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A35535 An exposition with practicall observations continued upon the thirty second, the thirty third, and the thirty fourth chapters of the booke of Job being the substance of forty-nine lectures / delivered at Magnus neare the Bridge, London, by Joseph Caryl ... Caryl, Joseph, 1602-1673. 1661 (1661) Wing C774; ESTC R36275 783,217 917

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incorruptible it hath naturally no seedes of dissolution in it because no contrariety no contrary qualities in it as all bodyes or corporeall substances have I know the Apostle saith 1 Tim 6.16 God only hath immortality it 's true he only hath it in himselfe independently originally but he derives and gives it as a talent to some creatures in a way of dependance upon himselfe Secondly Observe The soule brings in the life of the body The life of man What is the body without the soule but a lumpe of clay As soone as ever the soule departs life departs man dyeth and becomes a putrifying carkasse yet such is the folly of most men that all their care is for the life of the body which is at best a dying life they utterly neglect the soule which as it is the life of the body so it selfe never dyeth The soule is the Jewell the body is but the Cabinet the soule is the kernel the body is but the shell Will you be sollicitous about a Cabinet and a shell and slight the Jewel or throw away the kernel Will you take care of that which liveth the body and will you not take care of that which holds your life the soule Againe Note Life is the gift of God If the soule which is the cause of life in man be of God then the life of man is of God also The cause of the cause is the cause of the effect or thing caused But we need not argue it from Logick rules Scripture testimony being so aboundant in this thing Acts 17.25 He giveth to all life and breath and all things And v. 28. In him we live and move and have our being Spirituall and eternall life are the gift of God so also is naturall life And if so Then First Live to God Secondly Seeing God gives us life we should be willing to give our lives to God Yea Thirdly We should therefore be ready to give up or rather to lay downe our lives for God And as we should give up our lives to God when he calls for them by natural death so we should give up our lives for God when he calls us to beare witness to his name and truth by violent death I shall yet take notice of one thing further before I passe from this verse The Spirit of God hath made me and the breath of the Almighty hath given me life Some upon good grounds referre the first clause The Spirit of God hath made me to the creation both of soule and body and the second or latter clause the breath of the Almighty hath given me life to that quickning which we receive by the Spirit to the duties whereinto we are called in this life The breath of the Almighty hath given me life that is hath fitted and prepared me for the severall offices and services of life As if Elihu had sayd The Spirit of God hath not only made me a man but a man for worke yea the Spirit of God hath quickned me to the present worke and businesse I am come about Thus life imports not only spirituall life in the being of it but all the furniture ornaments and abilities of a spirituall life The Septuagint render this profession made by Elihu expressely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Spiratio omnipotentis est quae docet me Sept Haud me latet non a meipso sed a deo hunc prudentiae sensum me accepisse Nicet to this sence holding out a strong assurance which Elihu had that God had both called and prepared him for the service he was come about and engaged in The Spirit of God hath made me and the breath of the Almighty hath instructed me Another of the Greek Interpreters speaks as much I am not ignorant that of my selfe I am able to doe nothing but I have received this power from God As if Elihu had said The Spirit of the Almighty hath quickned me to this worke I am now upon and taught me what both to say and doe in thy case O Job Hence note God giveth not only the life of nature unto men but he fits them for all the duties and services of this life We indeed are scarcely to be reckoned among the living if we have no more but a naturall life what is it to be able to eate and drinke to heare and see and speake unlesse we have more then this we deserve not to be numbred or written among the living we are upon the matter but dead lumps and clods of clay It is the breath of the Almighty that quickens us and superadds ability to doe good that frames fashions and fits us for every good word and worke This is the life of man when a man is fitted for duty and service when he is furnished for imployment to stand God and his Brethren in some stead while he is in this world then he lives The motions impulses and influences the teachings and guidings of the Spirit of God are the life of our lives We can doe nothing of our selves till the Almighty bestows a new life upon us and as we can doe nothing at all in spiritualls till he gives us a new life so we can do nothing to purpose till the Spirit acts stirres up that life in us It is the Spirit who first bestows Secondly encreaseth Thirdly excites our spirituall life puts the new creature into motion All our good thoughts and holy actings all our uprightnesse and sincerity all our strength and ability flow from the Spirit untill the holy Spirit workes in us we sit still and when the Spirit worketh we must not sit still I saith the Apostle Rom 15.18 will not dare to speak of any of those things which Christ hath not wrought by me to make the Gentiles obedient by word and deed As if he had sayd My owne workes are not worth the naming I will not so much as mention any thing that Christ hath not wrought in me by the Spirit That was a mighty worke which he was enabled to doe to make the Gentiles obedient in word and deed Christ did not leave him to doe it in his owne power The breath of the Almighty enabled him and so he doth all those that are able and willing ready for and successefull in any such holy worke Let us therefore ascribe all to his working and quickening let us set down our severall Items of receit in our account-books confessing that we have nothing of our own This gift that grace that ability to doe to speake to suffer to act we have received from him Let the whole Inventory of our soules riches have Gods name written upon it and ascribed to his praise alone And if we thus uncloath our selves by giving God the glory of all we shall loose nothing by it for God will apparrell and furnish us deck and adorne us better every day The poorer we are in our selves the richer will he make us To be thus diminish't is the best way to
notwithstanding all the confusions and disorders which seeme to be in the affaires of this world the providence of God over mankinde in Generall and his great mercy towards the righteous in speciall is seene most eminently in these two things First In that he inspires them with the knowledge of heavenly things or acquaints them some way or other with his mind both as to the meaning of what he doth to them and of what he would have them doe Secondly In that he provideth and sends them a messenger or mediatour both to instruct them in their duty to pray for mercy and so consequently to deliver them when their soule draweth neere to the Grave and their life to the destroyers Both these gracious dispensations of God are proper to righteous men or at least appropriate to them in a peculiar manner the righteous are the men for whom God provides a messenger or mediatour and the righteous are the men whom God savingly and effectually inspires with the knowledge of his will in the things which concerne both their present worke and future reward Neither hath Satan any power so to darken their understandings about those great things as to make them miscarry and as for all his other mischievous plots and practices against them they serve to a cleane contrary purpose then he intendeth according to that most comfortable assertion of the Apostle Rom 8.28 We know that all things work together for good to them that love God to them who are the called according to his purpose Satan provoked God for a licence to heape outward calamities upon Job in stripping him naked of his worldly substance and in tormenting his body with grievous paines and sickness which latter Elihu prosecutes at large chap 33.19 20 21 22. He is chastned also with paine upon his bed and the multitude of his bones with strong paine so that his life abhorreth bread c. And what he speakes of sickness is applicable to any or all sorts of affliction in all which as it is sayd v. 27 28 29 30. God looketh upon men and if any say I have sinned and perverted that which is right and it profiteth me not he will deliver his soule from going into the pit and his life shall see the light Lo all these things worketh God oftentimes with man to bring back his soule from the pit to be enlightned with the light of the living From these premises we may collect both what is proper to the righteous and that in whatsoever is common to them with the wicked there is neither disorder nor confusion For though the best of the righteous are lyable to the same outward evills which the worst of the wicked are yet their condition is not the same seeing to the wicked those evills are purely punishments but the beginning of those sorrows which shall never end whereas to the righteous they are either but chastisements for some sin already committed or medicaments to prevent the committing either of the same or of some other sin And as for those who by such chastnings are brought to a sight of their sins and forsake them their soules are by this meanes v. 30. brought back from the pit to be enlightned with the light of the living This poynt is yet more fully and plainly prosecuted by Elihu in the 36th chapter where he informeth us how sufferings are differently to be conceived of according to a threefold difference of the persons suffering The first and chiefe is of those who are truely righteous and keep close to God in righteous wayes The second is of those who being righteous in their state have fallen foulely in their way with whom we may also reckon such as are yet in an unrighteous state yet shall be and at last are converted and brought home to God The third is of those who persevere and obstinately continue in their wicked state and wayes stopping their eares and hardning their hearts both against instruction and correction Elihu seemeth to put all these together v. 5 6. Behold God is mighty and despiseth not any he is mighty in strength and wisdome he preserveth not the life of the wicked but giveth right to the poore More distinctly He speaks of the first v. 7. He that is God with-draweth not his eyes from the righteous but with kings are they on the throne yea he doth establish them for ever and they are exalted He speakes of the second sort v. 8 9 10 11. And if they be bound in fetters and holden in the cords of affliction then he sheweth them their worke and their iniquity that they have exceeded He openeth also their eare to discipline and commandeth that they return from iniquity c. He speakes of the third sort v. 13 14. But the hypocrites in heart heap up wrath they cry not when he bindeth