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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

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but a slight and superf●…cial hope that grows upon us we know not how a fruit of ignorance and incogitancy when they are serious they begin to feel it a foolish kind of presumption upon which no account can be given 1 Pet. 3. 15. How can they give a reason of their hope But gracious souls the more they consider their warrant and the promise of God the more their hope is encreased Thirdly It is a dead and a cold hope not a lively hope 1 Pet. 1. 3. They have no taste no groans no ravishing thoughts about the happiness which they expect no strong desires after the thing hoped for Rom. 12. 12. Rejoyce in hope saith the Apostle they have but cold apprehensions of such great things And the hope that we expect is so excellent that it should stir up the greatest longings the greatest waiting and put us upon earnest expectation Fourthly It 's a weak inconstant hope a loose fond conjecture a guess rather than a certain expectation 1 Cor. 9. 26. I therefore so run not as uncertainly not at randome but upon sure and solid grounds A Child of God hath a due sense of the difficulty yet withal an assurance of the possibility and of the certainty of it and therefore it continues he presseth on if it be possible he may attain to his great hopes the resurrection of the dead Fifthly It 's a lazy loytering hope Carnal men would have Heaven and happiness but they make no haste towards it they give no diligence to make sure of it it is but a devout sloth Whereas he that hath a true hope is pressing forward Phil. 3. 13. and hastening and looking for the coming of Christ 2 Pet. 3. 12. But then there is a true hope in God both for final deliverance present support and present mercy that will never leave us ashamed Psal. 22. 5. They that hope in thee are not confounded and Psal. 25. 2 3. Let none that wait on thee be ashamed O my God I trust in thee let me not be ashamed What is a true Christian hope It may be discovered by the grounds of discouragement but most sensibly by the effects 1. By it the heart is drawn from Earth to Heaven earthly desires and hopes abated Phil. 3. 20. For our conversation is in Heaven whence also we look for the Saviour the Lord Iesus Christ they live as those that within a few days expect to be with God Christ in Heaven hath a Magnetick Virtue to draw up the hearts of Believers thither as a man that hath looked stedfastly upon the Sun can for a great while see nothing else 2. By it the heart is enlivened in Duty and quickened with diligence in the business of salvation Hope apprehends the difficulty as well as the excellency and possibility of salvation therefore what a man truly hopes for in this kind he make it his business to get it and look after it Phil. 3. 13. This one thing I do forgetting those things which are behind and reaching forth unto those which are before they mind it seriously and not superficially by the bye 3. It engageth the heart against sin 2 Pet. 3. 11. We that look for these things What manner of persons ought we to be in all holy conversation and godliness holiness implies purity and godliness dedication to God Now a false hope is consistent with the reign of sin suffers a man to be vile carnal careless neglectful of God full of malice envy pride but without any serious and solid ground it is but a lying presumption Now this hope that is thus fixed upon God will never disappoint us For First The fruition will ever be more than the expectation God doth for us above what we can ask or think Ephes. 3. 20. When the Prodigal Son came and said Make me as an hired servant the Father brought forth the fatted Calf and put a Ring on his F●…nger c. Solomon asked wisdom and God gave him riches honour and great abundance But much more in the World to come will the fruition be above expectation for Prophecy is but in part we are not now capable to know what we shall then enjoy we have but childish thoughts of things to come as a Child comes short of the apprehensions of a man 1 Cor. 13. 9 10 11. Secondly This hope cannot be abated with the greatest evil To a worldly man Death is the King of terrours and to a godly man 't is his last end though it vanquish his Body it doth not vanquish his Soul Prov. 14. 32. The wicked is driven away in his wickedness but the righteous hath hope in his death When other mens hopes vanish his hopes go down with him to the Grave Psal. 16. 9. as in a Bed of ease they shall sleep until the waking time Use. O be not deceived with false promises we must expect Blessing according to the tenour of the Covenant only things promised and no otherwise than they are promised temporal things with a limitation as good for us and with the exception of the Cross spiritual blessings their essence rather than degree of Grace And take heed of false hope that is groundless and fruitless Groundless the warrant of true hope is the Word of God I hope in thy word Psal. 130. 5. Hope that is without a warrant will be without effect when men please themselves they shall do well enough contrary to the Word of God Deut. 29. 19. And it 's fruitless it doth not fill the heart with gladness and quicken to holiness and stir up to walk with God And take heed of false experiences that is building upon temporal blessings and bare deliverances out of trouble Men are not so much preserved as reserved to further trouble many are spared but for a time it is but a reprieve I proceed to the 117th Verse Hold thou me up and I shall be safe and I will have respect unto thy Statutes continually Here observe 1. A repetition of his request for sustaining Grace 2. A renewing of the promise of obedience conceived before Verse 115. 1. A repetition of his request for sustaining Grace Hold thou me up and I shall be safe Where observe The request Hold thou me up and The fruit and effect promised to himself I shall be safe First The Blessing asked Hold thou me up a Metaphor taken from those that faint or those that slide and are ready to fall Secondly The fruit of it I shall be safe Before he had said Uphold me according unto thy word that I may live now he promiseth himself more from the Divine assistance safety By safety he means either the safety of the outward or inward man Why not both I shall be safe from those warpings and apostasie and all dangers and mischiefs that do attend it Turning aside from our duty doth not procure our fafety but perseverance in our duty Gods Children when they have failed have run themselves into much temporal inconveniencies as
Action A Rebellion or an act of disloyalty against God yea there is not only a vertual hatred in Sin but a formal hatred not only implyed but exprest they wish there were not a God to punish them and call them to an account such a Law to forbid such Practices as they affect or that such things were not sin VVell then 't is not some kind of pleasure in the study of the VVord will shew our love to the VVord but an Impartial Intire and Uniform Obedience strictly abstaining from such things as if forbiddeth and carefully practising what it requireth at our hands 2. That our hatred of Sin must flow from such a Principle a man may hate sin upon forreign and accidental reasons and so that obstaining from sin is not a true hatred but a Casual dislike as when we forbare some sins but retain others that sute better with our Condition Callings Employment Temper or because of some difficulty in compassing shame in Practising or repugnant to our natural Temper No it must be out of a principle of Love to God Psal. 97. 10. Ye that love the Lord hate evil So Psal. 119. 113. I hate vain thoughts but thy law do I love An hatred of Sin arising from love to God and his VVord is the only true hatred that 's hatred of sin as sin as 't is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Iohn 3. 4. A transgression of the Law as 't is ingratitude to God contrary to our Obligations to him not only as destructive to our selves not principally timore poenae but amore virtutis The VVord of God furnisheth us with divers Reasons and Arguments to move us to hate sin they all have their place but some are more Noble and Excellent than others As when a Man hateth sin because God hath forbidden it True hatred cometh from a love of the contrary therefore he that hath a vehement love to the Law hateth all things which are contrary to it Matth. 6. 20. He will hate the one and love the other There is no serving two Masters love to the one inforceth hatred of the other To love the Good and hate the Evil are inseparable 3. The more we hate Sin the more prepared we are to love the Law A carnal Heart hateth the Law Ioh. 3. 20. He that doth evil hateth the light And Rom. 8. 7. The carnal mind is not subject to the Law He that doth not hate sin hateth the word of God VVe cannot delight in it till our Affections be purified and sanctified Mens evil practices and dispositions cause them to hate the Light 't is a reproving light can sore Eyes delight to look upon the Sun or an unsound heart delight in that which will so ransack and search the Conscience 4. According to the degree of Love so will the degree of our Hatred be they that have the highest love of the Law will have most hatred of Sin they hate every lesser contrariety a vain Thought Psal. 119. 113. They do not only hate open and scandalous sins but sin carried on in a more close and cleanly manner yea they groan under the Relicks of Corruption and feel it an heavy burden Rom. 7. 