New-England Freemen Warned and Warmed, To be Free indeed, having an Eye to God in their ELECTIONS: 〈◊〉 a Sermon Preached before the Court of ELECTION At Boston, on the ●ast Day of May, 1671. J. O. Pastor of the first Church in Boston. Published by Order of the General Court. Printed in the Year. 1673. Christian Reader, I Was invited by the House of Deputies to Preach at the time and 〈◊〉 the occasion mentioned in the Title page, and that work (though very mean) sound that acceptance, that Captain Savage the Speaker with Captain Clark came in the name of that House to give me thanks: Since which the Deputies, with the concurrence of the Magistrates ordered the Printing of this poor piece; It was once in my thoughts here to have prefaced an Explication of some particulars, which it seems did not sound well in the ears of two or three persons whom I honour; but my second thoughts did contradict, telling me my Order was only for the Printing of the Sermon, and that the explication and defence thereof (if a tincture of prejudice (did remain) might as well be mistaken as the Sermon, and so occasion inconvenient alteration; wherefore I forbear being conscious to myself of no other scope nor meaning then what will be agreeable to all faithful Pa〈…〉 and true lovers of this Country, with when 〈…〉 before I am willing to leave this Testimony before I die; and that it may appear that I aim at what was in the heart of some long before me in time and worth; take some passages which have had unquestioned allowance in this Land: Mr. Shepard in his first part of the Parable of the Virgins, page 166. Who seethe not (that observes the Lords dealing) that some sorrows are toward, unless the Lord awaken, some sudden blasting blow. If any wind be stirring, men on the tops of the mountains will feel it, and its folly to think to flee from the cross unless we flee from Christ. 'Tis part of the portion he doth owe us here, if he love us. I do fear there is at this day as deep mischief plotting against New-England as e●er the Sun saw: Enemies will first deal subtly before cruelly, but subtly that they may deal cruelly; When Pharaoh deals wisely, he means to kill: Being come hither for public help and means and all ordinances, Oh do not betray your liberties, but lose your blood before you lose them, and the Lord in them; bear the Ark still on your shoulders that the Lord may, dwell with you. Idem 2d. part, page 16. If ever this Country receive a blow it will be by appearances, if ever any shall come under an appearance of piety and promise of protection, safety, liberty, only your Government must be a little altered, slumber here and you shall sleep in your enemy's arms. Idem page 198. An Objection is made, What power have Churches to keep out them that be Baptised? The Answer: The Apostle is punctual to it, 2 Tim 3. 5. speaking of the last days, having a form of godliness, turn away from such, he saith not, let them in and turn to them, and if they prove evil members cut them off and turn them from you, but turn away from them; he saith not if they be profane or not baptised and cannot say I was humbled & now I believe, but which is more if they have a form Ezek. 44.8, 9 you have set keepers of my charge in my Sanctuary for yourselves: thus saith the Lord God, no stranger uncircumcized in heart, nor uncircumcised in flesh shall enter into my Sanctuary, Heb. 12.15. looking diligently lest any root of bitterness springing up trouble you, he doth not say it is no matter what roots you set in Christ's Garden, only when they spring up and begin to feed and infect others, then have a care of them The Lord that forbids me to suffer Weeds to grow forbids my carelessness in sowing what seed, I please. Idem page 199. Paul may fear with a godly jealcusie some of the Corinthian Church, 2 Cor. 12. yet he calls them all Saints, and dares not mince his speeches with such notions of probability; a moral certainty, a man may and should have of all Church-members, a certainty of faith conditional, but not absolute. Idem page 200. Let all God's people, Watchmen on God's Walls, still be watchful and careful, there be temptations enough to make men fill and pester God's House with Swine; one hath his Friend, and his affection lead him; another, he is a man of estate and his Money is in the mouth of his Sack; another thinks there is one bad enough, but we shall do well enough with them. Hosea 8.4. They have set up Kings but not by me, they have made Princes and I knew it not. MEn, Fathers and Brethren, whatsoever you expect or suspect of me, I would neither expect nor suspect of you the representative body of a high professing People, that you should take up this solemn worship of God as a bare ceremony to attend the Granduer of the day, but would hope you come to look up to the great God, that he may give us some meat in this season. Psal. 145.15. But then look we to him with a single eye, for if we come resolved to him, & not to be resolved by him; we dissemble in our hearts, as they, Jer. 42.10. They ask counsel but take it not, Come not I pray you to inquire with an Idol in your heart, Ezek. 14.7. If there be here any of you with an Idol of prejudice, not to do what you hear; or a fixed purpose to do whatsoever you had a mind to before, be it right or wrong; let such an Idol fall down before the Living God, but whatsoever go will do, the Lord tells me what I must do, Ezek. 2.9. Thou shalt spe●k my words, whether they 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or whether they will forbear, and the words he hath at this time put into my mouth are these, They hav● set up Kings: Whose coherence is this in the first verse, the Prophet hath order from the Lord of Hosts to sound an Alarm with the greatest earnestness, with a Trumpet from the roof of his mouth against secure Hypocrites, & so to signify the approach of a swift and ravenous enemy, as an Eagle against the ten Tribes; and this notwithstanding any pretence to their Church estate, or being a house of God, and professing themselves to own, know and acknowledge him: ver. 2. they will cry 〈◊〉 God we know thee, now the reason of God's severe proceeding against them is, because they have broke the substance of their Covenant with God in the main Articles of it, transgressed my Covenant, and trespassed against any Law, and cast off the thing what his good, which is, that which the Covenant and Law require, and in this 4th. ver. is a proof of their thus breaking with God in their civil and religious administration the former is our present concern; They have set up Kings: Explic. They have set up Kings but not by me, the 70 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they have Kinged it to themselves and not to me, so the Syriack and vulgar Latin, but the Arabic varies a little, they have reigned of themselves and not from me, They have made Princes and I knew it not; the Grèek Syriack, vulgar Latin, Arabic, they were Princes & told me not, but the Hebrew verbs in the Text being in hiphil, and so of transitive signification doth avouch our Translation, and so the Chalde paraphraseth they made to rule, and not from my mind and will; yet often the 70 as quoted in the N. T. enlargeth the next and express sense of the Hebrew, and so it may here be allowed and the matter will bear it well; For those civil Governors that are of a corrupt constitution are not likely to carry on a godly administration, what power is ill laid in, will be ill laid out, Mich. 17. what is gathered of an Harlot will return to the hire of an harlot, what is from the flew will bring forth corruption, and so in case of the Text it proved, of all the Kings of the ten Tribes, we find not one godly King: But for further concerning the sense of the Text I would speak to two Questions. Quest. 