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reported that they were inspired by the gods
at Rome. O give credence to the word!
It is breathed from God's own mouth.
Hence ariseth all the profaneness of men,
they do not believe the scripture, Is. liii. 1,
"Who hath believed our report ?" Did you
believe the glorious rewards the scripture
speaks of, would you not give diligence to
make your election sure? Did you believe
the infernal torments the scriptures speaks
of, would not this put you into a cold sweat,
and cause a trembling at heart for sin? But
people are in part atheists; they give but
little credit to the word, therefore they are
so impious, and draw such dark shadows
in their lives. Learn to realize scripture;
get your hearts wrought to a firm belief
of it. Some think, if God should send
an angel from heaven, and declare his
mind, then they should rather believe him,
--or if he should send one from the damn-
ed, and preach the torments of hell all in
flames, then they would believe,--but Luke
xvi. 31, "If they believe not Moses and
the prophets, neither will they be persuaded
though one rose from the dead." God is
wise, and he thinks this way fittest to make-but they are drunk; to be chaste and holy,
his mind known to us by writing; and such
as shall not be convinced by the word, shall
be judged by the word. The belief of the
scripture is of high importance; it is the
belief of scripture that will enable us to re-
sist temptation, 1 John ii. 14, "The word
of God abideth in you, and ye have over-
come the wicked one." It is the belief of
scripture conduceth much to our sanctifica-
tion; therefore these two are put together,
sanctification of the Spirit, and belief of
the truth, 2 Thess. ii. 13. If the word
written be not believed, it is like writing
on the water which takes no impression.

to long life, Ps. xxxiv. 12; to a kingdom,
Heb. xii. 28. Well then may we count
those the sweetest hours which are spent in
reading the holy scriptures! Well may we
say with the prophet, Jer. xv. 16, "Thy
words were found, and I did eat them; and
they were the joy and rejoicing of my
heart!"

A. 5. Conform to scripture, let us lead scripture lives. O that the Bible might be seen printed in our lives! Do what the word commands. Obedience is an excellent way of commenting upon the Bible, Ps. lxxxvi. 11, "I will walk in thy truth." Let the word be the sun-dial by which you set your life. What are we the better for having the scripture, if we do not direct all our speeches and actions according to it? What is a carpenter the better to have his rule about him, if he sticks it at his back, and never makes use of it for the measuring and squaring of his work? So, what are we the better for the rule of the word, if we do not make use of it, and regulate our lives by it? How many swerve and deviate from the rule! The word teacheth to be sober and temperate,

A. 4. Love the word written: Ps. cxix. 97, "O how love I thy law!" "Lord (saith Augustine) let the holy scriptures be my chaste delight." Chrysostom compares the scripture to a garden; every truth is a fragrant flower, which we should wear, not on our bosom, but our heart. David counted the word "sweeter than honey and the honey-comb," Ps. xix. 10. There is that in scripture may breed delight: it shows us the way to riches, Deut. xxviii. 5, Prov. iii. 10;

but they are profane; they go quite from the rule. What a dishonour is this to religion, for men to live in contradiction to scripture! The word is called "a light to our feet," Ps. cxix. 105. It is not only a light to our eyes to mend our sight, but to our feet to mend our walk. O let us lead Bible conversations!

A. 6. Contend for scripture. Though we should not be of contentious spirits, yet we ought to contend for the word of God; this jewel is too precious to be parted with, Prov. iv. 13, "Keep her, for she is thy life." The scripture is beset with enemies, heretics fight against it: we must therefore "contend for the faith once delivered to the saints," Jude 3. The scripture is our book of evidences for heaven: shall we part with our evidences? The saints of old were both advocates and martyrs for truth; they would hold fast scripture, though it were with the loss of their lives.

A. 7. Be thankful to God for the scriptures. What a mercy is it that God hath not only acquainted us what his will is, but

us to heaven: it shows us every step we are to take; when we go wrong, it instructs us; when we go right, it comforts us; and it is matter of thankfulness, that the scriptures are made intelligible, by being translated.

