or stil●ess it signifies a staying of the heart a quieting of the mind Aarons mind was quiet and still all his unruly affections and passions were stilled and allayed Oleaste observes that Joshuah in speaking to the Sun Sta●d still in Gibeon useth the same word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is here used Joshua 12. 10. So that this Phrase Aa●on h●ld his peace imports thus much That Aa●o● stood still or stayed from further vexing or troubling or disquieting of
like the Bells that ring as pleasantly at a Funeral as at a Wedding They should be as thankful when it goes ill with them as when it goes well with them Cicero complained of old that it was a hard thing to find a thankful man Oh how hard a thing is it to find burnt Citizens really cordially frequently and practically thankful that they are alive that they are out of the grave out of Hell and that yet they have bread to eat and clothes to wear though their habitations are laid in ashes and all their pleasant things destroyed But The eighth Duty that lyes upon those who have been burnt up is to keep in their hearts a constant Remembrance of the late dreadful conflagration God expects that his children should commemorate his Judgements as well as his mercies The sore Judgement that God inflicted upon Isa 26. 8 9. Psal 119. 30. 120. Sodom is mentioned thirteen times in the blessed Scripture and all to work us to mind it and to abhorr those sins that laid that City desolate The Lord looks that his people should keep up fresh in their memories such Judgements that have been long before executed Jer. 7. 12. Go to my place which was in Shilo where I set my name at the first and see what I did to it for the wickedness of my people The Ark 1 Sam. 4. 10 11. of old stood at Shilo but after it was taken and carried away by the Philistins it was never brought back and from that time Shilo lay ever after desolate And this the Lord would have engraven upon their memories and upon their hearts Though stony hearts are bad yet Iron memories are good Luke 17. 32. Remember Lots wife Consider her sin and her punishment that so fearing the one you may learn to take heed of the other 2 Pet. 2. 6. And turning the Cities of Sodom and Gomorrah into ashes condemned them with an overthrow making them an ensample unto those that after should live ungodly There is much in those words That after should live ungodly Why hath God turned those rich and populous Cities into ashes and set them up as burning Beacon● but to warn all the world that they live not ungodly and to work them to keep alive in their memories the desolating Judgements of God The Rabbins say that the Jews at this day when they are to boild an house they are to leave one part of it unfinished and lying Rude in remembrance that Jerusalem and the Temple are at present desolate Oh let the remembrance of Londons desolation by fire be for ever kept up in all your hearts To this purpose consider 1. That the burning of London is a very great Judgement as I have formerly proved now great Judgements like great mercies should be alwayes kept up fresh in our memories 2. The burning of London is a National Judgement as I have formerly proved now National Judgements should be alwayes fresh in our memories 3. 'T is a Judgement that c●rries much of the wrath and anger of the Lord in it Amos 3. 6. Shall a Trumpet be blown in the City and the people not be afraid Shall there be evil in a City and the Lord hath not done it V. 8. The Lion hath roared who will not fear The Lord God hath spoken who can but prophesie Now the more anger and wrath we read in any Judgement the more highly it concerns us to remember that Judgement 4. A serious commemoration of Gods Judgements is a thing that is highly pleasing to the Lord. God delights as much in the glory of his Justice as he dos in the glory of his Mercy or Grace Now when we commemorate his Judgements we glorifie his Justice that has inflicted them 5. Severe Judgements contribute much to the enlightning Hos 5. 14 15. Chap. 6. 1 2 3. Jer. 24. 1 2 3 4 5 6. Chap. 22. 8 9. of mens understandings and to the awakening of their consciences and the reforming of their lives and to work men to judge them and justifie the Lord. And therefore it highly concerns you to keep up the Remembrance of Londons Desolation by fire alwayes fresh and flourishing in your souls 6. Smart Judgements are teaching things All Gods Rods have a voice Hear ye the Rod and him that hath appointed Mich. 6. 9. it Look as Gideon taught the men of Succoth by Thorns and Bryars So God by piercing Judgements teaches both sinners and Saints to take heed of despising his patience and long-suffering and to cease from doing evil and to learn to do well And to fear and fly from all such sinful courses o● Isa 1. 16 17. practices that bring destructive judgements upon the mos● glorious Cities in the world And upon this account how deeply dos it concern us to have alwayes the late fiery dispensation in our thoughts and upon our hearts 7. All Gods Judgements are his Messengers they are all at his command The Centurion had not such a Soveraign power over his servants as the great God hath over all sorts Ezek. 14. 13 15 17 19. Ma●th 21. 8. Isa 7. 18 19. of Judgements If the Lord do but hiss for the Fly of Egypt and the Bee of Assyria they shall come and do their office Now all Gods messengers as well as his mercies should still be kept in our eye But 8. and lastly Consider a serious commemoration of the Judgements of God will difference and distinguish you from all prophane persons and unsound Professors Psal 10. 5. Thy judgements are far above out of his sight Thy Judgements that is the plagues and punishments that thou layest upon the ungodly are high above his sight that is he fears them not he thinks not of them he minds them not he dos not seriously consider of them he is not kindly or deeply affected with them he regards them no more than a tale that is told or than Forreign Wars wherein he is not concerned Others carry the words thus He c●steth thy Judgements out of his sight he will not so much as once mind them they are too high for him to set them before him they are hidden before him they are above the reach of his understanding and apprehension both mercies and judgements have much of God in them They speak and speak aloud but wicked men can neither see nor hear nor understand the voice of God either in the one or in the other I have read of such a Pestilential disease once at Athens as took away the memories of those who were infected with it so that they forgot even their own names One Pestilential disease or another usually so seizeth upon wicked men that they easily and usually forget the Judgements of God If God set in with these eight Arguments they will contribute more to the enabling of you to keep the late f●ery dispensations of God fresh in your memories than all the Pillars of Brass or Stone in the world Yet I am far
Son nor thy Daughter thy man-servant nor thy maid-servant nor thy cattel nor thy stranger that is within thy gates Jer. 17. 22. Neither carry forth a burden out of your houses on the Sabbath Day neither do ye any work but hallow ye the Sabbath Day as I commanded your fathers Isa 58. 13. If thou turn away thy foot from the Sabbath from doing thy pleasure on my holy day and call the Sabbath a delight the holy of the Lord honourable and shalt honour him not doing thine own wayes nor finding thine own pleasure nor speaking of thine own words Here are three things distinctly observable in the words 1. Words 2. Works 3. Pleasure Not doing thine own wayes that is works not speaking thine own words not finding thine own pleasure Now mark we have stronger reasons to engage us to a stricter observation and sanctification of the Lords Day than they had for their Sabbath which may be thus evinced Not to speak of their double Sacrifices upon their S●bbath Numb 28. 9 10. which as some think might typifie our double devotion on the Lords Day nor yet to speak of those six Lambs whereby others conjecture was fore-prophesied the abundant services in the time of the Gospel Ezek. 46. 1 -5 First Our Motives are far greater and more efficacious For First Our day hath many priviledges above theirs witness the honourable T●tles given to it by holy and learned men As the Queen of dayes Princess Principal Primate a Royal day higher than the highest the first fruits of the days yea saith Hierom The Lords Day is better than any other common day than all Festivals New-moons and Sabbaths of Moses By these Titles 't is evident that the Ancients had the Lords Day in very h●gh esteem and veneration Sirs look what Gold is among inferiour Mettals and what among other Grain c. the same is the Lords Day above all other dayes of the week Secondly Their Sabbath was celebrated for the memorial of the Creation ours for the great work of Redemption But Thirdly Theirs was celebrated for their deliverance out of Aegypt ours for our deliverance from Hell Now if the Jews were bound and that for a whole day not to do their own works nor speak their own words nor find their own pleasure how much more solemnity belongs to our Lords Day O what a day is the Lords Day and how solemnly and devoutly ought it to be observed and sanctified But S●condly We have greater means and helps for the sanctification of the Sabbath than the Jews had for a long time or than the Primitive Christians had for three hundred years Mark the holy observation of the Sabbath among them came in by degrees long after the day was settled and the reason was this because for a good while they had no word written to be read nor no Synagogues built to read it in It was well nigh a thousand years or above a thousand years after the giving of the Law before the reading of the Law in Synagogues came up For a long time they had no Books among them but the five Books of Moses and those Books neither were not well understood by the common people And it is further observable that the children of Israel being in Aegypt under sore pressures afflictions and cruel bondage c. neither did nor could keep the Sabbath in any solemn manner not being permitted either to rest or enjoy any solemn assemblies And when they were in their wilderness condition they had many stations diversions and incursions of enemies so that they could not keep the Sabbath in any solemn publick manner as afterwards they did when they were setled in peace and safety in the Land of Canaan And so the Primitive Christians for three hundred years liveing und●r very great and violent Persecutions they neither did nor could keep the Lords Day with that solemnity that they should or would but as for place they met not openly but secretly in Woods and Desarts and Holes and Caves and Dens of the earth and so for time sometimes they met in the day and often they met in the night But as for us who have lived and do live in these dayes of the Son of man what rare means and helps what abundance of means and helps what choice and precious means and helps have we had and still have in spite of all oppositions from high or low to enable us to sanctifie the Sabbath And O that all the means and helps that we yet enjoy may be signally blest to that purpose But Thirdly The Heathens by the very light of nature held it but reasonable that the dayes consecrated to their Gods should totally be observed with rest and sanctity the Flamins which were their Priests affirmed that the Holy-dayes were polluted if any work were done upon the solemn dayes besides it was not lawful for the King of the Sacrifices Macrob●us l. 1. c. 16. and the Flamins their Priests to see a work done on the holy dayes and therefore by a Cryer it was proclaimed that no such things should be done and he that neglected the Precept was fined and besides the fine he which did ought unawares on such dayes was to offer Sacrifices for expiation And Scaevòla the High Priest affirmed that the wilful offendor could have no expiation Now shall Heathens be so strict in the observation of their holy dayes and shall not Christians be as strict in their observation of the Lords Day These Heathens will one day rise in judgement against the slight observers and the gross prophaners of the Lords Day But Secondly We must sanctifie the Sabbath by preparing ou● selves before hand for that day and all the duties of that day Eccles 5. 1 2. Hence it is that God hath fixt a Memorandum upon this Command more than he hath upon any other Command Exod. 20. 8. Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy Sabbath dayes are our Market-dayes Now men that are worldly wise they consider before hand what to buy and what to sell The Husband-man dungs dresses plowes harrows and all to prepare it for seed I will saith holy David Psalm 26. 6. wash my hands in innocency so will I compass thine Altar O Lord. Signifying that to holy performances there ought to be holy preparations When the Temple was to be built the Stones were hewen and the Timber squared and fitted before they were brought to the place where the Temple stood The Application is easie First The Jews had their preparations Mark 15. 42. And now when the Even was come because it was the preparation that is the day before the Sabbath c. Their preparation began at three a clock in the after-noon which the Hebrews called the Sabbath Eve The Jews as I have read were so careful in their preparation for the Sabbath that to further it the best and wealthiest of them even those that had many servants and were Masters of Families would chop
staff nor shoes nor to spit in it nor when they went away to turn their backs upon it but go sidelong But doubtless the great thing God points at and expects from his peoples hands on this day is that they do worship him with inward reverence seriousness and spiritualness All other Worsh●p abstracted from this will neither pleasure God nor profit us 1 Tim. 4. 8. For bodily exercise profiteth little Oh labour to be very spiritual in all the duties of this day Christ the Luke 1. 35 36. Matth. 3. 16. John 1. 32. Chap. 6. 36. Heb. 7. 26. Chap. 9. 14. 1 Tim. 3. 16. Lord of the Sabbath was spiritual in his conception in his life and conversation in his death and passion in his resurrection and ascension he was spiritual in his words in his works in his wayes and in his worship and therefore let us labour to be very spiritual in all we do on that day Again all the Ordinances of the day are spiritual viz. the Word Prayer Sacraments singing of Psalms c. and therefore we had need to be spiritual in all the services of that day Again the ends for which the Lords Day was appointed are all spiritual viz. the glory of God the illumination conversion and salvation of sinners and the edification confirmation consolation of Saints And therefore we had need be spiritual Ephes 6. 12. in all the duties of the day Again the grand enemies that we are to encounter with on this day are spiritual sin within and Satan without and therefore we had need be spiritual in all we do For there is no way to conquer spiritual enemies but by spiritual weapons and by spiritual 1 Cor. 10. 13. exercises Again grace thrives most and flourishes best in their souls who are most spiritual in their duties on the Lords Day Again the more spiritual any man is in his duties on the Lords Dayes the more secured and armed he will be against all spiritual judgments which are the sorest and dreadfullest of all judgements Again the more spiritual any man is in the duties of the Lords Day the more that man acts like the Angels in Heaven and like the Spirits of Heb. 12. 22 23. just men made perfect Again this will d●fference you from hypocrites formalists and all prophane persons An external observation of the Sabbath will difference you from Heathens but a spiritual spending of the Sabbath will difference you from hypocrites An hypocrite never rises so Luke 13. 14 15. high as to be spiritual in the Sabbaths of God Mark Sabbaths spiritually spent are a sure sign of a sincere heart and of a saving estate Now Oh that all these considerations Exod. 31. 13. might greatly provoke you and mightily encourage you to be very spiritual on the Lords Day and in all the duties of that day But Tenthly You must sanctifie the Sabbath by being spiritual 10. tual in all natural actions and holy and heavenly in all 1 Cor. 10. 13. earthly enjoyments It is reported of a Scotch Minister that he did eat drink and sleep eternal life Luther tells us that though he did not alwayes pray and meditate but did sometimes eat and drink and sometime sleep yet all should further his account That 's a Christian worth Gold that hath learned that heavenly art so to spiritualize all his natural actions as that they shall turn to his account in the great day Zach. 14. 20 21. In that day shall there be upon the Bells Cal●●● renders it stables of ho●ses which are the most stinking and contemptible places and yet these should be holily used or Bridles of the Horses Holiness unto the Lord. And the pots in the Lords house shall be like the bowls before the Altar Yea every pot in Jerusalem and in Judah shall be holiness unto the Lord of Hosts Here is holiness written upon the bridles of the horses they ride on and holiness written upon the cups and pots they drink in A holy and heavenly heart will be holy in the use of the meanest things that are for common use Something of sanctity should run through every piece of your civility Something of the spirit life and power of Religion you should shew in all parts of your common conversation on every day but especially on the Lords Day T●rtullian speaking of the carriage of the Primitive Christians Te●tul Apollog at their meals saith 1. Our Table resembleth an Altar and our Supper a Sacrifice 2. Our Table hath nothing savouring of baseness sensuality or immodesty we feed by measure we drink by the rules of temperance 3. We speak and converse as in the presence of God every one repeateth what he knoweth out of the holy Scriptures and his own invention to the praise of God 4. As prayer began the Banquet so prayer concludes it If you beheld us you would say that we were not at Supper but at a Lecture of holiness Should not the practice of these Primitive Christians put all such Christians to a blush in our day who on the Lords Day are so carnal in the use of spiritual things and so earthly in the use of heavenly things That is a memorable expression that you have in Exod. 18. 12. And Aaron came and all the Elders of Israel to eat bread with Moses Father-in-law before God Now mark in See Deut. 12. 5 7. 1 Chron. 29. 21 22. The word Bread is used for all meat Gen. 3. 19. Chap. 31. 14. these words you have 1. The greatness of their courtesie for though Jethro was a stranger and no Israelite yet the Elders honoured him with their company And Aaron and all the Elders came to eat bread with Moses his Father-in law 2. The graciousness of their carriage They came to eat bread with him before the Lord. That is saith Calvin on the Tex● in gloriam honorem Dei to the honor and glory of God Grace must spice every cup and be sauce to every dish or nothing will rellish well with him whose heart is set to sanctifie the Sabbath Aaron and all the Elders of Israel eat bread before the Lord that is they eat bread as in the presence of God Whilst they were eating of bread their hearts were under a reverential awe of God Dian●es Temple was burnt down when she was busie at Alexanders birth and could not be at two places together But God is present both in Paradice and in the wilderness at the same time he is present both at board and bed both in the family and in the Closet at the same time O that in all your natural civil Psalm 139. and common actions you would carry it as becomes his eye his presence that fills Heaven and earth with his glory But Eleventhly You must sanctifie the Sabbath by managing all the duties of the Sabbath with a spirit of holy joy and delight There is no garment that so well becomes the upright Psalm
33 1. Psalm 32 11. Phil. 4. 4. 1 Thes 5. 16 18. as the garment of gladness God hath laid his royal command upon us to rejoyce on this day Isa 58. 13 14. If thou turn away thy foot from the Sabbath from doing thy pleasure on my holy day and call the Sabbath a delight or as the Hebrew runs delights and so Tremelius reads it the holy of the Lord honourable and shalt honour him c. Then shalt thou delight thy self in the Lord c. Psalm 118. 24. This is the day which the Lord hath made we will be glad and rejoyce therein Now if you compare this Text with Matth. 21. 22 23. and Acts. 4. 11. you will find that the precedent Verses are a prophetical prediction of Christs resurrection and so this Verse fore-tells the Churches joy upon that memorable and glorious day A fe●st saith Solomon is made for laughter Eccles 10. 19. Now on this day the Lord of Hosts is pleased more especially and more abundantly to make for his people A feast of fat things a feast of wines on the lees of fat things full of Isa 25. 6. marrow of wines on the lees well refined On this day we enjoy the freest and the fullest and the sweetest and the choicest and the nearest communion of Saints And what doth this call for but a spirit of holy joy on this day we enjoy all the precious Ordinances in a most solemn manner and why then should we not be joyful in Gods house of prayer The Isa 56. 7. Luke 2. 10 11 12 13 14. heavenly Host sung at his birth and why should not we sing and rejoyce at his second birth his resurrection from the dead O Sirs Sabbaths are the very suburbs of heaven and who can be in the suburbs of heaven and not rejoyce A beautiful face is at all times pleasing to the eye but then especially when there is joy manifested in the countenance Joy in the face puts a new beauty upon a person and makes that which before was beautiful to be exceeding beautiful it puts a lustre upon beauty And so doth holy joy put a lustre upon the day of God the wayes of God and the people of God It is the duty and glory of a Christian to rejoyce in the Lord every day but especially on the Lords Day God reserves the best wine the best comforts and the choicest discoveries of himself and of his love and of his Christ and of his glory for that day and all to make his people joyful in the house of Isa 56 7. prayer The Manichees were wont to keep their Fasts upon the Lords Day which made Tertullian say that that practice Lect. 15. of theirs was a detestable wickedness To fast on the Lords Day saith Ignatius is to kill Christ But to rejoyce in the Lord this day and to rejoyce in all the duties of this day and to rejoyce in that redemption that was wrought for us on this day this is to crown Christ this is to lift up Christ But Twelfthly You must sanctifie the Sabbath by sanctifying of the whole day to Gods service and not by fits and flashes and sudden pangs O Sirs if the Lord was so strict that he would not lose a moments honor in a ceremonial day of rest Lev. 23. 32. It shall be unto you a Sabbath of rest and ye shall afflict your souls in the ninth day of the moneth at even from even unto even shall ye celebrate your Sabbath What shall we think the Lord expects upon this day which is mo-Psalm 92. 1 2. It is good to sing of his loving kindness in the morning and of his faithfulness every night Jer. 17. 22. You shall do no work but sanctifie my Sabbath Now that this may the better stick consider First God hath given you six whole dayes that you may Exod. 20. 9. Chap. 23. 12. provide for your selves and families and therefore do not deny him one day in seven What an unrighteous thing is it to buy by one measure which is greater and sell by another which is lesser Do not rob God of his time who hath been so noble as to give you six in seven But Secondly God rested all the seventh day he had finished the creation in six dayes God did not rest on one part of Gen. 2. 1 2 3. the seventh day and work on the other part of the seventh day but he rested all the seventh day And doubtless it is your wisdom duty and glory to write after the coppy that God has laid before you But Thirdly The Sabbath is not to be an artificial day but a natural day viz. twenty four hours together as you may see in Lev. 23. 32. From even unto even shall ye celebrate your Sabbath The dayes then were so reckoned But Fourthly You would not take it well at your servants hands if they should only work three or four hours in a day and either trifle away the rest of the time or else spend it in doing their own work when they should be a doing of yours and do you think that the great God will take it well at your hands that when you have spent three or four hours in the duties of his day that then you should either trifle away or fool away or play away or sleep away or sin away the remaining part of his day But Fifthly This hath been the judgement of most judicious Divines in all ages In the Counsel of Mexicon there was an Assembly of Ministers out of all Nations in Christendom and they ordained a Canon concerning the Lords Day The Canon runs thus We ordain that people keep the whole Lords Day holy and that they set themselves the whole day to pray to God and delight in God and hear his word and if a Countrey mans servant break this day his punishment shall be to be beaten with severe blows ictubus gravioribus are the very words of the Councel and if a Lawyer offer to plead this day he shall not have the benefit of his pleading or case and if a Minister break this day he shall be excommunicated half a year and thrown ●ut of the Church and shall not be received into the Church again but upon great humi●iation It is a good observation of Musculus upon Ex●d 20. 8. God doth not say saith he r●member the Sabbath to keep it holy for he that keeps it an hour or two keeps it holy but remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy he will have not a part of a day only but a whole day kept holy And Calvin upon these words Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy saith we are to keep this day holy and not a part of it but all of it I might produce a cloud of witn●sses in the case but let these suffice But Sixthly and las●ly Consider that the very Heathen have kept the whole day to their Idol Gods and not a part And shall
Rulers of this World are as Pliny speaks of the Roman Emperors Nomine Dii Natura Diaboli Monsters not men Murtherers not Magistrates such a Monster was Saul who hunted David as a Partridge slew the innocent Priests of the Lord ran to a Witch and who was a man of so narrow a Soul that he kn●w not how to look or live above himself his own interests and concernments The great care of every Magistrate Exod. 32. 10 11. 32. Nehem. 5. 6. to 19. Psal 137. 5 6. Acts 13. 36. should be to promote the publick Interest more than their own as you may see by comparing the Scriptures in the Margine together 'T was Caesars high commendation that he never had himself after the World had him for a Governour his mind was so set on the ●ublick that that he forgot his own private Affairs The Stars have their brightness not for themselves but for the use of others The Application is easie My Lord several Philosophers have made excellent and Carneades Aristotle Socrates c. The Roman Orator hath long since observed that the force of Justice is such and so great that even Thieves and Robbers both by Sea and Land who live upon injustice and rapine yet cannot live upon their Trade without some practice of it among themselves Cleobulus one of the seven Sages was wont to say that mediocrity was without compare The very Heathen could set so much divine glory in the face of a Magistrate that he styled him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the living Image of the everliving God Magistrates are as Nazianzen expresses it Pictures drawn of God Every Magistrate though in never so low a place bears the Image of God a Penny bears the Image of the Prince as well as a Shilling Magistrates are not immortal Deities neither have they everlasting God-heads Those gods as they had a beginning so they must have an end Quicquid oritur moritur There is a Mene Mene on them their days are numbred their time is computed Hercules his Pillar stands in their way Non datur ultra legant Orations in the praise of justice they say that all Ver●●es are compre●ended in the distribution of justice Justice saith Aristotle is a Synopsis and Epitome of all Vertues All I shall say is this the world is a Ring and justice is the Diamond in that Ring the world is a body and justice is the soul ●f that body It is well known that the constitution of a mans body is best known by his pulse if it stir not at all then we know he is dead if it stir violently then we know him to be in a Fever if it keep an equal stroke then we know he is sound well and whole So the estate and constitution of a City Kingdom or Common-weal is best known by the manner of executing justice therein for justice is the pulse of a City Kingdom or Common-weal if justice be violent then the City Kingdom or Common-weal is in a Fever in a very bad estate if it stir not at all then the City Kingdom or Common-wealth is dead but if it hath an equal stroke if it be justly and duely administred then the City Kingdom or Common-weal is in a good a safe and a sound condition When Vespasian asked Apollonius what was the cause of Neroes ruine he answered that Nero could tune the Harp well but in Government he did always winde up the strings too high or let them down too low Extreams in Government are the ready way to ruine all The Ro●●ns had their Rods for lesser faults and their Ax for capital crimes Extream right often proves extream wrong he that will always go to the utmost of what the Law allows will too too often do more than the Law requires A rigid severity often mars all Equity is still to be perferred before extremity To inflict great penalties and heavy censures for light offences this is to kill a flye upon a mans forehead with a Beetle The great God hath put his own Name upon Mag●strates Psal 82. 6. I said that ye are gods Yet it must be granted that you are gods in a smaller letter mortal gods gods that must dye like men all the sons of Ish are sons of Adam Magistrates must do justice impartially for as they are called Gods so in this they must be like to God who is no accepter of persons Deur 1. 17. Levi● 19. 15. He accepts not of the rich man because of his Robes neither doth he reject the poor man because of his Rags The Magistrates eyes are to be always upon causes and not upon persons Both the Statues of the Theban Judges and the Statues of the Egyptian Judges were made without hands and without eyes to intimate to us that as Judges should have no hands to receive Bribes so they should have no eyes to see a friend from a foe or a brother from a stranger in judgment And it was the Oath of the Heathen Judges as the Orator relates Audiam accusatorem reum sine affectibus person●rum respectione I will hear the Plaintiff and the Defendant with an equal mind without affection and respect of persons In the twelfth Novel of Justinian you may read of an Oath imposed upon Judges and Justices against inclining or addicting themselves to either party yea they put themselves under a deep and bitter execration and curse in case of partiality imploring God in such language as this Let me have my part with Judas and let the Leprosie of Geh●zi cleave to me and the trembling of Cain come upon me and whatsoever else may astonish and dismay a man if I am partial in the administration of justice The Poet in the Greek Epigram taught the silver Ax of justice that was carried before the Roman Magistrates to proclaim If thou be an offende● let not the silver flatter thee if an innocent let not the Ax 〈◊〉 ●ight thee The Athenian Judges judged in the night when the faces of men could not be seen that so they might be impartial in judgment My Lord your impartiality in the administration of justice in that high Orb wherein Divine Providence hath placed you is one of those great things that hath made you high and honourable in the eyes and hearts of all that are true lovers of impartial justice Some Writers say that some Waters in Macedonia being drunk by black sheep change their fleece into white Nothing but the pure and impartial administration of justice and judgment can transform black mouth'd black-handed and black hearted men into white There is nothing that sweetens satisfies and silences all sorts of men like the Isa 1. 23 24. administration of impartial justice the want of this brought desolation upon Jerusalem and the whole Land of Jury and upon many other flourishing Kingdoms and Countries as all August de Civitate Dei lib. 10. cap. 21 c. lib. 4. cap. 4. Lipsius de constan l. 2. c.
