Selected quad for the lemma: life_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
life_n delight_n grace_n libertine_n 36 3 16.0153 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A51842 One hundred and ninety sermons on the hundred and nineteenth Psalm preached by the late reverend and learned Thomas Manton, D.D. ; with a perfect alphabetical table directing to the principal matters contained therein. Manton, Thomas, 1620-1677.; White, Robert, 1645-1703.; Bates, William, 1625-1699. 1681 (1681) Wing M526A; ESTC R225740 2,212,336 1,308

There are 51 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

to the sutableness and proportion which it carrieth to our necessities and desires The Cock in the Fable preferred a Barley-corn before a Jewel the Barley-corn is more sutable to its natural appetite So believers have not the spirit of the world but the spirit which is of God 2 Cor. 2. 12. therefore the way of Gods Testimonies is more sutable and proportionable to that nature which they have Their wealth and worldly things they indeed sute with the sensitive nature but that is kept under therefore the prevalent inclination is to the word more than to the world 2. There is nothing in the enjoyment of worldly things but they have it more amply in the exactest and sincerest way of enjoyment by the word and walking in the way of its precepts Satans baits whereby he leads men to sin are Pleasure and Profit when bonum honestum the good of Honesty and Duty is declined there remains nothing but bonum utile and jucundum the good of Pleasure and Profit If we be moved with these things it is good to look there where we may have them at the highest rate and in the most sincere manner Now it is the word of God believed and obeyed which yieldeth us the greatest profit and the greatest You have both in one Verse Psal. 19. 10. More to be desired are they than gold yea than much fine gold sweeter also than the honey and the honey-comb Because of the Profit it is compared to Gold and because of the Sweetness and Pleasure we have by it 't is compared to Honey 1. The word of God will truly enrich a man and make us happy The difference between Gods people and others doth not lye in this that the one seeketh after Riches the other not they both seek to enrich themselves only the one seeketh after false and the other true riches as they are called Luk. 16. 11. and so differ from one another as we and the Indians do who reckon their wealth by their Wampenpeage or shells of fishes as we do ours by Gold and Silver the one hath little worth but what their Fancies put upon it the other hath a value in nature or to speak in a more home comparison Counters glass Beads and painted Toys please Children more than Jewels and things of greater price yea than Land of Inheritance or whatever when we come to mans estate we value and is of use to us for the supply of present necessities So worldly men preferring their kind of wealth before holiness and the influences of Grace they do but cry up Bawbles before Jewels To evidence this and that we may beat the world with their own notions and so the better defeat the temptation let us consider what is the true Riches 1. What is indeed true Riches 2. Why these are the true Riches I. What is indeed Riches 1. Gracious Experiences or Testimonies of the Favour of God He is a rich man indeed that hath many of these So it is said Rom. 10. 12. God is rich to all that call upon him it is meant actively not passively it only noteth that God doth give out plentiful experiences of his grace 2. Knowledge Let the word of God dwell in you richly in all wisdom Col. 3. 16. And the Apostle mentions the riches of the full assurance of understanding to the acknowledgment of the mystery of God and of the Father and of Christ Col. 2. 2. this is a treasure indeed that cannot be valued and he is a very poor soul that wants it 3. Faith Jam 2. 5. Hath not God chosen the poor of this world rich in faith He is a rich man that is emptied of himself that he may be filled with God 4. Good works 1 Tim. 6. 10. Charge them that are rich in this world that they be not high-minded c. but rich in good works Oh miserable man that hath nothing to reckon upon but his Money and his Bags so much by the year and makes it all his business to live plentifully in the world laying up nothing for Heaven and is not rich in gracious Experiences Knowledg Faith and Good works which are a Christians Riches II. Why are these the true Riches 1. That is true Riches which maketh the man more valuable which gives an intrinsick worth to him which Wealth doth not that is without us we would not judg of an Horse by the richness of his Saddle and the gawdiness of his Trappings and is man a reasonable creature to be esteemed by his Moneys and Lands or by his Graces and Moral perfections 2. That is Riches which puts an esteem upon us in the eyes of God and the holy Angels who are best able to judg One barbarous Indian may esteem another the more he hath of his shells and trisles but you would count him never the richer that should bring home a whole Ships lading of these things Luk. 12. 20. Such a fool is he that heapeth up treasure to himself and is not rich towards God that hath not of that sort of Riches which God esteemeth We are bound for a Countrey where Riches are of no value Grace only goeth currant in the other world 3. That is Riches which steads us in our greatest extremities When we come to dye the Riches of this world prove false comforts for they forsake a man when he hath most need of comfort In the hour of death when the poor shiftless naked soul is stripped of all and we can carry away nothing in our hands Grace lyeth near the heart to comfort us 'T is said by a voice from Heaven of those that dye in the Lord their works follow them their wealth doth not Our Graces continue with us to all Eternity 4. That is the true Riches which will supply all our necessities and bear our expences to Heaven Wealth doth not this but Grace Mar. 6. 33. Seek ye first the kingdom of God and the righteousness thereof and all these things shall be added 1 Tim. 4. 8. Godliness is profitable unto all things having the promise of the life that now is and of that which is to come Heaven and earth are laid at the feet of Godliness 5. That is true Riches which will give us a title to the best Inheritance The word of God is able to inrich a man more than all the Riches of the World because it is able to bring a man to an everlasting Kingdom All this is spoken because there is an evil desire that possesseth the whole world they are vehemently carried after riches and as they are encreased so are they delighted but saith David My delight is to encrease in knowledg and grace if I get more life more victory over lusts more readiness for Gods service this comforts me to the heart Now how do you measure your thriving by worldly or spiritual encrease 2. Here is the true delight Spiritual delight in spiritual objects far exceedeth all the joy that we can take in worldly
if you believed there were no God could you be more neglectfull of God and careless and mindless of heavenly things than you are now your Transgressions speak louder than your Professions in the Eye of an understanding Believer Psal. 36. 1. The Transgression of the wicked saith within his heart that there is no fear of God before his eyes Practice belies Profession Tit. 1. 16. They profess that they know God but in works they deny him Cold and dead Opinions are easily taken up and men talk by rote one after another yea and study to defend them and yet count God an Idol Denial in Works is the strongest way of Denial for Actions are more weighty and deliberate than Speeches 2. There is a threefold Remembrance of God for practical uses 1. There is a constant Remembrance we should carry the thoughts of God along with us to all our Businesses and Affairs and ever walk as in his Eye and Presence Prov. 23. 17. Be thou in the fear of the Lord all the day long not onely in Prayer but at all times in all our other occasions Some Graces like the Lungs are always in use so Psal. 16. 8. I have set the Lord always before me He that liveth always as in the sight of God cannot be so secure and sensless as others are A drowsie unattentive mind is easily deceived into sin but he that doth often remember God his Conscience is kept waking for he is all Eye and seeth all things all Hand and toucheth all things all Foot and walketh every where all Ear and heareth all things Sic agamus cum hominibus tanquam Deus videat sic loquamur cum Deo tanquam homines audiant the latter clause was the least that an Heathen could think of but surely if there be any weight in the former part of the Direction the latter is needless Thus we should never forget God 2. Occasional when God is brought to mind either by some special occasion offered or by some notable discovery of himself in his Word or Works Occasion offered as when Ahasuerus could not sleep Esth. 6. 1. it was the Providence of God he should reade in the Chronicles and so come to the knowledge of Mordecai so it befalleth God's Children they cannot sleep sometimes and so occasion is offered in the silence and solitude of the night to invite them to holy thoughts of God which may be of great use and comfort Iob 37. 7. He sealeth up the hand of every man that all men may know his work In deep Snow or Rain their work is hindred that they sitting at home may have time to consider of God and his Providence Sometimes it falleth out so that we know not what to do with our thoughts and it will look strangely in the review if we should prostitute them to vanity rather than give them to God like the act of a spitefull man that will rather destroy and waste a Commodity than let another have it Or when some notable Discovery of God is in his Ordinances and Providences Word or Works we should always season our hearts with the thoughts of God we should see him in every Creature and observe him in his daily Providences the Name of God is upon all things that he hath made but especially any notable Providence that falleth out which is an especial Demonstration of his Wisedom Justice and Power Psal. 111. 4. He hath made his wonderfull works to be remembred So in his Ordinances when God maketh any nearer approach to us by way of Conviction Counsel or Comfort 1 Cor. 14. 25. And thus are the secrets of his heart made manifest and so falling down on his face he will worship God and report that God is in you of a truth Many times our minds in reading or hearing are illustrated with an heavenly light or our hearts touched with some delightfull relish and the Word cometh in with more than ordinary Authority and Power upon the heart these are especial occasions which we must take to consider God and the great affairs of our Souls 3. Set and solemn when from the bent purpose and inclination of our own hearts without any outward impulsion we set our selves to remember the God that made us from first to last there is great use of Meditation and serious thoughts of God in the spiritual Life Our first awaking is occasioned by them Psal. 22. 22. They shall remember and turn to the Lord for a great while we live without God in the World till we recollect our selves and consider where we are and whither we are going we are like men drunk or asleep and do not make use of our Reason and common Principles that may be learned from the inspection of the Creature and every thing about us and when once we are brought into the Communion of the Life of God and have Grace planted in our hearts it cannot be carried on unless we take time to remember God Our Faith our Love our Desires our Delight they are all acted and exercised by our Thoughts so that the spiritual Life is but an Imagination unless we do frequently and often take time for serious Meditation of him It is not consistent with any of the three vital Graces Faith Hope and Love that a man should be a stranger to the Remembrance of God therefore God complaineth of it as a strange thing Ier. 2. 32. My people have forgotten me days without number do no more regard me than if they had never known me Besides the habits of Grace are so weak and our Temptations so strong and the Difficulties of Obedience so great that I cannot see how we can keep a foot any Interest of God in our selves if we seldom think of God and do not sometimes sequester our selves to revive this memorial upon our souls Can a sluggish heart be quickned or weak and inconstant Resolutions be strengthened or the sparks of Love ever blown up into a Flame and fainting Hopes cherished unless we seriously set our Minds a work to consider of God and our obligations to him Will a sleepy Profession without constant and lively thoughts doe it it cannot be Oh no if you mean to keep in the fire you must ply the Bellows and blow hard Whet Truths upon the Understanding and agitate your Minds in this holy Work II. My next work is to shew that it is a notable help to Godliness and that appeareth enough in that forgetting God is assigned as the cause of all mischief and remembring God the engagement to all Duty we forget God do not meditate upon his Name and so fall into Sin Psal. 9. 17. The wicked shall be turned into Hell and all the Nations that forget God Some deny God but most forget him they cast away the knowledge of God out of their minds So Psal. 50. 22. Consider this all ye that forget God that is the Description of the Wicked So it is the charge upon Israel as their great Sin and
their hearts to chuse him for their Portion and to make his Will their only Rule and obey and serve him whatever it cost them They have such a taste of this sweetness as doth engage their hearts to a close and constant adherence to Christ. Carnal men have only a naked knowledge of these things weak and uneffectual notions and apprehensions about them and if the sublimity reasonableness and suitableness of these truths to soul necessities cause any taste it is but slight slender and unsufficient So indeed Temporaries and Hypocrites are said to taste the heavenly gift the good Word of God and powers of the world to come Heb. 6. 4. They have some languishing apprehensions but they do not so taste them as to relish and feed upon them They do not relish Christ himself but only some benefit which they hope to get by him upon slight and easie terms have not such experience and sweetness of God in Christ as that their souls should constantly cleave to him It may be their fancy may be pleased a little in a supposition and possibility of salvation by Christ or in some general thought of those large promises and great offers which God makes in the Gospel not as it enforceth duty and subjection to God well then it differs from a bare understanding of the goodness of God's ways 2. This constitutes a difference sometimes between a renewed man and himself as to some things his inward senses are not always alike quick and lively he is still like-minded as he was but yet not alike affected his sight is not so clear nor taste so acute nor his feeling so tender though he hath the same thoughts of things he had before yet his spiritual sense is benummed and is not at all times affected alike while he keeps his spiritual eye clear from the clouds of Lust and Passion he is otherwise affected with things to come than he is when his eye is blinded with inordinate passion and love to present things and while he keeps his taste how sweet and welcome is this to his soul the remembrance of Christ and salvation by him And so while he keeps his heart tender he is sensible of the least stirring of sin and is humbled for it and the least impulsion of grace to be thankful for it Those Instructions Reproofs Consolations which at sometimes either wound or revive their spirits at other times do not move them at all their senses are benummed not kept fresh and lively And thus in the general I have proved That there is such a thing as spiritual taste 2 Secondly What is this spiritual sense It is an impression left upon our hearts which gives us an ability to relish and savor spiritual things but it cannot be known by description so much as by these two questions 1. The use of it what doth this taste serve for 2. What are the requisites that we may have such a taste and relish of divine and spiritual things 1 What doth this taste serve for There is a threefold use of them 1. To discern things good and wholsom from things noxious and hurtful to the soul that 's the use of spiritual sense in general to discern things good and evil Heb. 5. 14. Iob 6. 30. Is there iniquity in my tongue Cannot my taste discern perverse things God hath given all sensitive Creatures a taste whereby they may distinguish between things pleasant or bitter sweet or sowr wholsom or unwholsom savory or unsavory that they may chuse what is convenient to nature so the new Creature hath a taste to know things things contrary to the new nature and things that will keep it in life Iob 12. 11. Doth not the ear try words and the mouth taste his meat or as it is more plain Iob 34. 3. For the ear trieth words as the mouth tasteth meat Spiritual taste distinguisheth between what is salubrious and profitable to us that which is the pure Word milk agreeable to the new nature and what is frothy garnish'd out with the pomp of Eloquence it is tasteless to a gracious soul if it suiteth not with the interests of the new nature they have a faculty within them whereby they distinguish between Mens inventions and God's message A Man of spiritual taste when reason is restored to its use he comes to a doctrine and many times smells the Man saith he This is not the breast-milk that must nourish me the pure milk of the Word by which I must grow in strength and stature and if he finds any thing of God he owns God he discerns what is humane and what is divine 2. The use of this taste is also to refresh and comfort the soul in the sweetness of spiritual things Cant. 2. 3. I sate down under his shadow with great delight and his fruit was sweet to my taste The taste of Christ's Fruit in the comforts of Redemption the Fruit that grows there is sweet and pleasant to the new nature when the love of God to sinners in Christ is not only heard but believed not only believed but tasted it ravis●…ieth and transports the soul with sweet delight and content that excels all the pleasures of the world 3. It serves for this use to preserve the vitality of grace that is to keep it alive and in action Omnis vita gustu duciter every life hath its food and the food must be tasted this grace quickneth us to look after that food it keeps the new creature free for its operations helps it to grow 1 Pet. 2. 3. As new born babes desire the sincere milk of the Word that ye may grow thereby if so be ye have tasted that the Lord is gracious The truths of the Gospel are as necessary and natural for the cherishing and strengthning the spiritual life as the milk of the Mother is to the new born Babe and taste is necessary that we may relish it They that have a taste have an appetite and they delight in the Word more than in any other thing whereas those that have no taste or appetite grow not up to any strength they thrive not 2 What is requisite to cause this taste 1. Something about the object 2. Something about the faculty 1. Something about the Object which is the Word of God eating or taking into the mouth that 's necessary before tasting for the tongue is the instrument of taste the outward part of the tongue that serves for meats the inward part towards the root for drink so for this spiritual taste there is required eating or taking in the Object therefore we read often of eating the Word of God Ier. 15. 16. Thy Word was sweet and I did eat it And Ezek. 3. 3. We read of eating the Roll it is interpreted spiritually I did eat it then follows his taste it was in my mouth as honey for sweetness So Rev. 10. 10. I took the little book and eat it and it was in my mouth as sweet as
and God is too Fatherly to deny it to his Children You may deny an Apple to a wanton Child but you will not deny Bread to a fainting Child The bowels of a Father will not permit you to do that you may deny them superfluities in wisdom but your love will not permit you to deny them necessaries Meat is not so necessary to revive and refresh the Body as Grace for the Soul and his Holy Inspirations to act and guide you And will God deny these requests 7. Know when you have received Quickning Many Christians look for rapt and extatick Motions and so do not own the work of God when it hath passed upon them they under-rate their own Experiences and so cannot take notice of Gods Faithfulness Sense Appetite and Activity are the fruits of life and quickning 1. We have the more sense of indwelling Sin as an heavy Burthen Rom. 7. 24. None groan so sorely as those that are made partakers of a new Life Elementa non gravitant in suis locis a delicate Constitution is more sensible of pain Wicked Men scarce feel deep wounds given to their Conscience nor have any remorse for gross sins Gods Children their hearts smite them for the smallest disorders and irregularities 2. Appetite after Christ his Graces and Comforts 1 Pet. 2. 2. the more life any have the more craving of Food to maintain it in being they are always hungering and thirsting after God Matth. 5. 6. our Appetite will be after the things that conduce to the maintaining and preserving that being which they have If a man lose his Appetite the body pineth and languisheth and strength decayeth desire prepareth the soul to take in its supplies Your Life is in good plight when that is desired 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 't will be a means of Spiritual growth a kindly appetite after this Milk They are under a great decay who have lost their Appetite after the Gospel 3. Activity in Duties That we may honour Christ 1 Pet. 2. 4 5. To whom coming as a living stone ye also as lively stones are built up into a spiritual House Christ liveth and we live by him as the stones in the building carry a proportion with the corner-stone So Christians as the body with the Head It must needs be so because of Gods Spirit dwelling in us Ezek. 36. 27. Ioh. 7. 37. and because of the Graces in a Christian Faith and Love Faith working by Love is the great evidence of the new Creature If Faith and Love be strong it will quicken us to do much for God the apprehension of Faith doth enliven our notions of God Christ Heaven and Hell Faith puts Life into our thoughts of him Love is a notable pleader and urger 2 Cor. 5. 14. The Love of Christ constraineth us c. Secondly The Reasons why c. 1. They that have so much to do with God do see a need of it for he is a living God and will be served in a lively manner Rom. 12. 11. Not slothful in business fervent in Spirit serving the Lord. They that serve the Lord Negatively must not be slothful in business Affirmatively fervent in spirit God will not be served negligently coldly but with Life and earnestness The twelve Tribes served God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 instantly Act. 26. 7. Instantly serving God with the uttermost of their strength He that hath a Right to our all must have our best surely he will not be put off with every slight thing Now the Children of God that are sensible of this are earnest for quickning that they may serve God in such a way as becometh him with Life and Power and Zeal for the manner in every Duty is to be regarded as well as the matter A man may do many things that are good but there is no Life in what he doth He prayeth but without any life in Prayer dead in Prayer Heareth but no Life in Hearing dull of Hearing All things in a Christian may be counterfeited but Life cannot be counterfeited that cannot be painted 2. They are acquainted with themselves and observe the frame and posture of their own spirits Now they that know themselves will see a need of Quickning 1 Because of the instability and changeable frame of mans Heart it hardly stayeth long in the same state now 't is up and anon 't is down as the constant experience of the Saints witness Sometimes they have a forwardness and strong propension of Heart to that which is good at other times a lothness and dulness or unfitness to perform any spiritual service when their Will is more remiss and their Affections unbent 'T is not indeed the constant frame of their Hearts yet it is a disease incident to the Saints even good men may feel a slowness of Heart to comply with the will of God and some hanging off from Duty Spontancae lassitudines sunt signa imminentis morbi so is this laziness and backwardness of spirit a sign of some great spiritual distemper Sometimes they are carried with great largeness of Heart and full sail of Affections at other times they are in bonds and streights that they cannot pour out their Hearts before God Psal. 77. 4. I am sore troubled that I cannot speak sometimes they have great Life and Vigour at other times no such lively stirrings but are flat and cold and dead when with Sampson they think to go forth and shake themselves as at other times Iudges 16. 20. by sad Experience they find that their Locks are gone that their Understandings are lean sapless and their Affections cold and their Delight and Vigour lost Man is a sinful weak inconstant Creature his heart is as unstable as water and much of this levity and instability remaineth with us after Grace as is seen in the various postures of spirit that we are under 2 Because of the constant opposition of the Flesh. There is an opposite Principle in our Hearts Gal. 5. 17. The body of Death that dwelleth in us doth always resist the life of the Spirit in us and therefore God must renew the influences of his Grace to preserve Life There are desires against desires and delights against delights this must needs abate our Vigour The Spirit draweth one way the Flesh another 'T is drawing Iam. 1. 14. Every man is tempted when he is drawn away of his own lust and enticed 'T is depressing Heb. 12. 1. Seeing we also are compassed about with so great a Cloud of witnesses let us lay aside every weight and the sin which doth so easily beset us Carnal Affections hang as a weight retarding us in our Heavenly flight and motions 'T is warring Rom. 7. 23. I see another law in my members warring against the law of my mind and bringing me into captivity to the law of sin And therefore the Lord had need to cherish the new Creature and good seed which cannot but be weakned with this opposition 3 Because our outward condition doth
To press you to walk according to this rule if you would be blessed To this end let me press you to take the Law of God for your Rule the Spirit of God for your Guide the Promises for your encouragement and the Glory of God for your end 1. Take the Law of God for your Rule Study the mind of God and know the way to Heaven and keep exactly in it It is an argument of sincerity when a man is careful to practise all that he knows and to be inquisitive to know more even the whole will of God and when the heart is held under awe of Gods word If a Commandement stand in the way it is more to a gracious heart than if a thousand Bears and Lyons were in the way more than if an Angel stood in the way with a flaming sword Prov. 13. 13. He that feareth the Commandment shall be rewarded Would you have blessings from God fear the Commandment It is not he that fears wrath punishment inconveniencies troubles of the world molestations of the flesh no but he that dares not make bold with a Commandment As Ier. 35. 6. Go bring a temptation set pots of Wine before the Rechabites O they durst not drink of them why Ionadab the son of Rechab our father commanded us saying Ye shall drink no wine Thus a child of God doth reason when the Devil comes and sets a temptation before him and being zealous for God dares not comply with the lusts and humours of men though they should promise him peace happiness and plenty A wicked man makes no bones of a Commandment but a godly man when he is in a right posture of spirit and the awe of God is upon him dare not knowingly and wittingly go aside and depart from God 2. Take the Spirit of God for your Guide We can never walk in Gods way without the conduct of Gods Spirit We must not only have a way but a voice to direct us when we are wandering Isa. 30. 21. And thine ears shall hear a word behind thee saying This is the way walk in it Sheep have a Shepherd as well as a Fold and children that learn to write must have a Teacher as well as a Copy and so it is not enough to have a Rule but we must have a Guide a Monitor to put us in mind of our duty The Israelites had a pillar of a cloud by day and a pillar of fire by night The Gospel-Church is not destitute of a Guide Psal. 37. 24. Thou shalt guide me with thy counsel and afterwards receive me to glory The Spirit of God is the Guide and Director to warn us of our duty 3. The Promises for your encouragement If you look elsewhere and live by sense and not by faith you shall have discouragements enough How shall a man carry himself through the temptations of the world with honour to God 2 Pet. 1. 4. Whereby are given unto us exceeding great and precious promises that by these ye might be partakers of the divine nature having escaped the corruptions that are in the world through lust When we have promises to bear us up this will carry us clear through temptations and make us act generously nobly and keep close to him 4. Fix the Glory of God for your aim else it is but a carnal course The spiritual life is a living to God Gal. 2. 20. when he is made the end of every action You have a journey to take and whether you sleep or wake your journey is still a going As in a ship whether men sit lye or walk whether they eat or sleep the ship holds on its course and makes towards its Port. So you all are going into another World either to Heaven or Hell the broad or the narrow way and then do but consider how comfortable it will be at your journey's end in a dying hour to have been undefiled in the way then wicked men that are defiled in their way will wish they had kept more close and exact with God even those that now wonder at the niceness and zeal of others when they see that they must in earnest into another world oh then that they had been more exact and watchful and stuck closer to the Rule in their practice discourses compliances Men will have other notions then of holiness than they had before oh then they 'l wish that they had beem more circumspect Christ commended the unjust Steward for remembring that in time he should be put out of his Stewardship You will all fail within a little while then your poor shiftless naked souls must launch out into another world and immediately come to God How comfortable will it be then to have walked closely according to the line of Obedience The Third Point That a close walker not only shall be blessed but is blessed in hand as well as in hope How is he blessed 1. He is freed from wrath he hath his discharge and the blessedness of a pardoned man Joh. 5. 24. He that believeth on Christ hath everlasting life and shall not come into condemnation for he hath passed from death to life he is out of danger of perishing which is a great mercy 2. He is taken into favour and respect with God Joh. 15. 14. Ye are my friends if ye do whatsoever I command you There is a real friendship made up between us and Christ not only in point of harmony and agreement of mind but mutual delight and fellowship with each other 3. He is under the special care and conduct of Gods Providence that he may not miscarry 1 Cor. 3. 23. All things are yours and ye are Christs and Christ is Gods All the conditions of his life are over-ruled for good his blessings are sanctified and his miseries unstinged Rom. 8. 28. And we know that all things work together for good to them that love God to them who are the called according to his purpose 4. He hath a sure Covenant-right to everlasting glory 1 Joh. 3. 1. Behold now are we the sons of God and it doth not yet appear what we shall be c. Is a Title nothing before we come to enjoy the Estate We count a Worldly Heir happy as well as a Possessor and are not Gods Heirs happy 5. He hath sweet experiences of Gods goodness towards him here in this world Psal. 17. 15. As for me I will behold thy face in righteousness I shall be satisfied when I awake with thy likeness The joy of the presence and sense of the Lords love will counterbalance all worldly joys 6. He hath a great deal of peace Gal. 6. 16. And as many as walk according to this rule peace be on them and mercy and upon the Israel of God Obedience and holy walking bringeth peace Great peace have they which love thy Law and nothing shall offend them Psal. 119. 165. As there is peace in nature when all things keep their place and order This peace others cannot
things The pleasures of the mind are far more pure and defaeeate than those of the body so that if a man would have pleasures let him look after the chiefest of the kind He spoke like a beast rather than like a man that said Eat drink and be merry thou hast goods laid up for many years Luk. 12. 19. That is the most that worldly things can afford us a little bodily cheer Psal. 17. 14. Thou hast filled their bellies with hid treasures there is the poor happiness of a rich Worldling He may have a belly full and fare at a better rate than others do Hab. 1. 16. Their portion is made fat and their meat plenteous When men have troubled themselves and the world to make themselves great it is but for a little belly-cheer which may be wanted as well as enjoyed a modest temperance and mean fare yieldeth more pleasure But what is this to the delights of the mind A Sensualist is a fool that runneth to such dreggy and carnal delights Noble and sublime thoughts breed a greater pleasure What pleasure do some take in finding out a Philosophical Verity the man rejoyceth the senses are only tickled in the other Of all pleasures of the mind those of the spiritual life are the highest for then our natural faculties are quickned and heightned by the spirit The reasonable nature hath a greater joy than the sensitive and the spiritual divine nature hath more than the meer rational There is not only an higher object the Love of God but an higher cause the Spirit of God who elevateth the faculty to an higher manner of sense and perception Therefore both the good and evil of the spiritual life is greater than the good and evil of the rational The evil of the spiritual is greatest a wounded spirit who can bear And the good of the spiritual life is greatest Ioy unspeakable and glorious The higher the life the greater the feeling groans not uttered peace passing all understanding though it maketh no loud noise yet it dissuseth a solid contentment throughout the soul. All this is spoken because the way of Gods Testimonies is looked upon as a dark and gloomy course by carnal men yet it is the life of the blessed God himself Eph. 4. 18. Having the understanding darkned being alienated from the life of God through the ignorance that is in them because of the blindness of their heart And surely he wants no true joy and pleasure that lives such a life USE 1. Here is an invitation to men to acquaint themselves more with the way of Gods Testimonies that they may find this rejoycing above all riches It is hard to pleasant natures to abjure accustomed delights and carnal men picture Religion with a sowr austere face We shall never see cheerful day more if we are strict in Religion Oh consider your delight is not abrogated but perfected you shall find a rejoycing more intimate than in all pleasures Cyprian saith he could hardly get over this prejudice in his Epistle to Donatus Austin thirty years old parted with his carnal delights and found another sweetness Quàm suave mihi subito factum est It is your disease maketh you carnal when freed from the fervours of lust these things will have no relish with you If it seem laborious at first it will be more joyful than all riches The root is bitter but the fruit sweet At first it is bitter to nature which loveth carnal liberty to render it self captive to the word but after a little pains and when the heart is once subdued to God it will be sweet and comfortable Ask of the Spies that have been in this good Land if it be not a Land flowing with Milk and Honey David tells you In the way of thy testimonies This way would be more trodden if men would believe this if you will not believe make trial if Christs yoke seem burdensome it is to a galled neck USE 2. Trial. 1. Have we a delight in obedience to Gods Precepts Psal. 112. 1. They that fear God delight greatly in his commandments It is not enough to serve God but we must serve him delightfully for he is a good Master and his work hath wages in the mouth of it 'T is a sign you are acquainted with the word of God when the obedience which it requireth is not a burden but a delight to you Alas with many it is otherwise How tedious do their hours run in Gods service no time seemeth long but that which is spent in Divine Worship Do you count the clock at a Feast And are you so provident of time when about your sports Are you afraid that the lean kine will devour the fat when you are about your worldly business What causeth your rejoycing the encrease of Wealth or Grace 2. Is this the Supreme delight of the soul It is seen not so much by the sensible expression as by the serious constitution of the soul and the solid effects of it 1. Doth it draw you off from worldly vanities to the study of the word what are your conceptions of it What do you count your riches to grow in grace or to thrive in the world to grow rich towards God or to heap up treasures to your selves Is it your greatest care to maintain a carnal happiness 2. Doth it support you in troubles and worldly losses and bear you out in temporal adversities You cannot be merry unless you have riches and wealth and worldly accommodations then soul eat drink and be merry 3. Doth it sweeten duties the way of Gods commandments is your way home A beast will go home cheerfully you are going home to rest Let the joy of the Lord be your strength Certainly you will think no labour too great to get thither whither the word directs you As one life exceedeth another so there is more sensibleness in it A Beast is more sensible of wrong and hurt and of pleasure than a Plant and as the life of a man exceedeth the life of a beast so is he more capable of joy and grief And as the life of Grace exceedeth the life of a meer man so its joys are greater its griefs greater There are no hardships to which we are exposed for Religion but the Reward attending it will make us to overcome SERMON XVI PSAL. CXIX 15. I will meditate in thy precepts and have respect unto thy ways ALL along David had shewed what he had done now what he will do V. 10. I have sought V. 11. I have hid V. 13. I have declared V. 14. I have rejoyced Now in the two following Verses he doth engage himself to set his mark towards God for time to come I will meditate in thy precepts c. We should not rest upon any thing already done and past but continue the same diligence unto the end Here is David's hearty resolution and purpose to go on for time to come Many will say Thus I have done when I was
