Selected quad for the lemma: justice_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
justice_n mercy_n see_v sin_n 3,348 5 4.7378 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A32723 Several discourses upon the existence and attributes of God by that late eminent minister in Christ, Mr. Stephen Charnocke ...; Discourses upon the existence and attributes of God Charnock, Stephen, 1628-1680. 1682 (1682) Wing C3711; ESTC R15604 1,378,961 866

There are 83 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

performance of his Promise we argue with him from his faithfulness so in the fear of any insincerity or hidden Corruption we should implore his Omnscience For as God is a God in Covenant our God our God in the whole of his Nature so the Perfections of his Nature are employed in their several Stations as assistances of his Creatures This was David's Practice and Comfort after that large Meditation on the Omniscience and Omnipresence of God he turns his thoughts of it into Petitions for the employment of it in the concerns of his Soul and begs a Mercy suitable to the glory of this Perfection Psal 139.23 Search me Oh God and trie my heart trie me and know my thoughts Dive to the bottom Verse 24. And see if there be any wicked way in me and lead me in the way Everlasting His desire is not barely that God should know him for it would be senseless to beg of God that he should have Mercy or faithfulness or power or knowledge in his Nature but he desires the exercise of this Attribute in the discovery of himself to himself in order to his sight of any wicked way and Humiliation for it and Reformation of it in order to his Conduct to Everlasting Life As we may appeal to this Perfection to Judge us when the sincerity of our Actions is Censured by others so we may implore it to search us when our sincerity is question'd by our selves That our Minds may be enlightned by a Beam from his Knowledge and the little Thieves may be pull'd out of their Dens in our Hearts by the hand of his Power In particular it is our Comfort that we can and our necessity that we must Address particularly to this when we engage solemnly in a work of self-examination that we may have a clearer Eye to direct us than our own that we may not mistake Brass for Gold or counterfeit Graces for true that nothing that is filthy and fit to be cast out may escape our Sight and preserve its Station And we need not question the laying at the Door of this neglect viz. not calling in this Attribute to our Aid whose proper Office it is as I may so say to search and enquire all the mistakes ill success and fruitlessness of our endeavours in self-examination because we would engage in it in the pitiful strength of our own dimness and not in the light of Gods Countenance and the assistance of his Eye which can discern what we cannot see and discover that to us which we cannot manifest to our selves 'T is a Comfort to a learner of an Art to have a skilful Eye to overlook his work and inform him of the defects Beg the help of the Eye of God in all your searches and self-examinations 9. The Consideration of this Attribute is Comfortable in our assurances of and reflections upon the pardon of Sin or seeking of it As God punishes Men for Sin according to his knowledge of them which is greater than the knowledge their own Consciences have of them so he pardons according to his knowledge He pardons not only according to our knowledge but according to his own He is greater than any Mans Heart to condemn for that which a Man is at present ignorant of and greater than our Hearts to pardon that which is not at present visible to us He knows that which the most watchful Conscience cannot take a survey of If God had not an infinite Understanding of us how could we have a perfect and full pardon from him It would not stand with his Honour to pardon he knew not what He knows what Crimes we have to be pardon'd when we know not all of them our selves that stand in need of a gracious Remission His Omniscence beholds every Sin to charge it upon our Saviour If he knows our Sins that are black he knows every mite of Christs Righteousness which is pure and the utmost extent of his Merits as well as the demerit of our iniquities As he knows the filth of our Sin he also knows the covering of our Saviour He knows the value of the Redeemers Sufferings and exactly understands every Plea in the intercession of our Advocate Though God knows our Sins oculo indice yet he doth not see them oculo judice with a Judicial Eye His Omniscience stirs not up his Justice to Revenge but his Mercy to Pity His infinite Understanding of what Christ hath done directs him to disarm his Justice and sound an Alarm to his Bowels As he understands better than we what we have committed so he understands better than we what our Saviour hath merited and his Eye directs his Hand in the blotting out Guilt and applying the Remedy 3. The third Use shall be to Sinners to humble them and put them upon serious Consideration This Attribute speaks terrible things to a Profligate Sinner Basil thinks that the ripping open the Sins of the Damned to their faces by this Perfection of God is more terrible than their other Torments in Hell God knows the Persons of Wicked Men not one is exempted from his Eye he sees all the actions of Men as well as he knows their Persons Job 11.11 He knows vain Men he sees wickedness also Job 34.21 His Eye is upon all their goings He hears the most private Whispers Psal 139.4 the scope manner circumstance of speaking he knows it altogether He understands all our thoughts the first bubblings of that bitter Spring Psal 139.2 The quickest glances of the Fancy the closest musings of the Mind and the abortive wouldings or wishes of the Will the language of the Heart as well as the language of the Tongue Not a foolish thought or an idle word not a wanton glance or a dishonest action Not a negligent service or a distracting fancy but is more visible to him than the filth of a Dunghill can be to any Man by the help of a Sun Beam How much better would it be for desperate Sinners to have their Crimes known to all the Angels in Heaven and Men upon Earth and Devils in Hell than that they should be known to their Soveraign whose Laws they have violated and to their Judge whose Righteousness obligeth him to revenge the injury 1. Consider What a poor Refuge is secrecy to a Sinner Not the Mysts of a foggy Day nor the obscurity of the darkest Night not the closest Curtains nor the deepest Dungeon can hide any Sin from the Eye of God Adam is known in his Thickets and Jonah in his Cabin Achan's Wedge of Gold is discern'd by him though buried in the Earth and hooded with a Tent. Shall Sarah be unseen by him when she mockingly laughs behind the Door Shall Gehazy tell a Lye and comfort himself with an imagination of his Masters ignorance as long as God knows it Whatsoever works Men do are not hid from God whither done in the darkness or Day-light in the Mid-night darkness or the Noon-day Sun He is all Eye
them into a frame agreeable to the nature of God * Heb. 10.1 Heb. 9.9 nor purge the Conscience from those dead and dull dispositions which were by nature in them * Heb. 9.14 Being Carnal they could not have an efficacy to purifie the Conscience of the offerer and work Spiritual effects Had they continued without the exhibition of Christ they could never have wrought any change in us or purchased any favour for us * Burges vind pa. 256. At the best they were but shadows and came unexpressibly short of the efficacy of that person and state whose shadows they were The shadow of a man is too weak to perform what the man himself can do because it wants the life Spirit and activity of the substance The whole pomp and scene was suted more to the sensitive than the intellectual nature and like pictures pleased the fancy of Children rather than improved their reason The Jewish state was a state of Child-hood * Gal. 5.2 and that administration a Pedagogy * Gal. 4.24 The Law was a Schoolmaster fitted for their weak and Childish Capacity and could no more Spiritualize the heart than the teachings in a Primer-School can enable the mind and make it fit for affairs of State And because they could not better the Spirit they were instituted only for a time as elements delivered to an infant age which naturally lives a life of sense rather than a life of reason It was also a servile state which doth rather debase than elevate the mind rather Carnalize than Spiritualize the heart Besides t is a sense of mercy that both melts and elevates the heart into a Spiritual frame * Psa 130.4 There is forgiveness with thee that thou maist be feared And they had in that state but some glimmerings of mercy in the dayly bloody intimations of Justice There was no Sacrifice for some sins but a cutting off without the least hints of pardon and in the yearly remembrance of sin there was as much to shiver them with fear as to possess than with hopes And such a state which alwayes held them under the Conscience of sin could not produce a free Spirit which was necessary for a worship of God according to his nature 3. In their use they rather hindred than furthered a Spiritual worship In their own nature they did not tend to the obstructing a Spiritual worship for then they had been contrary to the nature of Religion and the end of God who appointed them Nor did God cover the Evangelical Doctrine under the clouds of the legal administration to hinder the people of Israel from perceiving it but because they were not yet capable to bear the splendor of it had it been clearly set before them The shining of the face of Moses was too dazling for their weak eyes and therefore there was a necessity of a veil not for the things themselves but the weakness of their eyes * 2 Cor. 3.13.14 The carnal affections of that people sunk down into the things themselves stuck in the outward pomp and pierced not through the vail to the Spiritual intent of them And by the use of them without rational conceptions they besotted their minds and became senseless of those Spiritual motions required of them Hence came all their expectations of a Carnal Messiah the veil of Ceremonies was so thick and the film upon their eyes so condensed that they could not look through the veil to the Spirit of Christ They beheld not the Heavenly Canaan for the beauty of the earthly nor minded the regeneration of the Spirit while they rested upon the purifications of the flesh The prevalency of sense and sensitive affections diverted their minds from enquiring into the intent of them Sense and matter are often cloggs to the mind and sensible objects are the same often to Spiritual motions Our Souls are never more raised than when they are abstracted from the entanglements of them A pompous worship made up of many sensible objects weakens the Spirituality of Religion Those that are most zealous for outward are usually most cold and indifferent in inward observances And those that overdo in carnal modes usually underdo in Spiritual affections This was the Jewish state * Illyric de velam Mosi● pa. 221. c. The nature of the Ceremonies being pompous and earthly by their show and beauty meeting with their weakness and Childish affections filled their eyes with an outward lustre allured their minds and detained them from seeking things higher and more Spiritual The kernel of those rites lay concealed in a thick shell the Spiritual glory was little seen and the Spiritual sweetness little tasted Unless the Scripture be diligently searched it seems to transfer the worship of God from true faith and the Spiritual motions of the heart and stake it down to outward observances and the opus operatum Besides the voice of the Law did only declare Sacrifices and invited the Worshipper to them with a promise of the atonement of Sin turning away the wrath of God It never plainly acquainted them that those things were Types and Shadows of something future that they were only outward purifications of the Flesh It never plainly told them at the time of appointing them that those Sacrifices could not abolish Sin and reconcile them to God Indeed we see more of them since their death and dissection in that one Epistle to the Hebrews than can be discern'd in the five Books of Moses Besides Man naturally affects a carnal Life and therefore affects a carnal Worship He designs the gratifying his sense and would have a Religion of the same nature Most men have no mind to busie their reasons about the things of sense and are naturally unwilling to raise them up to those things which are allyed to the spiritual nature of God and therefore the more spiritual any Ordinance is the more averse is the heart of man to it There is a simplicity of the Gospel from which our minds are easily corrupted by things that pleasure the sense as Eve was by the curiosity of her eye and the liquorishness of her Palate * 2 Cor. 11.3 From this Principle hath sprung all the Idolatry in the world The Jews knew they had a God who had delivered them but they would have a sensible God to go before them * Exod. 32.1 And the Papacy at this day is a Witness of the truth of this natural Corruption 4. Vpon these accounts therefore God never testified himself well pleased with that kind of Worship He was not displeased with them as they were his own institution and ordained for the representing though in an obscure manner the glorious things of the Gospel nor was he offended with those peoples observance of them For since he had commanded them it was their duty to perform them and their sin to neglect them But he was displeased with them as they were practised by them with Souls as
of them this must be either out of Sloth but how incompatible is laziness to a pure and infinite activity or out of Majesty but 't is no less for the glory of his Majesty to conduct them than it was for the glory of his Power to erect them into Being he that counts nothing unworthy of his Arms to make nothing unworthy of his Understanding to know why should he count any thing unworthy of his Wisdom to govern If he knows them to neglect them it must be because he hath no Will to it or no Goodness for it either of these would be a stain upon God to want Goodness is to be Evil and to want Will is to be negligent and scornful which are inconsistent with an Infinite Active Goodness Doth a Father neglect providing for the wants of the Family which he knows or a Physician the cure of that Disease he understands God is Omniscient he therefore sees all things he is good he doth not therefore neglect any thing but conducts it to the end he appointed it There is nothing so little that can escape his Knowledg and therefore nothing so little but falls under his Providence nothing so sublime as to be above his Understanding and therefore nothing can be without the compass of his Conduct nothing can escape his Eye and therefore nothing can escape his Care nothing is known by him in vain as nothing was made by him in vain there must be acknowledg'd therefore some end of this knowledg of all his Creatures Instruct 3. Hence then will follow the certainty of a day of Judgment To what purpose can we imagine this Attribute of Omniscience so often declared and urg'd in Scripture to our consideration but in order to a government of our practise and a future Tryal Every Perfection of the Divine Nature hath sent out brighter Rays in the World than this of his Infinite Knowledg his Power hath been seen in the Being of the World and his Wisdom in the Order and Harmony of the Creatures his Grace and Mercy hath been plentifully poured out in the mission of a Redeemer and his Justice hath been elevated by the Dying-Groans of the Son of God upon the Cross But hath his Omniscience yet met with a Glory proportionable to that of his other Perfections all the Attributes of God that have appeared in some beautiful glimmerings in the World wait for a more full manifestation in Glory as the Creatures do for the manifestation of the Sons of God Rom. 8.19 But especially this since it hath been less evidenced than others and as much or more abused than any it expects therefore a publick righting in the eye of the World There have been indeed some few sparks of this Perfection sensibly struck out now and then in the World in some horrors of Conscience which have made men become their own Accusers of unknown Crimes in bringing out hidden Wickedness to a publick view by various Providences This hath also been the design of sprinklings of Judgments upon several Generations as Psal 90.8 We are consumed by thy Anger and by thy Wrath we are troubled thou hast set our Iniquities before thee and our secret Sins in the light of thy Countenance The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies Youth as well as secret i.e. Sins committed long ago and that with secrecy By this he hath manifested that secret Sins are not hid from his eye Tho' inward Terrors and outward Judgments have been let loose to worry men into a belief of this yet the corruptions of men would still keep a contrary notion in their minds that God hath forgotten that he hides his face from Transgression and will not regard their Impiety Psal 10.11 There must therefore be a time of Tryal for the publick demonstration of this Excellency that it may receive its due Honour by a full Testimony that no secrecy can be a shelter from it As his Justice which consists in giving every one his due could not be Glorified unless men were called to an account for their actions so neither would his Omniscience appear in its illustrious colours without such a manifestation of the secret motions of mens hearts and of Villanies done under Lock and Key when none were conscious to them but the committers of them Novv the last Judgment is the time appointed for the opening of the Books Dan. 7.10 The Book of Gods Records and Conscience the counter-part were never fully opened and read before only novv and then some some pages turn'd to in particular Judgments and out of those Books shall men be judged according to their Works Rev. 20.12 Then shall the defaced Sins be brought vvith all their circumstances to every mans memory the Counsels of mens hearts fled far from their present remembrance all the habitual knovvledg they had of their ovvn actions shall by Gods knovvledg of them be excited to an actual revievv and their vvorks not only made manifest to themselves but notorious to the World All the Words Thoughts Deeds of men shall be brought forth into the light of their ovvn minds by the infinite Light of Gods understanding reflecting on them His Knovvledg renders him an unerring Witness as vvell as his Justice a swift Witness Mal. 3.5 a svvift Witness because he shall vvithout any circuit or length of Speech convince their Consciences by an invvard illumination of them to take notice of the blackness and deformity of their hearts and vvorks In all Judgments God is somevvhat knovvn to be the searcher of hearts the time of Judgment is the time of his remembrance Hos 8.13 Now will he remember their iniquity and visit their sins but the great instant or now of the full glorifying it is the grand day of account This Attribute must have a time for its full Discovery and no time can be fit for it but a time of a general reckoning Justice cannot be exercis'd without Omniscience for as Justice is a giving to every one his due so there must be knowledg to discern what is due to every man the searching the heart is in order to the rewarding the works 4. This Perfection in God gives us ground to believe a Resurrection Who can think this too hard for his Power since not the least Atome of the Dust of our Bodies can escape his Knowledg An infinite Understanding comprehends every mite of a departed Carcass this will not appear impossible nor irrational to any upon a serious consideration of this excellency in God The body is perished the matter of it hath been since clothed with different forms and figures part of it hath been made the body of a Worm part of it returned to the Dust that hath been blown away by the Wind part of it hath been concocted in the Bodies of Cannibals Fish ravenous Beasts the Spirits have evaporated into Air part of the Blood melted into Water what then is the matter of the body annihilated is that wholly perished no the
Thou hast seen it Thou hast intently beheld it as the word properly signifies He beholds and knows the actions of every particular Man as if there were none but he in the World And doth not only know but ponder * Prov. 5.21 and consider their works * Psal 33.15 He is not a bare Spectator but a diligent Observer * 1 Sam. 2.3 By him actions are weighed To see what degree of good or evil there is in them what there is to blemish them what to advantage them what the quality and quantity of every action is Consideration takes in every Circumstance of the Considered Object Notice is taken of the place where the minute when the Mercy against which it is committed the number of them is exact in Gods Book They have tempted me now these ten times * Numb 14.22 against the demonstrations of my Glory in Egypt and the Wilderness The whole Guilt in every Circumstance is spread before him His knowledge of Mens Sins is not confused such an Imperfection an infinite Understanding cannot be subject to 'T is exact for iniquity is markt before him * Jer. 2.22 5. God knows Mens miscarriage so as to judge This use his Omniscience is put to to maintain his Soveraign Authority in the exercise of his Justice His notice of the Sins of Men is in order to a just Retribution Psal 10.14 Thou hast seen mischief to requite it with thy hand The Eye of his Knowledge directs the Hand of his Justice and no sinful action that falls under his Cognizance but will fall under his Revenge they can as little escape his Censure as they can his Knowledge He is a Witness in his Omniscience that he may be a Judge in his Righteousness He knows the hearts of the Wicked so as to hate their Works and testifie his abhorrency of that which is of high value with M n * Luke 16.15 Sin is not preserved in his Understanding or written down in his Book to be moth-eaten as an old Manuscript but to be open'd one day and Copied out in the Consciences of Men He writes them to publish them and sets them in the light of his Countenance to bring them to the light of their Consciences What a terrible consideration is it to think that the Sins of a day are upon Record in an Infallible Uunderstanding much more the Sins of a week What a number then do the Sins of a Month a Year ten or forty Years arise to How many actions against Charity against Sincerity what an infinite number is there of them all bound up in the Court Rolls of Gods Omniscience in order to a Tryal to be brought out before the Eyes of Men Who can seriously consider all those Bonds reserv'd in the Cabinet of Gods Knowledge to be sued out against the Sinner in due time without an unexpressible horror 4. The fourth Use is of Exhortation Let us have a sense of Gods Knowledge upon our hearts All Wickedness hath a spring from a want of due Consideration and sense of it David concludes it so * Psal 86.14 The proud rose against him and violent Men sought after his Soul because they did not set God before them They think God doth not know and therefore care not what nor how they act When the fear of this Attribute is remov'd a Door is open'd to all Impiety What is there so villanous but the minds of Men will attempt to act What Reverence of a Deity can be left when the sence of his infinite Understanding is extinguisht What Faith could there be in Judgments in Witnesses How would the Foundations of Humane Society be overturn'd The Pillars upon which Commerce stands be utterly broken and dissolved What Society can be preserved if this be not truly believed and faithfully stuck to But how easily would Oaths be swallowed and quickly violated if the sense of this Perfection were rooted out of the minds of Men What fear could they have of calling to Witness a Being they imagine blind and ignorant Men secretly imagine that God knows not or soon forgets and then make bold to Sin against him * Ezek. 8.12 How much does it therefore concern us to cherish and keep alive the sense of this If God writes us upon the Palms of his Hands as the Expression is to remember us let us engrave him upon the Tables of our Hearts to remember him It would be a good Motto to write upon our Minds God knows all he is of infinite Understanding 1. This would give check to much iniquity Can a Mans Conscience easily and delightfully swallow that which he is sensible falls under the Cognizance of God when it is hateful to the Eye of his Holiness and renders the Actor odious to him Doth he not see my ways and count all my steps saith Job * Job 31.4 To what end doth he fix this Consideration To keep him from wanton glances Temptations have no encouragement to come near him that is constantly arm'd with the thoughts that his Sin is Book't in Gods Omniscience If any impudent Devil hath the face to tempt us we should not have the impudence to joyn issue with him under the sense of an infinite Understanding How fruitless would his Wiles be against this Consideration How easily would his Snares be crackt by one sensible thought of this This doth Solomon prescribe to allay the heat of Carnal imaginations * Prov. 5.20 21. It were a useful Question to ask at the appearance of every Temptation at the entrance upon every Action as the Church did in Temptations to Idolatry * Psal 44.21 Shall not God search this out for he knows the secrets of the heart His Understanding comprehends us more than our Consciences can our acts or our understanding our thoughts Who durst speak Treason against a Prince if he were sure he heard him or that it would come to his knowledge A sense of Gods knowledge of Wickedness in the first motion and inward contrivance would bar the accomplishment and execution The Consideration of Gods infinite Understanding would cry stand to the first glances of the heart to Sin 2. It would make us watchful over our hearts and thoughts Should we harbour any unworthy thoughts in our Cabinet if our heads and hearts were possess'd with this useful truth That God knows everything which comes into our minds * Ezek. 11.5 We should as much blush at the rising of impure thoughts before the Understanding of God as at the discovery of unworthy actions to the knowledge of Men If we lived under a sense that not a thought of all those millions which flutter about our Minds can be conceal'd from him how watchful and careful should we be of our hearts and thoughts 3. It would be a good preparation to every Duty This Consideration should be the Preface to every service The Divine Understanding knows how I now act This would engage us to serious
Instruments for the glory of his Justice Isa 10.5 6 7. Thus he served himself of the Ambition and Covetousness of the Assyrians Chaldeans and Romans for the Correction of his People and Punishment of his Rebels Just as the Roman Magistrates used the fury of Lions and other wild Beasts in their Theatres for the Punishment of Criminals The Lions acted their Natural temper in tearing those that were expos'd to them for a Prey but the intent of the Magistrates was to punish their Crimes The Magistrate inspir'd not the Lions with their Rage that they had from their Natures but served themselves of that Natural Rage to execute Justice 3. Gods Wisdom is seen in bringing good to the Creature out of Sin He hath ordered Sin to such an end as Man never dreamt of the Devil never imagin'd and Sin in its own Nature could never attain Sin in its own Nature tends to no good but that of Punishment whereby the Creature is brought into order It hath no relation to the Creatures good in it self but to the Creatures mischief But God by an act of Infinite Wisdom brings good out of it to the Creature as well as glory to his Name contrary to the Nature of the Crime the Intention of the Criminal and the Design of the Tempter God willed Sin that is he willed to permit it that he might communicate himself to the Creature in the most excellent manner He willed the Permission of Sin as an occasion to bring forth the Mystery of the Incarnation and Passion of our Saviour as he permitted the Sin of Josephs Brethren that he might use their Evil to a good end He never because of his Holiness wills Sin as an End but in regard of his Wisdom he wills to permit it as a Means and Occasion And thus to draw good out of those things which are in their own Nature most contrary to Good is the highest pitch of Wisdom 1. The Redemption of Man in so excellent away was drawn from the occasion of Sin The greatest Blessing that ever the World was blest with was usher'd in by Contrarieties by the Lust and irregular Affection of Man the first Promise of the Redeemer by the Fall of Adam Gen. 3.15 and the bruising the heel of that Promised Seed by the blackest Tragedy acted by wicked Rebels the Treachery of Judas and the Rage of the Jews the highest Good hath been brought forth by the greatest Wickedness As God out of the Chaos of rude and indigested Matter framed the first Creation so from the S ns of Men and Malice of Satan he hath erected the Everlasting Scheme of Honour in a New Creation of all things by Jesus Christ The Devil inspir'd Man to content his own fury in the Death of Christ and God order'd it to accomplish his own design of Redemption in the Passion of the Redeemer The Devil had his Diabolical Ends and God over-powers his Action to serve his own Divine ends The Person that betrayed him was admitted to be a Spectator of the most private Actions of our Saviour that his Innocence might be justified to shew that he was not afraid to have his Enemies Judges of his most retir'd Privacies While they all thought to do their own Wills Divine Wisdom orders them to do Gods Will. Acts 2.23 Him being delivered by the determinate Counsel and Fore-knowledge of God you have taken and by wicked hands have Crucified and slain And wherein the Crucifiers of Christ sinned in shedding the richest Blood upon their Repentance they found the expiation of their Crimes and the discovery of a superabundant Mercy Nothing but Blood was aimed at by them The best Blood was shed by them but Infinite Wisdom makes the Cross the Scene of his own Righteousness and the Womb of Mans Recovery By the occasion of Mans Lapsed state there was a way open to raise Man to a more excellent Condition than that whereinto he was put by Creation And the depriving Man of the happiness of an Earthly Paradise in a way of Justice was an occasion of advancing him to a Heavenly Felicity in a way of Grace The Violation of the Old Covenant occasionally introduc'd a better The loss of the first Integrity usher'd in a more stable Righteousness an Everlasting Righteousness Dan. 9.24 And the falling of the First Head was succeeded by one whose standing could not but be Eternal The Fall of the Devil was ordered by Infinite Wisdom for the good of that Body from which he fell 'T is supposed by some that the Devil was the Chief Angel in Heaven the Head of all the rest and that he Falling the Angels were left as a Body without a Head and after he had Politically beheaded the Angels he endeavoured to destroy Man and rout him out of Paradise But God takes the opportunity to set up his Son as the Head of Angels and Men. And thus whilst the Devil endeavoured to spoil the Corporation of Angels and make them a Body contrary to God God makes Angels and Men one Body under one Head for his Service The Angels in losing a defectible Head attained a more excellent and glorious Head in another Nature which they had not before though of a Lower Nature in his Humanity yet of a more glorious Nature in his Divinity From whence many suppose they derive their Confirming Grace and the stability of their standing All things in Heaven and Earth are gathered together in Christ Eph. 1.10 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 All united in him and reduced under one Head That though our Saviour be not properly their Redeemer for Redemption supposeth Captivity yet in some sense he is their Head and Mediator so that now the Inhabitants of Heaven and Earth are but one Family Ephes 3.15 And the Innumerable Company of Angels are parts of that Heavenly and Triumphant Jerusalem and that General Assembly whereof Jesus Christ is Mediator Heb. 12.22 29. 2. The Good of a Nation often by the skill of Divine Wisdom is promoted by the Sins of some Men. The Patriarchs selling Joseph to the Midianites Gen. 37.28 was without question a Sin and a breach of Natural Affection yet by Gods Wise Ordination it proved the Safety of the whole Church of God in the World as well as the Egyptian Nation † Gen. 45.5 8. Gen. 50.20 The Jews Unbelief was a step whereby the Gentiles arose to the knowledge of the Gospel As the setting of the Sun in one place is the rising of it in another ‖ Mat. 22 9● He uses the Corruptions of Men Instrumentally to propagate his Gospel He built up the True Church by the Preaching of some out of envy Phil. 1.15 as he blessed Israel out of the Mouth of a False Prophet Numb 23. How often have the Heresies of Men been the occasion of clearing up the Truth of God and fixing the more lively Impressions of it on the Hearts of Believers Neither Judah nor Tamar in their Lust dreamt of a
the wisdom of God Christ is the wisdom of God principally and the Gospel instrumentally as it is the power of God instrumentally to subdue the heart to himself This is wrapped up in the appointing Christ as Redeemer and open'd to us in the revelation of it by the Gospel 1. It is a hidden wisdom In this regard God is said in the Text to be only wise and it is said to be a hidden wisdom 1 Tim. 1.17 and wisdom in a mystery 1 Cor. 2.7 incomprehensible to the ordinary Capacity of an Angel more than the abstruse qualities of the Creatures are to the understanding of man No wisdom of Men or Angels is able to search all the Veins of this Mine to tell all the threds of this Web or to understand the lustre of it they are as far from an ability fully to comprehend it as they were at first to contrive it That wisdom that invented it can only comprehend it In the uncreated Understanding only there is a clearness of light without any shadow of darkness We come as short of full apprehensions of it as a Child doth of the Counsel of the wisest Prince It is so hidden from us that without Revelation we could not have the least imagination of it and though it be revealed to us yet without the help of an Infiniteness of Understanding we cannot fully fathom it 'T is such a tractate of Divine wisdom that the Angels never before had seen the Edition of it till it was publish'd to the World Eph. 3.10 To the intent that now unto Principalities and Powers in heavenly places might be known by the Church the manifold wisdom of God Now made known to them not before and now made known to them in the heavenly places They had not the knowledge of all heavenly Mysteries though they had the possession of heavenly Glory They knew the Prophecies of it in the Word but attained not a clear Interpretation of those Prophecies till the things that were prophecied of came upon the Stage 2. Manifold wisdom So 't is called As manifold as mysterious Variety in the Mystery and Mystery in every part of the Variety It was not one single act but a variety of Counsels met in it a conjunction of excellent ends and excellent means The glory of God the salvation of Man the defeat of the Apostate Angels the discovery of the blessed Trinity in their Nature Operations their combin'd and distinct Acts and Expressions of Goodness The means are the conjunction of two Natures infinitely distant from one another the union of Eternity and Time of Mortality and Immortality Death is made the way to Life and Shame the path to Glory The weakness of the Cross is the reparation of man and the Creature is made wise by the foolishness of preaching fallen man grows rich by the poverty of the Redeemer and man is filled by the emptiness of God The Heir of Hell made a Son of God by God's taking upon him the form of a Servant the Son of Man advanc'd to the highest degree of Honour by the Son of God becoming of no reputation 'T is called Eph. 1.8 abundance of wisdom and prudence Wisdom in the Eternal Counsel contriving a way Prudence in the Temporary Revelation ordering all Affairs and Occurrences in the World for the attaining the end of his Counsel Wisdom refers to the Mystery Prudence to the manifestation of it in fit ways and convenient seasons Wisdom to the contrivance and order Prudence to the execution and accomplishment In all things God acted as became him as a wise and just Governour of the World Heb. 2.10 Whether the wisdom of God might not have found out some other way or whether he were in regard of the necessity and naturalness of his Justice limited to this is not the question But that it is the best and wisest way for the manifestation of his glory is out of question This wisdom will appear in the different Interests reconciled by it In the Subject the second Person in the Trinity wherein they were reconciled In the two Natures wherein he accomplish'd it whereby God is made known to man in his Glory Sin eternally condemned and the repenting and believing sinner eternally rescued The honour and righteousness of the Law vindicated both in the Precept and Penalty The Devil's Empire overthrown by the same Nature he had overturned and the Subtilty of Hell defeated by that Nature he had spoiled The Creature engaged in the very act to the highest Obedience and Humility that as God appears as a God upon his Throne the Creature might appear in the lowest posture of a Creature in the depths of resignation and dependance the publication of this made in the Gospel by ways congruous to the wisdom which appeared in the execution of his Counsel and the Conditions of enjoying the fruit of it most wise and resonable 1. The greatest different Interests are reconcil'd Justice in punishing and Mercy in pardoning For man had broken the Law and plung'd himself into a Gulf of Misery The Sword of Vengeance was unsheathed by Justice for the punishment of the Criminal The Bowels of Compassion were stirred by Mercy for the rescue of the Miserable Justice severely beholds the Sin and Mercy compassionately reflects upon the Misery Two different claims are entred by those concerned Attributes Justice votes for Destruction and Mercy votes for Salvation Justice would draw the Sword and drench it in the blood of the Offender Mercy would stop the Sword and turn it from the breast of the Sinner Justice would edge it and Mercy would blunt it The Arguments are strong on both sides 1. Justice pleads I Arraign before thy Tribunal a Rebel who was the glorious Work of thy Hands the Center of thy rich Goodness and a Counterpart of thy own Image he is indeed miserable whereby to excite thy Compassion but he is not miserable without being Criminal Thou didst create him in a state and with ability to be otherwise The riches of thy Bounty aggravate the blackness of his Crime He is a Rebel not by necessity but will What constraint was there upon him to listen to the Counsels of the Enemy of God What force could there be upon him since it is without the compass of any Creature to work upon or constrain the Will Nothing of Ignorance can excuse him the Law was not ambiguously express'd but in plain words both as to Precept and Penalty it was writ in his Nature in legible Characters Had he received any disgust from thee after his Creation it would not excuse his Apostacy since as a Soveraign thou wert not obliged to thy Creature Thou hadst provided all things richly for him he was crowned with glory and honour Thy infinite power had bestowed upon him an Habitation richly furnished and varieties of Servants to attend him Whatever he viewed without and whatever he viewed within himself were several Marks of thy Divine Bounty to engage him to Obedience Had
Man if he stand thy Bounty will be eminent yet there is no room for Mercy to act unless by the Commission of sin he exposeth himself to Misery and if sin enter into another World I have little hopes to be heard then if I am rejected now Worlds will be perpetually created by Goodness Wisdom and Power Sin entring into these Worlds will be perpetually punished by Justice and Mercy which is a Perfection of thy Nature will for ever be commanded silence and lye wrapt up in an eternal Darkness Take occasion now therefore to expose me to the knowledge of thy Creature since without Misery Mercy can never set foot into the World Mercy pleads if man be ruined the Creation is in vain Justice pleads if man be not sentenced the Law is in vain Truth backs Justice and Grace abets Mercy What shall be done in this seeming Contradiction Mercy is not manifested if man be not pardoned Justice will complain if man be not punished 3. An expedient is found out by the wisdom of God to answer these Demands and adjust the Differences between them The wisdom of God answers I will satisfie your Pleas. The Pleas of Justice shall be satisfied in punishing and the Pleas of Mercy shall be received in pardoning Justice shall not complain for want of Punishment nor Mercy for want of Compassion I will have an infinite Sacrifice to content Justice and the Vertue and Fruit of that Sacrifice shall delight Mercy Here shall Justice have punishment to accept and Mercy shall have Pardon to bestow The Rights of both are preserved and the Demands of both amicably accorded in punishment and pardon by transferring the punishment of our Crimes upon a Surety exacting a Recompence from his Blood by Justice and conferring life and salvation upon us by Mercy without the expence of one drop of our own Thus is Justice satisfied in its Severities and Mercy in its Indulgences The riches of Grace are twisted with the terrors of Wrath. The bowels of Mercy are wound about the flaming Sword of Justice and the Sword of Justice protects and secures the bowels of Mercy Thus is God righteous without being cruel and merciful without being unjust his Righteousness inviolable and the World recoverable Thus is a resplendent Mercy brought forth in the midst of all the Curses Confusions and Wrath threatned to the Offender This is the admirable temperament found out by the wisdom of God His Justice is honoured in the Sufferings of Man's Surety and his Mercy is honoured in the application of the Propitiation to the Offender Rom. 3.24 25. Being justified freely by his Grace through the Redemption that is in Jesus Christ Whom God hath set forth to be a Propitiation through faith in his blood to declare his righteousness for the remission of sins that are past through the forbearance of God Had we in our Persons been Sacrifices to Justice Mercy had for ever been unknown had we been solely fostered by Mercy Justice had for ever been secluded had we being guilty been absolved Mercy might have rejoyced and Justice might have complained had we been solely punished Justice would have triumphed and Mercy grieved But by this medium of Redemption neither hath ground of Complaint Justice hath nothing to charge when the Punishment is inflicted Mercy hath whereof to boast when the Surety is accepted The Debt of the Sinner is transferred upon the Surety that the Merit of the Surety may be conferred upon the Sinner so that God now deals with our sins in a way of consuming Justice and with our Persons in a way of relieving Mercy 'T is highly better and more glorious than if the Claim of one had been granted with the exclusion of the Demand of the other It had then been either an unrighteous Mercy or a merciless Justice 'T is now a righteous Mercy and a merciful Justice 2. The Wisdom of God appears in the Subject or Person wherein these were accorded The second Person in the blessed Trinity There was a congruity in the Sons undertaking and effecting it rather than any other Person according to the order of the Persons and the several functions of the Persons as represented in Scripture The Father after Creation is the Law-giver and presents man with the Image of his own Holiness and the way to his Creatures happiness But after the Fall man was too impotent to perform the Law and too polluted to enjoy a Felicity Redemption was then necessary not that it was necessary for God to redeem man but it was necessary for man's happiness that he should be recovered To this the second Person is appointed that by Communion with him man might derive a happiness and be brought again to God But since man was blind in his Vnderstanding and an Enemy in his will to God there must be the exerting of a Vertue to enlighten his mind and bend his Will to understand and accept of this Redemption And this work is assigned to the third Person the Holy Ghost 1. It was not congruous that the Father should assume Human Nature and suffer in it for the Redemption of man He was first in order he was the Law-giver and therefore to be the Judge As Lawgiver it was not convenient he should stand in the stead of the Law-breaker and as Judge it was as little convenient he should be reputed a Malefactor That he who had made a Law against sin denounced a Penalty upon the commission of sin and whose part it was actually to punish the sinner should become sin for the wilful Transgressor of his Law He being the Rector how could he be an Advocate and Intercessor to himself How could he be the Judge and the Sacrifice A Judge and yet a Mediator to himself If he had been the Sacrifice there must be some Person to examine the validity of it and pronounce the Sentence of acceptance Was it agreeable that the Son should sit upon a Throne of Judgment and the Father stand at the Bar and be responsible to the Son That the Son should be in the place of a Governour and the Father in the place of the Criminal That the Father should be bruised * Isa 53.10 by the Son as the Son was by the Father † Zach. 13 70. that the Son should awaken a Sword against the Father as the Father did against the Son that the Father should be sent by the Son as the Son was by the Father * Gal. 4.4 The order of the Persons in the blessed Trinity had been inverted and disturbed Had the Father been sent he had not been first in order the Sender is before the Person sent As the Father begets and the Son is begotten Joh. 1.14 so the Father sends and the Son is sent He whose order is to send cannot properly send himself 2. Nor was it congruous that the Spirit should he sent upon this Affair If the Holy Ghost had been sent to redeem us and the Son to apply
How wonderful is this Wisdom of God! That the seed of the woman born of a mean Virgin brought forth in a stable spending his days in affliction misery and poverty without any pomp and splendor passing some time in a Carpenters shop with Carpenters tools and afterwards exposed to a horrible and disgraceful death Mark 6 6. should by this way pull down the gates of Hell subvert the kingdom of the Devil and be the hammer to break in pieces that power which he had so long exercised over the World Thus became he the Author of our life by being bound for a while in the chains of death and arrived to a principality over the most malicious powers by being a prisoner for us and the anv●l of their rage and fury 7. The Wisdom of God appears In giving us this way the surest ground of comfort and the strongest incentive to obedience The Rebel is reconciled and the rebellion shamed God is propitiated and the sinner sanctified by the same blood What can more contribute to our comfort confidence than Gods richest gift to us What can more enflame our love to him than our recovery from death by the oblation of his Son to misery and death for us It doth as much engage our duty as secure our happiness It presents God glorious and gracious and therefore every way fit to be trusted in regard of the interest of his own glory in it and in regard of the effusions of his grace by it It renders the Creature obliged in the highest manner and so awakens his industry to the strictest and noblest obedience Nothing so effectual as a crucified Christ to wean us from sin and stifle all motions of despair a means in regard of the Justice signaliz'd in it to make man to hate the sin which had ruined him and a means in regard of the love exprest to make him delight in that Law he had violated 2. Cor. 5.14 15. The love of Christ and therefore the love of God exprest in it constrains us no longer to live to our selves 1. It is a ground of the highest comfort and confidence in God Since he hath given such an evidence of his impartial truth to his threatning for the honour of his Justice we need not question but he will be as punctual to his promise for the honour of his mercy T is a ground of confidence in God since he hath redeemed us in such a way as glorifies the steadiness of his veracity as well as the severity of his Justice We may well trust him for the performance of his promise since we have experience of the execution of his threatning his m●rciful truth will as much engage him to accomplish the one as his just truth did to inflict the other The goodness which shone forth in weaker rays in the Creation breaks out with stronger beams in redemption And the mercy which before the appearance of Christ was manifested in some small Rivulets diffuseth itself like a boundless Ocean That God that was our Creator is our Redeemer the Repayrer of our Breaches and the Restorer of our Paths to dwell in And the plenteous Redemption from all Iniquity manifested in the Incarnation and Passion of the Son of God is much more a ground of hope in the Lord than it was in the past Ages when it could not be said the Lord hath but the Lord shall redeem Israel from all his iniquities Psal 130.8 It is a full Warrant to cast our selves into his Arms. 2. At incentive to obedience 1. The Commands of the Gospel require the obedience of the Creature There is not one Precept in the Gospel which interferes with any rule in the Law but strengthens it and represents it in its true exactness The heat to scorch us is allaied but the light to direct us is not extinguisht Not the least allowance to any sin is granted not the least affection to any sin is indulg'd The Law is temper'd by the Gospel but not null'd and cast out of doors by it It enacts that none but those that are sanctified shall be glorified that there must be Grace here if we expect Glory hereafter that we must not presume to expect an admittance to the Vision of Gods face unless our Souls be clothed with a robe of Holiness Heb. 12.14 It requires an obedience to the whole Law in our intention and purpose and an endeavour to observe it in our actions It promotes the honour of God and ordains a universal Charity among men it reveals the whole Counsel of God and furnisheth men with the holiest Laws 2. It presents to us the exactest pattern for our Obedience The redeeming Person is not only a Propitiation for the sin but a pattern to the sinner 1 Pet. 2.21 The Conscience of man after the fall of Adam approved of the reason of the Law but by the corruption of Nature man had no strength to perform the Law The possibility of keeping the Law by Human Nature is evidenced by the Appearance and life of the Redeemer and an assurance given that it shall be advanc'd to such a state as to be able to observe it We aspire to it in this life and have hopes to attain it in a future And while we are here the Actor of our Redemption is the copy for our Imitation The Pattern to imitate is greater than the Law to be ruled by What a lustre did his Vertues cast about the World How attractive are his Graces With what high Examples for all Duties has he furnish'd 〈◊〉 out of the copy of his Life 3. It presents us with the strongest motives to Obedience Tit. 2.11 12. The grace of God teaches us to deny ungodliness What Chains bind faster and closer than love Here is love to our nature in his Incarnation love to us though Enemies in his Death and Passion Encouragements to Obedience by the proffers of Pardon for former Rebellions By the disobedience of man God introduceth his redeeming Grace and ingageth his Creature to more Ingenious and excellent returns than his Innocent state could oblige him to In his Created state he had goodness to move him he hath the same goodness now to oblige him as a Creature and a greater love and mercy to oblige him as a repaired Creature and the terror of Justice is taken off which might invenom his Heart as a Criminal In his revolted state he had misery to discourage him in his redeemed state he hath love to attract him Without such a way black despaire had seized upon the Creature exposed to a remediless misery And God would have had no returns of love from the best of his earthly Works But if any sparks of Ingenuity be left they will be excited by the efficacy of this Argument The willingness of God to receive returning sinners is manifested in the highest degree and the willingness of a sinner to return to him in duty hath the strongest engagements He hath done as much to
incourage our Obedience as to illustrate his Glory We cannot conceive ●hat could be done greater for the salvation of our Souls and consequently what could have been done more to enforce our observance We have a Redeemer as man to copy it to us and as God to perfect us in it It would make the heart of any to tremble to wound him that hath provided such a salve for our Sores and to make Grace a warrant for Rebellion Motives capable to form Rocks into a flexibleness Thus is the Wisdom of God seen in giving us a ground of the surest confidence and furnishing us with incentives to the greatest Obedience by the horrors of wrath death and sufferings of our Saviour 8. The Wisdom of God is apparent in the Condition he hath settled for the enjoying the fruits of Redemption and this is faith a wise and reasonable Condition And the concomitants of it 1. In that it is suted to mans lapsed state and Gods Glory Innocence is not required here that had been a Condition impossible in its own nature after the Fall The rejecting of Mercy is now only condemning where mercy is proposed Had the Condition of Perfection in Works been required it had rather been a condemnation than redemption Works are not demanded whereby the Creature might ascribe any thing to himself but a Condition which continues in man a sense of his Apostacy abates all aspiring Pride and makes the reward of Grace not of Debt A Condition whereby Mercy is owned and the Creature emptied Flesh silenc'd in the Dust and God set upon his Throne of Grace and Authority The Creature brought to the lowest debasement and Divine Glory raised to the highest pitch The Creature is brought to acknowledge Mercy and seal to Justice to own the Holiness of God in the hatred of sin the Justice of God in the Punishment of sin and the Mercy of God in the pardoning of sin A condition that despoils Nature of all its pretended excellency Beats down the glory of man at the foot of God 1 Cor. 1.29.31 It subjects the Reason and Will of man to the Wisdom and Authority of God it brings the Creature to an unreserved submission and intire resignation God is made the Soveraign Cause of all the Creature continued in his emptiness and reduced to a greater dependance upon God than by a Creation depending upon him for a constant influx for an intire happiness A Condition that renders God glorious in the Creature and the fallen creature happy in God God glorious in his Condescension to Man and Man happy in his emptiness before God Faith is made the Condition of mans recovery that the lofty looks of man might be humbled and the haughtiness of man be pulled down Isa 2.11 that every towring imagination might be levelled 2. Cor. 10.5 Man must have all from without doors he must not live upon himself but upon anothers allowance He must stand to the provision of God and be a perpetual Sutor at his Gates 2. A Condition opposite to that which was the cause of the Fall We fell from God an unbelief of the Threatning he recovers us by a belief of the Promise by Unbelief we laid the Foundation of Gods dishonour by Faith therefore God exalts the Glory of his free Grace We lost our selves by a desire of self dependence and our return is ordered by a way of self-emptiness 'T is reasonable we should be restored in a way contrary to that whereby we fell We sinned by a refusal of cleaving to God t is a part of divine Wisdom to restore us in a denial of our own righteousness and strength * Laud against Fisher p. 5. Man having sinned by Pride the Wisdom of God humbles him saith one at the very root of the Tree of Knowledge and makes him deny his own Vnderstanding and submit to Faith or else for ever to lose his desired Felicity 3. It is a Condition suted to the Common Sentiment and custome of the World There is more of belief than reason in the World All Instructers and Masters in Sciences and Arts require first a belief in their Disciples and a resignation of their Understandings and Wills to them And it is the Wisdom of God to require that of man which his own reason makes him submit to another which is his fellow Creature He therefore that quarrels with the Condition of Faith must quarrel with all the World since Belief is the beginning of all Knowledge † Bradward p. 28. yea and most of the Knowledge in the World may rather come under the title of Belief than of Knowledge For what we think we know this day we may find from others such Arguments as may stagger our Knowledge and make us doubt of that we thought our selves certain of before Nay sometimes we change our Opinions our Selves without an● Instructor and see a reason to entertain an Opinion quite contrary to what we had before And if we found a general Judgment of others ●o vote against what we think we know it would make us give the less Credit to our selves and our own Sentiments All Knowledge in the World is only a belief depending upon the testimony or arguings of others for indeed it may be said of all men as in Job 8. Job 9. We are but of yesterday and know nothing Since therefore Belief is so universal a thing in the World the Wisdom of God requires that of us which every man must count reasonable or render himself utterly ignorant of any thing It is a Condition that is common to all Religions All Religions are Founded upon a Belief Unless men did believe future things they would not hope nor fear A Belief and Resignation was required in all the Idolatries in the World so that God requires nothing but what a universal custome of the World gives its suffrage to the reasonableness of Indeed justifying Faith is not suted to the Sentiments of men but that Faith which must precede iustifying a beliefe of the Doctrine though not comprehended by Reason is common to the custome of the World * J●neway p. 88. 'T is no less madness not to submit our Reason to Faith than not to regulate our Fancies by Reason 4. This Condition of Faith and Repentances is suted to the Conscience of Men. The Law of Nature teaches us th●t we are bound to believe every revelation from God when it is made known to us And not only to assent to it as true but embrace it as good This Nature dictates that we are as much oblige● to believe God because of his Truth as to love him because of his Goodness Every mans Reason tells him he cannot obey a Precept nor depend upon a Promise unless he believes both the one and the other No man's Conscience but will inform him upon hearing the revelation of God concerning his excellent contrivance of Redemption and the way to Enjoy it that it is very reasonable he should strip off
may be further considered that in this way of Redemption his Holiness in the hatred of Sin seems to be valued above any other Attribute He proclaims the value of it above the Person of his Son since the Divine Nature of the Redeemer is disguised obscur'd and vail'd in order to the restoring the Honour of it And Christ seems to value it above his own Person since he submitted himself to the Reproaches of Men to clear this Perfection of the Divine Nature and make it Illustrious in the eyes of the World You heard before at the beginning of the handling this Argument It was the Beauty of the Deity the Lustre of his Nature the Link of all his Attributes his very Life he values it equal with Himself since he swears by it as well as by his Life And none of his Attributes would have a due Decorum without it 'T is the glory of Power Mercy Justice Wisdom that they are all Holy So that though God had an Infinite tenderness and compassion to the Fallen Creature yet it should not extend it self in his relief to the prejudice of the Rights of his Purity He would have this triumph in the Tenderness of his Mercy as well as the Severities of his Justice His Mercy had not appeared in its true colours nor attain'd a regular End without Vengeance on Sin It would have been a Compassion that would in sparing the Sinner have encourag'd the Sin and affronted Holiness in the Issues of it Had he dispersed his Compassions about the World without the regard to his Hatred of Sin his Mercy had been too cheap and his Holiness had been contemn'd His Mercy would not have Triumph'd in his own Nature whilst his Holiness had suffered He had exercised a Mercy with the impairing his own Glory But now in this way of Redemption the Rights of both are secured both have their due lustre The Odiousness of Sin is equally discovered with the greatest of his Compassions an Infinite Abhorrence of Sin and an Infinite Love to the World march hand in hand together Never was so much of the Irreconcileableness of Sin to him set forth as in the moment he was opening his Bowels in the Reconciliation of the Sinner Sin is made the chiefest Mark of his Displeasure while the Poor Creature is made the highest Object of Divine Pity There could have been no motion of Mercy with the least Injury to Purity and Holiness In this way Mercy and Truth Mercy to the Misery of the Creature and Truth to the Purity of the Law have met together the Righteousness of God and the Peace of the Sinner have kissed each other Psal 85.10 II. The Holiness of God in his Hatred of Sin appears in our Justification and the Conditions he requires of all that would enjoy the benefit of Redemption His Wisdom hath so temper'd all the Conditions of it that the Honour of his Holiness is as much preserved as the Sweetness of his Mercy is experimented by us All the Conditions are Records of his exact Purity as well as of his condescending Grace Our Justification is not by the Imperfect works of Creatures but by an exact and Infinite Righteousness as great as that of the Deity which had been Offended It being the Righteousness of a Divine Person upon which account it is call'd the Righteousness of God not only in regard of Gods appointing it and Gods accepting it but as it is a Righteousness of that Person that was God and is God Faith is the Condition God requires to Justification but not a dead but an active Faith such a Faith as purifies the heart † James 2.22 Acts 15.9 He calls for Repentance which is a Moral retracting our Offences and an approbation of contemn'd Righteousness and a violated Law an endeavour to regain what is lost and to pluck out the heart of that Sin we have committed He requires Mortification which is called Crucifying whereby a Man would strike as full and deadly a blow at his Lusts as was struck at Christ upon the Cross and make them as certainly die as the Redeemer did Our own Righteousness must be condemned by us as impure and imperfect We must disown every thing that is our own as to Righteousness in reverence to the Holiness of God and the valuation of the Righteousness of Christ He hath resolved not to bestow the Inheritance of Glory without the Root of Grace None are partakers of the Divine Blessedness that are not partakers of the Divine Nature There must be a renewing of his Image before there be a vision of his face * He● 12.14 He will not have Men brought only into a Relative state of Happiness by Justification without a Real state of Grace by Sanctification And so resolved he is in it that there is no admittance into Heaven of a starting but a persevering Holiness Rom. 2.7 a patient continuance in well doing Patient under the sharpness of Affliction and continuing under the Pleasures of Prosperity Hence it is that the Gospel the restoring Doctrine hath not only the motives of Rewards to allure us to Good and the danger of Punishments to scare us from Evil as the Law had but they are set forth in a higher strain in a way of stronger engagement the Rewards are Heavenly and the Punishments Eternal And more powerful Motives besides from the choicer Expressions of Gods Love in the Death of his Son The whole Design of it is to re-instate us in a resemblance to this Divine Perfection whereby he shews what an Affection he hath to this Excellency of his Nature and what a detestation he hath of Evil which is contrary to it 3. It appears in the actual Regeneration of the Redeemed Souls and a carrying it on to a full perfection As Election is the effect of Gods Soveraignty our Pardon the fruit of his Mercy our Knowledge a stream from his Wisdom our Strength an impression of his Power so our Purity is a beam from his Holiness The whole work of Sanctification and the preservation of it our Saviour begs for his Disciples of his Father under this Title John 17.11 17. Holy Father keep them through thy own name and sanctifie them through thy Truth as the proper Source whence Holiness was to flow to the Creature As the Sun is the proper Fountain whence Light is derived both to the Stars above and Bodies here below Whence He is not only called Holy but the Holy One of Israel Isai 43.15 I am the Lord your Holy One the Creator of Israel Displaying his Holiness in them by a new Creation of them as his Israel As the rectitude of the Creature at the first Creation was the effect of his Holiness so the Purity of the Creature by a New Creation is a draught of the same Perfection He is called the Holy One of Israel more in Isaiah that Evangelical Prophet in erecting Zion and forming a People for himself than in the whole Scripture
