mas TORONTq SHERATON MEMORIAL LIBRARY EASTER, 1906 Shelf Nb. STACKS , Regifler No. < / r . THE WORKS OF THOMAS MANTON, D.D. VOL. IX. COUNCIL OF PUBLICATION. W. LINDSAY ALEXANDER, D.D., Professor of Theology, Congregational Union, Edinburgh. JAMES BEGG, D.D., Minister of Newington Free Church, Edinburgh. THOMAS J. CRAWFORD, D.D., S.T.P., Professor of Divinity, University, Edinburgh. D. T. K. DRUMMOND, M.A., Minister of St Thomas's Episcopal Church, Edinburgh. WILLIAM H. GOOLD, D.D., Professor of Biblical Literature and Church History, Reformed Presbyterian Church, Edinburgh. ANDREW THOMSON, D.D., Minister of Broughton Place United Presby terian Church, Edinburgh. REV. THOMAS SMITH, D.D., EDINBURGH. THE COMPLETE WORKS OP THOMAS MANTON, D.D. VOLUME IX. CONTAINING SEVERAL SERMONS UPON THE CXIX. PSALM ; ALSO SEVERAL SERMONS UPON THE TWENTY-FIFTH CHAPTER OF ST MATTHEW. LONDON: JAMES NISBET & CO., 21 BERNERS STREET. 1872. PRINTED BY BALLANTYNE AND COMPANY EDINBURGH AND LONDON CONTENTS. SEVERAL SERMONS UPON THE cxrx. PSALM. SERMON CLIX. " Thy righteousness is an everlasting righteous ness, and thy law is the truth," ver. 142, „ CLX. "Trouble and anguish have taken hold of me, yet thy commandments are my delights," ver. 143, 14 „ CLXL " The righteousness of thy testimonies is ever lasting : give me understanding, and I shafl live," ver. 144, . . . .24 CLXLL "I cried with my whole heart; hear me, O Lord: I will keep thy statutes," ver. 145, . 36 „ CLXIIL "I cried with my whole heart; hear me, O Lord : I will keep thy statutes," ver. 145, . 45 „ CLXIY. '« I cried unto thee ; save me, and I shall keep thy testimonies," ver. 146,, . . 53 „ ^ CLXY. " I prevented the dawning of the morning, and cried : I hoped in thy word," ver. 147, . 66 „ CLXVL "Mine eyes prevent the night^ratches, that I might meditate in thy word," ver. 148, . 77 „ CLXYIL ** Hear my voice, according to thy loving-kind ness : O Lord, quicken me according to thy judgment," ver. 149, . . .83 „ CLXVILL "They draw nigh that follow after mischief: they are far from thy law," ver. 150, . 96 CLXTX. "Thou art near, O Lord; and all thy com mandments are truth," ver. 151, . . 101 ^ CLXX. " Concerning thy testimonies, I have known of old that thou has founded them for ever," ver. 152, 113 „ CTiXXT. "Consider mine affliction, and deliver me; for I do not forget thy law," ver. 153, . 1'25 CONTENTS. PAGK SERMON CLXX1I. "Plead my cause, and deliver me: quicken me according to thy word/' ver. 154, . 135 „ CLXXIII. " Salvation is far from the wicked : for they seek not thy statutes/' ver. 155, . 145 „ CLXXIV. " Great are thy tender mercies, O Lord : quicken me according to thy judgments," ver. 156, . . . .158 „ CLXXV. "Princes have persecuted me without a cause : but my heart standeth in awe of thy word," ver. 161, . . . 166 „ CLXXVI. <" I rejoice at thy word, as one that findeth great spoil," ver. 162, . . .177 „ CLXXVII. "I hate and abhor lying: but thy law do I love," ver. 163, . . . .180 „ CLXXVIII. "Seven times a day do I praise thee, because of thy righteous judgments," ver. 164, . 189 „ CLXXIX. "Great peace have they that love thy law, and nothing shall offend them," ver. 165, 199 „ CLXXX. "Great peace have they that love thy law, and nothing shall offend them," ver. 165, 209 „ CLXXXI. " Lord, I have hoped for thy salvation, and done thy commandments," ver. 166, . 218 „ CLXXXII. "My soul hath kept thy testimonies, and I love them exceedingly," ver. 167, . 227 „ CLXXXIII. "I have kept thy precepts and thy testi monies, for all my ways are before thee," ver. 168, . . . .236 „ CLXXXIV. " My lips shall utter praise, when thou hast taught me thy statutes," ver. 171, . 245 „ CLXXX V. "My tongue shall speak of thy word : for all thy commandments are righteousness," ver. 172, . . . . 254 „ CLXXXVI. " Let thine hand help me : for I have chosen thy precepts," ver. 173, . . .263 „ CLXXX VII. " I have longed for thy salvation, 0 Lord; and thy law is my delight," ver. 174, .277 „ CLXXXVIIL " I have longed for thy salvation, 0 Lord; and thy law is my delight," ver. 174, . 285 „ CLXXXIX. "Let my soul live, and it shall praise thee; and let thy judgments help me," ver. 175, . 292 ,, CXC. " I have gone astray like a lost sheep : seek thy servant; for I do not forget thy commandments," ver. 176, . 299 CONTENTS. Vll SEVERAL SERMONS UPON MATTHEW xxv. PAGE SERMON I. " Then shall the kingdom of heaven be likened unto ten virgins, which took their lamps, and went forth to meet the bridegroom. And five of them were wise, and five were foolish," ver. 1, 2, . . 319 „ II. "They that were foolish took their lamps, and took no oil with them : but the wise took oil in their vessels with their lamps," ver. 3, 4, . 331 III. "They that were foolish took their lamps, and took no oil with them : but the wise took oil in their vessels with their lamps," ver. 3, 4, . 339 „ IV. " While the bridegroom tarried, they all slumbered and slept," ver. 5, . . .348 „ V. " While the bridegroom tarried, they all slumbered and slept. And at midnight there was a cry made, Behold, the bridegroom cometh ; go ye out to meet him," ver. 5, 6, . . . 360 ,, VI. " Then all those virgins arose, and trimmed their lamps. And the foolish said unto the wise, Give us of your oil, for our lamps are gone out," ver. 7, 8, . . . . 371 „ VII. "But the wise answered, saying, Not so; lest there be not enough for us and you : but go ye rather to them that sell, and buy for your selves," ver. 9, .... 383 „ VIII. "And while they went to buy, the bridegroom came ; and they that were ready went in with him to the marriage : and the door was shut," ver. 10, ..... 392 „ IX. "Afterwards came also the other virgins, saying, Lord, Lord, open to us. But he answered and said, Verily I say unto you, I know you not," ver. 11, 12, . . .404 „ X. " Watch therefore ; for ye know neither the day nor the hour wherein the Son of man cometh," ver. 13, . . . .413 ,, XI. "For the kingdom of heaven is as a man tra velling into a far country, who called his own servants, and delivered to them his goods. And unto one he gave five talents, to another two, to another one ; to every one according to his several ability," ver. 14, 15, . . 423 viii CONTENTS. PAQB SERMON XII. " Then he that had received the five talents went and traded with the same, and made them other five talents. Likewise he that had received two, he also gained other two. But he that had received one went and digged in the earth, and hid his lord's money," ver. 16-18, . . . . . 434 „ XIII. "After a long time the lord of those servants cometh, and reckoneth with them. And so he that had received five talents came and brought other five talents, saying, Lord, thou deliveredst unto me five talents : behold, I have gained besides them five talents more. His lord said unto him, Well done, thou good and faithful servant ; thou hast been faithful over a few things, I will make thee ruler over many things : enter thou into the joy of thy lord. He also that had received two talents came and said, Lord, thou deliveredst unto me two talents : behold, I have gained two other talents besides them. His lord said unto him, Well done, good and faithful servant, thou hast been faithful over a few things, I will make thee ruler over many things : enter thou into the joy of thy lord," ver. 19-23, . 447 „ XIV. " Then he which had received the one talent came and said, Lord, I knew thee that thou art an hard man, reaping where thou hast not sowed, and gathering where thou hast not strawed : and I was afraid, and went and hid thy talent in the earth : lo, there thou hast that is thine," ver. 24, 25, 461 „ XV. " His lord said unto him, Thou wicked and sloth ful servant, thou knewest that I reaped where I sowed not, and gathered where I have not strawed ; thou oughtest therefore to have put my money to the exchangers, and then at my coming I should have received mine own with usury," ver. 26, 27, . . . . 470 „ -XVI. "Take therefore the talent from him, and give it to him which hath ten talents. For unto every one that hath shall be given, and he shall have abundance ; but from him that hath not shall be taken away even that which he hath," ver. 28, 29, ... 482 SEVERAL SERMONS UPON THE CXIX. PSALM. SEVERAL SERMONS UPON THE GXIX. PSALM. SEKMON CLIX. Tliy righteousness is an everlasting righteousness, and thy law is the truth. — VER. 142. IN this verse the word of God is set forth by a double notion, of right eousness and law ; accordingly two things are predicated of it : as it is righteousness, it is said to be an everlasting righteousness ; and as it is law, it is said to be the truth. Both imply our duty : as there are truths in the word, it is man's duty to believe them ; as there are commands, it is man's duty to obey them. I shall treat first of the notions, secondly of the predications. First, The notions; and there the word is first called righteousness, * Thy righteousness/ God's righteousness is sometimes put for the righteousness which is in God himself ; as ver. 137, ' Kighteous art thou, 0 Lord ; ' Ps. cxlv. 17, ' The Lord is righteous in all his ways/ And sometimes for the righteousness which he requireth of us ; as James i. 20, ' The wrath of man worketh not the righteousness of God ; ' that is, the righteousness which God requireth of us ; and here in the text. Once more, that righteousness which God requireth of us in his word is sometimes taken, in a limited sense, for the duties of the second table, and so usually when it is coupled with holiness, Luke i. 75 ; Eph. iv. 24, ' The new man is created after God in righteousness and true holiness.' Holiness giveth God his due, and righteousness giveth man his due. Sometimes it is taken in a more general sense, as to imply the whole duty and perfection of man ; thus righteousness when it is put alone. In this general sense I take it here, and observe this point — 1. The word of God is righteousness. This is one of the notions by which it is expressed in this psalm ; so it is called in the text. The reasons. [1.] Because it is the copy of that righteousness which is in God. God's natural perfections are represented in the creatures, his majesty and omnipresence in the sun, but his moral perfections in the word. 4 SERMONS UPON PSALM CXIX. [SfiR. CLIX. The heavens declare his excellent majesty and glory, but his law, his purity, righteousness, and holiness— Ps. xix., the sun and the law are compared together, — as the creatures in their kind set forth God, so doth the word in its kind. Well may it be called righteousness, be cause it is the fairest draught and representation of God in his moral perfections, the chief of which are called righteousness and holiness. The knowledge we get by the creatures tendeth to exalt God ; the knowledge we get by the law to humble and abase man, because of our impurity ; and therefore the prophet, when he saw God, cried out, Isa. vi. 3, 'Woe is me ! I am undone; I am a man of unclean lips ; ' and David, when he contemplated the holiness of the law, cried out presently, Ps. xix. 12, ' Lord, cleanse me from my secret sins/ [2.] It is the riile,and pattern of all righteousness and justice in man ; for our righteousness is a conformity to God's 'law. Indeed, habitual righteousness is a conformity to God's nature ; actual righteousness, to his law. His Spirit reneweth our nature according to the image of God, and telleth us what is pleasing to God : Isa. li. 7, ' Hearken unto me, ye that know righteousness, the people in whose heart is my law/ They that have the law of God in their hearts do only know righteous ness, that is, know what belongs to it ; the new nature is tried, and all our ways tried by it. [3.] It is the great instrument to promote righteousness. It maketh the man that doth observe it just and righteous before God. There is a twofold righteousness before God — the righteousness of justification and the righteousness of sanctification. The righteousness of justifi cation, that is the great truth revealed in the scriptures. Nature saw nothing of that ; the heathen saw something of a breach, that there was need of appeasing God, but nothing of a righteousness before God : that secret was hid from the wise men of the world, and reserved for the scriptures ; and therefore the apostle saith, Horn. iii. 21, 22, ( But now the righteousness of God without the law is manifested, being witnessed by the law and the prophets, even the righteousness of God, which is by Jesus Christ, unto all, and upon all that believe/ The law and the prophets set forth this mystery to teach men, that we are to be justified before God by faith in Christ. Nature could convince us of guilt, but not of a righteousness. 2. For the way of sanctification, or how a man that is justified should approve himself to God and men. The scripture crieth up another righteousness, that becorneth justified persons; that is, the way to be righteous is to do righteousness : 1 John iii. 7, ' Little children, let no man deceive you ; he that doth righteousness is right eous/ So it is said of Zacharias and Elizabeth, Luke i. 6, that * they were righteous before God, and walked in all the commandments and ordinances of the Lord blameless/ So Deut. vi. 25, ' And it shall be our righteousness, if we observe to do all these commandments, before the Lord our God, as he commanded us/ This wisdom we learn from the word, where nothing but righteousness is recommended ; for it cometh from the righteous God, who is essentially good and holy, and cannot be contrary to himself in commanding unjust things : and therefore his commandments are in all points right. There is no way right to prove principles but by arguing ab absurdis, and so prove VER. 142.] SERMONS UPON PSALM oxix. 5 the goodness of them. What a miserable case would the world be in if there were not such a law and rule ! a place of villanies and wicked ness. And therefore here is righteousness, and all righteousness ; we need not seek further for direction. Sure God can tell what will best please him, and our sense and experience inform us what things are good and honest in the sight of men. Use. Let us live as becometh them that have such a righteous rule : * Wisdom is justified of her children/ Mat. xi. 19. Let us bear wit ness by our faith, profession, and godly life to the doctrine of God. This is to glorify the word, Acts xiii. 40, when we express the excel lencies of it in our practice ; do not only approve it in our judg ments, and commend it with our mouths, but express it in our lives. Practice glorifieth more than verbal praise. Let us show that the word is righteousness , that is to say, the copy of God's righteous ness, by being the rule and instrument of ours. Let us look after the righteousness of justification. We can never be truly righteous, unless we lay the foundation of the spiritual life in faith in Jesus Christ, and repentance from dead works, that maketh way for the spirit and power of godliness ; for Christ is made of God to us righteousness before he is made sanctification, 1 Cor. i. 30. There is no acceptance with God without it : Horn. v. 19, ' By the obedience of one, many were made righteous.' Thereby our persons are accepted. In ourselves there is none righteous, no not one ; and it is dangerous to look after any other righteousness while this is neglected : Kom. x. 3, ' Being ignorant of God's righteousness, they went about to establish their own righteous ness/ &c. Again, let me press you to look after the righteousness of sanctification, to see that we be renewed by the Spirit, and entered into a holy course ; and not only so, but we go on still in righteous ness : Kev. xxii. 11, ' He that is righteous, let him be righteous still.' We are renewed but in part : Prov xv. 9, ' The Lord loveth him that followeth after righteousness ; ' that maketh it his business to grow more righteous every day, and increase the acts, to perfect the habit ; this earnest endeavour must never be left off. Secondly, Now I come from the notion to the predication. This righteousness, it is an everlasting righteousness : it is so in two respects — in the constitution among men, and in the effects of it. 1. In the constitution of it. The covenant of grace is an everlast ing covenant ; so it is called Heb. xiii. 20 ; and the gospel is called the ' everlasting gospel/ Kev. xiv. 6 ; and ' I will make an everlasting covenant with you/ Isa. Iv. 3. The privileges of this covenant are eternal. Christ ' hath obtained an eternal redemption for us/ Heb. ix. 12 ; Dan. ix. 24. There is an unchangeable righteousness which Christ hath established in the church ; he is the Lord our righteous ness. His righteousness is still the same, and the plot was first laid in his everlasting decrees. The terms of life and salvation held forth in the new covenant are to continue for ever, no change to be expected. From the beginning of the world to the end thereof, the covenant of grace cannot cease ; the obligation still continueth ; men are for ever bound to love God and their neighbour. There shall no time come when the law of loving God and our neighbour shall be reversed and out of date. The covenant is essentially the same, under all the diver- G SERMONS UPON PSALM CXIX. [SER. CLIX. sity of administrations. And as the privileges, so the duties are of an eternal obligation. Among men, ra Sl/caia xwovpeva, that is just at one time that is not just at another. Lawgivers cannot always live to see their laws executed, and men cannot foresee all occasions and inconveniences, and therefore often repeal their laws. But God is wise ; he hath made an unchangeable law, and he forbiddeth things intrin sically evil, and commandeth things intrinsically good. 2. As to the effects of it, in case of obedience or disobedience. (1.) In case of disobedience, eternal wrath lighteth on them that reject this covenant, that walk contrary to it, they shall be eternally miserable : 2 Thes. i. 9, ' Who shall be punished with, everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord.' Not a temporal but an everlasting destruction; and Mark ix. 44, 'The worm shall never die, and the fire shall never be quenched.' An eternity of torments, because they despised everlasting mercy, and rejected the autho rity of an everlasting God. Having offended an infinite God, their punishment abideth on them for ever. If they will stand out their day, it is fit their recovery should be hopeless. (2.) The benefits are eternal in case of obedience. There is everlasting grace, ever lasting comfort, and everlasting life : 1 John ii. 17, ' The world passeth away, and the lust thereof, but he that doeth the word of God abideth for ever.' The Spirit is given as a comforter that shall abide for ever, John xiv. 16 ; and 2 Thes. ii. 16, ' God who hath loved us, and given us everlasting consolation, and good hope through grace/ And it is fit it should be so, because it is built upon God's unchangeable love, and Christ's eternal merit and intercession. God's love is an everlasting love, Jer. xxxi. 3. The efficacy of Christ's merit never ceaseth, Heb. xiii. 8. His continual intercession ever lasteth, Heb. vii. 25 , and Bom. viii. 39, ' Nothing shall separate us from the love of Christ.' He liveth for ever, by which we continue for ever in the favour of God, and the covenant standeth firm between him and us ; the fountain of comfort is never dried up. Use 1. To inform us of the difference between the laws of God and the laws of men. There are many differences, some of which I shall touch by and by ; this expression offereth two — it is righteousness, and everlasting righteousness. 