upon him Will you cast away your thoughts upon idle vanities rather than God shall have them Oh shame your thoughts must be working what shall they run waste and yet God have no turn 2. Or else men muse on that which is evil There are many sins ingross the thoughts 1. Uncleanness sets up a stage in the heart whereon a polluted Fancy personates and acts over the pleasures of that sin Our thoughts are often Panders to our lust 2 Pet. 2. 14. Having eyes full of adultery and that cannot cease from sin The unclean rolling of fancy on the beauty of women is forbid Mat. 5. 28. He that looketh on a woman to lust after her hath already committed adultery with her in his heart 2. Revenge the thoughts of it how sweet are they to a carnal heart Men dwell upon their discontents and injuries till like liquors that sowr in the Vessel when long kept they sharpen Revenge We are apt to concoct Anger into Malice Frowardness is in his heart he deviseth mischief continually he soweth discord Prov. 6. 14. 3. Envy stirreth up repining thoughts it is a sin that feedeth on the mind 1 Sam. 18. 9. And Saul envied David from that day forward David's ten thousands ever ran in Saul's mind Envy muses on the good of others to hate them 4. Pride in lofty conceits and whispers of vanity Luk. 1. 51. He hath scattered the proud in the imaginations of their hearts Proud men are full of musings Is not this great Babylon that I have built for the house of the kingdom by the might of my power and for the honour of my majesty Dan. 4. 30. Proud men please themselves with the suppositions of applause and the echoes of praise in their minds 5. Covetousness consists chiefly in a vain musing Ezek. 33. 31. Their heart goeth after their covetousness 2 Pet. 1. 14. Hearts exercised with covetous practices USE 2. Is of Exlortation to press us to meditate on Gods precepts Many think it is an exercise that doth not suit with their temper it is a good exercise but for those that can use it It is true there is a great deal of difference among Christians some are more serious and consistent and have a greater command over their thoughts others are of a more slight and weak spirit and less apt for duties of retirement and recollection but our unfitness is usually moral rather than natural not so much by temper as by ill use Now sinful indispositions do not disannul our engagements to God as a servants drunkenness doth not excuse him from work Inky water cannot wash the hands clean That it is a culpable unfitness appeareth partly because disuse and neglect is the cause of it those that use it have a greater command over the thoughts Men count it a great yoke custom would make it easie Every duty is an help to it self and the more we meditate the more we may They that use it much find more of sweetness than difficulty in it If a man did use to govern his thoughts they would come more to hand Partly want of love We pause and stay upon such objects as we delight in Love naileth the soul to the object or thing beloved Psal. 119. 97. Oh how I love thy law it is my meditation all the day Carnal men find no burden in their thoughts their heart is in them Well then though you have not such choice and savoury thoughts as others have yet set upon the work you can think of any thing you love Oh but as some press it it requireth art and skill and logical disposition of places of argumentation Answ. We cannot tye you to a method Serious thoughts no question are required and dealing with the heart about it in the best way of reasoning that we can use Take these directions 1. Look how others muse how to commit a sin and shall not we muse how to redress it Wicked men sit abrood Isa. 59. 5. They hatch the Cockatrice egg and weave the Spiders web they devise mischief upon the bed Mic. 2. 1. Wo to them that devise mischief on their beds So do you muse how to carry on the work of the day with success Prov. 16. 30. The wicked man shutteth his eyes to devise forward things it signifies his pensive solitary muttering with himself 2. As you would perswade others to good Surely you do not count admonition so hard a work What words you would use to them use the same thoughts to your self Heart answereth to heart 3. You understand a truth you have arguments evident and strong why you should believe it repeat them over to the soul with application Job 5. 27. See it and know it for thy good This application is partly by way of tryal partly by way of charge By way of trial how is it with thee oh my soul Rom. 8. 31. What shall we say to these things By way of charge and command Psal. 73. ult It is good for me to draw nigh to God I have put my trust in the Lord that I might declare all thy works SERMON XVII PSAL. CXIX 16. I will delight my self in thy statutes I will not forget thy word DAVID had spoken much of his respect to the Word both as to his former practice and future Resolutions A godly man the more good he doth the more he desireth delighteth and resolveth to do Spiritual affections grow upon us by practice and much exercise The graces of the Spirit and the duties of Religion do every one fortifie and strengthen one another lose one and lose all keep one and keep all Meditation breedeth delight and delight helpeth memory and practice He had said I will meditate on thy precepts and now I will delight my self in thy statutes and that produceth a further benefit I will not forget thy word The Spiritual Life is refreshed with change as well as the Natural but it is with change of exercise not of affection There is Hearing Praying Conferring Meditating and all with delight for when one Fontinel is drawn dry we may as the Lamb doth suck another that will yield new supply and sweetness David had spoken of his various exercises about the word in the use of all which he would maintain a spiritual delight In this Verse observe again a double respect to the word of God 1. I will delight my self in thy statutes 2. I will not forget thy word These are fitly suited Delight preventeth forgetfulness the mind will run upon that which the heart is delighted in and the heart is where the treasure is Mat. 6. 21. Worldly men that are intent upon carnal interests forget the word it is not their delight If any thing displease us we are glad if we can forget it it is some release from an inconvenience to take off our thoughts from it but it doubleth the contentment of a thing that we are delighted in to remember it and call it to mind In the outward School if
a Scholar by his own aversness from Learning or by the severity and imprudence of his Master by his morosity or unreasonable exactions hath no delight in his Book all that he learneth is lost and forgotten it goeth in at one ear and out at the other but this is the true art of memory to cause them to delight in what they learn Such instructions as we take in with a sweetness they stick with us and run in our minds night and day So saith David here I will delight in thy statutes I will not forget thy word Doct. 1. One great respect which the Saints owe to the word of God is to delight therein David resolveth so to do I will delight or solace or recreate my self in thy statutes this should be his refreshment after business David had many things to delight in the splendor and magnificence of his Kingdom as Nebuchadnezzar Dan. 4. 30. Is not this great Babylon that I have built for the house of the Kingdom by the might of my power and for the honour of my Majesty His great Victories which Aristotle saith are delightful to all 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It is an appearance of excellency Arist. Rhet. 1. cap. 11. Or in his Instruments of Musick as those Amos 6. 5. that chaunt to the sound of the viol and invent to themselves Instruments of Musick like David No this was not the mirth that he chose for his portion Wicked men throng their hearts with such delights as these lest an evil conscience flye upon them but I will delight my self in thy statutes He might take comfort in a subordinate way in these things but the solace of his life and the true sawce of all his labours was in the word of God As David so Ieremiah cap. 15. 16. Thy words were sound and I did eat them they were unto me as the joy and rejoycing of my heart That was the food and the repast of his soul and he felt more warmth and cherishing in it than any can in their bodily food So Paul Rom. 7. 22. I delight in the law of God in the inward man Not to know it only but to feel the power of it prevailing over his lusts that was his delight as to the better part of his soul So it is made a general Character of the blessed man Psal. 1. 2. that he delighteth in the Law of God and in that Law doth he exercise himself day and night Gods people will delight in his Law it is one of the greatest enjoyments they have on this side Heaven in the time of their absence from God It is the instrument of all the good that they receive Comfort Strength Quickning But now how do they delight in Gods Statutes 1. In reading the word The Eunuch returning from publick Worship was reading a portion of Scripture Acts 8. 28. It is good to see with our own eyes and to drink of the fountain our selves if it seem dark without the explication of men God that sent Philip to the Eunuch will send you an Interpreter 2. In hearing of the Word The Command is James 1. 19. Wherefore be swift to hear The Saints have had experiment of the power of it and therefore delight in it I was glad when they said Come and let us go up unto the house of the Lord Psal. 122. 1. You should be glad of these occasions of hearing not as with the Minstril to please the ear but to warm the heart Seeing is in Heaven Hearing in the Churches upon earth then Vision now Hearing 3. In conferring of it often What a man delighteth in he will be talking of so should you at home abroad Deut. 6. 7. Thou shalt be talking of them when thou sittest in thy house and as thou walkest by the way seasoning thy journey He that would have God to be in his journey as travelling and walking abroad should be speaking of divine things 4. In meditating and exercising his mind upon it Psal. 1. 2. He delighteth in the law of God and in that law doth he meditate day and night Delight causeth a pause or consistency of mind as the Glutton rolleth the sweet morsel under his tongue and is loth to let it go so a godly man's thoughts will run along with his delight Clean beasts chew the cud God's children will be ruminating going over the word again and again 5. In Practice This Delight is not in bare speculation so Hypocrites have their tasts and their flashes but in believing practising obeying Psal. 119. 14. I have rejoyced in the way of thy testimonies Delight breedeth obedience and is encreased and doubled by it 'T is not the delight which an ordinary beholder taketh in a rare piece of painting meerly to admire the Art but the delight which an Artist taketh in imitating it and copying it out Here in the Text it is in thy Statutes A gracious heart is alike affected with the Rule as the Promise not only with discoveries of Grace but discoveries of duty Now thus it must be ordinarily 1. The Duties of every day must be carried on with delight This must be our divertisement and the refreshment of our other labours that when tired out with the incumbrances of the world we may look upon reading meditating hearing as our recreation and the salt and solace of our lives that other things may go down the better The labours of the mind do relieve those of the body and those of the body those of the mind Ainsworth saith the word in the Text signifieth I will solace and recreate my self and Psal. 1. 2. His delight is in the law of the Lord and in that law doth he exercise himself day and night as was before cited 2. Especially upon the Lords day Isa. 58. 13. Thou shalt call the Sabbath a delight call it so that is account it so When our whole time is to be parted into Meditation and Prayer and Hearing and Conference then it is our advantage to lye in the bosome of God all the day long A Bell is kept up with less difficulty when it is once raised and when the heart is once got up it is the better kept up in an holy delight in God The Reasons of it are two 1. The word of God deserveth it 2. This delight will be of great use to them First The word of God deserveth it 1. In regard of the Author they delight in it for the Author's sake because it is the signification of his mind as a Letter from a beloved friend is very welcome to us Aristotle mentioning the causes of delight saith Rhet. 1. cap. 11. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lovers are mightily pleased when they hear any thing of the party beloved or receive any thing from them a Letter or a Token The Word is God's Epistle and Love-Letter to our selves it is the more welcome for his sake The contrary God complaineth of Hos. 8. 12. I have written to them the great things of
cross then their affection was spent 6. Some in case of dubious anxiety or in doubtful debates may desire to know the truth and be much and earnest in the study of the word but when they get above their scruples and in plain truths ordinary cases they neglect it Whereas David longed for the word of God at all times to feel the power of God accompanying it so as to find strength against his corruptions and that he might be established in waiting upon God This was the constant and stable desire of his soul. Thus you see the Word of God is the Object either read or preached The End of it is that they may grow in grace and that their hearts may be more subjected to God and may be strengthned in waiting upon him And the manner of this desire is vehement and constant not at times but it is the usual frame and temper of their hearts 4. The Effects of this desire what it worketh I will mention but two 1. It draws off the heart from other things Psal. 119. 136. Incline my heart unto thy testimonies and not unto covetousness implying that when the heart is drawn out after Gods testimonies it is drawn off from carnal pursuits Desires they are the vigorous bent of the soul and therefore as the stream of a River they can run but one way Our passionate desires of earthly things certainly will be abated if spiritual desires prevail in us for being acquainted with a better object they begin to disdain and loath other things 2. It maketh us diligent and painful in the use of means that we may get knowledg and strength by the Word Where strong desires are there will be great endeavours Prov. 8. 34. Watching daily at my gates waiting at the posts of my doors A man that hath a desire after grace and strength by the word of God will daily be redeeming occasions of waiting upon God It is but a slight wish not serious desire that is not seconded with answerable endeavours Having opened the nature of these desires let me shew the reasons of this vehement and constant bent of heart towards the word of God 1. Of the Vehemency 2. Of the Constancy First The Reasons of this Vehemency they are these Natural instinct Experience and Necessity 1. Natural instinct 1 Pet. 2. 2. As new-born babes desire the sincere milk of the word Children desire the dug not by instruction but instinct without a Teacher All creatures desire to preserve that life which they have and therefore by a natural propension they run to that thing from whence they received life Meer instinct carrieth the brute-creatures to the teats of their Dams and every Effect looks to the Cause to receive from thence its last perfection Trees that receive life from the Earth and the Sun they send forth their branches to receive the Sun and stretch their roots into the earth which brought them forth Fishes will not out of the water which breeds them Chickens are no sooner out of the shell but they shroud themselves under the feathers of the Hen. The little Lamb runs to the Dams teat though there be a thousand sheep of the same wool and colour as if it said Here I received that I have and here I 'le seek that I want By such a native inbred desire do the Saints run to God to seek a supply of strength and nourishment and the desire is very strong and vehement One thing have I desired of the Lord that will I seek after c. There were other things David might desire but this one thing his heart was set upon That he might enjoy constant communion with God in the use of publick Ordinances What is the reason of this I answer The spiritual nature you may as well ask What teacheth the young Lambs to suck as who taught the Regenerate to long for the Word What teacheth the Chicken to run under the wing of the Hen The cause of Appetite is not persuasion and discourse but inclination not argument but nature Appetite 't is an effect of life By natural tendency the new creature is carried out to its support from the word of God there to be comforted and nourished It shews that all who have not such a kindly appetite to the word of God that can relish nothing but meats drinks wealth vanity they were never acquainted with this new nature 2. Experience is another cause of this desire A child of God is not satisfied with a slight tast of the word but he desires more when he hath felt the comfort of it he is still longing to receive more from God James 1. 8. He hath begotten us by the word of truth What follows wherefore be swift to hear A man that hath had experience of the power of the word taketh all occasions he knows there is strength grace and liberty of heart to be found there so 2 Pet. 2. 3. As new-born babes c. if so be ye have tasted that the Lord is gracious Certainly a man that hath had any tast of communion with God will desire a fuller measure as by tasting of excellent meats we get an appetite to them Carnal men they do not know what it is to enjoy God in an Ordinance and therefore do not long for them they do not tast the sweetness of the word Psal. 19. 10. The statutes of the Lord are sweeter than the honey or the honey-comb The children of God find more true pleasure in the Ordinances in the statutes of God than in all things in the world though to carnal men they are but as dry sticks burdensome exercises the reason follows V. 11. Moreover by them is thy servant warned and in keeping of them there is great reward He commendeth the word from his own experience he had felt the effects and good use of it in his own heart he had been warned and had a great deal of comfort and refreshing by it therefore it is sweeter than the honey and the honey-comb So Psal. 63. 1 2. O God my soul thirsteth for thee my flesh longeth for thee what to do to see thy power and thy glory so as I have seen thee in the sanctuary He that hath had once a sight of God would not be long out of his company He compareth his desire of communion with God with hunger and thirst his desire is greater than the hunger and thirst that men suffer in a dry wilderness where there is no water to give refreshment He had seen God and would now see him again The remembrance of those former pleasures of the Sanctuary revived his desires so that besides Nature there is this Experience 3. The next cause is Necessity We should take delight in the word of God for its excellency though we stood in no need of it But our necessity is very great and this awakens desire The word is not only compared to things which make for conveniency of life as to Wine and Honey
but is compared also to things that are of absolute necessity bread and water It is called bread of life and water of life Bread of life we cannot live without it Job 23. 12. I have esteemed the words of thy mouth more than my necessary food Food is that which keeps us in life and enables us to action and work And as water Isa. 12. 3. With joy shall ye draw water out of the wells of salvation This is as water to a fainting Traveller Christians the soul is better than the body and eternal life is to be preferred before life natural therefore the necessities of the soul are greater and should be more urging than the necessities of the body The Famine of the Word is threatned as a very great evil Amos 8. 11. Now because the necessities of the Saints are so great therefore have they their hearts carried out with such longing after the Statutes of God And this necessity is not only at first when they are weak but it continueth with them as long as the imperfection continueth with them and till they come to heaven Every grace in a child of God needs encrease and support There is something that is lacking to their faith to their love to their knowledg 1 Thes. 3. 10. The Apostle saith That I might perfect that which is lacking to your faith They that are above Ordinances are not acquainted with their own hearts they are not men of spiritual experience they do not know the weaknesses and languishings a child of God is incident to it is wholly inconsistent to the nature of grace Wherever there is life there must be food because of the constant depastion of the natural heat upon the natural moisture Though the stomach be never so full at present yet anon it will be hungry again so because of the constant combat that is between the flesh and spirit whereever there is spiritual life it will be sensible of the necessity of food Well then it is hunger and necessity that sharpens appetite being sensible of spiritual languishing and need to repair strength daily therefore are their hearts carried out Thus you see the reasons of this vehement affection Secondly The reasons of the constancy of this respect 1. Because it is natural and kindly to the regenerate therefore as it is vehement so it is constant For it is not a light motion but such as is deeply rooted not a good liking but a through bent of heart it is that which setleth into another nature Now that which is as a Nature to us is known by its uniformity and constancy 2. They love the word for its own sake as it is Gods word therefore they ever love it Other men love it for foreign reasons as out of Novelty which is an adulterous affection or out of publick countenance as it is in fashion and repute and therefore are soon weary of it He that loves a woman for foreignreasons as Beauty and Portion when these cease his love ceaseth USE 1. Is to reprove the coldness and cursed satiety and loathing of the word of God that is abroad There is a plenty of means even to a surfeit Men are Gospel-glutted Christ-glutted and Sermon-glutted and therefore are at a very great indifferency and under a mighty coldness as to the word of God Usually we are more sensible of the benefit of the word in the want of it than we are in the enjoyment of it 1 Sam. 3. 1. The word of the Lord was precious in those days there was no open vision When the publick Ministry of the Prophets was rare and scarce then it was precious and sweet When the Papists denied the use of the Scripture in the Vulgar tongue O what would we give then for a little scrap and fragment of the word of God in English a Load of Hay for a Chapter in Iames. So in times of restraint how savoury is a godly Sermon But now visions are open men begin to surfeit of the word In semet ipsam saith Tertullian semper abundantia contumeliosa est Plenty lesseneth the price of things As in Solomon's time gold and silver were as dirt in the streets 1 King 10. 32. so the word of God though it be so precious and excellent yet when we have plenty of it line upon line precept upon precept by Gods indulgence then we begin to be glutted People grow wanton when they have abundance of means This is the temper of English professors at this day they are guilty of surfeiting of the word and that 's very dangerous either of a people or person Now that there is such a fulness and satiety appears partly By seldom attendance upon the word We do not redeem time to hear the word when brought home to our dores we seldom step out to hear it They use to say a surfeit of bread is most dangerous surely a surfeit of the bread of life is so When men are full and begin to despise the word as if not worth the hearing God usually sends a Famine to correct that surfeit of the Word Amos 8. 11 12. I will send a famine of hearing the word of the Lord and they shall wander from sea to sea and from the north even to the east they shall run to and fro to seek the word of the Lord and shall not find it Usually that is the way that God taketh for a glutted people that scorn and neglect the word when they might gather it like Manna from heaven every day they may ride many miles before they hear a sa●…oury Sermon and then those that were not for the word or desirous to be rid of it may long for a little comfort and reviving by it and cannot enjoy it 2. Men bewray this satiety and fulness of the word by fond affectation of luscious strains wholesome Doctrines will not down with them unless it be cooked and saweed to their wanton appetites O Christians the spiritual appetite desires 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the sincere milk of the word 1 Pet. 2. 2. unmixed milk give them plain simple milk without human mixtures and compositions The relish of the word is spoil'd by the garish strains of a frothy Eloquence A plain solid truth is more sutable to a gracious heart A man that hath a natural instinct to the word delights in the simplicity of it An Infant hath a distinguishing palate and knows the Mothers milk and pukes and casts when it sucks another so certainly if we had true spiritual life we would be delighted in the word for the words sake the more plain it is provided it be sound I am not for a loose careless delivering of Gods Message but it is the sound plain and wholsom Ministry which suits with a gracious appetite It argues a distempered heart when we must have Quails and Dainties and loath Manna Consider in heaven where we have the most simple apprehension of things we have the highest affection to them No need of
Powers against the people of God it may be you may judg it unseasonable but how soon it may be seasonable you cannot tell considering the spirit of enmity against the power of godliness Blessed be God that it is not so seasonable now But what use shall we now make of it 1. To bless God when he giveth Religious Rulers and such as are well affected to Religion It is a fulfilling of his promise Isa. 49. 23. And Kings shall be thy nursing-fathers and Queens thy nursing-mothers Gods Interest in the world is usually weak and his people like little children had need to be nursed up by the countenance and defence of worldly Potentates Now when they discharge their duty and do afford patronage and protection it should be acknowledged to Gods glory in whose hands their hearts are and the rather by us because of the iron yoke that was upon us and those hard task-masters under which we formerly groaned We have our own discontents as well as former ages but because all things are not as we could wish them shall we be thankful for none The liberty of Religion is such a blessing as we cannot enough acknowledg and doth sufficiently countervail other inconveniences Oh therefore let us not sowr our spirits into an unthankful frame by dwelling too much upon our discontents and private dissatisfactions it is a mercy that the Sword of Authority is not drawn against Religion When God meaneth good or evil to a Nation he usually dispenseth it by their Magistrates if good then he puts wisdom and grace into the hearts of those that govern or Government into the hands of those that are wise and gracious When he meaneth evil he sendeth them evil Magistrates Isa. 19. 4. The Egyptians will I give over into the hands of a cruel lord and a fierce king shall rule over them But when good Governours it is a mercy and a presage of good 2. To pity those whose case it is that Princes sit and speak against them as it is of many of the people of God now in the world When we suffer not by immediate and direct passion we should suffer by way of fellow-feeling and compassion It is charged as a great crime that those that were at ease in Sion were not grieved for the afflictions of Ioseph Amos 6. 6. compared with the first verse It may be used proverbially As the Butler forgat Ioseph when he was well at Court and his brethren did eat bread and little regard the afflictions of his soul when cast into the pit But I suppose them litterally because the half Tribe of Manasseh was carried captive by Tiglath Pilesar that they did not sympathize with them propter confractionem Ioseph for the breach made upon Ioseph God layeth affliction upon some of his people to try the sympathy of others as on Protestants in Poland the Emperors Dominions Savoy some parts of France and elsewhere 3. To be the more strict and holy and improve this good day of the Churches peace They that are not holy in a time of peace will not be holy and constant in a time of trouble Acts 9. 33. When the Churches had rest they walked in the fear of God and in the comforts of the Holy Ghost When we are not called to passive obedience and suffering our active obedience should be the more cheerfully performed Now where is it so our father 's suffered more willingly for Christ than we speak of him Our inward peace and comfort will cost us more in getting and therefore we should be more in service Oh let us not abuse this rest we have to the neglect of God or to vain contentions as green Timber warpeth and breaketh in the sun-shine The contentions of the Pastors saith Eusebius did usher in the Truth which was Dioclesian's Persecution 4. Here is Caution and a word of Counsel to the Princes of the Nations or the Heads of the people that now are met together and sit in Council Oh do not sit and speak against such as are Gods people that is Do not decree any thing against them Some would have the Magistrate to do nothing in Religion but that would leave things at a strange loose and disorder certainly you should at least provide for the liberties of Gods people that they should lead a quiet life in godliness and honesty 1 Tim. 2. 2. that they may be secured and the peace kept not only as to their Civil Interests but whilst they worship God according to their conscience which can never be as long as those swarms of Libertines are publickly tolerated which every day encrease in Number Power and Malice And again the great security of Magistrates lieth in an Oath of Fealty which only receiveth value from Religion therefore the Magistrate is concerned in what Religion is professed in a Nation as well as in things Civil But now whilst you interpose in Religion be sure you do not contradict or undermine Gods Interest and be not courted by any prepossessions of your own or the crafty insinuations of others to oppress by your sentence and suffrage those that fear God in the Land and do make conscience of their ways The Magistrates interposing in Religion is to me an unquestionable duty and yet to be managed with great caution Psal. 2. 10. Be wise now therefore O ye Kings and be instructed ye Iudges of the earth What by natural prejudices against the strict and more severe ways of Godliness what by private whispers and subtil disguises men may be tempted to oppose Christs Kingdom Cause and People therefore they should be wary as they would be faithful in their places and love their own souls to go upon sure clear grounds You are to promote Christs service otherwise you will be answerable for your neglect and yet you are to take heed lest whilst you think you do God service you subvert not his Interest and so you be answerable for your mistake To deal more particularly would be a diversion I only intend it as a warning and to shew you the necessity of consulting with those who are best able to judg in the case where your duty lieth II. David's Remedy But thy servant did meditate in thy statutes Doct. The best way to ease the heart from trouble that doth arise from the opposition of men of Power and Place is by serious consulting with Gods word Because the time will not bear a large prosecution I shall open the force of this clause in three Propositions 1. An holy divertisement is the best way to ease the trouble of our thoughts Certainly it is not good altogether to pore upon our Sorrows a diversion is a prudent course David did not meerly sit down and bemoan the calamity of his condition and so sink under the burden but runneth to the word As Husbandmen when their ground is overflowed by waters make Ditches and Water-furrows to carry it away so when our minds and thoughts are overwhelmed with
and saith unto him We have found the Messias and Philip called Nathanael and saiah unto him We have found him of whom Moses in the Law and the Prophets did write Iesus of Nazareth the son of Ioseph 2. For the edification of others Luke 22. 32. And thou being converted strengthen thy brethren True grace is communicative as fire c. 3. For our own profit He that useth his knowledg shall have more Whereas on the contrary full breasts if not sucked become dry In the dividing the loaves encreased All gifts but much more spiritual which are the best are improved by exercise Well then 1. Get a sense and experience of God's Truths and then speak of it to others That which we have seen we are best able to report of God giveth us experiences to this end that we may be able to speak of it to others None can speak with such confidence as those that have felt what they speak Christ saith those that come to him shall not only have a spring of comfort themselves but flow forth to others Joh. 7. 38. He that believeth on me as the Scripture hath said out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water IV. Point In our desires of knowledg it is meet to propound a good end As David here beggeth understanding that he might see and discover to others what he had found in God's Law To know that we may know is foolish curiosity to know that we may be known is vanity and ostentation to see that we may sell our knowledg is baseness and covetousness To edifie others this is charity to be edified our selves this is wisdom Good things must be sought to a good end Ye ask and receive not because ye ask amiss to consume it upon your lusts Jam. 4. 3. All things must be sought for to holy ends to glorifie God much more spiritual gifts The only good end is God's glory Open thou my lips that I may shew forth thy praise Psal. 51. 15. We are to desire knowledg that we may the more enjoy God and the more glorifie him There is a natural desire of knowledg even of Divine knowledg but we must look to our ends that we may grow in grace 1 Pet. 2. 3. that we may be more useful for God not meerly to store the head with notions or to vaunt it over others as having attained more than they no it should be only to do good to our own souls and to save others Rom. 15. 14. I am perswaded that ye are filled with all knowledg and able to admonish one another But now to make a market of our knowledg or to use it for our vile ends that 's naught Not for boasting ostentation curiosity and vain speculation but for practice should be our end When we improve our stock well we please God and shall have eternal profit our selves SERMON XXIX PSALM CXIX 28. My soul melteth for heaviness strengthen thou me according to thy word ACHRISTIAN should neither be humbled to the degree of dejection nor confident to the degree of security and therefore he is to have a double eye upon God and upon himself upon his own necessities and upon God's Alsufficiency You have both represented in this Verse as often in this Psalm his Case and his Petition 1. His Case is represented My soul melteth for heaviness 2. His Petition and Request to God Strengthen thou me according to thy word First His Case My soul melteth for heaviness In the Original the word signifies droppeth away The Septuagint hath it thus My soul fell asleep through weariness Probably by a fault of the Transcribers one word for another My soul droppeth It may relate 1. to the plenty of his tears as the word is used in Scripture Job 16. 20. My friends scorn me but mine eye poureth out tears unto God or droppeth to God the same word so it notes his deep sorrow and sense of his condition The like allusion is in Joshua 7. 5. The heart of the people melted and became as water Or 2. It relates to his languishing under the extremity of his sorrow as an unctuous thing wasteth by dropping so was his soul even dropping away Such a like expression is used in Psal. 107. 26. Their soul is melted because of trouble and of Jesus Christ whose strength was exhausted by the greatness of his sorrows it is said Psal. 22. 14. I am poured out like water all my bones are out of joint my heart is like wax it is melted in the midst of my bowels Be the allusion either to the one or to the other either to the dropping of tears or to the melting and wasting away of what is fat and unctuous it notes a vehement sorrow and brokenness of heart that 's clear his soul was even melting away and unless God did help him he could hold out no longer Doct. That Gods children oftentimes lye under the exercise of such deep and pressing sorrow as is not incident to other men David expresseth himself here as in a languishing condition which is not ordinary My soul droppeth or melteth away for heaviness The Reasons of the point are three 1. Their burdens are greater 2. They have a greater sense than others 3. Their exercise is greater because their reward and comfort is so great First Their burdens are greater than others as temptation desertion trouble for sin The good and evil of the spiritual life is greater than the good and evil of any other life whatsoever As their joys are unspeakable and glorious so their sorrows are sometimes above expression A wounded spirit who can bear Prov. 18. 14. Common natural Courage will carry a man through other afflictions O! but when the arrows of the Almighty stick in their heart Iob 6. 3. that's an unsupportable burden According to the excellency of any life so are the annoyances and the benefits of that life Man that hath a higher life than the beasts is more capable of delights and sorrows than Beasts are of pain and pleasure and so a Christian that lives the life of faith he is more capable of a higher burden Consider they that live a spiritual life have immediately to do with the Infinite and Eternal God and therefore when he creates joy in the heart O what a joy is that and when God doth but lay his hand upon them how great is their trouble Sin is a heavier burden than affliction and the wrath of God than the displeasure of man Coelestis ●…ra quos premit miseros facit humana nullos Evils of an eternal influence are more than temporal therefore must needs be greater and more burdensome Secondly They have a greater sense than others their hearts being intendered by Religion None have so quick a feeling as the children of God why because they have a clearer understanding and more tender and delicate affections 1. Because they have a clearer understanding and see more into the nature of things than those that are drowned
in present delights and contentments The loss of God's favour carnal men know not how to value but the Saints prefer it above life the favour of God is better than life Psal. 63. 3. therefore if the Lord do but suspend the wonted manifestations of his grace and favour how are their hearts troubled Thou didst hide thy face and I was troubled Psal. 30. 7. A child of God that lives by his favour cannot brook his absence therefore when they lose the sweet sense of his favour and reconciliation with him O what a trouble is this to their souls Other men make no reckoning of it at all And so for sin common spirits value it only by the damage that it doth to their worldly interests when it costs them dear they may hang the head Jer. 2. 9. Now know what an evil and bitter thing it is to forsake the Lord. A worldly man may know something of the evil of sin in the effects of it but a child of God seeth into the nature of it they value it by the wrong by the offence that is done to God and so are humbled more for the evil in sin than for the evil after sin So for the wrath of God carnal men have gross thoughts of it and may howl upon their beds when their pleasant things are taken from them but God's children are humbled because their Father is angry they observe more the displeasure of God in afflicting Providences than others do and one spark of God's wrath lighting into their consciences O what sad effects doth it work more than all other straits whatsoever Thus they have a clearer understanding they see more into the dreadfulness of God's wrath into the evil of sin and they know how to prize and value his favour more than others 2. They have delicate and tender affections Grace that gives us a new heart doth also give us a soft heart Ezek. 36. 26. I will put a new heart into them what kind of heart a heart of flesh as the old heart that is taken out is a heart of stone A new soft heart doth sooner receive the impression of divine terror than another heart doth A stamp is more easily left upon wax or a soft thing than upon a stone Or thus a slave hath a thicker skin than one nobly born tenderly brought up therefore he is not so sensible of stripes A wicked man hath more cause to be troubled than a godly man but he is not a man of sense he hath a heart of stone and therefore is not so affected either with God's dealings with him or his dealings with God Look as the weight of the blows must not only be considered but the delicateness of the constitution so because their hearts are of a softer and more tender constitution being hearts of flesh and receptive of a deeper impression therefore their sorrows exceed the sorrows of other men Thirdly The good that they expect is exceeding great and their exercise is accordingly for after the rate of our comforts so are our afflictions Wicked men that have nothing to expect in the World to come but horrors and pains they wallow now in ease and plenty Luk. 16. 25. Son in thy life-time thou receivedst thy good things God will be behind-hand with none of his creatures those that do him common service have common blessings in a larger measure than his own people have they have their good things that is such as their hearts chuse and affect But now good men that expect another happiness they must be content to be harras'd and exercis'd that they may be fitted and prepared for the enjoyment of this happiness As the stones that were to be set in the Temple were to be hewn and squar'd so are they to be hewn squar'd and exercised with bitter and sharp things that they may be prepared for the more glory USE 1. Then carnal men are not fit to judg of the Saints when they report their experiences if it be with them above the rate of other men When afflicted consciences speak of their wounds or revived hearts of their comforts their joys are supernatural and so are their sorrows and therefore a natural man thinks all to be but fancy all those joys of the Spirit that they are but Fanatick delusions and he doth not understand the weight of their sorrows When a man is well to see to and hath health strength and wealth they marvel what should make such a man heavy all their care is to eat drink and be merry and therefore because they are not acquainted with the exercises of a feeling conscience they think all this trouble is but a little mopishness and melancholy Poor contrite sinners who are ready to weep out their hearts at their eyes can only understand such expressions as these My soul melteth away for heaviness There 's another manner of thing in trouble of conscience than the carnal world doth imagine and many that have all well about them great Estates much befriended and esteemed in the world yea for the best things yet when God hides his face poor souls how are they troubled If he do but let a spark of his wrath into conscience and hide his face from them it 's a greater burden to them than all the miseries of the world David was a man valiant that had a heart as the heart of a Lyon 2 Sam. 17. 10. He was a man cheerful called the sweet Singer of Israel 2 Sam. 23. 1. of a ruddy sanguine complexion and a great Master of Musick He was no fool but a man wise as the Angel of God and yet you see what a bitter sense he had of his spiritual condition And when a man so stout and valiant so cheerful so wise complains so heavily will you count this mopishness and foolish melancholy But alas men that never knew the weight of sin cannot otherwise conceive of it they were never acquainted with the infiniteness of God nor power of his anger and have not a due sense of Eternity therefore they think so slightly of these matters of the spiritual life USE 2. Be not too secure of spiritual joys We warn you often of security or falling asleep in temporal comforts and we must warn you of this kind of security also in spiritual All things change You may find David in this Psalm in a different posture of spirit sometimes rejoycing in the Word of God above all riches and at other times his soul melteth away for very heaviness God's own people are liable to great trouble of spirit therefore you should not be secure as to these spiritual enjoyments which come and go according to God's pleasure Men that build too much upon spiritual suavities or sensible consolations occasion a snare to their own souls partly as they are less watchful for the present like Mariners which have been at Sea when they get into the Haven take down their tackling and make merry and think never to see
