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abundantia, indigentiæ, temperantiæ; "A threefold course of things; of abundance, want, temperance.' From abundance or excess, arise animosity and delicacy; from these, arise discord and quarrels; and from these, want: from want, we begin to learn wit; and compose ourselves to temperance: that thrifty course raises abundance: In circuitu ambulant impii, as he speaks. Now what shall we say? of the abundance and delicacy, we have surfeited already too long: we are now in the quarrelsome part, that arises from our pampered animosity; and what can follow next, but our miserable indigence and distress? we may please ourselves in the secure condition of our happy union, in the strength of our wooden walls, and our natural bulwarks; but I remember what I have read of a noble and wise captain, who, when he was vehemently moved to take upon him the defence of a strong city, which was enforced to him by the safe site, strong fortifications, plentiful ammunition, and inexpugnable walls of it; "Yea," saith he, " but tell me I pray you, have you any covering betwixt it and heaven? have you any defence against the vengeance of that God, whom your sins have provoked? If those sins of yours shall draw down God's curses upon your heads, to what purpose shall it be to endeavour to keep your enemy out of your gates?" The story applies itself. In vain shall we think to secure ourselves and our state from earth, if we irritate heaven.

There is no sin, that is dumb: there is none, that whispers: every one is vocal, loud, clamorous to solicit heaven for vengeance; but some are more shrill and importunate than others. God hath been pleased to distinguish their noise.

Oppression is one, that he hears above the rest: that hath two tongues; both loud ones, both prevalent; the cry of the Oppressed, and the cry of the Oppression. The Lord will enter into judgment with the ancients of his people, and the princes thereof. Wherefore? The spoil of the poor is in their houses. What mean you, that ye beat my people to pieces, and grind the faces of the poor, saith the Lord God of Hosts? Isaiah iii. 14, 15.

Contempt of God's ministers is another: and that's a paying sin, wheresoever it is; Jer. xxv. 4. Even Moses himself, that was mitissimus super terram, yet, when he comes to speak of affronts offered to Levi, can say, Smite through the loins of them that rise against him, and of them that hate him, that they rise not again; Deut. xxxiii. 11.

What should I particularize? The Lord hath a controversy with the land, saith the prophet Hosea: by swearing, and lying, and killing, and stealing, and committing adultery, they break out, and blood toucheth blood; Therefore shall the land mourn; Hos. iv. 2, 3. Doth he not speak of our times, think you?

But, above all these, there is a sin, which, wheresoever it is, drowns the noise of all the rest, and that is Sacrilege; which certainly, in what hand, in what nation soever it is found, hurries down an inevitable judgment. It was a fearful word, that of the Psalmist, Make their nobles like Oreb and Zeeb, yea, all their princes like Zeba

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and Zalmunna, who said, Let us take to ourselves the houses of God in possession: O my God, make them like a wheel; Psalm lxxxiii. 11, 12. Indeed, how can it be otherwise? Will a man rob God, says the Prophet, Ye are cursed with a curse, for ye have robbed me; Mal. iii. 9. What should I tell you the stories of Balthasar, of Heliodorus, of Crassus, of Julian, of the Templars, of Wolsey, and of his Master Henry VIII.? Shortly, shew me the man, the family, the nation, that ever prospered after sacrilege. I am sure I have a great author to the contrary, no less than one of the nine worthies, Charles the Great: Novimus, saith he, multa regna et reges eorum propterea cecidisse, quia Ecclesias spoliarunt, resque earum alienarunt, et militibus loco stipendii dederunt: "We have known," saith he, "great kingdoms and the kings of them therefore to have miscarried, because they spoiled Churches, and alienated their possessions, and gave them to their soldiers for their pay." If any man have a mind to feoff a curse upon himself and his posterity, let him defile his fingers with the holy things of God. Oh, let this portion be to the enemies of my Lord the King and our dear Country: but upon him, and his friends, and his peers and people, that abhor this wickedness, let there be blessings from God, even upon them and their seed for ever and ever!

