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A68718 A key of heaven the Lords Prayer opened, and so applied, that a Christian may learne how to pray, and to procure all things which may make for the glorie of God, and the good of himselfe, and of his neighbour : containing likewise such doctrines of faith and godlines, as may be very usefull to all that desire to live godly in Christ Iesus. Scudder, Henry, d. 1659?; Sibbes, Richard, 1577-1635. 1633 (1633) STC 22122; ESTC S1717 241,855 822

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most apt to enkindle the desires and helpe the faith of them that do pray If many and generall requests be to be put up then such titles and names must bee used that may perswade them they shall be heard in all If some particular petition be to be pressed then such names and descriptions of God are to be used as may helpe the heart in that particular Abrahams servant being to pray for successe in his masters businesse saith Ge● 24 12. O Iehovah God of my master Abraham I pray thee send me good speed this day and shew kindnesse unto my m●●t●er Abraham When Peter did intricate God to make choice of an Apostle to supply the place of Iudas hee saith Thou Lord Act. 1.24 which knowest the hearts of all men shew whether of these two thou hast chosen When David prayeth against the enemies of God and his children hee saith O Lord God to whom vengeance belongeth Psal 94.1 O God to whom vengeance belongeth shew thy selfe And when hee doth magnifie Gods name and would incire all people to pray unto him and praise him he speaketh to him in this description of God O thou that hearest prayer Psal 65.2 unto thee shall all flesh come For a wise choice of apt names Reason 1 titles to represent God with doth argue knowledge of God and wisedome to make use of his different attributes both which knowledge wisdome being mixed with faith doth much please and delight God to behold in his children The representing of God to Reason 2 the minde in convenient and meet names and notions is verie needfull for it will set the heart and keepe it in good plight working aw and reverence fervencie uprightnesse and confidence all which are requisite in prayer Vse It behoveth therefore every one that would make a good entrance into prayer without which he is not like to make a good proceeding to acquaint himselfe with the true understanding of the manifold names and descriptions of God recorded in Scripture and then let them make choice of the fittest titles of God to name him by according as there shal be especiall cause or use of his power wisedome mercie truth or justice c. Then to use such names as may best expresse those attributes which are especially to bee exercised in the granting of their requests Thus much of the whole description of God being cōsidered joyntly now followeth the consideration of each part of the description Father hath relation first to Christ the second person in Trinity whereby our Saviour directeth us unto a consideration of the three persons in Trinity and to the order of directing of prayers ordinarily viz. to the Father whence the doctrine is In prayer God is to be known Doct. 5 and conceived of in the distinction of persons Father Sonne and holy Ghost to whom prayer must be directed ordinarily in this sort scil to the Father by the Sonne through the helpe of the holy Ghost Christ saith Ioh. 16.23 Whatsoever ye shall aske my Father in my Name he will give it you The Apostle giveth thanks to God and the Father in the name of our Lord Iesus Christ Ephe. 5.20 We call God Abba Father by the Spirit which maketh our intercessions for us Rom. 8.15.27 For such is the divine dispensation of God the Father Reason Son and holy Ghost that though they are but one indivisible essence and whatsoever any one doth out of himselfe the very same doth the other also Ad extra yet they sustaine different persons and offices that I may so speake and do the same things in a different and distinct order yet so as the naming of one doth not exclude but necessarily include the other In prayer the Father sustaineth the person and place of him that is offended by sinne that must be appeased and doth heare and grant requests If we sinne we have an Advocate with the Father Which sheweth plainly that the Father in especiall sort must be appeased and sought unto The Sonne supplieth the place of a Mediator and intercessour by whom requests ascend and become acceptable to the Father He is that golden altar Ioh. 16.23 upon which the prayers of all Saints are offered and caused to ascend as incense Revel 8.3 No man can come to the Father but by him Ioh. 1● 6 He is appointed of God to be a Mediatour and being God and man is both a fit and all-sufficient Mediator between God and man Without him no mans person or best actions can be acceptable because of the many imperfections Wherefore all prayers must be offered up by Christ Iesus The holy Ghost doth supply the office of a teacher and of one that helpeth our infirmities and in us Rom. 