because he doth not act for his own profit but for his Creatures welfare and the manifestation of his own Goodness He sends out his Beams without receiving any addition to himself or substantial advantage from his Creatures 'T is from this Perfection that he loves whatsoever is good and that is whatsoever he hath made For every Creature of God is good * 1 Tim. 4.4 Every Creature hath some Communications from him which cannot be without some Affection to them Every Creature hath a Footstep of Divine Goodness upon it God therefore loves that goodness in the Creature else he would not love himself † Cajetan in secund ' secundae Qu. 34. Ar. 3. God hates no Creature no not the Devils and Damn'd as Creatures he is not an Enemy to them as they are the Works of his Hands He is properly an Enemy that doth simply and absolutely wish Evil to another but God doth not absolutely wish Evil to the Damned that Justice that he inflicts upon them the deserved Punishment of their Sin is part of his Goodness as shall afterward be shewn This is the most pleasant Perfection of the Divine Nature His Creating Power amazes us His Conducting Wisdom astonisheth us His Goodness as furnishing us with all Conveniencies delights us and renders both his amazing Power and astonishing Wisdom delightful to us As the Sun by effecting things is an Emblem of Gods Power by discovering things to us is an Emblem of his Wisdom but by refreshing and comforting us is an Emblem of his Goodness And without this refreshing Vertue it communicates to us we should take no pleasure in the Creatures it produceth nor in the Beauties it discovers As God is Great and Powerful he is the Object of our Understanding but as Good and Bountiful he is the Object of our Love and Desire 6. The Goodness of God comprehends all his Attributes All the Acts of God are nothing else but the Effluxes of his Goodness distinguisht by several names according to the Objects it is exercised about As the Sea though it be one Mass of Water yet we distinguish it by several names according to the Shores it washeth and beats upon as the Brittish and German Ocean though all be one Sea When Moses long'd to see his Glory God tells him he would give him a prospect of his Goodness † Exod. 33.19 I will make all my goodness to pass before thee His Goodness is his Glory and Godhead as much as is delightfully visible to his Creatures and whereby he doth benefit Man I will cause my Goodness or Comeliness as Calvin renders it to pass before thee what is this but the Train of all his lovely Perfections springing from his Goodness * Exod. 34.6 The whole Catalogue of Mercy Grace long-suffering abundance of truth summed up in this one word All are Streams from this Fountain he could be none of this were he not first Good When it confers Happiness without Merit 't is Grace when it bestows Happiness against Merit 't is Mercy when he bears with provoking Rebels ' its long-suffering when he performs his Promise 't is Truth when it meets with a person to whom it is not oblig'd 't is Grace when he meets with a person in the World to which he hath obliged himself by Promise 't is Truth * Herle upon Wisdom cap. 5. p. 41. 42. when it Commiserates a Distressed Person 't is Pity when it supplies an Indigent Person 't is Bounty when it succours an Innocent Person 't is Righteousness and when it pardons a Penitent Person 't is Mercy all summ'd up in this one name of Goodness And the Psalmist expresseth the same Sentiment in the same words † Ps 145.7 8. They shall abundantly utter the memory of thy great goodness and shall sing of thy righteousness The Lord is gracious and full of compassion slow to anger and of great mercy the Lord is good to all and his tender mercies are over all his works He is first Good and then Compassionate Righteousness is often in Scripture taken not for Justice but Charitableness This Attribute saith one † Ingelo Bentivolio Vran Book 4. p. 260 261. is so full of God that it doth defie all the rest and verifie the Adorableness of him His Wisdom might contrive against us His Power bear too hard upon us one might be too hard for an Ignorant and the other too mighty for an Impotent Creature His holiness would scare an impure and guilty Creature but his goodness conducts them all for us and makes them all amiable to us Whatever Comeliness they have in the Eye of a Creature whatever Comfort they afford to the Heart of a Creature we are oblig'd for all to his goodness This puts all the rest upon a delightful Exercise this makes his Wisdom design for us and this makes his Power to act for us This Vails his Holiness from affrighting us and this Spirits his Mercy to relieve us † Daille Melang part 2. p. 704 705. All his acts towards Man are but the Workmanship of this What moved him at first to Create the World out of nothing and erect so noble a Creature as Man endow'd with such excellent gifts was it not his goodness What made him separate his Son to be a Sacrifice for us after we had endeavoured to raze out the first marks of his favour Was it not a strong bubling of goodness What moves him to reduce a Fallen Creature to the due sense of his Duty and at last bring him to an Eternal Felicity is it not only his goodness This is the Captain Attribute that leads the rest to act This attends them and Spirits them in all his ways of acting This is the Complement and Perfection of all his Works had it not been for this which set all the rest on work nothing of his Wonders had been seen in Creation nothing of his Compassions had been seen in Redemption The Second thing is some Propositions to explain the Nature of this Goodness 1. He is good by his own Essence God is not only good in his Essence but good by his Essence The Essence of every created thing is good so the unerring God pronounced every thing which he had made * Gen. 1.31 The Essence of the worst Creatures yea of the impure and Savage Devils is good but they are not good per essentiam for then they could not be bad Malicious and Oppressive God is good as he is God and therefore good by himself and from himself not by participation from another He made every thing good but none made him good Since his goodness was not received from another he is good by his own Nature He could not receive it from the things he Created they are later than he Since they received all from him they could bestow nothing on him and no God preceded him in whose Inheritance and Treasures of Goodness he could be a Successor He is absolutely
whence he could draw them No but he denies that good to them which he is able if he pleased to confer upon them If God doth not give that good to a Creature which it wants by its own demerit can he be said to wish evil to it or only to deny that goodness which the Creature hath forfeited † Camere p. 30. and which is at Gods liberty to retain or disperse Though God cannot but love his own Image where he finds it yet when this Image is lost and the Devils Image voluntarily received he may choose whether he will manifest his goodness to such a one or no. Will you not account that Man liberal that distributes his Alms to a great company though he rejects some Much more will you account him good if he rejects none that implore him but dispenseth his doles to every one upon their Petition And is he not good because he will not bestow a Farthing upon those that Address not themselves to him God is so good that he denies not the best good to those that seek him He hath promised Life and Happiness to them that do so Is he less good because he will not distribute his goodness to those that despise him Though he be Good yet his VVisdom is the Rule of dispensing his Goodness 6. The severe Punishment of Offenders and the Afflictions he inflicts upon his Servants are no violations of his Goodness The Notion of Gods Vindictive Justice is as naturally inbred and implanted in the mind of Man as that of his Goodness and those two Sentiments never shockt one another The Heathen never thought him bad because he was just nor unrighteous because he was good God being Infinitely good cannot possibly intend or act any thing but what is good Thou art good and thou dost good i. e. whatsoever thou dost is good whatsoever it be pleasant or painful to the Creature * Ps 119.68 Punishments themselves are not a Moral Evil in the Person that inflicts though they are a Natural Evil in the Person that suffers them † Boetius In ordering Punishment to the VVicked Good is added to Evil In ordering Impunity to the VVicked Evil is added to Evil. To punish VVickedness is Right therefore Good To leave men uncontroul'd in their VVickedness is Unrighteous and therefore Bad. But again Shall his Justice in some few Judgments in the VVorld impeach his Goodness more than his wonderful Patience to Sinners is able to silence the Calumnies against him Is not his hand fuller of gracious Doles than of dreadful Thunderbolts Doth he not oftner seem forgetful of his Justice when he pours out upon the guilty the Streams of his Mercy than to be forgetful of his Goodness when he sprinkles in the VVorld some drops of his VVrath First Gods Judgments in the World do not infringe his Goodness For 1. The justice of God is a part of the goodness of his Nature God himself thought so when he told Moses he would make all his Goodness pass before him * Exod. 33.19 He leaves not out in that enumeration of the parts of it his resolution by no means to clear the Guilty but to visit the Iniquity of the Fathers upon the Children † Exod. 34.7 'T is a property of goodness to hate evil and therefore a property of goodness to punish it 'T is no less Righteousness to give according to the deserts of a Person in a way of Punishment than to reward a Person that obeys his Precepts in a way of Recompence VVhatsoever is Righteous is Good Sin is evil and therefore whatsoever doth witness against it is good His Goodness therefore shines in his Justice for without being just he could not be good Sin is a Moral Disorder in the VVorld Every Sin is Injustice Injustice breaks Gods Order in the VVorld there is a necessity therefore of Justice to put the VVorld in order Punishment orders the Person committing the Injury who when he will not be in the order of Obedience must be in the order of suffering for Gods Honour The goodness of all things which God pronounced so consisted in their order and beneficial helpfulness to one another When this order is inverted the goodness of the Creature ceaseth If it be a bad thing to spoil this order Is it not a part of Divine Goodness to reduce them into order that they may be reduced in some measure to their goodness Do we ever account a Governor less in goodness because he is exact in Justice and punisheth that which makes a disorder in his Government And is it a diminution of the Divine Goodness to punish that which makes a Disorder in the VVorld As VVisdom without Goodness would be a Serpentine Craft and issue in destruction so Goodness without Justice would be impotent Indulgence and cast things into confusion When Abels Blood cryed out for Vengeance against Cain it spake a good thing Christs Blood speaking better things than the Blood of Abel implies that Abels Blood spake a good thing the comparative implies a positive * Heb. 12.24 If it were the goodness of that Innocent Blood to demand Justice it could not be a badness in the Sovereign of the World to execute it How can God sustain the part of a Good and Righteous Judge if he did not preserve Humane Society And how would it be preserved without manifesting himself by publick Judgments against publick Wrongs Is there not as great a necessity that Goodness should have Instruments of Judgment as that there should be Prisons Bridewels and Gibbets in a good Commonwealth Did not the Thunderbolts of God sometimes roar in the Ears of Men they would sin with a higher hand than they do fly more in the face of God make the World as much a Moral as it was at first a Natural Chaos The ingenuity of Men would be dampt if there were not something to work upon their fears to keep them in their due order Impunity of the Innocent Person is worse than any Punishment 'T is a Misery to want Medicines for the Cure of a sharp Disease and a Mark of goodness in a Prince to consult for the security of the Political Body by cutting off a Gangren'd and corrupting Member And what Prince would deserve the noble Title of Good if he did not restrain by punishment those Evils which impair the Publick Welfare Is it not necessary that the examples of Sin whereby others have been encourag'd to Wickedness should be made examples of Justice whereby the same Persons and others may be discourag'd from what before they were greedily inclin'd unto Is not a hatred of what is bad and unworthy as much a part of Divine Goodness as a love to what is Excellent and bears a Resemblance to himself Could he possibly be accounted Good that should bear the same degree of Affection to a prodigious Vice as to a sublime Virtue And should behave himself in the same manner of carriage
Noah the 8th person a Preacher of Righteousness bringing in the Flood upon the World of the ungodly called the 8th in respect of his Preaching not in regard of his preservation He was the 8th Preacher in order from the begining of the World that endeavoured to restore the World to the way of Righteousness Most indeed consider him here as the 8th person saved so do our Translators and therefore add Person which is not in the Greek Some others consider him here as the 8th Preacher of Righteousness reckoning Enoch the Son of Seth the first grounding it upon Gen. 4.26 Then began men to call on the Name of the Lord Hebr. Then it was began to call in the Name of the Lord 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sept. He began to call in the Name of the Lord which others render he began to preach or call upon men in the Name of the Lord. The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies to Preach or to call upon men by Preaching Prov. 1.21 Wisdom cryeth or preaches And if this be so as it is very probable 't is easie to reckon him the 8th Preacher by numbering the successive heads of the Generations Gen. 5. Beginning at Enosh the first Preacher of Righteousness * Vid. Gells 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So many there were before God choakt the Old World with water and swept them away 'T is clear he often did admonish by his Prophets the Jews of their sin and the wrath which should come upon them One Prophet Hosea Prophesied 70 years for he Prophesied in the dayes of 4 Kings of Judah and one of Israel Jeroboam the Son of Joash Hos 1.1 or Jeroboam the second of that name Vzziah King of Judah in whose Reign Hosea Prophesied lived 38 years after the death of Jeroboam The Second Jotham Vzziah's Successor Reign'd 16 years Ahaz 16 Hezekiah 29 years Now take nothing of Hezekiah's time and Date the beginning of his Prophesie from the last year of Jeroboam's Reign and the time of Hosea's Prophesie will be 70 years compleat Wherein God warned those people and waited the return particularly of Israel * Sanctius Prolegom in Hosea Prolog the 3d. and not less than 5 of those we call the lesser Prophets were sent to foretell the destruction of the Ten Tribes and to call them to Repentance Hosea Joel Amos Micah Jonah And though we have nothing of Jonah's Prophesie in this concern of Israel yet that he lived in the time of the same Jeroboam and Prophesied things which are not upon record in the book of Jonah is clear 2 King 14.25 And besides those Isaiah Prophesied also in the Reign of the same Kings as Hosea did Isa 1.1 And it is God's usual method to send forth his servants and when their admonitions are slighted he Commissions others before he sends out his destroying Armies Mat. 22.3 4 7. 2. He doth often give warning of Judgments that he might not pour out his wrath He summons them to a surrender of themselves and a return from their Rebellion that they might not feel the force of his Armes He offers peace before he shakes off the dust of his feet that his despised peace might not return in vain to him to sollicite a revenge from his anger He hath a right to punish upon the first Commission of a crime but he warns men of what they have deserved of what his Justice moves him to inflict that by having recourse to his mercy he might not exercise the rights of his Justice God sought to kill Moses for not circumcising his Son Exod. 4.24 Could God that sought it miss of a way to do it Could a creature lurch or flie from him God put on the garb of an enemy that Moses might be discouraged from being an instrument of his own ruine God manifested an anger against Moses for his neglect as if he would then have destroyed him that Moses might prevent it by casting off his carelesness and doing his duty He sought to kill him by some evident sign that Moses might escape the judgment by his obedience He threatens Niniveh by the Prophet with destruction that Niniveh's Repentance might make void the Prophesie He fights with men by the Sword of his mouth that he might not pierce them by the Sword of his wrath He threatens that men might prevent the execution of his threatning He terrifies that he might not destroy but that men by humiliation may lie prostrate before him and move the bowels of his mercy to a louder sound than the voice of his Anger He takes time to whet his Sword that men may turn themselves from the edge of it He roars like a Lion that men by hearing his voice may shelter themselves from being torn by his Wrath. There is patience in the sharpest threatning that we may avoid the scourge Who can charge God with an eagerness to revenge that sends so many Heralds and so often before he strikes that he might be prevented from striking His threatnings have not so much of a black flag as of an Olive branch He lifts his up hand before he strikes that men might See and avert the stroke Isaiah 26.11 2. His Patience is manifest in long delaying his threatned Judgements though he finds no Repentance in the Rebels He doth sometimes delay his lighter punishments because he doth not delight in torturing his Creatures but he doth longer delay his destroying punishments such as put an end to mens happiness and remit them to their final and unchangeable state because he doth not delight in the death of a Sinner While he is preparing his arrows he is waiting for an occasion to lay them aside and dull their points that he may with honour march back again and disband his Armies He brings lighter smarts sooner that men might not think him asleep but he suspends the more terrible judgments that men might be led to Repentance He scatters not his consuming fires at the first but brings on ruining vengeance with a slow pace sentence against an evil work is not speedily executed Eccles 8.11 The Jews therefore say that Michael the Minister of Justice flyes with one wing but Gabriel the Minister of Mercy with two An 120 years did God wait upon the old World and delay their punishment all the time the Ark was preparing 1 Pet. 3.20 Wherein that wicked Generation did not enjoy only a bare patience but a striving patience Gen. 6.3 My Spirit shall not always strive with man yet his days shall be one hundred and twenty years the days wherein I will strive with him that his Long-suffering might not lose all its fruit and remit the objects of it into the hands of consuming Justice It was the Tenth Generation of the World from Adam when the deluge overflow'd it so long did God bear with them And the Tenth Generation from Noah wherein Sodom was consumed God did not come to keep his Assizes in Sodom till the cry of their sins was very
notwithstanding the clamour of the sins of the multitude Judea was ripe for the sickle but God would put a lock upon the torrent of his judgments that they should not flow down upon that wicked place to make them a desolation and a curse as long as tender hearted Josiah lived who had humbled himself at the threatning and wept before the Lord 1 King 22.19 20. Sometimes he bears with wicked men that they might exercise the Patience of the Saints Rev. 14.12 The whole time of the forbearance of Antichrist in all his intrusions into the Temple of God invasions of the rights of God usurpations of the Office of Christ and besmearing himself with the blood of the Saints was to give them an opportunity of Patience God is Patient towards the wicked that by their means he might try the Righteous He burns not the wisp till he hath scowred his vessels Nor layes by the hammer till he hath formed some of his matter into an excellent fashion He useth the worst men as rods to correct his people before he sweeps the twiggs out of his house God sometimes uses the thorns of the World as a hedge to secure his Church sometimes as instruments to try and exercise it Howsoever he useth them whither for security or tryal he is Patient to them for his Churches advantage 6. When men are not brought to Repentance by his Patience he doth longer exercise it to manifest the equity of his future justice upon them As Wisdom is justified by her obedient children so is justice justified by the rebels against Patience the contempt of the later is the justification of the former The Apostles were unto God a sweet savour of Christ in them that perish as well as in them that were saved by the acceptation of their message 2 Cor. 2.15 Both are fragrant to God his Mercy is Glorified by the ones acceptance of it and his Justice freed from any charge against it by the others refusal The cause of mens ruin cannot be laid upon God who provided means for their Salvation and sollicited their complyance with him What reason can they have to charge the Judge with any wrong to them who reject the tenders he makes and who hath forborn them with so much Patience when he might have censured them by his Righteous Justice upon the first crime they committed or the first refusal of his gracious offers Quanto Dei magis Judicium tardum est tanto magis justum * Minuc Felix pag. 41. After the despising of Patience there can be no suspition of an irregularity in the acts of Justice Man hath no reason to fall foul in his charge upon God if he were punished for his own sin considering the dignity of the injured person and the meanness of himself the offender But his wrath is more justified when it is poured out upon those whom he hath endured with much long suffering There is no plea against the shooting of his Arrows into those for whom this voice hath been loud and his arms open for their return As Patience while it is exercised is the silence of his justice so when it is abused it silenceth mens complaints against his justice The riches of his forbearance made way for the manifesting the treasures of his wrath If God did but a little bear with the insolencies of men and cut them off after two or three sins he would not have opportunity to shew either the power of his Patience or that of his wrath But when he hath a right to punish for one sin and yet bears with them for many and they will not be reclaimed the sinner is more inexcusable divine Justice less chargable and his wrath more powerful Rom. 9. 22. What if God willing to shew his wrath and to make his power known endured with much long suffering the vessels of wrath fitted for destruction The proper and immediate end of his long suffering is to lead men to repentance but after they have by their obstinacy fitted themselves for destruction he bears longer with them to magnifie his wrath more upon them and if it is not the finis operantis 't is at least the finis operis where Patience is abused Men are apt to complain of God that he deals hardly with them The Israelites seem to charge God with too much severity to cast them off when so many promises were made to the fathers for their perpetuity and preservation which is intimated Hos 2.2 Plead with your mother plead by the double repetition of the word plead Do not accuse me of being false or too rigorous but accuse your Mother your Church your Magistracy your Ministry for their spiritual fornications which have provoked me For their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 intimating the greatness of their sins by the reduplication of the word lest I strip her naked I have born with her under many provocations and I have not yet taken away all her Ornaments or said to her according to the rule of divorce res tuas tibi habeto God answers their impudent charge She is not my Wife nor am I her Husband He doth not say first I am not her Husband but she is not my Wife She first withdrew from her duty by breaking the Marriage Covenant and then I ceased to be her Husband No man shall be condemned but he shall be convinced of the due desert of his sin and the justice of God's proceeding God will lay open Mens guilt and repeat the measures of his Patience to justifie the severity of his wrath Hos 7.10 Sins will testifie to their face What is in its own nature a preparation for Glory men by their obstinacy make a preparation for a more indisputable punishment We see many evidences of God's forbearance here in sparing men under those blasphemies which are audible and those prophane carriages which are visible which would sufficiently justifie an act of severity Yet when mens secret sins both in heart and action and the vast multitude of them far surmounting what can arrive to our knowledge here shall be discovered how great a lustre will it add to God's bearing with them and make his justice triumph without any reasonable demurr from the sinner himself He is long suffering here that his justice may be more publick hereafter IV. The VSE I. For Instruction 1. How is this Patience of God abused The Gentiles abused those Testimonies of it which were written in showers and fruitful seasons No Nation was ever stript of it under the most provoking Idolatries till after multiplyed spurns at it Not a person among us but hath been guilty of the abuse of it How have we contemned that which demands a reverence from us How have we requited God's waitings with rebellions while he hath continued urging and expecting our return Saul relented at David's forbearing to revenge himself when he had his prosecuting and industrious enemy in his power 1 Sam. 24.17 Thou art more Righteous
But the Apostle the best Interpreter rectifies this in extending it by name to Jews as well as Gentiles Rom. 3.9 We have before proved both Jews and Gentiles that they are all under sin And v. 10.11 12. Cites part of his Psalm and other passages of Scripture for the further evidence of it concluding by Jews and Gentiles every person in the world naturally in this State of Corruption The Psalmist first declares the Corruption of the faculties of the Soul the fool hath said in his heart Secondly the streams issuing from thence they are corrupt c. the first in Athestical principles the other in unworthy practices and lays all the Evil Tyranny Lust and Persecutions by men as if the World were only for their sake upon the neglects of God and the Atheism cherished in their hearts The fool a term in Scripture signifying a wicked man used also by the Heathen Philosophers to signifie a vicious person 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as coming from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies the extinction of life in Men Animals and Plants so the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is taken * Isa 40.7 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the flower fadeth Isa 28.1 a plant that hath lost all that juyce that made it lovely and useful So a fool is one that hath lost his Wisdom and right notion of God and Divine things which were communicated to man by creation one dead in sin yet one not so much void of rational faculties as of Grace in those faculties not one that wants reason but abuses his reason In Scripture the word signifies foolish ‖ Mais 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 put together Deut. 32.6 Oh foolish people and unwise * Said in his heart that is he thinks or he doubts or he wishes The thoughts of the heart are in the nature of words to God though not to men T is used in the like case of the Atheistical person Psal 10.11.13 He hath said in his heart God hath forgotten he hath said in his heart thou wilt not require it He doth not form a Syllogism as Calvin speaks that there is no God he dares not openly publish it though he dares secretly think it He can not rase out the thoughts of a Deity though he endeavors to blot those Characters of God in his Soul He hath some doubts whither there be a God or no He wishes there were not any and sometimes hopes there is none at all He could not so ascertain him self by convincing arguments to produce to the World but he tampered with his own heart to bring it to that perswasion and smothered in himself those notices of a Deity which is so plain against the light of nature that such a man may well be called a fool for it There is no God * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 No God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 non potestas Domini Chaldae T is not Jehovah which name signifies the Essence of God as the Prime and Supream being But Eloahia which name signifies the Providence of God * Muis. God as a Rector and Judge Not that he denyes the Existence of a Supream being that Created the World but his regarding the Creatures his Government of the world and consequently his reward of the Righteous or Punishments of the Wicked * Cocceius There is a threefold denyal of God 1. Quoad exisientiam this is absolute Atheism 2. Quoad Providentiam or his inspection into or care of the things of the World bounding him in the Heavens 3. Quoad naturam in regard of one or other of the perfections due to his nature Not owning him as the Egyptians called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Of the denyal of the Providence of God most understand this * Eugubin in cloc not excluding the absolute Atheist as Diagoras is reported to be nor the Sceptical Atheist as Protagoras who doubted whither there were a God Those that deny the Providence of God do in effect deny the being of God for they strip him of that Wisdom Goodness Tenderness Mercy Justice Righteousness which are the Glory of the Deity And that principle of a greedy desire to be uncontroul'd in their Lusts which induceth men to a denyal of Providence that thereby they might stifle those seeds of fear which infect and embitter their sinful pleasures may as well lead them to deny that there is any such being as a God That at one blow their fears may be dasht all in peices and dissolved by the removal of the Foundation As men who desire liberty to commit works of darkness would not have the lights in the House dimm'd but extinguished What men say against Providence because they would have no check in their Lusts they may say in their hearts against the existence of God upon the same account little difference between the dissenting from the one and disowning the other They are corrupt they have done abominable works there is none that doth good He speaks of the Atheist in the singular the fool of the corruption issuing in the life in the plural Intimating that though some few may choak in their hearts the sentiments of God and his Providence and positively deny them yet there is something of a secret Atheism in all which is the fountain of the evil practices in their lives not an utter disowning of the Being of a God but a denyal or doubting of some of the rights of his nature * Atheism absolute is not in all mens judgements but practical is in all mens actions The Apostle in the Romans applying the later part of it to all mankind but not the former As the word translated corrupt signifies When men deny the God of purity they must needs be polluted in Soul and Body and grow brutish in their actions When the sense of Religion is shaken off all kind of wickedness is eagerly rusht into whereby they become as loathsome to God as putrified carcases are to men * Atheism absolute is not in all mens judgements but practical is in all mens actions The Apostle in the Romans applying the later part of it to all mankind but not the former As the word translated corrupt signifies Not one or two evil actions is the product of such a principle but the whole scene of a mans life is corrupted and becomes execrable No man is exempted from some spice of Atheism by the depravation of his nature which the Psalmist intimates there is none that doth good Though there are indelible convictions of the being of a God that they cannot absolutely deny it yet there are some Atheistical bublings in the hearts of men which Evidence themselves in their actions As the Apostle Tit. 1.16 They profess that they know God but in works they deny him Evil works are a dust stirred up by an Atheistical breath He that habituates himself in some sordid lust can scarcly be said seriously and firmly to believe that there
and the dregs of that revolt is that they know not God They forget God as if there were no such being above them and indeed he that doth the works of the Devil owns the Devil to be more worthy of observance and consequently of a being than God whose nature he forgets and whose presence he abhors Proposition 4. Every sin in its own nature would render God a foolish and impure being Many Transgressors esteem their acts which are contrary to the Law of God both Wise and Good If so the Law against which they are committed must be both foolish and impure What a reflection is there then upon the Law-giver The Moral Law is not properly a meer act of Gods Will considered in it self or a Tyrannical Edict like those of whom it may well be said stat pro ratione voluntas But it commands those things which are good in their own nature and prohibits those things which are in their own nature evil and therefore is an act of his Wisdom and Righteousness the result of his wise Council and an extract of his pure nature as all the Laws of just Law-givers are not only the acts of their Will but of a Will governed by Reason and Justice and for the good of the publick whereof they are conservators If the Moral commands of God were only acts of his Will and had not an intrinsick necessity reason and goodness God might have commanded the quite contrary and made a contrary Law whereby that which we now call Vice might have been canonized for Virtue He might then have forbid any Worship of him Love to him fear of his name He might then have commanded Murders Thefts Adulteries In the first he would have untied the link of duty from the Creature and dissolved the obligations of Creatures to him which is impossible to be conceived for from the Relation of a Creature to God obligations to God and duties upon those obligations do necessarily result It had been against the rule of Goodness and Justice to have commanded the Creature not to love him and fear and obey him This had been a command against Righteousness Goodness and intrinsick obligations to Gratitude And should Murder Adulteries Rapines have been commanded instead of the contrary God would have destroyed his own Creation he would have acted against the rule of goodness and order he had been an unjust tyrannical Governor of the world Publick society would have been crackt in peices and the world become a Shambles a Brothel House a place below the common sentiments of a meer man All sin therefore being against the Law of God the Wisdom and holy rectitude of Gods Nature is denyed in every Act of disobedience And what is the consequence of this but that God is both foolish and unrighteous in commanding that which was neither an Act of Wisdom as a Governour nor an Act of goodness as a benefactor to his Creature As was said before presumptuous sins are called reproaches of God Num. 15.30 The Soul that doth ought presumptuously reproacheth the Lord. Reproaches of men are either for natural moral or intellectual defects All reproaches of God must imply a charge either of unrighteousness or ignorance If of unrighteousness t is a denial of his Holiness If of Ignorance t is a blemishing his Wisdom If Gods Laws were not wise and holy God would not enjoyn them And if they are so we deny infinite Wisdom and Holiness in God by not complying with them As when a man believes not God when he promises he makes him a lyar 1 John 5.10 So he that obeys not a wise and holy God commanding makes him guilty either of folly or unrighteousness Now suppose you knew an absolute Atheist who denyed the being of a God yet had a life free from any notorious spot or defilement would you in reason count him so bad as the other that owns a God in being yet lays by his course of action such a black imputation of folly and impurity upon the God he professeth to own an imputation which renders any man a most despicable Creature Proposition 5. Sin in its own nature endeavours to render God the most miserable being T is nothing but an opposition to the will of God The will of no Creature is so much contradicted as the Will of God is by Devils and Men And there is nothing under the Heavens that the affections of human nature stand more point blank against than against God There is a slight of him in all the faculties of Man our Souls are as unwilling to know him as our Wills are averse to follow him Rom. 8.7 The carnal mind is enmity against God t is not subject to the Law of God nor can be subject T is true Gods will cannot be hindered of its effect for then God would not be supremely blessed but unhappy and miserable All misery ariseth from a want of that which a nature would have and ought to have Besides if any thing could frustrate Gods Will it would be superior to him God would not be Omnipotent and so would lose the perfection of the Deity and consequently the Deity it self for that which did wholly defeat Gods Will would be more powerful than he But sin is a contradiction to the Will of Gods Revelation to the Will of his precept and therein doth naturally tend to a superiority over God and would usurp his Omnipotence and deprive him of his blessedness For if God had not an infinite power to turn the designs of it to his own glory but the will of sin could prevail God would be totally deprived of his blessedness Doth not sin endeavour to subject God to the extravagant and contrary wills of men and make him more a slave than any Creature can be For the Will of no Creature not the meanest and most despicable Creature is so much crost as the Will of God is by sin Isa 43.24 Thou hast made me to serve with thy sins Thou hast endeavoured to make a meer slave of me by sin Sin endeavors to subject the blessed God to the humour and lust of every person in the world Proposition 6. Men sometimes in some circumstances do wish the not being of God This some think to be the meaning of the Text the fool hath said in his heart there is no God that is he wishes there were no God Many tamper with their own hearts to bring them to a perswasion that there is no God And when they cannot do that they conjure up wishes that there were none Men naturally have some Conscience of sin and some notices of Justice Rom. 1.32 They know the Judgement of God and they know the demerit of sin they know the Judgment of God and that they which do such things are worthy of death What is the consequent of this but fear of punishment and what is the issue of that fear but a wishing the Judge either unwilling or unable to vindicate the Honour of his
himself is an infinite Mirror of Goodness and ravishing Loveliness He is infinitely good and so universally good and nothing but good and is therefore so agreeable to a Creature as a Creature that it is impossible that the Creature while it bears itself to God as a Creature should be guilty of this but thirst after him and cherish every motion to him As no man wishes the destruction of any Creature as a Creature but as it may conduce to something which he counts may be beneficial to himself so no man doth nor perhaps can wish the cessation of the Being of God as God for then he must wish his own Being to cease also But as he considers him clothed with some perfections which he apprehends as injurious to him as his Holiness in forbidding Sin his Justice in punishing Sin And God being judged in those perfections contrary to what the revolted Creature thinks convenient and good for himself he may wish God stript of those perfections that thereby he may be free from all fear of trouble and grief from him in his fallen State In wishing God deprived of those he wishes God deprived of his Being because God cannot retain his Deity without a love of Righteousness and Hatred of Iniquity and he could not testifie his love to the one or his loathing of the other without encouraging Goodness and witnessing his Anger against Iniquity Let us now appeal to ourselves and examin our own Consciences Did we never please our selves sometimes in the thoughts how happy we should be how free in our vain pleasures if there were no God Have we not desired to be our own Lords without controle subject to no Law but our own and be guided by no Will but that of the Flesh Did we never rage against God under his afflicting Hand Did we never wish God stript of his Holy Will to command and his Righteous Will to punish c. Thus much for the general For the proof of this many considerations will bring in Evidence Most may be reduced to these two Generals Man would set himself up First as his own Rule Secondly as his own End and Happiness 1. Man would set himself up as his own Rule instead of God This will be evidenced in this Method 1. Man naturally disowns the Rule God sets him 2. He owns any other Rule rather than that of Gods prescribing 3. These he doth in order to the setting himself up as his own Rule 4. He makes himself not only his own Rule but would make himself the Rule of God and give Laws to his Creator 1. Man naturally disowns the Rule God sets him 'T is all one to deny his Royalty and to deny his Being When we disown his Authority we disown his God-head 'T is the Right of God to be the Soveraign of his Creatures and it must be a very loose and trivial assent that such men have to Gods Superiority over them and consequently to the Excellency of his Being upon which that Authority is founded who are scarce at ease in themselves but when they are invading his Rights breaking his Bands casting away his Cords and contradicting his Will Every man naturally is a Son of Belial would be without a Yoke and leap over Gods Inclosures and in breaking out against his Soveraignity we disown his Being as God For to be God and Soveraign are inseparable He could not be God if he were not Supreme nor could he be a Creator without being a Law-giver To be God and yet inferior to another is a Contradiction To make Rational Creatures without prescribing them a Law is to make them without Holiness Wisdom and Goodness 1. There is in Man naturally an unwillingness to have any acquaintance with the Rule God sets him Psal 14.2 None that did understand and seek God The refusing Instruction and casting his Word behind the back is a part of Atheism * Psal 50 1● We are heavy in hearing the Instructions either of Law or Gospel * Heb. 5.11 12. and slow in the Apprehension of what we hear The people that God had hedged in from the Wilderness of the World for his own Garden were foolish and did not know God were sottish and had no understanding of him * Jer. 4.22 The Law of God is accounted a strange thing * Hos 8.12 a thing of a different Clymate and a far Country from the heart of Man wherewith the mind of Man had no natural acquaintance and had no desire to have any or they regarded it as a sordid thing What God accounts great and valuable they account mean and despicable Men may shew a Civility to a Stranger but scarce contract an Intimacy There can be no Amicable Agreement between the holy Will of God and the heart of a depraved Creature One is holy the other unholy one is universally good the other stark naught The purity of the Divine Rule renders it nauseous to the impurity of a carnal heart Water and Fire may as well friendly kiss each other and live together without quarrelling and hissing as the holy Will of God and the unregenerate heart of a fallen Creature The nauseating a Holy Rule is an Evidence of Atheism in the heart as the nauseating wholesome Food is of putrified Flegm in the Stomack 'T is found more or less in every Christian in the Remainders though not in a full Empire As there is a Law in his Mind whereby he delights in the Law of God so there is a Law in his Members whereby he wars against the Law of God Rom. 7.22 23 25. How predominant is this loathing of the Law of God when corrupt Nature is in its full strength without any Principle to controul it There is in the Mind of such a one a Darkness whereby it is ignorant of it and in the Will a Depravedness whereby it is repugnant to it If Man were naturally willing and able to have an intimate acquaintance with and delight in the Law of God it had not been such a signal favour for God to promise to write the Law in the heart A man may sooner engrave the Chronicle of a whole Nation or all the Records of God in the Scripture upon the hardest Marble with his bare finger than write one Syllable of the Law of God in a spiritual manner upon his heart For 1. Men are negligent in using the means for the knowledge of Gods Will. All natural men are Fools who know not how to use the price God puts into their hands * Pro. 17.16 They put not a due estimate upon opportunities and means of Grace and account that Law-Folly which is the Birth of an infinite and holy Wisdom The knowledge of God which they may glean from Creatures and is more pleasant to the natural gust of men is not improved to the Glory of God if we will believe the Indictment the Apostle brings against the Gentiles * Rom. 1.21 And most of those that have
temper under a storm he would submit to God and let Israel go but when the storm is ended he will not be under Gods controul and Israels slavery shall be increased The fear of Divine wrath makes many a sinner turn his back upon his sin and the love of his ruling lust makes him turn his back upon his true Lord. This is from the prevalency of sin that disputes with God for the Soveraignty When God hath sent a sharp disease as a messenger to bind men to their beds and make an interruption of their sinful pleasures their mouths are full of promises of a new life in hope to escape the just vengeance of God The sense of Hell which strikes strongly upon them makes them full of such pretended resolutions when they howl upon their beds But if God be pleased in his Patience to give them a respite to take off the Chains wherewith he seemed to be binding them for destruction and recruit their strength they are more earnest in their sins than they were in their promises of a reformation as if they had got the mastery of God and had outwitted him How often doth God charge them * Amos 4.6 to ver 11. of not returning to him after a succession of Judgments So hard it is not only to allure but to scourge men to an acknowledgement of God as their Ruler Consider then Are we not naturally inclined to disobey the known Will of God Can we say Lord for thy sake we refrain the thing to which our hearts encline Do we not allow our selves to be licentious earthly vain proud revengful tho we know it will offend him Have we not been peevishly cross to his declared Will Run Counter to him and those Laws which express most of the glory of his holiness Is not this to disown him as our Rule Did we never wish there were no Law to bind us no precept to check our Idols What is this but to wish that God would depose himself from being our Governour and leave us to our own conduct or else to wish that he were as unholy as our selves as careless of his own laws as we are that is that he were no more a God then we a God as sinful and unrighteous as our selves He whose heart riseth against the Law of God to unlaw it riseth against the Author of that Law to undeifie him He that casts contempt upon the dearest thing God hath in the world that which is the image of his holiness the delight of his Soul that which he hath given a special charge to maintain and that because it is holy just and good would not stick to rejoyce at the destruction of God himself If Gods Holiness and righteousness in the beam be despised much more will an immense goodness and holiness in the fountain be rejected He that wisheth a beam far from his eyes because it offends and scorcheth him can be no friend to the Sun from whence that beam doth issue How unworthy a Creature is man since he only a rational Creature is the sole being that withdraws it self from the rule of God in this Earth And how miserable a Creature is he also Since departing from the order of Gods goodness he falls into the order of his Justice and while he refuseth God to be the rule of his life he cannot avoid him being the Judge of his punishment T is this is the original of all sin and the fountain of all our misery This is the first thing man disowns the Rule which God sets him Secondly 2. Man naturally owns any other rule rather than that of Gods prescribing The Law of God orders one thing the heart of man desires another There is not the basest thing in the world but man would sooner submit to be guided by it rather than by the holiness of God and when any thing that God commands crosses our own Wills we value it no more than we would the advise of a poor despicable beggar How many are lovers of pleasure more than lovers of God * 2 Tim. 3.4 To make something which contributes to the perfection of nature as learning wisdom moral vertues our Rule would be more tolerable But to pay that homage to a swinish pleasure which is the right of God is an inexcusable contempt of him The greatest excellency in the world is infinitely below God much more a bestial delight which is both disgraceful and below the nature of man If we made the vilest Creature on Earth our Idol t is more excusable than to be the slave of a brutish pleasure The viler the thing is that doth possess the throne in our heart the greater contempt it is of him who can only claim a right to it and is worthy of it Sin is the first object of mans election as soon as the faculty whereby he choses comes to exercise its power And it is so dear to man that it is in the estimate of our Saviour counted as the right hand and the right eye dear precious and useful members 1. The rule of Satan is owned before the rule of God The natural man would rather be under the guidance of Satan than the Yoke of his Creator Adam chose him to be his Governour in Paradice No sooner had Satan spoke of God in a way of derision Gen. 3.1 5. Yea hath God said but man follows his Counsel and approves of the scoff and the greatest part of his posterity have not been wiser by his fall but would rather ramble in the Devils Wilderness than to stay in Gods fold T is by the sin of man that the Devil is become the God of the world as if men were the Electors of him to the Government Sin is an Election of him for a Lord and a putting the Soul under his Government Those that live according to the course of the world and are loath to displease it are under the Government of the Prince of it The greatest part of the works done in the world is to enlarge the Kingdom of Satan For how many ages were the laws whereby the greatest part of the world was governed in the affairs of Religion the fruits of his usurpation and policy When Temples were erected to him Priests consecrated to his service The rites used in most of the Worship of the world were either of his own Coyning or the misapplying the Rites God had ordained to himself under the notion of a God Whence the Apostle calls all Idolatrous Feasts the table of Devils the cup of Devils Sacrifice to Devils fellowship with Devils * 1 Cor. 10.20.21 Devils being the real object of the Pagan Worship tho not formally intended by the Worshipper tho in some parts of the Indies the direct and peculiar worship is to the Devil that he might not hurt them And tho the intention of others was to offer to God and not the Devil yet since the action was contrary to the Will of God he regards
holiness and righteousness commanded God appointed it to magnifie his Justice and check the Idolatry that had been supported by that family Jehu acted it to satisfie his revenge and ambition he did it to fulfil his lust not the will of God who enjoyn'd him Jehu applauds it as zeal and God abhors it as murder and therefore would avenge the blood of Jezreel on the house of Jehu Hos 1.4 Such kind of services are not paid to God for his own sake but to our selves for our lusts sake 4. This is evident in neglecting to take Gods direction upon emergent occasions This follows the Text none did seek God When we consult not with him but trust more to our own Will and Counsel we make our selves our own Governours and Lords independent upon him As though we could be our own Counsellors and manage our Concerns without his leave and assistance as though our works were in our own hands and not in the hands of God * Eccles 9.1 that we can by our own strength and sagacity direct them to a successful end without him If we must acquaint our selves with God before we decree a thing * Job 22.28 then to decree a thing without acquainting God with it is to prefer our purblind wisdom before the infinite Wisdom of God to resolve without consulting God is to depose God and deifie self our own wit and strength We would rather like Lot follow our own humor and stay in Sodom than observe the Angels order to go out of it 5. As we account the actions of others to be good or evil as they suit with or spurn against our fancies and humours Vertue is a crime and vice a vertue as it is contrary or concurrent with our humors Little Reason have many men to blame the actions of others but because they are not agreeable to what they affect and desire We would have all men take directions from us and move according to our beck Hence that common Speech in the world such an one is an honest friend why because he is of their humour and lackies according to their wills Thus we make self the measure and square of good and evil in the rest of mankind and judge of it by our own fancies and not by the will of God the proper rule of Judgment Well then let us Consider Is not this very common are we not naturally more willing to displease God than displease our selves when it comes to a point that we must do one or other Is not our own Counsel of more value with us than Conformity to the will of the Creator Do not our Judgments often run Counter to the Judgment of God Have his Laws a greater respect from us than our own humours Do we scruple the staining his honour when it comes in competition with our own Are not the Lives of most men a pleasing themselves without a repentance that ever they displeased God Is not this to undeifie God to deifie our selves and disown the propriety he hath in us by the right of Creation and Beneficence We order our own ways by our own humours as though we were the Authors of our own being and had given our selves life and understanding This is to destroy the order that God hath placed between our wills and his own and a lifting up of the foot above the head 't is the deformity of the Creature The honor of every rational Creature consists in the service of the first cause of his being as the welfare of every Creature consists in the orders and proportionable motion of its members according to the Law of it's Creation He that moves and acts according to a law of his own offers a manifest wrong to God the highest wisdom and chiefest good disturbs the order of the world nulls the design of the righteousness and holiness of God The Law of God is the rule of that order he would have observed in the world He that makes another law his rule thrusts out the order of the Creator and establishes the disorder of the Creature But this will yet be more evident in the fourth thing 4. Man would make himself the rule of God and give Laws to his Creator VVe are willing God should be our benefactor but not our ruler we are content to admire his excellency and pay him a worship provided he will walk by our rule * Decay of Christian piety p. 169. somewhat changed This commits a riot upon his nature To think him to be what we our selves would have him and wish him to be Psal 50.21 VVe would amplifie his Mercy and contract his Justice We would have his power enlarg'd to supply our wants and straightned when it goes about to revenge our crimes VVe would have him wise to defeat our enemies but not to disappoint our unworthy projects We would have him all eye to regard our indigence and blind not to discern our guilt We would have him true to his promises regardless of his precepts and false to his threatnings VVe would new mint the nature of God according to our models and shape a God according to our fancies as he made us at first according to his own Image Instead of obeying him we would have him obey us Instead of owning and admiring his perfections we would have him strip himself of his infinite excellency and cloth himself with a nature agreeable to our own This is not only to set up self as the Law of God but to make our own Imaginations the model of the nature of God Corrupted man takes a pleasure to accuse or suspect the actions of God We would not have him act conveniently to his nature but act what doth gratifie us and abstain from what distasts us Man is never well but when he is impeaching one or other perfection of Gods Nature and undermining his Glory as if all his Attributes must stand Indicted at the bar of our purblind Reason This Weed shoots up in the exercise of Grace Peter intended the refusal of our Saviours washing his feet as an act of humility but Christ understands it to be a prescribing a law to himself a correcting his love John 13.8 9. This is evidenc'd 1. In the strivings against his Law How many men imply by their Lives that they would have God depos'd from his Government and some unrighteous being step in to his Throne as if God had or should change his Laws of Holiness into Laws of Licentiousness as if he should abrogate his old Eternal Precepts and enact contrary ones in their stead What is the Language of such practices but that they would be Gods Law-givers and not his Subjects that he should deal with them according to their own wills and not according to his righteousness that they could make a more holy wise and righteous Law than the Law of God that their imaginations and not Gods righteousness should be the rule of his doing good to them Jer. 9.31 They have
lay the Plot of our own Affairs and then come to God not for Counsel but Blessing Self only shall give us counsel how to act but because we believe there is a God that governs the world we will desire him to contribute success God is not consulted with till the Counsel of self be fixed then God must be the Executor of our Will Self must be the Principal and God the Instrument to hatch what we have contrived 'T is worse when we beg of God to favour some sinful Aim the Psalmist implies this Psal 66.18 If I regard Iniquity in my heart the Lord will not hear me Iniquity regarded as the aim in Prayer renders the Prayer succesless and the Suppliant an Atheist in debasing God to back his Lust by his holy Providence The Disciples had determined Revenge and because they could not act it without their Master they would have him be their Second in their vindictive passion Luke 9.55 Call for fire from Heaven We scarce seek God till we have modell'd the whole Contrivance in our own Brains and resolved upon the Methods of Performance as though there were not a fullness of Wisdom in God to guide us in our resolves as well as Power to breath Success upon them 4. In impatience upon the refusal of our desires How often do mens Spirits rise against God when he steps not in with the Assistance they want If the glory of God swayed more with them than their private interest they would let God be Judge of his own glory and rather magnifie his Wisdom than complain of his want of Goodness Selfish hearts will charge God with neglect of them if he be not as quick in their supplies as they are in their desires like those in Isa 58.3 Wherefore have we fasted say they and thou seest not wherefore have we afflicted our Souls and thou takest no knowledge When we aim at Gods glory in our importunities we shall fall down in humble Submissions when he denies us whereas self riseth up in bold Expostulations as if God were our Servant and had neglected the service he owed us not to come at our call We over-value the satisfactions of self above the honour of God Besides if what we desire be a sin our impatience at a refusal is more intolerable 'T is an anger that God will not lay aside his holiness to serve our corruption 5. In the actual aims men have in their Duties In Prayer for temporal things when we desire Health for our own ease Wealth for our own sensuality Strength for our revenge Children for the increase of our Family Gifts for our applause as Simon Magus did the Holy-Ghost or when some of those ends are aimed at This is to desire God not to serve himself of us but to be a Servant to our worldly interest our vain glory the greatning of our names c. In spiritual mercies begged for When pardon of sin is desired only for our own security from eternal Vengeance Sanctification desired only to make us fit for everlasting blessedness Peace of Conscience only that we may lead our lives more comfortably in the world when we have not actual intentions for the glory of God or when our thoughts of Gods honour are overtopt by the aims of self advantage Not but that as God hath prest us to those things by motives drawn from the Blessedness derived to our selves by them so we may desire them with a resepect to our selves but this respect must be contained within the due banks in subordination to the glory of God not above it nor in an equal ballance with it Gurnall Part. 3. Pag. 337. That which is nourishing or medicinal in the first or second degree is in the fourth or fifth degree meer destructive poyson Let us consider it seriously though a Duty be heavenly doth not some base end smut us in it 1. How is it with our Confessions of Sin Are they not more to procure our Pardon than to shame our selves before God or to be freed from the chains that hinder us from bringing him the glory for which we were created or more to partake of his benefits than to honour him in acknowledging the rights of his Justice Do we not bewail sin as it hath ruined us not as it opposed the Holiness of God Do we not shuffle with God and confess one sin while we reserve another as if we would allure God by declaring our dislike of one to give us liberty to commit Wantoness with another not to abhor our selves but to daub with God 2. Is it any better in our private and Family Worship Are not such Assemblies frequented by some where some upon whom they have a dependance may eye them and have a better opinion of them and affection to them If God were the sole end of our hearts would they not be as glowing under the sole eye of God as our tongues or carriages are seemingly serious under the eye of man Are not Family duties performed by some that their voices may be heard and their reputation supported among Godly Neighbours 3. Is not the Charity of many men tainted with this end self * Mat. 6.1 as the Pharisees were while they set the miserable Object before them but not the Lord bestowing Alms not so much upon the necessities of the people as the friendship we owe them for some particular respects Or casting our bread upon those Waters which stream down in the sight of the world that our Doles may be visible to them and commended by them Or when we think to oblige God to pardon our transgressions as if we merited it and Heaven too at his hands by bestowing a few pence upon indigent persons And 4. Is it not the same with the Reproofs of men Is not Heat and Anger carried out with full Sail when our worldly interest is prejudic'd and becalm'd in the concerns of God Do not many Masters reprove their Servants with more vehemency for the neglect of their Trade and Business than the neglect of Divine Duties and that upon Religious Arguments pretending the honour of God that they may mind their own interest But when they are negligent in what they owe to God no noyse is made they pass without rebuke Is not this to make God and Religion a Stale to their own ends 'T is a part of Atheism not to regard the injuries done to God as Tiberius * Dei injuria Deo curae Let Gods wrongs be looked to or cared for by himself 5. Is it not thus in our seeming Zeal for Religion As Demetrius and the Craftsmen at Ephesus cried up aloud the greatness of Diana of the Ephesians not out of any true zeal they had for her but their gain which was increased by the confluence of her Worshippers and the Sale of her own Shrines Acts 19.24.28 4. In making use of the Name of God to countenance our Sin When we set up an opinion that is a
Friend to our lusts and then dig deep into the Scripture to find Crutches to support it and authorize our practices When men will thank God for what they have got by unlawful means Fathering the fruit of their cheating craft and the simplicity of their Chapmen upon God Crediting their Cousenage by his Name as men do brass mony with a thin plate of silver and the stamp and image of the Prince The Jews urge the Law of God for the crucifying his Son John 19.7 We have a Law and by that Law he is to dye And would make him a Party in their private Revenge * Sanaerson's S. Part. 2. P. 158. Thus often when we have faultered in some actions we wipe our mouths as if we sought God more than our own interest prostituting the sacred Name and Honour of God either to hatch or defend some unworthy lust against his Word Is not all this a high degree of Atheism 1. 'T is a vilifying God an abuse of the highest good Other sins subject the Creature and outward things to them but acting in Religious services for self subjects not only the highest concernments of mens Souls but the Creator himself to the Creature Nay to make God contribute to that which is the pleasure of the Devil A greater slight than to cast the gifts of a Prince to a Herd of nasty Swine It were more excusable to serve our selves of God upon the higher accounts such that materially conduce to his glory but it is an intolerable wrong to make Him and his Ordinances Caterers for our own bellies as they did * Hos ●8 13 Vid. Cocc in locum They sacrificed the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of which the Offerer might eat not out of any reference to God but love to their Gluttony not to please him but feast themselves The Belly was truly made the God when God was served only in order to the Belly As though the blessed God had his Being and his Ordinances were enjoyned to pleasure their foolish and wanton Appetites As though the Work of God were only to patronize unrighteous ends and be as bad as themselves and become a Pander to their corrupt affections 2. Because it is a vilifying of God It is an undeifying or dethroning God 'T is an acting as if we were the Lords and God our Vassal A setting up those secular ends in the place of God who ought to be our ultimate end in every action to whom a glory is as due as his mercy to us is utterly unmerited by us He that thinks to cheat and put the Fool upon God by his pretences doth not heartily believe there is such a Being He could not have the Notion of a God without that of Omniscience and Justice an eye to see the cheat and an Arm to punish it The Notion of the one would direct him in the manner of his Services and the Sense of the other would scare him from the cherishing his unworthy ends He that serves God with a sole respect to himself is prepared for any Idolatry his Religion shall warp with the times and his interest he shall deny the true God for an Idol when his worldly interest shall advise him to it and pay the same Reverence to the basest Image which he pretends now to pay to God As the Israelites were as real for Idolatry under their basest Princes as they were Pretenders to the true Religion under those that were Pious Before I come to the use of this give me leave to evince this practical Atheism by two other Considerations 1. Vnworthy Imaginations of God The Fool hath said in his heart there is no God That is he is not such a God as you report him to be This is meant by their being corrupt in the 2. v. corrupt being taken for playing the Idolaters Exod. 32.7 We cannot comprehend God if we could we should cease to be finite and because we cannot comprehend him we erect strange Images of him in our fancies and affections And since guilt came upon us because we cannot root out the Notions of God we would debase the Majesty and Nature of God that we may have some ease in our Consciences and lye down with some comfort in the sparks of our own kindling This is universal in men by Nature God is not in all his thoughts Psal 10.4 Not in any of his thoughts according to the excellency of his Nature and greatness of his Majesty As the Heathen did not glorify God as God so neither do they conceive of God as God They are all infected with some one or other ill opinion of him thinking him not so holy powerful just good as he is and as the natural force of a human understanding might arrive to VVe joyn a new Notion of God in our vain fancies and represent him not as he is but as we would have him to be fit for our own use and suted to our own pleasure VVe set that active power of imagination on work and there comes out a God a Calf whom we own for a Notion of God Adam cast him into so narrow a mould as to think that himself who had newly sprouted up by his Almighty power was fit to be his Corrival in knowledge and had vain hopes to grasp as much as infiniteness If he in his first declining begun to have such a conceit t is no doubt but we have as bad under a mass of Corruption VVhen holy Agur speaks of God he crys out that he had not the understanding of a Man nor the knowledge of the holy * Pro. 30.2.3 He did not think rationally of God as Man might by his strength at his first Creation There are as many Carved Images of God as there are minds of Men and as monstrous shapes as those Corruptions into which they would transform him Hence sprang 1. Idolatry Vain Imaginations first set afloat and kept up this in the world * Rom. 1 2●.23 Vain Imaginations of the God whose glory they changed into the Image of corruptible Man They had set up vain Images of him in their fancy before they set up Idolatrous representations of him in their Temples The likening him to those Idols of Wood and Stone and various metals were the fruit of an Idea Erected in their own minds This is a mighty debasing the Divine nature and rendring him no better than that base and stupid matter they make the visible object of their adoration equalling him with those base Creatures they think worthy to be the representations of him Yet how far did this Crime spread it self in all Corners of the world not only among the more barbarous and Ignorant but the more polisht and Civilized Nations Judea only where God had placed the Ark of his presence being free from it in some intervals of time only after some sweeping Judgment And tho they vomited up their Idols undersome sharp scourge they licked them up again after the Heavens were