them they dye in youth and their life is among the uncleane These three sorts of men are dealt with by God according to their kind The last of them being altogether wicked and incorrigible abide under wrath for ever The second being in an evill state or having done that which is evill yet humbling themselves through grace and being bettered by their afflictions are usually restored to a prosperous estate in this life in case they dy under affliction are alwayes crowned with the blessedness of eternal life The First sort walking constantly humane frailties excepted in their uprightnesse are not only preserved in peace but receive high favours and speciall markes of honour from the bountifull hand of God which is true especially according to the condition of those times wherein God did more engage himselfe to his faithfull servants in promises of temporall happiness then now he doth in Gospel times And yet even these as now they are not so then they were not alwayes exempted from sufferings For as the second sort of righteous men are often afflicted in a way of chastisement for their sins so the Lord reserves to himselfe a liberty his Soveraignty allowing it to afflict the best and holiest of his servants for the tryall of their graces or the magnifying of his owne grace to them and in them as a Master of Heroick Arts and Games imposeth a very laborious task upon his Schollar-Champion not as a punishment of any default but to confirme his strength and exercise his valour The due consideration of all these things layd together by Elihu might well satisfie Job and sustaine his faith in a patient bearing the burden of all those calamities which the Great and most wise God was pleased to impose upon him and likewise convince him that he had fayled much in giving out so many impatient complaints about them And no doubt they prevailed much with him both towards his conviction and the quieting of his heart under those dispensations For we heare no more of him in that language Yet Elihu thought he had not done enough but continueth his discourse and draweth a further
therefore though he know well enough how to doe evill yet he is truely sayd not to know how to doe it Thirdly Not to know a thing is not to be accustomed or practised in it Thus when Elihu saith I know not to give flattering titles he seemes to say It is not my manner I have not been used to flatter As use doth not only make fitnesse but encreaseth our knowledge so disuse doth at once unfit us to doe a thing and diminisheth our knowledge how to doe it And therefore what we use not to doe we are rightly sayd not to know to doe I know not to give flattering titles Hence note The spirit of a good man is set against all that is evill he cannot close nor comply with it His understanding assenteth not to it his will chuseth it not his conscience cannot swallow it though not a camel but a gnat the least of sin-evils much lesse doth he give himselfe up to the free and customary practise of great sins A good man may well be sayd not to know to sin because though he knoweth the nature of all sins yet he knowingly declines the doing of every sin I know not to give flattering titles In so doing my Maker would soone take me away Those words in so doing are not expressed in the Originall but supplyed to make up the sence and yet we may very well read the text without them I know not to give flattering titles my Maker would soone take me away or as Mr Broughton renders my Maker would be my taker away My Maker Elihu expresseth God by the work of creation or by his relation to God as a creator Elihu doth but include himselfe in the number of those whom God hath made he doth not exclude others from being made by God as much as himselfe while he saith My Maker God is the maker of every man and is so in a three-fold consideration First He is the maker of every man in his naturall constitution as he is a man consisting of a reasonable soule and body I am fearefully and wonderfully made sayd David with respect to both Psal 119.14 Secondly God is every mans maker in his civill state as well as in his naturall he formeth us up into such and such a condition as rich or as poore as high or as low as Governours or as governed according to the pleasure of his owne will Prov. 22.2 The rich and the poore meete together the Lord is the maker of them both he meaneth it not only if at all in that place that the Lord hath made them both as men but he hath made the one a rich man and the other a poore man Thus the Lord is the maker of them both And as the Lord makes men rich so Great and honorable Psal 75.6 Promotion cometh not from the East nor from the West nor from the South It cometh from none of these parts or points of earth or heaven it cometh from nothing under heaven but from the God of heaven God is the Judge he putteth downe one and setteth up another Thirdly The Lord is the maker of every man in his spirituall state as good and holy and gracious Ephes 2.10 We are his workmanship created in Christ Jesus unto good works till we are wrought by God we can doe none of Gods worke nor have we any mind to doe it Now when Elihu saith My Maker would soone take me away we may understand it in all these three sences he that made me this body and soule when I came into the world he that ordered my way and state all this while that I have been in this world he that formed me up into a new life the life of Grace and hath made me a new man in this and for another world This my Maker would soone take me away Hence note It is good to remember God as our maker Man would not make such ill worke in the world if he remembred God his maker or that himselfe is the work of God We should remember God our maker First as to our being as from him we receive life and breath Secondly as to our well-being as from him we receive all good things both for this life and a better Eccles 12.1 Remember now thy creator not only that God is a creator but thy creator remember this in the dayes of thy youth And surely if thou remembrest him well thou wilt not forget thy selfe so much as to forget the duty which thou owest him Thinke often upon thy maker and then this thought will be upon thee alwayes If I owe my selfe wholly unto God for making me in nature how much more doe I owe my selfe unto God for making me a new creature We ought to live wholly to him from whom we have received our lives He that hath made us should have the use of us He hath made all things for himselfe Prov 16.4 chiefely man who is the chiefe of all visibles which he hath made Those two memento's That we are made by the power of God and that the price by which we are redeemed is the blood of God should constraine us at all times and in all things to be at the call and command of God My Maker Would soone take me away Invoce 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 tolleret me alludit ad praecedens 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 q d. Si capiam faciem me capiet Coc We had the same word in the former verse there 't is used for accepting a person here for taking away a person The Learned Hebricians take notice of an elegant flower of Rhetorick in this expression If I take persons God will take away my person so we may translate the Text If I take men my God will take me away Yea my maker would not only take me away at last or as we say first or last but he would make dispatch and be quicke with me My maker would Soone take me away Some render He would take me away as a little thing But the mind of our translation is he would take me away in a little time The originall word beares either signification 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and so may the scope of the text My Maker would take me away as a little thing he would blow me away as a feather or as dust and crush me as a moth and he would doe it in a moment in a little time all the men of the world yea the whole world is but a little thing before God and he can quickly take both away Isa 40.15 Behold the nations are as a drop of a bucket and are counted as the small dust of the Ballance Behold he taketh up the Islands as a very little thing Now if Whole Islands if all nations are such little things as drops and dusts then what is any one particular man how big soever he be And how soone can God take him away Little things are taken away in a little time So the word is
men but the blasphemy against the holy Ghost shall not be forgiven unto men As if he had said Though you sin against the Father and the Son it shall be forgiven you but if you sin against the holy Ghost it shall not be forgiven either in this world or in the world to come that is it shall never be forgiven Seeing then there is more in sinning against the holy Ghost then against the Father or the Son who are God the holy Ghost must needs be God For though there is no degree or graduall difference in the deity each person being coeternall coequall and consubstantiall yet the Scripture attributes more in that case as to the poynt of sinning against the holy Ghost then to sinning against the Father or the Son therefore certainly the holy Ghost is God Lastly The holy Ghost is the object of divine worship are not we baptized in the Name of the Father Son and holy Ghost Is the Father and the Son God and the holy Ghost not God who is joyned with them in the same honour Shall a creature come in competition with God And doth not the Scripture or word of God direct us to pray for grace from the Spirit as well as from the Father or the Son 2 Cor 13.13 Rev 1.4 Thus we see how full the Scripture is in giving the glory of the same workes upon us and of the same worship from us to the Spirit as to the Father and the Son And therefore from all these premises we may conclude That the Holy-Ghost with the Father and the Son is God blessed and to be glorified for evermore The Spirit of God hath made me And the breath of the Almighty hath given me life 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Spiritus ex ore egregiens halitus flatus anima proprie significat halitem p●r metonymiam effecti animam per synechdo●hen membri animal Pisc in Deut 10.16 The words carry an allusion as Interpreters generally agree to that of Moses describing the creation of man Gen 2.7 And the Lord God formed man out of the dust of the earth and breathed into his nostrills the breath of life and man became a living soule Elihu speakes neere in the same forme fully to the same effect The breath of the Almighty hath given me life or enlivened me As if he had sayd That soule which the Lord hath breathed into me hath made me live The soule of man may be called the breath of the Almighty because the Almighty is expressed infusing it into man at first by breathing And therefore the word Neshamah which properly signifies the breath doth also by a Metonymie of the effect signifie the soule it selfe which causeth breathing Thus our translaters render it Isa 57.16 I saith the Lord will not contend for ever neither will I be alwayes wroth for the spirit should faile before me and the soules which I have made As the soule of man was breathed in by God so the soule is that by which man breathes Breath and soule come and goe together Some comparing the originall word Shamaijm for the heavens with this word Neshamah which here we translate breath take notice of their neere affinity intimating that the soule