22 23 24. For I delight in the law of God after the inward man but I see another law in my members warring against the law of my mind and bringing me into captivity to the law of sin which is in my members And then Oh wretched man that I am Next to the Object of our affection the principle or spring of it must be regarded and next to the spring and rise of it the degree must be looked after that we love the good and hate the evil proportionably that is to say that our Hatred must be proportionable to the evil of the thing hated and our love to the good of the thing loved and indeed where the one is the other will be where a great love a great hatred where a little love a little hatred Psal. 119. 127 128. I love thy commandments above gold yea above fine gold therefore I esteem thy precepts in all things to be right and hate every false way Use. Well then if we would shew our love to the Word we must truly sincerely and constantly turn from all known sin with Detestation and Abhorrence for hatred of sin is an infallible evidence of love to the Word Now hatred of sin if it be right 1. 'T is Universal 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the whole kind as Haman thought scorn to lay hands upon Mordecai alone but sought to destroy the whole Race of the Iews Ester 3. 6. one sin is as inconsistent with the love of God as another there may be as much Contempt of Gods Authority in a sin of Thought as in a sin of Practice in a small sin as in a greater There may be much crookedness in a small line and in some Cases the Die is more than the Stuff I hate every false way 't is twice repeated in this Psalm in the 104. verse and verse 128. To hate what God hateth Prov. 8. 13. The fear of the Lord is to hate evil 2. 'T is Implacable it aimeth at the utter Extirpation and Expulsion of Sin they seek to remove the guilt to weaken the inclination they groan sorely under the very Being of sin that any thing of sin is left O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from the body of death Rom. 7. 24. 3. 'T is still growing at first 't is a dubious Case men that are Convinced have some Mind to let sin go or a wish that Christ would save them from it but 't is with such Reserves that they have rather a mind to keep it than let it go As Pharaoh had no mind to dismiss Israel and therefore stood hucking with God or as David when he sent out Forces against Absalom yet be tender of the young Man Pleasing Lusts we have but a remiss Will against them our love to it is greater than our dislike of it therefore so unstable Iam. 1. 8. but when the soul is Converted the soul is armed with a resolution 1 Pet. 4. 1. Then the love of sin is weakned in their hearts and the strength and vigour of it abated the soul is armed with a serious purpose to give it up and shake off this servitude in the confidence of that Grace which is purchased for them by Christs Death there is a Godly Inclination and bent of soul to live unto God Again as our Communion with God and sense of his Love is increased in us so our hatred of sin groweth more keen and fierce when God had told what he would do for Ephraim what have I any more to do with Idols Hosea 14. 8. I have had too much to do already what any more In what proportion there is a sense of Gods Love in the same proportion an hatred of Evil. Moses when he had talked with God in the Mount at his return
and are inclin'd to believe but when these truths soak into the heart to frame it to the obedience of his will When the Lord had spoken of practical obedience Was not this to know me saith the Lord Jer. 22. 16. And this is to believe So for Love Deut. 6. 5. Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thine heart and with all thy soul and with all thy might Every faculty must express Love to God Many will be content to give God a part God hath their Consciences but the world their affections Their heart is divided and the evidence of it is plainly this In their troubles and extremities they will seek after God but this is not their constant work and delight We are welcome to God when we are compelled to come into his presence God will not say as men you come in your necessity But we must then be sincere in our addresses and rest in him as our portion and all-sufficient good 2. For intention of Degrees To seek God with the whole heart it is to seek him with the highest elevation of our hearts The whole heart must be carried out to God and to other things for Gods sake As Harbingers when they go to take up room for a Prince they take up the whole house none else must have place there so God he will have the whole heart Again it may be considered as to the exaction of the Law and as a Rule of the Gospel 1. As an exaction of the Law and so Christ urged it to the young man that was of a Pharisaical institution to abate his pride and confidence Mat. 22. 37. Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy soul and with all thy mind Certainly these words there have a legal importance and signification for in another Evangelist Luk. 10. 28. it is added do and live which is the tenor of the Law And Christs intent was to abate the Pharisees pride by propounding the rigor of the first Covenant The Law requireth compleat love without the least defect according to the terms of it a grane wanting would make the whole unacceptable As a hard Landlord when all the rent is not brought to the full he accepteth none It is good to consider it under this sense that we may seek God in Christ to quicken us that we may value our deliverance by him from this burden which neither we nor our fathers were able to bear a stragling thought a wandring glance the least out-running of the heart had render'd us accursed for ever 2. It may be considered as a Rule of the Gospel which requireth our utmost endeavors our bewailing infirmities and defects but accepts of sincerity There will be a double principle in us to the last but there should not be a double heart So that this expression of seeking the Lord with the whole heart is reconcilable enough with the weaknesses of the present state For instance 1 King 14. 8. My servant David who kept my Commandments and who followed me with all his heart and did that only which was right in mine eyes David had many failings and some that left an indelible brand upon him in the matter of Uriah yet because of his sincerity and habitual purpose God saith He hath kept all my Commandments So in Iosiah 2 King 23. 25. Like to him there was no King before him that turned to the Lord with all his heart with all his soul and with all his might Yet he also had his imperfections against the warning of the Lord he goes out with a wicked King and dies in Battel So Asa 2 Chron. 15. 17. The high places were not taken away it was a failing in that holy King yet 't is said the heart of Asa was perfect all his days Well then when the whole heart is engaged in this work when we do not only study to know God but make it our work to enjoy him to rest in him as our all-sufficient portion though there will be many defects yet then are we said to seek him with the whole heart Secondly The reasons why God will be sought with the whole heart are 1. He that gives but part to God doth indeed give nothing The Devil keeps an interest as long as one lust remains unmortified and one corner of the soul is kept for him As Pharaoh stood hucking he would fain have some pawn of their return either leave your children behind no no they must go and see the Sacrifices and be trained up in the way of the Lord then he would have their flocks and herds left behind he knew that would draw their hearts back again So Satan must have either this lust or that he knows by keeping part all will fall to his share in the end A bird that is tyed in a string seems to have more liberty than a bird in a Cage it flutters up and down though it be held fast so many seem to flutter up and down and do many things as Herod but his Herodias drew him back again into the Fowlers net Thus because of a sinners danger 2. Because of Gods right By Creation he made the whole therefore requires the whole the Father of spirits must have the whole spirit We were not mangled in our Creation God that made the whole must have the whole He preserves the whole Christ hath bought the whole 1 Cor. 6. 20. Glorifie God in your body and in your spirit which are Gods And God promiseth to glorifie the whole Christians it would be uncomfortable to us if God should only take a part to Heaven All that you have is to be glorified in the day of Christ all that you are and have must be given to him whole spirit soul and body Let us not deprive him of any part Use. Well do we serve God and seek after God with the whole heart The natural mother had rather part with the whole than to see the child divided 1 King 3. 26. God had rather part with the whole than take a piece Either he will have the whole of your love or leave the whole to Satan The Lord complains Hos. 10. 2. Their heart is divided Men have some affections for God many times but they have affections for their lusts too the world hath a great share and portion of their heart Q. But when in a Gospel-sense may we be said to seek God with the whole heart Take it in these short Propositions 1. When the setled purpose of our souls is to cleave to God to love and serve him with an intire obedience both in the inward and outward man when this is the full determination and consent of our hearts 2. When we do what we can by all good means to maintain this purpose for otherwise 't is but a fruit of conviction a free-will pang Act. 24. 16. Herein do I exercise my self to have always a conscience void of offence towards God and towards all