1. How may we understand their setting up Kings and Princes and not by the Lord and his Knowledge? Answ. They did it not by his direction and approbation, they did never inquire and prosecute the mind of God in that business, nor did the Lord know and approve their way and procedure as he doth the way of the righteous, Psal. 1. ult. Quest. 2. How did they set up Kings and Princes without God's approbation? Answ. not merely (as I conceive) in setting up the Kingly Government, for that was revealed to be his will eventually, Deut. 17.14. but their sin in first taking to this Government was their lusting after it out of season and measure; this itching humour in the Israelites was partly from their distrusting their God, and partly for Gentilizing or conforming to the Gentiles, and it broke forth in gideon's time, Judg. 8.22, 23. they would have a Regal Hereditary Government, but Gideon suppresseth the motion, and oppo●eth the making a King in other time a manner than God appointed, to be a rejecting of God's Government; they say, rule thou over us, thou, and thy Son, and thy Son's Son, and Gideon said unto them, I will not rule over you, neither shall my Son rule over you; but who then? the Lord shall rule over you: But this lust in that people did afterwards rise, Judg. 9 toward his Bastard Son Abime●e●h, who had not that honest spirit to check it as his Father did; the same lust was stirring in the Israelites demand of a King, 1 Sam. 8.5.7. and this the Lord counts the rejecting of his Government, by which formerly a fit instrument was designed by the Lord in every extremity, and thus far the ten Tribes did act with the other, in setting up Kings without God's approbation; afterward I find this sinful proceeding to reign chief in the ten Tribes, for they knew the will of God, for the succession of David the Type of Christ, 2 Sam. 5.2 yet they first set up Ishbosheth, and afterward Absalon, and then inclined to Sheba, in all which they neither sought nor had the approbation of God, and by this lust were the ten Tribes acted in setting up jeroboam; for though it was by God's providence ordering all events, yet neither did the people, nor jeroboam inquire of God about it, but the people in discontent rebelled against the house of Dav d, & jeroboam in his ambition did snatch at the offer of the seditious Israelites; thus did not Dav●d, for though we was anointed King, yet neither in saul's time would he put forth a hand to the Crown, nor after saul's death had made the Throne vacant, would David step one foot towards possession of it, till he enquired after, and received God's approbation, 2 Sam. 2.1. David enquired of the Lord, shall I go up to any of the Cities of judah? but jeroboam did neither take nor wear the Crown according to God's counsel and rearms; And so it was with the Kings that succeeded him, and for the people that set up their Kings at their own pleasure; so did they destroy them, Hos. 7.7. Being hot as an oven in their own passions and factions, they devour their judges, their Kings are fallen, there is none that calls upon me, and pulled down their Kings without God's counsel or help, so that in two hundred years they had twenty Kings of ten several families; in the same time there were but eleven in judah, and all of David's house: Now this their setting up Kings and Princes according to their own lusts was the more criminal, because they in word owned God to be their God in Covenant, my God we know thee; and for them to order their Government without taking notice of God, was a ●reat disloyalty. From the words so depending and explained, I offer this Doctrine: Doct. It is expected of a People professing themselves the people of God, that they should have regard to him in the constitution and administration of their Magistracy: This appears by, 1. God reproving of the Israelites, in the Text the Israelites are charged with an omission, not doing according to God in their Magistracy, which implies a rule and duty so to do, sins of omission import a duty omitted. 2. By God's approving those that have this regard to him as well as his reproving them that have it not, Hos. 11. ult. Ephraim compasseth me about with lies, and the house of Israel with deceit; but judah yet ruleth with God, and is faithful with the Saints: the ten Tribes retaining some profession of God, but having no sincere respect to him in their civil or religious matters, do but keep a customary round of lies and hypocrisy in their profession of God; but judah in their Government, keeping to the house of David according to God's command, and holding with their Godly Ancestors and their faithful remnant are approved by their God. The Reasons to gain the assent of your understandings, and so to fetch in the consent of your wills are these: Reas. 1. The eternal God doth expect of them that acknowledge him for their God, and themselves for his people, that they should be his universally and unchangeably, and that his right to them should not be limited to any place or case, but should reach to their whole course, Pro. 3.6 In all thy ways acknowledge him and he shall direct thy paths: Ye must acknowledge him in better and greater matters, as in other days so in this solemn day, if therein you expect he shall set you to rights, ye must not play fast and lose; sometimes retain to God, and other times to Mammon, Mat. 6.24. Ye cannot serve God and Mammon, for they are so far two Masters as never to be one, to that if ye hold to one ye will despise the other; If the interest of God and the public interest in this Land call you to make one choice, and some worldly interest call you to another, if ye hold to the worldly, ye despise God in this, however in other occasions ye pretend to retain to him, your choice will discover whose indeed you are; your choice of a calling, your choice of a companion, yours (especially in Marriage for yourself or yours) and your choice of a Magistrates and others in Authority (when it is in your power) will show whether ye are resolved to serve God in your Generation or not; what say ye now ye Freemen of New-England? is the Lord your God or no? if he be, then as one man ye must say, Exod. 15.2. He is my God, I will prepare him an Habitation: I will endeavour such a frame of things as he may delight to dwell amongst us, He is my Father's God and I will exalt him; he hath wonderfully owned and exalted you and your Fathers, therefore ye must own and exalt him; and believe it Brethren, if ye talk of God and his Covenant, and walk not in the main concerns of your public or private standing with a chief regard to him; ye go about to mock him that will not be mocked. Reas. 2. Magistracy and Government is mercifully ordered and maintained by God, and therefore as it falls into the hands of men, should be ordered according to him, what is of him, and through him should also be to him: that there should be Government among men, it is an order that God hath set, Rom. 13.1. The Powers that be, are ordained of God. Government is not on●y by general providence ordered and governed by him (as are all Wars, Pestilence and Famine) but ordained, God gives out a command and a confinement (or bound) to it: All Nations by instinct of nature do desire a power and authority for Rule, and commission is given, as Gen. 7. God appointed a power awong men for revenge of Murder, and this when all Nations were contracted into one Family, but God did more expressly enjoin his own people to set up Magistrates, Deut. 16.18. judges and Officers shalt thou make