8.26 to make our intercessions and requests for us that they may be offered to the Father by the intercession of the Sonne For we know not what we should pray for as we ought and if the Spirit do not worke together in our prayers there would be no goodnesse at all in them no not so much as truth and uprightnesse without which Christ Iesus will not offer them to his Father for us Therefore prayers must bee made in the Spirit through the helpe of the Spirit Now because of this order of persons in the Deitie the Father being first and because of the different places they sustaine in the worke of our salvation the counsell and will of all three is that the Father should be prayed unto and worshipped in the onely mediation of the Sonne through the Spirit and therefore it is that the Father is here named not the Sonne or holy Ghost But because of the indivisible essence of the Godhead the naming of the Father doth necessarily imply the calling upon both Sonne and holy Ghost also If God must be known and Vse 1 worshipped in the distinction of the persons in Trinitie then it is impossible to represent God by any image as the Papists do For by what visible likenesse can an invisible Spirit which is truly not imaginarily distinguished into three persons and different manner of subsisting be likened or resembled The Papists that come to Vse 2 God by the mediatiō of Christ but in part joyning to Christ the mediation of Saints are hereby confuted For there is no Mediatour but that one person by whom God is our Father They come a distinction saying Christ is onely Mediatour of redemption but not the onely Mediatour of intercession that so they might leave a roome in which they might place the mediation of Saints but this is to sever what God hath joyned For the Scripture knoweth no Advocate or Intercessour but him who is the Redeemer 1. Ioh. 2.12 scil Christ Iesus the righteous who is the propitiation for our sinnes And it is as proper to the Mediatourship that Christ onely should make intercession at the right hand of God as to die and rise againe for the elect Rom. 8.34
Ob. If they say we pray to living men to make praiers and intercessions for us why not rather to the Saints departed who are more perfect Sol. I answer when we desire the living to pray for us we do not give any religious honour unto the living but they do properly give religious worship in praying to the dead which honour is due to God onely Besides the living know what we need the dead do not and in using the living we do not make them mediatours betweene the Father and us that he should helpe us for their worth and merit thus Christ onely is Mediatour but we onely request them to intreat the Father for Christs sake to helpe us Lastly Iam. 5.14 the Scripture doth warrant men to request the prayers of the living and doth acknowledge onely one Mediatour betweene God and man even there where it requireth that living Saints should make prayers and intercessions for all sorts of men 1. Tim. 2.1.5 All which think they know Vse 3 God but yet are altogether ignorant of the distinction of the persons must hereby know that they do not yet know God distinctly and if they worship God without any consideration of Christ by whom and of the holy Ghost through whose helpe they pray in the spirit if they do not expresse or imply thus much in prayer they do notwithstanding they professe the true God turne him into an Idol For in all true worship the unity is worshipped in Trinitie and Trinitie in unity without dividing the Godhead or confounding the Persons Vse 4 Every one that would worship God aright must therfore first learne to know him to be one only true God distinguished into the Father Sonne and holy Ghost but herein much warinesse and sobriety must be observed that none seeke into this mysterie of mysteries to understand above that which is meete namely above that which the Scripture hath revealed it being an object of faith to bee beleeved and not possible by reason to bee fully comprehended In conceiving of the distinction of persons take heed of two extremities first we must not conceive that there is an essentiall difference betweene them as if all the three had not one and the same nature Secondly we must not imagine that there is onely a rationall or imaginarie distinction whereas their different order and manner of subsisting and different manner of working declareth that there is a reall or true difference betweene them So that the Father as Father is in no respect the Sonne and the Sonne as Sonne is in no respect the holy Ghost and the holy Ghost as holy Ghost is in no respect either the Father or the Sonne When God is thus conceived of and knowne aright then in the same order as he doth subsist he must ordinarily be worshipped according to the direction of our Saviour in this patterne Stephens directing of his prayer to Christ was upon the beholding of Christ Iesus standing at the right hand of God Act. 7 ●● it being a speciall and extraordinary occasion This argueth that it is