1. It is righteousness. Men have and do often decree wickedness by a law, not only in the first table, where man is most blind, but also in the second ; not only in their barbarous worship, their sacrificing ot men, but also in their human constitutions. The Lacedemonians held it lawful to steal, if he were not taken eV avrS) ^e/oew, in the very act. In Cyprus they held it lawful for their virgins, if they were poor, to prostitute themselves to get a dowry or portion. By the law of the twelve tables a man might kill his wife if she smelt of wine or coun terfeited his keys. And among the Komans, if a slave had killed his master, all his fellow-slaves were put to death with him, though never so innocent. By the same laws, a father might thrice sell his child ; they might tear their debtors in pieces if they were not solvent. Thus blind were men in their own concerns and what made for human com merce ; much more in the way of pleasing God and the interest of the world to come. Bless God for this righteous law. Again — VER. 142.] SERMONS UPON PSALM cxix. 7 2. It is everlasting righteousness ; not only righteous at the first giving out, but righteous in all ages and times ; and should we slight this rule that will hold for ever ? In the world, new lords new laws ; men vary and change their designs and purposes ; privileges granted to-day may be repealed to-morrow, but this word will hold true for ever ; our justification by Christ is irrevocable, that part of righteous ness is everlasting. Be sure you are justified now, upon terms of the gospel, and you shall be justified for ever ; your forgiveness is an ever lasting forgiveness, and your peace is an everlasting peace: Jer. xxxiii. 34, ' I will remember your sins no more.' So the other righteousness of sanctification, it is for ever. Approve yourselves to God now, and you will approve yourselves at the day of judgment. Use 2. Exhortation. 1. Let this take us off from seeking things that have no continuance in them. The everlastingness of the word is opposed often to the transitory vanities of the world : 1 Peter i. 23-24, * All flesh is grass, and the glory of man as the flower of grass : the grass withereth, .and the flower falleth away, but the word of the Lord endureth for ever.' Why should we hunt after that glory that soon fadeth ? So 1 John ii. 17, ' The world passeth away, and the lust thereof, but he that doeth the will of God abideth for ever/ All these things change, and move up and down by divers circumrotations ; we sit fast and loose in the world, but in the covenant of grace all is sure. 2. Let us choose this word to live by, that we may be partakers of that everlasting good which cometh by it. Oh, let us regard it 1 Eternity is concerned in it. If the righteousness of God be everlasting, let us begin betimes to get interested in it, and persevere in it to the end. Let us begin betimes, for we have but a few days to live here in the world, and so either to express our thankfulness or lay a foundation for our eternal hopes ; therefore let us set about the work the sooner. And let us persevere ; our care to keep this law must be perpetual, not like temporaries. Many will carry themselves well and godly for a while, but afterwards fall off ; this doth not become an everlasting law ; there is the same goodness in God's law that there was at first. 3. Let us comfort ourselves with the everlastingness of the privi leges offered to us in God's word. The redeemed of the Lord should have an everlasting joy : Isa. xxxv. 10, ' And the ransomed of the Lord shall return, arid come to Zion with songs and everlasting joy upon their heads/ Let other things end and change as they will, our right by the new covenant changeth not. Sometimes we are in request in the world, and sometimes in disgrace ; but God's love is everlasting and sure. We are not in with him to-day and out to morrow ; he hath dealt with us upon sure and unchangeable terms ; nay, when you die, you may comfort yourselves in this, Ps. ciii. 17, ' The mercy of the Lord is from everlasting to everlasting, upon them that fear him, and his righteousness upon children's children/ Yea, not only in the changes of your outward condition is here an everlast ing spring of comfort, but also in the ups and downs of your spiritual condition, and the clouds which now and then darken your comfort and hope in God. In a time of desertion we seem to be dead and cast •off ; yet remember God loves to be bound for ever : 2 Sam. xxiii. 5, S SERMONS UPON PSALM CXIX. [SfiB. CLIX. ' Although my house be not so with God, yet he hath made an ever lasting covenant/ Though we are not so punctual, exact, and faith ful, but are subject to many errors and failings, yet God will mind his eternal covenant : Ps. Ixxxix. 33-34, * Nevertheless my loving-kind ness will I not utterly take from him, nor suffer my faithfulness to fail ; my covenant will I not break, nor alter the thing that is gone out of my lips.' Death doth not dissolve it, nor desertions break it off. Now for the second notion by which the word of God is expressed, ' thy law,' from whence observe — Doct. That the word of God hath the nature and force of a law. It is often so called in scripture ; not only the decalogue, which is the abridgment of all moral duties, but the whole scripture is God's- law: Isa. li. 4, 'A Jaw shall proceed from me;' and Ps. i. 2, 'His delight is in the law of God ; ' and the gospel is called ' the law of faith/ Rom. iii. 28. Here I shall show you how necessary it was that God should give man a law, both as we are considered apart, and with respect to community ; and then show that the word hath the force of a law. 1. Consider man apart. Surely the reasonable creature, as it is a creature, hath a superior to whose providence and ordering it is sub ject. So all the creatures have a law, by which the bounds of their motion are fixed and limited : Ps. clxviii. 6, * He hath established them for ever and ever; he hath made a decree which shall not pass ; > Prov. viii. 29, * He gave the sea his decree, that the waters should not pass his commandment.' The sun, moon, and stars are under a law ; all the creatures are balanced in a due proportion, and guided and fixed in their tract and course by an unerring hand, which is a kind of law to them. As a creature, man is subject to the direction of God's providence, as other creatures are; but as a reasonable creature, he is capable of moral government ; for so he hath a choice of his own, a power of refusing evil and choosing good. Other creatures are ruled by a rod of iron, necessitated to what they do by an act of God's power and sovereignty ; but man, being a voluntary agent, is governed by laws which may direct and oblige him to good, and warn and drive him from evil. This law was at first written upon man's nature, and that was sufficient while he stood in his integrity to- guide him and enable him to serve and please God in all things pro pounded to him. The law written on the heart of man was his rule- and principle. But that being obliterated by the fall, it was needful that God should give a new law, to guide man to his own blessedness, and to keep him from erring. The internal principle of righteousness being lost, the laws of men could not be sufficient, for they have another end, which is the good of human society. They aim not at such a supernatural end as the enjoyment of God ; their laws reach no^ further than the ordering of men's outward conversations, and meddle not with the inward workings and motions of the heart, of which they can take no cognisance. These may be inordinate, do a great deal of mischief ^ therefore, as the wise God directed men to give laws to order men's actions, so he would himself give laws to order the heart, which man cannot reach. Lay all these together, and there is a necessity that God should give a law to man. VER. 142.] SERMONS UPON PSALM cxix. 9 '2. But much more if you consider man in his community, as he is a part of that spiritual community called a church. All societies of men from the beginning of the world have found the establishing of laws the only means to preserve themselves from ruin. There is no other way against confusion ; and would God leave that society which is of his own institution, that of which he is the head, and in which his honour is concerned, without a law ? Deut. xxxii. 9, ' The Lord's portion is his people/ which was set apart to serve him, and to be to him for a name and a praise. Surely a people that have God so near them, and are in special relation to him, have their laws by which they may be governed and preserved as to their eternal good, unless we should say God took less care for his own people than for others. This necessity is the greater because this society is spiritual ; though made up of visible men, yet combined for spiritual ends, commerce and communion with God, and that mostly in their spirits, which maketh this society the hardest to be governed, and this, the most scattered and dispersed of all societies throughout all parts of the earth, should therefore be knit together with the strongest bonds. Surely then there needeth a common law, whereby they may be united in their conjunction with Christ, the head, and one another, that it may not be broken in pieces ; and this to be given by God, that he may pre serve his own authority and interest among them. This law is the scripture, those sacred digests in which God hath discovered not only his wisdom and justice, but his will and imperial power, what he will have us do. The one showeth the equity, the other the necessity of our obedience ; surely this is his law or none. The church to whom the law was given, God hath constituted the keeper of its own records ; never acknowledge another ; nor can any other make any tolerable pretence. Now, having brought the matter home, I shall show you wherein it hath the nature and force of a law, as we commonly take the word ; and here I shall — 1. Show you wherein it agrees. 2. Wherein it differs from the ordinary laws of men. 1. Wherein it agreeth. [1.] A law is an act of power and sovereignty by which a superior declare th his will to those that are subject to him. There are two branches of the supreme power — legislation and jurisdiction ; giving the law, and governing according to the law so given. And so God's power over the reasonable creature is seen in legislation, and in the administration of his providence there is his jurisdiction. In the scrip ture he hath given the law, and he will take an account of the observ ance of it ; in part here, at the petty sessions ; hereafter, more fully and clearly at the day of general judgment. But for the present, here is God's power seen over the creature in appointing him such a law. God hath the greatest right and authority to command : Isa. xxxiii. 22, ' The Lord is our judge and our lawgiver.' [2.] That there is not only direction given to us, but an obligation laid upon us. There is this difference between a law and a rule — a bare rule is for information, a law for obligation. So herein the word of God agrees with a law ; it is not only the result of God's wisdom, 10 SERMONS UPON PSALM CXIX. [SER. CLIX. but the effect of his legislative will. He would not only help and instruct the creature in his duty, hut oblige fhim by his authority. Decretum nccessitatem facit^ exhortatio liberam voluntatem excitat, saith the canonist. Exhortation and advice properly serveth to quicken one that is free, but a decree and a law imposeth a force, a necessity upon him. So Hierome, lib. ii. contra Jovin — Ubi consilium datur operantis arbitrium est, ubi prceceptum necessitous servitutis. A counsel and a precept differ ; a precept respects subjects, a counsel, friends. The scriptures are not only God's counsel, but his precept. There is a coactive power in his laws. God hath not left the creature at liberty to comply with his directions if he please, but hath left a strict charge upon him. [3.] Every law hajih a sanction, otherwise it were but an arbitrary direction ; the authority might be contemned unless it hath a sanction, that is, confirmed by rewards and punishments ; so hath God given his law under the highest penalties : Mark xvi. 16, 'He that believeth shall be saved, and he that believeth not shall be damned;' Gal. vi. 8, 'If ye sow to the flesh, of the flesh ye shall reap corruption;' Kom. viii. 13, ' If ye live after the flesh, ye shall die/ God telleth them what will come of it, and commandeth them to abstain as they will answer to God at their utmost peril. The obligation of a law, first, inferreth a fault, that is, contempt of authority ; so doth God's, as it is his law, and so it will infer a fault in us to break it ; and as we reject his counsel, it inferreth punishment, and the greater punishment the more we know of God's law : Kom. ii. 9, ' Tribulation, wrath, and anguish upon every soul that doeth evil, upon the Jew first, and also upon the Gentile.' Why the Jew first ? They knew God's mind more clearly. [4.] A sanction supposeth a judge, who will take an account whether his law be broken or kept, otherwise all the promises and threatenings were in vain. The law, that is the rule of our obedience, is the rule of his process ; so the word of God hath this in common with other laws ; therefore God hath appointed a judge and a j udgment-day wherein he will judge the world in righteousness, by the man whom he hath appointed ; and 2 Thes. i. 8, ' He will come in flaming fire, to render vengeance on all them that know not God, and obey not the gospel/ According to the law they have been under, Gentiles, Christians, they must all appear before the Lord, to give an account how they have observed God's law. Now in patience he beareth with men, yet some times interposeth by particular judgments, but then they shall receive their final doom. 2. Let us see wherein they differ from ordinary laws among men. [1.] Man in his laws doth not debate matters with his subjects, but barely enjoineth and interposeth authority ; but God condescendeth to the infirmities of man, and cometh down from the throne of his sovereignty, and reasoneth with and persuadeth and prayeth men that they will not forsake their own mercies, but yield obedience to his laws, which he convinceth them are for their good : Isa. xlvi. 8, ' Remember this, show yourselves men ; bring it to mind again, ye transgressors ; ' Isa. i. 18, * Let us reason together, saith the Lord/ God is pleased to stoop to sorry creatures, to argue with them, and make them judges in their own cause : Micah vi. 2, 3, he will plead with Israel, ' 0 my VER. 142.] SERMONS UPON PSALM cxix. 11 people, what have I done unto thee ? and wherein have I wearied thee ? Testify against we.' He will plead with Israel about the equity of his laws, whether they are not for their good. It is a lessening of authority for princes to court their subjects — they command them ; but God will beseech and expostulate and argue with his people ; 2 Cor. v. 20, he draws with the cords of a man, sweetly alluring their hearts to him. [2.] The laws of God bind the conscience and the immortal souls of men ; the laws of men only bind the behaviour of the outward man, they cannot order the heart. God takes notice of a wanton glance, of an unclean thought, a carnal motion, Mat. v. 28. Men's words and actions are liable to the laws of men ; they cannot know the thoughts ; but the law of God falls upon the counsels of the heart : Eom. vii. 14, * For I know that the law is spiritual, but I am carnal ; ' Heb. iv. 12, ' It is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart.' [3.] The law of God immutably and indispensably bindeth all men without distinction ; no man beggeth exemption here because of their condition ; there is no immunity and freedom from God's law. Men may grant immunity from their laws : 1 Sam. xvii. 25, ' He will make his father's house free in Israel.' Men's laws are compared to spiders' webs ; the lesser flies are entangled, great ones break through. God doth not exempt any creature from duty to him, but speaketh impar tially to all. [4.] Men's laws do more propend to punishment than they do to reward. For robbers and manslayers death is appointed, but the inno cent subject hath only this reward, that he doth his duty, and escapeth these punishments. In very few cases doth the law promise rewards ; the inflicting of punishments is its proper work, because its use is to restrain evil ; but God's law propoundeth punishments equal to the rewards ; eternal life on the one hand, as well as eternal death on the other : Deut. xxx. 15, ' See I have set before thee this day life and good, death and evil;' because the use of God's law is to guide men to their happiness. This should be much observed ; it is legis candor, the equity and condescension of man's law to speak of a reward ; it commands many things, forbids many things, but still under a penalty ; that is the great design of man's power ; in very few cases doth it invite men to their duty by a reward ; only in such cases where every good man would not do his duty. It is more exact and vigi lant in its proper and natural work of punishing the disobedient, that wickedness should not go unpunished ; the common peace requireth that ; but that good should be rewarded, there is no human necessity. Human laws were not invented to reward good, but pre vent evil. Use. Let us humble ourselves that we bear so little respect to God's word, that we so boldly break it, and are so little affected with our breaches of it. Do we indeed consider that this is God's law ? The greatest part of mankind fear the prince more than God, and the gal lows more than hell. If every vain thought or carnal motion in our hearts were as the cutting of a finger or burning in the hand, men would seem more afraid of that than they are of hell. Nay, I will tell you, men can dispense with God's law to comply with man's : Hosea 12 SERMONS UPON PSALM CXIX. [SER. CLIX. v. 11, 'Ephraim is oppressed, an* broken in judgment, because he willingly walked after the commandment/ A little danger will draw men into the snare, when hell will not keep them from it. Oh, let us rouse up ourselves ! Is not man God's subject ? Is he not a more powerful sovereign than all the potentates in the world ? Doth he not in his word give judgment on the everlasting estate of men, and will his judgment be in vain ? Hath not God appointed a day when all matters shall be taken into consideration? If you can deny these truths, go on in sin and spare not ; but if conscience be sensible of God's authority, oh ! break off your sins by repentance, and walk more cautiously for the time to come ! Every sin is avo^la, 1 John iii. 4, a breach of God's eternal law ; and will God always wink at your dis loyalty to him ? Nothing remaineth to be spoken to but the last clause, * Thy law is truth/ Doct. God's law is truth. 