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A00980 The way to blessednes a treatise or commentary, on the first Psalme. By Phinees Fletcher, B. in D. and minister of Gods Word at Hilgay, in Norfolke. Fletcher, Phineas, 1582-1650. 1632 (1632) STC 11085; ESTC S102384 208,041 304

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1 Chron. 28. 9. Know the God of thy fathers that chose him and set him up in thy heart to be thy God 3 when he loueth and feareth God Thus the sonns of Eli are said to be wicked that knew not God 1 Sam. 2. 12 and some-times all these included in one as Iohn 17. 3. This is life eternall to know thee the onely true God and whom thou hast sent Iesus Christ that is to know thee with the understanding and Iesus Christ by conceiving those things which are revealed of God the father and the Lord Iesus Christ to know with the will and affections by chosing and loving thee testified in all obedience is life eternall Thus likewise God is said to know men or the wayes of men not onely because he knowes and searches the heart and understandeth the thoughts Psal. 94. 11. but because he chuseth any people Amos .4 2. and because he loveth and delighteth in any Psal. 144. 3. Thus then is the sense of the words Because God seeth● choseth and loveth the wayes of a righteous man therefore he shall prosper and be blessed The point is evidently here a●firmed and will further be cleered in that which followes So likewise the grounds are apparent 1. In God 2. or opposite creatures In God his infinite power in the enemies their subiection and weaknes For lay down this first as a confessed truth God sees choses loves the wayes of righteous men secondly he is of infinite power doing whatsoeuer he will in heauen and earth Thirdly no creature able to resist and hence necessarily will follow this effect therefore shall they prosper and be blessed 1 The Lord vnderstandeth and seeth all the wayes of righteous persons whatsoever dutie they performe in obedience to any of his commandements though in secret and in the heart he discerns and will reward it openly Psal. 139. 1.2 3. 4. Math. 6.4.6 1. Cor. 4. 5. Heb. 4.13 Much and every way profitable use haue the Saints made of this truth hence some haue fenced themselues from many tentations and kept their hearts whole and sound Ioseph Gen. 39. 9. hauing his eye on the eye of God preserved his body from his Mystres unchast allurements Some haue hence learned to denie themselues and to prefer the rebuke of Christ before all earthly treasures as Moses Heb. 11.26 But of especiall use is it for consolation as well against tyrants and bloody persecutours as Psal. 35. 13. 14 15. 17. 22. 24. as against terrours of death Thus Hezekiah helde up his head and lifted up to God a confident and effectuall prayer even after the message of death Esa. 38.3 How great a comfort would it be to a servant or childe when he had offended or failed in dutie that his master or Father could see the unfeyned sorrow of his heart or could discerne how strongly he desires to doe stronger service This comfortable advantage haue all the Saints they serue such a Lord to whom they may truely as David say What can David say more unto thee for thou Lord knowest thy servant 2 Sam. 7.20 or as Peter Thou knowest that I loue thee Ioh. 21. 17. And indeed how should it bee otherwise Hee that planted the eare shall he not heare and hee that formed the eye shall hee not see hee that teacheth ma● knowledge shall hee not know How is it possible that the Creator should not know the creature He in whose hand are the preparations of the heart and the answer of the tongue he who pondereth the Spirits how should he be unacquainted with any thing in man Secondly As the Lord is every where present is not nor can be excluded from any place th● heaven of heavens cannot containe him 2. Chron. 6. 18. so is he especially present with the faithfull God dwells in the humble Christ dwells in the faithfull Ephe. 3. 17. They are the Temple of God and the holy Ghost dwells in them 1 Cor. 3. 16. being even the soule of their soule quickning them Iohn 6. 63. freeing them and bringing to libertie 2 Cor. 3. 17. teaching and prompting them Ioh. 14.26 and strengthning them Ephe. 3. 16. 2● The Lord chuseth out the righteous for himselfe and their paths for them preordaining setting out and preparing their way in which they shall walke and ordering their steps in that way The Lord chuseth the godly man God will teach those that feare him the way which hee chuseth See Ephe. 2. 10. where we easily perceiue that as God culls out the faithfull so doth he set out all their workes for them and prepares them not onely laying downe this way plainely in his word but writing it in the hearts of his people giving them also the will and deed see Esay 26. 