Imágenes de páginas
PDF
EPUB
[ocr errors]

ing of an atom in the air. Is it pardon we would have? Let us apprehend the blackness of sin, with the aggravations of it as it respects God; let us be deeply sensible of the want of pardon and worth of mercy, and get our affections into such a frame as a condemned man would do: let us consider, that as we are now at the throne of God's grace, we shall shortly be at the bar of God's justice; and if the soul should be forlorn there, how fixedly and earnestly would it plead for mercy! Let us endeavour to stir up the same affections now, which we have seen some dying men have, and which we suppose despairing souls would have done at God's tribunal. We must be sensible that the life or death of our souls depends upon worship.1 Would we not be ashamed to be ridiculous in our carriage while we are eating; and shall we not be ashamed to be cold or garish before God, when the salvation of our souls as well as the honour of God is concerned? If we but saw the heaps of sins, the eternity of punishment due to them; if we but saw an angry and offended Judge; if we but saw the riches of mercy, the glorious outgoings of God in the sanctuary, the blessed doles he gives out to men when they spiritually attend upon him; both the one and the other would make us perform our duties humbly, sincerely, earnestly, and affectionately, and wait upon him with our whole souls, to have misery averted and mercy bestowed. Let our sense of this be encouraged by the consideration of our Saviour presenting his merits. With what affection does he present his merits, his blood shed upon the cross, now in heaven! And shall our hearts be cold and frozen, flitting and unsteady, when his affections are so much concerned? Christ does not present any man's case and duties without a sense of his wants; and shall we have none of our own? Let me add this; let us affect our hearts with a sense of what supplies we have met with in former worship. The delightful remembrance of what converse we have had with God in former worship, would spiritualize our hearts for the present worship. Had Peter had a view of Christ's glory in the mount, fresh in his thoughts, he would not so easily have turned his back upon his Master: nor would the Israelites have been at leisure for their idolatry, had they preserved the sense of the majesty of God discovered in his late thunders from mount Sinai.

If any thing intrudes that may choke the worship, cast it speedily out. We cannot hinder Satan and our own corruption from presenting coolers to us, but we may hinder the success of them. We cannot hinder the gnats from buzzing about us when we are in our business, but we may prevent them from settling upon us. A man that is running on a considerable

1 Guliel. Paris, Rhetor. Divin. cap. 26, p. 350. col. 1.

errand will shun all unnecessary discourse that may make him forget or loiter in his business. What though there may be something offered that is good in itself; yet if it has a tendency to despoil God of his honour, and ourselves of the spiritual intentness in worship, send it away. Those that weed a field of corn, examine not the nature and particular virtues of the weeds; but consider only how they choke the corn, to which the native juice of the soil is designed. Consider what you are about; and if any thing interpose that may divert you, or cool your affections in your present worship, cast it out.

As to private worship, let us lay hold of the most melting opportunities and frames.

When we find our hearts in a more than ordinary spiritual frame, let us look upon it as a call from God to attend him; such impressions and motions are God's voice, inviting us into communion with him in some particular act of worship, and promising us some success in it. When the psalmist had a secret motion to seek God's face, and complied with it, Psal. xxvii. 8; the issue is the encouragement of his heart, which breaks out into an exhortation to others to be of good courage, and wait on the Lord: "Wait on the Lord; be of good courage, and he shall strengthen thine heart: wait, I say, on the Lord,"

ver. 14.

One blow will do more on the iron when it is hot, than a hundred when it is cold.1 Melted metals may be stamped with any impression; but once hardened, will with difficulty be brought into the figure we intend.

Let us examine ourselves at the end of every act of worship, and chide ourselves for any carnality we perceive in them. Let us take a review of them, and examine the reason; why art thou so low and carnal, O my soul? As David did of his disquietedness; "Why art thou cast down, O my soul? and why art thou disquieted in me?" Psal. xlii. 5. If any unworthy frames have surprised us in worship, let us seek them out after worship; call them to the bar; make an exact scrutiny into the causes of them, that we may prevent their incursions another time let our pulses beat quick, by way of anger and indignation against them: this would be a repairing what has been amiss; otherwise they may grow, and clog an after-worship more than they did a former. Daily examination is an antidote against the temptations of the following day, and constant examination of ourselves after duty, is a preservative against vain encroachments in following duties; and upon the finding them out, let us apply the blood of Christ by faith for our cure, and draw strength from the death of Christ for the conquest of them, and let us also be humbled for them. God lifts up the humble: 1 Reynolds.

VOL. I.-39

when we are humbled for our carnal frames in one duty, we shall find ourselves by the grace of God more elevated in the

next.

ON THE

DISCOURSE V.

ETERNITY

O F GOD.

PSALM XC. 2.—Before the mountains were brought forth, or ever thou hadst formed the earth and the world, even from everlasting to everlasting, thou art God.

THE title of this psalm is, A prayer; the author, Moses. Some think not only this, but the ten following psalms were composed by him. The title wherewith he is dignified, is, The man of God, as also in Deut. xxxiii. 1. One inspired by him, to be his interpreter, and deliver his oracles; one particularly directed by him; one who, as a servant, did diligently employ himself in his Master's business, and acted for the glory of God; he was the minister of the Old Testament, and the prophet of the New.2 There are two parts of this psalm.