1. I shall show in what sense it is said to be truth. 2. The reasons why it is truth. 3. The end of this truth. First, In what sense it is said to be truth. 1. It is the chief truth ; there is some truth in the laws of men and the writings of men, even of heathens; but they are but sorry frag ments and scraps of truth, that have escaped since the fall ; but the truth of the word is transcendent to that of bare reason. Here are truths of the greatest concernment, matters propounded that are very comfortable and profitable to lost sinners, 1 Tim. ii. 16. Here moral duties are advanced to the highest pitch : Deut. iv. 6, ' Keep therefore and do them, for this is your wisdom and your understanding in the sight of the nations/ The end of these is not only to regulate your commerce with men, but to guide you in your communion with God,, and help you to the everlasting enjoyment of him. 2. It is the only truth, that is, the only revelation of the mind of God that you can build upon ; it is the rule of truth. A thing may be true that is not the rule of truth. There is veritas regulata, and veritas regulans ; the word is the measure and standard, and they are true or false as they agree or disagree with it. Every custom and tradition must be tried upon it ; from the beginning it was not so ; from the beginning, my Christianity is Jesus Christ. We must not attend to what others did, but what Christ did, who is before all; every dictate of reason must be tried by it, for here is the highest reason. It is written to make the man of God perfect, or else it can not guide you to your happiness, 2 Tim. iii. 15, 16. Every revelation must be tried by it, Gal. i. 8. If an angel or man bring any doctrine which differs from or is besides the written word, it is a cursed doctrine : this is the rule. 3. It is the pure truth ; in it there is nothing but the truth, without the mixture of falsehood ; every part is true as truth itself. It is true in the promises, true in the threatenings, true in the doctrines, true in the histories, true in the precepts, true in the prohibitions. God will make it good to a tittle. True in moralities, true in the mysteries of faith ; not only true in duties that concern man and man, but in the VEIL 142.] SERMONS UPON PSALM cxix. 13 sublimer truths that concern commerce with God, where nature is more blind : Ps. xix. 9, ' The testimonies of the Lord are true and righteous altogether.' It is true where a carnal man would not have it°true, in the curses and threatenings. If God's word be true, woe to them that remain in a sinful way, they shall find it true shortly, and feel what they will not believe. It is true where a godly man feareth it will not be true ; no promises contradicted by sense but will prove true in their performance. Whatsoever, in the hour of temptation, carnal reason may judge to the contrary, within a while you will see your unbelieving fears confuted. 4. It is the whole truth ; it containeth all things necessary for the salvation of those that yield up themselves to be instructed by it: John xiv. 26, * He shall teach you all things,' and remember you of all things ; ' John xvi. 13, ' Lead you into all truth ; ' in all things that pertain to religion and our present conduct towards everlasting happi ness. Therefore nothing is to be hearkened to contrary to what God hath revealed in his word ; there is no room left for tradition, nor for extraordinary revelations ; all that is necessary for the church is re vealed there ; it is a full perfect rule. Secondly, The reasons. 1. From the author ; God is a God of truth, and nothing but truth can come from him, for God cannot lie, Titus i. 2. The truth of the law dependeth upon the truth of God ; therefore it must needs be without error ; yea, it corrects all error ; if God could deceive or be deceived, you might suspect his word. 2. The matter itself ; it commends itself to our consciences by the manifestation of the truth : 2 Cor. iv. 2, ' Approving yourselves by the word of truth,' 2 Cor. vi. 7. If the heart be not strangely perverted, and become an incompetent judge by obstinate atheism and corrupt affections, it cannot but own these truths to be of God : ' If our gospel be hid, it is hid to them that are lost/ 1 Cor. iv. 4. 3. The end of it, which is to regulate man and sanctify man. Now it were strange if he should be made better by a lie and a cheat : John xvii. 17, ' Sanctify them tty thy truth ; thy word is truth.' Certainly it is the most convenient instrument to reduce man to his wits, and make him live like a man. 4. It pretends to be the law of God ; it is so, or else it would be the greatest cheat in the world ; for it speaketh to us from God all along, and by virtue of his authority. None can be so brutish as to think that the wisest course of doctrines that ever the world was acquainted with is a mere imposture. Use 1. To commend the word of God to us ; we cannot have true doctrine, nor true piety, nor true consolation without the scriptures. Not true doctrine : Isa. viii. 20, ' To the law and to the testimony, if they speak not according to this word, there is no light in them/ It is to be condemned of falsehood, if not according to the word. You cannot have true holiness, for holiness is but scripture digested and put in practice, James i. 18. The foundation of the spiritual life is laid in the word ; scripture faith and scripture repentance are still fed by the word. It teacheth us how to believe, and how to repent, and how to pray, and how to live, especially the heavenly life ; and there 14 SERMONS UPON PSALM CXIX. [SER. CLX. can be no true comfort and peace without the word : Kom. xv. 4, ' That ye through patience and comfort of the scriptures might have hope/ Use 2. 1. We should consider the truth of the word, partly in the general, for the strengthening and settling of our faith, and to make it more clear and solid and certain: Eph. i. 13, 'In whom ye trusted, after that ye heard the word of truth/ When boisterous temptations would carry us to some evil, which God hath forbidden and severely threatened, that the point of the sword of the Spirit be put to the bosom of it, Deut. xxix. 19, 20. 2. When you are settling your souls as to the main point of accep tance with God : 1 Tim. i. 15, ' This is a faithful saying, and worthy of all acceptation, that Jesus Christ came into the world to save sin ners, of whom I am Kjhief/ The word will never deceive them that seek righteousness there. 3. When difficulties arise that oppose the promise or expectation of relief according to the promise, you should urge the truth of the word in the very face of difficulty : ' Thy law is truth/ Take Paul's in stance, Acts xxvii. God by promise gave all that sailed with Paul in the ship their lives, yet how many difficulties came to pass ! At first, when they were in the Adriatic Sea for so many days and nights, and had neither seen sun nor stars, they knew not where they were, nor whither they should go ; here was little appearance of God's making good his word to Paul. Another difficulty fell out, they feared they were near some country ; they sounded and found they were near some land, but what land they could not conjecture, and were afraid of being split in pieces against the rocks ; but the shipmen, that knew the danger of these seas, they must go out of the ship, they would make use of their long boat, and so they were ready to miscarry in the sight of the land, but Paul prevented them. And after it was day, the men were so spent because of long fasting and conflicting with the waves, they could not ply the oar. Another difficulty, they were where two seas met ; they ran the ship aground and resolved to kill Paul and the rest of the prisoners, lest they should swim to land ; but the captain, willing to save Paul, prevented that purpose ; and so at length they came all to shore, though followed with difficulty upon difficulty. God made good his promise to a tittle, ver. 44. Pray observe how Paul urged God's promise against the greatest difficulties, as sufficient ground of encouragement to expect relief: ver. 25, ' For I believe God, that it shall be even as it was told me/ SERMON CLX. Trouble and anguish have taken hold of me, yet thy commandments are my delights. — VER. 143. IN the words we have — 1. David's temptation, trouble and anguish have taken hold of me. 2. David's exercise under that temptation, thy commandments are my delight. VER. 143.] SERMONS UPON PSALM cxix. 15 3. The benefit of that exercise, notwithstanding the greatness of the temptation, yet. It is propounded with a non obstante. First, The temptation was very great, for he speaketh of trouble and anguish. The joining of synonymous words, or words of a like import and signification, increaseth the sense ; and so it showeth his affection was not ordinary ; yea, both these words have their particular use and emphasis. Trouble may imply the outward trial, and the difficulties and straits he was in ; anguish, inward afflictions : the one, the matter of the trial, and the other the sense of it. The other expression also is to be observed, ' Have taken hold of me ; ' in the Hebrew, * have found me ; ' so the Septuagint renders it, QXtyeis KOL dvdyKcu evpoadv pe ; and the vulgar Latin out of them, tribulatio et angustice, invenerunt me, 'have found me,' that is, ' come upon me/ as the expression intimateth. Troubles are said to find us, because they are sent to seek us out, and in time will light upon us. We should not run into them, but if they find us in our duty, we should not be troubled at them. Sometimes in scripture we are said to find trouble, and sometimes trouble to find us. We are said to find trouble. David said, Ps. cxvi. 3, ' I found trouble.' And so now here in the text, trouble and anguish found him. There is no difference, or if any, the one noteth a surprise. Trouble findeth us when it cometh un- looked for ; our finding it noteth our willingness to undergo it. when the will of God is so, especially for righteousness' sake. Secondly, David's exercise under this great temptation, ' Thy com mandments are my delights.' Where we have — 1. The object, ' thy commandments.' The commandment is put for the word in general, which include th promises as well as precepts, the whole doctrine of life and salvation. However, the property of the form is not altogether to be overlooked ; even in the commandments or the conscience of his duty, he took a great deal of comfort. 2. The affection, ' delight/ He had said before that he did not forget God's statutes when he was small and despised, ver. 141 ; now he delighted in them. This was his great love to the word, that he could find sweetness in it when it brought him trouble, such sweetness as did allay all his sorrows, and overcome the bitterness of them. 3. The degree, ' delights/ in the plural number ; he did greatly delight in it. Omnis obleclatio mea, saith Junius — thy command ments to me are instead of all manner of delights and pleasure in the world. Thirdly, The next is the opposition of this exercise to that tempta tion, ' yet/ It is not in the original, but necessarily implied, and there fore well inserted by our translators, to show that the greatness of his straits and troubles did not diminish his comfort, but increase it rather. The points are these : — 1. God seeth it necessary sometimes to exercise his people with a great deal of trouble. 2. This trouble may breed great vexation and anguish of spirit, even in a gracious heart. 3. Notwithstanding this trouble and anguish, gracious hearts will manifest their graciousness by delighting in the word. 4. They that delight in the word will find more comfort in their 16 SERMONS UPON PSALM CXIX. [$ER. CLX. afflictions than troubles can take from them, or such sweetness as will overcome the sense of all their sorrows. This was always David's help to delight in the word, and this brought him comfort though in deep troubles. For the first point, that God seeth it necessary sometimes to exercise his people with a great deal of trouble. Though they are highly in favour with God, yet they have their share of troubles as well as others. This is true if you — 1. Consider the people of God in their collective body and com munity, which is called the church. It is the church's name : Isa. liv. 11, 12, ' Oh thou afflicted, and tossed with tempest ! ' Names are taken a notionibus ; things are known and distinguished by their name ; it is one of ,the way-marks to heaven : Acts xiv. 22, ' Through many tribulations enter into the kingdom of God ; ' as the way to Canaan lay through a howling wilderness. If we were told before that we should meet with such and such marks in our journey to such a place, if we found them not, we should have cause to suspect we were out of our way. From the beginning of the world, the church hath always been bred up under troubles, and inured to the discipline of the cross : Ps. cxxix. 1, ' Many a time have they afflicted me from my youth, may Israel now say/ The spirit of enmity wrought betimes. The first family that ever was in the world yielded Abel the proto- martyr, and Cain the patriarch qf unbelievers. While the church kept in families, the outward estate of God's people was worse than their neighbours. Abraham was a sojourner, though owned and blessed by God, when the Canaanites were possessors, and dwelt in walled towns. Jacob's family grew up by degrees into a nation, but Esau's presently multiplied into many dukes and princes. And as they grew up, they grew up in affliction. Egypt was a place of retreat for them for a while, but before they got out of it, it proved a house of bondage. Their deliverance brought them into a wilderness, where want made them murmur, but oftener wantonness. But then God sent fiery serpents, and broke them, and afflicted them with other judgments. After forty years' wandering in the wilderness, they are brought into Canaan, a land of rest ; but it afforded them little rest, for they forfeited it almost as soon as they conquered it ; it flowed with milk and honey, but mixed with gall and wormwood. Their story, as it is delivered in the book of God, acquaints you with several varieties and intermixtures of providence, till wrath came upon them to the utmost, till God saw fit to enlarge the pale and lines of communication by treating with other nations. Now, if the Old Testament church were thus afflicted, much more the New. God discovered his appro bation and improbation then more by temporal mercies and temporal judgments. The promises run to us in another strain ; and since life and immortality were brought to light in the gospel, we must not expect to be so delicately brought up as never to see an evil day. He hath told us, 2 Tim. iii. 12, ' We must be conformed to our head/ Horn. yiii. 29 ; and expect to pledge Christ in his bitter cup, and our condition must inform us that our hopes were not in this world, 1 Cor. xv. 19. In the gospel dispensation God would deal forth temporal blessings more sparingly, and spiritual with a fuller hand ; the ex- TER. 143.] SERMONS UPON PSALM cxix. 17 perience of all ages verifieth this. When religion began first to fly abroad into all lands, the pagans first persecuted it, and then the pseudo- Christians ; the holiest and best people were maligned, and bound, and butchered, and racked, and stoned, but still they multiplied. It were easy to tire you with various instances in every age. Those that went home to God were those that came out of tribulations, and had washed their robes, and made them white in the blood of the Lamb, Rev. vii. 14. There is always something set afoot to try God's servants, and in the latter times the roaring lion is not grown more gentle and tame, rather more fierce and severe : Eev. xii. 12, ' For the devil is come xiii. 15, Though he slay me, yet will I trust in him/ Not only VEE. 146.] SERMONS UPON PSALM cxix. 57 when our affections are bribed : a child of God should love God for his judgments, as well as fear him for his mercies ; as lime, the more water you sprinkle upon it, the more it burneth. It was a high expression of Bernard's affection to those that he took to be the people of God, Adhcerebo vobis etiamsi velitis etiamsi nolitis ; so should we adhere to God now. When you can only wait on him in the way of his mercies, not in the way of his j udgments, your waiting and praying is discouraged upon every difficulty and disappointment, you have little love to him. [4.] Want of patience, or tarrying God's leisure till the promise bring forth. Some are hot and hasty ; if God will appear presently they can be content to observe him ; but to be crying and crying till their throat be hoarse and weary of crying, and no good come on it, they cannot away with this : 2 Kings vi. 33, ' This evil is of the Lord ; why should I wait on the Lord any longer ? ' They are discontented that God maketh them stay so long. Though God wait long upon them, and had reason enough to take the discouragement and be gone, yet they cannot tarry a little for God, and think prayer a useless work, unless it yield them a quick return, and that it is better to shift for themselves. Use. Keproof to two sorts : — 1. To those that cease praying or crying to God, if they have not a present answer, especially if they meet with a contrary rebuke in the course of his providence. You must cry, and cry again, not imagine that God will be at your beck ; but foolish men suddenly conclude, Mai. iii. 14, 'It is in vain to serve God, and what profit is it that we have kept his ordinance, and that we have walked mournfully before the Lord of hosts ? ' Oh no ! Consider something is due to the sovereignty of God, that we should wait his leisure ; for he is supreme, and will govern the world according to his own will, not ours. And therefore we must stay his time for the mercies we expect : Ps. cvi. 13, 14, ' They soon forgat his word, they waited not for his counsel, but lusted exceedingly in the wilderness, and tempted God in the desert.' And something is due to the stated course of ^ his providence. We cannot expect that God should turn all things upside-down for our sakes, and invert the beautiful order of his dis pensations : Job xviii. 