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A57143 Israels prayer in time of trouble with Gods gracious answer thereunto, or, An explication of the 14th chapter of the Prophet Hosea in seven sermons preached upon so many days of solemn humiliation / by Edward Reynolds ... Reynolds, Edward, 1599-1676. 1649 (1649) Wing R1258; ESTC R34568 243,907 380

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into kisses Gen. 33.4 and when Saul hath compassed David and his men round about and is most likely to take them he can even then take him off by a necessary diversion 1 Sam. 23.26 27 28. This is the comfort of Gods people That what ever men say except God say it too it shall come all to nothing He can restraine the wrath of men whensoever it pleaseth him and he will doe it when it hath proceeded so farre as to glorifie his power and to make way for the more notable manifestation of his goodnesse to his people Psal. 76.10 And thus farre of Gods answer to the Covenant of Ephraim They promised to renounce Idols and here God promiseth that they should renounce them Now there are two things more to be observed from this expression What have I to doe any more with Idols 1. That in true Conversion God maketh our speciall sinne to be the object of our greatest detestation which point hath beene opened before 2. From those words any more That the nature of true repentance is To break sin off as the expression is Dan. 4.27 and not to suffer a man to continue any longer in it Rom. 6.1 ● It makes a man esteeme the time past sufficient to have wrought the will of the Gentiles 1 Pet. 4.2 3. and is exceeding thrifty of the time to come so to redeeme it as that God may have all doth not linger nor delay nor make objections or stick at inconveniences or raise doubts whether it be seasonable to goe out of Egypt and Sodome or no Is not at the sluggards language modo modo a little more sleepe a little more slumber nor at Agrippas language almost thou perswadest me nor at Felix his language when I have a convenient season I will send for thee but immediately resolves with Paul not to conferre with flesh and bloud Gal. 1.16 and makes haste to flie from the wrath to come while it is yet to come before it overtake us Luk. 3.7 doth not make anxious or cavilling questions What shall I doe for the hundred talents How shall I maintaine my life my credit my family how shall I keep my friends how shall I preserve mine Interests or support mine estate but ventures the losse of all for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Matth. 13.46 Phil. 3.7 8. is contented to part with a skie-full of Starrs for one Sunne of Righteousnesse The Converts that returne to Christ come like Dromedaries like Doves like Ships no wings no sailes can carry them fast enough from their former courses unto him Esa. 60.6 7 8 9. Abraham is up betimes in the morning though it be to the sacrificing of a Son Gen. 22.3 David makes haste and delayes not when he is to keepe Gods Commandements Psal. 119.60 when Christ called his Diciples immediately they left their nets their Ship their Father and followed him Matth. 4.20 22. This is the mighty power of Repentance It doth not give dilatory answers It doth not say to Christ goe away now and come to morow then I will heare thee I am not yet old enough or rich enough I have not gotten yet pleasure or honour or profit or perferment enough by my sinnes but presently it heares and entertaines him I have sinned enough already to condemn to shame to slay me I have spent time and strength enough already upon it for such miserable wages as shame and death come to Therefore I will never any more have to doe with it This is the sweet and most ingenuous voyce of Repentance The thing which I see not Teach me and if I have done iniquity I will doe no more Iob 34.32 There is no sinne more contrary to repentance then Apostacie for godly sorrow worketh Repentance unto salvation which the soule never findes reason to repent of 2 Cor. 7.10 11 Let us therefore take heed of an evill heart of unbeliefe in departing from the living God Heb. 3.12 and of drawing back unto perdition Heb. 10.39 of dismissing our sinnes as the Jewes did their servants Ier. 34.16 and calling them back again for Satan usually returnes with seven more wicked spirits and maketh the last state of such a man worse then the first Luk. 11.26 Ground which hath been a long time laid downe from tillage unto pasture if afterwards it bee new broken will bring a much greater crop of corne then it did formerly when it was a common field And so the heart which hath been taken off from sinne if it returne to it againe will bee much more fruitfull then before As lean bodies have many times the strongest appe●i●e so lust when it hath beene kept leane returnes with greater hunger unto those objects that seed it A streame which hath beene stopped will runne more violently being once opened againe Therefore in Repentance wee must shake hands with sinne for ever and resolve never more to tamper with it Now in that the Lord saith I have heard him and observed him we learne hence First That God heareth and answereth the prayers only of penitents When a man resolves I will have no more to do with sinne then not till then doth his prayer finde way to God Impenitencie clogs the wing of devotion and stops its passage unto Heaven The person must be accepted before the petition Christ Iesus is the Priest that offereth and the Altar which sanctifieth all our services 1 Pet. 2.5 Esay 56.7 And Christ will not be their Advocate in Heaven who refuse to have him their King on earth The Scripture is in no point more expresse then in this If I regard iniquity in my heart the Lord will not heare me Psal. 66.18 Prayer is a powring out of the heart if iniquity be harboured there prayer is obstructed and if it doe break out it will have the sent and savour of that iniquity upon it The sacrifice of the wicked is an abomination to the Lord Prov. 15.8 both because it is impure in it selfe and hath no Altar to sanctifie it He that turneth away his eare from hearing the Law even his prayer shall be an abomination Prov. 28.9 Great reason that God should refuse to heare him who refuseth to heare God that hee who will not let God beseech him as hee doth in his word 2 Cor. 5.20 should not be allowed to beseech God Prov. 1.24.28 Esay 1.15 His eare is not heavie that it cannot heare but iniquitie separates between us and him and hides his face that he will not heare Esay 59.1 2. Ezek. 8.18 God heareth not sinners Ioh. 9.31 the prevalency of prayer is this that it is the prayer of a righteous man Iam. 5.16 And indeed no wicked man can pray in the true and proper notion of prayer It is true there is a kinde of prayer of nature when men cry in their distresses unto the God and Author of nature for such good things as nature feeleth the want of which God in the way of his generall providence
