Selected quad for the lemma: law_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
law_n great_a king_n power_n 13,233 5 4.9591 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A44679 A funeral sermon for that faithful and laborious servant of Christ Mr. Richard Fairclough (who deceased July 4, 1682 in the sixty first year of his age) by John Howe. Howe, John, 1630-1705. 1682 (1682) Wing H3027; ESTC R28698 23,255 72

There is 1 snippet containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

unprofitable Servant into outer darkness there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth vers 30. 6. See what estimate we are to make of the nature of God especially of his large munisicent goodness which is his nature God is love For consider the various emanations and discoveries of it which may here be taken notice of 1. That he should seek to have any for servants which the text supposeth that he doth in this world of ours A world of Apostate Degenerous Impure Impotent creatures disaffected to him and his Government hating him and as in themselves they are hateful to him He who hath so little need of servants for any real use who can do all things with a word And if he thought it fit to have them for state and as a thing becoming his majesty and greatness is attended above by so excellent God-like Creatures So suitable and obsequious So powerful and agile Those ministers of his that do his pleasure hearkening to the voice of his word A World of ministring Spirits that might be used for purposes less kind to us than they are That he should seek Servants among us for his having them implies it who ever serv'd him unsought unto invite men into his service with so importunate solicitation whom he might despise for their vileness and destroy for their rebellion which he can in a moment And that he should seek such to become his Servants not with indifferency but with so great earnestness and use afterwards so various endeavours to retain them in his service When they gradually decline that he so graciously upholds them when ready to break faith with him and quit his service that by so apt methods he confirms them when they actually wander and turn Vagabonds that he should be so intent to reduce them How admirable is all this View the whole case at once They neglect his first Invitations he repeats and inculcates them They faint he encourages and supports them They revolt he follows to bring them back The cause of our admiration still rises higher and higher How much is it in this last instance above all humane measures Most men would disdain so to sue to Servants that forsake them and are loath to confess their real need and want of them were it never so great The Cynick scorn'd to look after his servant that left him counting it a disgrace when Manes thought he could live without Diogenes that Diogenes should not be able to live without Manes The All-sufficient Deity stoops to that which indigency and wretchedness think even too mean for them 2. Consider the frankness of his acceptance even of the best for how many omissions how much lazieness and sloth how many incogitancies and mistakes how much real disservice must he forgive when he accepts them and says yet 'T is well done How little is it they do at the best and how unprofitable to him and yet that little also he forms and even creates them to and continually succours and assists them in it Works in them to will and to do Otherwise nothing at all would be done and yet how full how complacential his acceptance is 3. Consider the largeness and bounty of his rewards too large for our expression or conception So that we even say most to it when even lost in wonder we only admire and say nothing 4. Consider the kind of the Service which he thus bespeaks accepts and rewards The best and most acceptable service any are capable of doing him is when they accept him take and chuse him to be their portion and blessedness Trust love and delight in him as such live upon his fulness and according to their several stations perswade as many as they can to do so too They that in the most peculiar sence are his Ministers or Servants as they are more earnestly intent upon this and win more Souls are the more amply and gloriously rewarded They that turn many to righteousnes shine as stars And for all the rest of his Servants wherein do they serve him most but when by their converse and example they induce others to entertain good thoughts of God and Religion and thereupon to make the same Choice which they have made and become seriously Religious which is most certainly connected with their being happy and indeed in greatest part their very Happiness it self And when they relieve support encourage and help on those that are in the way or whom they are endeavouring to bring into the way to final blessedness We as much need our servants as they can us they are our living reasonable but most necessary instruments The whole universe of created beings subsists by mutual dependencies the uncreated being without any Creatures are made to need one another Infinite self-fulness not capable of receiving additions is most highly gratified by our chearful reception of its communications Let us learn now to conceive of God answerably to all this We do him not right that we consider not his admirable goodness in so plain instances of it with more frequent seriousness and intention of mind and Spirit and shew our selves stupid unapprehensive Creatures have we a thinking faculty about us a power to use thoughts and can we use it upon any thing more evident more considerable or that more concerns us or do we never use it less pertinently 7. How unreasonable is it either to quit the Service of our blessed Lord or to serve him dejectedly Quit it Who hath more right in us or where will we mend our selves O the treacherous folly of Apostacy and how severely is it wont to be animadverted on 2 Chron. 12.1 'T is said Rehoboam forsook the Law of the Lord and all Israel with him And what followed Shishak the King of Egypt comes against them with a great power and God sends them this Message by Shemaiah the Prophet that Because they had forsaken him vers 5. therefore he also had left them in the hands of Shishak and afterwards that thô upon their humbling themselves he would not quite destroy them but grant them some deliverance yet he adds nevertheless ye shall be his i. e. Shishak's Servants that ye may know my Service and the Service of the Kingdoms of the Countreys vers 8. Since they would abandon God and the true Religion he would by a very sensible instruction and costly experience teach them to distinguish and understand the difference and make them know when they have a good Master and if we serve him despondingly and with dejected Spirits how causeless a Reproach do we cast upon him and his Service 't is a greater iniquity than is commonly considered implies dislike of his work and the rules and orders of the Family impatiency of the restraints of it distrust of his Power to protect or Bounty to reward us and we may expect it to be resented accordingly so we sometimes find it hath been Deut. 28.47 48. Because thou servedst not the Lord thy God with joyfulness