12. As he doth not create them to bee idle or viciously employed so hee purposely maketh them new creatu●es that they may walke in newnesse of life This that they may doe he ordaineth good wayes and sets them out for them and leads them along to the end having prepared both the way and end for them Looke as a wise loving father considering his childes disposition appoints fits and traines him to some calling which he thinks well of and in which hee may prosper so the Lord having graciously called any to his knowledg according to his owne loue and wisedome sets out and makes readie for them that which he knowes most fit and convenient And necessarily is it that the Lord should effect this for his children For First The way of man is not in himselfe neither is it in man to direct his steps If the●fore they had no better Guid● then themselues they could not prosper in their wayes Secondly There are so many difficulties snares and stumbling blocks in the way layd and hid by Satan and his instruments that they must needs fall unlesse the Lord should beare them up and sustaine them Thus hee prepares the way streitens the crooked turnings and smooths the roughnesse Luk. 3. 4. 5. and puts under his hand when they are readie to fall Psal 37. 24. Thirdly Satan and his followers principalities and powers and worldly governours are their professed enemies in this journey resisting them in all good actions and fighting with all their armies to stop and hinder them that they may never enter into the land of promise Zach. 3. 1. Ephe. 6. 12. 3. The Lord doth loue and honour not onely the persons of all his Saints● but their wayes also with an everlasting loue haue I loved thee see Pro. 15. 9. and Psal. 37. 23. 24. The Lord loveth the way of the righteous though hee fall hee shall not bee cast off So likewise hee honours those that honour him 1 Sam. 2. 30. Rom. 2. 10. Such honour haue all his Saints The reason of this is plaine and necessarie First God is himselfe infinitely righteous therefore cannot but loue and honour righteous wayes persons Psal.
receiue of it they doe not receiue with sincere affection as the word of God but keepe themselues free from it where they list yeelding some obedience in some particulars nay indeed not at all obeying but rather following some naturall inclinations of restraint put into them by God Thus doe we see some of them at this day plainely uncasing themselues and professing Christ liue like beasts Others when they haue for some sinister ends as Demas followed the truth for a time fall cleane off revolting either to Antichrist or to the world in covetousnesse and notable profanenes But many as the Iewes in Iohn Baptist can for a time rejoyce in the Minister and the word while they are fresh or as Herod till they come crosse of them but being not planted by the rivers of water onely for some respects using a while but not constantly conversing with the Gospell in a short space they wither and fall from their profession 1. Here first may those wilfully and even desperately blind persons be censured who being sunke in a deepe securitie against the light of Gods word and their owne reason will perswade themselues and presume that although they grow old in their wickednesse and liue in open grosse filthy sins yet haue they faith as good as the best as true a loue to God as any of them all a strong hope of their salvation they haue as much feare of God and more then these sermon-men c. Now as a man who being to travaile by night in a dangerous way where on the right and left hand are many steepe rockes and fearefull downefalls should yet refuse a skilfull guide with a lanterne or torch and further because he would not see his danger would shut his eyes and winke were but a foole worthy to bee begged and no better then a mad man and though hee should boast much of his skill and knowledge in the passage that he could blinde-fold and in the darke goe as safely and come as secur●ly to the end of the way as he that journyed at mid-day with open eyes this bragging would make him but more ridiculous in the eye of any reasonable man such are these God hath given them the lanterne of his word and direction of his most wise Spirit to guide them the way is darke if they stray but a little on the right or left hand they are dashed in peeces against the stumbling stone and fall into perdition but they refuse the word hearken not to their owne reason but following their sense like bruit beasts wilfully proceed till they fall headlong into everlasting destruction both of body and soule would they take the word along with them they would soone perceiue their wilfull errour That would tell them Faith purifieth the heart Every man that hath this hope purgeth himselfe as hee is pure Purge out therefore the old leaven that yee may bee a new lumpe It will teach us This is the loue of God to keepe his commandements If any man loue mee hee will keepe my word The feare of the Lord is to hate evill Our reason if we would open the eyes of it would shew us that when wee trust upon any for matters of great importance and haue hung our hopes upon him wee will set our selues to please him and will do nothing which may kindle his anger and breed disl●ke of us that if we loue and feare our Prince wee will liue in his subjection and obedience to his lawes that if our children loue and feare us they will obserue what we commaund and deny their owne wills to content us Now what pleaseth our Lord Will he be pleased with thousands of rammes will hee be pleased with saying Lord Lord and calling our selues his servants He hath shewed thee oh man what is good in his sight and what the Lord requireth of thee surely to doe justly to loue mercy and to humble thy selfe to walke with thy God to doe the will of thy Father in heaven Mat. 7. 