. BRINKERI 119 William St., А NEW-YORK, УС. Олон Кс 28 TUE CROOK IN THE LOT; OR, A DISPLAY OF THE SOVEREIGNTY AND WISDOM OF GOD IN THE AFFLICTIONS OF MEN, AND THE CHRISTIAN'S DEPORTMENT UNDER THEM. BY REV. THOMAS BOSTON. NEW YORK: NOIERT CARTER & BROTHERS, 285 BROADWAY. 1851. RECOMMENDATION. I Am gratified to learn that you are about 10 publish Boston's “CROOK IN THE Lot.” Few books contain so much valuable matter within the same space. It may be considered an exposition of God's providence towards his people, while performing their pilgrimage through this vale of tears ; and was evidently the fruit of much ob- servation of the dispensations of God, and of pro- found acquaintance with the Holy Scriptures. I do not know that I could point out a work so well adapted to reconcile the afflicted saint to his lot in this world, and at the same time to teach him how to derive benefit from those events which are most adverse to his natural inclinations. I can, therefore, cordially recommend this little volume to all who desire wisely to interpret, and faithfully to improve, the dealings of Providence towards them; especially in the “dark and cloudy day” of adversity A. ALEXANDER. CM PREFACE. experience, his effort was to avoid even the appearance of evil, and to be fruitful in every good work. In regard to others, he was affectionate as a husband, indulgent as a father, and sincere and faithful as a friend. Not only did he extend his counsel and sympathy to the distressed, but one tenth of his annual income was reli. giously devoted to the relief of the poor. As a scholar, Mr. Boston was well versed in the Latin, Greek, Hebrew, and French languages, and in other depart. ments of learning, was no novice. As a. Theologian, his various works afford the best evidence of his great acquire. ments, of his sound and judicious views, and of his skill in defending the truth. In his application to study he was in. defatigable, and it was with him a rule, to leave no subject he was investigating, until he had mastered its difficulties. Yet withal he was so unostentatious, that nothing in his manner betrayed the conceit of learning. He was a liberal admirer of the gifts of others, and was unwilling to detract from their meritis, although they might differ with him in opinion. As a minister of Jesus Christ he was particularly conspi. cuous. He was "mighty in the Scriptures," not only in his critical acquaintance with them, but in his understand. ing of their spirit and power; by which he was well quali. fied to expound in a clear, simple, and cogent manner the great mysteries of the Gospel to others. His thoughts were generally just and often profound; his mode of ex. pression simple and yet forcible; his imagination fertile in happily adapted illustrations; his delivery graceful and carnest; and in his whole manner in the pulpit, gravity, meekness, and authority were happily blended. His minis. trations were not only acceptable, but successful in the conversion of sinners, and in the edification of saints. Mr. Boston, although a devoted student, never suffered his de. lightful pursuit of knowledge to interfere with his pastoral visitations. In preparing for the pulpit, he generally wrote out his sermons in full ;-an example worthy of imitation by more modern preachers. It is a remarkable fact that, viji PREFACE. was cleared to me, I generally stuck fast by it, being as much afraid to desert the way which I took to be pointed out to me." The same paper he thus concludes : " And thus I have given some account of the days of my vanity. Upon the whole, I bless my God in Jesus Christ, that ever he made me a Christian, and took an early dealing with my soul: that ever he made me a mi. nister of the gospel, and gave me some insight into the doctrine of his grace : and that ever he gave me the blessed Bible, and brought me acquainted with the originals, and especially with the Hebrew text. The world hath all along been a step-dame unto me, and whensoever I would have attempted to nestle in it, there was a thorn of uneasiness laid for me. Man is born crying, lives complaining, and dies disappointed from that quarter. •All is vanity and vexation of spirit; I have waited for thy salvation, O Lord.'": It may be interesting for the reader to know that the truly valuable treatise with which he is here presented, un. der a quaint title, was one of the last of the author's writings, and therefore embodies much of the maturity of his experience. He was engaged in revising it when he was called to cease from his labours. May it prove a happy legacy to every one into whose hands it may fall. CONTENTS Page INTRODUCTORY REMARKS, • . 14 PROPOSITION I. Whatsoever Crook there is in one's Lot, it is of God's making . I. As to the Crook itself, . 14-29 II. The Crook is of God's making. How it is of his making. Why he makes it . • 29456 PROPOSITION II. What God sees meet to mar, we shall not be able to mend in our Lot. What Crook God makes in our • Lot, we shall not be able to even, . I. God's marring and making a Crook in one's Lot, as he sees meet, . II. Men's attempting to mend or even the Crook in their Lot, . III. In what sense it is to be understood, that we shall not be able to mend, or even the Crook in our Lot, · 59 IV. Some reasons of the point, . . . 61 Directions for rightly managing the application for re. moving the Crook in our Lot, . PROPOSITION III. Considering the Crook in the Lot, as the work of God, is a proper means to bring one to behave rightly un. der it, . . . . . . 76 I. What it is to consider the Crook as the work of God, 77 II. How it is to be understood to be a proper means to bring one to behave rightly under the Crook, . 79 III. That it is a proper means to bring one to behave rightly under it, . . 65 CONTENTS. Pase 85 99 A comparison between the Lowly and Proud, . Doct. There is a generation of lowly, afflicted ones, having their spirit lowered and brought down to their lot; whose case, in that respect, is better than that of the proud getting their will, and carrying all to their mind, . I. The generation of the lowly afflicted ones, II. The generation of the proud getting their will, and carrying all to their mind, . III. It is better to be in a low afflicted condition, with the spirit humble and brought down to the lot, than to be of a proud and high spirit, getting the lot brought up io it, and matters go according to one's mind, - . Ilumility the great means to bring all to their respec. tive duties, . Doct. I. The bent of one's heart, in humbling cir. cumstances, should be towards a suitable humbling of the spirit, as under God's mighty hand placing us in them, II. What are those humbling circumstances the mighty hand of God brings men into, . III. What it is in humbling circumstances, to humble ourselves under the mighty hand of God, . . . Directions for reaching humiliation, . Doct. II. In due time, those that humble themselves under the mighty hand of God will certainly be lifted up, • • . . 109 113 115 118 126 137 12 INTRODUCTORY OBSERVATIONS. day of his birth ; namely, the day of the death of one, who having become the friend of God through faith, hath led a life to the honour of God, and ser- vice of his generation, and thereby raised himself the good and savoury name better than precious ointment, ver. 1. In like manner, he pronounces the house of mourning to be preferable to the house of feasting, sorrow to laughter, and a wise man's rebuke to a fool's song; for that, howbeit the lat. ter are indeed the more pleasant, yet the former are the more profitable, ver. 2-6. And observ- ing with concern, how men are in hazard, not only from the world's frowns and ill-usage, oppression making a wise man mad, but also from its smiles and caresses, a gift destroying the heart; there- fore, since whatever way it goes there is danger, he pronounces the end of every worldly thing bet- ter than the beginning thereof, ver. 7, 8. And from the whole, he justly infers, that it is better to be humble and patient, than proud and impatient, un- der afflicting dispensations; since, in the former case, we wisely submit to what is really best; in the latter, we fight against it, ver. 8. And he dis- suades from being angry with our lot, because of the adversity found therein, ver. 9; cautions against making odious comparisons of former and present times, in that point insinuating undue re- flections on the providence of God, ver. 10: and, against that querulous and fretful disposition, he first prescribes a general remedy, namely, holy wisdom, as that which enables us to make the best of every thing, and even giveth life in killing TA THE CROOK IN THE LOT. consideration, this view of the matter, is a proper means, at once, to silence and to satisfy men, and so to bring them unto a dutiful submission to their Maker and Governor, under the crook in their lot. Now, we take up the purpose of the text in hese three propositions. Prop. I. Whatsoever crook there is in one's lot, it is of God's making. Prop. II. What God sees meet to mar, no one shall be able to mend in his lot. Prop. Ill. The considering of the crook in the lot as the work of God, or of his making, is a pro- per means to bring us to a Christian deportment under it. Prop. I. Whatsoever crook there is in one's lot, it is of God's making. Here, two things are to be considered, namely, the crook itself, and God's making of it. I. As to the crook itself, the crook in the lot, for the better understanding thereof, these few things that follow are premised. 1. There is a certain train or course of events, by the providence of God, falling to every one of uis during our liſe in this world : and that is our lot, as being allotted to us by the sovereign God, our Creator and Governor, “in whose hand our breath is, and whose are all our ways.” This train of events is widely different to different persons, according to the will and pleasure of the sovereign manager, who ordereth men's conditions in the world in a great variety, some moving in a higher some in a lower sphere. THE CROOK IN THE LOT. 15 2. In that train or course of events, some fall ont cross to us, and against the grain ; and these make the crook in our lot. While we are here, there will be cross events, as well as agreeable ones, in our lot and condition. Sometimes things are softly and agreeably gliding on; but, by and by, there is some incident which alters that course, grates us, and pains us, as when we have made a wrong step, we begin to halt. 3 Every body's lot in this world hath some crook in it. Complainers are apt to make odious comparisons: they look about, and taking a distant view of the condition of others, can discern no- thing in it but what is straight, and just to one's wish; so they pronounce their neighbour's lot wholly straight. But that is a false verdict; there is no perfection here ; no lot out of heaven with- out a crook. For, as to “all the works that are done under the sun, behold all is vanity and vexa- tion of spirit. That which is crooked cannot be made straight.” Eccl. i. 14, 15. Who would not have thought that Haman's lot was very straight, while his family was in a flourishing condition, and he prospering in riches and honour, being prime minister of state in the Persian court, and standing high in the king's favour? Yet there was, at the same time, a crook in his lat, which so galled him, that “all this availed him nothing." Esth. v. 13. Every one feels for himself, where he is pinched, though others perceive it not. Nobody's lot, in this world, is wholly crooked; there are always some straight and even parts in IT DENOTES ADVERSITY. 17 thereof. God hath intermixed these two in men's condition in this world; that, as there is some prosperity therein, making the straight line, so there is also some adversity, making the crooked: which mixture hath place, not only in the lot of saints, who are told, that “in the world they shall have tribulation," but even in the lot of all, as already observed. Secondly, it is adversity of some continuance. We do not reckon it a crooked thing, which, though forcibly bended and bowed together, yet presently recovers its former straight- ness. There are twinges of the rod of adversity, which passing like a stitch in one's side, all is immediately set to rights again: one's lot may be suddenly overclouded, and the cloud vanish ere he is aware. But under the crook, one having leisure to find his sinart, is in some concern to get the crook made even. So the crook in the lot is ad- versity, continued for a shorter or longer time. Now, there is a threefold crook in the lot inci- dent to the children of men. 1. One made by a cross dispensation, which, howsoever in itself passing, yet hath lasting ef- fects. Such a crook did Herod's cruelty make in the lot of the mothers in Bethlehem, who by the murderers were lett “ weeping for their slain chil- dren, and would not be comforted, because they were not.” Matth. ii. 18. A slip of the foot may soon be made, which will make a man go halting long after. “ As the fishes are taken in an evil net; so are the sons of men ensnared in an evil time.” Eccl. ix. 12. The thing may fall out in a 2* 13 SOMETIMES IS LONG CONTINUED. moment, under which the party shall go halting to the grave. 2. There is a crook made by a train of cross dispensations, whether of the same or different kinds, following hard one upon another, and leav- ing lasting effects behind them. Thus in the case of Job, while one messenger of evil tidings was yet speaking, another came. Job i. 16–18. Cross events coming one upon the neck of another, deep calling unto deep, make a sore crook. In that case, the party is like unto one, who, recovering his sliding foot from one unfirm piece of ground, sets it on another equally unfirm, which imme- diately gives way under him too: or, like unto one, who, travelling in an unknown mountainous track, after having, with difficulty, made his way over one mountain, is expecting to see the plain coun- try; but, instead thereof, there comes in view, time after time, a new mountain to be passed. This crooks in Asaph's lot had like to have made him give up all his religion, until he went into the sanc- Luary, where this mystery of providence was un- riddled to him. Psal. lxxiii. 13–17. Solomon ob- serves, “That there be just men, unto whom it happeneth according to the work of the wicked.” Eccl. viii. 14. Providence taking a run against them, as if they were to be run down for good and all. Whoever they be, whose life in no part there- of affords them experience of this, sure Joseph missed not of it in his young days, nor Jacob in his middle days, nor Peter in his old days, nor our Saviour all his days. 20 CROOKED ONLY AS IT RESPECTS US. in heaven: there is no disagreeableness in it there. But in every person's lot, there is a crook in je- spect of their mind and natural inclination. The adverse dispensation lies cross to that rule, and will by no means answer it, nor harmonize with it. When Divine Providence lays one to the other, there is a manifest disagreeableness: the man's will goes one way, and the dispensation another way: the will bends upwards, and cross events press down: so they are contrary. And there, and only there, lies the crook. It is this disagreeable- ness which makes the crook in the lot fit matter of trial and exercise to us, in this our state of proba- tion: in which, if thou wouldst approve thyself to God, walking by faith, not by sight, thou must quiet thyself in the will and purpose of God, and not insist that it should be according to thy mind. Job xxxiv. 33. (2.) Unsightliness. Crooked things are unpleas- ant to the eye: and no erook in the lot seemeth to be joyous, but grievous, making an unsightly ap- pearance. Heb. xii. 11. Therefore men need to beware of giving way to their thoughts, to dwell on the crook in their lot, and of keeping it too much in view. David shows a huriful experience of his, in that kind, Psal. xxxix. 3. “ While I was musing The fire burned.” Jacob acted a wiser part, called his youngest son Benjamin, the son of the right- hand, whom the dying mother had named Benoni the son of my sorrow; by this means providing, that the crook in his lot should not be set afresh in his view, on every occasion of mentioning the name 22 DIFFERENT IN DIFFERENT PERSONS (4.) “ Aptness to catch hold and entangle, like hooks, fish-hooks." Amos iv. 2. The crook in the lot doth so very readily make impression, to the ruffling and fretting one's spirit, irritating corrup- tion, that Satan fails not to make diligent use of it for these dangeror's purposes; which point once gained by the tempter, the tempted, ere he is aware finds himself entangled as in a thicket, out of which he knows not how to extricate himself. In that temptation it often proves like a crooked stick, troubling a standing pool, which not only raises up? the mad all over, but brings up from the bottom some very ugly thing. Thus it brought up a spice of blasphemy and atheism in Asaph's case, Psal. lxxiji. 13. “Verily I have cleansed my heart in vain, and washed my hands in innocence:" as if he had said, There is nothing at all in religion, is is a vain and empty thing, that profiteth nothing ; I was a fool to have been in care about purity and holiness, whether of heart or life. Ah! is this the pious Asaph? How is he turned so white un- like himself ! but the crook in the lot is a handle, whereby the tempter makes surprising discoveries of latent corruption even in the best. This is the nature of the crook in the lot; les us now observe what part of the lot it falls in. Three conclusions may be established upon this head. 1st It may fall in any part of the lot; there is no exempted one in the case : for, sin being found in every part, the crook may take place in any part. Being “all as an unclean thing, we may DIFFERENT IN DIFFERENT PERSONS. 23 all fade as a leaf.” Isa. Ixiv. 6. The main stream of sin, which the crook readily follows, runs in very different channels, in the case of different persons. And in regard of the various dispositions of the minds of men, that will prove a sinking weight unto one, which another would go very lightly under. 2dly. It may at once fall into many parts of the lot, the Lord calling, as in a solemn day, one's ter- rors round about, Lam. ii. 22. Sometimes God makes one notable crook in a man's lut; but its name may be Gad, being but the forerunner of a troop which cometh.--Then the crooks are multi- plied, so that the party is made to halt on each side. While one stream, let in from one quarter, is running full against him, another is let in on him from another quarter, till in the end the waters break in on every hand. 3aly. It often falls in the tender part; I mean, that part of the lot wherein one is least able to bear it, or, at least thinks he is so. Psal. lv. 12, 13. “li was not an enemy that reproached me, then I could have borne it. But it was thou, a man, mine equal, my guide, and mine acquaint- ance." If there is any one part of the lot, which of all others one is disposed to nestle in, the thorn will readily be laid there, especially if he belongs 10 God; in that thing wherein he is least of all able to be touched, he will be sure to be pressed. 'There the trial will be taken of him; for there is the grand competition with Christ. “I take from them the desires of their eyes, and that where 24 IN SOME, IN BODILY DEFECTS. upon they set their minds,” Ezek. xxiv. 25. Since the crook in the lot is the special trial appointed for every one, it is altogether reasonable, and becom- ing the wisdom of God, that it fall on that which f all things doth most rival him. But more particularly, the crook may be observ- ed to fall in these four parts of the lot. First, In the natural part affecting persons con- sidered as of the make allotted for them by the great God that formed all things. The parents of mankind, Adam, and Eve, were formed altogether sound and entire, without the least blemish, wheth- er in soul or body; but in the formation of their posterity, there often appears a notable variation from the original. Bodily defects, superfluities, deformities, infirmities, natural or accidental, made the crook in the lot of some : they have something unsightly or grievous about them. Crooks of this kind, more or less observable, are very common and ordinary; the best are not exempted from them: and it is purely owing to sovereign pleas- ure they are not more numerous. Tender eyes made the crook in the lot of Leah, Gen. xxix. 17. Rachel's beauty was balanced with barrenness, the crook in her lot, chap. xxx. 1. Paul, the great apostle of the Gentiles, was, it should seem, no per sonable man, but of a mean outward appearance, for which fools were apt to contemn him, 2 Cor. x. 10. Timothy was of a weak and sickly frame, 1 Tim. v. 23. And there is a yet far more consid- erable crook in the lot of the lame, the blind, the deaf, and dumb. Some are weak to a degree in · IN OTHERS, THEIR REPUTATION. 25 their intellects; and it is the crook in the lot of several bright souls to be overcast with clouds, notably bemisted and darkened, from the crazy bodies they are lodged in ; an eminent instanco whereof we have in the grave, wise, and patient Job, “going mourning without the sun; yea, standing up and crying in the congregation.” Job. xxx. 28. Secondly. It may fall in the honorary part. There is an honour due to all men, the small as well as the great. 