Finally then, since there is no wickedness which doth not mainly contribute to the pulling down of God's vengeance upon us and our land, let us, in the fear of God, join all our forces together against all the reigning sins of the times: let us never think we can spend ourselves better, than in striving against the stream of our pressing iniquities. Wherefore hath God put the sword into the hands of you Great Men, but that you should use it to the effectual cutting down of all wickedness and vice? Wherefore hath God put the two-edged sword of the Spirit into the mouths of us his Ministers, but that we should lay about us zealously, in season, and out of season; to the hewing down of the over-grown abominations of this sinful age? Yea, how doth it concern every one of you, who hear me this day, if you would be but wise men and good patriots, to put your hand to the work, and to bend your utmost endeavours to the beating down of your own sins; and carefully to ransack all the blind corners of your hearts, to find out the cursed Achan in your own bosoms? Oh, that each man would thus undertake to reform one! How sure should we be that the God of Heaven would divert his fearful judgments; and graciously continue the blessing of peace, plenty, prosperity; and, together with them, of a happy government, and the freedom of the blessed Gospel to us and our posterity after us! Which God vouchsafe unto us, for his mercy's sake, and for the sake of the Son of his Love, Jesus Christ, the Just, &c. To whom, &c.

SERMON XVI.

PUBLIC THANKSGIVING FOR THE WONDERFUL MITIGATION OF THE LATE MORTALITY.

PREACHED BEFORE HIS MAJESTY, UPON HIS GRACIOUS COMMAND, AT HIS COURT OF WHITEHALL, JANUARY 29, 1625, AND UPON THE SAME COMMAND PUBLISHED.

PSALM lxviii. 19, 20.

Blessed be the Lord, who loadeth us daily with benefits, even the God of our Salvation. Selah. He that is our God is the God of Salvation; and unto God the Lord belong the issues from death.

YEA, blessed be the Lord, who hath added this unto the load of his other mercies to his unworthy servant, that the same tongue, which was called, not long since, to chatter out our Public Mournings, in the Solemn Fast of this place, is now employed in a Song of Praise; and the same hand, which was here lifted up for Suppli cation, is now lift up in Thanksgiving. Ye, that then accompanied me with your tears and sighs, accompany me now, I beseech you, in this happy change of note and time, with your joyful smiles, and acclamations to the God that hath wrought it.

It is not more natural for the sun, when it looks upon a moist and well-fermented earth, to cause vapours to ascend thence, than it is for greatness and goodness, when they both meet together upon an honest heart, to draw up holy desires of gratulation. The worth of the agent doth it not alone, without a fit disposition in the subject. Let the sun cast his strongest beams upon a flint, a pumice; he fetches out no stream: even so the greatness and goodness of the Almighty, beating upon a dry and hard heart, prevails nothing. Here all three are happily met: in God, infinite greatness, infinite goodness; such greatness, that he is attended with thousand thousands of angels, a guard fit for the King of Heaven; such goodness, that he receives gifts even for the rebellious: in David, a gracious heart, that, in a sweet sense of the great goodness of his God, breathes out this Divine Epiphonema, Blessed be the Lord, who loadeth us daily with benefits, even the God of our Salvation, &c.

Wherein, methinks, the sweet Singer of Israel seems to raise his note to the emulation of the Choir of Heaven, in the melody of their Hallelujahs: yea, let me say, now that he sings above in that

Blessed Concert of glorious spirits, his ditty cannot be better than this, that he sung here upon earth; and wherein we are about to bear our parts at this time. Prepare, I beseech you, both your ears for David's song, and your hearts and tongues for your

own.

And first, in this angelical strain your thoughts cannot but ob serve, without me, the Descant, and the Ground. The DESCANT OF GRATULATION; Blessed be the Lord: wherein is both Applause, and Excitation; an Applause given to God's goodness, and an Excitation of others to give that applause. The GROUND is a threefold respect of what God is in himself, God and Lord; of what God is and doth to us, which loadeth us daily with benefits of what he is both in himself and to us, The God of our Salvation; which last, like to some rich stone, is set off with a dark foil; To God the Lord belong the issues from death. So, in the first, for his own sake; in the second, for our sakes; in the third, for his own and ours; as God, as Lord, as a Benefactor, as a Saviour and Deliverer, Blessed be the Lord.