21. That humble and subject denying thy selfe that is thine owne wisedome to b●e governed by his word thy lusts to bee ruled by his will this is that which God delights in Now then when men will fol●ow their owne conceits and deceits in matter of religion without the word when they will walke after their owne hearts when they cannot bee brought to forsake so much as open grosse and palpable sinnes knowne and confessed but still walke in them is this to walke with God or can any man who hath any light from God in his word nay from his owne reason not see here his wicked and deceitfull heart that perswades him all is well when hee is yet in the very bond of iniquitie and gall of bitternesse The carelesnes of men in the weightiest matter which can conc●rne them must heere be rebuked They make no doubt at all of obteining the kingdome of God There is no question they thinke and say of all this well what is the ground of this so strong confidence Certainly it is a Castle in the ayre without any foundation but onely a presumptuous conceit of an idle braine Had the Spirit planted in them this perswasion the flesh would lay batterie to it and labour to weaken it objecting an hundred feares and shaking it with wavering nay the Spirit also would make this advantage of the enemie to use more diligence to make their calling and election sure by fortifying that which is weake and adding grace unto grace But this is the device and worke of Satan that strong man who having possession keepes all in his peace The Devill having got them in this his cradle of presumptuous securitie rockes them in sleepe of sinne by this pleasing dreame and were their eyes never so little open that one sparke of spirituall light might enter they could not but see how they are besotted For aske them Is not eternall life the gift of God They cannot deny it And on whom doth hee bestow it but on his faithfull servants And how doe wee serue him but in holinesse and righteousnesse Doe you thus serue him Is swearing profaning the Lords day by doing our owne will neglecting nay despising the word Sacraments prayer publike and private are these any parts of holinesse Is lying railing cursing spightfull dealing stealing c. any part of righteousnesse Doe you not liue in these or some of these sinnes doe you keepe your mouth as with a bridle feare an oath detest a slander as well as a slanderer Doe you tremble and rejoyce in the word do you cōtinue in prayer c. Here they haue no other refuge but those miserable fig-leanes which cannot hide their nakednesse Are you say they without your faults wee cannot be Saints on earth c. To reply to these poore shifts No man liues without sinne but thousands even all the faithfull liu● not in sinne they serue not sinne in the lusts of
THE WAY TO BLESSEDNES A TREATISE OR COMMENTARY ON THE FIRST PSALME PSAL. 119. 1. Blessed are the vndefiled in the way who walke in the Law of the Lord. By PHINEES FLETCHER B. in D. and Minister of Gods Word at Hilgay in NORFOLKE LONDON Printed by I. D. for Iames Boler and are to be sold at the Marigold in Pauls Church-yard 1632. TO MY MOST HONORED FREE AND BOVNTIFVLL Patron Sir HENRY WILOVGHBY Baronet and to his most worthy Lady all blessings of this and a better life Sir THe ignorant generally complaine of too much preaching and some learned of too much writing The first haue no eyes to see either the grace of God in his word or their owne want of grace for want of that grac●ous word The other I thinke in this haue squint eyes or at least looke not the r●ght way to the Gospell For did they condemne onely the wanton idle and vaine Pamphlets which too licentiously pandaring for lust stand forth in every shop or those turbulent libells which being engendered in earthly mindes breake forth into all bitternesse and fill the world with stormes and schismes who would not rise up with them against the wicked But the bookes by them censured nay despised and derided are such as tend to edification and are scorned either because they savour not of profound and deepe learning or not bumbasted with multiplicitie of reading or not stucke thicke enough with the flowers of Rhetorike when yet our owne experience makes us see these despised labours wonderfully to prosper in the Church whether it bee that the Lord delights to glorifie his power in infirmitie and takes no pleasure