1 Pet. ii. 17, and that upon the ground of the original constitution of human nature, as it was framed in the image of God. But, in the sovereign disposal of holy Providence, the crook in the lot of some falls here; they are neglected and slighted; their credit is still kept low : they go through the world under a cloud, being put into an ill name, their reputation sunk. This sometimes is the natural consequence of their own foolish and sinful conduct; as in the case of Dinah, who, by her gadding abroad to satisfy her youthful curiosity, regardless of, and therefore not waiting for a provi- dential call, brought a lasting stain on her honour, Gen. xxxiv. But, where the Lord intends a crook of this kind in one's lot, innocence will not be able to ward it off in an ill-natured world ; neither will true merit be able to make head against it, to make one's lot stand straight in ihat part. Thus David represents his case, Psal. xxxi. 114-13. “ They that did see me without, fled from me: I am for. gotten as a dead man out of mind: I am like a broken vessel. For I have heard the slander of many." 26 IN OTHERS, THEIR CALLIA 3 IN LIFE. Thirdly, it may fall in the vocational part Whatever is a man's calling or station in the world, be it sacred or civil, the crook in their lot may take its place therein. Isaiah was an eminent prophet, but most unsuccessful, Isa. liii. 1. Jere- miah met with such a train of discouragements and ill usage in the exercise of his sacred function, that he was very near giving it up, saying, “I will not make mention of him, nor speak any more in his name.” Jer. xx 9. The Psalmist observes this crook often to be made in the lot of some men very industrious in their civil business who sow in the fields—and at times “God blesseth them and suffereth not their cattle to decrease; but again, they are minished, and brought low, through op- pression, affliction, and sorrow.” Psal. cvii. 37– 39. Such a crook was made in Job's lot after he had long stood even. Some manage their em- ployments with all care and diligence; the hus- bandman carefully labouring his ground; the sheep- master · diligent to know the state of his flocks, and looking well to his herds ;" the tradesman, early and late at his business; the merchant, dili- gently plying his, watching and falling in with the most fair and promising opportunities; but there is such a crook in that part of their lot, as all they are able to do can by no means make even. For why? The most proper means used for compass- ing an end are insignificant without a word of di- vine appointment commanding their success. “Who is he that saith, and it cometh to pass, when the Lord commandeth it not ?" Lam. iii. 37. IN OTHERS, THEIR NEAREST RELATIONS. 27 People ply their business with skill and industry, but the wind turns in their face. Providence crosses their enterprises, disconcerts their mea- sures, frustrates their hopes and expectations, ren- ders their endeavours unsuccessful, and so puts and keeps them still in straitened circuinstances, “So the race is not to the swift, nor the battle wo the strong, neither yet bread to the wise." Eccl. ix. 11. Providence interposing, crooks the mea- sures which human prudence and industry had laid straight towards the respective ends ; so the swift lose the race, and the strong the battle, and the wise miss of bread; while, in the mean time, some one or the other providential incident, sup- plying the defect of human wisdom, conduct, and ability, the slow gain the race and carry the prize; the weak win the battle and enrich themselves with the spoil; and bread falls into the lap of the fool. Lastly, It may fall in the relational part. Rela- tions are the joints of society; and there the crook in the lot may take place, one's smartest pain being often felt in these joints. They are in their nature the springs of man's comfort ; yet, they often turn the greatest bitterness to him. Sometimes this crook is occasioned by the loss of relations. Thus a crook was made in the lot of Jacob, by means of the death of Rachel, his beloved wife, and the loss of Joseph, his son and darling, which had like to have made him go halting to the gravc. Job laments this crook in his lot, Joò xvi. 7. “ Thou hast made desolate all my company;" 28 IN DOMESTIC DISQUIETUDE. meaning his dear children, every one of whom he had laid in the grave, not so much as one son or daughter left him. Again, sometimes it is made through the afflicting hand of God lying heavy on them; which, in virtue of their relation, recoils on the party, as is feelingly expressed by that believ- ing woman, Matt. xv. 22. “Have mercy on me, O Lord; my daughter is grievously vexed.” Ephraim felt the. smart of family afflictions, " when he called his son's name Beriah, because it went evil with his house.” i Chron. vii. 23. Since all is not only vanity, but vexation of spirit, it can hardly miss, but the more of these springs of comfort are opened to a man, he must, at one time or other, find he has but the more sources of sorrows to gush out and spring in upon him; the sorrow always proportioned to the comfort found in them, or expected from them. And, finally, the crook is sometimes made here by their proving uncomfortable through the disagreeableness of their temper, and disposition. There was a crook in Job's lot, by means of an undutiful, ill-natured wife, Job xix. 17. In Abigail's, by means of a surly, ill-tempered husband, 1 Sam. xxv. 25. In Eli's, through the perverseness and obstinacy of his children, chap. ii. 25. In Jonathan's, through the furious temper of his father, chap. xx. 30–33. So do men oftentimes find their greatest cross, where they expected their greatest comfort. Sin hath unhinged the whole creation, and made every relation susceptible of the crook. In the family are found masters hard and unjust, servants fro. GOD, THE AUTHOR OF THESE DISPENSATIONS. 29 ward and unfaithful; in a neighbourhood, men sel- fish and uneasy ; in the church, ministers unedi- fying, and offensive in their walk, and people con- temptuous and disorderly, a burden to the spirits of ministers; in the state, magistrates oppressive, and discountenancers of that which is good, and subjects turbulent and seditious; all these cause crooks in the lot of their relatives. And thus far of the crook itself. II. Having seen the crook itself, we are in the next place, to consider of God's making it. And here is to be shown, 1. That it is of God's mak- ing. 2. Ilow it is of his making. 3. Why he makes it. First, That the crook in the lot, whatever it is, is of God's making appears from these three con- siderations. First, It cannot be questioned, but the crook in the lot, considered as a crook, is a penal evil, whatever it is for the matter thereof; that is, whether the thing in itself, its immediate cause and occasion, be sinful or not, it is certainly a punishment or affliction. Now, as it may be, as such, holily and justly brought on us, by our Sov- ereign Lord and Judge, so he expressly claims the doing or making of it, Amos iii. 6. “Shall there be evil in a city, and the Lord hath not done it ?" Wherefore, since there can be no penal evil, but of God's making, and the crook in the lot is such an evil, it is necessarily concluded to be of God's makin g. Secondly, It is evident, from the scripture doc. ALL ARE UNDER HIS ARRANGEMENT. trine of divine providence, that God brings about every man's lot, and all the parts thereof. He sits at the helm of human affairs, and turns them about whithersoever he listeth. “Whatsoever the Lord please, that did he in heaven and in earth, in the seas and all deep places,” Psal. cxxxv. 6. There is not any thing whatsoever befalls us, without his overruling hand. The same providence that brought us out of the womb, bringeth us to, and fixeth us in, the condition and place allotted for us, by him who “hath determined the times, and the bounds of our habitation.” Acts xvii. 26. It overrules the smallest and most casual things about us, such as “hairs of our head falling on the ground," Matt. x. 29, 30. “A lot cast into the lap.” Prov. xvi. 33. Yea, the free acts of our will, whereby we choose for ourselves, for even - the king's heart is in the hand of the Lord, as the rivers of water.” Prov. xxi. 1. And the whole steps we make, and which others make in refer- ence to us; for “the way of man is not in him- self; it is not in man that walketh to direct his steps.” Jer. x. 23. And this, whether these steps causing the crook be deliberate and sinful ones, such as Joseph's brethren selling him into Egypt; or whether they be undesignedl, such as man- slaughter purely casual, as when one hewing wood, kills his neighbour with “ the head of the axe slipping from the helve." Deut. xix. 5. For there is a holy and wise providence that governs the sinful and the hecdless actions of men, as a rider doth a lame horse, of whose haltig, not he, ALL ARE UNDER HIS ARRANC EMENT. 31 but the horse's lameness, is the true and proper cause; wherefore in the former of these cases, God is said to have sent Joseph into Egypt, Gen. xlv. 7, and in the latter, to deliver one into his neighbour's hand, Exod. xxi. 13. Lastly, God hath, by an eternal decree, immove- able as mountains of brass, Zech. vi. 1, appointed the whole of every one's lot, the crooked paris thereof, as well as the straight. By the same eternal decree, whereby the high and low parts of the earth, the mountains and the valleys, were ap- pointed, are the heights and the depths, the pros- perity and adversity, in the lot of the inhabitants thereof determined ; and they are brought about, in time, in a perfect agreeableness thereto. The mystery of Providence, in the governinent of the world, is, in all the parts thereof, the build- ing reared up of God, in exact conformity to the plan in his decree, “ who worketh all things after the counsel of his own will." Eph. i. 11. So that there is never a crook in one's lot, but may be run up to this original. Hereof Job piously sets us an example in his own case, Job xviii. 13, 14. “ He is of one mind, and who can turn him ?" and what his soul desireth, even that he doth. For he per- formeth the thing that is appointed for me; and many such things are with him.” SECONDLY, That we may see how the crook in the lot is of God's making, we must distinguish between pure sinless crooks, and impure sinful ones. First, There are pure and sinless crooks; which GOD TO BE ACKNOWLEDGED IN AFFLICTIONS. 33 these were the afflictions of David and Job res. pectively, so they were the sins of the actors, the unhappy instruments thereof. Thus one and the same thing may be, to one a heinous sin, defiling and laying him under guilt, and to another an af- fliction, laying him under suffering only. Now, the crooks of this kind are not of God's making, in the same latitude as those of the former; for he neither puts evil in the heart of any, nor stir- reth up to it: “He cannot be tempted with evil, neither tempteth he any man.” James i. 13. But they are of his making, by his holy permission of them ; powerful bounding of them, and wise over- ruling of them to some good end. 1st. He holily permits them, suffering men “ to walk in their own ways.” Acts xiv. 16. Though he is not the author of those sinful crooks, causing them to be, by the efficacy of his power: yet, if he did not permit them, willing not to hinder them, they could not be at all : for “he shutteth and no man openeth." Rev. iii. 7. But he justly with- holds his grace which the sinner doth not desire, takes off the restraint under which he is uneasy, and since the sinner will be gone, lays the reins on his neck, and leaves him to the swing of his lust. Hos. iv. 17. “ Ephrain is joined to idols; let him alone.” Psal. lxxxi. 11, 12. “Israel would none of me: so I gave them up to their own heart's lusts.” In which unhappy situation the sinful crook doth, from the sinner's own proper motion, naturally and infallibly follow; even as water runs down a hill, wherever there is a gap 34 LIMITED BY HIS POWER AND GOODNESS. left open before it. So in these circumstances, “ Israel walked in their own counsels," ver. 12. And thus this kind of crook is of God's making, as a just judge, punishing the sufferer by it. This view of the matter silenced David under Shimei's · cursings, 2 Sam. xvi. 10, 11.“ Let him alone, and let him curse, for the Lord hath bidden him." 2dly. He powerfully bounds them, Psal. Ixxvi. 10. “ The remainder of wrath” (that is, the crea- ture's wrath) “ thou shalt restrain.” Did not God bound these crooks, however sore they are in any one's case, they would be yet sorer. But he says to the sinful instrument, as he said to the sea, “ Hitherto shalt thou come, but no farther; and here shall thy proud waves be stayed.” He lays a restraining hand on him, that he cannot go one step farther, in the way his impetuous lust drives, than he sees meet to permit. Hence it comes to pass, that the crook of this kind is neither more nor less, but just as great as he by his powerful bounding makes it to be. An eminent instance hereof we have in the case of Job, whose lot was crooked through a peculiar agency of the devil ; but even to that grand sinner, God set a bound in the case: “The Lord said unto Satan, Behold all that he hath is in thy power, only upon himself put not forth thine hand.” Job i. 12. Now, Satan went the full length of the bound, leaving nothing within the compass thereof untouched, which he saw could make for his purpose, ver. 18, 19. But he could by no means move one step beyond it, to carry his point, which he could not gain within it. OVERRULED FOR SOME GOOD PURPOSE. 35 And therefore, to make the trial greater, and the crook sorer, nothing remained but that the bound set should be removed, and the sphere of his agency enlarged; for which cause he saith, “ But touch his bone and his flesh and he will curse thee to thy face," chap. ii. 5, and it being removed ac- cordingly, but withal a new one set, ver. 6. “ Be- hold he is in thine hand, but save his life;" the crook was carried to the utmost that the new bound would permit, in a consistency with his design of bringing Job to blaspheme; “ Satan smote him with sore boils, from the sole of his foot unto the crown of his head,” ver. 7. And had it not been for this bound, securing Job's life, he, after finding this attempt unsuccessful too, had doubtless des- patched him at once. 3dly. He wisely overrules them to some good purpose, becoming the divine perfections. While the sinful instrument hath an ill design in the crook caused by him, God directs it to a holy and good end. In the disorders of David's family, Amnon's design was to gratify a brutish lust; Absalom's, to glut himself with revenge, and to satisfy his pride and ambition ; but God meant thereby to punish David for his sin in the matter of Uriah. In the crook made in Job's lot, by Satan, and the Sabe ans and Chaldeans, his instruments, Satan's design was to cause Job to blaspheme, and theirs to gra- tiſy their covetousness: but God had another de. sign therein becoming himself, namely, to manifest Job's sincerity and uprightness. Did not he wisely and powerfully overrule these crooks made FOR THE TRIAL OF ONE's state. 37 tian, or a hypocrite? Though every affliction is trying, yet here I conceive lies the main providen- cial trial a man is brought into, with reference to his state ; forasmuch as the crook in the lot, being a matter of continued course, one has occasion to open and show himself again and again in the same thing ; whence it comes to pass, that it ministers ground for a decision, in that momentous point. It was plainly on this foundation that the trial of Job's state was put. The question was, whether Job was an upright and sincere servant of God, as God himself testified of him; or but a mercenary one, a hypocrite, as Satan alleged against him? And the trial hereof was put upon the crook to be made in his lot, Job i. 8—12. and ii. 3—6. Accord- ingly, that which all his friends, save Elihu, the last speaker, did, in their reasonings with him un- der his trial, aim at, was to prove him a hypocrite ; Satan thus making use of these good men for gain- ing his point. As God made trial of Israel in the wilderness, for the land of Canaan, by a train of afflicting dispensations, which Caleb and Joshua bearing strenuously, were declared meet to enter the promised land, as having followed the Lord fully; while others being tired out with them, their carcasses fell in the wilderness; so he makes tria of men for heaven, by the crook in their lot. If one can stand that test, he is manifested to be a zaint, a sincere servant of God, as Job was proved to be; if not, he is but a hypocrite ; he cannot stand the test of the crook in his lot, but goes away 40 CONVICTION of sin. Thirdly, Conviction of sin. As when one walk- ing heedlessly is suddenly taken ill of a lameness : his going halting the rest of his way convinces him of having made a wrong step; and every new pain- ful step brings it afresh to his mind : so God makes a crook in one's lot, to convince him of some false step he hath made, or course he hath taken. What the sinner would otherwise be apt to overlook, for- get, or think light of, is by this means recalled to mind, set before him as an evil and bitter thing, and kept in remembrance, that his heart may every now and then bleed for it afresh. Thus, by the crook, men's sin finds them out to their conviction, “as the thief is ashamed when he is found.” Numb. xxxii. 23. Jer. ii. 26. The which Joseph's brethren do feelingly express, under the crook made in their lot in Egypt, Gen. xlii. 11. “We are verily guilty concerning our brother," chap. xliv. 16. « God hath found out the iniquity of thy servants.” The crook in the lot doth usually, in its nature or cir- cumstances, so naturally refer to the false step or course, that it serves for a providential memorial of it, bringing the sin, though of an old date, fresh to remembrance, and for a badge of the sinner's folly, in word or deed, to keep it ever before him. When Jacob found Leah, through Laban's unfair dealing, palmed upon him for Rachel, how could he miss of a stinging remembrance of the cheat he had, seven years at least before, put on his owu father, pretending himself to be Esau? Gen. xxvii. 19. How could it miss of galling him occasion- ally afterwards during the course of the marriage ? CORRECTION FOR SIN. 41 He had imposed on his father the younger brother for the elder; and Laban imposed on him the elder sister for the younger. The dimness of Isaac's eves favoured the former cheat; and the darkness of the evening did as much favour the latter. So he behooved to say, as Adoni-bezek in another case, Judges i. 7. “ As I have done, so God hath re- quited me." In like manner, Rachel dying in child- birth, could hardly avoid a melancholy reflection on her rash and passionate expression, mentioned Gen. xxx. l. 6 Give me children, or else I die." Even holy Job read, in the crook of his lot, some false steps he had made in his youth, many years before, Job xiii. 26. “ Thou writest bitter things against me, and makest me to possess the iniquities of my youth.” Fourthly, Correction, or punishment for sin. In nothing more than in the crook of the lot, is that word verified, Jer. ii. 19. “ Thine own wickedness shall correct thee, and thy backslidings shall re- prove thee.” God may, for a time, wink at one's sin, which afterward he will set a brand of his in- dignation upon, in crooking the sinner's lot, as he did in the case of Jacob, and of Rachel, mentioned before. Though the sin was a passing action, or a course of no long continuance, the mark of the divine displeasure for it, set on the sinner in the crook of his lot, may pain him long and sore, that by repeated experience he may know what an evil and bitter thing it was. David's killing Uriah by she sword of the Ammonites was soon over ; but for that cause “the sword never departed from his 42 PREVENTING OF SIN. house.” 2 Sam. xii. 10. Gehazi quickly obtained iwo bags of money from Naaman, in the way of falsehood and lying; but as a lasting mark of the divine indignation against the profane trick, he got withal a leprosy which clave to him while he lived, and to his posterity after him. 2 Kings, v. 27. This may be the case, as well where the sin is pardoned, as to the guilt of eternal wrath, as where it is not. And one may have confessed and sincerely repeut- ed of that sin, which yet shall make him go halting to the grave, though it cannot carry him to hell. A man's person may be accepted in the Beloved, who yet hath a particular badge of the divine dis- pleasure, with his sin hung upon him in the crook of his lot. Psal. xcix. 8. “Thou wast a God that forgavest them, though thou tookest vengeance on their inventions." Fifthly, Preventing of sin. Hos. ii. 6. “I will hedge up thy way with thorns, and make a wall that she shall not find her paths.” The crook in the lot will readily be found to lie cross to some wrong bias of the heart, which peculiarly sways with the party : so it is like a thorn-hedge or wall in the way which that bias inclines him to. The defiling objects in the world do specially take and prove ensnaring, as they are suited to the particu- lar cast of temper in men: but by means of the crook in the lot, the paint and varnish is worn off the defiling object, whereby it loses its former tak. ing appearance: thus, the edge of corrupt affec- tions is blunted, temptation weakened, and much sin prevented; the sinner after “gadding about so DISCOVERY OF LATENT CORRUPTION. 43 much to change his way, returning ashamed.” Jer ii. 36, 37. Thus the Lord crooks one's lot that “ he may withdraw man from his purpose, and hide pride from men :' and so "he keepeth back his soul from the pit.” Job xxxiii. 