thee in all thy Gates which the Lord giveth thee; It is not arbitrary whether they will have Judges, Pharaoh calls Government' 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a sacred thing, and it is a mercy, and so made over to men through Christ, Prov. 8.15. By me King's reign, Mat. 28.15. All power is given to me in Heaven and Earth, Christ dispenseth it for carrying on the welfare of men, therefore the enjoyment of Government according to him is matter of praise, Psal. 122.4. Whether the Tribes go up to give thanks to the name of the Lord, for there are set Thrones of judgement: The setting up of Government is a mercy thankfully to be owned, as the want is a judgement and desolation, and the portion of bloody Esau, Isa. 34.12. They shall call the Nobles thereof to the Kingdom but none shall be there, and all her Princes shall be nothing, and this is sorely lamented, Hab. 1.14. and makest men as the fishes of the Sea, as creeping things that have not ruler over them; now God being the merciful founder of Magistracy, it is meet in the manage thereof we should look to him, as Isai. 22.11. when they used skill and diligence in fortifying of Jerusalem, there was one neglect that threatens the frustrating of all, that is, not having the principal eye and regard to the Lord that founded Jerusalem as the seat of the Kingdom, and his most solemn worship: It may be as usually is objected against this reason, from 1 Pet. 2.13. Submit yourselves to every Ordinance of man? Ans It is for the Lords sake, who hath ordered there should be Government, and so it is of the Lord; but in this and that particular form, it is of man as to the Commonwealth, though in the Churches even the form we conceive is fixed by the Lord; Civil Government is also called Humane, because its end is the good of man, in outwards nextly and the matter it is conversant about, is (properly and immediately) humane not divine; In divine the Magistrate hath not power according to his mind to put or appoint any Worship upon God which never came into his mind, Jer. 9.5. Which I commanded not, nor speak it, neither came it into my mind, and what came not into God's mind to appoint, may not come into the Magistrate's mind to enjoin. It is the liberty and honour of a Magistrate to protect and promote what Christ hath appointed in his house, and in this the Christian Magistrate hath not more power, though more light to manage that power; the help of the Magistrate is not of absolute necessity to the being of Christ's true Religion (for he did bring forth and maintain it when the edge of the Magistrate was sharp against it for 300 years the purer age) but this support is necessary for the false, jer. 10.5. an Image which is created by man, cannot subsist without his providence, the Idol must needs be borne it cannot go, and Babylon, whether East or West (the way of Arius, Mahomet or the Pope) must have a Beast to carry her, Rev. 17.7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith Mead but that this is the abuse of civil power will appear in the Doctrines third Reason. Reas. 3. Magistratical Power makes a man God's near and special Servant and Deputy in the World, therefore it is fit that in the giving and using this power, there should be a respect had to God, job. 10.34, 35. I said ye are Gods, if he called them Gods to whom the Word of God came; Gods saying and Commission purteth them in his stead, and by his impress upon the Magistracy, and by that only one man is able to rule so great numbers; when ye choose a Magistrate or Deputy, ye put such a man upon God, and therefore should consider what will please him, Rom. 13.4 the Magistrate is called Gods 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 & 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his Deacon (as we may say) his Minister, so 2 Chron. 9 8. Blessed be the Lord (saith heba's Queen to Solomon) wh●ch delighted in thee to set thee upon his Throne, to be K●ng for the Lord God: It is the Lords Throne, and for the Lord, and so inferior Magistrates, 2 Chro. 19.6. ●e judge for the Lord, Rev. 12.5. Constantin● is said to be caught up to God's Throne, now God useth men in Government not out of necessity but bounty, for Ps; ●l. 89.18. He is the Shield of his people, yet he hath the shields of his people, P●al 47. ult. the Magistrate represents Christ the Judge of all the Earth, and we may not put upon him a man that manifestly bears the Image of the Devil, neither may any dare in God's Livery to do the Devil's work; nay who of you dares to take in any to God's service, but to do Gods work, and not to serve your own particular turn. Application. Let the Authority of this Doctrine fall and fix upon your hearts this day, remembering Psal. 81.2. that God standeth, which is a posture of greater attention, and he attends in order to his judging of you, therefore have your eye upon God as his is upon you; Be in the fear of the Lord all this day, Prov. 23.17. So acknowledge God in giving and taking Magistracy, that he may approve your proceeding, and let every heart lift up a cry to the Lord almost in Moses words, Numb. 27.16. Let the Lord the God of the spirits of all flesh, set a man and men over the Congregation, which may go out before them, and which may go in before them, and which may lead them, and which may bring them in, that the Congregation of the Lord be not as sheep which have no Shepherd. Motive. 1. It concerns as to be owned in the proceed of this day, else the business of the day will not be for our safety, jer. 5.10. Go ye up upon her Walls, and destroy and take away her battlements, for they are not the Lords. If our Magistrates set up for our Protection, be not owned by the Lord, they will not be any protection; any enemy, heathen or called christian, hath a dormant Commission to come upon you and destroy you, though not with utter destruction. Motive 2. magistratical Power is of great weight and worth, especially among God's people; therefore with great consideration to be made over and managed by them that have it. Psal. 113.8. That he may set him with Princes, even with the Princes of his people. This very much heightens their honour; and so God tells David, 2 Sam. 7.8. I took thee from the sheep coat, to be Ruler over my people, over Israel. Pericles, being often chosen Praetor of Athens, every year when he put on his Robe, would bespeak himself; remember thou rulest over Freemen, thou rulest over Athenians, yet Christ bespeaks you that rule here, have a care what you do, for ye rule over my Children, joh. 19 8. When Pilate heard that saying, viz. that Christ was the Son of God, he was the more afraid, he was the more awed, and they that are in Authority here had as much need as any where to hearken to that, Psal. 2.10. Serve the Lord with fear, rejoice with trembling; It is spoken to Magistrates, ye may willingly and cheerfully serve the Lord i● that capacity of doing good to his people, but tremble lest ye miscarry; if ye do them any wrong ye are sure to hear of it, Psal. 105.14, 15. He suffered no man to do them wrong, yea, he reproved Kings for their sake, saying, touch not mine anointed, and do my Prophets no harm: If you touch his people harmfully, or put power into the hands of such as will so touch them you touch the apple of God's eye, Z●ch. 2. he will not bear that wrong to them that he will upon another people, no not although it be sl●ly and by way of fraud, and not by way of open violence, for that was the cause of Midian, against whom the Lord gives that charge, Numb. 31.3. Let them go against the Midianites and avenge the Lord of Midian. Motive 3. All your Administrations must come ere long