in the wisedome of words which makes the crosse of Christ of no effect or as light so the word is most cleere and powerfull when least mixed Famous is that historie of Sozomen who hath left it upon record that in the first Councell of Nice when an heathen Philosopher did not a little stumble the learned Christians a simple old man stept out and with plaine dealing both confuted and converted him No question there is great and even necessarie use of those speciall gifts in the Church yet by such examples the Lord plainely shewes that hee will not haue his meanest grace despised I am perswaded that with as much reason and lesse blasphemie wee may quarrell with the Creator for making so many rivers and fountaines on earth so many starres in heaven as with the Redeemer and blessed Spirit for storing this Kingdome with those gifts which make it as a watered garden and another firmament full of glorious lights shedding their beames into every corner For my selfe if any desire to know the reasons impelling mee to write what before I had spoken and giue way to my private and weake meditations to looke out in publike upon so learned an Age the chiefe are these First That redoubled and trebled commaund of our most gracious Saviour Feed my sheepe together with that inforcing motiue As thou lovest mee Oh! who can loue him sufficiently who loved to death whose loue passeth knowledge Or how can any man feed too much when no man can loue enough Therefore that Apostle there so adjured contented not himselfe to feed by preaching but to this day feedes us by his writing The same precept is often by his blessed Spirit pressed upon his Ministers Feed the flocke of Christ. As every man hath received the gift so let him administer it ●o other as good Stewards of the manifold graces of God Take heed to your selues and to the flocke over which the holy Ghost hath made you Overseers to feed the Church of God which he hath purchased with his owne bloud O strong adjuration Now God forbid that I should ever esteeme any paines sufficient for that for which God thought not his bloud too much Secondly The streight account which our Soveraigne Lord hath foretold he will exact of all his servants to whom he commits these treasures of his grace so that the single talent shall bee accountable and the slothfull person adjudged to a fearefull condemnation and execution for not putting it to the banke Thirdly The profit of Gods people especially those committed to me by Christ. Surely there is a wonderfull loue betweene a faithfull Pastor and his faithfull people The Galatians could giue their eyes Aquila and Priscilla their liues to the Apostle But beyond all admiration was the loue of that Apostle who not onely loved the more the lesse he was beloved their neglect as it were by Antiperistasis kindling and enflaming his affections but could willingly deferre his joyes with Christ in heaven and still liue under the bloudie persecution of Iewes Gentiles false Brethren and which is worse then all these the fierie opposition and loathsome but forced struglings with remainders of sinne that hee might build the Church He knew not which to choose his presence with Christ in infinite felicitie or his edifying the Church with all worldly miserie Lastly Though there be euē innumerable lights heaven yet is ther not one in vaine the very least and most obscure haue their use their light and influence yea those infinite little starres which by us cannot be discerned by reason partly of their distance partly of their smalnesse yet doe they paue embrighten and point out that milkie way in heaven And I doubt not but this little and weake worke shall through his power who brings light out of da●kenesse direct some or further them in that blessed way to eternall life But it may bee some will stop my way with slight e●tertainment and strong opposition of the world This cannot weigh with those stronger arguments inciting mee to this dutie I remember the Astronomers distinguish the visible fixt starres into six severall magnitudes Those of the first and chiefest exceed the whole earth in quantitie an hundred and seven-fold and even the most obscure and cloudy of the sixt magnitude eighteen-fold with advantage Thus those first and great starres the holy Apostles their followers and immediate Successours how wonderfully they did surmount the whole earth may easily appeare in this that when all the world interposed it selfe to ecclipse their light yet did they then shine more bright and filled the whole earth with the glorious splendour of the Gospell of Christ. So even in these last ages we haue knowne that notwithstanding all the opposition of Popes Emperours and many other Princes the whole earth indeed being banded against a very few and farre inferiour to those fi●st Ministers yet did they overcome all their malice and shed the long obscured light into all parts of the Christian world For my selfe I rest assured that one heavenly sparke in the least of those starres shining in the right hand of Christ shall not nor cannot by any earthly opposition bee so ecclipsed but that it shall breake through and both enlighten and enflame some of those whom God hath chosen It
