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A35945 A brief explication of the other fifty Psalmes, from Ps. 50 to Ps. 100 by David Dickson ... Dickson, David, 1583?-1663. 1653 (1653) Wing D1396; ESTC R19237 330,684 408

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dealing with his people The goodnesse of God endureth continually 2. So long as Gods unchangeable kindnesse endureth the wicked have no cause to insult over the godly nor have the godly cause to faint or be discouraged for this goodnesse of God David doth oppose both to Doegs boasting and to his own tentation The ●…indnesse of the Lord endureth for ever Ver. 2. Thy tongue deviseth mischiefs like a sharp r●…sour working deceitfully 3. Thou lovest evil more then good and lying rather then to speak righteousnesse Selah 4. Thou lovest all devouring words O thou deceitful tongue The next Argument of refuting Doegs folly is because this cruel calumny should bring Gods vengeance on Doeg and root him out from all felicity and here he first sets down his ditty in these three verses before he sets down his doom ver 5. Whence learn 1. The tongue when it is abused is a world of wickednesse setting the world on fire as it self is set on fire from hell by Satan for whatsoever mischief the devil can suggest or a wicked heart can devise the tongue will serve to vent it therefore is the tongue charged with devising of mischief Thy tongue deviseth mischief 2. The smooth convey of a wicked device doth not hide the mischief of it from Gods sight nor extenuate the mans fault but rather doth help on the mischief more cunningly and powerfully like a sharp rasour working de●…itfully 3. When a man speaketh no more of a tale of his neighbour but what may serve to the mans hurt and prejudice and keepeth up the relation of that part of the tale which might clear the mans innocency or might give a right construction of his doing albeit that part of the tale told be true if all the rest of the tale had been told with it yet being told alone as if it were the full history it is evil it is false lying It is a murthering and devouring speech and full of deceit and doth argue the Speaker such a one as Doeg was in the particular at least to whom David saith Thou lovest evil more then good and lying rather then to speak righteousnesse Thou lovest all devouring words O thou deceitful tongue 4. The more wit deliberation and affection is in a sin the heavier is the guilt and challenge for it more just Doegs devising mischief Doegs chusing evil and not good chusing lying and not righteousnesse loving these evil and all-devouring words maketh his ditty most fearful 5. God shall likewise destroy thee for ever he shall take thee away and pluck thee out of thy dwelling place and root thee out of the land of the living ●…ah Now followeth his doom Whence learn 1. As any wicked man is instrumental for bringing temporal destruction on the godly so is he instrumental in drawing everlasting destruction upon himself from Gods hand God shall likewise destroy thee for ever 2. He that seeketh to settle himself to inlarge himself to root himself in the earth and to prolong his standing in the world by wrong means and in special by hurting the godly and their good name and cause shall finde the event quite contrary to his desire designe and expectation as Doeg did whose doom was destruction for his evil offices done at Court against David ●…nd the Lords Ministers God shall take thee away and pluck thee out of thy dwelling place and root thee out of the land of the living Ver. 6. The righteous also shall see and feare and shall laugh at him 7. Lo this is the man that made not God his strength but trusted in the abundance of his riches and strengthened himself in his wickednesse The third Argument of ref●…tation of Doegs vain-boasting is that his wisdome should be seen to be ridiculous folly and his b●…asting to be the matter of his shame and disgrace Whence learn 1. The notable enemies of Gods children and servants may expect to be notably punished and that they who did see their sin shall see also Gods vengeance on them The righteous shall see it 2. As the godly are the only wise observers of Gods work and dispensation of his mercy and justice so also are they the only persons that do make spiritual advantage thereby The righteous shall see it and fear 3. As the good of godlinesse is seen and felt by the godly in their own experience of Gods blessing upon themselves so is it seen and observed also in the contrary evils which befal the ungodly Lo this is the man that made not God his strength say they but trusted in the abundance of his ri●…hes and strengthened himself in his wickednesse Ver. 8. But I am like a green Olive-tree in the house of God I trust in the mercy of God for ever and ever The fourth Argument for refutation of Doegs foolish boasting is because I saith David shall flourish in Gods favour in despite of Doeg Whence learn 1. Whatsoever may befall 〈◊〉 godly by the malice of their enemies it shall not hinder their felicity when their enemies are running to their own destruction it shall be well with the godly they may be perswaded of it for the Psalmists example doth encourage to it But I am like a green Olive-tree 2 As the Olive-tree being planted in a fertile ground draweth in moisture whereby it is nourished and groweth up so doth the beleever being planted in the Church draw spirit and life trom God by the holy ordinances whereby he groweth up I am like a green Olive-tree in the house of God 3. The wisdom of the godly and the ground of their true blessednesse is this they make fast work of their everlasting felicity by saith in God and this maketh them like green Olives all the dayes of their life for I trust in the mercy of God for ever and ever is given here for a reason of his happy growing in the house of God Ver. 9. I will praise thee for ever because thou hast done it and I will wait on thy Name for it is good before thy Saints He closeth the Psalm comfort●…bly with resoluti●…n to praise God and to depend upon him Whence learn 1. Victory over tentations obtained by saith i●… very glori●…us for saith doth make a man as sure of what is to come as if it were perfected and filleth him with praise for the certain hope of the performance of Promises I will prais●… thee for ever saith David because thou hast done it 2. ●…ith being soli●…ly fixed bringeth forth hope and quiet expectation of what is promised I will wait o●… thy Name 3. As the Christian patience of one of the Saints is a matter of g●…od example and great encouragement unto all the rest that behold it ●…o the consideration of the good which may redound to others who shall be witnesses of our patient atten●…ing upon God should sti●…e us up to this duty of patient hope in God I will wait on thee for it is good before thy Saints PSAL. LIII To
the ewes for the good of the Gentiles and enlarging of the Kingdom of Christ among them The petition is propounded ver 1 2 In the next place is an acclamation with the Gentiles glorifying of God at their in-bringing now foreseen that it should come most certainly ver 3 4. In the third place the Church of the Jewes do applaud the second time the conversion of the Gentiles and their praising of God promising to themselves that by that meanes the increase of Gods blessing on them shall follow and the enlarging of the Kingdom of God through all the world ver 5 6 7. Ver. 1. GOD be merciful unto us and blesse u●… and cause his face to shine upon us Sela●… 2. That thy way may be known upon earth thy s●…ving health among all nations This is the blessing which the Lord commanded the children of Aaron to pronounce upon the people of Israel Numb 6. 22 23. ●…hich here the people do turn into a prayer for the drawing in ●…f the Gentiles unto Gods service Whence learn 1. It is safe turning of Gods offers promises and forms of blessing of his people into prayers we are sure so to pray according to Gods will as the Church doth here 2. It is the duty of every citizen of the Church as lively members of that body to pray for the blessing of God upon all his people God be merciful unto us and cause his face to shine upon us 3. Then are the Lords people blessed when God doth make them instrumental to enlarge his Kingdome and to propagate the true Religion that is the doctrine of mans salvation and Gods service and this should be the aim we should shoot at in seeking any blessing to his people That the Lord may be known upon earth thy saving health among all the nations 4. The world is ignorant of true Religion till God by his own instruments reveale it and no way of Religion will please God nor profit men save Gods way only wherein he will have men to walk in the course of faith and obedience and wherein he revealeth how he will deal with us and how we must behave our selves toward him Therefore say they That thy way may be known upon earth thy saving health among all nations Ver. 3. Let the people praise thee O God let all the people praise thee 4. O let the nations be glad and sing for joy for thou shalt judge the people righteously and govern the nations upon earth Selab The Psalmist foreseeth by the revelation of Gods Spirit that the Gentiles shall be converted and shall rejoyce in God and praise him and therefore will have the Church of the Jewes to welcome them and to joyn in acclamation of praise to God with them because of Christs reigning among them and ruling them by his most holy lawes Whence learn 1. The manifestation of Gods freely gifted salvation in Christ and the revealing of his manner of dealing with people and how he will have people deal with him and one with another is a matter of unspeak●…ble praise to God and joy to men to whom this grace is revealed that thy saving health may be known among all nations let the people praise thee O God 2. True converts unto Christ besides the joy they have of their own salvation have also daily new accession of joy at the conversion of others as they come in and ought to blesse and praise God heartily with them when they behold their conversion Let all the people praise thee do they say twice and hereafter also the third time 3. The conversion of the Gentiles was not a thing only wished for by the Church of the Jewes but also prophesied of unto them clearly O let the nations be glad and sing for joy for thou shalt judge the people righteously c. 4. The Spirit which did endite the Psalmes did not degrade the promised Messiah Jesus Christ from his Godhead for his future incarnation but speaketh of him and to him as God blessed for ever that is the true God to the Jewish Church before his coming and true God to the converted Gentiles after his coming in the flesh one with the Father and holy Spirit for sixe times in this Psalm he is called God and acknowledged here to be the fountain of mercy and blessing to men and of manifested reconciliation with men and the object of all divine honour and praise and God the Lord and Law-giver of the converted Gentiles Thou shalt judge the people righteously and govern the nations upon earth 5. The doctrine and discipline of Christ whereby he judgeth and governeth his Church is most holy and righteous and in as far as particular Churches and Christians submit themselves to his Lawes Doctrine and Government they are his true subjects and shall finde the fruit of his governing and judging For these shall he judge righteously unto these shall he do the part of a Governour even on earth He shall govern the nations upon earth Ver. 5. Let the people praise thee O God let a●… the people praise thee 6. Then shall the earth yield her increase and God even our own God shall blesse us 7. God shall blesse us and all the ends of the earth shall fear him In the last place the Jewish Church giveth a second acclamation to the incoming of the Gentiles and do promise to themselves by that meanes Gods blessing more abundantly upon themselves as now being one body with the Gentiles in the same Covenant of grace with them Whence learn 1. As the conversion of the Gentiles was esteemed by the Jewes a matter worthy to be oftner presented to God and prayed for and earnestly pursued by all that loved God so was it foreseen to bee a matter of growing and lasting joy to men and growing and lasting praise to God and to Christ who is God the Converter of them and the Governour and Teacher of them effectually to know his Name and salvation Let all the people praise thee O God let all the people praise thee 2. The Spirit of God gave the Church of the Jewes to understand that the conversion of the Gentiles especially the conversion of the fulnesse of the Gentiles which here is prayed for when he saith Let all the people praise thee was to be a means or a mercy antecedent unto or nearly joyned with the bringing in and blessing of the Jewish Church and possibly in their own land Then shall the earth yield her increase and God even our own God shall blesse us for by the earth he meaneth the promised land of Canaan which hath been and is accursed during the time of their ejection out of it 3. When God shall be gracious to the Jewes after the conversion and bringing in of the Gentiles and shall renew the Covenant with them in Christ it shall fare the better with true Religion and with the Christian Churches among the Gentiles it shall be to them as a resurrection from the
