The Right Way OF Seeking God. A SERMON Preached at Great Yarmouth On the 11th of May, 1692. Being the Day of the Monthly Fast. By James Hannott Minister of the Gospel there. 1 Cor. Xu. 10. — Yet not I, but the Grace of God. LONDON, Printed by Tho. Snowden for Edward Giles Bookseller in Norwich near the Marketplace. 1692. To my worthy Friends, Inhabitants of the Town of Great Yarmouth, who frequent that Religious Assembly I relate unto. Beloved in our Lord! THE Design of the following Sermon is to give the true Notion, (though not a perfect Description,) of a Religious Fast. The frequent Return of these Days, I have feared should occasion our degenerating into a Formal and meet Customary Observance of the Externals of them. To prevent this, and more fully to explicate and press the Duty of a East-day, my thoughts were exercised upon this Subject. And when the Discourse had served you in this, it was laid up among its fellows; it being no part of my intention, in either the Composing or Preaching of it, that it should be more public. And there it had still continued, if the joint Request of several of you, had not obliged me to deliver it into your hands. I question not but it was a holy zeal for the Divine Truths insisted on, your regard to the practice of Righteousness, your love of Mercy and desire to walk humbly with God, from whence your importunity did proceed, accompanied with a hope that the same things might be promoted in others; which is so good an End, that if it may in any measure be attained, I shall have no cause to Repent of my compliance with you in it. The Lord grant it may be so, to whose blessing for that purpose I now commit it. And for you, my Heart's desire and Prayer is, that ye, may stand perfect and complete in all the Will of God: Walking in all the Commandments and Ordinances of the Lord blameless. I am Your Obliged and Affectionate Servant in the Gospel. J. H. Yarmouth June 16. 1692. The right way of seeking God. Micah VI 8. He hath showed thee, oh man, what is good: and what doth the Lord require of thee, but to do justly, and to love Mercy and to walk humbly with thy God? THese words are the Prophet's answer to a solicitous question that the Jews did propound unto him. To understand the design and pertinency of the Answer 'twill be needful we reflect upon the Question, and also the occasion of it. The Lord had a controversy with his People, ver 2. and said that he would plead with Israel. And that that He charges them with, was their Ingratitude and unthankfulness to Him for his many favours and benefits bestowed upon them: Two of which, as more signal, He does particularly recount; ver. 4. his delivering them from the Tyranny of Pharaoh in Egypt, ver. 5. and his defending them from the Enchantments of Balaam in Moab. And having such evidence to produce in his Cause, He might well challenge them, as He does, ver. 3. oh my People, what have I done unto thee, and wherein have I wearied thee? q. d. what have I commanded you, that you should count my service a Burden? or wherein can you fault my conduct and providence towards you? have I been unmindful of you or wanting to do you good? if I have, come forth and plead it, and testify against me. But on the contrary does not the whole of my proceedings with you testify for me? Witness what I did for you in Egypt, and what I did for you in the Wilderness: you had to this day been a Captive People, if I had not redeemed you; had not I defended you, the Devil and his Agents had prevailed to scatter and break you in pieces. Remember, oh my People these things, my ancient loving kindness to your Fathers whose Mercies you inherit; and have you any cause then to complain of my service? can you mend yourselves by changing your Lord? oh house of Israel, ●●ek. 18.29. are not my ways equal? are not your ways unequal? This charge was so home and demonstrative that they had nothing to reply, were convicted in their Conscience, and justify God: they are made sensible that they had complained of Him without cause, that they had falsely accused his Providence, and by their unthankful and undutiful carriage towards God, had highly provoked his Anger against them; and now that that they are most solicitous about is, how they may have the Lord pacified and reconciled to them. ●●r. 6. Hereupon they move the Prophet with this Question, Wherewithal shall I come before the Lord, and bow myself before the high God? The Lord, (as if they had said) we see, is Angry with us, as indeed he has just cause to be, and we are afraid that his Judgements should break forth upon us, as we have deser'vd they should; oh! What shall we do to avert them? How shall we make our appearance before this high God, or what shall we say unto him, or who shall direct us what to do, that we may get the Lord to be at peace with us? My Text contains an Answer to this question, only before the Prophet comes to that, He represents this People as suggesting some methods to themselves which they thought might serve to atone the anger of God and to procure his favour towards them. They inquire whether a punctual observance of the outward Institutions of God's Worship might not avail to that end, and proffer to address themselves to him with burnt Offerings and Calves of a year old, as the Law required. And if more than the ordinary Sacrifices were necessary in their Case, they'll spare no cost, but profess they were willing to do more than indeed it was either possible or lawful for them to do. Thousands of Rams they are ready to offer; ver. 7. would ten thousand Rivers of Oil suffice, could so many be procured, they would pour them all out before Him; and whereas nothing could be dearer to them than their Children, and amongst them the first born, yet if God would accept of the death of a Child, they were willing to cause it to pass through the fire. Jer. 32.35. Provided that they might retain their sins, their injustice, unmercifulness and proud disobedience to the commands of God, they will be as bountiful, expensive and laborious in the externals of Worship as God would have them to be. They will load his Altar with their Sacrifices, provided they may still go on to load God with their sins, they will devote all their substance to the Temple if they may be excused the dedicating themselves to God as a living and holy Sacrifice, Rom. 12.1. which is the true reasonable service. They will pour out thousands of sighs and prayers to God, Fast as often as He will, confess sin as much as He would have them, so that after they have confessed it, they may be allowed to return to the practice of it. No, no the Prophet tells them, it is not your offerings, your Rams, your Rivers, nor your Children, that will serve this turn: These things, tho' some of them be such as God has appointed, yet these alone will not please God, there is something else God looks for from a People that would humble themselves aright before Him, and meet God in his Worship with acceptation; and if you ask what that is? He hath showed thee, O man, what is good, and what doth the Lord require of thee, but to do justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with thy God? q. d. you inquire how you may come before the Lord, how you may humble yourselves in a right manner, so as that the anger of the Lord may be turned away from you, and you may escape his impendent judgements. You seem to be very desirous to have the Lord still to be your God, and that He would continue you to be his People, that He would still go on to deliver and to defend you, as He has done in times past: then know that it is not sacrifices only that God desires, but that which in conjunction therewith he does principally and ultimately require, is, that you do Justly, and love Mercy, and walk humbly with your God: these things are good and acceptable to God, and indispensibly incumbent upon you, as the Lord has showed them to be his mind and will concerning you; And tho' there are other things that God does require, which in their place and time are to be attended to, yet nothing comparatively with these, as to do justly, to love mercy and walk humbly with thy God. In which words we have these two general parts. 