17, 18. Every one knows what is most pleasant to him; but God alone knows what is most profitable. As all men are liars, so all men are fools too : He is the only wise God. Jude, ver. 25. Many are obliged to the crook in their lot, that they go not to those excesses, which their vain minds and corrupt affections would with full sail carry them to; and they would from their hearts bless God for making it, if they did but calmly consider what would most likely be the issue of the removal thereof. When one is in hazard of fretting under the hardship of bearing the crook, he would do well to consider what condition he is as yet in to hear its removal in a Christian manner. Sixthly, Discovery of latent corruption, whether in saints or sinners. There are some corruptions in every man's heart, which lie, as it were, so near the surface, that they are ready on every turn to rise up; but then there are others also which lie so very deep, that they are scarcely observed at all. But as the fire under the pot makes the scum to rise up, appear a-top, and run over; sn the crook in the lot raises up from the bottom, and brings out, such corruption as otherwise one could hardly imagine to be within. Who would have suspected such strength of passion in the meek Moses as he discovered at the waters of strife, and for which he was kept out of Canaan ? Psal. cvi. 32, 33, 46 THE EXERCISE OF GRACE. teacheth. Psal. cxlvii. 10, 11. “He delighteth not in the strength of the horse ; he taketh not pleasure in the legs of a man. The Lord taketh pleasure in them that fear him, in those that hope in his mercy.” And indeed the exercise of the graces of his Spirit in his people, is so very pre- cious in his sight, that whatever grace any of them excel in, they will readily get such a crook made in their lot as will be a special trial of it, that will make a proof of its full strength. Abraham ex- celled in the grace of faith, in trusting God's bare word of promise above the dictates of sense : and God, giving him a promise, that he would make of him a great nation, made withal a crook in his lot, by which he had enough ado with all the strength of his faith ; while he was obliged to leave his country and kindred, and sojourn among the Ca- naanites; his wiſe continuing barren, till past the age of child-bearing: and when she had at length brought forth Isaac, and he was grown up, he was called to offer him up for a burnt-offering, the more exquisite trial of his faith, that Ishmael was now expelled his family, and that it was declared, 'That in Isaac only his seed should be called. Gen. xxi. 12. “ Moses was very meek above all the men which were upon the face of the earth.” Numb. xii. 3. And he was intrusted with the conduct of a most perverse and unmanageable people, the crook in his lot plainly designed for the exercise of his meekness. Job excelled in patience, and by the crook in his lot, he got as much to do with it. For God gives none of his people to excel in FOR REPROOF. making the crook in the lot of others, returns on their own head at length with a vengeance, as did “ the blood of Jezreel on the house of Jehu.” Hos. i. 4. And it is specially undesirable to be so em- ployed in the case of such as belong to God; for rarely is the ground of the quarrel the same on the part of the instrument as on God's part, but very different; witness Shimei's cursing David, as a bloody man, meaning the blood of the house of Saul, which he was not guilty of, while God meant it of the blood of Uriah, which he could not deny. 2 Sam. xvi. 7,8. Moreover, the quarrel will be, at length, taken up between God and his people ; and then their scourgers will find they had but a thankless office, Zech. i. 15. “I was but a little displeased, and they helped forward the affliction," saith God, in resentment of the heathen crooking the lot of his people. In like manner are they guilty, who impute the crook in their lot to fortune, or their ill-luck, which in very deed is nothing but a creature of imagination, framed for a blind to keep man from acknowledging the hand of God. Thus, what the Philistines doubted, they do more impiously determine, saying, in effect, “ It is not his hand that smote us, it was a chance that hap- pened to us." 1 Sam. vi. 9. And, finally, those also are guilty, who, in the way of giving up them- selves to carnal mirth and sensuality, set then, selves to despise the crook in their lot, to make nothing of it, and to forget it. I question not, but one committing his case to the Lord, and looking to him for remedy in the first place, may lawfully FOR REPROOF. 49 call in the moderate use of the comforts of life, for help in the second place. But as for that course so frequent and usual in this case among carnal men, if the crook of the lot really be, as indeed it is, of God's making, it must needs be a most indecent unbecoming course, to be abhorred of all good men, Prov. iii. 11. “My son, despise not the chastening of the Lord.” It is surely a very desperate method of cure, which cannot miss of issuing in something worse than the disease, however it may palliate it for a while, Isa. xxii. 12–14. “In that day did the Lord God of hosts call to weeping and to mourning, and behold joy and gladness, eating flesh and drinking wine : and it was revealed in mine ears, by the Lord of hosts, Surely this iniquity shall not be purged from you till ye die.” Secondly, The unsubmissive, whose hearts like the troubled sea, swell and boil, fret and mur- mur, and cannot be at rest under the crook in their lot. This is a most sinful and dangerous course The apostle Jude, characterising some,“ to whom is reserved the blackness of darkness for ever," ver. 13. saith of them, ver, 16. “ These are mur- murers, complainers," namely, still complaining of their lot, which is the import of the word there nised by the Holy Ghost. For, since the crook in their lot, which their unsubdued spirits can by no means submit to, is of God's making, this their practice must needs be a fighting against God: and these their complainings and murmurings are indeed against him, whatever face they put upon FOR REPROOF them. Thus when the Israelites murmur against Moses, Numb. xiv, 2. God charges them with murmuring against himself. “How long shall 1 bear with this evil congregation, which murmured against me?" ver. 27. Ah! may not he who made and fashioned us without our advice, be allowed to make our lot too, without asking our mind, but we must rise up against him on account of the crook made in it? What doth this speak, but that the proud creature cannot endure God's work, nor bear what he hath done? And how black and dan- gerous is that temper of spirit! How is it possible to miss of being broken to pieces in such a course ? “He is wise in heart, and mighty in strength: who hath hardened himself against him, and hath prospered ?” Job. ix. 4. Thirdly, The careless and unfruitful, who do not set themselves dutifully to comply with the design of the crook in the lot. God and nature do nothing in vain. Since he makes the crook, there is, doubtless a becoming design in it, which we are obliged in duty to fall in with, according to that, Micah. vi. 9. “ Hear ye the rod.” And, in- deed, if one shut not his own eyes, but be willing to understand, he may easily perceive the general design thereof to be, to wean him from this world, and move him to seek and take up his heart's rest in God. And nature and the circumstances of the crook itself being duly considered, it will not be very hard to make a more particular discovery of the design thereof. But, alas! the careless sin- ner, sunk in spiritual sloth and stupidity, is in do 51 FOR CONSOLATION. concern to discover the design of Providence in the crook; so he cannot fall in with it, but remains unfruitful; and all the pains taken on him, by the great Husbandman, in the dispensation, are lost. “ They cry out by reason of the arm of the mighty ;" groaning under the pressure of the crook itself, and weight of the hand of the instrument thereof: “But none saith, Where is God my Maker ?” they look not, they turn not unto God fo all that, Job xxxv. 9, 10. Use 2. For consolation. It speaks comfort to the afflicted children of God. Whatever is the crook in your lot, it is of God's making, and there- fore you may look upon it kindly. Since it is your Father has made it for you, question not but there is a favourable design in it towards you. A discreet child welcomes his father's rod, knowing that being a father he seeks his benefit thereby ; and shall not God's children welcome the crook in their lot, as designed by their Father, who can- not mistake his measures, to work for their good, according to the promise? The truth is, the crook in the lot of a believer, how painful soever it proves, is a part of the discipline of the covenant, the nurture secured to Christ's children, by the promise of the Father, Psal. lxxxix. 30, 32. “If his children forsake my law, and walk not in my judgments, then will I visit their transgressions with the rod.” Furthermore, all who are disposed to betake themselves to God under the crook in their lot, may take comfort in this, let them know that there is no crook in their lot but may be made 53 OBJECTIONS ANSWERED. God himself is the principal party, whoever be the less principal. And albeit thou hast not de- served thy crook at the hand of the instrument which he makes use of for thy correction, thou certainly deservest it at his hand; and he may make use of what instrument he will in the mat- ter, or may do it immediately by himself, even as · seems good in his sight. Object. II. “But the crook in my lot might quickly be evened, if the instrument or instruments thereof pleased; only there is no dealing with them, so as to convince them of their fault in making it." Ans. If it is so, be sure God's time is not as yet come, that the crook should be made even; for, if it were come, though they stand now like an im- pregnable fort, they would give way like a sandy bank under one's feet: they should bow down to thee with their face towards the earth, and lick up the dust of thy feet.” Isa. xlix. 23. Meanwhile, that state of the matter is so far from justifying one's not eyeing the hand of God in the crook in the lot, that it makes a piece of trial in which his hand very eminently appears, namely, that men should be signally injurious and burdensome to others, yet hy no means susceptible of conviction. This was the trial of the church from her adver- saries, Jer. 1. 7. “All that found them have de- voured them; and their adversaries said, We of- fend not: because they have sinned against the Lord, the habitation of justice.” They were very abusive, and gave her barbarous usage; yet would 5* 54 OBJECTIONS ANSWERED. they own no fault in the matter. How could they ward off the conviction? Were they verily blame- less in their devouring the Lord's straying sheep? No, surely, they were not. Did they look upon themselves as ministers of the divine justice against her? No, they did not. Some indeed would make a question here, How the adversaries of the church could celebrate her God as the habitation of justice ? But the origi- nal pointing of the text being retained, it appears, that there is no ground at all for this question here, and withal the whole matter is set in a clear light. “ All that found them have devoured them; and their adversaries said, We offend not; because they have sinned against the Lord, the habitation of justice.” These last are not the words of the adversaries, but the words of the prophet showing how it came to pass that the adversaries devoured the Lord's sheep, as they lighted on them, and withal stood to the defence of it, when they had done, far from acknowledging any wrong: the matter lay here, the sheep had sinned against the Lord, the habitation of justice; and as a just pun- ishment hereof from his hand, they could have no justice at the hand of their adversaries. Wherefore, laying aside these frivolous preten- ces, and eyeing the hand of God, as that which hath bowed your lot in that part, and keeps it in the bow, be reconciled to, and submit under the crook, whatever it is, saying from the heart, “ Truly this is a grief, and I must bear it." Jer X. 19. And to move you hereunto, consider, SUBMISSION ENFORCED. . 53 1. It is a duty you owe to God, as your sover- eign Lord and Benefactor. His sovereignty chal. lenges our submission; and it can in no case be meanness of spirit to submit to the crook which his hand hath made in our lot, and to go quieily under the yoke that he hath laid on; but it is real- ly madness for the potsherds of the earth, by their turbulent and refractory carriage under it, to strive with their Maker. And his beneficence to us, ill- deserving creatures, may well stop our mouth from complaining of his making a crook in our lot, who would have done us no wrong had he made the whole of it crooked: “Shall we receive good at the hand of God, and shall we not receive evil ?” Job ii. 10. 2. It is an unalterable statute, for the time of this life, that nobody shall want a crook in their lot ; for “ man is born unto trouble as the sparks fly upward.” Job v. 7. And those who are de- signed for heaven, are in a special manner assured of a crook in theirs, “ that in the world they shall have tribulation,” John xvi. 33; for by means thereof the Lord makes them meet for heaven. And how can you imagine that you shall be ex- empted from the common lot of mankind ? “Shall the rock be removed out of his place for thee ?" And since God makes the crooks in men's lot ac- cording to the different exigence of their casos, you may be sure that yours is necessary for you. 3. A crook in the lot, which one can hy no means submit to, makes a condition of all things the likest to that in hell. For there a yoke, which 56 SUBMISSION ENFORCED. the wretched sufferers can neither bear nor shako off, is wreathed about their necks; there the Al- mighty arm draws against them, and they against it; there they are ever suffering and ever sinning; still in the furnace, but their dross not consumed, nor they purified. Even such is the case of those who now cannot submit to the crook in their lot. 4. Great is the loss by not submitting to it. The crook in the lot, rightly improved, has turned to the best account, and made the best time to some that ever they had all their life long, as the Psalmist from his own experience testifies, Psal. cxix. 67. “Before I was afflicted I went astray; but now have I kept thy word.” There are many now in heaven, who are blessing God for the crook they had in their lot here. What a sad thing must it then be to lose this teeth-wind for Immanuel's land ! But if the crook in thy lot do thee no good, be sure it will not miss of doing thee great damage ; it will greatly increase thy guilt and aggravate thy condemnation, while it shall for ever cut thee to the heart, to think of the pains taken by means of the crook in the lot, to wean thee from the world, and bring thee to God, but all in vain. Take heed, therefore, how you manage it, “ Lest-thou mourn at the last—and say, How have I hated instruction, and my heart despised reproof!" Prov. v. 10–12. Prop. II. What God sees meet to mar, we shall not be able to mend in our lot. What crook God makes in our lot, we shall not be able to even. We shall, SUCH OPPOSITION VAIN AND FRUITLESS. 59 Secondly. A strong desire to have the cross re- moved, and to have matters in that part going ac- cording to our inclinations. This is very natural, nature desiring to be freed from every thing that is burdensome or cross to it; and if that desire be kept in a due subordination to the will of God, and it be not too peremptory, it is not sinful, Matt. xxvi. 39. “If it be possible, let this cup pass from me; nevertheless, not as I will,” &c. Hence so many accepted prayers of the people of God, for the re- moval of the crook in their lot. Thirdly. An earnest use of means for that end This naturally follows on that desire. The man being pressed with the cross, which is in his crook, labours all he can in the use of means to be rid of it. And if the means used be lawful, and not re- lied upon, but followed with an eye to God in them, the attempt is not sinful, whether he succeed in the use of them or not. III. In what sense it is to be understood, that we shall not be able to mend or even the crook in our lot. It is not to be understood, as if the case were absolutely hopeless, and that there is no remedy for the crook in the lot. For there is no case so desperate, but God may right it, Gen. xviii. 14. “Is any thing too hard for the Lord ?” When the crook has continued long, and spurned all reme- dies one has used for it, one is ready to lose hope about it; but many a crook, given over for hope- less that would never mend, God has made per- fecily straight, as in Job's case. 60 SUCH OPPOSITION VAIN AND FRUITLESS. But we shall never be able to mend it by our- selves; if the Lord himself take it not in hand to remove it, it will stand before us immovable, like a mountain of brass, though perhaps it may be in itself a thing that might easily be removed. We take it up in these three things: 1. It will never do by the mere force of our hand. 1 Sam. ii. 9.-"For, by strength shall no man prevail.” The most vigorous endeavours we can use will not even the crook, if God give it not a touch of his hand; so that all endeavours that way, without an eye to God, are vain and fruitless, and will be but ploughing on the rock, Psalm cxxvii. 1, 2. 2. The use of all allowable means for it, will be successless unless the Lord bless them for that end, Lam. iii. 37. “Who is he that saith, and it cometh to pass, when the Lord commandeth it not ?" As onė may eat and not be satisfied, so one may use means proper for evening the crook in his lot, and yet prevail nothing; for nothing can be or do for us any more than God makes it to be or do, Eccl. ix. 11. “The race is not to the swift, nor the battle to the strong; neither yet bread to the wise, nor yet riches to men of understanding,” &c. 3. It will never do in our time, but in God's time, which seldom is so early as ours, John vii. 6. “My time is not yet come, but your time is always ready." Hence that crook remains sometimes immovable, as if it were kept by an invisible hand ; and at another time it goes away with a touch, because God's time is come for evening it. 62 MOTIVES TO INDUCE SUBMISSION. are to apply to him that made it to amend it, and not take the evening of it in our own hand. Motive 1. All our attempts for its removal will, without him, de vain and fruitless. Psal. cxxvii. 1. Let us be as resolute as we will to have it evened, if God say it not, we will labour in vain. Lam. iii. 37. Howsoever fair the means we use bid for it, they will be ineffectual if he command not the blessing. Eccl. ix. 11. 2. Such attempts will readily make it worse. Nothing is more ordinary, than for a proud spirit striving with the crook, to make it more crooked, Eccl. x. 8, 9. “Whoso breaketh a hedge, a ser- pent shall bite him. Whoso removeth stones, shall de hurt therewith," &c. This is evident in the case of the murmurers in the wilderness. It na- turally comes to be so; because, at that rate, the will of the party bends farther away from it: and, moreover, God is provoked to wreath the yoke faster about one's neck, that he will by no means let it sit easy on him. 3. There is no crook but what may be remedied by him, and made perfectly straight, Psal. cxlvi. 8. “ The Lord raiseth them that are bowed down,” &c. He can perform that, concerning which there re- mains no hope with us, Rom. iv. 17. “Who quick- eneth the dead, and calleth those things which be not as though they were ?" It is his prerogative to do wonders ; to begin a work, where the whole creation gives it over as hopeless, and carry it on to perfection. Gen. xviii. 14. 4. He loves to be employed in evening crooks, MOTIVES TO INDUCE SUBMISSION. 63 and calls us to employ him that way, Psal. I. 15. “ Call upon me in the day of trouble, and I will deliver thee,” &c. He makes them for that very end, that he may bring us to him on that errand, and may manifest his power and goodness in even- ing of them. Hos. v. 15. The straits of the chil- dren of men afford a large field for displaying his glorious perfections, which otherwise would be wanting. Exod. xv. 11. 5. A crook thus evened is a double mercy. There are some crooks evened by a touch of the hand of common providence, while people are either not exercised about them, or when they fret for their removal ; these are sapless mercies, and short- lived. Psal. lxxviii. 30, 31. Hos. xiii. 11. Fruits thus too hastily plucked off the tree of providence can hardly miss to set the teeth on edge, and will certainly be bitter to the gracious soul. But O the sweets of the evening of the crook by a humble application to, and waiting on the Lord! It has the image and superscription of divine favour upon it, which makes it bulky and valuable, Gen. xxxiii. 10. “For therefore I have seen thy face, as though I had seen the face of God,” &c, chap. xxi. 6. 6. God has signalized his favour to his dearest children, in making and mending notable crooks in their lot. His darling ones ordinarily have the greatest crooks made in their lot. Heb. xii. 6 But then they make way for their richest experiences in the removal of them, upon their application to him. This is clear from the case of Abraham, Jacob, and Joseph. Which of the patriarchs had so great 64 OBJECTIONS ANSWERED. . crooks as they ? but which of them, on the other hand, had such signal tokens of the divine favour ? The greatest of men, as Samson and the Baptist, have been born of women naturally barren; so do the greatest crooks issue in the richest mercies to them that are exercised thereby. 