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A29505 A treatise of prayer with several useful occasional observations and some larger digressions, concerning the Judaical observation of the Lord's Day, the external worship of God, &c. / by George Bright ... G. B. (George Bright), d. 1696. 1678 (1678) Wing B4677; ESTC R1010 210,247 475

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whosoever do shall not inherit the Kingdom of ●od But that we be filled with all the Fruits of the Spirit Love Joy Peace Long-suffer●●g Gentleness Goodness Faith Meekness Temperance Galat. 5. Verse 16. c. That all ●itterness Wrath Anger Clamour Evil-speaking and Malice may be put away far from us ●nd that we may be kind one to another ten●er hearte● forgiving one another even as God for Christ'● sake hath forgiven us Ephes 4. Verse 31. That we may add to our Faith Virtue Knowledge Temperance Patience Godliness Brotherly-kindness Charity that these things may be in us and abound that as Christians we may not be unfruitful in the Knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ Pet. ● 1. Verse 5. Further still In order to all these pray we for other excellent instrumental Graces or Virtues as that God would cause us to ad●ire his most excellent Nature and Perfections to imitate him in what we are capable ●nd ought to resemble him to be perfect as our heavenly Father is perfect but especiall● Holiness and Universal Beneficence that ● may be holy as he which hath called us is ● That he would grant us to obey him sinc●ly resolvedly universally that he w● give us an obedient Heart and consque● be universally holy righteous and go● and practise all manner of Virtue and e●cially in the hardest Lessons when i● his Will we should undergo any Evils or ●flictions then presently to comply wit●● Will and to submit ours to it nay perfe● acquiesce in it nay out of choice to make ● Will to be ours That also God would g● unto us to trust in him have Faith in ●● and Dependence upon him to believe w● soever he teacheth us willingly to ●● our Applications to him as our best F● upon all Occasions to acknowledge ●stantly that whatever inherent Strength ● Ability in any kind we have we ha●● from him to be heartily thankful to ●● for all good things to rejoyce in his F●● which cannot be had without Holi● which when we have we have all we● wish or desire in Effect and we need as ●● trouble our selves about any thing but ●●ing our selves in all dutiful Demeanour ● Temper towards him as the innocent and ●dient Child of a loving Father Further still In order to the obtai●● ●nd practising these and all other Virtues and ●races we may put into our Prayers that ●od would bestow upon us both natural ●arts and supervenient Gifts That he would ●ake us knowing and wise furnish our under●andings with the Knowledge of many and ●f the most excellent things especially spiri●ual and more especially that he would di●ect us to the Knowledge of the Truth and ●rue Goodness of things That we might ●ot be foolishly led away with things that ●re false erroneous vain trifling swelling ●nd puffing up and much pleasing sometimes ●or the present but of little Profit to our Selves or the World which make us little ●ruitful in good Works to others and con●equently the least acceptable to God Pray ●e that God would illuminate our Minds and make us clearly to discern things especially spiritual things such as are Truth and ● Goodness the excellent and invaluable effi●cacy of Holiness and all Virtue to make our Selves and the World happy the Mischievousness and consequently Unreasonableness of Sin and the real Contemptibleness of all other Qualities in compare with Holiness and that we might be affected accordingly that is that God would spiritualize our Understandings and Affections Particularly that he would give us to apprehend and understand and consider there is the greatest sincerest constantest Pleasure and Satisfacti● in a holy virtuous wise and consequent● godly Life and Temper that is in Imitati● of and Obedience to God much naturall● especially after much use and we know ●● how much by the Influence of the Spirit ● God that this will give us great Con●dence and Comfort in the Day of Death● Boldness Joy and Triumph in the Day ● Judgment when shall be seen so many trembling Knees and amazed Countenances of th● haughtiest Sinners and finally that it certainly fits us for and leads to a most perfec● and happy Condition or State of Life hereafter That God would give us I say ofte● to think of consider apprehend be affected with and feel these and any other Motives to ● holy Life Add we further That God would bestow● upon us a sober considerative advised cal●● Mind as a great preparation for Wisdom an● Virtue Pray we That God would instil● into us the most generally useful and instrumental Graces of a most ingenuous impartial● sincere Love of the Truth and more particularly a sincere Love to Christianity as ● Systeme of the most certain and useful Doctrines That we might believe most firmly and with a sense of their Excellency Sublimity Nobleness Delightfulness and Usefulness all the things that are therein taught and delivered and most especially those concerning our Tempers Lives and Actions that we may be hearty not superficial Believers And in order to this that we may the more mind and love these things Pray we that