acknowledge Gods power and mercy in our supplications so also it is our duty to glorify the mercy of God afte●… the self experience of it Thy mercy O Lord held me up Ver. 19. In the multitude of my thoughts within me thy comforts delight my soule He setteth down here a further benefit of his faith in God to wit that by what he saw in God he found comfort and joy in all his perplexities Whence learne 1. In the time of danger or of narrow trial many questions and doubts and discourses of minde use to arise which did not appear in time of ease and these multiplied thoughts do breed perplexity anxiety and grief which call for comfort as the experience of the Psalmist doth teach In the multiude of my thoughts within me c. 2. No ease for a perplexed soule till it go to God in Christ the resting stone in Sion and in him support is to be found under burdens and comfort against whatsoever cause of grief yes and more also joy and delight swallowing up all grievances 〈◊〉 the Psalmist by experience did finde usually In the multitude of my thoughts wi●…hin me thy comforts delight my soul now Gods comforts are Gospel comforts Ver. 20. Shall the throne of iniquity have fellowship with thee which frameth mischief by a law 21. They gather themselves together against the soule of the righteous and condemne the innocent blood He sheweth what use he made of the oppressors wickednesse for supporting of his own faith to wit that he was perswaded that God allowed not their mischievous courses howsoever they pretended to do what they did by a Law because not the good of the subject but the overthrow of the godly was intended by them Whence learne 1. The seat of Justice within the visible Church may possibly turn enemies to piety and righteousnesse and to those that follow Gods Word In which case the grief tentation wrastling and trial of the godly is not small 〈◊〉 the Psalmists experience doth teach us who here cometh to God with a question Shall the throne of iniquity have fellowship with thee 2. As the Thrones of Justice are honourable are countenanced and protected of God when they decree and execute righteousnesse so they lose their reputation and are de●…uded of Gods approbation comfort and defence when they decree and execute iniquity Shall the throne of iniquity have fellowship with thee 3. Albeit wicked men ofttimes love to have the appearance and shadow of equiry yet unrighteousnesse impiety oppression is not the more justifiable that it be covered with the authority of a law but rather God will abhorte that wickednesse which is enjoyned by a law so much the more as it hath pretence of law Shall the throne of iniquity have fellowship with thee that forgeth mischief by a Law 4. The iniquity of persecutors is the matter of confidence for the oppressed for if our adversaries be against God and against us also then have we fellowship with God in a common cause Shall the throne of iniquity have fellowship with thee saith he 5. When mischief is enacted by Law then shortly may the godly be pannelled as criminally guilty and they who allow the Law shall be found ready to sit upon Assises to condemn the righteous as the experience of the Psalmist doth shew They gather themselves together against the soule of the righteous and condemn the innocent blood Ver. 22. But the LORD is my defence and God is the rock of my refuge 23. And he shall bring upon them their own iniquity and shall cut them off in their own wickednesse yea the LORD our God shall cut them off From this consideration he draweth two conclusions one assuring him of his own protection ver 22. another assuring him of the destruction of the adversary ver 23. Whence learne 1. As nothing save faith in God can uphold a man in time of persecution so by persecution and trouble God useth to cause his own to make use of faith and to draw nearer hand unto him as the Psalmist did finde by experience saying But God is my defence 2. It is needful that he who would have Gods help and protection in a particular good cause should see that the reconciliation of his person be solidly grounded on the Covenant of Gods grace My God is the rock of my refuge 3. The godly may from Gods Word give out damnatory decrees against their persecutors which surely shall he executed as here thrice destruction is pronounced by the Psalmist against the oppressors 4. The destruction intended against the godly by their oppressors is as ready ●…s any thing to be the trap to take themselves in God shall bring upon them their own iniquity and shall cut thent oft in their own wickednesse 5 How little appearance soever there be of the vengeance of God upon wicked Rulers abusing their power against the godly for their righteousnesse and piety yet the overthrow of them must not be doubted of because of the Covenant past between God and his servants who serve him in suffering for righteousnesse for the repeating of the sentence of destruction the third time against such oppressors doth teach so much Yea the Lord our God shall cut them off PSAL. XCV THis Psalme is applied to Christ by the Apostle Heb. 3. 7 8 9 10 11. Whereof there are two parts In the first is an exhortation to worship God in Christ or Christ God with the Father and holy Spirit dwelling among them in the Temple and representing unto them his future incarnation and the execution of his offices in types and figures The arguments of pralsing and worshiping of him are five The first because he is the rock of our salvation ver 1 2. The second because of his greatnesse ver 3. The third for his power ver 4. The fourth because he created all things and us his people ver 5 6. The fifth because he is our covenanted God and Pastor ver 7. In the latter part of the Psalm is another exhortation unto the visible Church to evidence their obedience of saith and not to harden their heart in the time of Gods dealing with them by his Word as their fathers did who perished in the wildernesse for their provocation ver 8 9 10 11. Ver. 1. O Come let us sing unto the LORD let us make a joyfull noise to the Rock of our salvation 2. Let us come before his presence with thanksgiving and make a joyfull noise unto him with Psalmes From the first exhortation unto a chearful praising and worshipping of God manifesting himselfe in Christ to his Church and unto joyful thanksgiving for salvation offered and granted to us in him which is the first reason to move them to the duty Learn 1. As the necessity and acceptablenesse of the duty of praising God and thanksgiving unto him is very remarkable so is our unreadinesse unto the duty and unchearfulnesse in it observable also for the frequent and pressing
exhortations thereunto do intimate so much unto us O come let us sing unto the Lord let us make a noise let us come before him 2. Every one but specially the Lords Ministers should stirre up their people and others also to this duty to discharge it not only in secret but also publickly in their Congregations and that with chearfulnesse with heart and voice whatsoever shall be their private grievances and burdens Let us come before his presence with thanksgiving and make a joyful noise unto him with Psalms 3. Whatsoever evil or grief do trouble us there is reason of joy and praise and thanks when we look to Jesus Christ and his benefits Make a joyful noise unto the Rock of our salvation From him is our full deliverance and upon him lieth our victory over sin Satan death hell and all enmity founded as upon a Rock 4. It is time to come before God for mercy to prevent justice while yet we are spared and he is not come to us in judgement for so the Word in the original giveth ground signifying coming speedily and with prevention Let us speedily come before his presence or preoccupy his presence 5. He that cometh to God in Christ meeteth with his reconciled face for the coming to the Tabernacle the Ark and mercy-seat did signify and promise so much and therefore it is said Let us come before his presence or before his face 6. Singing of Psalmes should be done as a matter of honouring God and not as a matter of pleasing our own eares or the eares of others Let us come with thanksgiving or confession and praising and make a joyfull noise unto him with Psalmes Ver. 3. For the LORD is a great God and a great King above all gods Another reason of praising Christ is his greatnesse and supremacie above all Rulers and above all imaginable excellency Whence learn 1. He that hath a minde to praise God shall not want matter of praise as they who come before Princes do who for want of true grounds of praise in them do give them flattering words For the Lord is a great God for power and preheminency for strength and continuance 2. Except we put all things that bear the name of excellency under Gods feet whethe●… they be Angels or Princes or whatsoever the world maketh their god we do not give him his due honour He is a great King above all gods Ver. 4. In his hand are the deep places of the earth the strength of the hills is his also A third reason of his praise is this he is strong sustaining by his power sea and earth and all things of weight Whence learn 1. Whatsoever is most secret and remote from mens power or from our sight and knowledge God hath it at his disposing for he sustaineth it and maketh it subsist In his hand are the deep places of the earth 2. There is nothing of any strength among all the creatures which hath not its strength borrowed from God The strength of the hills is his also Ver. 5. The sea is his and he made it and his hands formed the dry land 6. O come let us worship and bow down let us kneel down before the LORD our maker A fourth reason of Christs praise is because he is the Creatour of all things and to be worshipped of us as our Creatōu●… That Christ as God or God to be incarnate one with the Father and holy Spirit is here intended appeareth by the command given to the worshippers to present themselves in the Temple and to kneel down toward the place of the A●…k before God dwelling between the Cherubims that is before Christ God to be incarnate Whence learn 1. All things were made by Christ whether high or low Coloss. 1. 16. And it was meet that our Saviour should be no other then he by whom sea and dry land were made so great is the work which the Mediator hath in hands The se●… is his and be made it and his hands formed the dry land 2. Christ as he is one with the Father and holy Spirit in greatnesse and power in respect of his Godhead and divine nature so is he one with the Father and holy Spirit in the capacity of divine honour O come let us worship and show down 3. Religious kneeling is a part of divine worship whereby we testify our absolute submission unto and highest giving of honour to God in soul and body and this honour is incommunicable to any creature Come let us worship and bow down let us kneel before the Lord our maker Ver 7. For he is our God and we are the people of his pasture and the sheep of his hand to day if ye will hear his voice The fifth reason of Christs praise is because he is our God and Pastor of his Church by office of his Mediatorship Whence learn 1. God deserveth praise of all the world but specially of his Church because of the near relation of Covenant between God and his Church Let us worship and bow down for he is our God 2. The good shepherd of the Church who layeth down his life for his sheep the great Doctor and Prophet of the Chuech the Mediator of the Covenant of grace and covenanted spouse of the Church is very God and was knowne believed on and worshipped as very God before his incarnation He is our God and we are the people of his pasture 3. Christ the Make●… the God the Mediator and Pastor of the Church doth not only effectually feed his people by teaching but also effectually governeth and defendeth his Church by his omnipotent power We are the people of his pasture and the sheep of his hand whom his Almighty hand and power governeth and protecteth in all ages Ver. 8. Harden not your heart as in the provocation and as in the day of temptation in the wildernesse 9. When your fathers tempted me proved me and saw my work 10. Fourty years long was I grieved with this generation and said It is a people that do ●…re in their heart and they have not knowne my wayes In the latter part of the Psalme which beginneth in the former verse To day if ye will hear his voice harden not your heart 〈◊〉 he giveth another exhortation to his Church visible to believe and obey the voice of our great Prophet Jesus Christ as the Apostle Heb. 3. 7 8 9 10 11. teacheth us to expound it The main argument to enforce the exhortation is lest the curse of God should overtake the disobedient and they should be debarred from heaven and happinesse as the misbelieving Israelites were secluded from Canaan and from heaven signified by it the history may be seen Exod. 17. Whence learue 1. The voice of God in the Scriptures in the Gospel appointed to be preached by sent Ministers is the voice of God the Father God the Son and God the holy Spirit one God in three persons for all who do grant the Scriptures to
be divine do acknowledge also that the Scriptures are the voice of God the Father and this Psalme the Apostle Heb. 3. 7. calleth the saying of the holy Ghost and in that same place he expoundeth his voice of whom this place doth speak to be the voice of the Sonne Jesus Christ and so the voice of God in the Scriptures in the Gospel appointed to be preached by sent messengers is the voice of God the Father Son and holy Spirit as David also doth teach us 2 Sam. 23. 2 3. The Spirit of the Lord spake by me there is the person of the holy Spirit The God of Israel said there is the ordinary designation of the person of the Father without secluding of the VVord or Spirit The Rock of Israel spake to me there is the description of the person of the Son who is the Builder of the Church his house and the foundation whereupon his Church is builded against which the gates of hell shall not prevail 2. The visible Catholick Church which hath the Word of God preached unto them and are in Covenant with him is the people of Christs pasture and sheep of his hand wherein may be found many such as harden their heart and perish and so are not all of them elect persons for To day if ye will hear his voice is spoken unto all to whom the Word of God doth come and doth bring them in the bond of the Covenant to hear his voice 3. Of such as are in Covenant with God in Christ to believe and obey his voice those only are actually true disciples who have this property to love to believe and to obey Gods voice to yield their heart to the Lords Word To day if ye will hear his voice is here the probation of their covenanted profession 4. The present time only is the opportunity of salvation or embracing of the offer of Gods grace and testifying of our obedience of saith we are not sure how long the Word shall remain with us or we with it To day if ye will hear his voice 5. How ignorant weak and unable soever a man be by nature to believe and obey the voice of God yet seeing God doth offer himselfe by his Word to cure him of all his evils he cannot endure that a man should wittingly willingly reject the counsel of the Lord and resolutely strengthen himself in his natural misbelief and disobedience for this were to harden his own heart yet more which here is forbidden To day if ye will hear his voice harden not your heart 6. The example of other mens sinnes should be made use of to make us wise for eschewing the like as here the history of the peoples murmuring against God and his Ministers is for this end recorded from Exod. 17. 