receiue Christ comming to thee beleeue onely and thou shalt liue Take heed now to thy foote and enter not into the way of scorners be no more a mocker least thy bonds increase Thou canst not but see every where profane men the plague of these last times making a jest of Religion despising God in his workes in his word in his Saints set not in with them but flie from them as from the pestilence And for a motiue to stop thee from this course consider thei● steppes how many feete haue gone that way how few returned Thou shalt find they perish by skores 2 King 2. 24. but hardly one or two single soules retyring safely from this last steppe of sinne But especially awaken thy soule from this sinne with assurance of like measure from God O seriously thinke with thy selfe will not the day come is it not running poast toward me and I know not how neere when I shall fi●de no comfort but onely in peace with God My pleasures my wealth will forsake me my friends will weepe for mee my body full of deadly griefes my soule pinched with thousand pangs of conscience the bell summoning me the graue gaping for me my accusers one without another within mee and the Iudge who cannot bee bribed much lesse any longer mocked ●eady to arraine me Oh then how welcome to mee will be the least hope that God would lend me a mercifull eare to heare me If hee should then deride my petition scorne my supplication and laugh at my miserie what can be expected but a fearfull instant damnation how soone would those foule spirits plunge my desolate soule into that eternall torment that lake of fire brimstone Shall I then willingly plucke this infinite misery upon my head Hath not the Truth which cannot lie assured me and will not my reason confirme it that he scornes the scorner How should I looke upon his face when he must be my Iudge whom I scorned to be my friend How shall I stand before his wrath whose grace I d●rided O therfore my soule prevent this mischiefe betimes accept of grace while he offers it seeke search sue for it now that thou mayest then assuredly finde it goe forth to meete it which is sent to meete thee take hold of it and leaue it not which will hold up thy head at that day will never leaue thee till thou art seated in eternall happinesse Psalme I. Ver. 2. But his delight is in the Law of the Lord and in his Law doth he meditate day and night THE Prophet having in the former verse layd downe the way which must bee declined by all those which would come to happinesse in this propounds positiuely the path which without faile wil bring us to it if we follow it to the end In this way he sets out two periods 1. delighting in Gods Law 2. meditating in it day night from which issue two points of doctrine 1. The Prophet affirmes him blessed who delights in the law of God 2. The Psalmist pronounceth him blessed who meditates day and night in the law of the Lord. In the former these particulars must bee opened● 1. what is the law of the Lord 2. what this delight in the law The law is sometime strictly taken for the first scriptures the fiue books of Moses and then ordinarily distinguished either from the writer and called the Law of Moses or by adding the other opposite member the law and the Prophets sometime it is more largely extended as comprehending all the propheticall writings of the old Testament as is manifest Iohn 10. 34. where the booke of Psalmes is made part of the Law But the word here used properly signifieth doctrine yet is generally and rightly translated Law because whatsoever God would haue us know concerning his will and pleasure is there by himselfe taught revealed and promulgated Deut. 29.29 so that he appointeth it the only ordinary meanes of life Luke 16. 29 30 31. 2. because all doctrines delivered in the word are so many sanctions of the supreame Majestie binding the conscience to all obedience and perfect subjection Againe his delight is by some translated his will the word signifying that action of the mind whereby willingly pleasingly and with loue the heart cleaues to any thing so used Gen. 34. 19. This then is the meaning of the words Whosoever loues the Law or word of God cleaues to it takes pleasure in that which God there cōmandeth he is entred already into a blessed estate This as it is here plainly testified so also the Apostle addes his suffrage unto it evidently affirming that as his misery consisteth in being vexed with the body of death resisting the law of God so his happinesse in delighting in that law concerning the inward man The grounds or reasons of this testimonie in David are 1. his knowledge in the word of God whence hee had taken forth this lesson● Deut. 28. 