13. know that have but read any thing of Scripture or History S. Austin plainly denies that ever the Rom●n Politie could be called properly a Common-weal●h upon this ground that Ubi n●n est Justiti● non est R●spublica he calls Common wealths without justice but magna L●t●ocini● or in Lipsius his language Congeries Confusio Turba 't is but an abuse of the word Respublica Common-wealth where the publick Good is not consulted by an impartial justice and equity 't is but a confused heap a rout of men or if we will call it so at present it will not be so long without impartial justice partly because injustice 1 Kings 12. 1 Sam. 8. 3. and oppression makes the multitude tumultuous and fills the peoples heads with dangerous designs as you may see by comparing the Scriptures in the Margine together and partly because it lays a Nation open and obuoxious to the wrath and vengeance of God as might easily be made good by scores of Scriptures Impartial justice is the best establ●shment of Kingdoms and Common-wealths The King by judgment establisheth the See Numb 25. 11. 2 Sam. 21 14. land Prov. 29. 4. It is the best security against desolating judgments Run ye through the streets of Jerusalem and seek in the broad places thereof if ye can find a man i● there be any that executeth judgment and I will pardon it Jer. 5 1. My Lord 〈◊〉 the Honour of a Magistrate to do justice impartially so i●●s the Honour and Glory of a Magistrate to do justice speedily Jer. 28 12. O house of David th●s s●i●h the Lord execute judgment in the morning and deliver him that is spoiled out of the h●nd of the oppr●ss●r lest my God is very speedy and swift in the execution of Justice Joel 3. 4. Gen. 19. Numb 16. Ezra 7. 20. In this as in other things it becomes Magistrates to be like to God sury go out like fi●e ●nd burn that none can quench it because of the evil of your doings After examination execution is to be done with expedition When men cry out for justice justice Magistrates must not cry out cr●s cra● to morrow to morrow Magistrates must do justice in the morning nei●her noon-justice nor afternoon justice nor evening-justice nor night-justice is so ac●eptable to God or so honourable to Magistrates or so advantagious to the people as morning-justice is to delay justice is worse sometimes than to deny justice 't is a very dangerous thing for Magistrates to be as long a bringing forth their Verdicts as the Elephant her young Delay of justice makes many more irreconcileable it makes many men go up and down this world with heavy hearts empty purses and thred bare coats I have read of a famous passage of Theodorick King of the Romans who when a Widow came to him with a sad complaint that she had a suit depending in the Court three years which might have been ended in a few days the King demands of her the Judges names she tells him he sends a special Command to them to give all the speedy dispatch that was possible to the Widows Cause which they did and in two days determined it to the Widows liking this being done the King calls for the Judges and they supposing that they should have both applause and reward for their expedition hastned to him full of joy but after the King had propounded several things to them about their former delay● he commanded both their heads to be struck off because they had spun out that Cause to a three years length which two days would have ended Here was Royal justice and speedy justice indeed Psal 101. 8. I will early destroy all the wicked of the land Summomane I will do morning-justice Festinanter so Genebrad I will hastily do it Justice should be on the wing delays are very dangerous and injurious Prov. 13. 12. Hope deferred maketh the heart sick the Hebrew word Memushshacah that is here rendred deferred is from Mash●ch that signifies to draw out at length Men are short-breathed and short-spirited and Hopes hours are full of Eternity and when their hopes are drawn ou● at length this makes their hearts sick and Ah what a world of such sick souls lyes l●nguishing at Hopes Hospital all the world over Hope in the Text is put for the good things hoped for Now when the good things men hope for be it justice or a quick dispatch c. are deferred and delayed this makes the poor Client sick at heart A lingring hope always breeds in the heart a lingring Consumption Julius Caesars quick dispatch is noted in three words Veni vidi vici I came I saw I overcame the harder travel hope hath and the more strongly it labours to bring forth and yet is deferred and delayed the more deadly sick the Client grows The speedy execution of justice is the very life and soul of justice Amos 5. 24. Bu● let judgment run down as waters and righteous●e●s as a mighty stream The Hebrew word Veiiggal that is here rendred run down is from Galal that signifies to rowl down freely plentifully vigorously constantly speedily as the grea● Billows of the Sea or as waves rowl speedily over the Rocks Judgment and Righteousness like a mighty stream should bear down all before it Fiat justitia tuat orb●s let justice be done whatever come of it Deut. 16. 20. That which is altoge●her just shalt thou follow or rather as the Hebrew hath it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Tsedek Tsedek justice justice shalt thou follow that is all manner of justice thou shalt follow and nothing but ●ustice shalt thou follow and thou shalt follow justice sincerely out of love to justice and thou shalt follow justice exactly without turning to the right hand or the left and thou shalt follow justice resolutely in spite of the world the flesh and the Devil and thou shalt follow justice speedily without delays or excuses A Magistrate that has the sword of justice in his hand must never plead there is a Lyon in the way My Lord this will be your Honour while you live and your Comfort when you come to dye that whilst the Sword was in your hand you did justice speedily as well as impartially You did justice in the morning and justice at noon and justice in the afternoon and justice at night what has been your whole Mayoralty but one continued day of justice Who can sum up the many thousand Causes that you have heard and determined and the many thousand differences that you have sweetly and friendly composed and ended If the Lawyers please but to speak out they must ingenuously confess that your Lordship has eased them of a great deal of work My Lord as it is the Honour and Glory of a Magistrate to do justice speedily so it is the Honour and Glory of a Magistrate to do justice resolutely couragiously valiantly It is observable that as soon as ever Joshua came into the
57. The first Part of the Book Of Atheism Gross Atheism practical Atheism brings desolating Judgments upon a people pag. 67. to pag. 70. The first Part of the Book In a strict and proper sense there was never such a Creature in the world as an Atheist pag. 71 72 73 74. The first Part of the Book There are the seeds of Atheism in the best and holiest of the sons of men pag. 74 75. The first Part of the Book B. Of the Ballance of Deceit Such as use the Ballance of deceit such run counter-cross to eight things pag. 89. to 92. The first Part of the Book Of the Blood of the Just Shedding the blood of the just brings the judgment of Fire and lays all desolate pag. 154 155 156 157. The first Part of the Book There are nine things that speak out the preciousness of the blood of the just pag. 157. to 168. The first Part of the Book Of Bribery Bribery brings desolating and destroying judgments both upon persons and places pag. 87 88 89. The first Part of the Book C. Of a City that hath Foundations Burnt Citizens should make sure a City that hath Foundations whose Builder and Maker is God pag. 227 228. The first Part of the Application Heaven is a City that is built upon a fivefold foundation pag. 228 229. The first Part of the Application The resemblance betwixt Heaven and a City holds in nine particulars pag. 229 230 231. The first Part of the Application D. Of the Devil Four Reasons why the imprisonment of the Saints is attributed to the Devil pag. 147 148 149. The first Part of the Application Quest What are the Duties that are incumbent upon them that have been burnt up Answ First to see the hand of the Lord in this late dreadful Fire pag. 131 132 133. The first Part of the Application Secondly To justifie the Lord in all that he has done pag. 133 134 135. The first Part of the Application Thirdly In patience to possess their own Souls pag. 166 167 168. The first Part of the Application Fourthly To set up the Lord in a more eminent degree then ever as the great Object of their fear pag. 168 169 170. The first Part of the Application Fifthly To be content with their present condition pag. 170 171 172 173. The first Part of the Application Sixthly To lye low to keep humble under this dreadful judgment of fire under the mighty hand of God pag. 173 174 175 176. The first Part of the Application Seventhly To encourage themselves in the Lord their God pag. 176 177. The first Part of the Application Eighthly To keep in their hearts a constant remembrance of the late dreadful Conflagration eight Arguments to encourage to this pag. 181 182 183. The first Part of the Application Ninthly To see the vanity mutability and uncertainty of all worldly comforts and enjoyments and accordingly to set loose from them pag. 184 185 186 187. The first Part of the Application Tenthly To be very importunate with God to take away those sins that have laid our City desolate pag. 217 218 219 220. The first Part of the Application The eleventh Duty is to prepare and fit for greater troubles and tryals pag. 220 221 222. The first Part of the Application The twelfth Duty is to secure the everlasting welfare of their precious and immortal Souls pag. 222 223 224. The first Part of the Application The thirteenth Duty is to get a God for their portion pag. 224 225 226. The first Part of the Application The fourteenth Duty is to make God their habitation to make God their dwelling-place pag. 226 227. The first Part of the Application The fifteenth Duty is to make sure an abiding City a City that hath foundations whose Builder and Maker is God p. 227. to pag. 232. The first Part of the Application The sixteenth Duty is for the burnt Citizens to sanctifie the Sabbath and to keep it holy all their days pag. 232. to 263. The first Part of the Application Quest What are the Duties that are incumbent upon those Habitations are yet standing as Monuments of divine Wisdom Power and Grace Answ These eight as follow First To take heed of those sins which bring the fiery Rod pag. 263 264. The first Part of the Application Secondly Not to think those greater sinners then your selves whose Habitations have been laid in Ashes pag. 264 265. The first Part of the Application Thirdly To be much in blessing of God pag. 265. Fourthly To take heed of security do not say the bitterness of death is past pag. 265 266. Fifthly To shew much love pity and compassion to those who are burnt up and turned out of all pag. 266 267. Sixthly To lift up a prayer for all those who are fallen under the heavy judgment of fire pag. 267 268. Seventhly Seriously to consider that some mens escaping of very great judgments is not properly a preservation but a reservation to some greater destruction pag. 268 269 270. Eighthly Not to rejoyce or glory in your Neighbours ruines pag. 270 271. E. Eternal Every thing that is conducible to the torments of the damned is eternal this is proved five ways pag. 105 106. F. Of Fire How the word Fire is used in Scripture pag. 10 11 12. The first Part of the Book First Consider the intemperate heat before the Fire pag. 5 6 7. The first Part of the Application Secondly Consider the suddenness and unexpectedness of the Fire pag. 7. to pag. 12. Thirdly Consider the force violence vehemency and irresistableness of it pag. 12 13 14. Fourthly Consider the swiftness of it it flew upon the wings of the wind pag. 14 15 16 17. Fifthly Consider the extensiveness of the Fire pag. 22 23. Sixthly Consider the impartiality of the Fire pag. 23 24. Seventhly Consider the greatness of it pag. 24 25 26 27 28 Eighthly Consider the terribleness of it pag. 28 29 30 31 32. Ninthly Consider the time when the Fire first began pag. 32 33 34 35 36. The first Part of the Application Tenthly Consider the Fire the burning of London is a National judgment pag. 36 37 38. That the Fire of London was not so great nor so dreadful a fire as that of Sodom and Gomorrah is proved by five Arguments pag. 88 89 90 91. Of the fire of Hell pag. 102 103 104 105 106. Four Arguments to prove that 't is very probable that there is material Fire in Hell pag. 106 107 108. Object If it be material Fire then it may be quencht c. Five Answers to this Objection pag. 108 109 110 111. Six differences between our common Fire and Hell-fire pag. 112. to 125. Object How will it stand with the unspotted Holiness Justice and Righteousness of God to punish a temporary offence with eternal punishments with eternal fire c. This Objection is answered seven ways pag. 125. to 131. F. Of Fornication Fornication is a sin that brings the
Judgment of Fire pag. 128. to 132. The first Part of the Book Several Reasons to prove that this sin of Fornication cannot groundedly be charged upon any of the precious Servants of the Lord that did truly fear him in the City of London p. 132. to 137. These Expressions of giving themselves over to Fornication and going after strange flesh implies six things pag. 134 135 136 137. G. Of God His God notes three things pag. 176. The first Part of the Application There are three things in God to encourage Christians under all their fiery tryals pag. 178 179. Of the Gospel The slighting of the Gospel brings desolating judgments pag. 100. to 104. The first Part of the Book Six sorts of slighters of the Gospel pag. 104. to 108. Saints no slighters of the Gospel of Grace and of the Graces of the Saints proved by seven Arguments pag. 108. to 112. God by fiery tryals designs the reviving quickning and recovering of the decayed Graces of his people pag. 41 42 43. God by fiery tryals designs a further exercise of his Childrens Graces pag. 43 44 45 46. God by fiery tryals designs the growth of his peoples Graces pag. 46 47 48 49. God by fiery tryals designs the tryal of his peoples Graces and the discovery of their sincerity and integrity to the world pag. 49 50 51 52 53. Many Christians Graces in London were withering before the fiery Dispensation pag. 61 62. H. Of Heaven Heaven is a City that is built upon a fivefold foundation pag. 228 229. The first Part of the Application The resemblance betwixt Heaven and a City holds in nine respects pag. 229 230 231. Hand See the Hand of the Lord in this late fiery Dispensation Ten Arguments to work you to this pag. 1. to 38. Of Holiness In these days of the Gospel all Holiness of places is taken away pag. 141. to 146. I. Of Intemperance Intemperance brings desolating judgments pag. 75 76 77 78. The first Part of the Book Six things Intemperance robs men of pag. 78. to 84. Of Judgments In eight respects great judgments are like to fire 7 8 9. The ends of God in inflicting the late judgment of Fire in respect of the wicked are seven pag. 12 to 31. The ends of God in inflicting the late judgment of Fire in respect of the Righteous are at large discovered pag. 31 to 53. The Sword is a worse judgment then that of Fire pag. 91 92. The first Part of the Application Famine is a more dreadful judgment then that of Fire pag. 92 93 94 95. Dreadful Earth quakes are a more terrible judgment then that of Fire pag. 95 96 97 98. That judgment that befel Korah Dathan and Abiram a more terrible judgment then that which befel the burnt Citizens pag. 98 99. That judgment that came upon Sodom and Gomorrah was a worse judgment then that was inflicted upon the burnt Citizens pag. 99. Eight Arguments to encourage the burnt Citizens to commemorate the late judgment of Fire pag. 182 183 184. There are seven sorts of men that have cause to fear worser judgments then any yet have been inflicted on them pag. 222 L. Lamentation Lament and mourn that London is laid in Ashes pag. 38 39 40. Ten Considerations to work you to lament over London's ashes pag. 40. to 57. Of a Little The righteous mans little is better then the multitude of Riches that many wicked men enjoy this blessed truth is made good by an induction of eleven particulars pag. 197. to 212. Five ways shewing how a righteous man improves his little pag. 203 204. Of London The burning of London was ushered in by sad Prodigies an● dreadful fore-runners pag. 40 41 42. London was an ancient City a City of great Antiquity pag. 42 43. London was an honourable City a renowned City pag. 43 44 45. London was the Bulwark the strong Hold of the Nation pag. 45 46 47 48. London was a Fountain a Sanctuary a City of Refuge to the poor afflicted and impoverished people of God pag. 48 49. London was a City compact a City advantagiously situated for Trade and Commerce pag. 49 50. Englands worst Enemies rejoyce and triumph in London's Ashes pag. 50. London was once the City of our solemn Solemnities pag. 50 51 52. Hubert confest the fact of firing the first house in London pag. 52 53 54 55 56 57. Of Losses Seven great losses an inordinate love to the world will expose a man to pag. 59 60 61. The first Part of the Book Eight ways whereby the burnt Citizens may know whether in this world God will make up their losses by the late Fire or no pag. 76 77 78 79 80. The first Part of the Application There are ten choice Jewels that a Christian can never lose in this world pag. 156 157 158 159. Of Luke-warmness There was much Luke-warmness among many Professors in London pag. 57 58. Of Lying A trade or course of Lying brings the judgment of Fire pag. 112 113. The first Part of the Book The School-men reduce all sorts of Lyes to three pag. 113 114 115 116. The greatness of the sin of Lying exprest in four particulars pag. 116. to 123. Eight Arguments to prove that this trade this course of Lying cannot by any clear evidence be charged upon those that truly feared the Lord whose Habitations were once within the Walls of London pag. 123. to 128. M. Of Mercy It was a very great mercy to six sorts of men that they had their lives for a prey when London was in flames pag. 60 to 70. O. Objections Object I would say the Lord is righteous but by this fiery Dispensation I am turned out of house and home Answ Four ways pag. 135 to 148. Object I would justifie the Lord but I have lost my all as to this world Seven Answers you have from pag. 150 to 159. Object I would justifie the Lord though I am turned out of all but this is that which troubles me that I have not an Estate to do that good which formerly I have done Four Answers you have from pag. 159 160 161. Object I would justifie the Lord though he hath turned me out of all but God hath punished the righteous with the wicked this fiery Rod hath fallen heavier upon many Saints then upon many sinners How then can I say that the Lord is righteous Six Answers are given to this Objection pag. 161 to 166. P. Of Punishment Quest How will it stand with the unspotted Holiness Justice and R●ghteousness of God to punish a temporary offence with eternal punishments Seven Answers to this Question pag. 125 to 131. Q. Quest What are those sins that bring the fiery Dispensation upon Cities Nations and Countries Answ From pag. 53 to 168. The first part of the Book Quest What sins were there among the professing people in London that might bring down the fiery Rod upon them Answ Seven pag. 55 to 63. Quest Four Questions proposed pag. 63 64.
S. Of the Sabbath Prophanation of the Sabbath brings the judgment of Fire pag. 137 138 139. Twelve Arguments to prove that God hath been very just and righteous in inflicting the late dreadful judgment of Fire upon those that prophaned his Sabbaths in London pag. 139 to 149. Six Arguments to prove that this abominable sin of prophaning the Sabbath cannot with any clear evidence be charged upon the people of God that did truly fear him within or without the Walls of London pag. 150. Burnt Citizens should sanctifie the Sabbath all their days pag. 232. The first Part of the Application Fourteen ways we should sanctifie the Sabbath pag. 233 to 263. Of the Sins of the professing people of London There were seven sins among the professing people in London that ought to work them to justifie the Lord though he hath burnt them up and turned them out of all pag. 55 to 63. The first Part of the Book Of the several Sins that bring the fiery Judgment upon Cities and Co●n●●ies First Gross Atheism practical Atheism brings desolating judgments pag. 67 to 75. Secondly Intemperance pag. 75 to 84. Thirdly The sins that were to be found in the Citizens Callings pag. 84 to 92. Fourthly Desperate incorrigibleness and unreformedness under former wasting and destroying Judgments brings the Judgment of Fire upon a people pag. 92 93 94. Fifthly Insolent and cruel oppressing of the poor brings desolating Judgments upon a people pag. 95 to 100. Sixthly Rejecting the Gospel contemning the Gospel and slighting the free and gracious offers of Christ in the Gospel brings the fiery Dispensation upon a people pag. 100 to 104. Seventhly A course of Lying a trade of Lying brings desolating Judgments upon Cities and people pag. 112 to 128. The eighth sin that brings the Judgment of Fire is mens giving themselves over to fornication and going after strange flesh pag. 128 to 133. The ninth sin that brings the Judgment of Fire upon a people is profanation of the Sabbath pag. 137 to 151. Tenthly The prophaneness lewdness blindness and wickedness of the Clergie brings the Judgment of Fire pag. 151 152 153. Eleventhly Sometimes the sins of Princes and Rulers bring the Judgment of Fire upon persons and places pag. 153. Twelfthly The abusing mocking and despising of the Messengers of the Lord brings the fiery Dispensation upon a people pag. 153 154. Thirteenthly Shedding of the blood of the just is a crying sin that brings the Judgment of Fire and lays all desolate pag. 154 to 168. Of Sin and of Gods Peoples Sins By fiery tryals God will make a fuller discovery of his peoples sins pag. 34 35. By fiery tryals God designs the preventing of sin pag. 35 36. By fiery tryals God designs the imbittering of sin to his people pag. 36 37 38. By fiery tryals God designs the mortifying and purging away of his peoples sins pag. 38 39 40. 41. Sin in the general brings the judgment of Fire upon a people pag. 64 65 66 67. Twelve ob●ervable things about sin pag. 218 219. The first Part of the Application Thirteen ●upports to bear up their hearts who have either lost all or much or most of what they had in this World The first support is this the great God might have burnt up all be might not have left one house standing pag. 57 to 60. The second support is this viz. That God has given them their lives for a prey pag. 60 to 70. The third support is this viz. This has been the Common Lot the common Case both of sinners and Saints pag. 70 71. The fourth support is this viz. That though they have lost much as they are men as they are Citizens Merchants Tradesmen yet they have lost nothing as they are Christians as they are Saints as they are the Called of God pag. 71 72 73. The fifth support is this viz. That the Lord will certainly one way or another make up all their losses to them pag. 74 75 76. The sixth support is this viz. That by fiery Dispensations the Lord will make way for the new Heavens and the new Earth he will make way for the glorious deliverance of his people pag. 80 81 82. The seventh support is this viz. That by fiery Dispensations God will bring about the ruine and destruction of his and his peoples enemies pag. 82 83. The eighth support is this viz. That all shall end well all shall work for good pag. 83 84 85. The ninth support is this viz. That there was a great mixture of mercy in that dreadful judgment of Fire that turned London into a ruinous heap pag. 85 86 87 88 89 90 91. The tenth support is this viz. That there are worse judgments then the judgment of Fire which God might but has not inflicted upon the Citizens of London this is made good five ways from pag. 91 to 99. The eleventh support is this viz. Your outward condition is not worse then Christs was when he was in the world pag. 99 100 101. The twelfth support is this viz. That your outward condition in this world is not worse then theirs was of whom this world was not worthy pag. 101. 102. The thirteenth support is viz. There is a worse fire then that which has turned London into a ruinous heap viz. the fire of Hell which Christ has freed Believers from pag. 102 to 125. T. Of the Text. The Text opened pag. 1 2 3 4 5. The first Part of the Book Of Thankfulness Six Arguments to encourage Christians to thankfulness and cheerfulness under the late d●solating Judgment of Fire pag. 179 180 181. The first Part of the Application W. Of Divine Warnings and the danger of slighting them Ten Arguments to work men to take l●●d of slighting Divine Warnings pag. 23 to 28. The first Part of the Book Of the Wicked The Wicked are compared to four things in Scripture pag. 82 83. The first Part of the Application Of the World and the Vanity of it and of a worldly Spirit The Vanity of the World discovered pag. 184 185 186 187. Ten Arguments to prove that a worldly spirit still hangs upon the burnt Citizens pag. 187 to 193. Ten Maxims for the burnt Citizens seriously and frequently to dwell upon as they would have their affections moderated to the things of this World pag. 193 to 216. How we may lawfully desire the things of the World exprest in three Particulars pag. 216 217. There was a great deal of Worldliness among the professing people of London pag. 58 59. The first Part of the Book An inordinate love to the World will expose a man to seven great losses pag. 59 60 61. ISAIAH 42. 24 25. Who gave Jacob to the spoil and Israel to the Robbers did not I the Lord he against whom we have sinned for they would not walk in his ways neither were they obedient to his Law Therefore he hath poured upon him the fury of his anger and the strength of battel and it hath
set him on fire round about yet he knew not and it burned him yet he laid it not to heart THE Lord in this Chapter by the Prophet Esay doth foretell heavy things against the people and by the way marks the Lords dealings he ever gives warnings before he sends any plagues he lightens before he thunders that the people might not say they did not hear of it and that the wicked might be the more inexcusable and that the godly might make an Ark to save themselves in These words contain in them five ●●veral things 1. The Author of this Destruction or Judgment 2 The Causes of it 3. The Judgment it self 4. W●● they were on whom this Judgment was inflicted 5. The Effect of it Now by Divine permission I will open these word● in order to you For th● first the Author of it Now this is laid down by Qu●stion and Answer Who gave Jacob to the spoil and Israel to the Robbers there 's the Question Did not I the Lord there the Answer God is the Author of all the Plagues and Judgments that befal a Nation Secondly The Causes why the Lord did this to a people that he had chosen to be a special people un●o himself to a people upon whom he had set his love to a people that he Deut. ● 5. 7. 8. Deut. 32. 10 11 12. had owned for his portion and that he had formerly kept as the Apple of his Eye and carried as upon Eagles wings Now the causes are set down fi●st more generally in these words Because they have sinned aga●nst the Lord. Secondly more particularly in these words For they would not walk in his ways neither were they obedient to his Law The third thing observable in the words is the dreadful Judgments themselves that God inflicted upon his sinful people his sinning people and these you have in vers 25. Therefore he hath poured upon him the fury of his anger not only his anger but the fury of his anger to shew the greatness of it the extremity of it Mark he doth not say that God did drop down his anger but he poured down hi● anger and indignation This Phrase he poured out is an allusion to the clouds pouring down of water violently all at once in an instant as they do many times in the Levant Seas in Egypt at the Indies and in several other parts of the G●n 6. 11. world as they did in the Deluge when the windows of Heaven were broke open Now by this similitude the Lord shews the dreadfulness the grievousness the suddenness and the vehemency of the Judgments that were fallen upon them And the strength of Battel The Lord appears in Arms against them in the greatness and fierceness of his wrath he sent in a very powerful Enemy upon them that with fire and sword over-ran them and their Country and destroyed them on every side as you may see by comparing the 2 Kings 23. 33. ult with the 24. and 25. Chapters following And hath set him on fire round about That is say some all the Countries Cities and Towns round about Jerusalem were set on fire Yet be knew not Though God had burnt them up on every hand yet they took no notice of it they regarded it not they were not at all affected with the fiery Dispensations of Diod orus Siculus writes that in Aethiopia there is such a sottish insensible people that if you cut them with a drawn sword or slay their wives and children before their faces they are not at all affected with it nor moved at it Such brutes were these Jews God O the dulness the insensibleness the sottishness of the Jews under the most awakning and amazing Judgments of God! And it burned him This some apply to the City of Jerusalem it self God did not only fire the Cities and Towns round about Jerusalem but he also set Jerusalem it self into a flame Jerusalem which was beautiful for situation the joy of the whole Earth the Paradise and Wonder of the world is turned into ashes Yet be laid it not to heart or upon his heart as the Original runs O the monstrous stupidity insensibleness and blockishness of this people Though God had brought them low though their Crown was fallen from their head though their glori●us City was turned into ashes and though they were almost destroyed by many smarting miseries and dreadful calamities yet they were not affected with the stupendious Judgments of God they were not awakned by all the flames that God had kindled about their ears they did not lay the Judgments of God to heart nor they would not lay the Judgments of God upon their hearts The fourth thing observable in the words i● the persons the people that were spoiled destroyed and consumed by fire and they were Jacob and Israel Who gave Jacob for a Isa 58. 2. Zach. 7. 5. Exod. 19. 5. spoil and Israel to the Robbers They were a praying people a professing people a fasting people a peculiar people a priviledged people and yet for their sins they became a destroyed people a consumed people a ruined people The fifth thing observable in the words is the little Effect the Judgments of God had upon them Now they were under such monstrous stupidity that they were not all awakned nor affected By Ti●us Vespasian their land became astage of blood and of all kind of barbarisms and now their so renowned City their Temple and Sanctum Sanctorum so fam'd all the world over was turned into ashes and laid level to the ground Buxtorf Synag Judaica cap. 5. c. 36. with the Judgments of God they regarded them not they laid them not to heart And as stupid and senseless were they when Titus Vespasi●n had laid their City desolate by fire and sword and sold thirty of them for one piece of silver as Josephus and other Historians tell us O Sirs since their crucifying of the Lord of Glory they have never laid their finger upon the right sore to this very day they wo'nt acknowledge their sin in crucifying of the Lord of Glory They confess they have sinned more then ever and therefore 't is that God hath more sorely afflicted them then ever but their cruelty to Christ their crucifying of Christ which ushered in the total ruine of their City and Country they cannot be brought to acknowledge to this very day though the Lord hath burnt them up on every hand and hath scattered them as dung all over the earth to this very day A Learned Writer tells us that they call Christ Bar-chozab the Son of a Lye a Bastard and his Gospel Aven Gilaion the Volume of Lyes or the Volume of Iniquity and us Christians Goii●n that is Gentiles Edomites when they salute a Christian they call him Shed that is Devil They hate all Christians but none so much as those that are converted from Judaism to Christianity and all this after so great a burning and desolation that