4, ' Shall the earth be forsaken for thee, and the rock removed out of his place ? ' shall God alter the course of nature, or change the order of governing the world for us, or to please our humour ? Something is due to the present estate of mankind, who are not to live by sense, but by faith: Hab. ii. 3, 4, ' For the vision is yet for an appointed time, but at the end it shall speak, and not lie : though it tarry, wait for it, because it will surely come, it will not tarry. Behold, his soul which is lifted up, is not upright in him : but the just shall live by his faith.' And that appointed time is for our trial, to see if we out of duty and principles of faith, can keep up our respects unto God, though his providence doth not presently gratify our desires or satisfy our necessities. Besides, it concerneth us to suspect ourselves rather than to blemish God's dispensations. Those always complain most of God's not hearing prayer who least deserve to be heard: Isa. Iviii. 3-5, * Wherefore 58 SERMONS UPON PSALM CXIX. [SER. CLXIV. have we fasted, say they, and thou seest not ? Wherefore have we afflicted our soul, and thou takest no knowledge ? Behold, in the of your fast you find pleasure, and exact all your labour : behold, vou fast for strife and debate, and to smite with the fist of wickedness, ye shall not fast as ye do this day, to make your voice to be heard on high. Is it such a fast that I have chosen ? a day for a man to afilict his soul? is it to bow down his head like a bulrush, and to spread sackcloth and ashes under him ? wilt thou call this a fast, and an acceptable day to the Lord ? ' 2. That though they do not cease praying, yet do they not pray with any life and hope, because of his delays and seeming denials. There are certain general blessings which we are always praying for, because though we have them, yet we ought daily to ask them of God ; the continuance of them, the sense of them, the increase^ of them ; here never cease praying, There are other particular blessings, that either concern ourselves, or the church of God, which we are to ask with earnestness, and yet submission : in these we put it to the most sensible trial whether God will hear us or no. Now for these things we must seek the face of God with hope and zeal. [1.] Because it is not enough to keep up the duty, unless we keep up the affections that must accompany the duty : Eom. xii. 12, ' Con tinuing instant in prayer,' Trpoo-KapTepovvres. In long afflictions men will pray, but they pray as men out of heart, for fashion's sake, or with little and weak affection ; rather satisfying their consciences than setting a-work the power of God. [2.] A seeming repulse or denial should make us more vehement ; as blind Bartimeus, ' the more they rebuked him, he cried so much the more/ Mark x. 48. God suffereth the faith of his servants to be tried with great discouragements ; but the more it is opposed, the more should it grow, and the more powerfully and effectually should it work in our hearts ; as the palm-tree shooteth up the faster the more weight is hung upon it ; or as fire, the more it is pent up, the more it striveth to break out ; therefore we should not only have fresh affections at first, but in every new prayer we should act over our faith again, and put forth spiritual desires anew. [3.] ^God's dearest children are not admitted at the first knock : Mat. vii. 7, 'Ask, and it shall be given you; seek, and ye shall find ; knock, and it shall be opened unto you.' It may be we have not at first asking ; we need seek and knock. Mercy doth not come to us all in haste ; we have not at first what we lack ; delays are no denials ; therefore we must not take the first or second answer, but continue with instance : ' Give the Lord no rest/ Isa. Ixii. 7. Be importunate with him, to hasten the deliverance of his people. [4.] We must not only continue praying when Christ seemeth to gleet us, or to give no answer, but when he giveth a contrary answer ; when he, to Appearance, rejecteth our persons and prayers, and seemeth to forbid us to pray. {Sometimes he seemeth to neglect us, and pass by as if he took no notice ; but yet he heareth when he doth not iswer ; yea, his not answering is an answer. Pray, or continue your 'rayer. It is said, Mark vi. 48, < He saw them toiling in rowing, for the wind was contrary to them ; and about the fourth watch of the VER. 146-.] SERMONS UPON PSALM cxix. 59 night he cometh unto them, walking upon the sea, and would have passed by them.' But he came with an intent to appease the storm and help them. Christ taketh notice of the distresses of his people, but they shall not know so much, but delayeth to help till all their patience be spent, and yet then seemeth to pass by, for their thorough trial and exercise, and to move them more earnestly to pray. Some times he giveth them a seeming contrary answer and rebuke ; instead of an expression of favour, he seemeth to pursue us in anger. God is the main party against us, we have to do with an offended God ; but yet we should not quit him, but follow him when he seemeth to forsake us, and fly to him when he is pursuing us in hot displeasure. Such is the admirable power of faith that it dares call on an angry God, and follow him when he goeth away from us, and lay hold on him when he smiteth, and cast itself into his arms in the midst of his rebukes and frowns : Jonah ii. 4, ' Then I said, I am cast out of thy sight ; yet will I look again towards thy holy temple.' God seemeth to cast us off, as those he will not favour or care for, which is a great trouble to a child of God, who liveth by his favour, and valueth that above all things else : now for such a one to be rejected by God in his own sense and feeling, it goeth near his heart ; yet in such a case we should not cast away our confidence, nor give over all addresses to God, but yet look to him and wait upon him. [5.] Whether God answereth or no, it is the duty of faith to answer itself. The answer of his providence is not so sure as the answer of his word, and that faith hath to do with. See Ps. vi. 4, ' Keturn, 0 Lord; deliver my soul ; save me, for thy mercies' sake.' Compare ver. 8, 9, ( The Lord hath heard the voice of my weeping : the Lord hath heard the voice of my supplications; the Lord will receive my prayer.' When trembling for fear of wrath, yet in prayer his heart groweth confident as if it had received news of an answer from heaven : Ps. Iv. 2, ' Attend unto me, and hear me;' compared with ver. 19, ' My God shall hear, and afflict them.' He is confident of it that the prayer should not miscarry. So Ps. liii. 1, 2, ' Deliver me from mine enemies, 0 my God ; defend me from them that rise up against me ; deliver me from the workers of iniquity, and save me from bloody men ; ' ver. 10, ' The God of my mercy shall prevent me ; God shall let me see my desire upon mine enemies/ Faith sees its own deliverance in the pro mise and all-sufficiency of God. When we have prayed according to God's will, we should take our prayer for granted, and leave it lying at God's feet : 1 John v. 14, ' And this is the confidence that we have in him, that if we ask anything according to his will, he heareth us.' God's delay is not always an argument of his hatred, but some more glorious purpose which is to be helped on by prayer : John xi. 5, 6, ' When he had heard therefore that he was sick, he abode two days still in the same place where he was.' I observe again, that he not only repeateth his prayer, but reneweth the promise of obedience, to show that it was no vanishing notion, but a settled conclusion; as Christ maketh Peter profess his love thrice to engage him the more, John xxi. So David, ' I will keep thy statutes ;' and again, ' I will keep thy testimonies ; ' as if he had said, Indeed Lord, I will ; it is the settled purpose of my heart (JO SERMONS UPON PSALM CXIX. [SER. CLXVI. to return to thee in the sincere obedience of my whole life. The note is — Doct. That purposes and promises of obedience should not be slightly made, but with the greatest advertency and seriousness of mind. 1. Because we are usually too slight in devoting ourselves to God : Deut. v. 27-29, ' Go thou near, and hear all tha^ the Lord our God shall say ; and speak thou unto us all that the Lord our God shall speak unto thee, and we will hear it, and do it. And the Lord heard the voice of your words when you spake unto me, and the Lord said unto me, I have heard the voice of the words of this people, which they have spoken unto thee ; they have well said, all that they have spoken. Oh, that there were such an heart in them, that they would fear me, and keep all my commandments always, that it might be well with them, and with their children for ever.' The Israelites again, when Joshua puts them to the question whether they would serve the Lord or other gods, Joshua xxiv. 18, 19, * We will serve the Lord, for he is our God. Joshua said unto them. Ye cannot serve the Lord, for he is an holy God/ What is the reason men are so slight ? Partly because they measure their strength by the present pang of devotion that is upon them, not considering the latent principle of sin, and that proneness to transgress that is in their hearts. Partly they take up duty by the lump, and the general bulk and view of it, without sitting down and counting the charges, as Christ advises, Luke xiv. ; whether they can be content to bear difficulties, renounce lusts, crucify the flesh with the affections and lusts thereof. A foolish builder doth not think of storms, Mat. vii. ; if his building stand for the present, he is satis fied. Partly because men will promise God fair to be rid of the present anguish and troubles, yield to anything to be out of the present danger ; but when they are out, they seldom regard the vows of their distress ; as those, Ps. Ixxviii. 34-37, made great promises, ' but their heart was not right with God, neither were they steadfast in his covenant/ Partly too when they are out of a temptation, and lusts are not stirring, they are other men than when in temptation, and so think all will be easy. 2. Because the nature of the work calleth for advertency and seri ousness, because it is a work of the greatest moment, and so must be done with the greatest deliberation. This devoting ourselves to God both entitleth us to all the comforts of Christianity, and engageth us to all the duties of it. It entitleth us to all the comforts ; you enter yourselves heirs to the covenant of grace when you enter into the bond of the holy oath, or give your hand to the Lord to be his people: 1 Cor. nL i?2»' ' £U thing8 are yours' because you are Christ's, and Christ is I you have owned Christ as your dearest Saviour and sove reign Lord, with love, thankfulness, and subjection, and given him the supreme command of your souls, then you are Christ's, and God is irs and all things yours : glory and salvation shall be yours in the world to come; grace, help, maintenance, ordinances, and providences shall be yours in the present world ; and death, as the connection be tween the two worlds, as the passage out of the one into the other, be yours also. ^ It is also the beginning and foundation of all ce, and if this were once seriously and heartily done, other things would succeed the more easily. He that is indeed God's will VER. 146.] SERMONS UPON PSALM cxix. 61 use himself for God's glory and service, and God shall have a share in all that he hath and doth : Kom. xiv. 7, 8, ' None of us liveth to him self, and no man dieth to himself ; for whether we live, we live unto the Lord ; and whether we die, we die unto the Lord ; whether we live, therefore, or die, we are the Lord's.' They came off so freely : 2 Cor. viii. 5, ' And this they did, not as we hoped, but first gave their own selves to the Lord, and unto us by the will of God/ This enliveneth our whole work. It is no hard matter to persuade them that have given up themselves to God to part with anything for God's use. 3. Because of the danger both in regard of sin and judgment, if we do it not aright. [1.] In regard of sin, rash and sudden engagements are seldom sound : Mat. xiii. 20, 21, the stony ground received the word with joy, and forthwith the good seed sprang up, but the blade soon withered. Usually sudden undertakings are accompanied with faint and feeble prosecutions ; and though men are warm and passionate for the present, within a while it corneth to nothing ; all their promises are broken, as tow is burnt in the fire. [2.] In regard of judgment, every consecration implieth an execra tion. If you break with God after you have engaged yourselves to him, your condition is worse ; it aggravateth every deliberate sin, and hastens judgment, for God will avenge the quarrel of his covenant, Lev. xxvi. 25. Better never begin, or the word pass out of your mouths, or thought enter into your heart, unless you be sincere, mean as you say. It is dangerous to alienate things once consecrated ; this is the worst kind of sacrilege, that shall not go unpunished. Use. You see, then, what seriousness we should use in devoting our selves to God, or promising obedience to him. 1. Eemember the, weakness of a creature, that you may resolve in God's strength. 2. Consider incident temptations, whether anything be like to shake you in your covenanted course, that you may arm yourselves against it. 3. Consider your more particular affections ; where the business is like to stick most, there are tender parts. 4. Consider the weight and importance of subjection. He will not be content with a little religiousness by the by, but you must love him with all your heart and all your soul, and serve him with all your might. 5. Consider the strength of your resolution, that you be irrevocably, everlastingly put under the sovereignty and command of God. Thus do, and you will find success and comfort in your deed. Now to the words themselves. There is first an intimation of a prayer ; where — 1. The vehemency, / cried. 2. The object or person to whom, to thee. 1 1 cried/ David keepeth up his fervour. What crying in prayer is I have showed in the former verse. I shall observe now — Doct. That great trouble and sense of danger puts an edge upon prayer, and kindleth our affection in it. When Israel was under sore bondage, God saith, Exod. iii. 6 'I have seen the affliction of my people in Egypt, and have heard their SERMONS UPON PSALM CXIX. [$ER. CLXIV. cry.' Afflictions make us cry in prayer, not only speak. An ordinary affection is vox orationis ; it speaketh to God in prayer ; but a vehe ment affection is clamor orationis, the cry of prayer. Ordinary prayers speak to God, but earnest prayers cry to God ; and though remiss and cold wishes vanish in the air, yet strong cries pierce the heavens. They have a shrill accent, and cannot be kept out from God : Judges iv. 3, ' The children of Israel cried unto the Lord ; for he had nine hundred chariots of iron.' So Judges vi. 5-7, ' They cried to the Lord because of the Midianites, who came up as grasshoppers.' David : Ps. xviii. 6, ' In my distress I called to the Lord, and cried to my God : he heard my voice out of his temple, and my cry came before him, even into his ears.' He prayed not seldom, but often and fre quently ; not slackly, but with fervency and earnestness. 1. Affliction wilt teach men to pray that never prayed before. The rude mariners in a storm called every man upon his god : Qui'nescit orare, discat navigare, Jonah i. 5. Those that neglect God at other times, as if they had no need of him, or pray faintly, are then glad to seek to him for succour and safety : Ps. Ixxiii. 34, ' When he slew them, then they sought him. and inquired early after God/ The natural principle of fear of death and love of self-preservation puts them upon it. So Jer. ii. 27, ' In their affliction they will say, Arise and save us ; ' Judges x. 10, ' And the children of Israel cried unto the Lord, saying, We have sinned against thee ; ' and ver. 14, ' Go, and cry unto the gods that ye have chosen ; let them deliver you in the time of your tribulation.' I. Good ones that prayed before will pray better and oftener, and with greater seriousness. Therefore God puts his own in straits to quicken their affections : Isa. xxvi. 16, 'Lord, in trouble have they visited thee ; they poured out a prayer, when thy chastening was upon them.' So Hosea v. 15, ' I will go and return to my place, till they acknowledge their offence, and seek my face, in their affliction they will seek me early/ When we are pressed hard on all sides, then the throne of grace is more frequented ; we are driven to it. Joab would not come at Absalom's call till he set his barley-field on fire. Use 1. Be content to be cast into such an estate that you may learn to pray ; for, alas ! we are but cursory at other times, but then our necessities whip us to the throne of grace, that was set up for a time >f need ; then is a time to put promises in suit, to make use of our interest m God. We mis-expound the voice of God's providence ; we expound trouble to be his casting off, putting us from him ; they are his voice calling, his hand pulling us to him : it is a time of drawino- nigh we are allowed: Ps. 1. 15, ' Call upon me in a day of trouble? ic clay of trouble is the fruit of sin, a part of the old curse. When nink him, feel him an enemy, he is drawing us nearer to him. mod season to bring God and you together, when our troubles chase the throne of grace. God is not wholly gone, he hath left some what behind him to draw us to himself. v ¥$ ?*A^ ™Pr?veth them that neglect God in their troubles : Dan. Ju » £!8 1S f°me uP°n us> yet w'e have not made our prayer You defer the dispensation; now you should make up >our former negligence. Unprofitableness under the rod is an ill VER. 146.] SERMONS UPON PSALM cxix 63 presage, when God sends a tempest after us. Oh, how frequent and earnest should we be in the practice of this duty ! 1. This is a time proper for it. Prayer is a duty never out of season, though some seasons are proper and solemn to it. God is always to be prayed unto, Job xxvii. 