7. It is the shortest and surest way to go straight to God with the crook in the lot. If we would have our wish in that point, we must, as the eagle, first soar aloft, and then come down on the prey. Mark v. 36. Our faithless out-of-the-way attempts to even the crook, are but our fool's haste, that is no speed ; as in the case of Abraham's going in to Hagar. God is the first mover, who sets all the wheels in motion for evening the crook, which without him will remain immovable. Hos. ii. 21, 22. Object. 1. “But it is needless, for I see, that though the crook in my lot may mend, yet it never will mend. In its own nature it is capable of be- ing removed, but it is plain it is not to be removed, it is hopeless." Ans. That is the language of unbelieving haste, which faith and patience should correct. Psal. cxvi. 11, 12. Abraham had as much to say for the hopelessness of his crook, but yet he applies to God in faith for the mending of it. Rom. iv. 19, 20. Sarah had made such a conclusion, for which she was rebuked. Gen. xviii. 13, 14. Nothing can make it needless in such a case to apply to God. Object. 2. “But I have applied to him again and again for it, yet it is never mended." 66 HOW TO OBTAIN RELIEF UNDER IT. nature, extraordinary prayer, with fasting, is very expedient. Matt. xvii. 21. 2. Humble yourselves under it, as the yoke which the sovereign hand has laid on you, Micah vii. 9. “I will bear the indignation of the Lord, because I have sinned against him,” &c. Justify God, condemn yourselves, kiss the rod, and go quietly under it; this is the most feasible way to get rid of it, the end being obtained. James iv. 10. “ 'Thou wilt prepare their hearts, thou wilt cause thine ear to hear. Psal. x. 17. 3. Wait on patiently till the hand that made ic mend it. Psal. xxvii. 14. Do not give up the matter as hopeless, because you are not so soon relieved as you would wish; “But let patience have her perfect work, that ye may be perfect and entire, wanting nothing.” James i. 4.-Leave the timing of the deliverance to the Lord ; his time will at length, to conviction, appear the best, and it will not go beyond it. Isa. Ix. 22. “I, the Lord, will hasten it in his time;" waiting on him, ye will not be disappointed, “For they shall not be ashamed that wait for me.” Isa. xlix. 23. . Exhortation 2. What crook there is, which, in the settled order of things, cannot be removed or evened in this world, let us apply to God for suita- ble relief under it. For instance, the common crook in the lot of saints, viz. in-dwelling sin; as God has made that crook not to be removed here he can certainly balance it, and afford relief under it. The same is to be said of any crook, while it remains unremoved. In such cases apply yourself HOW TO OBTAIN RELIEF UNDER IT. 67 to God, for making up your losses another way. And there are five things I would have you to keep in view, and aim at here. 1. To take God in Christ for, and instead of that thing, the withholding or taking away of which from you makes the crook in your lot. Psal. cxlii. 4,5. There is never a crook which God makes in our lot, but it is in effect heaven's offer of a blessed exchange to us; such as Mark x. 21. “ Sell whatsoever thou hast,—and thou shalt have treasure in heaven.” In managing of which ex- change, God first puts out his hand, and takes away some earthly thing from us, and it is expect- ed we put out our hand next, and take some hea- venly thing from him in the stead of it, and parti- cularly his Christ. Wherefore has God emptied your left hand of such and such an earthly com- fort? Stretch out your right hand to God in Christ, take him in the room of it, and welcome. Therefore the soul's closing with Christ is called buying, wherein parting with one thing, we get another in its stead, Matt. xiii. 45, 46. “The kingdom of heaven is like unto a merchantman seeking goodly pearls : who, when he had found one pearl of great price, he went and sold all that he had and bought it.” Do this, and you will be more than even hands with the crook in your lot. 2. Look for the stream running as full from him as ever it did or could run, when the crook of the lot has dried it. This is the work of faith, con- fidently to depend on God for that which is denied us from the creature. “When my father and mo- 68 HOW TO OBTAIN RELIEF UNDER IT. ther forsake me, then the Lord will take me up." Psal. xxvii. 10. This is a most rational expecta- tion: for it is certain there is no good in the crea- ture but what is from God; therefore there is no good to be found in the creature, the stream, but what may be got immediately from God, the foun- tain. And it is a welcome plea, to come to God and say, Now, Lord, thou hast taken away from me such a creature-comfort, I must have as good from thyself. 3. Seek for the spiritual fruits of the crook in the lot. Heb. xii. 11. We see the way in the world is, when one trade fails, to fall on, and drive another trade ; so should we, when there is a crook in the lot, making our earthly comforts low, set ourselves the more for spiritual attainments. If our trade with the world sinks, let us see to drive a trade with heaven more vigorously; see, if by means of the crook, we can obtain more faith, love, heavenly-mindedness, contempt of the world, humility, self-denial, &c. 2 Cor. vi. 10. So while we lose at one hand, we shall gain at another. 4. Grace to hear us up under the crook, ? Cor. xii. 8, 9. “For this thing I besought the Lord thrice ;" and he said, “ My grace is sufficient for thee.” Whether a man be faint, and have a light burden, or be refreshed, and strengthened, and have a heavy one, it is all the same; the latter can go as easy under his burden as the former un- der his. Grace proportioned to the trial is what we should aim at; getting that, though the crook be not evened, we are even hands with it. HOW TO BEAR IT WELL. : 69 5. The keeping in our eye the eternal rest and weight of glory in the other world, 2 Cor. iv. 17, 18. “For our light affliction, which is but for a moment, worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory; while we look not at the things which are seen, but at the things which are not seen.” This will balance the crook in your lot, be it what it will; while they who have no well-grounded hope of salvation, will find the crook in their lot in this world such a weight, as they have nothing to counterbalance it; but the hope of eternal rest may bear up under all the toil and trouble met with here. Exhortation 3. Let us then set ourselves rightly to bear the crook in our lot, while God sees meet to continue it. What we cannot mend, let us bear christianly, and not fight against God, and so kick against the pricks. So let us bear it, 1. Patiently, without fuming and fretting, or murmuring, James, v. 7. Psal. xxxvii. 7. Though we lose our comfort in the creature, through the crook in our lot, let us not lose the possession of ourselves. Luke xxi. 19. The crook in our lot makes us like one who has but a scanty fire to warm at: but impatience under it scatters it, so as to set the house on fire about us, and expose us to danger. Prov. xxv. 28. “He that hath no rule over his own spirit, is like a city that is broken down, and without walls.” 2. With Christian fortitude, without sinking un- der discouragement—"nor faint when thou art re- buked of him.” Heb. xii. 5. Satan's work is by MOTIVES TO PRESS THIS EXHORTATION. 71 The crook is a kind of spiritual medicine ; and as it is lost physic that purges away no ill humours, in vain are its unpleasantness to the taste and its gripings endured ; so it is a lost crook, and ill is the bitterness of it borne if we are not bettered hy it. Isa. xxvii. 9. "By this, therefore, shall the iniquity of Jacob be purged, and this is all the fruit, to take away his sin.” Motives to press this exhortation. Motive 1. There will be no evening of it while God sees meet to continue it. Let us behave un- der it as we will, and make what sallies we please in the case, it will continue immoveable, as fixed with bands of iron and brass. Job. xxiii. 13, 14. " But he is of one mind, and who can turn him? and what his soul desireth, even that he doth. For he performeth the thing that is appointed for me; and many such things are with him.” Is it not wis- dom then to make the best we may of what we cannot mend ? Make a virtue then of necessity. What is not to be cured must be endured, and should, with a Christian resignation. Motive 2. An awkward carriage under it notably increases the pain of it. What inakes the yoke gall our necks, but that we struggle so much against it, and cannot let it set at ease on us. Jer. xxxi. 18 How often are we, in that case, like men dashing their heads against a rock to remove it! The rock stands unmoved, but they are wounded, and lose exceedingly by their struggle. Impatience under the crook lays an over-weight on the burden, and DIFFICULTY SOLVED. 73 panies and goes alone with believing, flowing from the same saving illumination in the knowledge of Christ, whereby the soul is brought to believe on him. Hereby the soul sees him an able Saviour, and so trusts on him for salvation; the rightful Lord and infinitely wise Ruler, and so submits the lot to him. Matt. xiii. 45, 46. The soul taking him for a Saviour, takes him also for a head and ruler. It is Christ's giving himself to us, and our receiving him, that causes us to quit other things to and for him, as it is the light that dispels the darkness. Case. “Alas ! I cannot get my heart freely to subinit my lot to him in that point.” Ans. 1. That submission will not be carried on in any without a struggle ; the old man will never submit to it, and when the new man of grace is submitting to it, the old man will still be rebelling, Gal. v. 17. “For the flesh lusteth against the spirit, and the spirit against the flesh. And these are contrary, the one to the other, so that ye can- not do the things that ye would ;” but are ye sin- cerely desirous and habitually aiming to submit 10 it? Froin the ungracious struggle against the crook, turn away to the siruggle with your own heart to bring it to submit, believing the promise and using the means for it, being grieved from the heart with yourselves, that you cannot submit to it. This is submitting of your lot, in the favourable construction of the gospel. Rom. vii. 17–20; 2 Cor. viii. 12. If you had your choice, would you rather have your heart brought to submit to the 74 ADDITIONAL MOTIVES URGED. crook, than the crook evened to your heart's de- sire ? Rom. vii. 22, 23. And do you not sincere- ly endeavour to submit, notwithstanding the reluc. tancy of the flesh ? Gal. v. 17. Ans. 2. Where is the Christian self-denial, and taking up the cross, without submitting to the crook? This is the first lesson Christ puts in the hands of his disciples, Matt. xvi. 24. “If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me.” Self-denial would procure a reconciliation with the crook, and an admittance of the cross : but while we cannot bear our corrupt self to be denied any of its cray- ings, and particularly that which God sees meet especially to be denied, we carinot bear the crook in our lot, but fight against it in favour of self. Ans. 3. Where is our conformity to Christ, while we cannot submit to the crook? We cannot evidence ourselves Christians, without conformity to Christ. “He that saith he abideth in him, ought himself also so to walk, even as he walked.” 1 John ii. 6. There was a continued crook in Christ's lot, but he submitted to it, Phil. ii. 8. < And being found in fashion as a man, he hum- bled himself, and became obedient unto death, even the death of the cross.” Rom. xv. 3. “For even Christ pleased not himself,” &c. And so must we, if we will prove ourselves Christians in- deed. Matt. xi. 29.; 2 Tim. ii. 11, 12. Ans. 4. How shall we prove ourselves the gen- uine kindly children of God, if still warring with the crook? We cannot pray, Our Father-Thy ADDITIONAL MOTIVES URGED. 75 will be done on earth, as, &c. Matt. vi. Nay, the language of that practice is, We must have our own will, and God's will cannot satisfy us. Motive 4. The trial by the crook here will not last long. I Cor. vii. 29–31. What though the work be sore, it may be the better comported with, that it will not be longsome; a few days or years at farthest, will put an end to it, and take you off your trials. Do not say, I shall never be eased of it; for if not eased before, you will be eased of it at death, come after it what will. A serious view of death and eternity might make us set ourselves to behave rightly under our crook while it lasts. Motive 5. if you would, in a Christian manner, set yourselves to bear the crook, you would find it easier than you imagine, Matt. xi. 29, 30. " Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me, and ye shall find rest to your souls; for my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.” Satan has no readier way to gain his purpose, than to persuade men it is im- possible, that ever their minds should ply with the crook; that it is a burden to them, altogether in- supportable; as long as you believe that, be sure you will never be able to bear it. But the Lord makes no crook in the lot of any, but what may be borne of them acceptably, though not sinlessly and perfectly. Matt. xi. 30. For there is strength for tha effect secured in the covenant, 2 Cor. iii. 5; Phil. iv. 13, and being by faith fetched, it will certainly come, Psal. xxviii. 7. Motive 6. If you behave Christianly under your crook here, you will not lose your labour, but get 76 ADDITIONAL MOTIVES URGED. a full reward of grace in the other world, through Christ. 2 Tim. ii. 12; 1 Cor. xv. 58. There is a blessing pronounced on him that endureth on this very ground, James i. 12. “Blessed is the man that endureth temptation ; for, when he is tried, he shall receive the crown of life which the Lord hath promised to them that love him.” Heaven is the place into which the approved, upon the trial of the crook are received, Rev. vii. 14. “ These are they which came out of great tribulation, and have washed their robes, and made them white in the blood of the Lamb.” When you come there, no vestiges of it will be remaining in your lot, nor will you have the least uneasy remembrance of it; but it will accent your praises, and increase your joy. Motive 7. If you do not behave Christianly un- der it, you will lose your souls in the other world, Jude 15, 16. Those who are at war with God in their lot here, God will have war with them for ever. If they will not submit to his yoke here, and go quietly under it, he will wreathe his yoke about their neck for ever, with everlasting bonds that shall never be loosed. Job ix. 4. Therefore set yourselves to behave rightly under the crook in your lot. If you ask what way one may reach that ; for direction we propose, Prop. III. The considering the crook in the lot, as the work of God, is a proper means to bring one to behave rightly under it. USE OF THIS CONSIDERATION. 79 such. It is not a simple glance of the eye, but a contemplating and leisurely viewing of it as his work, that is the proper mean. We are to be, 1st. Habitually impressed with this considera- tion: as the crook is some lasting grievance, so the consideration of this as the remedy should be habitually kept up. There are other considera- tions besides this that we must entertain, so that we cannot always have it expressly in our mind : but we must lay it down for a rooted principle, ac- cording to which we are to manage the crook, and keep the heart in a disposition, whereby it may expressly slip into our minds, as occasion calls. 2dly. We are to be occasionally exercised in it. Whenever we begin to feel the smart of the crook, we should fetch in this remedy; when the yoke begins to gall the neck, there should be an appli- cation of this spiritual ointment. And however often the former comes in on us, it will be our wis- dom to fetch in the latter as the proper remedy ; the oftener it is used, it will more easily come to hand, and also be the more effectual. · Fifthly. A considering it for the end for which it is proposed to us, namely, to bring us to a dutiful carriage under it. Men's corruptions will cause them to enter on the consideration of it: but as the principle is, so the end and effect of it will be corrupt. 2 Kings vi. 33. But we must enter on, and use it for a good end, if we would have good of it, taking it as a practical consideration for regu- lating our conduct under the crook. II. How it is to be understood to be a proper 80 INDISPENSABLE NECESSITY OF FAITH. means to bring one to behave rightly under the crook. Not as if it were sufficient of itself, and as it stands alone, to produce that effect. But as it is used in faith, in the faith of the gospel; that is to say, a sinner's bare considering the crook in his lot as the work of God, without any saving relation to him, will never be a way to behave himself rightly under it: but having believed in Jesus Christ, and so taking God for his God, the consi- dering of the crook as the work of God, his God, is the proper means to bring him to that desirable lemper and behaviour. Many hearers mistake here. When they hear such and such lawful considera- tions proposed for bringing them to duty, they pre- sently imagine, that by the mere force of them, they may gain the point. And many preachers too, who, forgetting Christ and the gospel, pretend by the force of reason to make men Christians ; the eyes of both being held, that they do not see the corruption of men's nature, which is such as sets the true cure above the force of reason : all that they are sensible of, being some ill habits, which they think may be shaken off by a vigorous application of their rational faculties. To clear this matter, consider, First. Is it rational to think to set fallen man, with his corrupted nature, to work the same way with innocent Adam ? that is to set beggars on a level with the rich, lame men to a journey with those that have limbs. Innocent Adam had a stock of gracious abilities, whereby he might, by the force INDISPENSABLE NECESSITY OF FAITH. 81 of moral considerations, have brought himself to perform duty aright. But where is that with us? 2 Cor. iii. 5. Whatever force be in them to a soul endowed with spiritual life, what power have they to raise the dead, such as we are ? Eph. ii. 1. Secondly. The scripture is very plain on this head, showing the indispensable necessity of faith; Heb. xi. and that, such as unites to Christ, John xv. 5. “Without me,” that is, separate from me, “ye can do nothing ;" no, not with all the moral considerations ye can use. How were the ten commandments given on mount Sinai ? not as bare exactions of duty, but fronted with the gospel, to he believed in the first place; “I am the Lord thy God,” &c. And so Solomon, whom many regard rather as a moral philosopher, than an inspired writer leading to Christ, fronts his writings, in the beginning of the Proverbs, with most express gos- pel. And must we have it expressly repeated in our Bibles with every moral precept, or else shut our eyes and take these precepts without it ? that is the effect of our natural enmity to Christ. If we loved him more, we should see him more in every page, and in every command, receiving the law at his mouth. Thirdly. Do but consider what it is to believe rightly under the crook in the lot; what humilia- tion of soul, self-denial, and absolute resignation to · the will of God must be in it: what love to God it must proceed from ; how regard to his glory must influence it as the chief end thereof; and try, and sce if it is not impossible for you to reach it with- 82 IMPORTANCE OF DUE CONSIDERATION. out that faith aforementioned. I know a Christian may reach it without full assurance : but still, ac- cording to the measure of their persuasion that God is their God, so will their attainments in it be; these keep equal pace. O what kind of hearts do they imagine themselves to have, that think they can for a moment empty them of the creature, far- ther than they can fill them with a God, as their God, in its room and stead! No doubt men may, from the force of moral considerations, work them- selves to a behaviour under the crook, externally right, such as many pagans had ; but a Christian disposition of spirit under it will never be reached, without that faith in God. Object. “ Then it is saints only that are capable of the improvement of that consideration." Ans. Yea, indeed it is so, as to that and all other moral considerations, for true Christian ends : and that amounts to no more, than that directions for walking rightly are only for the living, that have the use of their limbs : and, therefore, that ye may improve it, set yourselves to believe in the first place. III. I shall confirm that it is a proper mean to bring one to behave rightly under it. This will appear, if we consider these four things. 1. It is of great use to divert from the consider- ing and dwelling on those things about the crook, which serve to irritate our corruption. Such are the balking of our will and wishes, the satisfac- tion we should have in the matter's going accord- ing to our mind, the instruments of the crook, how IMPORTANCE OF DUE CONSIDERATION. 83 injurious they are to us, how unreasonable, how obstinate, &c. The dwelling on these considera- tions is but the blowing of the fire within ; but to turn our eyes to it as the work of God, would be a cure by way of diversion, 2 Sam. vi. 9, 10; and such diversion of the thoughts is not only lawſul, but expedient and necessary. 2. It has a moral aptitude for producing this good effect. Though our cure is not compassed by the mere force of reason; yet it is carried on, not by a brutal movement, but in a rational way. Eph. v. 14. This consideration has a moral effi. cacy on our reason, it is fit to awe us into a sub- mission, and ministers a deal of argument for behaving christianly under our crook. 