2. his experience having felt by this delight an unspeakable happinesse being holden up in his deepest afflictions and quickened from his deadnesse by this word Hence gather these lessons The Scripture containeth all that doctrine which is profitable to the perfection of a Christian so farre as to make him wise to salvation and to bring him to everlasting happinesse For if he be blessed who with delight entertaines it necessarily it must containe whatsoever is necessary or profitable to that end Thus else-where he pronounceth it perfect And the Apostle speaking of the Scriptures affirmeth them able to make wise to salvatiō profitable to instruct c. so farre that the man of God may be perfect in every good worke And hence is it that when God by Moses had written this law and delivered it to the people he straitly charg●th th●m to adde nothing to it nor take any thing from it and againe doubles this precept Deut. 12. 32. And without all question howsoever it pleased the Lord of his goodnesse by the succeeding Prophets to expound and open the law and farther to presse and inforce it yet did never any Prophet adde any new doctrine to the former words they add●d to cleare and unfold it but no new matter or precept to the duties cōmanded Thus after did the Apostles as witnesseth that chosen Vessell they said no other things then those which Moses and the Prophets did say should come Certainly as in the creation of the bodily light the Lord made spread over the world a generall brightnesse which after he gathered into one body the Sunne and made it as a fountaine from whose beames not onely other creatures but the heavenly lights themselues should borrow all their splendour even the Moone and starres So having in this little world of man created a spirituall light of wisdome and knowledge in his understanding diffused and spread it over mankind and for some ages of the world derived both by traditiō as
according to his pleasure all in all things This as it is intimated by the Psalmist when he a●firmes that the man who departs from evill delights and meditates in Gods word shall every way prosper so is it in many other scriptures confirmed It is the Lord not our owne might which giveth us power to get wealth The blessing of the Lord maketh rich and hee addeth no sorrowes to it Honour comes not from East West North or South but God is Iudge who maketh higb and low Therefore hee promiseth these things to those who honour him with-holds them or rather heaps on them disgrace who dishonour him Thus even in these meaner blessings which earthly men call account prosperity the Lord hath the chiefe hand work much more that true good in which consisteth our onely happines is wholy framed and ordered by him The Lord was with Ioseph and hee was a man that prospered and so palpable was this worke of God that even his heathen Maister could not but discerne it and the Iayler himselfe easily observed it Now then if God causeth men to find favour in the eyes of men as Gen. 39. 21. so that even wicked Ahab makes Obadiah who greatly feared God Governour of all his house 1 King 18. 3. how much more is it hee alone who causeth us to find favour in his owne eyes in whose loving favour is all our happinesse But even wicked men the enemies of God and his truth prosper Of this we shall speake more fully hereafter for the present this may suffice They obtaine many things which they ayme at but the maine to which they intend all the rest namely to be happy they never attaine but lose all their paines and labour To conclude this point As all good gifts come downe from the father of lights so especially eternall life without which no man can be blessed is the gift of God Rom. 6. 23. Now therefore as a statu● of man when it ●tands farre off or when we are in the darke may easily seeme to bee a very man though it hath nothing indeed of a man but a sh●w and some outward proportions so rich men and such as flourish in this world seeme in carnall eyes to prosper but try their successe and bring it to the touchstone and you shall find it nothing but a deepe miserie cloathed with a shew and idle o●tentation of happinesse The Heathen are the best witnesses of this truth Thus Dionysius the Tyrant fitly described his estate so much praysed by his flatterer Damocles by placing him in a chaire of state furnishing a table with all delicates commaunding many noble Attendants to waite on him he had wine musicke and what his heart could wish in the meane time a sword hangs over his head held up by a weak threed ready to fall upon him Thus another rightly answered a flattering Courtier who therfore accounted him happy because he wore the Diadem that if he knew how many cares were tyed up in it hardly would he stoope to take it out of the durt And surely whosoever is most enamoured on this painted happinesse and prosperitie of wicked men if he seriously consider what vexing cares usher it what vanitie accompanies and what miserie followes it he would not a little scorne to employ any of his desires or endevours about it 2. Here also is fit occasion of t●yall If thou art of the number of the faithfull thou shalt prosp●r now then examine whether all things worke together for the best to thee Doth every thing helpe thee onward to God when a man giues up himselfe to the Lord in his word every thing shall draw us neerer to him even affliction and trouble Psal. 77.2.3 Nay even hypocrites at such times come in and approach unto him A man in danger will catch hold of any thing especially they will cleaue to those whom they most trust Thus prosperitie and blessings worke thankfulnesse Psal. 103. 