11. When freed from trouble and incon venience we are not freed from prayer ; still we must profess depen dence, subjection, and maintain our communion. But this is a special season : James v. 13, ' Is any one afflicted ? let him pray.' 2. Though afflictions drive us to the throne of grace, yet if we come seriously and heartily, we are not unwelcome to him. Those very prayers which necessity doth extort from us are accepted by God, and valued by him as an acceptable piece of worship. Therefore such as look toward God ought not to be discouraged though afflictions drive them to it, though they sought him not before, or not in good earnest before ; provided that always they find other errands, and be careful to maintain a constant communion with him. Most that are acquainted with God are taken in the briars. Jesus Christ in the days of his flesh had never heard of many, if their necessities had not brought them to him — their palsies, and possessions, and fevers, deaf ness, dumbness; thanks to these as their awakening occasions. A man will say, You come to me in your necessity. God is willing to receive us upon any terms. 3. How desperate in appearance soever our condition seem to be, yet crying will bring relief, or help may be found in God for them that cry to him : Judges iii. 9, ' When they cried, the Lord raised up a deliverer to the children of Israel, who delivered them, even Othniel the son of Kenaz : ' Judges iii. 15, ' And when the children of Israel cried to the Lord, the Lord raised them up a deliverer, Ehud the son of Gera/ So Psalm cvii. ; frequently. From that unto thee. Doct. In our troubles we must have recourse to God, and sue to him by prayer and supplication for help and deliverance in due time. 1. Because he is the author of our trouble. In miseries and afflic tions our business lieth not with men, but God ; by humble dealing with him we stop wrath at the fountain-head. He that bindeth us must loose us ; he is at the upper end of causes, and whoever be the instruments of our trouble, and how malicious soever, God is the party with whom we are to make our peace ; for he hath the absolute disposal of all creatures, and will have us to acknowledge the dominion of his providence, and our dependence upon him. In treaties of peace between two warring parties, the address is not made to private soldiers, but to their chief : ' The Lord hath taken away/ saith Job, chap, xxxiv. 29; 'when he giveth quietness, who then can make trouble ? ' 2. He challengeth this prerogative to be the God of salvation : Ps. iii. 8, ' Salvation belongeth unto the Lord ; ' and therefore, if we would be saved, we must seek it of him. Others cannot help if he help not, for he hath all means and creatures and second causes at his command. If we lean to means, they may fail, but if we rely upon God, he will never fail. Therefore, whatever means God offereth for our help, prayer to God is the best means, and first to be used. tJ.| SERMONS UPON PSALM CXIX. [SER. CLXIV. 3. There is comfort in dealing with God, whatever our case be. (1.) Because of his all-sufficient power. (2.) Because of his good will and readiness to help. [l.j Because of his power and all-sufficiency, so that he hath ways of deliverance more than we know of, and can save his own when men do count their case desperate : Dan. iii. 29, ' There is no other God that can deliver after this sort.' Let the strait be never so great, the burden heavy, and the creature weak, and at a desperate loss, yet God can find out ways and means to do his people good. [2.] For his good- will and readiness to hear : Ps. Ixv. 2, ' Oh, thou that nearest prayer, unto thee shall all flesh come/ The readiness of God to hear prayer doth open a door of access to all people who are sensible of their burdens and necessities. He hath ever showed him self ready to hear tfee cries and groans of his people, and woe be to them against whom they cry : Ps. xxii. 5, ' They cried unto thee, and were delivered.' Their cries and groans are not hid from him, and cannot be shut out: Ps. cvi. 44, 'Nevertheless he regarded their affliction, and he heard their cry.' Use. 1. To reprove divers sorts. 1. Some seek to help themselves by impatiency, fretting, unquiet behaviour in their troubles ; this doth increase their misery. Go, pour out your hearts before the Lord, that giveth ease : Phil. iv. 6, 7, * Be careful for nothing, but in everything by prayer and supplication, with thanksgiving, let your requests be made known unto God ; and the peace of God, which passeth all understanding, shall keep your hearts and minds, through Christ Jesus/ Your wrestling with trouble within yourselves doth but embroil you the more. 2. Some trust in outward helps, seek to men and means ; as Asa to the physicians, not to the Lord, 2 Chron. xvi. 12. It is not unlawful to use means, but we must depend upon the Lord for the blessing. Seek to him first, otherwise looking to man proveth a snare many ways, as it tempts us to comply with their lusts, to neglect God, maketh way for the greater sorrow in disappointment. The creature is vain in itself, made more vain by our confidence: Ps. Ix. 11, ' Give us help from trouble, for vain is the help of man/ You will be brought to it at last. The more earnestly we seek God, the more confidence we may have of the creature. Use 2. To inform us of the privilege and duty of the godly. 1 heir privilege; they have a God to go to. The worldly man gheth and crieth he knoweth not to whom ; but the godly man pre- eth himself in his lamentations to God: 'My friends scorn me, but mine eye poureth out tears unto God,' Job xvi. 20. He hath a Father m secret, a Friend in a corner ; they need not go to men, nor saints and angels; they have God himself, and can challenge him !>£ his office as the judge of the world, to help poor creatures: Ps. xciv. 2, Lift up thyself, thou judge of the world ; render a reward to 1 P^U - ,' by hls l^culiai> relation to them : Ps. v. 2, ' Hearken o the voice of my cry, my king and my God; for unto thee will I relation with them ^ "^ ^ M a stranSer' but one ia covenant 2. Their duty to make God their guardian and saviour in all their VER. 14G.] SERMONS UPON PSALM CXIX. 65 distress, when in their own sense they are near perishing : Mark viii. 26, 'Arise, save us, we perish;' 2 Kings xix. 19, 'Now therefore, 0 Lord our God, I beseech thee, save us out of his hand; that all the king doms of the earth may know that thou art the Lord God, even thou only.' When they have a good cause and a good conscience, this they may do and this they ought to do, and they will have comfort in it. The last thing which I shall observe is — Doct. That prayer for deliverance should be accompanied with serious purposes of obedience. ' Then/ saith David, ' I will keep thy testimonies.' 1. Because this is the best expression of gratitude and thankfulness. I take it for granted that every mercy from God deserveth a thankful return on the creature's part ; as we expect a return of our prayers, so God expecteth a return of his mercies ; and therefore we should be as careful to give him what he requireth, as we are careful to seek of him that which we need ; for even in our commerce with God there is ratio dati et accepti. I presume, again, that there is noftuch expression of thankfulness as obedience. Verbal thanks are but a cold return ; thanks-doing is the best thanksgiving : Ps. 1. 23, ' He that offereth praise glorifieth me, and to him that ordereth his conversation aright will I show the salvation of God.' Yea, once more, that we should think of this aforehand ; while we are asking the mercy in our distress, we should engage ourselves to glorify God both in word and deed. Again, the time that we have our mercies for ; in affliction we consider and are more serious, and afterwards we should keep the conscience of our obligation. 2. It is a sign the rod hath done its work, and then it will be gone, when it hath convinced you of former failings, and put you upon serious purposes : Job xxxiv. 31, 32, ' Surely it is meet to be said unto God, I have borne chastisement, I will offend no more. That which I see not, teach thou me : if I have done iniquity, I will do no more.' Otherwise what we ask of temporal mercy is either denied us or we get it in wrath. 3. You have a true notion of deliverance ; you look upon it as an engaging mercy ; therefore if God alter your condition you are bound to serve him. The end of our great deliverance is service : Luke i. 74, 75, ' That he would grant unto us, that we, being delivered out of the hands of our enemies, might serve him without fear, in holiness and righteousness before him all the days of our life.' All deliverances out of straits are branches and appendices of the great redemption of our souls unto eternal life, and have the same end and use : Ps. cv. 45, ' That they might observe his statutes and keep his laws/ That is the end of all deliverance out of trouble, to engage the hearts of his people to obedience, heart to serve him, opportunity to serve him. 4. A gracious heart desireth nothing to himself alone, and cannot be content to have the use of any benefit to himself only, but eyes God in all his enjoyments and all his requests ; therefore his great aim is that he may be in the better condition to keep God's commandments, for they ' live unto God ;' Kom. xiv. 7, 8, ' For none of us liveth unto him self, and no man dieth unto himself ; for whether we live, we live unto the Lord ; and whether we die, we die unto the Lord ; whether we YOL. IX. E 66 SERMONS UPON PSALM CXIX. [SfiB. CLXV. live therefore or die, we are the Lord's/ In every state they would be unto God what they are when they seek to be delivered ; it is that they may be in the better condition and capacity to serve God, and have more opportunities to glorify his name. Use. To persuade us to seek deliverance with these aims. 1. This is the temper of the people of Godj that which urgeth to prayer is his glory ; tnat which is their scope is his service. It is seen partly by the secret workings and purposes of their souls, what they do with their mercies when they have them ; what they please themselves with in the supposition of obtaining them. What is it with ? The satisfying of their revenge, providing for their families, living in pomp and ease, or that they may serve God ? Ps. Ixxv. 2, ' When I shall receive the congregation, I will judge uprightly ; ' if ever God give an opportunity again! And partly by the preparations ; they are afraid of a treacherous heart, therefore fitting themselves to enjoy the mercy before they have it, as the apostle learned to abound, Phil. iv. 11, 12. Partly by the argdhients they urge in prayer: Ps. Ixxxviii. 10-12, ' Wilt thou show wonders to the dead ? shall the dead arise and praise thee ? shall thy loving-kindness be declared in the grave, or thy faith fulness in destruction ? Shall thy wonders be known in the dark, and thy righteousness in the land of forgetfulness ?' So Ps. cvi. 47, ' Save us, 0 Lord our God, and gather us from among the heathen, to give thanks unto thy holy name, and to triumph in thy praise.' A true believer would have comfort, not for his own satisfaction, but to glorify God. 2. Then we are sure to 'speed when our end is right : James iv. 3, * Ye ask and receive not, because ye ask amiss, that ye may consume it upon your lusts/ We may speak it with confidence, our prayers mis carry for want of a right end. 3. The equity of this ; God hears us that we should hear him. SERMON CLXV. I prevented the dawning of the morning, and cried: I hoped in thy ivord. — VEB. 147. DAVID still goeth on to give us an account of his fervour in prayer, ' I cried.' That which we have new in this verse is — 1. His vigilancy and diligence, I prevented the dawning of the morn ing, and cried. 2. The reason and encouragement of this instant and assiduous praying, I hoped in thy word. First, His vigilancy and diligence, « I prevented/ Ac. He rose betimes to meditate and pray ; the Septuagint, eV awpia. Hesychius defineth that time to be wpav aTrpa/crov, a time of no business ; when others were deeping David was praying. The word ' prevented' is emphatical. ivid lived as it were in a strife with time, being careful it should not overrun him ; he pressed to get before it, by doing some good in it, and to get beforehand with the day. VER. 147.] SERMONS UPON PSALM cxix. 67 Doct. Those that make a business of prayer will use great vigilancy and diligence therein. I say, that make a business of prayer ; others that use it as a com pliment and customary formality will not be thus affected, or do it as a thing by the by, or a work that might well be spared, do not look upon it as a necessary duty ; but if a man's heart be in it, he will be early at work, and follow it close morning and night. His business is to maintain communion with God ; his desires will not let him sleep, and he gets up early to be calling upon God : Ps. Ixxxviii. 13, ' But unto thee have I cried, 0 Lord, and in the morning shall my prayer prevent thee.' Thus will good men even break their sleep to give themselves to prayer and calling upon the name of God. So Isa. xxvi. 9, ' With my soul have I desired thee in the night, and with my spirit within me will I seek thee early/ A man that hath an earnest desire after God, he will be at it night and day, when others are taking their rest. Their seeking of God is early and earnest ; but where such strong desires are not, God is little minded and regarded ; and of all busi nesses prayer seemeth that which may be best spared. That I may fully commend David's practice to you, I shall observe in this his diligence : — 1. That it was a personal, closet, or secret prayer, ' I cried/ I alone, with thee in secret. 2. That it was an early morning prayer, ' I prevented the dawning of the morning.' 3. That it was a vehement and earnest prayer, for it is expressed by crying, which, as Chrysostom saith, noteth ov rovov rfjs tfwvfjs a\\a TT)? Siavotas rrjv SidOeaw — Chrys. in Ps. v. He proveth it by that of God to Moses, ' Wherefore criest thou unto me ? ' Exod. xiv. 15. And when Moses was silent, yet he crieth ; for crying noteth the affection of the mind, not extension of the voice. Where I shall note, that it was an earnest prayer, though private ; and earnest, though as yet he could get no answer. 4. That it was the prayer of a public person, of a king, and a king entangled in wars, whose calling exposed him to a multitude of business and distractions ; yet he had his times of converse with God. Take all this together, and the pattern will be more fit to be com mended to your imitation. First, It was a personal or secret prayer, ' I cried,' I alone, and without company. Our Saviour doth in Mat. xviii. 19, 20, encourage us to public prayer, by the blessed effect of such petitions, where two or three do agree to ask anything of God in the name of Christ. He doth suppose that his disciples will make conscience of personal and solitary prayer, and therefore giveth directions and encouragement about it : Mat. vi. 6, ' But when thou prayest, enter into thy closet, and when thou hast shut thy door, pray to thy Father which seeth in secret, and thy Father which seeth in secret will reward thee openly/ He taketh it for granted that every one of his disciples is sufficiently convinced of being often with God in private, and pouring out his heart to God alone. It is not if, but iohent as supposing they will be careful of this ; it is not plurally and collectively, * when ye pray,' but orav TTpoo-ev'xrj ' when thou prayest.' Elsewhere the context speaketh 68 SERMONS UPON PSALM CXIX. [SEB. CLXV. of public prayer, or the assemblies of saints and of family worship ; but here he spcaketh of personal prayer. Church prayer hath a special blessing, when with a combined force we besiege heaven ; as the petition of a shire and county is more than a private man's sup plication ; but yet this is not without its blessing. God is with you in private. Pray to thy Father in secret, and he that seeth in secret observeth the carriage and posture and frame of thy spirit ; all thy fervour and uprightness of heart is known to him. That which is the hypocrite's fear, that God seeth in secret, is the saint's comfort, that God seeth in secret : it bindeth condemnation upon the thoughts of wicked men, 1 John iii. 21, but is their support, John xxi. 17; Horn. viii. 17, ' He that searcheth the heart knoweth the mind of the spirit.' He knoweth the brokenness or unbrokenness of the heart ; he can pick out the very language of thy sighs and groans, know where thou art, and how thou art employed : Acts ix. 11, 'Arise and go into the street which is called Strait, and inquire in the house of Judas for one Saul of Tarsus, for behold he prayeth.' In such a street, in such a house, in such a chamber of the house, there is one a-praying: a notable place to express God's seeing in secret, where we are, what we do, and how affected. And then his reward is another encouragement ; lie will reward thee openly, grant thee what thou prayest for, or bless thce for the conscionable performance of this duty. Openly, either by a sensible answer of thy prayers, as Dan. ix. 20-22; or with an evident blessing, as Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, in the eyes of the world; God highly favoured them. A secret prayer hath an open blessing ; or in convincing the consciences of men ; Pharaoh sendeth for Moses and Aaron when in distress. The consciences of wicked men are convinced that God's praying children have special audience with him ; no magicians sent for then, but Moses and Aaron. Thus God may reward them openly : 1 Sam. ii. 30, ' Those that honour me I will honour.' But chiefly at the day of judgment: Luke xiv. 14, * He shall be recompensed at the resurrection of the just.' Then is the great reward of Christians, and most public : ' Then shall every man have praise of God,' 1 Cor. iv. 5. Thus you see how our Lord encourageth us to closet prayer. But let us see other arguments to engage us to this duty. 1. All the precepts of prayer do include closet prayer : ' Continue in prayer, and watch in the same with thanksgiving/ Col. iv. 2; Pray without ceasing,' 1 Thes. v. 17. First God's precepts fall upon igle persons before it falleth upon families and churches ; for God consulereth us first as persons apart, and then in our several com binations and societies in joining with others. The duty is rather iposed upon us than taken up by voluntary choice ; and that only at stated times, when they can conveniently meet. If we are to continue in prayer, and to pray without ceasing, we are to make conscience ourselves of. being often with God. Every person that acknowledge^ Uod, that hath a Father in heaven, must come and profess his dependence upon him. 2. The example of Christ, which beareth the force of a law in things Hal We read often of Christ's praying : Mark i. 35, ' He went oSt into a solitary place to pray ; ' and Mat. xiv. 23, and Luke vi. 12, we VER. 147.] SERMONS UPON PSALM cxix. 69 read he prayed a whole night to God. Now let us improve this instance. Christ had no such need of prayer as we have ; the God head dwelt in him bodily ; nor such need of retirement ; his affections were always in frame ; yet he went out from the company of his disciples to pray alone to God. This pattern is very engaging, for if we have the spirit of Christ, we will do as Christ did ; and very encouraging, for by submitting to this duty he sanctifieth it for all : his steps drop fatness, and leave a blessing and virtue behind him. And it assureth us of his sympathising with us ; he is acquainted with the heart of an earnest supplicant ; and it is some comfort against our imperfections ; when we are with God, and our hearts are as heavy as a log, it is a comfort to think of this particular part of his righteous ness by which our defects are covered. 