of man is of a heavenly pedegree or comes from heaven yea the latine word mens signifying the mind is of the same consonant letters with the Hebrew Neshamah and as some conceive is derived from it So then I take these words The breath of the Almighty as a description of that part of man which is opposed to his body The Spirit of God hath made me that is hath set me up as a man in humane shape And the breath of the Almighty hath given me life that is this soule which the Almighty hath breathed into me hath made me a living man ready for any humane act or as Moses speakes God breathing into my nostrills the breath of life I became a living soule Hence observe First The soule of man floweth immediately from God 'T is the breath of God not that God liveth by breathing the way of his life is infinitely above our apprehension But 't is cleare in Scripture That the Almighty breathed into man the powers of life And therefore he is called by way of Eminence The father of spirits Heb 12.9 For though the Almighty is rightly entituled the Father of the whole man though both body and soule are the worke of God yet he is in a further sence the father of our spirits or soules then of our bodyes And here Solomon shewing how man is disposed of when these two are separated by death saith Eccl 12.7 Then shall the dust that is the body returne to the earth as it was and the spirit that is the soule shall returne to God who gave it The body is the gift of God but the body is not the breath of God it is not such an immediate gift of God as the soule is when the body of man was made at first God tooke the dust of the earth and formed his body out of it but when he gave him a soule he breathed that from himselfe it was an immediate effect of Gods power not dealing with nor working upon any prae-existing matter The spirit or soule of man is purely of God solely of God And hence we may inferre First Then the soule is not a vapour arising from the crasis or temperament of the body as the life of a beast is Secondly Then the soule of man is not traduced from the parents in generation as many learned men affirme especially to ease themselves of those difficulties about the conveyance of originall sin or defilement into the soule Thirdly We may hence also inferre then the soule is not corruptible it is an immortall substance How can that be corruptible or mortall which hath its rise as I may say immediately from God or is breathed in by the Almighty who is altogether incorruptible and immortal And whereas there is a twofold incorruptibility First by divine ordination that is God appoynts such a thing shall not corrupt and therefore it doth not so the body of man in it's first creation was incorruptible for though it were in it selfe corruptible being made out of the earth yet by the appoyntment of God if man had continued in his integrity he had not dyed And therefore it is said By sin came death yea doubtlesse if God should command and appoynt the meanest worme that moves upon the earth to live for ever or the most fading flower that groweth out of the earth to flourish for ever both the one and the other would doe so Secondly there is an incorruptibility in some things not meerely by a law or appoyntment of God but as from that intrinsecall nature which God hath bestowed upon them and implanted in them Thus the Angels are immortall they have an incorruptible nature and likewise the soule of man being breathed from the Almighty is in it's owne nature
it is that God delivereth man while 't is said by Elihu he keepeth back His soul from the pit Some expound the word soul in this former part of the verse in opposition to life in the latter part of it and his life from perishing by the sword Soul and life are sometimes taken promiscuously or indifferently for the same thing yet there is a very great difference between soul and life the life is nothing else but the union between soul and body but the soul is a spirituall substance distinct from the body while remaining in it and subsisting it self alone when separate from it That bond or knot which ties soul and body together is properly that which Elihu speaks of in the next words And his life As God keeps back his soul from everlasting destruction so his life from temporall destruction Though the soul be most precioua yet life is very precious skin for skin yea all that a man hath will he give for his life Chap. 2.5 'T is therefore no small mercy for God to keep back a mans life From perishing by the sword The sword is put sometime for warre that being the principal instrument of warre some insist much on that sence here as if the words contained a promise of being kept from perishing by the sword of an open enemy But the sword is here rather put for any kind or for all kinds of hurtfull evills what ever doth afflict vex or destroy may be called the sword Nomen gladii hoc in loco generalitèr denotare puto quicquid pungit percutit torquet cruciat vel affilgit Bold The text strictly in the letter is thus rendred and his life from passing by or through the sword we say from perishing by the sword which passing by the sword is not to escape the sword but to fall by the sword Thus 't is said of that idolatrous King Ahaz 2 Kings 16.3 He caused his sons to passe through the fire the meaning is not that he delivered them out of the fire but consumed them in the fire for he made them passe through the fire to Molech which was a sacrificing of them to that abominable idoll It is also said 2 Sam. ●2 31 when David took Rabba and destroyed the Ammonites he made them passe through the brick-kilne not to save them but to consume them Some conceive that this brick-kilne through which David made those captive Ammonites to passe was the fire or furnace of Molech that infamous Idoll of the Ammonites with whose bloody and most cruell devotions the apostatizing Jewes or people of God were in after times ensnared And if so then they might see God turning their sin into their punishment and declaring his fiery wrath against them in that by which they had declared their foolish and abominable zeale But that which I quote their punishment for is only the forme of its expression He made them pass through the brick-kilne Transire in gladium est idem quod incidere in manus et tela hostium et cadere in bello Gladius 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vocatur quasi missite telum Drus that is perish in it Thus here and his soul from passing by the sword is rightly translated from perishing by the sword The word rendred sword signifies also any missive weapon or weapon cast with the hand especially a dart so Mr. Broughton translates and his life from going on the dart The generall sence of this verse is plainly this The Lord withdraweth man from his purpose and hides pride from man that so he may in mercy preserve him from perishing both in body and soul or that he may keep him not only from the first but from the second death which is the separation of the whole man from the blessed presence of God for ever 'T is a great favour to be kept from the pit where the body corrupts or from the sword that wounds the flesh but to be kept from that everlasting woe which shall overwhelme the wicked in that bottomlesse pit or lake of fire and brimstone this is the highest favour of God to lost man This is the pit this the perishing from which saith Elihu the Lord keepeth back the soul and life of man First from the emphasis of the word he keepeth back importing that God as it were by strong hand or absolute authority and command keepeth the soul of man from the pit Note Man is very forward to run upon his own ruine even to run upon eternall ruine if the Lord did not hold stay and stop him Man would tumble into the pit at the very next step if God did not keep him The way of man naturally is downe to the pit and all that he doth of his own self is for his own undoing And as he is kept back from the pit so as the Apostle Peter hath it 1 Epist 1.5 he is kept by the power of God through faith unto salvation Secondly considering the season signified in the former verse that when man is going upon an evill work or walking in the pride of his heart God is keeping him from the pit Note While man hath sinfull purposes and pride in his heart all that while he is going on to destruction both temporall and eternall Every step in sin is a step to misery and the further any man proceedeth on in sin the further he wanders from God and the further he wanders from God the neerer he comes to misery As the further we goe from the Sun the neerer we are to the cold and the further we go from the fountaine the nearer we are to drought so they that hast to sin hast to sorrow yea to hell Solomon saith of such they love death There is no man loves death under the notion of death there is no beauty no amiableness in death but all they may be said to love death who love sin and live in it Every motion towards sin is a hasting into the armes and embraces of death sinners wooe and invite death and the grave yea hell and destruction Thirdly note The warnings and admonitions which God gives to sinfull man whether waking or sleeping are to keep him from perishing to keep him from temporall to keep him from eternall perishing This is the great end of preaching the Gospel the end also of pressing the terrors of the Law both have this aime to keep man from perishing When man is prest to holinesse and when he is represt from the wayes of sin 't is that he may not perish for ever God hath set up many ordinances he hath imployed many instruments to administer them many thousands goe up and downe preaching to the world and crying out to the sons of men repent and beleeve beleeve and repent and why all this cry but to keep souls from the pit and their life from perishing by the sword The Apostle Jude exhorts to save some with fear and of others to have compassion that is terrifie some that