the Lord has made in the midst of them 'T is true the length of those heavy Judgments under which they groan to this very day hath often puzled the Intellectuals of their Rabbies and hath many times put them to a stand and sometimes to break out into a kind of confession That surely their Judgments could not last so long but for crucifying of one that was more then a man There was one Rabbi Samuel who six hundred years since writ a Tract in form of an Epistle to Rabbi Isaac Master of the Synagogue of the Jews wherein he doth excellently discuss the cause of heir long captivity and extream misery And after that he had proved it was inflicted for some grievous sin he sheweth that sin to be the same which Amos speaks of For three transgressions Amos 2 6. of Israel and for four I will not turn away the punishment thereof because they sold the righteous for silver The selling of Joseph he makes the fi●st sin the worshipping of the Calf in Horeb the second sin the abusing and killing of Gods Prophets the third sin and the selling of Jesus Christ the fourth sin For the first they served four hundred years in Egypt for the second they wandred forty years in the wilderness for the third they were Captives seventy years ●n Babylon and for the fourth they are held in pitiful Captivity even till this day 'T is certain that the body of that people are under woful blindness and hardness to this very day And thus much for the opening of the words The 25. verse is the Scripture that I do intend to speak something to as the Lord shall assist Now the Proposition which I only intend to insist upon is this Viz. That God is the Author or Efficient cause of all the great Doct. Calamities and dreadful Judgments that are inflicted upon Cities and Countries and in particular of that of fire Now that God is the Author or Efficient cause of all the great Calamities and dreadful Judgments that are inflicted upon Cities and Countries will evidently appear to every mans understanding that will but take the pains to read over the 26. Chapter of Leviticus and the 28. Chapter of Deuteronomy with that 14. of Ezekiel from vers 13. to vers 22. That God is the Author or Efficient cause of this dreadful Judgment of Fire that is at any time inflicted upon Cities and Countries will sufficiently appear in these following Scriptures Amos 3. 6. Shall a Trumpet be blown in the City and the people not be afraid shall there be evil in the City and the Lord hath not done it This is to be understood of the evil of punishment and not of the evil of sin Amos 4. 11. I have overthrown some of you as God overthr●w Sodom and Gomorrah and ye were as a fire-brand pluckt out of the burnings yet have ye not returned unto me saith the Lord. Here I is emphatical and exclusive as if he should say I and I alone Amos 1. 14. But I will kindle a fire in the wall of Rabbah that is in the Metropolis or chief City of the Ammonites and it shall devour the Palaces thereof Rabbah their head-City was a cruel bloody covetous and ambitious City vers 13. And therefore rather than it should escape divine vengeance God will kindle a fire in the wall of it and burn it with his own hands Ezek. 20. 47. And say to the forrest of the South that is to Jerusalem that did lye South-wards from Chaldea hear the Word of the Lord. Thus saith the You will find this Scripture fully opened in the following Discourse Lord God Behold I will kindle a fire in thee and it shall devour every green tree in thee and every dry tree the flaming flames shall not be quenched and all fuel from the South to the North shall be burnt therein verse 48. And all flesh shall see that I the Lord have kindled it it shall not be quenched Men shall see that 't was God that kindled the fire and not man and therefore 't was beyond mans skill or power to quench it or to over-master it Jer. 7. 20. Therefore thus saith the Lord God Behold mine anger and my fury shall be poured out upon this place upon man and upon beast and upon the trees of the field and upon the fruit of the ground and it shall burn and shall not be quenched The Point being thus proved for the further opening of it premise with me these things 1. First That great afflictions dreadful Judgments are likened unto fire in the blessed Scriptures Psal 66. 12. We went through fire and water Jer. 4. 4. Circumcise your selves to the Lord and take away the fore-skins of your heart ye men of Judah and Inhabitants of Jerusalem lest my fury come forth like fire and burn that none can quench it because of the evil of your doings Jer. 21. 12. O house of David thus saith the Lord execute Judgment in the morning and deliver him that is spoiled out of the hand of the oppressor lest my fury go out like fire and burn that none can quench it because of the evil of your doings Lam. 2. 3 4. He hath cut off in his anger all the horn of Israel he hath drawn back his right hand from before the enemy and burned against Jacob like a flaming fire which devoureth round about he hath bent his bow like an enemy he stood with his right hand as an adversary and slew all that was pleasant to the eye in the Tabernacle of the Daughter of Zion he poured out his fury like fire Ezek. 15. 7. And I will set my face against them they shall go out from one fire and another fire shall devour them and ye shall know that I am the Lord when I set my face against them Ezek. 22. 20 21 22. As they gather Silver and Brass and Iron and Lead and Tin into the midst of the furnace to blow the fire upon it to melt it so will I gather you in mine anger and in my fury and I will leave you there and melt you yea I will gather you and blow upon you in the fire of my wrath and ye shall be melted in the midst thereof As silver is melted in the midst of the furnace so shall ye be melted in the midst thereof and ye shall know that I the Lord have poured out my fury upon you Thus you see that great afflictions great Judgments are likened unto fire But in what respects are great Afflictions great Judgments Quest like unto fire In these seven respects they are like unto fire Answ First Fire is very dreadful and terrible to mens thoughts spirits and apprehensions how dreadful was the fire of Sodom and the fire of London to all that were near it or spectators of it 'T is observable that some are set out in the blessed Scriptures as Monuments of most terrible and dreadful Vengeance whom the Kings of
Babylon roasted in the fire Jer. 29. 21 22. of them 't is said shall be taken up a curse when any imprecated sore vengeance from the Lord upon any one 't is said The Lord make thee like Ahab and Zedekiah whom the Kings of Babylon roasted in the fire 'T is very dreadful and terrible for a man to have the least member of his body frying in the fire but how terrible and dreadful must it be for a mans whole body to be roasted in the fire so are the Judgments of the Lord very terrible and dreadful to the children of men My flesh trembleth for fear of thee and I Psal 119. 120. am afraid of thy Judgments Hab. 3. 16. When I heard my belly trembled my lips quivered at the voice rottenness entred into my bones and I trembled in my self that I might rest in the day of trouble But Secondly Fire is very painful and tormenting in which respects Hell-torments are compared to fire so are great Afflictions and Judgments they are very painful and tormenting Isa 26. 17 18. they put a Land into sore travel next to the pangs of Conscience and the pangs of Hell there are none to those pangs that are bred and fed by terrible Judgments But Thirdly Fire is of a discovering nature it enlightens mens eyes to see those things that they did not see before so do the terrible Judgments of God enlighten mens minds and Rev. 15. 4. Ezek. 21. 3 4 5 6 7. understandings sometimes to know the Lord. Hence 't is that after Judgments threatned God doth so often tell them that they shal● know the Lord Sometimes God by his Judgments enlightens mens minds to see such an evil in sin that they never saw before and to see such a vanity mutability imporency and uncertainty in the Creature that they never saw before and to see such a need of free-grace of ●ich mercy and of infinite favour and goodness that they never saw before and to see such Majesty and terribleness Psal 66. 3. 5. in God which they never saw before Job 37. 22. With God is terrible Majesty But Fourthly Fire is probatory and refining and so are the Judgments of God they will try what metal men are made of they will try whether men are sound and sincere or hypocritical Isa 1. 25. Mal. 3. 1 2 3. Acts 26. 28 29. and hollow whether men are real Christians or nominal Christians whether they are throughout Christians or almost Christians whether their graces are true or counterfeit and whether they have much or but a litt●e grace Isa 31. 9. The Lords fire is in Zion and his furnace in Jerusalem Zacha. 13. 9. And I will bring the third part through the fire and will refine them as silver is refined and will try them as gold is tryed 1 Pet. 4. 12. Beloved think it not strange concerning the fiery tryal which is to try you Stars shine brightest in the darkest night Torches are the better for beating Grapes come not to the proof till they come to the press Spices smell sweetest when pounded young Trees root the faster for shaking Vines are the better for bleeding Gold looks the brighter for scouring and Juniper smells sweetest in the fire The Application is easie But Fifthly Fire is of a consuming and devouring nature as we have lately found by woful Experience Psal 18. 8. There went out a smoak out of his nostrils and fire out of his Isa 66. 15 16. Psal 21 9. Jer. 17. 4. Ezek. 38. 19 20. nouth devoured Jer. 15. 14. A fire is kindled in my anger which shall burn upon you Ezek. 22. 31. Therefore have I poured out my indignation upon them I have consumed them with the fire of my wrath Natural fire is a great devourer but mystical fire the fire of divine wrath is infinitely a greater devourer men may stand before a natural fire but no man has ever bin able to stand before the devouring fire of divine wrath The anger and wrath of God against wicked men is exceeding hot 't is a burning fiery flaming wrath against which they are never able to stand Isa 27. 4. Who would set the bryars and thorns against me in battel I would go through them I would burn them together Bryars and thorns are as well able to stand before a devouring fire as wicked men are able to stand before the smoaking wrath of that God which is a consuming fire Heb. 12. 29. Sixthly Fire breaks out suddenly and unexpectedly in an hour in a moment when no man thinks of it when no man looks for it as you see by that late dreadful fire that in a few days turn'd a glorious City into a ruinous heap So the Judgments of God they come suddenly and unexpectedly upon the sons of men witness the Judgments of God that came upon the old world Sodom and Gomorrah Nadab and Math. 24. 37 38 39. Gen. 19. Abihu Corah Dathon and Abiram 1 Thes 5. 3. For when they shall say peace and safety then sudden destruction cometh upon them as travel upon a woman with child and they shall not escape Security is a certain fore-runner of desolation and destruction The Apostle by the similitude he uses shews that the destruction of the wicked is 1. certain 2. sudden 3. inevitable But Seventhly Fire is impartial it makes no difference between rich and poor high and low honourable and base bond and free male and fema●e c. So the Judgments of God are impartial they reach all sorts and ranks of persons But Eighthly and lastly Fire is violent and irresistable we have had as dreadful a proof of this in the late dreadful Conflagration of London as ever any people have had since the Lord Jesus was on earth So are the Judgments of God violent and irresistable witness the raging Pestilence and the bloody Sword that in 1665. and 1666. has sent many score thousands to their long homes And thus you see how that Metaphorically or Typically great and sore Judgments do resemble fire But Secondly Premi●e this with me fire is sometimes attributed unto God Heb. 12. 29. Our God is a consuming fire sometimes fire is attributed to Christ Mal. 3. 2. But who ray abide the day of his coming and who shall stand when he appeareth for he is like a refiners fire and like fullers sope And sometimes fire is attributed to the Holy Ghost Mat. 3. 11. I indeed baptize you with water unto repentance but he that cometh after me is mightier then I whose shoes I am not worthy to bear he shall baptize you with the Holy Ghost and with fire that is with that fiery Holy Ghost that Spirit of Judgment and of burning wherewith the filth of the Daughter of Zion is washed away Isa 4. 4. But Thirdly Premise this with me the word Fire in Scripture is sometimes used by the Holy Ghost to set forth sin by Isa 9. 18. For wickedness burneth as the fire it
then they will bow and tremble under a sense of the Soveraignty of God The Soveraignty of God is that golden Scepter in his hand which he will make all bow to either by his Word or by his Works by his Mercies or by his Judgments This Scepter must be kist and submitted to or else fire and sword desolation and destruction will certainly follow Jer. 18. 2 3 4. 6. Arise and go down to the potters house and there will I cause thee to hear my word Then I went down to the potters house and behold he wrought a work on the wheels And the vessel that he made of clay was marred in the hand of the potter so he made it again another vessel that seemed good to the potter to make it O house of Israel cannot I do with you as the potter saith the Lord. Behold as the clay is in the potters hand so are ye in my hand O house of Israel The Jews were so stupid and sottish that verbal teaching without signs would not work upon them and therefore the Lord sent Jeremiah to the potters house that he might see by what the potter did that though he had made them a People a Nation a Church a State yet he could as easily unmake them and mar them as the potter marred the vessel that he had made God would have this people to know that he had as much power over them and all they had as the potter had power over the clay that he works upon and that he had as much both might and right also to dispose of them at his pleasure as the potter had over his clay to dispose of it as he judged meet Nay Beloved the potter has not such an God hath jus ad omnia jus in omnibus a right to all things a right in all things absolute power over his pots and clay as the Lord has over the Sons of men to make them and break them at his pleasure and that partly because that the clay is none of his creature and partly because without God give him strength he has no power to make or break one vessel God by the Prophet would have the Jews to know that 't was meerly by his good pleasure and grace that they came to be so glorious and flourishing a Nation as they were at this time yea and further to know that they were not so great and rich and flourishing and setled and built but that he could as easily break them and mar them as the potter could the Isa 64. 8. vessel that was under his hand Ah Sirs God by that dreadful fire that has destroyed our houses and burnt up our substance and banished us from our habitations and levelled our stately Monuments of Antiquity and Glory even with the ground has given us a very high evidence of his Soveraignty both over our persons and all our concernments in this world Ah London London were there none within nor without thy Walls that did deny the Soveraignty of God that did belye the Soveraignty of God that did slight the Soveraignty of God that did make head against the Soveraignty of God Were there none within nor without thy Walls that did say We are Lords and we will come no more unto thee That did say Is not this great Babylon is Jer. 2. 31. Dan. 4. 30. Lam. 4. 12. not this great London that we have built That did say the Kings of the Earth and all the Inhabitants of the World would not have believed that the adversary and the enemy the flaming and consuming fire should have entred into the gates of Jerusalem into the Gates of London That Exod. 5. 2. did say Who is the Lord that we should obey his voice That did advance a worldly Soveraignty above and against the Soveraignty of God and Christ Ah London London if there were any such within or without thy Walls then never wonder that God has in a flaming and consuming fire proclaimed his Soveraignty over thee and that he hath given such Atheists to know from woful experience that both themselves and all their concernments are in the hands of the Lord as the clay is in the hands of the potter and that the sorest Judgments that any City can fall under are but the Isa 5. 16. demonstrations of his Soveraign Prerogative Psal 9. 16. The Lord is known by the Judgments which he executeth the Power Justice and Soveraignty of God shines most gloriously in the execution of his Judgments upon the world Secondly God inflicts great and sore Judgments upon the Sons of men that the world may stand in awe of him and that they may learn to fear and tremble before him when he Consult these Scriptures Exod. 15. 14 15 16. Josh 2. 10 11. Rev. 15. 4. appears as a consuming fire he expects that the Nation should tremble and that the Inhabitants should fear before him 1 Sam. 16. 4. And Samuel did that which the Lord spake and came to Bethlehem and the Elders of the Town trembled at his coming and said comest thou peaceable Shall the Elders of Bethlehem tremble for fear that Samuel came to denounce some grievous Judgment against them and shall not we tremble when God has executed his terrible Judgments 1 Kings 21. 20 21 22 23 24 27 28 29. upon us Shall Ahab tremble and humble himself and fast and lye in sackcloth when Judgments are but threatned and shall not we tremble and fear before the great God who has actually inflicted upon us his three great Judgments Pestilence Sword and Fire Shall the Ninevites both Princes Jonah 3. 3 4. 5 6 7 8 9 10. Nobles and people tremble and humble themselves in sackcloth and ashes when God doth but threaten to over-throw their great their rich their populous City and shall not we tremble and lye low before the Lord when we see great London rich and populous London laid in ashes before our eyes When the hand of the Lord was stretched out Exod. 15. 15 16. See 2 Kings 6. 30. and Chap. 7. 6 7. 15. Jer. 4. 7 8 9. against the Egyptians the Dukes of Edom were amazed and the mighty men of Moab trembled Ah how severely has the hand of the Lord been stretched out against London and all her Inhabitants and therefore what cause have we to be amazed and to tremble before that God who has appeared in flames of fire against us Lam. 2. 3 4. He hath cut off in his fierce anger all the horn of Israel he hath drawn back his right hand before the enemy and he burned against Jacob like a flaming fire which devoureth round about He bent his bow like an enemy and poured out his fury like fire God burnt down their City their Temple their Gates their Princely Habitations their glorious Structures in the fierceness of his anger and in the greatness of his wrath O Sirs when God falls upon burning work when he pours out
his fury like fire when like a flaming fire he devours all our pleasant things and lays all our glory in dust and ashes we may safely conclude that his anger is fierce and that his wrath is great against us and therefore what eminent cause have we to fear and tremble before him God is a great and dreadful God Dan. 9. 4. A mighty God and terrible Deut. 7. 21. A great and terrible God Nehem. 1. 5. He is so in himself and he has been so in his fiery Dispensations towards us that the world by such remarkable severities may be kept in awe of him Generally fear doth more in the We are worthy saith Chrysostom of Hell if for no other cause yet for fearing Hell and the evil of punishment more then Christ Chrys Hom. 5. in Epist ad Rom. world then love As there is little sincerity so there is but little ingenuity in the world and that is the reason why many very rarely think of God but when they are afraid of him Many times Judgments work where Mercies do not win That famous Thomas Waldo of Lions the Father of the Waldenses seeing among many met together to be merry one suddenly fall down dead in the street it struck so to his heart that he went home a penitent it wrought to a severe and pious reformation of his life and he lived and dyed a precious man Though Pharaoh was not a pin the better for all the heavy Judgments that God inflicted upon him yet Jethro taking notice of those dreadful Plagues and Judgments that fell upon Pharaoh and upon his people and likewise upon the Amalekites was thereby converted and became a Proselyte as Rabbi Solomon noteth upon that 19. of Prov. 25. The world is so untractable that frowns will do more with them then smiles That God may keep wicked men in awe and in subjection to him he sees it very needful to bring common and general and over-spreading Judgments upon them Rev. 15. 4. Who shall not fear thee O Lord and glorifie thy Name for thou only art holy for all Nations shall come and worship before thee for thy Judgments are made manifest O Sirs when the Judgments of the Lord come to be made manifest then it highly concerns all ranks and sorts of men to fear the Lord and to glorifie his Name How manifest how visible has the raging Pestilence and the bloody Sword and the devouring Flames of London been in the midst of us and O that our fear and dread and awe of God were as manifest and as visible as his Judgments have been and still are for his hand to this very hour is stretched out against us Isa 9. 12. But Thirdly God inflicts great and sore Judgments upon the Sons of men and upon Cities and Countries to express and make known his Power Justice Anger Severity and Indignation against sinners and their sinful courses by which See Jer. 14. 15 16. Lam. 4. 11. Jer. 4. 15. to verse 19. he has been provoked Deut. 32. 19. And when the Lord saw it he abhorred them because of the provoking of his sons and of his daughters Vers 21. They have provoked me to anger with their vanities and I will provoke them to anger with a foolish Nation Vers 22. For a fire is kindled in my anger and shall burn unto the lowest Hell and shall consume the earth with her increase and set on fire the foundations of the mountains Vers 24. They shall be burnt with hunger and devoured with burning heat or with burning coals and with bitter destruction There is a knowledge of God by his Works as well as by his Word and by his Judgments as well as by his mercies In his dreadful Judgments every one may run and read his Power his Justice his Anger his Severity and his Indignation against sin and sinners 'T is irrevocable sins that bring irrevocable Judgments upon sinners whilst men hold on in committing great iniquities God will hold on in inflicting answerable severities When God cannot prevail with men to desist from sinning men shall not prevail with God to desist from destroying of them their habitations and all their pleasant things Jer. 2. 15. The young Lions roared upon him and yelled and they made his Land waste his Cities are burnt without Inhabitant Vers 17. Hast thou not procured this unto thy self in that thou hast forsaken the Lord thy God when he led thee by the way When Nicephorus Phocas had built a mighty strong Wall about his Palace for his own security in the night time he heard a voice crying out unto him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. O Emperour though thou buildest the wall as high as the clouds yet if sin be within it will overthrow all Sin like those Traitors in the Trojan Horse will do Cities Countries more hurt in one night then ten thousand open enemies could do in ten years Cities and Countries might flourish and continue as the days of Heaven and be as the Sun before the Almighty if his wrath be not provoked by their prophaneness and wickedness So that it is not any divine Aspect of the Heavens nor any malignant Conjunction of the Stars and Planets but the loose manners the ungracious lives and the enormous sins of men that lay Cities and Countries desolate Jer. 13. 22. And if thou say in thine heart wherefore come these things upon me wherefore hath the Lord sent plague sword famine and fire to devour and destroy and to lay all in ashes The Answer is For the greatness of thine iniquity God will in flames of fire discover his anger and indignation against sin and sinners The Heathen Herodotus Historian observes in the ruine of Troy that the sparkles and ashes of burnt Troy served for a lasting monument of Gods great anger and displeasure against great sinners The burning of Troy served to teach men that God punisheth great sinners with great plagues and certainly Londons being laid in ashes is a high evidence that God knows how to be angry with sinners and how to punish sin with the sorest of Judgments The Gods of the Gentiles were senseless stocks and stones not able to apprehend much less to revenge any injury done unto them Well therefore might the Philosopher be bold with Hercules to put him to his thirteenth labour in seething of his dinner and Martial with Priapus in threatning him to throw him into the fire if he looked not well to his Trees A child may play at the hole of a dead Asp and a filly woman may strike a dead Lyon but who dare play with a living Serpent who dare take a roaring Lyon by the beard O that Ch●istians then would take heed how they provoke the living God for he is a consuming fire and with a word of his mouth yea with the breath of his mouth he is able to throw down and to burn up the whole frame of Nature and to destroy all Creatures from
have rejected betrayed crucified scorned opposed and persecuted come in flames of fire to pass an eternal Doom upon them I have read a story of two Souldiers Holcot in lib. Sap. that coming to the Valley of Jehosaphat in Judea and one saying to the other Here in this place shall be the general Judgment wherefore I will now take up my place where I will then fit and so lifting up a stone he sate down upon it as taking possession before hand but being sate and ●ooking up to Heaven such a quaking and trembling fell upon him that falling to the earth he remembred the day of Judgment with horrour and amazement ever after The case of this Souldier will be the case of every wicked man when Christ shall appear in flames of fire to pass an eternal Sentence of Condemnation upon all the Goats that shall be found on the left hand It is strange in this so serious a business Mat. 25. 41. to vers 46. of the day of Judgment and of Christs appearing in flaming fire which so nearly concerns the sons of men how mens wits will busie them●elves in many nice inquiries ye may meet with many such questions in the School-men as 1. How long is it to the day of Judgment 2. In what place of the world shall the Judgment-day be held 3. What kind of fire shall then be burning 4. Whether Christ shall come with a Cross carried before him As if Malefactors in the Gaol should fall a reasoning and debating what weather it would be at the day of Assises or of the Judges habit and retinue and never bethink themselves how to answer their Indictment that they may escape condemnation London's flames should put us in mind of Christs coming in flames of fire and the burning of London should put us in mind of the burning of the world when Christ shall come to judge the sons of men according to their works and the terror and dread of that fire and mens endeavours to escape it should put us upon all those holy ways and means whereby we may escape the fury of those dreadful flames that shall never be quenched And the Houses and Estates that were consumed by the devouring fire in London-streets should put us upon securing a house not made with hands 2 Cor. 5. 1 2. Prov. 8. 18. 1 Pet. 1. 4. Mat. 6. 19 20 21. but one eternal in the Heavens and upon securing durable riches and an inheritance that fadeth not away and upon laying up for our selves treasures in Heaven where neither moth nor rust nor thieves and let me adde nor flames can break through corrupt or steal or burn The more general any Judgment is the more it should put us in mind of the General day of Judgment Now the burning of London was a general Jud●ment a Judgment that reaches from one end of the Land to another as I shall more fully evidence before I close up this Discourse and therefore it should remind us of the universal Conflagration of the whole World and the works thereof And thus you see the ends that God has in respect of the wicked in inflicting great and sore Judgments upon Persons Cities and Countrie● But pray Sir what are those ●igh and holy ends in respect Quest of the people of God th●●●od aims at by his inflicting of great and sore Judgments upon Persons Cities and Countries I suppose they are such as follow First To bring about those specia● favours and mercies Answ that God intends them By the dreadful Judgments that God inflicted upon Pharaoh and upon his people and upon his Country God brought about the freedom and liberty of his people to worship him according to his own prescriptions The great difference and contest between God and Pharaoh was who should have their wills God would have his people to worship him according to his own mind but Pharaoh Exod. 5. 1 2. Exod. 7. 16. Exod. 8. 8. 20. 25. 27. 29. Exod. 9. 1. 13. Exod. 10. 3. 7. 8. 11. 24. Exod. 12. 31. Jer. 11. 4. Dan. 9. 12. was resolved to venture his all before they should have their freedom and liberty to serve their God Upon this God follows him with plague upon plague and never leaves spending of his plagues upon him till he had overthrown him and through his ruine brought about the freedom and liberty of his poor people The Babylonians were cruel enemies to Gods poor Israel and kept them in bondage yea in a fiery furnace seventy years At last God stirs up the spirit of Cyrus for his Churches sake and he by fi●e and sword lays Babylon waste and takes them Captive who had held his people in a long Captivity Now he by breaking the Babylonians in pieces like a potters vessel brought about as as instrument in the hand of God the freedom and liberty of Gods poor people as you may see by comparing that 45. of Isa 1 2 3 4 5 6. with that 1. Chapter of Ezra God stirs up the spirit of Cyrus to put forth a Proclamation ●●r Liberty for the Jews to go to their own Land and to 〈◊〉 the House of the Lord God of Israel and then he gra●●●●●ly stirs up the spirits of the people wisely and soberty to i●●●ove Turn to Obadiah and read from vers 11. to the end of the Chapter ●he liberty he had proclaimed Jer. 49. 1. Concer●●●● the Ammonites thus saith the Lord Hath Israel no sons hath he no heir why then doth their King inherit Gad and 〈◊〉 people dwell in his Cities When the ten Tribes were carried away captive the Ammonites who dwelt near the Tribe of Gad intruded into it and the Cities of it but mark what God saith in verse 2. Therefore behold the days come saith the Lord that I will cause 〈◊〉 ●●arm of war to be heard in Rabbah of the Ammonites that was their chief City and it shall be a desolate heap and her daughters that is lesser Towns shall be burnt with fire then shall Israel be heir unto them that were his heirs saith the Lord. God by fire and sword Here was Lex talionis observed they that invaded the inheritance of others had their own invaded by them would lay desolate the chief City of the Ammonites and her Towns and Villages that did belong to her and by these dreadful Dispensations he would make way for his people not only to possess their own Land but the Ammonites Land also I will leave the prudent Reader to make the Application We have been under greater and dreadfuller Judgments then ever this poor Nation hath groaned under in former times and who can tell but that the Lord by these amazing Judgments may bring about greater and better mercies and blessings then any yet we do enjoy The Rabins say of Civil Liberty that if the Heavens were Parchment the Sea Ink and every pile of Grass a Pen the praises of it could not be comprised nor expressed May we