under judgement, ye that are Freemen must shortly be free among the dead, and that than your work and secret design whether good or bad must come to judgement, Eccl. 12. ult. and ye that shall be chosen, Psal. 82.6.7. Though you be all of you Children of the m●st ●●●h, or Angels as Chalde renders it, yet ye must die like Adam. Socrates writes to Dyonisius, thou art yet clothed with a mortal skin, and if ye die then follows the Judgement; act ye therefore so this day as ye may answer it boldly in that. It was the honour of Marcellus, that he went from the Tribunal to the Bar; and it is the Law of necessity upon you all, if not here yet else where, to give an account of your Administration; now if any of you upon these Motives are willing in your giving or taking Magistratical power, to do it according to Gods will, offer you some means so to do. Means 1. Mind the reallizing of your-profession of God, and take heed of Apostasy; in the two verses before the Text, we have Israel's boasting and breaking of their Covenant with God, Israel shall cry unto me, my God we know thee, but this is no better than to compass God with lies, Hos. 11. ult. For Israel hath cast off the thing that is good, the Enemy shall pursue him; If we do thus lie to God in N. E. we go against the interest of N. E. as hath been faithfully declaredon such a day as this: Mr. Stoughton If you cast off good, you cannot so cast off evil; evil will follow you if you follow not that which is good, when your Religion is but a pretence, a lie, it will never last, a lie is never long-lived howsoever you sawn upon God or his people, ye can never really love either by outward fleshly. circumcision alone, when ye are only (as the same Messenger said) custom born, Deut. 30.6. there's need of the Lords own circumcizing your hearts and the hearts of your seed, as he is really your God in Covenant, that you may love him and his interest with all your heart: If ye have this heart circumcision, heart-baptisme, than you will cleave to him and his people, whether ye be choosing or chosen into power, otherwise not, Prov. 24. ult. the upright is an abomination unto the wicked His natural Fore skin, the enmity of his carnal mind will upon any ripening temptation break out; he that hath but the form, not the power of godliness, will not like to have godliness in power, they that are not indeed Freemen (though so called) are servants, 2 Pet. 2.19. to corruption, and must serve such purposes which was owned by some Philosophers, Cic. 5. Paradox who laid down this Paradox (so that many would think it) all wise men are Freemen, and all fools are Servants, such then having a liberty to choose, will in the use of it serve corrupt men and not the holy God, neither will unsound Professors serve the Lord in the manner of that Authority they get, and therefore Job 17.8. The innocent shall stir up himself against the hypocrite, and God intending mercy to a people will help such opposition, job 34.30. That the Hypocrite reign not, lest the people be ensnared; such will lay secret and subtle snares for the people whom God in pity will deliver therefrom. As for you in N. E. to backslide and to fashion yourselves to the flaunting mode of England in worship or walking, you undertake a vain thing, for you can but limp after them, and you will forget (as was told you the last year by that Reverend Elder) your errand of Planting this Wilderness, Mr Danforth. and if you have a mind to turn your Churches into Parishes, and your Ministers into Priests and Prelates, I cannot think the Lord will ever endure it, as Ezek. 20.32. That which cometh into your mind shall not be at all, that ye say, we will be as the Families of the Countries: The Lord that hath so marvellously separated and distinguished this people for himself, will not so lose his propriety here, and know ye that your backsliding will not only be vanity but vexation, also for this ye will lose the good ye have had, Hos. 4.7. As they were increased so they sinned against me, therefore will I change their glory into shame. If ye grow more provoking as more populous; that which hath been the glory of N. E. (Magistracy and Ministry) will be its shame: If ye rebel and vex his holy Spirit, acting in them that anointing will be gone, Isai. 63.10, 11. Where is he that brought them up out of the Sea with the shepherd of his flock? where is he that put his holy spirit within them? Ye will have Magistrates and Ministers of a meaner alloy, yea happily, for your Hypocrisy and Apostasy, being false to Christ as was judas, you will have that plague, Psal. 109.6. A wicked man set over you, and an adversary shall stand at your right hand: Evil will certainly befall you, as Iosh. 6.26. joshua laid the bvilders of accursed destroyed jericho under a curse, so will our Jesus bring a Curse upon those that shall go about to build jericho the City of the Moon (so it signifies) the Kingdom of the Beast, which being an earthly, worldly Religion: Lunenburge is reckoned by the Moon, Rev. 11. But blessed are they that resist and crush the least beginnings and breed of Babylon, (be they will-worship, persecution or confusion:) Blessed I say are those that will dash their brats against the Rock, even Christ the sure and tried Stone. Yea, in case ye backslide from the God of your Fathers, ye will be as it were outlawed, and exposed as a free spoil to every enemy, jer. 50.7. 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, even the Lord the hope of their Fathers; and from such will ye be most likely to have your scourge from whom you have your apostasy; as Israel returning to the Idols of Mesopotamia, from whence their Ancestors Abraham and Jacob had separated, were first put into the hand of the King of Mesopotamia, judg. 3.8. and think not what I say is impertinent to the Doctrine or the day, for in the civil Government. The first worthy Planters they professed to erect and administer according to God, and if you that succeed will do according to your lust it will go ill with you: the gallant Gideon saith, jud. 8.20. I will not rule over you neither shall my Son rule over you, but the Lord shall rule over you: this did that worthy Father promise, but the Bastard Son will needs break to the ruin of himself and his partakers: If a degenerate and spurious Generation will not stand by the intendments and engagements of their faithful Ancestors, but in their giving and exercising rule neglect the Lord, he will ruin them and their helpers. Means 2. Mind faith fully and diligently your liberties, that ye may be free to act for and according to God in the constitution and manage of your Magistracy: quit once your liberties and ye mu t have such a Magistracy & manage of it as will please not God nor yourselves, but other men will be your masters, for servants yea, slaves must you be to some body when ye have let go your liberties, now to fix you in maintaining your liberties, I crave liberty to propound some Motives. Motive 1. It is a trust and favour of God that ye have such liberties, Psa. 118.14. This is the day that the Lord hath made or exalted: This your day of free Election is preforable before all your own days if we mar it not & (for aught we know) there is no such day in other Colonies abroad, and we may say as follows, we will rejoice and be glad in it, & the more we are engaged for such a day, because we have not deserved it, but as Saul, after his wickedness to David, and David's kindness to him in spring him when he had advantage, 1 San. 24.19. This day thou hast made me as the Hebrew saith, your liberty then being the gift of such a band, even of the Lord, let no hand be against it, but