3 4. concerning their tentation of God and provocation of him in the willernesse 5. It is to good purpose that we look upon the sins of our fore-fathers and upon Gods judgements on them for their sins that we may be humbled m●…de watchful against heredita●…y sins so this end is the time told them When your fathers tempted me proved me 8. He that maketh question ei●…her of Gods power or good will after he hath had experience and proof thereof burieth unthankfully the Lords bounty and doth draw a great deal deeper in the sin for this doth aggravate the provocation of God by the carnal Israelites here that they had often proof what God could do They saw my works saith he 9. The Lord not only marketh mens sins but also doth reckon how long they continue in them Fourty yeares long was I grieved 10. M●…sbelieving of God and not submitting our selves to his government is a vexing of his Spirit and a provocation of him to reject the sinner Fourty yeares long was I grieved with this generation 11. The errors of the minde are dangerous but the errors of the heart are yet more dangerous for the faults of the minde simply considered are ignorance and error but the fault of the heart is a loving of darknes and error the error of the minde saith I knew not I did not understand such a duty but the error of the heart saith no lesse then I will not know I desire not to hear of I care not for such a duty I said it is a people that do erre in their heart and they have not known my wayes that is they have not regarded my wayes have not allowed of them or loved them for otherwayes they were not simply ignorant of them they heard his words and saw his works 12. Not to subject our selves to such and such particular hard exercises difficulties straits and sad dispensations as it pleases God to put us under is a not knowing and disapproving of the ways of God which he followeth in dealing with his people and is no lesse then if we did take upon us to be wiser then he and to counsel and direct him how to govern the world and our particulars better then he doth They erre in heart and have not known my wayes Ver. 11. Unto whom I sware in my wrath that they should not enter into my rest To enforce the exhortation the Lord repeateth the doom pronounced upon such as harden their own hearts in their unbelief and disob●…ience of the voice of God to wit that he sware they should not enter into his rest that is they should not enter into the rest of reconciliation and peace with God which is a part of the believers rest whereof the Apostle speaketh commenting on this place Heb. 4. 3. nor into the rest of Canaan the type of heaven so they ●…ied in the wildernesse nor into the rest of heaven signified by Canaan so many of them as continued in this sin of hardening their heart against the voice of God Whence learn 1. There is a rest of God ordained for Believers who give up their hearts to the impression of Gods voice in the obedience of faith to wit the rest of justification reconciliation and peace with God the rest of begun sanctification and ceasing from their own works and the rest of everlasting refreshment begun in this life and perfected in the life to come for this is the rest which God calleth here his rest They shall not enter into my rest 2. A●… all sin hath judgement following after it as the shadow followeth the body so hardening of the heart against Gods Word in special hath wrath annexed unto it To whom I sware in my wrath 3. Obstinate hardeners of their heart in unbelief and disobedience against Gods Word are near to the curse and whosoever do continue to the end shall be found reprobates justly damned to the eternal torment of restlesseness against whom God standeth sworne to condemn them and destroy them Unto whom I sware in my wrath that they should not enter into my rest 4. The most fearful curses and threatnings pronouncel against sinners by God and the most terrible
own people righteous and followers of the rule of equity With righteousnesse shall he judge the world and the people with equity PSAL. XCIX FOr the comfort of the Church against the multitude of enemies round about her there is in this Psalm 〈◊〉 declaration of the Kingdom of Christ reigning as God one with the Father and holy Spirit in the Church of Israel before his Incarnation with a fourefold exhortation to all who shall heare tell of him The first exhortation is to stand in ●…we of him because of his great majesty manifested in Sion ver 〈◊〉 2. Another exhortation is to praise him for his greatnesse terriblenesse holinesse and righteousnesse ver 3 4. A third exhortation is to glorifie and worship him for sundry reasons ver 5 6 7 8. For which he repeateth the exhortation the fourth time ver 9. Ver. 1. THe LORD reigneth let the people tremble he sitteth between the Cherubims let the earth be moved 2. The LORD is great in Sion and he is high above all people From the first exhortation to feare Christ and to stand in awe of him Learn 1. Christ was King in his Church before his incarnation and did reigne in the sight of his Saints from the beginning of the world for as the Father from the beginning was in Christ his Sonne the Mediatour reconciling the world to himself not imputing their trespasses unto them so Christ the eternal Sonne was in the Father and with the Father and holy Spirit gathering and governing his Church all the time before his incarnation for it is Christ of whom ●…ere the Psalmist speaketh and calleth him Iehovah King in Sion The Lord reigneth 2. Albeit the Church be compassed about with enemies as the lilie among the thornes yet because her Lord reigneth in the midst of her she hath r●…ason not only to comfort her selfe in him but also hath ground of de●…ying her enemies and boasting against them The Lord reigneth let the people or Nations tremble 3. The Lords people do not worship an unknown God they know who he is and where to finde him to wit in his ordinances on the throne of grace reconciling himself to the world in Christ He sitteth between the Cherubims 4. Whosoever do seek God in Christ have the Angels attending on Christ to go forth for the service and safety of the beleever and worshipper for this did the ceremonial figure signifie He sitteth between the Cherubims 5. As Christ is attended by Angels to the comfort of his Church so also for the terrour and punishment of all adversaries in the world He sitteth between the Cherubims let the earth be moved 6. Albeit the Lord be great in his works every where yet is his greatnesse most manifest to his Church by his Word and Works to her and for her The Lord is great in Sion 7. There is no opposition which can be made against the Church no power or multitude of people able to prevail by counsel device plot or practice against his Sion or his Church for He is high above all people to dissipate their devices bridle their fury and destroy them at his pleasure Ver. 3. Let them praise thy great and terrible Name for it is holy 4. The Kings strength also loveth judgement thou dost establish equity thou executest judgement and righteousnesse in Iacob The second exhortation is to praise Christ the King of his Church for his greatnesse terrour holinesse moderation of his power and love of justice Whence learn 1. Whatsoever we know or understand of God we should not only by faith subscribe to it and seale it and praise God for it our selves but should also commend it to others and wish the like should be done by all men Let them praise thy Name 2. As the greatnesse of God in Christ on the one hand should induce men so the terrour of our God who is a consuming fire to his adversaries on the other hand should presse men to praise him Let them praise t●…y great and terri●…le Name 3. Whatsoever in Scripture is said of Christ will be found to be really in him he will answer to his name perfectly in all things without staine or blot Let them praise thy great and terrible Name for it is holy 4. Albeit the enemies of Christ despise the weaknesse and simplicity of his Government yet he is a powerful and strong King both in himself and in and for all who beleeve in him for here the Church praiseth the Kings strength 5. Christ moderateth his power specially in relation to his subjects and doth not what he may dealeth not in the rigour of justice with his people layeth no more on them then they are able to beare his yoke is easie and his burden is light yea he suffereth them not to be tempted above their strength but dealeth discreetly with them moderation and discretion pleaseth him The Kings strength loveth judgement 6. The course which our God hath set down for comforting the afflicted relieving the oppressed taking order with hypocrites and obstinate offenders is very equitable and a course which he will not alter or change for He loveth judgement and thou dost establish equity saith he 7. Christs actions and dispensations are answerable to his Lawes and his revealed Word he teacheth his subjects righteousnesse he maketh them righteous performeth his promises and executes his threatenings in his Church according to his sacred Word Thou executest judgement and righteousnesse in Iacob Ver. 5. Exalt ye the LORD our God and worship at his footstool for he is holy A third exhortation wherein he presseth the same duty of glorifyng of God the third time by three reasons One is because he is holy ver 5. Another is from the example of the Lords most approved servants who did subject themselves unto the Lords ordinances to their own and others advantage ver 6 7. A third reason from the example of the Church both in the wildernesse and in after-times who as they found the benefit of obedience of the ordinances of God when theyr worshipped God as he commanded them so did they smart so their disobedience when they followed their own inventions ver 8. whereupon he repeateth the exhortation the fourth time ver 9. Whence learne 1. Then is God rightly acknowledged when his Covenant of grace offered in Christ is embraced when men ioyne themselves to the true God of Israel and when they esteeme of God and acknowledge him as supreme Lord and King over all Exalt ye the Lord our God 2. God will be worshipped when and where and how he pleaseth to command and will not be worshipped but in Christ figured by the Temple and Ark of the Testimony in it worship as o●… before his fo●…tstool 3. The worshippers of God under the Old Testament were taught to lift their minde●… above all earthly things and loose their mindes from all limitation of God unto any corporal presence in the Sanctuary or Ark and to worship him at Solomon did
to give him more com●…ort then what is most comfortable in this world yea to make life it self without the feeling or hope of feeling ●…his love to be little w●…th to h●…m Thy lo●…g kindnesse is better then life 3. Rich experiences of the felt love of God in the use of the meanes deserve to be brought forth to the praise of God when it may glorifie him Because thy loving kindnesse is better then life my lips shall praise thee 4. One proof of Gods loving kindnesse towards us is reason abundant for us to blesse God for ever thereafter and to acknowledge him the fountain of blessings even to our selves whatseever change of dispensations we shall meet with Thus will I blesse thee while I live 5. As our assurance of Gods love unto us and of hi●… purp●…e to blesse us doth serve to prepare us for straits and difficulties hereafter so also for praying to God with confidence to be helped in whatsoever change of condition we may fall into afterwards Thus will I blesse thee while I live I will lift up my hands in thy Name to wit as a man engaged to depend upon thee to call upon thee as my need requireth and a man particularly encouraged by thee and confirmed by experience from thy former helping of me that I shall have a good answer from thee who hast manifested thy self unto me by Word and works 6. The spiritual life of the soul hath its own food as well as the bodily life of nature and the life of the godly is not so barren so sad and uncomfortable as the world doth beleeve They have their hid Manna and the water of life solid and satisfactory consolations and joy in the holy Spirit wherewith strangers do not intermeddle of which joyes the sweetest morsels of delicate banquets are but shadowes My soule shall be satisfied as with marrow and fatnesse 7. Such as do hunger and thirst after communion with God in Christ and do resolve to spend their life in Gods service may promise to themselves that they shall feel sweet satisfaction in this course and with David say My soule shall be sati●…fied as with marrow 8. Spiritual joyes are not like carnal joyes which end in sadnesse but they resolve in glorifying and do make the very outward man partaker of the benefit therefore doth the Psalm●…st adde And my mouth shall praise thee with joyful lips 9. The way to finde refreshment spiritual is beside publike ordinances to give our selves to spiritual exercises in secret at such times as our necessities civil and natural may best spa●…e and then and there to recall to minde what we have heard seen or felt of Gods Word or working and to keep up our thoughts upon this holy subject by prayer soliloquie and meditation as David sheweth to us the example When I remember thee upon my bed and meditate on thee in the night-watches 10. As one experience should call another to remembrance so the calling of experiences to our memory should oblige and encourage us in all conditions joyfully to make use by faith of Gods standing offer of grace to us in Christ shadowed forth by the wings of the cherubims stretched out alwayes over the mercy-seat Because thou hast been my helper therefore in the shadow of thy wings will I rejoyce for here and here only is the remedy of all sinne and misery Ver. 8. My soule followeth hard after thee thy right hand upholdeth me From the second fruit of the gracious answer given to Davids prayer that is from his giving the glory of the acts of grace which he did unto God the furnisher thereof Learne 1. The Lord useth to exercise the soules of his own children with sense of desertion and withdrawing of his presence one way or other This is presupposed in Davids following after the Lord when he felt him retiring himself as it were 2. A believer in God cannot endure a thought of separation from God nor forbear to seek after God when he misseth his presence but will use all meanes to recover the sense of his presence which he hath felt before My soule followeth hard after thee 3. It is our wisdom to reflect upon and acknowledge the grace of God in us and upon the acts of our saith and love toward God for our own strengthening as David doth here saying My soul followeth hard after thee 4. Although the exercise of gracious habits be our acts yet the enabling of us to bring these acts forth is the Lords work who giveth us both to will and to do of his own good pleasure and as it is our duty to acknowledge this so is it the fruit of our feelings of Gods help to professe it My soul followeth hard after thee but by what power strength and furniture doth he this Thy right hand upholdeth me 9. But those that seek my soul to destroy it shall go into the lower parts of the earth 10. They shall fall by the sword they shall be a portion for foxes The third fruit of the answer of his prayer is assurance given that his enemies shall be destroyed for it is revealed to him that Saul should be slain by the sword he knew by revelation that his carcasse should lie in the fields a prey for foxes and wilde beasts Whence learn 1. The deadly and unreconcileable enemies of Gods people hating them for a good cause do draw destruction on themselves Those that seek my soule to destroy it shall go down to the lower parts of the earth 2. It is agreeable with Gods justice that bloody enemies of Gods people be punished by their bloody enemies God can stirre up the wicked against the wicked to avenge the wrongs done to his children They shall fall by the sword they shall be a portion for the foxes 3. The Lord to ease the hearts of his oppressed children doth sometimes before hand make them foresee the destruction of their adversaries whether by teaching them in an ordinary way to apply the general sentences of the Scripture unto them or in a more special way revealing his minde as he seeth fit as here They shall fall by the sword c. 11. But the King shall rejoyce in God every one that sweareth by him shall glory but the mouth of them that speak lies shall be stopped The last fruit of his prayer is assurance that he shall be King and that all the godly shall be comforted by this means and that his righteousnesse shall be cleared against all the calumnies of the wicked Whence learn 1. Howsoever it may go hard with the righteous and their enemies may prosper for a time yet their lot shall be changed to the better at length and when he●… enemies are born down their head shall be lifted up and whatsoeve●… is p●…omised unto them they may be as sure of it as if they had p●…ssion of it yea they may stile themselves by the title whi●…h Gods ●…ord hath given unto them as David doth