against covetousness brings in a carnal wretch singing lullabies to his soul Luke 12. 19. Soul thou hast much goods laid up for many years take thy ease eat drink and be merry He doth not wish for more but pleaseth himself with what he had already and yet in his language would Christ impersonate and set forth the dispositions of a covetous heart So we are cautioned Psal. 62. 10. If riches increase set not your hearts upon them When we set up our rest here and look no further we are guilty of this sin But now because we may delight in our portion and take comfort in what God hath given us let us see when our delight in temporal things is a branch of covetousness I answer when we delight in them to the neglect of God and the lessening of our joy in his service and our hopes of eternal life are abated and grow less lively when we so delight in them as to neglect God and the sweet intercourse we should have in him Therefore covetousness is called Idolatry Ephes. 5. 5. Col. 3. 5. as it robs God of our trust while we build upon uncertain riches as a stable happiness and the best assurance of our felicity Mark 10. 23 24. How hardly shall they that have riches enter into the Kingdom of God And when the Disciples wondred our Saviour answered How hard is it for them that trust in riches c. That is that set their confidence in them in that degree and measure as is only due to God Then it is called Adultery Iam. 4. 4. because out of love to worldly things we can dispense with our love to God and delight in him As the Harlot draws away the affection from the lawful Wife In short when we seek them and prize them with the neglect of better as spiritual and heavenly things are Luk. 12. 21. Mat. 6. 19 20 21 33. Next to the love of God we must love our selves and there first our souls Now we are besotted and inchanted with the love of the world so as to slight the favour of God and the hopes of Blessedness to come this is Adultery spiritual and sets up another chief good Secondly Let us come to the causes of it and they are two Distrust of Gods Providence and discontent with Gods allowance You have both in one place Heb. 13. 5. Let your conversation be without covetousness and be content with such things as you have These two distrust and discontent have a mutual influence upon one another distrust breeds discontent with our present portion and discontent breeds ravenous desires and ravenous desires breed distrust for when we set God a task to provide for our lusts certainly he will never do it I say we can never depend upon him that he should provide for our lusts For the first of these that is distrust or a fear of want together with a low esteem of Gods Providence which maketh us so unreasonably solicitous about outward provisions therefore when Christ would cure our covetousness he seeks to cure our distrust Luke 12. 29. And seek not ye what ye shall eat or what ye shall drink neither be ye of doubtful mind Do not hover like Meteors in the air antedating your cares making your selves more miserable by your own suspicions and your own fears what shall become of you and yours So Mat. 6. 34. Take no thought for to morrow sufficient for the day is the evil thereof I say this carking about future things makes us so impatient and earnest after present satisfaction God trained up his people to a waiting upon his Providence Manna fell from Heaven every day so sufficient for the day is the evil thereof Every day we need look no further Give us this day our daily bread But men fear future need and poverty and so would help themselves by their own carking So then diffidence of Gods promises is the latent evil which lodgeth in the heart Sordid sparing and greedy getting that's on the top but that which lies near the heart is distrust we incline to sensible things and cannot tell how to be well without them and so resolve to shift for our selves 2. Discontent Men have not so much as their rapacious desires crave though they are allowed moderate supplies to keep them till they go to Heaven And therefore every thing that they get serves but as a bait to draw them on further so they are always joining house to house and laying field to field Isa. 5. 8. When once men transgress the bounds of contentment prescribed by God there is no stop or stay Look as the channel wears wider and deeper the more water falls into it the water frets more and more So the more outward things increase upon us the more are our desires increast upon us No man hath vast and unlimited thoughts at first Men would be a little higher in the world and a little better accommodated and when they have that they must have a little more then a little more so they seize upon all things within their grasp and reach Whereas if we had been content with our estate at first we might have saved many a troublesome care many a sin many needless desires and many a foolish and hurtful lust that proves our bain and torment Be content with such things as you have now or you will not be content hereafter the lust will increase with the possession As in some diseases of the stomach purging doth better than repletion not to feed the humour but to purge away the distemper So here it is not more that will satisfie us but our lusts must be abated if we were better satisfied with Gods fair allowance we might be happy men much sooner than ever we shall be by great wealth Thirdly For the discoveries of this sin Aristotle as it is a moral vice placeth it in two things in a defect in giving and an excess in taking we may better express both in Scripture-phrase by greedy getting and an unmeet with-holding 1. Greedy-getting manifested either 1. By sinful means of acquisition as lying couzening oppression prophaning the Lords-day grinding the faces of the poor carnal compliances or any other such unjust or evil arts of gain Men stick not at the means when their desires are so strongly carried out after the end Prov. 28. 20. He that maketh hast to be rich cannot be innocent They leap over hedg and ditch and all restraints of honesty and conscience to compass their ends all their endeavours are suited to their profit and therefore consult not with conscience but with interest and so prove treacherous to God unthankful to Parents disobedient to Magistrates unfaithful to Equals unmerciful to inferiors and care not whom they wrong so they may thrive in the world 2. Though it go not so high as injustice yet it appeareth by excessive labours when endeavours are unreasonably multiplied to the wrong both of the body and the soul. To the wrong
or the Infusion of Grace 2. For the renewing the vigour of the life of Grace the renewed Influence of God whereby this Grace is stirred up in our hearts First for Regeneration or the Infusion of Grace Ephes. 2. 1 2. When we were dead in Trespasses and Sins yet now hath he quickned us then we are quickned or made alive to God when we are new born when there is an habitual Principle of Grace put into our hearts Secondly Quickning is put for the renewed excitation of Grace when the life that we have received is carried on to some further increase and so 't is twofold either by way of Comfort in our Afflictions or enlivening in a way of Holiness 1. Comfort in afflictions and so 't is opposed to fainting which is occasioned by too deep a sense of present troubles and distrust of God and the supplies of his Grace when the affliction is heavy upon us we are like Birds dead in the nest and are so overcome that we have no Spirit nor Courage in the service of God Psal. 119. 50. This is my Comfort in affliction for thy word hath quickened me Then we are said to be quickened when he raiseth up our hearts above the trouble by refining our suffering Graces as Faith Hope and Patience Thus he is said to revive the Contrite one Isa. ●…7 15. To restore comfort to us and to refresh us with the Sense of his Love 2. There is a quickening in Duty which is opposed to deadness of Spirit which is apt to creep upon us that is occasioned by Negligence and sloathfulness in the business of the spiritual Life Now to quicken us God exciteth his grace in us An Instrument though never so well in tune soon grows out of Order A Key seldom turned rusts in the Lock so Graces that are not kept a work lose their Exercise and grow Luke-warm or else 't is occasioned by carnal Liberty or intermeddling with worldly things These bring a Brawn and deadness upon the Heart and the Soul is depressed by the cares of this World Luk. 21. 34. Now when you are under this Temper of soul desire the Lord to Quicken you by new influences of Grace 2. Let me shew the necessity of this quickening how needful ' t is 1. 'T is needful for without it our general standing is questionable whether we belong to God or no 1 Pet. 2. 5. Ye are living stones built up into a spiritual House t is not enough to be a stone in Christs building but we must be living Stones not only members of his body but living members I cannot say such a one hath no grace but when they have it not it renders their Condition very questionable a man may be living when he is not lively 2. Without it we cannot perform our Duties aright Religion to a dead heart is a very irkesome thing When we are dead-hearted we do our Duties as if we did them not in our general course of obedience we must go to God Psal. 119. 88. Quicken me after thy loving Kindness so shall I keep the Testimonies of thy Mouth Then we do good to good purpose indeed t is not enough for us to pray but we must pray with life and Vigour Psal. 80. 18. Quicken me and I will call upon thy Name so we should hear with Life not in a dull Careless Fashion Math. 13. 15. 3. All the Graces that are planted in us tend to beget quickening as Faith Hope and Love these are the Graces that set us a work and make us lively in the Exercise of the spiritual Life Faith that works by Love Gall. 5. 6. It sets the Soul a work by apprehending the sense of Gods love whereas otherwise t is but a dead Faith 1 Iam. 2. 16. Then for love what is the Influence of that it constrains the Soul it takes the soul along with it 2 Cor. 5. 14. and Rom. 12. 1. And then hope 't is called a lively Hope 1 Pet. 1. 3. all Grace is put into us to make us Lively not only the Grace of Sanctification but the Grace of Iustification is bestowed upon us for this end that we may be cheerful in Gods service Heb. 9. 14. How much more shall the blood of Christ purge our Consciences from dead works that we may serve the living God Sin and guilt make us dead and heavy hearted but now the blood of Christ is sprinkled upon the Conscience and the sentence of Death taken away then we are made cheerful to serve the living God Attributes are suited to the case in hand he is called the living God because he must be served in a living manner 4. All the Ordinances which God hath appointed are to get and increase this Liveliness in us Wherefore hath God appointed the Word Isa. 55. 3. Hear and your Souls shall live t is to promote the Life of Grace and that we may have new Incouragment to go on in the ways of God Moses when he received the Law is said to receive the lively Oracles of God Acts 7. 38. 10. So the doctrine of Christ they are all Spirit and Life and serve to beget Life in us As the redemption of the world by Christ the joys of Heaven the torments of Hell they are all quickening truths and propounded to us to keep us in Life and Vigour The Lords supper why was that appointed There we come to tast the flesh of Christ who was given for the Life of the world Iohn 6. That we might sensibly exercise our Faith upon Christ that we might be more sensible of our Obligations to him that we might be the more excited in the diligent pursuit of things to come Use 1. Is reproof David considereth the Dulness and Deadness of his Spirit which many do not but go on in a cold Tract of duties and never reguard the frame of their Hearts It is a good sign to observe our spiritual Temper and accordingly go to God Most observe their Bodies but very few their Souls If the body be ill at ease or out of Order they complain presently but love waxeth cold and their Zeal for God and delight in him is abated yet they never lay it to Heart Secondly To exhort us to get and keep this lively frame of heart 1. Get it Pray for it liveliness in obedience doth depend upon Gods Blessing unless he put life and keep life in our Souls all cometh to nothing Come to God upon the account of his Glory Psal. 143. 11. Quicken me O Lord for thy Name sake for thy Righteousness sake bring my Soul out of Trouble His tender Mercies Psal. 119. 156. Great are thy tender Mercies O Lord quicken me according to thy Iudgments Come to him upon the account of Christ Iohn 10. 10. I am come that they might have Life and that they might have it more abundantly And John 7. 38. He that believeth on me as the Scripture hath said out of his Belly shall flow Rivers
in thy way These two Prayers joyn'd together speak thus much if you be too busie about Vanity it will bring on a Brawn and Deadness and so you need to go to God for quickning And Christ tells his disciples Luke 21. 34. Take heed of being over-charged c. The soul is mightily distempered by too free a Liberty of the delights of the Flesh for Surfeiting and Drunkenness must not be taken there in the gross Notion 3. Let us take heed that we do not lose it by our Sloathfulness and Negligence in the spiritual Life Isa. 64. 7. There is none that stirreth up himself to take hold of thee As in a Watch one Wheel protrudes and thrusts forward another so when we are diligent all is lively in the Soul but when we are not active and serious in a Godly course all goes to Rack An Instrument though it be never so much in Tune yet laid by and hung up it grows out of Order Wells are sweetet for draining Our Graces if we keep not them awork lose their Vitality if we do not stir up the Grace of God 2 Tim. 3. 6. they are quite quenched when we grow careless and neglectful of our Souls we lose this Activity of Grace 4. Vain and Dead-hearted Company and Converse are a very great means to damp the Spirit and quench the Motions of the heavenly Life We should Provoke one another to good Works Heb. 10. 24. There is great Provocation in good Examples but we grow Lazy Formal slight by imitation Others profess Knowledg yet are Vain Dead-hearted so are we we have adopted it into our Manners and leven one another by this means There should be a holy Contention who should be most forward in the ways of Godliness and excel in our Heavenly calling this keeps Christians lively Saul when he was among the Prophets he Prophecied but when we converse with Dead-hearted company it breeds a great Damp. You read in Isa. 41. 6. 7. how the Idolaters encouraged one another it was when the Isles was to wait for the Messiah that they should not faint but get up their Idols again after Christ had got a little footing among them and shall not the Children of God encourage and keep up the life of Zeal one in another Use 2. Exhortation It presseth you to divers Duties 1. To see a need of quickning Though life received gives Power to act yet that Power must be excited by God No creature doth subsist and Act of it self All things Live Move and have their Being in God There is a Concurrence necessary to all created things much more to the New-creature Partly because of the internal indisposition of the Subject in which it is alas Grace in the Heart is but like fire in Wett-wood Partly by reason of External impediments Satan is ready to cast a Damp upon thy Soul so that the Lords grace is still necessary for us 2. Ask it of God All life was at first in him Originally and ' it s an Emanation from him The Apostle proves Christs God-head from this because In him was Life Iohn 1. 4. But is this a good Argument Doth that prove therefore he was God may we not say of the meanest Worm in it is Life but he means Originally he was the fountain of Life And still he keeps it in his own hands and conveys it to all Creatures every moment even to the lowest Worm Iohn 5. 26. For as the Father hath life in himself So hath he given to the Son to have life in himself The Power of quickning and keeping of life it belongs to God He hath it Originally from himself he gives it to others 1 Tim. 6. 13. he that quickneth all things Worms Men that gives Life to them is God 3 Except this Grace in and through Jesus Christ who hath purchased it for us who gave his Flesh to be meat indeed and his Blood drink indeed Iohn 6. 55. Who rose again that we should walk in newness of Life Rom. 6. 4. Who ascended to pour out the Spirit upon us Iohn 7. 38. 39. Therefore when we find Deadness Spiritually look to receive this life from Christ. 4. Rouse up your selves There are Considerations and Arguments to quicken us Certainly a man hath power and faculty to work truths upon himself to stir up the Gift and Grace that is in us 2 Tim. 1. 6. We must not think Grace works necessarily as fire burns whether we will or no that this will enliven us but we must rouze and stir up our selves as Psal. 42. 5. There are many considerations by which me may awaken our own Soul from the Love of God from the Hopes of Glory by which Christians should stir and keep their Spirits awake and alive towards God and Heavenly things Use 3. If quickning be so necessary it presseth us to see when ever we have received any thing of the vitality of Grace Sence Appetite and Activity we may know it by these things when there 's a sence of Sin in-dwelling as a Burden Life is strong then when it would expel its Enemy Rom. 7. 24. When there is an Appetite after Christ and his Graces and Comforts When there 's a greater Activity a bursting and breaking forth towards Religious Duties it is a sign Grace is strong in the heart for the Spirit is to be a fountain of living waters always breaking out Iohn 7. 38. When we are more fruitful towards God when it is ready to discover it self for the Glory of God then the heavenly life is kept in good plight For these things we should be thankful to God for he it is that awakeneth you SERMON XLVII PSALM CXIX Verse 41. Let thy Mercies come also to me O Lord even thy Salvation according to thy Word IN this Verse you have the Man of God in Straights and begging for Deliverance In this Prayer and Address to God you may observe 1. The Cause and Fountain of all Thy Mercies 2. The Effect or thing asked Salvation 3. The Warrant or Ground of his Expectation according to thy Word 4. The effectual Application of the Benefit asked Come also unto me The Sum of the Verse may be given you in this Point Doct. That the Salvation of God is the fruit of his Mercy and effectually dispensed and applied to his People according to his Word There is a twofold Salvation Temporal and Eternal 1. Temporal Salvation is Deliverance from Temporal Dangers Exod. 14. 13. Stand still and see the Salvation of the Lord. 2. Eternal Deliverance from Hell and Wrath together with that positive Blessedness which is called Eternal Life Heb. 5. 9. And being made perfect he became the Author of eternal Salvation to all them that obey him The Text is applicable to both though possibly the former principally intended 1. I shall apply it to Salvation Temporal or deliverance out of Trouble Then observe 1. the cause of it Thy Mercies Gods Children often fall into such streights that
In its infancy there may be some reliques of Fear in a Christian as Iohn 19. 39. Nicodemus at first came to Iesus by night but a grown Faith counts it no loss of Honour or impeachment of Dignity to become vile for God 4. The eternal Recompence 1 Sam. 2. 30. Those that honour me I will honour 1 Pet. 2. 7 That your faith may be found to praise glory and honour at Christs coming On the other side if we are ashamed of Christ Christ will be ashamed of us for evermore Mark 8. 38. Whosoever therefore shall be ashamed of me and my words in this adulterous and sinful generation of him also shall the Son of man be ashamed when he cometh in the glory of his father with the holy angels The Eagle-eye of Faith can look through all the Pageantry of the World and the Mists and Clouds of Time to the Future state the Judgment that shall be made of things To a Believers eye all the Honour of the World is but a Fancy and vain Appearance a Scene in which a base Fellow acteth the part of a Prince 5. The Judgment of the World is not to be stood upon Why should we desire the applause of the blind ungodly World or make any great matter of their contempt and scorn Shall the scorn of a Fool be more to us than the approbation of God If they slight you who slight God and Christ and their own Salvation why should you be troubled They are incompetent Judges of these things 1 Iohn 3. 1. The world knoweth us not Use. See the strange perversion of Humane Nature Men are ashamed where they should be bold and bold and confident where they should be ashamed they glory in their shame but think it a disgrace to speak of God and own God not before Kings onely but before their Familiars and Companions Be ashamed to be filthy false proud but never be ashamed to go to a Sermon where you may profit in the Ways of God and the Knowledge of his Testimonies to be strict in Conversation to speak reverently of God though scorned by Men. None of God's Servants have reason to be ashamed of their Master SERMON LIII PSAL. CXIX 47. And I will delight my self in thy commandments which I have loved THE Man of God is giving Arguments to inforce his Request That the word of Truth might not be taken utterly out of his mouth 1. He could not bear it because all his Hopes of Felicity were built upon it ver 43. 2. He promiseth constancy of Obedience ver 44. 3. Liberty of Practice ver 45. 4. Liberty of Profession not hindred by Fear or Shame but should be born out with confidence in that Profession 5. He urgeth in the Text with what delight he should carry on the Work of Obedience and I will delight my self in thy commandments which I have loved In which observe 1. His great Pleasure and Contentment is asserted and professed I will delight my self 2. The Object of it in thy commandments 3. The fundamental Reason or bottom Cause of this Delight which I have loved Doct. A gracious heart doth love and delight in the Commandments of God The Godly are described by it Hence David makes it the Character of a Blessed man Psal. 1. 2. His delight is in the law of the Lord and in that law doth he meditate day and night And Psal. 112. 1. Blessed is the man that feareth the Lord and delighteth greatly in his commandments Paul asserts of himself as a comfortable evidence of his Sincerity in the midst of his Infirmities Rom. 7. 22. For I delight in the law of God after the inward man By the inward man he means the renewed part that is pleased with all things that please God if we have such a Delight as is above the Delight of Sense c. I will 1. Explain the Point as it lieth here in the Text. 2. Shew how the Heart is brought to this for corrupt Nature is otherwise affected I. To explain the Point 1. His Pleasure and Contentment is asserted I will delight my self A Christian hath his Joys and Delights but they are pure and chaste they delight in the Lord and in his Word and Ways Phil. 4. 4. Rejoyce in the Lord always and again I say Rejoyce He hath a liberty 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but onely in the Lord 1 Cor. 7. 39. not onely may but must it is his Duty Joy is a great part of his Work not our Felicity or Wages onely but our Work also Now I shall prove that all the Pleasures and Delights of the Earth are nothing to the Pleasures and Delights which the Godly do find in God and in an holy Life 1. These Delights are more substantial It is not a superficial Joy that they are delighted withal but a substantial Joy It must needs be so partly because these are better grounded not built upon a mistake and fancy but the highest Warrant and surest Foundation which Mankind can build upon the Word of the Eternal God which can never fail Whereas the Joy that is meerly built upon carnal Delights is built upon a fancy and mistake Both are represented by the Apostle 1 Iohn 2. 17. The world passeth away and the lust thereof but he that doth the will of God abideth for ever If they considered the shortness of their Pleasures and in what a doleful case their Wealth and Honour and fleshly Delights will leave them they would have little list to be merry till they had looked after a more stable Blessedness The World will be soon gone and the Lust and Gust thereof gone also but he that goeth on with the work of Holiness building on the Promise of another World layeth a sure Foundation Partly because they do more intimately affect the Soul Sensual Delights do not go so deep as the Delights of Holiness Psal. 4. 7. Thou hast put gladness in my heart more than in the time when their corn and their wine increased like a soaking Showr that goeth to the Root The other tickleth the Senses poor slight and out-side Comforts that do not fortifie the Heart against distresses much less against the remembrance of our Judge or the fears of an offended God or the serious thoughts of another World For these two Reasons the Joys of a Christian stirred up in him by the Conformity of his Will to the Will of God are solid substantial Joys A wicked Man may be jocund and jovial but he hath not the true Delight they may have more Mirth but the Christian hath the true Joy In the midst of mirth the heart is sorrowful It is easie to be merry but it is not easie to be joyful or to get a substantial Delight 2. These Delights are more Perfective a Man is the better for them Other Delights that please the Flesh feed Corruption but these corroborate and strengthen Graces They are so far from disordering the Mind and leading us to sin that they
compose and purifie the Mind and make Sin more odious and fortifie us against the Baits of Sense which are the occasion of all the Sin in the World All our Joy is to be considered with respect to its Use and Profit Eccles. 2. 2. I said of laughter It is mad and of mirth What doth it The more a Man delighteth in God and in the Ways of God the more he cleaveth to him and resolveth to go on in this Course and Temptations to Sensual Delights do less prevail for the joy of the Lord is our strength The safety of the Spiritual Life lieth in the keeping up our Joy and Delight in it Heb. 3. 6. Whose house are we if we hold fast the confidence and the rejoycing of the hope firm unto the end Isa. 64. 5. Thou meetest him who rejoyceth and worketh righteousness But now Carnal Delights intoxicate the Mind and fill it with Vanity and Folly The Sensitive Lure hath more power over us to draw into the slavery of Sin Tit. 3. 3. For we our selves were also foolish deceived serving divers lusts and pleasures Surely then the healing Delights should be preferred before the killing wounding Pleasures that so often prove a snare to us 2. The Object is to be considered thy commandments Here observe 1. David did not place his Delight in Folly or Filthiness as they do that glory in their shame or delight in Sin and giving contentment to the Lusts of the Flesh as the Apostle speaks of some that sport themselves in their own deceivings 2 Pet. 2. 13. that do not onely live in sin but make a sport of it beguiling their own hearts with groundless apprehensions that there is no such evil and hazard therein as the Word declareth and Conscience sometimes suggesteth they are beholden to their sottish Error and Delusion for their Mirth Neither did he place his Delight in Temporal trifles the Honours and Pleasures and Profits of the World as bruitish Worldlings do but in the Word of God as the Seed of the New Life the Rule of his Conversation the Charter of his Hopes that blessed Word by which his Heart might be renewed and sanctified his Conscience setled his Mind acquainted with his Creators Will and his Affections raised to the Hopes of Glory The Matter which feedeth our Pleasures sheweth the Excellency or Baseness of it If like Beetles we delight in a Dunghil rather than a Garden or the Paradise of God's Word it shews a base mean Spirit as Swine in wallowing in the mire or Dogs to eat their own Vomit Our Temper and Inclination is known by our Complacency or Displacency Rom. 7. 5. For when we were in the flesh the motions of sin which were by the law did work in our members to bring forth fruit unto death Therefore see which your hearts carry you to to the World or the Word of God The most part of the World are carried to the Pleasures of Sense and mastered by them but a Divine Spirit or Nature put into us makes us look after other things 2 Pet. 1. 4. Whereby are given unto us exceeding great and precious promises even of the great blessings of the new Covenant such as Pardon of Sin Eternal Life c. 2. Not onely in the Promissory but Mandatory part of the Word Commandments is the Notion in the Text. There is matter of great Joy contained in the Promises but they must not be looked upon as exclusive of the Precepts but inclusive Promises are spoken of Psal. 119. 111. Thy testimonies have I taken as an heritage for ever for they are the rejoycing of my heart They contain spiritual and heavenly Riches and so are matter of Joy to a believing Soul but the Commandments call for Duty on our parts The Precepts appoint us a pleasant Work shew us what is to be done and left undone These Restraints are grateful to the New Nature for the compliance of the Will with the Will of God and its conformity to his Law hath a Pleasure annexed to it A renewed Soul would be subject to God in all things therefore delights in his Commandments without limitation or distinction 3. It is not in the Study or Contemplation of the Justice and Equity of these Commandments but in the Obedience and Practice of them There is a pleasure in the Study and Contemplation for every Truth breedeth a delectation in the mind Psal. 19. 8. The statutes of the Lord are right rejoycing the soul. It is a blessed and pleasant thing to have a sure Rule commending it self with great evidence to our Consciences and manifesting it self to be of God therefore the sight of the Purity and Certainty of the Word of God is a great pleasure to any considering Mind no other Study to be compared with it But the Joy of Speculation or Contemplation is nothing to that of Practice Nothing maketh the Heart more chearful than a good Conscience or a constant walking in the way of God's Commandments 2 Cor. 1. 12. Our rejoycing is this the testimony of our conscience that with simplicity and godly sincerity not with fleshly wisdom but by the grace of God I have had my conversation in the world Let me give you this Gradation The Pleasures of Contemplation exceed those of Sense and the Delights of the Mind are more sincere and real than those of the Body for the more noble the Faculty is the more capable of Delight A Man in his Study about Natural things hath a truer pleasure than the greatest Epicure in the most exquisite enjoyment of Sense Prov. 24. 13 14. My son eat thou honey because it is good and the honey-comb which is sweet to thy taste so shall the knowledge of wisdom be unto thy soul when thou hast found it then there shall be a reward and thy expectation shall not be cut off But especially the Contemplation of Divine things is pleasant the Objects are more sublime certain necessary profitable and here we are more deeply concerned than in the Study of Nature Surely this is sweeter than Honey and Honey-comb to understand and contemplate the way of Salvation by Christ This is an Heaven upon Earth to know these things Iohn 17. 3. This is life eternal to know thee the onely true God and Iesus Christ whom thou hast sent As much as the Pleasures of the Natural Mind do exceed these Bodily Pleasures so much do these Pleasures of Faith and Spiritual Knowledge exceed those of the Natural Mind These things the Angels desire to pry into Now the Delights of Practical Obedience do far exceed those which are the meer result of Speculation and Contemplation Why Because they give us a more intimate feeling of the Truth and Worth of these things and our Right in them thereby is more secured and our Delight in them is heightned by the supernatural Operation of the Holy Ghost The Joy of the Spirit is said to be unspeakable and full of glory 1 Pet. 1. 18. In short
suppose command us the contrary forbid us all respect to himself commanding us to worship false Gods transform and misrepresent his Glory by Images and fall down before Stocks and Stones blaspheme his Name continually and despise all those glorious Attributes which do so clearly shine forth in the Creation if he had commanded us to be impious to our Parents to fill the World with Murders Adulteries Robberies to pursue others with Slanders and False-witnessings to covet and take what is another Mans Wife Ox or Ass the heart of Man cannot allow such a Conceit nay the fiercest Beasts would abhor it if they were capable of receiving such an Impression Now surely a Law so reasonable so evident so conducing to the honouring of God Government of our selves and Commerce with others should be very welcom and acceptable to a gracious Heart 2. The State and Frame of a renewed Heart they are fitted and suited to these Commandments and do obey them not onely because injoyned but because inclined Nothing is pleasant to Men but what is suitable to their Nature so that may be delightful to one which is loathsom to another as the Food and Converse of a Beast is loathsom to a Man one Mans Pleasure is anothers Pain There is a great deal of difference between a carnal and a spiritual Mind the Heart sanctified and unsanctified Ezek. 36. 26 27. I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh and I will give you an heart of flesh and I will put my spirit within you and cause you to walk in my statutes and keep my judgments to do them When the Heart is fitted and suited by Principles of Grace the Work is not tedious but delightful Things are easie and difficult according to the poise and inclination of the Soul so Heb. 8. 10. I will write my laws upon their hearts and put them into their minds The Law without suiteth with an Inclination within and when things meet which are suitable to one another there is a delight Psal. 40. 8. Thy law is in my heart I delight to do thy will O God There is an Inclination not Necessary as in Natural Agents but Voluntary as in Rational Agents There is an Inclination in Natural Agents as in light Bodies to move upwards heavy Bodies to move downwards in Rational Agents when a Man is bent by his Love and Choice This latter David speaketh of Psal. 119. 36. Encline my heart unto thy testimonies and not to covetousness The Heart of Man standeth between two Objects the Laws of God and Carnal Vanities In our Natural estate we are wholly bent to please the Flesh in our Renewed Estate there is a new bent put upon the Heart now the old bent is not wholly gone though overmastered and overpowered The false Bias of Corruption will still incline us to the Delights of Sense but the new Bias to the way everlasting to spiritual eternal Happiness as that prevaileth we love and delight in the Commandments of God 3. The Helps and Assistances of the Spirit go further and increase this Delight in the way of God's Commandments God doth not onely renew our Wills and fit us with an inward power to do the things that are pleasing in his sight but exciteth and actuateth that Power by the renewed Influences of his Grace Phil. 2. 13. He giveth us to will and to do not onely a Will or an urging and inclination to do good but because of the opposition of the Flesh and manifold Temptations he gives also a Power to perform what we are inclined unto And where the spirit of the Lord is there is liberty 2 Cor. 3. 17. or a readiness of Mind to perform all things required of us not onely with diligence but delight 4. The great encouragements which attend Obedience as the Rewards of Godliness both in this Life and the next The Rewards of Godliness in this Life I shall speak of in the next Head for the Future the End sweetens the Means to us We have no mean End but the eternal Enjoyment of God in a complete state of Glory and Happiness Now this hath an influence upon the Love and Delight of the Saints to sweeten their Labours and Difficulties and Temptations The Scripture every where witnesseth 1 Cor. 15. 58. Therefore my beloved brethren be ye steadfast unmoveable always abounding in the work of the Lord forasmuch as you know that your labour is not in vain in the Lord. Phil. 3. 14. I press towards the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Iesus Rom. 5. 2. We rejoyce in hope of the glory of God And Rom. 8. 18. For I reckon that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall be revealed in us 5. Present comfortable Experience 1. In the general of Peace of Conscience and Joy in the Holy Ghost 1. Peace which is the natural result of the Rectitude of our Actions The fruit of righteousness is peace Isa. 32. 17. And Psal. 119. 165. Great peace have they that love thy law and nothing shall offend them Pax est tranquillitas ordinis That Description fits internal Peace as well as external When all things keep their Order Affections are obedient to Reason and Reason is guided by the Spirit of God according to his Word there is a Quiet and Rest from Accusations in the Soul 2. Joy in the Holy Ghost is distinct from the former Rom. 14. 17. For the kingdom of God is not meat and drink but righteousness and peace and joy in the holy Ghost These two differ in the Author Peace of Conscience is the Testimony of our own Souls approving the good we have done Joy in the Holy Ghost is a more immediate Impression of the comforting Spirit Rom. 15. 13. Now the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing that ye may abound in hope through the power of the holy Ghost They differ in their Measure Peace is a Rest from Trouble Joy a sweet Reflexion upon our good condition or happy estate It is in the Body a freedom from a Disease and a chearfulness after a good Meal or in the State Peace when no Mutinies and Disturbances Joy when some notable Benefit or Profit accrueth to the State So here they differ in their Subjects the Heathen so far as they did good might have a kind of Peace or Freedom from self-accusing and tormenting Fears Rom. 2. 15. Which shew the work of the law written in their hearts their consciences also bearing witness and their thoughts in the mean time excusing or else accusing one another but a stranger intermedleth not with these joys The Spirit where a Sanctifier there he is a Comforter They differ in the Ground The Joy of the holy Ghost is not meerly from a good Conscience as to a particular Action but from a good Estate as being accepted with God who is our Supreme Judge and assured