A. 8. Adore God's distinguishing grace, if you have felt the power and authority of the word upon your conscience; if you can say as David, Ps. cxix. 50, "Thy word hath

that he hath made it known by writing! In the old times God did reveal his mind by revelations, but the word written is a surer way of knowing God's mind than by revelation, 2 Pet. i. 18. This voice which came from heaven we heard; we have also a more sure word of prophecy. The devil is God's ape, and he can transform himself into an angel of light; he can deceive with false revelations as I have heard of one who quickened me." Christian, bless God that had, as he thought, a revelation from God to sacrifice his child, as Abraham had, whereupon he, following this impulsion of the devil, did kill his child. Thus Satan oft deceives people with delusions, instead of divine revelations, therefore we are to be thankful to God for revealing his mind to us by writing. We have a more sure word of prophecy. We are not left under a doubtful suspense that we should not know what to believe, but we have an infallible rule to go by. The scripture is our pole-star to direct

he hath not only given thee his word to be a rule of holiness, but his grace to be a principle of holiness! Bless God that he hath not only written his word, but sealed it upon thy heart, and made it effectual! Canst thou say it is of divine inspiration, because thou hast felt it to be of lively operation? O free grace! that God should send out his word, and heal thee; that he should heal thee, and not others; that the same scripture, which is to them a dead letter, should be to thee a savour of life.

THAT THERE IS A GOD.

QUEST. III. WHAT do the scriptures may wish there were no God, he may disprincipally teach? pute against a Deity,-but he cannot in his

ANS. The scriptures principally teach judgment believe there is no God, unless what man is to believe concerning God, and what duty God requires of man.

Q. What is God?

A. God is a spirit, infinite, eternal, and unchangeable, in his being, wisdom, power, holiness, justice, goodness and truth.

Here is, 1st. Something implied,-that there is a God; 2d. Expressed, that He is a spirit.-3d. What kind of spirit.

1st. Implied, That there is a God. The question, What is God? takes it for granted that there is a God; the belief of God's essence is the foundation of all religious worship, Heb. xi. 6, "He that comes to God, must believe that he is." There must be a first cause which gives a being and existence to all things besides.

by accumulated sin his conscience be seared, and he hath such a lethargy upon him, that he hath sinned away his very sense and reason.

2. We come to know that there is a God by his works; and this is so evident a demonstration of Godhead, that the most atheistical spirits, when they have considered these works of God, have been forced to acknowledge some wise and supreme power, the maker of these things; as it is reported of Galen and others.

(1). We will begin with the greater world: 1. The creation of the glorious fabric of heaven and earth; sure there must be some architect or first cause, the world could not make itself. Who could hang the earth on We come to know that there is a God: 1. nothing, but the great God? Who could By the book of nature; the notion of a Deity provide such rich furniture for the heavens,is engraven on man's heart,-it is demon- the glorious constellations, the firmament strable by the light of nature. I think it bespangled with such glittering lights? All hard for a man to be a natural atheist. He this speaks a Deity. We may see God's

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is THE LORD OF HOSTS? And as God doth wisely dispose all things in the whole regiment of the creatures, so, by his power, he doth support them; did God suspend and withdraw his influence ever so little, the wheels of the creation would unpin, and the axle-tree break asunder.-3. The motion of the creatures. All motion, as the philosophers say, is from something that is unmovable: as for example, the elements are moved by the influence and motion of the heavenly bodies, the sun and moon, and these planets are moved by the highest orb, called Primum Mobile: now, if one should ask, Who moves that highest orb, or the first mover of the planets? Sure it can be no other hand but God himself!

glory blazing in the sun, twinkling in the stars. Who could give the earth its clothing, -cover it with grass and corn,-adorn it with flowers,-enrich it with gold? Only God, Job xxviii. 4. Who but God could make the sweet music in the heavens, cause the angels to join in concert and sound forth the praises of their Maker, Job xxxviii. 7, "When the morning stars sang together, and all the sons of God shouted for joy?" If a man should go into a far country, and see stately edifices there, he would never imagine that these could build themselves, but that some greater power built them; to imagine that the work of the creation was not framed by God, is as if we should conceive a curious landscape to be drawn by a pencil without the hand of a limner: Acts (2). Let us speak of man, who is a microxvii. 24, "God that made the world, and cosm, or lesser world. The excellent conall things therein." To create, is proper to texture and frame of his body, which is the Deity.-2. The wise government of all wrought curiously as with needle-work, Ps. things evinces there is a God. God is the cxxxix. 15, "I was curiously wrought in the great superintendent of the world; he holds lowest parts of the earth;" and the endowthe golden reins of government in his hand, ment of this body with a noble soul; who guiding all things most regularly and harmo- but God could make such an union of differniously to their proper end. Who that eyes ent substances, flesh and spirit? "In him providence, but must be forced to acknow- we live, and move, and have our being." ledge there is a God? Providence is the The quick acute motion of every part of the queen and governess of the world; it is the body shows that there is a God. We may hand that turns the wheel of the whole crea- see something of him in the sparkling of the tion; providence sets the sun its race, the eye. And if the cabinet of the body be so sea its bounds. If God should not guide the curiously wrought, what is the jewel? The world, things would run into disorder and soul hath a celestial brightness in it; as Daconfusion. When one looks on a clock, and mascene saith, “It is a diamond set in a ring sees the motion of the wheels, the striking of clay." What noble faculties is the soul of the hammer, the hanging of the plum- endowed with? Understanding,—Will,— mets, he would say, there were some arti- Affections, which are a glass of the Trinity, ficer did make it, and put it into that order: as Plato speaks. The matter of the soul is so when we see the excellent order and har-spiritual; it is a divine spark lighted from mony in the universe, the sun, that great luminary, dispensing its light and heat to the world, without which the world were but a grave or a prison, the rivers sending forth their silver streams to refresh the bodies of men, and prevent a drought,—and every creature acting within its sphere, and keeping its due bounds, we must needs acknowledge there is a God, who wisely orders and governs all these things. Who could set this great army of the creatures in their several ranks and squadrons, and keep them in their constant march, but Hɛ, whose name