belong principally to the Ministers of the Word yet God hath given unto all Belevers a Iudgement of discretion to try the spirits and to search the Scriptures whether the things which they heare be so or no 1 Ioh. 4.1 Act. 17.11 1 Thess. 5.21 for no man is to pinne his own soule and salvation by a blinde obedience upon the words of a man who may mislead him nay not upon the words of an Angel if it were possible for an Angel to deceive Gal. 1.8 1 Kings 13.18 21. but onely and immediately upon the Scripture except when the blind lead the blind the leader only should fall into the ditch and the other goe to heaven for his blind obedience in following his guides towards hell whereas our Saviour tels us both shall fall though but one be the leader Matth. 15.14 Matth. 23.15 Secondly Having proved all things to hold fast that which is good with all readinesse to receive the righteous ways of God and submit unto them how meane soever the Instrument be in our eyes how contrary soever his message be to our wills and lusts When God doth manifest his Spirit and Word in the mouths of his Ministers we are not to consider the vessell but the Treasure and to receive it as from Christ who to the end of the world in the dispensation of his Ordinances speaketh from heaven unto the Church 1 Thess. 2.13 ● Cor. 5.20 Heb. 12.25 Matth. 28.20 Fourthly In that it is said That the Iust w●ll walk in them we may observe Two things 1. That Obedience and walking in the right wayes of the Lord is the end of the ministry That the Saints might be perfected that the body of Christ might bee edified that men might grow up into Christ in all things Eph. 4.11.15 that their eyes might be opened and they turned from darknesse to light and from the power of Satan unto God Act. 26.16 17 18. The Prophet concludeth that he hath laboured in vaine if Israel be not gathered Esay 49.4 5. Without this the Law is vaine the pen of the Scribe in vaine Ier. 8.8 better not know the way of Righteousnesse then having known it to turne from the holy Commandement which was delivered unto us 2. Pet. 2.21 We should esteeme it a great misery to be without Preaching without Ordinances and so indeed it is of all famine that of the Word of the Lord is the most dreadfull better be with Gods presence in a wildernesse then in Canaan without him Exod. 33.15 better bread of affliction and water of affliction then a famine of hearing the word to have our teachers removed Amos 8.11 Esay 30.20 this is mischiefe upon mischiefe when the Law perisheth from the Priest and there is no Vision Ezek. 7.26 and yet it is much better bee in this case without a Teaching Priest and without the Law then to enjoy them and not to walk answerably unto them where the Word is not a savour of life it is a savour of death unto death exceedingly multiplying the damnation of those that doe despise it 2 Cor. 2.15 Matt. 11.22 24. First it doth ripen those sinnes that it findes making them much more sinfull then in other men because committed against greater light and more mercy One and the same sinne in an Heathen is not so hainous and hatefull as in a Christian. Those trees on which the Sun constantly shines have their fruit grow riper and greater then those which grow in a shady and cold place The raine will hasten the growth as weell of weeds as of corne and make them ranker then in a dry and barren ground Ioh. 9.41 Ioh. 15.22.24 Secondly it doth superadde many more and greater for the greatest sinnes of all are those which are commited against light and grace Sinnes against the Law and Prophets greater then those which are committed against the glimmerings of nature Ezek. 2.5.3.6 7. and sinnes against Christ and the Gospel greater then those against the Law Heb. 2.2.10.28 29. Such are unbeliefe Impenitency Apostacy despising of salvation preferring death and sinne before Christ and mercy judging our selves unworthy of eternall life c. Thirdly it doth by these meanes both hasten and multiply judgments The sinnes of the Church are much sooner ripe for the fickle then the sinnes of Amorites they are neare unto cursing Heb. 6.8 Summer fruits sooner shaken off then others Amos. 8.1 Ier. 1.11 12. Christ comes quickly to remove his Candlestick from the abusers of it Rev. 2.5 The Word is a rich mercy in it selfe but nothing makes it effectually and in the event a mercy unto us but our walking in it 2. We learne from hence That we never make the Scriptures our Rule to live and walke according unto them till we be first justified and made righteous Our obedience to the Rule of the Law written in the Scriptures proceedeth from those suteable impressions of holinesse wrought in the soule by the Spirit of Regeneration which is called the writing of the Law in our hearts Ier. 31.33 2 Cor. 3.3 or the casting of the soule into the mould of the Word as the phrase of the Apostle seemeth to import Rom. 6.7 we are never fit to receive Gods Truth in the love and obedience of it till we repent and be renewed If God saith the Apostle will give repentance for the acknowledging of the truth 2 Tim. 25. The wise in heart that is those that are truly godly for none but such are the Scriptures wise men these will receive Commandements but a prating foole will fall Prov. 10.8 where by prating I understand cavilling contradicting taking exceptions making objections against the Commandement and so falling and stumbling at it according to that of the Apostle Iam. 1.19 20 21. Let every man bee swift to heare that is ready to learn the will of God and to receive the Commandement but slow to speak slow to wrath that is carefull that he suffer no pride and passion to rise up and speak against the things which are taught according as Iob sayes Teach me and I will hold my peace Iob 6.24 for the only reason why men fret and swell and speak against the truth of God is this because they will not work righteousnesse The wrath of man worketh not the righteousnesse of God therefore men are contentious because they love not to obey the truth Rom. 2.8 disobedience is the mother of gainsaying Rom. 10.21 when we once resolve to lay apart all filthinesse then wee will receive the Word with meeknesse and not before none heare Gods Words but they who are of God Ioh. 8.47 none hear the voyce of Christ but the sheep of Christ Ioh. 10.4 5. Christ preached is the power of God and the wisedome of God but it is onely to them that are called to others a stumbling block and foolishnesse 1 Cor. 1.24 We speak wisedome saith the Apostle but it is amongst them that are perfect 1 Cor. 2.6 He that is