let every hand hold it, Gal. 5.1. Stand fast therefore in the liberty wherewith Christ hath made us free, and be not entangled again with the yoke of bondage. The Lord Jesus hath given you such a standing, keep your standing, whosoever shall push at you, let none doubt that ever shall push at you, let none doubt that even our outward liberties in spirituals and temporals are from our Redeemer; precious Cotton so, All Church privileges and Commonwealth privileges hath the Lord purchased by his blood: So a faithful Brother among us, on such a day as this, our liberties and privileges are ransomed mercies: Mr. St. Christ hath given a price, and by his power, and by his spirit acting in the prayers and pains of his Servants, hath gotten and kept them. This liberty of choosing their own Magistrates the Lord gave to his own people, Deut. 1.13.15. Give ye (so the Hebrew, and our Margin) wise men, and understanding, & known among your Tribes and I will make them Rulers over you: and such as ye people gave, Moses took, yea, this people of Israel were still free to choose when scarce any were free to be chosen, Isai. 3.6. A man shall take hold of his Brother, and of the house of his Father, saying, thou hast clothing be thou a ruler: And all faithful ones are with Abraham, the proper heirs of the World, Rom. 4 13. and that without wrong to just propriety, and it seems all shall (as we) have the yoke broken because of the anointing, Isai. 10.27. Now shall not we hold the Lands and Liberties which our God hath given us, as judg. 11.24. that valiant jephthe told the Arronite, and indeed for your just bounds it will be great weakness to shorten them, for a near Enemy is the worst, as Sparta found by the Athenians, seizing on Pysus a near and rejected Island. Motive 2. Your trust by and for men bespeaks your care and vigilance about your Liberties. This Honourable Assembly consists of the trusties of all the Freemen of the ●●…nd: If Freemen indeed, they choose that they may so continue; we should have cause to complain of any that is chosen if he should use this trust our Liberties, as the Eagle in the Greek Epigram lamented that it was slain with an Arrow winged with its own Feathers: Ye are also trusted for men, for many, all Inhabitants have their Liberties, Women, Children, Servants, yea, and Strangers too, let me beseech this Honourable Assembly, in the name of all the Freemen (who am also a Freeman) not to part with any of our Liberties by force or fraud, these are our Crowns and jewels which we commit to your care and charge. Motive. 3. Your expressing agreement binds you; no man can choose or be chosen, but he hath taken the Oath for our Liberties, take heed you be not charged as those Hypocritical Professors, Isai. 48.1. nominal Christians, Swearing by the Lord, making mention of the God of Israel, but not in truth nor in righteousness, you have every one sweared by the Great Name of the Everliving God, truly to endeavour to maintain and preserve the liberties and privilege of this Commonwealth and Government: and this is more than is sworn for the Laws, to which only a subjection is undertaken; now if ye truly endeavour to maintain all the liberties as ye promise by Oath, than ye should be willing to know and make them known: there should be as I conceive, a distinct knowledge of them as there is a distinct obligation to them; I have seen the Liberties written by the then Governor, and subscribed by him, and others, and there I saw the preface and the three last Liberties to be too solemn to be concealed, one is for the perpetual observation of the liberties, another is to give them the force of Laws, and then giving of relief to any that are abridged in them. Methinks men should know what they are sworn, for Ignorantia juris, Ignorance of the Law doth not excuse a breach of it, wherefore watch and be diligent in keeping your liberties, that they may not be insensibly lost, Prov. 12.24. The hand of the diligent shall bear rule, but the slothful shall be under tribute. If you be dull and sleepy, and keep not your hold when others are active and pull hard, you must needs let go, unless I mistake, the 60 liberty and the 74. are infringed by inadvertency, I would hope it were no worse; but if ye shall break down the hedge of your Churches and Commonwealth, you will lay the field open to such as watch to make spoil of you: are there any that back-slide or warp among you, they will cooperate with workers of iniquity, Psal. 125.5. and ye will want no such Instruments, if ye admit of a carnal party into the privileges due here to visible Saints, they will be likely to eat out the heart of liberty and religion; as in a Syllogism, the conclusion follows the worse part, and godly men have something in them that inclines them to that which is not good, and if such comply with a carnal interest, Prov. 25.26. A righteous man falling down before the wicked, is as a troubled Fountain and corrupt spring, earthly, muddy, and not fit to be taken in as before; be ye therefore diligent and courageous, and not like Issachar, Gen. 49.14. A strong Ass couching down betwixt two burdens: you civil and your religious liberties are so coupled here, that if one be lost the other cannot be kept; if being free ye will put yourselves into bands, ye will be as the slothful under tribute, you will be shorn, 2 King. 10.12. the shearing house is as the Hebrew there, and your Margin, the house of shepheras binding, when you are so sheepish to be bound, your fleece will be shorn, and may be your skin flayed and flesh will be devoured, and if any say, its good sleeping in a whole skin, I would tell such that sleeping is not the way to keep the skin whole; observe those Neuters, judg. 8.6, ●. who refused to owe any relief to their Brethren in a needful time, but (till they saw which would be the stronger side) would not meddle so they might sleep in a whole skin; those wary Princes of Succoth could not compass it, but the contrary was written on their skin by the thorns of the wilderness and if this our wilderness bread any such luke warm Politicians in a needful time, it is to be hoped that it will also bring forth thorns enough to teach them, you have beautiful and precious liberties beyond other Colonies, but Prov. 11.20. as a jewel of gold in a Swine's snout, so is a fair woman without discretion, or that departs from discretion, or lest no Judgement to put it to clean and honourable but dirty uses, if you so root in your present and particular profits and interests, as to neglect your golden liberties, what will England? what will all the world say of you, that you are not new English, but no English men; therefore give me leave to beseech and entreat the aged to follow the aged Caleb that hearty man as he followed the Lord and fulfilled after him, jush. 14.8, 11, 13. Be ye now as hearty for your true and just liberties as ye were 40. year since, and so will your joshua, your Jesus bless you, and ye shall be able to prevail against the tallest opposers, even the Anakims. Let me also bespeak the young men amongst you, that you would not be prodigal of those liberties you never knew the getting of, use you not the fork since ye never knew the rake. Obj. 1. Doth any say that the Patent or Charter-right is questioned by some? I Answer, Such men do not appear so good friends either to the Crown or Country, for the question cutteth off the true and proper ligament between them, neither may it be reasonably said, that upon, or other circumstantial failer the Patent ceaseth; for on the great consideration, for the Grant is paid and cannot be relanded; for the lives and estates of many worthy men have