Word to vow our Duty but lifting up the Hand in all these Sences is to God Therefore 4. Here it meaneth no more but I will apply my self to the keeping of them or set vigorously about it put my hands to the practising of thy Law with all earnestness endeavouring to do what therein is enjoyned Two Points 1 Doct. That it is not enough to approve or commend the Commandments of God but we must carefully set our selves to the observance of them 2 Doct. Whosoever would do so must use great Study and Meditation 1 Doct. That it is not enough to approve or commend the Commandments of God but we must carefully set our selves to the practice of them 1. Hearing without Doing is disapproved Deut. 4. 5. I have taught you good statutes and judgments that ye might do so Deut. 5. 1. Hear O Israel the statutes and judgments which I speak in your ears this day that ye may learn them and do them Otherwise we deceive our own Souls Iames 1. 22. But be ye doers of the word and not hearers onely deceiving your own souls We put a Paralogism on our selves build on a sandy Foundation Mat. 2. 26. Every one that heareth these sayings of mine and doth them not shall be likened unto a foolish man that built his house upon the sand 2. Knowledge without Practice is not right Luke 12. 47 48. He that knoweth his masters will and prepareth not himself to do it shall be beaten with many stripes Better never known if not done for then they do but aggravate our Guilt and encrease our Punishment 3. Our Love is not right unless it endeth in Practice A Christians Love to whatever Object it be directed must be an unfeigned Love If God if the Brethren if the Word of God those words must ever sound in our ears 1 Iohn 3. 18. My little children love not in word and tongue but in deed and in truth Do you love the Word of God Do it not in word and in tongue but in deed and in truth 4. Our Delight is not right the Pleasure is but an airy idle and speculative Delight unless it set us about the practice of all holy Obedience unto God making it the design and business of our Lives to exercise our selves unto Godliness That sheweth the reality of your Delight when you come under the power of the Truth and are absolutely governed by it for then you delight in them aright as Mysteries of Godliness The Lord complaineth of them that had a delight in the Prophet his voice was as pleasing to them as a minstrel they hear the words and do them not Ezek. 33. 32. They may delight in sublime strains of Doctrine or flourishes of Wit Demosthenes had made a plausible Speech to the Athenians Phocion told them That the Cypress-tree is goodly and fair but beareth no Fruit. There may be flourishes of Wit but no food for hungry Consciences 5. Our Commendation is not right unless it endeth in Practice Many may discourse of the Ways of God never speak of them but with Commendation but they do not lift their hands to this blessed Work They shew some love to God's Commandments but when it cometh to action their hands are remiss and faint Christ refuseth that respect of bare naked Commendation Luke 11. 27 28. Blessed is the womb that bare thee and the paps that thou hast sucked 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yea rather blessed is he that heareth the word of God and keepeth it We are Disciples of that Master that did both teach and do Acts 1. 1. The former Treatise have I made O Theophilus of all that Iesus began both to do and teach Of the Pharisees it is said They say and do not Mat. 23. 2 3. But in Christians there must be saying and doing Iames 2. 12. So speak and so do as they that shall be judged by the law of liberty We shall be rewarded not for speaking well but for doing hands lifted up Well then nothing remains but practising Duties that are pressed upon you on the first opportunity Not he that heareth understandeth loveth delighteth commendeth but he that keepeth instruction it is is in the way of life Prov. 10. 17. He that submitteth himself to be guided by God's Word he is going the right way to Eternal Life and Happiness But to set home this Point more fully I shall 1. Inquire What kind of Observance we must address our selves unto 2. Why we must thus lift up our hands or address our selves to our Duty 1. How for the manner must we lift up our hands or what doing is necessary 1. It must be universal Herod did many things Mark 6. 20. Partial Reformation in outward things will not serve the turn In sundry particulars Men may yield to the Word of God but in others deny their Obedience as in some cheap Observances or such Duties as cross not our Lusts But David would lift up his hands to the Commandments without distinction and limitation Many this they will do and that they will do and so do not obey God's Will but their own Psal. 119. 6. Then shall I not be ashamed when I have respect unto all thy commandments Luke 1. 6. And they were both righteous before God walking in all the commandments and ordinances of the Lord blameless 2. This Doing must be serious and diligent Every Christian must bend the powers of his Soul and lay out the first of his Care and Labour in his Obedience unto God Phil. 2. 12. Work out your salvation with fear and trembling This is not a Work to be done by the bye but with the greatest care and sollicitude 3. This must be our settled and our ordinary Practice To lift up our hands now and then is not enough to do a good thing once or rarely No we must make Religion our business The lifting of the hands to God's Commandments is not a thing done accidentally occasionally or in a fit of Zeal but our trade and course of Life Acts 24. 16. I exercise my self in this to have a conscience void of offence both towards God and men 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This was the Employment of his Life 4. We must persevere or continue with patience in well-doing notwithstanding discouragements Heb. 12. 12. Wherefore lift up the hands which hang down and the feeble knees There must be no fainting whatever discouragements happen As there was a great deal of doe to hold up Moses's hands in Israels conflict with Amalek Exod. 17. 11 12. As long as he held up the rod of God Israel prevailed but Moses hands were heavy a sign of many Infirmities not able long to endure in spiritual exercise for though the spirit be willing yet the flesh is weak But Faith should still hold up our hands 5. This lifting up the hands or alacrious diligence should flow from a right Principle and that is Faith and Love 1. Faith or a sound Persuasion of God's Love to
11. It is spoken to them who have high thoughts of their Troubles low thoughts of God's Comforts 4. Uncertainty in Religion Principles must be fixed before they can be improved and we can feel their influence and Power But People will be making Essays and try this and try that God's grounds of Comfort are immutably fixed God will not change his Gospel-Laws for thy sake and therefore unless we would have a Mountebanks Cure we must stand to them Ier. 6. 16. Thus saith the Lord Stand ye in the ways and see and ask for the old paths where is the good way and walk therein and ye shall find rest for your souls When we have tried all we must come home at length to these things and our uncertainty in Religion will be none of the meanest causes of our Troubles 5. They look to Means and their natural Operation and neglect God And God onely will be known to be the God of all Comfort 2 Cor. 1. 3 4. Blessed be God even the father of our Lord Iesus Christ the father of mercies and the God of all comforts who comforteth us in all our tribulation Use 3. Is to exhort us 1. To prize and esteem the Scriptures and consult with them often There you have the Knowledge of God who is best worth our knowing and the way how we may come to enjoy him wherein our Happiness lieth It is a petty Wisdom to be able to gather Riches manage your Business in the World ordinary Learning is a good Ornament but this is the excellent deep and profound Learning to know how to be saved What is it I press you to know the Course of the Heavens to number the Orbs and the Stars in them to measure their Circumference and reckon their Motions and not to know him that sits in the Circle of them nor know how to inhabit and dwell there Oh how should this commend the Word of God to us where Eternal Life is discovered and the way how to get it Other Writings and Discourses may tickle the Fancy with pleasing Eloquence but that Delight is vanishing like a Musicians voice Other Writings may represent some petty and momentany advantage but time will put an end to that so that within a little while the advantage of all the Books in the World will be gone but the Scriptures that tell us of Eternal Life and Death their Effects will abide for ever Psal. 119. 96. I have seen an end of all perfections but thy commandments are exceeding broad When Heaven and Earth pass away this will not pass that is the Effects will abide in Heaven and Hell Know ye not that your Souls were created for Eternity and that they will eternally survive all these present things and shall your Thoughts Projects and Designs be confined within the narrow bounds of Time Oh no let your Affections be to that Book that will teach you to live well for ever in comparison of which all Earthly Felicity is lighter than Vanity 2. Be diligent in the Hearing Reading Meditating on those things that are contained there The Earth is the fruitful Mother of all Herbs and Plants but yet it must be tilled ploughed harrowed and dressed or else it bringeth forth little Fruit. The Scripture containeth all the grounds of Hope Comfort and Happiness the onely Remedy of Sin and Misery our Rule to walk by till our Blessedness be perfected but we have little benefit by it unless it be improved by diligent Meditation Psal. 1. 2. His delight is in the law of the Lord and in that Law doth he meditate day and night This must be your chief Delight and you must be versed therein upon all Occasions Psal. 119. 97. Oh how love I thy Law it is my meditation all the day when we love it and prize it it will be so for our Thoughts cannot be kept off from what we love and delight in 3. Reader hear meditate with a Spirit of Application and an aime of Profit Iob 5. 27. Hear it and know thou it for thy good as the Rule of your Actions and the Charter of your Hopes Rom. 8. 31. What shall we then say to these things That you may grow better and wiser and may have more advantages in your Heavenly progress take home your Portion of the Bread of Life and turn it into the Seed of your Life It is not enough to seek Truth in the Scriptures but you must seek Life in the Scriptures it is not an Object onely to satisfy your Understandings with the Contemplation of Truth but your Hearts with the enjoyment of Life and therefore you must not onely bring your Judgment to find the light of Truth but your Affections to embrace the goodness of Life offered Think not ye have found all when you have found Truth and learned it No except you find Life there you have missed the best Treasure you must bring your Understandings and Affections to them and not depart till both return full SERMON LVII PSAL. CXIX 51. The proud have had me greatly in derision yet have I not declined from thy law IN these Words are 1. David's Temptation 2. His Constancy and Perseverance in his Duty notwithstanding that Temptation 1. In the Temptation observe 1. The Persons from whom the Temptation did arise the Proud The wicked are called so for two Reasons 1. Because either they despise God and contemn his Wayes which is the greatest Pride that can fall upon the heart of a Reasonable Creature Rom. 1. 30. haters of God despitefull proud 2. Or else because they are drunk with worldly Felicity In the general Scoffing cometh from Pride What is Prov. 3. 34. He scorneth the scorners and giveth grace to the lowly is Iam. 4. 6. He resisteth the proud and giveth grace to the humble 2. Observe the Kind or Nature of the Temptation he was had in derision This may be supposed either for Dependance on God's Promises or for Obedience to his Precepts Atheistical Men that wholly look to the pleasing of the Flesh and the Interest of the present World make a mock of both We have instances of both in Scripture 1. They make a mock of relyance upon God when we are in distress think it ridiculous to talk of relief from Heaven when Earthly Power faileth Psal. 22. 7 8. They laugh me to scorn saying He trusted in the Lord. The great Promise of Christ's coming is flouted at by those Mockers 2 Pet. 3. 3 4. There shall come in the last days mockers walking after their own lusts and saying Where is the promise of his coming for since the fathers fell asleep all things continue as they were from the Creation Such Scoffers are in all Ages but now they overflow These latter times are the dregs of Christianity in which such kind of Men are more rife then the serious Worshippers of Christ. At the first Promulgation of the Gospel while Truths were new and the Exercises of Christian Religion lively and serious
of a soft Heart which must be asked of God 2 Chron. 34. 27. Because thine heart was tender and thou didst humble thy self when thou heardest the words of the Lord against this place There was an high peace and calm at that time but a tender Heart relenteth at the Threatnings Beg of God to sosten thy Heart 2. There needeth eminent Holiness for such a Frame that we shine as Lights in the midst of a crooked and perverse Generation Phil. 2. 15. The Mourners must not be infected and tainted themselves but save themselves from an untoward Generation condemn the Sins of the T●…es by their Conversation 3. We must have a Fear animated by Faith By Faith Noah was moved by fear concerning things unseen Heb. 11. 7. The danger of the Floud was unseen as yet and they married and gave in Marriage We must not judge of things by the present or by carnal Appearance there is a righteous Judge in Heaven Faith in his Word will shew us our Danger for God's Threatnings are all fulfilled and the more we seek to establish our selves by carnal Means the more our Ruine is hastened 4. There must be a grief set awork by a Love to God and the Souls of Men. In Calamities the true temper for Humiliation is a due Sense of our Fathers Anger and Brethrens Miseries in Sins our Fathers Dishonour and Man's Destruction those who are the same Flesh with our selves Now it should trouble us to see them in the way to eternal Ruine Of some have compassion making a difference And others save with fear pulling them out of the fire hating even the garment spotted with the flesh Jude 22 23 verses SERMON LX. PSAL. CXIX 54. Thy Statutes have been my Songs in the House of my Pilgrimage DAVID had in the former Verse expressed his great Trouble because of the increase of the Wicked and their Defection from the Law of God Now he sheweth what comforted him the Children of God have a great deal of divine Consolation from the Word in the midst of all their Sorrows and Evils of the present Life David's Comfort is here expressed 1. By the Matter or Object of it thy Stdtutes 2. The Degree of his Rejoycing intimated in the Word Songs The Effect is put for the Cause Joy and Mirth which usually breaketh forth into singing or the sign and indication for the Thing signified 3. The place where he rejoyced in the House of his Pilgrimage 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wheresoever I sojourn 1. By God's Statutes is meant his Word in general more especially the Precepts and Promises in the one we have the offer of Life in the other the way and means how to attain it In the Word is both our Charter and our Rule in both regards it is matter of Rejoycing Psal. 19. 8. The Statutes of the Lord are right rejoycing the Soul Nothing is commanded there but what is equitable in it self and profitable to us 2. By Songs a Metonymy of the Effect for the Cause or the Sign for the Thing signified such Pleasure Joy and Contentment as other men had in Songs David had in the Word of God Travellers use to lighten and ease the tediousness of the Way by Songs thy Word doth comfort me wonderfully Or you may take it literally the Themes and Arguments of his singing Profane Spirits must have Songs suitable to their Mirth as their Mirth is carnal so the Songs of carnal Men are obscene filthy and fleshly but an holy Man his Songs suit his Mirth and Joy he rejoyceth in the Lord and therefore his Songs are divine thy Statutes are my Songs Singing of Psalms is a delectable way of Edification which God hath not onely instituted in the Scriptures but Heathens saw an use of it by the light of Nature Aelian lib. 3. nat Hist. cap. 39. telleth us of the Cretians 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It is a spiritual Channel wherein our Mirth may run Iames 5. 13. Is any merry let him sing Psalms 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there is the Harmony that is a natural Delight the Matter that is a spiritual Comfort I cannot exclude this because it is one way of expressing that Delight which we take in the Word but I prefer the former for David speaketh of the Comfort he took in keeping God's Precepts when they were violated by others 3. In the House of my Pilgrimage you may take it literally for the time of David's Exile when banished by Saul or driven from his Palace by Absalom when he fled from place to place and wandred up and down in great distress then God's Statutes by which his Life was directed Innocency vindicated Hopes confirmed both of present Support and seasonable deliverance were as Songs to him his real and cordial Solaces Wheresoever the Believer is or whatsoever his Case and Condition be he hath still matter of Rejoycing in the Word of God So had David when he was exposed to continual Wandrings without any fixed Habitation Indeed the Children of God in Babylon say Psal. 137. 4. How shall we sing the Lord's Song in a strange Land The meaning is not to exclude their own spiritual Delight and Solace but they would not gratify the carnal Pleasure of the Enemies with a Temple-song or subject Religion to their sportive fancies and humours Rather Metaphorically for the whole Course of his Life whether spent in the Palace or in the Wilderness in whatsoever place he was he was still in the House of his Pilgrimage so he accounted his best and his worst Condition compare verse 19. I am a Stranger in the Earth and Psal. 39. 12. I am a stranger with thee and a Sojourner as all my Fathers were with 1 Chron. 29. 15. We are Strangers before thee and Sojourners as were all our Fathers Not onely when hunted like a Partridge upon the Mountains but also when he was at Rest and able to offer so vast a quantity of Treasure for the building of the House of God Two Points are observable 1 Doct. That the Godly count this World and their whole Estate therein the House of their Pilgrimage 2 Doct. That during this Estate and the Inconveniencies thereof they find matter of Rejoycing in the Word of God 1 Doct. That the Godly count this World and their whole Estate therein the House of their Pilgrimage I shall not handle this Doctrine in its full Latitude having spoken largely thereof in the 19 Verse onely now a few Considerations 1. Here is no fixed Abode there where we live longest we count our home and dwelling not an Inn which we take up in our passage but the place of our constant Residence in this World We are onely in Passage and so should consider it Heb. 3. 14. Here we have no abiding City but we look for one to come whose builder and maker is God Here we stay but a little while passing through to a better Country The Mortality of the Body and the Immortality of the Soul
often are they disappointed but if their Hopes should succeed and they should make themselves this way Eternal yet when the Pageantry of this World is over the great ungodly Men of the World who have Names Lands Families in the general Resurrection shall be Poor Base Contemptible whereas he that made it his Business to look after the World to come shall be Glorious for ever 4. When once our Qualification is clear every step of our remove out of this World is an approach to our abiding City Our Salvation nearer Rom. 13. 11. than when we first believed And 2 Cor. 4. 16. though our outward man perish yet the inward man is renewed day by day 5. Every degree of Grace makes your Qualification clearer Col. 1. 12. giving thanks to the Father who hath made us meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the Saints in light and 1 Tim. 6. 18. laying up in store for themselves a good foundation against the time to come that they may lay hold of eternal life Evidences are encreased when ripening for Heaven more and more 2. Let us carry our selves as such as count our best Estate in this World as the House of our Pilgrimage 1. Let us with great Joy and Delight of heart entertain the Promises of the Life to come resolving to hold and hugg them and esteem them and make much of them till the Performance come Heb. 11. 13. These all died in Faith not having received the Promises but having seen them afar off and were perswaded of them and embraced them and confessed that they were Strangers and Pilgrims on the Earth 2. Let us take heed of what may divert us and besot us and hinder us in our heavenly Journey 1 Pet. 2. 11. Dearly beloved I beseech you as Strangers and Pilgrims abstain from fleshly Lusts which war against the Soul A Relish of the Pleasures that offer themselves in the course of our Pilgrimage spoileth the sense that we have of the World to come and weakens our care and pursuit of it 3. Let us be contented with those Provisions that God in his Providence affordeth us by the way though they be mean and scanty 1 Tim. 6. 8. having food and raiment let us be content for we brought nothing into the world and it is certain we can carry nothing out we came into the World contented with a Cradle and must go out contented with a Grave therefore if we want the Pomp of the World let it not trouble us we have such allowance as our Heavenly Father seeth necessary for us till our great Inheritance cometh in hand 4. If the World increase upon us we should take the more care that we may have the Comfort of it in the World to come Rev. 14. 13. Their works follow them Luk. 16. 9. Make to your selves friends of the Mammon of unrighteousness that when ye fail they may receive you into everlasting habitations There is no other way to shew our weanedness in a full Estate nor to keep our hearts clean or to express our deep sense of the World to come but this 2. Doct. That during this Estate and the inconveniencies thereof God's Children find matter of Rejoycing in his Word 1. Let us consider how this Point lieth in this Text. 1. The Psalmist had a sufficient sense of the inconveniencies of the House of his Pilgrimage his absence from God for therefore he counts it a Pilgrimage the many affronts and dishonours that are done to God in the World which go near to a gracious heart who espouseth God's quarrel and interest therefore he saith Horrour hath taken hold upon me because men keep not thy Law nay and possibly his own Afflictions and Troubles for many Interpreters suppose him now expelled from Ierusalem and driven to wander up and down in the Forrests and Wildernesses yet then could he comfort himself in God and pass over his time in meditating on his Precepts and Promises The troubles and inconveniencies of our Pilgrimage are easily disregarded by them that have no sense of them or are slight-hearted or whose time of Trial is not yet come but then is strength of Grace seen when we can overcome sense of Trouble by the incouragements which the bare naked Word of God offereth If David were now in Exile it was a trouble to him not to enjoy the Ordinances and Means of Grace with the rest of God's People but to deceive the tediousness of it by God's Word that is the Trial. If we can depend upon the Promise when nothing but the Promise is left us there are no Difficulties too great for the Comfort of God's Word to allay 2. The Psalmist speaketh not of what he would doe but what he had done thy Statutes have been my Songs Experience of the Comfort of the Word is more than a Resolution to seek it there in his Resolution he would have been a Pattern of Duty but now he is a President of Comfort That which hath been may be God that hath given a Promise and Comfort to his Saints before will continue it in all Ages 3. The Psalmist speaketh not of an ordinary Joy but such as was ready to break out into singing which noteth the heart is full and can hold no longer without some vent and utterance As Paul and Silas were so full of Joy that they sang at midnight in the Stocks 2. Now I come to the Reasons why God's Pilgrims find matter of rejoycing in his Word during the time of their Exile and absence from God and all the Inconveniencies that attend it 1. Some on the Words part 2. Some on the part of him that rejoyceth 1. On the Words part God's Pilgrims can rejoyce in it 1. There they have the Discovery and Promise of eternal Life It telleth them of their Country a firm deed and conveyance is a Comfort to us before we have possession 2 Pet. 1. 4. To us are given exceeding great and precious Promises that being made partakers of the Divine nature we may escape the Corruptions that are in the world through Lust. In the Word there are Promises neither of small things of things of a little moment nor of things that we have nothing to doe with but of great moment and weight and given to us The Promises make the things promised certain to those to whom they do belong though they be not yet actually in their Possession and therefore the Children of God are delighted in them and so far as that their hearts are drawn off from worldly things They that adhere to them and prize the Comfort which they offer have something in them above natural Men or the ordinary sort of those that live in the World 2. There they have sure direction how they may attain this Blessedness which the Promises speak of and that is a great Comfort in the midst of the Darkness and Uncertainty of the present Life The Word of God is said to be a light that shineth to us
cause of their Defection Deut. 32. 18. Thou art unmindfull of the Rock that begat thee thou hast forgotten the God that formeth thee Oblivion is an Ignorance for the time Truths lose their efficacy when not remembred On the other side remembring God is made to be the immediate and next cause of our Duty Eccles. 12. 1. Remember thy Creatour in the days of thy youth Youth would not miscarry so shamefully if they did oftener remember God nor be led away by vain and sensual Delights if the thoughts of God did more dwell in their minds So Levit. 8. 11 12. Beware that thou forget not the Lord thy God in not keeping his Commandments Our Lives will declare whether we do remember God those that do often and seriously keep God in their thoughts will be most carefull to keep his Commandments III. The Reasons of the Point 1. It doth incourage us and quicken us to diligence in our Work as Souldiers fight best in their General 's presence and Scholars ply their Books when under their Masters Eye so by living always in the sight of God we study to please him the oftner we consider him the more we see no service can be holy and good enough for such a God as he is a God as not to be provoked and resisted so not to be neglected and slighted Mal. 1. 14. Cursed be the deceiver that hath in his Flock a male and voweth and sacrificeth to the Lord a corrupt thing for I am a great King saith the Lord of Hosts and my Name is dreadfull among the Heathen implying that when they came with a sickly Sacrifice they did not remember his Excellency and Greatness either they had no or mean thoughts of God but if they had remembred what an one he is they would imploy the best of their strength time and affection in his Service 2. The madness of our Natures is bridled and restrained by thoughts of God 3 Ep. Iohn 11. He that doth evil hath not seen God Will he force the Queen before my face Esth. 7. 8. you will not sport with Sin nor play with the occasions of it nor dare to venture upon God's Restraints It is said of an Arch-Angel 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he durst not bring against him a railing Accusation Jude vers 9. because they beheld the Face of God So if we had a deep sense of God impressed upon our Hearts we would be more awfull You make very bold with God when you dare knowingly venture upon the least Sin Will you affront God to his Face Children that are quarrelling or falling out when the Father or Mother cometh all is hush and silent 3. It comforts and reviveth us in the midst of our faintings and discouragements because of the evils of the present World Ionah 2. 7. When my Soul fainted within me I remembred the Lord. When the burthen of Affliction presseth us sore the stoutest Hearts are broken and lose all Courage but when we come to ponder seriously what God is or what he will be to his People or hath at any time been to our selves it cheereth and reviveth the Heart So Psalm 42. 6. Oh my God my Soul is cast down within me therefore will I remember thee By this way the Saints recover themselves Psal. 77. 10. And I said This is my Infirmity but I will remember the years of the right hand of the most High So also Matth. 16. 9. Do ye not remember the five loaves of five thousand nor the seven loaves of the four thousand The Use is to press us to remember God more when we will not look upon another we take it to be a great sign of aversation and hatred the Devils that are most opposite to God abhorr their own thoughts of God for they believe and tremble God thinketh of us he is not far from every one of us why are we so far from him we cannot open our eyes but one object or other will represent God to us What dost thou see hear and feel but the effects of his Power and Goodness he is before thee behind thee within thee round about thee and shall he not find a room in thy Heart when every trifle findeth a room there He that filleth every place shall thy Heart be empty of all thoughts of him To press you to this 1. Consider we are naturally apt to forget God do not like to retain him in our Knowledge Rom. 1. 28. backward to any remembrance of him Psal. 10. 4. The wicked through the pride of their Countenance will not seek after God God is not in all their thoughts 2. How much God hath done to put us in Remembrance of him by Creatures Providences Ordinances and his Spirit 1. Creatures all of them Sun Moon Stars Worms Grass put us in mind of him Psalm 19. 1 2. The Heavens declare the Glory of God and the Firmament sheweth his handy work Day unto day uttereth Speech and night unto night sheweth Knowledge The Creatures have a double Use their natural Use and their spiritual Use their natural Use is the special end for which they were made their spiritual Use is to set forth God to us We look upon them amiss if we look upon them as separated from and independent on God Our food is not onely to nourish Nature but that we may taste the sweetness and goodness of God in it All the Creatures bring this Message to our Consciences Remember God that made us and all things else They all read a Divinity Lecture to those that have a mind to hear it and preach the Goodness and Power and Wisedom of God by a loud and audible Voice It is true we are deaf but they cease not to cry to us Iob 12. 8. Speak to the earth and it shall teach thee and the beasts of the field and they shall declare to thee Not onely the shining Heavens but the dull Earth that heaviest and grossest Element the bruit Creatures that have no Reason the mute Fishes that can make no sound we must ask them parley with them by our own thoughts and so though they have neither Voice nor Ears they will answer us and resolve our Consciences the Question we put to them Is there a God yea and declare his excellent Attributes that he is Eternal Infinite Wise Powerfull and Good We may easily make out these Collections Christ saith the Stones would cry if these held their peace We should hear the Creature as we would hear God himself speaking to us they speak to all Countries in their own Language At first God spake to the World not by Words but things thus hath God engraven his Name upon his Works as those that make Watches or any curious Pieces write their Names upon them as he that carved a Buckler for Minerva had so curiously inlayed his own Name that it could not be rased out without defacing the whole Work so the Creatures are but a draught and pourtraicture of God's Glory
him always and if a godly man were put to his choice he would not be without this Fear of God To live always in an admiration of his excellent Majesty a thankfull sense of his Goodness and a regard to his Eye and Presence this is our Happiness 2. It is not contrary to our Comfort and Joy in the Lord. Fear to offend God and Joy in his Favour may well stand together Psalm 2. 10. Serve the Lord with fear and rejoyce with trembling There is a sweet mixture in a gracious Heart of an holy Awe and Seriousness with a delightfull sense of God's Goodness these Graces may easily be combined and brought to kiss one another Psalm 112. 1. Blessed is the man that feareth the Lord and delighteth greatly in his Commandments When we do most carefully abstain from what displeaseth him we have most sense of his Love and do most chearfully practise what he requireth of us All other Pleasures and Delights are but Maygames and Toys to that of a strict Obedience which giveth the Soul a continual Feast Acts 9. 31. They walked in the fear of the Lord and in the comforts of the Holy Ghost None have such a comfortable Life as they who are most carefull to avoid Sin We need this mixture we should grow slight and secure without Fear and slavish without Comfort There must be Fear to weaken the security of the Flesh and Joy of Faith to revive the Soul 3. It is not contrary to Courage and holy Boldness by which we should bear up under Troubles and Dangers There is a spirit of fear opposite to a sound mind 2 Tim. 1. 7. when men are ashamed of the Gospel or afraid of the Persecutions which accompany it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a cowardly spirit a worldly fear of Adversities and Dangers Losses Reproaches so we are commanded Fear not their fear but sanctify the Lord God of Hosts in your hearts and let him be your fear and let him be your dread Isa. 8. 12 13. no this is the Fear of the World but I press to the Fear of the Lord Luke 12. 4 5. Be not afraid of them that kill the Body and after that have no more that they can doe But I will forewarn you whom you shall fear Fear him which after he hath killed hath power to cast into Hell yea I say unto you fear him This is the best cure of the Fear of the World as one naile driveth out another The Fear to offend God inflameth our Courage and doth not abate it 4. It is not contrary to the Grace of the Gospel No it is the Fruit of it Psalm 130. 4. There is forgiveness with thee that thou mayst be feared The Heart is shy of a condemning God but closeth with and adhereth to a pardoning God and nothing breedeth this fear to offend so much as a tender sense of the Lords Goodness in Christ. 2. It presseth us to keep his Precepts that is the onely evidence that the Fear of God is rooted in our hearts The Heart must be prepared to keep all they are all equally good and they are all equally necessary not one of them is in vain and they are all joyned together like Rings in a Chain and we are not sincere till we regard all Psalm 119. 6. Then shall I not be ashamed when I have respect unto all thy Commandments The Judgment must approve all Psalm 119. 128. Therefore I esteem all thy Precepts concerning all things to be right and I hate every false way the Will must be set and fixed in a serious purpose to keep all making conscience of the least as well as the greatest the difficult as well as the easy Heb. 13. 18. I trust we have a good Conscience in all things willing to live honestly Earnest Endeavours must be used to grow up to a more exact Conformity to all Phil. 3. 14. I press toward the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Iesus Some Corruption may remain after all our endeavours but none must be reserved or cherished in the heart Psalm 66. 18. If I regard iniquity in my heart there will be a secret love to some Sins more than others but it must not be indulged but checked and striven against and prayed against Psalm 119. 133. Let not any iniquity have dominion over me and this praying and striving must produce some effect that in some measure it may be said of us what was said of Zechary and Elizabeth Luke 1. 6. They were both righteous before God walking in all the Commandments and Ordinances of the Lord blameless and we must increase and grow in this more and more Col. 1. 11. Strengthened with all might according to his glorious power unto all patience and long-suffering with joyfulness and 1 Thess. 4. 1. As ye have received of us how to walk and to please so do you abound more and more The entertaining of some bosom Sin which we are loth to part withall darkneth our whole Comfort 2. David's professed respect to these sort of men I am a Companion of them that fear thee of them and of all them 2 Doct. That we should associate our selves and keep communion with those who are truly gracious Consider 1. In what sense we are to be Companions of them that fear the Lord. 2. Why it must be so or the Reasons 1. In what sense may David or any other be said to be a Companion of those that fear the Lord or what it importeth 1. We must joyn with them or be ingaged in the profession of the same Faith and Obedience unto God The Faith of all Christians is a common Faith and their Salvation a common Salvation to them all Titus 1. 4. Titus my own Son after the common Faith Jude 3. I gave diligence to write to you of the common Salvation The Communion with the Saints which we believe in the Creed is in the first and chiefest place a Communion in Faith and Charity and this kind of Communion all the Members and Parties of the Catholick Church have one with another They are all quickened by the same Spirit live by the same Faith wait for the hope of the same Glory and so they are Companions in the same Religion 2. As many as cohabit and live in a convenient nearness must often meet together to joyn in the same Worship for God hath instituted the Assemblies of the Faithfull that we may openly and with mutual consent worship God in Christ in Prayer Thanksgiving Praises Word Sacraments c. and the assembling of our selves for these ends must not be forsaken for Negligence or Fear Heb. 10. 25. Forsake not the assembling of your selves together as the manner of some is but exhort one another and so much the more as you see the day approaching Now in this sense we are Companions of those that fear God as we joyn in worship with them Psalm 42. 4. I had gone with the multitude I went
same mind For he that hath suffered in the flesh hath ceased from Sin that he no longer should live the rest of his time in the flesh to the lusts of men but to the will of God Now that this Resolution may be made knowingly and with the greater strength not onely with the strength of Inclination or our own resolved renewed Will but in the sense of God's Authority a strong belief is necessary that this course of life is pleasing to God 2. That we may hold on with God in an awfull watchfull serious course of Godliness it is necessary that the belief of the Commandments be deeply impressed upon us alas otherwise we shall be off and on forward and backward according to the impulsion of our own Inclinations and Affections and the sense of our Interest in the World Many of the Commandments are crossing to our natural Inclinations and corrupt Humours or contrary to our Interests in the World our Profit Pleasure and nothing will hold the heart to our Duty but the Conscience of God's Authority this is the Lord's Will then the gracious Soul submitteth 1 Thess. 4. 3. For this is the will of God even your Sanctification that ye should abstain from Fornication And 1 Pet. 2. 15. For so is the will of God that with well-doing ye may put to silence the ignorance of foolish men That is Reason enough and instead of all Reasons to a Believer to awe and charge his heart that we may not shift and distinguish our selves out of our Duty that we may shake off sloath and negligence much more deceits and fraudulency and corrupt Affection Many shifts will be studied by a naughty heart that dispense with our Credit Esteem Honour Preferment in the World for our loyalty to God nothing but a deep belief of the Sovereignty of God and the sight of his Will can be of sufficient power to the Soul when such Temptations arise and our Duties are so contrary to the inclinations of the Flesh Heb. 11. 8. By Faith Abraham when he was called to goe out into a place which he should after receive for an inheritance he obeyed and he went out not knowing whither he went and verse 17 18. By Faith Abraham when he was tried offered up Isaac and he that had received the promises offered up his onely begotten Son Of whom it was said That in Isaac shall thy seed be called Gen. 12. 3. In thee shall all Families of the Earth be blessed Oh how have Believers need to bestir themselves upon such an occasion and to remember no evil can be compared with God's Wrath no earthly good with his Favour that transitory Delights are dearly bought if they endanger the Soul to compass them That the sufferings of this life are not worthy to be compared with the glory that shall be revealed in us Rom. 8. 18. The ordinary experience of Believers in lesser Temptations is enough to evince this c. Use 1. Is for Reproof 1. That men do so little revive the belief of God's Commandments hence Sins of omission Iames 4. 17. Therefore to him that knoweth to doe good and doth it not to him it is Sin of Commission Ier. 8. 6. I hearkned and heard but they spake not aright no man repented him of his wickedness saying What have I done every one turned to his course as the Horse rusheth into the battel Would men venture to break a known Law if they did consider that it was the Command of God that hath power to save and to destroy Surely want of Faith in the Precepts is a great cause of their coldness in Duty boldness in sinning Prov. 13. 13. Whoso despiseth the word shall be destroyed but he that feareth the Commandment shall be rewarded Now any one would fear God's Commandment if he did consider it in all its Circumstances 2. Those that would strongly believe the Promises but weakly believe that part of the Word that requireth their Duty from them all for Privileges seldome reflect upon their own Qualification it is a good temper when both goe together Psal. 119. 166. I have hoped for thy Salvation and have done thy Commandments So Psalm 147. 11. The Lord taketh pleasure in them that fear him in those that hope in his Mercy But when asunder all is naught God's Promises cannot comfort us if we be not of the number of them to whom they do belong Not onely consider what God is but what we are and what is required of us our Qualification as well as his Goodness our Duty as well as his Mercy Use 2. To believe the Commandments with a lively Faith we should be tender of disobeying God's Law The Law may be considered as a Covenant of Works or as a Rule of Life as a Covenant of Works so it is satisfied by Christ for those that have an interest in him and serveth to quicken us to get this interest in him as it is a Rule of Life so in the New Covenant we give up our selves to God to walk according to the Tenour of it as Israel by a voluntary submission Exod. 19. 8. All that the Lord hath spoken we will doe So in the Church of the New Testament we ingage our selves by a voluntary submission to walk according to the Will of God and confirm it by the Sacraments Baptism and the Lord's Supper Well then we are still to regard it as a binding Rule looking for Grace to perform it it is not onely a Rule given us for advice and direction but for a strong obligation to urge and inforce us to our Duty So Psalm 40. 8. Thy Law is in my heart I delight to doe thy will O God Use 3. Do we believe the Commandments Then 1. We will not please our selves with a naked Trust in the Promises while we neglect our Duty to God That which God hath joyned together no man must put asunder The Prophet saith Hos. 10. 11. Ephraim is an Heifer that is taught and loveth to tread out the Corn compared with Deut. 25. 4. Thou shalt not muzzel the Ox when he treadeth out the Corn. We are addicted to our own ease prize Comforts but loath Duty Oh make more Conscience of Obedience 2. Their Faith will be lively and operative cause to keep God's Charge and observe his Commandments otherwise it is but an Opinion and a dead Faith Iames 2. 20. Wilt thou know O vain man that Faith without Works is dead Many may discourse of the necessity of Duty that have little sense of it as the Children in the Furnace the fire had no power over them neither was one hair of their Heads singed nor their Coats changed not a Lust mortified no good by their strict Notions 3. They must be obeyed as God's Commands abstaining from evil because God forbiddeth it practising that which is good because God commandeth it Notitia voluntatis 1 Thess. 4. 3. This is the will of God even your Sanctification that ye should abstain from