the letting in of inward comfort and spiritual reviving from the sense of Gods love so Psal. 80. 18 19. Quicken us and we will call upon thy name Turn us again O Lord God of Hosts cause thy face to shine and we shall be saved The shining of Gods face or the sense of Gods love is the reviving of afflicted spirits 2. The actuation of grace there may be life where there is no vigor Now when we are stirred up to be lively in Gods service we are said to be quickned as in the 19. verse of the Psalm before quoted and often it is thus used in this Psalm as verse the 37. Quicken thou me in thy way The Point is this That Gods children need often to go to God for quickning because they often lye under deadness of heart and therefore should desire God who is the fountain of Grace to emit and send forth his influence They need this quickning 1. By reason of their constant weakness 2. Their frequent indispositions and distempers of soul. 1. Their constant weakness in this world 1. By reason of their inclination to sin 2. The imperfection of their motions towards that which is good 1. By reason of their inclination to sin Carnal concupiscence draweth us aside from God to sensual objects James 1. 14. A man is drawn away by his own lust There is a strong biass of corruption drawing us from Christ to present things Heb. 12. 1. Let us lay aside every weight and the sin which doth so easily beset us There is a carnal affection or corrupt inclination which carrieth us out inordinately to things lawful or too often to things unlawful this hangeth as a weight retarding us in all our heavenly flights and motions The love and care of the world which is apt to press down the soul and doth twine about us and insinuate with us the Apostle calleth it a law in his members Rom. 7. 23. a warning to us how when the flesh draweth us off so strongly one way to implore the Divine grace to draw us more strongly to the other 2. Because of the imperfection of their motions to that which is good though there be a purpose bent of heart and inclination that way Our gives are still about us we feel the old maim Grace is like a spark in wet wood that needs continual blowing 2. Their frequent indispositions and distempers of soul. Sometimes they feel a lothness in their souls and a shiness of Gods presence their hearts hang off the spirit indeed is willing but some fleshly thought or carnal excuse checketh the motion It is God alone that can make the soul willing he giveth both will and deed God bendeth the unwilling will as well as helpeth the fainting affections Again sometimes they find a great deadness there is no vigour or liveliness in their affections and they cannot follow after God with such zeal and earnestness though there be not a formal deadness such as usually is in the duties of hypocrites yet there is not always the same strength and agility of grace in the children of God their souls do not so earnestly reach after Christ. Now what can help but divine quickning therefore go to God for it We should rouse and stir up our selves God giveth out influences according to his will or pleasure but we must still stsr up our selves But to answer a case of conscience Whether we are to do duty in case of deadness and indisposition c. 1. The influence of grace is not the warrant of duty but the help 't is the efficient assisting cause not the ground or rule we are to do all acts of obedience on the account of Gods command Luke 5. 5. Simon answering said unto him Master we have toiled all the night nevertheless at thy word I will let down the net God is Soveraign and we are bound to obey whether disposed or indisposed Should the Husbandman never plow but when disposed to plow 2. Our sinful indisposition cannot excuse us In sins of commission our weakness to resist temptation is no excuse So also in sins of omission we cannot be allowed to say it was the Lord suffered me to sin No more will this plea be allowed The Lord did not quicken me to duty Grace is as necessary to prevent sin as to perform duty Gods suspension was no excuse to Hezekiah 2 Chron. 32. 31. Howbeit in the business of the Ambassadors of the Princes of Babylon who sent to him to enquire of the wonder that was done in the land God left him to try him that he might know all that was in his heart This complaint of weakness hath an ill aspect complaining without labouring is rather a taxing of God But 3. Natural men are bound to pray and perform duties therefore renewed men That natural men are bound see Acts 8. 22. Repent therefore of this thy wickedness and pray God if perhaps the thought of thine heart may be forgiven thee And Psal. 14. 2. The Lord looked down from heaven to see if there were any that did understand and seek God It is charged as a crime that they did not but much more the renewed for to whom more is given of them more is required It is another talent wherewith they are entrusted Grace is not only donum but talentum Grace is not given as a piece of money to a child to play withal but as we give money to Factors to trade withal for us Now a renewed man should do more being capable of more 4. The outward act of a duty is commanded as well as the inward though they come not up to the nature of a perfect duty there is somewhat of the Ordinance of Christ in them Hos. 14. 2. Take with you words and turn unto the Lord say unto him Take away all iniquity and receive us graciously so will we render the calves of our lips Though I cannot do all I must do as much as I can 5. We are to wait humbly in the use of means for the power of his grace When the door is shut knocking is the only way to get it open I will go and offer my self to God and see what he will do for me which is Gods usual way and to be used with the more caution and diligence because God doth all Phil. 2. 12 13. Wherefore my beloved as ye have always obeyed not as in my presence only but now much more in my absence work out your own salvation with fear and trembling for it is God which worketh in you both to will and to do of his good pleasure Seamen by tacking about get wind so far as you use the means you comply with Gods end A sad threatning there is to those that neglect the use of means that shut the dore upon themselves or if God withdraws are willing he should keep away 6. Acting in spiritual duties fits us for them Iter ad pietatem est intra pietatem Praying fits for praying
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
being hard to come by unless Desires be strongly fixed men are soon put out of the Humour and so nothing would be done to any purpose in the World Surely Holiness that is so difficult and distasteful to Flesh and Blood would be but little looked after if there were not strength of Desires to keep it up Therefore is this affection that we may encounter Difficulties and Oppositions As Nehe. 4. 6. When there were Difficulties and Straits it is said They built the Wall for the People had a mind to work that is their Hearts were set upon it So if we had a mind to any Excellent thing it is this mind that keeps us up in the midst of all Difficulties and Labours All excellent Things are hard to come by it is so in Earthly matters much more in Spiritual The Lord will have it so to make us Prize them more for things soon got are little esteemed As riotous Heirs which know not how to get an Estate lavishly spend it A man is chary of what is hardly gotten Iacob prized Rachel the more because he was forced to serve for her so long So we shall prize Heavenly things the more when they cost us a great deal of Diligence and Labour to get them Now sluggish Desires soon fail but Vehement longings keep the Heart a work 5. Consider the issue of these Desires As they come from a good Cause which is the new Nature and a new Life for Appetite follows Life so they tend to a good Effect are sure of a good Accomplishment and Satisfaction God is wont to give Spiritual things to those that desire them there the Rule is Ask and have It is not so in carnal Things many that seek and hunt after them with all the Strength and Labour of their Souls at length are miserably disappointed But all the Promises run for Satisfaction to a Hungry Thirsty Earnest and Longing Soul 5. Math. 6. Those that are hungry and have a strong Desire upon them he will fill 1. Luke 51. And open thy Mouthwide and I will fill it 81. Psal. 10. They that open unto him as the thirsty Land for the Rain God that gives Velle to Will will give Posse to Do First the Desire and then the Satisfaction and therefore where there is this strength of Desire though there may be some failing in other things in our Endeavours and Performances yet the Lord will accept it 6. It argues some nearness to compleat Fruition or to full Satisfaction in Heaven when we begin to be more earnest after Holiness than we were before and after more of God and his Grace and Image to be set up in our Souls The more we desire Holiness the more ripe for Heaven This is a Rule The nearer we are to any good thing our Hearts are set upon the more impatient in the want of it as natural Motions are swifter in the end than in the beginning though violent Motions are swifter in the beginning while the impression of the stone lasts it is swift but afterwards it abates So when the Soul beats so strongly after God and Holiness and larger measures of Grace 't is a sign we are Ripening apace for Heaven Paul when he was grown aged in Christianity then he saith Rom. 7. 24. Who shall deliver me from this Body of Death As what we translate in the Psalms O that Salvation were come out of Sion It is in the Hebrew Who shall give Salvation So here it is an Hebreisme Who shall that is O that I were delivered He had many afflictions he was in Perills often Scourged Whipped Persecuted but he doth not say O that I could get rid of this troublesome Life of affliction but it was the Body of Death the remainders of Corruption was most burdensome to him The Children of God their Pulses beat strongly when they are upon the Confines of Eternity and their full and final Consummation These men begin to Ripen for their Heavenly State into which God will translate them Use 1. For Conviction of several sorts of Persons that are sar from this Temper and frame of Heart To begin with the most Notorious 1. Some desire Sin with a passionate Earnestness Iob 15. 