1. A tacit Reprehension that the Prophet gives this People, reproving that fleshly confidence they placed in the external duties of God's worship, and much more in those arbitrary ways of Devotion which were of their own devising. 2. A positive Direction that he lays before them how they might come before God in his own instituted Worship with acceptation. And in that direction there are three particulars considerable. 1. A discovery of a Divine rule which we are to attend to in all our addresses to God, and that is the Revelation God has made of his mind and will to us, he hath showed thee, oh man. 2. A specification of things that are conformable to that rule, and to be regarded by us, viz. Justice that is to be done, Mercy that is to be loved, and Humility that is to be expressed in our walking with God. * Owen on the Spirit. p. 331. The last of which, walking humbly with God, compriseth the whole of our Covenant Obedience, Gen. 17.1. as the two former are eminent instances of it in particular. 3. A Rational enforcement of the forementioned duties by arguments; one taken from the goodness of the things, he hath showed thee, oh man, what is good, another from the Will and Command of God concerning these things, and what doth the Lord require of thee? These things are good, to do Justly, to love Mercy, and to walk humbly with God, and these are the things that God requires, and you must mind and attend unto, if you would so appear before God in his Worship, as to have the Lord pacified to you, and his anger turned away from you. The whole of which may be thus summed up. Doct. That a People who would humble themselves aright before the Lord, would have the difference between Him and Them comprimised, and would come before the Lord so as to be accepted with Him; must not rest in and take up with the external duties of God's Worship, but attend unto those things in their practice that are expressive of Real holiness and Obedience to the will of God in what he commands and requires of them. Before I proceed to prove and improve this proposition it will be needful to premise this in the first place, namely, that the answer that the Prophet in the text gives to this People's question, and the conclusion I have now form from it, does not respect the way of Atonement or making satisfaction to the Justice of God for sin. For as to that there is the same insufficiency in the highest acts of Evangelical obedience as there is in the performing the duties of Divine worship. The payment of one debt cannot discharge us of another: now we stand engaged to God in a twofold Debt; a Debt of punishment, that is the consequent of sin, whereby we become obnoxious to the Curse of the Law, the Wages of sin is death: And a Debt of Duty which is our obligation to the Precept of the Law, Rom. 6.23. and the payment of the Debt of Duty cannot discharge us from the debt of sin. When we do our duty we do but what we ought, and the doing what we ought cannot be a compensation for the doing of what we ought not to have done. If we come short in our duty that further increase the Debt of sin, but tho' we perform our duty that does not, lessen the former debt. We are debtors still to the Justice of God, because we have violated his holy Law; the Sanction of which was, the Soul that sins shall die, and are utterly insolvent or uncapable to pay this debt by the most exact and continued obedience that we can yield to the commands of it, Gal. 2.16. for by the works of the Law shall no flesh be justified. If therefore the Question be in what way is the justice of God satisfied for sin? in what way and upon what account is God reconciled to Sinners? What is the meritorious and procuring cause of the Grace and favour of God to a Person or People that have provoked his Anger against them by their sins? He hath showed thee, Oh Man, in his word, that it is not any Obedience of thine, that thou dost or canst perform unto God, but the obedience, the sufferings, the Righteousness of his own Son our Lord Redeemer, that is the only meritorious procuring cause of God's being reconciled to Sinners. Heb. 7 22. He is the Surety of that better Covenant that has paid the debt of sin for us and in our place; 1 Cor. 5.21. that was made Sin for us by offering himself to God, Heb. 9.26. and did appear to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself. But if the Question be, what it is that God requires of man according to the terms of the new Covenant, that would have the benefit of Christ's mediation, so as to have God actually reconciled to him, and the Anger of God turned away from him? He hath showed thee, Oh man, that it is not some slight external devotion: An outside fasting, or confessing of sin, and humbling yourself for a day; but that in conjunction with a Serious and Hearty performance of these duties, you do justly, and Love mercy, and walk humbly with God. Our Prophet does suppose God's acceptance of the atonement for sin made by our Lord Jesus Christ, but lets them know that without a Performance of the necessary duties of the Gospel, their claim to that atonement would be fruitless and ineffectual. As there was something that God required of Christ when He substituted himself in our Room to answer for our sins which was his dying for us, so there is something that God Requires of us, if we would have the benefit of the death of Christ. The Gospel does not make void, but establish the Law in its preceptive power. Christ's dying for sin, and our doing the will of God do very well consist. For to this end He died, ●om 14.9 and rose, and revived, that he might be the Lord both of the Dead and Living. That as he died for sin, so we should die to sin; and have communion with him in his rising by our walking in newness of Life. That which God required of Christ was obedience in a way of merit, that which God requires of us is obedience in a way of duty. Our obligation to obedience is not dissolved, but enforced and heightened by the mediatory Obedience of our Lord Jesus. To. do justly, to love mercy, and to walk humbly with God ever were, and ever will be incumbent on the Reasonable creature; and are those things that the Lord requires of them that would Seek him with acceptation and success. This premised, I now proceed to confirm the truth of the Proposition, and the proof of it will depend upon showing these two things; 1. The insufficiency that there is in a bare performance of the duties of Religious Worship separate from the duties of justice, mercy and humble walking with God, to procure the favour of God to a People. 