been laid down here to plant and subdue this Land, and subdued it is. Obj. 2. If it be said, there may be just reason to quit some of the Liberties? I Answer, I grant so much on condition, ye will also grant that the same deliberation should be used in the getting any of them, as there was in constituting of them: The liberties were probationers for three years, and in all the General Courts for that time, they were passed by all the Freemen, and it seems equal that all the Freemen should have as sufficient time to consider of the change and abrogation of them, and sure it is not fit that any one General Court should have such an unlimited Arbitrary, power that nothing should be fixed and unmoveable, no property, use and estate should be secured, and I think you will grant, that in the year 1641. when those liberties were in such degree enacted and settled; there were men civil and ecclesiastical (who managed that matter) of such weight and worth as none of us now filling their place can, and if wise and humble will pretend to weigh them down, though experience may add to former knowledge in particular cases. Obj. 3. But if that many give up we cannot help it? I Answer, Yes, for by your 75. liberty, you have power to enter your dissent and protestation, which will save your own souls from the guilt, and ye have encouragement to help yourselves and the whole, because as yet the promise is made good to you jer. 30.2 Your Nobleses are of yourselves, and your Governor proceeds from the midst of you, so that none can be in power to hurt or hazard you, but it must be by yourselves, and this being your glory ye may expect that the Lord will create a cloud when no visible help doth appear, Isai. 4, 5. upon all the glory shall be a defence, and the same presence of God will be offensive to all unrighteous encroachers or disturbers, Eccl. 10.8, 9 He that diggeth a pit shall fall into it, and whoso breaketh an bedge a Serpent shall by't him, whoso remoreth stones shall be hurt therewith, and he that cleaveth wood shall be endangered thereby: none that shall be removing your peculiar and distinguishing privileges and ancient bounds, and for that end will be making parties shall prosper; nay, take that encouraging word more, Ezra 6.11. Whosoever shall alter this word (of privileges and provision for the Temple) let the Timber be pulled down from his house, and being set up, let him be destroyed thereon, and let his house be made a Dunghill, and the God that hath caused his name to dwell there destroy all Kings and People that shall put to their hand to alter and destroy this House of God. Means 3. Of your constituting and administering Magistracy according to God, is to give good heed to your Election, that it may proceed with clearness, so that there may be no fraud nor doubt in giving your votes against which you way may seem to some not so sure as elsewhere; and surely what is indirectly gotten, is of and for the evil one; ye should come to this solemn action with a care, and not as Children to see the fashion and leave things at a venture, but as there is some care to be used for the manner of your Election, so much more for the Object whom you choose or refuse, Exod. 18. Thou shalt provide, Chasub is to look about, to be circumspect, ye must weigh and consider, Deut. 1.13. ye must pitch upon known men, excuse not, saying, thou knowest not whether men are fit or unfit, Prov. 24.12. If thou sayest, behold we knew it not; doth not he that pondereth the heart consider it, and he that keepeth thy soul, doth not he know it, and shall not he render to every man according to his works? The Lord knoweth what thou thinkest or knowest, and his Deputy Conscience knoweth; see therefore with thine own eye, implicit faith is indeed more easy but less safe, you do in your Conscience and experience make some judgement of men, whether friends to civil or religious liberties, to justice piety and virtue, whether Enemies to Vice, Oppression, Extortion, and biting Usury; and thus you do know whom to choose, whom to refuse, whom you choose you justify as a man qualified according to God's counsel, Prov. 24.24. He that saith unto the wicked, thou art righteous, him shall the people curse, and the Nations shall abhor; take heed therefore to yourselves this day or any day of Election, lest ye bore false witness for or against any whom ye choose or refuse, give good heed to your choice that you may not miscarry in it. Arg. 1. Because your choice will show what respect you have to Christ; It is a high charge you have from the Lord, Isai. 65.12. They chose the things wherein I delighted not, your choice shows who is your Master, and whom you would please, this shows what is deepest in your soul; holy Bolton in his discourse of happiness, pag. 131 shows, that the Hypocrite hath quite other ends in his choice, (even himself) but a sincere Christians thoughts run and are exercised about his faithfulness; If saith he, by my default, a false man be chosen, I shall be guilty before the high Judge of all, the mischiefs that follow thot unhappy choice: Nothing can undo this Country but unwariness and unfaithfulness but the mismaking or mis-acting of Freemen; choice of men to power and trust gives the true picture or character of them that choose; if Idols are set up in power and trust instead of men, really discharging their trust, Psal. 115.8. they that make them are like unto them. Arg. 2. If you miss in your choice ye provide not well for yourselves or neighbours whom ye choose, Magistrates or Deputies you trust with your lives, liberties and estates; Plato saith, good Magistra es are better than good Laws: If on by respects you set up such as will be scourges to yourselves or Brethren, you deserve to be whipped, judg. 9 the Shechamites for selfish respects chose a Bramble (Abimelech) and by him are they scratched, and even ruined. Arg. 3. W●●● you miss in choice, you do not well for the chosen nor the place, Ec. 8 9 There is a time when one man ruleth over others to his hurt, for so he acteth more sin and gathers more wrath, Pro. 26.18. As he that bindeth a stone in a string, so is he that giveth honour to a fool, such a man is not in his proper place, (as that stone, the stones proper place is the ground) neither can he well continue in it, and however it is better, where it is safe that men should not always continue in it, but there should be a change of some where it is safe, as it is said, Eccl. 3.18. By Magistracy and power God doth manifest men; if after trial of men you come free, according to the trial to choose or refuse, and so make some change, you will make men more modest & mindful in their place; howsoever by some s●●● change, you will try other men, and ●●●p possession of your liberty to choose, and none may take their place for an Inheritance to use it as they list. Means 4. Of acting according to God in the making and manage of Magistracy, is to attend to God's particular Rules in the matter, they are in Exod. 18.21. Thou shalt provide out of all the people able men, such as fear God, men of truth, ha●ing covetousness, here are Rules that make out the true manage of Magistracy, and so give aim to the choosers, to provide those that may so manage their place. 1. Able men, Chasil speaks, ability of estate: Isai. 3.7. In my house is neither bread nor clothing, make me not a Ruler over the People; he should of his own have necessary subsistence. 2. Ability of Wisdom, Psal. 2.10. Be wise O ye Kings, be instructed O ye judges of the Earth: they should themselves be wise, or at least guided by them that are so, the want of which is noted as a cause of all public disorders Psal. 8.2, 5. They know not themselves, neither will they understand from others, they walk on in darkness, the foundations of the Earth are out of course. 