3. I shall urge it from God's end in pouring out the Spirit, that we may pray apart, and mourn apart over our distempers and personal necessities, Zech. xii. 10-14. Many will say they have no gifts ; certainly they that feel their necessities will speak of them in one fashion or another. But this cuts off the objection. The Spirit is given to help thee : I will pour upon them the Spirit of grace and supplication, and they shall mourn apart. Such is God's condescension to the saints, that he hath provided for them not only an advocate but a notary ; a notary to draw up their petitions, and an advocate to present them in court. And surely the gifts of the Spirit should not lie by idle and useless. 4. I might urge you too from the practice of the saints, who are called God's suppliants, Zeph. iii. 10 ; the generation that seek him, Ps. xxiv. 6. They delight in God's company, and cannot be content to stay away long from him. Daniel had his three times a day, Dan. vi. 10. So David : Ps. Iv. 17, ' Evening and morning an$ noon will I ^ray and cry aloud, and he shall hear my voice.' And ' Seven times a day will I praise thee,' Ps. cxix. 164. And Cornelius prayed to God always, Acts x. 2 ; not only with his family, but sometimes alone for his family. They that have a habit of prayer will be thus affected. Now, to be altogether unlike the people of God giveth just cause of suspicion. 5. Shall I add our own private necessities, which cannot be so feelingly spoken to by others, do challenge such a duty at our hands, or it may be are not so fit to be divulged and communicated to them : 1 Kings viii. 38, ' There is the plague of our own hearts.' Paul had his thorn in the flesh : 1 Cor. xii. 7, ' I sought the Lord thrice.' No nurse like the mother ; none so fit feelingly to lay forth our case to God as ourselves. Private prayer it is a help to enlargement of heart, for the more earnest men are, the more they desire to be alone : Jer. xiii. 17, ' My soul shall weep sore in secret places.' Christ went from his disciples in his agony, when he would pray more earnestly, Luke xxii. 41, 42. Strong affections are loath to be disturbed, and seek retirement. Jacob sent away his company when he wrestled with God, Gen. xxiii. 24. Oh ! then, let all this be considered by you. If you neglect closet addresses to God, you wrong God and yourselves. You wrong God, because it is a necessary part of the creature's homage to God ; and you wrong yourselves, because such duties bring 70 SERMONS UPON PSALM CXIX. [SEE. CLXV. in a great deal of comfort and peace to the soul, and many sweet and gracious experiences, which are not vouchsafed elsewhere. Bernard saith, The church's spouse is bashful, and Christ will not communicate his loves in company. You are to use acquaintance with God, and so peace shall come to us, Job xxii. 21. It argueth little friendship to God when we seldom come at him, and maintain no personal com merce with him. When we pray with others, we cannot so well tell who is heard as when we pray alone, and see what God will do for our souls : Ps. cxvi. 1, ' I will love the Lord, because he hath heard the voice of my supplication.' You sought earnestly for such a thing, and the Lord heard you. To conclude all, a man will not pray with any savour and delight in public that doth not pray in secret. I observe in Ezekiel's vision the Lord removed from the temple by degrees; first from the \\o\f place to the altar of burnt-offerings, then to the threshold of the house, then to the mountain on the east side of the city ; there it stood hovering as loath to be gone. So first God is cast out of the closet, private intercourses are neglected, then out of the family, and then out of the congregation, and then public ordinances are laid aside as useless ; then are men given up to a strange giddy and vertiginous spirit, and all manner of profaneness. As a tree dies by degrees, first bears no fruit, then no leaves, then no bark ; so carnal Christians die by degrees. Secondly, It was an early morning prayer, ' I prevented the dawn ing of the morning, and cried.' I would not lay a burden upon any one's conscience ; so God have his due at any time of the day, it is enough. In colder climates, those of a weaker constitution may not be able to rise so soon, and therefore if any other time of the day be fittest for commerce, all circumstances considered, it cometh to the same issue. Yet that the morning is our golden time, and should not be neglected out of sluggishness, whatever dispensation there be Jor weakness, these considerations may evince. 1. The example of Christ and his saints. We read of our Lord Jesus Christ, Mark i. 35, ' That in the morning, rising a great while before day, he went out and prayed/ This example bindeth those to receive it that can receive it. If you would take the opportunity of the morning, it deserves to be considered by us how willing Christ was to deny his natural rest to be with God in private. And have not we more need ? And accordingly the saints have practised this : Ps. v. 3, ' My voice shalt thou hear in the morning, 0 Lord ; in the morning direct my prayer to thee, and look up.' Upon which Chrysostom Before thou washest thy hands, wash thy soul by prayer. So ggain, Ps. hx. 16, ' I will sing aloud of thy mercy in the morning/ David begin his day with praises of God and prayers to him. i' mi \ ' , . they rose UP earl7> and worshipped before t i' mi , . > rshipped before the lx>ra. lhat was their first work, and they were betimes at it. So the rimitive Christians had their hymnos antelucanos, they sung psalms ' <*od and Christ m the morning early, as their persecutors informed mst them See Tertul. Apol. Euseb, &c. Now this is of some sigmnance to Christiana 2. Because whenever we have strong affections to anything, we make our morning work, be it good or bad Good; so Mary and Mary VER. 147.] SERMONS UPON PSALM CXIX. 71 Magdalene came early to the sepulchre of Christ, Mat. xxviii. The disciples, when they came to wait for the promise of the Spirit, they met betimes, for the Holy Ghost fell upon them in the morning : Acts ii. 15, ' For these men are not drunk, as ye suppose, seeing it is but the third hour of the day/ which was about nine of the clock ; and some good time had been spent before, as appears by this speech that was uttered. So Hosea v. 16, 'In their afflictions they will seek me early/ This is their first and chiefest work : that which urgeth the heart most, we shall think of in the morning. The objects that have made deepest impression upon our spirits will present themselves before any images be received from abroad : Prov. vi. 22, ' Bind my law upon thy heart ; when thou walkest, it shall talk with thee/ &c. Abraham, when he went about the work of offering his son Isaac, he rose early in the morning, Gen. xxii. So, for bad things : if a man be worldly, his worldly desires and affections compel him to rise early for their satisfaction, Ps. cxxvii. 3, the drunkard is thinking early of his morn ing draught, to be filled with wine ! Isa. xv. 11, ' Woe to them that rise up early to follow strong drink/ The people, when they were mad upon the calf, Exod. xxxvi. 6, ' They rose up early in the morn ing and offered burnt- offer ings to it/ Whatsoever hath secured its interest in the soul will first urge us. So if prayer be our chief pleasure, it will urge us to be up betimes with God : our delights and affections solicit us in the morning. 3. It is the choicest time of the day, and therefore should be allotted to the most serious and necessary employment. It is the choicest time, partly with respect to the body, because the body is then best refreshed, and our vigour repaired, which is lessened and spent with the business of the day ; our memories quickest, senses readiest, natural faculties most acute. And partly with respect to the mind; our morning thoughts are our virgin thoughts, more pure, sublime, and defecate, usually free from worldly cares, which would distract us in prayer, and will more encroach upon us by our worldly business, and the baser objects which the necessity of our life engages us to con verse with, and be employed about. Certainly the best time should be taken up about the best business ; not in recreations to be sure, for this is to knit plea sure to pleasure, and to wear away the scythe in whetting, not in work ing. They are brutish epicures that rise up from sleep, not to service, but to their sensual delights and vanities ; as the scripture brandeth them that eat in the morning, not for strength, but excess, Eccles. x. 16, 17. The morning is the fittest time for business. Now what business should we do but the most weighty, and that which requireth the greatest heedfulness of soul, which is our communion with God ? 4. Consider, it is profitable to begin the day with God, and to season the heart with some gracious exercise; as David, Ps. cxxxix. 18, ' When I awake, I am still with thee/ It sanctifieth all our other business, as the offering the first-fruits did sanctify the whole lump. And to whom should the first-fruits of our reason and sense restored be consecrated, but to him that gave us all, and is the author and pre server of them ? When the world gets the start of religion, it can hardly overtake it all the day : the first thoughts leave a powerful impression upon it : Micah ii. 1, ' They devise evil upon their beds, 72 SERMONS UPON PSALM CXIX. [SER. CLXV. and when the morning is come they practise it/ With carnal men sin beginneth in the morning, stayeth in the heart all day, playeth in the fancy all night. But if you begin with God in the morning, yon take God along with you all the day to your business and employment. 5. This will be some recompense for the time lost in sleeping : half our lives are consumed in it ; our time is parted between work and sleep. It is the misery and necessity we are subject unto, whilst we are in the body, that so much of our time should be spent without doing anything for God, or showing any act of love and thankfulness to him. None of the other creatures ever stand still, but are always executing and accomplishing the end for which they were made. And in heaven the blessed spirits are always beholding the face of God, and lauding and blessing his name, and need not those intermissions which we bodily creature's do. Now, though this be our necessity, and so no sin to need the refreshings of sleep, yet because so much of our time is lost, by way of recompense, the least that we should do is to take the next season ; and if health and bodily constitution will permit, to prevent the dawning of the morning, and to be as early with God as we can. All the time we can well spare should be given to God. Do but consider, since thou wentest to bed the sun hath travelled many thousand miles to give thee light this morning, and therefore what a shame it is that the sun, being continually in so swift motion, should return and find him turning and tossing in his bed, like a door upon the hinges, Prov. xx. 14, after nature is satisfied with sleep ; and that we should not rise, and own God's mercy in the rest of the night, and sanctify the labours of the day by some serious address to him. This meditation is enforced by Augustine, indecus est Christiana, si radius solis eum inveniat in lecto, posset cnim dicere sol, si potestatem loquendi haberet, Amplius laloravi heri, quam tu : et tamen cum jam surrexerim, tu adkuc dormis. So Ambrose on this text, grave est, si te otiosum radius solis orientis in verecundo pudore conveniat, et lux clara inveniat occulos somnolento adhuc corpore depresses. Thirdly, It was a vehement and earnest prayer ; for saith David, ' I cried.' Observe — Doot. It was earnest, though private ; and it was earnest, though he could get no satisfactory answer. 1. Earnest though private. In all our addresses to God we must be serious ; whether men see or hear or no, God seeth and heareth. A hypocrite hath a great flash of gifts in company, but is strait when alone ; but God's children are most earnest in private, when they do more particularly open their hearts to God, without taking in the necessities of others. Christ when he was withdrawn from his disciples, then he prayed eKrevearepov, ' more earnestly,' Luke xxii. 44. Jacob sent away his company to deal with God in good earnest, and then wrestled i him : illc dolet vere qui sine teste dolet. Peter went out and wept bitterfy. So a Christian trieth it out between God and him, when he hath a mind to plead for his own soul or for the church; lerefore hath no outward reason to move him but conscience and spiritual affectioa The pharisees would pray in the synagogues and corners of the streets; but Christ saith, ' Go into thy closet, and shut the door, and pray to thy Father in secret/ Mat. vi. 7. This is the VER. 147.] SERMONS UPON PSALM cxix. 73 love and confidence we express to our Father in secret. A man may put forth himself with great warmth and vigour before others, that is slight and careless in secret addresses to God. In these secret inter courses we most taste our spirits, and discern the pure workings of affection towards God. A woman that only bemoaneth the loss of her husband in company, but banisheth all thoughts of him when alone, might justly be suspected to act a tragical part, and to pretend sorrow rather than feel it. Some will pray in secret, but customarily utter a few cold words ; but David saith, ' I cried.' Eemember there is one seeth in secret ; as Christ saith, ' I am not alone,' John xvi. 32 ; and Mai. i. 14, he is a God of great majesty ; he will not be put off with anything, with a short good-morrow or a hasty sigh. Consider, if you pray in good earnest, the prayer will not be lost ; there is a register kept in heaven : Acts x. 4, ' Thy prayer is come up as a memorial before God/ Surely a man that belie veth and consulteth these things dareth not be slight, though there be none present but God and his own soul. 2. It was earnest though the answer was delayed : I cried, I cried ; I prevented the dawning of the morning, and cried. The Lord can not away with cold asking and a ceasing upon every repulse. You must continue to pray when God continueth to deny, otherwise you do not pray in faith ; for when the word warrants you to pray, either by way of command or promise, you must not give over. David saith here, ' I cried, for I hoped in thy word.' When providence giveth no answer, you must take your answer out of the covenant or promise, and so answer yourself when God doth not answer you : 1 Sam. xii. 23, ' God forbid that I should sin against the Lord in ceasing to pray for you.' You cannot dispense with your duty, whatever the success be. Sometimes duty keepeth up prayer, sometimes the promise, and so hope of the mercy prayed for; there is no way to bring the promise and the providence of God together but by prayer or putting the promise in suit. Your obedience will be assaulted by the ingratitude of those whom you pray for, and your confidence by God's seeming denials ; therefore, as long as God commandeth, and he promiseth encouragement, you are not to give way, but hold up the suit still, whatever discouragements there be without. A good dog hunts by sight as long as he can see his game, but when that is lost, he hunts by scent. Visible probabilities be a good encouragement to give a lift to the mercy, when it seemeth to be coming on ; but though it be out of sight, faith keepeth the scent of the promise, keeps crying still; he heareth though he doth not answer, and the prayer will not be lost : but of this before. Fourthly, It is the prayer of a public person, who had his distrac tions, and more occasions than we can possibly pretend unto, yet he would not lose his praying hours. This consideration will yield us two notes : — 1. That David had his times of converse with God. 2. That rather than fail of them, he would take them from his sleep. 1. That he had his times of converse with God : Eccles. iii. 1, There is a time for all things/ much more for the best things ; 74 SERMONS UPON PSALM CXIX. [SEE. CLXV. therefore, if you have a time for other things, to eat and drink, and follow your worldly business, surely you should have a time for prayer. Shall we have a time for everything, and no time for God? Certainly we could not want time if we did not want a heart. Many complain they have no time, and many distractions ; if you have no time to pray, you have no time to be saved, no time to maintain the life and comfort and peace of your souls. David had as many employments as thou hast or canst have, therefore it is but a vain excuse. He that will regard what his own sluggish heart will allege, will never pray, never retire or be alone with God : a willing mind will find time in the midst of the greatest distractions ; whomsoever he compounds with and payeth short, he will not make bold with God, and serve him by halves. Look, as David speaks in 1 Chron. xxii. 14, ' Behold, in my trouble I have prepared for* the Lord an hundred thousand talents of gold and a thousand thousand talents of silver.' He was involved in wars, his exchequer impoverished and diminished, yet he kept vast sums for the temple. Surely the lean kine should not devour the fat, nor religion only be thrust out of doors. It is a more happy thing that Martha should complain of Mary than Mary neglect her duty. Holy privacy and closet work should not be neglected. It would be no loss to our other occasions if we did more prudently divide and allot out our time, and give God a good allowance rather than straiten him. Indeed, what part you should give to God is another question. In the general, it is good to dedicate a certain part and portion of our time to the Lord of time. Idle servants must be tasked, and required to bring in their tale of bricks. A prudent allotment, such as is consistent with our occasions and course of life, would be no burden to you. I am sure it will make your duties more seasonable and orderly. It is an expression of love to give him somewhat that is our own. In the general, we are not tied to the seasons of eating and drinking, yet for conveniency we have our stated hours. The most necessary work should have a turn, and not be taken up by chance, and not left to a mere haphazard ; it will make you more careful and watchful how you spend your other hours, that you may not be unfit for duty when your time of worship cometh, 1 Peter iii. 7. Again, though we cannot bind you absolutely to a time, they that are most holy will be most frequent with God. Love will direct. They that love one another cannot be strange to each other : he that loveth God cannot be long out of his company. God trusts love ; that grace is liberal and open-hearted. Christ resorted often to Bethany, because he loved Martha, Mary, and Lazarus, John xi. Lhe bpirit of God will direct you by his motions, Ps. xxvii. 