it and of the frequent decayes and abatements of the grace of God in us 12. By prayer and faith get a heart fixed upon God 13. Great comfort that our conversion and obedience dependeth on the power of God This no ground of supine neglect of duties for grace so worketh in us as that it disposeth us unto working the means being decreed as well as the end 14. Other mens wills are in Gods keeping He the author and orderer of our troubles 15. Repentance breaks off sin and makes haste out of it 16. God heareth onely penitents Our persons accepted before our prayers A wicked man may pray a prayer of nature not of faith Two wills in prayer Ours and Gods when a wicked man prayes for mercy he prayes against Gods will when for grace against his own 17. When we pray for outward things our aimes must be spirituall The way to have all our other ends is to make God our chiefe end 18. Prayer the Key of obedience The principles of service are the fruits of prayer 19. Words Ammunition against Armes that way as prayer goes God goes 20. Sound conversion engageth Gods protection and yeeldeth comfort in all conditions of life Sermon VII Sect. 1. THe seal of the Prophets Doctrine Interrogation denying wishing demonstrating awakening 2. In spirituall things mentall knowledge seconded with practicall wisdome 3. The wayes of the Lord his providence his precepts 4. Few men wise to salvation 5. The weaker part more then the wiser The word a sweet savour to 〈…〉 singularity sinfull pious singularity necessary 6. 〈…〉 pondreth all Gods wayes Wisdome particular gene●all 7. Wicked m●n shape their own end and apply sinfull means by a sinfull wisdome unto it God only the last end of righteous men 8. All wisdome is for obtaining of good avoiding of evill The excellency of every thing in Beauty Vse 9. Wisdome of Angels conversant about the Word Scripture the best Counsellor The plenitude thereof The pernicious influence of corrupt doctrines upon the present state of the Church 10. Twofold knowledge of judgements and blessings 11. The rectitude of Gods wayes in their equity and reason ablenesse their perfect harmony their directnesse to their end their conformity to the will of God their plainnesse and perspicuity 12. We are apt to pick quarrels at the Word 13. Wicked men set up their wills against Gods and invent distinctions to reconcile Gods will to theirs 14. Ministers may not stamp Gods mark on doctrines of humane invention nor superinduce any thing upon the Scripture People have a judgement of discretion to try the spirit 15. Obedience the end of the Ministry Ordinances not obeyed ripen and increase sin and hasten judgements 16. None but righteous men will obey the Word Every wicked man doth in some thing or other gainsay the truth 17. The right wayes of the Lord are unto wicked men matter of scandall 18. They stumble at the profoundnesse of the Word as being above reason 19. At the the strictnesse of it as being against their peruliar lust 20. At To the seraching power and simplicity of the Gospell 21. At impossibility of fulfilling the law which is but accidentall To ergenerate men the Law is Evangelically possible Wicked men hardened willingly as well as judicially 22. At the grace of the word by presumption at the threatnings and judgements of it by stubbornnesse 23. Wicked men stumble at the word not only unto scandall but unto ruine The First SERMON UPON HOSEA Chap. 14. Vers. 1 2. HOSEA 14.1 2. O Israel return unto the Lord thy God 〈…〉 hast fallen by thine iniquity Take with you words and turn to the Lord say unto him Take away all iniquity and receive us graciously or give good so will we render the 〈◊〉 of our lips THe blessing of Ephraim was according to his name Fruitfulness The fruitfulness of the Earth a bough by a well and the fruitfulness of the womb and of the brests Gen. 49.22.25 Deut. 2● 1● 17. Contrary unto which two blessings 〈…〉 in our Prophet two Iudgments threatned against him for his sins chap. 13 15 16. Though he be fruitful amongst his brethren an East wind shall come the wind of the Lord shall come up from the Wilderness and his spring shall become dry and his fountain shall be dryed up he shall spoil the treasure of all pleasant vessels Samaria shall become desolate for she hath rebelled against her God they shal fall by the Sword their Infants shal be dashed in pieces and their women with child shall be ript up And throughout the whole Prophecy if you read and observe it you will find the Judgments of God against Ephraim to be expressed by weeds emptiness barrenness dryness of roots of fruits of branches of springs and by a curse upon their Children as on the other side the blessing here in this Chapter renewed unto Ephraim repenting are all expressed by Metaphors of fruitfulness ver 5 6 7 〈…〉 two woful Iudgments against the fruitfulness of their springs and the fruitfulness of their wombs by the desolations of a bloody sword our Prophet taketh occasion once more for all to awaken and drive them to a timely repentance that so they may recover the blessing of their name Ephraim may be Ephraim again a plentiful a fruitful a flourishing people That when Gods Iudgments are in the earth they would then at least set themselves to learn righteousness that they may wash their feet in the blood of the wicked Of all Nations under Heaven this Land of ours hath had the blessing of Ephraim upon it fruitfulness of the Earth abunda●●e of plenty fruitfulness of the womb abundance of people But our misery is that the abundance of our sins hath mightily outvied the abundance both of our plenty and of our people sins too too paralel to those of Ephraim if you will but read this Prophet and compare the behaviours of this Nation with him And this parity of sins hath no doubt called upon God for a parity of judgments It is but a very little while since the Lord seemed to call for a North-wind as he doth here for an East-wind two Armies there met ready to look one another in the Face but his heart turned his repentings were kindled he would not give up Ephraim then He seems once more to be drawing of a Sword and having in vain hewed us by his Prophets as he complains chap. 6.5 to try whether hewing us by his Iudgments will work upon us So that now thou●● I must read my Text O Israel yet I must apply it O England Return unto the Lord thy God for thou hast fallen by thine iniquity Take with you words c. The whole Context containeth two general parts An Invitation unto Repentance Vers. 1. And an Institution how to perform it in the two verses following Before we come to the particulars of the Invitation let us first briefly observe That in the midst of Iudgments