16. He drinketh iniquity like Water As a thirsty Beast in those hot Countries would drink in water so did they drink in Sin Most wicked men are mad when their Lusts are set a working and there are some whose constant frame of Heart it is who make hast who march furiously as if they were afraid of coming to Hell too late bear down Conscience Word and all before them that set themselves to do Evil with both hands earnestly that have a strong desire after Sin and are carried out with as impatient longing after Sin as the Children of God such Eminent ones of God after Holiness 2. Some have no desire to the ways of God at all Iob 21. 14. They say unto God depart from us For we desire not the knowledge of thy ways the Hearts of many say so though their Tongues do not They are those which shut out the Light that cannot endure a searching Ministry lest it should trouble their Lusts disturb the Devils Kingdom that banish the thoughts of God out of their Hearts lest it revive the Sense of their Obligation to duty that set Conscience a challenging Gods right in their Souls that keep off from the Light 3. There are some that are insatiable in worldly things but have no Savour of these Heavenly and Holy things they are Thirsty for the Earth But God is not in all their thoughts Psal. 10. 4. a little Grace will serve their turn and think there is more ado than needs about Heaven and Heavenly things Alass the very contrary is true a little of the World will serve their turn here below If men had not a mind to increase their Temptations and Snares about a frail and temporal Life why do they make so much ado When many times they are taken away before they have Roasted what they have got in Hunting God takes them away but their Eternal estate is little looked after Riches qualifie us not but Holiness doth qualifie us for Heaven and it is our Ornament before God and his holy Angels And woe be to us if our poor Souls be thrust out Naked and Uncloathed in the other World Can we hunger and hanker after these lying Vanities and have no Hungering and Thirsting after Grace a little time will wear out the distinction of Rich and Poor High and Low but the distinction of Holy and Good will continue to Eternity Think of that time when not only the World but the Lust will pass away The lust of the World may be gone before we are out of the World as in Sickness and Pains but he that doth the will of God abideth for ever When we are Sick and Dying we have some kind of Notions and Apprehensions of these things then we can long and wish
5. 6. Faith which worketh by Love Well this quickning that I may most sensibly demonstrate it depends upon these two things 1. The Vitality of Grace that depends upon the degree and measure of our Faith For to speak nothing as to the mystical use as it is a means of our Function of Life but to speak only now as to its moral use as it acts by the sight of invisible things keep Faith alive and all is alive in the Soul Heb. 11. 1. Faith is the evidence of things not seen it doth make things absent and things not seen to act as if they were present therefore it must needs be a very enlivening thing Without Faith our notions of God Christ Heaven and Hell are never practical and lively in operation for this is the evidence of things not seen and this convinceth us of all Spiritual and unseen things to make them have a force and operation upon the soul. We do but hear read and discourse litterally until Faith puts life into our apprehensions and thoughts of them For Faith will affect us as if we did see the invisible God and will put the same affections into us as if Christ were Crucified before our eyes Gal. 3. 1. What is the reason the Mistery of Redemption is a wild story to some lively to others Faith affects the heart as if he were crucified before our eyes and his Life dropt out from him by degrees So Faith makes us hug and embrace them as if we were in the midst of the Glory of the blessed ones Take it only in its moral use it is an enlivening thing And as Faith is kept up in any Vigour so the spiritual Lise is kept up 2. For Love When we have a fresh and warm Sense of the Love of God upon our Souls we are quickned to do for him answerable to such a Love and our Souls reasons What hath God done so great things for us in Christ and we do nothing for God again Then we see we cannot do any thing too much Love hath a law upon the Soul that stirs up lively and Zealous motions towards God 2 Cor. 5. 14. The love of Christ constraineth us 1 Ioh. 5. 3. His Commandements are not grievous Then every thing goes on Pleasantly and runs upon it's Wheels Secondly Why will they that long after Gods Precepts see a need of quickning 1. Because of the Diseases incident to the renewed Estate There 's a constant weakness by reason of in-dwelling Corruption The flesh lusteth against the Spirit Gall. 5. 17. They cannot serve God with that Purity and Liberty they desire Then there are frequent indispositions of Soul sometimes they feel a slowness and loathness and dulness in their Souls Good men may yet be slow of Heart to heavenly things Luk. 24. 25. Look as the Physitian saith weariness that comes of its own accord is a sign of some Disease upon us Laziness in Duty comes from a remiss Will Sometimes too they find great Deadness that they cannot follow their work so close and with that Life and Earnestness And sometimes they are in Bonds sometimes in Straits that they cannot enlarge and dilate themselves towards God Psal. 119. 32. When thou shalt enlarge my Heart I will run the ways of thy Commandments Now they that mind their work they will be Sensible of this and call upon God to quicken them David complains of the dulness and deadness of his Spirit but many do not but go on in a Cold track of Duties and rever regard the frame of their Hearts But now a good man observes the Temper of his Soul Most observe their Bodies but few their Souls If their body be ill at ease and out of order they Complain presently but Love waxeth Cold Zeal for God and delight in God abateth men grow weary in Well-doing grow flat have this remiss Will this Deadness and Slowness of soul in the love of God they can satisfie themselves in this Frame and Temper 2. Because too without this supervening and quickning Grace they can never serve God cheerfully nor do any thing to purpose in the Heavenly life our general work of Obedience goes on slowly Psal. 119. 88. Quicken me so shall I keep the Testimony of thy Mouth then I shall do good to purpose But Religion is an irksome thing when we are Dead-hearted For particular Duties it is not enough to Pray but it must be with Life Psal. 80. 18. Quicken us and we will call upon thy Name It is not enough to Hear but to hear with Life Mat. 13. 15. It is a judgment to be dull of hearing 3. As it is uncomfortable to themselves to Act without quickning Grace so it is a thing very hateful with God a cold luke-warm Temper Rev. 3. 16. I will spew thee out of my Mouth This dull and stupid Profession is contrary to God and hateful to God and such as content themselves with this dead Profession God will spew them out of his mouth And it is contrary to all the provision God hath made for us Christ is set up as a fountain of Grace in our nature Iohn 10. 10. I am come that they might have Life and that they might have it more abundantly The Lord hath justified us by his Grace sprinkled our Hearts that we might serve the living God serve him in a living manner for Titles given to God imply the qualification in hand Heb. 9. 14. and he hath sanctified us planted Grace in our Hearts on purpose to maintain the life given us that there might be a lively Hope And all hearing is for Life Isa. 55. 3. we come to lively Oracles that we may be quickned The joys of Heaven Redemption by Christ Hells Torments these Doctrines are all quickning truths And the Lord hath given his flesh not only to God for a sacrifice but to us for Food that we may live Iohn 6. 51. Therefore to be cold it is Odious to God Use 1. For Caution 1. Let us take heed we lose not quickning through our own default that we lose not this enlivening Grace We may lose it by any hainous Sin of ours for by grieving the Spirit we bring on deadness upon the Heart Psal. 51. 10 11 12. When David sinned hainously he begs the Lord to quicken him and restore his free Spirit and the joy of his Salvation The spirit is a tender thing Every hainous sin is as a wound in the Body which lets out the life Blood and so we contract a Deadness upon our selves 2. Take heed of immoderate Liberty or Vanities of the world or Pleasures of the flesh if you would not lose this quickning The Apostle tells us 1 Tim. 5 6. The woman that liveth in Pleasure is dead while she Liveth Pleasures have a strange infatuation they bring a brawn and deadness upon the Heart and hinder the Sprightliness of spiritual and Heavenly affections Psal. 119. 37. Turn away mine Eyes from beholding Vanity And quicken thou me