2. The necessity that there is of such a People's attending to the practice of those things that are expressive of real holiness and Obedience to God in conjunction with the duties of God s worship, in order to that end. And first let us consider the insufficiency that there is in a bare performance of the duties of Religion's worship separate from the duties of justice mercy, and humble walking with God, to procure the favour of God to a People, to compromise the difference between God and them, to pacify his Anger and to avert his judgements. And because this People in the text talked so much of their burnt-Offerings, their Calves and their Rams, I shall to make this branch of the demonstration more plain and convincing, present you with the judgement of God in his word concerning these things, whilst this way of worship was in use and show you of how little account with God these Sacrifices were, when separated from the duties of justice, mercy and humble Obedience. The Ancient Sacrifices are to be considered two ways, 1. as they were typical Representation of that real Sacrifice which our Lord Jesus Christ offered to God, to make reconciliation for the sins of his offered to when through the enternal Spirit he offered himself too God. Much of the Gospel, as it was Revealed in that time, was wrapped up in those Sacrifices. They did all refer to and prefigure him that was to come. For whereas the holy and righteous Law of God had threatened Sin with Death, it could not be reasonably, supposed, Heb. 10.4 that the blood of Bulls and of goats should take away sin. And therefore, the Heathens to supply that defect, Quod pro vitâ bominis nisrvitd bominis reddatur, nonposse aliter Deorum Inmortalium numen plat● arbitrantur. having some natural, or rather traditional knowledge of the necessity of sacrifices to make Atonement for sin, did conclude that nothing less than the Life of a Man offered in Sacrifice, was sufficient to appease God. But indeed this man, is no other than the man Christ Jesus, the Psalmist is brought in speaking to his Father to this purpose, Heb. 10.5. When he cometh into the world, he saith, acrifice and offering thou wouldst not, but a body hast thou prepared me. Or, secondly, they are to be considered as acts of Homage and Worship performed by that People, to God, and in which they generally rested in a neglect of the weightier matters or the Law. And however they though to please God thereby we 〈…〉 testimonies in their own Scriptures, which show how highly God was displeased with them, whilst they took up with these in the neglect of Judgement Mercy and Humble walking with God. And I'll begin with that Reproof the Prophet gave King Saul, who bore himself much upon this business of sacrificing in the omission of a direct command of God wherein his obedience was concerned, 1 Sam. 15.22. Samuel said, Hath the Lord as great delight in burnt offerings and sacrifices as in obeying the voice of the Lord? behold to obey is better than sacrifice: and to hearken than the fat of Rams. It does appear by the preceding part of this history, that God had sent Samuel to Saul with a command to destroy the Amalekites, and that with a total destruction, Man and Woman, ●erse 3. Infant and suckling, Ox and Sheep, Camel and Ass. Saul applies himself to this work, but did it negligently and in part only. Agag the King he spares, supposing it might be for his honour to make him a Prisoner of War to lead him in triumph. Also the best of the Sheep, ● 〈…〉. and of the Oxen, and of the Fattling and of the Lambs he saves, and his pretence for that was, that these Fat Beasts would do well to serve God's Altar; 'twas not fit to slay them any where else. What? hath the Lord as great delight in sacrifices as in obedience? This was the command of God that all of Amalek should be destroyed: what meaneth then the bleeting of the Sheep, 〈…〉 4. and the Lowing of the Oxen which I hear? Oh, says he, they are for sacrifices to Worship God with. No, the Prophet tells him, God will accept of no such Worship, as is besides his command, and is founded in a contempt of that. To obey is better (pleases God more) than Sacrifice. Better thou hadst throughly obeyed the command of God, tho' there had not been a Ram left in the Universe to be offered in Sacrifice. My second proof for this I take from the 50th Psalm at the seventh verse we find the Lord addressing himself to that people thus; Hear, oh my People, and I will speak; oh Israel, and I will testify against thee. God had something to speak to them, and something to tesitifie against them. That which he had to say to them is at ver. 8. I will not reprove thee for thy Sacrifices or thy burnt-offerings continually before me. It seems they were so punctual in their Sacrifices, they would not rob God of a Lamb, nor fail him of an hour; their burnt offerings were continually before him. So that he would not tax them for any remissness or deficiency that way. But tho' He would not reprove them for their Sacrifices, he would reprove them for their sins and that to purpose, ver. 16, 77. ask them, what they had to do, to declare his statutes, or take his Covenant in their Mouth, seeing they hated instruction and cast his words behind them? Come, says God, you load my Altar with your sacrifices, but at the same time you make me to serve with your sins. You are a sacrificing People, but you are also a wicked People. You hear, but you hate my word, and when my commands are set before you, you take them and cast them behind you. Theft and Whoredom, ver. 18, 19 20. and evil speaking, you practise, or connive at in others, and you think your sacrificing should make amends for all No, says the Lord, I testify against you, that except you Repent and Reform, it is not all your Sacrifices can help you, but you yourselves will become a Sacrifice to my justice, I will deal with you as with others that are mine Enemies, and live in a total neglect of me. 2●. Wherefore, consider this, ye that forget God, lest I tear you in pieces, and there be none to deliver. He numbers them with those that forget God, because they rejected his commands, when yet at the same time they were so exact in their sacrifices, that He had nothing to reprove them for in that matter. The Prophet Isaiah in his 1st chapter from the 11th. to the 21st verse, does at large represent the judgement of God concerning this ancient way of worship severed from Judgement, Mercy and Faith. To what purpose is the multitude of your sacrifices unto me? saith the Lord; 〈…〉 11. I am full of burnt offerings, &c, To what purpose, Lord? hast thou not required these things? true, but there is something else too that I require of you, to do Justly to love Mercy and walk Humbly with me; and where are those offerings which I most delight in? Bring no more vain oblations. 〈…〉 3. Lord! they are thy Oblations, ay but they are vain, and altogether unprofitable to you as you do offer them, Incense is an abomination to me, There are in these ver. 14. ●xpressions against formality. Burr. on Hose. 'tis iniquity even the solemn meeting. Iniquity Lord! 'tis thy worship, and is it iniquity to Worship God? No, not in itself, but as you order the matter it is so; such worship as yours is, is no better than an open affront to me, whilst you think to put me off with this, and at the same time practise all manner of lewdness and wickedness Your hands are full of blood, you are unjust and unmerciful, and whilst that blood is in your hand, what matters to me all the Blood of Beasts that you shed from time to time before my Altar? Indeed it seems to have been the great burden of the Prophetical Ministry, to convince that People of the sin and Vanity of their trusting in these Sacrifices, whilst they neglected the duties of practical obedience, ' I was a sharp reproof to this purpose which the Lord by another prophet gave them, Jer. 7. where having discovered in the former part of the Chapter their groundless confidence and trusting in the Temple, ver. 14 which He threatens to do so as He had done to Shilo, He lets them know that their Sacrifices were of no more account with him at v. 21. Thus saith the Lord of hosts the God of Israel put your burnt-offerings unto your Sacrifices, and eat Flesh. q.d. keep your Sacrifices to yourselves, & dispose of them as you will; Assem. A●not. Patrick's Epit. pag. 527. eat them, do with them what you please. The burnt-offerings were wholly to be consumed