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heaven; and being spiritual, is immortal, as Scaliger notes; anima non senescit,—the soul doth not wax old, it lives for ever. And who could create a soul ennobled with such rare angelical properties, but God? We must needs say as the Psalmist, "It is he that hath made us, and not we ourselves," Ps. c.3.

3. We may prove a Deity by our conscience. Conscience is God's deputy or vicegerent. Conscience is a witness of a Deity; if there were no Bible to tell us there is a God, yet conscience might. Conscience, as the apostle saith, either accuseth,' or 'ex

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cuseth,' Rom. ii. 15. Conscience acts in order to a higher judicatory.-1. Natural conscience being kept free from gross sin, excuseth. When a man doth virtuous actions,-lives soberly and righteously,-observes the golden maxim, doing to others as he would have them to do to him,then conscience approves, and saith, "Well done!" Conscience, like a bee, gives honey.-2. Natural conscience in the wicked doth accuse. When men go against the light of conscience, then they feel the worm of conscience. Eheu, quis intus scorpio! SEN. Conscience, being sinned against, spits fire in men's faces, fills them with shame and horror; when the sinner sees a handwriting on the wall of conscience, his countenance is changed. Many have hanged themselves to quiet their conscience. Tiberius the emperor, a bloody man, felt the lashes of his conscience; he was so haunted with that fury, that he told the senate, he suffered death daily. And what is it should put a man's conscience into such an agony, but the impression of a Deity, and the thought of coming before God's tribunal? Those who are above all human laws, yet are subject to the checks of their own conscience. And it is observable, the nearer the wicked approach to death, the more they are terrified, and conscience gives a louder alarm to them: and whence is this, but from the apprehension of judgment approaching? The soul, being sensible of its immortal nature, trembles at him, who never ceaseth to live, and therefore will never cease to punish.

4. That there is a God, appears by the consent of nations, by the universal vote and suffrage of all. Nulla gens tam barbara cui non insideat hæc persuasio, Deum esse, "No nation so barbarous," saith Tully, "as not to believe there is a God." Though the heathen did mistake in their devotion, and did not worship the true God, yet they worshipped a God. They set up an altar, To the unknown God,' Acts xvii. 22. They knew a God should be worshipped, though they knew not the God whom they worshipped. Some did worship Jupiter, some Neptune, some Mars; rather than not to worship something, they would worship any thing.

5. That there is a God, appears by his prediction of future things. He who can foretell things which shall surely come to pass, is the true God. God foretold, that a virgin should conceive; he prefixed the time when the Messiah should be cut off, Dan. ix. 26; he foretold the captivity of the Jews in Babylon, and who should be their deliverer, Isa. xlv. 1. This is such a strong argument to prove a Deity, as God himself useth it to prove he is the true God, and that all the gods of the heathens were fictions and nullities, Isa. xli. 29. Testimonium divinitatis est veritas divinationis, TERTUL. To foretel things contingent, and which depend upon no natural causes, is proper to a Deity. 6. That there is a God, appears by God's unlimited power and sovereignty. He who can work, and none hinder him, is the true God; but God can do so, Isa. xliii. 13, “I will work, and who shall let it." Nothing can hinder action but some superior power; but there is no power above God,-all power that is, is by him, therefore all power is under him; he hath a 'mighty arm,' Ps. lxxxix. 13. He sees the designs men drive on against him, and plucks off their chariotwheels; he maketh the diviners mad; Isa. xliv. 25; he cutteth off the spirit of princes; he bridleth the sea, gives check to the leviathan, binds the devil in chains; he acts according to his pleasure; he doth what he will: "I will work, and who shall let it?" 7. There are devils, therefore there is a God. Atheists cannot deny but there are devils, and then they must grant there is a God. We read of divers possessed of the

devil.