not say more of a holy Liberty Liberty to serve and worship the Lord according to his own prescriptions and directions laid down in his blessed Word by which all worship and worshippers must be tryed at last is a pearl of price that none can sufficiently value Justinus the second Emperors Motto was Libertas res inaestimabilis Liberty is unvaluable The Lord give his people holy wise prudent sober humble and understanding hearts that they may know both how to prize and how to improve those liberties and mercies that he has handed to them through terrible Dispensations But Secondly God inflicts great Tryals and sore Judgments upon Persons and Places that he may awaken his own people out of that deep security that oftentimes seizeth upon Psal 30. 5 6 7 8 9. Math. 25. 5. 2 Sam. 2. 7. 15. and Chap. 24 15 16 17. 2 Kings 14. 25. Math. 12. 40. Jonah 1. 1 2 3. them What deep security had seized upon David so that God was forced to make use of the bloody Sword and of the sweeping Pestilence to awaken him Jonah was a Prophet he was a Servant of the Lord he was a Type of Christ he was a good man his name Jonah signifies a Dove though he had but little of the Dove in him being as passionate a man of an honest man as you have lightly heard of saith Luther Now Jonah having contracted guilt upon his conscience by acting quite contrary to Gods royal Call what a desperate senseless stupidity and security had seized upon him what a spiritual lethargy was poor Jonah in not much unlike that of the Smith Dog whom neither th● hammers above him nor the sparks of fire falling round about him can awake Jonah was not in a slumber but in a sound heavy deep and dead sleep and what a wonder what a prodigie was here that in all this stir and tumult and danger the winds whi●●ling and roaring the Sea working raging swelling frothing foaming and boiling like a pot the waves mounting up to Heaven and sinking down again to Hell as the Psalmist speaks the ship tumbling and tossing like a Tennis-ball the Mariners as stout fellows as they were surprized with fear and running up and down like men at their wits end like men that could not look pale death in the face with blood in their cheeks that yet Jonah should sleep and be as secure in that dreadful danger as if he had been in his own house sleeping on a bed of doune Oh the desperate security that may seize upon the best of Saints but this security God will cure in his Jonas's by some smart Tryal or by some heavy Judgment or other The Lethargy is best cured by a burning Ague Absolon 2 Sam. 14. 30. sends once or twice to Joab to come and speak with him but when he saw that Joab would not come he commands his corn-fields to be set on fire and this awakens him and fetches him with a witness So God by fiery afflictions and by burning up our comforts round about us awakens us and brings us to himself with a witness When Iron grows rusty we put it into the fire to purifie it and so when the people of God grow rusty and secure then the Lord brings them under fiery tryals to awaken them and to purifie them If Nero was so angry with Vespasian because he slept at his Musick how much more may the Lord be angry with all such as sleep and are secure under the most amazing and awakning Judgments But my hope and prayer is that the Lord has and will more and more graciously and effectually awaken all the wise slumbring Virgins upon whom this fiery Dispensation has past And therefore Thirdly In respect of his peoples sins God has several special ends that he aims at by all the fiery Tryals and smart Providences that he exercises them and others with As First God by these means designs a further and a fuller discovery of their sins In standing waters you cannot see the mud that lyes at the bottom of the Pool or Pond but Deut. 8. 2. when once the water is drawn away then it appears In times of prosperity there is a great deal of mud a great deal of Atheism unbelief discontent murmuring impatience passion pride c. that lyes at the bottom of mens hearts undiscovered Oh but when God shall once empty them of their Estates and burn up all their outward comforts and set them with Job upon the dunghil then the mud appears then a whole army of lusts discover themselves as we see in many this day whom you shall rarely find without tears in their eyes sighs in their hearts and complaints in their mouths Severe Providences are pills made purposely to clear the eye-sight 1 Kings 17. 18. And she said unto Elijah What have I to do with thee O thou man of God art thou come unto me to call my sin to remembrance and to slay my son If God had not taken away her son her sin had not been brought to remembrance O Sirs if God by this late dreadful Fire had not taken away your houses your goods your estates your trades many of your sins had not been brought to your remembrance though now you have lost most or all You may say with the Psalmist My Psal 51. 3. Turn to the Scriptures Gen. 42. 21. Jon. 4. 8 9. Jer. 9. 7. ult sins are ever before me my pride is ever before me my unbelief is ever before me my frowardness is ever before me my murmuring is ever before me my discontent is ever before me and my impatience is ever before me c. Good men never come to know how bad they are till they come to be exercised with severe Providences and smart Tryals It was the speech of a Holy man in a great sickness In thi● disease I have learned how great God is and what the evil of sin is I never knew to purpose what God was before nor what sin was before Afflictions are a Christians Glass in which they may run and read the greatness of God and the vileness of sin But Secondly By severe Providences and fiery Tryals God designs the preventing of sin Paul was one of the holiest men on earth called by some an earthly Angel and yet he needed a thorn in the flesh to prevent pride 2 Cor. 12. 7. And lest I should be exalted above measure through the abundance of the revelations there was given to me a thorn in the flesh the messenger of Satan to buffet me lest I should be exalted above measure Paul was in very great danger of being exalted above measure witness the doubling of those words in one verse Lest I should be exalted Lest I should be exalted Prudent Physicians sometimes give Physick to prevent diseases and so does the Physician of Souls as you may see by comparing the Scriptures in the Margine together The Job 33. 19-17 Chap. 34. 31 32. Job 40. 4
5. Hos 2. 6 7. burnt child dreads the fire Sin is but a bitter sweet 't is an evil worse then Hell it self Salt brine preserves from putrefaction and salt Marshes keep the sheep from rotting and so sharp Tryals severe Providences preserve the Saints from spiritual putrefying and from spiritual rotting The Rabbins to keep their Scholars from sin were wont to tell them that sin made Gods head ake and Saints under fiery tryals do find by experience that sin makes not only their heads but also their hearts ake and by this means God preserves his people from many sins which otherwise they would certainly fall into Beloved God by his fiery Dispensations has destroyed many or most of your outward comforts but little do you know the horrible sins that by this means the Lord has preserved you from A full Estate lays men most open to the greatest sins the worst of shares and the deadliest temptations The best of men have fallen foulest under their highest worldly enjoyments witness David Solomon Hezekiah c. Under your outward fulness how low was your communion with God how languishing were your Graces how lean were your Souls and how was your spring of inward Comforts dryed up How little had God of your thoughts your hearts your time your strength O Sirs how bad would you have been by this time if God had not removed those things that were but fuel to your lusts and quench-coals to your grace Well often think of this 't is a greater mercy to be preserved from sin yea from the least sin then 't is to enjoy the whole world But Thirdly By severe Providences and by fiery Tryals God designs the imbittering of sin to his people When God shall come and burn up mens comforts round about them then they will cry out Ah what a bitter thing is sin that puts God upon burning work then they will speak that language to their own Souls that the Prophet once spake to the Jews Jer. 2. 15. They made his land waste his cities are burnt with fire Vers 17. Hast thou not procured these things to thy self Vers 19. Thine own wickedness shall correct thee and thy back-slidings shall reprove thee know therefore and see that it is an evil thing and bitter that thou hast forsaken the Lord thy God and that my fear is not in thee saith the Lord God of Hosts So Chap. 4. 18. Thy way and thy doings have procured these things unto thee this is thy wickedness because it is bitter because it reacheth unto thy heart Yea now they will say that sin is bitternesses in the abstract and in the plural number also according to that of the Prophet Hosea Hos 12. 14. Ephraim provoked him to anger most bitterly or with bitternesses as the Hebrew has it Relations and friends may tell us that sin is a bitter thing and conscience may tell us that sin is a bitter thing and good books may tell us that sin is a bitter thing and men under terrours and horrours of spirit may tell us that sin is a bitter thing and the fore and heavy Judgments of God upon others may tell us that sin is a bitter thing and the Spirit by his secret whispers may tell us that sin is a bitter thing and Ministers may tell us that sin is a bitter thing they may tell you that 't is bitter to God it being the only thing in all the world that he has revealed his wrath from Heaven against and that is contrary to the Nature of God the Law of God the Being of God the Glory of God and the grand Designs of God They may tell you that 't is bitter to Christ witness his crying out in the bitterness of his Soul My God my God why hast thou forsaken me and witness the sorrows and heaviness of his Soul and his sweating clods of blood When he hung upon the Cross they gave him gall and vinegar to drink but no gall was so bitter to him as your sins They may tell you that sin is bitter to the Spirit of God Gen. 6. 3. Eph. 4. 29. for nothing grieves him and provokes him and vexes him but sin They may tell you that sin is bitter to the good Angels every sin that you commit is as a dagger at their hearts there is nothing in all the world so bitter to them as to see their Lord and Master daily yea hourly crucified by sinners fins They may tell you that sin is bitter to the evil Angels it being the only thing for which they were banished the Court of Heaven and turned down to the lowest Hell where they are kept in chains of darkness to the Judgment Jude 6. of the great day They may tell you that sin is bitter to the worst of men witness Adams hiding of himself and Gen. 3. 10. Math. 27. Gen. 4. 13. Rom. 8. 20 21 22. Judas his hanging of himself and Cains crying out My burden is greater then I am able to bear They may tell you that 't is bitter to the Creatures who groan under their burdens and who long to be delivered from that bondage that the sin of man hath subjected them to and yet for all this we will not feelingly affectionately experimentally say that sin is bitter till God comes and burns us up Lam. 4. 11. And gives us gall and wormwood to drink Chap. 3. 19 20. Remembring mine affliction and my misery the wormwood and the gall My soul hath them still in remembrance and is humbled in me O Sirs how bitter should sin be to you who have seen London all in flames Certainly God by burning up your sweet pleasant and delightful things would teach you to taste a greater bitterness in sin then ever O happy Fire that shall render God and Christ and Heaven and Promises and Ordinances more sweet and sin more bitter to poor sinners Souls Doubtless one of Gods great designs by this late Judgment of Fire is to imbitter sin to all sorts of men When Judgments imbitter our sins to us then they work kindly powerfully effectually and then we may conclude that there was a hand of love in those Judgments and then we shall justifie the Lord and say with the Church Lam. 1. 18. The Lord is righteous for I have rebelled against him or as the Hebrew runs Because I have imbittered him he is righteous in all the sore judgments that he hath inflicted upon me for I have imbittered him against me by my most bitter sins But Fourthly By severe Providences and fiery Tryals God designs the mortifying and purging away of his peoples sins Isa 1. 25. And I will turn my hand upon thee to wit to correct or chastise thee and purely purge away thy dross or drosses Dan. 11. 35. Mal. 3. 1 2 3. Gods fire is in Zion and his furnace in Jerusalem Isa 31. 9. and take away all thy tin or tins in the plural number Some by dross understand gross
men under their losses crosses tryals and sufferings from the people of God When they are under fiery tryals what an evil spirit what a desperate spirit what a sullen spirit what a proud spirit what a Satanical spirit what a hellish spirit do they discover they tell all the world that they are under the power and dominion of the God of this Phil. 2. 2. 2 Tim. 2. 26. World But when the people of God are under fiery tryals they make conscience of carrying of it so as that they may convince the world that God is in them of a truth and that they are sincere and upright before the Lord however they are judged and censured as Hypocrites Deceivers Dissemblers and what not O that all that are sufferers by this fiery Dispensation would make it their business their work their Heaven so to carry it under their present tryals as to convince all gain-sayers of the sincerity integrity and uprightness of their hearts both towards the Lord his people his ways his Ordinances his interest and all his concernments in this world And thus much for the gracious Ends that God aims at in all those severe Providences and fiery Tryals that of late he has exercised his people with The next thing we are to inquire after is those sins for which the Lord inflicts so heavy a Judgment as this of Fire upon the Sons of men Now for the opening of this give me leave to propose this Question Viz. What are those sins that bring the fiery Dispensation that Quest bring the Judgment of Fire upon Cities Nations and Countries Now that I may give a full and fair Answer to this necessary and important Q●estion will you please to premise with me these four things First We need not question but that some of all sorts ranks and degrees of men in and about that once great and glorious City did eminently contribute to the bringing down of that dreadful Judgment of Fire that has turned that renowned City into Ashes doubtless Superiors and Inferiors Ministers and People Husbands and Wives Parents and Children Masters and Servants Rich and Poor Honourable and Base Bond and Free have all had a hand in the bringing down that Judgment of Fire that has turned London into a ruinous heap But Secondly Premise this with me viz. That 't is a greater Argument of humility integrity and holy ingenuity to fear our selves and to be jealous of our selves rather then others as the Disciples of Christ did Mat. 26. 21 22. And as they Math. 26. 21 22. did eat he said Verily I say unto you that one of you shall betray me And they were exceeding sorrowful and began every one of them to say unto him Lord is it I 'T is better for every man to do his best to ransack and search his own Soul and to find out the Achan the accursed thing in his own bosom Lam. 3. 40. Joshua 7. that has brought that dreadful Judgment of Fire upon us then for men without any Scripture-warrant to fix it upon this party and that this sort of men and that There is no Christian to him that smites upon his own heart his own ●●east his own thigh saying What have I done The neglect of this duty the Prophet long since has complained of No man repents himself of his wickedness saying Jer. 8. 6. What have I done that is none comparatively So how rare is it to find a burnt Citizen repenting himself of his wickedness and saying What have I done Most men are ready to blame others more then themselves and to judge Math. 7. 1 2 3 4. others rather then themselves to be the persons that have brought down this Judgment of Fire upon us 'T was a good Saying of one of the Ancients Amat Deus seipsos judicantes Augustine non judicare God loves to judge them that judge others rashly but not those that judge themselves religiously But Thirdly Premise this with me in times of common Judgements common Calamities and Miseries other of the Saints and Servants of God have lookt upon their own sins as the procuring-causes of the common Calamity Thus David did in that 2 Sam. 24. 15. So the Lord sent a pestilence upon Israel from the morning even to the time appointed and there dyed of the people from Dan even to Beer-sheba seventy thousand men but mark the 17. verse And David spake unto the Lord when he saw the Angel that smote the people and said Lo I have sinned and I have done wickedly but these sheep what have they done let thy hand I pray thee be against me and against my fathers house And thus did good Nebemiah Nehem. 1. 3 6 7. And they said unto me The remnant that are left of the captivity there in the province are in great affliction and reproach the wall of Jerusalem also is broken down and the gates thereof burnt with fire Both I and my fathers house have sinned we have dealt very corruptly against thee and have not kept thy commandments nor the statutes nor the judgments which thou commandest thy servant Moses Now certainly 't is as much our glory as our duty to write after these blessed Copies that these Worthies have set before us Alexander had somewhat a wry neck and his Souldiers thought it an honour to be like him How much more should we count it an honour to be like to David and Nehemiah in such a practice as is honourable to the Lord and advantagious to our selves But what Plutarch said of Demosthenes That he was excellent at praising the worthy Acts of his Ancestors but not so at imitating them is applicable to the present case and to many who have been burnt up in our day But Fourthly and lastly Premise this with me there were many sins amongst them that did profess to fear God in that great City which may and ought to work them to justifie the Lord and to say that he is righteous in his fiery Dispensations I may well say to the burnt Citizens of London what the Prophet Oded to them in that 2 Chron. 28. 10. But are there not with you even with you sins against the Lord your God But you will say What sins were there among the professing people in London that may and ought to work them to justifie the Lord and to say that he is just and righteous and that he has done them no wrong though he has burnt them up and turned them out of all I answer That there were these seven sins among others Answ to be found amongst many of them I say not amongst all of them all which call aloud upon them to lye low at the foot of God and to subscribe to the Righteousness of God though he has turned them out of house and home and burnt up their substance on every hand First There was among many Professors of the Gospel in London too great a conformity to the fashions of the
world how many professing men in that great City were drest up like fantastical Anticks and women like Bartholomew-babies to the dishonour of God the shame of Religion the hardning of the wicked the grieving of the weak and the provoking of divine Justice When Darius changed the fashion of his Scabbard from the Persian manner into the Mode of the Greeks the Chaldean Astrologers prognosticated that the Persian Monarchy should be translated to them whose fashion he counterfeited Certainly that Nation may fear a scourge from that Nation or Nations whose fashions they follow Zepha 1. 8. And it shall come to pass in the day of the Lords Sacrifice that I will punish the Princes and the Kings children and all such as are cloathed with strange apparel This is a stinging and a flaming check against all Fashion-mongers against all such as seem to have consulted with French Italian Persian and all Outlandish Monsters to advise them of all their several modes and fashions of vice and that are so dextrous at following of them that they are more compleat in them then their pattern● Certainly if ever such Wantons be saved 't will be by fire Strange apparel is part of the Old man that must be put off if ever men or women intend to go to Heaven What dreadful things are thundred out against those proud curious Dames of Jerusalem by the Prophet Isaiah who being himself a Courtier inveighs Isa 38. 16. ult as punctually against the noble vanity of Apparel as if he had even then viewed the Ladies Ward-robes And those vanities of theirs brought desolating and destroying Judgments upon them And it shall come to pass that instead of sweet Isa 38. 24 25 26. smell there shall be a stink and instead of a girdle a rent and instead of well-set hair baldness and instead of a stomacher a girding of sack-cloth and burning of instead beauty Thy men sh●ll fall by the sword and thy mighty in the war And her gates shall lament and mourn and she being desolate shall sit upon the ground As light and slight as many make of vain Apparel yet Cyrian and Augustine draw up this Conclusion That superfluous Apparel is worse then Whoredom because Whoredom only corrupts Chastity but this corrupts Nature Seneca complained that many in his time were more sollicitous of their attire then of their good behaviour and that they had rather that the Common-wealth should be troubled then their Locks and set looks I have read of the Grecians that when they wished a curse upon their enemies it was this That they should please themselves in bad customs There are many who lift their heads high who seem to be under this curse this day Why doth the Apostle say saith one of the Ancients Above all things swear not Is it worse Austin Jam. 5. 12. to swear then to steal worse to swear then to commit adultery worse to swear then to kill a man No But the Apostle would fortifie us as much as he could against a postilent custom to punish the pestilent customs and fashions that were amongst us God sent the Pestilence in 1665. and the fiery Judgment in 1666. And the Lord grant that the bloody Sword in the hands of cruel Cut-throats that are brutish and skilful to destory be not sent amongst us some Ezek. 21. 31. other year to punish the same iniquity O Sirs what was more common among many Professors in London then to be cloathed in strange Apparel A la mode de France Mark those that affected the Babylonian Habit were sent Captives Ezek. 23. 15. to Babylon They that borrowed the fashions of the Egyptians may get their boils and botches Certainly such as fear the Lord should go in no Apparel but First such as they are willing to dye in Secondly to appear before the Ancient of Isa 26. 8 9 10. days in when his Judgments are abroad in the earth Thirdly to stand before a Judgment-seat But Secondly There was among many Professors of the Gospel in London much luke-warmness and coldness in the things of God the City was full of luke-warm Laodiceans The Rev. 3. 16 17. Math. 24. 12. love of many to God to his people to his ways and to his instituted Worship was cold very cold stark cold God destroyed the old World by water for the heat of their lusts and God has destroyed the City of London by fire for the coldness of their love that dwelt therein I have read of Anastati●s the Emperor how God shot him to death with a Thunder-bolt because of his luke-warmness and formality But Thirdly There was a great deal of worldliness and earthly-mindedness and coyetousness amongst the professing people of London O Sirs the world is all shadow and vanity 't is filia noctis like Jonabs Gourd a man may set Jonah 4. under its shadow for a time but it soon decays and dyes The main reason why many Professors dote upon the world is because they are not acquainted with a greater glory Men ate Acorns till they were acquainted with the use of Wheat The Load-stone cannot draw the Iron when the Diamond is in presence and shall earthly vanities draw the Soul when Christ the Pearl of price is in presence Many of the Prosessors of London were great Worshippers of the golden Calf and therefore God is just in turning their golden Calf into ashes The world may well be resembled to the fruit that undid us all which was fair to the sight smooth in handling sweet in taste but deadly in effect and operation The world in all its bravery is no better then the Cities which Solomon gave to Hiram which he called Cabul 1 Kings 9. 13. that is displeasing or dirty The whole world is circular the heart of man triangular and we know a Circle cannot fill a Triangle If the heart of man be not filled with the three Persons in Trinity it will be filled with the world 1 Joh. 5. 7. the flesh and the Devil Riches like bad servants never stay long with one master what certainty is there in that which one storm at Sea one treacherous friend one false cath one ball of fire yea one spark of fire may strip us of O Sirs if you can gather grapes of thorns and figs of thistles then go on and dote upon the world still All the things of this world are vain things they are vanity of vanities Eccle. 1. 2. all in Heaven count them vain and all in Hell count them vain a Jacobus piece is but as a chip to them Pearls are but as pebbles in their eyes Lazarus was a Preacher as some conceive and Dives a Lawyer sure I am that Lazarus in Heaven is now rich enough and happy enough and Dives in Hell is now poor enough and miserable enough H● who makes his world his God while he is in the world what will he do for a God when he goes out of this world Well Sirs
the heels and hurled him over-board and then the storm ceased and the Sea was quie● It will be hard to name an Atheist either in the holy Scripture or in Ecclesiastical Histories or in Heathen Writings which came not to some fearful end and therefore no wonder if Austin would not be an Atheist for half an hour for the gain of a million of worlds because he knew not but God might in that time make an end of him I have been the longer upon this Head because Atheist and Atheism did never so abound in this Land as it hath done these last years And that you may the clearer see who they are that have brought that sad Judgment of Fire upon that once glorious City of London Ah London London 't was the gross Atheism and the practical Atheist that was within and without thy Walls that has turned thee into a ruinous heap Mark I readily grant that there is the seeds reliques stirring and moving of Atheism in the best and holiest of the Sons of men but then 1. They disallow of it and discountenance it 2. 'T is lamented and bewailed by them 3. They oppose it and conflict with it 4. They use all holy and conscientious means and endeavours to be rid of it 5. By degrees they get ground against it and therefore God never did nor never will turn Cities or Kingdom● into flames for those seeds and remains of Atheism that are to be found in the best of Saints 't is that Atheism that is rampant that raigns in the hearts and lives of sinners as a Prince raigns upon his Throne that brings desolating and destroying Judgments upon the most flourishing Kingdoms and the most glorious Cities that are in the World But Secondly Luxury and Intemperance bring desolating and destroying Judgments upon Places and Persons Joel 1. 5. Awake ye drunkards and weep and howl all ye drinkers of In Ecclesiastical History you may read of one Drunkard who being toucht with his sin wept himself blind but the Drunkards of our days are more apt to drink themselves blind then to weep themselves blind wine because of the new wine for it is cut off from your mouth Verse 19. O Lord to thee will I cry for the fire hath devoured the pastures of the wilderness and the flames have burnt all the trees of the field Verse 20. The beasts of the field cry unto thee for the rivers of the water are dryed up and the fire hath devoured the pastures of the wilderness Luxury is a sin that brings both famine and fire upon a people it brought the Chaldeans upon the Jews who by fire and sword laid all waste The Horses of the Caldees destroyed their Pastures Vines Fig-trees Pomegranates c. which grew in many places of the Land and their Souldiers set their houses on fire and so brought all to ruine Amos 6. 1. Wo to them that are at ease in Zion Verse 3. That put far away the evil day Verse 4. That lye upon beds of ivory and stretch themselves upon their couches and eat the lambs out of the flock and the calves out of the midst of the stall Verse 5. That chant to the sound of the viol and invent to themselves instruments of musick like David Verse 6. That drink wine in bowls and anoint themselves with the chief oyntments but they are not grieved for the affliction of Jos●ph Verse 7. Therefore now shall they go captive with the first that go captive and the banquet of them that stretched themselves shall be removed Verse 8. The Lord God hath sworn by himself saith the Lord God of Hosts I abhor the excellency of Jacob and hate his palaces therefore will I deliver up the city with all that is therein Verse 11. For behold the Lord commandeth and he will smite the great house with breaches and the little house with clefts Luxury is a sin that forfeits all a mans enjoyments that turns him out of house and home Samaria was a very glorious City and a very strong City and a very rich City and a very populous City and a very ancient City c. and yet Luxury and Intemperance turned it into ashes it brought desolating and destroying Judgments upon it The rich Citizens of Samaria were given up to mirth and musick to Luxuries and excesses to riotousness and drunkenness to feasting and carousing and by these vanities and debaucheries they provoked the Lord to command the Chaldeans to fall on and to spoil them of their riches and to lay their glorious City in ashes So 't was Luxury and Intemperance that provoked the Lord to rain Hell out of Heaven upon Sodom and Gomorrah Luxury turned those rich and populous Gen. 18. Cities into ruinous heaps Ah London London the Luxuries and excesses the riotousness and drunkenness the mad feasting and carousing that have been within and without thy Walls that have been within thy great Halls Taverns and other great Houses hath turned thee into ashes and laid thy glory in the dust O you burnt Citizens of London what shameful spewing hath been in some of your Feasts as if Sardanapolus Apicius and Heliogabalus were still alive How often have many of you poured into your bodies such intoxicating drinks as hath many times laid you asleep stript you of your reason took away your hearts robbed you of your selves and laid a beast in your room Drunkenness is so base so vile a sin that it transforms the Soul deforms the body bereaves the brain betrays the strength defiles the affections and metamorphoseth the whole man yea it unmans the man Cyrus the Persian Xenophon Monarch being demanded of his Grandfather Astyages why he would drink no wine answered For fear lest they give me poyson for saith he yesterday when you celebrated your Nativity I judged that some body had poysoned all the wine they drunk because at the taking away of the Cloth not one of all those that were present at the Feast arose in his right mind Hath it not been thus with many of you if it hath lay your hands upon your mouths and say the Lord is righteous though he hath laid your houses in ashes Anacharses used to say that the first cup of wine was for thirst the second for nourishment the third for mirth and the fourth for madness but what would he have said had he lived within or without the Walls of London these last six years Ah London London were there none Isa 5. 22. Hab. 2. 17. within nor without thy Walls that were strong to drink and that gave their neighbour drink and that put the bottle to them to make them drunk that they might look on their nakedness Were there none within nor without thy Walls that with Marcus Antonius Darius Alexander the Great c. did boast and glory and pride themselves in their great abilities to drink down any that should come into their Company Were there none within nor without thy Walls O London