in the fire: The People were not to partake of them, but of the peace-offerings and thank-offerings they might eat; now, says God, you may take all for me; eat your burnt-offerings as well as your peace-offerings, I care not for any of them. And the Reason, upon which this Conviction is grounded, is at the 22th v. For I spoke not unto your Fathers, nor commanded them in the day that I brought them out of the hand of Egypt, concerning burnt-offerings or Sacrifices, v. 23. But this thing commanded I them, saying, obey my voice, and I will be your God, and ye shall be my People: and walk ye in all the ways that I have commanded you, that it may be well unto you. The first word that God spoke unto Israel was this, Obey my voice: This was that he commanded them, before he commanded them concerning Burnt-offerings: The ten Commandments which contain the rule of Moral Obedience, he delivered to them in the first place, and afterwards his statutes and ordinances that were to govern his public Worship. But, says he, that that was first commanded by me is last and least of all minded by you. You are for Burnt-offerings and Sacrifices, but not for obeying my voice. Well! put your Burnt-offerings to your Sacrifices, and eat them, do with them what you will I will not be concerned in them. To all which we may add that express testimony that the Lord gave them of his preference of moral duties to those that were only Ritual and Ceremonial, Hose. 6. He tells them v. 5. That He had hewed them by the Prophets, and every stroke was to cut down this fleshly confidence of theirs, that they placed in their sacrifices, whilst they neglected the other substantial duties of Religion, v. 6. For I desired mercy and not Sacrifice, (or mercy rather than Sacrifice) and the knowledge of God (an obediential knowledge) more than burnt-offerings. I shall close this with that sentence of the Scribe, Mark 12. Who having asked our Lord, Which is the first commandment of all? ver. 28 Our Saviour answers, to Love God with our whole Soul, 〈…〉 30. and the Second to it, to Love our neighbour as ourselves. 〈…〉 31. Hereupon the Scribe said unto him, Well Master, thou hast said the truth, this is more than all whole burnt-offerings and Sacrifices. 〈…〉 32 And that he apprehended Christ aright, our LordsLords approving him in what he said does manifest. 〈…〉 34. When Jesus saw that he answered discreetly he said unto him, Thou art not far from the Kingdom of God. And now I proceed to the Second branch of the Demonstration, 〈…〉 11. to show the necessity of practical Obedience in conjunction with the duties of Divine Worship for a People to attend unto that would have the Anger of God appeased to them, And because the text furnishes us with sufficient matter for the proof of this, I shall present you with three considerations which it contains and proposes to this purpose. 1. That this is Good, and therefore to be desired and pursued by us 2. That this the Lord requires, which lays us under an indispensible obligation to attend thereunto. 3. That this God has been pleased to show and reveal to us, and therefore we are inexcusable if we live in a neglect of it. 1. The necessity of practical Obedience in conjunction with the duties of Divine Worship does appear from the consideration of the goodness of it. Whatever the Lord requires of man, to be done it is good: Good in it self, good for him and good for others. 'Tis Absolutely good, Personally good and Relatively good. To do justly is good, to love mercy is good, to walk humbly with God is good. And what an attractive is this to come up to our duty, that is so good in the whole and good in every part of it▪ These things are good in themselves, not only because they are commanded, as all the positive institutions of worship are good, but they have an intrinsical goodness, and commend themselves to us from their very nature, they are such things as flow from the nature of God, as well as bear a conformity to the Will of God. So that it is impossible they should be otherwise than good, or that what is contrary to them should be so. Injustice, unmercifulness and disobedience to God cannot be good, they are Evil, and altogether Evil, and will be so for ever, Deut. 30.15. see, I have set before thee this day life and good, and death and evil. Holiness is good, and sin is evil; and it is impossible that either of them should be other than what they are. Sin cannot become Good, holiness cannot become evil: the difference betwixt holiness and sin is as great as betwixt good and evil; that except good could become evil, and evil good, the nature of good and evil be altered and confounded, it is impossible that Holiness thould be any otherwise than good, and sin any other thing than the worst and the purest evil. These things are also Good for us, so that we cannot more directly seek and promote our own good and happiness than in the practising of them. Is that good that is amiable and lovely? what so lovely as ho liness? That is the glory of the Divine Being, and the likeness of God in Man. Is that good that is pleasant and delightful? the sweetest pleasures are to be found in the ways of God. None enjoy such peace and tranquillity in their mind, Ps. 119.165. are so free from fears and offences as those who have the strictest regard to God's commands. Or is that good that is profitable? we are assured that godliness is profitable to all things, having a Promise of the life that now is, 1. Tim. 4.8. and of that which is to come. Oh how good is it to walk with God to awake with God, and to be in the fear of the Lord all the day! Ps. 4.6. Whereas many say, Who will show us good? Would they seek it in the way of God's commands they would assuredly find it. And these things are good for others too; how advantageous and beneficial to the World are Justice and Mercy? how much do they conduce to the good order of it? how sweet are the influences that they diffuse amongst all persons? who is not the better for them? The godly are refreshed with them, they adorn the Gospel, and commend Religion to others as a real substantial thing that is worthy their consideration and choice. The Religion that lies only in forms and discourse is an airy, unaffecting thing, and gets no ground in the World, but that that is operative and powerful commends itself to the Consciences of Men; these things are good for the bodies, and good for the Souls of others, and that is one Reason of the strict charge that is laid upon the Ministers of the Gospel to be frequent in the urging and pressing of them, Tit. 2.8. These things I will that thou affirm constantly, that they which have believed in God, might be careful to maintain good works: these things are good and profitable unto men. And this is further enforced by, 2. A consideration of the will of God, as being that which the Lord requires of us. 