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A45683 Two sermons lately preached at the Assizes in St. Maries Church in Leicester the former March 23, 1670, the latter July 27, 1671 / by Robert Harrison. Harrison, Robert, fl. 1648-1672. 1672 (1672) Wing H909; ESTC R25412 38,889 70

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on high made honourable and happy This this is the way and means to make that people the Head which were formerly the Tail to make them stronger than their enemies and more excellent than their neighbours Since thou wast precious in my sight thou hast been honourable and I have loved thee therefore will I give men for thee and people for thy life saith the merciful God to a repentant resorming people Isa. 43. 4. And Ezek. 16. 14. Thy renown went forth among the heathen for thy beauty for it was perfect through my comliness which I had put upon thee saith the Lord God Thus you see what is that righteousness that exalteth a nation and what is meant by the exaltation of a nation I am now to confirm the Assertion which indeed stands not in so much need of proving as of improving however I shall omit neither Righteousness exalteth a Nation or a Nation is greatly blessed by the means and for the sakes of Righteous ones who diligently perform the duties of their places to the glory of God and in the right of those with whom they have to do Righteousness is not to be taken here only in the abstract but with relation to the subject in which it is inherent the concrete is included in the abstract as it is often to be found in holy Writ where the names of Virtues and Vices are put for the persons to which they are adjoyned as wickedness for the wicked Job 5. 16. St. Paul was called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Pest for a pestilent plaguy fellow thus pride is put for the proud Jer. 50. 31. Behold I am against thee O thou most proud or O pride as it is in the margent of your Bibles which is to be understood of the lofty and proud City of Babylon So here Righteousness being inclusive of Righteous ones the Inference is clear that it is for the sake and by the means of such who endeavour to walk in all the Commandments and Ordinances of God blameless that a Nation comes to be exalted and blessed of the Lord. Consonant hereunto is that saying of an ancient Author whatever good thing is bestowed upon the sons of men it is given on the account of the righteous for the sake of those that faithfully preach and diligently hear the Gospel and call upon God the unrighteous do not believe this neither do they acknowledge it therefore they evilly requite the people of God If any shall be offended with this doctrine we need not much wonder at it for they who have no love for Gods people will not acknowledge that they are beholden to them The poor wise man that delivered the City by his wisdom how quickly was he forgotten the Text saith that no man remembred that poor wise man This is merces mundi the worlds wages as one loves to phrase it to be so blind as not to see or so ungratefull as not to own their best friends I mean sincere Christians upon whose account and for whose sake the Lord is pleased to conferr many great and endearing mercies upon an undeserving yea upon an ill-deserving people The truth of this Proposition will be sufficiently evidenced 1. By the Examination of those allusive metaphorical expressions which are aptly applied to righteousness or to righteous ones 2. By an Induction and Enumeration of particular blessings which the men of the world have enjoyed for their sake and upon their account 3. By the Consideration of those wasting Judgments which have presently taken place after their Removal By these steps we shall proceed to bring in such clear proofs of the Wise mans Assertion as may procure at least the assent of unprejudiced Readers and will be deny'd by none besides inconsiderate or resolved sinners I must not be long in my passage through these particulars To begin with the first we shall find upon enquiry Gods people to be compared First To the Bulwarks of a City which keeps off the Enemy and will not suffer desolation to enter Thus Nazianzen calls Athanasius the Bulwark of Truth When Sin hath made a breach for the Divine vengeance to take place God presently seeks for these to stand in the gap to prevent an Inundation of misery from rushing in upon unarmed naked sinners as you may read Jer. 5. 17. Run ye to and fro through the streets of Jerusalem and see now and know and seek in the broad places thereof if ye can find a man if there be any that executeth judgment that seeketh the truth and I will pardon it You see here what great account the Lord makes of his Servants when as he will pardon a whole Nation for one righteous mans sake So in Ezek. 22. 30. And I sought for a man among them that should make up the hedge and stand in the gap before me for the Land that I should not destroy it but I found none And because he could find none behold how suddenly winged destruction overtakes them in the following verse Therefore have I poured out mine indignation upon them I have consumed them with the fire of my wrath their own wayes have I recompenced upon their heads saith the Lord God 2dly The Righteous are the Chariots and Horsmen of a State thus Elisha cried after Elijah when he was taken from him by the spirit and mighty power of God My father my father the Chariot of Israel and the Horsmen thereof They are the very strength of a Nation where they live and have prevailed more with their prayers and tears then a thousand times as many could do with their weapons of War One of these have chased a thousand and two have put ten thousand to flight Whosoever shall gather together against thee shall fall for thy sake saith God to his Church Isa. 54. 