1. 2. 3. and make them study for recompence Psal. 116. 12. In feare they cleaue to him by faith Psal. 56. 3. In griefe they seeke to him the onely Comforter The word when it promiseth drawes them when it threatens humbles and driues them to grace and mercy nay even sinfull actions enforce them to God begging pardon and when they haue obtained it knitting their soules to him in ardent loue sinfull infirmities fill them with hung●r and thirst of him their righteousnes And this is the cause why they call God their portion because wholy resting on him they make all other things but meanes to inrich themselues in him and get into his favour Now then try here thy estate thou find●st many troubles in the world doe they wayne thee from this bewitching life and draw thy thoughts to a better world Thou art faint with sicknesse dost thou find that as the outward man perisheth so the inward man is renewed daily Thou enjoyest health and other blessings doe they worke upon thy heart to kindle more zeale to God more loue to his name and children doe they quicken thee to thankfulnesse thus doe all things worke on those whom God hath loved at least dost thou find in generall that though some things hinder yet when they all meete together they worke to the best for thee yea even sinne it selfe makes thee 1. see thy corrupt heart and sinfull nature 2. provokes thy loue to thy gracious Father who pardoneth so many offences and whets thee to all thankfulnesse and loue of Christ who hath satisfied for thee so that because m●ch is forgiven thee thou lovest much doth it more fill thy heart with loathing sinfull filthinesse and thy selfe for it awake thee to more care and watchfulnes and lastly wearie thee with the loathsome companie of it that thou desirest and criest to be delivered from this body of death If thou findest these fruits thou mayest comfort thy selfe in the Lord for he that thus worketh for thee and in thee hath ordained thee to life But if thou findest that outward prosperitie blowes up and bladders thy heart with pride that thou despisest God in his service that it workes thee to more securitie and carnall libertie if thou findest that trouble sicknesse c. bring forth impatience blaspheming or although for the present it worke a little and by the smart of the conscience and agonies terrifying the soule with present judgment stirre up thy heart to promise reformation and a better course of life judging and condemning thy selfe yet upon recovery thou fallest backe againe to thy former vomit thou art not in the number of those who feare aud loue the Lord and for whom all things shall worke for the best 1. Those blasphemers of the Gospell are here condemned who impute evill and the sinnes of men to the word of God upbraiding the Professours of it in any affliction with the loue and meditation of it Looke out and behold the
loues us out of his loue prepares us for grace and then giveth it when he hath fitted us for it and all this without promeriting nay any concurrance on our part that after he worketh in us and perfits what hee begins and crowns what he hath perfited and for our consolation that it is not in him that willeth or runneth but in God that shewes mercie and not for our righteousnes but because he hath chosen us that his purpose according to election may stand not of workes but of him that calleth so is there great use of it in wicked persons for warning and caution Neither can I see how any desperate person can pervert this but in the like manner he may abuse any other doctrine to his destruction as the Papists this day abuse that point of justification by faith and not by workes and many other we must therefore not onely retaine this truth but apply it to that end for which it was given by God making our calling and election sure 3. So also the neglect and despising of that truth namely that the Lord doth loue and honour the persons and wayes of godly men is here reproved Hence might wicked men tremble to see how hatefull and abominable their wayes and persons are in his sight who can recompence and surely will reward them according to their workes And how justly might thousands of Christians tremble when they see their affections in this particular so contrary to Christ For they account basely of those whom God honours hate those whom God loues shew to them all contempt and malice in reviling slandering or any abuse that they can or dare offer What member of Christ art thou who