we may have a very great Admiration of and Love to the excellent Qualities of our Saviour Jesus Christ his mighty miraculous Power and high Favour with God ●ay his being united so intimately to God or the Divine Nature his great Wisdom his ●ncomparable Holiness and Goodness and Virtue in the highest degree particularly that of his Charity and so of all other particular Virtues to us and all Mankind his being so great a Benefactor to us as he hath been in revealing and confirming so many excellent sublime noble and useful Truths and Doctrines to us in going through the most calamitous Life and Death to give us an Example of the most perfect Virtue and Holiness and thereby meriting and procuring for us the Remission and free Pardon of all our Sins or our Justification in case of true Repentance and Amendment in his procuring for us Grace and Assistance to repent amend and be converted which is in some measure afforded to the worst and the most negligent Finally in being the Author of Eternal Life to us by thus bringing us by his Grace and Merits to be good and to be pardoned and consequenntly not to be unmeet to enter into a State of great Perfection and Happiness after Death and the final Judgment of all Flesh of which he shall be the Judge and the Distributer After these may follow the things which for the most part are useful and subservient while we are in this Life and some of them proper thereto to make and keep us good or make us better or any way enable us to do more good to execute our Goodness more immediately or remotely Such as are long Life especially till we come to be good to be converted to repent that we may have the Experience of our own Sincerity and Strength in Goodness be profitable to the World by our good Example as we have been
of the Earth may know that thou art the Lord God even thou only He premises the express Acknowledgment of the Divine Supream and Uncontroulable Power to his Petition both as an Honour to his God and a cause of Confidence and Faith in himself and consequently of his petitioning God And this especially was most seasonable where there was some Power viz. that of Sennacherib and his false Gods opposed to the true God and which indeed had prevailed against the reputed Gods of other Nations which were in truth no Gods And so it is always most proper where there is any thing that seems to flatten or weaken our desire there to take notice of some Attribute in God just contrary which may easily excite and embolden it In David's Psalms nothing more frequent and particularly in the 86. Psalm Read the whole Psalm at leisure Verse 5. After several Petitions he strengthens and confirms his Faith and Prayer by the Consideration of the Divine Goodness For thou Lord art good and ready to forgive and plenteous in Mercy unto all them that call upon thee And Verse 8 9 10. from the consideration of his Supream Power Among the Gods there is none like unto thee O Lord neither are there any works like unto thy Works All Nations whom thou hast made shall come and worship before thee O Lord and shall glorisie thy Name For thou art great an● doest wondrous things thou art God alom Verse 13. is a particular Acknowledgment o● God's Mercy and a Reslection upon his pa●● Goodness to him For great is thy Mercy to wards me and thou hast delivered my Soul from the lowest Hell That is my Life from the low Grave or from Death And lastly Verse 15 16. But thou O Lord art a God fu● of compassion and gracious long-suffering ani plenteous in Mercy and Truth O turn unto me and have mercy upon me c. The Reader may himself casily observe many places in thes● Excellent Psalms and I cite these Examples to give him an occasion of observing these and such like places of the Scripture And to make our Apprehensions of God● insinite Excellencies and Persections more clear and strong we may here mention o● take notice of our own Infirmities Weaknesses or Imperfections that so by the apprehension and compare of these contraries we may the more clearly apprchend the Greatness of the other It will also well come in as a distinct Particular just after this or immediately before our Petitions to render them still more earnest and ardent because we do not use to ask of any one or at least importunately when we can probably or possibly have it done elsewhere and least of all if we can do it our selves Nay here we may mention and reslect upon the insufficiency of all the Creatures in the World without God and independent upon him to help us and do us good and that what they can do is only by his power and appointment And that therefore there is a Necessity of God's Help or we must be quite helpless This necessity of having all from God will still make our Desires more importunate particu'arly towards him But more of this hereafter II. The second Action or Operation of Soul in a Prayer is generally Confession For sometimes this Part as also others of Prayer except Petition may be omitted or used more sparingly according as the Occasion is By which I mean as in all parts of Prayer not Words or any other external Actions or Postures but an express Attention to and Judgment that we are or have been guilty of some Sins or Faults directed and proposed to God which supposes a free and impartial Disallowance Disapprobation and Dislike and consequently a Determination and Resolution of Soul