3. It has a divine appointment for that end, which is to be believed. Prov. iii. 6. So the text. The creature in itself is an inefficacious and moveless thing, a mere vanity. Acts. xvii. 28. That which makes any thing a means fit for the end, is a word of divine appointment. Matt. iv. 4. To use any thing then for an end, without the faith of this, is to make a god of the creature; there- fore it is to be used in a dependence on God, ac- cording to that word of appointment. 1 Tim. iv. 4, 5. And every thing is fit for the end for which God has appointed it. This consideration is ap- pointed for that end ; and therefore is a fit means for it. 4. 'The Spirit may be expected to work by it, and does work by it, in them that believe, and look to him for it, for as much as it is a mean of his 84 IMPROVEMENT OF THE SUBJECT. own appointment. Papists, legalists, and all su- perstitious persons, devised various means of sanc- tification, seeming to have, or really having, a moral fitness for the same; but they are quite in- effectual, because, like Abanar and Pharpar, they want a word of divine appointment for curing us of our leprosy; therefore the Spirit works not by them, since they are not his instruments, but de- vised of their own hearts. And since even the means of divine appointment are ineffectual with- out the Spirit, these can never be effectual. But this consideration having a divine appointment, the Spirit works by it. Use. Then take this direction for your behaving rightly under the crook in your lot. Inure your- selves to consider it as the work of God. And for helping you to improve it, so as it may be effectual, I offer these advices : 1. Consider it as the work of your God in Christ. This is the way to sprinkle it with gos- pel-grace, aud so to make it tolerable. Psal. xxii. 1. The discerning of a Father's hand in the crook will take out much of the bitterness of it, and sugar the pill to you. For this cause it will be necessary, (1) Solemnly to take God for your God, under your crook, Psal. cxlii. 4, 5. (2) In all your encounters with it, resolutely to believe, and claim your interest in him. 1 Sam. xxx. 6. 2. Enlarge the consideration with a view of the divine relations to you, and the divine attributes. Consider it, being the work of your God, the work of your Father, elder Brother, Head, Husband, 86 THE LOWLY AND PROUD CONTI ASTED. First. There is a comparison instituted, and that between two parties, and two points wherein they vastly differ. 1st. The parties are the lowly and the proud, who differ like heaven and earth : the proud are climbing up and soaring aloft; the lowly are con- tent to creep on the ground, if that is the will of God. Let us view them more particularly as the text represents them. On the one hand is the lowly. Here there is a line-reading and a marginal, both from the Holy Spirit, and they differ only in a letter. The former is the afflicted or poor, that are low in their condi- tion; those that have a notable crook in their lot through affliction laid on them, whereby their con- dition is lowered in the world. The other is the lowly or meek humble ones, who are low in their spirit, as well as their condition, and so have their minds brought down to their lot. Both together making the character of this lowly party. On the other hand is the proud; the gay and high minded ones. It is supposed here that they are crossed too, and have crooks in their lot; for, dividing the spoil is the consequent of a victory, and a victory pre-supposes a battle. 2nd. The points wherein these parties are sup- posed to differ, viz: being of a humble spirit, and dividing the spoil. Afflicted and lowly ones may sometimes get their condition changed, may be raised up on high, and divide the spoil, as Hannah, Job, &c. The proud may sometimes be thrown down and crushed, . PREFERENCE GIVEN TO THE LOWLY. 87 as Pharaoh, Nebuchadnezzar, &c. But that is not the question, Whether it is better to be raised up with the lowly or thrown down with the proud ? There would be no difficulty in determining that. But the question is, Whether it is better to be of a low and humble spirit, in low circumstances, with afflicted humble ones; or to divide the spoil, and get one's will, with the proud ? If men would speak the native sentiments of their hearts, that question would be determined in a contradiction to the text. The points then here compared and set one against another, are these : On the one hand, to be of a humble spirit with afflicted lowly ones. (Heb.) To be low of spirit; for the word primarily denotes lowness in situation or state : so the point here proposed is to be with, or in the state of, afflicted lowly ones, having the spirit brought down to that low lot ; the lowness of the spirit balancing the lowness of one's con- dition. On the other hand to divide the spoil with the proud. The point here proposed is, to be with or in the state of the proud, having their lot by main force brought to their mind; as those who, taking themselves to be injured, fight it out with the ene- my, overcome and divide the spoil according to their will. Secondly. The decision made, wherein the former is preferred to the latter; “ Better is it to be of an humble spirit with the lowly than to di- vide the spoil with the proud.” If these two pare ties were set before us, it were better to take our 88 THE LOWLY RARELY TO Bå FOUND. lot with those of a low condition, who have their spirits brought as low as their lot, than with those, who, being of a proud and high spirit, have their lot brought up to their mind. A humble spirit is better than a heightened condition. Doct. There is a generation of lowly afflicted ones, having their spirit lowered and brought down to their lot ; whose case, in that respect, is better than that of the proud getting their will, and car. rying all to their mind. 1. We shall consider the generation of the low- ly afflicted ones, having their spirit brought down to their lot. And we shall, First. Lay down some general considerations about them. 1. There is such a generation in the world, bad as the world is. The text expressly mentions them, and the scripture elsewhere speaks of them; as Psal. ix. 12. and x. 12. Matth. v. 3. with Luke vi. 20. Where shall we seek them ? Not in heaven, there are no afflicted ones there; nor in hell, there are no lowly and humble ones there, whose spirit is brought to their lot. In this world they must then be, where the state of trial is. 2. If it were not so, Christ, as he was in the world, would have no followers in it. He was the head of that generation whom they all copy aſter. * Learn of me, for I am meek and lowly of heart." Matt. xi. 29. And for his honour, and the honour of his cross, they will never be wanting while tho world stands, Rom. viii. 29. “ Whom he did fore- SOME MORE LOWLY THAN OTHERS. 89 know he also did predestinate to be conformed to the image of his Son.” His image lies in these two, suffering and holiness, whereof lowliness is a chief part. 3. Nevertheless, they are certainly very rare in the world. Agur observes, that there is another generation, (Prov. xxx. 13. “ There eyes are lofty, and their eye-lids lifted up,”) quite opposite to them, and this makes the greatest company by far. The low and afflicted lot is not so very rare, but the lowly disposition of spirit is rarely yoked with it. Many a high spirit keeps up in spite of low- ering circumstances. 4. They can be no more in number than the truly godly; for nothing less than the power of divine grace can bring down men's minds from their native height, and make their will pliant to the will of God. 2 Cor. x. 4, 5. Men may put on a face of submission to a low and crossed lot, be- cause they cannot help it, and they see it is in vain to strive : but to bring the spirit truly to it, must be the effect of humbling grace. 5. Though all the godly are of that generation, yet there are some of them to whom the character more especially belongs. The way to heaven lies through tribulation to all, Acis xiv. 22; and all Christ's followers are reconciled to it notwithstand- ing, Luke xvi. 26; Yet there are some of them more remarkably disciplined than oiliers, whose spirit is hereby humbled and brought down to their lot, Psal. cxxxi. 2. “ Surely I have behaved and quieted myself as a child that is weaned of his 92 CHARACTER OF THE LOWLY. justice, they may, Phil. ii. 3. Though they cannot hinder themselves from seeing their glaring faults, yet they are ready withal to acknowledge their excellencies, and esteem them so far. And be- cause they see more into their own merits and ad- vantages for holiness, and misimproving thereof, than they can see into others, they are apt to look ou others as better than themselves, circumstances compared. 4. They are sunk down into a state of subordi- nation to God and his will. Psal. cxxxi. 1, 2. Pride sets a man up against God, lowliness brings him back to his place, and lays him down at the feet of his sovereign Lord, saying, Thy will be done on earth, &c.—They seek no more the command, but are content that God himself sit at the helm of their affairs, and manage all for them, Psal. xlvii. 4. 5. They are not bent on high things, but dis- posed to stoop to low things. Psal. cxxxi. 1. Low- liness levels the lowering imaginations, which pride mounts up against heaven; draws a veil over all personal worth and excellences before the Lord; and yields a inan's all to the Lord, to be as stepping-stones to the throne of his glory. 2 Sam. xv. 25, 26. 6. They are apt to magnify mercies bestowed on them. Gen. xxxii. 10. Pride of heart overlooks and vilifies mercies one is possessed of, and fixes the eye on what is wanting in one's condition, making one like the flies, which pass over the sound places, and swarm together on the sore. CHARACTER OF THE PROUD. 93 bitterness in his lot, considering how the Lord, by means of that afflicting lot, stops the provision for unruly lusts, that they may be starved : how he cuts off the by-channels, that the whole stream of the soul's love may run towards himself; how he pulls off, and holds off the man's burden and clog of earthly comforts, that he may run the more ex- peditiously in the way to heaven. 5. They rest in it, as what they desire not to come out of, till the God that brought them into it, see it meet to bring them out with his good will. Isa. xxviii. 16. Though an unsubdued spirit's time for deliverance is always ready, a humble soul will be afraid of being taken out of its afflicted lot too soon. It will not be for moving for a change, till the heaven's moving bring it about; so this hinders not prayer, and the use of appointed means, with dependence on the Lord; but requires faith, hope, patience, and resignation. 2 2am. xv. 25, 26. II. We shall consider the generation of the proud getting their will and carrying all to their mind. And in their character also are three things. First, There are crosses in their lot. They also have their trials allotted them by overruling provi- dence, and let them be in what circumstances they will in the world, they cannot miss them altogether. For consider, . 1. The confusion and vanity brought into the creation by man's sin, have made it impossible to get through the world, but men must meet with what will ruffle them. Eccles. i. 14. Sin has turned the world from a paradise into a thicket 96 CHARACTER OF THE PROUD. there is no getting through without being scratch ed. As midges in the summer will fly about those walking abroad in a goodly attire, as well as about those in sordid apparel; so will crosses in the world meet with the high as well as the low. 2. The pride of their heart exposes them partic- ularly to crosses. A proud heart will make a cross to itself, where a lowly soul would find none. Esth. v. 13. It will make a real cross ten times the weight it would be to the humble. The generation of the proud are like nettles and thorn hedges, upon which things flying about do fix, while they pass over low and plain things; so none are more exposed to crosses than they, though none so unfit to bear them; as appears from, Secondly, Reigning pride in their spirit. Their spirits were never subdued by a work of thorough humiliation, they remain at the height in which the corruption of nature placed them: hence they can by no means bear the yoke God lays on them. The neck is swollen with the ill humours of pride and passion; hence, when the yoke once begins to touch it, they cannot have any more ease. We may view the case of the proud generation here in three things. 1. They have an over-value for themselves; and 80 will not stoop to the yoke ; it is below them. What a swelling vanity is in that, Exod. v. 2. “ Who is the Lord that I should obey his voice ?" Hence a work of humiliation is necessary to make one take on the yoke, whether of Christ's precepts or providence. The first error is in the understand- 98 CHARACTER OF THE PROUD the cross, even the crook, and bring the thing to their own mind : this is the cause of this unholy war, in which, (1.) There is one black band of hellish passions that marches upwards, and makes an attack on heaven itself, namely, discontent, impatience, mur- muring, frettings, and the like. “The foolishness of man perverteth his way; and his heart fretteth against the Lord.” Prov. xix. 3. These fire the breast, fall the countenance, Gen. iv. 6, let ofl sometimes a volley of indecent and passionate complaints, Jude, ver. 16, and sometimes of blas- phemies, 2 Kings vi. 33. (2.) There is another that marches forward, and makes an attack on the instrument or instruments of the cross, namely, anger, wrath, fury, revenge, bitterness, &c. Prov. xxvii. 4. These carry the man out of the possession of himself, Luke xxi. 19, fill the heart with a boiling heat, Psa. xxxix. 3, the mouth with clamour and evil-speaking, Eph. iv. 31, and threatenings are breathed out; Acts ix. 1, and soinetimes set the hands on work, a most heavy event, as in the case of Ahab against Naboth. Thus the proud carry on the war, but oftentimes they lose the day, and the cross remains immovable for all they can do; yea, and sometimes they them- selves fall in the quarrel, it ends in their ruin. Exod. xv.9, 10. But that is not the case in the text. For we are to consider them as, Thirdly, Getting their will, and carrying all to their mind. This speaks, 108 IMPROVEMENT OF THE SUBJECT. to bow and ply, than to get the crook in your lot evened. Motive 1. It is far more needful for us to have our spirits humbled under the cross, than to have the cross removed. The removal of the cross is needful only for the ease of the flesh, the humbling for the profit of our souls, to purify them, and bring them into a state of health and cure. 2. The humbling of the spirit will have a mighty good effect on a crossed lot, but the removal of the cross will have none on the unhumbled spirit. The humbling will lighten the cross mightily for the time, Matt. xi. 30, and in due time carry it cleanly off, 1 Pet. v. 6. But the removal of the cross is not a means to humble the unhumbled ; though it may prevent irritation, yet the disease still remains. 3. Think with yourselves how dangerous and hopeless a case it is to have the cross removed ere the spirit is humbled ; that is, to have the means of cure pulled away and blocked up from us, while the power of the disease is yet unbroken ; to be taken off trials ere we have given any good proof of our- selves, and so to be given over of our physician as hopeless, Isa. i. 5. Hos. iv. 17. Use 3. For direction. Believing the gospel, take God for your God in Christ towards your eternal salvation, and then dwell much on the thoughts of God's greatness and holiness, and of your own sin- . fulness; so will you be humbled under the mighty hand of God; and, in due time, he will lift you up. INTRODUCTORY REMARKS. 109 1 Peter v. 6 Humble yourselves therefore under the mighty hane? of God, that he may exalt you in due time. In the preceding part of this chapter, the apostle presents the duties of the church officers towards the people; and then the duty of the people, both towards their officers, and among themselves, which he winds up in one word, submission. For which causes he recommends humility as the great means to bring all to their respective duties. This is enforced with an argument taken from the differ- ent treatment the Lord gives to the proud and the humble; his opposing himself to the one, and showing favour to the other. Our text is an ex- hortation drawn from that consideration, and in it we have, !st. The duty we are to study : “Humble your- selves therefore under the mighty hand of God, that' he may exalt you in due time” And therein we may notice, (1.) 'The state of those to whom it is proposed, those under the mighty hand of God, whom his hand has humbled, or brought low in respect of their circumstances in the world. And by thesc I think, are meant, not only such as are under par- ticular signal afflictions, which is the lot of some, but also those who, by the providence of God, are, in any kind of way lowered, which is the lot of all. All being in a state of submission or dependence on others God has made this life a state of trial ; 10 110 INTRODUCTORY REMARKS. and for that cause he has, by his mighty hand, subjected men one to another, as wives, children, servants, to husbands, parents, masters; and these again to their superiors; among whom, again, even the highest depend on those under them, as magis- irates and ministers on the people, even the su- preme magistrate. This state of the world God has made for the trial of men in their several sta- tions, and dependence on others; and therefore, when the time of trial is over, it also comes to an end. " Then cometh the end-when he shall have put down all rule and all authority, and power," 1 Cor. xv. 24, 25. Meantime, while it lasts, it makes humility necessary to all, to prompt them to the duty they owe their superiors, to whom God's nighty hand has subjected them. (2.) The duty itself, namely, Humiliation of our spirits under the humbling circumstances the Lord has placed us in. “Humble yourselves therefore under the nighty hand of God, that he may exalt you in due time." Whether we are under partic- ular afflictions, which have cast us down from the height we were sometime in, or whether we are only inferiors in one or more relations ; or wheth- er, which is most common, both these are in our case, we must therein eye the nighty hand of God, as that which placed us there, and is over us, there to hold us down in it; and so, with an awful regard thereto, bow down under it, in the temper and dis- position of our spirits, suiting our spirits to our lot, and careful of performing the duty of our low wphere. 1 2 INTRODUCTORY REMARKS. Object. 1. If we let our spirit fall, we shall lio always at folks' feet, and they will trample on us. Ans. No; pride of spirit unsubdued, will bring men to lie at the feet of others for ever, Isa. Ixvi. 24. But humiliation of spirit will bring them un- doubtedly out from under their feet, Mal iv. 2, 3. They that humble themselves now will be exalted for ever; they will be brought out of their low situation and circumstances. Cast ye yourselves even down with your low lot, and assure your- selves ye shall not lie there. Object. 2. If we do not raise ourselves, none will raise us; and therefore we must see to our- selves, to do ourselves right. Ans. That is wrong. Humble ye yourselves in respect of your spirits, and God will raise you up in respect of your lot, or low condition; and they that have God engaged for raising them, have no reason to say they have none to do it for them. Bringing down of the spirit is our duty, raising us up is God's work; let us not forfeit the privilege of God's raising us up, by arrogating that work to ourselves, taking it out of his hand. Object. 3. But surely we shall never rise high, if we let our spirits fall. Ans. That it is wrong too: God will not only raise the humble ones, but he will lift them up on high ; for so the word signifies. They shall be as high at length as ever they were low, were they ever so low; nay, the exaltation will bear propor- tion to the humiliation. DESIGN OF GOD IN AFFLICTING. 113 (2.) Here is the date of that happy event when it will fall out. In due time, or in the season, the proper season for it, Gal. vi. 9. "In due season we shall reap, if we ſaint not.” We are apt to weary in humbling trying circumstances, and would instantly heave up our head, John. vii. 6. But So- lomon observes, There is a time for every thing when it does best, ånd the wise will wait for it, Eccl. iii. 1-8. There is a time too for exalting them that humble themselves ; God has set it, and it is the due time for the purpose, the time when it does best, even as sowing in the spring, and reaping in the harvest. When that time comes, your exalting shall no longer be put off, and it would come too soon should it come before that time. Doct. 1. The bent of one's heart, in humbling circumstances, should lie towards a suitable hum- bling of spirit, as under God's mighty hand plac- ing us in them. We shall consider, 1. What things are supposed in this. It suppo- ses that 1. God brings men into humbling circumstances, Ezek. xvii. 24. " And all the trees of the field shall know, that I the Lord have brought down the high tree.” There is a root of pride in the hearts of all men on earth, that must be mortified ere they can be meet for heaven: and therefore no man can iniss, in this time of trial, some things that will give a proof whether he can stoop or no. And 10* 114 DESIGN OF GOD IN AFFLICTING. God brings them into humbling circumstances for that very end, Deut. viii. 2. “ The Lord thy God led thee these forty years in the wilderness, to humble thee, and to prove thee, to know what was in thine heart." . 