compared with all that may be called life Life is either Natural Spiritual or Eternal Compare it with life Natural and there the Psalmist will tell you Psal. 63. 3. Thy loving-kindness is better than life life is not life without it without the feeling of this love or the hope of feeling it it is little worth To have the light of the Sun which is the comfort of the senses without the light of God's Countenance which is the comfort of the soul is a sad and dark estate especially to the Children of God that know they are made for another world and for this onely in their passage thither Natural life onely giveth us a capacity to injoy the comforts of sense which are base dreggy and corruptive but the special favour of God lets us into such consolations as perfect the Soul and affects it with a greater pleasure than our natural faculties are capable of life natural is a frail brittle thing but these saving effects of Gods mercy lay a Foundation of eternal happiness Life natural may grow a burden but the love of God is never burdensome the days may come in which there is no pleasure Eccl. 12. 1. Job 33. 20. his life abhorreth bread and his soul dainty food in sickness and age in troubles of Conscience Men do pretty well with their worldly happiness till God rebuke man for sin then all the glory profit and pleasure of the creature doth us no good Psal. 39. 11. When thou with rebukes dost correct man for iniquity thou makest his beauty to consume away like a moth Iudas halter'd himself when filled with the sense of Gods wrath Iob chose strangling rather than life At death when all worldly things cease and are of no more use to us the sense of Gods love will be of great use to us All the world understand the worth and value of Gods love when death cometh then a child of God feeleth it Oh saith he I would not for all the world but that I had made sure of the love of God before this hour how terrible else would it have been to leave all and leap out into an unknown world Ier. 17. 9. The unjust man at his latter end shall be a fool and Iob 27. 8. What is the hope of the Hypocrite if he hath gained when God cometh to take away his Soul 2. Life Spiritual the Soul hath no life but in communion with God who is the fountain of this new life now the more sensible and close this is the more they live the vitality of this life lyeth in the sensible participation of the effects of his special grace and mercy then we have it more abundantly Iohn 10. 10. not onely living but lively 3. For eternal life a comfortable sense of Gods mercy is the beginning and pledg of the true and heavenly life Rom. 5. 4 5 6. The shedding abroad the love of God in the heart of a believer maketh this his hope sure and certain he needeth not be ashamed for he hath earnest beforehand 2. Gods favour furnisheth us with a remedy against all evils and miseries i. e. wants troubles sins The want of other things may be supplyed by the love of God but the want of the love of God cannot be supplyed with any thing else if poor in the world yet we may be rich in faith Iam. 2. 5. if afflicted destitute yet this loss may be made up by the presence of God in the Soul 2 Cor. 4. 16. As our outward man decayeth our inward man is renewed day by day If they want the creature they have God there is no want of a candle when they have the Sun if they want health the Soul may be in good plight 3. Epist. Iohn 2. as Gaius had a healthy soul in a sickly body If they want liberty they ly open to the visits of his grace the Spirit of God is no stranger to them nor can his company and comforts be shut out Tertullian telleth the Martyrs you went out of the prison when you went into it and were but sequestred from the world that you might converse with God the greatest prisoners are those that are at large darkened with ignorance chained with lusts committed not by the Proconsul but God If they want the favour of men they have the favour of God God smileth when the world frowneth they may be Banished but every place is alike near to God and Heaven Some climates are nearer and some further off from the Sun but all alike near to the Sun of Righteousness Ibi pater ubi patria that is our Country where God is we are harrassed beaten afflicted in sundry manners but the sting is gone therod that is dip'd in guilt smarteth most but a pardoned man may rejoyce in tribulations Rom. 5. 1 2. But now on the contrary suppose a man high in honour wallowing in wealth spending his time and wealth in ease and pleasure but after all this God will bring him to Judgment the world is his friend but God is his enemy and he is all his life time subject to bondage Heb. 2. 14. not always felt but soon awakened and during the time of his comfort and delight he is danceing about the brink of hell liable to an eternal curse and there is but the slender thread of a frail life between him and execution a few serious sober thoughts undoe him 2. Sin that is the great evil both as to the guilt of it and the wages of it the guilt and obliquity of it no creature can provide a plaister for this sore to get our Consciences setled and our natures healed this is the special fruit of Gods mercy in Christ his business is to save us from sin Matt. 1. 21. Acts. 3. 26. God having raised up his son Iesus sent him to bless you in turning away every one of you from your iniquity Rom. 11. 26. There shall come out of Zion the deliverer and shall turn away ungodliness from Iacob have Gods Image repaired and restored to his Grace and Favour those that have felt sin a burden nothing will satisfie till the Lord looks graciously upon them 3. The favour of the Lord is the fountain of all blessings Get an interest in his special mercy and then all things are yours you have God for your God who commandeth all things 1 Cor. 3. 22. Whether Paul or Apollo or Cephas or the world or life or death or things present or things to come all things are yours Matt. 6. 33. First seek the Kingdome of God and his righteousness and all these things shall be added to you Prov. 10. 22. The blessing of the Lord maketh rich and he addeth no sorrow with it 4. It sweetens every Comfort a piece of bread with the love of God is a plentifull feast A little that a righteous man hath is better than the revenue of many wicked Quid prodest regium alimentum si ad Gehennam pascat What profiteth it to be fatted
upward that is to God for ease and relief as when we expect any bodies coming we send our eyes towards the place from whence he cometh Reasons 1. The Children of God make more of a Promise than others do and that upon a double account Partly because they value the Blessing promised Partly because they are satisfied with the assurance given by God's Word so that whereas others pass by these things with a careless eye their souls are lifted up to the constant and earnest expectation of the Blessing promised 'T is said of the Hireling that he must have his wages before the Sun go down Deut. 24. 15. Because he is poor and hath set his heart upon it Or as it is in the Hebrew lifted up his soul to it meaning thereby both his desire and hope He esteemeth his wages for it is the solace of his labors and the maintenance of his life and he assuredly expecteth it upon the promise and covenant of him who setteth him awork So it is with the Children of God they esteem the Blessings promised and God's Word giveth them good assurance that they do not wait upon him in vain 1 Tim 4. 10. Therefore we both labour and suffer reproach because we trust in the living God who is the saviour of all men especially of those that believe They know God is good to all much more to his Covenant servants They value his salvation and venture their All upon his salvation and the truth of his Word and therefore lift up their souls to him in the midst of their pressures and difficulties 2. It is some satisfaction to enjoy the Blessing in Idea and contemplation before we have it indeed Hope causeth a kind of anticipation and preunion of our souls with the blessedness expected as Heirs live upon their Lands before they have them And that 's the reason why Joy is made to be the fruit of Hope though it be proper to fruition and enjoyment Rom. 12. 12. Rejoycing in hope of the glory of God It refresheth them in their Pilgrimage and affecteth them in some measure as if it were in hand So Rom. 15. 13. The God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing that ye may abound in hope through the power of the holy Ghost While believing waiting hoping while conflicting with difficulties They carry themselves as if they had already obtained the thing promised for by eying the Promise they are cheared and revived Hope giveth a foretaste especially when the comforting Spirit addeth his impression thereunto 3. The opening of the eye of Faith argueth a closing of the eye of Sense which giveth a double benefit First That we are not withdrawn with vain Objects Secondly Not discouraged with contrary Appearances First That we are not withdrawn by vain Objects Nothing doth quench Zeal and Holiness and Joy in the Lord nor cast water upon that sacred fire which should be kindled and kept ever burning in our bosoms so much as keeping the eye of Sense always open to behold the lustre and beauty of worldly vanities Alas then hope of Heaven and salvation from God is a cold heartless thing we think of it carelesly desire and press after it very weakly But now when the eye of Sense is shut and the eye of Faith kept always open then Hope advanceth it self with life and vigor and present things seem less and things to come more great and glorious in our eyes 1 Pet. 1. 13. Be sober and hope to the end c. Sobriety is the moderation of our affections in the pursuit and ●…se of earthly things The delights of the present life burden the Soul glue it to the earth and to base and inferior objects But when our Souls are kept in the fresh lively and serious expectation of better things all the things of the world appear more contemptible 'T is not for Eagles to catch Flies nor for the Heirs of Promise to be captivated by the delights of Sense so that every day our Hope is more certain and powerful our pursuit more earnest The mind is not darkned with the fumes of lust nor diverted from those noble objects Secondly The eye of Sense being shut we are not discouraged with contrary appearances nor with fears and troubles and the tryals of the present life because Hope seeth Sun-shine behind the back of the Storm We have a notable Emblem of the eye of Faith and the eye of Sense in the Prophet and the Prophet's man 2 Kings 6. 15 16 17. When the servant of the man of God was risen early and gone forth behold an host compassed the city both with horses and charets and his servant said to him Alas my master how shall we do And he answered Fear not for they that be with us are moe than they that be with them And Elisha prayed and said Lord I pray thee open his eyes that he may see And the Lord opened the eyes of the young man and he saw and behold the mountain was full of horses and charets of fire round about Elisha's man is afrighted with the dreadful appearance of Enemies encompassing them round about and is at his wits end What shall we do But his Master Elisha had the eye of Faith and could see great preparations which God had sent for their defence which the servant could not see therefore encourageth him and in a Prophetical Vision sheweth not only more horses and charets but charets of fire which were no other than the Angels of God come together in the manner of an Host to rescue the Prophet of God What was represented to him in a Prophetical Vision is always evident to Faith and to the eyes of a believing Soul They see God and his holy Angels set for their deliverance When God openeth the eyes of the mind they can see the glory and power of the other world and then though troubled on every side yet not distressed though perplexed yet not in despair though persecuted yet not forsaken though cast down yet not destroyed 2 Cor. 4. 8 9. Though wrestling with difficulties yea brought to some extremities yet this invisible assistance supporteth them and though they have little humane means yet God carrieth them on to their expected end and issue 1. USE To reprove us for poring so much upon present things and neglecting those to come especially the great recompence of reward Alas Men have either none or cold thoughts of that blessed estate which is offered in the Promises Our thoughts flie up and down like dust in the wind they may sometimes light upon good things but they vanish and abide not We may have some cold ineffectual glances upon Heaven and heavenly things which flie away and never leave the Soul better This argueth Hope is very weak if there be any at all for Hope is always longing and looking out for the blessing Sending Spies into the Land of Promise to bring it tydings thence it will discover its self
nothing but sorrow but in the Word of God joy and comfort 4. The way of Application my delights the word is plural and increaseth the sense in what way soever it be interpreted Now it may be interpreted passively or actively 1. Passively That the Word of God refreshed him and afforded him matter of delight and so renewed his strength David had many sorrows but here he found delights as many comforts as troubles The Word of God yieldeth comfort for every state of life if there be many sorrows there are many delights but with advantage heavenly comforts for earthly afflictions eternal comforts for temporal sorrows 2. Actively He delighted in the Word of God yea counted it his delights it increaseth the sense 1. It was his chief delight Other things might be thankfully accepted and acknowledged but this was the solace and delight of his Soul 2. His continual delight and comfort to which he retreated upon all occasions 3. His whole or onely delight When deprived of all other things this was in stead of all delights to him all which shew his high esteem of the Word DOCT. That the afflicted mans true consolation is in the Word of God I will pursue the Point in the method that I have laid forth in the parts of the Text. 1. A Man after God's own heart such as David was may be afflicted why First Because God hath chosen another way of expressing his love to his people than by outward things for he will govern the spiritual part of the world by Faith and not by Sense therefore none shall know love and hatred by things that are before him Eccles. 9. 1. that is by meer outward events or things obvious to outward sense the significations of his love are more hidden Prov. 3. 31 32. Solomon supposeth that the Oppressor may be in a flourishing condition yet all this while the Lord hates him his secret is with the righteous we know his fatherly love to us not by things without us but things within us Rom. 8. 16. 1 John 3. 4. Hereby we know that he abideth in us by the Spirit which he hath given us Gal. 4. 6. He hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son into our hearts Outward things would soon be overvalued and we should take them as our whole felicity and portion if besides their sutableness to our present needs and appetites they should come to us as special evidences of God's love 2dly Afflictions are necessary to the best Certain it is God will conduct his people to glory not only by his internal but external Providence Now to humble us to wean us from the world there is need of afflictions 1 Pet. 1. 6. Te are in heaviness for a season if need be We are wanton vain neglectful of God unmindful of heavenly things if God did not put us under the Discipline of the Cross our minds and hearts would be more alienated from God and heavenly things Psal. 119. 67. Before I was afflicted I went astray Now since the best need it God will not be wanting in any part or point of necessary government to them 3dly That they may know the worth and benefit of God's Word and the comfort of it may be seen and felt by experience how able it is to support us and to uphold a sinking heart under any trouble whatsoever Rom. 15. 4. In full prosperity when we seem to live upon the creature we know not the benefit of God's promise nor how to live by Faith as the use of Bladders in swimming is not known while we are upon firm land The Word of God provideth comforts for the obedient not only at the end of the journey but for their support at present while they are in the way These comforts would be useless if never put upon the tryal therefore none of God's children must look to be ex●…pted 1 Pet. 5. 9. All these afflictions are accomplished in your brethren that are in the world Our condition is no harder than the rest of the Saints of God that have passed thorow the world 2. David was ready to sink under his burden and so are other the people of God ready to perish when they look to the bare afflictions This may come First From the grievousness of the affliction which staggereth and amaseth them Psal. 60. 3. Thou hast shewed thy people hard things thou hast made us to drink of the wine of astonishment Their thoughts are confounded as a man that has taken a poysonous Potion They know not to what hand to turn are wholly dispirited and put out of all comfort 2dly It comes from the weakness of the Saints There is some weakness and imbecility in the best more than they are aware of as when David was ready to faint under the Cross before troubles came We are like unto Peter we think we can walk upon the Sea but some boistrous wind or other assaults our confidence and then we cry out Help Master we perish Mat. 14. 30. We reckon only upon the Sea but do not think of the wind and so our weakness is made evident by proof whence cometh this weakness 1. Partly because we look more to the Creature than to God and to our dangers than to the power that is to carry us through them Isa. 51. 12 13. I even I am he that comforteth thee who art thou that thou shouldst be afraid of a man that shall dye and of the son of man that shall be made as grass And forgettest the Lord thy Maker that hath stretched forth the heavens and laid the foundations of the earth and hast feared continually every day because of the fury of the oppressor as if he were ready to destroy and where is the fury of the oppressor We that have the immortal and almighty God to be our Protector and Saviour why should we be afraid of a frail mortal man 2. If they look to God yet God doth not seem to look to them If a thin Curtain be drawn between God and us we are presently dismayed as if he were wholly gone and because of our hardships question the love of God Psal. 77. 9. Hath God forgotten to be gracious hath he in anger shut up his tender mercies Isa. 49. 14. Zion hath said the Lord hath forsaken me my God hath forgotten me though our condition be every way consistent with the fatherly love of God Heb. 12. 5. Have you forgotten the Exhortation which speaketh to you as children We are children though under discipline and God is a Father though he frowneth as well as smileth 3. Impatiency of delay if we question not his love yet cannot tarry his leisure Certainly it is very good to wait God's leisure though he seemeth asleep he will awake for our help Faith makes us like people that dig the Pit and wait for the rain to come down and fill it To lay the Cloth though we know not whence the Provision will be sent But the people of God
Law but the doctrine of the Gospel As if he had said Stick to that Doctrine where you have been quickned comforted revived and your hearts setled for God hath owned that doctrine He appeals to their own conscience and to their own known experience that they should not quit the doctrine of Faith but prize and keep close to it for surely that which hath been a means of begetting grace in our souls that should be highly prized by us If God hath wrought grace and any comfort and peace stick there and own God there and be not easily moved from thence Another Apostle reasons Iam. 1. 18 19. God hath begotten us by the word of truth wherefore be swift to hear that is O! do not neglect hearing take heed of forsaking or neglecting the Word for then you go against your own known experience you know here you had your life quickning comfort strength and will you be turned off from this for many times a Seducer may turn off a Believer from the Word which hath given him his first knowledge of Christ. There are three Causes which carry Saints to the Word and other Ordinances viz. Necessity Natural Appetite and inward Inclination and Experience Necessity they cannot live without the Word Natural Appetite and inward Inclination they have hearts suited to this work the Spirit which wrought in the heart hath put a nature in them sutable to the work And Experience they have found benefit by it These are the three grand Causes of respect to the Word and they are all implied or exprest in that 1 Pet. 2. 2. As new born Babes desire the sincere milk of the Word there 's natural appetite for the Word we have them come as new born Babes and there 's necessity you cannot live nor keep nor increase what you have unless you keep to the Word and there 's Experience if so be you have tasted you have had powerful impressions and quicknings by this Word We should engage our hearts upon experience the comfort life and light that we have had by the Word of God 3d Reason Our own spiritual Estate will sooner be discerned by these Experiences the comfort and quickning received from the Word in the way of duty for experience worketh hope Rom. 5. 4. If your experiences be observed and regarded this works a hopeful dependance upon God for everlasting glory your evidences will be more ready and sooner come to hand The motions of our souls are various and through corruption very confused and dark and this is that which makes it so difficult upon actual search to d●…cern how it stands between us and God it 's for want of observation But now if there be constant observation of what passeth between us and God how he hath quickned comforted and owned us in our attendance upon him and what he hath done to bring on our souls in the way of life these will make up an evidence and will abundantly conduce to the quickning and comforting of our hearts Use I. For Information It shews us 1. The Reason why so many neglect and contemn God's Word because they never g●… benefit by it they find no life in it therefore no delight in it Those that are quickned 〈◊〉 knowledge the mercy and improve it they esteem the Word and have a greater c●…science of their duty It is not enough to find truth in truth not to be able to contrad●… it but you must find life then we will prize and esteem it when it hath been lively in its operations to our souls 2. It shews the Reason why so many forget the Word because they are not quickned You would remember it by a good token if there were a powerful impression left upon your souls and the reason is because you do not meditate upon it that you may receive this lively influence of the Spirit For a Sermon would not be forgotten if it had left any lively impression upon your souls 3. If we want quickning we must go to God for it and God works powerfully by the influence of his grace and so he quickens us by his Spirit and he works morally by the Word both by the Promises and Threatnings thereof and so if you would be quickned you must use the means attend upon Reading and Preaching and meditating upon the Word As he works powerfully with respect to himself so morally by reasonings Use II. By way of Reflection upon our selves Have we had any of these Experiences David found life in God's Word therefore resolves never to forego it or forget it Therefore what experience have you had of the Word of God surely at least at first conversion there was the work of Faith and Repentance at first you will have this experience How were you brought home to God what have you had no quickning from the Word of God Case But here 's a Case of Conscience Doth every one know their Conversion or way of their own Conversion Christians are usually sensible of this first work There is so much bitter sorrow and afterwards so much rejoycing of hope which doth accompany that surely this should not be strange But though you have not been so wary to mark God's dealings with you and the particular quicknings of your souls yet at least when the Lord raised you out of your security and brought you home to himself you should have remembred it 1 Thess. 1. 9. They themselves shew of us what manner of entring we had unto you The entrance usually is known though afterward the work be carried on with less observation Growth is not so sensible as the first change God's first work is most powerful meets with greater opposition and so leaves a greater feeling upon us and therefore it were strange if we were brought home to Christ and no way privy and conscious to the way of it as if all were done in our sleep I say to think so were to give security a soft Pillow to rest on And therefore what quicknings had you then Can you say Well I shall never forget this happy season and occasion when God first awakened me to look after himself Many of God's Children cannot trace the particular Footsteps of their Conversion and mark out all the Stages of Christ's Journey and approach to their Souls 〈◊〉 are not alike thus troubled But yet that men may not please themselves with the 〈◊〉 position of imaginary grace wrought in them without their privity and knowledge let ●…e speak to this grand Case this manner of entrance of Christ into our souls how we are quickned from the dead and made living 1. None are converted but are first convinced of their danger and evil estate God's first work is upon their understandings Ier. 31. 19. After I was instructed I smote upon the thigh c. There is some light breaks in upon the Soul which sets them seriously a considering What am I Whither am I going What will become of me And Rom. 7. 9. When the
that wisdom Again a necessary good is to be prefer'd before an arbitrary now one thing is necessary Luke 10. 42. It is not necessary to be rich to live in pleasure to wallow in delights within a while we shall not be a Peny the better for these things It is not necessary to have so great a plenty of worldly accommodations it is not necessary to our happiness hereafter nor to the comfort of our lives for the present to have so much here Now see who is the wiser Man he that looks no higher than to some subordinate end or he that fixeth upon the last end He that pitcheth upon some limited good or he that pitcheth upon the most universal good that will yield him all things He that pleaseth his fancy with toys or he that looketh after a solid benefit He that taketh care for his body or he that minds his soul He that mindeth that which is accessary or indifferent to his happiness or he that mindeth that which is mainly necessary He that looketh after a perishing vanity or he that mindeth eternal happiness Certainly if there be a God and this God can do all things and our happiness lies in the enjoyment of him he is the wisest Man that takes God for his Portion and makes it his business to keep in with him and so doth a child of God Thus wisdom is seen in fixing our aim 2 Wisdom lies in the choice of apt and proper means and that is to take the Word for his Rule First God for his Portion then the Word for his Rule To presume of the end without using the means is folly therefore next to a good end and scope there must be a good path Now that we might not grope blindfold and wander up and down in fond Superstitions God hath given us his Word to instruct us in all things which concern our duty and our danger and to make us every way wise to salvation 2 Tim. 3. 15. If our happiness lies in the enjoyment of God it is meet God should appoint the way how we should come to him We should have been at a great loss if the Lord had given us grace to fix upon him as our end if he had not given us a Rule we could not find out our way But now God hath so exactly chalk'd it out That a Fool shall not err therein Isa. 35. 5. Such plain directions as makes wise the simple Psal. 19. 7. A plain Rule found out by the wisdom of God and so stated for all and peremptorily commanded to all that the most simple that will give up themselves to God's direction they shall find it Now who are wise they that walk in the way of their own hearts or they that will take God's direction in his Word Those that will live according to the counsel of God's Word or those that will fashion their lives according to the course of this World or according to the customs and examples of carnal Men like themselves Who is wiser they that will enquire after the mind of God who is wisdom itself and can best judge of wisdom and folly or they which shape their course according to the secular wisdom that prevails in the world and which hath often failed in its end who the wiser Man he that hath taken God's counsel and can never be deceived or those that walk according to the course of this world and find themselves wholly to be deceived Psal. 49. 13. This their way is their folly yet their posterity approve their sayings They will imitate that folly which hath been so fatal and so mischievous to others and think themselves happy Many carnal Men when they died they all-to-be-fooled themselves and lamented it that they had taken no more care to please God and walked no more closely with him that they had been more busie about worldly things than they had been for their precious and immortal souls therefore surely the children of God are wiser than their opposites that give up themselves to the vanity of carnal Pursuits 3 Wisdom lies in a vigorous prosecution of fit means to the best end without which all is nothing It is in vain to be sensible of our end and to be convinced of our way unless we mind to walk in it Many carnal Men will say that their happiness lies in the enjoyment of God that the Scriptures are the Word of God and his directions to attain that happiness but their folly lies in this that they have not a hearty consent to take this Word for their Rule and give up themselves to the directions thereof Prov. 17. 16. Wherefore is there a price in the hand of a fool to get wisdom seeing he hath no heart to it that is such means and such opportunities given them to be happy but that 's a price in the hands of a Fool his heart hangs off from the way and therefore here 's the great effect of wisdom when we do with all our hearts give up our selves to God that he may take his own way with us to make us happy for ever Wisdom lies in obedience Deut. 4. 6 7. Keep therefore and do them for this is your wisdom c. The World will say it is a simple course to be so nice scrupulous and precise but God tells you it is your wisdom and they that keep his statutes are a wise and understanding People The Devil fills us with all kind of prejudices against Religion To such as love ease he represents difficulty and the yoke of Christ to be a tedious yoke If they love honour he tells them of reproaches and disgrace If they affect wisdom he telleth them it is a low doctrine beneath the sublimity of their parts and abilities Now God assureth you this is your wisdom and understanding So Iob 28. 28. And unto man he said Behold the fear of the Lord that is wisdom and to depart from evil is understanding There 's an enquiry there in that Chapter where wisdom is to be sound and it is resolv'd that it is nowhere to be found but in a strict obedience not in the knowledge of the secrets of nature not in the crafts and policies of the world not in the plots and contrivances of the wicked not in dexterity to get wealth but in keeping God's Commandments with all preciseness and care Briefly this dextrous and effectual prosecution of the means which lead to our end lies in three things and so accordingly we may know wisdom all these are call'd wisdom in Scripture 1. In diligence and constant labour in the spiritual life When a Man makes Religion his work then he is a wise Man true to his end There are a company of notional Fools in the world that make Religion their talk but do not make it their work that can talk at as high a rate as others they have a naked approbation of the things of God but do not lie under the power and dominion
for they will grow upon us and therefore it makes for the encouragement of you that they should sooner begin with God 2. It makes for the encouragement of those that have the Education of Youth as Masters of Families Parents and the like Do not say it is too soon for them to learn No Age is too soon for God 2 Tim. 3. 5. Thou hast from thy Infancy learned the Scriptures When we suck in Religion with our milk it 's a great advantage those things we keep with us that we learn young Prov. 22. 6. Train up a child in the way he should go and when he is old he will not depart from it When the new Vessel is seasoned with this precious liquor it will keep the taste tender Twigs are bent this way when they are as Wax capable of any impression Use 3. Caution for young ones If young men should obtain this benefit to grow wiser than the Ancients notwithstanding this yet they should learn to shew reverence to the aged Iob 32. 4 5 6. And then to ascribe it to God saith he ver 8. There is a spirit in man and the inspiration of the Almighty giveth them understanding It is not the sharpness of our wit but the inspiration of his Grace he is the Author of all this wisdom that is wrought in us Use 4. To humble the Aged that have not made conscience of their time and ways and therefore are more blockish than many Children Isa. 65. 20. There shall be no more an infant of days nor an old man that hath not filled his days Old men that are ignorant of the mysteries of Faith after they have long sate under the Word of God and have many advantages to improve their youth Heb. 5. 12. When for the time ye ought to be Teachers ye have need that one teach you again which be the first principles of the Oracles of God and are become such as have need of milk and not of strong meat In this sense God is said to take away the understanding of the Aged that is by a just judgment for their unfruitfulness and unprofitableness under the means of Grace They that are much younger than you are wise in comparison of you when they excel you for ripeness in wisdom for solidness and setledness in manners in a course of godliness Those old men that draw near to the Grave before they have consider'd either the end wherefore they came into the world or the state into which they shall be translated when they go out of it those are Children of 100 years old that have nothing to reckon Age by but wrinckles and gray hairs Doct. 3. That the way to increase in spiritual understanding is to be studious in practical holiness The Word that will give you understanding will keep you out of all snares sufficiently direct you to true happiness But how shall we get it refer it to practice practise what you know and you shall know more it must needs be so 1. Because these are such as have God's Promise Iohn 7. 17. If any man will do his will he shall know of the doctrine whether it be of God or whether I speak of my self They that make conscience of their ways season their course in the fear of God that take Gods direction with them God will tell them they shall know what doctrine is of God 2. They have a greater clearness of mind and understanding therefore must needs discern holy things why because they are freed from the clouds of lust and passion which do insensibly blind and make them stay in generals Mat. 5. 8. Blessed are the pure in heart for they shall see God Saith Nazianzene Where there is purity there 's brightness where there 's a pure heart there 's a great deal more clearness in the understanding Reason and Fancy are dark unless a Man have a command over his Passions and Affections over his Passions of Anger Fear Grief and over his Affections of Love and Joy and Appetite towards sensual delights unless he be able to govern these things he will never truly discern the mind of God for the seasoning his course in living a holy life that of the Apostle is notable 2 Pet. 1. 5. Add to your faith virtue and to virtue knowledge and to knowledge temperance unless they be able to govern their affections in the use of worldly delights pleasures and profits they will never have this practical knowledge and therefore the only way to know divine things as Nazianzene well observes is conscientiously to keep the Commandments of God If you would know the Will of God do not spend your time in heaping up Notions but framing your heart to obedience governing your affections by the fear of God and suiting your hearts to the Word of God Alas Those that seek knowledge out of ambition curiosity and vain ostentation and lie under the power of vile affections get but very little true spiritual light they may have the understanding of Teachers but not the understanding to season them and guide them in their communion with God 3. The more we practise the more Religion is exemplifi'd and made sensible so that we come to understand more of the sweetness of it and on the other hand the more of difficulty is in it when there is nothing but bare Notions and naked apprehensions There we have a double advantage an exact Rule and more experience of the sweetness of Religion Prov. 3. 17. All her ways are ways of pleasantness When we practise what we know then we come to know the sweetness of entertaining communion with the Lord and they know more of the difficulty of Religion they know where their hearts are more averse and more in danger whereas others that soar aloft in Notions and idle and lofty speculations have not this experience 4. They that practise study things with more affection than others mightily help their understanding The more piety and zeal any man hath the more will the Lord bless his Studies Paul profited in the Iewish Religion above many of his Equals why Gal. 1. 14. Being more exceedingly zealous of the tradition of my Fathers A man that hath a zeal in any thing will profit more than others so he that hath a zeal for the things of God profits above others A blunt Iron if red hot will pierce through an Inch-board sooner than a cold Tool though never so sharp so those that have blunt parts in comparison of others yet if they have zeal and good affections they will pierce deep into the mysteries of Religion they that have sharper parts want the fire of zeal 5. The more fruitful any Grace is the more doth it abound with us and therefore when your knowledge is fruitful you will find it increased by laying out your Talents Col. 1. 10. Be fruitful in every good work always increasing in the knowledge of God First he presseth knowledge in order to practice then he presseth