to quit and abandon them and to do so no more An express and willing Judgment concerning our selves that we are guilty of some things which are not reasonable and cannot be justified is certainly I say a sign of a present changed Mind and Resolution to be guilty no more for what we have no mind to leave and yet know it not justifiable we conceal it from others and our selves too as much as we can and will not attend to it nor take notice of the unreasonableness and iniquity of it lest we should be engaged and pulled by contrary Appetites as that of good Opinion of others and of our selves concerning our selves and that of Virtue Justice Right often signisied by the name of Conscience of which last there is somewhat in the worst of Men to leave that which we love better and be disturbed in the enjoyment of it and consequently possess it with less delight and satisfaction After this Change of mind must needs also succeed a hatred and aversation from the sin for the time to come and a serious and sincere sorrow that we have been so foolish unreasonable unhappy for the time past on set purpose that we may be the more cautious and flee more therefrom for the suture This Confession is very proper in Prayer for it doth strengthen and embolden our desires thus It is a sign to us of a serious and real goodness in us as I have just now said and what is so confirms our Faith and Hope of God's particular goodness to us and that we are more capable of his Favours As being conscious to our selves of the Badness and Wickedness of our Temper of too great kindness for any sin weakens and oppresses them For we all naturally know God is righteous and good to the World and that it is most for the good government of it that he should put good men into a good and bad men into a bad condition that it should be well with the one and ill with the other generally But now what confirms our Faith and Hope emboldens our desire what weakens and sinks them and makes it less probable we should obtain any thing though we should desire it never so importunately cools and allays our desire too And here the more comprehensive and particular and accurate our Confession is so that we conceal not the least Fault but take notice even of small ones the more it is also principally of the greatest and foulest the most dear pleasant and delightful sins the more it is of the aggravating circumstances of any sin that is of those things which are signs of a greater degree of sinfulness in us such as are being against great means to be better against much knowledge both of our duty and of the mischievous consequences of our sins against the divine bounty elemency or justice or the like I say the more our Confession is thus performed the more still it is a sign of a greater degree of sincere and real goodness and consequently still more confirms and strengthens both our hopes and desires Besides this more immediate and proper use thus of Confession there are also many others As that it is an exercise of our disapprobation hatred sorrow
we now ask And the more still if the Favours we have already received be of the same kind with those we do now desire If it were before it may be now for ought we see just and reasonable for God to hear us And this emboldens animates and enlivens our Petition or Desire still more There are besides these more proper other collateral good Effects of Thanksgiving to God It is a very pleasant thing For what more so than Love what more delicious and sweet And what Friend is capable of being loved more than God Where 's such a Friend and Benefactor as he from whom we have all Again the Reflection upon our own Security upon our own Assurance of good things for the future from the Experience of and Attention to the Divine Benignity and Goodness is a very pleasing and satisfactory thing that we are in the Hands of Infinite Goodness all which our Thanksgiving gives occasion for And this we are most sensible of when under any Frights or Fears of some great Evils just ready to fall upon us then we greedily call to mind God's past Goodness But here we must have a care of loving God ultimately and only for being particularly good to us without at least some habitual reference of it to the use of pleasing him by doing the most Good we can as a Man might love a good Master or any Person or Thing that is useful to himself not much caring whether he be so to any body else all which indeed is no better than selfishness But we must look upon God's Goodness to us as one particular Instance of that Universal Goodness to all for which we love him and whereby we are engaged to love and please him and consequently to do good to all himself doth and to be perfect and happy i● so being and doing all which together is t● be our last End We are indeed for the m● part more sensible of those his personal E●vours because ordinarily we cannot so we apprehend others Satisfaction and Please as our own But we ought equally to that God for his Benefits to others and our selve● if we could alike apprehend them And here we may do well sometimes 〈◊〉 to aggravate God's Goodness that is to t● notice of those Circumstances which a●signs of the greatness thereof As that is the most free and undeserved For wh● Addition of Good can we make to him 〈◊〉 what can we give him that is not his ow● or what Law or Power superiour to