leaven that defile our Passeovers and urge God to passe away and depart from us these the obstructions between his sacred Majesty and you and between both and the happinesse of the Kingdome Think seriously what wayes may be most effectual to purge out this leaven out of the Land The principall sacrificing knife which kils and mortifies sin is the Word of God and the knowledge of it It would have been a great unhappinesse to the Common-wealth of Learning if Caligu●a 〈◊〉 as he endevoured deprived the world of the writings of Homer Virgil and Livy But O! what an Aegyptian calamity is it to have in this Sun-shine of the Gospel thousands of persons and families as I doubt not but upon inquirie it would appear without the writings of the Prophets and Apostles A Christian souldier without his sword a Christian builder without his rule and square a Christian calling without the instruments and ballances of the Sanctuary belonging to it O therefore that every Parish had an indowment ●it for a learned laborious and worthy Pastor and Pastors worthy of such endowments that provision were made that every family might have a Bible in it and if by Law it might possibly be procured the exercises of Religion therewithall this would be the surest Magazine to secure the happinesse of a Kingdome that all reproachfull titles which the devill useth as scarcrows and whi●lers to keep back company from pressing in upon Christs Kingdome were by Law proscribed That scandalous sins were by the awfulnesse and severity of Discipline more blasted and brought to shame That the Lords house were more frequented and his day more sanctified and his Ordinances more reverenced and his Ministers which teach the good knowledge of the Lord more encouraged then ever heretofore In one word that all the severall fountains of the Common-wealth were settled in a sound and flourishing constitution That in every place we might see Piety the Elme to every other Vine the supporter to every other profession Learning adorned with Piety and Law administred with Piety and Counsels managed with Piety and Trade regulated with Pietie and the Plow followed with Pietie That when Ministers fight against sin with the sword of Gods Word you who are the Nobles and Gentry of the Land would second them and frown upon it too a frown of yours may sometimes do as much service to Christ as a Sermon of ours And he cannot but take it very unkindly from you if you will not bestow your countenance on him who bestowed his blood on you That you would let the strictnesse of your lives and the pietie of your examples put wickednes out of countenance and make it appear as indeed it is a base and a sordid thing If we would thus sadly set our selves against the sins of the Land no power no malice no policies should stand between us and Gods mercies Religion would flourish and peace would settle and trade would revive and the hearts of men would be re-united and the Church be as a City compacted and this Nation would continue to be as it hath been like the Garden of Eden a mirrour of prosperity and happinesse to other people and God would prevent us in the second part of our Petition with the blessing of goodnesse as soon as ever iniquity were removed he would do us good which is the second thing here directed to pray for Receive us graciously In the originall it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Take good to wit to bestow upon us so Taking is sometimes used for Giving He received gifts for men so in the Psalm he gave gifts to men so in the Apostle and it is not improbable that the Prophet here secretly leadeth us to Christ the Mediatour who first receiveth gifts from his Father and then poureth them forth upon his Church Act. 2.23 The meaning then is Lord when thou hast pardoned weakned mortified sin go on with thy mercy and being in Christ graciously reconciled unto us give further evidence of thy Fatherly affection by bestowing portions upon us They shall not be cast away upon unthankfull persons we will render the Calves of our lips they shal not be bestowed upon those that need them not or that know where else to provide themselves It is true we have gone to the Assyrian we have taken our horses instead of our prayers and gone about to finde out good we have been so foolish as to think that the Idols which have been beholden to our hands for any shape that is in them could be instead of hands and of God unto us to help us in our need but now we know that men of high degree are but a lie that horses are but a vanity that an Idol is nothing and therefore can give nothing That power belongeth unto thee none else can do it That mercy belongeth unto thee none else will do it therefore since in thee only the fatherlesse find mercy be thou pleased to do us good We will consider the words first absolutely as a single prayer by themselves Secondly relatively in their connexion and with respect to the scope of the place From the former consideration we observe That all the good we have is from God he only must be sought unto for it we have none in our selves I know that in me that is in my flesh dwelleth no good Rom. 7.18 we can neither think nor speak nor do it And missing it in our selves it is all in vaine to seek for it in things below our selves They can provide for our back and belly and yet not that neither without God the root out of which the fruits of the earth do grow is above in heaven the Genealogy of Corn and Wine is resolved into God Hose 2.22 But if you go to your Lands or Houses or Teasuries for physick for a sick soul or a guilty conscience they will all return an Ignoramus to that enquiry salvation doth not grow in the furrows of the field neither are there in the earth to be found any Mines or harvests of Grace or Comfort In God alone is the fountain of life he that only is good he only doth good when we have wearied our selvs with having recourse to second causes here at last like the wandering Dove we must arrive for rest Many will say who will shew us any good Do thou lift up the light of thy countenance upon us Psal. 4.6 From him alone comes every go O gift Iam. 1.17 whether Temporall it is his blessing that maketh the creature able to comfort us The woman touched the hem of Christs garment but the vertue went not out of the garment but out of Christ Luk. 8.44 or whether Spirituall sanctified faculties sanctified habits sanctified motions glorious relations in Predestination Adoption and Christian Liberty excellent gifts heavenly comforts all and onely from him And that without change and alteration he doth not do