cleared over their Heads The whole book of Judges makes mention of it And tho an Evangelical light hath chased that Idolatry away from a great part of the world yet the Principle remaining Coyns more Spiritual Idols in the heart which are brought before God in acts of Worship 2. Hence all superstition received its rise and growth When we Mint a God according to our own Complexion like to us in mutable and various passions soon angry and soon appeased t is no wonder that we invent ways of pleasing him after we have offended him and think to expiate the sin of our Souls by some Melancholy devotions and self Chastisements Superstition is nothing else but an unscriptural and unrevealed dread of God * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 When they imagined him a rigorous and severe Master they cast about for ways to mitigate him whom they thought so hard to be pleased A very mean thought of him as if a slight and pompous Devotion could as easily bribe and flatter him out of his rigors as a few good words or baubling rattles could please and quiet little Children And whatsoever pleased us could please a God infinitely above us Such narrow conceipts had the Philistins when they thought to still the anger of the God of Israel whom they thought they possess'd in the Ark with the present of a few Golden mice * 1 Sam. 6.3 4. All the Superstition this day living in the world is built upon this foundation So natural it is to Man to pull God down to his own Imaginations rather than raise his Imaginations up to God Hence doth arise also the diffidence of his mercy tho they repent measuring God by the contracted Models of their own Spirits as tho his nature were as difficult to Pardon their offences against him as they are to remit wrongs done to themselves 3. Hence Springs all Presumption the Common disease of the world All the wickedness in the World which is nothing else but presuming upon God rises from the ill interpretations of the goodness of God breaking out upon them in the works of Creation and Providence The Corruption of Mans nature engendred by those Notions of goodness a monstrous birth of vain imaginations Not of themselves primarily but of God whence arose all that folly and darkness in their minds and conversations Rom. 1.20.21 They glorified him not as God but according to themselves imagined him good that themselves might be bad fancyed him so indulgent as to neglect his own honour for their sensuality How doth the unclean person represent him to his own thoughts but as a Goat the Murderer as a Tyger the sensual person as a Swine while they fancy a God indulgent to their Crimes without their repentance As the Image on the Seal is stampt upon the wax so the thoughts of the heart are Printed upon the actions Gods Patience is apprehended to be an approbation of their Vices and from the Consideration of his forbearance they fashion a God that they believe will smile upon their Crimes They imagine a God that plays with them and tho he threatens doth it only to scare but means not as he speaks A God they fancy like themselves that would do as they would do not be angry for what they count a light offence Psal 50.21 Thou thoughtest I was such a one as thy self That God and they were exactly alike as two Tallies * Gurnal part 2. p. 245. 246. Our wilful misapprehensions of God are the cause of our misbehaviour in all his worship Our slovenly and lazy services tell him to his face what slight thoughts and apprehensions we have of him Compare these two together Superstition ariseth from terrifying misapprehensions of God Presumption from self pleasing thoughts One represents him only rigorous and the other careless One makes us over officious in serving him by our own rules and the other over bold in offending him according to our humors The want of a true Notion of Gods Justice makes some Men slight him And the want of a true apprehension of his goodness makes others too servile in their approaches to him One makes us careless of duties and the other makes us look on them rather as Physick than food an unsupportable pennance than a desirable priviledge In this Case Hell is the principle of Duty performed to Heaven The superstitious Man believes God hath scarce mercy to Pardon the presumptuous Man believes he hath no such perfection as Justice to punish The one makes him insignificant to what he desires kindness and goodness the other renders him insignificant to what he fears his vindictive Justice What between the Idolater the superstitious the presumptuous person God should look like no God in the world These unworthy imaginations of God are likewise A vilifying of him Debasing the Creator to be a Creature of their own fancies putting their own stamp upon him and fashioning him not according to that beautiful Image he imprest upon them by Creation but the defaced Image they inherit by their fall and which is worse the Image of the Devil which spread it self over them at their revolt and apostacy Were it possible to see a Picture of God according to the fancies of Men it would be the most Monstrous being such a God that never was nor ever can be VVe honour God when we have worthy opinions of him sutable to his nature when we conceive of him as a being of unbounded loveliness and perfection VVe detract from him when we ascribe to him such qualities as would be a horrible disgrace to a wise and good Man As Injustice and Impurity Thus Men debase God when they invert his order and would Create him according to their Image as he first Created them according to his own And think him not worthy to be a God unless he fully answer the mould they would cast him into and be what is unworthy of his nature Men do not conceive of God as he would have them but he must be what they would have him one of their own shaping 1. This is worse than Idolatry The grossest Idolater commits not a Crime so hainous by changing his glory into the Image of Creeping things and senseless Creatures as the imagining God to be as one of our sinful selves and likening him to those filthy Images we erect in our fancies One makes him an earthly God like an earthly Creature the other fancies him an unjust and impure God like a wicked Creature One sets up an Image of him in the Earth which is his footstool the other sets up an Image of him in the heart which ought to be his throne 2. T is worse than absolute Atheism or a denial of God Dignius credimus non esse quodcunque non ita fuerit ut esse deberet was the opinion of Tertullian * Tertul. cont Maxim lib. 1. cap. 2. T is more Commendable to think him not to be than to think him such a one
from some powerful Principle so that every one may subscribe to the speech of the Apostle that when we would do good evil is present with them No reason of this can be rendred but the natural temper of our Souls and an affecting a distance from God under any consideration For though our guilt first made the breach yet this aversion to a converse with him steps up without any actual reflections upon our guilt which may render God terrible to us as an offended Judge Are we not often also in our attendance upon him more pleased with the modes of Worship which gratifie our fancy than to have our Souls inwardly delighted with the Object of Worship himself This is a part of our natural Atheism To cast such duties off by total neglect or in part by affecting a coldness in them is to cast off the Fear of the Lord. * Job 15.4 Not to call upon God and not to know him are one and the same thing Jer. 10.25 Either we think there is no such Being in the world or that he is so slight a one that he deserves not the respect he calls for or so impotent and poor that he cannot supply what our necessities require 3. No desire of a thorough return to him The first man fled from him after his defection though he had no refuge to fly to but the grace of his Creator Cain went from his presence would be a Fugitive from God rather than a Suppliant to him when by Faith in and application of the promised Redeemer he might have escaped the wrath to come for his Brothers blood and mitigated the sorrows he was justly sentenced to bear in the World Nothing will separate prodigal Man from commoning with Swine and make him return to his Father but an empty Trough Have we but husks to feed on we shall never think of a Fathers presence It were well if our sores and indigence would drive us to him but when our strength is devoured we will not return to the Lord our God nor seek him for all this * Hos 7.10 Not his drawn Sword as a God of Judgment nor his mighty Power as a Lord nor his open Arms as the Lord their God could move them to turn their eyes and their hearts towards him The more he invites us to partake of his grace the further we run from him to provoke his wrath The louder God called them by his Prophets the closer they stuck to their Baal * Hos 11.2 We turn our backs when he stretches out his hand stop our ears when he lifts up his voice We fly from him when he courts us and shelter our selves in any bush from his merciful hand that would lay hold upon us nor will we set our faces towards him till our way be hedged up with thorns and not a gap left to creep out any by-way * Hos 2.6.7 Whosoever is brought to a return puts the Holy-Ghost to the pain of striving he is not easily brought to a spiritual subjection to God nor perswaded to a Surrender at a Summons but sweetly over power'd by storm and victoriously drawn into the Arms of God God stands ready but the heart stands off Grace is full of intreaties and the Soul full of excuses Divine love offers and Carnal self-love rejects Nothing so pleases us as when we are furthest from him as if any thing were more amiable any thing more desirable than himself 4. No desire of any close imitation of him When our Saviour was to come as a Refiners fire to purifie the Sons of Levi the cry is who shall abide the day of his coming Mal. 3.2 3. Since we are alienated from the Life of God we desire no more naturally to live the Life of God than a Toad or any other Animal desires to live the Life of a Man No heart that knows God but hath a holy ambition to imitate him No Soul that refuseth him for a Copy but is ignorant of his Excellency Of this temper is all Mankind naturally Man in Corruption is as loth to be like God in Holiness as Adam after his Creation was desirous to be like God in Knowledge his Posterity are like their Father who soon turned his back upon his original Copy What can be worse than this Can the denial of his Being be a greater injury than this contempt of him as if he had not goodness to deserve our remembrance nor amiableness fit for our converse as if he were not a Lord fit for our subjection nor had a Holiness that deserved our imitation For the use of this It serves 1. For Information 1. It gives us occasion to admire the wonderful Patience and Mercy of God How many Millions of practical Atheists breath every day in his Air and live upon his Bounty who deserve to be Inhabitants in Hell rather than Possessors of the Earth An infinite Holiness is offended an infinite Justice is provoked yet an infinite Patience forbears the Punishment and an infinite Goodness relieves our wants The more we had merited his Justice and forfeited his Favour the more is his affection inhanc'd which makes his hand so liberal to us At the first invasion of his rights he mitigates the terror of the threatning which was set to defend his Law with the grace of a Promise to relieve and recover his rebellious Creature * Gen. 3.15 Who would have looked for any thing but tearing Thunders sweeping Judgments to rase up the foundations of the apostate world But oh how great are his Bowels to his aspiring Competitors Have we not experimented his Contrivances for our good though we have refused him for our happiness Has he not opened his Arms when we spurned with our Feet held out his alluring mercy when we have brandisht against him a rebellious sword Has he not intreated us while we have invaded him as if he were unwilling to lose us who are ambitious to destroy our selves Has he yet denyed us the care of his Providence while we have denyed him the rights of his Honour and would appropriate them to our selves Has the Sun forborn shining upon us though we have shot our Arrows against him Have not our Beings been supported by his Goodness while we have endeavoured to climb up to his Throne and his mercies continued to charm us while we have used them as weapons to injure him Our own necessities might excite us to own him as our happiness but he adds his invitations to the voice of our wants Has he not promised a Kingdom to those that would strip him of his Crown and proclaimed Pardon upon Repentance to those that would take away his Glory And hath so twisted together his own end which is his Honour and mans true end which is his Salvation that a man cannot truly mind himself and his own Salvation but he must mind Gods glory and cannot be intent upon Gods honour but by the same act he promotes himself
* ●●r 20. Their Fathers Worshipping in that Mountain and the Jews affirming Jerusalem to be a place of worship She pleads the Antiquity of the worship in this place Abraham having built an Altar there Gen. 12.7 and Jacob upon his return from Syria And surely had the place been capable of an exception such persons as they and so well acquainted with the Will of God would not have pitched upon that place to Celebrate their worship Antiquity hath too too often bewitched the minds of Men and drawn them from the revealed Will of God Men are more willing to imitate the outward actions of their famous Ancestors than conform themselves to the revealed Will of their Creator The Samaritans would imitate the Patriarchs in the place of worship but not in the faith of the worshippers Christ answers her that this question would quickly be resolved by a new state of the Church which was neer at hand and neither Jerusalem which had now the precedency nor that Mountain should be of any more value in that concern than any other place in the world * ver 21. But yet to make her sensible of her sin and that of her Country-men tells her that their Worship in that Mountain was not according to the Will of God he having long after the Altars built in this place fixed Jerusalem as the place of Sacrifices besides they had not the knowledge of that God which ought to be worshipped by them but the Jews had the true object of Worship and the true manner of worship according to the declaration God had made of himself to them * ver ●● But all that service shall vanish the vail of the Temple shall be rent in twain and that Carnal worship give place to one more Spiritual shadows shall fly before substance and truth advance it self above figures and the worship of God shall be with the strength of the Spirit such a worship and such worshippers doth the Father seek * ver 23. For God is a Spirit and those that Worship him must Worship him in Spirit and in truth The design of our Saviour is to declare that God is not taken with external worship invented by men no nor Commanded by himself and upon that this reason because he is a Spiritual essence infinitely above gross and Corporeal matter and is not taken with that pomp which is a pleasure to our Earthly imaginations 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Some translate it just as the words lie Spirit is God * Vulgar lat Illyrc Clav. But it is not unusual both in the old and new Testament languages to put the predicate before the subject as Psal 5.9 Their throat is an open Sepulchre in the Hebrew a Sepulchre open their throat So Psa 111.3 His work is honourable and glorious Heb. Honour and glory his work And there wants not one example in the same Evangelist Joh. 1.1 And the word was God Greek and God was the word In all the predicate or what is ascribed is put before the subject to which it is ascribed One tells us and he an head of a party that hath made a disturbance in the Church of God * E●●●●●p Institut lib. 4. cap. 3. that this place is not aptly brought to prove God to be a Spirit And the reason of Christ runs not thus God is of a Spiritual Essence and therefore must be worshipped with a Spiritual worship for the Essence of God is not the Foundation of his worship but his Will for then we were not to worship him with a Corporal worship because he is not a body but with an invisible and Eternal worship because he is invisible and eternal But the nature of God is the foundation of worship the Will of God is the Rule of worship the matter and manner is to be performed according to the Will of God But is the nature of the object of worship to be excluded No as the object is so ought our Devotion to be Spiritual as he is Spiritual God in his Commands for worship respected the discovery of his own nature in the Law he respected the discovery of his mercy and justice and therefore Commanded a worship by Sacrifices a Spiritual worship without those institutions would not have declared those Attributes which was Gods end to display to the world in Christ And tho the nature of God is to be respected in worship yet the obligations of the Creature are to be considered God is a Spirit therefore must have a Spiritual worship The Creature hath a body as well as a Soul and both from God and therefore ought to worship God with the one as well as the other since one as well as the other is freely bestowed upon him The Spirituality of God was the foundation of the change from the Judaical carnal worship to a more Spiritual and Evangelical God is a Spirit That is he hath nothing Corporeal no mixture of matter not a visible substance a bodily form * Melancton He is a Spirit not a bare Spiritual substance But an understanding willing Spirit holy wise good and just Before Christ spake of the Father * ver 23. the first person in the Trinity Now he speaks of God Essentially The word Father is personal the word God essential So that our Saviour would render a reason not from any one person in the blessed Trinity but from the Divine nature why we should worship in Spirit and therefore makes use of the word God the being a Spirit being Common to the other persons with the Father This is the reason of the proposition verse 23. Of a Spiritual Worship Every nature delights in that which is like it and distasts that which is most different from it If God were Corporeal he might be pleased with the victims of beasts and the beautiful Magnificence of Temples and the noyse of Musick But being a Spirit he cannot be gratified with carnal things He demands something better and greater than all those that Soul which he made that Soul which he hath endowed a Spirit of a frame sutable to his nature He indeed appointed Sacrifices and a Temple as shadows of those things which were to be most acceptable to him in the Messiah but they were imposed only till the time of Reformation * Heb. 9.10 Must Worship him Not they may or it would be more agreeable to God to have such a manner of worship But they must T is not exclusive of bodily worship for this were to exclude all publick worship in societies which cannot be performed without reverential postures of the body * Terniti The Gestures of the body are helps to worship and declarations of Spiritual acts We can scarcely worship God with our Spirits without some tincture upon the outward-man But he excludes all acts meerly Corporeal all resting upon an external service and devotion which was the Crime of the Pharisees and the general persuasion of the Jews
with hatred The beneficence and patience of God and his readiness to pardon men is the reason of the honour they return to him And this is so evident a motive that generally the Idolatrous world rankt those Creatures in the number of their Gods which they perceived useful and neficial to man-kind as the Sun and Moo● the Aegyptians the Ox c. And the more beneficial any thing appeared to mankind the higher station men gave it in the rank of their deities and bestowed a more peculiar and solemn worship upon it Men worshipped God to procure or continue his favour which would not have been acted by them had they not conceived it a pleasing thing to him to be merciful and gracious Sometimes his Justice is proposed to us as a motive of worship Heb. 12.28 29. Serve God with Reverence and Godly fear for our God is a consuming fire which includes his holiness whereby he doth hate sin as well as his wrath whereby he doth punish it Who but a mad and totally brutish person or one that was resolved to make war against heaven could behold the effects of Gods anger in the world consider him in his Justice as a consuming fire and despise him and rather be drawn out by that consideration to blasphemy and despair than to seek all ways to appease him Now tho the infinite power of God his unspeakable wisdom his incomprehensible goodness the holiness of his nature the vigilance of his Providence the bounty of his hand signifie to man that he should love and honour him and are the motives of worship yet the Spirituality of his nature is the rule of worship and directs us to render our duty to him with all the powers of our Soul As his goodness beams out upon us worship is due in Justice to him and as he is the most excellent nature veneration is due to him in the highest manner with the choicest affections So that indeed the Spirituality of God comes chiefly into consideration in matter of worship All his perfections are grounded upon this He could not be infinite immutable omniscient if he were a Corporeal being * Amirald dissert 6. disp 1. pa. 11. We cannot give him a worship unless we Judge him worthy excellent and deserving a worship at our hands And we cannot Judge him worthy of a worship unless we have some apprehensions and admirations of his infinite vertues And we cannot apprehend and admire those perfections but as we see them as causes shining in their effects When we see therefore the frame of the world to be the work of his power the order of the world to be the fruit of his wisdom and the usefulness of the world to be the product of his goodness We find the motives and reasons of worship and weighing that this power wisdom goodness infinitely transcend any corporeal nature we find a rule of worship that it ought to be offered by us in a manner sutable to such a nature as is infinitely above any bodily Being His being a Spirit declares what he is his other perfections declare what kind of Spirit he is All Gods perfections suppose him a Spirit all center in this His wisdom doth not suppose him merciful or his mercy suppose him omniscient There may be distinct notions of those but all suppose him to be of a spiritual nature How cold and frozen will our devotions be if we consider not his omniscience whereby he discerns our hearts How carnal will our services be if we consider him not as a pure Spirit * Amyraut de Relig. In our offers to and transactions with men we deal not with them as meer Animals but as rational Creatures and we debase their natures if we treat them otherwise And if we have not raised apprehensions of Gods spiritual nature in our treating with him but allow him only such frames as we think fit enough for men we debase his spirituality to the littleness of our own Being We must therefore possess our Souls with this we shall else render him no better than a fleshly service We do not much concern our selves in those things of which we are either utterly ignorant or have but slight apprehensions of That is the first Proposition The right exercise of worship is grounded upon the spirituality of God Propos 2. This spiritual worship of God is manifest by the light of Nature to be due to him In reference to this consider 1. The outward means or matter of that worship which would be acceptable to God was not known by the light of Nature The Law for a Worship and for a spiritual worship by the faculties of our Souls was natural and part of the Law of Creation though the determination of the particular acts whereby God would have this homage testified was of positive institution and depended not upon the Law of Creation Though Adam in Innocence knew God was to be worshipped yet by Nature he did not know by what outward acts he was to pay this respect or at what time he was more solemnly to be exercised in it than at another This depended upon the directions God as the soveraign Governour and Law-giver should prescribe You therefore find the positive institutions of the Tree of the knowledge of Good and Evil and the determination of the time of worship Gen. 2.3.17 Had there been any such notion in Adam naturally as strong as that other that a worship was due to God there would have been found some reliques of these modes universally consented to by Mankind as well as of the other But though all Nations have by an universal consent concurred in the acknowledgment of the Being of God and his right to adoration and the obligation of the Creature to it and that there ought to be some publick rule and polity in matters of Religion for no Nation hath been in the world without a worship and without external acts and certain ceremonies to signifie that worship yet their modes and rites have been as various as their climates unless in that common notion of sacrifices not descending to them by nature but tradition from Adam and the various ways of worship have been more provoking than pleasing Every Nation suted the kind of worship to their particular ends and polities they designed to rule by How God was to be worshipped is more difficult to be discerned by Nature with its eyes out than with its eyes clear * King on Jonah P. 63. The pillars upon which the worship of God stands cannot be discerned without revelation no more than blind Sampson could tell where the pillars of the Philistians Theatre stood without one to conduct him What Adam could not see with his sound eyes we cannot with our dim eyes He must be told from Heaven what worship was fit for the God of Heaven 'T is not by Nature that we can have such a full prospect of God as may content and quiet us This is the noble
of the Soul 't is there his Image glitters He hath given us a Jewel as well as a Case and the Jewel as well as the Case we must return to him The Spirit is Gods gift and must return to him * Eccl. 12.7 It must return to him in every service morally as well as it must return to him at last physically 'T is not fit we should serve our Maker only with that which is the Brute in us and withold from him that which doth constitue us reasonable Creatures we must give him our bodies but a living Sacrifice * Rom. 12.1 If the Spirit be absent from God when the Body is before him we present a dead Sacrifice 'T is morally dead in the duty though it be naturally alive in the posture and action 'T is not an indifferent thing whether we shall worship God or no nor is it an indifferent thing whether we shall worship him without Spirits or no As the excellency of mans knowledge consists in knowing things as they are in Truth so the excellency of the Will in willing things as they are in goodness As it is the excellency of Man to know God as God so it is no less his excellency as well as his duty to honour God as God As the obligation we have to the Power of God for our Being binds us to a worship of him so the obligation we have to his bounty for fashioning us according to his own Image binds us to an exercise of that part wherein his Image doth consist God hath made all things for himself Pro. 16.4 that is for the evidence of his own goodness and wisdom We are therefore to render him a glory according to the the excellency of his nature discovered in the frame of our own T is as much our sin not to glorifie God as God as not to attempt the glorifying of him at all T is our sin not to worship God as God as well as to omit the testifying any respect at all to him As the divine nature is the object of worship so the Divine perfections are to be honoured in worship We do not honour God if we honour him not as he is we honour him not as a Spirit if we think him not worthy of the ardors and ravishing admirations of our Spirits If we think the Devotions of the body are sufficient for him we contract him into the condition of our own being and not only deny him to be a Spiritual nature but dash out all those perfections which he could not be possessed of were he not a Spirit 5. The Ceremonial law was abolisht to promote the Spirituality of Divine worship That service was gross carnal calculated for an infant and sensitive Church It consisted in rudiments the Circumcision of the flesh the blood and smoak of Sacrifices the steams of incense observation of days distinction of meats Corporal purifications every leaf of the law is clogged with some rite to be particularly observed by them The Spirituality of worship lay veild under a thick clo●ld that the people could not behold the glory of the Gospel which lay covered under those shadows 2 Cor. 3.13 They could not stedfastly look to the ●●d of that which is abolished They understood not the Glory and Spiritual intent of the law and therefore came short of that Spiritual frame in the worship of God which was their duty And therefore in opposition to this administration the worship of God under the Gospel is called by our Saviour in the Text a worship in Spirit more Spiritual for the matter more Spiritual for the motives and more Spiritual for the manner and frames of worship 1. This legal service is called flesh in Scripture in opposition to the Gospel which is called Spirit The ordinances of the Law tho of Divine institution are dignified by the Apostle with no better a title than Carnal ordinances * Heb. 9.10 and a Carnal Command * Heb. 7.16 But the Gospel is called the Ministration of the Spirit as being attended with a special and Spiritual efficacy on the minds of men * 2 Cor. 3.8 And when the degenerate Galatians after having tasted of the pure streams of the Gospel turned about to drink of the thicker streams of the Law the Apostle tells them that they begun in the Spirit and would now be made perfect in the flesh * Gal. 3.3 They would leave the righteousness of faith for a justification by works The moral law which is in its own nature Spiritual * Rom. 7.14 in regard of the abuse of it in expectation of justification by the outward works of it is called flesh Much more may the Ceremonial administration which was never intended to run parallel with the moral nor had any foundation in nature as the other had That whole Oeconomy consisted in sensible and material things which only touched the flesh 'T is called the letter and the oldness of the Letter * Rom. 7.6 as Letters which are but empty sounds of themselves but put together and formed into words signifie something to the mind of the hearer or reader An old Letter a thing of no efficacy upon the Spirit but as a law written upon paper The Gospel hath an efficacious Spirit attending it strongly working upon the mind and Will and moulding the Soul into a Spiritual frame for God according to the Doctrin of the Gospel the one is old and decays the other is new and increaseth dayly And as the law it self is called flesh so the observers of it and resters in it are called Israel after the flesh * 1 Cor. 10.18 And the Evangelical worshipper is called a Jew after the Spirit Rom. 2.29 They were Israel after the flesh as born of Jacob not Israel after the Spirit as born of God and therefore the Apostle calls them Israel and not Israel * Rom. 9.6 Israel after a carnal birth not Israel after a Spiritual Israel in the Circumcision of the flesh not Israel by a regeneration of the heart 2. The legal Ceremonies were not a fit means to bring the heart into a Spiritual frame They had a Spiritual intent the Rock and Manna prefigured the Salvation and Spiritual nourishment by the Redeemer * 1 Cor. 10.3 4. The Sacrifices were to point them to the Justice of God in the punishment of sin and the mercy of God in substituting them in their steads as types of the Redeemer and the ransome by his blood The Circumcision of the flesh was to instruct them in the Circumcision of the heart They were flesh in regard of their matter weakness and cloudiness Spiritual in regard of their intent and signification They did instruct but not efficaciously work strong Spiritual affections in the Soul of the worshipper They were weak and beggerly elements * Gal 4.9 had neither wealth to inrich nor strength to nourish the Soul They could not perfect the Comers to them or put
to mock him than worship him When we believe that we ought to be satisfied rather than God glorified we set God below our selves imagin that he should submit his own honour to our advantage We make our selves more glorious than God as though we were not made for him but he hath a Being only for us this is to have a very low esteem of the Majesty of God Whatsoever any man aims at in worship above the glory of God that he forms as an Idol to himself instead of God and sets up a Golden-Image God counts not this as a Worship The Offerings made in the Wilderness for forty years together God esteemed as not offered to him Amos 5.25 Have you offered to me Sacrifices and Offerings in the Wilderness forty years oh House of Israel They did it not to God but to themselves for their own security and the attainment of the possession of the promised Land A spiritual Worshipper performs not worship for some hopes of carnal advantage he uses ordinances as means to bring God and his Soul together to be more fitted to honour God in the world in his particular place When he hath been inflamed and humble in any address or duty he gives God the glory his heart sutes the doxology at the end of the Lords-prayer ascribes the Kingdom Power and Glory to God alone and if any viper of Pride starts out upon him he endeavours presently to shake it off That which was the first end of our framing ought to be the chief end of our acting towards God But when men have the same ends in worship as Brutes the satisfaction of a sensitive part the service is no more than brutish The acting for a sensitive end is unworthy of the Majesty of God to whom we address and unbecoming a rational Creature The acting for a sensitive end is not a rational much less can it be a spiritual service though the Act may be good in it self yet not good in the Agent because he wants a due end We are then spiritual when we have the same end in our redeemed services as God had in his redeeming love viz. his own Glory 12. Spiritual service is offered to God in the name of Christ Those are only spiritual Sacrifices that are offered up to God by Jesus Christ * 1 Pet. 2.5 that are the fruits of the Sanctification of the Spirit and offered in the mediation of the Son As the Altar sanctifies the gift so doth Christ spiritualize our services for Gods acceptation as the Fire upon the Altar separated the airy and finer parts of the sacrifice from the terrene and earthly This is the Golden Altar upon which the Prayers of the Saints are offered up before the Throne * Revel 8.3 As all that we have from God streams through his blood so all that we give to God ascends by vertue of his merits All the blessings God gave to the Israelites came out of Sion * Psal 134.3 The Lord bless thee out of Sion that is from the Gospel hid under the Law all the duties we present to God are to be presented in Sion in an evangelical manner All our worship must be bottomed on Christ God hath intended that we should honour the Son as we honour the Father As we honour the Father by offering our service only to him so we are to honour the Son by offering it only in his name In him alone God is well pleased because in him alone he finds our services spiritual and worthy of acceptation We must therefore take fast hold of him with our Spirits and the faster we hold him the more spiritual is our worship To do any thing in the name of Christ is not to believe the worship shall be accepted for it self but to have our eye fixed upon Christ for the acceptance of it and not to rest upon the work done as carnal people are apt to do The Creatures present their acknowledgments to God by Man and man can only present his by Christ It was utterly unlawful after the building of the Temple to sacrifice any where else The Temple being a type of Christ it is utterly unlawful for us to present our services in any other name than his This is the way to be spiritual If we consider God out of Christ we can have no other notions but those of horror and bondage We behold him a Spirit but environ'd with Justice and Wrath for Sinners But the consideration of him in Christ vails his Justice draws forth his Mercy represents him more a Father than a Judge In Christ the aspect of Justice is changed and by that the temper of the Creature so that in and by this Mediator we can have a spiritual boldness and access to God with confidence * Eph. 3.12 whereby the Spirit is kept from benummedness and distraction and our Souls quickned and refined The thoughts kept upon Christ in a duty of worship quickly elevates the Soul and spiritualizeth the whole service Sin makes our services black and the blood of Christ makes both our persons and services white To conclude this Head God is a Spirit infinitely happy therefore we must approach to him with cheerfulness He is a Spirit of infinite Majesty therefore we must come before him with reverence He is a Spirit infinitely high therefore we must offer up our Sacrifices with the deepest humility He is a Spirit infinitely holy therefore we must address with purity He is a Spirit infinitely glorious we must therefore acknowledge his excellency in all that we do and in our measures contribute to his glory by having the highest aims in his worship He is a Spirit infinitely provoked by us therefore we must offer up our worship in the name of a pacifying Mediator and Intercessour 3. The third general is why a spiritual worship is due to God and to be offered to him We must consider the Object of Worship and the Subject of worship the Worshipper and the Worshipped God is a spiritual Being Man is a reasonable Creature The nature of God informs us what is fit to be presented to him our own nature informs us what is fit to be presented by us Reason 1. The best we have is to be presented to God in worship For 1. Since God is the most excellent Being he is to be served by us with the most excellent thing we have and with the choicest veneration God is so incomprehensibly excellent that we cannot render him what he deserves We must render him what we are able to offer the best of our affiections the flower of our strength the Cream and Top of our Spirits By the same reason that we are bound to give to God the best worship we must offer it to him in the best manner We cannot give to God any thing too good for so blessed a Being God being a great King slight services become not his Majesty * Mal. 1.13 14. 'T is unbecoming the
circumstances We honour the Majesty of God when we consider him with due reverence according to the greatness and perfection of his works and in this reverence of his Majesty doth worship chiefly consist Low thoughts of God will make low frames in us before him If we thought God an infinite glorious Spirit how would our hearts be lower than our knees in his presence How humbly how believingly pleading is the Psalmist when he considers God to be without comparison in the Heavens to whom none of the Sons of the Mighty can be likened when there was none like to him in strength or faithfulness round about * Psal 89.6 7 8. We should have also deep impressions of the Omniscience of God and remember we have to deal with a God that searcheth the heart and tryeth the reins to whom the most secret temper is as visible as the loudest words are Audible that though man judges by outward expressions God judges by inward affections As the Law of God regulates the inward frames of the heart so the eye of God pitches upon the inward intentions of the Soul If God were visibly present with us should we not approach to him with strong affections summon our Spirits to attend upon him behave our selves modestly before him Let us consider he is as really present with us as if he were visible to us let us therefore preserve a strong sense of the presence of God No man but one out of his wits when he were in the presence of a Prince and making a Speech to him would break off at every Period and run after the catching of Butter-flyes Remember in all worship you are before the Lord to whom all things are open and naked Direction 4. Let us take heed of inordinate desires after the world As the world steals away a mans heart from the Word so it doth from all other worship It chokes the Word * Mat. 13.27 it stifles all the spiritual breathings after God in every duty The edge of the Soul is blunted by it and made too dull for such sublime exercises The Apostles rule in Prayer when he joyns sobriety with watching unto Prayer 1 Pet. 4.7 is of concern in all worship sobriety in the pursuite and use of all wordly things A man drunk with worldly fumes cannot watch cannot be heavenly affectionate spiritual in service There is a magnetick force in the Earth to hinder our flights to Heaven Birds when they take their first flights from the Earth have more flutterings of their wings than when they are mounted further in the Air and got more without the Sphear of the Earths attractiveness the motion of their wings is more steady that you can scarce perceive them stir they move like a Ship with a full Gale The world is a clog upon the Soul and a bar to spiritual frames 'T is as hard to elevate the heart to God in the midst of a hurry of worldly affairs as it is difficult to meditate when we are near a great noise of waters falling from a Precipice or in the midst of a Volly of Muskets Thick claiy affections bemire the heart and make it unfit for such high flights it is to take in worship Therefore get your hearts clear from worldly thoughts and desires if you would be more spiritual in worship 5. Let us be deeply sensible of our present wants and the supplies we may meet with in worship Cold affections to the things we would have will grow cooler Weakness of desire for the communications in worship will freez our hearts at the time of worship and make way for vain and foolish diversions A Begger that is ready to perish and knows he is next door to ruin will not slightly and dully began Alms and will not be diverted from his importunity by every slight call or the moving of an Atom in the Air. Is it Pardon we would have Let us apprehend the blackness of sin with the aggravations of it as it respects God Let us be deeply sensible of the want of pardon and worth of mercy and get our affections into such a frame as a condemned man would do Let us consider that as we are now at the Throne of Gods grace we shall shortly be at the Bar of Gods Justice and if the Soul should be forlorn there how fixedly and earnestly would it plead for mercy Let us endeavour to stir up the same affections now which we have seen some dying men have and which we suppose despairing Souls would have done at Gods Tribunal * Guliel Paris Rhetor. Divin cap. 26. p. 350. Col. 1. We must be sensible that the life or death of our Souls depends upon worship Would we not be ashamed to be ridiculous in our carriage while we are eating and shall we not be ashamed to be cold or garish before God when the Salvation of our Souls as well as the Honour of God is concerned If we did see the heaps of sins the eternity of punishment due to them If we did see an angry and offended Judge If we did see the riches of mercy the glorious outgoings of God in the Sanctuary the blessed Doles he gives out to men when they spiritually attend upon him both the one and the other would make us perform our duties humbly sincerely earnestly and affectionately and wait upon him with our whole Souls to have misery averted and mercy bestowed Let our sense of this be encourag●d by the consideration of our Saviour presenting his merits With what affection doth he present his merits his blood shed upon the Cross now in Heaven And shall our hearts be cold and frozen flitting and unsteady when his affectio●s are so much concerned Christ doth not present any Mans case and duties without a sense of hi● wants and shall we have none of our own Let me add this let us affect our hearts with a sense of what supplies we ha●● met with in former worship The delightful remembrance of what conver●● we have had with God in former worship would spiritualize our hearts for the present worship Had Peter had a view of Christs glory in the Mount fresh in his thoughts he would not so easily have turned his back upon his Master Nor would the Israelites have been at leasure for their Idolatry had they preserved the sense of the Majesty of God discovered in his late Thunders from Mount Sinai 6. If any thing intrudes that may choak the Worship cast it speedily out We cannot hinder Satan and our own Corruption from presenting Coolers to us but we may hinder the success of them We cannot hinder the Gnats from buzzing about us when we are in our business but we may prevent them from setling upon us A man that is running on a considerable Errand will shun all unnecessary discourse that may make him forget or loyter in his business What though there may be something offered that is good in it self yet if it hath a
he knows at once what is has been and will be All things are past present and to come in regard of their Existence but there is not past present and to come in regard of Gods Knowledge of them * Parsiensis because he sees and knows not by any other but by himself He is his own Light by which he sees his own Glass wherein he sees beholding himself he beholds all things 2. There is no succession in the Decrees of God He doth not decree this now which he decreed not before for as his works were known from the beginning of the world so his works were decreed from the beginning of the world as they are known at once so they are decreed at once there is a succession in the execution of them first grace then glory but the purpose of God for the bestowing of both was in one and the same moment of Eternity * Eph. 1.4 He chose us in him before the foundation of the world that we should be holy The choice of Christ and the choice of some in him to be holy and to be happy were before the foundation of the world 'T is by the eternal Counsel of God all things appear in time they appear in their order according to the Counsel and Will of God from Eternity The Redemption of the world is after the Creation of the world but the Decree whereby the world was created and whereby it was redeemed was from Eternity 4. God is his own Eternity He is not eternal by grant and the disposal of any other but by Nature and Essence * Calov Socinian The Eternity of God is nothing else but the Duration of God and the Duration of God is nothing else but his Existence enduring Existentia durans If Eternity were any thing distinct from God and not of the Essence of God then there would be something which was not God necessary to perfect God As Immortality is the great perfection of a rational Creature so Eternity is the choice perfection of God yea the gloss and lustre of all others Every perfection would be imperfect if it were not always a perfection God is essentially whatsoever he is and there is nothing in God but his Essence Duration or Continuance in being in Creatures differs from their being for they might exist but for one instant in which case they may be said to have being but not duration because all duration includes prius et posterius All Creatures may cease from being if it be the pleasure of God they are not therefore durable by their Essence and therefore are not their own duration no more than they are their own Existence And though some Creatures as Angels and Souls may be called everlasting as a perpetual life is communicated to them by God yet they can never be called their own Eternity because such a Duration is not simply necessary nor essential to them but accidental depending upon the pleasure of another there is nothing in their nature that can hinder them from loosing it if God from whom they received it should design to take it away But as God is his own necessity of existing so he is his own duration in existing * Gassend As he doth necessarily exist by himself so he will always necessarily exist by himself 5. Hence all the perfections of God are eternal In regard of the Divine Eternity all things in God are eternal his Power Mercy Wisdom Justice Knowledge God himself were not eternal if any of his perfections which are essential to him were not eternal also He had not else been a perfect God from all eternity and so his whole self had not been eternal If any thing belonging to the nature of a thing be wanting it cannot be said to be that thing which it ought to be If any thing requisite to the Nature of God had been wanting one moment he could not have been said to be an eternal God The second Thing God is Eternal The Spirit of God in Scripture condescends to our Capacities in signifying the Eternity of God by days and years which are terms belonging to time whereby we measure it * Psal 102.27 But we must no more conceive that God is bounded or measured by time and hath succession of days because of those expressions than we can conclude him to have a Body because Members are ascribed to him in Scripture to help our conceptions of his glorious nature and operations Though years are ascribed to him yet they are such as cannot be numbred cannot be finished since there is no proportion between the duration of God and the years of Men. The number of his years cannot be searched out for he makes small the drops of water they pour down Rain according to the vapor thereof * Job 36.26 27 The numbers of the drops of Rain which have fallen in all parts of the Earth since the Creation of the world if substracted from the number of the years of God would be found a small quantity a meer nothing to the years of God As all the Nations in the world compared with God are but as the drop of a Bucket worse than nothing than vanity * Isa 40.15 So all the Ages of the world if compared with God amount not to so much as the One hundred thousandth part of a Minute The Minutes from the Creation may be numbred but the years of the duration of God being infinite are without measure As one day is to the Life of Man so are a Thousand years to the Life of God * Psal 90.5 Amyrald Trin. p. 44. The Holy-Ghost expresseth himself to the capacity of Man to give us some Notion of an infinite Duration by a resemblance suted to the capacity of Man If a Thousand years be but as a day to the Life of God then as a year is to the Life of Man so are Three hundred sixty five thousand years to the Life of God And as Seventy years are to the Life of Man so are twenty five Millions four Hundred and fifty Thousand years to the Life of God Yet still since there is no proportion between Time and Eternity we must dart our thoughts beyond all those * Daille Vent Sermons Ser. 1. sur 102. Psal 27. p. 21. For years and days measure only the duration of created things and of those only that are material and corporeal subject to the motion of the Heavens which makes days and years Sometimes this Eternity is exprest by parts as looking backward and forward by the differences of time past present and to come * Revel 1.8 Revel 4.8 Crellius weakens this argument De Deo cap. 18. p. 42. which was and is and is to come Though this might be spoken of any thing in being though but for an hour it was the last minute it is now and it will be the next minute yet the Holy-Ghost would declare something proper to God as
Glory belonging to all the Attributes of God 'T is not a single perfection of the Divine Nature nor is it limited to particular Objects thus and thus disposed Mercy and Justice have their distinct objects and distinct acts Mercy is conversant about a Penitent Justice conversant about an obstinate Sinner In our notion and conception of the Divine Perfections his Perfections are different The Wisdom of God is not his Power nor his Power his Holiness but Immutability is the Center wherein they all unite There is not one Perfection but may be said to be and truly is immutable none of them will appear so glorious without this Beam this Sun of Immutability which renders them highly excellent without the least shadow of imperfection How cloudy would his Blessedness be if it were changeable How dim his Wisdom if it might be obscur'd How feeble his Power if it were capable to be sickly and languish How would Mercy lose much of its lustre if it could change into wrath and Justice much of its dread if it could be turned into Mercy while the object of Justice remains unfit for Mercy and one that hath need of Mercy continues only fit for the Divine Fury But unchangeableness is a Thread that runs through the whole Web 'T is the enamel of all the rest none of them without it could look with a triumphant aspect His Power is unchangeable * Isa 26.4 In the Lord Jehovah is everlasting strength his Mercy and his Holiness endure for ever He never could nor ever can look upon iniquity * Hab. 1.13 He is a Rock in the righteousness of his ways the truth of his word the holiness of his proceedings and the rectitude of his nature All are exprest Deut. 32.4 He is a Rock his work is perfect for all his ways are Judgment A God of Truth and without Iniquity just and right is he All that we consider in God is unchangeable for his Essence and his Properties are the same and therefore what is necessarily belonging to the Essence of God belongs also to every perfection of the nature of God none of them can receive any addition or diminution From the unchangeableness of his nature the Apostle James 1.17 infers the unchangeableness of his Holiness and himself in Mal. 3.6 the unchangeableness of his Counsel 3. Vnchangeableness doth necessarily pertain to the Nature of God 'T is of the same necessity with the rectitude of his Nature He can no more be changeable in his Essence than he can be unrighteous in his Actions God is a necessary Being He is necessarily what he is and therefore is unchangeably what he is Mutability belongs to contingency If any perfection of his nature could be separated from him he would cease to be God What did not possess the whole Nature of God could not have the Essence of God 'T is reciprocated with the Nature of God Whatsoever is immutable by Nature is God whatsoever is God is immutable by Nature Some Creatures are immutable by his Grace and Power * Archbol● Serm. God is holy happy wise good by his Essence Angels and Men are made holy wise happy strong and good by Qualities and Graces The Holiness Happiness and Wisdom of Saints and Angels as they had a beginning so they are capable of increase and diminution and of an end also for their standing is not from themselves or from the nature of created strength holiness or wisdom which in themselves are apt to fail and finally to decay but from the stability and confirmation they have by the Gift and Grace of God The Heaven and Earth shall be changed and after that renewal and reparation they shall not be changed Our Bodies after the Resurrection shall not be changed but for ever be made conformable to the glorious Body of Christ * Phil. 3.21 but this is by the powerful Grace of God So that indeed those things may be said afterwards rather to be unchanged than unchangeable because they are not so by nature but by soveraign dispensation As Creatures have not necessary Beings so they have not necessary Immutability Necessity of being and therefore Immutability of being belongs by nature only to God otherwise if there were any change in God he would be sometimes what he was not and would cease to be what he was which is against the nature and indeed against the natural notion of a Deity Let us see then 1. In what regards God is immutable 2. Prove that God is immutable 3. That this is proper to God and incommunicable to any Creature 4. Some propositions to clear the unchangeableness of God from any thing that seems contrary to it 5. The Use First in what respects God is unchangeable 1. God is unchangeable in his Essence He is unalterably fixed in his Being that not a Particle of it can be lost from it not a Mite added to it If a Man continue in being as long as Methuselah Nine hundred and Sixty nine years yet there is not a day nay an hour wherein there is not some alteration in his substance though no substantial part is wanting yet there is an addition to him by his Food a diminution of something by his Labour He is always making some acquisition or suffering some loss But in God there can be no alteration by the accession of any thing to make his substance greater or better or by diminution to make it less or worse He who hath no being from another cannot but be always what he is God is the first Being an independent Being He was not produced of himself or of any other but by nature always hath been and therefore cannot by himself or by any other bechanged from what he is in his own nature That which is not may as well assume to it self a Being as he who hath and is all Being have the least change from what he is Again because he is a Spirit he is not subject to those mutations which are found incorporeal and bodily Natures Because he is an absolutely simple Spirit not having the least particle of composition he is not capable of those changes which may be in created Spirits 1. If his Essence were mutable God would not truly be It could not be truly said by himself I am that I am * Exod. 3.14 if he were such a Thing or Being at this time and a different Being at another time Whatsoever is changed properly is not because it doth not remain to be what it was That which is changed was something is something and will be something a Being remains to that thing which is changed yet though it may be said such a thing is yet it may be also said such a thing is not because it is not what it was in its first being 't is not now what it was 't is now what it was not 't is another thing than it was it was another thing than it is it will be another thing than
Interpretation God repented that is he did not bring the punishment upon them according to those days the Prophet had exprest and therefore forty natural days are to be understood and if it were meant of forty years and they were destroyed at the end of that term how could God be said to repent since according to that the punishment threatned was according to the time fixed brought upon them And the destruction of it forty years after will not be easily evinced if Jonah lived in the time of Jeroboam the second King of Israel as he did * 2 Kings 14 2● And Niniveh was destroyed in the time of Josiah King of Judah But the other Answer is plain God did not fulfil what he had threatned because they reformed what they had committed When the threatning was made they were a fit Object for Justice but when they repented they were a fit Object for a merciful Respite To threaten when sins are high is a part of Gods Justice not to execute when sins are revok'd by Repentance is a part of Gods Goodness And in the Case of Hezekiah * 2 Kings 20.1 5. Isaiah comes with a Message from God that he should set his house in order for he shall dye that is the Disease was mortal and no outward Applications could in their own nature resist the Destemper Behold * Isa 38.1 5. I will add to thy days fifteen years I will heal thee It seems to me to be one intire Message because the latter part of it was so suddenly after the other committed to Isaiah to be delivered to Hezekiah for he was not gon out of the Kings house before he was ordered to return with the news of his health by an extraordinary indulgence of God against the power of Nature and force of the Disease Behold I will add to thy Life noting it as an extraordinary thing He was in the second Court of the Kings House when this word came to him * 2 Kings 20.4 the Kings House having three Courts so that he was not gon above half way out of the Palace God might send this message of Death to prevent the Pride Hezekiah might swell with for his deliverance from Senacherib As Paul had a Messenger of Satan to buffet him to prevent his lifting up * 2 Cor. 12.7 and this good Man was subject to this sin as we find afterwards in the Case of the Babylonish Embassadors And God delayed this other part of the Message to humble him and draw out his Prayer and as soon as ever he found Hezekiah in this temper he sent Isaiah with a comfortable message of recovery So that the Will of God was to signify to him the mortality of his distemper and afterwards to relieve him by a message of an extraordinary Recovery 5. Proposition God is not changed when of loving to any Creatures he becomes angry with them or of angry he becomes appeased The change in these cases is in the Creature according to the alteration in the Creature it stands in a various relatition to God an innocent Creature is the Object of his Kindness an offending Creature is the Object of his Anger there is a change in the dispensations of God as there is a change in the Creature making himself capable of such dispensations God always acts according to the immutable nature of his Holiness and can no more change in his Affections to good and evil than he can in his Essence When the Devils now fallen stood as glorious Angels they were the Objects of Gods love because holy When they fell they were the objects of Gods hatred because impure the same reason which made him love them while they were pure made him hate them when they were criminal The reason of his various dispensations to them was the same in both as considered in God his immutable holiness but as respecting the Creature different the nature of the Creature was changed but the Divine holy nature of God remain'd the same * Psal 18.26 With the pure thou wilt shew thy self pure and with the froward thou wilt shew thy self froward He is a refreshing light to those that obey him and a consuming fire to those that resist him Tho the same Angels were not always loved yet the same reason that moved him to love them moved him to hate them It had argued a change in God if he had loved them alway in whatsoever posture they were towards him It could not be counted love but a weakness and impotent fondness the change is in the object not in the affection of God For the object loved before is not beloved now because that which was the motive of love is not now in it So that the Creature having a different state from what it had falls under a different affection or dispensation It had been a mutable affection in God to love that which was not worthy of love with the same love wherewith he loved that which had the greatest resemblance to himself Had God loved the fallen Angels in that state and for that state he had hated himself because he had loved that which was contrary to himself and the image of his own holiness which made them appear before good in his sight The Will of God is unchangeably set to love righteousness and hate iniquity and from this hatred to punish it And if a righteous Creature contracts the wrath of God or a sinful Creature hath the Communications of Gods love it must be by a change in themselves Is the Sun changed when it hardens one thing and softens another according to the disposition of the several subjects Or when the Sun makes a flower more fragrant and a dead carcass more noysome There are divers effects but the reason of that diversity is not in the Sun but in the subject the Sun is the same and produceth those different effects by the same quality of heat So if an unholy Soul approach to God God looks angrily upon him If a holy Soul come before him the same immutable perfection in God draws out his kindness towards him As some think the Sun would rather refresh than scorch us if our bodies were of the same nature and substance with that Luminary As the Will of God for Creating the world was no new but an Eternal Will tho it manifested it self in time so the Will of God for the punishment of sin or the reconciliation of the sinner was no new Will Tho his wrath in time break out in the effects of it upon sinners and his love flows out in the effects of it upon penitents Christ by his death reconciling God to man did not alter the Will of God but did what was consonant to his Eternal Will He came not to change his Will but to execute his Will Lo I come to do thy Will oh God * Heb. 10.7 And the grace of God in Christ was not a new grace but an old grace in a
