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mercy_n life_n lord_n sin_n 8,978 5 4.5107 4 true
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A86695 A dry rod blooming and fruit-bearing. Or, A treatise of the pain, gain, and use of chastenings. Preached partly in severall sermons, but now compiled more orderly and fully for the direction and support of all Gods chastened that suffer either in Christ, or for Christ in these dayes. By G. Hughes, B.D. pastor of the church in Plymouth. Hughes, George, 1603-1667. 1644 (1644) Wing H3308; Thomason E48_9; ESTC R14529 125,445 138

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else to steere himselfe by nothing more cleare then this that God laieth himself a rule to his creatures in his Attributes and workes As in that t Levit. 11.44 Be ye holy as I am holy so in this u Luk. 6.36 Be ye mercifull as your heavenly Father is mercifull otherwise vaine creatures are apt to call heavie light and bitter sweet and put off thereupon all bowells towards the Lords chastened God saith chastenings are heavie yet we might know it and say so too and subscribe unto it and expresse sutable indulgent affections to our afflicted brethren 2 More speciall for his chastened ones and that is to bee a standing comfort to them at every crosse when lovers and friends may stand fa●re off and none regard their sad condition though creatures thinke our burdens nothing and shew no pity to the afflicted it is no small refreshing that God knowes our sorrows and judgeth them grievous sit for his compassions David was often put to the use of this and sound no little comfort when an exil'd pilgrim hee wanders heavily driven from house and home and sprinkles his steps with teares and yet no man pitying or taking him in then he is comforted with this thought v Psal 56.8 Lord thou tellest my wanderings and bo●llest up my teares Againe when his spirit is overwhelmed with grief and hee lookes on the right hand and beheld and no man would know him no man cared for his soule then he can see and say x Psal 142.3.4.5 O Lord thou art my portion and my refuge thou carest for me and countest my burthen heavie Thus therefore God sheweth his certaine judgement of his peoples chastenings that in case of creature comfort failing to shew himselfe to be above all that it might be a standing cordiall to the afflicted soule SECT VI. Some Corollaries or inferences for instruction VVIthin the bosome of this sentence past by God lyeth this usefull truth Vse 1. Inst 1. God indulgeth yet grieves his children As God that chastens his owne judgeth their sufferings grievous so he himselfe spares not to put his holy ones to griefe He knowes the rod is smart and yet he laies it on though he pity hee will not spare to grieve his children Hee that knowes its griefe himselfe inflicts it Hee chastens yet pitieth them for their paine he pities and yet he chastens and sets on sorrow It doth not gainesay Gods gratious indulgence to afflict his people Three things God eyes Their sinne Their profit His owne Covenant all which inforce the unin of Gods indulgence and correction 1. God indulgeth yet scourgeth sons with an eye unto their sin not for satisfaction this were a detraction from Christ who alone can make it And what can the pain of the body recompence for the sin of the soul but for correction having marked former errors and miscarriages in them It is no lesse then Atheisme to deny God such a sight of sin in his children testified by his chastenings and intended not so much to afflict the soul as sin as may appeare in these aims of God therein 1. Every chastening respects sin To render sin more evident to the creature which perhaps before lay hid and unobserved or mistaken to be better then it is but when the deserved rod comes and grieves the flesh this discovery is presently made All the grief is sin which either hath provoked this painfull chastisement or at least made a way for it that the glory of God may appeare in the manifestation of sins bitternesse by it None knowes the fire better then he that hath been scorched nor can any better tell what cold is then he that hath been frozen and benummed by it and no man can speak of sin so well as he that knowes it in the smart It is a truth unquestionable y Lam. 3.39 Man suffers for his sin sin then is his suffering and its malignity in the smart of this z Compare Gen. 34.30 and Gen. 35.1 Jacob never so smelt the stench of his sin in the neglect of his vow at Bethel as when it made him stink amongst the inhabitants of the land a 2 Chron. 33.11.12 Manasseh never thought sin so burdensome as he found it by the iron chains in Babylon b Psal 38.3 So David seeth his sin to be the racker of his bones And c Rom. 7.24 Paul acknowledgeth it his death Thus sometime God teacheth men the knowledge of sin by its bitter evils d Iudg. 3.16 as Gideon taught the Elders of Succoth with thorns 2. To render sin more odious to his people doth God put them to grief He that loves wine its likely he doth not love poyson and if one cannot be had without the other if reason be left in the man the loathsomnesse of this will marre the pleasantnesse of that and make both equally odious It is usuall with God to put gall and wormwood upon sins desired Teat to wean his peoples affections from it that they might feel it the bitternesse of their soules and hate it e Hos 2.6.7 When thornes and adulterating seducing lovers are bound together the Church forsakes both these and them when Idols have no better companions but f Isai 30.20.22 bread of adversity and water of affliction they shall have a quick dispatch from the chastened souls with indignation they shall say Get ye hence 3. To render sin lesse pernitious or destructive and to give the speedier and the surer death unto it God grieves the soule which he so much tenders Flesh and sin are so neerly related and united that one cannot be but the other must be also neither can that lie weakned or afflicted but the other likewise suffers when the chastening hand of God laieth on the corrosive upon the Flesh when this weakens flesh it weakens sin and when it kills flesh it kills sin that it may save the soul from sins malignity in reigning and in killing It is the Apostles sure word g 1 Cor. 11.32 We are chastened of the Lord that we should not be condemned with the world The life and power of sin brings condemnation in the world Gods chastening kills that life and prevents that condemnation in his own afflicted See then indulgence and severitie in Gods rod towards his own in respect to sinne it is great mercie to lance that he may not kill With these purposes did God intimate his care of correcting the promised seed h Psal 89.30 31 32 33. If his children forsake my Law c. then will I visit their transgressions with the rod and their iniquitie with stripes yet I will love them too though I make it smart See chastening and yet indulgence love and yet the rod laid on 2. God puts his children to grief though he count it grievous Chastening looks to childrens profit with an eye to their further profit the full successe is given in that expression