the aide of God for it is he that worketh in us both to will and to do Phil. ● 11.12.13 when we Covenant to turn unto God we must withall pray unto him to turne us Lam. 5.21 Ier. 31. God commands us to turn our selves and to make us a new heart and a new spirit that we may live Ezek. 18.30.31 32. but withall he telleth us that it is hee who gives us one heart and one way and a new spirit that we may walk in his Statutes Ezek. 11.19.20 Ier. ●2 39 He giveth us posse velle agere proficere the power to make us able the heart to make us willing the Act to walk the proficiency to improve the perseverance to finish and perfect holinesse David cannot run in the way of Gods Commandements till he enlarge his heart Psal. 119.32 nothing can finde the way to heaven but that which comes first from heaven Ioh. 2.13 wee cannot give unto God any thing but of his own Who am I saith David and what is my people that we should be able to offer so willingly after this sort for all things come of thee and of thine own have we given thee 1 Chron. 29.14 For the further understanding of this point and of the sweet concord and concurrence betweene the will of man converted and the effectuall grace of God converting wee shall set down these few propositions 1. That there is in man by nature a power or faculty which wee call Free will whereunto belongeth such an indifferency and indeterminacy in the manner of working that whether a man will a thing or ●ill it choose it or turne from it hee doth in neither move contrary to his owne naturall principles of working A stone moving downward doth move naturally upward contrary to its nature and so violently But which way so ever the will moves it moves according to the condition of its created being wherein it was so made as when it chose one part of a contradiction it retained an inward and fundamentall habitude unto the other like those gates which are so made as that they open both wayes So that as the tongue which was wont to sweare or blaspheme when it is converted doth by the force of the same faculty of speaking being newly sanctified utter holy and gracious speeches so the will which being corrupted did chuse evill and only evill being sanctified doth use the same manner of operation in chusing that which is good the created nature of it remaining still one and the same but being now guided and sanctified by different principles This wee speak onely with respect to the naturall manner of its working for if we speake of liberty in a morall or theologicall sense so it is certaine that the more the will of man doth observe the right order of its proper objects and last end the more free and noble it is the very highest perfection of free will standing in an immutable adherency unto God as the ultimate end of the creature and all ability of receding or falling from him being the deficiency and not the perfection of Free-will And therefore the more the will of man doth cast off and reject God the more base servile and captive it growes In which sense we affirme against the Papists that by nature man since the fall of Adam hath no Free-will or naturall power to beleeve and convert unto God or to prepare himselfe thereunto 2. In man fallen and being thereby universally in all his faculties levened with vitious and malignant principles there is a native privitie and corrupt force which putteth forth it selfe in resisting all those powerfull workings of the word and spirit of grace that oppose themselves against the body of sinne and move the will unto holy resolutions for the wisedome of the flesh cannot bee subject unto the Law of God Rom. 8.7 The flesh will lust against the spirit as being contrary thereunto Gal. 5.17 an uncircumcisied heart will alwayes resist the holy spirit Act. 7.51 there is such a naturall antipathy between the purity of the word and the impurity of the will of man that he naturally refuseth to heare and snuffeth at it and pulleth away the shoulder and hardneth the heart and stoppeth the eare and shutteth the eyes and setteth up strong holds and high reasonings against the wayes of God and is never so well as when he can get off all sight and thoughts of God and be as it were without God in the world Ier. 5.3.6.10.17.23.19.15 Mal. 1.13 2 Chron. 36.16 3. According to the degrees and remainders of this naturall corruption so farre forth as it is unmortified and unsubdued by the power of grace this originall force doth proportionably put forth it selfe in withstanding and warring against the Spirit of God even in the regenerate themselves A notable example whereof wee have in Asa of whom it is said that he was wroth with Hanani the Seer and put him in a Prison-house and was in a rage with him when hee reproved him for his carnall confidence 2 Chron. 16.10 and the Apostle doth in many words both state and bewaile the warring of the Law of his members against the law of his minde so that when hee did with the one serve the law of God hee did with the other serve the law of sinne and was unable to doe the thing which hee would and the evill which he would not he did doe by the strength of sinne that dwelled in him ● Rom. 7.14 15. 4. We are to distingish of the will of God which is set forth in Scripture two manner of wayes There is voluntas signi or that will of God whereby he requires us to work and which he hath appointed to bee observed by us His will signified in precepts and prohibitions This is the will of God saith the Apostle even your sanctification 1 Thess. 4.3 So we are said to prove to try to doe Gods will or that which is pleasing in his sight Matth. 7.21 Rom. 12.2 Ioh. 8.29 and there is voluntas benepla●iti the will of his purpose and counsell according unto which hee himselfe in his owne secret and unsearchable good pleasure is pleased to work for hee worketh all things after the counsell of his owne will Eph. 1.11 whatsoever the Lord pleaseth that he doth in heaven and earth Psal. 135.6 And no second causes can doe any thing else though they never so proudly break the order of Gods revealed will but what his hand and Counsell had before determined Acts 4.28 The will of Gods precept and command is every day violated resisted and broken through by wicked men unto their owne destruction How often would I and yee would not Matth. 23.37 Ierem. 13.11 But the will of Gods Counsell and purpose cannot bee resisted or withstood by all the powers of the world the Counsell of the Lord must stand and those very agents that worke purposely to disappoint and subvert it doe by those very workings