good evil is present with me * Rom. 7.21 Never more present than when we have a mind to do good and never more present than when we have a mind to do the best and greatest good How hard is it to make our thoughts and affections keep their stand place them upon a good Object and they will be frisking from it as a Bird from one bough one fruit to another We vary postures according to the various objects we meet with The course of the World is a very airy thing suted to the uncertain motions of that Prince of the power of the Air which works in it * Eph. 2.2 This ought to be bewail'd by us Tho we may stand fast in the truth tho we may spin our resolutions into a firm web tho the Spirit may triumph over the flesh in our practice yet we ought to bewail it because inconstancy is our nature and what fixedness we have in good is from grace What we find practised by most men is natural to all * Lawrence of Faith p. 262. As face answers to face in a glass so doth heart to heart * Pro. 27.19 a face in the glass is not more like a natural face whose image it is than one mans heart is naturally like another 1. 'T is natural to those out of the Church Nebuchadnezzar is so affected with Daniels prophetick Spirit that he would have none accounted the true God but the God of Daniel * Dan. 2.47 How soon doth this notion slip from him and an image must be set up for all to worship upon pain of almost cruel painful death Daniels God is quite forgotten The miraculous deliverance of the three Children for not worshipping his Image makes him settle a Decree to secure the Honour of God from the reproach of his Subjects * Dan. 3.29 yet a little while after you have him strutting in his Palace as if there were no God but himself 2. 'T is natural to those in the Church The Israelites were the only Church God had in the World and a notable Example of inconstancy After the Miracles of Aegypt they murmured against God when they saw Pharaoh marching with an Army at their Heels They desired food and soon nauseated the Manna they were before fond of when they came into Canaan They sometimes worshipped God and sometimes Idols not only the Idols of one Nation but of all their Neighbours In which regard God calls this his Heritage a Speckled Bird * Jer. 12.9 a Peacock saith Hierom inconstant made up of varieties of Idolatrous colours and Ceremonies This levity of Spirit is the root of all mischeif it scatters our thoughts in the Service of God it is the cause of all revolts and Apostacies from him it makes us unfit to receive the communications of God whatsoever we hear is like words writ in sand ruffled out by the next gale whatsoever is put into us is like precious liquor in a palsie hand soon spilt It breeds distrust of God when we have an uncertain judgment of him we are not like to confide in him an uncertain judgment will be followed with a distrustful heart In fine where it is prevalent it is a certain sign of ungodliness to be driven with the wind like chaffe and to be ungodly is all one in the judgment of the Holy Ghost Psal 1.4 the ungodly are like the chaff which the wind drives away which signifies not their destruction but their disposition for their destruction is inferred from it ver 5. Therefore the ungodly shall not stand in judgment How contrary is this to the unchangeable God who is alwayes the same and would have us the same in our religious Promises and Resolutions for good 4. If God be immutable 't is sad news to those that are resolved in wickedness or careless of returning to that duty he requires Sinners must not expect that God will alter his will make a breach upon his nature and violate his own Word to gratifie their lusts No 't is not reasonable God should dishonour himself to secure them and cease to be God that they may continue to be wicked by changing his own nature that they may be unchanged in their vanity God is the same goodness is as amiable in his sight and Sin as abominable in his eyes now as it was at the beginning of the world Being the same God he is the same Enemy to the Wicked as the same Friend to the Righteous He is the same in Knowledge and cannot forget sinful acts He is the same in Will and cannot approve of unrighteous Practices Goodness cannot but be alway the Object of his Love and Wickedness cannot but be alway the Object of his Hatred And as his aversion to Sin is alway the same so as he hath been in his Judgments upon Sinners the same he will be still for the same perfection of Immutability belongs to his Justice for the punishment of Sin as to his Holiness for his disaffection to Sin Though the Covenant of Works was changeable by the crime of man violating it yet it was unchangeable in regard of Gods justice vindicating it which is inflexible in the punishment of the breaches of his Law The Law had a preceptive part and a minatory part When man changed the observation of the Precept the righteous nature of God could not null the execution of the threatning He could not upon the account of this perfection neglect his just word and countenance the unrighteous transgression Tho there were no more rational Creatures in being but Adam and Eve yet God subjected them to that death he had assured them of and from this immutability of his Will ariseth the necessity of the suffering of the Son of God for the relief of the apostate Creature His Will in the second Covenant is as unc●a●●eable as that in the first only repentance is settled as the condition of the second which was not indulged in the first and without repentance the sinner must i●●vo●●bly p●rish or God must change his nature There must be a change in man there can be n●●●e in God his bow is bent his arrows are ready if the wicked do not turn * Psal 7.11 There is not an Atheist an hypocrite a prophane person that ever was upon the Earth but Gods Soul abhorred him as such and the like he will abhor for ever While any therefore continue so they may sooner expect the Heavens should roul as they please the Sun stand still at their order the Stars change their course at their beck than that God should change his nature which is opposite to prophaness and vanity Who hath hardned himself against him and hath prospered * Job 9.4 Use 2. Of comfort The immutability of a good God is a strong ground of consolation Subjects wish a good Prince to live for ever as being loath to change him but care not how soon they are rid of an Oppressor
pierce into the lower World as if his Presence and Cares were confin'd to Coelestial things and the Earth were too low a Sphere for his Essence to reach at least with any Credit 'T is forgotten by good men when they fear too much the designs of their Enemies Fear not for I am with thee Isa 43.5 If the Presence of God be enough to strengthen against fear then the prevailing of fear issues from our forgetfulness of it 2. This Attribute of Gods Omnipresence is for the most part contemn'd When men will commit that in the presence of God which they would be afraid or ashamed to do before the eye of man Men do not practice that Modesty before God as before men He that would restrain his tongue out of fear of mens eye will not restrain either tongue or hands out of fear of Gods What is the language of this but that God is not present with us or his presence ought to be of less regard with us and influence upon us than that of a creature Drexel Nice● lib. 2. cap. 10. Ask the Thief why he dares to steal Will he not answer No eye sees him Ask the Adulterer why he strips himself of his Chastity and invades the Rights of another Will he not answer Job 24.15 No eye sees me He disguiseth himself to be unseen by man but slights the all-seeing eye of God If only a man know them they are in terror of the shadow of death they are Planet-struck but stand unshaken at the presence of God Job 24.17 Is not this to account God as limited as man as ignorant as absenting as if God were something less than those things which restrains us 'T is a debasing God below a creature If we can forbear sin from an awe of the presence of man to whom we are equal in regard of Nature or from the presence of a very mean man to whom we are superior in regard of condition and not forbear it because we are within the ken of God We respect him not only as our inferior but inferior to the meanest man or child of his Creation in whose sight we would not commit the like action 'T is to represent him as a sleepy negligent or careless God as tho any thing might be concealed from him before whom the least fibres of the heart are anatomiz'd and open who sees as plainly midnight as noon-day sins Heb 4.13 Now this is a high aggravation of sin To break a Kings Laws in his sight is more bold than to violate them behind his back as it was Haman's offence when he lay upon Esthers bed to force the Queen before the Kings face The least iniquity receives a high tincture from this And no sin can be little that is an affront in the face of God and casting the filth of the creature before the eyes of his holiness As if a Wife should commit Adultery before her Husbands face or a Slave dishonour his Master and disobey his commands in his presence And hath it not often been thus with us Have we not been disloyal to God in his sight before his eyes those pure eyes that cannot behold iniquity without anger and grief Isa 65.12 Ye did evil before my eyes Nathan chargeth this home upon David 2 Sam. 12. ● Thou hast despised the commandment of the Lord to do evil in his sight And David in his repentance reflects upon himself for it Psal 51.4 Against thee thee only have I sinned and done this evil in thy sight I observed not thy presence I neglected thee while thy eye was upon me And this consideration should sting our hearts in all our confessions of our Crimes Men will be afraid of the presence of others whatsoever they think in their heart How unworthily do we deal with God in not giving him so much as an eye-service which we do man 8. How terrible should the thoughts of this Attribute be to sinners How foolish is it to imagine any hiding-place from the Incomprehensible God Quo fugis Encelade quas cunque accesseris oras sub Jove semper eris who fills and contains all things and is present in every point of the World When men have shut the door and made all darkness within to meditate or commit a Crime they cannot in the most intricate recesses be sheltred from the presence of God If they could separate themselves from their own shadows they could not avoid his company or be obscured from his sight Psal 139.12 The darkness and light are both alike to him Hypocrites cannot disguise their sentiments from him he is in the most secret nook of their hearts No thought is hid no lust is secret but the eye of God beholds this and that and the other He is present with our heart when we imagine with our hands when we act We may exclude the Sun from peeping into our solitudes but not the eyes of God from beholding our actions The eyes of the Lord are in every place beholding the evil and good Prov. 15.3 He lies in the depths of our souls and sees afar off our designs before we have conceived them He is in the greatest darkness as well as the clearest light in the closest thought of the mind as well as the openest expressions Nothing can be hid from him no not in the darkest Cells or thickest Walls He compasseth our path wherever we are Psal 139.3 and is acquainted with all our ways He is as much present with wicked men to observe their sins as he is to detest them Where he is present in his Essence he is present in his Attributes His Holiness to hate and his Justice to punish if he please to speak the word 'T is strange men should not be mindful of this when their very sins themselves might put them in mind of his presence Whence ha●● thou the power to act who preserves thy being whereby thou art capable of committing that evil Is it not his Essential presence that sustains us and his Arm that supports us And where can any man flye from his presence Not the vast Regions of Heaven could shelter a sinning Angel from his eye How was Adam ferreted out of his hiding-places in Paradice Nor can we find the depths of the Sea a sufficient covering to us If we were with Jonah closeted up in the belly of a Whale if we had the wings of the morning as quick a motion as the light at the dawning of the day that doth in an instant surprise and overpower the regions of darkness and could pass to the utmost parts of the earth or hell there we should find him there his eye would be upon us there would his hand lay hold of us and lead us as a Conqueror triumphing over a captive Psal 139.8 9 10. Nay if we could leap out of the compass of heaven and earth we should find as little reserves from him He is
and his Resolution to punish 1. It will appear in forbearing Sin from a sense of Mans knowledge not of Gods Open Impieties are refrain'd because of the Eye of Man but secret Sins are not checked because of the Eye of God Wickedness is committed in darkness that is restrained in light as if darkness were as great a clog to Gods Eyes as it is to ours as though his Eyes were mufled with the Curtains of the Night * Job 22.14 This it is likely was at the root of Jonah's flight he might have some secret thought that his Masters Eye could not follow him as though the close Hatches of a Ship could secure him from the knowledge of God as well as the Sides of the Ship could from the dashing of the Waves What lies most upon the Conscience when it is graciously wounded is least regarded or contemned when it is basely inclin'd David's heart smote him not only for his Sin in the gross but as particularly circumstantiated by the commission of it in the sight of God Psal 51.4 Against thee thee only have I sinned and done this ev l in thy sight None knew the reason of Vriah's Death but my self and because others knew it not I neglected any regard to this Divine Eye When Jacob's Sons used their Brother Joseph so barbarously they took care to hide it from their Father but cast away all thoughts of God from whom it could not be conceal'd Doth not the presence of a Child bridle a Man from the act of a long'd for Sin when the Eye of God is of no force to restrain him as if Gods knowledge were of less value than the sight of a little Boy or Girle as if a Child only could see and God were blind He that will forbear an unworthy action for fear of an Informer will not forbear it for God as if Gods Omniscience were not as full an Intelligencer to Him as Man can be an Informer to a Magistrate As we acknowledge the power of Men seeing us when we are ashamed to commit a filthy action in their view so we discover the power of God seeing us when we regard not what we do before the light of his Eyes Secret Sins are more against God than open Open Sins are against the Law secret Sins are against the Law and this prime Perfection of his Nature The Majesty of God is not only violated but the Omniscience of God disown'd who is the only Witness We must in all of them either imagine him to be without Eyes to behold us or without an Arm of Justice to punish us And often it is I believe in such cases that if any thoughts of Gods knowledge strike upon Men they quickly damp them lest they should begin to know what they fear and fear that they might not eat their pleasant Sinful Morsels 2. It appears in partial Confessions of Sin before God As by a free full and ingenuous Confession we offer a due glory to this Attribute so by a feigned and curtail'd Confession we deny him the honour of it For though by any Confession we in part own him to be a Soveraign and Judge yet by a half and pared acknowledgment we own him to be no more than a Humane and ignorant one Achans full Confession gave God the glory of his Omniscience * Josh 7.19 manifested in the discovery of his secret Crime And Joshuah said to Achan My Son give glory to the Lord God of Israel and make Confession unto him And so Psal 50.23 Who so offereth praise glorifieth me or confession as the word signifieth in which sense I would rather take it referring to this Attribute which God seems to tax Sinners with the denial of Vers 21. telling them that he would open the Records of their Sins before them and indite them particularly for every one If therefore you would glorifie this Attribute which shall one day break open your Consciences offer to me a sincere Confession When David speaks of the happiness of a pardon'd Man * Ps 2.1 2. Camero p. 89. col 1. he adds in whose Spirit there is no guile not meaning a sincerity in general but an ingenuity in Confessing To excuse or extenuate Sin is to deny God the knowledge of the depths of our deceitful hearts When we will mince it rather than aggravate it lay it upon the inducements of others when it was the free act of our own wills study shifts to deceive our Judge this is to speak lies of him as the expression is Hos 7.13 as though he were a God easie to be cheated and knew no more than we are willing to declare What did Sauls transferring his Sin from himself to the People * 1 Sam. 15.15 but charge God with a defect in this Attribute When Man could not be like God in his knowledge he would fancy a God like to him in his ignorance and imagine a possibility of hiding himself from his knowledge And all Men tread more or less in their Fathers steps and are fruitful to devise distinctions to disguise Errors in Doctrine and excuses to palliate Errors in Practice This Crime Job removes from himself * Job 31.33 when he speaks of several acts of his sincerity If I cover'd my transgression as Adam by hiding my iniquity in my bosom I hid not any of my Sins in my own Conscience but acknowledg'd God a Witness to them and gave him the glory of his knowledge by a free Confession I did not conceal it from God as Adam did or as Men ordinarily do as if God could understand no more of their secret Crimes than they will let him and had no more sense of their faults than they would furnish him with As the first rise of Confession is the owning of this Attribute for the Justice of God would not scare Men nor the Holiness of God awe them without a sense of his knowledge of their iniquities so to drop out some fragments of Confession discover some Sins and conceal others is a plain denial of the extensiveness of the Divine Knowledge 3. It is discover'd by putting God off with an outside Worship Men are often flatterers of God and think to bend him by formal glavering Devotions without the concurrence of their hearts as though he could not pierce into the darkness of the Mind but did as little know us as one Man knows another There are such things as feigned Lips * Psal 17.1 a contradiction between the Heart and the Tongue a clamour in the Voice and scoffing in the Soul a crying to God thou art my Father the guide of my youth and yet speaking and doing evil to the utmost of our power * Jer. 3 4 5. As if God could be impos'd upon by fawning pretences and like old Isaac take Jacob for Esau and be couzend by the smell of his Garments As if he could not discern the Negro heart under an Angels Garb. Thus Ephraim the Ten Tribes
him he knows what Angels and Men do and infinitely more what is known by them obscurely is known by him clearly What is known by man after it is done was known by God before it was wrought By his wisdom as much as by any thing he infinitely differs from all his Creatures as by wisdom Man differs from a Brute We cannot frame a notion of God without conceiving him infinitely wise We should render him very inconsiderable to imagine him furnisht with an infinite knowledge and not have an infinite wisdom to make use of that knowledge or to fancy him with a mighty power destitute of prudence Knowledge without prudence is an eye without motion and power without discretion is an arm without a head a hand to act without understanding to contrive and model a strength to act without reason to know how to act It would be a miserable notion of a God to fancy him with a brutish and unguided power The Heathens therefore had and could not but have this natural notion of God Plato therefore calls him Mens † Eugub per. Philosoph lib. 1. cap. 5. and Cleanthes used to call God Reason and Socrates thought the title of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 too magnificent to be attributed to any thing else but God alone Arguments to prove that God is wise Reas 1. God could not be infinitely perfect without wisdom A rational Nature is better than an irrational Nature A man is not a perfect man without reason how can God without it be an infinitely perfect God Wisdom is the most eminent of all Vertues all the other perfections of God without this would be as a body without an eye a soul without understanding A Christian's Graces want their lustre when they are destitute of the guidance of wisdom Mercy is a feebleness and Justice a cruelty Patience a timerousness and Courage a madness without the conduct of wisdom so the Patience of God would be cowardise his Power an oppression his Justice a tyranny without wisdom as the Spring and Holiness as the Rule No attribute of God could shine with a due lustre and brightness without it Power is a great perfection but wisdom a greater * Licet magnum sit posse majus tamen est sapere Wisdom may be without much power as in Bees and Ants but power is a tyrannical thing without wisdom and righteousness The Pilot is more valuable because of his skil than the Gally Slave because of his strength and the conduct of a General more estimable than the might of a private Souldier Generals are chosen more by their skill to guide than their strength to act What a Clod is a man without Prudence what a Nothing would God be without it This is the Salt that gives relish to all other perfections in a Creature This is the Jewel in the Ring of all the Excellencies of the Divine Nature and Holiness is the splendor of that Jewel Now God being the first Being possesses whatsoever is most noble in any Being If therefore Wisdom which is the most noble perfection in any Creature were wanting to God he would be deficient in that which is the highest Excellency God being the living God as he is frequently termed in Scripture he hath therefore the most perfect manner of living and that must be a pure and intellectual life Being essentially living he is essentially in the highest degree of living As he hath an infinite life above all Creatures so he hath an infinite intellectual life and therefore an infinite Wisdom whence some have called God not sapientem but super-sapientem † Suarez Vol. 1 lib. 1. cap. 3 p. 10. not only wise but above all wisdom Reas 2. Without infinite Wisdom he could not govern the World Without wisdom in forming the Matter which was made by Divine power the World could have been no other than a Chaos and without wisdom in Government it could have been no other than a heap of Confusion without wisdom the World could not have been created in the posture it is Creation supposeth a determination of the will putting power upon acting the determination of the will supposeth the counsel of the understanding determining the will No work but supposeth understanding as well as will in a rational Agent As without skill things could not be created so without it things cannot be governed Reason is a necessary perfection to him that presides over all things Without knowledge there could not be in God a foundation for Government and without wisdom there could not be an exercise of Government and without the most excellent wisdom he could not be the most excellent Governour He could not be an universal Governour without a universal wisdom nor the sole Governour without an unimitable wisdom nor an independent Governour without an original and independent wisdom nor a perpetual Governour without an incorruptible wisdom He would not be the Lord of the World in all points without skill to order the affairs of it Power and wisdom are foundations of all Authority and Government Wisdom to know how to rule and command Power to make those Commands obeyed No regular Order could issue out without the first nor could any order be enforced without the second A feeble wisdom and a brutish power seldom or never produce any good effect Magistracy without wisdom would be a frantick power a rash conduct like a strong arm when the eye is out it strikes it knows not what and leads it knows not whither Wisdom without power would be like a great body without feet * Amirant moral like the knowledge of a Pilot that hath lost his arm who though he knows the Rule of Navigation and what Course to follow in his Voyage yet cannot mannage the Helm But when those two wisdom and power are link't together there ariseth from both a fitness for Government There is wisdom to propose an end and both wisdom and power to employ means that conduct to that end And therefore when God demonstrates to Job his right of Government and the unreasonableness of Job's quarrelling with his proceedings he chiefly urgeth upon him the consideration of those two excellencies of his Nature power and wisdom which are exprest in his Works † Chap. 38 39 40 41. A Prince without wisdom is but a Title without a Capacity to perform the Office no man without it is fit for government Nor could God without wisdom exercise a just Dominion in the World He hath therefore the higest wisdom since he is the universal Governour That wisdom which is able to govern a Family may not be able to govern a City and that wisdom which governs a City may not be able to govern a Nation or Kingdom much less a World The bounds of God's government being greater than any his wisdom for government must needs surmount the wisdom of all ‖ Amyrald desert The●l p. 111. And though the Creatures be not in number actually infinite yet they
great Invasion And the spirit of God hath particularly left upon record that Particle as we may reasonably suppose to such a purpose And so in the description of the blessed Virgin Luke 1.27 There is nothing of her Holiness mentioned which is with much diligence recorded of Elizabeth Vers 6. Righteous walking in all the commandments of God blameless Probably to prevent the superstition which God foresaw would arise in the World And we do not find more undervaluing speeches uttered by Christ to any of his Disciples in the exercise of his Office than to her except to Peter As when she acquainted him with the want of Wine at the Marriage in Cana she receives a slighting answer Woman what have I to do with thee John 2.4 And when one was admiring the blessedness of her that bare him he turns the Discourse another way to pronounce a blessedness rather belonging to them that hear the Word of God and keep it Luke 11.27 28. in a mighty Wisdom to Antidote his people against any conceit of the prevalency of the Virgin over him in Heaven in the Exercise of his Mediatory Office 2. As his Wisdom appears in his Government by his Laws so it appears in the various inclinations and conditions of Men. As there is a distinction of several Creatures and several qualities in them for the Common good of the World so among men there are several inclinations and several Abilities as Donatives from God for the Common advantage of Human Society As several Chanels cut out from the same River run several waies and refresh several Soils one Man is qualified for one Employment another marked out by God for a different Work yet all of them fruitful to bring in a Revenue of Glory to God and a harvest of Profit to the rest of Mankind How unusefull would the Body be if it had but one Member 1 Cor. 12.19 How unprovided would a House be if it had not Vessels of Dishonour as well as of Honour The Corporation of Mankind would be as much a Chaos as the Matter of the Heavens and the Earth was before it was distinguisht by several forms breathed into it at the Creation Some are inspired with a particular Genius for one Art some for another Every man hath a distinct Talent If all were Husband-men where would be the Instruments to Plow and Reap If all were Artificers where would they have Corn to nourish themselves All men are like Vessels and Parts in the Body design'd for distinct Offices and Functions for the good of the whole and mutually return an advantage to one another As the variety of Gifts in the Church is a fruit of the Wisdom of God for the preservation and increase of the Church so the variety of Inclinations and Employments in the World is a fruit of the Wisdom of God for the preservation and subsistence of the World by mutual Commerce What the Apostle largely discourseth of the former in 1 Cor. 12. may be applied to the other The various Conditions of men is also a fruit of Divine Wisdom Some are Rich and some Poor the Rich have as much need of the Poor as the Poor have of the Rich If the Poor depend upon the Rich for their livelyhood the Rich depend upon the Poor for their Conveniencies Many Arts would not be learn'd by men if Poverty did not oblige them to it and many would faint in the learning of them if they were not thereunto encouraged by the Rich. The Poor labour for the Rich as the Earth sends Vapours into the vaster and fuller Air and the Rich return advantages again to the Poor as the Clouds do the Vapours in Rain upon the Earth As Meat would not afford a nourishing Juyce without Bread and Bread without other Food would immoderately fill the Stomach and not be well digested so the Rich would be unprofitable in the Common-wealth without the Poor and the Poor would be burthensom to a Common-wealth without the Rich The Poor could not be easily govern'd without the Rich nor the Rich sufficiently and conveniently provided for without the Poor If all were Rich there would be no Objects for the exercise of a Noble part of Charity If all were Poor there were no Matter for the exercise of it Thus the Divine Wisdom planted various Inclinations and diversified the Conditions of Men for the publick advantages of the World 2. Gods Wisdom appears in the government of Men as Fallen and Sinful or in the government of Sin After the Law of God was broke and Sin invaded and conquer'd the World Divine Wisdom had another Scene to act in and other Methods of Government were necessary The Wisdom of God is then seen in ordering those Jarring Discords drawing Good out of Evil and Honour to himself out of that which in its own Nature tended to the supplanting of his Glory God being a Soveraign Good would not suffer so great an Evil to enter but to serve hims●lf of it for some greater End for all his Thoughts are full of Goodness and Wisdom Now though the Permission of Sin be an Act of his Soveraignty and the Punishment of Sin be an Act of his Justice yet the Ordination of Sin to good is an Act of his Wisdom whereby he doth dispose the Evil over-rules the Malice and orders the Events of it to his own Purposes Sin in it self is a Disorder and therefore God doth not permit Sin for it self for in its own Nature it hath nothing of Amiableness but he wills it for some Righteous End which belongs to the manifestation of his Glory which is his aim in all the Acts of his Will He wills it not as Sin but as his Wisdom can order it to some greater Good than was before in the World and make it contribute to the beauty of the Order he intends As a dark Shadow is not delightful and pleasant in it self nor is Drawn by a Painter for any Amiableness there is in the Shadow it self but as it serves to set forth that Beauty which is the main design of his Art so the glorious Effects which arise from the Entrance of Sin into the World are not from the Creatures Evil but the Depths of Divine Wisdom Particularly 1. Gods Wisdom is seen in the bounding of Sin As it is said of the Wrath of Man it shall praise him and the remainder of Wrath God doth restrain Psal 76.10 He sets limits to the boyling Corruption of the Heart as he doth to the boisterous Waves of of the Sea Hitherto shalt thou go and no further As God is the Rector of the World he doth so restrain Sin so temper and direct it as that Human Society is preserved which else would be overflown with a Deluge of Wickedness and Ruine would be brought upon all Communities The World would be a Shambles a Brothel-house if God by his Wisdom and Goodness did not set bars to that Wickedness which is in the Hearts of Men The whole Earth
might be ordered as an Answer to his former Petition Psal 19.12 Cleanse thou me from my secret sins and as he did earnestly pray after his Fall so no doubt but he endeavour'd a thorough Sanctification Psal 51.7 Purge me wash me and that he meant not only a Sanctification from that single Sin but from all Root and Branch is evident by that Complaint of the slaw in his Nature verse 5. the Dross and Chaff which lies in the heart is hereby discovered and an opportunity administred of throwing it out and searching all the corners of the Heart to discover where it lay As God sometimes takes occasion from one Sin to reckon with Men in a way of Justice for others so he sometimes takes occasion from the commission of one Sin to bring out all the actions against the Sinner to make him in a way of gracious Wisdom set more cordially upon the work of Sanctification A great Fall sometimes hath been the occasion of a Mans Conversion The Fall of Mankind occasioned a more blessed Restoration and the Falls of particular Believers ofttimes occasion a more extensive Sanctification Thus the only Wise God makes poysons in Nature to become Medicines in a way of Grace and Wisdom 5. Hereby the growth in Grace is furthered 'T is a wonder of Divine Wisdom to substract sometimes his Grace from a Person and let him fall into Sin thereby to occasion the increase of habitual Grace in him and to augment it by those ways that seem'd to depress it By making Sins an occasion of a more vigorous acting the contrary Grace the Wisdom of God makes our Corruptions in their own nature destructive to become profitable to us Grace often breaks out more strongly afterwards as the Sun doth with its heat after it hath been mask'd and interrupted with a Mist They often through the mighty working of the Spirit make us more humble and Humility fits us to receive more Grace from God † James 4.6 How doth Faith that sunk under the Waves lift up its head again and carry the Soul out with a greater liveliness What ardours of Love what flouds of Repenting Tears what severity of Revenge what horrours at the remembrance of the Sin what Tremblings at the appearance of a second Temptation So that Grace seems to be be awaken'd to a new and more vigorous life ‖ 2 Cor. 7.11 The broken Joynt is many times stronger in the Rupture than it was before The Luxuriancy of the Branches of Corruption is an occasion of purging and purging is with a design to make Grace more fruitful John 15.2 He purgeth it that it may bring forth more fruit Thus Divine Wisdom doth both sharpen and brighten us by the dust of Sin and ripen and mellow the fruits of Grace by the dung of Corruption Grace grows the stronger by opposition as the Fire burns hottest and clearest when it is most surrounded by a cold Air and our Natural heat reassumes a new strength by the coldness of the Winter The foyl under a Diamond though an imperfection in it self increaseth the beauty and lustre of the Stone The Enmity of Man was a commendation of the Grace of God It occasioned the breaking out of the Grace of God upon us and is an occasion by the Wisdom and Grace of God of the increase of Grace many times in us How should the Consideration of Gods Incomprhensible Wisdom in the management of Evil swallow us up in Admiration who brings forth such beauty such eminent Discoveries of himself such excellent good to the Creature out of the bowels of the greatest Contrarieties making dark Shadows serve to display and beautisie to our Apprehensions the Divine Glory If Evil were not in the World Men would not know what Good is They would not behold the lustre of Divine Wisdom as without Night we could not understand the beauty of the Day Though God is not the Author of Sin because of his Holiness yet he is the Administrator of Sin by his Wisdom and accomplisheth his own Purposes by the Iniquities of his Enemies and the Lapses and Infirmities of his Friends Thus much for the Second The Government of Man in his Lapsed state and the Government of Sin wherein the Wisdom of God doth wonderfully appear III. The Wisdom of God appears in the Government of Man in his Conversion and Return to him If there be a Counsel in framing the lowest Creature and in the minutest passages of Providence there must needs be a higher Wisdom in the government of the Creature to a Supernatural End and framing the Soul to be a monument of his Glory The Wisdom of God is seen with more Admirations and in more varieties by the Angels in the Church than in the Creation * Eph. 3.10 that is in forming a Church out of the Rubbish of the World out of Contrarieties and Contradictions to him which is greater than the framing a Celestial and Elementary World out of a rude Chaos The most glorious Bodies in the World even those of the Sun Moon and Stars have not such stamps of Divine Skill upon them as the Soul of Man nor is there so much of Wisdom in the Fabrick and Faculties of that as in the reduction of a blind wilful rebellious Soul to its own happiness and Gods glory Eph. 1.11 12. He worketh all things according to the counsel of his own Will that we should be for the praise of his glory If all things then this which is none of the least of his works To the praise of the glory of his Goodness in his work and to the praise of the Rule of his work his Counsel in both the act of his Will and the act of his Wisdom The restoring of the Beauty of the Soul and its fitness for its true end speaks no less Wisdom than the first draught of it in Creation And the application of Redemption and bringing forth the fruits of it is as well an act of his Prudence as the contrivance was of his Counsel Divine Wisdom appears First In the Subjects of Conversion His Goodness reigns in the very Dust and he erects the Walls and Ornaments of his Temple from the Clay and Mud of the World He passes over the Wise and Noble and Mighty that may pretend some grounds of boasting in their own natural or acquired Endowments and pitches upon the most contemptible Materials wherewith to build a Spiritual Tabernacle for himself 1 Cor. 1.26 27. The foolish and weak things of the World those that are naturally most unfit for it and most refractory to it Herein lies the Skill of an Architect to render the most knotty crooked and inform Pieces by his Art subservient to his main purpose and design Thus God hath ordered from the beginning of the World contrary Tempers various Humors diverse Nations as Stones of several Natures to be a Building for himself fitly framed together and to be his own Family † 1 Cor. 3.7 Who will
Will as a Natural Faculty concurs in the act or motion God doth not act in this in a way of Absolute Power without an Infinite Wisdom suting himself to the Nature of the things he acts upon He doth not change the Physical Nature though he doth the Moral As in the Government of the World he doth not make heavy things ascend nor light things descend ordinarily but guides their Motions according to their Natural qualities So God doth not strain the Faculties beyond their due pitch He lets the nature of the Faculty remain but changes the Principle in it The Understanding remains Understanding and the Will remains Will. But where there was before Folly in the Understanding he puts in a Spirit of Wisdom and where there was before a stoutness in the Will he forms it to a pliableness to his offers He hath a Key to fit every Ward in the Lock and opens the Will without injuring the Nature of the Will He doth not change the Soul by an alteration of the Faculties but by an alteration of something in them Not by an Inroad upon them or by meer power or a blind Instinct but by proposing to the Understanding something to be known and informing it of the Reasonableness of his Precepts and the Innate goodness and excellency of his Offers and by inclining the Will to love and embrace what is proposed And things are propos'd under those Notions which usually move our Wills and Affections We are moved by things as they are good pleasant profitable we entertain things as they make for us and detest things as they are contrary to us Nothing affects us but under such qualities and God sutes his Encouragements to these Natural Affections which are in us His Power and Wisdom go hand in hand together his Power to act what his Wisdom orders and his Wisdom to conduct what his Power executes He brings Men to him in ways suted to their Natural dispositions The stubborn he tears like a Lion the gentle he wins like a Turtle by sweetness he hath a Hammer to break the stout and a Cord of Love to draw the more pliable Tempers He works upon the more Rational in a way of Gospel Reason upon the more Ingenuous in a way of kindness and draws them by the Cords of Love The Wise-men were led to Christ by a Star and Means suted to the knowledge and study that those Eastern Nations used which was much in Astronomy He worketh upon others by Miracles accommodated to every ones sense and so proportions the Means according to the Nature of the Subjects he works upon 4. The Wisdom of God is apparent in his Discipline and Penal Evils The Wisdom of Human Governments is seen in the matter of their Laws and in the Penalties of their Laws and in the proportion of the Punishment to the Offence and in the good that redounds from the Punishment either to the Offender or to the Community The Wisdom of God is seen in the Penalty of Death upon the Transgression of his Law both in that it was the greatest Evil that Man might fear and so was a convenient means to keep him in his due bound and also in the proportion of it to the Transgression Nothing less could be in a Wise Justice inflicted upon an Offender for a Crime against the highest Being and the Supream Excellency But this hath been spoken of before in the Wisdom of his Laws I shall only mention some few it would be too tedious to run into all 1. His Wisdom appears in Judgments in the suting them to the qualities of Persons and nature of Sins He deviseth evil Jer. 18.11 his Judgments are fruits of Counsel He also is wise and will bring Evil Isai 31.2 Evil sutable to the Person offending and Evil sutable to the Offence committed As the Husbandman doth his Threshing Instruments to the Grain He hath a Rod for the Cummin a tenderer Seed and a Flayl for the harder so hath God greater Judgments for the obdurate Sinner and lighter for those that have something of tenderness in their Wickedness Isai 28.27 29. Because he is wonderful in Counsel and excellent in working so Some understand the place With the froward he will shew himself froward He proportions punishment to the Sin and writes the cause of the Judgment in the Forehead of the Judgment it self Sodom burned in Lust and was consumed by Fire from Heaven The Jews sold Christ for Thirty pence and at the Taking of Jerusalem Thirty of them were sold for a Penny So Adonibezek Cut off the Thumbs and great Toes of others and he is served in the same kind Judg. 1.7 The Babel Builders design'd an indissoluble union and God brings upon them an unintelligible Confusion And in Exod. 9.9 the Ashes of the Furnace where the Israelites burnt the Egyptian Bricks sprinkled towards Heaven brought Boyls upon the Egyptian Bodies that they might feel in their own what Pain they had caused in the Israelites flesh and find by the smart of the inflamed Scab what they had made the Israelites endure The Waters of the River Nilus are turned into Blood wherein they had stifled the breath of the Israelites Infants And at last the Prince and the flower of their Nobility are drowned in the Red Sea 'T is part of the Wisdom of Justice to proportion punishment to the Crime and the degrees of Wrath to the degrees of Malice in the Sin Afflictions also are wisely proportion'd God as a wise Physician considers the nature of the humor and strength of the Patient and sutes his Medicines both to the one and the other 1 Cor. 10.13 2. In the seasons of Punishments and Afflictions He stays till Sin be ripe that his Justice may appear more equitable and the Offender more inexcusable Dan. 9.14 he watches upon the evil to bring it upon Men. To bring it in the just Season and order for his righteous and gracious Purpose his Righteous purpose on the Enemies and his Gracious purpose on his People Jerusalems Calamity came upon them when the City was full of People at the Solemnity of the Passover that he might Mow down his Enemies at once and Time their Destruction to such a moment wherein they had Timed the Crucifixion of his Son He watched over the Clouds of his Judgments and kept them from pouring down till his People the Christians were provided for and had departed out of the City to the Chambers and Retiring places God had provided for them He made not Jerusalem the Shambles of his Enemies till he had made Pella and other places the Arks of his Friends As Pliny tells us The Providence of God holds the Sea in a calm for fifteen days that the Halcyons little Birds that frequent the Shoar may build their Nests and hatch up their Young The Judgment upon Sodom was suspended for some hours till Lot was secured | Daille sur 1 Cor. 10. p. 390. God suffer'd not the Church to be Invaded
and dispose of all his Creatures for the bringing his Purposes and his Promises to their designed perfection 6. Hence appears the necessity of a publick review of the Management of the World and of a Day of Judgment As a Day of Judgment may be inferr'd from many Attribute of God as his Soveraignty Justice Omniscience c. so among the rest from this of Wisdom How much of this Perfection will lie unvail'd and obscure if the Sins of Men be not brought to view whereby the ordering the unrighteous Actions of Men by his directing and over-ruling Hand of Providence in subserviency to his own Purposes and his Peoples good may appear in all its glory Without such a publick Review this part of Wisdom will not be clearly visible how those Actions which had a vile foundation in the Hearts and designs of Men and were formed there to gratifie some base Lust Ambition and Covetousness c. were by a secret Wisdom presiding over them conducted to amazing Ends. 'T is a part of Divine Wisdom to right it self and convince Men of the reasonableness of its Laws and the unreasonableness of their Contradictions to it The execution of the Sentence is an act of Justice but the conviction of the reasonableness of the Sentence is an act of Wisdom clearing up the Righteousness of the proceeding and this precedes and the other follows Jude 15. To convince all that are ungodly of all their ungodly deeds That Wisdom which contrived satisfaction as well as that Justice which required it is concerned in righting the Law which was enacted by it The Wisdom of a Soveraign Law-giver is engaged not to see his Law vilified and trampled on and exposed to the Lusts and Affronts of Men without being concerned in vindicating the Honour of it It would appear a Folly to enact and publish it if there were not a Resolution to right and execute it The Wisdom of God can no more associate Iniquity and Happiness together than the Justice of God can separate Iniquity from Punishment It would be defective if it did always tamely bear the Insolences of Offenders without a time of remark of their Crimes and a Justification of the Precept rebelliously spurn'd at He would be Unwise if he were Unjust Unrighteousness hath no better a Title in Scripture than that of Folly 'T is no part of Wisdom to give birth to those Laws which he will always behold ineffectual and neither vindicate his Law by a due execution of the Penalty nor right his own Authority con●emn'd in the violation of his Law by a just Revenge Besides What Wisdom would it be for the Soveraign Judge to lodge such a Spokesman for himself as Conscience in the Soul of Man if it should be alway found speaking and at length be found false in all that it speaks There is therefore an apparent prospect of the Day of Account from the consideration of this Perfection of the Divine Nature 7. Hence we have a ground for a mighty Reverence and Veneration of the Divine Majesty Who can contemplate the Sparklings of this Perfection in the variety of the Works of his hands and the exact Government of all his Creatures without a raised Admiration of the Excellency of his Being and a falling flat before him in a posture of Reverence to so great a Being Can we behold so great a mass of Matter digested into several Forms so exact a Harmony and Temperament in all the Creatures the proportions of Numbers and Measures and one Creature answering the Ends and Designs of another the distinct Beauties of all the perpetual Motion of all things without checking one another the variety of the Nature of things and all acting according to their Nature with an admirable Agreement and altogether like differing strings upon an Instrument emitting divers Sounds but all reduc'd to order in one delightful Lesson I say Can we behold all this without Admiring and Adoring the Divine Wisdom which appears in all And from the Consideration of this let us pass to the Consideration of his Wisdom in Redemption in reconciling divided Interests untying Hard-knots drawing one contrary out of another and we must needs acknowledge that the Wisdom of all the Men on Earth and Angels in Heaven is worse than Nothing and Vanity in comparison of this vast Ocean And as we have a greater esteem for those that invent some excellent Artificial Engines what Reverence ought we to have for him that hath stampt an unimitable Wisdom upon all his Works Nature orders us to give Honour to our Superiours in Knowledge and conside in their Counsels but none ought to be Reverenc'd as much as God since none equals him in Wisdom 8. If God be Infinitely Wise it shews us the necessity of our Address to him and Invocation of his Name We are subject to Mistakes and often overseen we are not able rightly to Counsel our selves In some cases all Creatures are too short-sighted to apprehend them and too ignorant to g ve Advice proper for them and to contrive Remedies for their ease but with the Lord there is Counsel Jer. 32.19 He is great in counsel and mighty in working great in Counsel to advise us mighty in Working to assist us We know not how to effect a design or prevent an expected Evil. We have an Infinite Wisdom to go to that is every way skilful to manage any business we desire to avert any Evil we fear to accomplish any thing we commit into his hands When we know not what to resolve he hath a Counsel to guide us Psal 73.24 He is not more Powerful to effect what is needful than Wise to direct what is fitting All Men stand in need of the Help of God as one Man stands in need of the assistance of other Men and will not do any thing without Advice and he that takes Advice deserves the Title of a Wise man as well as he that gives Advice But no Man needs so much the Advice of another Man as all Men need the Counsel and Assistance of God Neither is any mans Wit and Wisdom so far in●eriour to the Prudence and Ability of an Angel as the Wisdom of the wisest Man and the most sharp-sighted Angel is inferiour to the Infinite Wisdom of God We see therefore that it is best for us to go to the Fountain and not content our selves with the Streams to beg Advice from a Wisdom that is Infinite and Infallible rather than from that which is Finite and Fallible Vse II. If Wisdom be the Perfection of the Divine Majesty How prodigious is the Contempt of it in the World In General All Sin strikes at this Attribute and is in one part or other a degrading of it The first Sin directed its Venom against this As the Devils endeavoured to equal their Creator in Power so Man endeavoured to equal him in Wisdom Both indeed scorn'd to be rul'd by his Order but Man evidently exalted himself against the Wisdom
we see all his acts we cannot see all the draughts of his skill in them An unskilful hearer of a musical lesson may receive the melody with his Ear and understand not the rarities of the composition as it was wrought by the Musitians mind Under the old Testament there was more of Divine Power and less of his Wisdom apparent in his acts As his Laws so his acts were more fitted to their Sense Under the new Testament there is more of Wisdom and less of power As his Laws so his acts are more fitted to a spiritual mind Wisdom is less discernable than power Our Wisdom therefore in this case as it doth in other things consists in silence and expectation of the end and event of a work We owe that honour to God that we do to men wiser than our selves to imagin he hath reason to do what he doth though our shallowness cannot comprehend it We must suffer God to be wiser than our selves and acknowledg that there is something soveraign in his waies not to be measured by the feeble reed of our weak understandings And therefore we should acquiesce in his proceedings take heed we be not found slanderers of God but be adorers instead of Censurers and lift up our hands in admiration of him and his waies instead of citing him to answer it at our Bar. Many things in the first appearance may seem to be rash and unjust which in the Issue appear comely and regular If it had been plainly spoke before that the Son of God should dye that a most holy person should be crucified it would have seemed cruel to expose a Son to misery unjust to inflict punishment upon one that was no Criminal to joyn together exact Goodness and Physical evil that the Soveraign should dye for the Malefactor and the Observer of the Law for the Violators of it But when the whole design is unravelled what an admirable connexion is there of Justice and Mercy Love and Wisdom which before would have appeared absurd to the muddied reason of man We see the Gardiner pulling up some delightful Flowers by the roots digging up the Earth overwhelming it with Dung an ignorant person would imagine him wild out of his wits and charge him with spoiling his Garden But when the Spring is arrived the spectator will acknowledge his skill in his former Operations The truth is the whole design and methods of God are not to be judged by us in this World the full declaration of the whole contexture is reserved for the other World to make up a part of good mens happiness in the amazing views of divine Wisdom as well as the other perfections of his nature We can no more perfectly understand his Wisdom than we can his Mercy and Iustice till we see the last lines of all drawn and the full expressions of them We should therefore be sober and modest in the consideration of Gods ways his Judgments are unsearchable and his ways past finding out The riches of his Wisdom are past our counting his depths not to be fathomed yet they are depths of righteousness and equity Though the full manifestation of that equity the grounds and methods of his proceedings are unknown to us As we are too short fully to know God so we are too ignorant fully to comprehend the acts of God Since he is a God of Judgment we should wait till we see the issue of his works Esa 30.18 And in the mean time with the Apostle in the Text give him the glory of all in the same expressions To the only wise God be glory through Jesus Christ for ever Amen A DISCOURSE UPON THE Power of God Job 26.14 Loe these are parts of his wayes but how little a portion is heard of him but the thunder of his power who can understand BILDAD had in the foregoing Chapter entertain'd Job with a Discourse of the dominion and power of God and the purity of his righteousness whence he argues an impossibility of the justification of Man in his Presence who is no better than a Worm Job in this Chapter acknowledges the greatness of Gods power and descants more largely upon it than Bildad had done but doth Preface it with a kind of Ironical speech as if he had not acted a friendly part or spake little to the purpose or the matter in hand The subject of Job's Discourse was the worldly happiness of the Wicked and the Calamities of the Godly And Bildad reads him a Lecture of the extent of Gods Dominion the number of his Armies and the unspotted rectitude of his Nature in comparison of which the purest Creatures are foul and crooked Job therefore from verse 1. to verse 4. taxeth him in a kind of scoffing manner that he had not touched the Point but rambled from the Subject in hand and had not applyed a Salve proper to his Sore Verse 2. How hast thou helped him that is without power how savest thou the arm of him that hath no strength c. your discourse is so impertinent that it will neither strengthen a weak person nor instruct a simple one * Munster But since Bildad would take up the Argument of Gods Power and discourse so short of it Job would shew that he wanted not his Instructions in that kind and that he had more distinct Conceptions of it than his Antagonist had uttered And therefore from verse 5. to the end of the Chapter he doth magnificently treat of the Power of God in several Branches And verse 5. he begins with the lowest Dead things are formed from under the waters and the inhabitants thereof You read me a Lecture of the Power of God in the heavenly Host Indeed it is visible there yet of a larger extent and Monuments of it are found in the lower parts What do you think of those dead things under the Earth and Waters of the Corn that dies and by the moys●●ng influences of the Clouds springs up again with a numerous progeny and increase for the nourishment of man What do you think of those varieties of Metals and Minerals conceived in the bowels of the Earth those Pearls and Riches in the depths of the Waters midwifed by this Power of God Add to these those more prodigious Creatures in the Sea the Inhabitants of the Waters with their vastness and variety which are all the Births of Gods Power both in their first Creation by his mighty Voice and their propagation by his cherishing Providence Stop not here but consider also that his Power extends to Hell either the Graves the Repositories of all the crumbled dust that hath yet been in the World for so Hell is sometimes taken in Scripture Verse 6. Hell is naked before him and destruction hath no covering The several lodgings of deceased men are known to him No skreen can obscure them from his sight nor their dissolution be any bar to his Power when the time is come to compact those mouldred Bodies to entertain
that is none can The Text is a lofty declaration of the Divine Power with a particular note of Attention Loe. 1. In the expressions of it in the works of Creation and Providence Loe these are his ways Ways and Works excelling any created strength referring to the little summary of them he had made before 2. In the Insufficiency of these ways to measure his Power but how little a portion is heard of him 3. In the Incomprehensibleness of it The thunder of his Power who can understand Doct. Infinite and Incomprehensible Power pertains to the Nature of God and is exprest in part in his Works or Though there be a mighty expression of Divine Power in his Works yet an Incomprehensible Power pertains to his Nature The thunder of his Power who can understand His Power glitters in all his Works as well as his Wisdom Psal 62.11 Twice have I heard this that Power belongs unto God In the Law and in the Prophets say some But why Power twice and not Mercy which he speaks of in the following Verse He had heard of Power twice from the voice of Creation and from the voice of Government Mercy was heard in Government after Man's Fall not in Creation Innocent man was an object of Gods goodness not of his Mercy till he made himself miserable Power was exprest in both or Twice have I heard that Power belongs to God that is it is a certain and undoubted Truth that Power is essential to the Divine Nature 'T is true Mercy is essential Justice is essential but Power more apparently essential because no acts of Mercy or Justice or Wisdom can be exercised by him without Power The repetition of a thing confirms the certainty of it Some observe that God is called Almighty Seventy times in Scripture * Lessius de perfect Divin lib. 5. cap. 1. Though his Power be evident in all his Works yet he hath a Power beyond the expression of it in his Works which as it is the glory of his Nature so it is the comfort of a Believer To which purpose the Apostle expresseth it by an excellent Periphrasis for the honour of the Divine Nature Eph. 3.20 Now unto him that is able to do exceeding abundantly above all that we can ask or think unto him be glory in the Churches We have reason to acknowledge him Almighty who hath a Power of acting above our power of understanding Who could have imagin'd such a powerful operation in the propagation of the Gospel and the Conversion of the Gentiles which the Apostle seems to hint at in that place His Power is exprest by Horns in his hands Hab. 3.4 because all the Works of his hands are wrought with Almighty strength Power is also used as a Name of God Mark 14.62 The Son of Man sitting on the right hand of Power that is at the right hand of God God and Power are so inseparable that they are reciprocated As his Essence is Immense not to be confin'd in Place as it is Eternal not to be measur'd by Time so it is Almighty not to be limited in regard of Action 1. 'T is Ingeniously illustrated by some by a Vnit † Fotherby Atheomastic p. 306 307. all Numbers depend upon it it makes Numbers by Addition Multiplies them unexpressibly when one Unit is removed from a Number how vastly doth it diminish it It gives perfection to all other Numbers it receives perfection from none If you add a Unit before 100 how doth it multiply it to 1100 If you set a Unit before twenty Millions it presently makes the Number swell up to an hundred and twenty Millions and so powerful is a Unit by adding it to Numbers that it will infinitely inlarge them to such a vastness that shall transcend the capacity of the best Arithmetician to count them By such a Meditation as this you may have some prospect of the Power of that God who is only Unity the Beginning of all things as a Unit is the beginning of all Numbers and can perform as many things really as a Unit can numerically that is can do as much in the making of Creatutes as a Unit can do in the multiplying of Numbers The Omnipotence of God was scarce denied by any Heathen that did not deny the Being of a God and that was Pliny and that upon weak Arguments 2. Indeed we cannot have a conception of God if we conceive him not most Powerful as well as most Wise He is not a God that cannot do what he will and perform all his pleasure If we imagine him restrain'd in his Power we imagine him limited in his Essence As he hath an infinite Knowledge to know what is possible he cannot be without an infinite Power to do what is possible As he hath a Will to resolve what he sees good so he cannot want a Power to effect what he sees good to decree As the Essence of a Creature cannot be conceiv'd without that activity that belongs to his nature as when you conceive Fire you cannot conceive it without a power of burning and warming and when you conceive Water you cannot conceive it without a power of moistning and cleansing So you cannot conceive an Infinite Essence without an Infinite Power of activity And therefore a Heathen could say If you know God you know he can do all things and therefore saith Austin Give me not only a Christian but a Jew not only a Jew but a Heathen that will deny God to be Almighty A Jew a Heathen may deny Christ to be Omnipotent but no Heathen will deny God to be Omnipotent and no Devil will deny either to be so God cannot be conceiv'd without some Power for then he must be conceiv'd without Action Whos 's then are those products and effects of Power which are visible to us in the World to whom do they belong who is the Father of them God cannot be conceiv'd without a Power suitable to his Nature and Essence if we imagine him to be of an Infinite Essence we must imagine him to be of an Infinite Power and Strength In particular I shall shew 1. The Nature of God's Power 2. Reasons to prove that God must needs be Powerful 3. How his Power appears in Creation in Government in Redemption 4. The Vse I. What this Power is or the Nature of it 1. Power sometimes signifies Authority And a Man is said to be Mighty and Powerful in regard of his Dominion and the right he hath to Command multitudes of other persons to take his part but Power taken for Strength and Power taken for Authority are distinct things and may be separated from one another Power may be without Authority as in successful Invasions that have no just foundation Authority may be without Power as in a Just Prince expell'd by an unjust Rebellion the Authority resides in him though he be over-power'd and is destitute of Strength to support and exercise that Authority The Power