is understanding So much as we hate sin so much of spiritual wisdom and spiritual understanding Certainly to hate sin is wisdom I prove it from the nature of sin All disobedience is the greatest folly that can be in the world and therefore if to sin be to do foolishly ●…o hate sin is to be wise and not to have understanding certainly is a fruit of solly for a man to do that which will condemn himself if ever he comes to himself Now when a man comes to himself as when he dies or repents Oh how will his heart condemn and reproach him for the vanity of his worldly course when he is fill'd with his own ways especially Repentance that 's a coming to our selves As a man when he hath slept out his drunkenness and excess and begins to look back upon his follies committed under that distemper such is Repentance it is an after-wisdom and therefore it argues that there was an imprudence and inconsideration of the things we repent of and therefore we condemn our selves That is folly which gratifies those that are our utter enemies now sin it gratifies the Devil which seeks our ruine He goes about seeking whom he may devour 1 Pet. 5. 8. You please him that seeks your utter destruction and will you grieve God and please the Devil That is Folly which brings no disadvantage upon him whom you disobey but upon you it brings the greatest mischief imaginable God is not hurt by your sins he is above our injury Iob 9. 12. If thou be wise thou shalt be wise for thy self but if thou scornest thou alone shalt bear it There is no hurt done to God all the hurt is to our own souls Prov. 8. 36. He that sinneth against me wrongs his own soul and he that hateth me loveth death Every sinner is his own Murderer and his own Destroyer All those Arrows we shoot up against Heaven they fall down with more violence upon our own heads That is folly for a man to hazard a Jewel for a Trifle to stake his Soul and Heaven and Eternal Happiness against a little flesh-pleasing and carnal satisfaction Ionah 2. 8. They that observe lying vanities for sake their own mercies Poor fugacious comforts lying vanities to follow after and forsake their own mercy that is all that happiness which might have been their own A Sinner is a mad Games●…er that throws away the Kingdom of Heaven at every Cast for a little momentany short delight and vain contentment That is folly to break with him upon whom our All depends our Life Being Comfort Happiness so doth sin make ●…s break with God Isa. 59. 2. Tour iniquities have separated between you and your God Well then if sin be to do foolishly to depart from sin this is wisdom this is understanding Certainly he that provides against the greatest mischief doth escape the greatest danger he is the wise man and not he that provides against temporal inconveniences only as poverty and disgrace He that escapes sin escapes hell the wrath of God the extremest misery that can light upon a poor creature Prov. 15. 24. The way of the wise is above to avoid hell beneath and therefore 't is a high point of wisdom to hate sin 2 As it is a high point of understanding so it is a fruit and effect of understanding According to the degree of understanding that we have so will our hatred of sin be for he saith Through thy precepts I get understanding therefore I hate every false way To prove this by two Reasons 1. Our affections follow our apprehensions There is no way to come to the heart but by the mind by the understanding Look as there is no way to come to the bowels to purge out distempers that are there but by the mouth stomach and other passages that lead to the bowels so there is no way to come to the heart and affections but by the understanding knowledge that begets all other affections those which belong to choice and pursuit or those that belong to slight or aversation Those that belong to choice and pursuit desire delight There is no desire of that which is unknown so in those things that belong to slight and aversation those affections be it grief or shame for sin already committed or fear or hatred that sin may not be committed Grief or shame Ier. 31. 19. After I was inst●…ucted I smote upon my thigh I was ashamed yea even confounded because I did bear the reproach of my youth It is light which humbles and the soul is affected according to the sight it hath of things or go to those affections which serve to prevent the commission of sin as hatred and fear Hatred in the Text a good understanding goes before a through hatred will follow 2. Reason that when the mind is fraught with truths and gotten a good stock of knowledge by God's precepts then it will be checking and urging the soul to caution against sin and therefore the more understanding you get by God's precepts the more are you warned and put in mind of things Psal. 119. 11. I have hid thy Word in mine heart that I might not sin against thee When the Word hath laid up in the heart a good stock of knowledge there will be one thought or other that will be rising up and defying all temptations wherewith you are assaulted Eph. 6. 17. Take unto you the helmet of salvation and the sword of the Spirit which is the Word of God In the spiritual conflict we need weapons not only desensive but offensive not only the shield of Faith but the sword of the Spirit that we may destroy and slay sin and withstand temptation and chase away Satan from us what 's this sword of the Spirit the Word of God the more seasonable relief the more fresh thoughts you have to withstand temptations which are apt to come in upon you Pr. 6. 21 22. Bind them upon thine heart when thou goest it shall lead thee when thou sleepest it shall keep thee and when thou awakest it shall talk with thee This will always be urging him to duty and warning him of his danger A word of Use. 1 Get understanding 2 Never count your selves to understand any thing but as you increase in hatred of sin 1. Get understanding Partly 1 because there are many false ways you will never discern without much understanding There are many false ways that are palliated and represented under the shew of good and we are easily ensnared unless we have light to chuse our way 1 Cor. 2. 8. Had they known it they would not have crucified the Lord of glory A man will be carried on with a great deal of life and activity in a way contrary to God Acts 26. 9. I verily thought with my self that I ought to do many things contrary to the Name of Iesus of Nazareth O the tyranny and madness of an erring Conscience and an ignorant Zealot what a ready
feet and path First In general observe this It is not a light to our brains to fill us with empty Notions but a light to our feet to regulate our practice and to guide our actions Ier. 6. 16. He doth not say hearken after the true Religion but walk therein For a man to study the Scripture only to satisfie curiosity only to know what 's right and good and not follow it with all his heart is but to make a rod for his own back and doth but cause his own condemnation to be sore and terrible Luke 12. 47. To be able to dispute for truth and not lie under the power of it to avoid Heresie and live in Vice will never bring him to Heaven Gal. 6. 16. It is not them that are able to talk of it but to walk according to this rule not to play with it but to work with it Knowledge and practice must be joined together they do never well asunder but excellent together Secondly In our Practice 1 Our Path our general choice A man that consults with God's Word The Lord will teach him the way that he shall chuse Psal. 25. 12. Every thing appointed to an end must have all things absolutely necessary to that end else it is not perfect in its kind though perfect to guide us to eternal life therefore it must contain all things that belong or conduce to that end It is not a Rule given us to be rich or safe but to be eternally happy 2 As 't is a light to our path so to our feet How in the particular actions that we perform and in the particular conditions that we pass through 1. In the particular actions that we perform Every action we go about must be guided by the Word why because obedience in particular actions we are most apt to miscarry in Many are wise in generals but in particulars they quite mistake their way We have general Notions that we must be holy ay but we are not holy in all manner of conversation 1 Pet. 1. 15. In every creek and turning of your lives in all your actions of eating drinking sleeping and waking we are to be mindful and respect the command of God in all these No path of a Christian's conversation but ought to savor of grace and holiness not only his religious but his common and civil actions Every action is a step to Heaven or Hell for this life is compared to a walk and in a walk every step brings us onward in our way Briefly in every act either sin or grace interposeth therefore we had need look to every step and still to walk according to Rule 2. It guides us in all the conditions that we pass through In every Age here 's milk for the weak and strong meat for men of ripe age In every calling from the King to the lowest Beggar In every state of life adversity prosperity still here 's light for you There are two Parties whose interest it is to decry the clearness of Scripture Papists and Libertines Papists they are afraid to stand to this tryal they would bring all to the judgment of the Church therefore 't is for their interest that the Scriptures were not a clear safe and a full direction Libertines they decry the clearness of Scripture upon several grounds Those that plead for a boundless Toleration what 's their great Argument Nothing is certain in Religion If the Word be a clear Rule then c. SERMON CXIII PSAL. CXIX VER 105. Thy Word is a lamp unto my feet and a light unto my path HEre I shall answer five Objections that are made by Cavellers Object 1. First If it be so clear a Light why do men so often mistake that have the Scriptures and consult with them yea why is there such differences among good men Answ. I answer in general There is Light in the Scriptures but there is darkness in men that are conversant about them The Object may be well represented when the faculty is not well disposed There are defects in them to whom this discovery is made though they have light yet they want eyes the Sun giveth light enough though blind men cannot see it the Word doth whatsoever is necessary on its own part To the beholding of any thing by the outward sense there must not only be light to make the object conspicuous but also a faculty of seeing in the eye blind men cannot see at noon-day nor the sharpest sighted at midnight There is light in the Scriptures surely for God would not deal hypocritically with us that are his people if he hath given us a rule he would not wrap it up in darkness so as we should not know his meaning so that the defect is in us This in general But secondly there are many causes of mens mistake 1. Some come to the Word with a presumption of their own wit and leaning upon their own understanding as if that should discover the whole counsel of God and these God never undertook to teach Psal. 25. 9. The meek will he guide in judgment and the meek will he teach his way Those that in an humble sense of their own nothingness depend upon his direction them will he teach Iam. 1. 21. Receive with meekness the ingrafted Word of God We have caution given us and admonitions against pride and arrogance and self-dependence Prov. 3. 3 4 5 6. 2. Many bring their prejudicate Opinions along with them and are biassed and prepossessed before they come to the Word of God and so do not so much take up the sense which the Scriptures offer as seek to impose their own sense on them and regulate the Scriptures to their own hearts not regulating their hearts and principles and senses according to the Word of God Optimus ille lector est qui dictorum intelligentiam saith Hilary expectat c. That mind which is preoccupied with evil opinions and enslaved to preconceived conclusions they do not take any thing from the Word but impose something upon it which God never revealed there If the weights be equal yet if the balance be not equipendent wrong may be done They come with an Idol in their own hearts Ezek. 14. 2. as those that would ask counsel of the Lord that were resolved beforehand Ier. 42. While we look through the Spectacles of our own fancies and preconceptions the mind poisoned with Error seemeth to see what we see not 3. Some search the Scriptures not out of any love to the truth or to know the mind of God but to oppose it rather and so seek a pretence from thence to justifie their private faction in way of opposition against God The Devil gets Scripture to wrest it to his own purpose Mat. 4. 6. They read not to be better but to cavil and put a greater varnish upon the Devil's cause as Iulian did search the Scriptures to pick an advantage against the true Religion and scoff at them that profest it and
lest ye forget the Covenant of the Lord your God Quest. But when should we renew our Covenant or our Oath of Allegiance to God 1. Partly when we stand in need of some special favor from God or when we draw nigh to him in some special duty As Iacob when God manifested himself to him and he had communion with him at Bethel then he vowed a Vow Gen. 28. 21. So Num. 21. 2. Israel vowed a Vow to the Lord when they were in some distress And Psal. 65. 14. I will pay the vows of my distress which I made when I was in trouble 2. Again after some special mercy when under some love pang of spiritual rejoycing and we have a deep sense of God's love to us or a new pledge of his love to us either in spiritual or temporal benefits and our soul melted out towards God in acts of spiritual rejoycing Psal 116. 8 9. For thou hast delivered my soul from death mine eyes from tears and my feet from falling I will walk before the Lord in the land of the living And when God breaks the force and power of Enemies when he makes the wrath of man turn to his praise then Psal. 76. 11. Vow and pay unto the Lord your God Those Pagan Mariners they made their Vows to God when the Lord deliver'd them from the storm Ionah 1. 16. 3. When all things go to ruine when the state of Religion is collapsed either in a Nation or in our hearts after some notable breaches of Covenant by a people or by a person and we have warped from God seem to have wrested our selves out of his arms then to bind our selves to him again and to renew our Vows for upon this occasion doth Iosiah enter into Covenant with God and cause the people to stand to the oath 2 Chron 34. 4 When we are to draw nigh to God in the use of the Seals of the New Covenant when a Man is to revive his own right in the Covenant of Grace so when we are to draw nigh to God in the Lord's Supper which is the New Testament in Christ's blood which is the Seal of the Covenant then we should solemnly bind our selves to the duty of it and swear to the Lord anew Use. To press you with all earnestness to enter into Covenant with God and then to keep it and make it good to be sensible of the Vow of God upon you and to keep firm in the bond of the holy Oath 1 First To enter into solemn Obligation to God a purpose of holy and close walking with God I shall press you hereunto 1. God's Laws are holy just and good therefore certainly we should not be backward to swear to him because we cannot bring our selves seriously to give up our selves to the Lord they are righteous Judgments Suppose you could be free yet subjection to God were to be chosen before liberty therefore when Christ invites us to take his yoke upon our selves he doth not so much urge his authority All things are given to me of my Father therefore come to me but he urgeth the sweetness of Obedience and the pleasure we may find in coming to him Mat. 11. 29. My yoke is easie and my burden is light If a Man were free to chuse whether he would be for God or no yet the perfection or well-being of the reasonable nature being so much concerned in obedience to God you should chuse those Laws before liberty What doth the Lord require of you to be holy just temperate often praying and praising his Name and are these things hard a Man is not a Man if he do not yield to these things Tit. 2. 12. All our duties are comprised in those three Adverbs soberly righteously godly by being sober a Man delights himself and by being just and righteous a Man delights others without this the World would be but like a Den of Thieves and by being godly he doth delight God If we had only leave to love God and serve him much more when we have a command to serve him to be often in communion with him it is the happiest life in the World There 's a great deal of pleasure sweetness and rational contentment doth accompany the exercise of these three graces Sobriety Righteousness Godliness 2. We are already obliged by God's command so that whether you resolve or no you are bound There are some things that are left free in our own power before the Vow passeth upon us as Acts 5. 4. Was it not in thy power Ay but there are other things that are not in our power God's right over the creature is valid whether he consent to it or no as the natural relation doth infer and enforce duty without consent This is the difference between voluntary and natural relations look as a Father is a Father whether the child own him or no in that quality and relation and without his consent a Father as a Father hath a right to command the child But there are duties that depend upon our consent as in the choice of an Husband or Master So here 's a natural relation between God and us he our Creator we his Creatures he our Superior and we his Inferior by reason of his authority and eternal right and God may urge this I am the Lord though he do not urge that I am the Lord thy God Sometimes I am the Lord Lev. 18. 5. his own Sovereignty Sometimes The Lord thy God ver 2. which argues our choice and consent to chuse him for our God therefore thou art not free 3. Actual consent and resolution on our part is required that the sense of our duty may be more explicite upon our heart 2 Chron. 30. 8. Yield your selves to the Lord. In the Original Give the Lord the hand that is strike hands with him enter into Covenant with him say Lord I will be for thee and thou for me chuse him for your portion and give up your selves to be the Lord's people Rom. 12. 1. Present your bodies a living sacrifice holy acceptable unto God which is your reasonable service He alludes to the Eucharistical Sacrifices All our offerings must not be sin-offerings but thank-offerings so present your selves Under the Law a Man he brought his thank-offering and laid his hand upon it Lord I am thine It was implied in your Baptism and it is but reason that you should own your Baptismal Vow when you come to years of discretion A bargain that is made for an Heir during his Non-age it is confirmed by him when he comes to age You were dedicated to God's service when you were young and knew not what you did now when you come to chuse your own way and at years of discretion you should stand to what was done in your Name to God therefore there must be a serious and solemn consent of your heart 4. It is for your profit to chuse the strictest Engagements Not only to approve the ways of God
him but when his heart was upheld in the ways of God So Col. 3. 3. Your life is hid with Christ in God They had a life visible as other men had but your life that which you chiefly esteem and indeed count to be your life is a hidden thing Here I shall enquire 1. What is this spiritual life 2. Shew that there is a spiritual life distinct from the natural 3. The excellency of the one above the other 4. When this spiritual life is in good plight 1. What is meant by spiritual life 'T is threefold a life of justification and sanctification and glorification First The life of justification We are all dead by the merit of sin When a man is cast at law we say he is a dead man Through one mans offence all were dead Rom. 5. 5. We are sensible of it when the Law cometh in with power Rom. 7. 9. we begin to awaken out of our dead sleep Gods first work is to awaken him and open his eyes that he may see he is a Child of wrath a condemned person undone without a pardon when the Law came sin revived and I died before he thought himself a living man in as good an estate as the best but when he was enlightned to see the true meaning of the Law he found himself no better than a dead man Now when justified the sinner is translated from a sentence of death to a sentence of life passed in his favour and therefore it is called justification of life Rom. 5. 18. and Ioh. 5. 29. He that believeth shall not enter into condemnation but hath passed from death to life that is is acquitted from the sentence of death and condemnation passed on him by the Law Secondly The life of sanctification which lyes in a Conjunction of the soul with the spirit of God even as the natural life is a Conjunction of the body with the soul. Adam though his body was organized and formed was but a dead lump till God breathed the soul into him so till our union with Christ by the communion of his spirit we are dead and unable to every good work But the Holy Ghost puts us into a living condition Ephes. 2. 4 5. We were dead in trespasses and sins yet now hath he quickned us There is a new manner of being which we have upon the receiving of Grace Thirdly Life eternal or the life of Glory which is the final result and consummation of both the former For justification and sanctification are but the beginnings of our happy estate justification is the cause and foundation and sanctification is an introduction or entrance into that life that we shall ever live with God 2. Now this life is distinct from life natural for it hath a distinct principle which is the spirit of God the other a reasonable soul 1 Cor. 15. 45. The first man Adam was made a living soul the last Adam was made a quickning spirit Parents are but instruments of Gods Providence to unite body and soul together but here we live by the spirit or by Christ Gal. 2. 20. God and we are united together Then we live when joined to God as the fountain of life whence the soul is quickned by the spirit of Grace This is to live indeed 'T is called the life of God Ephes. 4. 18. not by common influence of his Providence but by special influences of his Grace Secondly It is distinct in its operations Unumquodque operatur secundum suam formam as things that move upward and downward according to their form so the new Nature carrieth men out to their own natural motion and tendency Walking as men 1 Cor. 3. 3. and walking as Christians are two distinct things The natural and humane life is nothing else but the orderly use of sense and reason but the Divine and spiritual life is the acting of Grace in order to communion with God as if another Soul dwelt in the same Body Ego non sum ego Old lusts old acquaintance old temptations knock at the same door but there is another Inhabitant Thirdly Distinct in supports Hidden Manna Meat indeed Drink indeed Ioh. 6. 55. There is an outward man and an inward man the inward man hath its life as well as the outward And as life so taste omnis vita gustu ducitur The hidden man must be fed with hidden Manna meat and drink that the world knows not of its comforts are never higher than in decays of the body 1 Cor. 4. 16. A man is as his delight and pleasure is it must have something agreeable Fourthly Distinct in ends The aim and tendency of the new Nature is to God 't is from God and therefore to him Gal. 2. 19. 'T is a life whereby a man is enabled to move and act towards God as his utmost end to glorifie him or to enjoy him A carnal man's personal contentment is his highest aim water riseth not beyond its fountain But a gracious man doth all to please God Col. 1. 11. to glorifie God 1 Cor. 10. 31. And this not only from his obligations Rom. 14. 7 8. but from his being that principle of life that is within him Ephes. 1. 12. A man that hath a new principle cannot live without God his great purpose and desire is to enjoy more of him 3. The excellency of the one above the other There is life carnal life natural and life spiritual Life carnal as much as it glittereth and maketh a noise in the world 't is but a death in comparison of the life of Grace 1 Tim. 5. 6. She that liveth in pleasure is dead whilst she liveth and let the dead bury their dead Luke 9. 60. and dead in trespasses and sins None seem to make so much of their lives as they yet dead as to any true life and sincere comfort So life natural 't is but a vapour a wind and a little puff of wind that is soon gone take it in the best Nature is but a continued sickness our food is a constant medicine to remedy the decays of Nature most men use it so alimenta sunt medicamenta But more particularly First Life natural is a common thing to Devils Reprobates Beasts Worms Trees and Plants but this is the peculiar priviledge of the Children of God 1 Iohn 4. 13. Therefore Gods Children think they have no life unless they have this life If we think we have a life because we see and hear so do the Worms and smallest Flyes if we think we are alive because we eat drink and sleep so do the Beasts and Cattel if we think we live because we reason and conferr so do the Heathens and Men that shall never see God if we think we have life because we grow well and wax strong proceeding to Old Age so do the Plants and Trees of the Field Nay we have not only this in common with them but in this kind of life other Creatures excel Man The Trees excel us for
growth in bulk and stature who from little Plants grow up into most excellent Cedars In hearing smelling seeing many of the Beasts go before us Eagles in sight Dogs in scent c. Sense is their perfection Some see better others hear better others smell better all have a better appetite to their meat and more strong to digest it For life rational endowed with reason many Philosophers and Ethnicks excel Christians in the use of reason Our excellency then lyeth not in the vegetative life wherein Plants excel thee nor in sensitive which Beasts have better than thou nor in the reasonable which many Reprobates have which shall never see the face of God but in life spiritual to have the soul quickned by the spirit of Grace Secondly Life natural is short and uncertain but this eternal Grace is an immortal flame a spark that cannot be quenched All our labour and toil is to maintain a lamp that soon goeth out or to prop up a Tabernacle that is always falling when we have made provision for it taken away this night c. it is in the power of every Ruffian and Assassinate but this is a life that beginneth in Grace and endeth in Glory Thirdly The outward life is short but yet we soon grow weary of it but this is a life that we shall never be weary of 1 Kin. 19. 4. Elijah requested for himself that he might dye the shortest life is long enough to be incumbred with a thousand miseries If you live to Old Age Age is a burthen to it self Days come in which there is no pleasure Eccl. 12. 1. but you will never wish for an end of this life Fourthly In the preparations and costs which God hath been at to bring about this life at first Without any difficulty God breathed into man the breath of life Gen. 2. 7. But to procure this life of Grace God must become man and set up a new fountain of life in our Natures Ioh. 10. 20. And not only so but to dye Iohn 6. 51. My flesh which I give for the life of the world Consider the price payed for it God would not bestow it at a cheaper rate than the death of his only Son Fifthly In the provisions of it Isai. 57. 10. the life of thy hands With a great deal of toil and labour we get a few supports for it But this is fed with the bloud of Christ influences of Grace and comforts from the Spirit not with gross things but sublime high noble Sixthly In the use for which it serveth It fitteth us for Communion with God as the other fits us for Communion with men Things can have no Communion with one another that do not live the life of one another We dwell in God and God dwelleth in us Seventhly Its necessities are greater which shew the value of the life The higher the life the more dependance Things inanimate as stones need not such supplies as things that have life Where Plants will not grow they must have a kindly soil Among Plants the Vine needs more dressing and care than the Bramble Beasts more than Plants their food appointed God hath most left to mans care as the instrument of his Providence Man more than Beasts Saints more than Men much waiting upon God No Creature so dependent in need of such daily supplies as the inward man Eighthly Its sense is greater There is a greater sensibleness in this life than in any other life all life hath a sweetness in it as any life exceedeth another so more sensibleness a Beast is more sensible of wrong and hurt than a Plant. As the life of a man exceedeth the life of a beast so more capable of joy and grief As the life of Grace exceedeth the life of a Man so its joy is greater its grief is greater trouble of Conscience a wounded spirit So the joy of Saints is unspeakable and glorious Peace that passeth all understanding 4. When is this life in good plight It sheweth it self in these two effects First A comfortable sense of Gods love Secondly An holy disposition to serve and please God The vitality of it lyeth in these two Grates Faith and Love when they are kept up in their height and vigour then it is a life begun it lyeth in the height of Faith apprehending and applying Gods love to the soul I live by faith and the height of love swaying and enclining the heart to obedience 2 Cor. 5. 14. Therefore they desire God to uphold them that they might be kept in heart and comfort and in a free inclination to serve him Now when they find any abatement of faith so that they cannot rejoyce in the promises as they were wont to do they count themselves dead or when their inward man doth not delight it self in the Law of God but they are dull and slow to good things they look upon themselves as dead But on the other side when they find the vigour of this life in them they are merry and glad when they feel their wonted delight in prayer and holy exercises this is that they mainly prize that which is not seen and felt is as if it were not to their comfort not to their safety Use. To exhort us all to look after this life and when you have got it to be very chary of it First Look after this life You that are alienated from the life of God through ignorance and hardness of heart be invited to come to him it is for life Iob 2. 4. Skin for skin and all a man hath will he give for his life We all desire life vile things that live excel more precious that are dead A living Dog is better than a dead Lion Eccl. 9. 4. A Dog was an unclean Beast and of all Creatures a Lion is the most noble and generous A Worm is more capable of life than the Sun Now if life natural be so sweet what is life spiritual No such life as this it fits us for communion with God and blessed Spirits Christ chideth them You will not come to me that you might have life Better you had never lived if you live not this life of Grace When Beasts dye their misery dyeth with them but yours beginneth Secondly If you have this life begun be chary of it If the bodily life be but a little annoyed we complain presently but why are you so stupid and careless and do not look after this to keep the spiritual life in good plight Let your prayers and desires be to have this life strengthened make this your prayer To be strengthened with might by his spirit in the inner man A Christian maketh this to be his main comfort and his main care O how busie are we to provide for the outward man that we may be well fed well cloathed Most mens care is for Back and Belly Oh be more careful for the inner man let that be refreshed with the bloud of Christ and the comforts of the
the Word Scripture Faith and Scripture Repentance are still fed by the Word It teacheth us how to believe and how to repent and how to pray and how to live especially the Heavenly Life and there can be no true Comfort and Peace without the Word Rom. 15. 4. That ye through Patience and Comfort of the Scriptures might have hope 2. Use. We should consider the Truth of the Word partly in the general for the strengthening and settling of our Faith and to make it more clear and solid and certain Eph. 1. 13. In whom ye trusted after that ye heard the Word of Truth When boisterous Temptations would carry us to some evil which God hath forbidden and severely threatned that the point of the sword of the Spirit be put to the bosome of it Deut. 29. 19 20. 2. When you are settling your souls as to the main point of Acceptance with God 1 Tim. 1. 15. This is a faithful saying and worthy of all Acceptation that Iesus Christ came into the World to save sinners of whom I am chief The Word will never deceive them that seek Righteousness there 3. When difficulties arise that oppose the promise or expectation of relief according to the promise you should urge the truth of the word in the very face of difficulty thy law istruth Take Pauls instance Act. 27. God by Promise gave all that sailed with Paul in the Ship their lives yet how many difficulties came to pass At first when they were in the Adriatique Sea for so many days and nights and had neither seen Sun nor Stars they knew not where they were nor whether they should go here was little appearance of Gods making good his word to Paul Another Difficulty fell out they feared they were near some Countrey they sounded and found they were near some land but what land they could not Conjecture and were afraid of being split in pieces against the Rocks but the Shipmen that knew the danger of these Seas they must go out of the Ship they would make use of their long Boat and so they were ready to miscarry in the sight of the land but Paul prevented them And after 't was day the men were spent because of long fasting and conflicting with the Waves they could not ply the Oar. Another difficulty they were where two Seas met they run the Ship a ground and resolved to kill Paul and the rest of the Prisoners lest they should swim to land but the Captain willing to save Paul prevented that purpose And so at length they came all to shore though followed with difficulty upon difficulty God made good his Promise to a tittle ver 44. Pray observe how Paul urged Gods Promise against the greatest difficulties as sufficient ground of encouragement to expect relief ver 25. for I believe God that it shall be even as it was told me SERMON CLX PSALM CXIX VER 143. Trouble and Anguish have taken hold of me yet thy Commandments are my delights IN the Words we have I. Davids Temptation Trouble and Anguish have taken hold of me II. Davids Exercise under that Temptation thy Commandments are my delight III. The Benefit of that Exercise notwithstanding the greatness of the Temptation Yet 'T is propounded with a non obstante I. The Temptation was very great for he speaketh of Trouble and Anguish The joyning of Synonymous Words or words of a like import and signification increaseth the sense and so it sheweth his affection was not ordinary Yea both these words have their particular use and emphasis Trouble may Imply the outward Tryal and the difficulties and streights he was in Anguish Inward Afflictions the one the Matter of the Trial and the other the sence of it The other expression also is to be observed have taken hold of me in the Hebrew have found me so the Septuagint renders it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the Vulgar Latin out of them tribulatio et angustia invenerunt me have found me that is come upon me as the expression intimateth Troubles are said to find us because they are sent to seek us out and in time will light upon us We should not run into it but if they find us in our duty we should not be troubled at them Sometimes in Scripture we are said to find trouble and sometimes trouble to find us We are said to find trouble David said Psal. 116. 3. I found trouble And so now here in the Text Trouble and Anguish found him There is no difference or if any the one noteth a surprize Trouble findeth us when it cometh unlooked for our finding it noteth our willingness to undergo it when the Will of God is so especially for Righteousness sake II. Davids Exercise under this great Temptation thy Commandments are my delights Where we have 1. The Object thy Commandments The Commandment is put for the Word in general which includeth Promises as well as Precepts the whole Doctrine of Life and Salvation However the property of the form is not altogether to be overlooked even in the Commandments or the Conscience of his Duty he took a great deal of Comfort 2. The Affection Delight He had said before that he did not forget Gods statutes when he was small and despised ver 141. now he delighted in them This was his great love to the Word that he could find sweetness in it when it brought him trouble such sweetness as did allay all his sorrows and overcome the bitterness of them 3. The Degree Delights in the plural number He did greatly delight in it Omnis oblectatio mea saith Iu●…ius Thy Commandments to me are instead of all manner of delights and pleasure in the World III. The next is the Opposition of this Exercise to that temptation yet 'T is not in the Original but necessarily Implyed and therefore well inserted by our Translators to shew that the greatness of his Streights and Troubles did not diminish his Comfort but Increase it rather The Points are these First God ●…th it necessary sometimes to exercise his People with a great deal of Trouble Secon●…●…his Trouble may breed great Vexation and Anguish of Spirit even in a gracious ●…rt Thirdly Notwithstanding this Trouble and Anguish gracious Hearts will manifest their graciousness by delighting in the Word Fourthly They that delight in the Word will find more Comfort in their Afflictions than Troubles can take from them or such sweetness as will overcome the sense of all their Sorrows This was alwayes Davids help to delight in the Word and this brought him Comfort though in deep Troubles For the First Point That God seeth it necessary sometimes to exercise his People with a great deal of Trouble Though they are highly in Favour with God yet they have their share of Troubles as well as others This is true if you 1. Consider the People of God in their Collective Body and Community which is called the Church 'T is the Churches name Isa. 54. 11 12. Oh
overseen a God of Judgment by whom all things are weighed 1 Sam. 2. 3. every dram and scruple of the Cross. A just God and will punish no more than is deserved Iob 34. 23. He will not lay upon man more then is right As well no more than is meet as no more than is right He is a good God does only what our need and profit requireth For he doth not afflict willingly nor grieve the children of men Lam. 3. 33. 3. Doctrine That 't is the property of a gracious Soul to delight in Gods Commandments 'T was Davids Practice and 't is the mark of a blessed man Psal. 1. 2. But his delight is in the Law of the Lord. And Rom. 7. 22. I delight in the Law after the inward man And Psal. 112. 1. Blessed is the man that delighteth greatly in his Commandments Delight in Moral things saith Aquinas is the rule by which we may Judge of mens Goodness or Badness Delectatio est quies voluntatis in bono Men are good and bad as the Objects of their delight are They are good who delight in good things and they evil who delight in evil things We shall consider the nature of Delight I. In the Causes II. In the Effects of it I. The Causes are 1. Proportion and Suitableness Sensitive Creatures delight much in such food as is agreeable to their nature now the Commandments are suitable to the renewed heart the Law is in their Heart Psal. 40. 8. And Psal. 37. 31. The Law of his God is in his heart Divine qualities are planted there which suit with the rule of Holiness and Righteousness Eph. 4. 24. And this is the sum of the Law or Commandements of God 2. A second Cause is Possession of it and Communion with it Oritur saith Aquinas ex praesentia connaturalis boni Now one may be said to possess the Law or enjoy the Law in regard of the knowledge of it or Obedience to it Ioh. 14. 21. He that hath my Commandments and keepeth them he it is that loveth me The knowledge of the Law so it be not superficial and fleshly but full and thorough and savory is very Comfortable and goeth toward a good note but Obedience to the Law is the cause of delight therein Gods servants rejoyce when they can bring on their hearts with any Life and Power in the way of Gods Testimonies Psal. 119. 14. I have rejoyced in the way of thy Testimonies more than in all Riches Thence cometh their Comfort and Obedience 3. A third Cause of Delight is a precedent love of the Object Love is a Complacency in and Propension towards that which is Good absolutely considered both in the presence and absence of it Desire noteth the absence of a Good Delight the presence and fruition of it Therefore a love of the Object delighted in is essentially presupposed to delight So that it is impossible for any thing to be delighted in but it is first loved We have experience that many things are delightful in themselves and known to be such which yet do not actually delight if they be hated A man may tast of the sweetness of honey yet if he have an Antipathy against it he may Ioath it David in this Psalme presupposeth love as Antecedent to delight Psal. 119. 47. I will delight my self in thy Commandments which I have loved Carnal men cannot say so For every one that doth evil hateth the light Ioh. 3. 20. The renewed onely love the Commandments Yea it doth not only presuppose a love of simple Complacency but also a love of Desire for all things are first desired before delighted in None can truly delight in Obedience but such as desire it Such as can say with David verse 40. Behold I have longed after thy Precepts And Verse 131. I opened my mouth and panted for I longed after thy Commandements Now all such are Blessed Matth. 5. 5. II. Let us consider the Effects 1. The first is Dilatatio Cordis The inlarging of the Heart it openeth and wideneth the Heart towards the reception of the Law and maketh it more capacious and comprehensive thereof than otherwise it would be Psal. 119. 32. I will run the way of thy Commandements when thou shalt have inlarged my Heart The Heart is at Ease and in a commodious Condition as a Body that is in a large and fit place where it is not streightned and this is as Oil to the Wheels 2. Delectatio causat sui ●…tim Desiderium Delight in an Object causeth a Thrist in it self and more of it self Even the Angels and blessed Spirits feel this effect of Delight that it never cloyeth but they desire more of their own Happiness Much more doth it work so in us who are in such an imperfect state of injoyment upon a two fold Account 1. The Objects of spiritual delight are perfect but the Acts whereby we injoy and possess those Objects are imperfect God is an Infinite and All-satisfying Good but the acts whereby we enjoy him here in this Life whereby we have Union and Communion with him are imperfect We know believe love hope but in part 1 Cor. 13. 9. Hereupon that delight which ariseth from the imperfect fruition of God here in this life stirreth up to an eager desire after fuller fruition and unto a farther inlargement and intension of those Acts whereby such fruition is attained or wherein it consisteth still Thirsting after more when tasted 1 Pet. 2. 3 4. 2. Spiritual Delights may be said to cause a Desire as Desire importeth a denial or exclusion of Loathing For the Objects of spiritual delight and the Acts whereby they are injoyed can never exceed the degree and measure required in them unless by accident by reason of some bodily act concurrent therewith and subservient unto the spiritual operation The Desire can never be too great the expression of it may be burdensome We may easily exceed the bounds of moderation in Carnal things but not in Spiritual They can never be too high and intense Therefore fresh desires and earnest longings are still kindled and quickned in us it never dulls the Appetite but draweth out the Soul farther and farther and cannot be too eager and zealous after Holiness 3. Another effect of Delight is perficit operationem it makes the Operation to its Object more perfect than otherwise it would be As a motive or means it exciteth to a greater care and diligence in promoting the End which we pursue The Delight in the Law helpeth to perfect our Meditation therein and Observation thereof by its sweetness it quickeneth provoketh and allureth to a greater Zeal in both Delight maketh all things easie 1 Ioh. 5. 3. All her wayes are wayes of Pleasantness Prov. 3. 17. The Sabbath is a delight Isa. 58. 13. It facilitates Duties and removes difficulties in working Now this Delight must be sincere otherwise they are but like the Carnal Iews who did delight to know his Wayes Isa. 58.