forget God as our Prophet complaines Hos. 13.6 But spiritual knowledge of Blessings is to taste and see the goodness of the Lord in them To look up to him as the Author of them acknowledging that it is he who giveth us power to get wealth and any other good thing Deut. 8.17 18. Psal. 127.1 Prov. 10.22 and to be drawn by them unto him as their End to the adoring of his bounty to the admiration of his goodnesse to more chearfulnesse and stronger engagements unto his service to say with Iacob He gives me bread to eate and raiment to put on therefore he shal be my God Gen. 28.20 He giveth me all things richly to enjoy therefore I will trust in him 1 Tim. 6.17 Catalogues of mercy should beget resolutions of obedience Iosh. 24.2 14. Thirdly we have here a singular commendation of the Doctrine which the Prophet had delivered unto the people of God namely that it was altogether Right and the way which God required them to walk in whatever Judgement carnall and corrupt minds might passe upon it Now the Doctrine of Gods Judgements Precepts and Pro●mises is said to be Right diverse wayes 1. In regard of their Equity and Reasonablenesse There is nothing more profoundly and exactly rationall then true religion and therefore conversion is called by our Saviour conviction There is a power in the word of God to stop the mouthes and dispell the cavillations of all contradictors so that they shal not be able to resist or speak against the truth that is taught Ioh. 16 8. Tit. 1.9.10 Act. 6.10 Mat. 22.34 and the Apostle calleth his Ministry a Declaration and a manifestation of the truth of God unto the consciences of men 1 Cor. 2.4 2 Cor. 4.2 and Apollos is said mightily to have convinced the Jewes shewing or demonstrating by the Scripture that Jesus was Christ Act. 18.28 therefore the Apostle calleth the devoting of our selves unto God a Reasonable Service Rom. 12.1 and those that obey not the Word are called unreasonable or absurd men that have not wisedome to discerne the truth and equity of the wayes of God 2 Thess. 3.2 What can be more reasonable then that he who made all things for himself should be served by the Creatures which he made That we should live unto him who gave us our being That the suprea● will should be obeyed the infallible truth beleeved that he who can destroy should be feared that he who doth reward should be loved and trusted in That absolute Iustice should vindicate it self against presumptuous disobedience and absolute goodnesse extend mercy unto whom it pleaseth It is no marvel that the holy Spirit doth brand wicked men throughout the Scripture with the disgracefull title of Fools because they reject that which is the supreme rule of wisedome and hath the greatest perfection and exactnesse of reason in it Ier. 8.9 2. In regard of their consonancy and Harmony within themselves as that which is right ●nd strait hath all its parts equall and agreeing one unto another so all the parts of Divine Doctrine are exactly suteable and conforme to each o●her The promises of God are not yea and nay but yea and Amen 2. Cor 1 19 20. However there ●ay be seeming repugnances to a carnall and captious eye which may seem of purpose allowed for the exercise of our diligence in searching and humility in adoring the profoundnesse and perfection of the word yet the Scriptures have no obliquity in them at all but all the parts thereof doe most intimately consent with one another as being written by the Spirit of truth who cannot lye nor deceive who is the same yesterday to day and for ever 3. In regard of their Directnesse unto that End for which they were revealed unto men being the strait road unto eternall life able to build us up and to give us an inheritance Act. 20.32 In which respect the word is called the word of life Act. 5.20 and the Gospel of Salvation Eph. 1.13 yea Salvation it selfe Ioh. 4.22 Ioh. 12.50 Act. 28.28 as being the way to it and the instrument of it 2. Tim. 3.15 16 17. Iam. 1.21 4. In regard of their Conformity to the holy nature and will of God which is the originall rule of all Rectitude and Perfection Law is nothing but the will of the Law-giver revealed with ●n intention to binde those that are under it and for the ordering of whom it was revealed That will being in God most holy and perfect the Law or Word which is but the patefaction of it must needs be holy and perfect too therefore it is called the acceptable and perfect will of God Rom. 12.2 Col. 1.9 It is also called a Word of truth importing a conformity between the minde and will of the speaker and the word which is spoken by him in which respect it is said to be Holy Iust and Good Rom. 7.14 5. In regard of the Smoothnesse Plainnesse Perspicuousnesse of them in the which men may walke surely easily without danger of wandring stumbling or miscarriage as a man is out of dan●ger of missing a way if it be strait and direct with out any turnings and in no gre●● danger of falling in it if it be plaine and smooth and no stumbling block left in it Now such is the word of God to those who make it their way a strait way which looketh directly forward Psal. 5.8 Heb. 12.13 An even and smooth way which hath no offence or stumbling block in it Psal. 26.12 Psal. 119.165 It is true there are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hard things to exercise the study and diligence the faith and prayers of the profoundest Scholers waters where in an Elephant may swimme but yet as nature hath made things of greatest necessity to be most obvious and Common as aire water bread and the like whereas things of greater rarity as gemms and jewels are matters of honour and ornament not of daily use so the wisedome of God hath so tempered the Scriptures as that from thence the wisest Solomon may fetch jewels for ornament and the poorest Lazarus bread for life but these things which are of common necessity as matters of Faith Love Worship Obedience which are universally requisite unto the common salvation as the Apostle expresseth it Iude ver 3. Tit. 1.4 are so perspicuously set downe in the holy Scriptures that every one who hath the spirit of Christ hath therewithall a judgement to discern so much of Gods will as shall suffice to make him beleeve in Chirst for righteousnesse and by worship and obedience to serve him unto salvation The way of Holinesse is so plain that simple men are made wise enough to finde it out and wayfaring men though fooles doe not erre therein Psal. 19.7 ●say 32.4 Esay 35.8 Matth. 11 25. From all which we learn First to take heed of picking quarrels at any word of God or presuming to passe any bold and carnall censure