despisest such as thy head hath crowned with his heavenly Kingdome How farre from a Christian who hast no loue to such whom Christ hath loved beyond his life So also by forgetting this lesson many depriue themselues of much comfort For how much joy might the weake Christian gather here if hee did continually remember He that hath given mee an heart to loue him he first loved me he hath set his heart upon me for good and therfore hath drawn me from my wicked vaine conversation to serue him and if he hath loved me when I was an enemie will he forsake me now he hath seasoned my heart with some measure of loue and desire of his service What a cordiall would this bee against all the revilings contempts and despitefull usage of the world we are therefore much to blame that we make no better use of a truth so full of profit and consolation Hence may the faithfull soule in any necessitie and upon all occasions draw endlesse comfort How did this hearten David in all persecution of Saul and slanders of his enemies Psal. 18. 10. c. Psal. 7. 3. c. yea indeed in all his trouble nay when he found his tongue unable in that dutie of thankfulnesse to poure out his heart 2 Sam. 7. 20● this yet offered him much consolation Thou Lord knowest thy servant The like see in Ieremie in much tentation and many grievances Ier. 12. 3. Especially remember Iob who when hee was assaulted on everie side without and within his friends accusing him of hypocrisie and fighting craftily against his faith the enemie bringing all the terrours of God in a full armie against him and making him possesse the iniquities of his youth yet could uphold his soule and keepe it from sinking in this storme with the remembrance of this truth and strongly applying it to his heart found powerfull consolation in this He knoweth my way and tryeth me That excellent Apostle persecuted by bloodie Infidels Iewes and Heathen slandered and wronged by false Brethren nay too little esteemed by his owne children in the Spirit accounted the off-scouring of all things could fully satisfie his owne soule and comfortably wait on God on this knowledge God was his witnesse 1 Thes. 2. 13. and could therefore ●light that censure of man 1 Cor. 3. 3. 5. Wee should therefore apply this for comfort when we are reviled as hypocrites by the world or inwardly accused by Satan that God sees and will judge when we are despised by men that God hath chosen us when we and our actions in Gods service are hated and abased that God hath loved and honoured both Labour for such wayes as are acceptable to God such as he hath chosen and commended such as he loues and honoureth For motiues oh remember thy heart is very deceitfull and will easily blind thee with counterfeit shewes and false hopes if thou lookest not very narrowly to it Learne therefore of this Saint to consider thy paths and with hast putting away delayes to turne thy feete into the wayes of God Say with thy selfe All the wayes of man are cleane in his owne eyes but the Lord weigheth the spirits Every way of man is right in his owne eyes but the Lord pondereth the hearts Now what shall it profit mee if I as those vaunting Pharises justifie my selfe when the Lord knowes and condemnes me what good shall I reape from man that my actions are highly esteemed in the world when they are abomination to God Let mee never forget that there is a way seeming right unto man but the issues thereof are the wayes of death thinke with thy selfe what horrour will assaile and daunt thee in that day when having securely trusted in thine owne heart and wayes thine eyes are at length opened to see thine errour that thou and all thy workes are hated and detested by the Lord. Consider what infinite comfort and joy will spring in thy heart in all estates yea the most afflicted when thou canst say in truth that thou hast tryed and weighed thy pathes before they come to that great trya●l to bee pondered by the Lord and hast unfainedly taken up those wayes and walked in them uprightly with thy best endevour which God himselfe hath chosen and set for thee and will accept in his mercie Learne therefore to trust in the Lord with all thy heart and leane not to thine owne wisedome in all thy wayes acknowledge him and hee shall direct thy wayes Proposition 2. But the way of the ungodly shall perish In the former words the Prophet giues an infallible reason why the faithfull shall prosper in their wayes and bee blessed here also he useth a necessary argument why the ungodly cannot haue good successe nor ever attaine to happinesse Now how soever he leaues out the Antithesis or opposite axiom to the former God knowes not the way of ungodly men yet is it here without question to be understood I will therefore handle it fully and annexe the cause with the effect in this intire proposition God knowes not the way of the ungodly therefore they their wayes shall perish The words haue beene before sufficiently cleered as well who are the ungodly what also is ment by their wayes