yet will they be forced to feign submission unto him Through the greatnesse of thy power shall thy enemies submit themselves to them 5. Over and above what is already accomplished of this prophecie concerning the conversion of the Gentiles a higher measure is yet to be expected in the bringing in of that number of them which the Scripture calleth the fulnesse of the Gentiles and the making all the Kingdomes of the earth to become the Lords and his Sonne Christs for this word in a greater measure then yet is come to passe must be fulfilled All the earth shall worship thee they shall sing unto thee they shall sing unto thy Name Which word doth import the revealing of the glad tidings of Jesus Christ unto them and their joyful acceptation of the Gospel and glorifying of God for it 6. As it is the Lords glory to have many praising him so should it be the joy of all that love him now to foresee the successe of Christs Kingdome as well as it was of old when it was the Churches song All the earth shall worship thee Ver. 5. Come let us see the works of God he is terrible in his doing toward the children of men 6. He turned the sea into dry land they went through the flood on foot there did we rejoyce in him 7. He ruleth by his power for ever his eyes behold the nations let not the rebellious exalt themselves Selah He pointeth out in special the Lords works already wrought for his people Whence learn 1. Albeit the Lord doth work for the delivery of the Church and his own glory yet men are so carelesse to observe his works that they can neither make use thereof for their own profit nor for Gods praise so that there is much need to stirre up our dulnesse to observe them and make right use thereof Come and see the works of God 2. Whosoever do observe the works of God which he hath wrought for his people they shall be forced to fear and admire his wonderful Acts for them and his respect unto them He is terrible in his doing toward the children of men 3. The work of redemption of his Church out of Egypt is a work one for all worthy to be made use of to the end of the world and sufficient to shew that if need be God will invert the course of nature for the good of his people and for their delivery out of difficulties He turned the sea into dry land 4. As the Lord will work wonders for the delivery of his people out of misery so will he work wonders for performing of promises to them and for bringing them to the possession of what he hath given them right unto for the drying of the river Iordan that his people might go in to possesse the promised land was a pawn and evidence of this his purpose for all time coming They went through the flood on foot 5. As all the people of God are one body and that which is done in one age to one generation doth concern all and every one to make use of it in their generation so every one in after-ages should reckon themselves one body with the Lords people in former ages and make use of Gods dealing with them as if they had been present then with them as here the Church in the Psalmists time joyneth it selfe with the Church in Ioshuahs time rejoycing in God with them at their entring into Canaan There did we rejoyce in him say they 6. Whatsoever the Lord hath done for his people in any time by-past he is able and ready to do the like for his people in any time to come He ruleth by his pouer for ever and for this cause his former Acts are perpetual evidences and pledges of like Acts to be done hereafter as need is 7. Nothing is done in any place which the Lord is not witnesse unto no plot or motion against his people which he seeth not His eyes behold the Nations 8. Albeit there will be from time to time a generation who will not submit themselves to this sovereign Ruler but will stand out against him and maligne his Church yet shall they not long prosper nor have cause of gloriation in their rebellion Let not the rebellious exalt themselves ver 8. O blesse our God ye people and make the voice of his praise to be heard 9. Which holdeth our soul in life and suffereth not our feet to be moved 10. For thou O God hast proved us thou hast tried us as silver is tried 11. Thou broughtest us into the net thou layedst affliction upon our loines 12. Thou hast caused men to ride over our heads we went through fire and through water but thou broughtest us out into a wealthy place In the second part of the Psalm the Psalmist exhorts the Church in his time to praise God for preserving them from extirpation in the time of their fiery trial and sore affliction under the tyranny and oppression of their enemies Whence learn 1. The Lords people in every age besides all the reasons they have to praise God for his former works want not their own particular reasons for his care providence and kindnesse to themselves in their own time to stirre up one another to blesse his Majesty O blesse our God ye people 2. It is the Churches proper priviledge and her glory above all other incorporations and societies beside to have special interest in God as her own O blesse our God 3. It is not sufficient that the Lords people acknowledge inwardly the mercies of God to themselves but it is their duty in an orderly way to bring others on to the knowledge of God and to shew to others how praise-worthy he is make the voice of his praise to be heard 4. Albeit the Lord takes many things away from his people when he is pleased to exercise them yet he keeps life in their soul some sweet communion of spirit between himself and them and doth not suffer all his people to be extirpate and rooted out from the earth Which boldeth our soul in life 5. It is great mercy to be kept from desperate courses in the time of sad calamities and to be supported under burdens that we sink not and to be prevented from denying of God or of his truth in time of persecution He suffereth not our feet to be moved 6. One end of the troubles of the Church among others is the trial of the graces of his people and purging them from their corruptions for which cause the Lord useth to bring on one trouble after another as mettal is put in the fire oftner then once For thou O God hast proved us thou hast tried 〈◊〉 as silver is tried 7. When God doth bring his Church into trial there is no escaping we must look for affliction and not dream of declining it by our own wit or skill Thou broughtest us into the net thou layedst affliction upon our ●…ines 8. It is wisdome
mercy to them that he may have the more glory thanks for his work I will magnifie him with thanksgiving 3. Moral worship offered in Spirit and truth in the meanest degree of sincerity is more acceptable to God then the most pompous ceremonial service which can be done to him without Spirit and truth This also shall please the Lord better then an oxe and bullock that hath bornes and hooses that is which is perfect and wanteth nothing in the external part of commanded service 4. That which we know shall be most acceptable to God we ought to study and follow that most that we may walk before God unto all well-pleasing in special to praise him in affliction and to praise him from a contrite spirit This also shall please the Lord better then c. Ver. 32. The humble shall see this and be glad and your hearts shall live that seek God 33. For the Lord heareth the poor and despiseth not his prisoners From the third evidence of the victory of his faith in the prophecy of the fruits of his sufferings mainly as he was a type of Christ who here is most intended Learn 1. The exercise of the Saints set down in Scripture and namely the exercise of David and of Christ represented by him was foretold that it should be of great use to the Church of God in after-times as now we see it in effect The humble shall see this and be glad 2. The humble soul is most capable of divine knowledge and comfort The humble shall see this 3. The escape of our Lord Jesus out of his sufferings for us and the escape of his afflicted children out of their sufferings through faith in him is a matter of instruction comfort and joy to every humbled beleever The humble shall see this and be glad 4. As such who are pure in spirit and truly humbled do live upon Gods almes and are daily at his doores for relief of their necessities and for communion with his gracious goodnesse so shall they thrive well in this trade Your heart shall live that seek God 5. The Lord●… children have a life beyond the children of men which is able to quicken them in their deepest troubles and to make them blessed in their delivery out of troubles a life moral and spiritual whereby their conscience is comforted Your heart shall live that seek God 6. The right way for the godly afflicted to have the benefit of the troubles and events which Christ and his followers have had experience of is to comfort themselves in hope of the like event and successe in seeking God as they did The humble shall see this and be glad and your heart shall live that seek God 7. As the Lords poor men are much in prayer so shall they be rich in good answers For the Lord heareth the poor 8. Whoever in defence of any point of Gods truth are put to trouble either in body or minde by men or Satan or both they are all sufferers for God they are all prisoners who howsoever they be misregarded by men shall be of much price in Gods eyes He despiseth not his prisoners Ver. 34. Let the heaven and earth praise him the seas and every thing that moveth therein 35. For God will save Sion and will build the Cities of Iudah that they may dwell there and have it in possession 36. The seed also of his servants shall inherit it and they that love his Name shall dwell therein From the last evidence of the victory of faith set down in a prophetical thanksgiving for the foreseen mercies which were to come to the Church by Christs procurement and specially to the Jewes Learne 1. Large sense of troubles maketh way for large observation and sense answerable of mercies The evil of deepest afflictions the Lord can recompense with highest consolation as the beginning and ending of this Psalm giveth evidence 2. The soul that seeth the mercy of God toward it self doth see also the mercy of God upon the same grounds to all others his people in Sion his Church in every place and time and he seeth the benefits of Christs sufferings to be matter of praise unto God able to fill the whole world and he seeth his own insufficiency for the praising of God also and that all the creatures are all few enough when they all concurre in this Song Let the heaven and the earth praise him and the seas and every thing that moveth therein 3. Whatsoever condition of Gods people can be represented by the various condition motion settlement or commotion of heaven earth and seas and things therein cannot but furnish matter of joyful praise to God and come up to contribute to Gods praises Let the heaven and earth the seas and every thing that moveth therein praise him 4. Every delivery of every beleever and above all the delivery of Christ as man from his expi●…tory sufferings is earnests and pledges of the delivery of the Church militant out of all its troubles For God will save Sion saith the Psalmist being now delivered out of his trouble 5. As the Lord will ever maintain his Church his Sion and his Iudah so hath he a purpose to give a special evidence of this his care among the Jewes how farre soever they may at some times be from all appearance of his respect to them for in the promise he keepeth in expressely the Name of Iudah He will build the Cities of Iudah 6. What outward testimonies of Gods respect to the Jewes for Christs sake shall be given unto them after the destruction of their Cities here presupposed we must leave it to God to be in due time by his own works interpreted and to be made out according to what here is said That the Cities of Judah shall be builded that they may dwell there and have it to wit the promised land in possession the seed also of his servants shall inherit it and they that love his Name shall dwell therein Only let us observe that the duty of the true Citizens of the Church is to transmit true Religion to their posterity and that this is the best and only way to transmit also the blessing of God and the constant possession thereof unto them The seed also of his servants shall inherit it and they that love his Name c. PSAL. LXX To the chief Musician A Psalme of David to bring to remembrance THis Psalm is almost one in words with the latter end of Psalm 40. wherein David being in present danger of his life by his enemies prayeth first for speedy delivery ver 1. next for shameful disappointment to his enemies ver 2 3. and thirdly for a comfortable life to all the godly ver 4. from which condition albeit he himself was very farre for the present yet he professeth he doth relie on God by faith and prayeth for a timous delivery ver 5. From the Inscription Learn 1. Our most notable dangers and deliveries should most