with us they would even stand s●●ll and have nothing to doe if God did not bring us into straights or keep us for a season in them In a sick-bed the Lord shews us and we may find work enough for all our graces especially for faith and patience and submission of spirit to his worke and will We may doe better worke and doe it better in sickness then in health Seventhly God brings many upon their fick-beds to teach them the worth of health and make them thankfull for it They who are seldome sicke are as seldome thankfull for their health and scarce reckon that for a mercy the want whereof they have never felt 'T is rare that we prize what we have till we have it not Eightly God exerciseth many with sickness with a purpose to put men upon a holy purpose of improving their health better and of doing more for God while 't is well with them Lastly not a few are afflicted that God may have an opportunity to doe his worke and declare his power God himself would be hindred of much glorious work in restoring and recovering them to health did he not chasten them upon sick beds The question was put about the blind man Joh. 9.3 4. Who did sin this man or his Parents that he was born blind Jesus answered neither hath this man sinned nor his Parents but that the works of God should be made manifest in him If there had not been a blind man in the world how could the power of God have been made manifest in giving sight to the blind if some were not extreamly torturingly sick how would the power of God be seene in healing the sicke and rebuking their paine For all these purposes Man is chastened with paine upon his bed and the multitude of his bones with strong paine We never profit by chastenings till we answer the purposes of God in sending them and unless we know what and which they are we can never answer them If we answer these nine toucht upon we shall either answer all or to be sure we shall baulke or refuse none Elihu having thus shewed us the sicke man in paine proceeds to shew us what further effect his paine and sickness wrought upon him Vers 20. So that his life abhorreth bread and his soule dainty meat This verse sheweth the second effect of sickness The former was paine This is loss of appetite or nauseousnesse His life That is his living body We may call the sick mans body a living body though it be hard to say whether we should number him among the living or the dead We read life put for the body which liveth or whereby it liveth Psal 88.3 My soule saith Heman is full of troubles and my life draweth nigh unto the grave that is I am ready to dye and my body to be buryed He doth not say he hath no great stomack to but his life abhorreth bread The word here used is of a Syriack derivation Vox 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Syra est notat nauseare facere nam 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sordes scoriam excrementum quicquid sordicum et immundum est vel in humano corpore vel ex eo excretū Drus Merc nor is it found any where in Scripture but here The nowne signifieth any thing that is filthy excrementicious or uncleane whence the verbe is rendred to abhorre loath or nauceate because we abhorre those things which are filthy or uncleane His life abhorreth bread That is common food Sometimes bread is put for all kind of dyet as David sayd to Mephibosheth 2 Sam 9.10 Thou shalt eat bread at my table But because of that opposition in the text to dainties by bread we may here understand only ordinary food His life abhorreth bread and his soule dainty meat The Hebrew is Meat of desire Not only such meat as men usually desire for the wholesomnesse of it but such as curious palates desire for the pleasantness of it such meat is here meant Yea thirdly such meat as the man had a desire to before his sicknesse for the sutableness of it to his owne taste and appetite he then abhorreth His soule abhorreth dainty meat The turning of the stomack and losse of appetite are usuall symptomes of sickness Almost all sicknesses weaken the appetite and some take it quite away so that the patient not only hath no desire to but loathes dainty meate or meate of desire This phrase or forme of speaking is used Dan 10.3 I saith he ate no pleasant bread or no bread of desires as we put in the margin neither came flesh nor wine in my mouth 'T is used againe 2 Chro 32.27 Hezekiah made himselfe treasuries for silver and gold c. and all manner of pleasant jewells we put in the Margin for all jewells of desire So Amos 5.11 Pleasant vineyards or vineyards of desire It was the manner of the Hebrews to expresse pleasant by desirable because pleasant things are much desired His soule abhorreth meate of desire or dainty meate Hence note First 'T is a mercy to tast our meat or to take the comfort of what we eate Many have meat but cannot taste it That which giveth the best taste to our meat is a taste of the goodnesse of God in it 1 Pet 2.1 If ye have tasted that the Lord is gracious It is sweet to taste meat and the goodnesse of the Lord together Secondly Note God can quickly make those things that are most desirable to us dainty meat meat of desire loathsome to us Some abhor meat because they have eaten of it long The Jewes did eate Manna and Quailes till they loathed them Num 11.20 Others loath meat because they have eaten over-much A third sort loath some meat by a naturall antipathy against it Fourthly Others loath wholsome meat out of a curiosity because it is not dainty enough Lastly Sickness causeth a loathing of all meate even of the most dainty and desirable meate And the Lord at any time can make that which was our desire our loathing We have a like description of a sick man Ps 107.18 His soule abhorreth all manner of meat and draweth neere unto the gates of death Thirdly Note The best of Creature-comforts are but vaine comforts What can dainty meat doe a man good when he is sicke and ready to dye Then gold and silver lands and houses which are the dainty meat of a covetous man are loathsome to him When a man is sicke to death his very riches are sapless and tastless to him wife and children friends and acquaintance can yeild little comfort in that dark houre yea they often prove miserable comforters When we have most need of comfort these things administer least or no comfort at all to us Is it not our wisdome then to get a stock of such comforts as will hold and abide fresh with us when all worldly comforts either leave us or become tastless to us Is it not good to get a store of
that food which how sick soever we are our stomacks will never loath yea the sicker we are our soules will the more like hunger after and feed the more heartily upon The flesh of Christ is meat indeed Joh 6.55 Feed upon him by faith in health and in sicknesse ye will never loath him His flesh is the true meat of desires such meat as will fill and fatten us but never cloy us A hungry craving appetite after Christ and sweet satisfaction in him are inseparable and still the stronger is our appetite the greater is our satisfaction And which is yet a greater happiness our soules will have the strongest appetite the most sharp-set stomacke after Christ when through bodily sickness our stomacks cannot take down but loath the very scent and sight of the most pleasant perishing meate and delicious earthly dainties Looke that ye provide somewhat to eat that will goe downe upon a sick-bed your sick bed meat is Christ all other dainty food may be an abhorring to you Further Not only are we to consider the sickness of the body as the cause of this tastlesness and listlesness after bread But we are to consider the sick man abhorring dainty meate under the hideings of Gods face or in feares about his spirituall state as appeares by that which followeth If there be a messenger with him an interpreter one of a thousand to shew unto man his uprightness● or to set him right in his spirituall state c. The sick man for want of that as well as for want of health can taste no sweetness in the rarest dainties Hence note A sense of divine displeasure or the hideing of divine favour from the soule renders all outward comforts comfortlesse to us If a man have never so much health yet the appearances of divine displeasure will make him sick of his most pleasant things Carnall men can eat and drink and live upon pleasures yea upon the pleasures of sin and goe on merrily with them a while because they know not the meaning of the displeasure of God nor doe they know what the favour of God meaneth they understand not what they want yea they flatter themselves that they have enough and are well enough though they have nothing and are nothing that is of any worth But if God once awaken them out of this dreame and shew them their cursed condition all will be gall and wormwood to their taste or as gravel between their teeth As the sense of divine favour makes bitter things sweet and sorrowfull things comfortable to us the soure herbs of affliction dainties to us So not only common but dainty meat all the cates and viands of this world will be not only tastless but bitter to us when God frownes upon us An earnest in the love and favour of God is the good of all good things For the close of all take these two Counsells upon the occasion of these words First Receive your bread and dainty meate with prayer and thankesgiving you may quickly else come to abhorre your bread yea and your dainties The word and prayer both sanctifie and sweeten all creature-enjoyments Secondly Take heed of abusing your meate ye may quickly be brought to a loathing of it When they who have given themselves up to luxury and intemperance lye upon their sick-beds and find their stomacke turned from all their dainties it will be most grievous to them to consider how they have abused their dainties to feed their lusts As some who abuse the creatures are punished with the want of them so others with an abhorrence and loathing of them So much for this second symptome of sickness His life abhorreth bread and his soul dainty meat The third followeth and appeareth in the generall decay and languishment of the sick mans body Vers 21. His flesh is consumed away that it cannot be seene and his bones that were not seene stick out In this verse and the next Elihu still insists upon his description of the sick mans condition and in them he gives us two other sad effects or symptomes of his sickness First The generall wast and consumption of the body vers 21. Secondly The utmost perill of life v. 22. Elihu describes the first effect of sicknesse the first here but the third in order by two things First By the disappearing of that which used to be seene and appeare very faire and beautifull the visible part grows as it were invisible his flesh is consumed away that it cannot be seene Secondly By the appearing of that which used not to be seene his invisible parts not so in their own nature but as to their place I say his invisible parts grow visible His bones which were not seen stick out Thus with much elegancy he sets forth the sorrowfull and deplorable estate of the sick man His flesh is consumed away As if he had sayd Before his sicknesse he was full of flesh fat and faire but falling into sickness he falls away and is worne as we say to skin and bones his flesh is consumed Flesh in Scripture is taken two wayes First Improperly and Tropically Secondly Literally or Properly In a Tropicall and Improper sense flesh signifieth our sinfull corruption Gal 5.17 The flesh evermore lusteth against the spirit that is the unregenerate part in man against the regenerate These two are always contending and combating with one another in all those whom Christ hath conquered to himselfe Happy are they that finde their flesh in this sense consuming away and 't is that which every man is studying who knows what godlinesse meanes the consumption of this flesh even the mortification of his lusts of pride and earthliness of wrath envie and unbeliefe Secondly flesh by a figure is put for the whole naturall body consisting of many parts dissimilar to flesh Thus the Psalmist complained in prayer that the Lord had given the flesh of his Saints to the beasts of the earth Psal 79.2 that is he had exposed their bodies through the rage and cruelty of their enemies to the teeth and bowells of savage and ravenous beasts Thirdly flesh is also put for the whole man consisting both of soul and body Gen. 6.12 13. The Lord saw that all flesh had corrupted their wayes That is all men who are made up of a body and soul had corrupted their wayes by letting loose and acting their sinfull corruptions Fourthly flesh is sometimes put for that which is b●st in man his greatest naturall perfections whatsoever in him is lesse then grace whatsoever is highest in him below the spirit is called flesh in Scripture When Peter Math. 16.17 had made that blessed confession which is the rock upon which the Church is built thou art Christ the Son of the living God presently Christ tells him flesh and blood hath not revealed this unto thee that is the highest and the most perfect piece of nature hath not taught thee this lesson the Evangelist saith of all true beleevers who have received