2. These circumstances prove pressing as a weight on the heart, tending to bear it down, Psal. cvii. 12. “ Therefore he brought down their hearts with labour.” They strike at the grain of the heart, and cross the natural inclination : whence a trial arises, whether, when God lays on his migh- ty hand, the man can yield under it or not; and consequently, whether he is meet for heaven or not. 3. The heart is naturally apt to rise up against these humbling circumstances, and consequently against the mighty hand that brings and keeps them on. The man naturally bends his force to get off the weight, that he may get up his head, seeking more to please himself than to please his God, Job. xxxv. 9, 10. “They cry out hy reason ou the arm of the mighty : but none saith, Where is God my Maker ?" This is the first gate the heart runs to in humbling circumstances; and in this way the unsubdued spirit holds on. 4. But what God requires is, rather to labour to bring down the heart, than to get up the head, James iv. 10. Here lies the proof of one's meetness for heaven; and then is one in the way heaven-ward, when he is more concerned to get down his heart than to get up his head, to go calmly under his burden than to get it off, to bow under the mighty hand, than to put it off him. AFFLICTIONS DIVERSIFIED. 115 . 5. There must be a noticing of the hand of God in humbling circumstances; “Hear ye the rod, and him who hath appointed it.” Mic. vi. 9. There is an abjectness of spirit, whereby some give up themselves to the will of others in the harshest treatment, merely to please them, without regard to the authority and command of God. This is real meanness of spirit, whereby one lies quietly to be trampled on by a fellow worm, from its ima- ginary weight; and none so readily fall into it as the proud, at some times, to serve their own turn. These are men-pleasers, Eph. vi. 6 ; Gal. i. 10. II. What are those humbling circumstances the mighty hand of God brings men into. Supposing here what was before taught concerning the crook in the lot being of God's making, these are cir- cumstances, 1. Of imperfection. God has placed all men in such circumstances under a variety of wants and imperfections, Phil. iii. 12. We can look no where, where we are not beset with them. There is a heap of natural and moral imperfec- tions about us : our bodies and our souls, in all their faculties, are in a state of imperfection. The pride of all glory is stained ; and it is a shame for us not to be humbled under such wants as attend us; it is like a begger strutting in his rags. 2. Of inferiority in relations, whereby men are set in the lower place in relations and society, and made to depend on others, 1 Cor. vii. 24. God has for a trial of men's submission to himself, 116 AFFLICTIONS DIVERSIFID. subjected them to others whom he has set over them, to discover what regard they will pay to his authority and commands at second hand. Domin ion or superiority is a part of the divine image shining in them, 1 Cor. xi. 7. And therefore reverence of them, consisting in an awful regard to that ray of the divine image shining in them, is necessarily required, Eph. v. 23; Heb. xii. 9. The same holds in all other relations and superi- orities, namely, that they are so far in the place of God to their relatives, Psal. lxxxii. 6, and though the parties be worthless in themselves, that looses not from the debt due to them, Acts xxiii. 4, 5. Roin. xiii. 7. The reason is, because it is not their qualities, but their character, which is the ground of that debt of reverence and subjection ; and the trial God makes of us in that matter turns not on the point of the former, but of the latter. Now, God having placed us in these circum- stances of inferiority, all refractoriness, in all things not contrary to the command of God, is rising up against his mighty hand, Rom. xiii. 2, because it is mediately upon us for that effect, though it is a man's hand that is immediately on us. 3. Of contradiction, tending directly to balk us of our will. This was a part of our Lord's state of humiliation, and the apostle supposes it will be a part of ours too, Heb. xii. 3. There is a perfect harimony in heaven, no one to contradict another there : for they are in their state of retribution and 118 WHEREIN HUMILIATION CINSISTS justly left weltering in it. Men wilfully make one false step, and for that cause they are justly left to make another worse ; and sin hangs about all, even the best. And this is over-ruled of God for our humiliation, that we may be ashamed, and never open our mouth any more. Wherefore, not to be humbled under our sinfulness, is to rise up against the mighty hand of God, and to justify all our sin- ful departings from him, as lost to all sense of duty, and void of shame. III. What it is in humbling circumstances, to humble ourselves under the mighty hand of God. This is the great thing to be aimed at in our hum- bling circumstances. And we may take it up in these eight things. 1. Noticing God's mighty hand, as employed in bringing about every thing that concerns us, either in the way of efficacy or permission, “ And he said, It is the Lord ; let him do what seemeth him good.” 1 Sam. iii. 18. “And the king said, The Lord hath said unto him, Curse David: who shall then say, wherefore hast thou done so ?” 2 Sam. xvi. 10. He is the fountain of all perfection, but we must trace our imperfections to his sovereign will. It is he that has posted every one in their relations by his providence; without himn we could not meet with such contradictions ; for, “ 'The king's heart is in the hand of the Lord, as the rivers of water: he turneth it withersoever he pleaseth.'. Prov. xxi. 1. He sends afflictions, and justly puis- ishes one sin with another. Isa, vi. 10. 2. A sense of our own worthlessness and no 120 WHEREIN HUMILIATION CONSISTS. taken away ; blessed be the name of the Lord." And xl. 4, 5. “What shall I answer thee? I will lay mine hand upon my mouth. Once have I spoken, but I will not answer; yea, twice, but I will proceed no farther.” And Eli, 1 Sam. ii. 18. It is the Lord ; let him do what seemeth him good.” 5. A magnifying of his mercies towards us in the midst of all his proceedings against us, Psal. cxliv. 3. Has he lain us low? If we be duly humbled, we shall wonder he has laid us no lower Ezra ix. 13. For however low the humble are laid, they will see they are not yet so low as their sins deserve. Lam. iii. 22. 6. A holy and silent admiration of the ways and counsels of God, as to us unsearchable. Rom. xi. 33. Pride of heart thinks nothing too high for the man, and so arraigns before its tribunal the divine proceedings, pretends to see through them, censures freely and condemns; but humiliation of spirit disposes a man to think awfully and honour- ably of those mysteries of Providence he is not able to see through. 7. A forgetting and laying aside before the Lord all our dignity, whereby we excel others, Rev. iv. 10. Pride feeds itself on the man's real or imagi- nary personal excellency and dignity, and, being so inured to it before others, cannot forget it before God, Luke xviii. 11. "God, I thank thee I ain not as other men.” But humiliation of spirit makes it all to vanish before him as doth the shadow be- fore the shining sun, and it lays the man, in his WHEREIN HUMILIATION CONSISTS. 121 own eyes, lower than any, “Surely I am more brutish than any man, and have not the understand- ing of a man.” Prov. xxx. 2. 8. A submitting readily to the meanest offices requisite in, or agreeable to our circumstances. Pride at every turn finds something that is below the man to condescend or stoop to, measuring by his own mind and will, not by the circumstances God has placed him in. But humility measures by the circumstances one is placed in, and readily falls in with what they require. Hereof our Sa- viour gave us an example to be imitated, Phil. ii. 8. “ Being found in fashion as a man he humbled him- self, and became obedient unto death.” John xiii. 14. "If I then, your Lord and Master, have washed your feet, ye ought also to wash one ano- ther's feet.” Use. Of exhortation. Let the bent of your heart then, in all your humbling circumstances, be to- wards the humbling of your spirit, as under the mighty hand of God. This lies in two things. 1. Carefully notice all your humbling circum- stances, and overlook none of them. Observe your imperfections; inferiority in relations; con- tradictions you meet with ; your afflictions; un- certainty of all things about you; and your sinful- ness.-Look through them designedly, and con- sider the steps of the conduct of Providence toward you in these, that ye may know yourselves, and may not be strangers at home, blind to your own real state and case. 2. Observe what these circumstances require of 11 122 MOTIVES FOR ATTAINING IT. you, as suitable to them; bend your endeavours towards it, to bring your spirits into that temper of humiliation, that, as your lot is really low in all these respects, so your spirits may be low too, as under the mighty hand of God. Let this be your great aim through your whole life, and your exer- cise every day. Motive 1. God is certainly at work to humble one and all of us. However high any are lifted up in this world, Providence has hung certain badges for humiliation on them, whether they will notice them or not, Isa. xl. 6. Now, it is our duty to fall in with the design of providence, that while God is humbling us, we may be humbling our- selves, and that we may not receive humbling dis- pensations in vain. 2. The humiliation of our spirit will not take effect without our own agency therein : while God with him ; for he works on us as rational agents, who being moved, move themselves, Phil. ii. 12, 13. God by his providence may force down our lot and condition without us, but the spirit must come down voluntarily and of choice, or not at all; therefore, strike in with humbling providences in humbling yourselves, as mariners spread out the sails when the wind begins to blow, that they may go away before it. 3. If ye do not, ye resist the inighty hand of God, Acts. vii. 51. Ye resist in so far as ye do not yield, but stand as a rock keeping your ground against your Maker in humbling providences, Jer. MOTIVES FOR ATTAINING IT. 123 v. 3. “Thou hast stricken them, but they have not grieved; thou hast consumed them, but they have refused to receive correction. They have made their faces harder than a rock; they have refused to return." Much more when ye work against him to force up your condition, which ye may see God means to hold down. And of this resistance consider, It is a direct fighting against God, a shaking off of subjection to our sovereign Lord, and a rising in rebellion against him. Isa. xlv. 9. . (2.) The folly of it. How unequal is the match! How can the struggle end well? Job ix. 4. What else can possibly be the issue of the potsherds of the earth dashing against the Rock of Ages, but that they be broken to pieces ? All men must cer- tainly bow or break under the mighty hand of God. Job xh. 8. 4. This is the time of humiliation, even the time of this life. Every thing is beautiful in its season; and the bringing down of the spirit now is beautiful, as in the time thereof, even as the plowing and sowing of the ground is in the spring. Consider, (1.) Humiliation of spirit is in the sight of God of great price, 1 Pet. iii. 4. As he has a special aversion to pride of heart, he has a special liking of humility, chap. v. 5. The humbling of sinners and bringing them down from their heights, where- in the corruption of their nature has set them, is he great end of his word, and of his providences. 124 MOTIVES FOR ATTAINING IT. (2.) It is no easy thing to humble men's spirits ; it is not a little that will do it; it is a work that is not soon done. There is need of a digging deep for a thorough humiliation in the work of conver- sion, Luke vi. 48. Many a stroke must be given at the root of the tree of the natural pride of the heart ere it fall; ofttimes it seems to be fallen, and yet, it arises again. And, even when the root stroke is given in believers, the rod of pride buds again, so that there is still occasion for new hum. bling work. (3.) The whole time of this life is appointed foi humiliation. This was signified by the forty years the Israelites had in the wilderness, Deut. viii. 2. It was so to Christ, and therefore it must be so to men, Heb. xii. 2. And in that time they must either be formed according to his image, or else appear as reprobate silver that will not take it on by any means, Rom. viii. 29. So that what- ever lifting up men may now and then get in this life, the habitual course of it will still be hum- bling. (4.) There is no humbling after this, Rev. xxii. 11. If the pride of the heart be not brought down in this life, it will never be ; no kindly humiliation is to be expected in the other life. There the proud will be broken in pieces, but not softened ; their lot and condition will be brought to the lowest pass, but the unhumbleness of their spirits will still remain, whence they will be in eternal ago nies through the opposition betwixt their spirits and lot, Rev. xvi. 21. MOTIVES FOR ATTAINING IT. 125 Wherefore, beware lest ye sit your time of hu- miliation : humbled we must be, or we are gone for ever; and this is the time, the only time of it; therefore, make your hay while the sun shines; strike in with humbling providences, and fight not against them while ye have them, Acts xiii. 41. The season of grace will not last; if ye sleep in seed time, ye will beg in harvest. 5. This is the way to turn humbling circum- stances to a good account; so that instead of being losers ye would be gainers by them, Psal. cxix. 71. “ It is good for me that I have been afflicted." Would ye gather grapes of these thorns and this- tles, set yourselves to get your spirits humbled by them. Humiliation of spirit is a most valuable thing in itself, Prov. xvi. 32. It cannot be bought too dear. Whatever one is made to suffer, if his spirit is thereby duly brought down, he has what is well worth bearing all the hardships for, 1 Pet. iii. 4. Humility of spirit brings many advantages along with it. It is a fruitful hough, well loaden, wherever it is. It contributes to one's ease under the cross, Matt. xi. 30; Lam. iii. 27-29. It is a sacrifice particularly acceptable to God, Psal. li. 17. The eye of God is particularly on such for good, Isa. Ixvi. 2. “To this man will I look, even to him that is poor, and of a contrite spirit, and trembleth at my word.” Yea, he dwells with them, Isa. Ivii. 15. And it carries a line of wis- dom through one's whole conduct, Prov. xi. 2. “ With the lowly is wisdom.” 11* 126 DIRECTIONS FOR THIS PURPOSE. 6. Consider it is a mighty hand that is at work with us; the hand of the mighty God; let us then bend our spirits towards a compliance with it, and not wrestle against it. Consider, (1.) We must fall under it. Since the design of it is to bring us down, we cannot stand before it; for it cannot miscarry in its designs, Isa. xlvi. 10. “My counsel shall stand.” So fall before it we must, either in the way of duty or judgment, Psal. xlvi. 5. “ Thine arrows are sharp in the heart of the king's enemies, whereby the people fall under thee.” (2.) They that are so wise as to fall in humilia- tion under the mighty hand, be they ever so low, the same hand will raise them up again, James iv. 10. In a word, be the proud ever so high, God will bring them down : be the humble ever so low, God will raise them up. Directions for reaching this humiliation. I. General Directions. Direct. 1. Fix it in your heart to seek some spiritual improvement of the conduct of Providence towards you, Micah vi. 9. Till once your heart get a set that way, your humiliation is not to be expected, Hosea xiv. 9. But nothing is more rea- sonable, if we would act either like men or Chris- tians, than to aim at turning what is so grievous to the flesh unto the profit of the spirit; that if we are losers on one hand, we may be gainers on another. 128 DIRECTIONS FOR THIS PURPOSE. Phil. iv. 13. “I can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me.” God allows you to be persuaded of it, whatever is your weakness and the difficulty of the task. “For our sakes this is written, That he that ploweth should plow in hope; and he that thresheth in hope, should be partaker of his hope." 1 Cor. ix. 10. And the belief there- of is a piece of the life of faith, 2 Tim. ii. 1. If you have no hope of success, your endeavours, as they will be heartless, so they will be vain. “ Wherefore lift up the hands that hang down, and the feeble knees.” Heb. xii. 12. 2. Whatever hand is, or is not, in your hum- bling circumstances, do you take God for your party, and consider yourselves therein as under his mighty hand, Micah vi. 9. Men in their humbling circumstances overlook God; so they find not themselves called to humility under them; they fix their eyes on the creature instrument, and in- stead of humility, their hearts rise. But take him for your party that ye may remember the battle, and do no more. Job xli. 8. 3. Be much in the thoughts of God's infinite greatness; consider his holiness and majesty, to awe you into the deepest humiliation, Isa. vi. 3— 5. Job met with many humbling providences in his case, but he was never sufficiently humbled under them, till the Lord made a new discovery of himself unto him, in his infinite majesty and greatness. He kept his ground against his friends, and stood 10 his points, till the Lord took that me- thod with him. It was begun with thunder, Job DIRECTIONS FOR THIS PURPOSE. 129 Xxxvii. 1, 2. Then followed God's voice out of the whirlwind, chap xxxviii. 1, whereon Job is brought down, chap. xl. 4, 5. It is renewed till he is farther humbled, chap. xlii. 5, 6. “Wherefore 1 abhor myself, and repent in dust and ashes." 4. Inure yourselves silently to adınit mysteries in the conduct of Providence towards you, which you are not able to comprehend, but will adore, Rom. xi. 33. “O the depth of the riches, both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! how unsearch- able are his judgments, and his ways past finding out!” That was the first word God said to Job, Xxxviii. 2. “Who is this that darkeneth counsel by words without knowledge ?" It went to his heart, stuck with him, and he comes over it again, chap. xlii. 3, as that which particularly brought him to his knees, to the dust. Even in those steps of Providence, which we seem to see far into, we may well allow there are some mysteries beyond what we see. And in those which are perplexing and puzzling, sovereignty should silence us; his infinite wisdom should satisfy though we cannot see. 5. Be much in the thoughts of your own sinful- ness, Job xl. 4. “Behold I am vile, what shall I answer thee? I will lay mine hand upon my mouth.” It is overlooking of that, which gives us so much ado with humbling circumstances. While the eyes are held that they cannot see sin, the heart riseth against them; but when they are opened, it falls. Wherefore, whenever God is dealing with you in humbling dispensations, turn your eyes, up- 130 DIRECTIONS FOR THIS PURPOSE. on that occasion, on the sinfulness of your nature, heart and life, and that will help forward your hu- miliation. 6. Settle it in your heart, that there is need of all the humbling circumstances you are put in. This is truth, 1 Pet. i. 6. “ Though now for a season (if need be) ye are in heaviness through manifold temptations.” God brings no needless trials upon us, atlicis none but as their need re- quires, Lam. ii. 33. “ For he doth not afflict wil-. lingly, nor grieve the children of men.” That is an observable difference betwixt our earthly and our heavenly Father's correction, Heb. xii. 10. " They, after their own pleasure ; but he for our profit, that we might be partakers of his holiness." Look to the temper of your own hearts and nature, how apt to be lifted up, to forget God, to be carried away with the vanities of the world: what fool- ishness is bound up in your heart! Thus you will see the need of humbling circumstances for bal- last, and of the rod for the fool's back; and if at any time you cannot see that need, believe it on the ground of God's infinite wisdom, that does no- thing in vain. 7. Believe a kind design of providence in them towards you. God calls us to this, as the key that opens the heart under them, Rev. ii. 19. Satan suggests suspicions to the contrary, as the bar which may hold it shut, 2 Kings vi. 33. “This evil is of the Lord, what should I wait for the Lord any longer ?” As long as the suspicion of an ill design in them against us reigns, the creature ADDITIONAL MOTIVES URGED. 131 will, like the worm at the man's feet, put itself in the best posture of defence it can, and harden it- self in sorrow : but the faith of a kind design will cause it to open out itself in humility before him. Case. “O! if I knew there were a kind design in it, I would willingly bear it, although there were more of it; but I fear a ruining design of Provi- dence against me therein.” Ans. Now, what word of God, or discovery from Heaven, have you to ground these fears upon ? None at all but from hell, 1 Cor. x. 13. What think you the design towards you in the gospel is? Can you believe no kind design in all the words of grace there heaped up? What is that, I pray, but black unbelief in its hue of hell, flying in the face of the truth of God, and making him a liar. Isa. lv. 1 ; 1 John v. 10, 11. The gospel is a breath- ing of love and good-will to the world of mankind sinners, 'Titus ii. 11 ; iii. 3, 4; 1 John iv. 14; John : ji. 17. But ye believe it not, in that case, more than devils believe it. If he can believe a kind design there, ye must believe it in your humbling circumstances too; for the design of Providence cannot be contrary to the design of the gospel; but contrariwise, the latter is to help forward to the other. 