pride compasseth them as a chaine violence covereth them as a garment They glory in their oppression 3. Albeit God bestow riches on the wicked and more then they could reasonably wish and do give them health of bodies to make use of their riches as they please so as they swell for fatnesse which abundance should oblige a man to serve the Lord more heartily yet the recompence they render to God is this they become more and more vicious in their own persons and do threaten more and more injuries to their neighbours They are corrupt and speak wickedly concerning oppression They stand in awe neither of God nor man but openly in their speeches they despise all authority over them They speak loftily They scoffe and mock religion and speak blasphemously of God and his providence They set their mouth against the Heavens They speak as they please of all things and all men not caring against whom they speak or what they speak to any mans prejudice Their tongue walketh through the earth not caring whom it tread upon or whom it abuse 4. The prosperity of the wicked and their thriving in an ill course doth ensnare many inconsiderate people even members of the visible Church and moveth them to follow the evil wayes of the openly wicked and to make defection from their own professed duties Therefore his people return hither saith he 5. When men stumble at righteousness because of trouble and follow the course of the wicked for love of worldly advantage it is righteousness with God to give both the bait for a while to such changelings and the hook also for hardening them in their own wicked choice And waters of a full Cup saith he are wrung out unto them that is they finde some worldly commodity by their defection 6. There is a threefold tentation to draw a man from the course of holiness unto looseness and profanity one when the wicked 〈◊〉 observed to prosper in the world another when multitudes 〈◊〉 off a good course and follow the example of the wicked and a third when those backsliders also seem to prosper after their defection as here 1. The wicked do calumniate every good course and they prosper 2. Gods people return hither for love of prosperity 3. Then waters of a full Cup are wrung out unto them All these things may concurre and the way mean time is most damnable notwithstanding Ver. 11. And they say How doth God know and is there knowledge in the most High 12. Behold these are the ungodly who prosper in the world they increase in riches Here he bringeth in the poor deluded people defending their defection and their following the example of the ungodly and hardening themselves in their evil course saying in substance that if God disliked the ungodly he would not let them prosper so in the world and heap riches upon them as he doth and this is in substance to blaspheme God as an ignorant Governour of the world or a misregarder how men do carry themselves Whence learne 1. When men are once insnared in an ill course they will seek reasons to justifie themselves those thoughts which did insnare them do also hold them for they to whom waters of a full Cup are wrung out do say How doth God know 2. Men are ready to reproach the Lord if he do not guide the world to their fancy yea and to blaspheme God rather then blame themselves for their faults as these words do import How doth God know that is how can it be that God taketh notice of such mens wayes as wrong seeing he doth prosper them 3. To think that God is well-pleased with the way of the wicked because they prosper and that he respects not his Saints because he doth afflict them more then the wicked is as much as in effect to say The Lord is not wise that doth so well to his foes and dealeth so hardly with his friends for so here is it interpreted by the Lord Is there knowledge in the most High 4. It seemeth very reasonable to carnal reason that if God hate ungodlinesse he should not suffer the ungodly to prosper in the world and if he will suffer them to prosper then he doth not hate ungodlinesse and therefore when it is clear to all men that the ungodly do prosper they conclude that God knoweth not taketh no notice of ungodlinesse or is not displeased with it for here is their proof Behold say they these are the ungodly who prosper in the world they increase in riches 5. The thing that deceiveth the ungodly and the misbelieving world about Gods dispensation is that they look only to 〈◊〉 which is done by God in this world no punishment after death or felicity after death do they think upon These are the ungodly say they who prosper in the world 6. In the very tentation whereby the wicked is insnared the worme of their gourd and the staine of their felicity is discovered their felicity is but in riches and their prosperity is but in this present world They prosper in the world say they Ver. 13. Verily I have cleansed my heart in vain and washed my hands in innocency 14. For all the day long have I been plagued and chastened every morning Here is the well near slipping of the Psalmists feet set down in his begun yielding unto the devils tentation forcibly born in upon him and repeated over by him after the manner of a resolute conclusion condemning all his former course of godlinesse upon this one poor pretence because he seemed to himself more miserable then the wicked were Whence learn 1. A tentation sometime may be so powerfully born in upon the spirit of a childe of God as it may seem to be admitted yielded unto and subscribed unto as truth as here we see Verily I have cleansed in vaine c. 2. The true course of sanctification consists in the study of cleansing a man from all pollution both of soul and body or in cleansing the heart and the hands as here is set down The heart is cleansed by the blood of the expiatory sacrifice laid hold on by faith and by the begun works of the Lords Spirit manifested in the hearty resolution purpose and study of holinesse the hands are cleansed by a blameless and harmless conversation or course of life and actions I have cleansed my heart and hands in innocency 3. When a man is under a tentation or in a fleshly temper of spirit for the present he putteth a high price upon any good he hath done and forgetteth by what strength he did it he forgetteth Gods part and his glory in it for the Psalmists part was the consenters part the instruments part and he was in the point of action only a subordinate agent and co-worker at the best by a borrowed strength and yet as if all the work had been his work alone In vain saith he have I cleansed my heart and washed my hands in innocency 4 That
red sea so soon as he manifests himselfe it will get out of the way as affrighted at his Majesty The waters saw thee O God the waters saw thee they were afraid the depths also wre troubled 4. The commotions which God hath made in heaven by rain hailstone thunder fire and lightning when he would shew himselfe for his people and against their enemies do testify sufficiently what God can and will do for his own children who draw near unto him and how he will rebuke every adversary power which is against them The clouds poured out water the skies sent out a sound thine arrowes went abroad the voice of thy thunder was in heaven the lightnings lightened the world the earth trembled and shook Whether we referre these words to what God did in plaguing Egypt before he brought out his people or after when he shewed his anger in pursuing the Egyptians in their flight when they were seeking to escape out of the red sea or to what the Lord did in fighting for his people against the Canaanites they teach the same doctrine to us ver 19. Thy way is in the sea and thy path in the great waters and thy footsteps are not known 20. Thou leddest thy people like a flock by the land of Moses and Aaron He closeth his meditation with two observations one is that the Lords wayes are past finding out and this he insinuateth by making a way through the red sea where never one went before and never one could follow after The other observation is that God can save his people by how few and weak instruments he pleaseth Whence learn 1. The Lord draweth deep in the working out of the delivery and salvation of his own people bringing them first unto extremity of danger and then making a plain and clear escape from all their straits Thy way is in the sea where no man can wade except God go before him and where any man may walk if God take him by the hand and lead him through 2. What God is in working when he engages his children in dangers and which way he is going when he leads them into overflowing troubles and deep waters they cannot understand till he hath done his work Thy path is in the great waters 3. A particular reason of every thing which God doth can no man find out for the which cause the Lord craveth submission of all his children in their exercises as he did of Iob Thy footsteps are not known 4. Whether men do see reasons of Gods dealing with them or not the Lord hath a care of his weak and witlesse people as a shepherd hath of his flock and is a gracious leader of his people that follow him Thou leddest thy people as a flock 5. The Lord hath his meanes and instruments of whose ministery he maketh use and those albeit they be few and weak yet shall he do his greatest works by them according as he doth imploy them Thou leddest thy people as a flock by the hand of Moses and Aaron PSAL. LXXVIII Maschil of Asaph IN this Psalm the Lords Spirit doth stirre up his people to make a right use of the Lords works of justice and mercy set down in holy Scripture and to this end he giveth account of Gods dealing very mercifully with his people and never in justice but when mercy was abused and he sheweth also the peoples dealing with God unthankfully deceitfully whether he dealt mercifully or in justice with them The Psalm may be divided thus After a Preface to prepare the hearer for attention and observation of what he was to deliver ver 1 2 3 4. he bringeth forth first the evidence of Gods gracious care he had of his people in giving them his blessed Word to teach unto them faith and obedience ver 5 6 7 8. Secondly the evidence of Gods judgement against his people who were put to flight before their foes when they did not believe the Lord and did not make use of his works among them ver 9 10 11. Thirdly he setteth down how great things God did for them in Egypt and in the wildernesse ver 12 13 14 15 16. Fourthly how they made no better use of these mercies then to tempt God and provoke him to wrath ver 17 18 19 20. Fifthly how for their tempting of God he was angry at them for their unbelief and notconsidering of the miraculous feeding of them with Manna v. 21 22 23 24 25. and how in wrath he satisfied their lust by sending quailes for them to eat flesh their fill ver 26 27 28 29. Sixthly how because they repented not of their provocation the Lord did plague them and they went on in their misbeliefe and disobedience 〈◊〉 and God went on in the course of multiplying judgements on them and cutting off multitudes of them ver 30 31 32 33. Seventhly how they at last made a fashion of repenting and seeking of God but proved in effect nothing but flattering dissemblers and hypocrites unconstant in the Covenant ver 34 35 36 37. Eighthly how the Lord in mercy pitied and spared them many a time notwithstanding all their provocations of his justice against them ver 38 39 40 41. Ninthly he setteth down the prime cause of all this their sinne and misery because they marked not or made no use of the difference that God put between the Egyptians and them nor how for their cause he had plagued the Egyptians with plague after plague ver 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51. And brought their fathers safely out of Egypt when their enemies were drowned before their eyes ver 52 53. Tenthly he setteth down how the Lord perfected their journey to Canaan and brought them to the possession of it thrusting our the Canaa●…ites that they might have place ver 54 55. Eleventhly how they for all this provoked God to anger with their idolatry and superstition ver 56 57 58. Twelfthly how the Lord for this their oft repeated provocation did miserably vex them in the dayes of Eli and Samuel giving over his Ark into the Philistines hand and plaguing their countrey with variety of plagues ver 59 60 61 62 63 64. Thirteenthly how God of his free mercy put his enemies to shame and restored Religion and Liberties to Church and Kingdom ver 65 66. And last of all how he brought them to a setled condition under David who was a type of Christ ver 67 6●… 69 70 71 72. Ver. 1. GIve eare O my people to my Law incline your eares to the words of my mouth 2. I will open my mouth in a parable I will utter dark sayings of old 3. Which we have heard and known and our fathers have told us 4. We will not hide them from their children shewing to the generations to come the praises of the LORD and his strength and his wonderful work that he hath done In the Preface the Spirit of the Lord calleth for attention unto the doctrine which he is