15. and in the 17. verse No weapon that is formed against thee shall prosper and every tongue that shall rise against thee in judgment thou shalt condemn this is the heritage of the servants of the Lord and their righteousness is of me saith the Lord. 3dly They are as Stakes to an hedge or Trees to a Cawsey that keep it from falling down and from being broken up thus we read Isa. 6. 13. In it shall be a tenth and it shall return and shall be eaten as a Teil tree and as an Oak whose substance is in them when they cast their leaves so the holy seed shall be the substance thereof or the substance of the people as some have rendred the Text. The Prophet here alludeth to a long Cawsey or Terrass supported on either side with great Trees strongly rooted which reached from the Kings Palace to the Gate Shallecheth on the West-side of the Temple which Gate you find mentioned 1 Chron. 26. 16. Now the Righteous are these Trees on either side the Cawsey which have life and substance in them and though sometimes the Trees may cast their
leaves yet being firmly rooted they keep the Cawsey from decaying and mouldring away thus the holy seed notwithstanding all their failings do support and bear up the Nation which but for them might be suddenly wasted and brought to utter desolation For the sake of the Godly saith Grotius God will not suffer the City to be taken Lastly They are the Pillars and Foundation of Church and State Prov. 10. 25. As the whirlwind passeth away so is the wicked no more but the righteous is an everlasting foundation or the foundation of the world as Arias Montanus hath rendred the words They are the very Atlasses of the world that support and bear it up and keep it from falling upon the heads of the ungodly In Psal. 75. 3. David saith that he himself bare up the pillars of the earth If once these Pillars were removed the whole Fabrick of the world would presently tumble down and be turned into a Chaos of confusion As soon as ever Jesus Christ by the Preaching of the everlasting Gospel hath gathered together the number of the Elect the Elements shall then melt with fervent heat the Earth also and the works that are therein shall be burnt up It is for the sake of Christs little flock of that sorry handfull of sincere Believers who are so much scorned and despised by the unrighteous and accounted the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the very filth of the world that the world hath still a being and was not long ere this on a flame as it shall be at that great and notable day of the Lord. The Lord accounts of the world by his Church and upholds it for his Servants sake were it not for Jehoshaphat I would not look towards thee nor see thee said Elisha to Jehoram so may God say to the wicked were it not for my people I would have no regard at all to you Thus you have shadowed forth under several Metaphorical expressions the real serviceableness of righteous ones in order to the exaltation of a Nation I am in the next place to instance in some particular Blessings which Nations have enjoyed for righteousness sake and still may enjoy upon the account of the Righteous And these besides many others which I shall not now so much as name are Truth Peace Plenty Victory over enemies and Preservation from ruine First It is for the sake of his people that the Lord gives and continues the great truths of his Gospel his blessed ordinances the means of salvation to any Nation hence St. Paul was commanded and encouraged of God after his first vision to go into Macedonia in a second to continue preaching the Gospel at Corinth because the Lord tells him he had much people in that City so that it was for his peoples sake that the Lord sent the Apostle to Corinth to preach the Gospel Yea he loved the people all his Saints are in thy hands and they sat down at thy feet every one shall receive of thy words The Psalmist reckons the enjoyment of Gods word and ordinances as the greatest mercy which the Jews were bless'd with above any other people and therefore had more abundant cause to praise God for his great goodness Psal. 147. 19 20. He sheweth his word unto Jacob his Statutes and his judgments unto Israel he hath not dealt so with any Nation and as for his judgments they have not known them praise ye the Lord. There are many 't is to be feared in the Christian world that have no serious apprehension of this singular great mercy but look upon it as an enjoyment that may well enough be spared Preaching is counted but foolishness and all the means of grace are thought to be unnecessary and undesirable yet if it were but well considered that it is not onely a great mercy in it fels which impenitent sinners will not be perswaded to believe but also that this is a blessing which seldome comes alone for where God sets up the light of his Gospel he usnally sends peace and plenty and many other mercies to accompany it so that where the means of grace have been most pure and powerful other outward blessings have been there most plentiful and abounding If this consideration I say was but once well digested in the hearts of the sons of men many that heretofore have had low thoughts of the means of grace might see reason enough to have them in greater estimation for the time to come Blessed are your eyes saith Christ to his Disciples for they see and your ears for they hear And blessed is the people that know the joyful sound they shall walk O Lord in the light of thy countenance 2. The Lord gives that sweet and much to be desired mercy of Peace for his peoples sake thus righteousness and peace have often kissed each other Psa. 85. 