or the pains of his body he looked upon himself as one free among the dead that is as a dead man his life drew near to the destroyers And hence Fourthly Others read the words not in an active sence as we Destroyers but in a passive His life draweth nigh to those who are destroyed or dead Dying men are so neere to that they may be reckoned as dead men That word of encouragement in the Prophet Isa 41.14 Which we render Feare not thou worme Jacob and ye men or as we put in the Margin Few men of Israel is rendred by some others Feare not thou worme Jacob and ye that are dead of Israel that is who are in your owne fearefull apprehensions or in the opinion of your proud and prepotent enemies as dead men or nigh unto death or as we may expound it by that of Paul concerning himselfe and his Fellow-Apostles with respect to the continuall hazzard of their lives 1 Cor 4.9 men as it were appoynted unto death yea as the learned in the Hebrew language tell us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 haec vox ex eo nata videter quod simus morti subjecti Ita et a Graecis 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 et à latinù mortalu usurpatus Martyn the word translated in the Prophet men with the change but of one poynt and that only in the position of it signifieth properly dead men We find the word applyed specially to wicked worldly men Psal 17.14 who are there called the hand of God to afflict or take away the lives of Godly men and are sayd to have their portion in this life the word I say is applyed to them as implying that how much soever they rejoyce either in the present enjoyments of this naturall life or in the hopes of a long naturall life in this world yet they alwayes are within one poynt or pricke with a pen which is the shortest imaginable space of death In which sense also St Paul speaking of the different state of the body now in this life and after the resurrection from the dead saith 1 Cor 15.54 When this mortall shall have put on immortality that is when we who now live in dying bodyes or in bodyes bearing the markes or tokens of death and looking like dead men shall have put on the beautifull and glorious robes of immortality Then shall be brought to passe the saying that is written Death shall be swallowed up in victory Whereas now death which is ready enough to get the victory over healthy and strong men is so ready to get the victory over weake and sicke men that their life may very well be sayd according to this fourth and last interpretation to draw nigh to the destroyed or those that are already dead Thus if in stead of Death-Bringers or destroyers we read Destroyed or those that have been brought to death the meaning of Elihu in this passage is plaine and easie importing the sicke man so sicke that there is scarce a step or but a poynt between him and those who are actually dead But whether we take the word in this passive sence and translate The Destroyed or in the active as we and translate destroyers thereby understanding either Angels in speciall or diseases in Generall sent by God to destroy or take away the life of the sicke man which way soever of these I say we expound the word it yeilds a cleare sence as to the scope of the text and as to the truth of it upon the matter the very same His life draweth nigh to the destroyers Hence note First Diseases are destroyers Either they themselves destroy when they come or the destroyer comes with them Psal 90.3 Thou turnest man to destruction and sayest returne ye children of men 'T is a Psalme penned by Moses lamenting the frailety of mankinde He lived to see all Israel whom under his hand and conduct God brought out of Egypt dye ●●cept that renowned two Caleb and Joshua And therefore he having seene the great destruction of that people for their murmurings and unbeliefe for their ten-fold provocations in the wilderness might say from his owne experience more then most men to that poynt of mans mortality And as God turned that people to destruction and sayd according to that irrevocable sentence Gen 3.19 Returne ye children of men to your originall and first materiall dust so he saith the same to men every day who as they are dust so we see them returning to their dust Every disease if so commission'd by God is death and every paine if he say it the period of our lives Againe Elihu is here speaking of a man whom the Lord is but trying teaching and instructing upon his sick bed yet he saith His soule is drawing neere to the grave and his life to the destroyers Hence observe Those afflictions which are but for instruction may looke like those which are for destruction When the Lord hath a purpose only to try a man he often acts towards him as if he would kill him If any shall say this is hard I answer A ruffe horse must have a ruffe rider Ruffe wood will not cleave without a beetle and wedges We put God to use extremities that he may bring us to a moderation Our spirits are often so ruffe and head-strong that they must be kept in with bit and bridle they are so tough and knotty that there 's no working no cleaving of them till the Lord sets his wedges to us and layes on with his beetle of heaviest and hardest afflictions In a word we even compell him to bring us to deaths-doore that he may teach us to live Now seeing paines and sicknesses of which Elihu speakes as the way and meanes by which God speakes to sinfull man are accompanied with such dreadfull symptomes and effects loathing and losse of appetite consumption of the flesh and the breaking of the very bones the soule drawing neere to the grave and life to the destroyers seeing I say there are such sad effects of sicknesse remember First Health is worth the praying to God for Secondly Health is worth the praising of God for and that considered either first as continued or secondly as restored 'T is a mercy not to be pained not to be sicke 't is a more sencible though not a greater mercy to be freed from paine and recovered out of sickness While we are kept free from paines and sicknesses how thankfull should we be and when we are freed from and brought out of the bonds of bodily paine and sicknesses how soule-sicke yea how dead are we if we are not thankfull Thirdly Seeing paines and sicknesses are such sad afflictions be wise and carefull for the preservation of your health doe not throw away your health upon a lust doe not expose your selves to lasting paines and pining sicknesses for the satisfying of a wanton sensuall appetite The health and strength of this frayle body are of more value
then ten thousand of those vanishing delights Yet how many are there who run themselves to the graves mouth and into the thickest throngs of those destroyers for the taking up of such pitifull and perishing delights who to please their flesh for a few moments in surfeiting drunkenness and wantonness bring many dayes yea moneths and yeares of paine and torment upon their flesh yea and not only shorten I meane as to what they might probably have had by the course of nature the number of their dayes but suddenly end extinguish them It hath been sayd of old Gluttony kills more men then the sword that is it casts ●●em into killing diseases 'T is a maxime in warre Starve your enemy if you can rather then fight him cut his throat without a knife destroy him without drawing a sword that is with hunger Some are indeed destroyed with hunger and hunger if not relieved will destroy any man Yet surfeiting destroyeth more then hunger and 't is a more quicke and speedy destroyer We have knowne many who have cut their owne throats by cutting too much and too fast for their bellyes Pampering the Body destroyeth more bodies then starving Many while they draw nigh to their Tables their soules as Elihu here saith are drawing neere to the grave and their life to the destroyers Therefore remember and consider O ye that are men given to appetite as Solomon calleth such Pro 23 2. or rather as the Hebrew elegancy there hath it ye that are Masters of appetite studying your Bellyes till indeed ye are mastered by appetite to you I say remember and consider Health is more then meate and life then dainty faire All the content that intemperance can give you cannot recompence you for the paines that sickness will give you you may have pleasure for an houre or two and sickness for a moneth or two for a yeare or two And if all the pleasure we take in satisfying that which though it may be glutted yet will not be satisfied a lust cannot recompence the paines that are found in a sick bed for a few dayes moneths or yeares how will it recompence any for those everlasting paines that are found in hell where the damned shall be alwayes conversing with death and destruction and yet never dye nor be destroyed Fourthly Forasmuch as sickness is often accompanied with such grievous dolours and racking tortures let the sick pray much that they may be armed with patience who knows what tryalls and extremities sickness may bring him to Though the beginnings and first appearances of it are but small like the cloud which first appeared to the servant of Eliah onely of a hands-breadth yea though it begin but with the little finger of the hand yet as that little cloud did the whole face of the heaven so this little distemper may over-spread the whole body and put you to the exercise of all your patience it may hang and encrease upon you till it hath broken your bones and consumed your flesh and brought you to the graves mouth therefore pray for patience Lastly Let not the strong man glory in his ●●●ngth nor the healthy man in his health sicknesse may come shortly and then how strong soever any man is downe he must and lye by it There 's no wrestling away sickness any way if God send it and bid it come but by wrestling with God as Jacob did Gen 32. in prayer If you thinke to wrestle away bodily sickness by bodily strength and striving with it you will be throwne and get the fall Who can stand before a feaver or a consumption when they arrest us in the name of the Great King and carry us prisoners to our beds Therefore let no man glory in his strength if any man doe it shewes at present his morall weakness and his naturall weakness may quickly teach him another lesson and spoyle his glorying JOB Chap. 33. Vers 23 24 25 26. If there be a messenger with him an interpreter one among a thousand to shew unto man his uprightness Then he is gracious unto him and saith Deliver him from going down to the pit I have found a ransome His flesh shall be fresher then a childes he shall return to the dayes of his youth He shall pray unto God and he will be favourable unto him and he shall see his face with joy for he will render to man his righteousness THese words hold forth the third way by which God speakes or reveales himselfe to man and recovers him out of his sin As if Elihu had said When God hath brought a man to his sick bed and he yet continueth in his blindness not perceiving either his owne errour or the purpose and intention of God to him If then besides all this God so order the matter that