subject unto one Prince doth not greatly care to study the Laws of another or if he doe it is in order to curiosity and not unto duty So long as men resolve of Christ we will not have this man to raign over us so long either they study not his Word at all or it is in order to some carnall and corrupt ends and not either to obedience or salvation Hereby we may try our spirituall estate whether we be just men or no if we make Gods Word our Way our Rule our Delight laying it up in our hearts and labouring to be rich in it that wee may walk with more exactnesse It was an ill signe of love to Christ the Master of the Feast when men chose rather to tend their cattell and grounds then to waite on him Luke 14.18 An ill signe of valuing his doctrine when the losse of their Swine made the Gardarens weary of his company Luke 8.37 There was much work to doe in the house when Mary neglected it all and sate at his feet to heare his Doctrine and yet was commended by him for it Hee was better pleased to see her hunger after the Feast that hee brought then solicitous to provide a Feast for him more delighted in her love to his Doctrine then her Sisters care for his entertainment Luke 10.41 42. This is one of the surest Characters of a Godly man that hee makes the Word in all things his Rule and Counsellor labouring continually to get more acquaintance with God and his holy Will thereby Prov. 10.14 Col. 3.16 Iohn 15.7 It is H●s Way and every man endeavours to be skilfull in the way which he is to travell It is his Toole and instrument every Work-man must have that in a readinesse to measure and carry on all the parts of his work It is his Wisedome every one would be esteemed a wise man in that which is his proper function and profession It is the mystery and Trade unto which he is bound and every man would have the reputation of skill in his owne Trade It is his Charter the grant of all the Priviledges and Immunities which belong unto him and every Citizen would willingly know the Priviledges which he hath a right in It is the Testament and Will of Christ wherein are given unto us exceeding great and precious Promises and what Heire or childe would be ignorant of the last Will of his Father Lastly it is the Law of Christs Kingdom and it concerns every Subject to know the Duties the Rewards the Punishments that belong unto him in that relation Fifthly in that he saith That the Transgressours shall fall therein wee learne That the Holy and right wayes of the Lord in the ministry of his word set forth unto us are unto wicked men turned into matter of falling and that two manner of wayes 1. By way of Scandall they are offended at it And 2. by way of Ruine they are destroyed by it 1. By way of Scandall they are offended at it So it is prophesied of Christ that as he should be for a Sanctuary unto his people so to others who would not trust in him but betake themselves to their owne counsels he should be for a stone of stumbling and for a rock of offence for a ginne and for a snare Esay 8.14 for the fall and the rising againe of many in Israel and for a signs to be spoken against Luke 2.34 35. So he saith of himselfe for Iudgement am I come into this world that they which see not might see and that they which see might be made blinde Ioh. 9.39 And this offence which wicked men take take at Christ is from the purity and holinesse of his word which they cannot submit unto A stone of stumbling he is and a rock of offence to them which stumble at the word being disobedient 1 Pet. 2.8 2 Cor. 2 14 15. Thus Christ preached was a Sanctuary to Sergius Paulus the Deputy and a stumbling block to Elymas the Sorcerer a Sanctuary to Dionysius and Damaris and a stumbling block to the wits and Philosophers of Athens A Sanctuary to the Gentiles that beg'd the preaching of the Gospel and a stumbling block to the Iews that contradicted and blasphemed Act. 13.42 45. the former primarily and per se for salvation was the purpose of his comming there was sinne enough to condemne the world before I came not saith he to judge the world but to save the world Joh. 12.47 The other occasionally not by any intrinsecall evill quality in the word which is holy just good and dealeth with all meeknesse and beseechings even towards obstinate sinners but by reason of the pride and stubbornesse of these men who dash against it as that wholesome meat which ministers strength to a sound man doth but feed the disease of another that sits at the same table with him the same light which is a pleasure to a strong eye is a paine to a weak one the same sweet smels that delight the braine doe afflict the matrix when it is distempered and none of this by the infusion of malignant qualities but only by an occasionall working upon and exciting of those which were there before And there are many things in the word of God at which the corrupt hearts of wicked men are apt to stumble and bee offended As first the profoundnesse and depth of it as containing great mysteries above the discovery or search of created Reason Such is the pride and wantonnesse of sinfull wit that it knows not how to beleeve what it cannot comprehend and must have all Doctrines tried at her barre and measured by her ballance as if a man should attempt to weigh out the earth in a paire of scales or to empty the waters of the Sea with a bucket As soone as Paul mentioned the Resurrection presently the Athenian Wits mocked his Doctrine Act. 17.32 and it was a great stumbling block to Nicodemus to heare that a man must be borne againe Joh. 3.4 Sarah hath much adoe to beleeve beyond reason Gen. 18.12 and Muses himselfe was a little staggerd by this temptation Numb 11.22 21. A very hard thing it is for busie and inquisitive Reason to rest in an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the depth of the wisedome and counsell of God and to adore the unsearchablenesse of his Judgements though even Humane Lawes tell us that Reason of Law is not always to be inquired into The first great Heresies against the highest mysteries of Christian Religion the Trinity the two natures of Christ the Hypostaticall union the deity of the Holy spirit had their first rise among the Graecians who were then the masters of wit and Learning and esteemed the rest of the world Barbarous and the old exception which they were wont to take at the Doctrine of Christianity was the foolishnesse of it as the Apostle notes 1 Cor. 1.23 Secondly the sanctity and strictnesse