to deliver for foure reasons The first because it was his law and words of his mouth directed to his covenanted people ver 1. The next because this doctrine was mysterious and full of ●…id wisdom ver 2. The third because it is an ancient doctrine delivered to the Church of old and transmitted unto them that succeeded ver 3. The fourth because it must be known and transmitted to the succeeding posterity and following generations of the Church for the glory of Gods wonderful working for his Church v. 〈◊〉 Whence learn 1. Such is our dulnesse and slownesse of heart to understand and beleeve what the Lord doth say unto us that we have gre●… need to be admonished and stirred up to attention and hearing with ●…aith Give eare O my people saith the Spirit by his Prophet 2. The authority of divine doctrine should tie ou●… cares to hear it reverently beleevingly and obediently it is the Lords law and the words of his mouth speaking by his Prophet to us Give eare O my People to my law incline your ●…ares to the words of my mouth 3. Albeit the Word of the Lord be plain to the attentive beleever yet to the unattentive misbeleever it is a hid mystery and for this reason we have need to hear attentively and beleevingly I will open my mouth in a parable I will utter dark sayings 4. The Word of the Lord hath true antiquity with it divine doctrine is no new doctrine and for this reason should we hear it attentively and beleevingly I will utter dark sayings of old 5. Albeit the Word of the Lord be a mystery and dark sayings to the misbeleeving multitude of the world yet it is understood received and beleeved by the true members of the Church from age to age therefore the Prophet speaking of himself and of the godly in his time saith of their parables and dark speeches Which we have heard and known and our fathers have told us 6. Those are worthy of the name of Fathers in the Church in relation to posterity who transmit to posterity the truth of God contained in Scripture such as is here set down in this Psalme and this is the only infallible sort of tradition which delivereth to posterity what God delivered to the Prophets or their Predecessors by Scripture such as is the doctrine delivered in this Psalme Which we saith he have heard ●…d known and our fathers have told us we will not hide them from their children 7. The godly in every age ought to have the same care to transmit the Word of truth to their posterity which their ancestors had to transmit it unto them and to pay the debt they owe to their faithful Ancestors unto succeeding generations We will not hide them from their children shewing to the generations to come c. 8. The subject matter of sound and saving doctrine is the setting forth of the glory of God in his attributes and wonderful operations for his people Shewing to the generations to come the praises of the Lord and his wonderful works that he bath done Ver. 5. For he established a Testimony in Iacob and appointed a Law in Israel which he commanded our fathers that they should make them known to their children 6. That the generation to come might know them even the children which should be borne who should arise and declare them to their children 7. That they might set their hope in God and not forget the works of God but keep his Commandments 8. And might not be as their fathers a stubborn and rebellious generation a generation that set not their heart aright and whose spirit was not stedfast with God After the Preface he bringeth forth a notable evidence of the Lords care of his Church in giving them his Scriptures and revealed rule of faith and obedience to be transmitted from one generation to another ver 5 6. that they might have faith and hope in God and obey his commands ver 7. and not be like such of their Predecessors as were rebellious hypocrites and backsliders from their covenanted duties v. 8. Whencelearn 1. One of the chiefest mercies that can be bestowed on a people is the giving of the holy Scripture●… unto them and revealing unto them the way of salvation and of Gods service which he requireth this is put in the first room here For he established a Testimony in Iacob and appointed a Law in Israel 2. Gods words and ordinances appointed in Scripture are witnesses for him of his wisdom power holinesse mercy and justice against such as do not make use thereof and a fixed rule for mens faith and obedience therefore is it said He established a testimony in Iacob and appointed a Law in Israel 3. The Scriptures were not appointed for a rule only to those to whom they were first directed but for the use also of the Church in all ages following which every man must both study to understand and obey himself and also teach his children and those under his charge to understand and obey according to his place he gave a testimony and a law to the fathers That they should make them known to their children th●…t the generation to come might know them even the children which should be borne who should arise and declare them to their children 4. The end of revealing and teaching of Gods Word is to beget and increase mens faith in God and dependance upon him as here is set down the Word was to be declared to their children That they might se●… their hope in God 5. The way to foster saith and hope in God is to mark and consider and keep in a sanctified memory how God hath al●…eady confirmed his Word by his works and by pawnes and pledges both of his power and purpose to perform what he hath said therefore doth he joyne unto the duty of setting their hope in God the duty of not forgetting his works intimating that if his works were forgotten his Word would not be beleeved and faith and hope in God would not remain constantly fixed on God 6. The faith and hope which God craves of his people to be fixed on him is such as may bring forth obedience to his precepts therefore unto hoping in God and not forgetting his works he addeth But keep his Commandments So this is the summe of true religion to have faith in God upon the termes of grace offered unto us through a Redeemer and to hope for and expect the accomplishment of all his promises and to foster our faith and hope by the consideration of what he hath done for his people and uprightly to set our selves to keep his Commandments 7. The example of fathers is not to be followed except wherein they followed the Lord where their practice is not conformable to Gods Word we must not be like them therefore saith he And might not be as their fathers were stubborn 8. This is the natural inclination of corrupt mankinde to go on in our finful
strong for thy self In the Hebrew it is the Son whom thou madest strong even Christ who is the true Sonne of God the true Vine-tree Iohn 15. 1. whereabout the Fathers husbandry is in a special way imployed 6. The visible Church or people of God by Covenant at some time may be so farre from a glorious and flourishing condition of prosperity that on the contrary in outward appearance she may be almost destroyed and like to perish utterly as here of the Lords Vineyard or the whole visible Church we read It is burnt with fire it is cut down he meaneth Gods people They perish saith the Psalmist at the rebuke of thy countenance 7. We are to look not so much to instruments of the Churches desolation as to the peoples sinnes procuring it and to Gods wrath causing it They perish at the rebuke of thy countenance Ver. 17. Let thy band be upon the man of thy right hand upon the Sonne of man whom thou madest strong for thy self 18. So will not we go back from thee quicken us ana we will call upon thy Name 19. Turn us again O LORD God of hostes cause thy face to shine and we shall be saved In the last place they put up three requests In the first they insist upon that point of their prayer v. ●…5 which concerneth the Branch of the Vineyard of Israel the promised Messiah Christ the Redeemer and do make request over again that the stock and lineage of David whereof Christ was to come might be kept to the fore till he should assume humane nature and become the Sonne of man according to the solid grounds which God had laid down to bring this promise to passe For the substance of the prayer is this Seeing thou hast made one branch of this Vine which thou broughtest out of Egypt strong for thy self or for thy own purpose namely the man of thy right hand the Sonne of man the promised Messiah God to be incarnate Let thy hand or power be imployed for bringing this to passe that he who is at thy right hand thy equal may be made man the man of thy right hand the Sonne of man So will not we go back from thee that is by him we thy redeemed shall be preserved from apostasie and separation from thee In the second request they pray for the pouring forth of the Spirit upon his dead people that having spiritual life communicated unto them they may worship God in Spirit and truth Quicken us and we will call upon thy Name say they In the third request they repeat the third time that prayed for repentance and reconciliation to be manifested to his people From the first request ver 17. Learn 1. The refuge rest consolation and confidence of a distressed Church or person is Christ and toward him must the afflicted cast their eye for relief as here the Church in her deepest desolation doth 2. Christ is alwayes at the right hand of the Father in regard of power and glory and it is for him no robbery to be equal with God the Father Phil. 2. 16. and his humane nature assumed doth not degrade him from the glory which he had with the Father before the world began Iohn 17. 5. 〈◊〉 is the man of Gods right hand in a singular manner 3. Christ and his Kingdom are established before God for ever for bringing to passe the purpose and service of God in the Redemption of his elect He is the man whom the Father hath made strong for himselfe for his humane nature is united with his divine nature in one person his incarnation was made sure by the eternal and immurable decree of the Covenant of Redemption wherein the elect were given over to Christ and grace was granted and given to them in Christ Jesus before the world began 2 Tim. 1. 9. And as his incarnation was made 〈◊〉 by decree so also made sure by many times repeated Promises in the Law and Prophets beginning at Gen. 3. 15. where it is promised that the seed of the woman should tread down the head of the serpent all along the Scripture unto Malachi 3. 〈◊〉 where it is revealed that Christs messenger to wit Iohn Baptist in the power of Elias should come before him and straightway after he himself should shew himself as did come to passe This is the Sonne of man saith he whom thou hast made strong for thy self 4. To bring this promise to effect and accomplishment the Almighty power of God shall set on work and never drew back from operation till his purpose was brought to passe for after the time that the man Abraham was designed of whose seed he was to take flesh the Scripture sheweth what care the Lord had of Isaac and Iacob and the Patriarchs in Egypt and about the bringing of their posterity out of it to Canaan till Davids family is designed for his sto●…k and when the ten tribes were scattered abroad he preserved Iudah to the foxe and when that tribe also was thrust out into captivity he brought it back again and preserved Davids race and the tribe of Iudah under civil Government till Christ came and this the prayer here propounded did make request for Let thy hand be upon the man of thy right hand 5. Neither the Church nor any member thereof needeth any more security for their stability and perpetuation but Christ for now when the Vineyard is burnt and the visible Church defaced the remnant are cotent to rest satisfied with this which also they take for granted and do subscribe unto it Let thy hand he upon the man of thy right hand upon the Sonne of man whom thou hast made strong for thy self 6. The consanguinity of Christ with the beleever and his humiliation in his humane nature are strong supporters of the faith and comfort of his people that do seek salvation through him therefore do the faithful here fixe themselves on this that as he is Gods Sonne so he is a branch of their Vineyard also that as he is at the right hand of the Father as God so he is the man of his right hand also the Son of man or of Adam partaker of flesh and blood with us of the same stock that we are of in all things like to us except sin for the Son of man is the stile whereby Christ stiled himself in his humiliation 7. The perpetuity of the Church and the perseverance of the Saints is founded upon the sufficiency of Christ and the unseigned beleever may assure himself as of the continuance of the Church so of his own perseverance and constant communion with God through him Let thy hand be upon the man of thy right hand c. so will not we go back from thee From the second request v. 18. Learn 〈◊〉 As there is a death of alienation from the life of God in the unregenerate and a death of disability discomfort and discouragement found in the regenerate in Scripture so there
is a quickening which giveth spiritual life to those that a e●…t dead in their sinnes and trespasses and a quickening which giveth strength and comfort to the weak disconsola●…e and discouraged souls of Gods children for the first sort of quickening every regenerate man should pray in behalf of all the elect in the visible Church who are not as yet converted and for quickening in other respects they should pray in behalf of themselves and other afflicted spirits of the godly as here the beleevers do pray Quicken us 2. The honouring of God in spiritual worship should be the end of our petitions which we do make for any good to our selves Quicken us and we shall call upon thy Name 3. Albeit the work of calling on Gods Name and worshipping of God in Spirit and tr●…h be the work of the regenerate man yet the spiritual life and the motion or stirring up of the regenerate man unto this work the enabling of the man unto it and in it and the cheering up of his heart to do it affectionately is the work of the Lord for these doth the P●…lmist here distinguish first he sets down Gods part Quicken thou us and then o●…r part And we shall call upon thy Name From the third request ver 19. repeated now the third time Learn 1. In what respects soever the Church of the Jewish Nation may seem to be alienated from God yet the●…e is hope of their repentance and returning and reconciliation unto God for there is a petition of the Lords enditing standing he e thrice repeated in their favour to be granted in due time by God to whom nothing is hard and here in this third repetition of this prayer the Name of God Jehovah whereby he told Israel that he would be known to them to be the performer of promises is added expressely Turn us again O Iehovah God of hostes 2 Albeit we our selves do breed the mist and clouds which do hide from us the shining of Gods favour towards us and we do build the partition walls we do raise up mountains of transgressions which separate between God and us vet it is the Lord himself only who of his own free grace and by his own power doth dissolve these clouds and remove these impediments out of his own way towards us Turn us again and cause thy face to shine 3. So oft as we are burdened with the same pressure and straitened with the same necessity as oft we may and should have recourse to God for relief by prayer for this staffe hath God put in faiths hand to help the believer in every stop of his journey till he come home to the Lord and be past all perill Turne 〈◊〉 again cause thy face to shine 4. As the sight of our distance from God and sense of his displeasure and fear of perdition do serve to be a spurre to our prayer so desire of reconciliation desire and purpose of repenting and hope of salvation ●…o serve to encourage us to persevere in prayer till we have what we ask perfected to us Turn us again cause thy face to shine so shall we be saved PSAL. LXXXI To the chief Musician upon Gittith A Psalme of Asaph THis Psalm was appointed to be sung in their solemn seasts new moones and feast of tabernacles in special for a testimony of Gods gracious and bountiful dealing with his people