that 's no fault of our Portion but the defect of our Capacity Though we have not that fulness that we shall have hereafter yet we have it initially Here we have the First-fruits have it virtually hope and look for it there is something begun in the Soul that will increase towards this Satisfaction certainly this is a Portion that can alone be possest with Content God is satisfied with himself and sufficient to his own Happiness therefore surely there is enough in him to fill the Creature That which fills an Ocean will fill a Bucket that which will fill a Gallon will fill a Pint those Revenues that will defray an Emperours Expences are enough for a Beggar or Poor man So when the Lord himself is satisfied with himself and it is his happiness to enjoy himself there needs no more there is enough in God to satisfy If our desires run out after other things they are desires not to be satisfied but to be mortified If we hunger after other Contentments they are like feverish desires not to be satisfied but to be abated in the Soul for he that fills all things hath enough to fill up our Hearts Sixthly Complacency and Delight That which a Man would take pleasure in there where he may have abundant matter of rejoycing and Delight this a Man would choose for his Portion Now in God he hath the truest and sincerest Delight This is matter of rejoycing as David saith Psal. 16. 7. The Lord is my Portion what then I have a goodly Heritage here 's that which will revive and refresh my Heart enough There is no rejoycing that is sincere but this As the Discomforts of the New Creature are more real than all other Discomforts and pierce deeper a wounded Spirit who can bear so the Joyes of the New Creature none goe so deep Psal. 4. 6. Thou hast put more gladness into my heart c. Others do but tickle the Senses a little refresh the outward Man please the more bruitish part but this the Heart And this is such a joy as can be better felt than uttered 2 Pet. 1. 8. It is unspeakable and none can know the strength and sweetness of it till it be felt a Stranger cannot conceive it doth not intermeddle with his joy Prov. 14. 10. One drop of this is more than an Ocean of carnal Pleasure When we have other things without God we can never be serious Take the merriest Blades in the World and dig them to the bottom still there is something of sadness and remorse that doth sowre all their Content Conscience is secretly repining and ready to imbitter their Joy Though men strive to bear it down yet it 's ever returning upon them therefore they cannot be truly chearfull The most jolly Sinners have their Pangs that take off the edge of their Bravery Carnal Rejoycing makes a great noise like Thorns under a Pot but it 's but a blaze and gone But this is a solid Joy and Comfort wherewith a Man may look death in the face with chearfulness and think of the World to come and not be sad Alas a little thing puts the merriest Sinner into the Stocks of Conscience He that makes it his business to adde one Pleasure to another and spend his days in vanity how soon is his Mirth removed Therefore if a Man would choose a Portion to have Joy at the higest Rate he should choose God for his Portion II. How comes a godly Man to look upon God under this Notion that no less will content him but God himself why he hath another apprehension and another manner of heart to close with him than carnal Men his Understanding is inlightned and his Heart inclined by Grace 1. He sees more into the worth of Spiritual and Heavenly Things He hath Faith which is the Evidence of things not seen of things that do not lie under the judgment of Sense and present Reason he can spy things under a Vail and his eyes are opened to see what is the Riches of the glory of his Inheritance in the Saints Eph. 1. 17 18. and therefore he is convinced of the fullness and sufficiency that is in God and the emptiness and straitness that is in the Creature God hath given him Counsel his Reins instruct him Psal. 16. 7. All by Nature are blind ignorant apt to dote upon the Creature but by Grace their eyes are opened that they have another manner of discerning that they do not see things onely by discourse but their Hearts are affected Others may discourse but they have not this divine Light and spiritual Understanding by which spiritual Things may be discerned as matters of Opinion they may but not as matters of Choice A carnal Man may argue out with Reason the Worth and Excellency of God but he hath not a refined Apprehension and perswasive Counsel which is in God's People 2. Their Hearts are inclined to choose him for their Portion They do not onely see an alluring worth in the Object but there 's an attracting Vertue by which the Heart is drawn in to God Iohn 6. 44. No man can come to me except the Father which hath sent me draw him The great Article of the Covenant of Grace is to take God for our God Now all the Articles of the New Covenant are not onely Precepts ●…ut Promises The conditions of the Covenant are conditions in the Covenant God gives what he requires And therefore as the great Article of the Covenant is to take God for our God so the great Blessing of the Covenant is to have a new Heart or a new placing of our Desires and Affections Sin lieth in a Conversion from God to the Creature Grace in turning us to God again The Change is mainly seen in fixing our chiefest Good and our last End God gives his People a Heart to close with him and accept of him as their Portion to fix upon him as their chiefest Good and their last End Use 1. To reprove them that do not take God for their Portion Godly Men must have God himself they prefer him above all and saving Grace above other Benefits Psal. 4. 6 7. There 's the dispositions of the Godly and the Carnal The many say who will shew us any good but Lord lift up the Light of thy Countenance upon us A carnal Man is for Good in common any Good but not for the Light of God's Countenance nothing will satisfy the Saints but the Light of God's Countenance they prefer him above his Gifts and among his Gifts they prefer saving Graces and renewing Mercies such as begin and confirm them in their Union with God in Christ. But carnal Men go no further than the World they choose not God but his Gifts and among these not the best but the common sort such as suite with the Appetite of the fleshly Nature and the more brutish part of these Riches Pleasures and Honours and these too not as coming from God but as
with fear and trembling In the time of our sojourning here we meet with many Temptations Baits without are many and the Flesh within us is importunate to be pleased and our account at the end of the Journey is very exact 1 Pet. 1. 17. And if ye call on the Father who without respect of persons judgeth according to every man's work pass the time of your sojourning here in fear A false Heart is apt to betray us and the entertainments of sense to intice and corrupt us and we are assaulted on every side and Salvation and eternal Happiness is the thing in chase and pursuit if we come short of it we are undone for ever Heb. 4. 1. Having a promise of rest left with us let us fear lest we come short of it There is no mending Errours in the other World there we shall be convinced of our mistakes to our Confusion but not to our Conversion and Salvation II. The influence it hath upon keeping God's Precepts 1. In general this is one demonstration of it that the most eminent Servants of God have been commended for their Fear of God Iob cap. 1. 1. is said to be a man perfect and upright one that feared God and eschewed evil He had a true Godliness or a filial awe of God which kept him from Sin and the Temptations whereby it might insinuate it self into his Soul So Obadia Ahabs Steward is described to be a man that feared God greatly 1 Kings 18. 3. and of one Hananiah it is said Nehem. 7. 2. that he feared God greatly above many others Men are more holy as the Fear of God doth more prevail in their hearts their tenderness both in avoiding and repenting of Sin increaseth according as they entertain the awe and fear of God in their hearts and here is the rise and fountain of all circumspect Walking As the Stream is dryed up that wanteth a Fountain so Godliness ceaseth as the Fear of God abateth 2. More particularly 1. It is the great pull-back and constant preservative of the Soul against Sin As the Beasts are contained in their subjection and obedience to Man by the fear that is upon them Gen. 7. 2. The dread of you shall be upon every Beast of the earth that they shall not hurt you So the Fear of God is upon us Exod. 20. 20. God is come to prove you that his fear may be before your faces that ye sin not Ioseph is an instance Gen. 39. 9. How can I doe this great wickedness and sin against God Abraham could promise himself little security in a place where no Fear of God was Gen. 20. 11. I thought surely the fear of God is not in this place and they will slay me for my Wifes sake Therefore Prov. 23. 17. be thou in the fear of the Lord all the day long 2. It is the great excitement to Obedience 1. Duties of Religion will not reverently and seriously be performed unless there be a deep awe of God upon our Souls God will be sanctified in all that draw nigh unto him Lev. 10. 3. Now what is it to sanctify God in our hearts but to fear his Majesty and Greatness and Goodness Isa. 8. 13. Sanctify the Lord God of Hosts in your hearts and make him your Fear Therefore David desireth God to call in his stragling Thoughts and scattered Affections Psal. 86. 11. Unite my heart to the fear of thy Name so the serious Worshippers are described to be those that desire to fear his Name Nehem. 1. 11. 2. Duties towards Men will not be regarded in all times and places unless the Fear of God bear rule in our hearts As Servants when their Masters are absent neglect their work Col. 3. 