in his mercifull providence he provideth for his further instruction and sends a speciall messenger as he doth me to thee an interpreter which is a singular favour of God to explain and expound the meaning of his dealings with him and what his owne condition is to bring him to a true sight and sence of his sin and to set him upright in the sight of God by the actings of faith and repentance this soone altereth the case and hereupon God is presently appeased towards him Then he is gracious and then many blessed fruits and effects of his grace doe follow and are heaped on him Here therefore we have a very illustrious instance of Gods loving kindness to poore sinfull man recovering and fetching him backe when he is as it were halfe dead from the gates of death restoring him both as to soule and body putting him into a perfect so farre as on this side heaven it may be called perfect state and giving him indeed what he can reasonably desire of him In the context of these foure verses Consider First The instrument or meanes by which God brings this about and that is by sending a messenger or a choice interpreter to the sick mans bed to counsel and advise him Vers 23. If there be a messenger with him c. Secondly We have here the motive or first moving cause of this mercy that is the grace or free favour of God then he will be gracious unto him and saith Deliver him from going downe to the pit that is being gracious he will give forth this word for his deliverance Then he is gracious to him c. v. 24. Thirdly We have here the meritorious Cause of this mercifull deliverance and that is a ransom I have found a ransom at the latter end of the 24th verse Fourthly We have the speciall benefits of this deliverance which are two-fold First Respecting his body He is delivered from the pit of death v. 24. And not only so but he hath a life as new as when he began to live His flesh shall be fresher then a childes the dayes of youth shall returne to him againe v. 25. Secondly We have the benefit respecting
that condition a body without a soule but his life was for that time withdrawne there was no appearance of it no sencible breathing no motion no vitall visible operation Thus we may conceive what is meant by the rendring unto man his righteousness Hence observe First A justified person is a righteous person He hath a clothing of righteousness that which we call his righteousness is not properly but imputedly his It is not a cloathing of his owne making but made for him and bestowed freely upon him Rom 10.3 They being ignorant of the righteousness of God and going about to establish their owne righteousness have not submitted themselves to the righteousness of God It is Gods righteousness not our owne and yet it is our owne as well as the righteousness of God it being imputed and reckoned unto us for our righteousness it is the believers righteousness as given to him it is Christs righteousness as wrought by him Secondly Observe A justified person under great afflictions and temptations often looseth the comfortable sight and sence of his owne righteousness And so may look upon himselfe as an unrighteous person as having no righteousnes or as being unreconciled unjustified For as many bold sinners hypocrites presume they have a righteousness when they have none and boast themselves to be in the number of the justified when they are not So many an afflicted and tempted soule who is indeed justified in the sight of God may be unjustified in his owne Great afflictions have an appearance of divine displeasure which stands most opposite to justification As affliction is a kinde of darkness so it often leaves the soule in much darkness And he that is in the dark is full of feare he is apt to question his state whether he hath any thing of God in him or no. For though it be not good for a Christian alwayes to begin to live he should come to a poynt and labour for a certainty yet some are brought to such a pass that their former evidences and experiences are even dead and lye prostrate and they constrained to begin a new reckoning about their spirituall estate or as it were to begin againe to live Thirdly Note Mans righteousness or justification is as lost to him when he wants the evidence that is the comfort sweetness and peace of it When his soul-state is so ravel'd and intangled that he can make nothing of it then his righteousness is as lost Those things which appeare not are to us as if they were not Not to know what we have is a degree of not having When grace doth not act or is not used we are sayd in Scripture to lack grace or to have none 2 Pet 1.9 But he that lacketh these things is blind and cannot see afar off The whole context carrieth it of believers who are in a state of grace who yet not using grace are sayd to lack it and are called blinde as not able to see afar off how it was with them when the work of conversion first began so have upon the matter forgotten that they were ever purged from their old sins That is they act as a man that hath never had any acquaintance with God or knew so much as the meaning of repentance from dead workes He in the Gospel who had but one talent and did not use it is sayd to have none From him that hath not shall be taken away even that he hath Math 25.29 'T is a strange expression to say that shall be taken away from a man which he hath not yet the idle servant is sayd not to have that one talent which he had because he did not use it but layd it by as a dead stocke Now as in reference unto the grace of sanctification in us when we doe not act we are sayd to lack it or not to have it so in reference to the peace of justification when we have not the comfort of it we are sayd to be without it And therefore when peace is restored to the soule righteousness or justification is restored also Further from the connexion of these words He shall see his face with joy for he will render unto man his righteousness Note Fourthly When the sight of our righteousness or justified state in Christ returnes to us our comforts returne We may be justified or in a justified state and not rejoyce But if we know we are in a state of justification we cannot but rejoyce It will make a man rejoyce to purpose when he seeth the righteousness of justification is clearely his Isa 45.25 Surely shall one say in the Lord have I righteousness and strength One shall say this He shall not only have righteousness in the Lord but he shall say he hath that is he shall be able to make it out he shall have the light of it upon his spirit and then as it followeth in the Prophet In him shall all the seed of Israel be justified and shall glory When they are able to say this then they shall not only rejoyce but glory Glorying is the height of joy or joy is in its full strength The Apostle saith Rom 14.17 The kingdome of God is not meat and drink What is it then but righteousness and what else peace and joy in the holy Ghost Righteousness brings in peace that 's the first fruit The warre is ended the controversie determined between God and the soule and when once peace is entred joy will follow It is usuall to make triumphs when a formerly broken peace is made between two nations When Abimilech sent commissioners to make a covenant of peace with Isaac the holy Story saith Gen 26.30 He made them a feast and they did eate and drinke Surely when God sends his holy Spirit to speake peace to a troubled soule against whom his terrors have been set in array as Job sayd in his own case Chap 6.4 and the arrowes of the Almighty within him have drunke up his spirit he I say having his peace thus restored to him cannot but have the joy of the Lord restored to him as David prayed his might Psal 51.12 Restore unto me the joy of thy salvation That is shew me that I am justified that my sin is pardoned this will bring back into my bosome the joy of thy salvation and my drooping soul shall be not only refreshed but feasted as with marrow and fatness Joy is a certaine consequent upon the sight of our justification Yea joy is not only a consequent but a fruit and effect of it joy floweth out of the nature of it nor is it ever interrupted or suspended but upon the hiding of righteousness out of our sight And therefore joy returnes unfayleably when the Lord is pleased thus to render unto man his righteousness JOB Chap. 33. Vers 27 28 29 30. He looketh upon men and if any say I have sinned and perverted that which was right and it profiteth me not He will deliver his soule from
have cause to boast of the penny-worth he hath had by sin which hath occasion'd the sorrows of that repentance One houres communion with God in wayes of holiness is better then all the profits and pleasures which any man hath got while he was committing that sin or running any course of sin whereof he now repenteth At the best sin dishonours God troubles our consciences and breakes our peace at the best nothing is got by sin which is worth the having at worst the soule is lost by it which of all things we have is most worth the having Thirdly Note Sin is exceeding dangerous and destructive to man Some would sin for the pleasures and carnal contentments which are found in sin though they knew they should make no earnings or get no profit by it yea though they knew they should be and dye beggers by it Once more if this were all that they should loose heaven by it or if the meaning of loosing their soules were only this that their soules should be no more they would easily venture it But there is an affirmative in the negative and when 't is sayd sin profiteth not the meaning is it brings trouble and renders us miserable for ever Fooles that is all sinfull men saith the Spirit of God Psal 107.17 because of their transgression and because of their iniquities are afflicted and all such among these fooles as dye in their sin are damned and who is able to summe up the dammage of damnation Fourthly Learne Sinners shall be forced at last to confesse that there is no profit in sin True penitents confesse it willingly now and impenitents shall confesse it at last whether they will or no they shall have such a conviction of the evill of sin by their sufferings as will make them say what hath pride profited me and what hath envy profited me what hath malice and wrath profited me And what hath the fraudulent deceiving of my neighbour profited me this will be the cry of sinners to all eternity Oh what hath sin profited us That which is the willing confession of a gracious repentant here will be the forced confession of damned impenitents for ever hereafter This will be a bitter repentance Hell is and will be full of the words of repentance but no fruit of repentance shall be found there The damned shall not find either amendment in themselves or mercy from God This will be the confession of all sinners at last as of those that repent and are saved so of those who repent when damned we have sinned and perverted that which was right and it hath not profited us And when once man hath made this hearty confession to God of his sin and folly then God maketh him a gracious promise of deliverance and mercy as appeares in the tenour of the next verse Vers 28. He will deliver his soule from going into the pit and his life shall see the light There is a two-fold reading of this 28th verse as was shewed in opening the former For whereas that 27th verse is understood by some as