on the one hand and of their provocation of God on the other hand moving him to change his dispensation toward them and to withhold many benefits from them which otherwayes they might have had if they had not rejected Gods counsel and had chosen their own wayes that by this Psalme his people might learn to be wiser The parts of the Psalme are three The first is a Preface wherein there is a mutual stirring up of the Church-members to keep the solemn feasts and blowing of trumpets ver 1 2 3. and a reason or this mutual exho●…tation taken from Gods institution of this ordinance when he brought his people out of Egypt from the service of strangers ver 4 5. In the second part is set down how God delivered them from bondage in Egypt and from troubles in their journey ver 6 7. and how reasonable commands the Lord did give unto them which commands are all summed up in this one That God should be their God alone ver 8 9 10. In the third part is set down First how they rejected God and his counsel ver 11. Next how therefore they were plagued by being given over to their own lusts ver 12. Thirdly how they deprived themselves of Gods benefits which by following Gods counsel they might have enjoyed ver 13 14 15. Ver. 1. SIng aloud unto God our strength make a joyful noise unto the God of Iacob 2. Take a Psalm and bring hither the timbrel the pleasant harp with the psaltery 3. Blow up the trumpet in the new Moon in the time appointed on our solemn feast-day From their mutual stirring up of one another to rejoyce in God commanded here by the Psalmist in the Lords Name Learn 1. That whatsoever may be our own private condition it is our duty ever and in all things to give glory to God to rejoyce in him to professe and avow his Name Sing aloud unto God 2. The Lords people have the fulfilling supplying and supporting of their emptinesse wants and weaknesse in God whose sufficiency they ought to make use of and rejoyce therein Sing unto God our strength 3. It is the Covenant of grace whereby God becometh our God which doth intitle us and giveth us interest in and right unto his all-sufficiency which we should entertain joyfully in our communion with God praising him and thanking him for it and delighting in his presence because of it Make a joyful noise unto the God of Iacob for God was Iacobs God because God was by Covenant Abrahams and his childrens God whose children also we are who are Christs Gal. 3. 29. From the use and variety of musical instruments called for Ver. 2 3. Learn 1. Albeit the external melody of musical instruments in the Lords publike worship with the rest of the paedagogie and shadowing dark figures of the Ceremonial Law be abolished now when the Lord the Sunne of righteousnesse is come yet the moral duties represented by them are still to be acknowledged and followed by us to wit that the praises of the Lord are unexpressible by us and that we are unsufficient of our selves to set forth the same that we have matter of unspeakable joy in God our Redeemer and should stir up all the powers of our soul to this part of his spiritual service for this did those musical instruments teach Take a Psalm and bring hither the timbrel the pleasant harp with the Psaltery 2. We ought to acknowledge the stately magnificence of our exalted Lord and our dulnesse and slownesse to praise him and what need we had to be stirred up and to stirre up
Zebah and as Zalmunna 12. Who said Let us take to our selves the houses of God in possession In the latter part of the Psalm is the Churches prayer to God that he would be party against her enemies and plague them There are sundry branches of the malediction which the Church doth imprecate against the enemies The first is that God would destroy them as he destroyed others before them who were upon such a wicked plot of roo●…ing out Gods people Whence learn 1. When the Church hath to do with her enemies she should look what in Scripture the Lord did for her in times past for so doth the Church look here to what the Lord did to his enemies Iudg. 7. 22. and 4. 15 24. and 7. 25. and 8. 〈◊〉 2. It is lawful to pray for judgements upon the enemies of the Church provided it be out of a publick spirit and not out of private malice or revenge in which case the prayers of the Church are more forcible for the overthrow of their enemies then all her external force is Do unto them as unto the Midianites is a hard charge against them 3. Former plagues poured out upon the Churches enemies are pledges of the Lords bringing like judgements on her enemies afterward and of giving like preservation unto the Church as before Do unto them as to the Midianites in Gideons time and to Sisera and Iabin in Deborah time when small meanes were sufficient for a great overthrow of the enemy 4. The dead bodies of Gods enemies shall not only be contemptible before men which is incident to the bodies of the Saints sometimes but also contemptible before God as here we see Their enemies perished at Endor and became as dung for the earth 5. The Nobles leaders chief amongst Gods enemies may look for most eminent judgement Make their Nobles like Orch and Zeeb yea all their Princes like Zebah and Zalmunna 6. It is all one for enemies to resolve to spoile Gods Church and to rob God of his habitation specially so long as Gods people love to have God dwelling among them for the injuries done to the Church redound to the contumely of God who hath taken the maintenance of 〈◊〉 They say Let us take to our selves the houses of God in possession Ver. 13. O my God make them like a wheel as the stubble before the winde 14. As the fire burneth a wood and as the flame setteth the mountains on fire 15 So persecute them with thy tempest and make them afraid with thy storme 16. Fill their faces with shame that they may seek thy Neme O LORD 17. Let them be confounded and troubled for ever yea let them be put to shame and perish From the rest of the branches of the imprecation wherein sundry similitudes are looked unto for shewing forth the effects of Gods wrath upon the enemies of the Church Learn 1. Use is to be made of our Covenant with God so well against our enemies as for our selves for O my God saith he no wwhen he is about to curse the enemy 2. The enemies of Gods Church have many a mischief waiting on them of which if they escape one another shall overtake them yea no one similitude can set forth what misery is prepared for them no peace no rest for them no standing in any stablished prosperity but they shall be rolled as a bowle turned upside-down or as a wheel Make them like a wheel 3. They shall have no strength to resist the blast of Gods wrath Make them as stubble or chaffe before the winde 4. The Lords indignation against them shall burn them as a flame doth a Forrest let them be cons●…med as fire that burneth a wood which is the greatest flame we can easily conceive or when a mountain of sulphur or coales is kindled as the flame sets the mountains on fire where f●… above the earth and under it do meet together 5. If they escape for a while yet judgements shall follow them and overtake them and 〈◊〉 them and turn them in a circle till they be giddy So persecute them with thy tempest or whirewinde 6. Beside what torment their present plague shall bring unto them horror and fear of worse to come shall vexe them Make them afraid with thy storme 7. At last they shall be ashamed when both they shall be disappointed of what they intended against the godly and also meet with the misery which they least feared Fill their faces with shame 8. If any of the enemies of Gods people do belong to Gods election the Churches prayer against them giveth way to their conversion and doth not seek more then that the judgement should follow them only till they acknowledge their sinne and do turn and seek God Fill their faces with shame that they may seek thy Name O Lord. 9. For the rest of the wicked irreconcileable adversaries when shame of disappointment and temporal judgements are come upon them the worst of all doth yet follow even everlasting perdition Let them be confounded and troubled for ever yea let them be put to shame and perish Ver. 18. That men may know that thou whose Name alone is IEHOVAH art the most High over all the earth He closeth the Psalme with shewing the end of all this complaint and imprecation Whence learne 1. The end of all cursing of the wicked enemies of the Church is not to satisfy private revenge but that God may be glorified Let them perish that men may know that thou art he whose Name is IEHOVAH 2. The Name Iehovah signifying Gods being of himself and the cause of the being of all things created is incommunicable to any creature and in Scripture is given only unto the three persons of the Godhead the Father the Word and the Spirit whose essence is one as here is taught Th●… men may know that thou whose Name alone is Iehovah 3. If men will not acknowledge the true God to be the supreme and only Governour of all the world they shall by his heavy ●…ements either upon others or upon thgmselves be made to show it for the Church doth here declare that they do use this heavy imprecation against Gods enemies that men may know say they that thou whose Name alone is Iehovah art the most High over all the earth PSAL. LXXXIV To the chief Musician upon Gittith A Psalme for the sonnes of Korah THis Psalme is of the same subject with Psalm 42. and Psalm 63. Wherein the Psalmist lamenteth his banishment from the Temple and the publick Ordinances of Religion to ver 8. and then prayeth for his restoring to that priviledge in the rest of the Psalme This Psalme agreeth well with the time of Davids parting with the Ark when he fled from Absalom In his lamentation First he commendeth the place of publick worship ver 1. Then sheweth his longing after it ver 2. Thirdly he wisheth to be as a sparrow in the meanest condition partaker of that priviledge ver 3. Fourthly
with God so particularly as if the Indenture were past between God and that soul by name so that the beleever may reade his own name in Gods everlasting stiles and titles and may reade in himself the mark of Gods interest unto him and the mark of his interest in God for evermore for O God of my salvation importeth no lesse 3. When a beleever hath laid hold on eternal life he may by the same right ask and expect comfort in and deliverance out of every trouble as an Appendix of the great salvation which is coming unto him as here Heman doth 4 God can love a man and keep him in faith and exercise of prayer a long time without a comfortable answer and all in love wise love I have cried day and night before thee saith Heman and the answer is not come yet 5. There is a difference of the lamentation of the worldly man and of the beleever The worldly man sighes and cries and he knows not to whom but the godly do present themselves in their lamentations to God I have cried day and night before thee as his d●…lour did cleave unto him or was renewed upon him so he had his recourse to God at all times 6. Albeit our prayer being presented before God do seem to us ●…ot to have been admitted yet must our bill lie still and be put up to God again and again till it be received to our sense and knowledge Let my prayer come before thee 7. The beleevd may be sure to have a good answer at length but he must be instant and deal still with God for it and presse it hard and patiently wait for it as Heman here doth Incline thine eare unto my cry Ver. 3. For my soule is full of troubles and my life draweth nigh unto the grave In the second place he layeth out his trouble before God in nine degrees thereof each of them superadding something to the former under which he is not only wonderfully upheld but also he maketh use of this lamentation and long catalogue of miseries as a ground of his hope to have a gracious answer at last which came to passe as the turning of this lamentation into a Song to the comfort of others in the Church that should feel the like in any measure thereafter doth shew for his condition he setteth it down under the name of trouble soul-trouble more troubles then one or two and the first degree thereof is that his soul is ful●… of troubles replenished so as it can hold no more Whence 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Albeit we h●…d nothing to bring before God but our grief and miserie we want not matter of confidence to finde favour from our pitiful God as this example teacheth us Incline thine eare for my soul is full of trouble●… 2. If the godly should sm●…ther their grief and not go to God with it then sorrow were able to ch●…ke them but this is no small ease to them that they have God to go unto to whom they may freely vent their minde as here we see 3. Soul troubles are the most pressing troubles and with those readily will the Lord exercise his children when he mindeth to trie their faith making their spirits to smart with trouble after trouble with a number of troubles which they are neither able to reckon nor to beare My soul is full of troubles 4. The dolours of the minde are able to waste away the body which cannot but shrink and pine away when the soul is sick with anguish My life draweth near to the grave saith he and this is the second degree of his trouble Ver. 4. I am counted with them that go down into the pit I am as a man that hath no strength The third degree of his trouble is that in the judgement of them who knew his condition and possibly lamented i●… he was counted a lost man yea and he himself did finde no strength to beare out or to recover himself Whence learn 1. It is no small tentation and vexation of spirit to the godly beleever to be in the judgement of beholders a lost man because of the seeming desperate condition of his soul and yet it may befall a dear childe of God I am counted with them that go down in the pit 2. Albeit God hath by grace severed death from hell unto the believer yet the connexion of these two if justice were not satisfied in the Redeemer should never be forgotten as the Scriptures giving the same name to death grave and hell may teach us I am counted with them that go down to the pit or grave or hell 3. Whatsoever strength of soul or body a man hath in his possession shall be soon emptied when God putteth him in distresse except new furniture be supplied unto him and that no losse then unto the weakest I am as a man that hath no strength Ver. 5. Free among the dead like the slaine that lie in the grave whom thou remembrest no more and they are cut off from thy hand The fourth degree of his trouble is that he is like the Leper in the law shut out from the living and put among the dead and no more fit for any duty of the living which teacheth us that the beleever in God may at some time be so burdened with trouble of spirit as he can neither think nor speak nor go about any duty of the living for a time I am or I am counted saith he as one free among the dead or shut out and separate among the dead The fifth degree of his trouble he is a man whose life is violently pluckt from him who gets not liberty to die at leasure or in peace but is thrust out of the world suddenly with a deadly wound and such may the condition of a soul dear to God seem to it self to be I am like the slaine that lie in the grave The sixth degree of his trouble is he seemeth to be deprived of the comfortable vicissitude of the common benefits of life and of those changes which ordinarily Gods visitations do make as if he were left under the power of death there to lie without a change of that condition for ever and such may the case of a beloved Saint seem to be both to himself and to others I am as one in grave whom thou remembrest no more yea the beleever at a time may lose the sight of everlasting promises and seem to himself to be rejected of God I am as they that are cut off from thy hand Ver. 6. Thou hast laid me in the lowest pit in darknesse in the deepes The seventh degree of his trouble he seemeth as a man already condemned and possessed of the torment of hell in the extricable misery of the damned deprived of all light of consolation in the gulfe of desparation wherein a man cannot finde ground nor deliverance from it Whence learn 1 That this also may be the case of a beleever in his own sense Thou hast