8. Think with yourselves, that this life is the time of trial for heaven, James i. 12. “Blessed is the man that endureth temptation; for when he is tried, he shall receive the crown of life which the Lord hath promised to them that love him.” And Therefore there should be a welcoming of humbling 132 ADDITIONAL MOTIVES URGED. circumstances in that view, ver. 2. "Count it all joy when ye fall into divers temptations." If there is an honourable office, or beneficial employment to be bestowed, men strive to be taken on trial for it, in hope they may be thereupon legally admitted to it. Now God takes trial of men for heaven by humbling circumstances, as the whole Bible teacheth ; and shall men be so 'very loth to stoop to them? I would ask you. (1.) Is it nothing to you to stand a candidate foi glory, to be put on trial for heaven? Is there not an honour in it, an honour which all the saints have had ? James v. 10, 11. “Behold we count them happy that endure,”. &c. And a fair pros- pect in it, 2 Cor. iv. 17. “For our light affliction, which is but for a moment, worketh for us a far. more exceeding and eternal weight of glory.” Do but put the case, that God should overlook you in that case, as one whom it is needless ever to try on that head; that he should order you your por- tion in this life with full ease, as one that is to get no more of him; what would that be? (2.) What a vast disproportion is there between your trials and the future glory? Your most hum- bling circumstances, how light are they in com- parison of the weight of it! The longest con- tinuance of them is but for a moment, compared with that eternal weight. Alas! there is much unbelief at the root of all our uneasiness under our humbling circumstances. Had we a clearer view of the other world, we should not make so much of either the smiles or frowns of this. ADDITIONAL MOTIVES URGED. 133 (3.) What think ye of coming foul off in the trial of your humbling circumstances ? Jer. vi. 29, 30. “ The lead is consumed of the fire ; the founder melteth in vain ; for the wicked are not plucked away. Reprobate silver shall men call them, because the Lord hath rejected them.” That the issue of it be only, that your heart appear of such a temper as by no means to be humbled ; and that therefore you must and shall be taken off them, while yet no humbling appears. I think the aw- fulness of the dispensation is such, as might set us to our knees to deprecate the liſting us up from our humbling circumstances, ere our hearts are hum- bled, Isa. i. 5. Ezek. xxiv. 13. . 9. Think with yourselves, how, by humbling cir- cumstances, the Lord prepares us for heaven, “Giv- ing thanks unto the Father, who hath made us meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the saints in light,” Col. i. 12; 2 Cor. v. 5. The stones and timber are laid down, turned over and over, and newed, ere they be set up in the building; and not sot up just as they come out of the quarry and wood. Were they capable of a choice, such of them as would refuse the iron tool would be refused a place in the building. Pray, how think ye to be made meet for heaven, by the warm sunshine of this world's ease, and getting all your will here? Nay, Sirs, that would put your mouth out of taste for the joys of the other world. Vessels of dishonour are fitted for destruction that way; but vessels of hon- our for glory by humbling circumstances. I would here say, 12 134 ADDITIONAL MOTIVES URGED. (1.) Will nothing please you but two heavens, one here, another hereafter? God has secured one heaven, for the saints, one place where they shall get all their will, wish, and desire; where there shall be no weight on them to hold them down; and that is in the other world. But ye must have it both here and there, or ye cannot di- gest it. Why do you not quarrel too, that there are not two summers in one year; two days in the twenty-four hours? The order of the one heaven is as firm as that of the years and days, and ye cannot reverse it; therefore, chose ye whether you will take your night or your day first, your winter or your summer, your heaven here or hereafter. (2.) Without being humbled with humbling cir- cumstances in this life, ye are not capable of heaven, 2 Cor. v. 5. “Now, he that hath wrought us for the self-same thing is God.” You may indeed lie at ease here in a bed of sloth, and dream of heaven, big with hopes of a fool's paradise, wishing to cast yourselvcs just out of Delilah's lap into Abraham's bosom ; but except ye be humbled, ye are not capable. (3.) Of the Bible-heaven, that heaven described in the Old and New Testarnents. Is not that hea- ven a liſting up in due time? But, how shall ye be liſted up that are never well got down? Where will your tears be to be wiped away? What place will there be for your triumph, who will not fight the good fight? How can it be a rest to you, who cannot submit to labour ? (4.) of the saints' heaven, Rev. vii. 14. “And ADDITIONAL MOTIVES URGED 135 he said unto me, These are they which came out of great tribulation, and have washed their robes, and made them white in the blood of the Lamb." This answers the question about Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, and all the saints with them there : they were brought down to the dust by humbling cir- cumstances, and out of these they came before the throne. How can ye ever think to be lifted up with them with whom ye cannot think to be brought down? (5.) Of Christ's heaven, Heb. xii. 2. “Who for the joy that was set before him, endured the cross, despising the shame, and is now set down at the right hand of God.” O! consider how the Forerunner made his way, Luke. xxiv. 26. “Ought not Christ to have suffered these things, and to enter into his glory?" And lay your account with it, that if ye get where he is, ye must go thither as he went, Luke. ix. 23. “And he said, If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross daily, and follow me.” 10. Give up at length with your towering hopes from this world, and confine them to the world to come. Be as pilgrims and strangers here, looking for your rest in heaven, and not till you come there. There is a prevailing evil, Isa. lvii. 10. “ Thou art wearied in the greatness of thy way: yet said- est thou not, There is no hope.” So the Babel- building is still continued, though it has fallen down again and again: for men say, “ The bricks are fallen down, but we will build with hewn stones; the sycamores are cut down, but we will change THERE MUST BE A WAIFING TIME. 139 justified rather than than the other; for every one that exalteth himself shall be abased, and he that humbleth himself shall be exalted.” Solomon observes, Prov. xv. 1. that a soft answer turneth away wrath ; but grievous words stir up anger.” And so it is, that while the proud, through their obstinacy, do but wreathe the yoke faster about their own necks, the humble ones, by their yield- ing, make their relief sure, 1 Sam. ii. 8–10. “He raiseth up the poor out of the dust, and lifteth up the beggar from the dunghill, to set them among princes, and to make them inherit the throne of glory. He will keep the feet of his saints, and the wicked shall be silent in darkness ; for by strength shall no man prevail. The adversaries of the Lord shall be broken in pieces.” So can- non will break down a stone wall, while yielding packs of wool will take away its force. 5. There is an appointed time for the lifting up of those that humble themselves in their humbling circumstances, Hab. ii. 3. “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." To every thing there is a time, as for humbling, so for lifting up, Eccl. iii. 3. We know it not, but God knows it, who hath appointed it. Let not the humble one say, I shall never be lifted up. There is a time fixed for it, as precisely as for the rising of the sun after a long and dark night, or the return of the spring after a long and sharp winter. 6. It is not to be expected, that immediately 140 THERE MUST BE A WAITING TIME. upon one's humbling himself, the lifting up is to follow. No: one is not merely to lie down under the mighty hand, but to lie still, waiting the due time; humbling work is longsome work; the Is- raelites had forty years of it in the wilderness. God's people must be brought to put a blank in his hand, as to the time; and while they have a long night of walking in darkness, must trust, Isa. 1. 10. “ Who is among you, that feareth the Lord, that obeyeth the voice of his servant, that walketh in darkness and hath no light? Let him trust in the name of the Lord, and stay upon his God.” 7. The appointed time for the liſting up is the due time, the time fittest for it, wherein it will come most seasonably. “ And let us not be weary in well-doing ; for, in due season we shall reap, it we faint not,” Gal. vi. 9. For that is the time God has chosen for it; and be sure his choice, as the choice of infinite wisdom, is the best; and there- fore faith sets to wait it, Isa. xxviii. 16. “ He that believeth shall not make haste.” Much of the beauty of any thing depends on the timing of it, and he has fixed that in all that he does, Eccl. jii. 11. “He hath made every thing beautiful in his time." 8. The liſting up of the humble will not fail to come in the appointed and due time, Hab. ii. 3. Time makes no halting, it is running day and night; so the due time is fast coming, and when it comes, it will bring the liſting up along with it. Let the humbling circumstances be ever so low, on THERE IS A TWO-FOLD LIFTING UP. 141 ever so hopeless, it is impossible but the lifting up from them must come in the due time. A word, in the general, to the lifting up, abiding those that humble themselves. There is a two- fold lifting up. 1. A partial lifting up, competent to the humbled in time, during this life, Psal. xxx. 1. “I will ex- tol thee, O Lord, for thou hast liſted me up, and hast not made my foes to rejoice over me.” This is a lifting up in part, and but in part, not wholly; and such liftings up the humbled may expect, while in this world, but no more.—'These give a breathing to the weary, a change of burdens, but do not set them at perfect ease. So Israel, in the wilderness, in the midst of their many mourning times, had some singing ones, Exod. xv. 1.; Num- bers xxi. 17. 2. A total liſting up, competent to them at the end of time, at death, Luke xvi. 22. “ It came to pass that the beggar died, and was carried, by the angels, into Abraham's bosom.” Then the Lord deals with them no more by parcels, but carries their relief to perfection, Heb. xii. 22, 23. Then he takes off all their burdens, eases them of all their weights, and lays no more on for ever. He then lifts them up to a height they were never at before ; no, not even at their highest. He sets them quite above all that is low, and therein fixes them, never to be brought down more. Now, there is a due time for both these. (1.) For the partial lifting up. Every time is not fit for it: we are not always fit to receive com- FROM THE REVOLUTIONS OF NATURE. 145 he cause grief, yet will he have compassion ac. cording to the multitude of his mercies ; for he doth not afflict willingly, nor grieve the children of men.” God sends afflictions for humbling, as. the end and design to be brought about by them when that is obtained, and there is no more use for them that way, we may assure ourselves they will be taken off. The providence of God, viewed in iis stated methods of procedure with its objects, crisures it. Turn your eyes which way you will on the divine providence, you may conclude thence, that in due time the humble will be liſted up. Observe the providence of God, in the revolu- tions of the whole course of nature, day succeed- ing to the longest night, a summer to the winter, a waxing to a waning of the moon, a flowing to an ebbing of the sea, &c. Let not the Lord's hum- bled ones be idle spectators of these things; they are for our learning, Jer. xxxi. 35–37. “ Thus saith the Lord, which giveth the sui for a light by day, and the ordinances of the moon, and of the stars for a light by night, which divideih the sea, when the waves thereof roar; the Lord of hosts is his name. If those ordinances depart from be- fore me, saith the Lord, then the seed of Israe also shall cease from being a nation before me for ever.” Will the Lord's hand keep such a steady course in the earth, sea, and visible heavens, as to bring a lifting up in them after a casting down, and only forget his humbled ones? No, by no means. 13 146 HUMILIATION AND EXALTATION OF CHRIST. Observe the providence of God, in the dispen. sations thereof, about the man Christ, the most noble and august object thereof, more valuable than a thousand worlds, Col. ii. 9. Did not providence keep this course with him, first humbling him, then exalting him, and lifting him up? first bringing hiin 10 the dust of death, in a course of sufferings thirty- three years, then exalting him to the Father's right hand in an eternity of glory? Heb. xii. 2. “Who for the joy that was set before him, endured the cross, despising the shame, and is now set down at the right hand of the throne of God.” Phil. ii. 8, 9. "And being found in fashion as a man, he humbled himself, and became obedient unto death, even the death of the cross; wherefore God also hath highly exalted him." "The exaltation could not fail to follow his humiliation, Luke xxiv. 26. “Ought not Christ to have suffered these things, and to enter into his glory?" And he saw and be- lieved it would follow, as the springing of the seed doth the sowing it, John xii. 24. There is a near concern the humbled in humbling circumstances have herein. This is the pattern Providence copies after in its conduct towards you. The Father was so well pleased with this method, in the case of his own Son, that it was determined to be followed, and just copied over again in the case of all the heirs of glory, Rom. viii, 29. “For whom he did fore- know, he also did predestinate to be confornied to the image of his Son, that he might be the first born among many brethren." And who would not 148 THE DISPENSATIONS OF PROVIDENCE. Lord has kept with her, Psal. cxxix. 1—4. Apel was slain by wicked Cain, to the great grief of Adam and Eve, and the rest of their pious chil- dren; but then there was another seed raised up in Abel's room, Gen. iv. 25. Noah and his sons were buried alive in the ark for more than a year : but then they were brought out into a new world and blessed. Abraham for many years went child- less; but at length Isaac was born. Israel was long in miserable bondage in Egypt; but at length seated in the promised land, &c. We must be content to go by the footsteps of the flock; and if in humiliation, we shall surely follow them in ex- altation too. Observe the providence of God in the dispen- sations of his grace towards his children. The general rule is, 1. Pet. v. 5. “For God resisteth the proud, and giveth grace to the humble.” How are they brought into a state of grace? Is it not by a sound work of humiliation going before ? Luke. vi. 48. And ordinarily the greater the mea- sure of grace designed for any, the deeper is their humiliation before, as in Paul's case. If they are to be recovered out of a backsliding case, the same method is followed: so that the deepest hu- niiliation ordinarily makes way for the greatest comfort, and the darkest hour goes before the ri- sing of the Sun of righteousness upon them, Isa. Ixvi. 5—13. Observe the providence of God at length throw- ing down wicked men, however long they stand and prosper, Psal. xxxvii. 25, 36. "I have seen the THE DOCTRINES OF THE WORD. 149 wicked in great power, and spreading himself like a green bay tree; yet he passed away, and lo, ho was not; yea, I sought him but he could not be found." They are long green before the sun, bat at length they are suddenly smitten with an east wind, and wither away; their lamp goes out with a stench, and they are put out in obscure darkness. Now, it is inconsistent with the benignity of the divine nature, to forget the humble to raise them, while he minds the proud to abase them. The word of God puts it beyond all peradven- ture, which, from the beginning to the end, is the humbled saint's security for a lifting up, Psal. cxix. 49, 50. “Remember the word unto thy servants, upon which thou hast caused me to hope. This is my comfort in my affliction ; for thy word hath quickened me.” His word is the great letter of his name, which he will certainly cause to shine, Psal. cxxxviii. 2. “ For thou hast magnified thy word above all thy name ;” and in all generations hast been safely relied on, Psal. xii. 6. Consider, 1. The doctrines of the word, which teach faith and hope for the time, and the happy issue which the exercise of these graces will have. The whole current of Scripture, to those in humbling circum- stances, is, “not to cast away their confidence, but to hope to the end ;" and that for this good rea- son, that " it shall not be in vain." See Psal. xxvii. 14. “Wait on the Lord; be of good courage, and he shall strengthen thine heart; wait, I say, on the Lord.” And compare Rom. ix. 33; Isa. 13* 150 PROMISE AND EXAMPLES OF THE WORD. xlix. 23. “For they shall not be ashamed that wait for me." 2. The promises of the word, whereby heaven is expressly engaged for a lifting up to those that humble themselves in humbling circumstances, “Humble yourselves in the sight of the Lord, and he shall lift you up," James iv. 10. “And he that humbleth himself shall be exalted,” Matt. xxiii. 12. It may take a time to prepare them for lifting up, but that being done, it is secured, “ Lord, thou hast heard the desire of the humble; thou wilt prepare their heart; thou wilt cause thine ear to hear,” Psal. x. 17. They have his word for de- liverance, Psal. 1. 15. And though they may seem to be forgotten, they shall not be always so ; the time of their deliverance will come. “For the needy shall not always be forgotten : the expecta- tion of the poor shall not perish for ever,” Psal. ix. 18. “He will regard the prayer of the desti- tute, and not despise their prayer,” Psal. cii. 17. 3. The examples of the word sufficiently con firming the truth of the doctrines and promises, Rom. xv. 4. “For whatsoever things were written aforetime, were written for our learning; that we through patience and comfort of the scriptures might have hope.” In the doctrines and promises ine liſting up is proposed to our faith, to be reckon- ed on the credit of God's word ; but, in the exam- ples it is, in the case of others, set before our eyes to be seen. James v. 11. “Behold we count them happy which endure. Ye have heard of the pa- 152 THE INTERCESSION OF CHRIST. be Christ's prayers e Re being joined with these cries, there cannot fail to be a lifting up. Christ's intercession is certainly joined with the cries and prayers of the humbled in their hum- bling circumstances. Rev. viii. 3. “And another angel came and stood at the altar, having a golden censer, and there was given unto him much in- cense, that he should offer it with the prayers of all saints upon the golden altar which was before the throne.” They are by the Spirit helped to groan for relief, Rom. viii. 26, and the prayers and groans, which are through the Spirit, are certaimly to be made effectual by the intercession of the Son, James v. 16. And ye.may know they are by the Spirit, if so be ye are helped to continue pray- ing, hoping for your suit at last on the ground of God's word of promise ; for nature's praying is a pool that will dry up in a long drought. The Spi- rit of prayer is the lasting spring, John iv. 14; Psal. cxxxviii. 3. “In the day when I cried, thou answeredst me; and strengthenest me with strength in my soul.” Truly there is an intercession in heaven, on account of the humbling circumstances of the humble ones. « Then the angel of the Lord answered and said, O Lord of hosts, how long wilt thou not have mercy on Jerusalem, and on the cities of Judah, against which thou hast had indignation these threescore and ten years ?" Zech. i. 12. How then can they miss of a lifting up in due time? Christ is in deep earnest in his intercession for THE INTERCESSION OF Christ. 153 his people in their humbling circumstances. Some will speak a good word in favour of the helpless, , that will be little concerned whether they speed or not; but our Intercessor is in earnest in behalf of his humbled ones: for he is touched with sympa- thy in their case, Isa. Ixiii. 9. "In all their afflic- tion he was afflicted.” A most tender sympathy, Zech. ii. 8. “ For he that toucheth you, toucheth the apple of his eye.” He has their case upon his heart, where he is in the holy place in the highest heavens, Exod. xxviii. 29, and he keeps an exact account of the time of their humbling circumstances, be it as long as it will, Zech. i. 12. Moreover, it is his own business; the lifting up which they are to have is a thing that is secured to him in the promises made to him on the account of his blood shed for them, Psal. lxxxix. 