The devils are called in scripture, Hairy Ones,' because they often appeared in the form of goats or satyrs. Gerson, in his book De probatione spirituum, tells us how Satan on a time appeared to an holy man in a most glorious manner, professing himself to be Christ: the old man answered, "I desire not to see my Saviour here in this desert, it shall suffice me to see him in heaven." Now, if there be a devil, then there is a God. Socrates, an heathen, when he was accused at his death, confessed, that, as he thought there was a malus genius, an evil spirit, so he thought there was a good.

Use 1. Seeing there is a God, this re

proves such atheistical fools as deny it. punishment. The sinner's deathday and Epicurus denied there was a providence, doomsday is a coming; Ps. xxxvii. 13, saying, that all things fell out by chance. "The Lord seeth that his day is coming." He that saith there is no God, is the wick- While there is a hell, the wicked shall be edest creature that is; he is worse than a scourged enough; and while there is eternithief, who doth but take away our goods ty, they shall lie there long enough; and God from us, but the atheist would take away will abundantly compensate the faithful serour God from us, John xx. 13, "They have vice of his people. They shall have their taken away my Lord." So we may say of white robes and crowns: Ps. lviii. 11, atheists, they would take away our God from "Verily there is a reward for the righteous! us, in whom all our hope and comfort is laid Verily he is a God that judgeth in the up. Ps. xiv. 1, "The fool hath said in his earth!" Because God is God, therefore he heart there is no God." He durst not speak will give forth glorious rewards to his peoit with his tongue, but said it in his heart; ple. he wished it. Sure none can be speculative atheists! "The devils believe and tremble," James ii. 19. I have read of one Arthur, a professed atheist, who, when he came to die, cried out he was damned; but though there are few found who say, "There is no God," yet many deny him in their practices, Tit. i. 16, "In works they deny him." Cicero said of Epicurus, verbis reliquit, deos resustulit. The world is full of practical atheism; most people live as if they did not believe there was a God. Durst they lie, defraud, be unclean, if they believed there were a God who would call them to an account? If an Indian, who never heard of a God, should come among us, and have no other means to convince him of a Deity, but the lives of men in our age, surely he would be of Protagoras's mind, who did hang in a doubtful suspense, and did question whether there were a God,-utrum Dii sint, non ausim afirmare! Use 2. Seeing there is a God, he will deal" Hast thou an arm like God?" Canst thou righteously, and give just rewards to men. Things seem to be carried in the world very unequally; the wicked flourish, Ps. lxxiii; they who tempt God are delivered, Mal. iii." Who knows the power of his wrath ?" 15, the ripe clusters of grapes are squeezed into their cup, and, in the mean while, the godly, who wept for sin and served God, are afflicted, Ps. cii. 9, "I have eaten ashes like bread, and mingled my drink with weeping." Evil men enjoy all the good, and good men endure all the evil. But seeing there is a God, he will deal righteously with men, Gen. xvii. 25, "Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right?" Offenders must come to

Use 3. Seeing there is a God, wo to all such as engage this God against them! He lives for ever to be avenged upon them, Ezek. xxii. 14, "Can thine heart endure, or can thine hands be strong in the day that I shall deal with thee? Such as pollute God's sabbath,-oppose his saints, trampling these jewels in the dust, such as live in a contradiction to God's word, these do engage the Infinite Majesty of heaven against them; and how dismal will their case be? Deut. xxxii. 41, "If I whet my glittering sword, and mine hand take hold of judgment; I will render vengeance to mine enemies; I will make mine arrows drunk with blood," &c. If it be so terrible to hear the lion roar, what is it when he begins to tear his prey? Ps. 1. 22, "Consider this, ye that forget God, lest I tear you in pieces!" O that men would think of this, who go on in sin! Shall we engage the great God against us? God strikes slow but heavy: Job. xl. 9,

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strike such a blow? God is the best friend, but the worst enemy. If he can look men into their grave, how far can he throw them?

Ps. xc. 11. What fools are they, who, for a drop of pleasure, drink a sea of wrath? Paracelsus speaks of a frenzy some have, which will make them die dancing: sinners go dancing to hell.

Use 4. Seeing there is a God, let us firmly believe this great article of our creed. What religion can there be in men, if they do not believe a Deity? "He that cometh to God, must believe that he is."

To wor

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