Instruments He needs no Matter to work upon because he can make something from nothing all Matter owes it self to his Creative Power He needs no time to work in for he can make Time when he pleases to begin to work He needs no Copy to work by Himself is his own Pattern and Copy in his Works All created Agents want Matter to work upon Instruments to work with Copies to work by Time to bring either the births of their Minds or the works of their hands to perfection But the Power of God needs none of these things but is of a vast and Incomprehensible nature beyond all these As nothing can be done without the compass of it so it self is without the compass of every Created Understanding 4. This Power is of a distinct conception from the Wisdom and Will of God They are not really distinct but according to our Conceptions We cannot discourse of Divine things without observing some proportion of them with humane ascribing unto God the Perfections sifted from the Imperfections of our Nature In Us there are three Orders of Understanding Will Power and accordingly three Acts Counsel Resolution Execution which though they are distinct in Us are not really distinct in God In our Conceptions the Apprehension of a thing belongs to the Understanding of God Determination to the Will of God Direction to the Wisdom of G●d Execution to the Power of God The Knowledge of God regards a thing as possible and as it may be done the Wisdom of God regards a thing as fit and convenient to be done the Will of God resolves that it shall be done the Power of God is the application of his Will to effect what it hath resolved Wisdom is a fixing the Being of things the measures and perfections of their several Beings Power is a conferring those Perfections and Beings upon them His Power is his ability to act and his Wisdom is the Director of his action His Will orders his Wisdom guides and his Power effects His Will as the spring and his Power as the worker are exprest Psal 115.3 He hath done whatsoever he pleased He commanded and they were created Psal 140.5 and all three exprest Eph. 1.11 Who works all things according to the counsel of his own will So that the Power of God is a Perfection as it were subordinate to his Understanding and Will to execute the results of his Wisdom and the orders of his Will to his VVisdom as directing because he works skilfully to his Will as moving and applying because he works voluntarily and freely The exercise of his Power depends upon his Will His Will is the supream cause of every thing that stands up in Time and all things receive a Being as he wills them His Power is but Will perpetually working and diffusing it self in the season his Will hath fixed from Eternity 't is his Eternal Will in perpetual and successive springs and streams in the Creatures 't is nothing else but the constant efficacy of his Omnipotent Will This must be understood of his Ordinate Power But his Absolute Power is larger than his Resolving Will for though the Scripture tells us He hath done whatsoever he will yet it tells us not that he hath done whatsoever he could He can do things that he will never do Again His Power is distinguisht from his Will in regard of the Exercise of it which is after the act of his Will His Will was conversant about Objects when his Power was not exercis'd about them Creatures were the objects of his VVill from Eternity but they were not from Eternity the effects of his Power His Purpose to Create was from Eternity but the execution of his Purpose was in Time Now this execution of his VVill we call his Ordinate Power His VVisdom and his VVill are supposed antecedent to his Power as the Counsel and Resolve as the Cause precedes the performance of the Purpose as the effect * Gamacheus Some distinguish his Power from his Understanding and VVill in regard that his Understanding and VVill are larger than his Absolute Power for God understands Sins and wills to permit them but he cannot himself do any Evil or Unjust action nor have a power of doing it But this is not to distinguish that Divine Power but Impotence for to be unable to do Evil is the perfection of Power and to be able to do things Unjust and Evil is a weakness imperfection and inability Man indeed wills many things that he is not able to perform and understands many things that he is not able to effect he understands much of the Creatures something of Sun Moon and Stars he can conceive many Suns many Moons yet is not able to create the least Atom But there is nothing that belongs to Power but God understands and is able to effect To sum this up The VVill of God is the Root of all the VVisdom of God is the Copy of all and the Power of God is the Framer of all 5. The Power of God gives activity to all the other perfections of his Nature and is of a larger extent and efficacy in regard of its Objects than some perfections of his Nature I put them both together 1. It contributes Life and Activity to all the other perfections of his Nature How vain would be his Eternal Counsels if Power did not step in to execute them His Mercy would be a feeble pity if he were destitute of Power to relieve and his Justice a slighted Scarecrow without Power to punish his Promises an empty sound without Power to accomplish them As Holiness is the Beauty so Power is the Life of all his Attributes in their exercise and as Holiness so Power is an Adjunct belonging to All a Term that may be given to All. God hath a powerful Wisdom to attain his Ends without interruption He hath a powerful Mercy to remove our Misery a powerful Justice to lay all Misery upon Offenders He hath a powerful Truth to perform his Promises an Infinite Power to bestow Rewards and inflict Penalties 'T is to this purpose Power is first put in the two things which the Psalmist had heard Psal 62.11 12. Twice have I heard or two things have I heard first Power then Mercy and Justice included in that expression Thou rendrest to every man according to his work In every perfection of God he heard of Power This is the Arm the Hand of the Deity which all his other Attributes lay hold on when they would appear in their Glory this hands them to the World by this they act in this they triumph Power framed every stage for their appearance in Creation Providence Redemption 2. 'T is of a larger extent in regard of its Objects than some other Attributes Power doth not alway suppose an Object but constitutes an Object It supposeth an Obiect in the act of Preservation but it makes an Object in the act of Creation but Mercy supposeth an object Miserable
yet doth not make it so Justice supposeth an object Criminal but doth not constitute it so Mercy supposeth him Miserable to relieve him Justice supposeth him Criminal to punish him but Power supposeth not a thing in real existence but as possible or rather it is from Power that any thing hath a possibility if there be no repugnancy in the nature of the thing Again Power extends further than either Mercy or Justice Mercy hath particular Objects which Justice shall not at last be willing to punish and Justice hath particular Objects which Mercy at last shall not be willing to refresh but Power doth and alway will extend to the Objects of both Mercy and Justice A Creature as a Creature is neither the object of Mercy nor Justice nor of Rewarding Goodness A Creature as Innocent is the Object of Rewarding Goodness a Creature as Miserable is the Object of Compassionate Mercy a Creature as Criminal is the Object of Revenging Justice but all of them the Objects of Power in conjunction with those Attributes of Goodness Mercy and Justice to which they belong All the Objects that Mercy and Justice and Truth and Wisdom exercise themselves about have a possibility and an actual Being from th●s perfection of Divine Power 'T is Power first frames a Creature in a capacity of Nature for Mercy or Justice though it doth not give an immediate qualification for the exercise of either Power makes Man a Rational Creature and so confers upon him a Nature mutable which may be Miserable by its own fault and punishable by Gods Justice or pityable by Gods Compassion and relievable by Gods Mercy but it doth not make him Sinful whereby he becomes miserable and punishable Again Power runs through all the degrees of the states of a Creature As a thing is possible or may be made 't is the Object of Absolute Power as it is factibile or ordered to be made 't is the Object of Ordinate Power As a thing is actually made and brought into Being it is the Object of Preserving Power So that Power doth stretch out its Arms to all the Works of God in all their Circumstances and at all Times When Mercy ceaseth to relieve a Creature when Justice ceaseth to punish a Creature Power ceaseth not to preserve a Creature The Blessed in Heaven that are out of the reach of punishing Justice are for ever maintained by Power in that Blessed Condition the Damned in Hell that are cast out of the Bosom of Intreating Mercy are for ever sustain'd in those remediless Torments by the Arm of Power 6. This Power is Originally and Essentially in the Nature of God and not distinct from his Essence 'T is Originally and Essentially in God The strength and power of Great Kings is originally in their People and managed and ordered by the Authority of the Prince for the Common good Though a Prince hath Authority in his Person to Command yet he hath not sufficient Strength in his Person without the Assistance of Others to make his Commands to be obeyed He hath not a single Strength in his own Person to conquer Countries and Kingdoms and increase the Number of his Subjects He must make use of the Arms of his own Subjects to over-run other places and yoke them under his Dominion But the Power of all things that ever were are or shall be is Originally and Essentially in God 'T is not deriv'd from any thing without him as the Power of the greatest Potentates in the World is Therefore Psal 62.11 it is said Power belongs unto God that is solely and to none else He hath a Power to make his Subjects and as many as he pleases to create Worlds to enjoyn Precepts to execute Penalties without calling in the strength of his Creatures to his Aid The Strength that the Subjects of a Mortal Prince have is not deriv'd to them from the Prince though the Exercise of it for this or that end is ordered and directed by the Authority of the Prince But what Strength soever any thing hath to act as a Means it hath from the Power of God as Creator as well as whatsoever Authority it hath to act is from God as a Rector and Governour of the World God hath a Strength to act without Means and no Means can act any thing without his Power and Strength communicated to them As the Clouds in the 8th Verse before the Text are called Gods Clouds his Clouds So all the Strength of Creatures may be called and truly is Gods Strength and Power in them a drop of Power shot down from Heaven originally only in God Creatures have but a little Mite of Power somewhat communicated to them somewhat kept and reserved from them of what they are capable to possess They have limited Natures and therefore a limited Sphere of Activity Clothes can warm us but not feed us Bread can nourish us but not cloath us One Plant hath a Medicinal quality against one Disease another against another but God is the possessor of Universal Power the Common Exchequer of this Mighty Treasure He acts by Creatures as not needing their power but deriving power to them What he acts by them he could act himself without them And what they act as from themselves is derived to them from Him through Invisible Chanels And hence it will follow that because Power is Essentially in God more Operations of God are possible than are exerted And as Power is Essentially in God so it is not distinct from his Essence It belongs to God in regard of the unconceivable Excellency and Activity of his Essence † Ratione summae actualitatis essentiae Suarez vol. 1. p. 150 151. And Omnipotence is nothing but the Divine Essence efficacious ad extra 'T is his Essence as operative and the immediate principle of Operation As the power of Enlightning in the Sun and the power of Heating in the Fire are not things distinct from the Nature of them but the Nature of the Sun bringing forth Light and the Nature of the Fire bringing forth Heat The power of Acting is the same with the Substance of God though the Action from that Power be terminated in the Creature If the Power of God were distinct from his Essence he were then compounded of Substance and Power and would not be the most Simple Being As when the Understanding is inform'd in several parts of Knowledge it is skill'd in the Government of Cities and Countries it knows this or that Art It Learns Mathematicks Philosophy this or that Science The Understanding hath a power to do this but this power whereby it Learns those Excellent things and brings forth Excellent Births is not a thing distinct from the Understanding it self we may rather call it the Understanding powerful than the Power of the Understanding and so we may rather say God powerful than say the Power of God because his Power is not distinct from his Essence From both these it will
it congruous to the righteous and holy nature of God to command Murder and Adultery to command men not to worship him but to be base and unthankful These things would be against the Rules of Righteousness As when we say of a good Man he cannot rob or fight a Duel we do not mean that he wants a courage for such an Act or that he hath not a natural strength and knowledge to manage his Weapon as well as another but he hath a righteous Principle strong in him which will not suffer him to do it his will is setled against it No Power can pass into Act unless applied by the will But the will of God cannot will any thing but what is worthy of him and decent for his Goodness 1. The Scripture saith 't is impossible for God to lye * Hebr. 6.18 and God cannot deny himself because of his faithfulness † 2 Tim. 2.13 As he cannot dye because he is life it self as he cannot deceive because he is goodness it self as he cannot do an unwise action because he is wisdom it self so he cannot speak a false word because he is truth it self If he should speak any thing as true and not know it where is his infinite Knowledge and Comprehensiveness of Understanding If he should speak any thing as true which he knows to be false where is his infinite Righteousness If he should deceive any Creature there is an end of his Perfection of Fidelity and Veracity If he should be deceiv'd himself there is an end of his Omniscience we must then fancy him to be a deceitful God an ignorant God that is no God at all ‖ Becan sum Theolog. p. ●3 If he should lye he would be God and no God God upon supposition and no God because not the first Truth All Unrighteousness is Weakness not Power 't is a Defection from right Reason a Deviation from Moral Principles and the Rule of perfect Action and ariseth from a defect of Goodness and Power 'T is a Weakness and not Omnipotence to lose Goodness * Maximus Tyrius God is Light 't is the perfection of Light not to become Darkness and a want of Power in Light if it should become Darkness His Power is infinitely strong so is his Wisdom infinitely clear and his Will infinitely pure Would it not be a part of Weakness to have a disorder in himself and these Perfections shock one against another Since all Perfections are in God in the most Soveraign height of Perfection nothing can be done by the Infiniteness of one against the Infiniteness of the other He would then be unstable in his own Perfections and depart from the infinite rectitude of his own Will if he shoul do an evil action Again † Ambrose What is an Argument of greater strength then to be utterly ignorant of Infirmity God is Omnipotent because he cannot do Evil and would not be Omnipotent if he could Those things would be Marks of Weakness and not Characters of Majesty Would you count a sweet Fountain impotent because it cannot send forth bitter Streams Or the Sun weak because it cannot diffuse Darkness as well as Light in the Air There is an inability arising from Weakness and an ability arising from Perfection 'T is the Perfection of Angels and blessed Spirits that they cannot sin And it would be the Imperfection of God if he could do Evil. 2. Hence it follows that 't is impossible that a thing past should not be past If we ascribe a Power to God to make a thing that is past not to be past we do not truly ascribe Power to him but a Weakness For it is to make God to lye As though God might not have created man yet after he had created Adam though he should presently have reduced Adam to his first nothing yet it would be for ever true that Adam was created and it would for ever be false that Adam never was created So though God may prevent sin yet when sin hath been committed it will alway be true that sin was committed It will never be true to say such a Creature that did sin did not sin his sin cannot be recalled Though God by pardon take off the Guilt of Peter's denying our Saviour yet it will be eternally true that Peter did deny him It is repugnant to the Righteousness and Truth of God to make that which was once true to become false and not true that is to make a Truth to become a Lye and a Lye to become a Truth This is well argued from Hebr. 6.18 'T is impossible for God to lye ‖ Becan sum Theol. p 84. Crel de Deo cap. 22. The Apostle argues that what God had promised and sworn will come to pass and cannot but come to pass Now if God could make a thing past not to be past this consequence would not be good for then he might make himself not to have promised not to have sworn after he hath promised and sworn And so if there were a power to undo that which is past there would be no foundation for Faith no certainty of Revelation It cannot be asserted that God hath created the World that God hath sent his Son to dye that God hath accepted his death for man These might not be true if it were possible that that which hath been done might be said never to have been done So that what any may imagine to be a want of Power in God is the highest perfection of God and the greatest security to a believing Creature that hath to do with God Fourthly Some things are impossible to be done because of God's Ordination Some things are impossible not in their own nature but in regard of the determin'd Will of God So God might have destroy'd the World after Adam's fall but it was impossible not that God wanted Power to do it but because he did not only decree from Eternity to create the World but did also decree to redeem the World by Jesus Christ and erected the World in order to the manifestation of his glory in Christ Eph. 1.4.5 The choice of some in Christ was before the foundation of the World Supposing that there was no hinderance in the Justice of God to pardon the sin of Adam after his fall and to execute no punishment on him yet in regard of Gods threatning that in the day he eat of the forbidden fruit he should dye it was impossible So though it was possible that the Cup should pass from our blessed Saviour that is possible in its own nature yet it was not possible in regard of the determination of Gods Will since he had both decreed and publisht his Will to redeem Man by the Passion and Blood of his Son These things God by his absolute Power might have done but upon the account of his decree they were impossible because it is repugnant to the Nature of God to be mutable 'T is to deny his own
Justice abus'd his Goodness done injury to all those Attributes which are necessary to his relief It was not so in Creation nothing was uncapable of disobliging God from bringing it into Being The Dust which was the Matter of Adams Body need●d only the extrinsick Power of God to form it into a Man and inspire it with a living Soul It had not render'd it self obnoxious to Divine Justice nor was capable to excite any disputes between his Perfections But after the entrance of Sin and the merit of Death thereby there was a resistance in Justice to the free Remission of Man God was to exercise a Power over himself to answer his Justice and pardon the Sinner as well as a power over the Creature to reduce the Run-away and Rebel Unless we have recourse to the Infiniteness of Gods Power the infiniteness of our Guilt will weigh us down We must consider not only that we have a mighty Guilt to press us but a mighty God to relieve us In the same act of his being our Righteousness he is our Strength In the Lord have I righteousness and strength Isai 45.24 2. In the sense of Pardon When the Soul hath been wounded with the sense of sin and its Iniquities have star'd it in the face the raising the Soul from a despairing condition and lifting it above those Waters which terrified it to cast the light of Comfort as well as the light of Grace into a heart covered with more than an Egyptian Darkness is an act of his Infinite and Creating Power Isai 57.19 I create the fruit of the lips peace Men may wear out their Lips with numbring up the Promises of Grace and Arguments of Peace but all will signifie no more without a Creative Power than if all Men and Angels should call to that White upon the Wall to shine as splendidly as the Sun God only can create Jerusalem and every Child of Jerusalem a rejoycing * Isai 65.18 A Man is no more able to apply to himself any word of Comfort under the sense of Sin than he is able to Convert himself and turn the proposals of the Word into gracious Affections in his heart To restore the joy of Salvation is in Davids Judgment an act of Soveraign Power equal to that of creating a clean heart Psal 51.10 12. Alas 't is a state like to that of Death as Infinite Power can only raise from Natural death so from a Spiritual death also from a Comfortless death In his favour there is life in the want of his Favour there is death The Power of God hath so placed Light in the Sun that all Creatures in the World all the Torches upon Earth kindled together cannot make it Day if that doth not rise so all the Angels in Heaven and Men upon Earth are not competent Chirurgions for a wounded Spirit The cure of our Spiritual Ulcers and the pouring in Balm is an Act of Soveraign Creative Power 'T is more visible in silencing a Tempestuous Conscience than the Power of our Saviour was in the stilling the stormy Winds and the roaring Waves As none but Infinite Power can remove the Guilt of Sin so none but Infinite Power can remove the Despairing sense of it III. This Power is evident in the preserving Grace As the Providence of God is a manifestation of his Power in a continued Creation so the preservation of Grace is a manifestation of his Power in a continued Regeneration To keep a Nation under the Yoke is an act of the same Power that subdu'd it 'T is this that strengthens Men in suffering against the Fury of Hell † Colos 1.13 't is this that keeps them from falling against the force of Hell the Fathers hand John 10.29 His strength abates and moderates the violence of Temptations his Staff sustains his People under them his Might defeats the Power of Satan and bruiseth him under a Believers feet The Counterworkings of Indwelling Corruption the reluctances of the Flesh against the breathings of the Spirit the fallacy of the Senses and the rovings of the Mind have ability quickly to stifle and extinguish Grace if it were not maintain'd by that Powerful blast that first inbreathed it No less Power is seen in perfecting it than was in planting it ‖ 2 Pet. 1.3 no less in fulfilling the work of Faith than in ingrafting the Word of Faith 2 Thess 1.11 The Apostle well understood the Necessity and Efficacy of it in the preservation of Faith as well as in the fir●t infusion when he expresses himself in those terms of a Greatness or Hyperbole of Power his Mighty Power or the Power of his Might Ephes 1.19 The Salvation he bestows and the Strength whereby he effects it are joyned together in the Prophets Song Isai 12.2 The Lord is my strength and my salvation And indeed God doth more magnifie his Power in continuing a Believer in the World a weak and half-rigg'd Vessel in the midst of so many Sands whereon it might split so many Rocks whereon it might dash so many Corruptions within and so many Temptations without than if he did immediately transport him into Heaven and cloth him with a perfectly Sanctified Nature To Conclude What is there then in the World which is destitute of Notices of Divine Power Every Creature affords us the Lesson all acts of Divine Government are the marks of it Look into the Word and the manner of its propagation instructs us in it your Changed Natures your Pardoned Guilt your Shining Comfort your quell'd Corruptions the standing of your staggering Graces are sufficient to preserve a sense and prevent a forgetfulness of this great Attribute so necessary for your support and conducing so much to your comfort Vses I. Of Information and Instruction 1. If Incomprehensible and Infinite Power belongs to the Nature of God then Jesus Christ hath a Divine Nature because the Acts of Power proper to God are ascribed to him This Perfection of Omnipotence doth unquestionably pertain to the Deity and is an incommunicable Property and the same with the Essence of God He therefore to whom this Attribute is ascribed is essentially God This is challenged by Christ in conjunction with Eternity Revel 1.8 I am Alpha and Omega the beginning and the ending saith the Lord which is and which was and which is to come the Almighty This the Lord Christ speaks of himself He who was equal with God proclaims himself by the Essential title of the Godhead part of which he repeats again verse 11. and this is the Person which walks in the midst of the seven Golden Candlesticks the Person that was dead and now lives vers 17 18. which cannot possibly be meant of the Father the first Person who can never come under that denomination of having been dead Being therefore adorn'd with the same Title he hath the same Deity and though his Omnipotence be only positively asserted v. 8. yet his Eternity being asserted v. 11 17. it inferreth
that we should press it upon our selves And shall we be forgetful of that which every thing about us every thing within us is a mark of How come we by a power of seeing and hearing a faculty and act of understanding and will but by this Power framing us this Power assisting us What though the Thunder of his Power cannot be understood no more can any other Perfection of his Nature shall we therefore seldom think of it The Sea cannot be fathom'd yet the Merchant excuseth not himself from sailing upon the Surface of it We cannot glorifie God without due consideration of this Attribute for his Power is his Glory as much as any other and called both by the Name of Glory Rom. 6.4 speaking of Christ's Resurrection by the Glory of the Father and also the riches of his Glory Eph. 3.16 Those that have strong Temptations in their course and over-pressing Corruptions in their hearts have need to think of it out of Interest since nothing but this can relieve them Those that have experimented the working of it in their new Creation are oblig'd to think of it out of gratitude It was this mighty Power over himself that gave rise to all that pardoning Grace already conferred or hereafter expected without it our Souls had been consum'd the World overturned we could not have expected a happy Heaven but have layen yelling in an eternal Hell had not the Power of his Mercy exceeded that of his Justice and his Infinite Power executed what his Infinite Wisdom had contrived for our Redemption How much also should we be rais'd in our admirations of God and ravish our selves in contemplating that Might that can raise innumerable Worlds in those Infinite imaginary Spaces without this Globe of Heaven and Earth and exceed unconceivably what he hath done in the Creation of this 2. From the pressing the consideration of this upon our selves Let us be induc'd to trust God upon the account of his Power The main end of the revelation of his Power to the Patriarchs and of the miraculous Operations of it in Egypt was to induce them to an intire reposing themselves in God And the Psalmist doth scarce speak of the Divine Omnipotence without making this Inference from it and scarce exhorts to a trust in God but backs it with a Consideration of his Power in Creation it being the chief support of the Soul Psal 146.1 Happy is he whose hope is in the Lord his God which made Heaven and Earth the Sea and all that therein is That Power is invincible that drew the World out of nothing Nothing can happen to us harder than the making the World without the concurrence of Instruments No difficulty can nonplus that strength that hath drawn all things out of nothing or out of a confus'd Matter next to nothing No Power can rifle what we commit to him 2 Tim. 1.12 He is all Power above the reach of all Power all other Powers in the World flowing from him or depending on him He is worthy to be trusted since we know him true without ever breaking his word and Omnipotent never failing of his purpose and a confidence in it is the chief act whereby we can glorifie this Power and credit his Arm. A strong God and a weak Faith in Omnipotence do not sute well together Indeed we are more engaged to a trust in Divine Power than the Ancient Patriarchs were They had the Verbal Declaration of his Power and many of them little other Evidence of it than in the Creation of the World and their Faith in God being establish'd in this first discovery of his Omnipotence drew out it self further to believe That whatsoever God promised by his Word he was able to perform as well as the Creation of the World out of nothing which seems to be the intendment of the Apostle Hebr. 11.3 Not barely to speak of the Creation of the World by God which was a thing the Hebrews understood well enough from their Ancient Oracles but to shew the Foundation of the Patriarchs Faith viz. God making the World by his Word and what use they made of the Discovery of his Power in that to lead them to believe the Promise of God concerning the Seed of the Woman to be brought into the World But we have not only the same Foundation but superadded Demonstrations of this Attribute in the Conception of our Saviour the Union of the two Natures the glorious Redemption the Propagation of the Gospel and the new Creation of the World They relied upon the naked Power of God without those more illustrious Appearances of it which have been in the Ages since and arriv'd to their notice We have the wonderful Effects of that which they had but obscure Expectations of 1. Consider Trust in God can never be without taking in God's Power as a concurrent Foundation with his Truth 'T is the main ground of Trust and so set forth in the Prophet Isa 26.4 Trust ye in the Lord for ever for in the Lord Jehovah is everlasting strength And the Faith of the Ancients so recommended Hebr. 11. had this chiefly for its ground and the Faith in Gospel-times is called a Trusting on his Arm Isa 51.5 All the Attributes of God are the Objects of our Veneration but they do not equally contribute to the producing Trust in our hearts his Eternity Simplicity Infiniteness Amyrant Moral Tom. 5. p. 170. ravish and astonish our Minds when we consider them But there is no immediate tendency in their Nature to allure us to a confidence in him no not in an innocent State much less in a laps'd and revolted Condition But the other Perfections of his Nature as his Holiness Righteousness Mercy are amiable to us in regard of the immediate Operations of them upon and about the Creature and so have something in their own Nature to allure us to repose our selves in him But yet those cannot engage to an intire trust in him without reflecting upon his Ability which can only render those useful and successful to the Creature For whatsoever bars stand in the way of his holy righteous and merciful proceedings towards his Creatures are not overmaster'd by those Perfections but by that Strength of his which can only relieve us in concurrence with the other Attributes How could his Mercy succour us without his Arm or his Wisdom guide us without his Hand or his Truth perform Promises to us without his strength As no Attribute can act without it so in our addresses to him upon the account of any particular Perfection in the Godhead according to our indigency one eye must be perpetually fixed upon this of his Power and our Faith would be feeble and dispirited without eying this Without this his Holiness which hates sin would not be regarded and his Mercy pitying a grieving sinner would not be valued As this Power is the ground of a wicked man's fear so it is the ground of a good man's trust This
in Scripture the strongest Affirmations or Negations 'T is here a strong affirmation of the Incomparableness of God and a strong denial of the worthiness of all Creatures to be partners with him in the degrees of his Excellency 'T is a preference of God before all Creatures in Holiness to which the purity of Creatures is but a shadow in desert of Reverence and Veneration he being Fearful in praises The Angels cover their Faces when they adore him in his particular Perfections Amongst the gods Among the Idols of the Nations say some Others say * River 'T is not to be found that the Heathen Idols are ever dignified with the Title of Strong or Mighty as the word translated Gods doth import and therefore understand it of the Angels or other Potentates of the World or rather inclusively of all that are noted for and can lay claim to the Title of Strength and Might upon the Earth or in Heaven God is so great and Majestick that no Creature can share with him in his Praise Fearful in praises Various are the Interpretations of this passage To be reverenc'd in praises his Praise ought to be celebrated with a Religious Fear Fear is the product of his Mercy as well as his Justice He hath forgiveness that he may be feared Psal 130.4 Or Fearful in praises whom none can praise without Amazement at the considerations of his works † Calvin None can truly praise him without being affected with Astonishment at his Greatness Or Fearful in praises | Munster whom no Mortal can sufficiently praise since he is above all Praise Whatsoever a Human Tongue can speak or an Angelical Understanding think of the Excellency of his Nature and the Greatness of his Works falls short of the vastness of the Divine Perfection A Creatures Praises of God are as much below the transcendent Eminency of God as the meaness of a Creatures Being is below the Eternal Fulness of the Creator Or rather Fearful or Terrible in praises that is in the Matter of thy Praise And the Learned Rivet concurs with me in this sense The Works of God celebrated in this Song were Terrible It was the Miraculous overthrow of the Strength and Flower of a Mighty Nation His Judgments were severe as well as his Mercy was seasonable The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies Glorious and Illustrious as well as Terrible and Fearful No Man can hear the Praise of thy Name for those great Judicial Acts without some Astonishment at thy Justice the stream and thy Holiness the Spring of those Mighty Works This seems to be the sense of the following words Doing wonders Fearful in the Matter of thy Praise they being Wonders which thou hast done among us and for us Doing wonders Congealing the Waters by a Wind to make them stand like Walls for the rescue of the Israelites and melting them by a Wind for the overthrow of the Egyptians are Prodigies that challenge the greatest Adorations of that Mercy which delivered the one and that Justice which punished the other and of the Arm of that Power whereby he effected both his Gracious and his Righteous Purposes Doctr. Whence observe That the Judgments of God upon his Enemies as well as his Mercies to his People are matter of Praise The Perfections of God appear in both Justice and Mercy are so linkt together in his acts of Providence that the one cannot be forgotten whiles the other is acknowledged He is never so Terrible as in the Assemblies of his Saints and the Deliverance of them Psal 89.7 As the Creation was erected by him for his Glory so all the Acts of his Government are design'd for the same end And his Creatures deny him his due if they acknowledge not his Excellency in whatsoever dreadful as well as pleasing Garbs it appears in the World His Terror as well as his Righteousness appears when he is a God of Salvation Psal 65.5 By terrible things in righteousness wilt thou answer us oh God of our Salvation But the Expression I pitch upon in the Text to handle is Glorious in Holiness He is Magnified or Honourable in Holiness so the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is translated Isai 42.21 He will magnifie the Law and make it honourable Thy Holiness hath shone forth admirably in this last Exploit against the Enemies and Oppressors of thy People The Holiness of God is his Glory as his Grace is his Riches Holiness is his Crown and his Mercy is his Treasure This is the Blessedness and Nobleness of his Nature it renders him Glorious in himself and Glorious to his Creatures that understand any thing of this lovely Perfection Doctr. Holiness is a glorious Perfection belonging to the Nature of God Hence he is in Scripture styled often the Holy one the Holy one of Jacob the Holy one of Israel and oftner entituled Holy than Almighty and set forth by this part of his Dignity more than by any other This is more affix'd as an Epithete to his Name than any other You never find it exprest his Mighty Name or his Wise Name but his Great Name and most of all his Holy Name This is his greatest Title of Honour in this doth the Majesty and Venerableness of his Name appear When the Sinfulness of Senacherib is aggravated the Holy Ghost takes the rise from this Attribute 2 Kings 19.22 Thou hast lift up thine eyes on high even against the Holy one of Israel not against the Wise Mighty c. but against the Holy one of Israel as that wherein the Majesty of God was most illustrious 'T is upon this account he is called Light as Impurity is called Darkness both in this sense are opposed to one another He is a pure and unmixt Light free from all blemish in his Essence Nature and Operations 1. Heathens have own'd it Proclus calls him the Vndefiled Governour of the World * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Poetical Transformations of their False gods and the Extravagancies committed by them was in the account of the wisest of them an unholy thing to report and hear † 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ammon in Plut. de 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 apud Delphos p. 393. ‖ Gassend Tom. 1. Phys §. 1. lib. 4. cap. 2. p. 289. And some vindicate Epicurus from the Atheism wherewith he was commonly charged that he did not deny the Being of God but those Adulterous and contentious Deities the People worshipped which were Practises unworthy and unbecoming the Nature of God Hence they asserted that Vertue was an Imitation of God and a Vertuous Man bore a resemblance to God If Vertue were a Copy from God a greater Holiness must be owned in the Original And when some of them were at a loss how to free God from being the Author of Sin in the World they ascribe the birth of Sin to Matter and run into an absurd Opinion fancying it to be uncreated that thereby they might exempt God from
all mixture of Evil so Sacred with them was the Conception of God as a Holy God 2. The Absurdest Hereticks have own'd it * Petav. Theol. Dogmat. Tom. 1. lib. 6. cap. 5. p. 415. The Manichees and Marchionites that thought Evil came by Necessity yet would salve Gods being the Author of it by asserting two distinct Eternal Principles One the Original of Evil as God was the Fountain of good So rooted was the Notion of this Divine Purity that none would ever slander Goodness it self with that which was so disparaging to it 3. The Nature of God cannot rationally be conceived without it Though the Power of God be the first Rational conclusion drawn from the sight of his Works Wisdom the next from the order and connexion of his Works Purity must result from the beauty of his Works That God cannot be deform'd by Evil who hath made every thing so Beautiful in its time The Notion of a God cannot be entertain'd without separating from him whatsoever is impure and bespotting both in his Essence and Actions Though we conceive him Infinite in Majesty Infinite in Essence Eternal in Duration Mighty in Power and Wise and Immutable in his Counsels Merciful in his proceedings with Men and whatsoever other Perfections may dignifie so Soveraign a Being yet if we conceive him destitute of this excellent Perfection and imagine him possessed with the least contagion of Evil we make him but an Infinite Monster and fully all those Perfections we ascrib'd to him before we rather own him a Devil than a God 'T is a contradiction to be God and to be Darkness or to have one Mote of Darkness mixed with his Light 'T is a less Injury to him to deny his Being than to deny the Purity of it the one makes him no God the other a deform'd unlovely and a detestable God Plutarch said not amiss That he should count himself less injured by that Man that should deny that there was such a Man as Plutarch than by him that should affirm that there was such a one indeed but he was a debauch'd Fellow a loose and vicious Person 'T is a less wrong to God to discard any acknowledgments of his Being and to count him Nothing than to believe him to exist but imagine a base and unholy Deity He that saith God is not Holy speaks much worse than he that saith There is no God at all Let these two Things be considered I. If any this Attribute hath an excellency above his other Perfections There are some Attributes of God we prefer because of our Interest in them and the relation they bear to us As we esteem his Goodness before his Power and his Mercy whereby he relieves us before his Justice whereby he punisheth us As there are some we more delight in because of the goodness we receive by them so there are some that God delights to honour because of their Excellency 1. None is sounded out so loftily with such solemnity and so frequently by Angels that stand before his Throne as this Where do you find any other Attribute trebled in the Praises of it as this Isai 6.3 Holy Holy Holy is the Lord of Hosts the whole Earth is full of his Glory and Rev. 4.8 The four Beasts rest not day and night saying Holy Holy Holy Lord God Almighty c. His Power or Soveraignty as Lord of Hosts is but once mentioned but with a ternal repetition of his Holiness Do you hear in any Angelical Song any other Perfection of the Divine Nature thrice repeated Where do we read of the crying out Eternal Eternal Eternal or Faithful Faithful Faithful Lord God of Hosts Whatsoever other Attribute is left out this God would have to fill the Mouths of Angels and Blessed Spirits for ever in Heaven 2. He singles it out to swear by Psal 89.35 Once have I sworn by my Holiness that I will not lye unto David And Amos 4.2 The Lord will swear by his Holiness He twice swears by his Holiness once by his Power Isai 62.8 once by all when he swears by his Name Jer. 44.26 He lays here his Holiness to pledge for the assurance of his Promise as the Attribute most dear to him most valued by him as though no other could give an assurance parallel to it in this concern of an Everlasting Redemption which is there spoken of He that swears swears by a greater than himself God having no greater than himself swears by himself And swearing here by his Holiness seems to equal that single one to all his other Attributes as if he were more concern'd in the Honour of it than of all the rest 'T is as if he should have said since I have not a more excellent Perfection to swear by than that of my Holiness I lay this to pawn for your Security and bind my self by that which I will never part with were it possible for me to be stript of all the rest 'T is a tacit Imprecation of himself If I lye unto David let me never be counted holy or thought righteous enough to be trusted by Angels or Men. This Attribute he makes most of 3. 'T is his glory and beauty Holiness is the Honour of the Creature sanctification and honour are linkt together 1 Thess 4.4 much more is it the honour of God 't is the Image of God in the Creature * Ephes 4.24 When we take the Picture of a Man we draw the most beautiful part the Face which is a Member of the greatest excellency When God would be drawn to the Life as much as can be in the Spirit of his Creatures He is drawn in this Attribute as being the most beautiful Perfection of God and most valuable with him Power is his Hand and Arm Omniscience his Eye Mercy his Bowels Eternity his Duration his Holiness is his Beauty 2 Chron. 20 21. should praise the Beauty of Holiness In the 27 th Psalm and the 4 th Verse David desires to behold the Beauty of the Lord and enquire in his Holy Temple that is the Holiness of God manifested in his hatred of Sin in the daily Sacrifices Holiness was the Beauty of the Temple Isai 46.11 Holy and Beautiful House are joyned together much more the Beauty of God that dwelt in the Sanctuary This renders him lovely to all his Innocent Creatures though formidable to the Guilty ones * Plutarch Eugubin de Perenni Phil. lib. 6. cap. 6. A Heathen Philosopher could call it the Beauty of the Divine Essence and say That God was not so happy by an Eternity of Life as by an Excellency of Vertue And the Angels Song intimate it to be his glory Isaiah 6.3 The whole Earth is full of thy Glory that is of his Holiness in his Laws and in his Judgments against Sin that being the Attribute applauded by them before 4. 'T is his very life So it is called Ephes 4.18 Alienated from the Life of God that is from the Holiness of
God speaking of the opposite to it the Vncleaness and Prophaness of the Gentiles We are only alienated from that which we are bound to imitate but this is the Perfection alway set out as the Pattern of our Actions Be you holy as I am Holy no other is proposed as our Copy Alienated from that Purity of God which is as much as his Life without which he could not live If he were stript of this he would be a dead God more than by the want of any other Perfection His Swearing by it intimates as much He Swears often by his own Life As I live saith the Lord so he Swears by his Holiness as if it were his Life and more his Life than any other Let me not live or Let me not be Holy are all one in his Oath His Deity could not outlive the Life of his Purity II. As it seems to challenge an Excellency above all his other Perfections so 't is the glory of all the rest As it is the glory of the Godhead so 't is the glory of every Perfection in the Godhead As his Power is the Strength of them so his Holiness is the Beauty of them As all would be weak without Almightiness to back them so all would be uncomly without Holiness to adorn them Should this be sullied all the rest would lose their Honour and their comfortable Efficacy As at the same instant that the Sun should lose its Light it would lose its Heat its Strength its generative and quickening virtue As Sincerity is the lustre of every Grace in a Christian so is Purity the splendor of every Attribute in the Godhead His Justice is a holy Justice his Wisdom a holy Wisdom his Arm of Power a Holy Arm Psal 98.1 his Truth or Promise a Holy Promise Psal 105.42 Holy and True go hand in hand Revel 6.10 His Name which signifies all his Attributes in conjunction is Holy Psal 103.1 Yea he is R●ghteous in all his waies and Holy in all his works Psal 145 17. 'T is the Rule o● all his Acts the Source of all his Punishments If every Attribute of the Deity were a distinct Member Purity would be the Form the Soul the Spirit to animate them Without it his Patience would be an Indulgence to Sin his Mercy a Fondness his Wrath a Madness his Power a Tyranny his Wisdom an unworthy Subtilty 'T is this gives a Decorum to all His Mercy is not exercis'd without it since he pardons none but those that have an Interest by Union in the Obedience of a Mediator which was so delightful to his Infinite Purity His Justice which Guilty man is apt to tax with Cruelty and Violence in the exercise of it is not acted out of the compass of this Rule In Acts of Mans vindictive Justice there is something of Impurity Perturbation Passion some mixture of Cruelty but none of these fall upon God in the severest Acts of Wrath. When God appears to Ezekiel in the resemblance of Fire to signifie his Anger against the House of Judah for their Idolatry from his Loyns downward there was the appearance of Fire but from the Loyns upward the appearance of Brightness as the colour of Amber Ezek. 8.2 His Heart is clear in his most Terrible acts of Vengeance 't is a pure Flame wherewith he scorcheth and burns his Enemies He is Holy in the most fiery appearance This Attribute therefore is never so much applauded as when his Sword hath been drawn and he hath manifested the greatest fierceness against his Enemies The Magnificent and Triumphant expression of it in the Text follows just upon Gods Miraculous defeat and ruine of the Egyptian Army The Sea covered them they sank as Lead in the mighty waters Then it follows Who is like unto thee oh Lord glorious in Holiness And when it was so celebrated by the Seraphims Isai 6.3 it was when the Posts moved and the House was filled with smoke v. 4. which are signs of Anger Psal 18.7 8. And when he was about to send Isaiah upon a Message of Spiritual and Temporal Judgments that he would make the heart of that people fat and their ears heavy and their eyes shut waste their Cities without Inhabitant and their Houses without Man and make the Land desolate Verses 9 10 11 12. and the Angels which here applaud him for his Holiness are the Executioners of his Justice and here called Seraphims from burning or fiery Spirits as being the Ministers of his Wrath. His Justice is part of his Holiness whereby he doth reduce into order those things that are out of order When he is consuming Men by his Fury he doth not diminish but manifest Purity Zephany 3.5 The just Lord is in the midst of her he will do no Iniquity Every Action of his is free from all tincture of Evil. 'T is also celebrated with Praise by the four Beasts about his Throne when he appears in a Covenant garb with a Rain-bow about his Throne and yet with Thundrings and Lightnings shot out against his Enemies Revel 4.8 compared with vers 3.5 to shew that all his Acts of Mercy as well as Justice are clear from any stain This is the Crown of all his Attributes the Life of all his Decrees the Brightness of all his Actions Nothing is Decreed by him nothing is acted by him but what is worthy of the Dignity and becoming the Honour of this Attribute For the better understanding this Attribute observe 1. The Nature of this Holiness 2. The Demonstration of it 3. The Purity of his Nature in all his Acts about Sin 4. The Vse of all to our selves First The Nature of Divine Holiness In General The Holiness of God Negatively is a perfect and unpolluted freedom from all Evil. As we call Gold pure that is not embased by any Dross and that Garment clean that is free from any Spot so the Nature of God is estranged from all shadow of Evil all imaginable contagion Positively 'T is the Rectitude or Integrity of the Divine Nature or that conformity of it in Affection and Action to the Divine Will as to his Eternal Law whereby he works with a becomingness to his own Excellency and whereby he hath a delight and complacency in every thing agreeable to his Will and an abhorrency of every thing contrary thereunto As there is no darkness in his Understanding so there is no spot in his Will As his Mind is possessed with all Truth so there is no deviation in his Will from it He loves all Truth and Goodness He hates all falsity and Evil. In regard of his Righteousness he loves Righteousness Psal 11.7 The righteous Lord loveth righteousness and hath no pleasure in wickedness Psal 5.4 He values Purity in his Creatures and detests all Impurity whether inward or outward ‖ Martin de Deo p. 86. We may indeed distinguish the Holiness of God from his Righteousness in our Conceptions Holiness is a Perfection absolutely considered in the Nature
of God Righteousness a Perfection as referred to others in his Actions towards them and upon them In Particular This Property of the Divine Nature is First An essential and necessary Perfection He is essentially and necessarily Holy 'T is the essential glory of his Nature His Holiness is as necessary as his Being as necessary as his Omniscience As he cannot but know what is right so he cannot but do what is just His Understanding is not as Created Understandings capable of Ignorance as well as Knowledge so his Will is not as Created Wills capable of Unrighteousness as well as Righteousness There can be no contradiction or contrariety in the Divine Nature to know what is right and to do what is wrong If so there would be a diminu ion of his Blessedness he would not be a God alway blessed Blessed for ever as he is * Rom. 9 5. He is as necessarily Holy as he is necessarily God as necessarily without Sin as without Change As he was God from Eternity so he was Holy from Eternity † Turre●in de Satisfact p. 28. He was Gracious Merciful Just in his own Nature and also Holy though no Creature had been framed by him to exercise his Grace Mercy Justice or Holiness upon If God had not created a World he had in his own Nature been Almighty and able to Create a World If there never had been any thing but himself yet he had been Omniscient knowing every thing that was within the verge and compass of his Infinite Power so he was Pure in his own Nature though he never had brought forth any Rational Creature whereby to manifest this Purity These Perfections are so necessary that the Nature of God could not subsist without them And the acts of those ad intra or within himself are necessary for being Omniscient in Nature there must be an act of knowledge of himself and his own Nature Being Infinitely Holy an act of Holiness in Infinitely loving himself must necessarily flow from this Perfection ‖ Ochino Predic part 3. Bodic 51. p. 347 348. As the Divine Will cannot but be perfect so it cannot be wanting to render the highest Love to it self to its Goodness to the Divine Nature which is due to him Indeed the acts of those ad extra are not necessary but upon a condition To love Righteousness without himself or to detest Sin or inflict Punishment for the committing of it could not have been had there been no Righteous Creature for him to love no Sinning Creature for him to loath and to exercise his Justice upon as the Object of Punishment Some Attributes require a Condition to make the Acts of them necessary As it is at Gods liberty whether he will create a Rational Creature or no But when he decrees to make either Angel or Man 't is necessary from the Perfection of his Nature to make them Righteous 'T is at Gods liberty whether he will speak to Man or no but if he doth 't is impossible for him to speak that which is false because of his Infinite Perfection of Veracity 'T is at his liberty whether he will permit a Creature to Sin but if he sees good to suffer it 't is impossible but that he should detest that Creature that goes cross to his Righteous Nature His Holiness is not solely an Act of his Will for then he might be Unholy as well as Holy he might love Iniquity and hate Righteousness he might then command that which is good and afterwards command that which is bad and unworthy For what is only an Act of his Will and not belonging to his Nature is indifferenr to him As the positive Law he gave to Adam of not eating the Forbidden Fruit was a pure Act of his Will he might have given him liberty to eat of it if he had pleased as well as prohibited him But what is Moral and good in its own Nature is necessarily willed by God and cannot be changed by him because of the transcendent Eminency of his Nature and Righteousness of his Will As it is impossible for God to command his Creature to hate him or to dispence with a Creature for not loving him for this would be to command a thing intrinsically Evil the highest Ingratitude the very Spirit of all Wickedness which consists in the hating God Yet though God be thus necessarily Holy he is not so by a bare and simple necessity as the Sun shines or the Fire burns but by a free necessity not compelled thereunto but inclined from the fulness of the Perfection of his own Nature and Will so as by no means he can be Unholy because he will not be Unholy 't is against his Nature to be so 2. God is only absolutely Holy There is none Holy as the Lord. 1 Sam. 2.2 'T is the peculiar glory of his Nature As there is none Good but God so none Holy but God No Creature can be essentially Holy because Mutable Holiness is the substance of God but a Quality and Accident in a Creature God is Infinitely Holy Creatures Finitely Holy He is holy from Himself Creatures are holy by derivation from him He is not only Holy but Holiness Holiness in the highest degree is his sole Prerogative As the highest Heaven is called the Heaven of Heavens because it embraceth in its Circle all the Heavens and contains the Magnitude of them and hath a greater vastness above all that it incloseth so is God the Holy of Holies He contains the Holiness of all Creatures put together and Infinitely more As all the Wisdom Excellency and Power of the Creatures if compar'd with the Wisdom Excellency and Power of God is but Folly Vileness and Weakness so the highest created Purity if set in parallel with God is but Impurity and Uncleaness Revel 15.4 Thou only art Holy 'T is like the light of a Glow-worm to that of the Sun † Job 15.15 The Heavens are not pure in his sight and his Angels he charged with folly Job 4 18. Though God hath Crowned the Angels with an unspotted Sanctity and placed them in a habitation of Glory yet as Illustrious as they are they have an Unworthiness in their own Nature to appear before the Throne of so Holy a God Their holiness grows dim and pale in his Presence 'T is but a weak shadow of that Divine Purity whose Light is so glorious that it makes them cover their faces out of weakness to behold it and cover their Feet out of shame in themselves They are not pure in his sight because though they love God which is a Principle of Holiness as much as they can yet not so much as he deserves They love him with the intensest degree according to their Power but not with the intensest degree according to his own Amiableness For they cannot infinitely love God unless they were as Infinite as God and had an understanding of his Perfections equal with himself and as immense
it self that it cannot be conceived to fall within the Compass of the Divine Nature † Deut. 32.4 who is a God without iniquity because a God of truth and sincerity just and right is he To bestow excellent Faculties upon Man in Creation and incline him by a suddain impulsion to things contrary to the true end of him and induce an inevitable ruin upon that Work which he had composed with so much Wisdom and Goodness and pronounced good with so much delight and Pleasure is inconsistent with that love which God bears to the Creature of his own framing To incline his Will to that which would render him the Object of his hatred the Fuel for his Justice and sink him into deplorable Misery 't is most absurd and unchristian-like to imagine 3. Nor can God necessitate man to sin Indeed sin cannot be committed by force there is no sin but is in some sort voluntary Voluntary in the root or voluntary in the branch voluntary by an immediate act of the Will or voluntary by a general or natural inclination of the Will That is not a Crime to which a man is violenc'd without any concurrence of the Faculties of the Soul to that act 't is indeed not an act but a passion a man that is forced is not an Agent but a Patient under the force But what necessity can there be upon Man from God since he hath implanted such a Principle in him that he cannot desire any thing but what is good either really or apparently and if a man mistakes the Object 't is his own fault for God hath endowed him with Reason to discern and liberty of Will to choose upon that Judgment And though 't is to be acknowledged that God hath an Absolute Soveraign Dominion over his Creature without any Limitation and may do what he pleases and dispose of it according to his own Will as a Potter doth with his Vessel Rom. 9.21 according as the Church speaks Isa 64.8 We are the Clay and thou our Potter and we all are the work of thy hand Yet he cannot pollute any undefiled Creature by virtue of that Soveraign Power which he hath to do what he will with it because such an act would be contrary to the Foundation and Right of his Dominion which consists in the excellency of his Nature his immense Wisdom and unspotted Purity If God should therefore do any such act he would expunge the right of his Dominion by blotting out that nature which renders him fit for that Dominion and the exercise of it * Amyrald disert pa 103 104. Any Dominion which is exercis'd without the Rules of goodness is not a true Soveraignty but an insupportable Tyranny God would cease to be a rightful Soveraign if he ceased to be good and he would cease to be good if he did command necessitate or by any positive operation incline inwardly the heart of a Creature directly to that which were morally evil and contrary to the eminency of his own Nature But that we may the better conceive of this let us trace Man in his first fall whereby he subjected himself and all his Posterity to the Curse of the Law and hatred of God we shall find no foot-steps either of Precept outward force or inward impulsion † Amyrald defens de Calvin p. 151. 152 The plain story of Man's Apostacy dischargeth God from any interest in the Crime as an incouragement and excuseth him from any appearance of suspicion when he shewed him the Tree he had reserved as a mark of his Soveraignty and forbad him to eat of the Fruit of it He backt the Prohibition with the threatning the greatest Evil viz. Death which could be understood to imply nothing less than the loss of all his happiness and in that couch'd an assurance of the perpetuity of his felicity if he did not rebelliously reach forth his hand to take and eat of the Fruit * Gen. 2.16 17 'T is true God had given that Fruit an excellency a goodness for food and a pleasantness to the eye † Gen. 3.6 He had given Man an appetite whereby he was capable of desiring so pleasant a Fruit but God had by Creation rang'd it under the Command of Reason if man would have kept it in its due Obedience he had fixed a severe Threatning to bar the unlawful Excursions of it He had allowed him a multitude of other Fruits in the Garden and given him liberty enough to satisfie his Curiosity in all except this only Could there be any thing more obliging to Man to let God have his reserve of that one Tree than the grant of all the rest and more deterring from any disobedient Attempt than so strict a Command spirited with so dreadful a Penalty God did not sollicite him to rebel against him A sollicitation to it and a command against it were inconsistent The Devil assaults him and God permitted it and stands as it were a Spectator of the issue of the Combat There could be no necessity upon Man to listen to and entertain the Suggestions of the Serpent He had a power to resist him and he had an answer ready for all the Devils Arguments had they been multiplied to more than they were the opposing the Order of God had been a sufficient Confutaion of all the Devils plausible reasonings That Creator who hath given me my being hath ordered me not to eat of it Though the pleasure of the Fruit might allure him yet the force of his Reason might have quell'd the liquorishness of his Sense The perpetual thinking of and sounding out the command of God had silenc'd both Satan and his own Appetite had disarm'd the Tempter and preserved his Sensitive part in its due subjection What inclination can we suppose there could be from the Creator when upon the very first offer of the Temptation Eve opposes to the Tempter the Prohibition and Threatning of God and strains it to a higher peg than we find God had delivered it in For in Gen. 2.17 't is you shall not eat of it but she adds Gen. 3.3 neither shall you touch it which was a Remark that might have had more influence to restrain her Had our first Parents kept this fixed upon their Understandings and Thoughts that God had forbidden any such act as the Eating of the Fruit and that he was true to execute the Threatning he had uttered of which Truth of God they could not but have a natural Notion with what ease might they have withstood the Devils attack'd and defeated his Design And it had been easie with them to have kept their Understandings by the force of such a thought from entertaining any contrary Imagination There is no ground for any jealousie of any Encouragements inward Impulsions or necessity from God in this Affair A discharge of God from this first sin will easily induce a freedom of him from all other sins which follow upon it God doth not then
Organ whereby he blew in his Temptation is put into a worse condition than it was before Thus God hated the Spunge whereby the Devil deform'd his beautiful Image Thus God to manifest his detestation of Sin ordered the Beast whereby any Man was slain to be slain as well as the Malefactor Levit. 20.15 The Gold and Silver that had been abused to Idolatry and were the Ornaments of Images though good in themselves and uncapable of a Criminal Nature were not to be brought into their Houses but detested and abhorred by them because they were cursed and an abomination to the Lord. See with what loathing Expressions this Law is enjoyn'd to them Deut. 7.25 26. So contrary is the holy Nature of God to every Sin that it curseth every thing that is Instrumental in it 3. How detestable is every thing to him that is in the Sinners possession The very Earth which God had made Adam the Proprietor of was Cursed for his sake Gen. 3.17 18. It lost its Beauty and lies languishing to this day and notwithstanding the Redemption by Christ hath not recovered its health nor is it like to do till the compleating the Fruits of it upon the Children of God Rom. 8.20 21 22. The whole Lower Creation was made subject to Vanity and put into Pangs upon the Sin of Man by the Righteousness of God detesting his Offence How often hath his implacable Aversion from Sin been shewn not only in his Judgments upon the Offenders Person but by wrapping up in the same Judgment those which stood in a near relation to them Achan with his Children and Cattle are overwhelmed with Stones and burned together Josh 7.24 25. In the destruction of Sodom not only the grown Malefactors but the young Spawn the Infants at present uncapable of the same Wickedness and their Cattle were burned up by the same Fire from Heaven and the Place where their Habitations stood is at this day partly a heap of Ashes and partly an Infectious Lake that choaks any Fish that swim into it from Jordan and stifles as is related by its Vapor any Bird that attempts to fly over it Oh how detestable is Sin to God that causes him to turn a pleasant Land as the Garden of the Lord as it is styled Gen. 13.10 into a Lake of Sulphur to make it both in his Word and Works as a lasting Monument of his abhorrence of Evil 4. What design hath God in all these Acts of Severity and Vindictive Justice but to set off the lustre of his Holiness He testifies himself concerned for those Laws which he hath set as Hedges and Limits to the Lusts of Men and therefore when he breaths forth his fiery Indignation against a People he is said to get himself Honour As when he intended the Red Sea should swallow up the Egyptian Army Exod. 14.17 18. which Moses in his Triumphant Song Ecchoes back again Exod. 15.1 Thou hast triumphed gloriously gloriously in his Holiness which is the glory of his Nature as Moses himself interprets it in the Text. When Men will not own the Holiness of God in a way of Duty God will vindicate it in a way of Justice and Punishment In the destruction of Aarons Sons that were Will-worshippers and would take Strange Fire Sanctified and Glorified are coupled Lev. 10.3 He glorified himself in that Act in vindicating his Holiness before all the People declaring that he will not endure Sin and Disobedience He doth therefore in this Life more severely punish the Sins of his People when they presume upon any act of Disobedience for a Testimony that the nearness and dearness of any Person to him shall not make him unconcern'd in his Holiness or be a plea for Impurity The End of all his Judgments is to witness to the World his Abominating of Sin To Punish and Witness against Men are one and the same thing Micah 1.2 The Lord shall witness against you and it is the Witness of Gods Holiness Hos 5.5 And the Pride of Israel doth testifie to his face One renders it the Excellency of Israel and understands it of God the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is here in our Translation Pride is rendred Excellency Amos 8.7 The Lord God hath sworn by his Excellency which is Interpreted Holiness Amos 4.2 The Lord God hath sworn by his Holiness What is the issue or end of this Swearing by Holiness and of his Excellency testifying against them In all those Places you will find them to be sweeping Judgments In one Israel and Ephraim shall fall in their Iniquity in another He will take them away with Hooks and their Posterity with Fish-hooks and in another He would never forget any of their works He that punisheth Wickedness in those he before used with the greatest Tenderness furnisheth the World with an undeniable Evidence of the Detestableness of it to him Were not Judgments sometimes poured out upon the World it would be believed that God were rather an Approver than an Enemy to Sin To Conclude Since God hath made a stricter Law to guide Men annex'd Promises above the merit of Obedience to allure them and Threatnings dreadful enough to affright Men from Disobedience He cannot be the Cause of Sin nor a lover of it How can he be the Author of that which he so severely forbids or love that which he delights to punish or be fondly Indulgent to any Evil when he hates the Ignorant Instruments in the Offences of his Reasonable Creatures III. The Holiness of God appears in Our Restoration 'T is in the Glass of the Gospel we behold the Glory of the Lord * 2 Cor. 3.18 that is the Glory of the Lord into whose Image we are changed but we are changed into nothing as the Image of God but into Holiness We bore not upon us by Creation nor by Regeneration the Image of any other Perfection We cannot be changed into his Omnipotence Omniscience c. but into the Image of his Righteousness This is the pleasing and glorious sight the Gospel Mirror darts in our eyes The whole Scene of Redemption is nothing else but a discovery of Judgment and Righteousness Isai 1.27 Zion shall be redeemed with Judgment and her Converts with Righteousness 1. This Holiness of God appears in the manner of our Restoration viz. by the Death of Christ. Not all the Vials of Judgments that have or shall be poured out upon the wicked World nor the flaming Furnace of a Sinners Conscience nor the Irreversible Sentence pronounc'd against the Rebellious Devils nor the Groans of the Damned Creatures give such a demonstration of Gods Hatred of Sin as the Wrath of God let loose upon his Son Never did Divine Holiness appear more beautiful and lovely than at the time our Saviours Countenance was most marr'd in the midst of his Dying Groans This himself acknowledges in that Prophetical Psalm Psal 22.1 2. when God had turned his Smiling Face from him and thrust his sharp Knife