the humble confession of the sick man recovered and so read in this forme He looketh upon men and saith I have sinned and perverted that which was right and it profited me not then this 28th verse is rendred to make up that sence as a thankfull acknowledgement of his recovery He hath delivered my soule from going into the pit and my life seeth the light Thus as we had his confession of repentance in the verse fore-going I have sinned Ju●ta hanc loctionem erit etiamnū hic versus ex cōfessione restituti aegri dei in se summam beneficentiam agnosc●ntis Merc c. so here we have his confession of praise and thankfulness He hath delivered my soule from going into the pit Mr Broughton translates to this sence He saved my soule from going into the pit that my life doth see the light Thus the sick man being restored breakes out into thanksgiving The Lord in mercy hath freed me from death hell and the grave I need not feare Satans accusations my body enjoyes the light of the world and my soule the light of Gods countenance shining upon me which is better then life But because our owne reading is cleare in the originall text and holds out the scope of the context fully enough therefore I shall prosecute that only He will deliver his soule from going into the pit The words are an assertion of the favour and goodnesse of God to the penitent sick man He that is God looketh upon men and if he heare any saying I have sinned and perverted that which is right and it profiteth me not if he make such an humble and gracious confession this will be the issue the Lord will deliver his soule from going into the pit At the 18th verse we had words of the same import He keepeth back his soule from the pit and his life from perishing by the sword And againe at the 24th verse Deliver him from going downe to the pit To be delivered from the pit as was there shewed is to be delivered from death And the word soule as was then likewise expounded is put for the person As if it were sayd He will deliver him the penitent man from death and that both from temporall death the death of the body and from eternall death the destruction of body and soule or he will deliver him first from the pit of the grave and secondly from the pit of hell He will deliver his soule from the pit And his life shall see the light Videre lucem periphrasis est vitae sicut è contrario tenebrae sunt symbolum mortis Pined That is he shall live to see the light To see the light is a circumlocution of life As if it had been sayd He shall recover out of his deadly sickness and behold the light of the Sun as living men doe Thus David prayed Psal 56.13 That he might walke before God in the light of the living And thus the wicked man is threatned with eternall death Psal 49.19 He shall goe to the generation of his fathers they shall never see light That is they shall never enjoy life but be shut up in a perpetuall night of death or in the night of perpetuall death Secondly When 't is sayd his life shall see the light we may understand it not only for a bare returne to life or that he shall live but that he shall live comfortably and prosperously he shall lead a happy life To see the light is to live and rejoyce light is pleasant it is comfortable to behold the Sun as Solomon speakes To see light comprehends all the comforts of this life and of that to come which is called the inheritance of the Saints in light Col 1.12 For as darkness is put not only for death but for all the troubles of this life and the torments of the next so light is put both for life and
soule or body he gives him a new life he brings him in one respect back from the grave and in another from hell As a sick man he is brought from the grave and as a sinner he is brought from hell Great deliverances are a kind of new creation And fresh blessings are to us as fresh beings Take these two inferences from it First How should they who have been under great outward afflictions praise the Lord when they are delivered They who having had the sentence of death in themselves should look upon themselves when restored as men raised from the dead And how should sinners praise the Lord when he hath reconciled them to himselfe and pardoned their sins In doing this for them he delivereth them from wrath from hell and from eternall death Let such praise the name of the Lord and say as in the text He hath delivered our soules from the pit Secondly Let such live unto God having received a new life from God They that have received a new temporall life from God ought to dedicate it unto God how much more they that have received new spirituall life They that have received it indeed cannot but dedicate it unto God This negative mercy calls aloud for all that we are or have to be given up to God but that positive mercy which followeth calleth yet lowder for it And to be enlightned with the light of the living Nomen 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 non sumitur pro quibuslibet hominibus hac vita fruentibus sed pro divi●ibus potentibu● vivere est vigere valere Sunt qui ad futuram vitā referunt sed id s●nam quidem Allegoricè intelligi postquam ad literam de hac vita intellecteru Merc Take it for temporall spirituall or eternall life all these ends are accomplished in those mercifull workes of God to poore sinners some restraine the text to the light of this temporall life others enlarge it to the light of spirituall and eternall life We are enlightned with the light of the living When the comforts of this life are restored much more are they who are restored to the comforts of their spirituall life and so to the hope of eternall life By the living we are not to understand those who are barely on this side the grave and yet breath in the ayre or who have only a weake shadowed spirituall life which they scarce know of or perceive The living here are they that live comfortably and prosperously both as to soule and body Thus 't is sayd in that Prophecy of Christ Psal 72.13 He shall live and to him shall be given of the gold of Sheba prayer also shall be made for him continually and dayly shall he be praised Christ lives to purpose he lives as a Prince in power and dignity yea he is the Prince of life It was more then a sensitive or rationall life which Davids faith was assured of when he sayd Psal 118.17 I shall not dye but live his meaning was I shall live honourably and triumphantly declaring with joy the workes of the Lord. Thus here To be enlightned with the light of the living is to enjoy a comfortable life or to live happily Hence note A troubled state is a dark state sickness and sorrow whether inward or outward are darkness They are darkned with the darkness of the dead whose life is wrapped up in anguish and sorrow Secondly Note The designe and purpose of God in all his ordinances and providences towards his people is for their good All that hath been sayd before emptieth it selfe into these sayings To keep back his soule from the pit and to be enlightned with the light of the living The Lord hath no eye in these workes to his owne gaine but mans good The Lord doth not willingly grieve nor afflict the children of men Lam 3.35 He taketh no pleasure in it abstractly considered nor doth he look for any profit by it Much lesse doth he it as it follows v. 36. meerely to crush under his feete all the prisoners of the earth All that he expects by it as to himselfe is to be glorified by all for himselfe is above all and therefore designeth himselfe in all yet the glory which God hath by man is only the manifestation of his glory not any addition to it The benefit which God aymes at in afflicting man returnes to man He would have man bettered by affliction and as soone as man is bettered by affliction every thing shall goe better with him and he shall be delivered from affliction Rom 8.28 All things worke together for the good of them that love God to them who are the called according to his purpose And as all things worke together for the good of them who are the called according to his purpose so it is the purpose of God that all things should worke together for their good and that is not a successless purpose Indeed every rod upon the backs of the wicked hath a voyce in it to call them from the pit of death and destruction and to be enlightned with the light of the living but God makes this call effectuall to all his elect none of whom shall perish with the world So that a godly man should be so farre from judging himselfe dealt with as an enemy as Job in his extremity did when he is most sorely afflicted that indeed he may see the love and fatherly care of God in it All the providentiall dispensations of God worke to glorious ends Sometimes for the outward good of his people in this life alwayes for good as to their spirituall and eternall life Therefore lay aside hard thoughts of God whatsoever hard things he is a doing or you are suffering The wayes in which God leads us may possibly be very darke yet they run to this poynt to keep us from the pit of darkness and that we may be enlightned with the light of the living Thirdly Note Man would undoe himselfe both for here and for ever if God did not worke wonderfully for him and powerfully keep him from destruction All these things God worketh twice and thrice to keep our soules from the pit man left to himselfe would run head-long upon mischiefe in this world upon eternall misery in the world to come Nothing but the hand of God can hold man from ruining himselfe The heart of man is so set upon sin that he will rather loose his soule then leave his lust and will rather dye then that shall 'T is as easie to stay the motion of the Sun or to turne back the course of nature as to stay or turne back the naturall motion or course of the heart in sinning An almighty power must doe the latter as well as the former So that if the Lord did not put forth more then mercy even mercy clothed with power no man could be saved should God wish us never so well and tell us what good he hath layd up for us if we
