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in secret, not only for their own sins, but let them bestow some tears likewise upon the sins of others. Labour to appease the wrath of God, and he will either appease man's wrath, or, howsoever, will turn, it jointly to his benefit and his own glory. Let the fear of the most high God, who hath no less power over the strongest of his enemies than over the meanest of his servants; let his fear, I say, possess all our hearts, and it will certainly expel that ignoble and base fear of the wrath of man. See how the prophet opposes them in Isaiah viii. 12, 13: Fear not their fear, (says he,) nor be afraid; but sanctify the Lord, and let him be your fear, and let him be your dread; fear not, but fear. This holy fear begets the best courage; the breast that is most filled with it, abounds most in true magnanimity. Fear thus, that you may be confident, not in yourselves, though your policy and strength were great, (cursed is man that trusteth in man, and maketh flesh his arm,) but confident in that God who is too wise and vigilant to be surprised, too mighty to be foiled, and too rich to be out-spent in provision; who can suffer his enemy to come to the highest point of apparent advantage, without any inconvenience, yea, with more renown in his conquest. And so a Christian who is made once sure of this, (as easily he may,) is little careful about the rest; his love to God prevailing over all his affections, makes him indifferent what becomes of himself or his dearest friends, so God may be glorified. What though many fall in the quarrel, (which God avert!) yet it is sufficient that truth in the end shall be victorious. Have not the saints in all ages been content to convey pure religion to posterity, in streams of their own blood, not of others? Well, hold fast by this conclusion, that God can limit and bind up the most violent wrath of man, that, though it swell, it will not break forth. The stiffest heart, as the current of the most impetuous river, is in his hand, to appoint its channels, and turn it as he pleaseth. Yea, it is he that hath shut up the very sea with bars and doors, and said, Hitherto shalt thou

very

come, and no further: here shall thy proud waves be stayed. Job xxxviii. 10, 11. To see the surges of a rough sea come in towards the shore, a man would think that they were hastening to swallow up the land; but they know their limits, and are beaten back into foam. Though the waves thereof toss themselves as angry at their restraint, yet the small sand is a check to the great sea; yet can they not prevail; though they roar, yet can they not pass over it, says Jeremiah, v. 22.

The sum is this: what God permits his church's enemies to do, is for his own further glory; and reserving this, there is not any wrath of man so great, but he will either sweetly calm it, or strongly restrain it. To him be praise, &c.

SERMON XII.

PSALM CXii. 7:

He shall not be afraid of evil tidings; his heart is fixed, trusting in the Lord.

ALL the special designs of men agree in this-they seek satisfaction and quietness, of mind, that is, happiness. This, then, is the great question-who is the happy man? It is here resolved, ver. 1: Blessed is the man that feareth the Lord, that delighteth in his commandments.

The blessedness is unfolded as a rich landscape, that we may view the well-mixed colours, the story and tissue of it, through the whole Alphabet, in capital letters; and take all and set them together, it is a most full, complete blessedness, not a letter wanting to it.* Amongst the rest that we have in these

*This Psalm in the Hebrew consists of 22 short verses, each of which begins with the letters of the Alphabet, in their order, till they are all ended. No one letter is here omitted, as is the case in the 25th Psalm, where the same order is observed.

words, is of a greater magnitude and brightness than many of the rest-He shall not be afraid of evil tidings.

Well may it begin with a hallelujah, a note of praise to him in whom this blessedness lies. O what a wretched creature were man, if not provided to such a portion, without which is nothing but disappointment; and thence the racking torment and vexation of a disquieted mind, still pursuing somewhat that he never overtakes!

The first words are the inscription, The blessedness of that man, &c. So the particulars follow; where outward blessings are so set, as that they look and lead higher, pointing at their end, the infinite goodness whence they flow, and whither they return and carry along with them this happy man.

And these promises of outward things are often evidently accomplished to the righteous, and their seed after them, and that commonly after they have been brought very low. But when it is otherwise with them, they lose nothing. It is good for many, yea, it is good for all the godly that have less of these lower things, to raise their eye to look after higher, the eye of all, both of these that are held somewhat short, and for those that have abundance in the world.