22. Servants obey in all things your Masters according to the flesh not with eye service as men pleasers but in singleness of heart fearing God A Christian is alike every where because God is alike every where He that feareth God needeth no other Theatre than his own Conscience nor other Spectatours than God and his holy Angels So to hinder us from contriving mischief in secret when others are not aware of it Levit. 19. 14. Thou shalt not curse the deaf man nor lay a stumbling block before the blind but shalt fear the Lord thy God The deaf hear not the blind seeth not but God seeth and heareth and that is enough to a gracious heart to bridle us when it is in our power to hurt others As Ioseph assureth his Brethren he would be just to them for I fear God Gen. 42. 18. Nehemiah did not convert the publick Treasures to his private use Nehem. 5. 15. so did not I for I fear God This grace when it is hazardous to be faithfull to men makes us to slight the danger Exod. 1. 17. The Midwives feared God and did not as the King of Egypt commanded them that kept them from obeying that cruel edict to their own hazard Neither hope of gain nor fear of loss can prevail where men fear God 3. It breedeth Zeal and Diligence in the great and general business of our Salvation and maketh us more carefull to approve our selves unto God in our whole course that we may be accepted of him 2 Cor. 7. 1. perfecting holiness in the fear of God God is a great God and will not be put off with any thing or served with a little Religiousness by the bie but with more than ordinary Care and Zeal and Diligence Now what inclineth us to this but the Fear of God or a Reverence of his Majesty and Goodness So Phil. 2. 12. Let us work out our Salvation with fear and trembling Salvation is not to be looked after between sleeping and waking no it requireth our greatest Attention as having a sense of the weightiness of the work upon our hearts The Use is to press to two things 1. To fear God 2. To keep his Precepts if we would come under the character of his People 1. To fear God Be not prejudiced against this Grace it is generally looked upon as a left-handed Grace 1. It is not contrary to our Blessedness Prov. 28. 14. Blessed is he that feareth always It doth not infringe the happiness of our Lives to be always in God's company mindfull of our Duty to him The Angels in Heaven always behold the Face of our Heavenly Father and in that Vision their supream Happiness consists There is a Fear of Angels and a Fear of Devils The Angels ever fear and reverence God the Devils believe and tremble the Angel's Fear is Reverence the Devil's Fear is Torment God doth not require that we should always perplex our selves with Terrours and Scruples that were a Torture not a Blessedness but God hath required that we should always have a deep sense of his Majesty and Goodness impressed upon our hearts In Heaven this Fear will not cease it is an essential respect due from the Creature to the Creatour and as we shall love him so fear
Isa. 26. 8. Yea in the way of thy judgments O Lord have we waited for thee c. Our affections are bribed when desired comforts are presently obtained God will see if we purely love him 4. For a close to this Point Our Sufferings are like to be long I speak not as determining but to awaken a Spirit of Prayer that they may be shortned when Christ made as if he would go farther they constrained him to tarry Luke 24. 28 29. These are sad symptoms of it First When Reformation is rejected and Corruptions are setling again upon their own Base Hos. 7. 1. When I would have healed Israel then the iniquity of Ephraim was discovered c. Ezek. 24. 13. In thy filthiness is lewdness because I have purged thee and thou wast not purged thou shalt not be purged from thy filthiness any more till I have caused my fury to rest upon thee This Crime is not only chargeable on them who opposed the Reformation but on those who by multiplied Scandals dishonoured the Cause of God Instance in Papists in Queen Maries time who got in by fraud and violence not by miscarriage of the Protestants Then 't was sharp 〈◊〉 short ours is like to be tedious and long 2dly When our Deliverance is li●…ly to prove a mischief and a misery when we are not prepared to receive it God will not give us things for our hurt And we may fear as much from our Brethren our mutual bickerings as from Enemies when God promises Restauration he promiseth Unity Zeph. 3. 9. For then will I turn to the people a pure language that they may call upon the Name of the Lord to serve him with one consent Zech. 14. 9. And the Lord shall be King over all the earth in that day shall there be one Lord and his Name one The Dog is let loose when the Sheep scatter 3dly When there is a damp upon the Spirit of Prayer and Men give over seeking to God for deliverance as an hopeless thing God is near when the Spirit of Prayer is revived Ezek. 36. 37. Thus saith the Lord God I will yet for this be enquired of by the house of Israel to do it for them I will increase them with men like a flock And Jer. 29. 12 13. Then shall ye call upon me and ye shall go and pray unto me and I will hearken unto you And ye shall seek me and find me when ye shall search for me with all your heart Dan. 9. 19 ●…0 and Psal. 10. 17. Lord thou hast heard the desire of the humble thou wilt prepare their heart thou wilt cause thine ear to hear Et passim Alibi 4thly When God is upon his Judicial Process and there is not any course taken to reconcile our selves to him God hath been judging his People judging the Nation wherein they live Judgment began at the House of God what notable Humiliation and Reformation hath it produced there There is God's whole work to be done upon Mount Sion If. 10. 12. What fruit of all those terrible Judgments Incorrigibleness sheweth our Stripes will be many our Judgments long 5. When Dispensations tend to the removing of the Candlestick or look very like it Rev. 2. 5. Remember therefore from whence thou art fallen and repent and do the first works or else I will come unto thee quickly and will remove thy candlestick cut of his place except thou repent That is done either by destroying Judgments taking away the subject matter of the Church or by their own Apostasie and spiritual Fornication or sad Errors and Confusions ill treatment of God's People opposing his Interests by his Enemies and the sinful Miscarriages and Apostasies of professing Friends will help to wear out an unthankful murmuring Generation II Doct. When Salvation is delayed or Deliverance long a coming the Soul fainteth I shall shew 1. The Nature of this Fainting 2. The Causes of Fainting 3. The Kinds of Fainting 4. The Considerations which may preserve us from Fainting 1. For the Nature of this Fainting Here we must inquire what is meant by the Fainting of the Soul Fainting is proper to the Body but here it is ascribed to the Soul as also in many other places the Apostle saith Heb. 12. 3. Lest ye be weary and faint in your minds Where two words are used Weariness and Fainting both taken from the Body-Weariness is a lesser Fainting a higher degree of deficiency in weariness the Body requireth some rest or refreshment when the active power is weakned and the vital spirits and principles of motion are dulled but in Fainting the vital power is contracted and retireth and leaveth the outward parts liveless and sensless When a Man is wearied his strength is abated when he fainteth he is quite spent These things by a Metaphor are applied to the Soul or Mind A Man is weary when the Fortitude of his Mind his moral or spiritual strength is broken or begins to abate when his Soul sits uneasie under Sufferings But when he sinketh under the burden of grievous tedious or long Affliction then he is said to faint when all the reasons and grounds of his comfort are quite spent and he can hold out no longer 2. The Causes of Fainting The Fainting of the Body may arise either from Labour Sickness and Travel or else from Hunger and Thirst. So the Fainting of the Soul is either first from the tediousness of present Pressures or 2dly from a fervent and strong desire First From the tediousness of present Sorrows and Pressures as Jer. 8. 18. When I would comfort my self against my sorrow my heart fainteth within me And why because of the length of their Afflictions ver 20. The harvest is past the summer is ended and we are not saved Sorrow doth so in vade their spirits that they are by no means able to ease themselves expectations of this side and that side are cut off they long look for help and relief but none appeareth So Lam. 1. 22. My sighs are many and my heart is faint They are overwhelmed with grief and cannot bear up with any courage 2dly It may be caused by a fervent and strong desire Psal. 84. 2. My soul longeth yea even fainteth for the courts of God Vehement desires cause a languor So 't is taken here 't is long O Lord that I have waited and attended with great desire for deliverance from thee Those who vehemently desire any thing are apt to faint Where Love is hot Desire cannot be cold The benefit of the Church liberty to serve God do strongly move the Saints yea the Spirit of God increaseth the vehemency of these motions For he maketh intercession for the saints with sighs and groans that cannot be uttered Rom. 8. 20. He concurreth to the vehemency of the desire but the fainting is from our selves from our weakness The Soul is so earnestly fixed in the expectation of God's salvation that it can no longer keep any equal tenour so that this Fainting