'Tis His will concerning, and his command to us, who is the Lord, who has an unquestionable right in us and a supreme power over us, and whose will is a binding law as well as a sufficient Reason to us; so that it is no arbitrary or indifferent matter whether we will obey or no, but he that requires you to perform the duties of his solemn Worship, and in Obedience to whose command you engage in them, does likewise require you to do justly, to love mercy, to walk humbly with your God. And as his willing of these things to be duties incumbent on Man is that that is highly consentaneous and agreeable to his own glory, that the reasonable creature should be just and merciful as he is, and be always mindful of that infinite distance that there is between him and it, and the highest deference that upon that account is due to him; so the regular subordination that there ought to be in our Wills to His, the relation we stand in to Him as the Lord, and the entire subjection we owe to Him in that Relation; lays us under the strictest obligation to observe and obey all his requirements. Consider then. The Lord, that is thy supreme Ruler and Governor, He in whose hands is the disposal of all things, who doth according to his will in the Army of Heaven, and among the inhabitants of the Earth; He that is the one Lawgiver who is able to save and to destroy, Jam. 4.12 who has the power of Life and Death, and whose power reacheth to the Soul as well as the body, can save or destroy both in Hell. He whom the Angels obey, and are His Ministers harkening to the voice of his word: He, whose Law at first impressed upon them, the inanimate creatures do every day fulfil: This Sovereign Lord who is King throughout the World, requires that you should be Just and Merciful and Humble. Every act of disobedience to his command is a high contempt of his Authority. 'Tis the character of the wicked to say, ●s. 12.4. Who is Lord over us? and again, Who is the Lord, that I should obey his voice? Exod. 5.2. Oh let us take heed of becoming guilty either in mind or practice of so great an impiety. Moreover, The Lord, that is thy Redeemer, that has bought thee with the inestimable price of his own blood: that laid down his Life to deliver thee from Sin and Death and Hell, was willing to empty himself of his glory for a time, to be poor and mean, to be despised and persecuted and suffer the accursed death of the Cross for your sake: rather than you should die, He would die in your place; rather than you should become a sacrifice, He was willing to be made one Himself: that out of Obedience to the Will of God, and from the greatness of his love to the Children of Men traveled with the greatest sorrows, drunk off the bitterest cup and underwent the Curse for you, He also requires the most exact obedience at your hand. Cor. 6.9.20. And ye are not your own, but ye are bought with a price: therefore glorify God in your body and in your spirit which are God's. Yea, The Lord, that is thy bountiful Benefactor, that does thee good continually, that loads thee with his benefits every day, that prevents thee with mercy, that supplies thee with good, that delivers thee in thy straits, succours thee in thy temptation, hears thy prayers, and is so ready to appear for thy help: The Lord in whom them dost Live and Move and hast thy Being, ●●s. 84.11. that is a Sun and a Shield, will give Grace and Glory, and withhold no good thing; that has given thee so many tastes of his Love, such frequent experiences of his goodness, and yet has greater things in reserve to bestow, what is it that he requires of thee as a grateful return for all these benefits but that thou do justly and love mercy and walk humbly with thy God. consider then who it is that requires these things of you; and how reasonable and equitable is it that we should answer His requirements in the most punctual manner? Especially if we add, 3. The last consideration that the Lord who hath required these things hath showed and made known the same, has promulged and declared his will very plainly and expressly, in these things, to the understanding and capacity of all persons. He hath showed thee, Oh man, what is good, and what the Lord doth require of thee. He requires nothing of thee but what He has showed thee. These things are common to man as man, and therefore required of every man, He has spoke them to thy ear, he has made them visible to thy Eye, they are such things as do approve themselves to thy Rational Faculties: These are not Mysteries but plain discoveries of the mind and will of God, He has set thy duty in a clear light, which whosoever attends unto may attain to the understanding of it. He hath showed thee, Oh man. Partly by the Light of Nature that some of these things, at least, as to do justly and to Love mercy, are pleasing and acceptable to him. He has engraved them upon thy very Heart, so that reflecting upon the Original principles of thy Nature, and by conversing with thyself, ask thy Conscience questions, and harkening to the Answers and dictates of it, this thou mayst know and understand, that to do justly is good; and injustice is evil; to love mercy is pleasing to God, and the contrary to it as displeasing to him. Did the Heathens of old, and do they still at this day know it and art thou a stranger to it? Read what is said of them, Rom. 2.14, 15. the Gentiles which have not the written Law, do by nature the things contained in the law, these having not the Law, are a law unto themselves, which shows the work of the Law written in their hearts. But principally He hath showed it thee by the light of his Word that contains a more explicit and full Revelation of man's duty. All the lines of it are there drawn at length, all the particulars of it clearly stated. If thou goest to the Law and to the Testimony, thou may'st have a sufficient direction how to act in all thy concerns, how to order thy steps in every path, what it is God requires of thee every day, in every place and in every condition: what thy duty towards God and what thy duty towards man is. And what cause have we to adore the goodness of God, that has furnished us with such a clear light to direct us in our walking with him, that we have not only a Law light but a Gospel-light that shines so brightly? Jesus Christ is come a light into the World, He hath revealed God unto us, He is the way, the truth and the life, that both by his Preaching and by his Example has opened the mind of God to us, and He that followeth Him shall not walk in darkness, ●ohn 8.12. but have the light of life. And because God hath showed it unto thee, thou art inexcusable oh man! who livest in the neglect or contempt of these requirements of His. Thou canst not plead ignorance; or say, when thou dost an unjust action, that thou didst not know better; or be unmerciful and say thou didst not know it to be a fault; or be proud and disobedient against God and ask what evil there is in't? oh take heed that thou dost not sin against Light and Knowledge, Jam. 5.17. for to him that knoweth to do good and doth it not, to him it is sin, sin with an aggravation, that will be attended with a sorer punishment on them that are guilty of it, Luk. 12.47 even to be beaten with many stripes. So much for the confirmation of the Doctrine, that which follows is The APPLICATION. 1. This Doctrine yields, at all times a useful, but on this day a very seasonable caution to us, to take heed that we rest not in mere outward duties of Worship, as if that were all that God required; and as it is to be feared many persons do, to the deceiving of themselves. They are very exact, very frequent and very punctual in these things, but guilty of a woeful neglect of the moral duties of Religion, and so are but partial, and consequently unsincere in their obedience. Let us take heed that we deceive not ourselves in the same way. If we halve it with God in the matter of our duty, He will cut us short in the matter of his mercy. What if such a Religion should obtain a temporal reward, 'tis insufficient to evidence a real interest in the saving love of God. There is no doubt but God has required these things of us. All the true methods, means and ways of Worship are of God's appointment. Praying and Hearing and Fasting are his Ordinances; but he never intended that we should rest in these and go no further: To do this and no more: to attend unto these and neglect other things, is a Badge of loathsome Hypocrisy in the sight of God, and branded in Scripture as the guise of an unsound Heart. Hypocrites and unsound Professors know they must do something in Religion. Something they would do to appease God when He is Angry; something, to continue His favour when Providence is easy and comfortable to them; something, to keep up a Credit and Reputation with others for Religion; and something to quiet the importunities of their own Conscience; but then they resolve to do as little as they can, and because a slight and heedless performance of the Worship of God is the easiest part of Religion, and most consistent with their unmortified lusts, they pitch upon this course. 