ashamed to walk the streets who have once carried it with a very high hand Ah London London were there none within nor without Hos 12. 7. Amos 8. 5. Deut. 25. 13. thy Walls that had the ballance of deceit in their hands and that loved to oppress falsifying the ballances by deceit and that had in their bags divers weights that did sell by one measure and buy by another that had wicked ballances Micha 6. 11. and the bag of deceitful weights in their hands their Houses their Shops their Ware-houses Well suppose there were many such within and without the Walls of London what of that why then I would say First Such run counter-cross to divine Commands Levit. 19. 35 36. Ye shall do no unrighteousness in judgment in met●yard in weight or in measure Just ballances just weights a Levit. 19. 13. Mark 10. 19. 1 Cor. 7. 5. just Ephah and a just hin shall ye have Ezek. 45. 10. Ye shall have just ballances and a just Ephah and a just bath Deut. 25. 13 14 15. Thou shalt not have in thy bag divers weights a great and a small But thou shalt have a perfect and just weight a perfect and just measure shalt thou have that thy days may be lengthned in the land which the Lord thy God giveth thee We have a common Saying Weight and measure is Heavens treasure But Secondly Such persons and such practices are an abomination to the Lord Deut. 25. 16. For all that do such things and all that do unrighteousness are an abomination unto the Lord thy God Prov. 11. 1. A false ballance is abomination to the Lord. Prov. 20. 10. Divers weights and divers measures both of them are alike abomination to the Lord and a false ballance is not good Now mark the very weights and measures are an abomination to the Lord how much more the men that make use of them But Thirdly Such act counter-cross to Gods delight Prov. 11. 1. A just weight is his delight Prov. 16. 11. A just weight and ballance are the Lords They are commanded by the Lord and commended by the Lord and they are the delight of the Lord. But Fourthly Such act counter-cross to his Nature which is holy just and righteous and to all his administrations Ezek. 18. and Chap. 33. 17. 20. 29. which are full of righteousness justice and equity But Fifthly Such act counter-cross to the very Light and Law of Nature by not dealing by others as they wou●d have Math. 7. 12. others deal by them They are the very botches of the Land and enemies to all Civil Society But Sixthly Such stir up the anger and indignation of God against themselves Ezek. 22. 13. Behold therefore I have smitten mine hand at thy dishonest gain which thou hast made or at thy covetousness as some render the Hebrew word or at thy money gotten by fraud and force and over-reaching and cheating of others as others render it God is here said to smite his hands at their dishonest gain to note the greatness of his anger wrath and indignation against them and his readiness and resolvedness to take vengeance on them by animating i●stigating encouraging and stirring up the Chaldeans to destroy their persons by the Sword and to consume their riches and houses by fire Chap 21. 17. God has no hand to smite but this is spoken after the manner of men who oftentimes express the greatness of their wrath and rage by smiting their hands one against another God to shew the greatness of his spleen and rage in a holy sense against them for their dishonest gain expresses it by the smiting of his hands 1 Thes 4. 6. That no man go beyond or defrand his brother in any matter because th●t the Lord is the avenger of all such first or last vengeance will reach them who make it their business their trade to ov●r-reach others But Seventhly Such act counter-cross to the Examples of the most eminent Saint● To the Example of Moses Numb 16. 15 I have not tak●n an ass from them neither have I hurt one of them Of Samuel 1 Sam. 12. 3 4 5. Of Zacharias and Elizabeth Luke 1. 5 6. Of Paul Acts 24 16. yea to the Examples of all the Apostles Judas excepted 2 Cor. 1. 12. Chap. 7. 2. Receive us we have wronged no man we have corrupted no man we have defrauded no man But Eighthly and lastly Such act counter-cross to their own everlasting happiness and blessedness 1 Cor. 6. 8 9. Nay you do wrong and defraud and that your brethren Know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the Kingdom of Heaven Unrighteous persons may hear much of Heaven and talk much of Heaven and set their faces towards Heaven but they shall never inherit the Kingdom of Heaven God himself has lockt fast the gate of blessedness against the unrighteous and therefore all the world shall never be able to open it Heaven would be no Heaven but a Hell if the unrighteous should inhabit there To sum up all If such persons run counter-cross to Gods commands if their persons and practices are an abomination to the Lord if they act counter-cross to Gods delight and to his Nature yea to the very Light and Law of Nature to the best Examples and to their own happiness and blessedness is it any wonder then to see divine Justice set such mens houses on fire about their ears and to see the flames consume such Estates as were got either by fraud or force by craft or cruelty c. Now the gaining of the things of this world by hook o● by crook or by such wicked courses and cursed practices tha● we have been discoursing on I cannot charge upon the peopl● of God that did truly fear him whose habitations were o●ce within or without the Walls of London because such practices would neither stand with Grace nor with the Honour of God nor with the Credit of Religion nor with the Law of God nor with the Law of Nature nor with the Peace of a Saints Soul Besides 't is very observable to me that those that have the ballances of deceit in their hand are called Caananites in that 12. of Hos 7. He is a merchant th● ballances of deceit are in his hand he loveth to oppress He● He is Canaan that is a meer natural man that hath no common honesty in him a money-merchant one that cares no● how he comes by it so he may have it one that counts all good fish that comes to his net though it be through cunning contrivances or violent practices But Fourthly Desperate incorrigibleness and unreformedness under wasting and destroying Judgments brings the desolating Judgment of Fire upon a people Isa 42. 24 25. Who Levit. 26. Deut. 28. Turn to that Jer. 30. 23 24. gave Jacob for a spoil and Israel to the robbers did not the Lord he against whom we have sinned For they would not walk in his ways neither
were they obedient unto his Law Therefore he hath poured upon him the fury of his anger and the strength of battel and it hath set him on fire round about yet he knew not and it burned him yet he laid it not to heart Levit. 26. 27 28. 31 32 33. And if ye will not for all this hearken unto me but walk contrary unto me then will I walk contrary unto you also in fury and I even I will chastise you seven times for your sins And I will make your Cities waste and bring your Sanctuaries unto desolations And I will bring the Land into desolation and your enemies which dwell therein shall be astonished at it And I will scatter you among the Hea then and will draw out a sword after you and your Land shall be desolate and your Cities waste Isa 1. 5. 7 8. Why should you be stricken any more ye will revolt more and more the whole head is sick and the whole heart faint your Country is desolate your Cities are burnt with fire your Land-strangers devour it in your presence and it is desolate as over-thrown by strangers And the daughter of Zion is left as a cottage in a vineyard as a lodge in a garden of cucumbers as a besieged City Amos 4. 6 7 8 9 10 11. And I also have given you cleanness of teeth in all your Cities and want of bread in all your places yet have ye not returned unto me saith the Lord. And also I have withholden the rain from you when there were yet three months to the harvest and I caused it to rain upon one City and caused it not to rain upon another City one piece was rained upon and the piece whereupon it rained not withered So two or three Cities wandred unto one City to drink water but they were not satisfied yet have ye not returned unto me saith the Lord. I have smitten you with blasting and mildew when your gardens and your vineyards and your fig-trees and your olive-trees increased the palmer-worm devoured them yet have ye not returned unto me saith the Lord. I have sent among you the pestilence after the manner of Egypt your young men have I slain with the sword and have taken away your horses and I have made the stink of your camps to come up unto your nostils yet have ye not returned unto me saith the Lord. I have overthrown some of you as God overthrew Sodom and Gomorrah and ye were as a fire-brand pluckt out of the burning yet have ye not returned unto me saith the Lord. By all these Scriptures 't is most evident that desperate incorrigibleness and unreformedness under wasting and destroying Judgments brings the fiery Dispensations of God upon a people Ah London London how long has the Lord been striving with thee by his Spirit by his Word by his Messengers by his Mercies and by lesser Judgments and yet thou hast been incorrigible incurable and irrecoverable under all God lookt that the Agues Fevers small Pox strange Sicknesses want of Trade Poverty that was coming on like an armed man upon thee with all the lesser Fires that have been kindled in the midst of thee should have awakned thee to repentance and yet under all how proud how stout how hard how obdurate hast thou been God lookt that the bloody Sword that the Nations round hath drawn against thee should have humbled thee and brought thee to his foot and yet thou hast rejected the remedy of thy recovery God lookt that the raging devouring Pestilence that in 1665. destroyed so many ten thousands of thy Inhabitants should have astonished thee and have been as a Prodigy unto thee to have affrighted thee out of thy sins and to have turned thee to the most High But yet after so stupendious and amazing Judgments thou wast hardned in thy sins and refusest to return By all these divers kinds of Judgmen●s how little did God prevail with thy Magistracy Ministry or Commonalty to break off their sins to repent and to abhor themselves in dust and ashes Hath not God spent all his Rods in vain upon thee were not all sorts of men generally seven times worse after those wasting Judgments then they Jer. 24. 2 3. were before and therefore thou hast cause to fear that this is that which hath kindled such a devouring Fire in the midst of thee and that hath turned thy glory into shame thy Riches Palaces and stately Houses into ashes When after the raging Pestilence men returned to the City and to their Estates and Trades c. they returned also to their old sins and as many followed the world more greedily then ever so many followed their lusts their sinful courses more violently then ever and this has ushered in thy desolation O London The Physitian when he findeth that the potion which he hath given his Patient will not work he seconds it with one more violent and thus doth the Chi●urgion too if a gentle plaister will not serve then he applies that which is more corroding and to prevent a gangrene he makes use of his cauterizing knife and takes off the joynt or member that is so ill affected So doth the great God when men are not bettered by lesser Judgments he sends greater Judgments upon them God was first as a moth to Ephraim Hos 5. 12. 14. which consumed him by little and little but when that would not better him and reform him then the Lord comes as a Lyon upon him and tore him all to pieces If the dross of mens sins will not come off he will throw them into the melting-pot again and again he will crush them harder and harder in the press of his Judgments and lay on such Irons as shall enter more deep into their Souls If he strike and they grieve not if he strikes again and they tremble not if he wounds and they return not then 't is a righteous ●hing with God to turn men out of house and home and to ●urn up their comforts round about them Now this has been thy case O London and therefore God has laid thee desolate in the eyes of the Nations Now this desperate incorrigibleness and unreformedness under wasting and destroying Judgments I cannot groundedl● fix upon those who did truly fear the Lord within and without the Walls of London because they made it their bu●iness according to the different measures of grace they had ●eceived to mourn under wasting Judgments and to lament a●ter the Lord under wasting Judgments and to be bet●ered and reformed under wasting Judgments and no● only ●o understand but also to obey the voice of the Rod. Thei●●arnest prayers strong crys bitter tears sad sigh● and heavy groans under wasting Judgments may sufficiently evidence that they were not incorrigible under wasting Judgments But Fifthly I●solent and cruel oppressing of the Poor is a sin that brings desolating and destroying Judgments upon a people God sent ten wasting Judgments one after another upon
Pharaoh his People and Land to revenge the cruel oppression Exod. 3. 9. of his poor people Prov. 22. 22 23. Rob not the poor because he is poor neither oppr●ss the afflict●d in the gate For the Lord will plead their cause To rob and oppress the rich is a great sin but to rob and oppress the poor is a greater but to rob and oppress the poor because he is poor and wants money to buy justice is the top of all inhumanity and impiety To oppress any one is a sin but to oppress the oppressed is the heighth of sin Poverty and want and misery should be motives to pity but oppressors make them the whet-stones of their cruelty and severity and therefore the Lord will plead the cause of his poor oppressed people against their oppressors without fee or fear yea he will plead their cause with pestilence blood and fire Gog was a great oppressor of the poor Ezek. 38. 8 9 10 11 12. 13 14. And God pleads against him with pestilence blood and fire Verse 22 And I will plead against him with pestilence and with blood and I will rain upon him and upon his bands and upon the many people that are with him an overflowing rain and great hail-stones fire and brimstone Such as oppress a Mich. 2. 1 2. man and his house even a man and his heritage they take the surest the readiest way to bring ruine upon their own houses Isa 5. 8. Wo unto them that joyn house to house and field to field till there be no place that they may be placed alone in the midst of the earth ●ut mark what follows verse 9. In mine ears said the Lord of Hosts of a truth many houses shall be desolate even great and fair without inhabitants of a truth many houses shall be desolate This is an Emphatical form of swearing 't is as if the Lord had said Let me not live or let me never be owned or accounted a God or let me never be looked upon as a God of truth a God of my word let me never be believed nor trusted more for a God if I do not lay desolate the houses of oppressors the great houses of oppressors the fair houses of oppressors yea the multitude and variety of the houses of oppressors So Amos 3. 9 10 11. Publish in the palaces at Ashdod and in the palaces ●n the Land of Egypt and say Assemble your selves upon the mountains of Samaria and behold the great tumults in the midst thereof and the oppressed or oppressions in the midst thereof For they know not to do right saith the Lord who store up violence and robbery in their palaces Therefore thus saith the Lord God an adversary there shall be even round about the Land and he shall bring down thy strength from thee ●nd thy palaces shall be spoiled Now mark the 15. verse And I will smite the winter-house with the summer-house and the houses of ivory shall perish and the great houses shall have an end saith the Lord. In their Palaces and in their Winter and Summer-houses they stored up all the riches preys and spoils that they had got by oppression But God tells them that their Palaces should be spoiled and that he would smite the Winter-house upon the Summer-house so the Hebrew runs God was resolved that he would dash one house against the other and lay them all on heaps Though their Palaces and houses were never so rich and strong and stately and pompous and glorious and decked and adorned and enamelled and checkered yet they should all down together So Zach. 7. 10 11. 14. Oppress not the widow nor the fatherless the stranger nor the poor and let none of you imagine evil against his brother in your heart But they refused to hearken and pulled away the shoulder and stopped their ears that they should not hear Well now mark what follows verse 14. But I scattered them with a whirlwind among all the nations whom they knew not thus the land was desolate after them that no man passed thorow nor returned for they laid the pleasant land or as the Hebrew has it the second Land of desire desolate Palestine was a very pleasant Land aLand which flowed with milk and honey a Land which was the glory of all Lands God had made it as his Paradise and enriched it with all plenty and pleasure and above all with his presence and residence in his City and Temple but they by oppressing the poor the widow and the fatherless laid all desolate Jer. 12. 12. O house of David thus saith the Lord execute judgment in the morning and deliver him that is spoiled out of the hand of the oppressor lest my fury go out like fire and burn that none can quench it Oppression lays a people open to Gods fury it provokes the Lord to turn their all into unquenchable flames Psal 12. 5. For the oppression of the poor for the sighing of the needy now will I arise saith the Lord I will set him in safety from him that passeth at him Upon these words Chrysostom saith Timete quicunque pauperem Chrys in Psal 12. injuriâ afficitis habetis vos potentiam opes judicum benevolentiam sed habent illi arma omnium validissima luctus ejulatus quae à coelis auxilium attrahunt Haec arma domus effodiunt fundamenta evertunt haec integras nationes submergunt Fear ye whosoever ye be that do wrong the poor you have power and wealth and the favour of the Judges but they have the strongest weapons of all sighings and groanings which fetch help from Heaven for them These weapons dig down houses throw up foundations overthrow whole Nations Thus you see by all these clear Scriptures that oppression is a sin that brings wasting and destroying Judgments upon a people Ah London London was there no oppression and cruelty to be found within and without thy Walls Eccle. 4. 1. So I returned and considered all the oppressions that are done under the Sun and behold the tears of such as were oppressed and they had no comforter and on the side of their oppressors there was power but they had no comforter And behold the tears of such as were oppressed The original word signifies lachrymam non lachrymas a tear not tears as if the oppressed had wept so long and wept so much that they could weep no longer nor weep no more having but only one tear left them Were there not O London many of thy poor oppressed Inhabitants that wept so long that they could weep no longer and that wept so much that they had but one tear left O the crys and tears of the oppressed within and without thy Walls did so pierce Gods ears and so work upon his heart that at last he comes down in flames of fire to revenge the oppressed Were there no rich Citizens that did wrack their Tenants and grind the faces of the poor that took an advantage
from their necessities to beat down the price of their Commodities that so they might raise Were there none within nor without thy Walls O London that used his neighbour without wages and gave him no reward for his work that kept back the hire of the labourer and that were the poor labourers purse-bearers and Cofferers whether they would or no that fleeced the poor to feather their own nests Deut. 24. 14 15. Exod. 22. 22 23. Zeph. 3. 3. themselves on the poors ruine Were there no false weights false wares false lights false measures to be found within and without thy Walls by which the poor has been cheated cozened and oppressed O how did the rich work upon the necessities of the poor bringing them to such under-prizes as hath undone both them and their making good that word Amos 8 4. They swallow up the needy and make the poor of the land to fail O the heavy burdens that have been laid upon the poor by their Aegyptian Task-masters what over-reaching of the poor and what over-rating of the poor have been within and without thy Walls O London Thy poor O London did rise early and go to bed late they did fare hard and lye hard and work hard and yet by reason of the cruelty oppression and unmercifulness of many of thy wealthy Citizens they were hardly able to make any convenient supplies for themselves and their families Oppression turns Princes into roaring Lyons and Judges into evening Wolves 't is an unnatural sin 't is a sin against the light of Nature No creatures do oppress them of their own kind Look upon the Birds of prey as upon Eagles Vultures Hawks and you shall never find them preying upon their own kind Look upon the wild Beasts of the Forest as upon the Lyon the Tyger the Wolf the Bear c. and you shall find them favourable to them of their o●n kind and yet men unnaturally prey upon one another like the fish in the Sea the great swallowing up the small 'T is a sin against that great and common Rule of Equity Math. 7. 12. All things whatsoever ye would that men should do unto you do ye even so to them Now no man in his wits would have another to wrong and oppress him in his Estate Name or Conscience and therefore he should not wrong or oppress others in their Estates Names or Consciences and therefore no wonder if God punishes this sin with flames of fire 'T is thy oppressors O London that has turned thy glory into ashes Now this insolent oppressing of the poor is a sin that I cannot make good against the people of God that did truly fear him in that great City 'T is a sin they have often be wailed and lamented before the Lord in their solemn Addresses to God Where this sin is rampant where it rules as a Prince upon the Throne 't is a clear evidence that th● fear of the Lord is not in such mens hearts Levit. 25. 17. Ye shall not oppress one another but thou shalt fear thy God Now this lyes fair in the words viz. That such as do oppress others they do not fear God and such as do fear God they will not oppress others Amaleck was a great Oppressor of the poor people of God and the Holy Ghost hath se● Deut. 25. 18. Oppressors are persons destitute of the fear of God and the want of the fear of the Lord is the spring and fountain of the worst of sins and that against which the Lord will come near in Judgment Mala. 3. 5. this black brand of infamy upon him that he feared no● God Had Amaleck feared the Lord he would have been so far from oppressing the poor people of God that he would have comforted them and succoured them and relieved them in the midst of their necessities miseries and distresses The Jews oppressing one another is attributed to their not fearing of God Nehem. 5. 9. Oppression is so crying a sin against the Law of God the Law of Grace the Law of Nature and the Law of Nations that certainly it cannot be justly charged upon such as have set up God in their hearts as the great Object of their fear The word for oppression in the Hebrew is Mispach which signifies a Scab a Wound a Leprosie Now oppression is such a scab a wound a leprosie as is not to be found upon those that have fellowship with the Father and the Son Oppressors may boast of their profession and call themselves Saints or the people of God but God accounts them worse then Scythians witness those dreadful woes that God has denounced against them in the blessed Scriptures Zeph. 3. 1. Wo to the oppressing City Jer. 22. 13 Wo unto him that buildeth his house by unrighteousness and his chambers by wrong that useth his neighbours service without wages and giveth him not for his work Isa 10. 1-3 Wo unto them that decree unrighteous decrees To turn aside the needy from judgment and to take away the right from the poor of my people that widows may be their prey and that they may rob the fatherless And what will ye do in the day of visitation and in the d●solation which shall come from far to whom will ye flee for help and where will ye leave your glory Mich. 2 1 2. Wo to them that devise iniquity and work evil upon their beds when the morning is light they practise it because it is in the power of their hand And they covet fields and take them by violence and houses and take them away so they oppress a man and his house even a man and his heritage Now by all these dreadful woes 't is further evident that this horrid sin of insolent oppression cannot be charged upon the Called and Chosen of God for where do you find in all the Scriptures the Vessels of Glory under those woes that are denounced against the ungodly But Sixthly Rejecting the Gospel contemning the Gospel and slighting the free and gracious offers of Christ in the Gospel brings the fiery Dispensation upon a people and causes the Lord to lay their Cities desolate Math. 22. 2 3 4 5 6 7. The kingdom of heaven is like unto a certain King which made a marriage for his Son And he sent forth his servants to call them that were bidden to the wedding and they would not come Again he sent forth other servants saying tell them which are bidden Behold I have prepared my dinner my oxen and my fatlings are killed and all things are ready come unto the marriage But they made slight of it ●nd went their ways one to his farm another to his merchandize And the remnant took his servants and intreated them spitefully and slew them But when the King heard thereof he was wroth and sent forth his armies and destroyed those mu●derers and burnt up their City In this Parable the Vocation of the Gentiles and the Rejection of the Jews is set for●h
were many that set a greater price upon the arts the parts the gifts the studied notions and Seraphical expressions of their Ministers then they did upon the Gospel it self and what was this but to prefer the Handmaid before the Mistress the Servant before his Lord the flowers about the dish before the meat that was in the dish the chaff before the Wheat and Pebbles before the richest Pearls The Gospel is the field and Christ is the Treasure that is hid in that field the Gospel is a Ring of gold and Christ is the Pearl in that Ring of gold and yet how many were there within and without the Walls of London that put no considerable price or value upon the Gospel But Fifthly Such as wilfully disobey the Gospel and live and walk in ways quite cross and contrary to the Gospel such are slighters and contemners of the Gospel and accordingly the Lord will deal with them Take one Text for all 2. Thes 1. 7 8 9. And to you who are troubled rest with us when the Lord Jesus shall be revealed from heaven with his mighty Angels in flaming fire taking vengeance on them that know not God and that obey not the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Who shall be punished with everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord and from the glory of his power This is a more terrible Text against all such as are either ignorant of the Gospel or that disobey the Gospel then any is to be found in all the Old Testament In the last day Christ will take vengeance in flaming fire on them that disobey his Gospel and that walk contrary to the Rules of his Gospel and therefore no wonder if before that day he lays their habitations desolate by a flaming fire whose lives give the lye to his glorious Gospel These men above all others expose the Gospel to the derision and contempt of the basest and vilest men When some of the Heathens have lookt upon the loose lives of Professors they have said Aut hoc non est Evangelium aut hi non sunt Christiani Either this is not the Gospel in which there is so much goodness or these are not Christians in whom there is none at all Did you never hear nor read of one who eying the loose conversations of Professors cryed out Sit anima mea cum Philosophis Let my Soul be rather with the honest Philosophers who were Heathen then with these wicked lewd men that are called Christians Now were there none within nor without the Walls of London that did wilfully disobey the Gospel and that walkt in ways quite cross and contrary to the Gospel surely there were and therefore at their doors we may safely lay the burning of London But Sixthly and lastly Such as slighted scorned and contemned the faithful sincere serious gracious and conscientious Professors of the Gospel such slighted scorned and contemned the Gospel it self When the Jews were in prosperity Joseph Antiq. lib. 11. cap. 8 it was the manner of the Samaritans to repute themselves their nearest Cousins When the Jews were in a thriving and flourishing condition then the Samaritans could derive their Pedigree from Ephraim and Manasses the Sons of Joseph but when the Jews were in any great affliction or under persecution then they would deny all acquaintance with them and all relation to them When Profession was in fashion and Religion was in credit how many were there within and without the Walls of London that did pretend to be kin to be Cousins to the serious conscientious and sincere Professors of the Gospel who since the day of their affliction have not only denied all acquaintance with them and renounced all relation to them but also are turned slighters scorners and contemners of them if these may not be reckoned among the slighters scorners and contemners of the Gospel I do not know who may To sum up all I have shewed you that slighting scorning and contemning of the Gospel is a sin of that high nature that it provokes ●he Lord to lay Cities desolate I have shewed you the greatness of that sin and the persons that are guilty of it so that now you may point with a finger to those persons that have laid London in ashes But before I close up this Particular give me leave to say That this sin of slighting scorning and contemning of the Gospel I dare not charge upon those that truly fear the Lord and that have found the Gospel to be a Gospel of power upon their own Souls turning them from darkness to light and from the power of Satan to Jesus Christ And I 1 Thes 1. 5 6 7. Acts 26. 18. shall freely give you my Reasons that you may be the better satisfied that 't was not so much their sins as your own that has brought down that heavy Judgment of Fire upon the City wherein once you and they had your respective habitations My Reasons are these First Those that did truly fear the Lord and that had experienced the power of the Gospel in a saving way upon their own Souls they did frequently before the Lord bewail and mourn over both together and apart that hainous Ezek. 9. 4. 6. sin of slighting scorning and contemning of the Gospel which many were guilty of whose habitations were then some within and others without the Walls of London The Jews have a Law which enjoyns them to take up any paper which they see lying on the ground and the reason is lest happily the Name of God be written in the paper and ignorantly trodden under foot Though Christians ought to be free from such superstitious curiosities yet they ought to be very careful that the least tittle of the Gospel the least command of the Gospel be not trod under foot Now the Saints who once lived within and without the Walls of London who through grace have experienced the saving power of the Gospel upon their own Souls how have they mourned and lamented to see that glorious Gospel of Christ trod under foot which they have layen so near their hearts and therefore I cannot fairly charge this sin upon them But Secondly Slighting scorning and contemning of the Gospel is a great step towards the sin against the holy Ghost and a sin of so great a cry and so deep a dye that I cannot Heb. 2. 3. Chap. 10. 28 29. at present find where 't is in Scripture charged upon such as truly fear the Lord and that have really experienced the power of the Gospel in a saving way upon their own Souls and therefore I cannot fairly charge this sin upon them Thirdly Next to God the Gospel is the most sweet and delightful thing in all the world to gracious Souls who have experienced the saving power of it upon themselves Luth●r Psal 19. 10 11. Psal 119. 72. 103. 127. Job 23. 12. Austin crys away with our writings that room may be made for the Book of God found so
sudden death and of Haman who slandering Mordecai and the Jews and by his lyes plotting their ruine was taken in the same snare that he had laid for them and both he and his Sons hanged upon the same Gallows which he had made for innocent Mordecai The same Chap. 7. 9. And Chap. 9. 13 14. Lyar that was feasting with the King one day was made a feast for Crows the next day Dreadful are the threatnings that the great God has given out against lyars Psal 5. 6. Thou shalt destroy them that speak leasing Such as lye in jest will without repentance go to Hell in earnest Psal 12. 3. The Lord shall cut off all flattering lips and the tongue that speaketh proud things God by one Judgment or another in one way or another will cut off all flattering lying lips as a rotten member is cut off from the body or as a barren tree that is stocked up that it may cumber the ground no more Psal 120. 2 3 4. Deliver my soul O Lord from lying lips and from a deceitful tongue What shall be given unto thee or what shall be done unto thee thou false tongue sharp arrows of the Mighty God will retaliate sharp for sharp with coals of juniper The coals of Juniper burn hot and last long some say a month and more and smell sweet Now upon these coals will God broil lying lips and a deceitful tongue pleasing himself and others in the execution of his wrath upon a lying tongue Prov. 19. 5. A false witness shall not be unpunished and he that speaketh lyes shall not escape Though men sometimes by lying may escape the displeasure of men yet they shall never by lying escape the wrath and displeasure of God Wrath is for that man and that man is for wrath who hath taught his tongue the trade of lying Hos 12. 1. Ephraim daily increaseth lyes and desolation Desolation is the fruit and consequent of lying sin and punishment are inseparable companions they who heap up lyes hasten desolation both upon themselves and the places where they live Now if lying be a sin so hateful and odious to God no wonder if God appears in flaming fire against it But Fourthly and lastly Lying is a sin against the Light and Law of Nature it is a sin against natural Conscience and therefore 't is that a little child will blush many times when he tells a lye It was observed of Pomponius Atticus Ciceroes great Friend that he never used lying neither could he with patience lend his ear to a Lyar. Tennes the Son of Cyrnus who was worshipped as a God was so strict in judgment that he caused an Ax to be held over the witnesses head to execute them out of hand if they were taken with fa●shood or a lye Among the Scythians when their Priests foretold an untruth they were carried along upon hurdles full of heath and dry wood drawn by oxen and manacled hand and foot and burnt to death Aristotle saith by the Arist Ethic. lib. 4. cap. 7. light of natural Reason that a lye is evil in in self and cannot be dispensed withal it being contrary to the Order of Nature For saith he we have tongues given us to express our minds and meanings one to another by Now if our tongues tell more or less then our minds conceive it is against Nature It is said of Epaminondas a Heathen that he abhorred mendacium jocosum a jefting lye Plutarch calls Lying a Tinkerly sin a sin that is both hateful and shameful Euripedes saith that he is unhappy who rather useth lyes though seemingly good then truths when he judgeth them evil To think the truth saith Plato is honest but a filthy and dishonest thing to lye I could saith my Author both sigh and smile at the simplicity of some Pagan people in America who having told a lye used to let their tongues blood in expiation thereof A good cure for the Squinancy but no satisfaction for lying These Heathens will one day rise in Judgment against such amongst us as make no conscience of lying To bring things close those that lived within and without the Walls of London that were given up to a trade a course of lying those persons sinned with a high hand not only against the Light of Nature but also against as clear as glorious a Gospel-light as ever shined round a people since Christ was upon the Earth and therefore no wonder if God hath laid their City in ashes He that s●all seriously dwell upon these four things viz. 1. That lying is a very great sin 2. That Lyes and Lyars are very destructive to all humane Societies Kingdoms and Common-wealths 3. That Lying is a sin most hateful and odious to God 4. That Lying is a sin against the Light and Law of Nature he will see cause enough to justifie the Lord in that late dreadful Fire that has thus been amongst us But before I close up this Particular give me leave to say That this trade this course of Lying that brings that sore Judgment of Fire upon Cities and Countries I cannot charge with any clear evidence upon those that did truly fear the Lord whose habitations were once within or without the Walls of London before it was turned into a ruinous heap and that upon these grounds First Because a trade a course of Lying is not consistent with the truth or state of Grace A trade a course of drunkennes● Psal 139. 23 24. 1 Joh. 3. 6 7 8 9 10. of whoring of swearing of cursing is as inconsistent with a state of Grace as a trade a course of Lying is I know Jacob lyed and David lyed and Peter lyed but none of these were ever given up to a trade of lying to a course of lying The best Saints have had their extravagant motions and have sadly miscarried as to particular actions but he Vna actio no● denominat that shall judge of a Christians estate by particular acts though notorious bad will certainly condemn where God ●cquits We must always distinguish between some single evil actions and a serious course of evil actions It is not this or that particular evil action but a continued course of evil actions that denominates a man wicked As it is not this or that particular good act but a continued course of holy actions that denominates a man holy Every man is as his course is if his course be holy the man is holy if his course be wicked the man is wicked There is a Maxime in Logick viz. That no general Rule can be established upon a particular Instance And there is another Maxime in Logick viz. That no particular Instance can overthrow a general Rule So here look as no man can safely and groundedly conclude from no better premises then from some few particular actions though in themselves materially and substantially good that this or that mans spiritual estate is good so on the other hand no man ought