into his heart which forced that Terrible cry from him My God my God why hast thou forsaken me he adores this Perfection of Holiness v. 3. But thou art holy Thy Holiness is the Spring of all this sharp Agony and for this thou Inhabitest and shalt for ever inhabit the Praises of all thy Israel Holiness drew the Vail between Gods Countenance and our Saviours Soul Justice indeed gave the stroke but Holiness order'd it In this his Purity did sparkle and his Irreversible Justice manifested that all those that commit Sin are worthy of death this was the perfect Index of his Righteousness † Rom 3 2● that is of his Holiness and Truth then it was that God that is Holy was sanctified in Righteousness Isai 5.16 It appears the more if you consider 1. The Dignity of the Redeemers Person One that had been from Eternity had laid the Foundations of the World had been the Object of the Divine Delight He that was God blessed for ever becomes a Curse He who was blessed by Angels and by whom God blessed the World must be seiz'd with Horrour The Son of Eternity must bleed to death Where did ever Sin appear so irreconcileable to God Where did God ever break out so furiously in his detestation of Iniquity The Father would have the most Excellent Person one next in order to himself and Equal to him in all the glorious Perfections of his Nature * Phil 2.6 Die on a Disgraceful Cross and be exposed to the flames of Divine Wrath rather than Sin should live and his Holiness remain for ever disparaged by the Violations of his Law 2. The near Relation he stood in to the Father He was his own Son that he delivered up Rom. 8.32 His Essential Image as dearly beloved by him as himself yet he would abate nothing of his Hatred of those Sins imputed to one so dear to him and who never had done any thing contrary to his Will The strong Cries utter'd by him could not cause him to cut off the least Fringe of this Royal Garment nor part with a Thred the Robe of his Holiness was woven with The Torrent of Wrath is open'd upon him and the Fathers Heart beats not in the least notice of Tenderness to Sin in the midst of his Sons Agonies † Lingend Tom. 3. p. 699 700. God seems to lay aside the Bowels of a Father and put on the garb of an Irreconcileable Enemy Upon which account probably our Saviour in the midst of his Passion gives him the Title of God not of Father the Title he usually before Addrest to him with Math. 27.46 My God my God not My Father my Father why hast thou forsaken me He seems to hang upon the Cross like a disinherited Son while he appear'd in the garb and rank of a Sinner Then was his Head loaded with Curses when he stood under that Sentence of Cursed is every one that hangs upon a Tree Gal. 3.13 and look'd as one forlorn and rejected by the Divine Purity and Tenderness God dealt not with him as if he had been one in so near a Relation to him He left him not to the Will only of the Instruments of his Death he would have the chiefest blow himself of bruising of him Isai 53.10 It pleased the Lord to bruise him the Lord because the power of Creatures could not strike a blow strong enough to satisfie and secure the Rights of Infinite Holiness It was therefore a Cup temper'd and put into his hands by his Father a Cup given him to drink In other Judgments he lets out his Wrath against his Creatures in this he lets out his Wrath as it were against Himself against his Son One as dear to him as himself As in his making Creatures his Power over Nothing to bring it into Being appear'd but in pardoning Sin he hath power over himself so in punishing Creatures his Holiness appears in his Wrath against Creatures against Sinners by inherency But by punishing Sin in his Son his Holiness sharpens his Wrath against him who was his Equal and only a reputed Sinner As if his Affection to his own Holiness surmounted his Affection to his Son For he chose to suspend the breakings out of his Affections to his Son and see him plunged in a sharp and Ignominious Misery without giving him any visible Token of his Love rather than see his Holiness lie groaning under the Injuries of a Transgressing World 3. The Value he puts upon his Holiness appears further in the Advancement of this Redeeming Person after his Death Our Saviour was Advanc'd not barely for his Dying but for the respect he had in his Death to this Attribute of God Heb. 1.9 Thou hast loved Righteousness and hated Iniquity therefore God even thy God hath Anointed thee with the Oil of Gladness c. By Righteousness is meant this Perfection because of the opposition of it to Iniquity Some think Therefore to be the final Cause as if this were the sense Thou art anointed with the Oil of Gladness that thou mightest love Righteousness and hate Iniquity But the Holy Ghost seeming to speak in this Chapter not only of the Godhead of Christ but of his Exaltation the Doctrine whereof he had begun in Verse 3. and prosecutes in the following Verses I would rather understand Therefore For this cause or reason hath God anointed thee not to this end Christ indeed had an Unction of Grace whereby he was fitted for his Mediatory Work He had also an Unction of Glory whereby he was rewarded for it In the first regard it was a qualifying him for his Office in the second regard it was a solemn Inaugurating him in his Royal Authority And the Reason of his being setled upon a Throne for ever and ever is because he loved Righteousness He suffered himself to be pierced to Death that Sin the Enemy of Gods Purity might be destroy'd and the Honour of the Law the Image of Gods Holiness might be repair'd and fulfilled in the Fallen Creature He restored the Credit of Divine Holiness in the World in manifesting by his Death God an irreconcileable Enemy to all Sin in abolishing the Empire of Sin so hateful to God and restoring the rectitude of Nature and new framing the Image of God in his chosen Ones And God so valued this Vindication of his Holiness that he confers upon him in his Humane Nature an Eternal Royalty and Empire over Angels and Men. Holiness was the great Attribute respected by Christ in his dying and manifested in his Death and for his Love to this God would bestow an Honour upon his Person in that Nature wherein he did vindicate the Honour of so dear a Perfection In the Death of Christ he shewed his Resolution to preserve its Rights In the Exaltation of Christ he evidenced his mighty pleasure for the Vindication of it In both the Infinite value he had for it as dear to him as his Life and Glory 4. It
besides As he sent Jesus Christ to satisfie his Justice for the expiation of the Guilt of Sin so he sends the Holy Ghost for the cleansing the filth of Sin and overmastering the power of it Himself is the Fountain the Son is the Patern and the Holy Ghost the immediate Imprinter of this stamp of Holiness upon the Creature God hath such a value for this Attribute that he designs the glory of this in the renewing the Creature more than the happiness of the Creature though the one doth necessarily follow upon the other yet the one is the principal Design and the other the consequent of the former Whence our Salvation is more frequently set forth in Scripture by a Redemption from Sin and Sanctification of the Soul than by a Possession of Heaven † Tit. 2.11 12 13 14 and many other places Indeed as God could not create a Rational Creature without interesting this Attribute in a special manner so he cannnt restore the Fallen Creature without it As in creating a Rational Creature there must be Holiness to adorn it as well as Wisdom to form the design and Power to effect it so in the restoration of the Creature as he could not make a Reasonable Creature unholy so he cannot restore a Fallen Creature and put him in a meet posture to take pleasure in him without communicating to him a resemblance of himself As God cannot be Blessed in himself without this Perfection of Purity so neither can a Creature be blessed without it As God would be Unlovely to himself without this Attribute so would the Creature be unlovely to God without a stamp and mark of it upon his Nature So much is this Perfection one with God valued by him and interested in all his Works and Ways The third Thing I am to do is to lay down some Propositions in the defence of God's holiness in all his acts about or concerning sin It was a prudent and pious advice of Camero Not to be too busie and rash in Inquiries and Conclusions about the reason of God's Providence in the matter of sin The Scripture hath put a bar in the way of such Curiosity by telling us that the ways of God's Wisdom and Righteousness in his Judgments are unsearchable * Rom. 11.33 Much more the ways of God's Holiness as he stands in relation to Sin as a Governour of the World we cannot consider those things without danger of flipping Our Eyes are too weak to look upon the Sun without being dazled Too much Curiosity met with a just check in our first Parent To be desirous to know the reason of all God's proceedings in the matter of Sin is to second the Ambition of Adam to be as wise as God and know the reason of his actings equally with himself 'T is more easie as the same Author saith to give an Account of God's Providence since the Revolt of Man and the Poyson that hath universally seiz'd upon Human Nature than to make guesses at the manner of the fall of the first Man The Scripture hath given us but a short Account of the manner of it to discourage too curious Inquiries into it 'T is certain that God made Man upright and when Man sinned in Paradice God was active in sustaining the substantial nature and act of the Sinner while he was sinning though not in supporting the sinfulness of the Act He was permissive in suffering it He was Negative in withholding that Grace which might certainly have prevented his Crime and consequently his Ruin though he withheld nothing that was sufficient for his Resistance of that Temptation wherewith he was assaulted And since the Fall of Man God as a wise Governour is directive of the Events of the Transgression and draws the choicest Good out of the blackest Evil and limits the sins of men that they creep not so far as the evil Nature of men would urge them to and as a righteous Judge he takes away the talent ●rom idle Servants and the Light from wicked ones whereby they stumble and fall into Crimes by the inclinations and proneness of their own corrupt Natures leaves them to the Byas of their own vitious habits denies that grace which they have forfeited and have no right to challenge and turns their sinful actions into punishments both to the Committers of them and others 1. Proposition God's holiness is not chargeable with any blemish for his creating man in a mutable state 'T is true Angels and Men were created with a changeable Nature and though there was a rich and glorious stamp upon them by the Hand of God yet their Natures were not uncapable of a base and vile Stamp from some other Principle As the Silver which bears upon it the Image of a great Prince is capable of being melted down and imprinted with no better an Image than that of some vile and monstrous Beast Though God made Man upright yet he was capable of seeking many inventions Eccl. 7.29 yet the hand of God was not defiled by forming Man with such a Nature It was sutable to the Wisdom of God to give the Rational Creature whom he had furnisht with a power of acting righteously the liberty of choice and nor fix him in an unchangeable state without a trial of him in his Natural that if he did obey his obedience might be the more valuable and if he did freely offend his offence might be more inexcusable 1. No Creature can be capable of immutability by Nature Mutability is so essential to a Creature that a Creature cannot be supposed without it You must suppose it a Creator not a Creature if you allow it to be of an Immutable Nature Immutability is the property of the Supream Being God only hath immortality 1 Tim. 6.16 Immortality as opposed not only to a natural but to a sinful death the word only appropriates every sort of Immortality to God and excludes every Creature whether Angel or Man from a Partnership with God in this by Nature Every Creature therefore is capable of a Death in sin None is good but God and none is naturally free from change but God which excludes every Creature from the same Prerogative and certainly if one Angel sinned all might have sinned because there was the same root of Mutability in one as well as another 'T is as possible for a Creature to be Creator as for a Creature to have naturally an incommunicable property of the Creator All things whether Angels or Men are made of nothing and therefore capable of defection * Suarez V●l. 2. p. 5.8 because a Creature be●ng made of nothing cannot be good per essentiam or essentially good but by participation from another Aga●n every Rational Creature being made of nothing hath a Superior which created him and governs him and is capable of a Precept and consequently capable of Disobedience as well as Obedience to the Precept to transgress it as well as obey it God cannot sin because he
cause of the evil actions of men God acts nothing but withholds his Power he doth not enlighten their minds nor encline their wills so powerfully as to expel their darkness and root out those evil Habits which possess them by Nature God could if he would savingly enlighten the minds of all men in the World and quicken their hearts with a new Life by an invincible Grace but in not doing it there is no positive act of God but a cessation of Action We may with as much reason say that God is the Cause of all the sinful Actions that are committed by the Corporation of Devils since their first Rebellion because he leaves them to themselves and bestows not a new Grace upon them As say God is the Cause of the sins of those that he overlooks and leaves in that state of Guilt wherein he found them God did not pass by any without the consideration of sin so that this act of God is not repugnant to his Holiness but conformable to his Justice 4. Proposition The Holiness of God is not blemisht by his secret will to suffer sin to enter into the World God never willed sin by his preceptive Will It was never founded upon or produced by any word of his as the Creation was He never said Let there be sin under the Heaven as he said Let there be Water under the Heaven Nor doth he will it by infusing any Habit of it or stirring up Inclinations to it no God tempts no man James 1.13 Nor doth he will it by his approving Will 't is detestable to him nor ever can be otherwise He cannot approve it either before Commission or after 1. The Will of God is in some sort concurrent with sin He doth not properly will it but he wills not to hinder it to which by his Omnipotence he could put a bar If he did positively will it it might be wrought by himself and so could not be evil If he did in no sort will it it would not be committed by his Creature Sin entred into the World either God willing the permission of it or not willing the permission of it The latter cannot be said for then the Creature is more powerful than God and can do that which God will not permit God can if he be pleased banish all sin in a moment out of the World He could have prevented the Revolt of Angels and the Fall of Man they did not sin whether he would or no He might by his Grace have stept in the first Moment and made a special impression upon them of the Happiness they already possessed and the Misery they would incur by any wicked attempt He could as well have prevented the sin of the fallen Angels and confirmed them in Grace as of those that continued in their happy state He might have appeared to man informed him of the Issue of his Design and made secret impressions upon his heart since he was acquainted with every avenue to his Will God could have kept all sin out of the world as well as all Creatures from breathing in it he was as well able to bar sin for ever out of the World as to let Creatures lye in the Womb of nothing wherein they were first wrapped To say God doth will sin as he doth other things is to deny his Holiness to say it entred without any thing of his Will is to deny his Omnipotence If he did necessitate Adam to fall what shall we think of his Purity If Adam d●d fall without any concern of God's Will in it what shall we say of his Soveraignty The one taints his Holiness and the other clips his Power If it came without any thing of his Will in it and he did not foresee it where is his Omniscience If it entred whether he would or no where is his Omnipotence Rom. 9.19 Who hath resisted his Will There cannot be a lustful Act in Abimelech if God will withhold his Power Gen. 20.6 I withheld thee Nor a cursing word in Balaam's Mouth unless God give power to speak it Numb 22.38 Have I now any power at all to say any thing The Word that God puts in my mouth that shall I speak As no Action could be sinful if God had not forbidden it so no sin could be committed if God did not will to give way to it 2. God doth not will sin directly and by an efficacious Will He doth not directly will it because he hath prohibited it by his Law which is a discovery of his Will So that if he should directly will sin and directly prohibite it he would will good and evil in the same manner and there would be Contradictions in God's Will To will sin absolutely is to work it Psal 115.3 God hath done whatsoever he pleased God cannot absolutely will it because he cannt work it * Rispolis God wills good by a positive decree because he hath decreed to effect it He wills evil by a privative decree because he hath decreed not to give that Grace which would certainly prevent it † Bradward lib. 1 cap. 34. God wills it secundum quid God doth not will sin simply for that were to approve it but he wills it in order to that Good his Wisdom will bring forth from it He wills not sin for it self but for the event To will sin as sin or as purely evil is not in the capacity of a Creature neither of Man nor Devil The Will of a Rational Creature cannot will any thing but under the appearance of good of some good in the sin it self or some good in the issue of it Much more is this far from God ‖ Aquin. cont Gent. l. 1. c. 95. who being infinitely good cannot will evil as evil and being infinitely knowing cannot will that for good which is evil Infinite Wisdom can be under no Errour or Mistake To will sin as sin would be an unanswerable blemish on God but to will to suffer it in order to good is the glory of his Wisdom It could never have peep'd up its head unless there had been some decree of God concerning it And there had been no decree of God concerning it had he not intended to bring good and glory out of it If God did directly will the discovery of his Grace and Mercy to the World he did in some sort will sin as that without which there could not have been any appearance of Mercy in the World For an Innocent Creature is not the Object of Mercy but a Miserable Creature and no Rational Creature but must be sinful before it be miserable 3. God wills the permission of sin He doth not positively will sin but he positively wills to permit it And though he doth not approve of sin yet he approves of that act of his Will whereby he permits it For since that sin could not enter into the World without some concern of God's Will about it that act of his Will that gave way
torments the Person that acts it 't is black and abominable and hath not a mite of Goodness in the Nature of it If it ends in any good 't is only from that Infinite Transcendency of skill that can bring Good out of Evil as well as Light out of Darkness Therefore God did not permit it as Sin but as it was an occasion for the manifestation of his own Glory Though the Goodness of God would have appear'd in the Preservation of the World as well as it did in the Creation of it yet his Mercy could not have appear'd without the Entrance of Sin because the Object of Mercy is a Miserable Creature but Man could not be Miserable as long as he remained Innocent The Reign of Sin opened a door for the Reign and Triumph of Grace Rom. 5.21 As sin hath reigned unto death so might grace reign through righteousness to eternal life Without it the Bowels of Mercy had never sounded and the ravishing Musick of Divine Grace could never have been heard by the Creature Mercy which renders God so amiable could never else have beam'd out to the World Angels and Men upon this occasion beheld the stirrings of Divine Grace and the Tenderness of Divine Nature and the glory of the Divine Persons in their several Functions about the Redemption of Man which had else been a Spring shut up and a Fountain sealed the Song of Glory to God and Good will to Men in a way of Redemption had never been Sung by them It appears in his dealings with Adam that he permitted his Fall not only to shew his Justice in punishing but principally his Mercy in rescuing since he proclaims to him first the Promise of a Redeemer to bruise the Serpents head before he setled the Punishment he should smart under in the World † Gen. 3.15 16 17. And what fairer prospect could the Creature have of the Holiness of God and his Hatred of Sin than in the edge of that Sword of Justice which punished it in the Sinner but glitter'd more in the Punishment of a Surety so near Allied to him Had not Man been Criminal he could not have been Punishable nor any been punishable for him And the Pulse of Divine Holiness could not have beaten so quick and been so visible without an exercise of his Vindicative Justice He left Mans mutable Nature to fall under Vnrighteousness that thereby he might commend the Righteousness of his own Nature * Rom. 3.7 Adams Sin in its Nature tended to the ruine of the World and God takes an occasion from it for the glory of his Grace in the Redemption of the World He brings forth thereby a new Scene of Wonders from Heaven and a surprizing Knowledge on Earth As the Sun breaks out more strongly after a Night of Darkness and Tempest As God in Creation framed a Chaos by his Power to manifest his Wisdom in bringing Order out of Disorder Light out of Darkness Beauty out of Confusion and Deformity when he was able by a Word to have made all Creatures stand up in their Beauty without the precedency of a Chaos So God permitted a Moral Chaos to manifest a greater Wisdom in the repairing a broken Image and restoring a deplorable Creature and bringing out those Perfections of his Nature which had else been wrapt up in a perpetual silence in his own bosom † But of the Wisdom of God in the permitting Sin in order to Rede●ption I have handled in the Attribute of Wisdom It was therefore very congruous to the Holiness of God to permit that which he could make subservient for his own glory and particularly for the manifestation of this Attribute of Holiness which seems to be in opposition to such a permission 5. Proposition The Holiness of God is not blemisht by his concurrence with the Creature in the material part of a sinful Act. Some to free God from having any hand in Sin deny his concurrence to the Actions of the Creature because if he concurs to a sinful Action he concurs to the Sin also Not understanding how there can be a distinction between the Act and the Sinfulness or Viciousness of it and how God can concur to a Natural Action without being stain'd by that Moral Evil which cleaves to it For the understanding of this observe 1. There is a concurrence of God to all the acts of the Creature Acts 17.28 In him we live and move and have our being We depend upon God in our Acting as well as in our Being There is as much an efficacy of God in our Motion as in our Production as none have life without his Power in producing it so none have any operation without his Providence concurring with it In him or by him that is by his Virtue preserving and governing our Motions as well as by his Power bringing us into Being Hence Man is compared to an Ax Isai 10.15 an Instrument that hath no action without the cooperation of a Superiour Agent handling it And the Actions of the Second Causes are ascrib'd to God the Grass that is the product of the Sun Rain and Earth he is said to make to grow upon the Mountains Psal 147.8 and the Skin and Flesh which is by Natural generation he is said to cloath us with Job 10.5 in regard of his co-working with Second Causes according to their Natures As nothing can exist so nothing can operate without him let his Concurrence be removed and the Being and Action of the Creature cease Remove the Sun from the Horizon or a Candle from a Room and the Light which flowed from either of them ceaseth Without Gods preserving and concurring Power the course of Nature would sink and the Creation be in vain ‖ Suarez Metaph part 1. p. 552. All Created things depend upon God as Agents as well as Beings and are subordinate to him in a way of Action as well as in a way of Existing If God suspend his Influence from their Action they would cease to act as the Fire did from burning the Three Children as well as if God suspend his Influence from their Being they would cease to be God supports the Nature whereby Actions are wrought the Mind where Actions are consulted and the Will where Actions are determin'd and the Motive power whereby Actions are produced The Mind could not contrive nor the Hand act a Wickedness if God did not support the Power of the one in designing and the Strength of the other in executing a wicked Intention Every faculty in its Being and every faculty in its Motion hath a dependance upon the Influence of God To make the Creature Independent upon God in any thing which speaks Perfection as Action considered as Action is is to make the Creature a Soveraign Being Indeed we cannot imagine the Concurrence of God to the good Actions of Men since the Fall without granting a Concurrence of God to evil Actions because there is no Action so purely
many Leagues behind any resemblance to God he stript off that which was the glory of his Nature and was the only means of glorifying God as his Creator The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Apostle uses is very significant Postpon'd by Sin an infinite distance from any imitation of Gods Holiness or any appearance before him in a garb of Nature pleasing to him Let us lament our Fall and distance from God 3. Information All Vnholiness is vile and opposite to the Nature of God 'T is such a loathsom thing that the Purity of Gods eye is averse from beholding Hab. 1.3 'T is not said there that he will not but he cannot look on Evil there cannot be any amicableness between God and Sin the Natures of both are so directly and unchangeably contrary to one another Holiness is the Life of God it endures as long as his Life He must be Eternally averse from Sin he can live no longer than he lives in the hatred and loathing of it If he should for one instant cease to hate it he would cease to live To be a Holy God is as Essential to him as to be a Living God and he would not be a living but a dead God if he were in the least point of Time an Unholy God He cannot look on Sin without loathing it he cannot look on Sin but his Heart riseth against it It must needs be most odious to him as that which is against the glory of his Nature and directly opposite to that which is the lustre and varnish of all his other Perfections 'T is the Abominable thing which his Soul hates Jer. 44.4 the vilest terms imaginable are used to signifie it Do you understand the loathsomness of a miry Swine or the nauseousness of the vomit of a Dog These are Emblems of Sin † 2 Pet. 2.22 Can you endure the steams of putrified Carkasses from an open Sepulchre * Rom. 3.23 Is the smell of the stinking sweat or Excrements of a Body delightful the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in James 1.21 signifies as much Or is the sight of a Body overgrown with Scabs and Leprosie grateful to you So vile so odious is Sin in the sight of God 'T is no light thing then to fly in the Face of God to break his Eternal Law to dash both the Tables in pieces to trample the Transcript of Gods own Nature under our feet to cherish that which is inconsistent with his Honour to lift up our heels against the glory of his Nature to joyn Issue with the Devil in stabbing his Heart and depriving him of his life Sin in every part of it is an opposition to the Holiness of God and consequently an envying him a Being and Life as well as a Glory If Sin be such a thing ye that love the Lord hate Evil. 4. Information Sin cannot escape a due Punishment A hatred of Unrighteousness and consequently a will to punish it is as Essential to God as a love of Righteousness Since he is not as an Heathen Idol but hath Eyes to see and Purity to hate every Iniquity he will have an Infinite Justice to punish whatsoever is against Infinite Holiness As he loves every thing that is amiable so he loaths every thing that is filthy and that constantly without any change his whole Nature is set against it he abhors nothing but this 'T is not the Devils knowledge or activity that his Hatred is terminated in but the Malice and Unholiness of his Nature 't is this only is the Object of his Severity 'T is in the recompence of this only that there can be a manifestation of his Justice Sin must be punish'd for 1. This Detestation of Sin must be manifested How should we certainly know his loathing of it if he did not manifest by some act how ungrateful it is to him As his love to Righteousness would not appear without rewarding it so his hatred of Iniquity would be as little evidenc'd without punishing it His Justice is the great Witness to his Purity The Punishment therefore inflicted on the Wicked shall be in some respect as great as the Rewards bestow'd upon the Righteous Since the hatred of Sin is natural to God 't is as natural to him to shew one time or other his hatred of it And since Men have a conceit that God is like them in Impurity there is a necessity of some manifestation of himself to be Infin●tely distant from those Conceits they have of him Psal 50.21 I will reprove thee and set them in order before thine eyes He would else encourage the Injuries done to his Holiness favour the Extravagances of the Creature and condemn or at least slight the Righteousness both of his own Nature and his Soveraign Law What way is there for God to manifest this Hatred but by Threatning the Sinner and what would this be but a vain Affrightment and ridiculous to the Sinner if it were never to be put in execution There is an indissoluble connexion between his Hatred of Sin and Punishment of the Offender Psal 11.5 6. The wicked his Soul hates Vpon the wicked he shall rain snares fire and brimstone c. He cannot approve of it without denying himself and a total Impunity would be a degree of Approbation The Displeasure of God is Eternal and Irreconcileable against Sin for Sin being absolutely contrary to his holy Nature He is Eternally contrary to it If there be not therefore a way to separate the Sin from the Sinner the Sinner must lie under the Displeasure of God no displeasure can be manifested without some marks of it upon the Person that lies under that Displeasure The Holiness of God will right it self of the wrongs done to it and scatter the Prophaners of it at the greatest distance from him which is the greatest Punishment that can be inflicted to be removed far from the Fountain of Life is the worst of Deaths God can as soon lay aside his Purity as always forbear his Displeasure against an Impure Person 't is all one not to hate it and not to manifest his Hatred of it 2. As his Holiness is natural and necessary so is the punishment of Vnholiness necessary to him 'T is necessary that he should abominate Sin and therefore necessary he should discountenance it The Severities of God against Sin are not vain Scare-crows they have their foundation in the Righteousness of his Nature 't is because he is a Righteous and Holy God that he will not forgive our Transgressions and Sins Josh 24.19 that is that he will punish them The Throne of his Holiness is a fiery flame Dan. 7.9 there is both a pure light and a scorching heat Whatsoever is contrary to the Nature of God will fall under the Justice of God he would else violate his own Nature deny his own Perfection seem to be out of love with his own Glory and Life He doth not hate it out of choice but from the
Immutable propension of his Nature 't is not so free an act of his Will as the Creation of Man and Angels which he might have forborn as well as effected As the detestation of Sin results from the universal rectitude of his Nature so the punishment of Sin follows upon that as he is the Righteous Governour of the World 'T is as much against his Nature not to punish it as it is against his Nature not to loath it He would cease to be Holy if he ceas'd to hate it and he would cease to hate it if he ceas'd to punish it Neither the Obedience of our Saviours Life nor the strength of his Cries could put a bar to the Cup of his Passion God so hated Sin that when it was but imputed to his Son without any commission of it he would bring a Hell upon his Soul Certainly if God could have hated Sin without punishing it his Son had never felt the smart of his Wrath His love to his Son had been strong enough to have caused him to forbear had not the Holiness of his Nature been stronger to move him to inflict a Punishment according to the demerit of the Sin God cannot but be Holy and therefore cannot but be Just because Injustice is a part of Unholiness 3. Therefore there can be no Communion between God and Vnholy spirits How is it conceivable that God should hate the Sin and cherish the Sinner with all his filth in his bosom that he should Eternally detest the Crime and Eternally fold the S●nner in his Arms Can less be expected from the Purity of his Nature than to separate an impure Soul as long as it remains so Can there be any delightful Communion between those whose Natures are contrary Darkness and Light may as soon kiss each other and become one Nature God and the Devil may as soon enter into an Eternal League and Covenant together For God to have pleasure in wickedness and to admit Evil to dwell with him are things equally impossible to his Nature * Psal ● 4 while he hates Impurity he cannot have Communion with an impure Person It may as soon be expected that God should hate himself offer Violence to his own Nature lay aside his Purity as an Abominable thing and blot his own Glory as love an Impure Person entertain him as his delight and set him in the same Heaven and Happiness with himself and his holy Angels He must needs loath him he must needs banish him from his Presence which is the greatest Punishment Gods Holiness and Hatred of Sin necessarily infer the Punishment of it 5. Information There is therefore a necessity of the satisfaction of the Holiness of God by some sufficient Mediator The Divine Purity could not meet with any acquiescence in all Mankind after the Fall Sin was hated the Sinner would be ruin'd unless some way were found out to repair the Wrongs done to the Holiness of God either the Sinner must be condemned for ever or some Satisfaction must be made that the Holiness of the Divine Nature might Eternally appear in its full lustre That it is Essential to the Nature of God to hate all Unrighteousness as that which is absolutely repugnant to his Nature none do question That the Justice of God is so Essential to him as that Sin could not be pardon'd without Satisfaction some do question though this latter seems rationally to follow upon the former † Turretin de Sati●fac p. 8. That Holiness is Essential to the Nature of God is evident because else God may as much be conceived without Purity as he might be conceived without the creating the Sun or Stars No Man can in his right Wits frame a right Notion of a Deity without Purity It would be a less Blasphemy against the Excellency of God to conceit him not Knowing than to imagine him not Holy And for the Essentialness of his Justice Joshua joyns both his Holiness and his Jealousie as going hand in hand together Josh 24.19 He is a Holy God he is a Jealous God he will not forgive your sin But consider only the Purity of God since it is contrary to Sin and consequently hating the Sinner the guilty Person cannot be reduc'd to God nor can the Holiness of God have any complacency in a filthy Person but as Fire hath in Stubble to consume it How the Holy God should be brought to delight in Man without a Salvo for the Rights of his Holiness is not to be conceiv'd without an impeachment of the Nature of God The Law could not be abolish'd that would reflect indeed upon the Righteousness of the Law-giver to abolish it because of Sin would imply a change of the Rectitude of his Nature Must be change his Holiness for the sake of that which was against his Holiness in a compliance with a prophane and unrighteous Creature This should engage him rather to maintain his Law than to null it And to abrogate his Law as soon as he had enacted it since Sin stept into the World presently after it would be no credit to his Wisdom There must be a reparation made of the Honour of Gods Holiness by our selves it could not be without Condemnation by another it could not be without a sufficiency in the Person No Creature could do it All the Creatures being of a finite Nature could not make a compensation for the disparagements of Infinite Holiness He must have despicable and vile Thoughts of this Excellent Perfection that imagines that a few Tears and the glavering Fawnings at the death of a Creature can be sufficient to repair the Wrongs and restore the Rights of this Attribute It must therefore be such a compensation as might be commensurate to the Holiness of the Divine Nature and the Divine Law which could not be wrought by any but him that was possessed of a Godhead to give efficacy and exact congruity to it The Person design'd and appointed by God for so great an affair was one in the form of God one equal with God Phil. 2.6 who could not be term'd by such a Title of Dignity if he had not been equal to God in the universal rectitude of the Divine Nature and therefore in his Holiness The Punishment due to Sin is translated to that Person for the righting Divine Holiness and the Righteousness of that Person is communicated to the Sinner for the Pardon of the Offending Creature If the Sinner had been Eternally damn'd Gods hatred of Sin had been evidenc'd by the strokes of his Justice but his Mercy to a Sinner had lain in obscurity If the Sinner had been Pardoned and Saved without such a reparation Mercy had been evident but his Holiness had hid its head for ever in his own bosom There was therefore a necessity of such a way to manifest his Purity and yet to bring forth his Mercy That Mercy might not alway sigh for the destruction of the Creature and that Holiness might not mourn
34.12 How despicable is a Judge that wants Innocence As Omniscience fits God to be a Judge so Holiness fits him to be a Righteous Judge Psal 1.6 The Lord knows that is loves the way of the Righteous but the way of the ungodly shall perish 9. Information If Holiness be an eminent Perfection of the Divine Nature The Christian Religion is of a Divine Extraction It discovers the Holiness of God and forms the Creature to a conformity to him It gives us a prospect of his Nature represents him in the Beauty of Holiness Psal 110.3 more than the whole Glass of the Creation 'T is in this Evangelical Glass the Glory of the Lord is beheld and rendred amiable and imitable † 2 Cor. 3.18 'T is a Doctrine according to Godliness 1 Tim. 6.3 directing us to live the Life of God a life worthy of God and worthy of our first Creation by his hand It takes us off from our selves fixeth us upon a Noble End points our Actions and the scope of our lives to God It quells the Monsters of Sin discountenanceth the Motes of Wickedness and it is no mean Argument for the Divinity of it that it sets us no lower a Pattern for our Imitation than the Holiness of the Divine Majesty God is exalted upon the Throne of his Holiness in it and the Creature advanc'd to an Image and resemblance of it 1 Pet. 1.16 Be ye holy for I am holy Vse 2. The Second use is for Comfort This Attribute frowns upon Lapsed Nature but smiles in the Restorations made by the Gospel Gods Holiness in conjunction with his Justice is Terrible to a guilty Sinner but now in conjunction with his Mercy by the Satisfaction of Christ 't is sweet to a Believing Penitent In the first Covenant the Purity of his Nature was joyned with the Rigours of his Justice In the second Covenant the Purity of his Nature is joyned with the Sweetness and Tenderness of his Mercy In the one Justice flames against the Sinner in the right of Injur'd Holiness In the other Mercy yearns towards a Believer with the consent of Righted Holiness To rejoyce in the Holiness of God is the true and genuine Spirit of a Renewed Man My heart rejoyceth in the Lord what follows There is none holy as the Lord 1 Sam. 2.1 2. Some Perfections of the Divine Nature are Astonishing some Affrighting but this may may fill us both with Astonishment at it and a Joy in it 1. By Covenant we have an Interest in this Attribute as well as any other In that Clause of Gods being our God entire God with all his Glory all his Perfections are past over as a portion and a gracious Soul is brought into Union with God as his God Not with a part of God but with God in the Simplicity Extent Integrity of his Nature and therefore in this Attribute And upon some account it may seem more in this Attribute than in any other for if he be our God he is our God in his Life and Glory and therefore in his Purity especially without which he could not live he could not be happy and blessed Little comfort will it be to have a dead God or a vile God made over to us And as by this Covenant he is our Father so he gives us his Nature and communicates his Holiness in all his Dispensations and in those that are severest as well as those that are sweetest Heb. 12.10 But he corrects us for our profit that we might be partakers of his Holiness Not simply partakers of Holiness but of his Holiness to have a Portrayture of it in our Nature a Meddal of it in our hearts a spark of the same Nature with that Immense splendor and flame in himself The Holiness of a Covenant Soul is a resemblance of the Holiness of God and formed by it As the Picture of the Sun in a Cloud is a fruit of his Beams and an Image of its Author The fulness of the Perfection of Holiness remains in the Nature of God as the fulness of the Light doth in the Sun yet there are transmissions of Light from the Sun to the Moon and it is a Light of the same Nature both in the one and in the other The Holiness of a Creature is nothing else but a reflection of the Divine Holiness upon it and to make the Creature capable of it God takes various methods according to his Covenant Grace 2. This Attribute renders God a fit Object for Trust and Dependance The Notion of an Unholy and Unrighteous God is an uncomfortable Idea of him and beats off our hands from laying any hold of him 'T is upon this Attribute the Reputation and Honour of God in the World is built What encouragement can we have to believe him or what Incentives could we have to serve him without the lustre of this in his Nature The very thought of an Unrighteous God is enough to drive Men at the greatest distance from him As the Honesty of a Man gives a reputation to his Word so doth the Holiness of God give credit to his Promise 'T is by this he would have us stifle our Fears and fortifie our Trust Isai 41.14 Fear not thou worm Jacob and ye men of Israel I will help thee saith the Lord and thy Redeemer the holy one of Israel He will be in his Actions what he is in his Nature Nothing shall make him defile his own Excellency Unrighteousness is the ground of Mutability but the Promise of God doth never fail because the rectitude of his Nature doth never languish Were his Attributes without the conduct of this they would be altogether formidable As this is the glory of all his other Perfections so this only renders him comfortable to a Believing Soul Might we not fear his Power to crush us his Mercy to overlook us his Wisdom to design against us if this did not influence them What an oppression is Power without Righteousness in the hand of a Creature destructive instead of protecting The Devil is a mighty Spirit but not fit to be trusted because he is an Impure Spirit When God would give us the highest Security of the sincerity of his Intentions he swears by this Attribute † Psal 8.35 His Holiness as well as his Truth is laid to pawn for the Security of his Promise As we make God the Judge between us and others when we swear by him so he makes his Holiness the Judge between himself and his People when he swears by it 1. 'T is this renders him fit to be confided in for the answer of our Prayers This is t●e ground of his readiness to give * Matth. 7.11 If you being evil know how to give good gifts how much more shall your Father which is in Heaven give good th●ng● to them that ask him Though the holiness of God be not mention'd yet it is to be understood the Emphasis lies in those words if you being evil
than Men have reason to complain for the exercise of Justice in the vindication of it If God established all things in Order with Infinite Wisdom and Goodness and God silently behold for ever this Order broken would he not either charge himself with a want of Power or a want of Will to preserve the Marks of his own Goodness Would it be a kindness to himself to be careless of the breaches of his own Orders His Throne would shake yea sink from under him if Justice whereby he Sentenceth and Judgment whereby he Executes his Sentence were not the supports of it † Ps 89.14 Justice and Judgment are the habitation of thy Throne 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Stability or Foundation of thy Throne So Psal 92.2 Man would forget his Relation to God God would be unknown to be Soveraign of the World were he careless of the breaches of his own Order * Psal 9.16 The Lord is known by the Judgments which he Executes Is it not a part of his Goodness to preserve the indispensible Order between himself and his Creatures His own Soveraignty which is good and the subjection of the Creature to him as Soveraign which is also good The one would not be maintained in its due place nor the other restrained in due limits without Punishment Would it be a goodness in him to see Goodness it self trampled upon constantly without some time or other appearing for the relief of it Is it not a Goodness to secure his own Honour to prevent further Evil Is it not a Goodness to discourage Men by Judgments sometimes from a contempt and ill use of his Bounty as well as sometimes patiently to bear with them and wait upon them for a Reformation Must God be bad to himself to be kind to his Enemies And shall it be accounted an unkindness and a Mark of Evil in him not to suffer himself to be always outrag'd and defy'd The World is wrong'd by Sin as well as God is injur'd by it How could God be good to himself if he righted not his own Honour Or be a good Governour of the World if he did not sometimes witness against the Injuries it receives sometimes from the works of his hands Would he be good to himself as a God to be careless of his own Honour Or good as the Rector of the World and be regardless of the Worlds Confusion That God should give an Eternal good to that Creature that declines its Duty and despiseth his Soveraignty is not agreeable to the goodness of his Wisdom or that of his Righteousness 'T is a part of Gods Goodness to love himself Would he love his Soveraignty if he saw it dayly slighted without sometimes discovering how much he values the Honour of it Would he have any esteem for his own Goodness if he beheld it trampled upon without any will to vindicate it Doth Mercy deserve the name of Cruelty because it pleads against a Creature that hath so often abused it and hath refused to have any pity exercised towards it in a Righteous and Regular way Is Soveraignty destitute of Goodness because it preserves its Honour against one that would not have it Reign over him Would he not seem by such a regardlesness to renounce his own Essence undervalue and undermine his own Goodness if he had not an implacable aversion to whatsoever is contrary to it If Men turn Grace into Wantonness is it not more reasonable he should turn his Grace into Justice All his Attributes which are parts of his Goodness engage him to punish Sin without it his Authority would be vilified his Purity stain'd his Power derided his Truth disgraced his Justice scorn'd his Wisdom slighted He would be thought to have dissembled in his Laws and be judged according to the Rules of Reason to be void of true Goodness 4. Punishment is not the primary Intention of God 'T is his Goodness that he hath no mind to Punish and therefore he hath put a bar to Evil by his Prohibitions and Threatnings that he might prevent Sin and consequently any occasions of severity against his Creature * Zarnovecius de satisfact Part. 1. cap. 1. p. 3 4. The principal Intention of God in his Law was to encourage Goodness that he might reward it And when by the commission of Evil God is provoked to Punish and takes the Sword into his hand he doth not act against the Nature of his Goodness but against the first intention of his Goodness in his Precepts which was to Reward As a good Judge principally intendeds in the Exercise of his Office to protect good Men from Violence and maintain the honour of the Laws yet consequently to punish bad men without which the Protection of the good would not be secured nor the Honour of the Law be supported And a good Judge in the Exercise of his Office doth principally intend the incouragement of the good and wisheth there were no wickedness that might occasion Punishment and when he doth Sentence a Malefactor in order to the Execution of him he doth not act against the goodness of his Nature but pursuant to the Duty of his Place but wisheth he had no occasion for such severity Thus God seems to speak of himself † Isaiah 28.21 He calls the act of his Wrath his Strange Work his Strange Act A work not against his Nature as the Governor of the World but against his first Intention as Creator which was to manifest his Goodness Therefore he moves with a slow pace in those Acts brings out his Judgments with relentings of heart and seems to cast out his Thunderbolts with a trembling hand He doth not afflict willingly nor grieve the Children of Men * Lam. 3.33 And therefore he delights not in the death of a Sinner † Ezek. 33.11 Not in Death as Death in Punishment as Punishment but as it reduceth the suffering Creature to the Order of his Precept or reduceth him into order under his Power or reforms others who are Spectators of the Punishment upon a Criminal of their own Nature God only hates the Sin not the Sinner He desires only the destruction of the one * Suarez Vol. 1. de Deo lib. 3. cap. 7. p. 146. not the misery of the other The Nature of a Man doth not displease him because it is a work of his own Goodness but the Nature of the Sinner displeaseth him because it is a work of the Sinners own extravagance Divine Goodness pitcheth not its hatred primarily upon the Sinner but upon the Sin But since he cannot punish the Sin without punishing the Subject to which it cleaves the Sinner falls under his lash Who ever regards a good Judge as an Enemy to the Malefactor but as an Enemy to his Crime when he doth Sentence and Execute him 5. Judgments in the World have a goodness in them therefore they are no Impeachments of the Goodness of God 1. A Goodness in their preparations He
sends not Judgments without giving warnings His Justice is so far from extinguishing his Goodness that his Goodness rather shines out in the preparations of his Justice He gives Men time and sends them Messengers to perswade them to another temper of mind that he may change his Hand and exercise his Liberality where he threatned his Severity When the Heathen had Presages of some Evil upon their Persons or Countreys they took them for invitations to Repentance excited themselves to many acts of Devotion implored his Favour and often Experimented it The Ninivites upon the Proclamation of the destruction of their City by Jonah fell to Petitioning him whereby they signified That they thought him good though he were just and more prone to Pity than Severity and their humble Carriage caused the Arrows he had ready against them to drop out of his hands * Jonah 3.9 10. When he brandisheth his Sword he wishes for some to stand in that Gap to mollifie his anger that he might not strike the fatal blow † Ezek 22.30 I sought for a Man among them that should make up the Hedge and stand in the Gap before me in the Land that I should not destroy it He was desirous that his Creatures might be in a capacity to receive the Marks of his Bounty * Cressel Antholog Decad. 2. p. 162. This he signified not obscurely to Moses Exod. 32.10 when he spoke to him to let him alone that his anger might wax hot against the People after they had made a Golden Calf and Worshipped it Let me alone said God Not that Moses restrained him saith Chrysostom who spake nothing to him but stood silent before him and knew nothing of the Peoples Idolatry But God would give him an occasion of praying for them that he might exercise his Mercy towards them yet in such a manner that the People being struck with a sense of their Crime and the horrour of Divine Justice they might be amended for the future when they should understand that their Death was not averted by their own Merit or Intercession but by Moses his Patronage of them and pleading for them As we see sometimes Masters and Fathers angry with their Servants and Children and preparing themselves to punish them but secretly wish some Friend to intercede for them and take them out of their hands There is a Goodness shining in the preparations of his Judgments 2. A Goodness in the Execution of them They are good as they shew God disaffected to Evil and conduce to the glory of his Holiness and deter others from presumptuous Sins † Deut. 10.3 I will be glorified in all that draw near unto me in his Judgment upon Nadab and Abihu the Sons of Aaron for Offering strange Fire By them God preserves the excellent Footsteps of his own Goodness in his Creation and his Law and curbs the Licentiousness of Men and contains them within the bounds of their Duty The Judgments are good saith the Psalmist * Psal 119. Psal 39. i. e. Thy Judicial proceedings upon the Wicked For he desires God there to turn away by some signal act the reproach the Wicked cast upon him Can there be any thing more Miserable than to live in a World full of Wickedness and void of the Marks of Divine Goodness and Justice to repress it Were there not Judgments in the World Men would forget God be insensible of his Government of the World neglect the Exercises of Natural and Christian Duties Religion would be at its last gasp and expire among them and Men would pretend to break Gods Precepts by Gods Authority Are they not good then as they restrain the Creature from further Evils Affright others from the same Crimes which they were inclinable to commit He strikes some to reform others that are Spectators As Apollonius tam'd Pigeons by beating Dogs before them Punishments are Gods gracious warnings to others not to venture upon those Crimes which they see attended with such Judgments The Censers of Corah Dathan and Abiram were to be wrought into Plates for a covering of the Altar to abide there as a Memento to others not to approach to the Exercise of the Priestly Office without an authoritative call from God * Num. 16.38 40. And those Judgments exercised in the former Ages of the World were intended by Divine Goodness for warnings even in Evangelical times Lots Wife was turned into a Pillar of Salt to prevent Men from Apostacy That use Christ himself makes of it in the exhortation against turning back † Luke 17.32 33. And * Psal 58.10 The Righteous shall wash his Feet in the Blood of the Wicked When God shall drench his Sword in the Blood of the Wicked the Righteous shall take occasion from thence to purifie themselves and reform their Ways and look to the Paths of their Feet Would not Impunity be hurtful to the World and Men receive incouragement to Sin if severities sometimes did not bridle them from the practice of their Inclinations Sometimes the Sinner himself is reform'd and sometimes removed from being an example to others Though Thunder be an affrightning noise and Lightning a scaring flash yet they have a liberal goodness in them in shattering and consuming those contagious Vapours which burden and infect the Air and thereby render it more clear and healthful Again There are few acts of Divine Justice upon a People but are in the very Execution of them attended with demonstrations of his Goodness to others He is a Protector of his own while he is a Revenger on his Enemies When he rides upon his Horses in anger against some his Chariots are Chariots of Salvation to others * Hab. 3.8 Terrour makes way for Salvation The overthrow of Pharaoh and the strength of his Nation compleated the deliverance of the Israelites Had not the Aegyptians met with their Destruction the Israelites had unavoidably met with their Ruine against all the Promises God had made to them and to the defamation of his former Justice in the former Plagues upon their Oppressors The death of Herod was the security of Peter and the rest of the Malic'd Christians The gracious deliverance of good Men is often occasion'd by some severe stroak upon some eminent Persecutor The destruction of the Oppressor is the rescue of the Innocent Again Where is there a Judgment but leaves more Criminals behind than it sweeps away that deserved to be involved in the same fate with the rest More Aegyptians were left behind to possess and enjoy the goodness of their fruitful Land than they were that were hurried into another World by the overflowing Waves Is not this a Mark of goodness as well as severity Again Is it not a goodness in him not to pour out Judgments according to the greatness of his Power To go gradually to work with those whom he might in a moment blow to destruction with one breath of his Mouth Again He sometimes exerciseth
His Grace would have Crown'd that which had been so agreeable to him He had been a denier of himself had he numbred Innocent Creatures in the Rank of the Miserable But to be kind to an Enemy To run Counter to the vastness of Demerit in Man was a Superlative Goodness a Goodness triumphing above all the provocations of Men and Pleas of Justice It was an abounding Goodness of Grace * Rom. 5.20 Where Sin abounded Grace did much more abound 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It swell'd above the heights of Sin and triumphed more than all his other Attributes 4. Man was reduced to the lowest Condition Our Crimes had brought us to the lowest Calamity we were brought to the dust and prepar'd for Hell Adam had not the boldness to Request and therefore we may Judge he had not the least hopes of Pardon he was sunk under Wrath and could have expected no better an Entertainment than the Tempter whose sollicitations he submitted to We had cast the Diadem from our heads and lost all our Original Excellency We were lost to our own Happiness and lost to our Creators Service when he was so kind as to send his Son to seek us Matth. 18.11 and so liberal as to expend his Blood for our cure and preservation How great was that Goodness that would not abandon us in our Misery but remit our Crimes and rescue our Persons and ransom our Souls by so great a Price from the Rights of Justice and horrors of Hell we were so fitted for 5. Every Age multiplied Provocations Every Age of the World proved more degenerate The Traditions which were purer and more lively among Adams immediate Posterity were more dark among his further Descendants Idolatry whereof we have no Marks in the old World before the Deluge was frequent afterwards in every Nation Not only the knowledge of the true God was lost but the Natural Reverential thoughts of a Deity were expelled Hence Gods were dubb'd according to Mens humors and not only Human Passions but Brutish Vices ascrib'd to them As by the Fall we were become less than Men so we would fancy God no better than a Beast since Beasts were Worshipped as Gods * Rom. 1.21 yea fancied God no better than a Devil since that Destroyer was Worshipped instead of the Creator and a Homage paid to the Powers of Hell that had ruin'd them which was due to the Goodness of that Benefactor who had made them and preserved them in the World The vilest Creatures were Deifi'd Reason was debas'd below Common Sense And Men ador'd one end of a Log while they warmed themselves with the other † Isai 44.14.16 17. as if that which was Ordain'd for the Kitchin were a fit Representation for God in the Temple Thus were the Natural Notions of a Deity deprav'd the whole World drencht in Idolatry And though the Jews were free from that gross abuse of God yet they were sunk also into loathsom Superstitions when the Goodness of God brought in his design'd Redeemer and Redemption into the World 6. The impotence of Man enhanceth this Goodness Our own Eye did scarce pity us and it was impossible for our own hands to relieve us we were insensible of our Misery in love with our Death we courted our Chains and the noise of our fettering Lusts were our Musick * Tit. 3.3 serving diverse Lusts and Pleasures Our Lusts were our Pleasures Satans Yoke was as del ghtful to us to bear as to him to impose Instead of being his Opposers in his attempts against us we were his voluntary Seconds and every whit as willing to embrace as he was to propose his Ruining Temptations As no Man can recover himself from Death so no Man can recover himself from Wrath he is as unable to Redeem as to Create himself he might as soon have stript himself of his being as put an end to his Misery his Captivity would have been endless and his Chains remediless for any thing he could do to knock them off and deliver himself he was too much in love with the Sink of Sin to leave wallowing in it and under too powerful a hand to cease frying in the Flames of Wrath. As the Law could not be obeyed by Man after a corrupt Principle had enter'd into him so neither could Justice be satisfied by him after his Transgression The Sinner was indebted but Bankrupt As he was unable to pay a Mite of that Obedience he owed to the Precept because of his enmity so he was unable to satisfie what he owed to the Penalty because of his Feebleness He was as much without love to observe the one as without strength to bear the other † Rom. 8.7 He could not because of his Enmity be subject to the Law or compensate for his Sin because he was * Rom. 5.6 without strength His strength to offend was great but to deliver himself a meer nothing Repentance was not a thing known by Man after the fall till he had hopes of Redemption and if he had known and exercised it what compensation are the Tears of a Malefactor for an injury done to the Crown and attempting the life of his Prince How great was Divine Goodness not only to pity Men in this State but to provide a strong Redeemer for them Oh Lord my Strength and my Redeemer said the Psalmist † Psal 19 1● When he found out a Redeemer for our Misery he found out a Strength for our Impotency To conclude this Behold the Goodness of God when we had thus unhandsomely dealt with him had nothing to allure his Goodness Multitudes of Provocations to incense him were reduced to a conditon as low as could be fit to be the Matter of his Scoffs and the Sport of Divine Justice and so weak that we could not repair our own Ruines then did he open a Fountain of fresh Goodness in the Death of his Son and sent forth such delightful Streams as in our Original Creation we could never have tasted Not only overcame the Resentments of a Provoked Justice but magnified it self by our lowness and strengthned it self by our weakness His Goodness had before Created an Innocent but here it saves a Malefactor and sends his Son to die for us as if the Holy of Holies were the Criminal and the Rebel the Innocent It had been a pompous Goodness to have given him as a King but a Goodness of greater grandeur to expose him as a Sacrifice for Slaves and Enemies Had Adam remain'd Innocent and proved thankful for what he had received it had been great Goodness to have brought him to glory But to bring filthy and rebellious Adam to it surmounts by unexpressible degrees that sort of Goodness he had experimented before Since it was not from a light Evil a tolerable Curse unawares brought upon us but from the Yoke we had willingly submitted to from the power of darkness we had courted and the furnace of wrath we had kindled