'Tis indeed much easier to confess a hundred sins, than to forsake one: 'tis easier to spend a whole day in public Worship, than to deny the enticement of a Lust, or to withstand a Temptation when it opportunely presents; because the one is only the labour of the body, the other requires the exercise of the Soul; the one may be a weariness to the Flesh, but the other is cross and opposite to the beloved interests of it; and carnal Hearts may make shift to brook the one, tho' they cannot bear the other. A little outward Penance and Mortification of the body they can undergo, but a true Repentance of sin, that consists in deserting the practice and mortifying the principle of sin is utterly distasteful to them. Oh then as we would acquit ourselves of the charge and guilt of Hypocrisy, let us take heed of resting in the outward duties of Worship. Tho' your Eyes be lifted up to Heaven, if your affections be fixed upon Earthly objects; though you bow your knee before God, if your Hearts do Rebel against Him: if you acknowledge your transgression, but do still retain and practise it; if you make many Prayers but don't endeavour to live answerably to 'em; if you vow and promise to lead a new life, but as soon as you go from this place forget what you have been doing: What is all this but a mere mockery? Gal. 6.7. And be not deceived, God is not mocked. This part of the Worship of God that we are now engaged in is no doubt a very necessary duty incumbent upon us. God has commanded it, and special providences call us to it. Who does not see what need there is of Fasting, of Prayer and Humbling ourselves before the Lord? But Remember this is but one part of what God requires of you. The true Fast does not consist in a bare observance of those things that outwardly relate to such a day. A man may be very Formal in them, forbear all servile work, put on meaner apparel, attend the public duties of God's House, and outwardly seem to be very submiss and serious therein, and yet if this be all, God does disown such a Fast from being the day that he has chosen and appointed, Isa. 58.5. Is it such a Fast that I have chosen? A day for a man to afflict his Soul! Is it to how down his head as a bulrush, and to spread sackcloth and ashes under him? wilt thou call this a Fast, and an acceptable day unto the Lord? No, this is not the day that God has chosen: And yet this is the only Fast that many keep, that is filled up with corporal gestures and performances. What then is the Fast that God has chosen? He himself describes it in the following verses, to lose the bands of wickedness, ver. 6.7 to undo the heavy burdens, and to let the oppressed go free,— to deal thy bread to the hungry, to bring the poor that are cast out to thy house, to cover the naked, and hide not thyself from thy own flesh, i. e. turn not away from relieving thy poor Brother: This is the true Fast, the Fast that God has chosen, to break off from our sins, and to do justly, and to love mercy. And, Oh that this may be the Fast that we may keep, a day that God may accept, and accept us in it! we seem to be sensible that the Just and Righteous God has a controversy with this Nation, that He is come forth to plead with England. We have like the Jews, been unthankful for mercies, do soon forget our wonderful deliverances and refuse to be reformed by the various methods God has used with us to that end, and now we think God is Angry with us, and we fly to these duties of Fasting and Prayer, and hope these will appease God; and is this all that we will do? God will upbraid us with such Fasts, soon grow weary of them, and break in through such Fasts with his judgements upon us. He looks for more, he requires more, and more than this we must do, if we would prevail with God, and obtain a blessing from Him, and that now leads me to the 2d Use. I would make of this truth, to Exhort and ers vad e you to come up to the full duty of this day in the several branches that grow upon the text, to do justly, to love mercy, and to walk humbly with God; which are all of them such things as all that profess the name of our Lord Jesus should labour to be very exact in. 1. Do justly: Let justice and righteousness regulate your dealings with Men, and be expressed in all your concerns with them. The best description of of justice, (that branch of it that is called commutative,) is that which our Lord and Saviour has ven of it, Mat. 7.12. whatsoever things ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them. i e. so deal with others, as you would have them to deal with you, if they were in your place, and you in in theirs. No man would have another to deal fraudulently and deceitfully with him, to cheat and wrong and oppress him; do you to others as you would have them to do to you. Be as just in your word, as true to your promise, as exact in your dealings as you would have others to be? This is the thing that is just, and that this Justice God does require of you, Appears by the reproof the Prophet gives the violaters of it in the words that follow the text, Are there yet the treasures of wickedness in the house of the wicked, v. 10. and the scant measure that is abominable? v. 11. shall I count them pure with the wicked balances and with the bag of deceitful weights? These uneven balances, deceitful weights and scant measures, that are the Instruments of unrighteousness, are hateful to God, and tho' for a time they may serve a covetous humour, and men may heap up treasures to themselves thereby, yet there is a curse that attends such persons, and a moth that will consume their riches; those treasures of wickedness will not always continue in the house of the wicked. To do justly is a thing that most persons know, but too few make Conscience of, but justice is a thing that must be done. 'Tis not enough to have the notion of it in our Mind, but the practice of it must be in our hand. To be just and not to do justly in our particular actions is a contradiction. He that doth Righteousness is Righteous. 1 Joh. 3.7. And that we may do so, let us consider, how pleasing and acceptable this is to God, Prov. 21.3. to do justice and judgement is more acceptable to the Lord than Sacrifice. Let us also consider what an Ornament it is to Christianity; to do justly is to adorn the Doctrine of God our Saviour, Tit. 3.10. which does so strictly and frequently enjoin the practice of Righteousness betwixt man and man. Luk. 20.25 Rom. 13.7. And indeed what does Religion teach you if it does not teach you this piece of morality? Further consider how necessary the practice of this Divine Virtue is to fit and qualify you for converse and communion with God in his Ordinances; so that when the Question was put of old, Lord who shall abide in thy Tabernacle? who shall dwell in thy holy hill? 