not unlawfull to direct prayer to the second Person or third Person upon especiall cause but yet ordinarily this rule and order in worshipping GOD must be observed First we must direct prayer unto the Father of lights the giver of every good and perfect gift Secondly we must offer up praier and praise by Christ Iesus who offereth up incense with the prayers of all Saints Rev. 8.3 by whom wee have accesse to the throne of grace Heb. 4.15.16 to finde grace and helpe in time of need Thirdly wee must use all meanes to obtaine the holy Spirit of grace and supplications We must pray for it and heare the Gospell which is the ministerie of the Spirit preached Then we must cherish stirre up the good motions thereof taking heed that wee doe not grieve it or quench it by any evill conversation Let us get an holy acquaintance with it that it may make heartie requests for us For prayers cannot be sweet incense if they be not mingled and anointed with holy oyle which is the anointing of the Spirit which as it teacheth all things 1 Ioh 2.27 as Iohn speaketh so especially it must teach us to pray aright Wherefore whensoever you pray enter into consultation with the inward man what you should aske and how consult with the word denie carnall reason and presumption of your owne abilities in prayer then shall the Spirit make your requests for you which by you must be seconded and 〈…〉 and truth put up to the Father by Christ Whosoever shall in this manner direct his praier to the Father by the Sonne through the Spirit albeit I cannot promise him that his heart shall be so inlarged that he shall satisfie himselfe in prayer yet I can assure him he shall alwaies be able to offer up such sighes and desires as shall please God and prevaile more with him then shall the praiers of others who without the spirit of prayer by the meere helpe of nature art can command both words and varietie of matter at their pleasure Vse 5 This directing of prayers unto the Father in the name of the Sonne through the holy Ghost may remove the greatest discouragements that any Christian can meet with when he goeth about to pray It is not majestie nor infinite justice in God nor greatnesse or multitude of sinnes in man nor any unworthinesse of his person nor yet his insufficiencie to thinke a good thought nor yet the feeling of himselfe that many times hee knoweth not either what or how to pray can dishearten him if hee doe but consider that hee prayeth to God who is God the Father Sonne and holy Ghost and that he may pray in this order namely hee prayes to the Father of Christ who is his Father he prayes in the name of Jesus Christ who hath satisfied his Father for all his sinnes and daily doth make intercession for him and hee praieth in the Spirit who helpeth his infirmities and maketh requests for him though it bee sometimes but with sighes and groanes which are not distinctly uttered Rom. 8.26 By this meanes there is life and spirit in our prayers and God doth and will accept them for he knoweth the meaning of his Spirit and will accept the worke of his Spirit in us through Christ though wee bewray our many imperfections Father in the second place hath through Christ relation to all the members of Christ who are here willed to say Our Father whence note Doct. 6 All true Christians have the Lord of heaven and earth to their Father J ascend to my Father and your Father saith Christ Ioh. 20.17 I will be a Father unto you and ye shall be my sonnes and daughters saith the Lord Almighty 2 Cor. 6.18 Reason 1 They have received the adoption of sonnes Gal. 4.5 and are all the children of God by faith in Christ Iesus Gal. 3.26 Reason 2 They are all
borne againe by the Spirit of adoption whereby they have the image of God renewed in righteousnesse and true holinesse and so are become his children by the regeneration of his Spirit wherewith he hath sealed them for his owne Whereas the men of the Vse 1 world doe entertaine in them a base opinion of all that indeavour to keepe a good conscience in all things therein approving themselves to bee Christs Disciples indeed and the very children of the most high hereby they may see their errour their insolencie and their extreame malice and folly Can there be a more notorious folly and madnesse then this when the children of the bond-woman Ioh. 8.44 nay of the devill for herein they doe his lusts shall account of and use the children of the free-woman yea of the everliving God as the filth of the world and the of-scouring of all things 1. Cor. 4.13 How doe these men by defaming the children therein despise God their Father But let them take heed how they despise or misuse the least of those little ones that have indeed given their names to Christ Iesus It is hard kicking against pricks Act. 9.5 It is not safe touching the Lords anointed Psal 105.15 Zach. 2.8 the very apple of his eye And know as base as they be Their Angels and ministring spirits doe alwaies behold the face of their Father which is in heaven Mat. 18.10 Vse 2 Hereby all men should learn