He never sent his Son to shed a drop of Blood for their Recovery they can expect nothing but the torment of their Persons and the destruction of their Works But we abuse that Goodness that would Rescue us since we are Miserable as well as that Righteousness which Created us Innocent How base is it to use him so ill that is not once or twice but a daily hourly Benefactor to us whose Rain drops upon the Earth for our Food and whose Sun shines upon the Earth for our pleasure as well as profit such a Benefactor as is the true Proprietor of what we have and thinks nothing too good for them that think every thing too much for his Service How unworthy is it to be guilty of such base Carriage towards him whose benefits we cannot want nor live without How disingenuous both to God and our selves to despise the riches of his Goodness that are design'd to lead us to Repentance * Rom. 2.4 and by that to Happiness And more hainous are the Sins of Renew'd Men upon this account because they are against his Goodness not only offer'd to them but tasted by them not only against the Notion of Goodness but the Experience of Goodness and the relisht sweetness of choicest Bounty 3. God takes this Contempt of his Goodness hainously He never upbraids Men with any thing in the Scripture but with the abuse of the good things he hath vouchsaft them and the unmindfulness of the Obligations arising from them This he bears with the greatest regret and indignation Thus he upbraids Eli with the preference of him to the Priesthood above other Families * 1 Sam. 2.28 And David with his Exaltation to the Crown of Israel † 2 Sam. 12.7 8 9. when they abused those Honours to carelesness and licentiousness All Sins offend God but Sins against his Goodness do more disparage him and therefore his fury is the greater by how much the more liberally his benefits have been dispens'd It was for abuse of Divine Goodness as soon as it was tasted that some Angels were hurl'd from their Blessed Habitation and more happy Nature It was for this Adam lost his present Enjoyments and future Happiness for the abuse of Gods Goodness in Creation For the abuse of Gods Goodness the old World fell under the fury of the Flood and for the Contempt of the Divine Goodness in Redemption Jerusalem once the darling City of the infinite Monarch of the World was made an Aceldema a Field of Blood For this Cause it is that Candlesticks have been removed great Lights put out Nations overturn'd and Ignorance hath triumph'd in places bright before with the Beams of Heaven God would have little care of his own Goodness if he always prostituted the Fruits of it to our Contempt Why should we expect he should always continue that to us which he sees we will never use to his Service When the Israelites would Dedicate the Gifts of God to the service of Baal then he would return and take away his Corn and his Wine and make them know by the less that those things were his in Dominion which they abus'd as if they had been Soveraign Lords of them * Hos 2.8 9. Benefits are Entail'd up us no longer than we obey † Josh 24.20 If you forsake the Lord he will do you hurt after he hath done you good While we obey his Bounty shall shower upon us and when we revolt his Justice shall consume us Present Mercies abus'd are no Bulwarks against impendent Judgments God hath Curses as well as Blessings and they shall light more heavy when his Blessings have been more weighty Justice is never so severe as when it comes to right Goodness and revenge its quarrel for the injuries received A convenient Enquiry may be here How Gods Goodness is contemn'd or abus'd 1. By a forgetfulness of his Benefits We enjoy the Mercies and forget the Donor we take what he gives and pay not the Tribute he deserves The Israelites forgot God their Saviour which had done great things in Egypt * Psal 100 2● We send Gods Mercies where we would have God send our Sins into the Land of forgetfulness and write his Benefits where himself will write the Names of the Wicked in the Dust which every Wind defaceth The remembrance soon wears out of our Minds and we are so far from remembring what we had before that we scarce think of that Hand that gives the very instant wherein his Benefits drop upon us Adam basely forgot his Benefactor presently after he had been made capable to remember him and reflect upon him the first remark we hear of him is of his forgetfulness not a syllable of his thankfulness We f●rget those Souls he hath lodg'd in us to acknowledge his favours to our Bodies we forget that Image wherewith he beautified us and that Christ he expos'd as a Criminal to Death for our Rescue which is such an act of Goodness as cannot be exprest by the Eloquence of the Tongue or conceiv'd by the acuteness of the Mind Those things which are so common that they cannot be invisible to our Eyes are unregarded by our Minds our Sense prompts our Understanding and our Understanding is deaf to the plain dictates of our Sense We forget his Goodness in the Sun while it warms us and his Showers while they enrich us in the Corn while it nourisheth us and the Wine while it refresheth us * Hos 2.8 She did not know that I gave her Corn and Wine and Oyl She that might have read my Hand in every bit of Bread and every drop of Drink did not consider this 'T is an injustice to forget the benefits we receive from Man 't is a Crime of a higher Nature to forget those dispens'd to us by the hand of God who gives us those things that all the World cannot furnish us with without him The Inhabitants of Troas will condemn us who worshipped Mice in a grateful remembrace of the Victory they had made easie for them by gnawing their Enemies Bow-strings They were mindful of the Courtesie of Animals though unintended by those Creatures and we are regardless of the fore-meditated Bounty of God 'T is in Gods Judgment a brutishness beyond that of a stupid Ox or a duller Ass * Isai 1.3 The Ox knows his Owner and the Ass his Masters Crib but Israel doth not know my People do not consider The Ox knows his Owner that Pastures him and the Ass his Master that feeds him but Man is not so good as to be like to them but so bad as to be inferior to them He forgets him that sustains him and spurns at him instead of valuing him for the benefits conferr'd by him How horrible is it that God should loose more by his Bounty than he would do by his Patrimony If we had Blessings more sparingly we should remember him more gratefully If he had sent us a bit of
majestically and by way of Authority not as the look of a bare Spectator but the look of a Governor to pass a sentence upon them as a Judge His being in the Heavens renders him capable of doing whatsoever he pleases Psal 115.3 His Throne being there he can by a word in stopping the Motions of the Heavens turn the whole Earth into confusion In this respect it is said he rides upon the Heaven in thy help Deut. 33.26 Discharges his Thunders upon men and makes the influences of it serve his peoples interest By one turn of a cock as you see in Grottos he can cause streams from several parts of the Heavens to refresh or ruine the World 6. Duration of it The Heavens are incorruptible his Throne is placed there in an incorruptible state Earthly Empires have their decayes and dissolutions The Throne of God outlives the dissolution of the World His Kingdom rules over all He hath an absolute right over all things within the Circuit of Heaven and Earth though his Throne be in Heaven as the place where his Glory is most eminent and visible his Authority most exactly obey'd yet his Kingdom extends its self to the lower parts of the Earth He doth not mufle and cloud up himself in Heaven or confine his Soveraignty to that place his Royal power extends to all visible as well as invisible things He is proprietor and possessor of all Deut. 10.14 The Heaven and the Heaven of Heavens is the Lords thy God the Earth also with all that is there He hath right to dispose of all as he pleases He doth not say his Kingdom Rules all that fear him but over all so that it is not the Kingdom of Grace he here speaks of but his natural and universal Kingdom Over Angels and Men Jews and Gentiles Animate and Inanimate things The Psalmist considers God here as a great Monarch and General and all Creatures as his Hosts and Regiments under him and takes notice principally of two things 1. The Establishment of his Throne together with the Seat of it He hath prepared his Throne in the Heavens 2. The extent of his Empire His Kingdom rules over all This Text in all the parts of it is a fit basis for a discourse upon the Dominion of God and the observation will be this Doctrine God is Soveraign Lord and King and exerciseth a Dominion over the whole World both Heaven and Earth This is so clear that nothing is more spoken of in Scripture The very name Lord imports it a name originally belonging to Gods and from them translated to others And he is frequently called the Lord of Hosts because all the Troops and Armies of Spiritual and Corporeal Creatures are in his hands and at his service This is one of his principal Titles And the Angels are called his Hosts 21. ver following the Text his Camp and Militia But more plainly 1 Kings 22.19 God is presented upon his Throne encompast with all the Host of Heaven standing on his Right hand and on his Left which can be understood of no other than of the Angels that wait for the Commands of their Soveraign and stand about not to Counsel him but to receive his Orders The Sun Moon and Starrs are called his Hosts Deut. 4.19 Appointed by him for the Government of inferior things He hath an absolute Authority over the greatest and the least Creatures over those that are most dreadful and those that are most beneficial over the good Angels that willingly obey him over the Evil Angels that seem most uncapable of Government And as he is thus Lord of Hosts he is the King of Glory or a glorious King Psal 24.10 You find him called a great King the most High Psal 92.1 The supream Monarch there being no dignity in Heaven or Earth but what is dimm before him and infinitely inferior to him yea he hath the Title of Only King 1 Tim. 6.15 The Title of Royalty truly and properly only belongs to him You may see it described very magnificently by David at the freewill offering for the Building of the Temple 1 Chron. 29.11 12. Thine O Lord is the greatness and the Power and the Glory and the Victory and the Majesty thine is the Kingdom O God and thou art exalted as Head above all Both Riches and Honour come of thee and thou Reignest over all and in thy hand is Power and Might and in thy hand it is to make Great and to give strength to all He hath an eminency of Power or Authority above all All Earthly Princes received their Diadems from him yea even those that will not acknowledge him and he hath a more absolute power over them than they can challenge over their meanest Vassals As God hath a knowledge infinitely above our knowledge so he hath a Dominion incomprehensibly above any Dominion of Man and by all the shadows drawn from the Authority of one man over another we can have but weak glimmerings of the Authority and Dominion of God There is a threefold Dominion of God 1. Natural which is absolute over all Creatures and is founded in the Nature of God as Creator 2. Spiritual or Gracious which is a Dominion over his Church as Redeemed and founded in the Covenant of Grace 3. A Glorious Kingdom at the winding up of all wherein he shall Reign over all either in the Glory of his Mercy as over the glorified Saints or in the Glory of his Justice in the condemned Devils and Men. The first Dominion is founded in Nature The second in Grace The third in regard of the blessed in Grace in regard of the damn'd in demerit in them and Justice in him He is Lord of all things and always in regard of propriety Psal 24.1 The Earth is the Lords and the fulness thereof the World and all that dwell therein The Earth with the Riches and Treasures in the Bowels of it the habitable World with every thing that moves upon it are his he hath the sole right and what right soever any others have is deriv'd from him In regard also of possession Gen. 14.22 The most high God possessor of Heaven and Earth In respect of whom Man is not the proprietary nor possessor but usufructuary at the Will of this Grand Lord. In th● prosecution of this I. I shall lay down Some general propositions for the clearing and confirming it II. I shall shew Wherein this right of Dominion is founded III. What the nature of it is IV. Wherein it consists and how 't is manifested I. Some general Propositions for the clearing and confirming of it 1. We must know the difference between the Might or Power of God and his Authority We commonly mean by the Power of God the strength of God whereby he is able to effect all his purposes By the Authority of God we mean the right he hath to act what he pleases Omnipotence is his Physical power whereby he is able to do what he will Dominion is
transgression But those things are accounted sins by all mankind and sins against the supream being So that a Dominion and the exercise of it is so fast linkt to God so intirely in him so intrinsick in his Nature that it cannot be imagined that a rational Creature can be made by him without a stamp and mark of that Dominion in his very nature and frame 't is so inseparable from God in his very act of Creation 2. 'T is such a Dominion as cannot be renounced by God himself 'T is so intrinsick and connatural to him so inlaid in the nature of God that he cannot strip himself of it nor of the exercise of it while any Creature remains ' T●● preserv'd by him for it could not subsist of its self 't is govern'd by him it could not else answer its end 'T is impossible there can be a Creature which hath not God for its Lord. Christ himself though in regard of his Deity equal with God yet in regard of his created state and assuming our nature was God's servant was govern'd by him in the whole of his office acted according to his command and directions God calls him his servant Isaiah 42.1 And Christ in that Prophetick Psalm of him calls God his Lord. Psal 16.2 Oh my Soul Thou hast said unto the Lord thou art my Lord. It was impossible it should be otherwise Justice had been so far from being satisfi'd that it had been highly incensed if the order of things in the due subjection to God had been broke and his terms had not been complied with It would be a Judgment upon the World if God should give up the Government to any else as it is when he gives Children to be Princes Isaiah 3.4 i. e. Children in understanding 3. 'T is so inseparable that it cannot be communicated to any Creature No Creature is able to exercise it every Creature is unable to perform all the offices that belong to this Dominion No Creature can impose Laws upon the Consciences of men Man knows not the inlets into the Soul his pen cannot reach the inwards of man What Laws he hath power to propose to Conscience he cannot see executed because every Creature wants omniscience he is not able to perceive all those breaches of the Law which may be committed at the same time in so many Cities so many Chambers Or suppose an Angel in regard of the height of his standing and the insufficiency of Walls and darkness and distance to obstruct his view can behold mens actions yet he cannot know the internal acts of mens minds and Wills without some outward eruption and appearance of them And if he be ignorant of them how can he execute his Laws If he only understand the outward fact without the inward thought how can he dispense a Justice proportionable to the crime He must needs be ignorant of that which adds the greatest aggravation sometimes to a sin and inflict a lighter punishment upon that which receives a deeper tincture from the inward posture of the mind than another fact may do which in the outward act may appear more base and unjust and so while he intends Righteousness may act a degree of injustice * M●●●ii Colleg. Theolo● Disp 18. p. 12 13. Besides no Creature can inflict a due punishment for sin that which is due to sin is a loss of the Vision and sight of God but none can deprive any of that but God himself nor can a Creature reward another with Eternal Life which consists in Communion with God which none but God can bestow II. Thing Wherein the Dominion of God is founded 1. On the Excellency of his Nature Indeed a bare excellency of Nature bespeaks a fitness for Government but doth not properly convey a right of Government Excellency speaks aptitude not Title A Subject may have more Wisdom than the Prince and be fitter to hold the Reins of Government but he hath not a Title to Royalty A man of large capacity and strong vertue is fit to serve his Countrey in Parliament but the Election of the People conveys a Title to him Yet a strain of Intellectual and Moral abilities beyond others is a foundation for Dominion And it is commonly seen that such eminences in men though they do not invest them with a Civil Authority or an Authority of Jurisdiction yet they create a veneration in the minds of men their vertue attracts reverence and their advice is regarded as an Oracle Old men by their age when stored with more Wisdom and Knowledge by reason of their long experience acquire a kind of power over the younger in their Dictates and Counsels so that they gain by the strength of that excellency a real Authority in the minds of those men they converse with and possess themselves of a deep respect from them God therefore being an incomprehensible ocean of all perfection and possessing infinitely all those vertues that may lay a claim to Dominion hath the first foundation of it in his own nature His incomparable and unparalell'd excellency as well as the greatness of his work attracts the voluntary Worship of him as a Soveraign Lord. Psal 86.8 Among the Gods there is none like unto thee neither are there any works like unto thy work All Nations shall come and Worship before thee Though his benefits are great engagements to our Obedience and Affection yet his infinite Majesty and perfection requires the first place in our acknowledgements and adorations Upon this account God claims it Isaiah 46.9 I am God and there is none like me I will do all my pleasure And the Prophet Jeremy upon the same account acknowledgeth it Jer. 10.6 7. Forasmuch as there is none like unto thee Oh Lord thou art great and thy name is great in might who would not fear thee O King of Nations For to thee doth it appertain Forasmuch as there is none like unto thee And this is a more noble Title of Dominion It being an uncreated Title and more eminent than that of Creation or Preservation * 〈◊〉 Th●olog Nat. pag. 757. This is the natural order God hath plac'd in his Creature 's that the more excellent should rule the inferior He committed not the Government of lower Creatures to Lions and Tygers that have a delight in blood but no knowledge of vertue but to man who had an eminence in his nature above other Creatures and was formed with a perfect rectitude and a height of reason to guide the reins over them In man the Soul being of a more sublime nature is set of right to rule over the Body the Mind the most excellent Faculty of the Soul to rule over the other Powers of it and Wisdom the most excellent habit of the Mind to guide and regulate that in its determinations and when the Body and sensitive Appetite controul the Soul and Mind 't is an Usurpation against Nature not a rule according to Nature the excellency therefore of
he please and exact what he will of his Creature without promising any Rewards May he not use his own for his own honour as well as men use for their credit what they do possess by his indulgence 5. Affliction is an act of his Soveraignty By this right of Soveraignty may not God take away any man's Goods since they were his doles As he was not indebted to us when he bestow'd them so he cannot wrong us when he removes them He takes from us what is more his own than it is ours and was never ours but by his gift and that for a time only not for ever By this right he may determine our times put a period to our days when he pleases strip us of one member and lop off another Man's being was from him and why should he not have a Soveraignty to take what he had a Soveraignty to give Why should this seem strange to any of us since we our selves exercise an absolute Dominion over those things in our possession which have sense and feeling as well as over those that want it Doth not every man think he hath an absolute Authority over the Utensils of his house over his Horse his Dog to preserve or kill him to do what he please with him without rendring any other reason than 't is my own May not God do much more Doth not his dominion over the work of his hands transcend that which a man can claim over his Beast that he never gave life unto He that dares dispute against God's absolute right fancies himself as much a God as his Creator understands not the vast difference between the Divine nature and his own between the Soveraignty of God and his own which is all the theam God himself discourseth upon in those stately Chapters Job 38 39. c. Not mentioning a Word of Job's sin but only vindicating the rights of his own Authority Nor doth Job in his reply Job 40.4 speak of his sin but of his natural vileness as a Creature in the presence of his Creator By this right God unstops the Bottles of Heaven in one place and stops them in another causing it to Rain upon one City and not upon another Amos 4.7 Ordering the Clouds to move to this or that quarter where he hath a mind to be a Benefactor or a Judge 6. Vnequal dispensations are acts of his Soveraignty By this right he is patient toward those whose sins by the common voice of men deserve speedy Judgments and pours out pain upon those that are patterns of vertue to the World By this he gives sometimes the worst of men an Ocean of wealth and honor to swim in and reduceth an useful and exemplary grace to a scanty poverty By this he Rules the Kingdoms of men and sets a Crown upon the head of the basest of men Dan. 4.17 While he deposeth another that seem'd to deserve a weightier Diadem This is as he is the Lord of the Ammunition of his Thunders and the Treasures of his Bounty 7. He may inflict what torments he pleases Some say by this right of Soveraignty he may inflict what torments he pleaseth upon an innocent person which indeed will not bear the nature of a punishment as an effect of Justice without the supposal of a crime but a torment as an effect of that Soveraign right he hath over his Creature which is as absolute over his work as the Potters power is over his own Clay Jerem. 18.6 Rom. 9.21 * Lessius de perfect Divin p. 66. 67. May not the Potter after his labour either set his vessel up to adorn his House or knock it in peices and fling it upon the Dunghill separate it to some noble use or condemn it to some sordid service Is the right of God over his Creatures less than that of the Potter over his Vessel since God contributed all to his Creature but the Potter never made the Clay which is the substance of the Vessel nor the water which was necessary to make it tractable but only moulded the substance of it into such a shape The Vessel that is fram'd and the Potter that frames it differ only in Life the body of the Potter whereby he executes his Authority is of no better a mould than the Clay the matter of his Vessel shall he have so absolute a power over that which is so near him and shall not God over that which is so infinitely distant from him The Vessel perhaps might plead for its self that it was once part of the Body of a man and as good as the Potter himself whereas no Creature can plead it was part of God and as good as God himself Though there be no man in the World but deserves affliction yet the Scripture sometimes layes affliction upon the score of God's dominion without any respect to the sin of the afflicted person James 5.15 Speaking of a sick person if he have committed sins they shall be forgiven him whereby is implyed that he might be struck into sickness by God without any respect to a particular sin but in a way of Tryal and that his affliction sprung not from any exercise of Divine Justice but from his absolute soveraignty And so in the case of the blind man when the Disciples askt for what sin it was whether for his own or his Parents sin he was born blind John 9.3 Neither hath this man sinned nor his Parents which speaks in its self not against the whole current of Scripture but the words import thus much that God in this blindness from the birth neither respected any sin of the mans own nor of his Parents but he did it as an absolute soveraign to manifest his own Glory in that miraculous cure which was wrought by Christ Though afflictions do not happen without the desert of the Creature yet some afflictions may 〈◊〉 sent without any particular respect to that desert meerly for the manifestation of God's Glory since the Creature was made for God himself and his honour and therefore may be used in a serviceableness to the Glory of the Creator 2. His Dominion is absolute in regard of unlimitedness by any Law without him He is an absolute Monarch that makes Laws for his Subjects but is not bound by any himself nor receives any rules and Laws from his Subjects for the management of his Government But most Governments in the World are bounded by Laws made by common consent But when Kings are not limited by the Laws of their Kingdoms yet they are bounded by the Law of Nature and by the Providence of God But God is under no Law without himself his rule is within him the rectitude and Righteousness of his own nature he is not under that Law he hath prescribed to man The Law was not made for a Righteous man 1 Tim. 1.9 Much less for a Righteous God God is his own Law his own nature is his rule as his own Glory is his end
himself is his end and himself is his Law He is moved by nothing without himself nothing hath the dominion of a motive over him but his own will which is his rule for all his actions in Heaven and Earth Dan. 4.32 He rules in the Kingdom of men and gives it to whomsoever he will And Rom. 9.18 He hath Mercy on whom he will have Mercy As all things are wrought by him according to his own eternal Ideas in his own mind so all is wrought by him according to the inward motive in his own will which was the manifestation of his own honour The greatest motives therefore that the best persons have used when they have pleaded for any grant from God was his own Glory which would be advanced by an answer of their Petition 3. His dominion is absolute in regard of Supremacy and uncontroulableness None can implead him and cause him to render a reason of his actions He is the Soveraign King Who may say unto him what dost thou Eccles 8.4 'T is an absurd thing for any to dispute with God Rom. 9.20 Who art thou O Man that replyest against God Thou a man a peice of dust to argue with a God incomprehensibly above thy reason about the reason of his works Let the Potsheards strive with the Potsheards of the Earth but not with him that fashion'd them Isaiah 45.9 In all the desolations he works he asserts his own Supremacy to silence men Psal 46.10 Be still and know that I am God Beware of any quarrelling motions in your minds 't is sufficient that I am God that is supream and will not be impleaded and censur'd or worded with by any Creature about what I do He is not bound to render a reason of any of his proceedings Subjects are accountable to their Princes and Princes to God God to none since he is not limited by any Superior his Prerogative is supream 4. His dominion is absolute in regard of Irresistibleness Other Governments are bounded by Law so that what a Governour hath strength to do he hath not a right to do Other Governours have a limited ability that what they have a right to do they have not always a strength to do they may want a power to execute their own Counsels But God is destitute of neither he hath an infinite right and an infinite strength his word is a Law he commands things to stand out of nothing and they do so He commanded or spake 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 light to shine out of darkness 2 Cor. 4.6 There is no distance of time between his word Let there be Light and there was Light Gen. 1.3 Magistrates often use not their Authority for fear of giving occasion to insurrections which may overturn their Empire But if the Lord will work Who shall let it Isaiah 43.19 And if God will not work who shall force him He can check and overturn all other powers his decrees cannot be stopped nor his hand held back by any if he wills to dash the whole World in peices no Creature can maintain its being against his order He sets the Ordinances of the Heavens and the dominion thereof in the Earth And sends Lightnings that they may go and say unto him here we are Job 38.33.34 3. Yet this dominion though it be absolute is not Tyrannical but 't is managed by the rules of Wisdom Righteousness and Goodness If his Throne be in the Heavens it is Pure and Good Because the Heavens are the purest parts of the Creation and influence by their Goodness the lower Earth Since he is his own rule and his nature is infinitely Wise Holy and Righteous he cannot do a thing but what is unquestionably agreeable with Wisdom Justice and Purity In all the exercises of his Soveraign right he is never unattended with those perfections of his Nature Might not God by his absolute power have pardon'd mens guilt and thrown the invading sin out of his Creatures But in regard of his Truth pawn'd in his threatning and in regard of his Justice which demanded satisfaction he would not Might not God by his absolute soveraignty admit a man into his Friendship without giving him any Grace But in regard of the incongruity of such an act to his Wisdom and Holiness he will not May he not by his absolute power refuse to accept a man that desires to please him and reject a purely innocent Creature But in regard of his Goodness and Righteousness he will not Though innocence be amiable in its own Nature yet it is not necessary in regard of God's soveraignty that he should love it but in regard of his goodness it is necessary and he will never do otherwise As God never acts to the utmost of his power so he never exerts the utmost of his soveraignty because it would be inconsistent with those other properties which render him perfectly adorable to the Creature As no intelligent Creature neither Angel nor Man can be fram'd without a Law in his Nature so we cannot imagine God without a Law in his own Nature unless we would fancy him a rude Tyrannical foolish Being that hath nothing of Holiness Goodness Righteousness Wisdom If he made the Heavens in Wisdome Psal 136.5 He made them by some rule not by a meer will but a rule within himself not without A wise work is never the result of an absolute unguided Will 1. This dominion is managed by the rule of Wisdom What may appear to us to have no other spring than absolute soveraignty would be found to have a depth of amazing Wisdom and accountable reason were our short capacities long enough to fathom it When the Apostle had been discoursing of the eternal Counsells of God in seizing upon one man and letting go another in rejecting the Jews and gathering in the Gentiles which appears to us to be results only of an absolute dominion yet he resolves not those amazing acts into that without taking it for granted that they were govern'd by exact Wisdom though beyond his ken to see and his line to sound Rom. 11.33 Oh the depth of the riches both of the Wisdom and Knowledge of God how unsearchable are his Judgments and his Ways past finding out There are some things in matters of state that may seem to be acts of meer Will but if we were acquainted with the Arcana Imperii the inward Engins which moved them and the ends aimed at in those undertakings we might find a rich vein of prudence in them to incline us to Judge otherwise than bare Arbitrary proceedings The other Attributes of Power and Goodness are more easily perceptible in the works of God than his Wisdom The first view of the Creation strikes us with this sentiment that the Author of this great Fabrick was mighty and beneficial but his Wisdom lies deeper than to be discern'd at the first glance without a diligent enquiry As at the first casting our eyes upon the Sea we behold its motion colour and
something of its vastness but we cannot presently fathom the depth of it and understand those lower Fountains that supply that great Ocean of Waters 'T is part of God's Sovereignty as it is of the wisest Princes that he hath a Wisdom beyond the reach of his Subjects 't is not for a finite nature to understand an infinite Wisdom nor for a foolish Creature that hath lost his understanding by the fall to judge of the reason of the methods of a wise Counsellor Yet those actions that savour most of Soveraignty present men with some glances of his Wisdom Was it meer will that he suffered some Angels to fall But his Wisdom was in it for the manifestation of his Justice as it was also in the case of Pharaoh Was it meer will that he suffered sin to be committed by man was not his Wisdom in this for the discovery of his mercy which never had been known without that which should render a Creature miserable Rom. 11.32 He hath concluded them all in unbelief that he might have Mercy upon all Though God had such an absolute right to have annihilated the World as soon as ever he had made it yet how had this consisted with his Wisdom to have erected a Creature after his own image one day and despis'd it so much the next as to Cashier it from Being What Wisdom had it been to make a thing only to destroy it To repent of his work as soon as ever it came out of his hands without any occasion offered by the Creature If God be suppos'd to be Creator he must be supposed to have an end in Creation what End can that be but himself and his own Glory the manifestation of the perfections of his Nature What perfection could have been discovered in so quick an annihilation but that of his power in Creating and of his Soveraignty in snatching away the Being of his Rational Creature before it had laid the methods of acting What Wisdom to make a World and a reasonable Creature for no use Not to Praise and Honour him but to be broken in pieces and destroy'd by him 2. His Soveraignty is managed according to the rule of Righteousness Worldly Princes often fancy Tyranny and Oppression to be the chief marks of Soveraignty and think their Scepters not beautiful till died in blood nor the Throne secure till established upon slain Carkasses But Justice and Judgment are the Foundation of the Throne of God Psal 89.14 Alluding perhaps to the supporters of Arms and Thrones which among Princes are the figures of Lions Emblems of Courage as Solomon had 1 Kings 10.19 But God makes not so much might as right the support of his He sits on a Throne of Holiness Psal 47.8 As he reigns over the Heathens referring to the calling of the Gentiles after the rejecting the Jews the Psalmist here praising the Righteousness of it as the Apostle had the unsearchable Wisdom of it Rom. 11.33 In all his ways he is Righteous Psal 145.17 In his ways of Terror as well as those of sweetness in those works wherein little else but that of his Soveraignty appears to us 'T is always linkt with his Holiness that he will not do by his absolute right any thing but what is conformable to it since his dominion is founded upon the excellency of his Nature he will not do any thing but what is agreeable to it and becoming his other perfections Though he be an absolute Soveraign he is not an Arbitrary Governor Shall not the Judge of all the Earth do right Gen. 18.25 i. e. 'T is impossible but he should act righteously in every punctilio of his Government Since his Righteousness capacitates him to be a Judge not a Tyrant of all the Earth The Heathen Poets represented their chief God Jupiter with Themis or Right sitting by him upon his Throne in all his Orders God cannot by his absolute Soveraignty command some things Because they are directly against unchangeable Righteousness as to command a Creature to hate or blaspheme the Creator not to own him nor praise him It would be a manifest unrighteousness to order the Creature not to own him upon whom he depends both in its being and well being This would be against that natural duty which is indispensably due from every rational Creature to God This would be to order him to lay aside his reason while he retains it to disown him to be the Creator while man remains his Creature This is repugnant to the Nature of God and the true nature of the Creature Or to exact any thing of man but what he had given him a capacity in his original nature to perform If any command were above our natural power it would be unrighteous as to command a man to grasp the Globe of the Earth to stride over the Sea to lave out the waters of the Ocean these things are impossible and become not the Righteousness and Wisdom of God to enjoyn There can be no obligation on man to an impossibility God had a free dominion over nullity before the Creation he could call it out into the being of man and beast But he could not do any thing in Creation foolishly because of his infinite Wisdom nor could he by the right of his absolute Soveraignty make man sinful because of his infinite purity As it is impossible for him not to be Soveraign 'T is impossible for him to deny his Deity and his purity 'T is Lawful for God to do what he will but his will being ordered by the Righteousness of his nature as infinite as his will he cannot do any thing but what is just and therefore in his dealing with men you find him in Scripture submitting the reasonableness and equity of his proceedings to the Judgment of his deprav'd Creatures and the inward dictates of their own Consciences Isaiah 5.3 And now Oh Inhabitants of Jerusalem and men of Judah Judge I pray you between me and my Vineyard Though God be the great Soveraign of the World yet he acts not in a way of absolute Soveraignty He rules by Law he is a Lawgiver as well as a King Isaiah 33.22 It had been repugnant to the nature of a rational Creature to be ruled otherwise to be govern'd as a beast this had been to frustrate those Faculties of Will and Understanding which had been given him To conclude this when we say God can do this or that or command this or that his Authority is not bounded and limited properly Who can reasonably detract from his Almightiness because he cannot do any thing which savors of weakness and what detracting is it from his Authority that he cannot do any thing unseemly for the dignity of his nature 'T is rather from the infiniteness of his Righteousness than the straitness of his Authority at most it is but a voluntary bounding his dominion by the Law of his own Holiness 3. His Soveraignty is managed according to the rule of Goodness
breach of it He summons Adam to the Bar indicts him for his Crime finds him guilty by his own Confession and passeth sentence on him according to the rule he had before acquainted him with 4. The means whereby he punisheth shews his dominion Sometimes he musters up Hail and Mildew sometimes he sends regiments of wild Beasts so he threatens Israel Levit. 26.22 Sometimes he sends out a party of Angels to beat up the quarters of men and make a carnage among them 2 King 19.35 Sometimes he mounts his Thundring battery and shoots forth his Ammunition from the Clouds as against the Philistines 1 Sam. 7.10 Sometimes he sends the slightest Creatures to shame the Pride and punish the sin of man as Lice Froggs Locusts as upon the Egyptians the 8 9 10. chap. of Exodus 2. This Dominion is manifested by God as a proprietor and Lord of his Creatures and his own Goods And this is evident 1. In the choice of some persons from Eternity He hath set a part some from Eternity wherein he will display the invincible efficacy of his Grace and thereby infallibly bring them to the fruition of Glory Eph. 1.4 5. According as he hath chosen us in him before the Foundation of the World that we should be Holy and without blame before him in Love having Predestinated us to the Adoption of Children by Jesus Christ to himself according to the good pleasure of his will Why doth he write some names in the Book of Life and leave out others why doth he enroll some whom he intends to make Denizons of Heaven and refuse to put others in his register The Apostle tells us 't is the pleasure of his Will You may render a reason for many of God's actions till you come to this the top and Foundadation of all and under what head of reason can man reduce this act but to that of his Royal Prerogative Why doth God save some and condemn others at last Because of the Faith of the one and unbelief of the other Why do some men beleive Because God hath not only given them the means of Grace but accompanied those means with the efficacy of his Spirit Why did God accompany those means with the efficacy of his Spirit in some and not in others Bccause he had decreed by Grace to prepare them for Glory But why did he decree or choose some and not others Into what will you resolve this but into his soveraign pleasure Salvation and Condemnation at the last upshot are acts of God as the Judge conformable to his own Law of giving life to Believers and inflicting death upon unbeleivers for those a reason may be rendered but the choice of some and preterition of others is an act of God as he is a soveraign Monarch before any Law was actually transgrest because not actually given When a Prince redeems a Rebel he acts as a Judge according to Law but when he calls some out to pardon he acts as a soveraign by a Prerogative above Law into this the Apostle resolves it Rom. 9.13.15 When he speaks of Gods loving Jacob and hating Esau and that before they had done either good or evil It is Because God will have Mercy on whom he will have Mercy and Compassion on whom he will have Compassion Though the first scope of the Apostle in the beginning of the Chapter was to declare the reason of God's rejecting the Jews and calling in the Gentiles had he only intended to demolish the pride of the Jews and flat their opinion of merit and aim'd no higher than that Providential act of God he might convincingly enough to the reason of men have argued from the Justice of God provoked by the obstinacy of the Jews and not have had recourse to his absolute Will but since he asserts this latter * Amyrald dissert p. 101 102. the strength of his argument seems to lie thus if God by his absolute soveraignty may resolve and fix his love upon Jacob and estrange it from Esau or any other of his Creatures before they have done good or evil and man have no ground to call his infinite Majesty to account may he not deal thus with the Jews when their demerit would be a barr to any complaints of the Creature against him If God were considered here in the quality of a Judge it had been fit to have considered the matter of Fact in the Criminal but he is considered as a Soveraign rendring no other reason of his action but his own Will whom he will he hardens ver 18. And then the Apostle concludes Ver. 20. Who art thou O Man that replyest against God If the reason drawn from Gods Soveraignty doth not satisfie in this enquiry no other reason can be found wherein to acquiesce For the last condemnation there will be sufficient reason to clear the Justice of his proceedings But in this case of Election no other reason but what is alledg'd viz. The Will of God can be thought of but what is liable to such knotty exceptions that cannot well be untyed 1. It could not be any merit in the Creature that might determine God to choose him If the decree of Election falls not under the merit of Christ's passion as the procuring cause it cannot fall under the merit of any part of the corrupted mass The decree of sending Christ did not precede but follow'd in order of nature the determination of choosing some When men were chosen as the subjects for Glory Christ was chosen as the means for the bringing them to Glory Eph. 1.4 Chosen us in him and predestinated us to the Adoption of Children by Jesus Christ The choice was not meerly in Christ as the moving cause that the Apostle asserts to be the good pleasure of his will but in Christ as the means of conveying to the chosen Ones the fruits of their Election What could there be in any man that could invite Gpd to this act or be a cause of distinction of one branch of Adam from another Were they not all hew'd out of the same Rock and tainted with the same corruption in blood Had it been possible to invest them with a power of merit at the first had not that venom contracted in their nature degraded all of power for the future What merit was there in any but of wrathfull punishment since they were all considered as Criminals and the cursed brood of an ungrateful Rebel what dignity can there be in the nature of the purest part of clay to be made a Vessel of Honour more than in another part of Clay as pure as that which was form'd into a Vessel for mean and sordid use What had any one to move his mercy more than another since they were all Children of wrath and equally dawb'd with Original guilt and filth Had not all an equal proportion of it to provoke his Justice What merit is there in one dry bone more than another to be inspir'd with the breath
Ver. 12. He shall gather them i. e. Those conspiring Nations as sheaves into the floor then he sounds a Trumpet to Sion Arise and thresh O Daughter of Sion for I will make thy Horn Iron and thy Hoofs Brass and thou shalt beat in pieces many people And I will consecrate their gain unto the Lord and their substance unto the Lord of the whole Earth I will make them and their Councels them and their strength the monuments and signal marks of my Empire over the whole Earth When you see the cunningest designs baffled by some small thing intervening when you see men of profound Wisdom infatuated mistake their way and grope in the noon day as in the night Job 5.14 bewildred in a plain way When you see the hopes of mighty attempters dasht into despair their triumphs turn'd into funerals and their joyful expectations into sorrowful disappointments when you see the weak devoted to destruction victorious and the most presumptuous defeated in their purposes then read the divine Dominion in the desolation of such devices How often doth God take away the Heart and Spirit of grand designs and burst a mighty wheel by snatching but one man out of the World How often doth he cut off the spirits of Princes Psal 76.12 either from the World by death or from the execution of their projects by some unforeseen interruption or from favouring those contrivances which before they cherish'd by a change of their minds How often hath confidence in God and religious Prayer edg'd the weakest and smallest number of weapons to make a carnage of the carnally confident How often hath presumption been disappointed and the contemn'd Enemy rejoyc'd in the spoils of the proud expectant of victory * Causin symb lib. 2. cap. 65. Phydias made the Image of Nemesis or revenge at Marathon of that Marble which the haughty Persians despising the weakness of the Athenian forces brought with them to erect a Trophy for an expected but an ungain'd victory Hamans neck by a sudden turn was in the Halter when the Jews necks were design'd to the block Julian design'd the overthrow of all the Christians just before his breast was peirced by an unexpected Arrow The Powder-Traytors were all ready to give fire to the Mine when the Soveraign hand of Heaven snatch'd away the match Thus the great Lord of the World cuts off men on the pinacle of their designs when they seem to threaten Heaven and Earth Puts out the Candle of the wicked which they thought to use to light them to the execution of their purposes turns their own Counsels into a curse to themselves and a blessing to their Adversaries and makes his greatest Enemies contribute to the effecting his purposes How may we take notice of Gods absolute disposal of things in private affairs when we see one man with a small measure of Prudence and little Industry have great success and others with a greater measure of Wisdom and greater toil and labour find their enterprizes melt between their fingers It was Solomons observation That the race was not to the swift nor the battle to the strong neither bread to the wise nor riches to men of understanding nor yet favour to men of skill Eccles 9.11 Many things might interpose to stop the swift in his race and damp the courage of the most valiant Things do not happen according to mens ability but according to the over-ruling Authority of God God never yet granted man the dominion of his own way no more than to be Lord of his own time the way of man is not in himself it is not in him that walketh to direct his steps Jerem. 10.23 He hath given man a power of acting but not the soveraignty to command success He makes even those things which men intended for their security to turn to their ruine Pilate delivered up Christ to be accounted a friend to Caesar and Caesar soon after proves an Enemy to him removes him from his Government and sends him into banishment The Jews imagined by the crucifying Christ to keep the Roman Ensigns at a distance from them and this hasted their march by Gods soveraign disposal which ended in a total desolation He makes the Judges fools Job 12.17 by taking away his light from their understanding and suffering them to go on in the vanity of their own Spirits that his soveraignty in the management of things may be more apparent For then he is known to be Lord when he snares the wicked in the work of his own hands Psal 9.16 You have seen much of this doctrine in your experience and if my judgment fail me not you will yet see much more 5. The Dominion of God is manifest in sending his Judgments upon whom he please He kills and makes alive he wounds and heals whom he pleaseth His thunders are his own and he may cast them upon what subjects he thinks good He hath a right in a way of Justice to punish all men he hath his choice in a way of Soveraignty to pick out whom he please to make the examples of it Might not some Nations be as wicked as those of Sodom and Gomorrah yet have not been scorcht with the like dreadful flames Zoar was untoucht while the other Cities her Neighbours were burnt to ashes Were there never any places and persons successors in Sodoms guilt Yet those only by his Soveraign Authority are separated by him to be the examples of his Eternal vengeance Jude 7. Why are not sinners as Sodom like as those ancient ones scalded to death by the like fiery drops 't is because it is his pleasure and the same reason is to be rendered why he would in a way of Justice cut off the Jews for their sins and leave the Gentiles untoucht in the midst of their Idolatries When the Church was consumed because of her iniquities they acknowledg'd Gods Soveraignty in this Isaiah 64.7 8. We are the Clay and thou art our Potter and we all the work of thy hands thou hast a liberty either to break or preserve us Judgments move according to Gods order When the Sword hath a charge against Askelon and the Sea shoar thither it must march and touch not any other place or person as it goes though there may be demerit enough for it to punish Jer. 47.6 7. When the Prophet had spake to the Sword Oh thou Sword of the Lord how long will it be ●re thou be quiet Put up thy self into thy scabbard rest and be still The Prophet answers for the Sword how can it be quiet seeing the Lord hath given it a charge against Askelon there hath he appointed it If he hath appointed a judgment against London or Westminster or any other place there it shall drop there it shall peirce and in no other place without a like charge God as a Soveraign gives instructions to every Judgment when and against whom it shall march and what Cities what Persons it shall arrest
own affections according to the holiness of his own Will As it is the effect of his power so it is an argument of his power the greatness of the effect demonstrates the fulness and sufficiency of the Cause The more feeble any man is in reason the less command he hath over his passions and he is the more heady to revenge Revenge is a sign of a Childish mind the stronger any man is in reason the more command he hath over himself Prov. 16.32 He that is slow to Anger is better than the mighty and he that rules his own Spirit than he that takes a City He that can restrain his Anger is stronger than the Coesars and Alexanders of the World that have fill'd the Earth with slain Carcasses and ruin'd Cities By the same reason God's slowness to Anger is a greater argument of his Power than the creating a World or the power of dissolving it by a Word In this he hath a Dominion over Creatures in the other over himself This is the reason he will not return to destroy because I am God and not Man Hosea 11.9 I am not so weak and impotent as man that cannot restrain his Anger This is a strength possessed only by a God wherein a Creature is no more able to parallel him than in any other So that he may be said to be the Lord of himself as it is in the verse before the Text that he is the Lord of Anger in the Hebrew instead of furious as we translate it so he is the Lord of Patience The end why God is Patient is to shew his Power Rom. 9.22 What if God willing to shew his Wrath and to make his Power known endured with much Long-suffering the Vessels of Wrath fitted to destruction To shew his Wrath upon Sinners and his Power over himself in bearing such indignities and forbearing punishment so long when men were vessels of wrath fitted for destruction of whom there was no hopes of amendment Had he immediately broken in peices those Vessels his power had not so eminently appear'd as it hath done in tolerating them so long that had provoked him to take them off so often There is indeed the power of his Anger and there is the power of his Patience and his power is more seen in his Patience than in his Wrath. 'T is no wonder that he that is above all is able to crush all But it is a wonder that he that is provok't by all doth not upon the first provocation rid his hands of all This is the reason why he did bear such a weight of provocations from vessels of wrath prepar'd for ruine that he might 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 shew what he was able to do the Lordship and Royalty he had over himself The power of God is more manifest in his Patience to a multitude of Sinners than it could be in Creating Millions of Worlds out of nothing this was the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a power over himself 5. This Patience being a branch of Mercy the exercise of it is founded in the Death of Christ Without the consideration of this we can give no account why Divine Patience should extend it self to us and not to the fallen Angels The threatning extends it self to us as well as to the fallen Angels The threatning must necessarily have sunk man as well as those glorious Creatures had not Christ stept into our relief * Testa●d de natur Grat. Thes 119. Had not Christ interposed to satisfie the Justice of God man upon his sin had been actually bound over to punishment as well as the fall'n Angels were upon theirs and been fettered in chains as strong as those Spirits feel The reason why man was not hurl'd into the same deplorable condition upon his sin as they were is Christs promise of taking our nature and not theirs Had God design'd Christ's taking their nature the same Patience had been exercised towards them and the same offers would have been made to them as are made to us In regard of these fruits of this Patience Christ is said to buy the wickedest Apostates from him 1 Pet. 2.1 Denying the Lord that bought them such were bought by him as bring upon themselves just destruction and whose damnation slumbers not ver 3. he purchased the continuance of their lives and the stay of their execution that offers of Grace might be made to them This Patience must be either upon the account of the Law or the Gospel for there are no other rules whereby God governs the World a fruit of the Law it was not that spake nothing but Curses after Disobedience not a letter of Mercy was writ upon that And therefore nothing of Patience Death and Wrath was denounced no slowness to Anger intimated It must be therefore upon the account of the Gospel and a fruit of the Covenant of Grace whereof Christ was Mediator Besides this perfection being God's waiting that he might be Gracious Isai●h 30.18 that which made way for Gods Grace made way for his waiting to manifest it God discovered not his Grace but in Christ And therefore discovered not his Patience but in Christ 't is in him he met with the satisfaction of his Justice that he might have a ground for the manifestation of his Patience And the Sacrifices of the Law wherein the Life of a beast was accepted for the sin of a man discovered the ground of his forbearance of them to be the expectation of the great sacrifice whereby sin was to be compleatly expiated Gen. 8.21 The publication of his Patience to the end of the World is presently after the sweet savor he found in Noah's sacrifice The promised and design'd coming of Christ was the cause of that Patience God exercised before in the World And his gathering the Elect together is the reason of his Patience since his death 6. The naturalness of his Veracity and Holiness and the strictness of his Justice are no barrs to the exercise of his patience 1. His Veracity In those threatnings where the punishment is exprest but not the time of inflicting it prefixt and determined in the threatning his veracity suffers no dammage by the delaying Execution so it be once done though a long time after the credit of his Truth stands unshaken As when God promises a thing without fixing the time he is at liberty to pitch upon what time he pleases for the performance of it without staining his faithfulness to his Word by not giving the thing promised presently Why should the deferring of Justice upon an offender be any more against his Veracity than his delaying an answer to the petitions of a suppliant But the difference will lie in the threatning Gen. 2.17 In the day thou eatest thereof thou shalt dye the death The time was there setled In that day thou shalt dye some referre day to eating not to dying and render the sentence thus I do not prohibit thee the eating this fruit for
a day or two but continually In whatsoever day thou eatest thereof thou shalt dye but not understanding his dying that very day he should eat of it Referring day to the extensiveness of the prohibition as to time But to leave this as uncertain it may be answered that as in some threatnings a condition is implyed though not exprest as in that positive denouncing of the destruction of Niniveh Jonah 3.4 Yet forty days and Nineveh shall be destroy'd the condition is imply'd unless they humble themselves and repent for upon their Repentance the sentence was deferred So here in the day thou eatest thereof thou shall dye the death or certainly dye unless there be a way found for the expiation of thy crime and the righting my honour This condition in regard of the event may as well be asserted to be implyed in this threatning as that of Repentance was in the other Or rather thou shalt dye thou shalt die spiritually thou shalt loose that image of mine in thy nature that Righteousness which is as much the Life of thy Soul as thy Soul is the life of thy Body that Righteousness whereby thou art enabled to live to me and thy own happiness What the Soul is to the Body a quickning Soul that the image of God is to the Soul a quickning image Or thou shalt dye the death or certainly dye thou shalt be liable to death * Perer in loc And so it is to be understood not of an actual death of the Body but the merit of death and the necessity of death thou wilt be obnoxious to death which will be avoided if thou dost forbear to eat of the forbidden fruit thou shalt be a guilty person and so under a sentence of death that I may when I please inflict it on thee Death did come upon Adam that day because his nature was vitiated He was then also under an expectation of death he was obnoxious to it though that day it was not poured out upon him in the full bitterness and gall of it As when the Apostle saith Rom. 8.10 The Body is dead because of sin he speaks to the Living and yet tells them the body was dead because of sin he means no more than that it was under a sentence and so a necessity of dying though not actually dead So thou shalt be under the sentence of death that day as certainly as if that day thou shouldst sink into the dust And as by his Patience towards man not sending forth death upon him in all the bitter ingredients of it his Justice afterwards was more eminent upon mans surety than it would have been if it had been then employ'd in all its severe operations upon man So was his Veracity eminent also in making good this threatning in inflicting the punishment included in it upon our nature assum'd by a mighty person and upon that person in our nature who was infinitely higher than our nature 2. His justice and righteousness are not prejudiced by his patience There is a hatred of the sin in his holiness and a sentence past against the sin in his justice though the execution of that sentence be suspended and the person reprieved by patience which is implyed Eccles 8.11 Because sentence against an evil work is not executed speedily therefore the heart of the sons of men is fully set in them to do evil Sentence is past but a speedy execution is stopt Some of the Heathens who would not imagine God unjust and yet seeing the villanies and oppressions of men in the World remain unpunisht and frequently beholding prosperous wickedness to free him from the charge of injustice denyed his providence and actual Government of the World for if he did take notice of humane affairs and concern himself in what was done upon the Earth they could not think an infinite goodness and Justice could be so slow to punish oppressors and relieve the miserable and leave the World in that disorder under the injustice of men They judged such a patience as was exercised by him if he did govern the World was drawn out beyond the line of fit and just Is it not a presumption in men to prescribe a rule of Righteousness and conveniency to their Creator It might be demanded of such whether they never injur'd any in their lives and when certainly they have one way or other would they not think it a very unworthy if not unjust thing that a person so injur'd by them should take a speedy and severe revenge on them And if every man should do the like would there not be a speedy dispatch made of Mankind Would not the World be a shambles and men rush forwards to one anothers destruction for the wrongs they have mutually received If it be accounted a virtue in man and no unrighteousness not presently to be all on fire against an offence by what right should any question the consistency of Gods patience with his justice Do we praise the lenity of Parents to children and shall we disparage the long suffering of God to men We do not censure the righteousness of Physitians and Chirurgeons because they cut not off a corrupt member this day as well as to morrow And is it just to asperse God because he doth deferr his vengeance which man assumes to himself a right to do We never account him a bad Governour that deferrs the tryal and consequently the condemnation and execution of a notorious offender for important reasons and beneficial to the publick either to make the nature of his crime more evident or to find out the rest of his complices by his discovery A Governour indeed were unjust if he commanded that which were unrighteous and forbad that which were worthy and commendable But if he delayes the execution of a convict offender for weighty reasons either for the benefit of the state whereof he is the Ruler or for some advantage to the offender himself to make him have a sence of and a regret for his offence we account him not unjust for this God doth not by his patience dispense with the holiness of his Law nor cut off any thing from its due Authority If men do strengthen themselves by his long suffering against his Law 't is their fault not any unrighteousness in him He will take a time to vindicate the Righteousness of his own commands if men will wholly neglect the time of his patience in forbearing to pay a dutiful observance to his Precept If Justice be natural to him and he cannot but punish sin yet he is not necessitated to consume sinners as the fire doth stubble put into it which hath no command over its own qualities to restrain them from acting But God is a free agent and may choose his own time for the distribution of that punishment his nature leads him to Though he be naturally just yet it is not so natural to him as to deprive him of a dominion over his own acts and a
freedom in the exerting them what time he judgeth most convenient in his Wisdom God is necessarily holy and is necessarily angry with sin his nature can never like it and cannot but be displeased with it yet he hath a liberty to restrain the effects of this anger for a time without disgracing his holiness or being interpreted to act unrighteously As well as a Prince or State may suspend the execution of a Law which they will never break only for a time and for a publick benefit If God should presently execute his Justice this perfection of patience which is a part of his goodness would never have an opportunity of discovery Part of his Glory for which he Created the World would lye in obscurity from the knowledge of his creature His Justice would be signal in the destruction of sinners but this stream of his goodness would be stopt up from any motion One perfection must not cloud another God hath his seasons to discover all one after another The times and seasons are in his own power Act. 1.7 The seasons of manifesting his own perfections as well as other things Succession of them in their distinct appearance makes no invasion upon the rights of any If justice should complain of an injury from patience because it is delaid patience hath more reason to complain of an injury from justice that by such a plea it would be wholly obscur'd and unactive For this perfection hath the shortest time to act its part of any it hath no stage but this World to move in Mercy hath a Heaven and Justice a Hell to display it self to Eternity but long suffering hath only a short liv'd earth for the compass of its operation Again Justice is so far from being wrong'd by Patience that it rather is made more illustrious and hath the fuller scope to exercise it self 'T is the more righted for being deferred and will have stronger grounds than before for its activity The equity of it will be more apparent to every reason the objections more fully answered against it when the way of dealing with sinners by patience hath been slighted When this dam of long suffering is remov'd the floods of fiery justice will rush down with more force and violence Justice will be fully recompenc'd for the delay when after Patience is abused it can spread it self over the offender with a more unquestionable Authority it will have more arguments to hit the sinner in the teeth with and silence him There will be a sharper edge for every stroke the sinner must not only pay for the score of his former sins but the score of abus'd patience so that justice hath no reason to commence a suit against God's slowness to anger What it shall want by the fulness of mercy upon the truly penitent it will gain by the contempt of patience on the impenitent abusers When men by such a carriage are ripen'd for the stroke of justice justice may strike without any regret in it self or pull-back from mercy The contempt of long suffering will silence the pleas of the one and spirit the severity of the other To conclude since God hath glorified his justice on Christ as a surety for sinners his patience is so far from interfering with the rights of his justice that it promotes it 'T is dispensed to this end that God might pardon with honour both upon the score of purchased mercy and contented justice that by a penitent sinners return his mercy might be acknowledg'd free and the satisfaction of his Justice by Christ be glorified in believing for he is long suffering from an unwillingness that any should perish but that all should come to Repentance 2 Pet. 3.9 i. e. All to whom the promise is made for to such the Apostle speaks and calls it long suffering to us ward And Repentance being an acknowledgment of the demerit of sin and a breaking off unrighteousness gives a particular glory to the freeness of mercy and the equity of Justice II. The 2d thing How this patience or slowness to anger is manifested 1. To our First Parents His slowness to anger was evidenced in not directing his Artillery against them when they first attempted to rebel He might have struck them dead when they began to bite at the temptation and were inclinable to a surrender for it was a degree of sinning and a breach of Loyalty as well though not so much as the consummating Act. God might have given way to the floods of his wrath at the first spring of man's aspiring thoughts when the monstrous motion of being as God began to be curdled in his heart But he took no notice of any of their Embryo sins till they came to a ripeness and started out of the womb of their minds into the open Air And after he had brought his sin to perfection God did not presently send that death upon him which he had merited but continued his Life to the space of 930 years Gen. 5.5 The Sun and Stars were not arrested from doing their Office for him Creatures were continued for his use the earth did not swallow him up nor a Thunderbolt from Heaven raze out the memory of him Though he had deserved to be treated with such a severity for his ungrateful demeanour to his Creator and Benefactor and affecting an equality with him yet God continued him with a sufficiency for his content after he turned rebel though not with such a liberality as when he remain'd a Loyal Subject And though he foresaw that he would not make an end of sinning but with an end of living he used him not in the same manner as he had used the Devils He added dayes and years to him after he had deserved death and hath for this 5000 years continued the propagation of Mankind and derived from his loyns an innumerable posterity and hath crown'd multitudes of them with hoary heads He might have extinguisht humane race at the first but since he hath preserved it till this day it must be interpreted nothing else but the effect of an admirable Patience 2. His slowness to anger is manifest to the Gentiles What they were we need no other witness than the Apostle Paul who summs up many of their crimes Rom. 1.29.30 31 32. He doth preface the Catalogue with a comprehensive expression being filled with all unrighteousness And concludes it with a dreadful aggravation They not only do the same but have pleasure in them that do them They were so soakt and naturaliz'd in wickedness that they had no delight and found no sweetness in any thing else but what was in it self abominable All of them were plung'd in Idolatry and Superstition none of them but either set up their great men or creatures beneficial to the World and some the damned Spirits in his stead and paid an adoration to insensible Creatures or Devils which was due to God Some were so deprav'd in their lives and actions that it seem'd to be the