of comfort to God whether he will give temporal deliverance a comfortable sense of his love or hopes of glory a clearer right and title to eternal Rest. 2. Yea refer the thing it self Comfort is necessary because a great part of our temptations lie in troubles as well as allurements Sense of pain may discompose us as well as pleasure entice us The world is a persecuting as well as a tempting world The flesh troubleth as well as enticeth The Devil is a disquieting as well as an insnaring Devil But yet comfort though necessary is not so necessary as holiness Therefore though comfort is not to be despised yet sincere love to God is to be preferred and though it be not dispensed so certainly so constantly and in so high a degree in this world we must be contented The Spirits comforting work is oftner interrupted than the work of holiness so much as is necessary to our employment for God in the world we shall have 3. Comfort is raised in us by the Spirit of God Acts 9. 31. Then had the Churches rest and were edified and walking in the fear of the Lord and in the comfort of the holy Ghost were multiplied For means we have his Word his Promises and also his Providence His Word Rom. 15. 4. Whatsoever things were written aforetime were written for our learning that we through patience and comfort of the scriptures might have hope His Promises Psal. 119. 50. This is my comfort in my affliction for thy word hath quickned me Heb. 6. 17 18. Wherein God willing more abundantly to shew unto the heirs of promise the immutability of his counsel confirmed it by an oath That by two immutable things in which it was impossible for God to lye we might have a strong consolation who have fled for refuge to lay hold upon the hope set before us And also his Providence Protection and Defence Psal. 23. 4. Thou art with me thy rod and thy staff they comfort me The Rod and Staff are spoken of as Instruments of defence 4. Consider how ready God is to comfort his People Isa. 40. 1 2. Comfort ye comfort ye my people saith your God Speak ye comfortably to Ierusalem and cry unto her that her warfare is accomplished that her iniquity is pardoned When time serveth God sendeth these messages SERMON XCI PSAL. CXIX VER 83. For I am become like a bottle in the smoke yet do I not forget thy precepts HEre is rendred a Reason why he doth so earnestly beg for Comfort and Deliverance The Reason is taken from his necessity he was scarce able to bear any longer delay of comfort Not only his Faith and Hope was spent but his Body was even spent through the trouble that was upon him He had told us in the 81 Verse My soul fainteth for thy salvation In the 82 Verse Mine eyes fail for thy word And now I am become like a bottle in the smoke c. Observe here 1. His Condition represented 2. His Resolution maintained Or First The Heat of Tribulation I am become like a bottle in the smoke Secondly His constant perseverance in his Duty Yet do I not forget thy precepts 1. His Condition is represented by the similitude of a bottle in the smoke alluding therein to a Bottle of Skin such as the Iews used As in Spain their Wine is put into Borachos or Bags made of Hog-skins 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Homer in a Vessel or Bottle of a Goat-skin And Christ's similitude of old Bottles and new Bottles relateth thereunto Mat. 9. 17. For he meaneth it of Skin-Bottles or Bladders if such a Bottle be hung up in the smoke and by that means it becometh black parched and dry The Man of God thought this a fit Emblem of his condition The Septuagint read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Frost Kitor signifieth any Fume or Vapor whether of smoke or mist as Psal. 148. 8. Fire and hail snow and vapor The word for vapor is the same with this which is here rendred smoke Here it signifieth smoke rather than vapor or mist. 2. His Resolution Yet do I not forget thy precepts I do not forget That is I do not decline from or neglect my duty as Heb. 13. 16. To distribute and communicate forget not that is neglect it not As on God's part when he will not perform what belongeth to him being hindred by our disobedience he threatneth to forget his people Ier. 23. 39. that is will not deliver them So we forget God's Precepts when we do not fulfil or neglect our duty Now forget God's Precepts he might either as his Comfort or his Rule both ways must the word be improved and remembred by us Yet because the notion of Precepts is here used I understand the latter Often is this passage repeated in this Psalm as Ver. 51. The proud have had me greatly in derision yet have I not declined from thy law Though scorned and made a mockage by those that were at ease and lived in pomp and splendor yet his zeal was not abated Ver. 61. The bands of the wicked have robbed me yet have I not forgotten thy law Though plundred by the violence of Soldiers So ver 109. My soul is continually in my hand yet do I not forget thy law That is though he was in danger of death continually We have it ag●…in Ver. 141. I am small and despised yet do I not forget thy law Though contemned and slighted as an useless creature and one that might be well spared in the world So in the Text I am become like a bottle in the smoke though wrinkled and shrivel'd with age and sorrow Thus in all Temptations David's love to God and his ways were not abated DOCT. That though our Tryals be never so sharp and tedious yet this must not lessen our respect to God or his Word In handling this Point I shall shew you three things First That God may exercise his Children with sharp and tedious Afflictions Secondly That these Afflictions are apt to draw us into manifold Sins and Errors of Practice Thirdly That yet this should not be A gracious Heart should withstand this shock of Temptations For the first David is an instance whose sad complaint we have had continued for three Verses together I shall only now open the Similitude in the Text whereby he representeth his condition 1. A Bottle in the smoke is dry and wrinkled and shrunk up so he was worn out and dryed up with sorrow and long suspense of expectation This noteth the decay of his bodily strength so also elsewhere Psal. 102. 3. My days are consumed like smoke and my bones are burnt as an hearth And he saith Psal. 32. 4. Thy hand was heavy upon me my moisture is turned into the drought of summer His chief sap oil was spent humidum radicale As a leathern Sack long hung up in a smoking Chimney so was he dryed up and shrivel'd and wrinkled by long continued troubles
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Devices There are many devices and carnal inventions in the hearts of men which the Scripture takes notice of as First When men devise debate in their judgments by carnal means without complying with God Iam. 4. 8. Cleanse your hands ye sinners and purifie your hearts ye double minded By vain thoughts they mind carnal projects how to get from under the judgment without reformation humiliation and complying with God by humane means or sinful shifts without Gods warrant and allowance Isai. 9. 10. When it was ill with them they hope to mend it The Bricks are fallen down but we will build with hewen Stones the Sycamores are cut down but we will change them into Cedars The state of our affairs is bad but we can work it into better Secondly When men spend their time wholly to compass their carnal end as he Luke 12. 18. I will pull down my Barns and build greater c. When they sacrifice their precious thoughts to their interest and lusts and catering and progging how to satisfie carnal Nature making provision for the flesh to fulfil it in the lust thereof Or Thirdly When mens designs are plainly wicked and tend to the mischief of others Prov. 16. 30. He shutteth his eyes to devise froward things moving his lips he bringeth evil to pass Moving the lips and shutting the eyes are gestures and postures of men that are pensive and musing Mic. 2. 1. Wo unto them that devise evil upon their beds When men seek to spin and weave out a Webb of wickedness and carry on their sins with the greatest secrecy This in short is some taste of the vanity of our thoughts II. What are the sins that do most usually ingross and take up our thoughts I answer 1. Uncleanness Speculative wickedness makes way for active He hath committed Adultery in his heart Matth. 5. 28. There is polluting our selves by our thoughts and this is a sin usually works that way 2. Revenge Liquors are sowr'd when long kept so when we dwell upon discontents they turn to revenge Prov. 14. 17. He that is soon angry dealeth foolishly and a man of wicked devices is hated He that is passionate and soon angry is a Fool but when a man is not only angry but malicious that puts him upon wicked devices when he doth concoct his anger he is a Fool to purpose Purposes of revenge are most sweet and pleasant to carnal nature Prov. 16. 14. Frowardness is in his heart he deviseth mischief continually When men are full of revengeful and spiteful thoughts 3. Envy 'T is a sin that feeds upon the mind 1 Sam. 18. 9. Those Songs of the Women That Saul had slain his thousands but David his ten thousands they ran in Sauls mind therefore he hated David Envy is an evil disease that dwelleth in the heart and bewrays it self mostly in thoughts 4. Pride Either Pride in the desires or Pride in the mind either vain-glory or self-conceit this is entertaining our hearts with whispers of vanity therefore it is said Luke 1. 51. He hath scattered the Proud in the imagination of their hearts Proud men are full of imaginations 5. Covetousness which is nothing but vain musings and exercises of their heart 2 Pet. 2. 14. An heart they have exercised with covetous practices And it withdraws the heart in the very time of Gods Worship Ezek. 33. 31. Their heart goeth after their Covetousness 6. Distrust is another thing which usually takes up our thoughts distracting motions against Gods Providence III. Upon what grounds we are to make conscience of our thoughts 1. Because they are irregularities contrary to the Law of God It is said Psal. 19. 