lye Rev. 14. 5. And in their mouth was found no guile for they are without fault before the Throne of God Now upon this account also I dare not charge the trade of lying upon thos● gracious Souls that feared the Lord within or without the Walls of London before it was turned into a ruinous heap But Eighthly and lastly Lyars are reckoned amongst the basest and the worst of sinners that you read of in all the Book of God Levit. 19. 11. Ye shall not steal neither deal falsely neither lye one to another Prov. 6. 16 17 18 19. These six things doth the Lord hate yea seven are an abomination to him A proud look a lying tongue and hands that shed innocent blood An heart that deviseth wicked imaginations fee● that be swift in running to mischief A false witness that speaketh lyes and him that soweth discord among brethren So the Apostle Paul setting down a Catalogue of the basest and worst of sinners he ranks lyars in the rere of them 1 Tim. 1. 9 10. Knowing this that the law is not made for a righteous man but for the lawless and disobedient for the ungodly and for sinners for unholy and prophane for murderers of fathers and murderers of mothers for man-slayers For whoremongers for them that defile themselves with mankind for men-stealers for lyars for perjured persons So John numbers them amongst the damned crew Rev. 21. 8. That shall be sent to hell and that must perish for ever Rev. 21. 8. But the fearful and unbelieving and the abominable and murtherers and whoremongers and sorcerers and idolaters and all lyars shall have their part in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone which is the second death In this Catalogue of the damned crew the fearful are placed in the Front and the lyars in the Rere See once more how the Holy Ghost couples lyars Rev. 22. 15. For without are dogs and sorcerers and murtherers and whoremongers and idolaters and whosoever loveth and maketh a lye Thus you see in all these Scriptures that lyars are numbred up among the rabble of the most desperate and deplorable Wretches that are in all the world and therefore upon this account also I cannot charge the trade of lying upon them that feared the Lord whose habitations were once within or without the Walls of London The eighth sin that brings the Judgment of Fire is mens giving themselves over to fornication and going after strange flesh Jude 7. Even as Sodom and Gomorrah and the Cities about them in like manner giving themselves over to fornication and going after strange flesh are set forth for an example suffering the vengeance of eternal fire In these words there are these three things observable First The places punished and they are Sodom and Gomorrah and the Cities about them which were Admah and Zeboim Egesippus and Stephanus say that ten Cities were destroyed Deut. 29. 23. Hos 11. 8. and some say thirteen Cities were destroyed when Sodom was destroyed but these things I shall not impose upon you as Articles of Faith The overthrow of Sodom and Gomorrah and the Cities about them was total both in respect of the Inhabitants and the places themselves their sin was universal and their punishment was as universal That pride idleness and fulness of bread that is charged upon them by the Prophet Ezekiel did usher in those abominable Ezek. 16. 49 50. wickednesses that laid all waste and desolate Secondly The sins that brought these punishments viz. The giving themselves over to fornication and going after strange flesh The first is Giving themselves over to fornication Now the word Fornication is not to be taken properly and strictly for that act of uncleanness that is often committed between persons unmarried but it is here to be taken for all sorts of carnal uncleanness The Heathen thought fornication no vice and therefore they made it a common custom and were wont to pray thus The Gods increase the number of the Harlots The second sin that is charged upon them is Their going after strange flesh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 another flesh as the words in the Original run The Apostle in this modest and covert expression Going after strange flesh or other flesh or another flesh doth hint to us their monstrous and unlawful lusts that were against the Course Light and Law of Nature they gave themselves up to such filthiness as is scarce to be named among men they went after other flesh then what Nature or the God of Nature had appointed The Gen. 2. 21. ult great God never appointed that male and male but only that male and female should be one flesh 't is impossible that man and man in that execrable act should make one flesh as man and woman do The flesh of a male to a male must needs be another flesh The Apostle Paul expresseth their filthiness thus For even their women did change the natural Rom. 1. 26 27. use into that which is against nature and likewise also the men leaving the natural use of the women burned in their lust one toward another men with men working that which is unseemly Chrysostom well observes on these words that whereas by Gods Ordinance in lawful copulation by Marriage two became one flesh both Sexes were joyned together in one by Sodomitical uncleanness the same flesh is divided into two men with men working uncleanness as with women of one Sex making as it were two The Gen●i●es had left the God of Nature and therefore the Lord in his just Judgment left them to leave the order of Nature and so to cast scorn and comtempt upon the whole humane Nature Again There is another sort of pollution by strange flesh Levit. 18. 23. and that is a carnal joyning of a man with a beast which is prohibited Neither shalt th●u lye with any beast Oh what a sink of sin is in the nature of man the heart of man And as this pollution is prohibited so 't is punished with death And Chap. 20. 15. if a man lye with a beast he shall surely be put to death and ye shall slay the beast The Lord to shew the horridness and the hainousness of this beastly sin commands that even the poor harmless innocent beast that is neither capable of sin nor of provoking or enticing man to sin must be put to death Oh how great is that pollution that pollutes the very beasts and that makes the unclean more unclean and that doth debase the beast below a beast Now to this sort of pollution the beastly Sodomites had without doubt given up themselves The third thing observable in the words is the severity of their punishment Suffering the vengeance of eternal fire We commonly say that fire and water have no mercy and we have frequently experienced the truth of that saying When God would give the world a proof of his greatest severity against notorious sinners and notorious sins he doth it
by inflicting the Judgment of Fire when the Sodomites burned in their lusts one towards another Then the Lord rained upon Sodom and Gomorrah brimstone and fire from the Lord out of heaven The Lord rained brimstone and fire from the Lord that is by an elegant Hebraism from himself it being usual with the Hebrews to put the Noun for the Pronoun as you may see by comparing the Scriptures in the Margine together Gen. 1. 27. 1 Sam. 15. 22. 2 Chron. 7. 2. 1 Kings 8. 1. Now this fiery vengeance came not from any inferior cause but from the supream cause even God himself This brimstone and material fire that was rained by the Lord out of Heaven was not by any ordinary course of Nature but by the immediate almighty power of God Doubtless it was the supernatural and miraculous work of the Lord and not from any natural cause that such showers not of water as when the Old world was drowned but of material fire and brimstone should fall from Heaven upon Sodom and Gomorrah to which add Adama and Zeboim for all these four Cities were burnt together God rained not sprinkled yea he rained not fire only but fire and brimstone for the increase of their torment and that they might have a Hell above ground a Hell on this s●de Hell They had hot fire for their burning lusts and stinking brimstone for their stinking brutishness They burned with vile and unnatural lusts and therefore against the course of Nature fire falls down from Heaven and devours them and their stinking abominable ●●lthiness is punished with the stench of brimstone mingled with fire Thus God delights to suit mens punishments to their sins yea that temporal fire that God rained out of Heaven upon Sodom and Gomorrah was but a fore-runner of their everlasting punishment in that Lake which burns with Rev. 21. 8. fire and brimstone for evermore The temporal punishment of the impenitent Sodomites did but make way to their Jude 7. eternal punishments as Jude tells us I readily grant that the fire of Hell was typified by that fire which fell from Heaven upon Sodom and Gomorrah but I cannot conceive that the Apostle Jude in the place last-cited doth intend or design to prove that the Sodomites were destroyed by Hell-fire for in the History of Genesis to which the Apostle alludes there is no mention at all of Hell-fire or of Eternal fire and doubtless the example that should warn sinners to repent of their sins and to turn to the most High is to be taken from the History in Genesis I cannot at present see how Sodom and Gomorrah can be set forth as an example to sinners by suffering the punishment of Hell-fire when the History is wholly silent as to any such fire Some to mollifie the seeming austerity of that Phrase which Jude u●es viz. Eternal fire read the words thus Were made an example of eternal fire suffering vengeance by which construction they gather that the fire which hath irreparably destroyed Sodom and Gomorrah was a type and figure of that fire of Hell of that Eternal fire that is reserved for wicked men and by which sinners ought to be warned Others by eternal fire understand the duration of the effects of the first temporal punishment the soil thereabout wearing the marks of divine displeasure to this very day Several Authors write that the Air there is so infectious that no creature can live there Josephus Tertullian Augustine c. and though the Apples and other fruit that grow there seem pleasant unto the eye yet if you do but touch them they presently turn into cinders and ashes The stinking Lake of Asphaltes near to Sodom is left as a perpetual Monument of Gods Vengeance killing all fish that swimmeth in it and fowls that flye over it Others by eternal fire understand an utter destruction according to that 2 Pet. 2. 6. And turning the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah into ashes condemned them with an overthrow that is utterly destroyed them making them an ensample unto those that after should live ungodly God hangs them up in Gibbets as it were that others might hear and fear and not dare to do wickedly as they had done What though it be said that the fire wherewith these Sodomites were destroyed was eternal yet there is no necessity to understand it of Hell-fire for even that very fire which consumed those Cities may be called Eternal because the punishment that was inflicted on Sodom and Gomorrah by fire was a punishment that should last as long as the world lasted God resolved those Cities should never be rebuilt but remain perpetual desolations in all generations Now in this sense the word Eternal is often used in the Scripture Again the fire and brimstone that fell upon Sodom and Gomorrah was a type and figure of that eternal fire or those eternal torments that shall be inflicted upon all impenitent sinners for ever and ever The sum of all is this that the Sodomites by giving themselves over to fornication and by going after strange flesh did provoke the Lord to rain Hell out of Heaven upon them they did provoke the Lord to rain material fire and brimstone both upon their persons and their habitations Now give me leave to say that doubtless the body of the inhabitants of that famous City which is now laid in ashaes were as free from giving themselves over to fornication and going after strange flesh as any in any part of the Nation yea more free then many in some parrs of the Nation yea give me leave to say that I cannot see how these sins that are charged upon the Sodomites can be clearly or groundedly charged upon any of the precious Servants of the Lord that did truly fear him in that renowned City And my Reasons are these First Because in all their solemn and secret Addresses to the Lord they have seriously lamented and mourned over these crying abominations Secondly Because mens giving themselves over to fornication and going after strange flesh are such high and horrid sins against the Light and Law of Nature that God commonly preserves his Chosen from them He shall be an Apo●lo to me that can produce any one instance in the Old or New Testament of any one person that after real and through Conversion did ever give himself over to fornication and to go after strange flesh Aristotle calls beastiality a furpassing wickedness By the Laws of those two Emperors Theodisius and Arcadius Sodomites were adjudged to the fire In the Councel of Vienna the Templers who were found guilty of this sin were decreed to be burnt And among the Romans it was lawful for him who was attempted to that abuse to kill him who made the assault Tertullian brings in Christianity triumphing over Paganism because this sin was peculiar to Heathens and that Christians never changed the Sex nor accompanied with any but their own wives This and such like as Tertullian speaks
that he in his instruments Rev. 2. 10. makes against the strictest observers of that day and witness his constant prompting and spurring such on to the prophanation of the Sabbath whose examples are most dangerous and encouraging to wicked men as Magistrates Ministers Parents and Masters c. and witness his strong endeavours constant attempts crafty devices and deep policies that he has made use of in all the Ages of the World to keep people off from a religious observation of the Sabbath yea and to make them more wicked on that day then on any other day of the week May I not say then on all other days of the week I have been the longer upon this ninth Particular partly because of the weightiness of it and partly to encourage the Reader to a more close and strict observation of the Sabbath and partly to justifie those that are conscientious observers of it and partly to justifie the Lord in turning London into ashes for the horrible prophanation of his day The Sabbath-day is the Queen of days say the Jews The The Sabbath-day differs as much from the rest of the days as the wax doth to which a Kings Great Seal is put from ordinary wax Sabbath-day among the other days is as the Virgin Mary among Women saith Austin Look what the Phenix is among the Birds the Lyon among the Beasts the Whale among the Fishes the Fire among the Elements the Lilly among the Thorns the Sun among the Stars that is the Sabbath-day to all other days and therefore no wonder if God burn such out of their habitations who have been prophaners of his day Ah London London were there none within nor without thy Walls that made light of this Institution of God and that did offer violence to the Queen of days by their looseness and prophaneness by their sitting at their doors by their walking in Moor-fields by their sportings and wrestlings there and by their haunting of Ale-houses and Whore-houses their tossing of Pots and Pipes when they should have been setting up God and Christ and Religion in their Families and mourning in their Closets for the sins of times and for the afflictions of poor Joseph How did the wrath and rage of King Ahasuerus smoak against Haman Esth 7. 8 9 10. when he apprehended that he would have put a force upon the Queen And why then should we wonder to see the wrath of the Lord break forth in smoak and flames against such a generation that put a force upon his day that prophaned his day the Queen of days Ah Sirs you have greatly prophaned and abused the day of the Lord and therefore why should any marvel that the Lord has greatly debased you and laid your glory in dust and ashes In these late years how has prophaneness like a flood broke in upon us on the Lords day and therefore it highly concerns all the prophaners of the day of the Lord to lay their hands upon their hearts and to say the Lord is righteous the Lord is righteous though he has laid our habitations desolate Who is so great a stranger in our English Israel as not to know that God was more dishonoured on the Sabbath-day within and without the Walls of London then he was in all the other six days of the week and therefore let us not think it strange that such a fire was kindled on that day as has reduced all to ashes What Antick habits did men and women put on on this day what frothy empty airy discourses and intemperance was to be found at many mens Tables this day How were Ale-houses Stews and Moor-fields filled with debauched sinners this day No wonder then if London be laid desolate Now this abominable sin of open prophaning the Sabbaths of the Lord I cannot with any clear evidence charge upon the people of God that did truly fear him within or without the Walls of London For first they did lament and mo●rn over the horrid prophanation of that day Secondly I want eyes at present to see how it will stand either with the truth of Grace or state of Grace for such as are real Saints to live in the open prophanation of Gods Sabbaths Thirdly because an ordinary prophaning of the Lords Sabbaths is as great an Argument of a prophane heart as any that can be found in the whole Book of God Fourthly because Sabbath-days are the Saints Market-days Prov. 10. 5. Prov. 17. 16. Isa 25. 6. Math. 5. 47. the Saints harvest-days the Saints summer-days the Saints seed-days and the Saints feasting-days and therefore they will not be such fools as to sleep away those days much less will they presume to prophane those days or to toy and trifle away those days of Grace Fifthly what singular thing do they more then others if they are not strict observers and conscientious sanctifiers of the Lords day ●ixthly and lastly of all the days that pass over a Christians head in this world there are none that God will take such a strict and exact account of as of Sabbath-days and therefore it highly concerns all people to be strict observers and serious sanctifiers of that day Now upon all these accounts I cannot charge such throughout Saints as lived within or without the Walls of London with that horrid prophanation of the Sabbath as brought the late fiery Dispensation upon us and that turned a glorious City into a ruinous heap Whatever there was of the hand of man in that dreadful Conflagration I shall not now attempt to divine but without a peradventure it was Sabbath-guilt which threw the first Ball that turned London into flames and ashes When fire and smoaking was on Mount Sinai God was there but when London was in Exod. 19. 18. flames and smoak Sabbath-guilt was there Doubtless all the power of Rome and Hell should never have put London into flames had not Londons guilt kindled the first coal But We come now to the Use and Application of this important Point Tenthly The prophaneness lewdness blindness and 10. wickedness of the Clergy of them in the Ministry brings the Judgment of Fire and provokes the Lord to lay all waste before him Zeph. 3. 4-6 Her Prophets are light and treacherous persons her Priests have polluted the Sanctuary they have done violence to the law I have cut off the nations their towers are desolate I have made their street w●ste that none passeth by their cities are destroyed so that there is no man that there is none inhabitant Their Prophets and Priests were rash heady and unstable persons they were light faithl●ss men or men of faithlesness as the Hebrew runs They were neither faithful to God nor faithful to their own Souls nor faithful to others Souls they invented and feigned Prophesies of their own and then boldly maintained them and imposed them upon their Hearers they were prophane and light in their carriages they fitted their Doctrines to all fancies humours parties and times
a great miracle and that he should prevail against all that Power was a greater and that after all he should dye in his bed was the greatest of all There are many thousand Instances more of the like nature but enough is as good as a Feast Eighthly The spiritual Judgments that God hath given such up to who have shed the blood of the Just speaks out their blood to be precious blood Oh the dreadful horrors and amazing terrors of conscience that such have been given up to Take a few Instances among the many that might be given The Vaivod that had betrayed Zegeden a godly man professed to Zegedine that he was so haunted with Apparitions Cicero and the Furies of his own Conscience that he could not rest day nor night Dionysius a cruel Tyrant a bitter Enemy Conscience is Gods Preacher in the bosom Conscience is mille testes a thousand witnesses for or against a man Conscience hath a good memory to all good men and good things was so troubled with fear and horror of conscience that not daring to trust his best friends with a Rasor he used to sindge his beard with burning coals A sleepy conscience when awakned is like a sleepy Lyon when he awakes he roars and tears his prey It is like Prometheus Vultur it lyes ever gnawing Sin brings a stain and a sting Horror of conscience meets a man in the dark and makes him leap in the night and makes him quake in his sleep and makes him start in every corner and makes him think every bush is a man every man a Devil and every Devil a Messenger to fetch him quick to Hell By this Theodorick saw the face of a man in the mouth of a fish N●ssus heard the noise of murther in the voice of birds Saundes ran distracted over the Irish Mountains This made Cain wander Saul stab himself Judas hang himself Arius empty his bowels at the stool Latomus cry desperately he was damned he was damned and Julian confess that he was conquered It makes man the Lord of all to be Slave to all Lord what is man Certainly 't is better with Evagrius to lye secure on a bed of straw then to have a turbulent conscience on a bed of Doune having Curtains embossed with Gold and Pearl But Ninthly and lastly The shedding of the blood of the Just is a sin of so high a cry and so deep a dye that for it God is resolved except men repent that he will shut them out Gal. 5. 21. Rev. 21. 8. Rev. 22. 15. 1 Joh. 3. 15. Math. 22. 7. of the highest Heaven and cast them down to the lowest Hell as you may see by comparing the Scriptures in the Margine together and therefore certainly the blood of the Just is most precious blood Now seeing that the blood of the Just is such precious blood who will wonder if God sets such Cities and Towns and Countries into a flame about their ears upon whose skirts the blood of the Just is to be found Josephus speaking of the desolation of Jerusalem saith Because they have sinned against the Lord God of their Fathers in shedding the blood of just men and innocents that were within thee even in the Temple of the Lord therefore are our sorrowful sighings multiplied and our weepin●s daily increased 'T was the blood of the just the blood of the innocents that turned Jerusalem into ashes I have read of one Rabbi Samuel who six hundred years since writ a Tract in form of an Epistle to Rabbi Isaac Master of the Synagogue of the Jews wherein he doth excellently discuss the cause of their long Captivity and extream misery and after that he had proved that it was inflicted for some grievous sin he sheweth that sin to be the same which Amos speaks of For three transgressions of Israel and for four I will not turn away the punishment thereof because they sold the righteous for silver and the poor for a pair of shoes The selling of Joseph he makes the first sin the worshipping of the Calf in Horeb the second sin the abusing of Gods Prophets the third sin and the selling of Jesus Christ the fourth sin For the first they served four hundred years in Egypt for the second they wandred forty years in the Wilderness for the third they were Captives seventy years in Babylon and for the fourth they are held in pitiful Captivity even till this day When Phocas that bloody Cut-throat sought to secure himself by building high Walls he heard a voice from Heaven telling him That though he built his Bulwarks never so high yet sin within blood within would soon undermine all Shedding the blood of the Just is a sin that hath undermined the strongest Bulwarks and that hath blown up and burnt up the most glorious Cities that have been in the World And who can tell but that the blood of the Just that was shed in the Marian days might now come up into Speeds Chronicle in Queen Mary remembrance before the Lord For in four years of her Reign there were consumed in the heat of those flames two hundred seventy seven persons viz. Five Bishops one and twenty Ministers eight Gentlemen eighty four Artificers one hundred Husbandmen Servants and Labourers six and twenty Wives twenty Widows nine Virgins two Boys and two Infants I say who can tell but that the blood of these precious Servants of the Lord hath cryed aloud in the ears of the Lord for vengeance against that once glorious but now desolate City Men of brutish spirits and that are skilful to destroy make no more of shedding the blood of the Just then they do of shedding the blood of a Swine but yet this hideous sin makes so great a noise in the ears of the Lord of Hosts that many times he tells the World by his fiery Dispensations that it cannot be purged away but by fire And thus much for the sins that bring the fiery Judgment our way now to the Application is plain THE FIRST PART OF THE Application 1. To see the Hand of the Lord in it Ten Considerations to work to this 2. To mourn under the sense of so great a Judgement WE come now to the Use and Application of this important Point The Explication of a Doctrine is but the drawing of the Bow the Application is the hitting of the Mark the white c. Is it so that God is the Author or Efficient cause of all the great calamities and dreadful Judgements that are inflicted upon Cities and Countreys and in particular of that of Fire then First Let us see the hand of the Lord in this late dreadful Vse Fire that hath been upon us for certainly God is the Author permissively at least he is the great Agent in all those terrible Judgements that befall Persons Cities and Kingdoms Ruth 1. 13. 21. Psalm 39. 9. 1 Sam. 3. 18. Whosoever or whatsoever be the Rod it s his hand that gives the
stroke The power of bringing Judgements upon Cities God challengeth to himself Amos 3. 6. Sha●● there be evil in a City and the Lord hath not done it Whatever the Judgement be that falls upon a City God is the Author of it he acts in it and orders it according to his own good pleasure There is no Judgement that casually falls upon any person City or Countrey Every Judgement is inflicted by a Divine Power and Providence The Chalde●ns could never have burnt Jerusalem if the Lord had not granted The Souldiers Fire-brand by which was fired the famous Temple of Jerusalem was commissionated by a Divine Command them a commission Hence saith the Prophet Evil came down from the Lord unto the gate of Jerusalem Mich. 1. 12. 'T was a sore evil that Jerusalem which was one of the worlds wonders should be destroyed by fire but this evil was determined at the Counsel-board in Heaven Jerusalem was burnt by a Commission signed in Heaven both when the Chaldeans under Nebuchadnezzar and when the Romans under Titus Vespasian laid it in Ashes All sorts of Judgements are more at the beck of God and under the command Matth. 8. 5. 11. Whatever Miscreants made the Fire-Balls yet God did blow the fire and so turned London into a Ruinous heap Certainly there was much of Gods hand whatever there was of mens heads in this fatal Fire of God than Servants are under the commands of their Masters or Souldiers under the commands of their General or Children under the command of their Parents Whatever Judgement God commands to destroy a Person a City or Countrey that Judgement shall certainly and effectually accomplish the command of God in spite of all that creatures can do God as he is our Creator Preserver and Soveraign Lord has an absolute power both over our persons lives estates and habitations and when we have transgressed his righteous Laws he may do with us and all we have as he pleases he may turn us out of house and home and burn up all our comforts round about us and yet do us no wrong Those things which seem accidental and casual unto us are ordered by the wise Councel Power and Providence of God Instruments can no more stir till God gives them a commission than the Axe or the Knife can cut of it self without an hand Job eyed God in the fire that fell from Heaven and in all the fiery tryals that befell him And therefore as one observes he doth not say the Lord gave Austi●e and the Devil took away nor the Lord gave and the Chaldeans and Sabeans took away but the Lord hath given and the Lord hath taken and blessed be the name of the Lord. Job 1. 20 21. Certainly without the cognizance and concurrence of a Wise Omniscient and Omnipotent God no creatures can move nor without his fore-sight and permission no event can befall any Person City or Countrey Acts 17. 28. For in him we live move and have our being No man can put forth a natural action without him Whatever the means or instruments of our misery be the hand is Gods and this the Saints in all the Ages of the world have confest It becomes us Levit. 10. 1 2 3 4. Heb. 11. 25 26. in every Judgement to see the hand of the Lord and to look through visible means to an invisible God for though the Lord may and many times do's make use of Satan and his instruments to scourge his dearest children yet it is but one hand and many instruments that he smites us with God makes use of what second causes he pleases for the execution of his pleasure And many times he makes the worst Isa 10. 5. to 20. of men the Rod of his indignation to chastise his people with Witne●s Pharaoh Ahab Haman Herod and the Assyrian Kings with scores of other instances that the Scripture affords And all Histories abound in nothing more than in Instances of this nature as all know that have read any thing of History The Conclave of Rome and the Conclave of Hell can do nothing without a commission from Heaven They can't make a Louse nor burn a House nor drown Exod. 8. 18. Jer. 21. 10. Matth. 8. 32. Chap. 10. 30. Luke 21. 18. a Pigg without a commission under the Broad Seal of Heaven A Sparrow lights not upon the ground nor a hair falls not from our heads no nor a bristle from a Sow's back saith Tertullian but by a Divine Providence All created creatures both in that upper and in this lower world depend upon God for their being motion and several activities Now in that God did not exert his Power neither to prevent nor check those furious flames which he knew without his interposure would lay all in ashes 't is evident that it was his Divine pleasure that London should be turned into a ruinous heap Gods not hindering the desolation of London was a tacit commissioning of the flames to burn down all that stood in their way That such are under a high mistake that ascribe the burning of London so to second causes as that they will allow no more Judgement of God in it than that which accompanies common casualty I shall sufficiently evidence before I have finished this first Use But I hope the prudent Reader will make it his business to see the signal hand of God in this late fiery dispensation and to remember that the Scribe is more properly said to write than the Pen and he that maketh and keepeth the Clock is more properly said to make it go and strike than the Wheels and Poizes that hang upon it and every Workman to effect his work rather than the tools which he useth as instruments So the Lord of Hosts who is the Chief Agent and Mover in all things and in all actions may more fitly and properly be said to effect and bring to pass all Judgements yea all things that are done in the earth than any inferiour or subordinate causes seeing they are but his tools and instruments which he rules and guides according to his own Will Power and Providence At this some of the more civilized Heathen hath long since hammered viz. That the same power dispenseth both comforts and crosses when they painted Fortune in two forms with two faces of contrary colours the foremost white the hindermost black to signifie that both good and evil came from the Goddess Fortune When 't was told Prince Henry that delitiae generis humani that darling of mankind That the sins of the people caused that affliction that was upon him O no said he I have sins enough of mine own to cause that So should we all confess that though God take occasion by another mans sin or by another mans hand to fire my house Yet the cause is just that it should be so and that I my self have deserved it whatsoever the occasion or the instrument be God had matter enough against