of whom to esteeme most honourably whom to make choise of for their yoke-fellowes their servants or their companions also in whom they should most delight and to whom they should shew most love and goodnesse even to true Christians whom David calleth The Saints that bee upon the earth Psal 16.3 and the excellent and well hee might for they have the God of excellencie to their Father If true Christians have God Vse 3 to their Father this should move all men to become Christians indeed to beleeve and to order their conversation aright for such onely the Doctrine meaneth It is the highest advancement and honour that man is capable of to bee called and to bee indeed the sonnes and daughters of God Almighty Iohn doth admire such love in God and such advancement of men that men should be called the sonnes of God 1 Ioh. 3.1 All Christians should be like Vse 4 God Holy as he is holy for it becommeth children to be like their father They should honour and obey him If I be a Father where is mine honour saith God Mal. 1.6 As obedient children they must not fashion themselves according to the former lusts of their ignorance but as hee which hath called them is holy 1 Pet 1.14.15 so they should be holy in all manner of conversation Disobedience of children to their Parents was in the law of the Iewes punishable with death disobedience therefore unto our heauenly Father is much more dangerous They should likewise submit themselves unto his fatherly chastisements Heb. 12.5.7.10 they must neither despise them nor faint under them but must indure them patiently because God therein dealeth with them as with sonnes for their profit that they might be partakers of his holinesse They need not carke and care but in all things they may and must with boldnesse and assurance of helpe repair to God being assured of his fatherly affection towards them for to whom doe children flie in their need but to their Parents We have seene those that bee evill give good gifts unto their children how much more will our heavenly Father give good things even his holy Spirit Luk. 11.13 to them that aske him Lastly it is the joy and comfort Vse 5 of every Christian to consider that they have this honor that they may call God Father and aske him blessing What manner of love hath the Father bestowed in this saith Iohn 1 Ioh. 3.1 that wee should bee called the sonnes of God That wee the sonnes of men of meane men of mortall men of sinfull men yea the very children of the divell should be advanced to bee the sonnes and daughters of God Almighty While vainglorious foolish men vaunt and brag of their gentry and earthly Parentage let us with an holy exultation of spirit rejoyce in this that wee have God to our Father This doth comfort the heart in povertie sickenesse paine disgrace and in all distresses when we know wee have a Father that will not forsake us though our naturall Parents should Psal 27.10 that though tender mothers may forget their sucking children and sonnes of their wombe yet God will not forget his Isa 49.15 hee is wise and almightie and will helpe in the best time he alwaies knoweth what we have need of If wee be children then heires of God and joynt heires with Christ Rom. 8.17 When we duely thinke of this no afflictions can dismay us for we hold them not worthy the glory that shall be revealed in us Rom. 8.18 wee shall by this helpe our selves against heart-eating cares for we have a father and wee know it belongeth to Parents to provide and lay up for their children 2 Cor. 12 13. When we think of this that we are Gods heirs it will keepe us from grieving at and enuying the prosperity of the wicked we will be well content God should give his moveables where he please so long as the birth-right and inheritance is ours for we are begotten to a lively hope of an inheritance incorruptible and undefiled that fadeth not away reserved in the heavens for us 1. Pet. 1.3.4 Whatsoever our estate be in the world we may and ought to comfort our selves with these thoughts Which art in heaven God is described by his being in heaven not onely to shew where he is for he is a God at hand and a farre off Ier. 23.23 24. and filleth heaven and earth but as the majestie of Kings may be set out by their glorious palaces and thrones so heaven Gods most glorious throne doth here set forth his majectie and the perfection of all his infinite excellencies Whence learne Doct. 7 God to whom prayer is made who is Father to all true beleevers is an heavenly majestie invisible perfect and infinite in power goodnesse and all other heavenly excellencies one whose dwelling is in the heavens When God would set forth his owne greatnesse and goodnesse at once Isa 57.15 he saith Thus saith the high and loftie one that inhabiteth eternitie whose name is holy I dwell in the holy place with him also that is of a contrite and humble spirit to revive the spirit of the humble c. The Church doth helpe her faith by casting her thoughts upon heaven the habitation of Gods holinesse and of his glory and thereby gathereth arguments of Gods perfect love to them and power for them when she saith Where is thy zeale and thy strength c. and from the same consideration doth preferre Gods