it intrinsecally or in the nature of the thing impossible but accidentally and by reason of naturall corruption which is enmity against it a burthen may be very portable in it selfe which he who is a creeple is not able to beare the defect is not in the Law but in us Rom. 8.3 Secondly that of this Impossibility there may be made a most excellent use that being convinced of impotency in our selves we may have recourse to the perfect obedience and righteousnesse of Christ to pardon all our violations of it Gal. 3.21 24. Thirdly being regenerated and endued with the spirit of Christ the Law becomes Evangelically possible unto us againe yea not onely possibly but sweet and easie Rom. 7.22 1 Ioh. 5.2 Ma. 11.30 Though impossible to the purpose of Iustification and legall Covenant which requireth perfection of obedience under paine of the Curse Gal. 3.10 in which sense it is a yoake which cannot bee born Act. 15.10 A Commandement which cannot be endured Heb. 12.20 yet possible to the purpose of acceptation of our services done in the obedience of it The spirituall part of them being presented by the intercession and the carnall defects covered by the righteousnesse of Christ in whom the father is alwayes well pleased Fourthly if any wicked man presume to harden himselfe in the practice of sinnes under this pretence that it is impossible for him to avoid them because God hardneth whom he will Though the Apostolicall increpation be Answer sufficient Who art thou that replyest against God yet he must further know that he is not onely hardned judicially by the sentence of God but most willingly also by his owne stubborne love of sinne and giving himselfe over unto greedinesse in sinning and thereby doth actively bring upon himselfe those indispositions unto duty so that the Law being impossible to be performed by him is indeed no other then hee would himselfe have it to be as bearing an active enmity and antipathy unto it Sixthly The mercy and Free-grace of God in the promises is unto wicked men an occasion of stumbling while they turn it into lasciviousnesse and continue in sinne that grace may abound Rom. 6.1 Iud. ver 4. and venture to make work for the blood of Christ not being led by the goodnesse of God unto repentance but hardning themselves in impenitency because God is good Rom. 2.4 There is not any thing at which wicked men doe more ordinarily stumble then at mercy as gluttons surfet most upon the greatest dainties venturing upon this ground to goe on in sinne because they cannot out-sinne mercy and to put off repentance from day to day because they are still under the offers of mercy making mercy not a sanctuary unto which to fly from sinne but a sanctuary to protect and countenance sinne and so by profane and desperate presumption turning the very mercy of God into a judgement and savour of death unto themselves Deut. 29.19 20. Num. 15.30 pretending liberty from sinne that they may continue in it and abuse God by his owne gifts Lastly the threatnings of God set forth in his Word and executed in his judgements upon wicked men are great occasions of stumbling unto them when they are not thereby with Manasses humbled under Gods mighty hand but with Pharoah hardned the more in their stubbornnesse against him There is such desperate wickednesse in the hearts of some men that they can even sit down and rest in the resolutions of perishing resolving to enjoy the pleasures of sinne while they may To morrow we shall dye therefore in the meane time let us eat and drink 1 Cor. 5.32 This evill is of the Lord why should we wait for the Lord any longer 2 Kings 6.33 There are three men in the Scripture that have a speciall brand or marke of ignominy set upon them Cain Dathan and Ahaz The Lord set a mark upon Cain Gen. 4.15 This is that Dathan and this is that Ahaz Num. 26.9 2. Chron. 28.22 and if we examine the reasons we shall finde that the sinne of stubbornnesse had a speciall hand in it Cains Offering was not accepted upon this he grew wroth and sullen and stubborn against Gods gentle warning and slew his brother Dathan and his Companions sent for by Moses return a proud and stubborn answer we will not come up we will not come up Ahaz greatly distressed by the King of Syria by the Edomites by the Philistimes by the Assyrian and in the midst of all this distresse stubborn still and trespassing more against the Lord. It is one of the saddest symptomes in the World for a man or a Nation not to be humbled under the correcting hand of God but like an anvile to grow harder under blowes and a most sure argument that God will not give over but goe on to multiply his judgements still for he will overcome when hee judgeth and therefore will judge till he overcome In Musicall Notes there are but eight degrees and then the same returnes againe and Philosophers when they distinguish degrees in qualities doe usually make the eighth degree to be the highest but in the wrath of God against those who impenitently and stubbornly stand out against his judgements wee shall finde no fewer then eight and twenty degrees threatned by God himselfe I will punish seven times more and yet seven times more and againe seven time more and once more seven times more for your sinnes Levit. 26.18 21 24 28. thus wicked men doe not only stumble at the Word by way of scandall but also 2. By way of Ruine because they are sure in the conclusion to be destroyed by it for the rock stands still the ship only is broken that dasheth against it Gods Word is and will be too hard for the pride of men the more they resist it the mightier will it appeare in their condemnation The weak corn which yeelds to the wind is not harmed by it but the proud Oake which resists it is many times broken in pieces The soule which submits to the Word is saved by it the soule which rebels against it is sure to perish Therefore since the Word comes not to any man in vaine but returnes glory to God either in his conversion or in his hardning It greatly concerneth every man to come unto it with meek penitent docile tractable believing obedient resolutions and to consider how vaine and desperate a thing it is for a Potsherd to strive with a rod of Iron for the pride wrath of man to give a chalenge to the justice and power of God for briars and thornes to set themselves in battell against fire As our God is a consuming fire himselfe so his law is a fiery Law Deut. 33.2 his word in the mouths of his Ministers a fire Ier. 5.14.23.29 If we be gold it will purge us if thorns it will devour feed upon us This is the condemnation saith our Saviour That light is come