'Tis answered, He that walketh uprightly, and worketh Righteousness, and speaketh the truth in his Heart. He that backbiteth not with his tongue, nor doth evil to his neighbour, nor taketh up a reproach against his neighbour, Psal. 15.1, 2, 3. And if this does not move some of us, let such consider, that the just God, to whom vengeance does belong, does very often execute his Righteous Judgements upon notorious and impenitent violaters of Justice, 1 Thes. 4.6. that no man go beyond and defraud his Brother in any matter: because that the Lord is the avenger of all such. You are a trading People that I speak to, and have dealings in the World, I beseech you to consider these things and have a strict regard to justice and righteousness in all you do. And so doing, 2. Love Mercy, labour to be of a merciful disposition: show mercy, and do it from a principle of Love, love to God and love to Man. The object of Mercy are the Miserable, and the exercise of this grace consists in doing what in us lies to relieve those that are in necessity, to comfort those that are cast down, to counsel those to whom our advice may be helpful, to sympathise with those that are afflicted, to assist those that are tempted, and to help them to bear their burden: In one word, to do all the good that we can to the Souls and Bodies of all men, and especially to those that are of the household of Faith. Be ready to give to them that ask, to lend to them that would borrow of you, and to forgive those that have offended against you. A merciful man is such a one as Job, who was Eyes to the blind, and Feet to the Lame, and a Father to the poor, Job 29.15. The alwise God has so ordered it in his Providence that we should always have objects and occasions for the exercise of this Grace. Some are poor, some are sick, some are carried into captivity, some are bereaved of their relations, that others that are healthful and rich and prosperous in the World might succour them in their distresses: And some left to fall into sin, that those that stand by Grace, might restore such with a spirit of meekness. Think it not enough that you are strictly just, but remember that you must be merciful too. Yea you cannot be truly just except you be merciful, to deny to others some part of our own, when the providence of God calls us to give it, is injustice, as well as not to give them what is their own, and the highest injustice, injustice to God, in not using the goods of this World, to the end for which he has entrusted us with them. 7. And as Divine Love is the general Principle of all good actions, so it is the immediate Fountain from whence all the Streams of Mercy do issue. They that love Mercy, will be ready to show Mercy, and think it no cost, no burden, no weariness to do it. That that proceeds from Love we do freely and cheerfully, and that puts a lustre upon every act of Mercy. And to excite this Principle in you, consider, that showing Mercy to others does assimilate and make you like unto God himself, who delights in Mercy; who when he does proclaim his Name, does it especially by the display of his Goodness and Mercy; Exod. 34. and should we not affect the nearest Union with God, and the highest Resemblance of him? Luke 6.36. Be ye therefore merciful, as your heavenly Father is merciful. Also consider that the Love of Mercy is a special evidence of the Sincerity of your Love to God, to be Merciful for God's sake does proceed from the love of God: But, whoso hath this world's goods and seeth his Brother hath need, and shutteth up his Bowels of compassion how dwelleth the Love of God in him? 1 John 3.17. And let us often seriously think of the great day of the Lord, when nothing but Divine Mercy can stead and befriend us, and that they are merciful men who are particularly described in Scripture that shall have the benefit of the Divine Mercy. The Apostle's prayer for Onesiphorus, 2 Tim. 1. does import so much, v. 16. the Lord give Mercy unto the house of Onesiphorus for he oft refreshed me, Mat. 25.24. ad sin. — the Lord grant that he may find mercy of the Lord in that day. And it is expressly said on the contrary, that He shall have judgement without mercy that hath showed no mercy, Jam. 2.13. How ready and willing then should we be to embrace all Opportunities of showing Mercy. In which, as well as in the former duty of doing justly, we should have respect unto God, his glory as the end, and his command as the reason of all that we do, which is the fumm of the last duty, that you 3. Walk humbly with your God; endeavouring to approve yourselves to Him in all that you do, which is that that puts an excellency into and a beauty upon your due ties to men, and makes them acceptable with God through Jesus Christ, as being ultimately done to him. Endeavour that your whole life may be as much as possibly you can a continued walk with God. Set him always before your Face, have your Eye constantly to him: keep up your Hearts with God, in a frame fit for Communion with God at all times. Observe his Providence, follow the Guidance of it, receive the Instructions of it, and comply with all the Calls of it. Be led by the Spirit of God, and be obsequious to all his holy motions: let your conversation be in Heaven. Be followers of the Lord Jesus, and walk as you have Him for an Example. And be very Humble in your walking with God, depend upon him for Divine assistance and strength in all that you do for his name. Be Humble and Reverend in your Worshipping of God. Ascribe all the Glory to him of all the good you receive and do. Be Low, be vile in your own sight, and exalt the Lord in your Soul: Let him be your first and your last: Begin all your works with God, and end them in Him. Remember to this purpose, how God has declared Himself as to this part of your duty, that He resisteth the Proud, but giveth Grace to the humble. Jam. 4.6. Isa. 57.19. And has promised to dwell with the Humble. Therefore nip and check all the buddings of pride when it first begins to shoot. Be not proud of your clothing, but be clothed with Humility. 1 Per. 5.5. Be not proud of your Parts and Gifts but use them to Edify one another in Love. Be not proud of your Riches and Estate, for you must shortly leave them, and give an account, to Him that lends them you, how you have improved them for Him. Indeed we do very much forget ourselves what we were, and do yet continue to be Sinful dust, when our hearts do swell with this Vanity. This is the worst, because (as it is probable,) it was the first sin. And is still the first that lives, and the last that dies in the heart. Labour therefore through the Spirit of God to mortify it in all the kind's of it both Corporal and Spiritual. And indeed what way soever we look, we may see enough to make and to keep us humble. If we look up to God how should his Majesty abase us! If we look to our selves, how low should our sins lay us! If we look to Saints, it may humble us to see how short we come of many of them in Grace and Holiness; And if to Sinners, to consider that such we were, and such we should have continued to be, had not the free and effectual Grace of God made the difference. You that have most, 1 Cor. 4.7. have nothing but what you have received. And for your Direction, as to the whole; 1. Be convinced that your duty lies in these things; that they are not things indifferent, but indispensibly incumbent upon you: If any thing be necessary for us to attend unto, the things here proposed to us are so. To make light and little account of them, is to cashier all practical Obedience, for what remains to be done by you, if doing justly, and showing mercy, and walking humbly with God, be not your duty? Yea these are the great and weighty duties of the Gospel, that claim our primary regard and attendance to them. And yet how many professing the Christian Religion, act as if Christianity were nothing at all concerned therein; which is and aught to be for a Lamentation? Persons that are unjust and unmerciful to men, and disobedient to God, and that oftentimes without finding any Remorse or Regret in themselves, whose Religion has nothing of substance in it, but lies in some speculative notions only, 1 Tim. 