10. and 't is promised Isa. 45. 13 14. Great shall be the peace of thy Children When the Prophet Isaiah brought that star●tlig news of the Babylonish captivity to Hezekiah the good King comforts himself with this that the judgement threatned should not fall upon the Nation in his dayes Isa. 39. 8. Then said Hezekiah to Isaiah good is the word of the Lord which thou hast spoken He said moreover for there shall be peace and truth in my dayes He firmly believed God upon his word who had already assured him that he would defend this City to save it for his own sake and for his Servant Davids sake It is reported of Luther that he was known to pray often with much earnestness and fervour of spirit That so long as he lived Germany might be quiet and enjoy peace and when he foresaw a black cloud of judgment hanging over that people he told some of his Friends that he would do his best to keep it from breaking in his dayes yea he believed also that it should not and he said moreover when I am gone let them that come after me look to it I 'le conclude this particular with that precious promise Isa. 32. 17 18. And the work of righteousness shall be peace and the effect of righteousness quietness and assurance for ever And my people shall dwell in a peaceable habitation and in sure dwellings and in quiet resting places Thirdly The great blessing of Plenty God gives for his peoples sake Thus God blessed Laban for Jacob's sake Gen. 30. 30. It was little said Jacob to Laban which thou hadst before I came and it is now increased into a multitude and the Lord hath blessed thee since my coming Potiphar also prospered greatly whilst Joseph was with him Gen. 39. 5. And it came to pass from that time that he made him over-seer in his house and over all that he had that the Lord blessed the Egyptians for Josephs sake and the blessing of the Lord was upon all that he had in the house and in the field Yea the
whole land of Egygt fared the better for Josephs sake for when there was a Famine over all the face of the earth there was bread enough and plenty of corn in Egypt which by Josephs wise forecast was laid up in Store-houses against that time Fourthly Victory over Enemies is another great mercy which the Lord of Hosts often giveth for his servants sake and by their means What a great conquest did the Heathen Emperour obtain through the means of the thundring Legion of Christians who by their fervent prayers prevailed with God to discomfit an huge army with thundring and lightning And Aurelius by experience found that Christians prevailed more with their prayers then others could do with their arms for the good of the Empire and therefore he desired the Senate to cease the Persecution lest the Christians should turn those spiritual weapons against the Empire So then the Race is not to the Swift nor the Battle to the Strong But thine O Lord is the greatness and the power and the glory and the victory and the majesty and in thine hand it is to make great and to give strength unto all thy people as David acknowledgeth 1 Chron. 29. 11 12. Lastly Preservation from ruine and destruction have the Righteous obtained for a disobedient and stif-necked people A clear proof we have of this Job 22. 30. He shall deliver the Island of the Innocent or according to the margent the Innocent shall deliver the Island and it is delivered by the pureness of thine hands He shall deliver the Island of the Innocent in the Hebrew it is non innocentem he shall deliver the Island of the guilty q. d. a Righteous man that truly fears God shall be instrumental for the delivering of those at least from present ruine who are yet in their sins and have therefore no such interest with God to prevail with him to be thus gracious and merciful unto them Therefore he said he would destroy them had not Moses his chosen stood before him in the breach to turn away his wrath left he should destroy them Psal. 106. 23. And Isa. 65. 8. Thus saith the Lord as the new wine is found in the cluster and one saith destroy it not for a blessing is in it so will I do for my servants sake that I may not destroy them all For his Elects sake the Lord in judgement thinks thoughts of mercy towards a very vile and sinful people who cease not to go on in wayes of rebellion against him and herein he deals with wicked men that do but cumber the ground as if one had resolved to pull up a barren Vineyard and quite lay it waste yet should nevertheless refrain in part because of some choice fruitful Plants that are sound in it If there had but been ten Righteous Persons in Sodom the Lord promised his servant Abraham that he would not destroy it for tens sake And it is worth our observation that the Lord never left off granting till Abraham left off asking mercy for that people This may encourage the righteous among us to continue in prayer and not to cease pleading with God for mercy to this sinful land of our nativity Ye that make mention of the Lord keep not silence And give him