I. THE DESCANT OF GRATULATION. It is not hard to observe that David's Hallelujahs are more than his Hosannas; his thanks, more than his suits. Ofttimes doth he praise God, when he begs nothing: seldom ever doth he beg that favour, for which he doth not raise up his soul to an anticipation of thanks. Neither is this any other than the universal under-song of all his heavenly ditties, Blessed be the Lord. Praised, as our former Translation hath it, is too low. Honour is more than praise: blessing is more than honour. Neither is it for nothing, that from this word 77, "to bless," is derived "the knee," which is bowed in blessing; and the cryer before Joseph proclaimed 7, calling for the honour of the knee from all beholders; Gen. xli. 43. Every slight, trivial acknowledgment of worth is a praise: blessing is in a higher strain of gratitude, that carries the whole sway of the heart with it, in a kind of divine rapture. Praise is in matter of compliment; blessing, of devotion.

The Apostle's rule is, that, the less is blessed of the greater; Abraham, of the King of Salem: the Prophet's charge is, that the greater should be blessed of the less; yea, the greatest of the least, God of man. This agrees well. Blessing is an act, that will bear reciprocation: God blesseth man, and man blesseth God: God blesseth man imperatively; man blesseth God optatively: God blesseth man in the acts of mercy; man blesseth God in the notions, in the expressions of thanks: God blesseth man, when he makes him good and happy; man blesseth God, when he confesseth how good, how gracious, how glorious he is; so as the blessing is wholly taken up in agnition, in celebration: in the one, we acknowledge the bounty of God to us; in the other, we magnify him vocally, really, for that bounty.

Oh, see then what high account God makes of the affections and actions of his poor, silly, earth-creeping creatures; that he gives us in them power to bless himself, and takes it as an honour to

be blessed of us. David wonders, that God should so vouchsafe to bless man: how much more must we needs wonder at the mercy of God, that will vouchsafe to be blessed by man, a worm, an atom, a nothing. Yet, both St. James tells us, that with the tongue we bless God; and the Psalmist calls for it here, as a service of dear acceptation, Blessed be the Lord. Even we men live not, cameleonlike, with the air of thanks; nor feed e'er the fatter with praises: how much less our Maker? O God, we know well, that whatsoever men or angels do or do not, thou canst not but be infinitely Blessed in Thyself. Before ever any creature was, thou didst equally enjoy thy Blessed Self from all eternity: what can this worthless, loose film of flesh either add to or detract from thine Infiniteness? Yet, thou, that humblest thyself to behold the things that are done in heaven and earth, humblest thyself also to accept the weak breath of our praises, that are sent up to thee from earth to heaven. How should this encourage the vows, the endeavours of our hearty thankfulness, to see them graciously taken! Would men take up with good words, with good desires, and quit our bonds for thanks, who would be a debtor? With the God of Mercy this cheap payment is current. If he then will honour us so far as to be blessed of us; oh let us honour him so far as to bless him. Quare verbis parcam? gratuita sunt: "Why do we spare thanks, that cost us nothing?" as that wise Heathen. O give unto the Lord, ye mighty, give unto the Lord the praises due to his Name: offer to God the sacrifice of thanksgiving: and still let the foot of our song be, Blessed be the Lord.

II. This for the Descant of Gratulation: the GROUND follows. 1. His Own Sake hath reason to be first. God will be blessed both as Jah, and Adonai: the one, the style of his Essence; the other, of his Sovereignty.

(1.) Even the most accursed Deist would confess, that, as a pure, simple, infinite, absolute being, GOD is to be blessed: for, if Being be Good, and these two be convertible, nature must needs teach him, that an Absolute and Infinite Being must needs be Absolutely and Infinitely Good,

But what do I blur the glory of this day with mention of those monsters, whose idol is nature, whose religion is secondary atheism, whose true region is the lowest hell? Those damned Ethnicks cannot, will not conceive of God as he is; because they impiously sever his Essence from his inward Relations.

We Christians can never be so heavenly affected to God as we ought, till we can rise to this pitch of piety, to bless God for what he is in himself, without the external beneficial relations to the creature: else our respects reflect too much homeward, and we do but look through God at ourselves,

(2.) Neither is it for us, only to bless him as an Absolute God, but as a SOVEREIGN LORD too, whose Power hath no more limit than his Essence: the great Moderator of Heaven and Earth; giv ing laws to his creature; overruling all things; marshalling all

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