3. Ability of spirit or courage, else they will not be a terror to evil-works, but bear the sword in vain, Rom. ●●. 4. and this Ability is especially to be min●●●… when Drunkenness, Gaming, Unright●●●●…ness & Uncleanness grow bold; the Rule●●ad need be furnished 〈…〉 with boldness to encounter and defeat them, and I would here in particular cast in a word against the first, Exo. 21.33. what pits you open or dig with your licence, ye had need to cover them to keep the tippling beast from falling therein, at least the tiplers of your own Towns. 2. God-fearing men; those that want the fear of God will not regard men justly and conscientiously, Luk. 18.2. The Judge that feared not God, neither regarded he men. This is N. England's Crown that you have or may have in the Magistracy, such as fear God and hold fast, and use what you have that no man take your Crown, Rev. 3.11. 3. Men of Truth, sincere faithful men: (1) Encouraging the good. (2) Being just men. (3) And of public spirits. 1. Encouraging and succouring them that are favoured of God, and st●dy conformity to him, this must be the aim of Rulers, who Pet. 1.2, 14. are sent forth for the praise of them that do well, and this will be their advantage, Zach. 12.5. The Governors of judah shall say in their heart, the Inhabitants of jerusalem shall be my strength in the Lord of Hos●●… their God; those that have God to frie●● are surest friends to Magistracy, theref●●● Magistracy should be friendly to such, and consider that God puts out his Children to them to nurse, Numb. 11.12. as a nursing Father bears the sucking child: It is true, the Nurse may not suffer the child to feed on poison, and it is as true, that the Nurse must not starve and pinch the child, nor be impatient toward it in a froward fit; some are severe to conscientious people (being supposed pious, peaceable and useful) if they conform not to their apprehensions, and these eagerly drive on to a uniformity, and urge that some errors have dangerous and heretical consequences; for such as among us do in Conscience press this, I dare not judge them in their persuasion, but would crave leave to remember what Chamier saith, in Answer to the Papists charging Protestants with grievous Heresies drawn from their opinion, Nemo fit Hereticus per cons●quentiam, and as for the uniformity so cruelly urged by Papists and Prelates, I would hope that only convincing light for the means and compassionate love for the manner will be taken up, and till this course prevail, I wish forbearance may be exercised to all sober people, so it be not against piety or peace; and if we here in the time of our peace and ease, use violence to pious people here with us, we may ere we are ware, help for ward the affliction of those in other parts, Zach. 1.15. which is the way of the Heathen, very displeasing to God. 2. Being just men is a second part of the Ruler's truth, he should be one that will seek and hasten justice: seek justice, job 29.16. The cause which I knew not I searched out, this requires a diligent and wakeful attendance: It is absurd if at any time true, that they which judge in a cause should sleep at the hearing; he that in such a case is cast, may well (as he) appeal from sleeping to waking Philip; more vigilance is required in a cause which may sometime be covered with many blind●, and the strong current of a party, in which ease just men will not therefore bear down any in his cause, job 3●. 21. If I have lift up my hand against the fatherless, when I saw my help in the Gate: he should hasten justice, it is the honour of Christ in his Kingdom, Isai. 16.5. He shall sit upon bis Throne in truth, judging and seeking judgement, and hasting righteousness. Your second liberty is, that all have justice without partiality or delay, and they go well together, for warping in a cause makes delay, for a right li●● is the shortest; it is a great sin in the Magistrate and wrath on the people, when Isai. 59.14. judgement is turned away backward, and justice standeth afar off, for truth is fallen in the street (when upon motion) and equity cannot enter. But when the current of Justice in the hand and heart of just men shall run too strong for all opposition, it is more pleasing to God than the best melody of instituted Worship, Amos 5.23, 24. Take thou away from me the noise of thy Songs, for I will not hear the melody of thy Viols, but let judgement roll down as waters, and Righteousness as a mighty stream; when you are upon the seat of Judgement Christ must be nearest a kin unto you, Prov. 7.4. Say unto Wisdom, that is unto Christ, thou art my Sister, and call understanding thy Kinswoman, that they may keep thee from the strange woman. The nearer the will and interest of Christ, the more strange will, all by ways of injustice and partiality be to us; Kindred will be no Kindred: Zelucus when engaged to put out his Sons eyes for Adultery, would rather make a breach upon himself in the loss of one eye, then on the just Law to favour him. 3. Such as are of a public spirit to prosecute the general good are such men of truth as are fit for Magistracy; every Magistrate should be as Nehemiah, A man come to seek the welfare of the Sons of Israel, Neh. 2.10. for be is of God set in that work and place for that end to every one, Rom. 13.4. he is a Minister of God to thee for good, Africanus had that wholesome counsel, never to rise from the Court till he had done good to one or other, now the public good, the good of all may be promoted by the Magistrate in point of defence, diligence, ingenuity and peace. 1. Defence, Hos. 4.18. Her shields are translated Rulers, whence in the East Sultan (which signifies a Shield) is the usual name of their Princes, upon which a learned Protestant wisheth that some were not rather Scutica then Scuta, a Scourge rather than a Shield. 2. Diligence, that the people may live industruously and not idly, for honesty of life is under the Magistrates care, 1 Tim. 2.2. Thus our Ancient, holy ones Elton and Dod on the Commandments express this care of honest labour and calling to be the Magistrate's duty, and this some wise Rulers have thought necessary for the public quiet. 3. Ingenuity, for the drawing forth of this here in this Land, see the best Argument Psal. 122.9. Because of the house of the Lord our God I will seek thy good, because the good and maintenance of so many Churches doth depend upon some wise consideration of the gifts of men here, and the commodities of the Land; therefore it is not enough only to take up that good which is obvious, but search for that which is not, and well were it as seems to me, if we had a standing Committee to relieve and weigh such propositions tending to the better subsisting of the people. I find in the fifth liberty an allowance of a Monopoly on the producing a commodity now in the Land, and I perceive Magistrates and Ministers, and most of the Husbandmen will find the want of some stable commodity, which may command supplies from abroad. 