no rest till he establish and till he make Jerusalem till he make England a praise in the earth I have done with the two first Heads for confirmation In the next place If we consider those wasting judgments which after the removal of the righteous like a swift torrent have broken in upon the ungodly the truth of the Proposition will yet be more fully manifested No sooner was Noah got into the Ark but God sent such a deluge of water as swept away the wicked Inhabitants of the earth The flood-gates of heaven are set open and the fountain of the great depths broken up and unavoidable destruction rusheth in upon the sinners of the old world In the very same day that Lot set soot out of Sodom came such a storm of fire and brimstone upon those Cities that in a few hours entomb'd them in their own ashes and left them as standing monuments of the Lords wrathful indignation upon ungodly wretches to the end of the world Not long after good King Josiah was taken away the Kingdom of Judah tumbled down apace the people of the Land was carried into captivity and all went to wrack with them thus the Lord in mercy many times takes away the righteous from the evil to come he doth with them as men are wont to do with their corn in the field when it is catching weather they are careful to get it into their barns before the rain fall so God took away Josiah before the dismal destruction of that people as he had promised 2 King 22. 19 20. When the Righteous had left Jerusalem and were gone to Pella as they had been warned of God the City is presently taken and as great wrath is poured sorth upon that people as ever was upon any Nation in the world besides nay none like unto it according to the prognostick of our blessed Saviour Mat. 24. 21. So that they might justly take up the like complaint with their forefathers in their Babylonish captivity and a more bitter lamentation if they could find words to express● it then that we read of Lam. 1. 12. Is it nothing to you all ye that pass by behold and see if there be any sorrow like unto my sorrow which is done unto me wherewith the Lord hath afflicted me in the day of his fierce anger Methuselah the longest-liv'd Patriarch dyed the year before the Flood St. Austin was taken away by death immediately before Hippo was sacked by the Vandals and the death of St. Ambrose was the fore-runner of the ruine of Italy I have somewhere read an observation of Luther that all the Apostles died before the destruction of Jerusalem except John and Luther himself died a little before the wars began in Germany It bodes no good to a State when God picks such choice principal Plants out of it Surely this speaks the Lords intention to take away the hedge of his Vineyard and to lay it waste It was a sign that Sampson meant to pull down the house on the Philistins heads when he attempted to stir the Pillars and when God takes away the Pillars and Supporters of a Nation certainly he intends it no good 't is greatly to be feared that he is already come out of his place to punish the Inhabitants of the Earth for their Iniquity Thus I have given in the proof of the Proposition by some argumentative considerations which being twisted together will make a strong cord sufficient to draw any that have staggered in the belief of this particular to a firm perswasion of the great use and furtherance of Righteousness for the exaltation of a Nation But it may
mighty stream Amos 5. 24. I shall now begin where I formerly ended and advance through divine assistance more vigorously to inculcate and press home the very same duty from these words of wise Solomon which may be considered as a twofold Argument taken from Reward and Punishment those great Incentives to duty exciting us thereunto From the due praise of righteousness and the manifest peril of sin we shall find sufficient cause to be enamoured with the one and to detest the other to abhor that which is evil and to cleave to that which is good What the Lord himself said to Rebecca when Twins lay strugling in her the same may be spoken of this Scripture Two Nations are in its Womb and two manner of people shall be separated from its bowels But it must not be so with these as it was with Jacob and Esau for the Elder is here the beloved and the Younger is hated of God Righteous ones are acceptable and pleasing in his fight and they shall be rewarded Sinners are an abomination to him and they shall not be unpunished Say ye to the righteous it shall be well with him for they shall eat the fruit of their doings Wo unto the wicked it shall be ill with him for the reward of his hands shall be given him So then not to multiply particulars because I would not fall into either of those Extreams of being too nice and curious or too negligent and careless in the division of my Text for as Seneca saith Idem vitii habet nimia quod nulla divisio you have here 1. The blessed fruit of Righteousness and 2. The cursed product of Sin Righteousness exalteh a Nation but Sin is a reproach to any people I shall speak to the parts as they lie before us after a brief explication of the termes And first to give you a taste of the fruit of Righteousness it will be expedient to enquire into two things as 1. VVhat is that Righteousness which exalteth a Nation 2. VVhat is meant by the exaltation of a Nation These two Quaeries being resolved I shall undertake the farther Illustration of the Assertion First then VVhat is that Righteousness that exalteth a Nation In answer thereunto we must distinguish of the word Righteousness There is a twofold Righteousness viz. of Imputation and of Implantation The Righteousness of Imputation is wrought by the merit of Christ for us the Righteousness of Implantation is wrought by the Spirit of Christ in us the one is the Righteousness of our justification the other is the Righteousness of our sanctification Now 't is the latter of these which is here said to exalt a Nation and Cajetan phraseth it an Vniversal Righteousness which is Influential into all the actions of a Christian and streams through the whole course of his life it is so very conspicuous and casts such a shine upon it as evidenceth him that hath it to be holy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in all manner of conversation as in 1 Pet. 1. 