all flesh perisheth and turneth again unto what it once was dust 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Hebrew word which we render to gather signifieth to add one thing or person to another When Rachel had conceived and bare a son Gen. 30.22 23. she called from this word his name Joseph and said the Lord shall add to me another son Thus here If God add or gather to himself his spirit and his breath that is the spirit and breath of man c. We may distinguish between these two Spiritus animam flatus vitam quae ab anima provenit conservatur significat ego opin●r idem esse hoc loco Sanct. spirit and breath Some insist much and curiously upon this distinction The spirit denoting the soul or the internal rational power of man and the breath that effect of life which followeth or floweth from the union of soul and body The life of man is often expressed by breath Cease ye from man whose breath or life is in his nostrils Isa 2.22 If once man's breath goeth out his life cannot stay behinde the spirit of a man is in this sence distinct from his breath for when the breath is vanished and is no more the soul or spirit liveth The Apostle in his prayer for the Thessalonians 1 Thess 5.23 puts soul and spirit together The very God of peace sanctifie you wholly and I pray God your whole spirit and soul and body be preserved harmless unto the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ There 't is most probable by the soul he intends the inferiour powers in man or his affections and by the spirit his higher powers of reason and understanding yet the spirit is often put for that whole part of man which is contradistinct to his body Into thy hands I commend my spirit that is my soul not forgetting my body And I conceive we may safely expound it here in that latitude as comprehending the whole inner man Yet it is all one as to the sence of this place whether we take spirit and breath distinctly or for the same the spirit being so called from spiration or breathing If he gather unto him his spirit and his breath The gathering of the spirit and breath of man unto God is but a periphrasis or circumlocution of death or of man's departure out of this life when man was formed or created Gen. 2.7 it is said God breathed into him the breath of life and man became a living soul And when man dyeth his breath or spirit may be said to be gathered or returned back unto God so then the meaning of Elihu in this double supposition If he set his heart upon man if he he gather to himself his spirit and his breath is clearly this if God were once resolved or should but say the word that man must presently die die he must and that presently Hence Note First God can easily do whatsoever he hath a minde to do If he do put his heart upon the doing of any thing it is done Men often set their hearts yea and their hands unto that which they cannot do if men could do that which they set their hearts to do or have a minde to do and thereupon set their hands to do we should have strange work in the world 'T is a mercy to many men that man is often frustrated in his thoughts and purposes in his attempts and undertakings and 't is a glorious mercy to all that have an interest in God that God never lost a thought nor can be hindred in any work he setteth his heart upon He that can lett or stop all men in their works can work and none shall lett or stop him What God will do is not defecible or undoeable if I may so express it by any power in heaven or earth And as God can do what he will and ask no man leave so he can do what he will without trouble to himself 't is but the resolve of his will the turning of his hand or the cast of his eye all which are soon dispatcht and 't is done Thus God breathed out his wishes for the welfare of Israel Psal 81.13 O that my people had hearkned unto me c. I should soon have subdued the●r enemies and turned my hand against their adversaries As if he had said I could and would have eased them of all their enemies even of all that rose up against them easily even with the turning of my hand What is more easily done or mo●e speedily done then the turning of a hand Many things are hard to man and indeed very few things are easie to him except it be to sin or to do evil he can do evil easily some things are not only hard but too hard impossible for man but there is nothing hard much less too hard for God he can easily do the hardest things yea the hardest things are as easie to him as the easiest for as Psal 139.12 Darkness hideth not from the sight of God the darkness and the light are both alike to him so hardness hinders not the work of God hardness and easiness are both alike to him if he set his heart upon it From this general truth take two inferences First How should we fear before this God How should we tremble at the remembrance of and walk humbly in our highest assurance with this God We are much afraid to displease those men who can easily hurt us and in whose hand it is to ruine us every hour But O how little are we in this thought to fear the Lord to take heed of displeasing the Lord who can with ease either help or hurt either bring salvation or destruction who in a moment can thrust the soul out of the body and cast both into hell Secondly We may hence make a strong inference for the comfort of the people of God when their straits are most pinching and their difficulties look like impossibilities and are so indeed while they look to man when their enemies are strongest and the mountains which stand in the way of their expected comforts greatest if then God will be entreated to set his heart and cast his eye upon them their straits are presently turned into enlargements difficulties become easie and mountains plains If we can but engage the Lord his own promise is the surest engagement and indeed all that we can put upon him or minde him of if I say we can thus engage the Lord to be with us who can be to our hurt many will be to their own against us Secondly Note Our life is at the beck dispose and pleasure of God He can gather the spirit and the breath to himself whensoever he pleaseth Psal 104.29 Thou hidest thy face and they are troubled and thou takest away their breath they die and return to their dust If God hideth his face from us 't is death while we live but if he take away our breath we cannot live but die Psal 90.3 Thou
goodliness thereof as the flower of the field that is all men are perishing and all that man hath meerly as a man is as fading and perishing as himself is Some take notice that man was not called flesh till after his fall It 's said before when God set him up in that primitive purity of his Creation Man became a living soul He was not spoken of at first as flesh but as a living soul Gen. 2.7 but as soon as man had sinned he was called flesh as if he had no soul There may two other reasons be given why man is called flesh both following from the former First Because man since his fall doth most for his flesh and neglects his soul altogether till being planted into the second Adam he is brought out of that wretched condition into which he fell by and with the first Adam Secondly He is called flesh because since the fall man is become weak and frail both as to Naturals and Morals Gen. 6.3 My spirit shall not alwaies strive with man for that he also is flesh As if the Lord had said Now man declareth himself to be flesh indeed he acts like an impotent sorry creature he acts as if he scarce had a soul in him as if he were no more then the beasts of the earth My spirit shall not alwaies strive with man for that he also is flesh and therefore v. 30. God told Noah The end of all flesh is come before me that is Man and all his worldly glory shall all be swept away with a deluge of water as here All flesh shall perish together There is a two-fold perishing First By way of annihilation Secondly By way of transmutation When Elihu saith all flesh shall perish we are not to understand it of annihilating all flesh God can do that he can turn man back into that nothing out of which he was made but the perishing in the Text importeth only a change Death is called a change a change to perishing as that good great woman said I will go in unto the King and if I perish I perish Hest 4.16 that is If I die I die The Prophet laments Isa 57.1 The righteous perisheth and no man layeth it to heart All flesh shall perish 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Together That is without exception one as well as another rich and poor high and low strong and weak all are alike in the hand of God Psal 33.13.15 The Lord looketh from heaven he beholdeth all the sons of men c. he fashioneth their hearts alike or together that is he fashioneth the hearts of all men God doth not so fashion mens hearts alike as to make them all alike faces do not differ so much as hearts but as he fashions one mans heart so anothers he fashions the heart of a King as well as the heart of a begger All flesh shall perish together none either by power or policy can stand against a displeased God Again We may take the word together for all at once God can make a total devastation in the earth and sweep all away as filth with the besome of destruction He can destroy all the world of all men who are the chiefe part of the world together or at one blow so that as the Prophet Nahum speaks Chap 1.9 Affliction shall not rise up a second time All flesh shall perish together And man shall returne againe unto dust Or he shall goe backe unto dust that is he shall dye that 's the sentence which God gave upon man when he had sinned Gen 3.19 In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread till thou returne unto the ground for out of it wast thou taken for dust thou art and unto dust shalt thou returne Man was dust before he sinned yet he had not returned to dust if he had not turned from God by sin Sin brought in death and death brings us to the dust All flesh shall perish together and man shall returne againe unto dust Hence observe There is no one man hath more priviledge then another against the sentence of death The Greatest Prince dyeth as soone as the meanest peasant Death can as soone and as easily breake into the strongest fort or tower of stone as into the meanest cottage of reeds High and low shall perish together Let none hope to secure themselves by any thing of this world from going out of this world Riches availe not in the day of death Pro 11.4 High Titles and honours availe not strength availeth not beauty availeth not none of these can be a protection if God send out a writ or summons to the grave Happy are they who get an assurance of life after death for none have an assurance of life against death Againe In that death is here expressed under this notion of perishing Observe Man is but in a perishing condition while he is in this world As all the things of the world are so is man while he abideth if I may say he abideth in this world Christ earnestly exhorts John 6.27 Labour not for the meat that perisheth Why should we labour that is set our selves with our whole strength and might to pursue perishing things seeing we our selves are perishing The more perishing we are the more reason we have to looke after and labour for those things which doe not which cannot perish When the Apostle saith 1 Pet 1.18 We are not redeemed with corruptible things from our vaine conversation c. He doth not instance in flowers or fruits of the earth which quickly rot but in gold and silver which are the most durable and lasting metalls even these are corruptible but we our selves as to this bodyly life are corruptible not only as gold and silver but as the most fading flowers and summer fruits of the earth Further From that other description of death as 't is called a returning againe unto dust We learne Man is of the dust Unlesse man as to his body were of the dust when he began to live he could not be sayd to returne unto dust when he dyeth or departs this life Many men pore upon their pedegree and heir minds swel with pride because they are of such or such a noble descent but let them remember man is of the dust The soule or spirit of man is indeed from above as was shewed before and the body of man is I grant a compound of all the foure Elements Our bodyly spirits say Naturalists are of the fire our breath of the ayre our blood of the water and our flesh and bones are most properly of the dust of the earth yet the whole body of man is denominated dust or earth or as the Apostle stileth it 2 Cor 5.1 'T is an earthly house If our earthly house of this tabernacle were dissolved For though we may truely say there is water and ayre and fire in this house yet because earth is the predominant Element the whole body beares the denomination of