4. Peace is the last thing I will name conducing to the public good, which is proper for the Magistrate to promote, 1 Tim 2.2. we are to pray for, and therefore endeavour that Magistrates may maintain Peace, and the Ruler's Office is under the notion of an Healer, or hinder up. Isa. 3.7. Chebesh, he is a Chirurgeon, to bind up the wounds of the Country, Isa. 1.6. There is closing and crushing out the corrupt matter, and then binding up for the uniting of the parts; and then there is mollifying or suppling, for the removing of the swelling and hardness. Now for this blessed work, the Magistrate needs an eagle's eye, and Lion's heart, and yet a Ladies soft and gentle hand. Fathers and Brethren, ye are now to assemble, being clothed with the chief Magistratical power of this poor Country; let me beseech you in the Name of the Lord, to attend healing work, and to act as those that are united as one man for the common good, that the people may be so; meddle not with any thing that may divide you in so dubious a time, remember that Gen. 13.7. the strife between Abraham and Lot was very unreasonable, because the Cananite was then in the Land, and therefore Abraham to allay and end the strife, doth deny himself, and wave his right; ye know my Brethren, what new neighbours we have their busy Locusts will know and improve all your strife & other snares for you are boasted of, therefore now is your season for self-denial: If you have any of you a thirst and longing to make any change in Church or Commonwealth, and may be you see your help in the gate, and have it in your power, yet let me entreat you in this joint of time, not to follow but forbear your own desires, because they cannot be pursued without public hazard; if any of you long for the waters of your Native land, yet forbear to drink them as David, 1 Chro. 11.17. Pardon me I pray you, if from what appears above-board I cannot see how men here can find any occasion of division, if they do not on some secret cause unseasonably seek it; what if some Brethren have departed from a particular Church, irregularly say some, regularly say others? but why should this make any noise, heat and breach in the Land, since it is not held out as an ordinary case; the like may not be seen in an age, neither is this I hope, to be a Precedent, nor is it upon any different Principles, though some differing application of Principles, for it is expressly owned on all hands that the major part of a Church must issue their matters, where the rule doth not contradict, neither can I understand why the question about adult Children of the Church should make any estrangement, since all godly men have the same scope to fetch in to Christ the young Generation: Some by giving those privileges which others deny to awaken them to look out for the true and inward foundation of privileges. If upon such grounds as these we admit of strife, it will carker and sour our spirits, and will take up so much of our heat and heart as to leave us faint and feeble for converting work. The appearance of disagreement among the Elders, will hinder the order of Churches, which we would assert, and hinder the conversion of Youth which we would promote, and promote profaneness, superstition and popery, which we would hinder; hinder did I say? nay, which we would with all our might hinder and watch against, for Satan's great Attaque upon the Churches seems to lie that way, and may be Satan and his instruments will blow up either real division amongst us, or the repute or report of it, that there may be a pretence of a necessity to set up a Courtier for your Governor in the Common wealth, and a Prelate or something like it in the Churches; and when Taxes and Tithes, and all kind of vexation are upon you in your labours, and heavy burdens upon your Consciences, than you will (may be cry and not be heard, because of your wilful drawing such things upon yourselves, 1 Sam. 8.18. then will you wish, Oh that we had harkened to God and his servants and had agreed, but were it not (my honoured Fathers and dear Brethren) better to work in hope for that agreement now, which we would wish for in vain. Now therefore, let all New England's friends for their comfort, and Enemies for their disappointment know, that (bating some Exentricks) we are all general●y agreed in the Principles of purity and power of the Churches, and the liberty and safety of this people against all that ly● in wait against us, whether nearer or further off. Bear with me I beseech you, that I have been so large in a matter which lay upon my heart with so great weight; I sh●ll now hasten to a conclusion when I have only touched upon: 4. Qualification of them that should be set up in Magistratical power, hating Covetousness; this Covetousness which doth incapacitate a man for Magistracy, is an earnest intentiveness upon wealth and increase of estate: A covetous Magistrate, Deputy or Commissioner, will be so busy upon particular advantage, that for want of that he will think much of time and pains for public good, and will be indulging 〈…〉 vice if he can gain by it, the Creek 〈…〉 could say 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 (love of 〈…〉 is the rust of the soul, and that it is Sacrilege to get wealth from the public, and gives even a divine rule that Magistracy is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not a trading and merchandise but a Ministry, be that despiseth the gain of oppression, that shaketh his hands from holding of bribes, Isai. 33.14.15 shall hold up his head when all the world is on fire, and such a fire seems kindling now, and happy are they who will shake off such gain, as a spark of hell, or a viper lighting upon them, as Paul did Act. 28.5. But now it is time to conclude, lest while I should help I should hinder the work of the day, and 〈◊〉 conclusion I would add two words. 1. If you have had and shall have respect to God, in constituting and administering of Magistracy, than we must be thankful to the Lord for such Magistrates that we have liberty to choose such, and that we have such to choose: Else where their Magistrates and Officers, Governor and Major General, their Secretary, yea, their Marshal is from abroad, and the Colony have no judgement of their fitness permitted to them; yea, we must be thankful, not only for, but to such magistrates and Deputies th●● accept and 〈…〉 their trust, for indeed we are beholden to them for so mean a 〈…〉 is allowed, that they will put the 〈…〉 dear under so great a burden in totter●●●… and troublesome times, let all the Inhabitants encourage them in their work, for all your mirth and prosperity will cease when such Rulers do, Lam. 5.14. The Elders have ceased from the Gate, the Young men from their Music. If your choice and administration be not to the mind of God; exercise experience for your unworthiness; your weakness in Faith, Prayer, Watching and Working, for God would have you work ●●t all your salvations, Eccl. 10.18. By much slothfulness the building decayeth, and through idleness of the hands the house droppeth through, Prov. 12.24. The hand of the diligent shall bear rule, but the slothful shall be under tribute, all the decays of the fair building of Government here, all thraldom, and all your destructions must needs be of yourselves, and your own default especially the Freemen. 2. Exercise Faith, if ye seek the Lord, he ●ill not cast you off, he hath expressed himself so in promise, 1 Sam. 12.22. The Lord will not forsake his people for his great names sake, because it hath pleased the Lord to make you his people; therefore howsoever mat●●●… 〈…〉 aside from following the Lord, 〈…〉 Lord with all your heart, for the 〈…〉 will not forsake, and so hath the Lord 〈…〉 pressed himself in performance to you hitherto, Isa. 26.3. ye are born by him from the belly, and are carried from the womb●, and let this be our comfort, the Lord Jesus will put an end to all the disorders of Government, and the more disorders of that 〈◊〉 and the foundations are out of coarse; the more are we forced to cry, Psal. ●●. 〈…〉 rise O Lord, judge the Earth, 〈…〉 Nations: This may awaken our 〈◊〉 to the Lord Jesus, Come Lord Jesus 〈◊〉 quickly, even so, AMEN. FINIS.