8. bometimes he sendeth you into the closet; your own necessities will put you in mind ; he hath left many wants upon us to bring us into his presence : James i. 5, 'If any man want wisdom/ &c.; Heb. iv. ; Let us come with boldness to the throne of grace, that we may obUun mercy, and find grace to help in a time of need/ The interest > spiritual life directs you ; you cannot maintain it in any vigour but by some recourse to God ; some time God must have. ^ Jiather than fail, he would take it from his sleep. Other busi- VER. 147.] SERMONS UPON PSALM cxix. 75 ness must give way to the great work and interest, especially the most inconsiderable interests of recreation. We are bidden to redeem time, Eph. v. 16, rescue it from meat, sleep, company, and recreation. Surely this is an equitable proposal, let God have as much time every day as thou spendest unprofitably. Do but observe the spending of thy time, and be ashamed that God should have such a little share. Use. Now you see David's instance, let this persuade you to this assiduity and diligence, to be ardent and instant in prayer, taking hold of all opportunities to pursue after God, without whom you can not live : Ps. Ixix. 32, ' Your hearts shall live, that seek God/ We cannot preserve any vitality without this. To press this — 1. Ketire often from company to be alone with God. Public duties are of little profit with us because we neglect private. God com- plaineth of his people, Jer. ii. 32, ' That they have forgotten him days without number.' How many days have gone over your heads, and God never heard from you ! You should no more forget him every day than a bride would forget her ornaments on the wedding-day. 2. Let me lay this before you; you should be betimes with God, that you may not encroach upon your other occasions ; yea, that you may sanctify your other occasions, and be the fitter for it all the day after. Let not the soft enemy of sleep steal away your golden hours, and the flower and choicest part of time. A Christian that makes conscience of his time should not inure himself to a sluggish course, and turn in his bed like a door upon the hinges, if your constitution will bear it, otherwise we lay no blame upon you. The scriptures have many dissuasives from immoderate sleep, Prov. v. 9, xiii. 4, xxvi. 14; vi. 6. To be sure a Christian is to make conscience of time, and how he spendeth it ; and we may sin and surfeit in sleeping as well as in eating and drinking ; and therefore we must watch against the en croachments of ease and sloth, lest a sluggish humour grow natural to us, and a morbid custom that cannot be shaken off. 3. It presseth you to fervency, though in private. As much fer vency, sense, and zeal as you would express before men, so much should we express when alone. The name of God must be sanctified in all that draw near to him, in private as well as in public, otherwise he is scorned rather than honoured ; that it may appear you were sincere in prayer, and have not mean and low thoughts of God, other wise you bring a suspicion upon all your public duties. There may be sometimes more assistance in public, more order and method for edification, but not more ardour and zeal. Pray with fervency, as to an all-seeing spirit. Though the Lord delayeth, yet he intendeth the enlargement of our desires: Lam. iii. 49, 50, 'Mine eye trickleth down and ceaseth not, without any intermission ; till the Lord looks down from heaven and beholds.' If you are soon discouraged you will get nothing. ^ 4. Be sure that God hath his share. If business take up more time than prayer, because of the urgency of bodily necessities, yet ordinarily a man should not spend more time in any pastime and recreations than in religious exercises. It is most equal we should first seek the kingdom of God, and the righteousness thereof, Mat. vi. 33. The most needful duty should have most time bestowed upon it. 76 SERMONS UPON PSALM CXIX. [SER. CLXV. It ;'s an ill character to be ' lovers of pleasure more than lovers of God ' 2 Tim. iv. 3. It is reasonable to give an equal time to God and religion as to sports and delights. Most men have no other thing to do than to eat, drink, and sleep ; if they should compare their re ligion and their recreations, they would soon see what a large share of time one hath above the other. Secondly, We come to the reason and encouragement of his dili- <*ence, / hoped in thy word ; that is, because I have thy word for it, I do not doubt but in time I shall reap the fruit of my prayers. Doct. A lively hope, grounded upon the word of God, will put us upon this vigilancy and diligence in prayer. The reasons are taken — (1.) From the word of God, which is the ground of hope : Ps. cxxx. 5, ' I wait for the Lord, my soul doth wait, and in his word cfo I hope.' And (2.) From the nature of hope, which is the fountain of prayer. First, From the word of God, which serveth for two uses — invita tion and assurance. 1. For invitation, to give us leave to come to the throne of grace. David did not come unbidden or uninvited into God's presence ; he had his word for it ; the promises of the gospel give us liberty, other wise we should not assume the boldness to appear before him : Ps. 1. 15. The word is our warrant, it is as it were the holding out of the golden sceptre : 2 Sam. vii. 27, ' Therefore hath thy servant found in his heart to pray this prayer unto thee.' 2. For assurance and firm confidence ; before the thing promised be Qbtained, God pawneth his word with us, which we must hold till the performance come. Now they that can thus hold it, and believe the promise, will be often in prayer, that the word may be both esta blished to them, 2 Sam. vii. 25, and fulfilled : Ps. cxvi. 10, ' I have believed, and therefore have I spoken.' Secondly, From the nature of hope, which implieth two things, both which have an influence upon prayer — earnest expectation, and patient tarrying the Lord's leisure. 1. Earnest expectation : Phil. i. 20, c According to my earnest ex pectation and my hope/ This exciteth the soul by all means to pur sue after the thing hoped for. When Daniel understood by books that the time was come, then was he vehement and earnest, Dan. ix. 2, 3. Elijah, when he saw a cloud but as big as a man's hand, he saith, 1 Kings xviii. 43, ' Go bid Ahab prepare his chariot ; get thee down, that the rain stop thee not.' What we look for, we will pray for. 2. Patient tarrying. • We read of < the patience of hope,' 1 Thes. i. ; and so, though they seem long delayed, yet hope in the promise will make us wait, and abide the performance of them ; because they are assured they shall find the fruit of them at last. Use. You see how we pray ; the occasion of prayer is necessity, our ities-lead us to the promise; that inviteth us, and giveth us assurance, and yields matter for faith and hope ; that puts us upon okmgand waiting; these two make us pray. When we can join patienham spei cum ardore desiderii ; the earnestness of expectation, keepeth us from sloth or negligence in the use of the means, or * us to call upon God ; and patience, that keeps us from fainting VER. 148.] SERMONS UPON PSALM cxix. 77 or discouragement : hence cometli that earnest diligence and constant unceasing importunity, so as to give God no rest. The belief of God's promises do not make us neglect means, but to be more diligent in the use of them. SERMON CLXVI. Mine eyes prevent the night watches, that I might meditate in thy word. — VER. 148. WE hear before of David's diligence in prayer, now in meditation. His prayer was encouraged by his hope, his hope was fed by the word, and the word improved by meditation ; for he saith, ' I hope in thy word/ and then, ' Mine eyes prevent the night watches/ &c. In the words we have — 1. An account of his vigilancy and diligence, mine eyes prevent the night watches. 2. The duty wherein he was exercised, that I might meditate in thy word. The first branch needeth a little illustration— what is meant by ' night watches/ and what by preventing these night watches. 1. What is meant by 'night watches'? Drusius telleth us that the night among the Hebrews was divided into three watches. The first watch was called the head or beginning of the watches : Lam. iii. 19, ' Arise, cry out in the night, in the beginning of the watches ; pour out thine heart like water before the Lord.' The second was called the middle watch : Judges vii. 19. ' Gideon came to the outside of the camp in the beginning of the middle watch.' The third and last was called the morning watch : Exod. xiv. 24, ' In the morning watch the Lord troubled the host of the Egyptians/ This was the first division of the night among the Hebrews into three watches ; but it seemeth afterwards, when they were acquainted with the Romans, they had four watches; as Mat. xiv. 21, 'In the fourth watch of the night Jesus went to them, walking on the sea/ For every three hours they had a new watch, and according to this latter division they were called, the evening, and the midnight, and the cock-crowing, and the dawning, Mark xiii. 35. Now whether we reckon by the first or second division, it cannot be imagined that David should be wholly without sleep. Rabbi David Kimchi thinketh he gave the first watch to sleep, and the othe* two to the meditation of the word, and that he did this often when the nights were long. I think it is meant of the third and last watch, and so it agreeth with the dawning of the morning men tioned in the former verse ; and this watch, which is called the morn ing watch, did David prevent, getting up early to entertain himself with delightful meditations on the word of God. The Septuagint reads it, ' Early in the morning/ 2. What is meant by preventing the night watches ? Either that he was more careful to awake at several times of the night to meditate on God's word than they to keep their watches who were appointed SERMONS UPON PSALM CXIX. [SfiR. CLXVI. thereunto, or that he did not need to be called upon by them ; for the watchmen were wont to tell them the seasons and watches of the night, but he needed not that help, his own desires and delights awakened him ; so that in effect he saith, When others are so fast asleep that I'ilher they do not wake in the night, or if they do, it is because they are interrupted in their sleep by the noises of the watch or guard, I need no such excitation, ' for my eyes prevent the night watches ; ' sleep flieth from them of its own accord, that my mind may be de lighted with the meditation of God's word. The points are : — 1. From the duty wherein David was exercised, Doct. That meditation on the word of God is one duty that Chris tians should take care to perform. 2. From the season, his eyes prevented the night watches, Doct. A gracious heart will take all occasions to set itself a- work on holy tlungs, and sometimes in the night. 3. From the condition wherein he was ; in some distress, for he saith, ' Save me ;' and his prayers not yet heard, ' I cried, I cried, I cried/ Doct. That it is needful to meditate on God's promises at such a time as our suit hangeth at the throne of grace without grant and effect. The first will give us occasion to speak of the duty of meditation, and the necessity and profit of it. What the duty of meditation is, see sermon upon the 15th verse of this psalm. Secondly, It is a necessary duty, because it is recommended to us by God, among other things enjoined in his word. He complaineth of the neglect of it : Isa. i. 3, ' Israel doth not know, my people doth not consider;' they will not think upon God, nor consider what great things he hath done for them. It is recommended to us in the prac tice of the saints, they sometimes meditate upon God : Ps. Ixiii. 3, ' I remember thee upon my bed, and meditate of thee in the night watches.' ^ When David could not sleep, and had his night rest broken, his thoughts run upon God presently. Sometimes upon the works of God : Ps. cxliii. 5, ' I meditate on all thy works, I muse on the work of thine hands.' On his creation and providence. Some times on the word of God, that part which -sets forth their duty : Ps. 2, ' But his delight is in the law of the Lord, and in that law doth he meditate day and night.' To make the Christian's life more [lerly and comely ; the apostle commands us : Phil. iv. 8, 'To think on these things.' Sometimes on the promises and grounds of faith, ie support of theii souls in a fainting time, as in the text ; especi- illy that part of the word which is brought unto them by the provi dence of God, and so we meditate upon what we read and hear : Luke w ' j ryi kept a11 tllese tm"ngs> and pondered them in her heart.' e ponder things when we consider the weight and moment of them, that our hearts may be affected with them. So Moses : Deut. xxxii. io, And he said unto them, Set your hearts unto all the words which tify among you this day;' Luke iv. 44, ' Let these sayings sink o your ears ; be seriously considered and thought of by you, not be Lost or vanish into the air, or stay in the brain. Inmlly, It is a profitable duty ; it is a help— 1. lo our natural faculties. VER. 148.] SERMONS UPON PSALM cxix. 79 2. To our graces. 3. To our duties. 1. To our natural faculties. To our memories: we complain, of weak memories, but we do not take a right course to cure them. Good things slip from us as water doth through a sieve ; and why ? Because we do not weigh them, and meditate upon them by deep and serious thought. Truths would stay with us longer if we did of tener think on them. So many a conviction is lost : James i. 23, 24, ' For if any man be a hearer of the word and not a doer, he is like unto a man beholding his natural face in a glass, for he beholdeth himself, and straightway forgetteth what manner of man he was/ Many a com fort is lost by neglect : Heb. xii. 5, { And have you forgotten the exhortation which speaketh to you as children ? ' A weak impression is soon defaced. Many a pressing motion is lost for want of a little diligence to fasten it upon the heart : Heb. ii. 1, ' Therefore we ought to give the more earnest heed to the things which we have heard, lest at any time we should let them slip/ Meditation and serious con sideration fasten a truth upon the mind and memory. Deliberate thoughts stick by us, as a lesson well conned is not easily forgotten. Civet long kept in a box, the scent remaineth when the civet is taken out. Sermons meditated upon are remembered long after they are delivered. So for understanding. We have weak understandings, slow to conceive of anything that is spiritual and heavenly ; why ? Because we are so little exercised in the study and contemplation of these things ; whereas our judgments would ripen, and we would grow more skilful in the word of righteousness, if we did often meditate on it : Ps. cxix. 99, ' I have more understanding than all my teachers, for thy testimonies are my meditation. We see things in transits, and know them only by hearsay, without meditation. To move the will we had need deal seriously with our own hearts ere we can gain them to a consent. Thoughts are the spokesmen that make up the match between the soul and the temptation : they were given for the like office in good things ; they are the first acts of the soul to set a- work all the rest. Things lie by till we take them into our thoughts and consideration at leisure, that we may know what is their tendency, and how they concern us. You cannot imagine the gospel should work as a charm, and convert us we know not how, before consent and choice. There is a propounding and debating of terms ; the greatest matters will not work on him that doth not think of them. God and Christ, and heaven and salvation, are looked upon in a cold and remiss manner without this serious consideration. And to excite, and quicken, and stir our affections, meditation is useful. We complain of deadness, and we ourselves are the cause, because we do not rouse up ourselves, excite and compel ourselves, expostulate with ourselves : Isa. Ixiv. 7, ' And there is none that calleth upon thy name, and stirreth up himself to take hold of thee. ' Man hath a power to whet truths upon his own heart, and if we will not make use of it, and reason for God with ourselves, we are justly left under the power of deadness and stupidness of spirit. 2. It is a great help to our graces. (1.) Faith takes root by medi tation: Mat. xiii. 5, ' The seed forthwith sprang upjbecause it had no deepness of earth/ A careless slight heart is no fit soil for faith to 30 SERMONS UPON PSALM CXIX. [SER. CLXVI. grow in. (2.) Hope is made lively by consideration of the thing hoped for. (3.) Charity is inflamed by the sight and frequent view of divine objects in their beauty and amiableness. 3. The duties of religion, reading and hearing, are effectual by meditation. The use is for exhortation, to press you to meditation; it is the mother and nurse of knowledge and godliness, the great instrument in all the offices of grace, otherwise we take up things by hearsay ; this digests them, and maketh them our own. 1. It preventeth vain thoughts, both as it stocketh the heart with truth, for good seed thick set and well rooted destroyeth the weeds, and as it seasoneth the heart with a gracious disposition, and inureth it more to holy thoughts ; whereas those that do not use to meditate, how are their minds pestered with swarms of vain thoughts, which wholly divert it and turn it aside from God ? Man is mindless of holy things, and if they turn into the heart by accident, their enter tainment is cold and careless, as a man would be used that cometh into a house full of enemies. 