7. The Law of God is pure converting the Soul The Law of God differs herein from the Laws of men The Commands of the greatest and most mighty Potentates upon Earth can go no further than the regulating of the conversation for that 's all they can take account of but the Law of God reacheth to the motions of the inward man and to the reducing of our thoughts to the obedience of God for God hath a Tribunal in the heart and conscience he searcheth and trieth the reins knows all our thoughts afar off and therefore it is proper to him to give Laws to our thoughts 2. God hath declared much of his displeasure against them The Devils sin for which he was cast out of Heaven was a sin of thought an aspiring thought possibly against the Imperial Dignity of God And so great were his Judgments upon men that he doth not so much take notice of outward acts as of inward thoughts therefore Gen. 6. 5. he threatned the old World for the imagination of the thoughts of their hearts We look to the stream but God looks to the Fountain Acts are hateful to men because liable to their cognizance so Ier. 6. 19. I will bring evil upon this people even the fruit of their thoughts because they have not hearkened to my words nor to my law but rejected it Nay in Gods process at the Last Day when God comes to judge the World it is said the secrets of their hearts shall be made manifest 1 Cor. 4. 5. Mens inward Debates Counsels reasonings and thoughts they shall be brought into the judgment 3. Make conscience of thoughts because among all sins thoughts are most considerable and that in these respects First In respect of the Subject They are the sins of the highest part of man the mind which is the leading part of the Soul The errours and irregularities of the lower part of the Soul are not so considerable as the counsels debates reasonings principles that we are seasoned and guided by Rom. 8. 7. The wisdom of the flesh is enmity against God That which should be the guide to man his wisdom that puts him upon opposition If sensual appetite were only in the fault it were not so much Secondly From their Nature They are the immediate issues of the Soul the first-born of original corruption The free acts of the heart do discover more of the temper of it than words and actions that are more remote A man may be known by his thoughts but not so much known by his words and actions for words and actions may be over-ruled by by-ends and restraints of fear and shame Men may speak not as they would do not as they would but think as they would To curry favour with others a man may refrain his tongue and do some unpleasing actions or may profess opinions contrary to his own mind But inward thoughts being the immediate Births of the Soul very much discover the temper of the man Hereby you may take the best measure of your spirits A gracious man is full of gracious thoughts and a wicked man full of wicked thoughts Prov. 12. 5. The thoughts of the righteous are right but the counsels of the wicked are deceit Our thoughts we can best judge by being the purest offspring of the
wonder is inauditum insperatum it could not enter into the heart of man to conceive what God hath done for us in Christ Unheard of unlook'd for 2 Sam. 7. 19. And this was yet a small thing in thy sight O Lord God but thou hast spoken also of thy servants house for a great while to come and is this the manner of man O Lord God If we wonder at what is wise and deep the terms upon which salvation is dispensed and propagated are with excellent wisdom 1 Cor. 2. 2. We speak the wisdom of God in a mystery even the hidden wisdom which God ordained before the world to our glory These are mysteries that lye out of the road of vulgar understandings 2. Upon every new looking it argueth some Distemper unless we wonder Either carelesness of soul-necessities or stupidness and unattentiveness or else carnal savour prevailing too much 3. It is a great help to practice The more the word is admired the more reverence it striketh into the Conscience the more it is submitted unto the more should we frame our practice In the Text Therefore doth my soul keep them The Word must be kept not only affected with it but our esteem must last and we must ever be tender of doing any thing contrary to it It must be kept by the soul there is the directive and commanding power it must be preserved or kept there not confined there If not kept there it will not be kept elsewhere There Understanding's clear Conscience awful heart ready Humane authority reacheth no farther than to bind men to conform to order in the course of their practice but Divine authority bringeth under the heart and thoughts to the obedience of Christ 2 Cor. 10. 5. It bindeth the Conscience to approve of Gods commanded Will to chuse it with affection to embrace it with the whole man to follow on with strength and constant endeavours Therefore wonderful partly because a renewed esteem is the beginning of a pure and intire subjection to it why did any give up themselves to the discipline of it Plato and Zeno's Doctrine was admired So to God reverence is the mother of obedience If we have not a sleight esteem of the word we shall look more after keeping of it And partly Because wonderfulness of promises evidenceth them to be of God it commendeth it self to the Consciences of men Means First A spiritual gust to relish knowledge and spiritual things A bruitish soul admires the sweetness of carnal things the sober part of the world that prize intellectual food the perfections of the mind they have a tast and relish for those things Psal. 119. 103. How sweet is thy word to my tast yea sweeter than honey to my mouth A sensual heart is not affected with these things Secondly A diligent search Ephes. 3. 9. And to make all men see what is the fellowship of the mystery which from the beginning of the world hath been hid in God The more diligently we search into these things the more we admire them A superficial view satisfieth and contenteth sooner than a deep search Herein they differ from other things for the more they are searched into the less they are admired imperfections which formerly lay hid then come in view Thirdly A thorough insight or spiritual illumination Psal. 119. 18. Open thou mine eyes that I may behold wondrous things out of thy Law And ver 27. Make me to understand the way of thy precepts so shall I talk of thy wondrous works The testimonies of God have more in recess than in open view Fourthly Experience if we have felt the wonderful Power Majesty and Authority of the Word Iohn 8. 32. Ye shall know the truth and the truth shall make you free Where there is no such effect they have no experience Fifthly Shew forth the wonderfulness of Gods testimonies by the raisedness of your Conversations They disparage the Word that live at a mean rate 2 Tim. 3. 5. Having a form of godliness but denying the power 1 Pet. 4. 14. If ye be reproached for the name of Christ happy are ye for the Spirit of Glory and of God resteth upon you On their part he is evil spoken of but on your part he is glorified SERMON CXLIII PSAL. CXIX VER 130. The entrance of thy Word giveth light it giveth understanding to the simple IN the former Verse David had commended the Word from the wonderfulness and mysteriousness thereof here from its clearness and perspicuity Thy testimonies are wonderful yet they give light The entrance giveth light to the simple The one property doth not hinder the other upon a twofold account First Because the truths revealed in Scripture are of two sorts some are plain Doctrines fit for the entertainment of Novices and may be called the Porch and Entrance others are deep mysteries to exercise the wits of the strongest In the waters of the Sanctuary in some places the Elephant may swim in others the Lamb may wade The Penmen of the Scripture acknowledged themselves to be Debtors to wise and foolish learned and unlearned Rom. 1. 14. I am debtor both to the Greeks and to the Barbarians both to the wise and to the unwise And accordingly were made use of to discover truths of all sorts There are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not all things nor the most material but some things hard to be understood 2 Pet. 3. 16. God hath expressed his mind in some points so that the sharpest sighted will not at first glance easily take up the meaning of it Other things are plain and easie and obvious so that the very entrance or first sight of them giveth understanding Secondly From the manner because though there are mysteries and things naturally unknown to us yet they are not obscurely delivered so as that we should despair to understand them but in a plain and familiar Style depths of mystery in plainness of words Therefore the simplest who desire to know so much as may comfort and save their souls ought not to be hindred and discouraged in the study of the Scriptures The sum is Some things are open and clear other things dark and mysterious but though hard to be understood yet not impossible to be understood most things plain none impossible The entrance of thy word giveth light it giveth understanding to the simple In these words 1. What or the Benefit we have by the Scriptures set forth by two words the one Metaphorical giveth light the other literal it giveth understanding That is it which is meant by Light 2. How or whence we have this Light from the entrance of the word 3. To whom to the Simple The first thing is explained in the Text it giveth Light that is it giveth understanding Two Questions then remain by way of Explication First What is meant by the entrance of thy Words some render it Ostium the door as Ierom the Septuagint 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Vulgar the Declaration we the