3.5. which they have taken up; these have a form of Godliness, but deny the power thereof; from such, they that would walk with God in a course of Obedience, must turn away. 2. Make sure of a Being in Christ by Faith, that in him you may hear and bring forth this fruit unto God. such an Interest in, and Union with the Lord Jesus by a Faith that is of the Operation of God, is absolutely necessary to a right discharge of any and every duty. For tho' some of the things that God requires, may be done as to the external part, and what is so done may be materially good, without any such special Grace received and exerted in the doing of them, yet are they formally defective, as not proceeding from a pure Heart, and a good Conscience, 1 Tim. 1.5. and Faith unfeigned, which are the declared Principles, necessary to constitute and denominate an action Evangelically good. Humane Nature indeed, refined from the more dreggy and sensual part of it, by Precepts of Morality, may raise itself to a practice of That that is purely moral in these things. So some of the Heathens have not only been strictly just, but largely beneficent, and have done much good both in their public capacities and private stations. But in as much as our Evangelical Walking and Conversing with God is concerned in these actions, that they be done through a Divine Strength, and directed to the Glory of God, this the Mind of Man is altogether ignorant of, whilst estranged from the Light and Power of that Faith, whereby we come to be in Christ, and to be one with him: For as it is thro' his Mediation only, that we are, and can be accepted in any good we do; so there is a Divine Grace communicated from him to us, that alone can strengthen us to do, and persevere in the doing these things, and also direct our hearts to intend the Glory of God therein: And which is that Qualification that specificates duties of Evangelical Obedience from acts of Moral Virtue. Thus the fruit ever answers the species and kind of the Tree it grows upon, Mat. 7.17. is corrupt or good according as that is; and nothing less than such a supernatural Grace received in Union with Christ, is sufficient to make this Evil Tree good, so to alter the Corrupt Nature of Man, to dethrone the Dominion of Sin, and to bring the Soul under the power of a Principle of Righteousness and Holiness whereby it becomes disposed, sanctified and meet for the Master's use, 2 Tim. 2.21. and prepared unto every good work. Then think it not enough that you are Christians by Name, by an outward Baptism, and visible Profession, but make sure of a real spiritual In-being in Jesus Christ, in whom only it is that we can do any thing that is good, so as to be accepted with God in it; Joh. 15.5. and without whom we can do nothing, that is a bringing forth fruit unto God. 3. Possess yourselves with as lively apprehensions as you can get of the worth and excellency of the things God requires of you. And these, to do justly, to love mercy, and to walk humbly with God, are all of them things that have a real and transcendent worth in them; such things as do approve themselves to be Good and excellent to an enlightened mind, and a well-disposed heart. They are such things, wherein the Perfection of our Nature, as it lies in a conformity to God, and subjection to him, does consist; They are also Lovely in the Eyes of others, and things of good Report, that cause Religion to be well spoken of. None but the debauched, and such whose Consciences are seared as with a hot Iron, 1 Tim. 4.2. will open their mouths against them; to all others, that have any sense of Humanity, and Conscience left, they commend themselves, as things that are good and excellent, worthy to be practised and imitated by others. Having such a lively apprehension of the worth of these things, we shall not look upon them as a task and imposition upon us, but do them with delight as things that are most suitable and agreeable to us. 4. Read, study and in all things consult the Word of God, to regulate your doings to God, and dealings with Men. This written Word is the Revealed Will of God. This shows us all things we are commanded, and all we are forbidden. This Word is able to make the Man of God perfect, 2 Tim. 3.17. throughly furnished unto all good works. And what can more commend it to us to be the Book of our daily Converse and Meditation? I don't wonder that David speaks so much in the praise and commendation of it, when he declares it was a Lamp unto his feet, and a Light unto his path. Whether it were night or day with him, Psal. 119.105. whatever state of Life he passed through, the Word of God was his Rule, his Counsellor, that never failed him, and never misled him. How much is it then our wisdom to have a constant Regard to this Word, to see that warranting our actions, guiding us in our difficulties, and reclaiming us when we go astray. Such is the promise for our direction, consulting with the Word, and seeking God to enable us by his Spirit to understand it, Isa. 30.21. Thine Ears shall hear a word behind thee, saying, This is the way walk ye in it, when ye turn to the right hand, and when ye turn to the left. 5. Awe your hearts with the Authority of God in his Commands, when Temptations would bribe your Affections to turn out of the path of Duty. We need something to check those inclinations there are in us to comply with Temptations, which those that are engaged in a course of Obedience are wont to meet with: And nothing so effectual to that purpose, as to consider that the Lord who hath showed us where our duty lies, has also Required that we should walk therein. That his Precepts are not only Counsels, but Commands, which we cannot violate, without being guilty of a high Contempt of God, and exposing ourselves to his displeasure. If the Charge of an Earthly Superior has so mnch force, as to restrain Men from those things that their Natural Appetites incline them to, ●er. 35.14. (as the Rechabites, who would not drink Wine, because their Father had commanded them to forbear;) how much more should the Command of the Great God of Heaven and Earth influence us to a vigorous Resistance of all those Temptations, that would divert us from our Duty to Him? 'Tis enough to oppose and silence any Temptation when we are in the way of our Duty, to charge ourselves with this, ●●l. 119.5. that God has commanded us to keep his Precepts diligently. 6. And lastly; Take heed and beware of Covetousness, which is that Evil in the heart, from whence Temptations ordinarily do proceed, or which they strive to work upon, to turn us aside from doing justly, loving mercy, and walking humbly with God. Whosoever indulges this Evil in himself, and is governed more by a worldly Interest, than the Concernments of God's Glory, his own present Peace, and Eternal Happiness, will often halt in the practice of these things. Opportunities to be unjust and unmerciful, when they present, will inflame his Lust, and cause him to break with God. Pray that God would mortify this Evil in your heart. Arm yourself with all the considerations of the vanity and insufficiency that there is in the greatest worldly affluence to make you happy, and especially think often of that mortifying Question that our Lord and Saviour has put to us; Matth. 16.26. What is a man profited if he shall gain the whole World, and lose his own Soul? Or what shall a man give in exchange for his Soul? No gains of Unrighteousness can countervail the loss of the Soul. Wherefore knowing the terror of the Lord, 2 Cor. 5.11 let us take heed that we be not overcome by this Secret Evil in our own bosom. Mortify the Love of the World in you; and set up the Love of God as the Ruling and Governing Principle in all your actions. THE END.