2. It must not be on forreign Reasons And then it must be Universal otherwise it is but like Herod who heard Iohn gladly and did many things c. Mark 6. 20. It must be deeply rooted otherwise it is but like the seed which fell on the Stony ground which received the Word with joy but dureth but for a while Matth. 13. 20. 1. Use. To shew how far they are from the Temper of Gods Children whose Delight is in Sin or the Pleasures of the Flesh. These have dreggy muddy Souls Their hearts are on sports plays merry-meetings These desires are soon cloyed leave a bitterness in the Soul till we contemn them we are never fit for an Holy Life See Gregory de Valentia 2. Use. Have we this Delight The Sincerity may be discerned 1. By the Extent It is extended to all the parts of the Word delight in the Promises and Precepts To be partial in the Law Hypocrites can well allow Mal. 2. 9. 2. It will be discerned by the Effects of it You will often Consult with it Psal. 119. 24. Thy Testimonies are my delight and my Counsellors 3. It will be a perpetual Delight Iob. 27. 10. Will he delight himself in the Almighty Will he always call upon God You will own it in Affliction as in the Text. Many will delight in Gods Word when Prosperity accompanieth it but not in Trouble and Anguish You will delight in Obedience and in the way of his Testimonies not talk of it but do it The young Man's delight in Dinah made him Circumcise himself Gen. 34. 19. Lastly Compare it with your delight in things Sensible Temporal and Corporeal If it be sincere and cordial it will not onely equal but surmount these Verse 72. The Law of thy Mouth is better to me than thousands of Gold and Silver And Verse 162. I rejoyce in thy Word as one that findeth great Spoil Spiritual good is greater than Corporal our conjunction with it is more intimate greater and firmer The part gratified is more Noble the Soul than the Body it will make these dye that the other may live 3. Use. Let us be exhorted to do what we can for the begetting encreasing and cherishing this delight in our hearts If you love God you cannot but love his word which is so perfect a representation of him If you love Holiness you must needs delight in the Word this is the rule of it If you love Life and Happiness you must needs delight in the Word this is the way that leadeth us to so Blessed and Glorious an Estate If you love Christ you will love the Word which offereth him to you If you love the new Nature you will delight in the Word which is the Seed of it If you would speed in Prayer Ver. 77. Let thy tender Mercies come unto me for thy Law is my Delight If you would be supported in Affliction Verse 92. Unless thy Law had been my Delight I should then have perished in mine Affliction 4. Doctrine In the days of our Trouble and Anguish Gods Word will be a great delight and comfort to us Such a Comfort as will overcome the bitterness of our Affliction So saith David here When all Comforts have spent their Virtue then Gods Word will be a Comfort to us Here I shall shew First What Comfort the Word holds out to us Secondly Why Afflictions do not diminish it First What Comforts it holds forth 1. The Priviledges of the Afflicted Rom. 5. 1 2. We glory in Tribulations knowing that Tribulation worketh Patience Such may rejoyce in Tribulations Miseries are unstinged his Rods are not signs of his Anger They are in the favour of God and his heart is with them however his hand be smart upon them The Habitude and Nature of Afflictions is altered in themselves they are the Punishments of Sin and so their Natural tendency is to Despair and Bondage God seemeth to put the Old Covenant in suit against unbelieving sinners but now they are Tryals Preventions Medicines to Believers that proceed from love and are designed for their good 2. The Word holdeth forth the Blessedness of an other World 2 Cor. 4. 17 18. Our light Affliction which is but for a moment worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory Hope is not afrighted by Affliction but worketh Before Corn be ripened it needeth all kind of Weathers The Husbandman is glad of showers as well as sun-shine Rainy Weather is Troublesome but the season requireth it 3. It assureth us of what is acceptable to God Micah 6. 8. He hath shewed thee O Man what is good and what doth the Lord require of thee but to do justly and love mercy and to walk humbly with thy God So it yieldeth comfort through the Conscience of our Duty and chearfull reflections on afflicted Innocency are not these Gods wayes which we desire to walk in and for which we are troubled 4. The Word hath notable Precepts that ease the Heart Phil. 4. 6. Be careful for nothing but in every thing by Prayer and Supplication with Thanksgiving let your Requests be made known unto God 1 Peter 5. 7. Casting all your Care upon him for he careth for you Proverbs 16. 3. Commit thy Works unto the Lord and thy thoughts shall be Established It biddeth us cast all our Cares upon God and commit our selves to the Guidance of his Providence 5. It giveth us many Promises of Gods being with us and strengthning and delivering us and giving us a gracious Issue out of all our Troubles 1 Corinthians 10. 13. God is Faithful who will not suffer you to be tempted above that you are able But will with the Temptation also make a way to escape that ye may be able to bear it Now it is a great ease to the Soul to fly to these Promises which are made to his Afflicted Servants 6. It breedeth Faith which fixeth the Heart Psalm 112. 7. He shall not be afraid of evil tidings his Heart is fixed trusting in the Lord. It breedeth Fortitude or cleaving to God under the greatest Trials 2 Samuel 6. 22. And Psalm 44. 17 18. Now this becometh a Testimony and Proof of our Love to God and so bringeth Comfort It breedeth Obedience and the doing of good leaveth a Pleasure behind it After Sin a sting remaineth Romans 2. 14 15. It breedeth Waiting and Patience when all Hope is cut off Micah 7. 7. Therefore I will look unto the Lord I will wait for the God of my Salvation When such Trouble is on us as no end appeareth of it Most mens Comfort holdeth out but whilst there is hope of turning the Stream of things They are not satisfied in their Duty nor comforted with Promises but born up with Hopes of Success Secondly Why Afflictions do rather increase than diminish this 1. They drive us to these Comforts Man liveth by sense more than by Faith when he hath any thing about him but his sorrows drive him to God
gave it at first Gen. 2. 7. God formed man of the dust of the ground and breathed into his Nostrils the breath of Life and Man became a living Soul and still this Life is at Gods disposing and he will sooner continue it to us in a way of Obedience then in a way of Sin Iob 10. 12. Thou hast granted me life and favour and thy Visitation hath preserved my Spirit Act. 17. 28. In him we live and move and have our being The same Power that giveth us Being maintaineth it as long as he pleaseth All is at the dayly dispose of God 2. Life is better preserved in a way of Obedience then by Evil-doing that provoketh God to cast us off and exposes us to Dangers 'T is not in the Power of the World to make us live or die a day sooner or longer than God pleaseth If God will make us happy they cannot make us miserable Therefore give me understanding and I shall live that is lead a comfortable and happy Life for the present Prevent sin and you prevent danger Obedience is the best way to preserve Life Temporal as great a Paradox as it seems to the World 't is a Scripture Truth Prov. 4. 4. Keep my Commandments and live And Verse 13. Take hold of instruction let her not go keep her for she is thy life And Prov. 3. 16. Length of dayes is in her right hand and in her left Riches and Honour And Verse 18. She is a tree of Life The Knowledge and Practice of the Word is the only meanes to live Comfortably and Happily here as well as for Ever hereafter II. Life Spiritual that is two-fold the Life of Justification and the Life of Sanctification 1. The Life of Justification Rom. 5. 18. The free gift came upon all men to Iustification of Life He is dead not only on whom the Hangman hath done his work but also he on whom the Judge hath passed sentence and the Law pronounceth him dead In this sense we were all dead and Justification is called Justification to Life there is no living in this sense without knowledge Isa. 53. 11. By his knowledge shall my righteous Servant Iustify many We live by Faith and Faith cometh by Hearing and Hearing doth no good unless the Lord giveth Understanding as Meats nourish not unless received and digested 2. The Life of Sanctification Eph. 2. 1. And you hath he quickened who were dead in trespasses and sins And men live not properly till they live the life of Grace they live a false counterfeit Life not a blessed happy certain and true Life Now this Life is begun and carried on by saving knowledge Col. 3. 10. the new man is renewed in knowledge Again Men are said to be alienated from the life of God through the ignorance that is in them Eph. 4. 18. They that are ignorant are dead in Sin Life Spiritual cometh by Knowledge Hence beginneth the change of the Inward Man and thence forth we live Give me understanding ut vere in te vivam that the true life begun in me may grow and increase daily but never be quenched by sin III. Life Everlasting or our Blessed Estate in Heaven So 't is said of the Saitits departed they all live to God Luk. 20. 38. And this is called Water of life the Tree of life the Crown of life properly this is life What is the present life in Comparison of Everlasting life The present life 't is mors vitalis a living death or mortalis vita a dying life a kind of death 't is alwayes in fluxu like a Stream it runneth from us as fast as it cometh to us Iob. 14. 2. He flyeth as a shadow and continueth not We die as fast as we live it differeth but as the point from the line where it terminateth 'T is not one and the same no permanent thing 't is like the shadow of a Star in a flowing stream It 's Contentments are base and low Isa. 57. 10. called the life of thy hands 't is patcht up of several Creatures fain to ransack the Store-houses of Nature to support a ruinous Fabrick And compare it with the Life of Grace here it doth not exempt us from sin nor miseries our Capacities are narrow we are full of Fears and Doubts and Dangers but in the Life of Glory we shall sin nor sorrow no more This is meant here the righteousness of Gods Testimonies is everlasting give me understanding and I shall live 't is chiefly meant of the Life of Glory this is the fruit of saving knowledge Ioh. 17. 3. when we so know God and Christ as to come to God by him Use. Let us seek this saving Knowledge of God that we may live first Spiritually here and Gloriously here But few mind it all desire sharpness of Wit and to be as knowing as others no man would be a fool but would own a wickedness in Morals rather than a weakness in Intellectuals but who thinketh of being wiser for Heaven of being seasoned with the Fear of God Most men choak all the Motions and Inclinations they have in that kind with Worldly delights and Worldly businesses being alive to the World and dead to God thronging their hearts with Carnal Vanities but leaving no room for higher and serious thoughts But at length be perswaded what do men desire but Life If you know God and Christ with a saving knowledge you shall have it 1. We were made for this end to come to the knowledge of the Truth and be Saved 1 Tim. 2. 4. We do not live meerly to live but to make provision for a better Life not to satisfie our bodies out of Gods storehouse but to furnish our souls with Grace and exercise our selves in his Law day and night that we may know his Will concerning us and provide for a better Life and live according to the directions of his Word 2. No Creature is so bad as Man when he degenerateth from his End for which he was created 'T is not so much for the Sea to break its bounds or to have a defect in the Course of Nature as the Degeneration of Man 3. You live not properly when destitute of the Life of God and Heavenly Wisdom he doth not live the life of a Man nor preserve the rectitude of his Nature SERMON CLXII PSALM CXIX VER 145. I Cryed with my whole Heart hear me O Lord I will keep thy Statutes IN these Words are First An Allegation I cryed with my whole Heart Secondly A Petition hear me Thirdly A Promise of Obedience I will keep thy Statutes First In the Allegation we have a Description of Prayer by the two Adjuncts of it 1. Intension and Fervency I Cryed 2. The Sincerity and Integrity of it with my whole Heart Secondly The Petition is for Audience only what we translate hear me is in the Heb. answer me Now this being a General it is uncertain what he prayed for it may be for deliverance out of
Hebrews was divided into three Watches the first Watch was called the head or beginning of the Watches Lam. 3. 19. Arise cry out in the night in the beginning of the watches pour out thine heart like water before the Lord. The second was called the middle watch Iudges 7. 19. Gideon came to the outside of the Camp in the beginning of the middle watch The third and last was called the morning watch Exod. 14. 24. In the morning watch the Lord troubled the host of the Aegyptians This was the first division of the Night among the Hebrews into three watches but it seemeth afterwards when they were acquainted with the Romans they had four Watches as Matth. 14. 21. In the fourth watch of the night Iesus went to them walking on the Sea For every three hours they had a new Watch and according to this latter division they were called the Evening and the Midnight and the Cock-crowing and the Dawning Mark 13. 35. Now whether we reckon by the first or second division it cannot be imagined that David should be wholly without sleep Rabbi David Kimchi thinketh he gave the first watch to sleep and the other two to the Meditation of the Word and that he did this often when the nights were long I think 't is meant of the third and last watch and so it agreeth with the dawning of the Morning mentioned in the former Verse and this Watch which is called the Morning Watch did David prevent getting up early to entertain himself with delightful Meditations on the Word of God The Sept. reads it early in the morning II. What is meant by preventing the Night Watches either that he was more careful to awake at several times of the Night to Meditate on Gods Word than they to keep their Watches who were appointed thereunto or that he did not need to be called upon by them for the Watchmen were wont to tell them the Seasons and Watches of the Night but he needed not that help his own desires and delights awakened him so that in effect he saith when others are so fast asleep that either they do not wake in the night or if they do 't is because they are interrupted in their sleep by the noises of the Watch or Guard but I need no such excitation for my eyes prevent the night watches sleep flyeth from them of its own accord that my mind may be delighted with the Meditation of Gods Word The Points are First From the Duty wherein David was exercised Doctrine That Meditation on the Word of God is one duty that Christians should take care to perform Secondly From the Season his eyes prevented the night watches Doctrine A Gracious heart will take all occasions to set itself a work on Holy things and sometimes in the Night Thirdly From the Condition wherein he was in some distress for he saith save me and his Prayers not yet heard I cryed I cryed I cryed Doctrine That 't is needful to Meditate on Gods promises at such a time as our suit hangeth at the Throne of Grace without grant and effect The first will give us occasion to speak of the Duty of Meditation and the necessity and profit of it what the Duty of Meditation is see Sermon upon the 15th Verse of this Psalm II. 'T is a necessary Duty because 't is recommended to us by God among other things injoyned in his Word He complaineth of the neglect of it Isa. 1. 3. Israel doth not know my People doth not consider they will not think upon God nor consider what great things he hath done for them 'T is recommended to us in the practice of the Saints they sometimes meditate upon God Psal. 63. 3. I remember thee upon my bed and meditate of thee in the night watches When David could not sleep and had his night rest broken his thoughts run upon God presently Sometimes upon the Works of God Psal. 143. 5. I meditate on all thy works I muse on the work of thine hands On his Creation and Providence Sometimes on the Word of God either that part which sets forth their Duty Psal. 1. 2. But his delight is in the law of the Lord and in that law doth he meditate day and night To make the Christians Life more orderly and comely the Apostle commands us Phil. 4. 8. to think on these things Sometimes on the Promises and grounds of Faith for the support of their Souls in a fainting time as in the Text especially that part of the Word which is brought unto them by the Providence of God and so we meditate upon what we read and hear Luk. 2. 19. Mary kept all these things and pondered them in her heart We ponder things when we consider the weight and moment of them that our hearts may be affected with them So Moses Deut. 32. 46. And he said unto them set your hearts unto all the words which I testify among you this day Luk. 9. 44. Let these sayings sink into your ears be seriously considered and thought of by you not be lost or vanish into the Air or stay in the Brain III. 'T is a profitable Duty 't is an help 1. To our Natural Faculties 2. To our Graces 3. To our Duties 1. To our Natural Faculties to our Memories We complain of weak Memories but we do not take a right course to cure them Good things slip from us as water doth through a sieve and why because we do not weigh them and meditate upon them by deep and serious thought Truths would stay with us longer if we did oftner think on them So many a Conviction is lost Iam. 1. 23 24. For if any man be a hearer of the Word and not a doer he is like unto a man beholding his natural face in a glass for he beholdeth himself and straitway forgetteth what manner of man he was Many a Comfort is lost by neglect Heb. 12. 5. And have you forgotten the exhortation which speaketh to you as children A weak impression is soon defaced Many a pressing motion is lost for want of a little diligence to fasten it upon the heart Heb. 2. 1. Therefore we ought to give the more earnest heed to the things which we have heard lest at any time we should let them slip Meditation and serious Consideration fastens a Truth upon the Mind and Memory Deliberate thoughts stick by us as a Lesson well Conned is not easily forgotten Civet long kept in a Box the sent remaineth when the Civet is taken out Sermons meditated upon are remembred long after they are delivered So for Understanding we have weak Understandings slow to conceive of any thing that is Spiritual and heavenly why because we are so little exercised in the study and contemplation of these things whereas our Judgments would ripen and we would grow more skillful in the Word of Righteousness if we did often meditate on it Psal. 119. 99. I have more understanding then all my Teachers for thy testimonies
and sinless Purity for so it is wholly unsuitable to them what should a carnal sensual heart do with heaven or how should they desire it that hate the Company of God the Communion of Saints the Image of God God maketh meet Col. 1. 12. Giving thanks to the Father who hath made us meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the saints in light There is jus haereditarium jus aptitudinale though they do not desire to be saved for it they would love holiness more Partly because those conceits that they have of the adjuncts of Salvation and that happiness and personal Contentment which results to them they do not practically esteem it as to value it above the delights of the flesh and the Vanities of the World and they do not think it worthy the pursuit but for the interests of the bodily Life cast off all care of it Heb. 12. 16. As Esau who for one morsel of meat sold his birthright Mar. 22. 5. They made light of it and went their wayes one to his Farm another to his Merchandise Use. I. It informeth us of two things 1. That wicked Men are the Authors of their own Ruine Salvation doth not fly from them but they fly from it they are far from the Law and therefore is Salvation far from them They will not take the course to be saved for they care not for God and his Statutes it is but just ut qui male vivit male pereat that they which despise Salvation should never see it 2. That the wicked buy the pleasures of sin at a dear rate since they defraud their own Souls of Salvation thereby Their loss you have in the Text Salvation is far from them and their gain is nothing but a little Temporal satisfaction and are these things worthy to be compared what is it maketh you wicked but the ease and sloth of the Flesh and the love of some carnal delight And are you contented to Perish for this Whoredom from God Use. II. Let it Exhort us to believe and improve this Truth for if men did surely believe it there would not be so many wicked men as there are neither would they dare to lye in sin as long as they do O! consider if the wicked have no part nor portion in the Salvation offered nor any jot of Gods Favour belonging to them the wicked should not flatter themselves with presumptuous hopes but break off their sins by Repentance 1. Gods Mercy will not help you though he be a God of Salvation yet he will not save the impenitent and such as go on still in their Trespasses Psal. 68. 19 20 21. Blessed be the Lord who daily loadeth us with benefits even the God of our salvation Selah He that is our God is the God of salvation and unto God the Lord belong the issues from death But God shall wound the head of his Enemies and the hairy scalp of such an one as goeth on still in his Trespasses You must not fancy a God all honey and sweetness and that his Mercy should be exercised to the wrong of his Justice the Lord will not spare the abusers of Grace whoever he spareth Deut. 29. 19 20. And it shall come to pass when he heareth the words of this curse that if he bless himself in his heart saying I shall have peace though I walk in the imagination of my heart to add drunkenness to thirst the Lord will not spare him but then the anger of the Lord and his Iealousie shall smoke against that man and all the curses that are written in this book shall lye upon him and the Lord shall blot out his name from under Heaven 2. No Doctrine preached in the Church will bear you out not Law for that discovereth both Sin and the Curse Convinceth of sin Rom. 3. 20. By the Law is the knowledge of sin what is sin and who is the sinner that bindeth you over to the curse Gal. 3. 10. For as many as are of the law are under the curse for it is written Cursed is every one that continneth not in all things which are written in the book of the law to do them The Gospel that sheweth a Remedy against sin but upon Gods Terms that first with broken hearts we sue out our Pardon 1 Ioh. 1. 9. If we confess our sins he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrightcousness Sin must be condemned confessed before pardoned And then that in the way of Holiness we should seek Salvation and Eternal Life The Way and End must not be separated Rom. 6. 22. We must have our fruit unto holiness if we would have our end to be eternal life The pure and undefiled have only part in this salvation but it is far from the wicked Christ disclaims the unholy and unsanctified Mar. 7. 23. Depart from me ye that work iniquity You may as well expect the way to the West should bring you Eastward as to walk in the wayes of sin and hope to come to Heaven at last to think God will save us and suffer us to walk in our own ways or that this undefiled Inheritance shall be bestowed on dirty sinners this had been pleasing to flesh and blood but it is the Devils Covenant not Gods that Article you shall be saved and yet live in your sins is foisted in by Satan that false Deceiver to flatter men with vain Conceits 3. Do you hope of Repentance hereafter But in the mean time ye run a desperate hazard to leave the Soul at pawn in Satans hands it is not easie work to get it out again who would Poison himself upon a presumption that before it cometh to his heart he shall meet with an Antidote Judicial hardness is layed on them that withstand seasons of Grace Isa. 55. 6. Seek ye the Lord while he may be found call ye upon him while he is near Prov. 1. 24 25 26. Because I have called and ye refused I have stretched out my hand and no man regarded but ye have set at nought all my counsels and would none of my reproofs I also will laugh at your calamity I will mock when your fear cometh None of those men that were bidden shall taste of my supper Luk. 14. 24. 4. The Heart is more hardened the longer you continue in this Course Heb. 3. 13. But exhort one another daily while it is called to day lest any of you be hardened through the deceitfulness of sin Inveterate Diseases are seldom cured a tree that hath long stood and begun to wither is unfit to be Transplanted Ier. 13. 23. Can the Ethiopian change his skin or the Leopard his spots then may ye also do good that are accustomed to do evil 5. There is a stint and measure as to Nations Gen. 15. 16. The iniquity of the Ammorites is not yet full Persons Vessels of Mercy Vessels of Dishonour Rom. 9. 22 23. What if God willing to shew his
respect to the end now if they do not make the Everlasting injoyment of God their end the Scriptures are of little use to them a trouble rather than a comfort because they disturb them in pursuing their lusts but a man that would injoy God get to his Holy Hill is apprehensive of the benefit 2. They are not affected with their wants and therefore esteem not the Word For the great benefit of the Word is to teach us a remedy for sin and misery now they that mind not the misery and danger in which they stand go on carelesly and despise the Word of God Prov. 22. 3. A prudent man forseeth the Evil and hideth himself but the simple passe on and are punished They little think of the evil which is near them and so slight the Counsel of God Secondly Those that will not believe them that find sweetness in it as if all were phantastical and imaginary Are the wisest and most serious part of mankind deceived And hath the carnal fool only the wit to discern the mistake Surely in all reason it should be otherwise These tell us of those delights and transports of soul in meditating on the Promises in purifying their Hearts by the Precepts and though a stranger intermedleth not with their Joyes yet surely these find them All that is spiritual and supernatural is suspected by those who are drowned in matters of sense Iohn 12. 29. A voice from Heaven is Thunder the motions of the Spirit fumes of Wine Acts 3. 13. Joy in the Holy Ghost but a fancy c. Thirdly Them that count it an Alphabetary knowledge fit for beginners David was no Novice yet he rejoyced in the Word as one that found great spoil the more conversant he was in these Holy Writings the more he delighted in them No 'T is not only Childrens meat there is not only Milk there but strong Meat also Heb. 5. 14. 'T is our Rule to walk by till our blessedness be perfected The continual store-house of our comforts Rom. 15. 4. 'T is the continual means of growing into Communion with God in Christ. Use. II. To exhort us to delight in the Word of God 'T is the work and mark of a Blessed man Psal. 1. 2. But his delight is in the Law of the Lord and in his Law doth he Meditate day and night As far as the necessities of the present life will bear it they are still getting more Knowledge of true Blessedness and the way that leadeth to the Injoyment of it This is their business and pleasing Study His work is to form his heart to a sincere uniform impartial obedience and as he doth increase in Godliness by the help of the Word his soul is more satisfyed all the joyes of the World to this are nothing to him Are your Hearts thus set to know the Lord and his revealed Will and the way of Life SERMON CLXXVII PSALM CXIX VER 163. I hate and abhor lying but thy law do I love IN this Verse the Man of God sheweth his Affection to the Word by the Hatred of those things which are contrary to the Word Observe here First Affection set against Affection Secondly Object against Object First Affection against Affection Hatred against Love Love and Hatred are natural Affections which are good or evil according to the Objects to which they are applyed Place Love on the World Sin and Vanity and nothing worse place Hatred on God Religion Holiness and it soon proveth an hellish thing But now set them upon their proper objects and they express a gracious Constitution of Soul let us hate Evil and love Good Amos 5. 15. and all is well Man needeth affections of Aversation as well as Choice and Pursuit Hatred hath its use as well as Love Love was made for God and things that belong to God and Hatred for Sin 't was put into us that at the first appearance sense or imagination of Evil we might retire our selves and fly from it and is any thing so evil as sin so contrary to God so baneful to the Soul The office of Love is to adhere and cleave to God and whatever will bring us to the injoyment of him and the office of hatred is that we may truly and sincerely turn from all evil with Detestation according to the nature and degree of evil that is in it The Emphasis of the Text is notable I hate and abhor it must be a thorough Hatred which David Psal. 139. 22. calleth a perfect hatred Secondly Here is Object set against Object As Love is opposed to Hatred so the Law to Lying for the Word of God is Truth and requireth truth of all that submit to it pure sincerity and simplicity Some render the word more generally the Sept. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I hate and abominate iniquity other Translations render it not so they expound it so that one kind is put for all the rest and fitly for every sin is a falsehood and often called in this Psalm a false way and a lye and will fail and beguile all them who are delighted with it and the purport and drift is that we should admit omit commit nothing which is contrary to the Word of God which is the great object of an holy mans Love The Points are three Doctrine I. They that love the word of God must hate sin Doctrine II. That a slight hatred of a sinful course is not enough but we must hate and abhor it Doctrine III. That among other sins we must hate falshood and lying and all kind of frauds and deceits For the first Point Doct. I. They that love the Word of God must hate sin This implyeth four things 1. That our Love must be demonstrated by such effects otherwise it is but pretended if we do not avoid what it forbiddeth for our love to God and his VVord is mostly seen in Obedience and dutiful Subjection to him and it for Gods Love is a Love of Bounty our Love is a Love of Duty he is said to love us when he blesseth us and bestoweth on us the effects of his special Grace and Favour we are said to love him when we obey him These Propositions are clear in Scripture That our love to God is tryed by our love to the VVord And our love to the VVord by our hatred of Sin Ioh. 14. 21. He that hath my Commandments and keepeth them he it is that loveth me And Verse 23. If any man love me he will keep my words On the contrary our Enmity to God and his VVord is determined by our love to Sin Enmity to God Col. 1. 21. Enemies in your minds by evil works To his VVord Rom. 8. 7. The carnal mind is not subject to the Law neither indeed can be Habitual sin argueth a Malice or Hatred of God and his holy Law and actual Sin an actual Hatred 'T is finis operis if not operantis whether a man thinketh so or no 't is the intent of the
Commandments Gods love to us 't is indeed a love of bounty but our love is a love of duty and service I have not yet done with this Reason it necessarily follows from the Love of God though you abstract him from the notion of a Sovereign and Law-giver and should love him only because of the excellency of his Nature Now thus I argue the same reasons that carry us to Love God do carry us also to love his Law for he that loveth God will love any thing of God where ever he finds it he will love his Word he will love his Saints but chiefly his Word for that is most to be loved because that hath most of God in it the Law is a copy of his Holiness the tract of God is in the Creatures there is his vestigium His Image is in his Saints they resemble his divine Qualities but his most lively print and character is upon his Word The Image of God in his Saints is obscured by their infirmities but the Law of God is perfect there is no blemish there this is the fairest copy and draught of his Holiness Nay once more in this Argument abstract the consideration of his authority and the perfection of his Being yet our obligations to God as our Benefactor will inforce this love to his Word and make it sweet to us because 't is the Letter of our Friend and Benefactor and the signification of his Will to whom we owe Life and Breath and all things And therefore though the Law did not deserve to be loved for its own sake yet it should be sweet for his sake from whom it cometh he hath evidenced much love to us as we are Creatures but much more love in Christ as we are sinners and it should be acceptable to us upon his account Love and Gratitude will constrain us to do his Will and regard his Commands 3 Cor. 5. 14. If we have any sence of our great obligations to him it must needs be so II. Gods Children find such an excellency in his Law that they must needs Love it As 't is 1. A plain clear Word that doth fully discover the Will of God and not leave duty to our own uncertain guesses it puts duty into a plain stated course how we may come to be blessed for ever more Psal. 119. 105. Thy Word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path Light is pleasant but darkness is uncomfortable When Aristotle was asked why all men do love the Light his answer was That was the question of a blind man sence discovereth sufficiently why we should Love the Light Certainly If you ask why men do not love the Word of God 't is because the God of this World hath blinded their Eyes 2 Cor. 4. 4. 2. 'T is a good Word because 't is suited to our necessities so we read Heb. 6. 5. If so be ye have tasted the good Word Is food good when a man is hungry Is drink good when a man is thirsty Then the Word of God is good for it suiteth with the necessities of our Souls as these things do with our Bodies 1 Tim. 1. 15. This is a faithful saying and worthy of all acceptation that Iesus Christ came into the world to save sinners The Gospel is a Doctrine fitted for hungry Consciences if our inward senses were not benummed and we were not so Christ-glutted and Gospel-glutted as we are Oh how precious would these tenders of Grace be to our Souls 3. 'T is a pure Word so David gives the reason in the 140 verse of this Psalm Thy word is very pure therefore thy servant loveth it Hypocrites will now and then relish the comforts of the Gospel be affected with the Word because it speaketh such good things to poor sinners but Gods Children love the Word for its Purity and Holiness It meeteth with every sin and directeth them to every Duty necessary for the enjoyment of the Blessed God 't is not Comfort only must draw our love but Holiness This argueth the life and power of Grace when we would not have the Law of God less strict and holy then it is but love it for this very reason because 't is pure strict and holy You would not think a beggar loves you because he liketh your Almes but he is loth to stay with you for your service and live under the orderly Government of your Family Most mens love to the Word is such they delight in the Comforts of it as an Almes but they hate the Duty of it as a task they had rather let the Duties of it alone if it could be without danger and forbear them if they durst Oh but when your hearts consent to the purity of the Law and you would chuse that Life which it points out unto you rather than any life in the World or the most absolute freedom that the heart of Man can imagine so that you love your Master the more because he hath appointed you such work this is true Affection to God and his Word You had rather live in Holiness than Sin if you had your freest choice 't is a sign then you love Holiness for Holiness sake and admire that in the Word which is most worthy its strictness 4. 'T is a Sublime Word Verse 129. Thy testimonies are wonderful therefore doth my soul keep them Here are excellent Truths glorious Mysteries fit to exercise the sharpest Wits in the World a Study fitter for Angels than Men 1 Pet. 1. 12. I do not speak this to stir up Curiosity which is a Moral Itch a lust of the Mind and nothing more opposite to true Love than Lust but to raise men to a due Esteem of the Scriptures which they are wont to contemn for their simplicity and plainnes 't is full of high Mysteries though it may be read with profit by simple People or any who desire knowledge Sensual men that are drowned in Worldly Delights only look to the Comfort of the Animal Life and value all things as that is gratified but those that look to the Spiritual Life and the ennobling of their Souls they will find the only Sublime Wisdom in the Word of God Deut. 4. 6. Keep these statutes and do them for this is your wisdom and understanding in the sight of the Nations which shall hear all these Statutes and say Surely this great Nation is a wise and understanding people What pitiful Notions had the Philosophers and the wisest of the Heathen concerning God and Angels and Providence and the Creation of the World and the Souls of men and the happiness of the other World and the way to attain it When the Heathen came to be first acquainted with the Iews they wondered at their Wisdom and Skill these things would beget admiration in us if we did meditate on them and contented not our selves with a slight and customary Rehearsal of them here are deep Misteries to exercise the greatest Wits and therefore consider