had set both their City and Temple in a flame before their eyes Now mark sudden and unexpected Judgements do alwayes carry a great deal of the anger and severity of God in them Deut. 7. 4. So will the anger of the Lord be kindled against you and destroy thee suddenly God being greatly angry with Jerusalem Isa 29. 1 2 3 4. He tells her that her Judgement should be at an instant suddenly ver 5. Psal 64. 7. But God shall shoot at them with an arrow suddenly shall they be wounded Hab. 2. 7. Shall they not rise up suddenly that shall bite thee and awake that shall vex thee and thou shalt be for booties unto them Prov. 6. 14 15. Frowardness is in his heart be deviseth mischief continually he soweth discord Therefore shall his calamity come suddenly suddenly shall he be broken without remedy Here is a dismal doom not bruised but broken yea suddenly broken when they least dream or dread the danger And this without remedy there shall be no possibility of piecing them up again or putting them into a better condition Chap. 24. 22. Their calamity shall rise suddenly when they think that they have made all cock-sure then ruine and desolation lyes at their door Certainly there are no judgements so dreadful and amazing as those which come most suddenly and unexpectedly upon the sons of men for these cut off all hope they hinder the exercise of reason they cloud mens minds they distress mens spirits they marr mens councils and they weaken mens courage and they daunt mens hearts so that they can neither be serviceable to themselves nor their friends not the publick all this was evidently seen upon the body of the Citizens when London was in flames The more eminent cause have we to take notice of the hand of the Lord in that late fiery dispensation that has past upon us The year 1666. according to the computation of several sober wise learned men should have been the Christians Jubilee many mens expectations were high that Rome that year should be laid in ashes but it never entered into any of our hearts or thoughts that this very year London should be laid in ashes O unexpected blow Berlin in Germany who in the Pulpit Scultet A●●a● charged the Apostle Paul with a lie was suddenly smitten with an Apoplexy while the words were yet in his mouth and f●ll down dead in the place The Parson of Chrondal in Kent having got a Pardon from Cardinal Pool as the Popes Substitute in that work the next Lords Day in his own Parish presses all his people to do the l●ke with this Argument that he was now so free from all his sins that he could die presently and God presently so struck him in the Pulpit that he died and never spoke more As Bibulus a Roman General was riding in triumph in all his glory a Tyle fell from the house in the Street and knockt out his brains Otho the Emperour slew himself with his own hands but slept so soundly the night before that the Grooms of his Chamber heard him snort And Plutarch reporteth the like of Cato Lepidus and Aufidius stumbled at the very threshold of the Senate and died the blow came in a cloud from Heaven Sophocles died suddenly by excessive joy and Homer by immoderate grief Mr. Perkins speaks of one who when it thundered scoffingly said it was nothing but Tom Tumbril a hooping his Tubs and presently he was struck dead with a Thunderbolt Olympus the Arrian Heretick bathing himself Theatre of Gods Judgements lib. 1. ap 9. p. 64. uttered sad words against the blessed Trinity but suddenly a threefold Thunderbolt struck him dead in the same place Attilus King of the Huns proudly gave out that the Stars fell before him and the earth trembled at his presence and how he would be the scourge of all Nations but soon after he died by a flux of blood breaking out of his mouth which choaked him on his wedding-day King Henry the Second of France upon the Marriage of his Sister with the King of Spain was so puffed up that he called him self by a new Title Tres-heur●use Roy The thrice happy King But to confute him in solemnizing that Marriage he was slain at Tilt by the Captain of his Guard though against his will but not without Gods determinate counsel in the very beginning of his supposed happiness Now every one that is a man either of reason or Religion will certainly say that in these sudden Judgements that befell these persons there was the angry and displeased hand of God to be seen O how much more then should we see the angry and displeased hand of the Lord in that sudden dreadful fire that has turned our once renowned City into a ruinous heap Jer. 8. 15. In this year 1666. many thought that there had been many great and glorious things in the womb of Providence that would have been now brought forth but they were mistaken for unexpectedly London is laid in ashes But Thirdly Consider the force violence vehemency and irresistibleness of it despising and triumphing over all those Many Authors speak much of the Greek Fire some of which burnt the Saracens Fleet to be of such force that the Ancients accounted no other means would extinguish it but Vinegar And certainly several fir●s that have been enkindled by Romish Jesuits have not been less turious weak endeavours that were used This Fire broke forth with that violence and raged with that fury and appeared in that dreadfulness and spread it self with that dismalness and continued for so long a time with that irresistibleness that discouraged hearts and weak hands with their Buckets Engines Ladders Hooks opening of Pipes and sweeping of Channels could give no check to it This fire broke in upon the Inhabitants like an Arm of the Sea and roared and raged like a Bear robbed of her Whelps until it had laid our glory in ashes When the fire was here and there a little allayed or beaten down or put to a stand how soon did it recover its force and violence and make the more furious onsets burning down Water-houses Engines Churches and the most strong pleasant and stately houses nothing being able to stand before its rage How soon did the flames mount up to the tops of the highest houses and as soon descend down to the bottom of the lowest Vaults and Cellars Stone walls and Brick-walls and those noble and strong Pieces of Architecture were all but fuel to those furious flames How did they march along Jehu-like on both sides of the Streets with such a roaring dreadful and astonishing noise as never was heard in the City of London before Londons sins were now so great and Gods wrath was now so hot that there was no quenching of the furious flames The Decree for the burning of London was now gone forth and none could reverse it The time of Londons fall was now come The fire had
nor ears never heard of before nor tongues never discoursed of before nor Pens never writ of before Beloved you know that 't is our duty to take serious notice of the hand of the Lord in the least Judgement and in every particular Judgement Oh how much more then dos it highly concern us to take serious notice of the hand of the Lord that has been lifted up against us in that late dreadful impartial universal fire that has burnt us all out of our habitations and laid our City desolate But Seventhly Consider the greatness of it the destructiveness of it Oh the many thousand families that were destroyed and impoverished in four dayes time Of many it might have been said the day before the fire who so rich as London was the Lady-City where the Riches of many Nations were laid up I would rather be bound to weep over London than be bound to summ up the losses of London by this dreadful fire these and the very next day it might have been said of the same persons who so poor as these as poor as Job yea poor to a Proverb Jer. 21. 13 14. Behold I am against thee O inhabitant of the valley and rock of the plain saith the Lord which say who shall come down against us or who shall enter into our habitations But I will punish you according to the fruit of your doings saith the Lord. And I will kindle a fire in the forrest thereof and it shall devour all things round about it Some by the Forrest understand the fair and sumptuous buildings in Jerusalem that were built with wood that was hewen out of the Forrest of Libanon and stood as thick as Trees in the Forrest Others by the Forrest understand the whole City of Jerusalem with the Countrey round about it that was as full of people as a Forrest is full of Trees Others by Forrest understand the house of the Lord and the Kings house and the houses of the great Princes which were built with excellent matter from the Wood of Lebanon Jerusalem was 2 Sam. 5. 6. so strongly d●fended by nature that they thought themselves invincible as once the Jebusites did they were so confident of the strength of their City that they scorned the proudest and the strongest enemies about them But sin had brought them low in the eye of God so that he could see nothing eminent or excellent among them and therefore the Lord resolves by the Chaldees to fire their magnificent buildings in which they gloried and to turn their strong and stately City into a ruinous heap Though Jerusalem Psalm 125. 2. stood in a Vale and was environed with Mountains yet the upper part of it stood high as it were upon a rocky rising hill Now the Citizens of Jerusalem trusted very much in the scituation of their City they did not fear their being besieged straitned conquered or fired and therefore they say Who shall come down against us Who shall enter into our habitation Where is the enemy that has courage or confidence enough to assault our City or to enter into our habitations but God tells them that they were as barren of good fruit as the Trees of the Forrest were barren of good fruit and therefore he was resolved by the hand of the Chaldeans to hew them down and to fire their most stately Structures and to turn their glorious City in which they greatly trusted and gloried into a ruinous heap All which accordingly was done not long after by Nebuzaradan and his Army as you may see in Jer. 52. 12 13 14 15. How often hath the Citizens of London been alarm'd with the cry of fire which hath been as often extinguished before they could well know where it was and how it began but all former fires were but small fires but Bon-fires to this dreadful fire that has been lately amongst us In the twentieth year of the Reign of William the first so Sir Richard Bakers Chronicle p. 31. 47. great a fire happened in London that from the West-gate to the East-gate it consumed houses and Churches all the way This was the most grievous fire that ever happened in that City saith my Author And in the Reign of King Henry the first a long tract of buildings from West-cheap in London to Aldgate was consumed with fire And in King Stephens Reign there was a fire that began at London Stone and consumed all unto Aldgate These have been the most remarkable fires in London But what were any of these or all these to that late dreadful fire that has been amongst us London in those former times was but a little City and had Eccles 9. 14. but a few men in it in comparison of what it was now London was then but as a great Banqueting-house to what it was now Nor the consumption of London by fire then was Can. 2. 4. nothing proportionable to the consumption of it by fire now For this late lamentable devouring fire hath laid waste the greatest part of the City of London within the walls by far and some part of the Suburbs also More than fourscore Parishes and all the Houses Churches Chappels Hospitals and other the great and magnificent buildings of Pious or Publick use which were within that circuit are now brought into ashes and become one ruinous heap This furious raging fire burnt many stately Monuments to powder it melted the Bells in the Steeples it much weakned and shattered the strongest Vaults under ground O what Age or Nation hath ever seen or felt such a dreadful visitation as this hath been Nebuzaradan General to the King of Babylon first sets the Temple of Jerusalem on fire and then the Jos A●t p. 255. A. M. 3356. Kings Royal Palace on fire and then by fire he levells all the houses of the great men yea and all the houses of Jerusalem are by fire turned into a ruinous heap according to Jer. 52. 12 13 14. what the Lord had before foretold by his Prophet Jeremiah Now this was a lamentable fire Some hundred years after the Roman Souldiers sackt the City and set it on fire and Jos A●t p. 741. A. M. 4034. laid it desolate with their Temple and all their stately buildings and glorious monuments Three or four Towers and the Wall that was on the West side they left standing as monuments of the Romans valour who had surpized a City so Jos A●t p. 745. strongly fortified All the rest of the City they so plained that they who had not seen it before would not believe that it had ever been inhabited Thus was Jerusalem one of the worlds wonders and a City famous amongst all Nations Luke 19. 41 42 43 44. Tacit. A● 15. made desolate by fire according to the prediction of Christ some years before There was a great fire in Rome in Nero's time it spread it self with that speed and burnt with that violence till of fourteen
body suffers all the members of the body suffer 't is so in the Politick body c. Look as all Rivers run into the Sea and all the lines of the circumference meet in the center so did the interests of the most eminent persons in the whole Nation meet in London c. Now London is laid in ashes we may write Ichabod upon poor England By the flames that have been kindled in London God hath spit fire into the face of England an universal stroke The sore strokes of God which have lately fallen upon the head City London are doubtless designed by Heaven for the punishment of the whole body In the sufferings of London the whole Land suffers For what City County or Town in England was there that was not one way or other refreshed and advantaged if not enriched with the silver streams of London that overflowed the Land as the River Nilus doth the Land of Aegypt Doubtless there are but few in the Land but are more or less concerned in the burning of London There are many thousands that are highly concerned in their own particulars there are many thousands concerned upon the account of their inward friends and acquaintance and who can number up the many score thousands imployed in the Manufacture of the Land whose whole dependance under God was upon London What Lamentation mourning and wo is there in all places of the Land for the burning of London especially among poor Tradesmen Inn-keepers and others whose livelihoods depended upon the safety and prosperity of London Certainly he is no English man but one who writes a Roman hand and carries about him a Romish heart who feels not who trembles not under this universal blow Many years labour will not make up the Citizens losses to them Yea what below the Riches of the Indies will effectually make up every mans losses to him He shall be an Apollo to me that can justly summ up the full value of all that have been destroyed by those furious flames that has turned the best if not the richest City in the world into a ruinous heap Now their loss is a loss to the whole Nation and this the Nation already feels and may yet feel more and more if God in mercy dos not prevent the things that we have cause to fear 'T is true London is the back that is smitten but what corner is there in all the Land that hath not more or less one way or another contributed to the burning of London Not only those that lived in Jerusalem but also those that came up to Jerusalem and that Traded with Jerusalem they even they did by their sins contribute to Jerusalems ruine They are under a high mistake that think it was only the sins of the City which brought this sore desolation upon her doubtless as far as the Judgement extends and reaches so far the sins extend and reach which have provoked the Lord to make poor London such an astonishing example of his justice How are the eff●cts of Londons ruine already felt and sighed under all the Nation over The blood and spirits which this whole Nation hath already lost by this late lamentable fire will not be easily nor suddenly recovered The burning of London is the Herald of God to the whole Nation calling it to repentance and reformation for the very same sins that have laid London in ashes are rampant in all parts of the Nation as you may easily perceive if you please but to compare that Catalogue that in this Book I put into your hands with those sins that are most reigning and raging in all places of the Land by which you may also see that they were not the greatest sinners in England upon whom the fire of London fell no more than they were the greatest sinners in Jerusalem upon whom the Tower of Siloam fell That the burning Luke 13. 4 5. of London is a National Judgement is evident enough to every man that has but half an eye But if any should doubt of it or dispute it the Kings Proclamation for a General Fast on that account puts it beyond all dispute The words of the Proclamation that are proper to my purpose are these A Visitation so dreadful speaking of the burning of London that scarce any Age or Nation hath ever seen or felt the like wherein although the afflicting hand of God fell more immediately upon the inhabitants of this City and the parts adjacent yet all men ought to look upon it as a Judgement upon the whole Nation and to humble themselves accordingly O Sirs you are to see and observe and acknowledge the hand of the Lord in every personal Judgement and in every Domest●cal Judgement O how much more then in every National Judgement that is infl●ct●d upon us And thus I have done with those ten Considerations that should not only provoke us but also prevail with us to see and acknowledge the hand of the Lord in that late dreadful fire that has laid ●ur City desolate The second Use is a Use of Lamentation and mourning Vse 2 Is London laid in ashes Then let us all lament and mourn that L●nd●n is laid desolate Shall Christ weep over Jerusalem Luke 19. 41 42 43 44. when 't was standing in all its glory knowing that it would not be long before it was laid even with the ground and shall not we weep over London whose glory is now laid in the d●st Who can look upon London as the An●ient and Noble Metropolis of England and not lament and mourn to see it laid in ashes It might have been said not long since Psalm 98. 12 13. London the Crown of England ha●h ●ost its Jewel of Wealth and Beauty Walk about Sion walk about London and go round about ●er t●ll the Towers thereof mark ye well her Bulwarks consid●r her P●laces look upon her stately Houses Halls and Hospitals take notice of her Shops and fair Ware-houses and Royal Exchange c. and lo the glory of all ●hese things is now buried in a common ruine O the incredible change that a devouring fire hath made in four dayes time within thy Walls O London So that now we may lamentingly Alas poor London Is this the joyous City whose antiquity is of ancient dayes Is this the crowning City Isa 23. 7 8 whose Merchants were Princes and whose Traffickers were the honourable of the Earth Who can but weep to see how the Lord hath made a City an heap and a ruine of a defenced City and a Pallace to be no City Who can look upon Chap. 25. 2. naked Steeples and useless Chimneys and pittiful fragments of ragged walls Who can behold stately Structures and noble Halls and fair Houses and see them all laid in ashes or turned into a heap of Rubbish without paying some tears as due to the sadness of so dreadful a spectacle Who can with dry eyes hear London thus speaking out of its r●ines Is it nothing
saith Plato is not to encrease our heaps but to diminish the covetousness of our hearts And saith Seneca Cui cum paupertate bene convenit pauper non est A contented man cannot be a poor man I have read of another Philosopher who seeing a Prince going by with the greatest pomp and state imaginable he said to some about him See how many things I have no need of And saith another It were well for the world if there were no Gold in it But since its the fountain whence all things flow it s to be desired but only as a pass to travel to our journeys end without begging When Croesus King of Lydia asked Solon one of the seven wise men of Greece who in the whole world was more happy than he Solon answered Tellus who though he was a poor man yet he was a good man and content with that which he had So Cato could say as Aulus Gel●ius reports of him I have neither House nor Plate nor Garments of price in my hands what I have I can use if not I can want it S●me blame me because I want many things and I blame them because they cannot want Now shall Nature do more than Grace Shall the poor blinded Heathen outstrip the knowing Christian O Sirs he that can lose his will in the will of God as to the things of this world he that is willing to be at Gods allowance he that has had much but can now be satisfied with a little he that can be contented to be at Gods finding he is of all men the most likely man to have all his losses made up to him But Eighthly and lastly Are your hearts more drawn out to have this fiery dispensation sanctified to you than to have your losses made up to you Do you strive more with God to get good by this dreadful Judgement than to recover your lost goods and your lost estates Is this the daily language of your souls Lord let this fiery calamity be so sanctified as that it may eminently issue in the mortifying of our sins in the encrease of our Graces in the mending of our hearts in the reforming of our lives and in the weaning of our souls from every thing below thee and in the fixing of them upon the greathings of Eternity If it be thus with you 't is ten to one but God even this world will make up your losses to you But The sixth Support to bear up the hearts of the people of God under the late fiery di●pensation is this viz. That by fiery dispensations the Lord will make way for the new Heavens and the new Earth he will make way for the glorious deliverance of his people Isa 66. 15. 16. 22. For behold the Lord will come with fire and with his Chariots like Isa 9. 5 6. Psalm 66. 12. ● whirle-wind to render his anger with fury and his rebuke with flames of fire For by fire and by his sword or by his sword of fire will the Lord plead with all flesh and the slain of the Lord shall be many For as the new heavens and the new earth which I will make shall remain before me saith the Lord so shall your seed and your name remain The great and the glorious things that God will do for his people in the last dayes are set for●h by new he●vens and new earth and Isa 65. 17. Jo●l 2. 1 2 3 4 5 30 31 32. Zeph. 3. 8 9. these God will bring in by fi●ry di●pensations The glorious dstat● of the universal Church of J●ws and Gentiles on earth is no lower an estate than that o● a new he●v●n and a new earth Now th●s blessed Church-State is ushe●●d into the world by fi●ry Judgements By fi●ry dispensations God 2 Pet. 3. 10 11 12 13. will put an end to the glory of t●●s old w●rld and bring in the new Look as G●d by a wa●●ry D●luge made way for one new world so by a fiery D●luge in the last of the last Gen. 9. ●ee our new Anotationists o● Isa 65. Isa 17. o● Chap. 66. 15 16 22. and on Rev. 21. 1. dayes he will make way for another new world wherein shall dwell righteousness as Peter speaks All men ●n common speech call a new great change a new world By fiery dispensations God will bring great changes upon the world and make way for his Sons reign in a more glorious manner than ever he has yet reigned in the world Rev. 18 Chap. 19. Chap. 20. and Chap. 21. The summ of that I hav● in short ●o offer to your consideration out of these Chapters is this Babylon the great is fallen is fallen How much she hath glorified her self so much sorrow and torment shall be given her Her plagues come in one day death and mourning and famine and she shall be utterly burnt with fire Rejoyce over her thou heaven and ye holy Apostles and Prophets for God hath avenged you on her And after these things I heard a great voice of much people c. Saying Alleluiah salvation and glory and honour and power unto the Lord our God for tru● and right●ous are thy judgements for he hath judged the great Whore that hath corrupted the earth and hath avenged the blood of his Saints And again they said Alleluiah And the four and twenty Elders said Amen Alleluiah And I heard as it were the voyce of a great multitude and as the voyce of many waters and as the voyce of mighty thunderings saying Alleluiah for the Lord God omnipotent reigneth And the Beast and the false Prophet were cast into the lake of fire And the rest were slain with the sword But the Saints reigned with Christ a thousand years in the new Heavens and new Earth to whom the Kings of the earth and Nations of the world bring their honour God by his fiery dispensation upon Babylon makes way for Christs Reign and the Saints Reign in the New Heavens and new Earth But The seventh Support to bear up the hearts of the people of God under the late fiery dispensation is this viz. That by fiery dispensations God will bring about the ruine and destruction Psalm 50. 3 of his and his peoples enemies Psal 97. 3. A fire goeth before him and burneth up his enemies round about Heb. 3. 5. Before him went the Pestilence and burning coals went forth at his feet Ver. 7. I saw the tents of Cushan in affliction and the curtains of the Land of Midian did tremble Ver. 12. Thou didst march through the Land in indignation thou didst thresh the Heathen in anger Ver. 13. Thou wentest forth for the salvation of thy people even for salvation with thine anointed thou woundest the head out of the house of the wicked by discovering the foundation even to the neck S●lah Jer. 50. 31 32. Behold I am against thee O thou most proud saith the Lord God of Hosts for thy day is come the time that I will
vessels of Honour Commonly the most afflicted Christians are the most golden Christians Zechary 13. 9 And I will bring the third part through the fire and will refine them as silver is refined and will try them as gold is tried they shall call on my name and I will hear them I will say it is my people and they shall say the Lord is my God The fire of London was rather Physick than Poison there was more of a Paternal chastisement than there was of an extirpating vengeance in it and therefore certainly it shall work well it shall issue well The ninth Support to bear up the hearts of the people of God under the late fiery dispensation is this viz. That there was a great mixture of mercy in that dreadful Judgement of fire that has turned London into a ruinous heap At the final destruction of Jerusalem there was not one stone left upon Luke 19. 41. 45. another This might have been thy case O London had not mercy triumphed over Justice and over all the plots and designs of men Though many thousand houses are destroyed yet to the praise of free grace many thousand houses in the City and Suburbs have been preserved from the rage and violence of the flames What a mercy w●s that that Z●ar should be standing when Sodom was laid in ash●s Gen. 19. And what a mercy was this that your houses should be standing when so many thousand houses have been laid desolate Is more than a third part of the Ci●y destroyed by fire W●y the whole City might have been destroyed by fire and all the Suburbs round about it But in the midst of wrath God has remembred mercy in the midst of great seve●ity Psalm 136. 23. God has exercised great clemency Had the fire come on with that rage fury and triumph as to have laid both City and Sub●rbs level we must have said with th● Church The L●rd is ●ighteous Had the three Children their Songs Lam. 1. 18. in the midst of the fiery Furnace and why should not they have their Songs of praise whose hous●s by a miraculous Providen●e were preserved in the mi●st o● Londons flames O Sirs what a mixture of mercy was there in this fiery calamity that all your lives should be spared and that many of your houses should be preserved and that much of your goods your wares your commod●ties shou●d be snatcht as so many fire-brands out of the fire If ever there were an obligation put upon a people to cry Grace Grace Grace the Lord has put one upon you w●o h●ve b●●n sh●●●rs in that mixture of mercy that God has ex●ended to ●he many thousand sufferers by L●ndons flames Had this J●dgement of fire been infl●cted when t●e raging P●stilence sw●pt away some thousands every Week and when he City was even left naked as to her inhab●tants and when the whole Nation Josh 2. 9 10 11. was under a drea●ful ●●ar ●re●bling an● d●smayedness of spirit might there not have been far greater desolations both of houses goods and lives in the midst of us Had God con●ended with London by Pes●ilence and fire at once who would ●●ve lodged your persons in their beds or your goods in heir Barns Had these two dreadful Judgements met Londoners would have met with but few frien●s in the world Well when I look upon Londons sins and deserts on the on● hand and upon the principles old hatred plots designs rage and wrath of some malicious persons on the other Ezek. 25. 15. hand instead of wondering that so much of the City and Suburbs is destroyed I rather wonder that any one house Tacitus writing of Rome saith S●quitu● clades om●ibus quid ●bi p●r viol●●●iam ig●ium accidera● gravior atque a●●oior A●●al lib. 15. p. ●91 It was rich mercy that it was not so wi●h Lo●don in the City or Suburbs is preserved Whilst London was in flames and all men under a high distraction and all t●ings in a sad confusion a secret subtle designing powerful enemy m●ght have risen up in the midst of you that might have spoiled your goods rav●shed your wives defloured your daughters and after all this have sheathed their swords in all your bowels and in that it fell not out thus what cause have Lond●ners to bow for ever before preventing and restraining Grace Since the creation of the world God has never been so severe in the execution of his most dreadful Judgements as not to remember mercy in the midst of wrath When he drowned the old world who before were drowned in lusts and pleasures he extended mercy to Noah and his family When he rained Hell out of Heaven upon Sodom and Gomorrah turning those rich and pleasant Gen. 19. Cities into ruinous heaps he gave Lot and his Daughters their lives for a prey And when by fire and sword he had made Jerusalem a dreadful spectacle of his wrath and vengeance Isa 6. 11 12 13. Jer. 5. 10. 18. yet then a remnant did escape This truth we Citizens have experienced or else we and our all before this day had been destroyed Every Citizen should have this Motto written in characters of Gold on his fore-head It is of Lam. 3. 22. the Lords mercies that we are not consumed God might have made London like Sodom and Gomorrah but in the day of his anger some beams of his favour darted forth upon your London By which means the hopes of some are so far revived as to expect that London yet may be re-built and blest That 's a dreadful word When he begins he will make an end 1 Sam. 3. 12. Jer. 4. 4. Chap. 21. 12. and the fire of his wrath shall burn and none shall quench it These eradicating Judgements had certainly fallen upon London had not the Lord in the midst of his fury remembred mercy If the Lord had not been on our side may London now Psalm 124. 1 2 3. say if the Lord had not been on our side when the fire rose up against us then the fire had swallowed us up quick when its rage was kindled against us Doubtless God ne-never mingled a cup of wrath with more mercy than this T●ough the fire of London was a very great and dreadful fire yet it was not so great nor so dreadful a fire as that of S●dom and Gomorrah was for that fire of Sodom and Gom●rrah First It was a miraculous fire a fire that was besides beyond and against the course of Nature Gen. 19. 24. Then They sinned aga●n●t the light and course of nature and the●efore they were destroy●d against the course of nature by fire from Heaven the Lord rained upon Sodom and Gomorrah brimstone and fire fr●m the Lord out of Heaven Fire mingled with brimstone hath b●en found 1. Most obnoxious to the ey●s 2. Most loathsome to the smell And 3. Most fierce in burning He hit the mark who speaking of fire and brim●●one s●id
