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SERMON XVI.a

A PROSPEROUS CONDITION IN THIS WORLD IS A BLESSING OF GOD, WHEREIN WE NOT ONLY MAY, BUT OUGHT TO REJOICE, SINCE IT IS GIVEN US BY GOD AS A PECULIAR TIME OF COMFORT AND REJOICING.

ECCLES. vii. 14.

In the day of prosperity be joyful, but in the day of adversity consider: God also hath set the one over against the other, to the end that man should find nothing after him.

THOUGH it be very hard in divers places of this book of Ecclesiastes to find out the connection of one sentence with the other; yet here a probable account may be given of the coherence of my text with the preceding verse. For therein the Wise Man exhorts us to consider the work of God, i. e. his work of providence, as by the whole context we are led to understand the words; to consider that God works still by his providence, and what he works; and he tells us, that upon this consideration, we shall be forced to say, Who can make that straight, which he hath made crooked? i. e. God's providence is uncontrollable, and those evil afflictive things that happen to men in the world by his will cannot be avoided; those crooked things that are so

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[From the manner in which king Charles II. is mentioned, towards the end of this Sermon, it would appear to have been written after the death of that king.]

to us, that bend and turn from the way and course designed and desired by us, are directed by God, and what he will have thus crooked, who can make straight? To the same sense the Wise Man speaks, chap. i. 14, 15. I have seen all the works that are done under the sun; and behold all is vanity and vexation of spirit. That which is crooked cannot be made straight.

Upon this consideration, the Preacher in my text exhorts us all to attend to the work of God's providence in the various occurrences and dispensations thereof, whether prosperous or afflictive, and to accommodate and apply ourselves to them accordingly. In the day of prosperity, &c.

In the handling of which text I shall follow my usual method, first throughly to explain it, and then to raise some practical and useful observations from it.

In the day of prosperity be joyful, but in the day of adversity consider. In the Hebrew nai i in the good day, or the day of goodness, i. e. in the day or time when the good things we desire happen to us. So the phrase is often used in Scripture; see particularly 1 Pet. iii. 10. He that will love life and see good (i. e. happy and prosperous) days, let him refrain his tongue from evil.

literally, be

Be joyful. In the Hebrew i thou in good. The Septuagint renders it 50 év åyatã, live in good. The vulgar Latin more clearly, fruere bonis, "enjoy thou the good things," which God hath given thee, with complacence and delight in them. But in the day of adversity. In the Hebrew y in the evil day, when afflictive and evil

things happen to thee. This is the known sense of the phrase of evil days in Scripture. So Gen. xlvii. 9. Jacob expressing to Pharaoh the troubles and afflictions of his past life, saith, Few and evil have the days of the years of my life been. So the Wise Man again in his book of Ecclesiastes, chap. xii. 1. Remember now thy Creator in the days of thy youth, while the evil days come not, nor the years draw nigh, when thou shalt say, I have no pleasure in them. Where the days of old age are called evil days, because they are generally attended with sickness and infirmities, and other evils both of body and mind.

In the day of adversity consider. In the Hebrew

see thou, consider well the circumstances thou art in, and the duty incumbent on thee; think in what condition thou art, and what thou art to do in that state.

But must we not consider also in the day of prosperity? Must we then lay aside our reason and consideration, and drown ourselves in sensuality? God forbid. I shall shew you anon the necessary cautions and considerations we are to make use of in the day of prosperity.

But in the day of adversity we are especially concerned to consider, and to consider in a more especial manner. This is a season wherein divine Providence more loudly calls us to consideration, and to a deeper consideration. We have a like text to this in the Epistle of St. James, chap. v. 13. Is any man among you afflicted? let him pray. Is any merry? let him sing psalms. Shall we hence conclude, that we are to pray only in the time of affliction? This were an absurd and wicked inference.

For we are to pray always. But the time of affliction is a more special season for prayer, for much and mighty, for frequent and fervent prayer.

Thus we say εὐχαίτε γερόντων, that prayer is the proper province, the business of old men, who are going out of the world. Not as if old men only were obliged to pray; but they being just ready to be called out of this world to God's tribunal, and upon the very confines of an eternal state, either of happiness or misery, are in a more special manner concerned to be very frequent and earnest in the exercise of this duty. In the day of adversity consider. This is a most proper season for consideration; and if men do not then consider, they never will. But to proceed with the words of the

text.

God also hath set the one over against the other, i. e. God hath set our evil days, or days of adversity, against our days of prosperity, each against and with each other. Our life is not made up wholly either of prosperous or evil days, but is a mixture of both; one while we are in the day of prosperity, and then presently after in that of adversity; by such vicissitudes and changes, as the divine wisdom thinks fit, and most conducing to his glory and our good. And so I come to the last words of my text.

That man should find nothing after him, i. e. (as the most learned interpreters generally expound the words according to the ancient Latin translation,) ut non inveniat homo contra eum justas quærimonias, "that man might have no just cause of com"plaining against him." For, according to the Hebrew idiom, to find something after another, signifies, upon examination, to find some fault in what

he hath done. According to this interpretation, the meaning of the words is this: "God hath so dis

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posed and ordered the whole course of man's life "on earth, so chequered and intermingled his prosperous and evil days one with the other, that, upon a review of the whole, man himself will find "no reason to complain of him, or to blame either "his wisdom, or justice, or goodness in that dis"posal."

So that in the whole, the text is (as an excellent person expresseth it) "an admirable advice to com"ply with our present condition, and suit our minds "unto it ;" because we cannot bring things to the bent of our own minds, and therefore had better study to conform our mind to our condition, whatsoever it be, whether prosperity or adversity; into which the divine wisdom hath divided our life, and so proportioned them one to the other, that none can justly find fault with his disposal, nor, all things considered, tell how to mend them or order them better.

The text thus explained readily yields us these following observations.

I. The good and prosperous days and times of our life are in God's design given to us as peculiar times of comfort and rejoicing.

II. The evil days, the days and times of our affliction and trouble, are in God's design the proper seasons of recollection and serious consideration.

III. The providence of God hath so contrived it, that our good and evil days, our days of prosperity and adversity, should be intermingled each with the other.

IV. This mixture of good and evil days is by the

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