2. How great an affront is it to God to omit this part of communion with him ; it is irksome to think of him. Saints find it otherwise : Ps. civ. 34, * My meditation of him shall be sweet/ Some, God is said to be near in their mouth, and far from their reins,. Jer xii. 2 ; fre quently spoken of, but seldom considered by them. That soul that hath a sincere and unfeigned love to him will take some time to solace itself with him alone ; to be sure God taketh it kindly at our hand : Mai. iii. 16, ' A book of remembrance was written for them that feared the Lord, and thought upon his name ; ' that have frequent and high thoughts of God in their hearts, without which, love will presently languish and grow cold. 3. What a neglect it is of God's messages of love that you will not consider them : Mat. xxi. 5, ' And they made light of it;' and Heb. ii. 3, ' How shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation.' He hath laid out all his eternal thoughts upon a way of salvation, and manifested it to you, and you entertain it with so much scorn that you will not sot your minds to it, and think it worthy a few sad and sober thoughts. What ? Is it so tedious to think a thought of your own greatest con cernments ? Surely man is strangely depraved to refuse this. 4. What a likely means meditation is to do you good. I know it is the Lord inclineth the heart, and our thoughts work no further than God is in them, yea, he giveth us to think, 2 Cor. iii. 5. But as it is our duty, so it is a very proper means to improve our graces and our comfort ; for a constant, steady, continued view of truth surely will work more than a glance. A transient view cannot leave such an impression upon us as a steady view. We taste things better when they are chewed than when they are swallowed whole. Meditation goeth over things again and again, and prieth into every part. And as it is a constant light, so it is an argumentative consideration of •hings. When one scale is not heavy enough, we put in weight after weight till we gain our point ; bring off the heart from such a vanity, jngage it to such a pursuit by our own arguings with ourselves : Prov. xu. 14, A man shall be satisfied with good by the fruit of his own VER. 148.] SERMONS UPON PSALM cxix. 81 mouth ;' Acts xvii. 11, 12, 'And these were more noble than they of Thessalonica, in that they received the word with all readiness of mind, and searched the scriptures daily, whether these things were so/ Therefore many believed, because they had searched with all readiness of mind. 5. This is an argument should prevail with God's children, that we may know our growth in grace, by the frequency, continuance, and efficacy of holy thoughts. At first good thoughts are few and rare, the heart is so crowded with vanity, that there is no room for God or his word ; for these things keep their interest in the heart and draw the mind after them, so that days pass over our heads and we forget God, Ps. x. 11 ; or if they arise in our minds, they find little entertainment there, but are gone as soon as they come. It is the policy of the enemy of our salvation to draw our minds from one thing to another, that good thoughts may pass over without fruit and benefit ; or if we force ourselves to continue, they do not warm the heart, only weary the brain. But now when truths are ever with us, they improve us : Ps. cxix. 98, ' Thou through thy commandments hast made me wiser than my enemies, for they are ever with me ; ' Prov. vi. 22, ' When thou goest it shall lead thee, when thou sleepest it shall keep thee, and when thou walkest it shall talk with thee.' We have them always ready and at hand. They that are sound at heart can pause with delight on heavenly things. It is a good note of some progress, it is a sign the heart is heavenly, carried out with a strong and prevailing love to heavenly things, that earthly profits and vain pleasures have not such a hand over us as they were wont to have. You have gotten the mastery over your thoughts, that the best and dearest of them you can employ for God, with great fervency and continuance : other matters do not find better welcome, nor so easily jostle them out of doors. By all this it appears it is a most profitable duty. Doct. That a gracious heart will take all occasions to set itself a-work on holy things, and sometimes in the night. David did frequently rouse up himself in the night to solace his soul with thoughts of God ; this was a frequent and cheerful exercise and employment to him. 1. I shall prove this argueth a gracious frame of spirit. 2. Show you some reasons why we should meditate sometimes in the night. 1. It argueth a gracious frame of heart to take all occasions to set our minds a-work on holy things ; for there are three things in it:— [1.] Plenty of divine knowledge ; the heart is well stocked, and can entertain itself without help from abroad : Ps. xvi. 7, ' I will bless the Lord who hath given me counsel ; my reins also instruct me in the night season.' He had laid up a great deal of truth in his reins or inward parts, and when sleep fled from his eyes, out it came. So Prov. vi. 21, ' Bind them continually upon thy heart, and tie them about thy neck ; ' to be always ready and present with us. It is an excellent thing to have a good treasure in our hearts : Mat. xii. 35, ' A good man out of the good treasure of his heart bringeth forth good things.' Many a man's heart is stuffed with vanity, and then he is VOL. IX. F 82 SERMONS UPON PSALM CXIX. [$ER. CLXVI. vain in his thoughts, and vain in his discourses, and vain in his actions ; yea, 'the word of God doth not dwell in him richly/ Col. iii. 16; then your thoughts are very scant and barren ; as he that hath more brass farthings m his pocket than gold or silver, will more easily pull them out at every turn. Our leanness of soul and difficulty to meditate cometh from the want of a stock of knowledge. [2.] It argueth spiritual delight and strong love : Ps. i. 2, ' But his delight is in the law of God, and in that law doth he meditate day and night.' Did we find such comfort as David did, we would break our sleep for that end. He that delights in the word is much conversant in it, for ubi amor ibi animus. All the time his necessities can spare, he will spend it in these private and spiritual exercises. Many men's time hangs upon their hands ; they do not know how to spend the sum mer day nor the winter night ; but one that hath a strong affection to holy things, he rather wants time, such is his solace and delight in God. He beginneth his heaven upon earth, and all the time he can get he is spending this way. But if we find no such comfort and repose of soul in meditation, no wonder that we are so averse from it. Our thoughts follow our affections, delight will set the mind a- work ; when others are sleeping securely, he mindeth his salvation. [3.] It argueth sincerity : Ps. xvii 3, ' Thou hast proved mine heart; thou hast visited me in the night ; thou hast tried me, and shalt find nothing.' In the night when darkness concealeth me from the eyes of men, then I exercise myself in spiritual thoughts. Many put on reli gion as a disguise in the day ; in public actions they personate a zeal, and act a devout part ; but that is to be sincere when God hath a great share in our closest privacies and retirement. 2. Sometimes take the night as a special occasion : Ps. Ixiii. 6, ' When I remember thee upon my bed, and meditate on thee in the night watches ; ' Ps. Ixxvii. 6, ' I call to remembrance my song in the night' There is a double help for meditation in the night — [1.] Solitude, then we are alone, and therefore fittest to meditate, when nobody disturbs us. [2.] The silence of the night is also a help, when nothing is heard or seen to distract attention. Use. What use shall we make of this ? We cannot lay a burden upon your consciences, and by way of absolute necessity exact these nocturnal meditations from you ; only in the general — 1. As much ^ as our strength and natural necessities will permit, we should be meditating night and day. It may be a shame to us that many tradesmen are up afore day to follow their callings, and that they should excel us. The Christians had their morning hymns to Christ in the times of persecution. 2. We may press you to the affection, though not to the season ; to be stored with good matter, and to have a strong delight in this work, and sincerity to make conscience of private duties. 3. If we wake in the night and our rest is broken off, then to exer cise ourselves in holy thoughts. Many times it falleth out that we cannot sleep ; now we should spend the time in meditation and prayer, not in vain thoughts, or entertaining ourselves with carnal musings, or perplexing and anxious thoughts about the troubles that we are under. VER. 149.] SERMONS UPON PSALM cxix. 83 4. If David waked in the night, how much are they to blame that snort and sleep in the day, even in the time of worship, when others are entertaining communion with God. Surely if they had earnest affections this could not always be. The example of Eutychus should deter these ; Acts xx. 9, ' And there sat in the window a young man named Eutychus, being fallen into a deep sleep ; and as Paul was long preaching, he sunk down with sleep, and fell down from the third loft, and was taken up dead ; ' Mat. xxvi. 40, ' What ! could not ye watch with me one hour ? ' Doct. That meditation of the promises is very seasonable when the answer of our prayers is denied. For this is very powerful to support our fainting hopes, and to cheer and revive our drooping spirits. There is support in the word, and comfort in the word ; therefore we should much meditate on the pro mises at such a time. The best holdfast that we have of God is by his promise. Whatsoever his dispensations be, this will give satisfac tion enough. Though you cannot find what you would, his word is certain ; though no appearance of performance, his word is sure enough to fasten upon. The grounds of faith are more sweet and satisfactory the more they are examined and looked upon. SEKMON CLXVIL Hear my voice, according to thy loving-kindness : 0 Lord, quicken me according to thy judgment. — VER. 149. IN these words you have — (1.) David's prayer ; (2.) The grounds of his support, or his encouragements in asking. 1. His prayer is double — (1.) General, for audience, ' Hear my voice ; ' (2.) Particular, for quickening, ' Quicken me.' 2. His encouragements and grounds of confidence in asking are also two — (1.) God's loving-kindness ; (2.) His judgment. Both together imply the loving-kindness of God manifested in the word or expressed and engaged in the promises. The points are three : — Doct. 1. One blessing which the children of God do see a need often and earnestly to ask of God is quickening. David ever and anon reneweth his request, and he is loath to be denied ; and therefore, before he saith, ' Quicken me/ he saith, ' Hear my voice.' Doct. 2. The main argument which God's children have to plead in prayer is his own favour and loving-kindness. That is David's argu ment in the text, ' Hear my voice, according to thy loving-kindness/ Doct. 3. The mercy and loving-kindness of God, manifested and impledged in the promises of the gospel, doth notably encourage us to ask help from him ; for David doth not only say, ' According to thy loving-kindness/ but, 'According to thy judgment/ Doct. 1. For the first point, one blessing which the children of God do see a need often and earnestly to ask of God is quickening. Here I shall inquire — 1. What is quickening. £4 SERMONS UPON PSALM CXIX. [SER. CLXVII. 2. Give you some reasons why the children of God do see a need so often and earnestly to ask it of God. First, What is quickening ? 1. By quickening some understand restitution to happiness ; for a calamitous man is as one dead and buried under deep and heavy troubles, and his recovery is a life from the dead, or a reviving from the grave. So quickening seemeth to be taken, Ps. Ixxi. 20, ' Thou which hast showed me great and sore troubles shalt quicken me again, and bring me up from the depths of the earth/ 2. Others understand by quickening the renewing and increasing in him the vigour of his spiritual life. That he beggeth that God would revive, increase, and preserve that life which he had already given, that it might be perfected and consummated in glory, that he might be ever ready to bring' forth the habits of grace into acts. The use which we should make of it is to press you — 1. To be sensible of the temper of your hearts, and see whether you want quickening, yea or no. The feeling of spiritual deadness argueth some life and sense yet left. You have attained to so much of life, and do retain it in such a measure, as to be able to bemoan yourselves to God. Most observe their bodies, but very few their souls : if their bodies be ill at ease or out of order, they complain. Men that go on in a track of customary duties see no need of quickening ; therefore this humble sense is a good sign. Matins and vespers coldly run over never put us upon the feeling of indispositions, but only duties done with some spirit and life, as a smith blows not the bellows on cold iron or a dead coal. Who would seek quickening when not serious in the work ? They that go on in the cold wont of duties never regard the frame of their hearts. 2. When you want quickening, ask it of God. He brought us into the state of life at first, and therefore every moment we must beg of him that he would quicken us, that he would continue it, and perfect his own work : Cant. i. 4, ' Draw me ; we will run after thee/ There is no running, no preserving the vitality of grace, without his renewed influence : Ps. xxii. 29, ' None can keep alive his own soul.' There fore, when we find this deadness or decay of life, to whom should we go but to the fountain of life to repair it ? No creature doth subsist of itself, or act of itself. 3. Ask it earnestly. David prefaceth a general prayer before this request, and saith, ' Hear my voice/ as loath to be denied. Many ask it of course, rather use it as a mannerly form when they are entering upon holy duties, than a broken-hearted request. See you desire it heartily : Ps. cxix. 40, ' Behold, I have longed after thy precepts ; quicken thou me in thy righteousness/ A man's heart is set upon it, and will not sit down with the distemper, as contented and satisfied with a dead frame of heart: quickening is for longing souls, that would fain do the work of God with a more perfect heart. 4. Expect this grace in and through Jesus Christ, who came down from heaven for this end : John x. 10, ' I am come that they might have life, and might have it more abundantly/ That was his end in coming into the world, to procure life for his people, and not only bare life, but liveliness and comfort, yea, glory hereafter : he died to pur- VER. 149.] SERMONS UPON PSALM cxix. 85 chase it for us : John vi. 51, ' This is my flesh, which I give for the life of the world.' His incarnation and taking on him our nature is the channel and conduit through which the quickening virtue that is in the Godhead is conveyed to us ; and his offering up himself in that nature by his eternal Spirit doth purchase and merit the application and annunciation of this his quickening virtue to our souls, and pre- pareth him to be fit meat for souls. That same flesh and human nature of Christ that is offered up a ransom to justice, is also the bread of life for souls to feed upon. Souls are fed with meditations upon his death and sufferings. The bread which he giveth by way of applica tion is his flesh, which he gave by way of ransom ; every renewed act of faith draweth an increase of life from him. 5. Consider how God worketh it in us. The Father of spirits loveth to work with his own tools. These three agree in one — the Spirit, the word, and the renewed heart. The one is the author, the other the instrument, and the last the object. There is the Spirit acting, and the habit of grace acted upon, and the word and sacraments are the instruments and means. For God will do it rationally, and by a lively light. God forceth not the nature of second causes against their own inclination. It is pleasing to him when we desire him to renew his work, and to bring forth the actings of grace out of his own seed, and to blow with the wind, the breath of his Spirit, on the gardens, that the spices may flow out, Cant. iv. 15. If one of these be wanting, there can be no quickening. Not the Spirit, for he applieth all and doth all in the hearts of believers. It is from him that we have the new life of grace and all the activity of it : Gal. v. 25, * If we live in the Spirit, let us also walk in the Spirit/ Then there must be a renewed heart ; for God doth first infuse the principles of the new life, and gracious habits and power into the soul, next he doth actuate those powers, or stir them up to do what is good ; otherwise we do but blow to a dead coal. Then the word and sacraments come as God's means which are fitted to work upon the new creature. These are full of spiritual reason, and suited to the sanctified understandings of mea and women. 6. Consider God's loving-kindness, how ready he is to grant this. He will not deny the gift of the Holy Ghost to them that ask him, Luke xi. 13. It is an argument not a pari, but a minore ad majus. God is more able and willing to give than earthly parents, who are but half fathers. This is a spiritual and necessary blessing, and God is too fatherly to deny it to his children. You may deny an apple to a wanton child, but you will not deny bread to a fainting child, the bowels of a father will not permit you to do that ; you may deny them superfluities in wisdom, but your love will not permit you to deny them necessaries. Meat is not so necessary to revive and refresh the body, as grace for the soul, and his holy inspirations to act and guide you. And will God deny these requests ? 7. Know when you have received quickening. Many Christians look for rapt and ecstatic motions, and so do not own the work of God when it hath passed upon them ; they underrate their own experi ences, and so cannot take notice of God's faithfulness. Sense, appetite, and activity are the fruits of life and quickening. 86 SERMONS UPON PSALM CXIX. [SEE. CLXVII. [1.] We have the more sense of indwelling sin as a heavy burden, Kom. vii. 24. None groan so sorely as those that are made partakers of a new life. Elementa non gravitant in suis locis. A delicate con stitution is more sensible of pain. Wicked men scarce feel deep wounds given to their conscience, nor have any remorse for gross sins ; God's children, their hearts smite them for the smallest disorders and irregularities. [2.] Appetite after Christ, his graces and comforts, 1 Peter ii. 2 ; the more life any have, the more craving of food to maintain it in being ; they are always hungering and thirsting after God, Mat. v. 6 ; our appetite will be after the things that conduce to the maintaining and preserving that being which they have. If a man lose his appe tite, the body pineth and languisheth, and strength decayeth : desire prepareth the soul to take in its supplies. Your life is in good plight when that is desired, TO \oyi/cbv a$o\ov