15. Righteousness is a word of great latitude Justitia latissime patet ac omnes complectitur virtutes saith Ludovicus Vives in his Commentary upon Austin de Civ Dei It includes not only all moral virtues but also all Divine and Spiritual Graces Aristotle calls it omnis virtus and saith it excels all other quantum Lucifer inter astra as the bright and Morning-Star excels the rest in beauty and splendor It is a virtue in a stricter sense that doth Suum cuique tribuere that renders to every one his due to God the things that are Gods as Faith Fear Love Thanksgiving and Obedience and to men the things that are mens as Honour Tribute and Subjection to Kings Reverence Respect and Service to Superiors Love Kindness and Justice to Inferiors Truth and Equity in our mutual dealings and negotiations in the world a doing to others as we our selves would be done by according to that sacred and standing Rule of our blessed Lord and Master Mat. 7. 12. This Righteousness is to be found in the several VValks of Gods Commandments it runs as one saith through every Precept as it were the veins of every Law in the second Table and calls for obedience due to parents Natural Ecclesiastical and Civil in the fifth Command our care to preserve our Neighbours life in the sixth Chastity in the seventh Estate in the eighth good name in the ninth our desires in their due bounds against coveting what is our neighbours in the tenth And take but the word in the most comprehensive sense and it is the obedience of the whole Law This is the Righteousness that exalteth a Nation not as a Cause producing an effect but as a means conducing to such an end The Lord doth not thus reward our Righteousness ex debito but ex bene placito not for our merits that plea will sail us but for his mercies sake This for the Answer of the first Quaery Secondly What is meant by the exaltation of a Nation when may a Nation be said to be exalted Then is a Nation any Nation exalted as well as the Jewish whose Doctors would have this former part of the Text speak them the only happy people in the world excluding all others when it is blessed made prosperous and flourishing in the enjoyment of Truth Peace and Plenty VVhen the Almighty for it is his doing enlargeth the borders of it strengtheneth the bars of her gates and blesseth her Children within her VVhen he maketh peace in her borders abundantly blesseth her provision and satisfieth her poor with bread VVhen there is no breaking in nor going out no leading into captivity nor complaining in the Streets And when the Lord with an higher hand yet blesseth a people with all spiritual and heavenly blessings when he placeth his Sanctuary in the midst of a Nation his Tabernacle is with a people and he sets up among them the glorious light of the Gospel in the golden Candle stick of his Ordinances VVhen he turns to the people a pure language that they may call upon the name of the Lord to serve him with one consent or with one shoulder as it t s in that Gospel-promise Zech. 3. 9. Then may it be rightly said of such a Nation or People according to the Psalmists conclusion Psal. 144. 15. Happy is the People that is in such a case yea happy is that People whose God is the Lord. Glorious things are spoken of thee O City of God Now is a Nation exalted made honourable and renowned or born on high as judicious Cartwright understands the expression which he judgeth to be a metaphor taken from heavy bodies lifted up and carried aloft by joint force and united strength Thus a people brought low made vile and miserable because of their fins by the administration of justice and the exercise of righteousness are lifted up
wind from the Wilderness that smites the four corners of the house and makes it to tumble upon the heads of those that are within it The house of the wicked shall be overthrown but the tabernacle of the righteous shall flourish Prov. 14. 11. Again for the sake of righteous ones the Lord bestows as you have already heard those great blessings of Truth Peace Plenty Victory over enemies and preservation from ruine and destruction upon a Nation these and many more are the sweet fruits of righteousness But now all manner of destructive evils as famine of Bread and famine of the Word Wars cruel bondage Pestilence Fire dishonour and reproach are the cursed products of sin the bitter effects of those works of the flesh which the Apostle speaks of Gal. 5. 19 20 21. Thus is sin a reproach to any people Sin is that which makes Kingdoms desolate and bereaves them of all their power greatness and renown When Ephraim spake trembling he exalted himself in Israel but when he offended in Baal he died Hos. 13. 