set his hand also in the sea and his right hand in the rivers The fifth promise made to David in the shadow but to Christ in the most real substance is the inlarging of his Kingdom through the world by sea and land continent and is●…es and so Christs Kingdom must not be confined to more narrow bounds then his charter doth beare him unto but must be stretched out to the due length and breadth even to whither soever he sendeth out his Gospel and doth extend his hand to subdue and conquer subjects unto himself and to bring them within the visible Church for I will set his hand also in the sea and his right hand in the rivers sheweth that the Kingdom must reach beyond the bounds of Canaan whether we look to David the type or to Christ the Antitype we are led by this speech to the largenesse of this Kingdom 26. He shall cry unto me Thou art my Father my God and the rock of my salvation The sixth promise properly belonging to Christ according as it is declared by the Apostle Heb. 1. 4. from this place and from a Sam 17. 19. For albeit David and Solomon were God sonnes by adoption office of Government and chosen types yet Christ who came of David according to the flesh was Gods Sonne by personal union of the humane nature with the Word or second Person of the Trinity And here he is promised as Head and Prince of the Covenant of salvation made in favour of the elect only Mediatour and Intercessor for all the redeemed Whence learn 1. The Covenant of grace is consolidated in Christ our Head and he hath the first right as man to say unto the Father that which is here said as Intercessor and Mediatour for the elect He shall cry unto me Thou art my Father my God and the rock of my salvation 2. Hereby it is intimated also that both Christ in his own person and the persons of his redeemed ones also in whose name Christ taketh the right of what is promised to his subjects was to be exercised with trouble and was to be put to it to make use of the Covenant and of the priviledges and promises of it for sustentation and salvation Thou art my Father my God and the rock of my salvation Ver. 27. Also I will make him my first-borne higher then the Kings of the earth The seventh promise most proper also to Christ who in respect of his humane nature personally united with the divine nature of the eternal only begotten Sonne is made and declared to be the Fathers first-born and more excellent then all the Kings of the earth how despicable soever his Kingdom doth seem for all ear●…hly Kings are under his foo●…stool and of them none can make or preserve the life of one of his subjects nor his own Also I will make him my first-borne higher then the Kings of the earth Davids prerogative above other Kings was but a shadow of this and of short continuance Ver. 28. My mercy will I keep for him for evermore and my covenant shall stand fact with him The eighth promise is of everlasting mercy to Christs subjects to be kept in store for Christs dispensing forth thereof My mercy will I keep for him for ever and this is the ground of the Cov●…nant and the sweetest consolation of the Covenant which shall never he disannulled because established in Christ and to him for our behoof My Covenant shall stand fast with him Ver. 29. His seed also will I make to endure for ever and his throne as the dayes of Heaven The ninth promise is of the continuance and increase of his off spring and Kingdome while the world standeth which cannot be fulfilled but in Christ. Whence learn 1. Christ hath from age to age a succession of children whom he by his Word and Spirit begetteth unto a spiritual life and this succession shall not be cut off but one generation shall follow another His seed also will I make to endure for ever 2. As Christ shall not want subjects in any age to shall he not cease to govern his people in any age His throne shall be as the dayes of Heaven Ver. 30. If his children forsake my law and walk not in my judgements 31. If they break my statutes and keep not my Commandments 32. Then will I visit their transgression with the rod and their iniquitie with stripes 33. Neverthelesse my loving kindnesse will I not utterly take from him nor suffer my faithfulnesse to faile The tenth promise is of a merciful manner of dealing with Christs subjects that is with persons regenerate and reconciled with God by correcting them with temporal rods when they break forth into offences and do turn back or go aside from obedience to Gods law that being corrected they may repent and so be saved Whence learn 1. The Covenant here made with David in type and with Christ the Antitype is for the behoof and benefit of the children as this article maketh evident If his children forsake my law 2. There is a provision in the Covenant against the sins which may fall out in the persons covenanted and might marre all our comfort if remission were not covenanted If his children forsake my law 3. If the Lords children watch not over their own corrupt nature and against tentations they are in danger of falling and certainly will fall into fits of fearful sinning against Gods revealed will both by way of commission and omission so as they may seem not renewed as here is presupposed If his children forsake my law and walk not in my judgments if they break my statutes and keep not my Commandments 4. The Lord doth not allow sin in his own children more then in others but will testifie his indignation against the sins of his own children with ●…ad judgements If they keep not my commandments then w●…ll I visit their transgressions with the rod and their iniquity with stripes 5. The sharpest rods and forest stripes wherewith God doth visit the children of Christ may stand and do stand with loving kindnesse unto them for they are fatherly corrections medicinal pre●…ervatives against sinning afterward and tokens of Gods hating of sinne and not of rejection of their persons but rather effects of his love to the persons corrected Neverthelesse my loving kindnesse will I not utterly take from him 6. The mercy shewen to the children is with respect to the Father with whom the Covenant is made in favour of the children My loving kindnesse will I not utterly take from him that is from David as type and Christ as Antitype for whose sake the kindnesse is derived to the children 7. Except the Covenant of grace had this article in it for remission of sinne and for fatherly correction to drive unto repentance that the penitent person coming to God by faith might have sinne forgiven him and loving kindnesse shewen to him this Covenant should faile us no lesse then the Covenant of works
he exhorteth all to acknowledge the Lord as they who are worshippers of him and who are taught by his Word should do Whence learn 1. It was foretold that as the Church of Israel was taught by the Lords Word to know him so should the Gentiles be so taught also for Give unto the Lord the glory due to his Name presupposeth and importeth that they should have his Name set forth in his Word and ●…hould be instructed to know him and how to worship him acceptably 2. Whatsoever point of glory the Scripture giveth unto God it may not be withdrawn from him nor communicated to any other be●…de him for it is his own proper due Give unto him the glory due to his Name 3. It is the manner of the Scriptures of the Old Testament to expresse the spiritual service of the Gospel in the termes of the service of the Law Bring an offering and come into his courts 4. Albeit bodily sacrifices and oblations and the material Temple of Ierusalem be taken away yet the moral duties shadowed forth in them are still necessary to be done we must not come for fashion empty and vaine before God but with the calves of our lips offering up our selves in a living sacrifice holy and acceptable to him Bring an offering unto hm 5. The Church of the Gentiles make up one Church with the Jewes and are of the same incorporation and holy society and partakers of the priviledges of the Church with them Bring an offering and come into his courts Ver. 9. O worship the LORD in the beauty of holinesse feare before him all the earth In the third branch he exhorteth more particularly all the Gentiles to worship and feare the same God with the Church of the Jewes Whence learn 1. True Converts must submit themselves absolutely unto Christs Government in soul and body for O worship the Lord importeth so much 2. Then is a mans worship and submission sanctified and made acceptable when it is offered in and through Christ and in society with his Church represented by the Sanctuary here called the beauty of holinesse Worship the Lord in the beauty of holinesse 3. Among all Gods works nothing so beautiful as his ordinances rightly made use of in his Church Worship the Lord in the beauty of holinesse 4. All our worship must be seasoned with fear lest we swerve on either hand from the rule prescribed by God Fear before him all the earth Ver. 10. Say among the heathen that the LORD reig●…th the world also shall be established that it shall not be moved he shall judge the people righteously 11. Let the heavens rejoyce and let the earth be glad let the sea roare and the fulnesse thereof 12. Let the field be joyfull and all that is therein then shall all the tre●…s of the wood rejoyce 13. Before the LORD for he cometh for he cometh to judge the earth he shall judge the world with righteous●…esse and the people with his truth In the fourth place he exhorteth the Lords Ministers his called messengers every where to proclaime Christ King in his own Church and to declare the benefits of his reigning in special these three 1. The putting of all things which are in disorder and confusion in the world by sin into their own order again and setling all things to the perpetual benefit of his subjects 2. Christs righteous governing and de●…ending of his subjects 3. The unexpressible joy which Christ doth bring to his people for setting forth whereof all the reasonable and understanding creatures are unable Whence learn 1. Wheresoever the Gospel is preached there without injurie to Magistrates Christ may and should be declared King sovereigne Lord and Law-giver in all the matters of Religion and whatsoever concerneth the salvation of men and service of God Say among the heathen that the Lord reigneth 2. Before Christ come to a people men neither know God nor themselves nor what is their profit nor what is their losse for before Christ reveale himself to a man things earthly and temporall are put in the room of things heavenly and everlasting the creatures and lusts of men are put in the room of God and the sinner is made a slave to his own lusts and unclean spirits but when Christ cometh who is the light of the world and the life of men and convin●…eth men of sin and righteousnesse and judgement then is the sinner humb●…ed and God exalted and every thing is put in its own place and a solid state of grace and glory is ●…ounded by his Word and working and is setled by his decree for the benefit of the world of his Elect and Regenerate people for by Christs governing the world also shall be established 3. The Kingdom of Christ is a Kingdom which cannot be moved and they who are his Subjects do receive this Kingdom in title and right and begun possession which cannot be taken from them again The world also shall be established that it cannot be moved 4. The government of Christs Kingdom is so well and wisely carried by him as right is done to God and man to friends and foes and no injury to any party is allowed and course is taken to give effectually to every man according as his work shall be He shall judge the people righteously 5. There is no true rejoycing for sinners in heaven or earth except in and through Jesus Christ alone all joy of sinners without him is madnesse and in him men have cause of rejoycing whatsoever condition they shall be in Let the heaven rejoyce and let the earth be glad let the sea roare and the fulnesse thereof 6. The joy which Christ bringeth to his people is such that men and Angels are not able to expresse it and if all the dumb creatures had mindes and mouthes to set it forth it were a taske and more for them to undertake it Let the heavens rejoyce and the earth be glad let the sea roare and the fulnesse thereof c. 7. As all the creatures are in a sort of bondage and subjection unto vanity through the sins of men so have they their own redemption freedom from vanity in relation to Christ and the service which they do unto the Saints who make right use of them and at length the creature shall be fully delivered from the bondage of corruption and in its owne kinde have cause of rejoycing Let the heaven earth sea and fields rejoyce c. 8. All the creatures are at enmity with man before he be reconciled to God in Christ but when peace is made by Jesus Christ they look upon man all of them with another countenance as servants unto and children of their Lord who is Father of the reconciled and governour of all for their good Let the fields be joyful and all that is therein then shall all the trees of the wood rejoyce They shall look upon a reconciled man walking in the light of Gods countenance as a