that the drought was so great that all the Fountains and Riv●rs except Iber and Be●is were dried up so that the earth gaped in several places that whole fields were parted and that many who had thought to have fled into other parts were hindered and could no● get passage over these fearful openings of the earth Hereby Spain especially those places nearest the Mediterranean Sea being stripped naked of all Herbs ●nd the glory of Trees being d●y●d up ex●ept a f●w T●ees which were preserved upon the banks of the River Betis men and Beasts being consumed with thirst and famine was ●urned by this J●dgement into a mis●rable solitude and Wilderness The Royal line of the Kings was by this means All these things do the Histories of Spain report extinct and the poorer sort of men whose means were ●hort and provision small went into other places as they could conveniently and with all sp●ed not being able to stand or stay out this six and twenty years misery In the Th●cyd Pel●ponn●s●an War at Potidea men eat one another When Vtica was besieged by Amilcar the Father of H●nnibal men Pol●b at one another the famine was so great amongst them At Antioch in Syria many of the Christians in the Holy War Turk Hist Fol. 18. through famine devoured the dead bodies of the late slain enemies At the siege of Scodra Horses were dainty meat yea th●y were glad to eat Dogs Cats Rats and the skins of beasts sod A little Mouse and Puddings made of Dogs Ibid. 4●6 guts was sold at so great a price as exceeds all credit When H●nnibal besieged Cassilinum the famine was so great that Val. Max. l 7 ●ap 6. Turk Hist a Mouse was sold for two hundred groats that is for three pound eighteen shillings and eight pence That was a sore famine in Samaria when an Asses head was sold for 2 Kings 6. 25. eighty pieces of silver that is say some for four or five pound Others say ten for a shekel of silver was with the Jews as much as two shillings six pence with us by this account an Asses head was sold for ten pound sterling In Edward the Seconds time Anno 1316. There was so great a famine that horses dogs yea men and children were stoln for food and the Thieves newly brought into the Parch Pilgrim p. 289. Sp●ed 6. 4 Gaols were ●orn in pieces and eaten presently half alive by such as had been longer there In War Oppression Cap●ivity and many other calamities much of the hand of man is to be seen but Famine is a deep evident and app●ren● Judgement which God himself brings upon the sons of men by his own high hand Many or most of those calamities that are brought upon us by humane means are avoidable by humane helps but famine is that comprehensive Judg●ment that the highest power on earth cannot help against If the Lord do not help thee whence shal I help thee 2 Kings 6 27 out of the barn fl●or or out of the Wine-press said the King of Israel in the famine of Samaria Ah London London if the Lord had inflicted upon thy inhabitan●s this sore Judgement of f●mine making the Heavens as Iron and the Earth as Brass Lev. 26. 19. Hab. 3. 17. Deut. 28. 23. If the Lord had cut off all thy delightful and necessary provisions and thy Cit●zens had been forced to eat one another or every one to eat the flesh of his own arms and the fruit of his own body how dismal would thy condition have been Certainly such as have been swept away by the raging Pestilence ashore and such as have been slain by the bloody sword at Sea might very well be counted happy in comparison of those who should live and die under that lingering Judgement of a famine Doubtless famine is a sorer Judgement than either Sword Fire or Pestilence There be many deaths in a Dearth Famine is the top of all humane calamities as B●sil termeth it extream hunger hath made Mothers Murtherers and so turned the Sanctuary of life into the Shambles of death Thirdly God might have overturned London and her inhabitants in a moment by some great and dreadful Earthquake as he hath done several great rich strong and populous Isa 13 1● Psal● ●8 7. Cities and Towns in former times Under Tiberius the Emperour thirteen Cities of Asia fell down with an Earth-quake and six under Trajan and twelve under Constantine In Campania Ferraria in Italy 1569. in the space of forty hours by reason of an Earthquake many Palaces Fardenti●s Temples and houses were overthrown with the loss of many a man the loss amounting to forty hundred thousand p●unds In the year 1171. there was such a mighty Earthquake that the City Tripolis and a great part of Damascus in Antiochia and Hul●ipre the chief City in the Kingdom of Loradin and other Cities of the Sarac●n● either per●sh●d utterly or were wonder●ul●y defac●d In the year 1509. in ●he mon●●h of September the●e was so g●eat an Earthquake at Bodi● Constantinople tha● there were th●rt●●● thousand men destroyed by it and 〈◊〉 City m●s●r●bly shattered and ●u●ned by it In t●e 〈◊〉 ●f Hen●y the first the earth moved with so great a 〈…〉 many ●uildings were shaken down Sr. 〈◊〉 Bakers Chr●noc●e p. 47. and M●lm●sbu●● 〈◊〉 ●hat the house wherein he sate was lifeed up wi●● a 〈…〉 and at in third time settled again in the p●●p●r pla●e A●so in divers places it yi●l●ed forth a hid●o●● no i● and cast ●●rth fl●mes In L●mbardy there was ●n Earthquake that continued forty dayes and removed a Town ●●to the place where it stood a great way off In Ho●eden the elev●n●● year of the Reign of King Henry the second on the six and twenti●th d●y of January was so great an Earthquake Sr. Richa●d Ba●●rs Chron●cle p. 65. in Ely N●rfolk and Suffolk that it overthrew them that stood upon their feet and made the Bells to ring in the Steepl●s In the four and twentieth year of his Reign in the Territory of Derlington in the Bishopwrick of Durham the earth lifted up her self in the manner of an high Tower and so rem●i●ed unmoveable from morning till evening and then fell with so horrible a noise that it frighted the inhabitants there●bouts and the earth swallowing it up made there a deep pit which is seen at this day for a testimony wh●reof Leyland saith he saw the Pits there commonly cal●ed See the Relation in Print Hell-Keitles In the year 1666. the C●ty of Raguz● was overthrown by a most dreadful Earthquake and all the inhabitants which were many thousands except a few hundred were destroyed and buried in the ruines of that City At B●rn Anno 1584. near unto which City a certain Hill carried violently b●yond and over other Hills is reported by Polanus who lived in those parts to have covered a whole Polan Syntag. ●41 Village that had
guilt and stain of sin of its own nature and unpardoned endures eternally upon the soul and therefore what can follow but eternal torments The lasting continuance of sin is remarkably deseribed by the Prophet Jeremiah Chap. 17. 1. The sin of Judah is written with a Pen of Iron and with the point of a Diamond it is graven upon the table of their hearts Not only written but engraven that no hand can deface it Slight not the commission of any sin it perishes not with the acting The least vanity hath a perpetuity nay an eternity of guilt upon it Sin leaving a blot in the soul brings the matter of Hell fire is eternally punished because there is still matter for that everlasting fire to work upon But Fifthly I answer Though death put an end to mens lives yet not to sins Hell is as full of sin as it is of punishment or torment Though the Schoolmen determine that after this life men are capable neither of merit nor demerit and therefore by their sins do not incurr a greater measure of punishment yet they grant that they sin still Though when the creature is actually under the sentence of condemnation the Law ceases to any further punishment yet there is an obligation to the precepts of the Law still Though a man be bound only to the curse of the Law as he is a sinner yet he is bound to the precept of the Law as he is a creature so that though the demerit of sin ceaseth after death yet the nature of sin remaineth though by sinning they do not incurr a higher and a greater degree of punishment yet as they continue sinning so it is just with God there should be a continuation of the punishment already inflicted But Sixthly I answer It is no injustice in God to punish temporal offences with perpetual torments God measureth the punishment by the greatness of the offence and not by the time wherein the sin was acted Murder Adultery Sacriledge Treason and the like capital crimes are doomed in the Judicatories of men to death without mercy and sometimes to perpetual imprisonment or to perpetual banishment and yet these high offences were committed and done in a short time Now this bears a proportion with eternal torments O Sirs if the offences committed against God be infinitely heinous why may not the punishment be infinitely lasting Sinners offences as Austin well observes are not to be measured temporis longitudine Aug. de C●v●t D●● l. 1. c. 11. by the length of time wherein they were done but iniquitatis magnitudine by the foulness of the crime and if so then God is just in binding the sinner in everlasting chains We must remember that God is a great and a glorious God and that he is an omniscient and an omnipotent God and that he is a mighty yea an almighty God and that he is a ●oly and a just God and that he is out of Christ an incomprehensible incommunicable and very terrible God and that he is an infinite eternal and independent God And Heb. 12. 29. 30. we must remember that man is a shaddow a bubble a vapour a dream a base vile sinful worthless Worm Now these things being considered must we not confess that eternity it self is too short a space for God to revenge himself on sinners in But Seventhly and lastly I answer Such sinners have but what they chose Whilest they lived under the means of Grace the God of Grace sat before them Heaven and Hell Glory Deut. 11. 26 27. Chap. 30 15. Heb. 2. 2 3. Chap. 10. 28 29. John 3. 14 15 16 17 36. Chap. 1. 11. and misery eternal life and eternal death so that if they eternally miscarry they have none to blame but themselves for choosing Hell rather than Heaven misery rather than glory and eternal death rather than eternal life Ah how treely how fully how frequently how graciously how gloriously hath Christ been offered in the Gospel to poor sinners and yet they would not choose him they would not close with him they would not embrace him nor accept of him nor enter into a marriage Covenant with him nor resign themselves up to him nor part with their lusts to enjoy him They would not come to Christ that they might have John 5. 40. Mat●h 22. 2 3 4 5. 2 Cor. 4. 3 4. life they slighted infinite mercy and despised the riches of Grace and trode under foot the blood of the everlasting Covenant and scorned the offers of eternal salvation and therefore 't is but just that they should lye down in everlasting sorrows How can that sinner be saved that still refuses salvation How can mercy save him that will not be saved by mercy yea how can Christ save such a man that will not be saved by him All the world can't save that man from going to Hell who is peremptorily resolved that he will not go to Heaven Sinners have boldly and daily refused eternal life eternal mercy eternal glory and therefore 't is but just that th●y should endure eternal misery And let thus much suffice for answer to the Objection But Sir pray what are those duties that are incumbent upon Quest those that have been burnt up and whose habitations are n●w laid in its ashes I answer They are these that follow Answ First See the hand of the Lord in this late dreadful fire acknowledge the Lord to be the Author of all Judgements and of this in particular 'T is a high point of Christian Prudence Lev. 26. 41. Mich. 7. 9. and Piety to acknowledge the Lord to be the Author of all personal or National sufferings that b●fall us Jer. 9. 12. Who is the wise man that may understand this for what the Land perisheth and is burnt up like a Wilderness that none passeth through It is very great wi●dom to know from whom all our afflictions come and for what all our affl●ctions come upon us God looks that we should observe his hand in all our sufferings Hear the rod and who hath appointed it God challenges all sorts of afflictions as his own special Administration Mich. 6 9. See this Text fully opened in my first Epistle to my Treatise on ●loset Prayer Amos 3. 6. Is there any evil in the City and the Lord hath not done it I form the light and create darkness I make peace and create evil I the Lord do all th●se things Isa 45. 7. God takes it very hainously and looks upon it as a very great indignity that is put upon his Power Providence and Justice when men will neither see nor acknowledge his hand in those sore afflictions and sad sufferings that he brings upon them Of such the Prophet Isaiah complains Chap. 26. 11. Lord when thy hand is lifted up they will not see The hand the power of the Lord was so remarkable and conspicuous in the Judgements that were inflicted upon them as might very well wring an acknowledgement out
of them that it was the Lord that had stirred his wrath and indignation against them and yet they wilfully and desperately shut their eyes against all the severities of God and would not behold that dreadful hand of his that was stretched out against them O Sirs God looks upon himself as reproached and slandered by such who will not see his hand in the amazing Judgements that he inflicts upon them Jer. 5. 12. They have belied the Lord and said it is not he or as the Hebrew runs he is not Such was the Atheism of the Jews that they slighted divine warnings and despised all those dreadful threatnings of the Sword Famine and Fire which should have lead them to repentance and so tacitely said the Lord is not God such who either say that God is not omniscient or that he is not omnipotent or that he is not so just as to execute the Judgements that he has threatned Such belie the Lord such deny him to be God Many feel the rod that cannot hear it and many experience the smart of the rod that don't see the hand that holds the rod and this is sad How can the natural man without faiths prospective look so high as to see the hand of the Lord in wasting and destroying Judgements By common experience we find that natural men are mightily apt to father the evil of all their sufferings upon secondary causes sometimes they cry out this is from a distemper in nature and at other times they cry out this is from a bad Air Sometimes they cry out of the malice Plots envy and rage of men and at other times they cry out of Stars Chance and Fortune and so fix upon any thing rather than the hand of God But now a gracious Christian under all his sufferings he overlooks all secondary causes and fixes his eye upon the hand of God You know what Joseph said to his unnatural Brethren who fold him Gen. 45. 7. for a slave Non vos sed Deus 'T was not you but God that sent me into Aegypt Job met with many sore losses and sad crosses but under them all he over-lookt all instruments all secondary causes he over-looks the Sabeans and the Chaldeans and Satan and fixes his eye upon the hand of God The Lord hath given and the Lord hath taken away blessed be Job 1. 21. the name of the Lord. Judas and Annas and Caiaphas and Pilate and Herod and the bloody Souldiers had all a deep hand in the sufferings of Christ but yet he over-looks them all and fixes his eye upon his fathers hand The cup which my Father hath given me shall I not drink it This cup was John 18. 11. the cup of his sufferings Now in all his sad sufferings h● had still an eye to his Fathers hand Let us in all our sufferings write after this Copy that Christ has set before us But of this I have spoken very largely already and therefore let this touch suffice here Secondly Labour to justifie the Lord in all that he has done Say the Lord is righ●eous though he hath laid your City desolate When Jerusalem was laid desolate and the Wall thereof broken down and the Gates thereof were burnt with fire Nehemiah justifies the Lord Chap. 9. 33. Howbeit thou art just in all that is brought upon us for thou N●h●m 1. 4. So Ma●●●c●us the Emperour justified God when he saw his Wife and Children butchered before his eyes by the Tray●or Phocas and knew that h●mself should soon after be stewed in his own Broth cryed out Just art thou O Lord and just are all thy Judgements hast done right but we have done wickedly The same Spirit was upon Jeremiah Lam. 1. 1 4 8. How doth the City sit solitary that was full of people H●w is she become as a Widow She that was great among the Nations and Princ●ss among the Provinces How is she become tributary The wayes of Zion do mourn because none come to the solemn feasts all her Gates are desolate her Priests sigh her Virgins are afflicted and she is in bitterness The Lord is righteous for I have rebelled against his commandment The same Spirit was upon David Psal 119. 75. I know O Lord that thy Judgements are right and that thou in faithfulness hast afflicted me So Psal 145. 17. The Lord is righteous in all his wayes and holy in all his works This Maxim we must live and dye by though we don't alwayes see the reason of his proceedings 'T is granted on all hands that voluntas Dei est summa perfectissima infallibilis Regula divinae justitiae Deus sibi ipsi lex est The will of God is the chiefest the most perfect and infallible Rule of Divine Justice and that God is a Judge to himself Shall Gen. 18. 25. not the Judge of all the earth do right In this Negative question is emphatically implyed an Affirmative Position which is that God above all others must and will do right because from his Judgement there is no appeal Abraham considering the Nature and Justice of God was confidently assured that God could not do otherwise but right Hath God turn'd you out of house and home and marred all your pleasant things and stript you naked as the day wherein you were born yes Why if he hath he hath done you no wrong he can do you no wrong he is a Law to himself and his righteous Will is the Rule of all Justice God can as soon cease to be as he can cease to do that which is just and right So Psa 97. 2. Clouds and darkness are round about him Righteousn●ss and Judgement are the habitation of his throne Clouds and dar●n●ss notes the terribleness of Gods administrations though God be very terrible in his administrations yet righteousness and judg●ment are the habitation of his Throne It hath been a day of Gods wrath in London a day of trouble and distress a day of wasting and desolation a day of darkness and gloominess a day of clouds Zeph. 1. 15. and thick darkness as it was once in Jerusalem yet righteousness and judgement are the habitation of his Throne or as it may be translated are the foundation of his Throne Gods Seat of Judgement is alwayes founded in righteousness So Daniel 9. 12. And he hath confirmed his words which he spake against us and against our Judges that judged us by bringing upon us a great evil for under the whole heaven hath not been done as hath been done upon Jerusalem Ver. 14. The Lord our God is righteous in all his works which he doth for we obeyed not his voice God is only righteous he is perfectly righteous he is exemplarily righteous he is everlastingly righteous he is infinitely righteous and no unrighteousness dwells in him There are four things that God can't do Psal 92. 15. Job 36. 23. 1. He can't lie 2. He can't die 3. He ca'nt deny himself Nor 4.
humble thy self under the mighty hand of God God has ab●sed the● and therefore make it thy work to b● base in thine own eyes W●en N●hemiah understood that the Chald●ans There is nothing more more evident ●n History than this viz. That those d●eadful fires that have b●en ki●d●ed amongst the Christian have been still kind●ed by Idolatrous hands who were a generation of Idolaters had made Jerusalem desol●te by Fire he greatly humbl●d himself under the mighty hand of God He lookt through all act●ve causes to the efficient cause and accordingly he abased himself before the L●rd as you may see Neh. 1. 3 4. And they said unto me the remnant that are left of the Captivity there in the Province are in great ●●fl●ction and reproach the Wall of Jerus●lem also is broken down and the Gates thereof are burnt with fire And it came to pass when I heard these words that I sate down and wept and mourned certain dayes and fasted and prayed before the God of Heaven When Nehemiah ●eard that th● Wall of Jerusalem was broken down and that the gates thereof were b●rnt with fire his grief was so great that he could not stand under it and therefore he sits down and weeps Who is there that is a man that is an Englishman that is a C●ri●●●an that is a Protestant that can behol● the Ru●nes of Lond●n and not at least the frame of his Spirit sit down and wee● ov●r those R●in●s The way of wayes ●o be truly yea ●ighly ●x●lted is to be thoroughly humbled The h●g●est Heavens and the lowest hearts do both alike please Isaiah 57. 15. the most high God God will certainly make it his work to ex●lt them who make it their great work to abase themselves Such who are low in their ow● eyes and can be be content to be low in the eyes of others such are most high and ●ono●rable in the eye of God in the esteem and account ●f God The lowly Christian is alwayes the mo●● lovely C●ristian Now God hath laid your City low you● all low he ex●ects that your hearts should lye low unde● his mighty ha●d All the world cannot long keep up thos● men who do'nt labour to keep down their hearts under Judgements inflicted or Judgements feared Remember the sad Catastrophe of Herod the great of Agrippa the great of Pompey the great and of Alexander the great If your spirits remain great under great Judgements 't is an evident sign that more raigning Judgements lye at your doors But T●e seventh D●ty that lyes upon those who have been burnt up is to bless a taking God as well as a giving God 't is to encourage themselves in the Lord their God though he has stript them of all their worldly goods Thus did Job when he had lost his all The Lord gave and the Lo●d hath Job 1. 21. taken away blessed be the name of the Lord. One brings in holy Job standing by the ruined house under whose Walls his ten Children lay dead and buried and lifting up his D●e●ellius in his Gynnasiun Patient●ae heart and hands towards Heaven saying Naked came I out of my Mothers womb and naked shall I return thither the Lord gave and the Lord hath taken away Blessed be the name of the Lord. Ecce spectaculum sayes he dignum ad quod respiciat intentus operi suo Deus Behold a spectacle a spectacle worthy of God himself were he never so intent upon his work in Heaven yet worthy of his cognizance When Ziklag was burnt with fire and David plundered by the Amalekites and his Wives carried captive yet then he encouraged 1 Sam. 30. 1 2 3 6. himself in the Lord his God His God notes 1. His nearness and dearness to God Saints are very near and dear to God Psal 148. 14. Ephes 2. 13. 2. His God notes his Relation to God God is the Saints Father 3. His God notes his right to God Whole God 2 Cor. 6. 18. is the believers All he has and all he can do is the believers From these and such other like considerations David encouraged himself in the Lord his God when all was gone and so should we So the believing Hebrews took joyfully the Heb. 10. 34. spoiling of their goods whether by fire or plundering or otherwise is not said knowing in themselves that they had in Heaven a better and more enduring substance And to this duty James exhorts James 1. 2. Count it all joy my brethren when you fall into divers temptations or tribulations or afflictions A Christian in his choicest deliberation ought to count it all joy when he falls into divers tribulations The words are emphatical the Apostle doth not say be patient or quiet when you fall into divers temptations or afflictions but be joyful Nor the Apostle doth not say be joyful with a little joy but be joyful with exceeding great joy All joy The words are an Hebraism is full joy all joy is perfect joy And this becomes the Saints when they fall or are begirt round not with some but with divers that is with any kind of affliction or tribulation An omnipotent God will certainly turn his peoples misery into felicity And therefore it concerns them to be divinely merry in the midst of their greatest misery Oh that all burnt Citizens would seriously consider of these three things 1. That this fiery Rod has been a Rod in a Fathers hand 2. That this fiery Rod shall sooner or later be like Aarons Rod a blooming Rod. Choice fruit will one day grow upon this burnt Tree London No man can tell what good God may do England by that fiery Rod that he has laid upon London 3. That this fiery Rod that has been laid upon London has not been laid on 1. According to the greatness of Gods anger Nor 2. According to the greatness of his power Nor. 3. According to the strictness of his justice Nor 4. According to the d●merits of our sins Nor 5. According to the expectations of men of a Romish faith who 't is to be feared Acts 1. 19. did hope to see every house laid desolate and London made an Aceldama a Field of Blood Nor 6. Accordingly to the extensiveness of many of your fears for many of you have feared worse things than yet you feel Now upon all these considerations how highly dos it concern the people of God to be thankful and cheerful yea and to encourage themselves in the Lord under that fiery dispensation that has lately past upon them But what is there considerable in God to encourage the soul under Quest heavy crosses and great l●sses and fiery tryals First There is his gracious his special and pecular presence Answ Psalm 23. 4. Though I walk through the valley of the shadow Dan. 3. 24 25. of death I will fear no evil for thou art with me thy rod and thy staff they comfort me Psal 91. 15. He shall
and kindness of God towards you manifested in the mighty preservations protections and salvations that he has vouchsafed to you when you were surrounded with all manner of hazzards and dangers O that you would strive as for life to come up to duties which are certainly incumbent upon all those who have escaped the burning flames But you will say What are they Quest These that follow Answ First It highly concerns you who have escaped the fiery dispensation to take heed of those sins which bring the fiery Rod and which have turned many of your neighbours out of house and home What they are I have already declared 2 Pet. 2. 6. Luke 17. 32. Jer. 7. 12. 1 Sam. 4. 11. Psalm 78. 60 at large If those sins that have brought the fiery judgement upon your neighbours are to be found among you you have cause to fear the fiery Rod or else some other judgement that shall be equivalent to it If you sin with others you shall suffer with others except there be found repentance on your side and pardoning grace on Gods The Lord hath punished your neighbours with that judgement of judgements the fire and he expects that you should take notice thereof and be instructed thereby to take heed of those sins that they have been judged for else the same or worser judgements will certainly befall you Because Jer. 3. 8. Obad. 11 12 13 14. Edom made no good use of Jerusalems sufferings therefore the Lord threatens her that shame should cover her and that she should be cut off for ever God expects that the judgements that he hath executed upon all round about you should awaken you out of security and work in you a holy dread of his name and provoke you to repentance for what is past and engage you to a more exact walking with him for the time to come But Secondly It highly concerns you not to think those who are burnt up to be greater sinners than your selves who have Isa 5. 22. 23 24. Chap. 51. 17 22 23. ●er 25. 15. 30. escaped the consuming flames Some there were that told Christ of certain Galileans whose blood Pilate had mingled with their Sacrifices an argument of Gods sore displeasure in the eye of man to be surpised with a bloody death even in the act of Gods service But Jesus answered suppose Luk. 13. 1 2 3. ye that these Galileans were sinners above all the Galileans because they suffered such things I tell you nay but except ye repent ye shall all likewise perish And Christ confirmeth it by another parallel to it of the men upon whom the Tower in Sil●am fell Luke 13. 4 5. Or those eighteen upon whom the Tower in Siloam fell think ye that they were sinners above all men that dwell in Jerusalem I tell you nay but except ye repent ye shall all likewise perish Doubtless there are many fifties in London whose habitations are laid desolate who were more righteous than many of those whose houses have escaped the consuming flames Judgements many times begin at the house of God The hand of God is many times 1 Pet. 4. 17. Ezek. 9. 6. Job 1. heaviest upon the holiest of people Job was stript of all his earthly comforts and set upon a Dunghill to scrape his sores with Potsheards and yet Job had not at that time his fellow in all the East Countrey for a man fearing God and eschewing evil Job was a perfect peerless man and yet had his habitation laid in ashes and his substance destroyed when his neighbours round about him enjoyed their all without disturbance Doubtless many of them whose houses are turned into a ruinous heap were good people people of unblameable lives people of exemplary lives yea earthly Angels if compared with many of those who have escaped the fiery Rod. Many have drunk deep of this cup of wrath who are a people of his choicest love and therefore do not judge all them to be greater sinners than your selves that have not escaped the fiery Rod as well as your selves You who have escaped the consuming flames should make other mens lashes your lessons and their burnings your warning● You should not so much eye what others have suffered as what your selves have deserved But Thirdly It concerns you to be much in blessing of God that your habitations are standing when others habitations are laid desolate round about you But here look that your thankfulness is 1. Reall 2. Great 3. Cordial 4. Practical and 5. Constant No thankfulness below such a thankfulness will become such whose habitations are standing Monuments of Gods free mercy I have largely prest this duty before and therefore a touch here must suffice B●t Fourthly Be not secure do not say the bitterness of death is past as Agag did when he came before Samuel stately and 1 Sam. 15. 32. haughtily with the garb and gate of a King Many times when wicked men are in the greatest security they are then nearest the highest pitch of misery Is there not guilt enough upon all your hearts and upon all your habitations to expose them to as great a desolation as London lyes under Ans Yes yes Why then do not you get off this guilt by frequent exercises of faith in the blood of Christ or else prepare to drink of the same cup that London hath drunk off or of a worse Ponder seriously and frequently upon these Scriptures Isa 51. 17. Awake awake stand up O Jerusalem which hast drunk at the hand of the Lord the cup of his fury thou hast drunken the dregs of the cup of trembling and wrung them out Verse 22. Thus saith thy Lord the Lord and thy God that pleadeth the cause of his people behold I have taken out of thy hand the cup of trembling even the dregs of the cup of my fury thou shalt no more drink it again Verse 23. But I will put it into the hands of them that afflict thee which have said to thy soul bow down that we may go over and thou hast laid thy body as the ground and as the street to them that went over Jer. 25. 15. For thus saith the Lord God of Israel unto me take the wine cup of this fury at my hand and cause all the Nations to whom I send thee to drink it Verse 17. Then took I the cup at the Lords hands and made all the Nations to drink unto whom the Lord had sent me Verse 18. To wit Jerusalem and the Cities of Judah and the Kings thereof and the Princes thereof to make them a desolation an astonishment an hissing and a curse as it is this day Verse 28. And it shall be if they refuse to take the cup at thine hand to drink then shalt thou say unto The particular Kings and Kingdoms that must drink of this cup are set down from verse 19. to verse 28. See Lam. 4. 21. Ezek. 23. 31 32 33 34. them thus saith the Lord of Hosts