These temporal promises were more abounding and more frequently fulfilled, in their very kind, in the times of the law; yet still the right is constant, and all ages do give clear examples of the truth of this word. Where it is thus, it is a blessing created by its aspect to this promise, and so differs from the prosperity of ungodly men; and where it is otherwise with the righteous and their seed, it is no shift, but a most solid comfort, to turn their eyes to a higher compensation.

But howsoever it go, this still holds-He shall not be afraid of evil tidings. Notwithstanding the hardest news that can come to his ears, of any thing that concerns himself or his children, or the rest of God's children in his charge in the world, his heart is fixed, trusting in the Lord.

First, let us take a little of the character of this

Who is it that is thus undaunted? The

blessed man.
man that feareth God.

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All the passions are but several ebbings and flowings of the soul, and their motions are the signs of its temper. Which way it is carried, that is mainly to be remarked by the beating of its pulse. If our desires, and hopes, and fears, be in the things of this world, and the interest of flesh, this is their temper and disorder, the soul is in a continual fever: but if they move Godwards, then is it composed and calm, in a good temper and healthful point, fearing and loving him, desiring him, and nothing but him, waiting for him, and trusting in him. And when any one affection is right, and in a due aspect to God, all the rest are so too for they are radically one, and he is the life of that soul that is united to him; and so in him it moves in a peculiar spiritual manner, as all do naturally in the dependence of their natural life on him that is the fountain of life.

Thus we have here this fear of God, as often else. where, set out as the very substance of holiness and evidence of happiness. And that we may know there is nothing either base or grievous in this fear, we have joined with it, delight and trust; delighteth greatly in his commandments; which is that badge of love to him, to observe them, and that with delight, and with exceeding great delight. So, then, the fear is not that which love casts out, but that which love brings in. This fear follows and flows from love, a fear to offend, whereof nothing so tender as love; and that, in respect of the greatness of God, hath in it withal a humble reverence. There is in all love a kind of reverence, a cautious and respective wariness towards the party loved; but especially in this, where not only we stand in a lower relation, as children to our Father, but the goodness that draws our love doth infinitely transcend our measures and reach, therefore there is a rejoicing with trembling, and an awful love, the fearing the Lord and his goodness, Hosea iii. 5. This both fear and trust, the heart touched by the

Spirit of God, as the needle touched with the loadstone, looks straight and speedily to God, yet still with trembling, being filled with this holy fear.

That delighteth. Oh! this is not only to do them, but to do them with delight; somewhat within is connatural and symbolical; yea, this very law itself is writ within, not standing as a hard task-master over our head, but impressed within as a sweet principle in our hearts, and working from thence naturally. This makes a soul find pleasure in purging out of sensual pleasures, and ease in doing violence to corrupt self, even undoing it for God, having no will but his: the remainders of sin and self in our flesh will be often rising up, but this predominant love dispels them. So this fear works with delight.

And further, that we may know how serene and sweet a thing it is, it is here likewise joined with confidence, trusting; a quickening confidence always accompanying it; and so, undoubtedly, it is a blessed thing. Blessed is he that feareth. Fear sounds rather quite contrary, hath an air of misery ; but add, whom? He that feareth the Lord: that touch turns it into ^ gold. He that so fears, fears not: He shall not be afraid; all petty fears are swallowed up in this great fear, as a spirit inured with great things is not stirred nor affected at all with small matters. And this great fear is as sweet and pleasing as these little fears are anxious and vexing. Secure of other things, he can say, "If my God be pleased, no matter who is displeased; no matter who despise me, if he account me his: though all forsake me, my dearest friends grow estranged, and look another way, if he reject me not, that is my only fear; and for that I am not perplexed, I know he will not." As they answered Alexander when he sent to inquire what they most feared, thinking possibly they would have said, Lest he should invade us: their answer was, We fear nothing but lest heaven should fall upon us; which they did not fear neither. A believer hath no fear but of the displeasure of heaven, the anger of God to

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