Hims●●● to his own Nature obligeth and controlle him We may also remember our selves 〈◊〉 God is good to us when we are bad wh● we are negligent and take no notice there ungrateful undutiful nay make ill use his Favours abuse them for this God m● do for some reasons though we have 〈◊〉 advantage of probability to expect it whi●● is a sign of more pure free and sincere Goo●ness or Love to others For we think no Pe●son can expect any Recompence for his Goo●ness from one he knows is unable much le● from one he knows unwilling and loves hi● not All this is to be done that we may be more deeply affected with the Divine Goodness for the Ends aforesaid We may read Jacob's Prayer to be delivered from his Brother Esau as an Instance Gen. 32. Verse 9 10 11. In the 10th Verse before his Prayer he takes notice of God's manifold Mercies to him without doubt with Thanks and particularly of his Wealth and Increase that God had blessed him withal I am not worthy of the least of all thy Mercies and of all the Truth which thou hast shewed to thy servant for with my Staff I passed over this Jordan and now I am become two Bands In the Psalms we meet often with Thanksgivings and Petitions Praises and Prayers joyned together Psalm 144 in the two first Verses David blesseth and thanketh God Blessed be the Lord my strength who teacheth my Hands to war c. who subdueth the People under me And then Verse the 5th he petitions and prays for the long continuance of the like Goodness in God and Verse 7. Send thine Hand from above rid me and deliver me out of great Waters from the Hands of strange Children And Psalm 3. Verse 3 4 7. And Psalm 9. to Verse 13. is most Acknowledgments and Praises and then a Prayer Have Mercy upon me O Lord consider my Troubles which I suffer of them that hate me thou that liftest me up from the Gates of Death And Psalm 13 after his Petition in the 6th Verse he saith he will sing unto the Lord because he hath dealt bountifully with him SECT VII V. A Fifth Ingredient in a Prayer is som●times particular explication of o● Case either of the one or more go● things we desire to have or of the Evil thing we desire to be delivered from a more ●●stinct Representation and View of them ●rected to God And this then especially whe● we intend to make a more particular expre●● Address to God in secret or in publick alo● or with others for one or for some few co●tain things It may be done sometimes as when 〈◊〉 find our selves very sensible and clearly apprehensive of and affected with the goodne●● of any thing in our Prayers for ordina●● and general good things Here also m● come in the reasons or grounds of our gre●● Desires at this time such as now the gre●● Goodness of the things their Necessity Diff●culty if not Impossibility by any second Ca●ses we yet see or the like Now the use of this is not to acquaint God more particularly with our Case or to move him to be the more favourable to us or pit● us by giving him a distinct Knowledge of what we need or desire not so much as the most general Prayer and Desire is needful for that such as the Poets was approved by Socrates and extant in Brodaeus's Collection of Greek Epigrams Plat. Alcib 2. Brod. Epig. lib. 1. Xenoph. Memorab lib. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 viz. That Jupiter would give him good things whether he asked them or no and keep evil things from him though he should pray for them And another of his mentioned by Xenophon viz. That the Gods would give him good things leaving it to them as best knowing what were such to choose for him No but one principal reason is to cause our selves longer to attend to our Wants we doing it more particularly and distinctly and consequently to be more affected with them and so more passionately earnestly and importunately to desire the supply of them A very confused general short transient Apprehension of the Goodness or Badness of things doth not generally so deeply affect us or raise up such strong Passions in us as a more particular distinct and longer one by frequent smart Bouts yet not so continuedly long as to tyre us doth For the same cause may the grounds or reasons of the Greatness of our Desires be mentioned such
bow down and oppress this happy soul With upright and cheerly countenance with solid joy and satisfaction in his thoughts he steadily and generously walks through all the variety of conditions of life and being the Divine Wisdom may dispose him into Who would not be a good man that he may thus pray and who would not pray that he may enjoy so great a happiness who would be so weak and foolish as for the indulgence and gratification of some pitiful mean and base appetite for the present enjoyment of some vile and unreasonable lust or sin forego and quit all his faith confidence and hope in God and the consequent delight acquiescence case peace and joy of soul upon all occasions being ashamed ever to think of God much more to address himself to him or ask any thing at his hand though he should be in never so great distress Who would lose the benefit and comfort of so good a Friend for what can never make the least part of recompense Yes Let Atheists and Worldlings live without any minding of or addressing themselves to God if they please the good man knows too well the sweetness the profit and the pleasure thereof to do likewise David was a truly excellent