A complaint of the frailty of man's life in general, ver. 3—6;3 and then a particular complaint of the condition of the church, ver. 8-10. A prayer, ver. 12.

But before he speaks of the shortness of human life, he fortifies them by the consideration of the refuge they had, and should find in God; "Lord thou hast been our dwelling-place in all generations," ver. 1. We have had no settled abode in the earth since the time of Abraham's being called out from Ur of the Chaldees: we have had Canaan in a promise, we have it not yet in possession; we have been exposed to the cruelties of an oppressing enemy, and the incommodities of a desert wilderness; we have wanted the fruits of the earth, but not the dews of heaven. "Thou hast been our dwelling-place in all generations." Abraham was under thy conduct; Isaac and Jacob under thy care; their posterity were multiplied by thee, and that under their oppressions. Thou hast been our shield against dangers, our security in the time of trouble: when we were pursued to the Red Sea, it was not a creature delivered us; and when we feared the pinching of our bowels in the desert, it was no creature rained manna upon us. "Thou hast been our dwelling-place." Thou hast kept open house for us, sheltered us against storms, and preserved us from mischief, as a house does an inhabitant from wind and weather; and that not in one or two, but in all generations.-Some think an allusion is here

1 Coccei. in loc.

2 Austin in loc.

3 Pareus in loc.

made to the ark, to which they were to have recourse in all emergencies. Our refuge and defence has not been from created things; not from the ark, but from the God of the ark. Observe from it,

He

God is a perpetual refuge and security to his people. His providence is not confined to one generation; it is not one age only that tastes of his bounty and compassion. His eye never yet slept, nor has he suffered the little ship of his church to be swallowed up, though it has been tossed upon the waves. has always been a haven to preserve us, a house to secure us; he has always had compassion to pity us, and power to protect us; he has had a face to shine, when the world has had an angry countenance to frown: he brought Enoch home by an extraordinary translation from a brutish world; and when he was resolved to reckon with men for their brutish lives, he lodged Noah, the phoenix of the world, in an ark, and kept him alive as a spark in the midst of many waters, whereby to rekindle a church in the world. In all generations he is a dwellingplace, to secure his people here, or entertain them above.

His providence is not wearied nor his care fainting. He never wanted will to relieve us, for he has been our refuge: nor ever can want power to support us, for he is a God from everlasting to everlasting. The church never wanted a pilot to steer her, and a rock to shelter her, and dash in pieces the waves which threaten her.

How worthy is it to remember former benefits, when we come to beg for new! Never are the records of God's mercies so exactly revised, as when his people stand in need of new editions of his power. How necessary are our wants to stir us up to pay the rent of thankfulness in arrear! He renders himself doubly unworthy of the mercies he wants, that does not gratefully acknowledge the mercies he has received. God scarce promised any deliverance to the Israelites, and they in their distress scarce prayed for any deliverance, but that from Egypt was mentioned on both sides; by God to encourage them, and by them to acknowledge their confidence in him. The greater our dangers, the more we should call to mind God's former kindness. We are not only thankfully to acknowledge the mercies bestowed upon our persons, or in our age, but those of former times. "Thou hast been our dwelling-place in all gene

rations."

Moses was not living in the former generations, yet he appropriates the former mercies to the present age. Mercies, as well as generations, proceed out of the loins of those that have gone before. All mankind are but one Adam; the whole church but one body.

1 Theodoret in loc.

In the second verse he backs his former consideration-by the greatness of his power in forming the world, and-by the boundlessness of his duration; "from everlasting to everlasting." As thou hast been our dwelling-place, and expended upon us the strength of thy power, and riches of thy love, so we have no reason to doubt the continuance on thy part, if we be not wanting on our parts: for the vast mountains and fruitful earth are the works of thy hands; and there is less power requisite for our relief, than there was for their creation; and though so much strength has been upon various occasions manifested, yet thy arm is not weakened; for "from everlasting to everlasting thou art God."

Thou hast always been God, and no time can be assigned as the beginning of thy being: the mountains are not of so long a standing as thyself; they are the effects of thy power, and therefore cannot be equal to thy duration; since they are effects, they suppose a precedency of their cause. If we would look back, we can reach no further than the beginning of the creation, and account the years from the first foundation of the world; but after that we must lose ourselves in the abyss of eternity; we have no clue to guide our thoughts; we can see no bounds in thy eternity. But as for man, he traverses the world a few days, and by thy order pronounced concerning all men, returns to the dust, and moulders into the grave.

By mountains some understand angels, as being creatures of a more elevated nature: by earth, they understand human nature, the earth being the habitation of men. There is no need to divert in this place from the letter to such a sense. The description seems to be poetical, and amounts to this, he neither began with the beginning of time, nor will expire with the end of it: he did not begin when he made himself known to our fathers; but his being did precede the creation of the world, before any created being was formed, or any time settled.

"Before the mountains were brought forth," or before they were begotten or born, (the word being used in those senses in Scripture,) before they stood up higher than the rest of the earthly mass God had created. It seems that mountains were not casually cast up by the force of the deluge, softening the ground, and driving several parcels of it together to grow up into a massy body, as the sea does the sand in several places; but they were at first formed by God.

The eternity of God is here described-in his priority, "before the world;—in the extension of his duration, "from everlasting to everlasting thou art God." He was before the world, yet he neither begins nor ends. He is not a temporary, but an

[blocks in formation]
« AnteriorContinuar »