Promises with a qualification Rom. 2. 7. To them who by patient continuance in well-doing seek for glory honour and immortality eternal life God hath not simply promised Blessedness but the Promise requireth a qualification and a performance of Duty in the Person to whom the Promise is made and therefore before we can have a certainty of Hope we must not only look upon the Assurance on Gods part but make out our qualification So Psal. 1. 1 2. Blessed is the man that walketh not in the counsel of the ungodly nor standeth in the way of sinners nor sitteth in the seat of the scornful But his delight is in the law of the Lord and in his law doth he meditate day and night So Psal. 119. 1 2. Blessed are the undefiled in the way who walk in the law of the Lord Blessed are they that keep his testimonies and seek him with the whole heart and many such places which intimate that blessedness belongeth to such as are of an holy Heart and intirely give up themselves to an holy Course that doing the Commandments uprightly and in a Gospel Sense is a necessary Condition to qualifie those Persons which shall be saved And therefore they that live in any sin against Conscience may take notice how fearful their Estate is for the present and how needful it is to begin a good course before they can have any hope toward God 2. And Partly Because true hope is operative and hath an influence this way There are two parts in Sanctification Mortification and Vivification and true Hope hath an influence upon both Mortification 1 Ioh. 3. 3. And every man that hath this hope in him purisieth himself as he is pure that when we see God we shall be like him he that hopeth for such a pure and sinless Estate either to see God will he appear before him in his filthy Rags Ioseph washed himself when he was to come before Pharaoh so when to appear before God what with this wanton vain unclean heart We are to be like him is this to be like Christ where there is such a disproportion between Head and Members And if this hope be fixed in our hearts it will set us a purifying more and more So for Vivification it urgeth and incourageth to Obedience Tit. 2. 12 13. For the grace of God that bringeth salvation hath appeared to all men teaching us that denying ungodliness and worldly lusts we should live soberly righteously and godly in the present world Look backward or forward it urgeth the heart to Obedience Why backward to the duties of Holiness shall we be Lazy in his work when we expect such a great Reward 3. Because there is no such thing to damp Hope and weaken our Confidence as Sin We cannot trust him whom we have offended freely and without restraint and therefore while we please the flesh we break our Confidence Sin will breed shame and fear and 't is impossible to hope in God unless we serve him in love and seek to please him if we feel it not presently we shall feel it sin that now weakeneth the Faith which we have in the Commandments will in time weaken the Faith that we have in the Promises Every part of Gods revealed Will cometh to be tried one time or another our Confidence in Gods Mercy is not earnestly and directly assaulted till the hour of Death or the time of extraordinary Trial When the evil day cometh then the Consciousness of my own sin whereunto we have been indulgent will be of like force to withdraw our assent from Gods Mercies as the delight and pleasure we took was to cause us to Transgress his Commandments 1 Cor. 15. 56. The sting of death is sin and the strength of sin is the law 4. Because our hope is increased by our diligence in the holy life This fostereth and augments it Heb. 6. 11. And we desire that every one of you doth shew the same diligence to the full assurance of hope unto the end It must needs be so for since there is a qualification the more clear our qualification is the more full is our assurance of hope and so far as a man neglects his duty and abateth in his Qualification so far doth his Assurance abate To look on one side of the Covenant is a groundless presumption 2. None do and can keep the Commandments but they that hope for Salvation This is plain from the order of the words in the Text first I hoped for thy Salvation therefore done the Commandments implying that thereby he kept the Commandments without this none can have an heart nor hand to do any thing for God Peccator saith Bernard nihil expectat indique peccator est quod bonis presentibus Non modo delectus sed etiam contentus nihil in futurum expectat He that looketh for nothing from God can never be diligent in his service nor faithful and true to him Hope 't is our strength Lam. 3. 18. And I said my strength and my hope is perished from the Lord we first begin continue and go on with God upon the hope he offereth to us Use. I. It reproveth those that hope well but take no care to do any thing for God Every one will say they must hope in God but none looketh after this lively and operative hope their hope is barren and unfruitful who are they that can make Application of the Promises 2 Tim. 4. 8. Use. II. Is to perswade us to the coupling of these two when this Conjunction is founded then are we in a right frame if we would keep the Commandments we must hope for the Salvation of God if we would hope for the Salvation of God we must keep the Commandments This is most acceptable to the Lord Psal. 147. 11. The Lord taketh pleasure in them that fear him and hope in his mercy Such as believe and fear to offend him they have acceptable Communion with him 'T is for your Comfort Acts 9. 31. 't is for the honour of Religion on the one side to avoid the carnal Confidence of Papists on the other the cold Profession of Protestants if you hope for temporal Deliverance They that make no Conscience of obeying God cannot hope for Deliverance from him for his Salvation must be expected in the way of his Precepts Psal. 37. 3. Trust in the Lord and do Good so shalt thou dwell in the land So Wait on the Lord and keep his way and he shall exalt thee to inherit the land when the wicked are cut off thou shalt see it Then we may commend our selves and all our Affairs to Gods care and trust it becometh them that look for Salvation and to be helped out of their troubles to be more earnest than others in keeping his Law If you would enjoy the comfortable Assurance that you shall be saved at length live so as you may never mar your Confidence 1 Pet. 1. 13. Be sober and hope to the end Live
Flames for a little contentment here in the World for a little ease and delight here given to your carnal Nature Is an Earthly Life that you cannot long hold more valuable then an Eternal Heaven you shall enjoy for ever no let us go to heaven though we get thither with many pains and sufferings If you forsake all not only in Vow and Purpose but Actually and in Deed yet still you have something better you shall be no looser in the end you shall so choose the blessed God and live with him for evermore and be fill'd with his Love as full as you can hold and be employed in his service and all this in an Eternal Perfection and glorified Estate 4. Motive Choose for you will never have cause to repent of your choice The Lord stands upon his Justification is very tender of giving his People any Cause to repent of his service Micah 6. 3. O my people what have I done unto thee and wherein have I wearied thee testifie against me Pray what hurt hath Holiness done you Who was ever the better for sinning or who was the worse for Holiness There was none that ever made a carnal choice but first or last they had cause to repent of it either they repent of it in a kindly manner while they may mend the matter or else they shall repent for ever in Misery but who ever repented of his Repentance or cursed the day of his new Birth To whom ever was it any grief of heart that they were acquainted with God and Christ or the way that leadeth unto life who dieth the sweeter death or who repents of their choice then the serious or the carnal Oh they that have chosen the World they cry out how the World hath deceived them but never any repented of choosing God and the wayes of God Let these things perswade you to choose his Precepts Secondly For Directions 1. In Choosing the Object is to be regarded Gods Precepts indefinitely all of them not one excepted the smallest as well as the greatest the troublesome as well as the easie the most neglected as well as the most observed we must choose all Gods Precepts not abate any thing but especially the main or the essential Precepts of Christianity or the Fundamental points of the Covenant Now the Question is What 's the Fundamental Point of the Covenant Truly that 's known by the form of Baptisme Baptisme is the solemn Seal of entring into Covenant with God it 's the Seal of our initiation or first entrance into Covenant with God Mat. 28. 19. Now what is it to be Baptised in the name of the Father Son and Holy Ghost when you first choose the ways of God here you must begin you must close with Father Son and Holy Ghost heartily take them to be your God that is you must close with God the Father as your All-sufficient Portion or chiefest happiness to be loved above all and also as your highest Lord that he may be served pleased and obeyed above all Well and in the name of the Son that is Jesus Christ he must be taken as your Saviour and Redeemer to bring you to God and to reconcile you to him And to be Baptised in the name of the Holy Ghost is this to take him as your Sanctifier Guide and Comforter to make you a holy people to God to cleanse your hearts from sin to write all Gods Laws upon your Hearts and put them into your Minds and to guide you by the Word and Ordinances to everlasting Life This is the main thing that is first to be minded because it contains all and doth necessarily infer the rest for otherwise to be resolute in some by-point of Religion though it be right this is but the Obstinacy of a Faction not the constancy of a Christian Zeal 2. As you must look to the Object of this choice so to the Causes of it and what are they An Enlightned Mind a renewed Heart a Love to God and then the Spirit of God enlightning and inclining our Hearts 1. An Enlightned Mind is a cause of choosing the ways of God when the Lord hath taught us his Precepts an enlightned mind discovers a beauty and amiableness in the ways of God Psal. 119. 128. I esteem all thy Precepts to be right and they are the rejoycing of my soul. 2. A Renewed Heart wherein all the precepts of God are written over again They were written upon our Hearts in Innocency but that 's a blurred Manuscript therefore in Regeneration they are written over again God writes his Law in our hearts and puts them in our inward parts Heb. 8. 10. and then the Law within suits with the Law without for the new Creature is created after God in Righteousness and true Holiness In true Holiness which relates to the first Table of the Law and Righteousness which relates to the second Table of the Law the renewed heart that hath this inclination and propension is carried out to them 3. Love to God for that 's implied in the choice Iohn 14. 21. He that hath my Commandements and keeps them he it is that loves me and he that loves me hath my Commandements and keeps them It follows the other way where there is love to God there will be choosing of his ways 4. Gods Spirit the Lord Enlightning and Inclining our Hearts to this choice God Enlightens for he teacheth us the way that we shall choose and when we see these things in the light of the Spirit then we see the Beauty of them Psal. 25. 12. It holds good as to the path of Life and in particular cases but chiefly in the main case God teacheth him the way that he shall choose And the Spirit of God enclines the Heart too as well as enlightens the Mind 1 Pet. 1. 22. Ye have purified your souls in obeying the truth through the spirit 3. There are the Effects of this Choice What are they Delight Diligence and Patience 1. Delight Psal. 40. 8. I delight to do thy will O my God yea thy law is within my heart When the Law is not only written in the Book but written in the heart then there 's a Delight a ready and willing Obedience It is spoken first of Christ of David it was said in Type it 's true also of all Believers for they have the Spirit of Christ and the same also is exprest of the People of God Psal. 112. 1. Blessed is the man that feareth the Lord that delighteth greatly in his Commandments When a man hath chosen the precepts of God and bound himself in this way then his heart is taken with a delight 2. Diligence Gods Precepts are the great business and employment of our lives and then there 's a constant study to please him Col. 1. 9 10. Filled with the knowledge of his will in all wisdom and spiritual understanding that you may walk worthy of the Lord unto all pleasing We must do Gods Will and
of these things This is the Assurance of Faith spoken of Heb. 10. 22. I know I shall find this to be a Truth Men are Conscionable and faithful in keeping their Word much more God who can neither deceive nor be deceived 2. You are to delight in the promise though the performance be not yet nor like to be for a good while neither performed nor likely to be performed Heb. 11. 13. They saw them afar off and yet being perswaded of these things they embraced them And Ioh. 8. 56. Abraham saw my day and was glad You hold the Blessing by the root where you have the promise Heb. 6. 18. 3 You are to take the naked promise for a ground of your hope however it seem to be contradicted in the course of his providence 't is his Word you are to go by and stand by and according to which you must interpret all his Dispensations 'T is said Rom. 4. 18. That Abraham believed in hope against hope When Faith dependeth upon God naked Word then it standeth upon its own Basis and proper Legs every thing is strongest in its props and pillars which God and nature hath appointed for it He hangeth the Earth upon nothing in the midest of the Air but there is its place So Faith standeth fast upon his Word who is able to perform what he saith 4. This Faith must conquer our Fears and Cares and Troubles Psal. 112. 7. He shall not be afraid of evil tydings his heart is fixed trusting in the Lord. And Psal. 56. 3 4. In God I will praise his word in God have I put my trust I will not fear what man can do unto me The force of Faith is seen in calming our passions and sinful Fears or else it is but a Notion and our Reverence and Respect to God will be weakened by it 5. When Faith hath done its work in the quieting of our own hearts you must glorifie God in your Carriage before others Ioh. 3. 33. Put to his Seal that God is true that is when we confirm others in the faith and belief of the promises by our joyfulness in all Conditions Patience and Contentedness under the Cross Diligence in Holiness Hope and Comfort in great streights You shall see Numb 20. 12. that God was angry with Moses and Aaron because they believed not to sanctifie him in the eyes of the Children of Israel We are not only to believe in God our selves but to sanctifie him in the eyes of others As the Thessalonians by receiving the Word in much Affliction much Assurance and Joy in the Holy Ghost were Examples to all that believed in Achaia 1 Thes. 1. 5 6 7. Thus we should do but how few do thus believe Some count these vain words and the Comforts thence deduced Fanatical illusions or Fantastical impressions nothing so ridiculous in the Worlds Eye as Trust and dependance on unseen Comforts Psal. 22. 8. He trusted on the Lord that he should deliver him let him deliver him seeing he delighted in him Ungodly Wits make the life of Faith a sport or matter of Laughter Some have more modesty but as little Faith they are all for the present World 2 Tim. 4. 9. present delights please them but present Temptations altogether unsettle them Heb. 12. 11. cannot bear present smart nor despise the present World Rom. 8. 19. any thing in hand is more than the greatest promise of better things to come they do not deal equally with God and man if man promise they reckon much of that but cannot tarry upon Gods security count his promise little worth they can trade with a Factor beyond Sea and trust all their estate in a mans hand whom they have never seen and yet the Word of the infallible God is of little respect with them The best build too weakly upon the promise as appeareth by the prevalency of our Cares and Fears Heb. 12. 4 5 6. If you did take God at his Word you would not be so soon Mated with every difficulty there would be more resolution in Trials more hardiness against ttoubles A man may boldly say the Lord is my helper I will not fear what man can do unto me If we had Faith to believe it it would more effectually quiet our hearts and minds in all our streights necessities and perplexities it would calm our desires and fears we would not desire the best things of the World nor fear the worst SERM. CLXXXVIII PSALM CXIX VER 174. I have longed for thy Salvation O Lord and thy law is my delight WE now come to the second Acceptation of the Word Salvation as it implyeth Eternal Salvation and so the Points are two Doctrine I. That we should vehemently Long and earnestly Wait for Eternal Life Doctrine II. That we should not only Long for Salvation but delight in the way which leadeth us to it For the first Point That Longing for Salvation is the Duty and Property of Gods Children The Reasons are taken from I. The Object of these Desires II. The Subject of these Desires III. The Use of these Desires IV. The State and Condition of the present World I. The Object The Object of Desire is Good considered as absent and not yet obtained Good All desire that it should be well with themselves This Desire is confused and general not the hundredth part Longeth after the true Good Psal. 4. 6. Who will shew us any good Some are carried by Ambition others by Covetousness others by Sensuality 1 Ioh. 2. 16. All that is in the World is either the lust of the Flesh the lust of the Eye or pride of Life And Isa. 53. 6. All we like sheep have gone astray we have every one turned to his own way As the Channel is cut so Corrupt Nature finds a vent But now Gods Salvation is the true good and ought to be desired and will be desired by all his Children It Importeth a freedom from all Misery and an Injoyment of all Good and a freedom from all Misery there sin and sorrow shall be no more and all Tears shall be wiped from our Eyes Rev. 21. 4. the blessed Spirits above have none of our cares and fears and sorrows here we are sighing and they are praising we sinning and they pleasing God we full of infirmities and they are perfect and without blemish And in the full enjoyment of all good Psal. 16. 11. At thy right hand is fulness of Ioy and in thy presence pleasures for evermore Psal. 17. 15. As for me I will behold thy face in Righteousness I shall be satisfied when I awake with thy likeness Alas the preparations to this Estate in the World are far above the vain delights of the Flesh much more the pleasures there these the soul longeth for though they are thankful for a refreshment by the way yet they long to be at home II. Reason is taken from the Subject of these Desires and there we have 1. The Suitableness 2. The Experience 3. Our
to God to prolong their Lives a while Rom. 15. 31 32. Now I heseech you Brethren for the Lord Iesus Christs sake and for the Love of the Spirit that ye strive together with me in your Prayers to God for me that I may be delivered from them that do not believe in Judea and that my service which I have done for Jerusalem may be accepted of the Saints that I may come unto you with joy by the VVill of God and may with you be refreshed 4. To breed up their Children in the Nurture of the Lord and that they may be usefull in their Familyes as Iacob desired to see Ioseph 5. We may beg it that we may not fall into the Hands of Men lose our Life by Murtherers Psal. 31. 15. My Times are in thy Hand deliver me from the hand of mine Enemyes and from them that persecute me The Dispensation of all Mercies Comforts Troubles Life Death are in Gods Hand not in Mans Power therefore we pray that it may rest there that we may not be given up to the Will of those that hate us All These Desires have a respect to the Glory of God and if conceived with submission and trust that God will do what is for the best they are all lawful Use of all 1. Exhortation it presseth you 1. To Consecrate your selves to God Rom. 12. 1. I beseech you therefore Brethren by the Mercies of God that ye present your Bodies a Living Sacrifice Holy acceptable unto God which is your Reasonable Service Under the Law the Bodyes of Beasts were to be slain yours is a Living Sacrifice both were set apart for God the one to dye the other to live to God 2. Having given up your selves to God use your selves for God there will be an enquiry what share God hath in your Time Acts. 27. 23. The God whose I am and whom I serve 3. Praise the Lord with Heart Mouth and Life a Christians Conversation is nothing but an Hymn to God 1 Pet. 2. 9. But ye are a Chosen Generation a Royal Priest-hood a Holy Nation a Peculiar People that ye should shew forth the praises of him who hath called you out of darkness into his Marvellous Light The Virtues of God his Attributes 4. When ●…er you pray for continuance of Life in any danger or distress either for your self or others propound this as the end not so much for our own Satisfaction as the honour of God A Christian is not content to have the use of the benefit to himself alone 1. For Self Every man desireth Life the whole World would all and every of them put this request to God Let my Soul live but very few consider why they should live Some desire Life only to please the flesh and that they may enjoy the Delights of the present World A Brutish wish A Heathen could say He doth not deserve the name of a Man qui unam diem velit esse in voluptate c. Certainly not of a Christian that would desire Life merely to enjoy the Delights of the flesh These would not leave their Hogs Trough to go home to their Father Some there are who desire Life to see their Children well bestowed or to free their Estate from incumbrance and are loth to part from their Natural Relations Wife Children Friends This is a natural Respect and should be subordinate to an higher End Though this Desire keeping its place may be Lawful yet out of its place sinful We use to profess Psal. 73. 25. Whom have I in heaven but thee and there is none upon earth that I desire besides thee In short two Motives I will urge why the Glory of God should have the chief Respect in our Affections 1. The benefit it giveth Hope of prolonging Life if this desire be true and real And it giveth certain Assurance of not perishing for ever The one it doth for God doth all things with respect to his Glory Psal. 119. 94. The other also for he will glorifie those that glorifie him 2. This is the Temper of a sincere Christian surely to a Believer 'T is a piece of Self-denial to be kept out of Heaven longer Therefore it must be sweetned with some valuable Compensation something there must be to calm the Mind and contentedly to spare the enjoyment of it for a while Now next to the good pleasure of God which is the Reason of Reasons there is some Benefit we pitch upon there is nothing worthy to be compared but our service If God may have Glory if our Lives may do good a Gracious heart must be satisfied with Gracious Reasons 2. For others If we make it our Request we must have the same Aims in this Case that the Faith and Grace of others may benefit them Mar. 2. 5. When Iesus saw their faith he said unto the sick of the palsie thy sins be forgiven thee Now in such Requests bare natural Reasons should not move us but that God may not loose an Instrument of his Glory and that his Power and Providence may be more seen in the World in the Recovery 'T is good to beg of God for God Psal. 115. 1. Not unto us but unto thy Name give glory It should be accounted as a Mercy unto us Phil. 2. 27. For indeed he was sick nigh unto death but God had mercy on him and not on him onely but on me also least I should have sorrow upon sorrow 5. This End is known by the Use in Having and submission in asking 1. The use in Having how we use a Mercy when we have it if we do indeed live to the Glory of God and the rather for these Experiences 2. Submission in Asking whether we sight or are Crowned Work or receive our Reward For God is the best Judge of what is most for his own Glory Use. II. Is Direction but of this See Verse the 17. I come now to the second Point Doctrine II. That Gods Iudgments are a great help and relief to his People who desire to praise him even when they are in danger of their lives Here I shall shew I. What are Gods Judgments II. How they are an Help I. What is the meaning of Misphalim Judgements here 1. God Governeth the World that is called Judgement Psal. 9. 7. 8. He hath prepared his Throne for Iudgment he shall judge the world in righteousness he shall minister Iudgement in uprightness So Ioh. 5. 22. When the Government is put into the hands of Christ 't is said For the Father judgeth no man but hath committed all Iudgment unto the Son 2. God governeth the World according to this Word there is his Judgment concerning Things and Persons stating what is good and evil The Reward of the one and Punishment of the other Psal. 19. 9. The Iudgments of the Lord are true and righteous altogether The Precept is the Rule of our Duty the sanction of Gods Process Therefore in Scripture the Punishments of the wicked are
what is to come yet fear of punish ment alone sheweth you are slaves and only love your selves the Devils fear and tremble but do not love You may fear a thing though you hate it So far as the heart is affected with the fear of Hell 't is good 3. There are very good and sound Principles yet do not always argue Grace as when duties are done out of the urgings of an enlightened Conscience this may be without the bent of a renewed heart but yet the principle is sound for the first thing that influenceth a man is to consider himself a Creature and so to look upon himself as bound to obey his Creator I shall illustrate it by the Apostles words in another case I must preach the Gospel and wo unto me if I preach not the Gospel 1 Cor. 9. 16. 17. Whether I do it willingly or unwillingly yet a Dispensation is committed to me So saith the Soul whether I be fitted to do God service or no God must be obeyed but because Gods precept is invested with a Sanction of Threatnings and Rewards here comes in the fear of Hell and the hopes of heaven The Lord hath commanded me to fly from Hell this is a good principle So the hope of Heaven Heb. 11. 26. 't is a sound principle a man may be gracious or he may not Many have a liking to Heaven and Eternal Life as 't is a state of happiness not of likness to God where 't is not alone 't is a very sound principle but as 't is it may sometimes be the sign of a renewed man and sometimes not 4. There are rare and excellent Principles when we Act out of thankfulness to God when we consider the Lords goodness that might have required Duty out of meer Soveraignty he hath laid the Foundation of it in the bloud of his own Son 1 Ioh. 4. 29. When we love him out of the sense of his love to us in Christ And when the grace of God that hath appeared teacheth us to deny ungodliness Tit. 2. 11. when the Mercies of God melt us Rom. 12. 1. when there are no intreaties so powerful as that of Love Again another principle that is rare and excellent is when the Glory of God doth season us in our whole Course that it may be to the praise of his glorious grace 1 Cor. 10. 31. Another is Complacency in the Work for the Works sake When we love the Law because it is pure when I see it will ennoble me and make me like God when I love God and his wayes when nothing but so noble imployment doth ingage me to his service and service to God is the sweetest life in the World SERMON CLVIII PSALM CXIX VER 141. I am Small and Despised yet do I not forget thy Precepts HEre David proveth the Truth of his former Assertion that seeing the Word of God was so Pure he loved it for its own sake and that he did not Court Religion for the portion that he should have with it but for it self Some are meer Mercenaries no longer then they are bribed by some Worldly profit they have no respect for God and his Wayes The Man of God was of another Temper if God would bestow any thing on him well if not he would love his Word still yea when it brought him apparent Loss Meanness and Contempt yet this could not make any divorce between his Heart and the Word I am small and despised c. In the Words we have 1. David's Condition 2. David's Carriage under that Condition His Condition might have been a Snare to him yet still he keepeth up his Affection 1. His Condition is set forth by two Notions the one of which implyeth the other Gods Providence I am small God had reduced him to streights the other Mans Treatment of him and despised the one sheweth what he was really in himself the other what he was in the opinion of others Mean in himself and Contemptible in the eye of others The Sept. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I am the younger and set at nought Therefore the Greek Interpreters suppose it relateth to the story when God bids Samuel to anoint one of the Sons of Iesse to be King and the elder Children were brought forth who were Taller and more likely too and they said of them surely the Lords Anointed is before him and when Samuel enquired for another they told him 1 Sam. 16. 7. That there remaineth the youngest and he keepeth sheep then when he was but an Youth and a despised stripling his heart was with God and God favoured him Or else they refer it to the time when Eliab his eldest Brother despised him 1 Sam. 17. 28. Others think this was verified when the Elders of Israel forsook him and clave to Absalom rather I think it generally to any Afflicted Condition when he was little in Estate and Reputation rather than in years elsewhere so is this word small taken Amos 7. 2 5. Iacob is small by whom shall he arise When his Condition was helpless and hopeless and Interest inconsiderable in the World So here I am small and despised I am looked upon as a man of no Value and Interest 2. Davids Carriage under this Condition Yet do I not forget thy Precepts First here is a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 less is said more is intended I do earnestly remember them Again a man may be said to remember or forget two wayes Notionally or Affectively Notionally a man forgets when the Notions of things formerly known are quite vanished out of our Minds Affectively when though he retaineth the notions yet he is not answerably affected he doth not act suitably So 't is taken here and implyeth as much as I am stedfast in the profession of this Truth as they say in a like Case Psal. 44. 17. We have not forgotten thee nor dealt falsely in thy Covenant not parted with any point of Truth or neglected and dispensed with any part of Duty Precepts is put for the whole word of God I do not forget thy Word the Comforts and Duties of it None do so far forget God and his Precepts as those that make defection from him The sum of all is My mean and despicable Condition doth not make a breach upon my Constancy but still I keep the Credit of being a Faithful Servant to thee His Temptation was double his Faithfulness had made him small God seemeth to forget us in our low Estate yet we should not forget him and had made him despised though we lose esteem with men by sticking to the Word of God yet the Word of God should lose no esteem with us Doctrine They that love God may be reduced to a Mean Low and Afflicted Condition I am small saith David The Lord seeth it meet for divers reasons 1. That they may know their happiness is not in this World and so the more long for Heaven and delight in Heavenly things Psal. 17. 14 15. From men
of the World which have their portion in this life As for me I will behold thy face in righteousness I shall be satisfied when I awake with thy likeness Christ gave his Spirit to the rest of the Disciples and the Purse to Iudas he had the keeping of the bag that was the worst Gods dearest Children usually have the least in this World that they may look higher as Levi had no portion among his Brethren because God would be his portion Others have more plentiful Accomodations for Back and Belly they are better Clad their Tables more plentifully furnished and supplied larger portions for their Children they that look to save any thing or get any thing by Religion but the saving of their Souls are fouly mistaken if we have more than others Religion calleth for more disbursements Charity and liberal distributions exposeth to Troubles Religion moderateth our desires and forbids all unjust ways of acquiring Wealth calleth upon us to forsake all for a good Conscience Therefore they that follow Christ out of a design to be rich in this World lose their aim not but that Hypocrites sometimes make a Market of Religion but then God is Angry and they and the Church too payeth for it at last not but that Religion bringeth in Temporal supplies Mat. 6. 33. First seek the Kingdom of God and his righteousness and these things shall be added unto you 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 food and raiment it bringeth in God may give some a more plentyful allowance especially if they be Faithful Stewards then they are intrusted with more but generally they are mean and small or if they have more of this Worlds goods they have their Afflictions in other kinds 2. 'T is necessary to cut off the provisions of the Flesh and the fuel of their Lusts a rank soil breedeth Weeds and when we sail with a full stream we are apt to be carried away with it We either glut our selves with the Pleasures of the Flesh or grow proud and hanker and linger after the Pomp and Vanities of the World and neglect God And therefore God is fain to diet us and to keep us bare and low as he is said to cut Israel short 2 Kings 10. 32. When he streightned their Coasts and Borders so for our cure we need not only internal Grace to abate the Lust but external Providence to catch away the Prey and Bait by which it is fed The wise Man saith not only give me grace but give me neither Poverty nor Riches Prov. 30. 8 9. and Gal. 6. 14. by whom the World is Crucified to me and I unto the World Both parts are necessary riches are a great Temptation we would root here and grow Sensual Worldly and Proud if God did not snatch our Comforts from us when we are apt to Surfet of them a plentiful portion of Temporal things is Spiritually Dangerous 3. That they may be more sensible of his displeasure against their sins and scandalous Carriage by which they have dishonoured him and provoked the pure eyes of his glory Never have scandals faln out but some great Woe followed Matth. 18. 7. Woe to the World because of offences Therefore God hath brought his People low that he may vindicate his Name which through their means is Blasphemed Rom. 2. 24. and make his People sensible of their sin the World shall know that he doth allow sin no more in them than others and therefore though they were as the signet upon his finger he will pluck them off and make them feel the smart of their wandrings Amos 3. 2. You only have I known of all the Families of the Earth therefore I will punish you for all your iniquities They that have been so near and dear to him the World might think he did approve their sins if he did not manifest his displeasure at them Usually their sins go nearest his heart and meet with the sorest vengeance Deut. 32. 19. When the Lord saw it he abhorred them because of the provokings of his Sons and of his Daughters Their relation to God their priviledges and the consequences of their actions aggravate their sins And therefore God is most quick and severe in punishing their sins We complain we were brought low but were not our Provocations first very high The most Religious cannot wipe their mouths and excuse themselves as faultless Oh what a sad part hath been lately acted upon the Publick Stage What a trade have many driven for themselves under a mask of Religion What breaches in the body of Christ uncharitable divisions making a profession of the Name of Christ for Carnal ends 4. That we may learn to live upon the Promises and learn to exercise suffering Graces especially dependance upon God who can support us without a temporal visible Interest Compare Rev. 12. 11. And they overcame him by the bloud of the Lamb and by the word of their Testimony and they loved not their lives to the death Rev. 13. 7. And it was given unto him to make War with the Saints and to overcome them and power was given him over all Kindreds and Tongues and Nations You shall see how the Enemies overcome and the Saints overcome The seed of the Woman and the seed of the Serpent The Beast raiseth the World against the Saints and prevaileth over their Bodies he overcomes them by spoiling them of Liberty Lives and Temporal Estate but they overcome by adhereing to Truth and resisting his Temptations and their own Corruptions even in the lowest Estate by Suffering So for other Graces Patience Meekness Self-denial Spiritual Comforts as the Stars in their order fought against Sisera so all graces are exercised in their turn Rev. 13. 10. Here is the Faith and Patience of the Saints that is a time to act these Graces a full Third of the Scriptures would be lost which containeth Comfort for Afflicted ones if God did not exercise them with Temporal Afflictions 5. That God may convince the Enemies that there is a people that do sincerely serve him and not for carnal selfish Ends. Iob 1. The Carnal World suspect private selfish worldly aims and designs in all that we do and attribute all our Duties to Interest being themselves led by Interest they cannot think others are led by Conscience Men are apt to suspect and maligne what they will not imitate There is sometimes too much advantage given many are Mercenaries only esteem the ways of God when beneficial to them Ioh. 6. 26. Ye seek me not because ye saw the Miricles but because ye did eat of the Loaves and were filled Therefore it is needful to heighten the price of Religion when it is too cheap a thing to be a Christian. This God doth by bringing his People low that the World may see some will cleave to him in all conditions not only when his wayes are befriended but when frowned upon God will glorifie himself and his Truth by their Constancy 6. That his glory may be more