interest of the rest of the World that they should have been extinguisht for the instruction of their contemporaries and posterity The best of them had turned all Religion into a fable coyn'd a World of rites some unnatural in themselves and most of them unbecoming a rational creature to offer and a Deity to accept Yet he did not presently arm himself against them with Fire and Sword nor stopt the course of their Generations nor tare out all those reliques of natural light which were left in their minds He did not do what he might have done but he winkt at the times of that ignorance Act. 17.30 their ignorant Idolatry for that it referrs to ver 29. They thought the God-head was like to Gold or Silver or stone graven by Art and mens device 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 overlooking them He demean'd himself so as if he did not take notice of them He winkt as if he did not see them and would not deal so severely with them the eye of his Justice seem'd to wink in not calling them to an account for their sin 3. His slowness to anger is manifest to the Israelites You know how often they are call'd a stiff-necked people they are said to do evil from their youth i. e. from the time wherein they were erected a Nation and Common-wealth and that the City had been a provocation of his anger and of his fury from the day that they built it even to this day i. e. the day of Jeremiah's Prophesie that he should remove it from before his face Jer. 32.31 From the dayes of Solomon say some which is too much a curtailing of the Text as though their provocations had taken date no higher than from the time of Solomon's rearing the Temple and beautifying the City whereby it seem'd to be a new Building They began more early they scarce discontinued their revolting from God they were a grief to him 40 years together in the Wilderness Psal 95.10 Yet he suffer'd their manners Act. 13.18 He bore with their ill behaviour and sawcyness towards him And no sooner was Joshua's head laid and the Elders that were their conductors gathered to their fathers but the next Generation forsook God and smutted themselves with the Idolatry of the Nations Judg. 2.7.10 11. And when he punished them by prospering the Arms of their enemies against them they were no sooner delivered upon their cry and humiliation but they began a new Scene of Idolatry And though he brought upon them the power of the Babylonian Empire and laid chains upon them to bring them to their right mind And at 70 years end he struck off their chains by altering the whole posture of affairs in that part of the World for their sakes Overturning one Empire and settling another for their Restoration to their antient City And though they did not after disown him for their God and set up Baal in his Throne yet they multiplyed foolish traditions whereby they impaired the Authority of the Law yet he sustained them with a wonderful Patience and preferred them before all other people in the first offers of the Gospel And after they had outrag'd not only his servants the Prophets but his Son the Redeemer yet he did not forsake them but employed his Apostles to sollicit them and publish among them the Doctrine of Salvation So that his treating this people might well be call'd much long suffering it being above 1500 years wherein he bore with them or mildly punished them far less than their deserts Their coming out of Egypt being about the year of the World 2450 and their final destruction as a Common-wealth not till about 40 years after the death of Christ And all this while his Patience did sometimes wholly restrain his Justice and sometimes let it fall upon them in some few drops but made no total devastation of their Country nor wrote his revenge in extraordinary bloody Characters till the Roman conquest wherein he put a period to them both as a Church and State In particular this Patience is manifest 1. In his giving warnings of Judgments before he orders them to go forth He doth not punish in a passion and hastily He speakes before he strikes and speakes that he may not strike Wrath is publisht before it is executed and that a long time An 120 years Advertisement was given to a debauch'd World before the Heavens were open'd to spout down a deluge upon them He will not be accused of coming unawares upon a people He inflicts nothing but what he foretold either immediately to the people that provoke him or anciently to them that have been their fore-runners in the same provocation Hos 7.12 I will chastise them as their Congregation hath heard Many of the leaves of the Old Testament are full of those Presages and Warnings of approaching judgment These make up a great part of the Volume of it in various Editions according to the State of the several provoking times Warnings are given to those people that are most abominable in his sight Zeph. 2.1 2. Gather your selves together yea gather together Oh Nation not desired 't is a Meiosis Oh Nation abhorr'd before the decree bring forth He sends his Heralds before he sends his Armies He summons them by the voice of his Prophets before he confounds them by the voice of his Thunders When a parley is beaten a white flagg of Peace is hung out before a black flagg of fury is set up He seldom cuts down men by his Judgments before he hath hewed them by his Prophets Hos 6.5 Not a remarkable judgment but was foretold the Floud to the Old World by Noah The Famine to Egypt by Joseph The Earthquake by Amos. Amos 1.1 The storm from Chaldea by Jeremy The Captivity of the Ten Tribes by Hosea The total destruction of Jerusalem and the Temple by Christ himself He hath chosen the best persons in the World to give those intimations Noah the most Righteous person on the earth for the Old World And his Son the most beloved person in Heaven for the Jews in the later time And in other parts of the World and in the later times where he hath not warned by Prophets he hath supplyed it by Prodigies in the Air and Earth Histories are full of such Items from Heaven Lesser judgments are fore-warners of greater as Lightnings before Thunder are Messengers to tell us of a succeeding clap 1. He doth often give warning of Judgments He comes not to extremity till he hath often shaken the rod over Men He thunders often before he crusheth them with his Thunder-bolt He doth not till after the first and second admonition punish a rebel as he would have us reject a Heretick He speaks once yea twice Job 33.14 and man percieves it not He sends one Message after another and waits the success of many messages before he strikes Eight Prophets were order'd to acquaint the Old World with approaching judgment 2 Pet. 2.5 He saved
strong that it had been a wrong to his Justice to have restrain'd it any longer The cry was so loud that he could not be at quiet as it were on his Throne of Glory for the disturbing noise Gen. 18.20 21. Sin transgresseth the Law the Law being violated solicites Justice Justice being urg'd pleads for punishment the cry of their sins did as it were force him from Heaven to come down and examine what cause there was for that clamour Sin cries loud and long before he takes his Sword in hand Four hundred years he kept off deserved destruction from the Amorites and deferr'd making good his promise to Abraham of giving Canaan to his Posterity out of his Long-suffering to the Amorites Gen. 15.16 In the fourth Generation they shall come hither again for the iniquity of the Amorites is not yet full Their measure was filling then but not so full as to put a stop to any further patience till four hundred years after The usual time in succeeding Generations from the denouncing of Judgments to the execution is forty years this some ground upon Ezek. 4.6 thou shalt bear the iniquity of the House of Judah forty days taking each day for a year Though Hosea lived seventy years yet from the beginning of his prophesying Judgments against Israel to the pouring them out upon that Idolatrous People it was forty years Hosea as was mentioned before prophesied against them in the days of Jeroboam the second in whose time God did wonderfully deliver Israel 2 Kings 14.26.27 From that time till the total destruction of the ten Tribes it was forty years as may easily be computed from the Story 2 Kings 15 16 17. chapters by the Reign of the succeeding Kings So forty years after the most horrid villany that ever was committed in the face of the Sun viz. The Crucifying the Son of God was Jerusalem destroyed and the inhabitants captiv'd so long did God delay a visible punishment for such an outrage Sometimes he prolongs sending a threatned judgment upon a meer shadow of humiliation so he did that denounced against Ahab He turn'd it over to his posterity and adjourn'd it to another season 1 Kings 21.29 He doth not issue out an Arrest upon one Transgression you often find him not commencing a suit against men till three and four Transgressions The first of Amos all along that chapter and the second chapter for three and four i. e. seven A certain number for an uncertain He gives not orders to his judgments to march till men be obstinate and refuse any commerce with him He stops them till there be no remedy 2 Chron. 36.16 It must be a great wickedness that gives vent to them Hos 10.15 Heb. your wickedness of wickedness He is so slow to anger and stays the punishment his enemies deserve that he may seem to have forgot his kindness to his Friends Psal 44.24 Wherefore hidest thou thy face and forgettest our affliction and oppression He lets his people groan under the yoke of their Enemies as if he were made up of kindness to his Enemies and anger against his Friends This delaying of punishment to evil men is visible in his suspending the terrifying acts of Conscience and supporting it only in its checking admonishing and controuling acts The patience of a Governour is seen in the patient mildness of his Deputy Davids Conscience did not terrifie him till nine months after his sin of Murder Should God set open the Mouth of this power within us not only the Earth but our own bodies and Spirits would be a burden to us 'T is long before God puts Scorpions into the hands of mens Consciences to scourge them He holds back the rod waiting for the hour of our return as if that would be a recompence for our offences and his forbearance III. His Patience is manifest in his unwillingness to execute his Judgments when he can delay no longer He doth not afflict willingly nor grieve the Children of Men. Lament 3.33 Hebr. He doth not afflict from his Heart He takes no pleasure in it as he is Creator The height of mens provocations and the necessity of the preserving his rights and vindicating his Laws obligeth him to it as he is the Governour of the World As a Judge may willingly condemn a Malefactor to death out of affection to the Laws and desire to preserve the order of Government but unwillingly out of Compassion to the offender himself When he resolved upon the destruction of the old World he spake it as a God grieved with an occasion of punishment Gen. 6.6 7. compared together When he came to reckon with Adam be walked he did not run with his Sword in his hand upon him as a mighty man with an eagerness to destroy him Gen. 3.8 And that in the cool of the day a time when men tired in the day are unwilling to engage in a hard employment His exercising judgment is a coming out of his place Isaiah 26.21 Micah 1.3 He comes out of his station to exercise judgment a Throne is more his place than a tribunal Every prophesie loaded with threatnings is call'd the Burden of the Lord a burden to him to execute it as well as to men to suffer it Though three Angels came to Abraham about the punishment of Sodom whereof one Abraham speaks to as to God yet but two appear'd at the destruction of Sodom as if the Governour of the World were unwilling to be present at such dreadful work Gen. 19.1 And when the Man that had the inkhorn by his side that was appointed to mark those that were to be preserved in the common destruction return'd to give an account of the performing his commission Ezek. 9.10 We read not of the return of those that were to kill as if God delighted only to hear again of his works of Mercy and had no mind to hear again of his severe proceedings * Mercer in Gen. 1.5 The Jews to shew Gods unwillingness to punish imagine that Hell was created the second day Because that days work is not pronounced good by God as all the other days works are Gen. 1.8 1. When God doth punish he doth it with some regret * Cressol Decad. 2. p. 163. When he hurles down his thunders he seems to do it with a backward hand Because with an unwilling heart He created saith Chrysostom the World in six days but was seven days in destroying one City Jericho which he had before devoted to be razed to the ground What is the reason saith he that God is so quick to build up but slow to pull down His Goodness excites his power to the One but is not earnest to perswade him to the Other When he comes to strike he doth it with a sigh or groan Isaiah 1.24 Ah I will ease me of my adversaries and avenge me on my Enemies 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ah a note of grief So Hos 6.4 Oh Ephraim what shall I do unto thee
Oh Judah what shall I do unto thee 'T is an Addubitatio a figure in Rhetorick as if God were troubled that he must deal so sharply with them and give them up to their Enemies I have tried all means to reclaim you I have used all ways of kindness and nothing prevails What shall I do my Mercy invites me to spare them and their ingratitude provokes me to ruine them God had born with that people of Israel almost three hundred years from the setting up of the Calves at Dan and Bethel sent many a Prophet to warn them and spent many a rod to reform them And when he comes to execute his threatnings he doth it with a conflict in himself Hosea 11.8 How shall I give thee up Oh Ephraim How shall I deliver thee Israel As if there were a pull-back in his own Bowels he solemnizeth their approaching funeral with a hearty groan and takes his farewell of the dying Malefactor with a pang in himself How often in former times when he had sign'd a warrant for their Execution did he call it back Psal 78.38 Many a time turn'd he his anger away Many a time he recall'd or order'd his Anger to return again as the word signifies as if he were irresolute what to do He recall'd it as a man doth his Servant several times when he is sending him upon an unwelcome message or as a tender hearted Prince wavers and trembles when he is to sign a Writ for the death of a Rebel that hath been before his favorite as if when he had sign'd the Writ he blotted out his name again and flung away the Pen. And his method is remarkable when he came to punish Sodom though the cry of their sin had been fierce in his ears yet when he comes to make inquisition he declares his intention to Abraham as if he were desirous that Abraham should have helped him to some arguments to stop the outgoings of his judgment He gave liberty to the best person in the World to stand in the gap and enter into a treaty with him to shew saith one * Pierce sinner implead Pag. 227. how willingly his mercy would have compounded with his justice for their Redemption And Abraham interceded so long till he was ashamed for pleading the cause of patience and Mercy to the wrong of the rights of divine Justice Perhaps had Abraham had the courage to ask God would have had the compassion to grant a reprieve just at the time of Execution 2. His Patience is manifest in that when he begins to send out his judgments he doth it by degrees His Judgments are as the Morning Light which goes forth by degrees in the Hemisphere Hos 6.5 He doth not shoot all his thunders at once and bring his sharpest judgments in array at one time but gradually that a people may have time to turn to him Joel 1.4 First the Palmer-worm then the Locust then the Canker-worm then the Caterpillar What one left the other was to eat if there were not a timely return A Jewish Writer * Kimchi saith these judgments came not all in one year but one year after another The Palmer-worm and Locust might have eaten all but divine Patience set bounds to the devouring creatures God had been first as a moth to Israel Hos 5.12 Therefore will I be to the house of Ephraim as a Moth Rivet translates it I have been in the Hebr. 't is I without adding I have been or I will be and more probably I have been I was as a Moth which makes little holes in a garment and consumes it not all at once And as rottenness to the house of Judah or a worm that eats into wood by degrees Indeed this people had consum'd insensibly partly by civil combustions change of Governours Forreign Invasions yet they were as obstinate in their Idolatry as ever At last God would be no longer to them as a Moth but as a Lyon tear and go away ver 14. So Hos 2. God had disowned Israel for his Spouse ver 2. She is not my Wife neither am I her Husband yet he had not taken away her Ornaments which by the right of divorce he might have done but still expected her Reformation for that the threatning intimates ver 3. let her put away her Whoredom least I strip her naked and set her as in the day when she was born If she returned she might recover what she had lost if not she might be stript of what remained Thus God dealth with Judah Ezek. 9.3 The Glory of God goes first from the Cherub to the Thresh-hold of the house and stayes there as if he had a mind to be invited back again then it goes from the Threshold of the house and stands over the Cherubims as if upon a penitent call it would drop down again to its antient Station and Seat over which it hoverd Ezek. 10.18 And when he was not sollicited to return he departs out of the City and stood upon the Mountain which is on the East part of the City Ezek. 11.23 looking still towards and hovering about the Temple which was on the East of Jerusalem as if loath to depart and abandon the place and people He walkes so leasurely with his Rod in his hand as if he had a mind rather to fling it away than use it His Patience in not pouring out all his Vials is more remarkable than hi● wrath in pouring out one or two Thus hath God made his slowness to anger visible to us in the gradual punishment of us First the Pestilence on this City then Firing our Houses Consumption of Trade these have not been answered with such a carriage as God expects therefore a greater is reserved I dare prognosticate upon reasons you may gather from what hath been spoke before if I be not much mistaken the 40 yeares of his usual Patience are very near expired he hath inflicted some that he might be met with in a way of Repentance and omit with honour the inflicting the remainder 4. His Patience is manifest in moderating his judgments when he sends them Doth he empty his Quiver of his Arrows or exhaust his magazines of thunder No he could roul one Thunder-bolt successively upon all Mankind 'T is as easie with him to Create a perpetual motion of Lightning and Thunder as of the Sun and Stars and make the World as terrible by the one as it is delightful by the other He opens not all his store he sends out a light party to skirmish with men and puts not in array his whole Army He stirs not up all his wrath Psal 78.38 he doth but pinch where he might have torn asunder When he takes away much he leaves enough to support us If he had stirred up all his anger he had taken away all and our lives to boot He rakes up but a few sparks takes but one firebrand to fling upon men when he might discharge the whole Furnace upon them
his blow the smarter it will be The heavier the Canons are the more difficulty are they drawn to the besieged Town but when arriv'd they recompence the slowness of their march by the fierceness of their battery Because I have purged thee i. e. used means for thy reformation and waited for it and thou wast not purg'd thou shalt not be purg'd from thy filthiness any more till I have caused my fury to rest upon thee I will not go back neither will I spare according to thy ways and according to thy doings shall they Judge thee Ezek. 24.13.14 God will spare as little then as he spar'd much before His wrath shall be as raging upon them as the Sea of their wickedness was within them When there is a bank to forbid the irruption of the streams the waters swell but when the bank is broke or the lock taken away they rush with the greater violence and ravage more than they would have done had not they met with a stop The longer a stone is in falling the more it bruiseth and grinds to powder There is a greater treasure of Wrath laid up by the abuses of patience Every sin must have a just recompence of reward and therefore every sin in regard of its aggravations must be more punished then a sin in the singleness and simplicity of its own nature As treasures of mercy are kept by God for us he keeps mercy for thousands so are treasures of wrath kept by him to be expended and a time of expence there must be Patience will account to Justice all the good offices it hath done the sinner and demand to be righted by Justice Justice will take the account from the hands of Patience and exact a recompence for every disingenuous injury offered to it When Justice comes to arrest men for their debts Patience Mercy and Goodness will step in as Creditors and clap their actions upon them which will make the condition so much more deplorable 4. When he puts an end to his abus'd patience his wrath will make quick and sure work He that is slow to Anger will be swift in the execution of it The departure of God from Jerusalem is described with wings and wheels Ezek. 11.23 One stroke of his hand is irresistible he that hath spent so much time in waiting needs but one minute to ruine though it be long ere he draws his Sword out of his scabbard yet when once he doth it he dispatcheth men at a blow Ephraim or the Ten Tribes had a long time of patience and prosperity but now shall a month devour him with his portion Hosea 5.7 One fatal month puts a period to the many years peace and security of a sinful Nation His Arrows wound suddenly Psal 64.7 And while men are about to fill their Bellies he casts the fruits of his wrath upon them Job 20.23 Like thunder out of a Cloud or a Bullet out of a Cannon that strikes dead before it is heard God deals with sinners as Enemies do with a Town batter it not by planted Guns but secretly undermines and blows up the Walls whereby they involve the Garrison in a suddain ruine and carry the Town God spar'd the Amalekites along time after the injury committed against the Israelites in their passage out of Egypt to Canaan but when he came to reckon with them he would wast them in a trice and make an utter consumption of them 1 Sam. 15.2 3. He describes himself by a travelling Woman Isaiah 42.14 That hath born long in her Womb and at last sends forth her Birth with strong cries Though he hath held his peace been still and refrained himself yet at last he will destroy and devour at once The Ninivites spar'd in the time of Jonah for their Repentance are in Nature threatned with a certain and total ruine when God should come to bring them to an account for his length and patience so much abus'd by them Though God endur'd the murmuring Israelites so long in the Wilderness yet he paid them off at last and took away the Rebels in his Wrath. He uttered their sentence with an irreversible Oath that none of them should enter into his rest and he did as surely execute it as he had solemnly sworn it 5. Though he doth deferre his visible wrath yet that very delay may be more dreadful than a quick punishment He may forbear striking and give the Reins to the hardness and corruption of mens hearts He may suffer them to walk in their own Counsels without any more striving with them whereby they make them selves fitter fuel for his vengeance This was the fate of Israel when they would not hearken to his voice he gave them up to their own hearts lusts and they walked in their own Counsels Psal 81.12 Though his sparing them had the outward aspect of patience it was a wrathful one and attended with spiritual judgments thus many abusers of patience may still have their line lengthned and the Candle of prosperity to shine upon their heads that they may encrease their sins and be the fitter mark at last for his arrows They swim down the stream of their own sensuality with a deplorable security till they fall into an unavoidable gulf where at last it will be a great part of their Hell to reflect on the length of divine patience on Earth and their inexcusable abuse of it 2. It informs us of the reason why he lets the Enemies of his Church oppress it and deferrs his promise of the deliverance of it If he did punish them presently his holiness and Justice would be glorifyed but his power over himself in his patience would be obscured Well may the Church be content to have a perfection of God glorified that is not like to receive any honor in another World by any exercise of it self If it were not for this patience he were uncapable to be the Governour of a sinful World he might without it be the Governour of an innocent World but not of a criminal one he would be the destroyer of the World but not the orderer and disposer of the extravagancies and sinfulness of the World The interest of his Wisdom in drawing good out of evil would not be served if he were not clothed with this perfection as well as with others If he did presently destroy the Enemies of his Church upon the first oppression his wisdom in contriving and his power in accomplishing deliverance against the united powers of Hell and Earth would not be visible no nor that power in preserving his people unconsumed in the furnace of Affliction He had not got so great a name in the rescue of his Israel from Pharaoh had he thundered the Tyrant into destruction upon his first Edicts against the innocent If he were not patient to the most violent of men he might seem to be cruel But when he offers peace to them under their rebellions waits that they may be members of his Church rather
that their corruption should be so deep and strong that so much patience could not overcome it It would certainly make a man asham'd of his nature as well as his actions 3. The consideration of his patience would make us resent more the injuries done by others to God A Patient sufferer though a deserving sufferer attracts the pity of men that have a value for any vertue though clouded with a heap of vice How much more should we have a concern for God who suffers so many abuses from others And be grieved that so admirable a patience should be slighted by men who solely live by and under the daily influence of it The impression of this would make us take Gods part as it is usual with men to take the part of good dispositions that lie under oppression 4. It would make us patient under Gods hand His slowness to Anger and his forbearance is visible in the very strokes we feel in this Life We have no reason to murmur against him who gives us so little cause and in the greatest afflictions gives us more occasion of thankfulness than of repining Did not slowness to the extreamest Anger moderate every affliction it had been a Scorpion instead of a rod. We have reason to bless him who from his long-suffering sends temporal sufferings where eternal are justly due Ezra 9.13 Thou hast punished us less than our iniquities do deserve His indulgences towards us have been more than our corrections and the length of his patience hath exceeded the sharpness of his rod Upon the account of his long-suffering our mutinies against God have as little to excuse them as our sins against him have to deserve his forbearance The consideration of this would shew us more reason to repine at our own repinings than at any of his smarter dealings And the consideration of this would make us submissive under the Judgments we expect His undeserved patience hath been more than our merited judgments can possibly be thought to be If we fear the removal of the Gospel for a season as we have reason to do we should rather bless him that by his waiting patience he hath continued it so long then murmur that he threatens to take it away so late He hath born with us many a year since the light of it was re-kindled when our Ancestors had but six years of patience between the rise of Edward the VI and the ascent of Queen Mary to the Crown 2. Exhortation is to admire and stand astonisht at his patience and bless him for it If you should have defil'd your Neighbors bed or sullyed his reputation or rifled his Goods would he have withheld his vengeance unless he had been too weak to execute it We have done worse to God then we can do to man and yet he draws not that Sword of Wrath out of the scabbard of his patience to sheath it in our hearts 'T is not so much a wonder that any Judgments are sent as that there are no more and sharper That the World shall be fired at last is not a thing so strange as that fire doth not come down every day upon some part of it Had the disciples that saw such excellent patterns of mildness from their Master and were so often urg'd to learn of him that was lowly and meek the Government of the World it had been long since turn'd into ashes since they were too forward to desire him to open his magazine of judgments and kindle a fire to consume a Samaritan Village for a slight affront in comparison of what he received from others and afterwards from themselves in their forsaking of him Luke 9.52 53 54. We should admire and praise that here which shall be prais'd in Heaven though patience shall cease as to its exercise after the consummation of the World it shall not cease from receiving the acknowledgments of what it did when it traversed the stage of this Earth If the Name of God be glorified and acknowledged in Heaven no question but this will also since long-suffering is one of his Divine Titles a letter in his name as well as Merciful and Gracious Abundant in Goodness and Truth And there is good reason to think that the patience exercised towards some before converting grace was ordered to seize upon them will bear a great part in the Anthems of Heaven The greater his long-suffering hath been to men that lay covered with their own dung a long time before they were freed by grace from their filth the more admiringly and loudly they will cry up his Mercy to them after they have past the gulf and see a deserv'd Hell at a distance from them and many in that place of torments who never had the tasts of so much forbearance If mercy will be prais'd there that which began the Alphabet of it cannot be forgot If Paul speak so highly of it in a damping World and under the pull-backs of a body of death as he doth 1 Tim. 1.16 17. For this cause I obtained mercy that Christ might shew forth all long-suffering Now unto the King Eternal Immortal Invisible the Only Wise God be Honour and Glory for ever and ever Amen No doubt but he will have a higher note for it when he is surrounded with a heavenly flame and freed from all remains of dullness shall it be praised above and have we no notes for it here below Admire Christ too who sued out your repreive upon the account of his merit As mercy acts not upon any but in Christ so neither had patience born with any but in Christ The pronouncing the arrest of Judgment Gen. 8.21 was when God smell'd a sweet savour from Noahs sacrifice not from the Beasts offer'd but the Antitypical sacrifice represented That we may be raised to bless God for it let us consider 1. The multitude of our provocations Though some have blacker guilt than others and deeper stains yet let none wipe his mouth but rather imagine himself to have but little reason to bless it Are not all our offences as many as their have been minutes in our lives All the moments of our continuance in the World have been moments of his Patience and our ingratitude Adam was punished for one sin Moses excluded Canaan for a passionate unbelieving word Ananias and Saphira lost their lives for one sin against the Holy Ghost One sin sullyed the beauty of the World defaced the works of God had crackt Heaven and Earth in pieces had not infinite satisfaction been proposed to the provoked Justice by the Redeemer And not one sin committed but is of the same venemous nature How many of those contradictions against himself hath he born with Had we been only unprofitable to him his forbearance of us had been miraculous But how much doth it exceed a miracle and lift it self above the meanness of a conjunction with such an Epithet since we have been provoking Had there been no more than our impudent or careless
rushings into his presence in Worship Had they been only sins of Omission and sins of Ignorance it had been enough to have put a stand to any further operations of this perfection towards us But add to those sins of Commission sins against knowledge sins against spiritual motions sins against repeated resolutions and pressing admonitions the neglects of all the opportunities of Repentance put them all together and we can as little recount them as the sands on the sea shore But what do I only speak of particular men view the whole World and if our own iniquities render it an amazing Patience what a mighty supply will be made to it in all the numerous and weighty provocations under which he hath continued the World for so many revolutions of Years and Ages Have not all those pressed into his presence with a loud cry and demanded a sentence from Justice yet hath not the Judge been overcome by the importunity of our sins * Pont. part 1. 42. Were the Devils punished for one sin a proud thought and that not committed against the blood of Christ as we have done numberless times yet hath not God made us partakers in their punishment though we have exceeded them in the quality of their sin Oh admirable patience that would bear with me under so many while he would not bear with the sinning Angels for one 2. Consider how mean things we are who have provoked him What is man but a vile thing that a God abounding with all riches should take care of so abject a thing much more to bear so many affronts from such a drop of matter such a nothing creature That he that hath anger at his command as well as pity should endure such a detestable deformed creature by sin to fly in his face What is man that thou art mindful of him Psal 8. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 miserable incurable man derived from a word that signifies to be incurably sick Man is Adam Earth from his Earthly Original and Enosh incurable from his corruption Is it not worthy to be admired that a God of infinite Glory should wait on such Adams worms of earth and be as it were a servant and attendant to such Enoshes sickly and peevish creatures 3. Consider who it is that is thus patient He it is that with one breath could turn Heaven and Earth and all the inhabitants of both into nothing That could by one Thunderbolt have razed up the Foundations of a cursed World He that wants not instruments without to ruine us that can arm our own Consciences against us and can drown us in our own Phlegm And by taking out one pin from our bodies cause the whole frame to fall asunder Besides 't is a God that while he suffers the sinner hates the sin more than all the Holy men upon Earth or Angels in Heaven can do So that his patience for a minute transcends the patience of all creatures from the Creation to the Dissolution of the World because it is the patience of a God infinitely more sensible of the cursed quality of sin and infinitely more detesting it 4. Consider how long he hath forborn his anger A reprieve for a Week or a Month is accounted a great favour in Civil States The Civil Law enacts * Cod. Lib. 9. Titul 47 6. 20. that if the Emperour commanded a man to be condemned the Execution was to be deferred 30 dayes because in that time the Princes anger might be appeased But how great a favour is it to be reprieved 30 years for many offences every one of which deserves death more at the hands of God than any offence can at the hands of man Paul was according to the common account but about 30 years Old at his Conversion and how much doth he elevate Divine long suffering Certainly there are many who have more reason as having larger quantities of patience cut out to them who have lived to see their own gray hairs in a rebellious posture against God before Grace brought them to a surrender We were all condemn'd in the Womb our Lives were forfeited the first moment of our breath but patience hath stopt the Arrest The merciful Creditor deserves to have acknowledgment from us who hath laid by his Bond so many years without putting it in suit against us Many of your companions in sin have perhaps been surprized long ago and haled to an Eternal Prison Nothing is remaining of them but their dust and the time is not yet come for your Funeral Let it be considered that that God that would not wait upon the fallen Angels one instant after their sin nor give them a moments space of Repentance hath prolonged the Life of many a sinner in the World to innumerable moments to 420000 minutes in the space of a Year to 8 Millions and 400000 Minutes in the space of 20 Years The damned in Hell would think it a great kindness to have but a Year's Month's nay Daye 's respite as a space to Repent in 5. Consider also how many have been taken away under shorter measures of patience Some have been struck into a Hell of misery while thou remainest upon an Earth of forbearance In a Plague the destroying Angel hath hew'd down others and past by us The Arrows have flew about our heads past over us and stuck in the heart of a neighbour How many Rich men How many of our Friends and Familiars have been seiz'd by death since the beginning of the year when they least thought of it and imagin'd it far from them Have you not known some of your acquaintance snatcht away in the height of a crime Was not the same wrath due to you as well as to them And had it not been as dreadful for you to be so surprized by him as it was for them Why should he take a less sturdy sinner out of thy company and let thee remain still upon the Earth If God had dealt so with you how had you been cut off not only from the enjoyment of this Life but the hopes of a better And if God hath made such a Providence beneficial for reclaiming you how much reason have you to acknowledge him He that hath had least patience hath cause to admire but those that have more ought to exceed others in blessing him for it If God had put an end to your natural Life before you had made provision for Eternal how deplorable would your condition have been Consider also who ever have been sinners formerly of a deeper note Might not God have struck a man in the embraces of his Harlots and choaked him in the moment of his excessive and intemperate healths or on the sudden have spurted Fire and Brimstone into a blasphemers mouth What if God had snatcht you away when you had been sleeping in some great iniquity or sent you while burning in lust to the fire it merited Might he not have crackt the string that linkt your souls to your
757 758 782 783 V. Governour and Magistrates Licentiousness the Gospel no friend to Pag. 336 Life Eternal expected by Men from something of their own vide Justification Assured to the People of God Pag. 236 683 684 Light a glorious Creature Pag. 588 Light of Nature shews the Being of a God Pag. 4 5 Limiting God a contempt of his Dominion Pag. 761 Lives of Men at God's disposal Pag. 748 Love to God sometimes arises meerly from some self-pleasing benefits Pag. 90 A necessary ingredient in Spiritual Worship Pag. 147 148 A great help to it Pag. 176 God is highly worthy of it Pag. 201 202 556 557 563 675 676 677 778 Outward expressions of it insignificant without Obedience Pag. 580 581 God's Gospel name Pag. 616 Of God to his People great Pag. 769 Lusts of Men make them Atheists Pag. 2 M. MAgistracy the Goodness of God in setling it Pag. 650 Magistraees are inferiour to God to be obedient to him Pag. 765 766 Ought to govern Justly and Righteously Pag. 766 To be obey'd ib. Man could not make himself Pag. 17 18 19 20 The World subservient to him Pag. 23 The abridgement of the Universe Pag. 29 30 608 Naturally disowns the Rule God hath set him Pag. 54 ad 67 Owns any Rule rather than God's Pag. 67 ad 70 Would set himself up as his own Rule Pag. 70 ad 74 Would give Laws to God Pag. 74 ad 80 Would make himself his own End V. End His Natural Corruption how great Pag. 452 Made holy at first Pag. 507 508 607 Yet mutable which was no blemish to God's Holiness Pag. 517 518 519 Made after God's Image Pag. 607 The World made and furnish'd for him Pag. 608 609 610 In his Corrupt estate without any motives to excite Gods Redeeming love Pag. 625 ad 628 Restored to a more excellent state than his first Pag. 641 642 Under God's Dominion Pag. 719 720 Means Vide Instrument To depend on the Power of God and neglect them is an abuse of it Pag. 483 484 Of Grace to neglect them an affront of God's Wisdom Pag. 402 403 Given to some and not to others Pag. 734 ad 737 Have various influences Pag. 737 738 Meditation on the Law of God Men have no delight in Pag. 56 Members bodily attributed to God do not prove him a Body Pag. 118 119 What sort of them attributed to him ib. With a respect to the Incarnation of Christ ib. Mercies of God to Sinners how Wonderful Pag. 99 100 A Motive to Worship Pag. 130 Former ones should be remembred when we come to beg new ones Pag. 180 Its Plea for Fallen Man Pag. 376 377 It and Justice reconcil'd in Christ Pag. 377 Holiness of God in them to be observed Pag. 557 Contempt and abuse of them vide Goodness One foundation of God's Dominion Pag. 709 710 Call for our Love of him Pag. 676 677 678 And Obedience to him Pag. 680 681 Given after great Provocations Pag. 805 806 Merit of Christ not the cause of the first resolution of God to Redeem Pag. 621 622 Not the cause of Election Pag. 728 729 Man uncapable of Pag. 764 Miracles prove the Being of a God though not wrought to that end Pag. 5 38 Wrought by God but seldom Pag. 371 The Power of God Pag. 438 The Power of God seen no more in them than in the ordinary works of Nature Pag. 450 451 Many wrought by Christ Pag. 460 Moral Goodness encouraged by God Pag. 652 Moral Law commands things good in their own Nature Pag. 51 723 The Holiness of God appears in in it Pag. 508 Holy in the matter and manner of his Precepts Pag. 508 509 Reaches the Inward Man Pag. 509 510 Perpetual ib. V. Law of God Publish'd with Majesty Pag. 724 Mortification how difficult Pag. 101 Motions of all Creatures in God Pag. 449 Variety of them in a single Creature Pag. 449 450 Mountains how useful Pag. 23 Before the Deluge Pag. 181 Mouth how curiously contrived Pag. 30 N. NAture of Man must be sanctified before it can perform Spiritual Worship Pag. 142 Human highly advanced by its union with the Son of God Pag. 628 629 Human and Divine in Christ vide Vnion Night how necessary Pag. 350 O. OBedience to God not true unless it be universal Pag. 61 Due to him upon the account of his Eternity Pag. 202 To him should be preferr'd before Obedience to Men. V. Laws Of Faith only acceptable to God Pag. 336 Distinct but inseparable from Faith ib. Shall be rewarded Pag. 354 Redemption a strong Incentive to it Pag. 387 388 Without it nothing will avail us Pag. 580 581 The goodness of God in accepting it tho imperfect Pag. 656 657 Due to God for his goodness Pag. 680 681 682 Due to God as a Soveraign Pag. 779 780 781 What kind of it due to him Pag. 781 782 783 784 Objects the proposing them to Man which God knows he will use to sin no blemish to Gods Holiness Pag. 533 ad 536 Obstinacy in Sin a contempt of Divine Power Pag. 480 481 Omissions of Prayer a practical denial of God's Knowledge Pag. 328 Of Duty a contempt of his Goodness Pag. 666 Omnipresence an Attribute of God Pag. 243 Denied by some Jews and Heathens but acknowledged by the wisest amongst them Pag. 244 245 To be understood negatively Pag. 245 Influential on all Creatures Pag. 245 246 Limited to Subjects capacitated for this or that kind of it Pag. 246 Essential ib. In all places Pag. 246 247 248 With all Creatures Pag. 248 Without mixture with them or division of himself Pag. 248 249 Not by multiplication or extension Pag. 249 But totally ib. In imaginary spaces beyond the World Pag. 249 250 251 God's incommunicable Property Pag. 251 252 Arguments to prove his Omnipresence Pag. 252 ad 256 Objections against it answer'd Pag. 257 ad 261 Ascribed to Christ Pag. 261 262 Proves God a Spirit Pag. 262 And his Providence ib. And Omniscient and Incomprehensible Pag. 263 Calls for Admiration of him Pag. 264 Forgotten and contemn'd 264 Pag. 265 Terrible to Sinners Pag. 265 266 Comfortable to the Righteous and wherein Pag. 268 Should be often thought of and the advantages of so doing Pag. 268 ad 270 Opposition in the hearts of Men naturally against the Will of God Pag. 57 P. PArdon Gods Infinite Knowledge a comfort when we reflect on it or seek it Pag. 334 † The Power of God in granting it and giving a sense of it Pag. 470 471 The Spring of all other Blessings Pag. 698 Always accompanied with Regeneration ib. Punishment remitted upon it Pag. 698 699 'T is perfect Pag. 699 Of God and his alone gives a full security Pag. 769 770 Patience under Afflictions a duty Pag. 415 God's Immutability should teach us it Pag. 237 238 A sense of God's Holiness would promote it Pag. 555 556 And his Goodness Pag. 688 Motives to it Pag. 784 785 786 The true Nature of it Pag. 786 Consideration of
Gods Patience to us would promote it Pag. 822 Patience of God how admirable Pag. 99 100 263 806 807 808 His Wisdom the ground of it Pag. 396 Evidences his Power Pag. 460 789 'T is a Property of the Divine Nature Pag. 791 A part of Goodness and Mercy but differs from both Pag. 792 793 Not insensible constrained or faint-hearted Pag. 793 794 Flows from his fulness of Power over himself Pag. 794 795 Founded in the Death of Christ Pag. 795 796 His Veracity Holiness and Justice no bars to it Pag. 796 797 798 Exercis'd towards our First Parents Gentiles and Israelites Pag. 799 800 Wherein it is evidenc'd Pag. 800 ad 808 The reason of its exercise Pag. 808 ad 814 'T is abus'd and how Pag. 814 815 The abuse of it sinful and dangerous Pag. 816 817 818 Exercis'd towards Sinners and Saints Pag. 819 Comfortable to all Pag. 819 820 Especially to the Righteous ib. Should be meditated on and the advantage of so doing Pag. 821 822 We should admire and bless God for it with Motives so to do Pag. 823 824 825 Should not be presumed on Pag. 825 826 Should be imitated Pag. 826 827 Poems fewer Sacred ones good than of any other kind Pag. 86 Peace God only can speak it to troubled Souls Pag. 471 Permission of Sin what it is and that 't is no blemish to Gods Holiness Pag. 522 ad 529 Persecutions the Goodness of God seen in them Pag. 657 658 Vide Apostacy Perseverance of the Saints a Gospel Doctrine Pag. 333 Certain Pag. 235 486 487 551 Motives to labour after it Pag. 238 239 Depends on God's Power and Wisdom Pag. 333 471 Pleasures Sensual men strangely addicted to Pag. 86 We ought to take heed of them Pag. 107 Poor the Wisdom of God in making some so Pag. 356 357 Power infinite belongs to God Pag. 421 The meaning of the word Pag. 421 Absolute and ordinate Pag. 421 422 Distinct from Will and Wisdom Pag. 424 Gives life and activity to his other Perfections Pag. 425 Of a larger extent than some others ibid. Originally and essentially in the Nature of God and the same with his Essence Pag. 426 427 Incommunicable to the Creature ibid. Pag. 431 Infinite and Eternal Pag. 427 ad 432 Bounded by his Decree Pag. 432 Not infringed by the impossibility of doing some things Pag. 432 ad 435 Arguments to prove it is in God Pag. 435 ad 439 Appears in Creation Pag. 439 ad 445 In the Government of the world Pag. 445 ad 456 In Redemption Pag. 456 ad 461 In the publication and propagation of the Gospel Pag. 461 ad 467 In planting and preserving Grace and pardoning sin Pag. 467 ad 472 Ascribed to Christ Pag. 472 ad 476 And to the Holy Ghost Pag. 476 Infers his Blessedness Immutability and Providence Pag. 476 477 A ground of Worship Pag. 478 And for the belief of the Resurrection Pag. 479 Contemn'd and abused and wherein Pag. 480 ad 484 Terrible to the Wicked Pag. 484 Comfortable to the Righteous and wherein Pag. 485 ad 487 Should be meditated on Pag. 488 And trusted in and why Pag. 489 490 Should teach us humility and submission Pag. 491 And the fear of him and not of man Pag. 491 492 Praise consideration of God's Wisdom and Goodness would help us to give it to him Pag. 409 689 690 Men backward to it Pag. 697 Due to him Pag. 776 Prayer men impatient if God do not answer it Pag. 92 93 We should take the most melting opportunities for secret Prayer Pag. 178 Not unnecessary because of God's Immutability Knowledge Pag. 220 231 335 to Creatures a wrong to God's Omniscience Pag. 322 323 Omission of it a practical denial of God's Knowledge Pag. 328 'T is a comfort that the most secret ones are understood by God Pag. 331 God's Wisdom a comfort in delaying or denying an answer to them Pag. 406 For success on wicked Designs how sinful Pag. 543 God fit to be trusted in for an answer of them Pag. 551 The goodness of God in answering them Pag. 654 655 His Goodness a comfort in them Pag. 682 God's Dominion an Encouragement to and ground of it Pag. 770 771 779 Preparation we should examine our selves concerning it before worship Pag. 162 Consideration of God's Knowledge would promote it Pag. 338 † How great a sin to come into God's Presence without it Pag. 544 Presence of Men more regarded than God's Pag. 86 87 We should seek for God's special and influential Presence Pag. 270 271 Vide Omnipresence Preserve himself no Creature can Pag. 19 447 448 God only can the World Pag. 29 The Power of God seen in it Pag. 445 One foundation of God's Dominion Pag. 709 Presumption springs from vain imaginations of God Pag. 95 96 A contempt of God's Dominion Pag. 761 762 Pride how common Pag. 82 83 An exalting our selves above God Pag. 89 The thoughts of God's Eternity should abate it Pag. 197 198 199 An affront to God's Wisdom Pag. 405 Of our own Wisdom foolish Pag. 411 God's Mercies abused to it Pag. 668 A contempt of his Dominion Pag. 761 Principles better known by actions than words Pag. 49 Some kept up by God to facilitate the Reception of the Gospel Pag. 392 Propagation of Creatures the Power of God seen in it Pag. 448 449 Of Mankind one end of God's patience Pag. 811 812 Prophecies prove the Being of God Pag. 39 Promises Men break them with God Pag. 66 67 232 233 Of God shall be performed Pag. 196 486 821 We should believe them and leave God to his own season of accomplishing them Pag. 342 Distrust of them a contempt of God's Wisdom Pag. 405 The Holiness of God in the performance of them to be observ'd Pag. 557 Providenc of God proved Pag. 262 317 318 477 Vide Government of the World Especially to his Church and the meanest in it 272 273 Extends to all Creatures 646 ad 649 Distrust of it a contempt of God's Goodness 665 Punishments v. Judgments God always just in them Pag. 100 671 Of sinners Eternal Pag. 193 194 The wisdom of God seen in them Pag. 370 Necessarily follow sins Pag. 547 548 549 Do not impeach God's Goodness Pag. 598 ad 604 Not God's primary intention Pag. 601 Inflicting them a branch of God's Dominion Pag. 726 727 Necessarily follow upon it Pag. 767 Of the Wicked unavoidable and terrible Pag. 767 768 Purgatory held by the Jews Pag. 73 R. RAin an instance of God's Wisdom and Power Pag. 349 418 Reason should not be the measure of God's Revelations Pag. 413 414 Repentance how ascribed to God Pag. 224 225 2●6 A reasonable Condition Pag. 389 The end of God's patience Pag. 810 811 The consideration of God's patience would make us frequent and serious in the practice of it Pag. 821 Reprobation consistent with God's Holiness and Justice Pag. 522 Reproof may be for evil ends Pag. 93 Reputation men more concerned for their own than Gods
there been some reason of any disgust it could not have ballanced that kindness which had so much reason to oblige him However he had received no courtesie from the fallen Angel to oblige him to turn into his Camp Was it not enough that one of thy Creatures would have stript thee of the glory of Heaven but this also must deprive thee of thy glory upon Earth which was due from him to thee as his Creator Can he charge the difficulty of the Command No It was rather below than above his strength He might rather complain that it was no higher whereby his Obedience and Gratitude might have a larger scope and a more spacious Field to move in than a Precept so light so easie as to abstain from one Fruit in the Garden What excuse can he have that would prefer the liquorishness of his Sense before the dictates of his Reason and the Obligations of his Creation The Law thou didst set him was righteous and reasonable and shall Righteousness and Reason be rejected by the Supream and Infallible Reason because the rebellious Creature hath trampled upon it What must God abrogate his holy Law because the Creature hath slighted it What Reflection will this be upon the Wisdom that enacted it And upon the Equity of the Command and Sanction of it Either Man must suffer or the Holy Law be expunged and for ever out of date And is it not better Man should Eternally smart under his Crime than any dishonourable Reflections of Unrighteousness be cast upon the Law and of folly and want foresight upon the Lawgiver Not to punish would be to approve the Devils Lye and justifie the Creatures Revolt It would be a Condemnation of thy own Law as unrighteous and a Sentencing thy own Wisdom as imprudent Better Man should for ever bear the Punishment of his Offence than God bear the dishonour of his Attributes Better Man should be miserable than God should be unrighteous unwise false and tamely bear the denial of his Soveraignty But what advantage would it be to gratifie Mercy by Pardoning the Malefactor Besides the irreparable dishonour to the Law the falsifying thy veracity in not executing the denounced threatning he would receive incouragement by such a grace to spurn more at thy Soveraignty and oppose thy Holiness by running on in a course of sin with hopes of Impunity If the Creature be restored it can not be expected that he that hath fared so well after the breach of it should be very careful of a future observance His easy readmission would abet him in the repetition of his Offence and thou shalt soon find him cast off all Moral dependance on thee Shall he be restored without any Condition or Covenant He is a Creature not to be governed without a Law and a Law is not be enacted without a Penalty What future regard will he have to thy Precept or what fear will he have of thy Threatning if his Crime be so lightly past over Is it the stability of thy Word What reason will he have to give credit to that which he hath found already disregarded by thy self Thy Truth in future Threatnings will be of no force with him who hath experienced thy laying it aside in the former 'T is necessary therefore that the rebellious creature should be punished for the preservation of the honour of the Law and the honour of the Lawgiver with all those perfections that are united in the composure of it 2. Secondly Mercy doth not want a Plea 'T is true indeed the sin of man wants not its aggravations He hath slighted thy Goodness and accepted thy Enemy as his Counsellor but it was not a pure act of his own as the Devils revolt was He had a Tempter and the Devil had none He had I acknowledge an Understanding to know thy Will and a Power to obey it yet he was mutable and had a capacity to fall It was no difficult task that was set him nor a hard yoke that was laid upon him yet he had a brutish part as well as a rational and sense as well as Soul whereas the fallen Angel was a pure Intellectual Spirit Did God create the World to suffer an eternal dishonour in letting himself be out-witted by Satan and his work wrested out of his hands Shall the work of eternal Counsel presently sink into irreparable destruction and the honour of an Almighty and wise Work be lost in the ruine of the Creature This would seem contrary to the nature of thy Goodness to make Man only to render him miserable To design him in his Creation for the Service of the Devil and not for the Service of his Creator What else could be the issue if the chief work of thy Hand defaced presently after the erecting should for ever remain in this marred condition What can be expected upon the continuance of his misery but a perpetual hatred and enmity of thy Creature against thee Did God in Creation design his being hated or his being loved by his Creature Shall God make a holy Law and have no obedience to that Law from that Creature whom it was made to govern Shall the curious workmanship of God and the excellent Engravings of the Law of Nature in his heart be so soon defaced and remain in that blotted condition for ever This fall thou couldst not but in the treasures of thy Infinite Knowledge foresee Why hadst thou Goodness then to Create him in an Integrity if thou wouldst not have Mercy to pity him in Misery Shall thy Enemy for ever trample upon the honour of thy Work and triumph over the glory of God and applaud himself in the success of his subtilty Shall thy Creature only passively glorifie thee as an Avenger and not actively as a Compassionater Am not I a perfection of thy Nature as well as Justice Shall Justice ingross all and I never come into view 'T is resolved already that the fallen Angels shall be no Subjects for me to exercise my self upon and I have now less reason than before to plead for them They fell with a full consent of will without any motion from another and not content with their own Apostacy they envy thee and thy glory upon Earth as well as in Heaven and have drawn into their party the best part of the Creation below Shall Satan plunge the whole Creation in the same irreparable ruine with himself If the Creature be restored will he contract a boldness in sin by impurity Hast thou not a Grace to render him ingenuous in Obedience as well as a Compassion to recover him from Misery What will hinder but that such a Grace which hath established the standing Angels may establish this recovered Creature If I am utterly excluded from exercising my self on men as I have been from Devils a whole Species is lost nay I can never expect to appear upon the Stage If thou wilt quite ruine him by Justice and create another World and another
the Eye of his Justice that Ephraim might not be his unwise Son and stay long in the place of the breaking forth of Children i. e. That he should speedily reclaim himself and not continue in the way of destruction God hath no need to abuse any he doth not lie to the Sons of men if he would have men perish he could easily destroy them and have done it long ago He did not leave the woman Jezabel in being nor lengthned out her time but as a space to Repent Revelations 2.21 That she might reflect upon her ways and devote her self seriously to his service and her own happiness His patience stands between the offending Creature and Eternal misery a long time that men might not foolishly throw away their Souls and be damned for their impenitency by this he shews himself ready to receive men to mercy upon their return To what purpose doth he invite men to Repentance if he intended to deceive them and damn them after they Repent 3. He doth exercise Patience for the propagation of Mankind If God punished every sin presently there would not only be a period put to Churches but to the World without Patience Adam had sunk into Eternal anguish the first moment of his provocation and the whole World of Mankind in his loynes had perished with him and never seen the light If this perfection had not interposed after the first sin God had lost his end in the Creation of the World which he Created not in vain but formed it to be inhabited Isa 45.18 It had been inconsistent with the wisdom of God to make a world to be inhabited and destroy it upon sin when it had but two principal inhabitants in it the reason of his making this earth had been insignificant He had not had any upon earth to Glorifie him without erecting another World which might have proved as sinful and as quickly wicked as this God should have alwayes been pulling down and rearing up creating and annihilating one world would have come after another as wave after wave in the Sea His Patience stept into support the honour of God and the continuance of men without which one had been in part impaired and the other totally lost 4. He doth exercise Patience for the continuance of the Church If he be not patient toward sinners what stock would there be for believers to spring up from He bears with the provoking carriage of men evil men because out of their loynes he intends to extract others which he will form for the glory of his grace He hath some unborn that belong to the election of Grace which are to be the seed of the worst of men Jeroboam the chief incendiary of the Israelites to Idolatry had an Abijah in whom was found some good thing towards the Lord God of Israel 1 King 14.13 Had Ahaz been snapt in the first act of his wickedness the Israelites had wanted so good a Prince and so good a man as Hezekiah a branch of that wicked predecessor What Gardiner cuts off the thornes from the Rose-bush till he hath gathered the Roses And men do not use to burn all the Crab-tree but preserve a Stock to engraft some sweet fruit upon There could not have been a Saint in the Earth nor consequently in Heaven had it not been for this perfection He did not destroy the Israelites in the Wilderness that he might keep up a Church among them and not extinguish the whole seed that were heirs of the promises and Covenant made with Abraham Had God punished men for their sins as soon as they had been committed none would have lived to have been better none could have continued in the World to honour him by their virtues Manasseh had never been a convert and many brutish men had never been changed from beasts to Angels to praise and acknowledge their Creator Had Peter received his due recompence upon the denyal of his Master he had never been a Martyr for him Nor had Paul been a Preacher of the Gospel nor any else and so the Gospel had not shined in any part of the world No seed would have been brought into Christ Christ is beholding immediately to this attribute for all the seed he hath in the world 'T is for his Name sake that he doth deferr his Anger and for his praise that he doth refrain from cutting us off Isa 48.9 And in the next chapter follows a Prophesie of Christ To overthrow Mankind for sin were to prevent the spreading a Church in the world A woman that is guilty of a Capital Crime and lies under a condemning sentence is reprieved from Execution for her being with child 'T is for the Child's sake the Woman is respited not for her own 'T is for the Elects sake in the loyns of transgressors that they are a long time spared and not for their own Isa 65.8 9. As the new Wine is found in the cluster and one saith destroy it not for a blessing is in it So will I do for my servants sake that I may not destroy them all as a Husband-man spares a Vine for some good clusters in it He had spoke of vengeance before yet he would reserve some from whom he would bring forth those that should be inheritors of his Mountains that he might make up his Church of Judea Jerusalem being a Mountainous place and the type of the Church in all Ages What is the reason he doth not level his Thunder at the heads of those for whose destruction he receives so many Petitions from the Souls under the Altar Rev. 6.9 10. Because God had others to write a Testimony for him in their own blood and perhaps out of the loynes of those for whom vengeance was so earnestly supplicated * Smith on the Creed p. 404. And God as the Master of a Vessel lies Patiently at Anchor till the last Passenger he expects be taken in 5. For the sake of his Church he is Patient to wicked men The tares are Patiently endured till the Harvest for fear in the plucking up the one there might be some prejudice done to the other Upon this account he spares some who are worse than others whom he crusheth by signal judgments The Jews had committed sins worse than Sodom for the confirmation of which we have God's Oath Ezek. 16.48 and more by half than Samaria or the Ten Tribes had done ver 51. Yet God spared the Jews though he destroyed the Sodomites VVhat was the reason but a larger remnant of Righteous persons more clusters of good grapes were found among them than grew in Sodom Isa 1.9 A few more Righteous in Sodom had dampt the Fire and Brimstone design'd for that place And a remnant of such in Judea was a bar to that fierceness of anger which otherwise would have quickly consumed them Had there been but Ten Righteous in Sodom Divine Patience had still bound the Arms of justice that it should not have prepared its Brimstone