33–36. So not only are they looking on earth, but the man Christ is in heaven looking for the accomplish- ment of these promises, Heb. x. 12, 13. “But this man, after he had offered one sacrifice for sins, for ever sat down on the right hand of God; from henceforth expecting till his enemies be made his footstool.” How is it possible, then, that he should be balked? Moreover, these humbling circum- stances are his own sufferings still, though not in his person, yet in his members, Col. i. 24. “ Who now rejoice in my sufferings for you, and fill up ihat which is behind of the afflictions of Christ in my flesh, for his body's sake, which is the church.” Wherefore there is all ground to conclude he is in deep earnest. Again, The PARTIAL LIFTING UP. 155 youth, Psal. xxxviii. 15, others all their lifetime, Heb. ii. 15. Object. “If that be the case, what comes of the promise of lifting up? Where is the liſting up, if one may go to the grave under the weight ?” Ans. Were there no life after this, there would be ground for that objection ; but since there is another life, there is none in it at all. In the other life the promise will be accomplished to the hum- bled, as it was, Luke xvi. 22. Consider that the great term for accomplishing the promises is the other life, not this. “These all died in the faith, not having received the promises, but having seen them afar off, and were persuaded of them, and embraced them.” Heb. xi. 13. And that whatever accom- plishment of the promise is here, it is not of the nature of a stock, but of a sample or a pledge. Quest. “But then, may we not give over pray- ing for the lifting up, in that case ?" Ans. We do not know when that is our case ; for a case may be past all hope in our eyes, and The eyes of others, in which God designs a lifting up in time, as in Job's, chap. vi. 11. • What is iny strength that I should hope ; and what is mine end that I should prolong my life ?" But, be it as it will, we should never give over praying for the lifting up, since it will certainly come to all who pray in faith for it; if not here, yet hereaſter. The promise is sure, and that is the commandment; so much praying cannot miss of a happy issue at length, Psa. I. 15. “Call upon me in the day of trouble ; I will deliver thee, and thou shalt glorify 156 THE PARTIAL LIFTING UP. me.” The whole life of a Christian is a praying, waiting life, to encourage whereunto all temporal deliverances are given as pledges, Rom. viii. 23. “ And not only they, but ourselves also, which have the first fruits of the Spirit ; even we ourselves groan within ourselves, waiting for the adoption, to wit, the redemption of our body.” · And whoso ob- serves that full liſting up at death to be at hand, must certainly rise, if he has given over his case as hopeless. However, there are some cases wherein this lifting up does take place. God gives his people some notable liftings up, even in time raising them out of remarkably humbling circumstances. The storm is changed into a calın, and they remeinber it as waters that fail, Psa. xl. 1—4. Some may be in humbling circumstances very long, and sore and hopeless, and yet a lifting up may be abiding them, of a much longer continuance. This is sometimes the case with the children of God, who are set to hear the yoke in their youth, as it was with Joseph and David ; and of them that get it laid on them in their middle age, as it was with Job, who could not be less than forty years old at his trouble's coming, but after it, lived one hundred and forty, Job xlii. 16. God by such methods prepares man for peculiar usefulness. Others may be in humbling circumstances long and sore, and quite hopeless in the ordinary course of providence, yet they may get a lifting up ero they come to their journey's end. The life of God's children is like a cloudy and rainy day, THE PARTIAL LIFTING UP. 157 wherein, in the evening, the sun breaks out from under the clouds, shines fair and clear a little, and then sets. “And it shall come to pass in that day, that the light shall not be clear, nor dark. But it shall come to pass, that at evening time it shall be light,” Zech. xiv. 6,7. Such was the case of Ja- cob in his old age, brought in honour and comfort into Egypt unto his son, and then died. Yet, whatever liſtings up they get in this life, they will never want some weights hanging about them for their humbling. They may have their singing times, but their songs, while in this world, will be mixed with groanings, 2 Cor. v. 4. “ For we that are in this tabernacle do groan, being bur- dened.” The unmixed dispensation is reserved for the other world ; but this will be a wilderness unto the end, where there will be howlings, with the most joyful notes. All the liſtings up which the humbled meet with now are pledges, and but pledges and samples of the great lifting up, abiding them on the other side ; and they should look on them so. Ilos. ii. 15. “And I will give her her vineyards from thence, and the valley of Achor for a door of hope; and she shall sing there as in the days of lier youth, and as in the day when she caine up out of the land of Egypt." Our Lord is now leading his people through the wilderness, and the manna and the water of the rock are earnests of the milk and honey flowing in the promised land. They are not yet come home to their father's house, but they are travelling on the road, and Christ :heir elder brother with them. 1 14 BENEFITS OF THIS LIFTING UP. 159 the long way of waiting hope and patient continu- ance, James v. 7. "Be patient therefore, brethren, unto the coming of the Lord. Behold the husband- man waiteth for the precious fruit of the earth, and hath long patience for it until he receive the early and latter rain.” Humility prepares for the accom- plishment of the promise, faith sucks the breast of it, and patient waiting hangs by the breast till the milk come abundantly. But no liſtings up of God's children here are any more than pledges of lifting up. God gives worldly men their stock here, but his children get nothing but a sample of theirs here, Psalm xvii. 14. Even as the servant at the term gets his fee in a round sum, while the young heir gets nothing but a few pence for spending money. The truth is, this same spending money is more valuable than the world's stock, Psalm iv. 7. “ Thou hast put gladness in my heart, more than in the time that their corn and their wine increased.” But though it is better than that, and their services too, and more worth than all their waiting, yet it is be- low the honour of their God to put them off with it, Heb. xi. 16. “But now they desire a better country, that is, an heavenly ; wherefore God is not ashamed to be called their God; for he hath prepared for them a city.” We shall now consider what they will get by this liſting up promised to the humbled. They will get, 1. A removal of their humbling circumstances. God having tried them a while, and humbled them, 160 BENEFITS OF THIS LIFTING UP. and brought down their hearts, will, at length, tano off their burden, remove the weight so long hung on them, and so take them off that part of their trial joyfully, and let them get up their back long bowed down; and this one of two ways. Either in kind, by a total removal of the burden. Such a lifting Job got, when the Lord turned back his captivity, increased again his family and sub- stance, which had both been desolated. David, when Saul his persecutor fell in battle, and he was brought to the kingdom after many a weary day, expecting one day to fall by his hand. It is easy with our God to make such turns in the most hum- bling circumstances. Or in equivalent, or as good, removing the weight of the burden, that though it remains, it presses them no more, 2 Cor. xii. 9, 10. “And he said unto me, My grace is sufficient for thee, for my strength is made perfect in weakness. Most gladly, therefore, will I rather glory in my infir- mities, that the power of Christ may rest upon me Therefore, I take pleasure in infirmities.” Though they are not got to the shore, yet their head is no more under the water, but lifted up. David speaks feelingly of such a lifting up, Psal. xxvii. 5, 6. * For in the time of trouble he shall hide me in his pavilion ; in the secret of his tabernacle shall he hide me; he shall set me upon a rock. And now shall mine head be lifted up above mine ene- mies round about me; therefore will I offer in his tabernacle sacrifices of joy; I will sing, yea, I will sing praises unto the Lord.” Such had the three 161 BENEFITS OF THIS LIFTING UP. Hebrews in the fiery furnace, the fire burnt, but it could burn nothing of them hut their bonds; they had the warmſh and light of it, but nothing of the scorching heat. 2. A comfortable sight of the acceptance of their prayers, put up in their humbling circuinstances. While prayers are not answered, but trouble con- tinued, they are apt to think they are not accepted or regarded in heaven, because there is no altera. tion in their case, Job ix. 16, 17. “If I had call- ed, and he had answered me, yet would I not be- lieve that he had hearkened unto my voice, for he breaketh me with a tempest.” But that is a mis- take; they are accepted immediately, though not answered, 1 John v. 14. “And this is the confi. dence we have in him, that if we ask any thing according to his will, he heareth us." The Lord does with them as a father, with the letters com- ing thick from his son abroad, reads them one by one with pleasure, and carefully lays them up to be answered at his convenience. And when the answer comes, the son will know how acceptable they were to his father, Mait. xv. 28. 3. A heart-satisfying answer of their prayers so that they shall not only get the thing, but see they have it as an answer of prayer; and they will put a double value on the mercy, 1 Sam. ii. 1. Accepted prayers may be very long of answering, many years, as in Abraham and David's case, but they cannot miscarry of an answer at length, Psalm ix. 18. The time will come when God will tell out to them, according to the promise, that 14* 162, BENEFITS OF THIS LIFTING UP. they shall change their note, and say, Psalm cxvi. 1. I love the Lord, because he hath heard my voice, and my 'supplication :" looking on their lif- ting up as bearing the signature of the hand of a prayer hearing God. 4. Full satisfaction, as to the conduct of Provi- dence, in all the steps of the humbling circum- stances, and the delay of the liſting up, however perplexing these were before, Revelation xv. 3. Standing on the shore, and looking back to what they have passed through, they will be made to say, “He hath done all things well.” Those things which are bitter to Christians in the pass- ing through, are very sweet in the reflection on them; so is Samson's riddle verified in their expe- rience. 5. They get the lifting up, together with the in- terest for the time they lay out of it. When God pays his bonds of promises, he pays both principal and interest together; the mercy is increased ac- cording to the time they waited, and the expenses and hardships sustained, during the dependance of the process. The fruits of common providence are soon ripe, soon rotten; but the fruit of the promise is often long a ripening, but then it is du- rable : and the longer it is a ripening, it is the more valuable when it comes. Abraham and Sarah waited for the promise about ten years, at length they thought on a way to hasten it, Gen. xvi. That soon took, in the birth of Ishmael, but he was not the promised son. They were com- ing into extreme old age ere the promise brought PREPARATION OF HEART NECESSARY. 167 The life of a Christian here is designed to be a life of faith; and though faith may act more easily when it has some help from sense, yet it certainly acts most nobly when it acts in opposition to sense. Then is it pure faith when it stands only on its own native legs, the power and word of God, Rom. iv. 19, 20. “And being not weak in faith, he consi- dered not his own body now dead-neither yet the deadness of Sarah's womb. He staggered not at the promise of God through unbelief; but was strong in faith, giving glory to God. And thus it must do, when matters are carried to the utmost point of hopelessness. Again, due preparation of the heart, for the liſt- ing up out of the humbling circumstances, goes be- fore the due time of that lifting up, according to the promise. It is not so in every lifting up; the liſtings up of common providences are not so criti- cally managed; men will have them, will wait for them no longer, and God flings them in anger, ere they are prepared for them, Hos. xiii. 11. “] give thee a king in mine anger.” They can by no means abide the trial, and God takes thein off as reprobate silver that is not able to abide it, Jer. · vi. 29, 30. This due preparation consists in a due humilia- tion, Psa. x. 17. And it often takes much work to bring about this, which is another point that we are very incompetent judges of. We should have thought Job was brought very low in his spirit, by the providence of God bruising him on the one hand, and his friends on the other, for a long time: RESIGNATION TO THE WILL OF GOD. 169 xiii. 4, gives a handle for this bias of the corrupt pature.---But God is a jealous God, and when he appears sufficiently to humble, he will cause the matter of our honour to give way to the vindication of his. 2. A resignation to the divine pleasure as to the time of lifting up. God gives the promise, leaving the time blank as to us. Our time is always ready, and we rashly fill it up at our own hand. God does not keep our time, because it is not the due time. Hence we are ready to think his word fails; whereas it is but our own rash conclusion from it that fails, Psal. cxvi. 11. “I said in my haste, all men are liars.” Several of the saints have suffered much by this means, and thereby learned to let alone filling up that blank. The first promise was thus used by believing Eve, Gen. iv. 1. Another promise was so by believing Abra- ham, after about ten years' waiting. Gen. xvi. If this be the case of any child of God, let them not be discouraged upon it, thinking they were over-rash in applying the promise to themselves : they were only so in applying the time to the promise ; a mistake that saints in all ages have made, which they repented, and saw the folly of, and let alone that point for the time to come; and then the promise was fulfilled in its own due time. Let them in such circumstances go and do like- wise, leaving the time entirely to the Lord. 3. Ar entire resignation as to the way and man- ner of bringing it about. We are ready to do, as to the way of accomplishing the promise, just as 170 RESIGNATION TO THE WILL OF GOD. with the time of it, to set a particular way for the Lord's working of it; and if that be not kept, the proud heart is stumbled, 2 Kings v. 11. “But Naaman was wroth, and he went away, and said, Behold, I thought he will surely come out to me, and stand and call on the name of the Lord his God, and strike his hand over the place.” But the Lord will have his people broken off from that too, that they shall prescribe no way to him, but leave it to him entirely, as in that case, ver. 14. “He went down and dipped himself seven times in Jor- dan, according to the saying of the man of God, and he was clean.” The compass of our knowledge of ways and means is very narrow, as, if one is blocked up, oftentimes we cannot see another, but our God knows many ways of relief, where we know but one or none at all; and it is very usual for the Lord to bring the lifting up of his people in a way they had no view to, after repeated disap- pointments from those quarters whence they had great expectation. 4. Resignation as to the degree of the lifting up, yea, and as to the very being of it in time. The Lord will have his people weaned so, that how- ever hasty they have sometimes heen, that they behooved to be so soon liſted, and could no longer bear, they shall be brought at length to set no time at all, but submit to go to the grave under their weight, if it seem good in the Lord's eyes; and in that case they will be brought to be content with any measure of it in time, without prescribing how much, 2 Sam. xv. 25, 26. “If I shall find favour PATIENT WAITING ON GOD. 171 in the eyes of the Lord, he will bring me again- But if he thus say, I have no delight in thee: be- nold, here am I, let him do as seemeth good unto him." 5. The continuing of praying and waiting on the Lord in the case, Eph. vi. 18. “Praying al- ways with all prayer and supplication in the Spirit, and watching thereunto with all perseverance." It is pride of heart, and unsubduedness of spirit, that makes people give over praying and waiting, because their humbling circumstances are length- ened out time after time, 2 Kings. vi. 33. But due humility, going before the lifting up, brings men into the temper, to pray, wait, and hang on reso- lutely, setting no time for the giving it over till the lifting up come, whether in time or in eternity, Lam. iii. 49, 50. 6. Mourning under mismanagements in the trial, Job xlii. 3. - Therefore have I uttered that I un- derstood not, things too wonderful for me, which I knew not.” The proud heart dwells and expatiates on the man's suffețings in the trial, and casts out all the folds of the trial, on that side, and views them again and again. But when the Spirit of God comes duly to humble, in order to lifting up, he will cause the man to pass, in a sort, the suf- fering side of the trial, and turn his eyes on his own conduct in it, ransack it, judge himself im- partially, and condemn himself, so that his mouth will be stopt. This is that humility that goeth be- fore the liſting up in time in the way of the pro- mise. 172 THE FINAL LIFTING UP. We proceed to consider the lifting up as brought about at the end of time in the other world. And, 1st. A word as to the nature of this liſting up. Concerning it we shall say these five things : 1. There is a certainty of this lifting up, in all cases of the humbled under humbling circumstan- ces. . Though one cannot, in every case, make them sure of a lifting up in time, yet they may be assured, be the case what it may, they will with- out all peradventure, get a lifting up on the other side, 2 Cor. v. 1. "For we know, that if our earthly house of this tabernacle were dissolved, we have a building of God, an house not made with hands eternal in the heavens." Though God's humble children may both breakfast and iline on bread of adversity, and water of affliction, They will be sure to sup sweetly and plentifully. And the believing expectation of the latter might serve to qualify the former, and make them easy finder it. 2. It will be a perfect lifting up, Heb. xii. 22. They will be perfectly delivered out of their par- ricular trials and special furnace, be it what it will, That made them weary many a day. Lazarus was then delivered from his poverty and sores, and ly- ing at the rich man's gate, Luke xvi. 22, and ful- ly delivered. Yea, they will get a lifting up from all their humbling circumstances together. All imperfectios will then be at an end, inferiority in relations, contradictions, afflictions, uncertainty, and sin. If it was long in coming, there will be a blessed moment when they shall get altogether 174 THE FINAL LIFTING UP. my prosperity I said, I shall never be moved. Thou didst hide thy face, and I was troubled.” But then indeed the trial is quite over, the fight is at an end, and then is the time of the retribution and triumph. 5. There will not be the least remaining uneasi ness from the humbling circumstances, but, on the contrary, they will have a glorious and desirable effect. I make no question but the saints willº have the remembrance of the humbling circum- stances they were under here below. Did the rich man in hell remember his having fire breth- ren on the earth, how sumptuously he fared, how Lazarus sat at his gate ; and can we doubt but the saints will remember perfectly their heavy trials ! Rev. vi. 10. But then they will remember them as waters that fail; as the man recovered to health remembers his tossings on the sick bed; and that is a way of remembering that sweetens the pre- sent state of health beyond what otherwise it would be. Certainly the shore of the Red Sea was the place that, of all places, was the fittest to help the Israelites to sing in the highest key. And the humbling circumstances of saints on the earth will be of the same use to them in heaven, Rev. xv. 3. 2dly. A word to the due time of this liſting up. -There is a particular, definite time for it in every saint's case, which is the due time, but it is hid from lis. We can only say in general. 1. Then is the due time for it, when our work we have to do in this world is over. God has ap 176 THE IMPROVEMENT OF THE WHOLE. confidence, whatever their humbling circumstances be; let them assure themselves there will come a liſting up to them at length; if not here, yet to be sure hereafter. Let them keep this in their view, and comfort themselves with it, for God has said it, Psal. ix. 18. “ The needy shall not always be forgotten.” If the night were ever so long, the morning will come at length. 2. Let patience have her perfect work. The husbandman waits for the return of his seed, the merchant for the return of his ships, the store- master for what he calls year-time, when he draws in the produce of his flocks. All these have long patience, and why should not the Christian too have patience, and patiently wait for the time ap- pointed for his liſting up? Ye have heard much of the Crook in the Lot; the excellency of humbleness of spirit in a low lot beyond pride of spirit, tnough joined with a high one :-Ye have been called to humble yourselves in your humbling circumstances, and have been assured in that case of a lifting up. To conclude: we may assure ourselves, God will at ler:gth break in pieces the proud, be they ever so high; and he will triumphantly lift up the humble, be they ever so low. THE END 一一 ​"""""""