Example of this usefulness and benefit of Prayer It seems to have been his most usual Cordial which he often took to support his fainting and tired soul to quell and compose his vexations fears disturbances to alleviate and remove his grief and sadness We 'l give an instance or two Psalm 42. First he mentions his present sad and miserable condition in many respects as his being banished out of his Country it is likely by Saul and principally from the Publick Worship of his God for which he panted and thirsted Oh when shall I come and appear before God Verse 1 2 4 6. Then his Enemies contempt and insulting over him and especially their not believing that he was so great a Favourite of God's but rather that God had rejected him or minded him not Verse 3 10. But to comfort and chear himself he prays to God and is very confident God will hear him as he had reason and cheerlily chides himself Ver. 8 9 11. Yet the Lord will command his loving kindness in the day time and in the night his Song shall be with me and my Prayer to the God of my life that is yet I will pray to my God and I trust and know he will give me cause to rejoyce and praise him by his hearing of me at all times I will say unto God my Rock why hast thou forsaken me why go I mourning because of the oppression of the Enemy And Verse 11. Why art thou cast down O my Soul why art thou so disquieted within me hope thou in God for I shall yet praise him who is the health of my Countenance and my God Again The very next Psalm viz. 43. he prays very passionately to God for deliverance from his Enemies who were unmerciful deceitful unjust and that God would bring him back again to enjoy his Publick Worship in his Temple from which he seems now banished Oh send out saith he thy light and thy truth that is perhaps thy enlightning or rejoycing truth in performing of thy Promises thou hast made to me let them lead me let them bring me unto thy holy hill Sion the place where the Temple was built and to thy Tabernacles that is the Temple built instead of the Tabernacle where God especially manifested himself or where were very special effects of his Power and Presence Then he Vows unto God that with exceeding joy and thankfulness he would make use of and improve that favour Vers 4. Then will I go unto the Altar of God unto God my exceeding joy c. and then Verse the last he is full of good hope and firm confidence that God who was the health of his countenance that is the cause of all his joy and of his content which useth to be shewed by ones healthful aspect and countenance and who was his God would hear his Petition at last viz. that he should praise him therefore and that publickly in the Temple Again in Psalm 55. he describes the miserable plight that he was in because of the constant Machinations and plots of his Enemies deceitful and bloody men as 't is v. 23. nay of those who had been his Friends and Confidents who had forsaken him in his disgrace and adversity as it is usual and contemned him Verse 12. his Enemies contrived even to take away his Life they oppressed him with Accusations and Reproaches and wrathfully hated him whence he was full of Complaints and Mourning in so much that there was likelihood of his death thereby which though another sense may be too he expresseth in Verse 4 5 by his heart being pained and the terrours of death fallen upon him and fearfulness and trembling coming upon him and horrour overwhelming him But then the course he takes is to pray to God with hope and trust in him By these he reseues himself from this sadness and grief of Soul and eases comforts and satisfies it Verse 16. As for me I will call upon God and the Lord shall save me Verse 17. Evening and Morning and at Noon-day that is very frequently he would pray and cry aloud and God should hear his voice And Verse 22. Cast thy burden that is what grieves thee upon the Lord and he shall sustain thee He shall never suffer the righteous to be moved that is himself to be frustrated of his hope SECT IX A Third Way how Prayer is for our III. ease comfort and satisfaction of mind is by reflection upon our having performed our most just and reasonable duty to God and upon some more than ordinary good qualities in our selves that may upon this occasion appear as in general upon our ability for and our good will to this duty or performance that we are able and disposed for such excellent things as are in Prayer more particularly that our minds are so able to converse with spiritual things and future yea eternal and to be affected with them such as God his Nature and Actions our own Souls their Actions and Inclinations the State after Death the Affairs of the Life hereafter That we can take notice of God's Perfections acknowledge them really honour him love and resolve to obey him to put our trust in him and depend upon him that we can take notice of and grieve sincerely and heartily for the irregularities of our Actions and our bad and sinful Temper and Inclinations be pleased with desire pray for Virtue and Grace that we can think of attend to and be frequently and much affected with things of future reward and misery Heaven and Hell that we are not sensual dull worldly earthly-minded persons who can mind nothing but sensible present and worldly matters for this short life All men are naturally inclined to believe and confusedly see