1. It is sin that hath divested and disrobed many flourishing Nations of their excellency and glory that hath made them become a curse and an astonishment an hissing and perpetual desolation sin hath unjoynted and broken asunder the confederacies and societies of all creatures It is the great make-bate in the world the cause of all that Ataxie and Disorder of that Stubborness and Rebellion of those Errors and Divisions of those Fightings Brawlings and Vexatious Law-sutes which are to be found in Church and State all these Evils and abundance more which I cannot now stand to mention are the mischievous consequences of sin I have done with the Illustration of the Text let us now see what Use is to be made of it and having endeavoured to give a light to the Text by Explication I shall now proceed to the life of a Sermon which is the Application First then Hence we may be Informed who are the best and who are the worst Members of a State who are the most profitable and who are the most injurious to the Nation in which they live Unrighteous ones cry out against the Righteous when as they themselves do the most mischief as the good Prophet justly retorted the crimination upon Ahab himself 1 Kings 18. 17 18. One Sinner saith Solomon destroyeth much good how much more then a rabble of Rebellious Sinners who are continually provoking the great God to anger with their crying sins and with their cursed abominations They and they only that fear God will honour the King in a Scripture sence The Righteous man is the best Instrument for the 〈◊〉 of a Nation however he is spoken against by the ungodly for as one saith truly of him Christianys inimicus nemini multo minus Imperatori A true Christian is an enemy to no man such less to the King He obeys for Conscience sake and from a principle of the fear of God who requires a subjection to the higher powers he is subject and obedient He submits to every ordinance of man for the Lords sake whether it be to the King as supreme or unto Governours as unto them that are sent by him for the punishment of evil doers and for the praise of them that do well for so is the will of God that with well doing he may put to silence the ignorance of foolish men They whose hearts the Lord had touched joyned themselves with Saul when he was anointed King but the children of Belial despised him 1 Sam. 10. 26 27. It is no wonder said our late great and gracious King if men not fearing God should not honour their King they will easily contemn such shadows of God who reverence not that supreme and adorable Majesty in comparison of whom all the glory of men and Angels is but obscurity An unrighteous man can never be a good Subject and profitable member for promoting the Weal publique For 1. If he be prophane he will do the King more disservice by his lawless practices then ever he can do him service from those loyal principles which he is a great pretender to Or 2ly If he be Factious he will strike at Magistracy under the cloak of Piety and that Rebellion may not appear bare-fac'd he will mask it with Religion Or 3ly If he be covetous and in some publique imployment and Office of Trust he will be sure to drive on his own Interest without any regard to the honour of the King or profit of the Kingdom Covetousness which is the root of all evil makes the Courts of Judicature magna latrocinia places of great Robbery as St. Austin speaks The next Use is for Exhortation and here let us all be exhorted and perswaded and O! that God himself would effectually perswade us by the power of his blessed Spirit to love righteousness and to hate all manner of unrighteousness to have no fellowship with the unfruitfull works of darkness but rather to reprove them To follow that which is good and nor that which is evil He that doth good is of God but he that doth evil hath not seen God This is a duty that nearly concerns all men both high and low rich and poor There 's none so poor but he may contribute something toward the welfare and happiness of the Kingdom he is to lift and list again by his prayers and tears for the Exaltation of it and these are powerfull means which will wonderfully prevail with God for the obtaining of mercy and finding grace to help in time of need This poor sinfull Nation through the goodness of God for his Servants sake hath for many years past been miraculously preserved as the Bush in the midst of burnings After many wasting Judgments inflicted on us by Sword Pestilence and Burnings the Lord hath not blessed be his great name broken us from being a people for he yet waits to be gracious to us But when we consider the result of former deliverances is to commit greater abominations still may we not justly fear that God hath a farther controversie with this Land even such an one as shall make it to mourn once more and lay us lower then ever we have been cast down under former pressures We may be secure but we can never be safe while we go on in our sins neglecting to offer the sacrifices of righteousness and to put our trust in the Lord. What though Judgments have left us in a great measure if we have not left our sins these will cause us to pass under the rod again and will certainly make us more miserable For the hand of the Lord shall find out all his enemies his right hand shall find out those that hate him Come forth then ye righteous ones and with one shoulder endeavour the supportation of a tottering Nation Oh! labour to heal the breaches thereof for it