1. Pet. 2.9 It is the glory and happinesse of a man to bee holy like unto God Holinesse is an infallible and peculiar marke of a childe of God Therefore Gods people are called the people of his holinesse Isa 63.18 Ier. 2.3 And Israel was holinesse to the Lord. Let us purge our selves therefore from all filthinesse of flesh and spirit perfecting holinesse in the feare of God then shall wee approve our selves to be worthy persons even the sonnes and daughters of the Lord almightie Moreover if the fruit of our Christian profession be holinesse Rom 6.22 the end wil be eternall life Vse 4 If God bestow holinesse upon any man though hee have neither personablenesse nor wealth nor wit nor worldly honour besides let him not be impatient for what he wāteth but let him rejoyce and give thanks for what he hath for he hath that which maketh him to bee esteemed in the judgement of wise men and of the wise God a worthy and excellent person And if we consider the worth of holinesse it will move us to beare the afflicting hand of God with patience and cheerefulnesse For the end of his chastening is saith the Apostle that we might be partakers of his holinesse Heb. 12 10 than which nothing is more profitable nothing more honourable The second Petition Thy kingdome come In the first petition prayer is made that God onely may be set up to be knowne and acknowledged to be as he is most holy most glorious to whom all things as to their proper end are to bee referred This is the chiefe desire of a Christian out of which all other petitions issue forth into which they doe all emptie themselves Gods Name cannot be knowne and thereby hallowed except God make himselfe knowne to bee that High and holy one that onely Potentate King of Kings Lord of Lords to whom holinesse and glory doth belong Wherefore petition is made that hee would please to advance his kingdome as a meanes to shew his excellencie and glory that men may yeeld it unto him The comming of this kingdom is the subject of this petition Kingdome in the largest sense signifieth the governance and rule of a people under one head or King But here it is limited by particular reference to God saying Thy kingdome which importeth that administration of governement which God doth exercise either immediately by himselfe or mediately by Christ in preserving and ordering all things so as may set forth his soveraignty to the glory of his holinesse in perfectiō of goodnes power wisedome mercy justice c. This kingdome of God is Vniversall over all creatures called the kingdome of power or providence Psal 103.19 is Speciall respecting the Church in this life called the kingdome of grace in the life to come called the kingdome of glory In this petition kingdome signifieth Gods kingdome of power grace and glory each one serving unto or following upon the other and all three doe set forth his holy Name the hallowing whereof was in the first petition prayed for Kingdome of his providence is desired because it doth both set forth Gods excellencie and doth minister matter means for the better erecting of the kingdome of grace The kingdome of grace is desired because GOD therein doth most admirably shew himselfe and it maketh way to the kingdome of glory being the beginning and entrance thereinto The kingdome of glory is desired because it is the perfection of the kingdome of grace and when all enemies shall be vanquished and all subjects gathered and advanced to the highest honour 1 Cor. 15. ●8 then God shall be all in all and shall be knowne and acknowledged to be all in all and then his Name shall be perfectly hallowed and glorified Kingdome here is called Gods kingdome as it is a government different from and a government over the kingdome of men but especially as it is opposed unto the kingdome and dominion of sinne and Sathan For the throwing downe of Satan is according as Saint Iohn heard by a voyce from heaven the comming of salvation Rev. 12.10 and strength and the kingdome of our God and the power of his Christ As his kingdome goeth downe Gods kingdome is set up This kingdome of God is either essentiall and inseparable eternally equally belonging to the Father Sonne and holy Ghost or it is Deputative and separable according as by the dispensation of the blessed Trinity it was conferred upon the second person in Trinity as he i● the Mediatour betweene God and his creature The administration of this kingdome is either immediate namely when the Father from himselfe by the Sonne but not as Mediatour doth through the holy Ghost communicate himselfe to the creature and doth governe all things or else it is mediate namely when the Father from himselfe by the Son as Mediatour betweene him and his creature doth communicate himselfe to his creature and doth governe all things God did immediately governe all things in the world untill that by Adams transgression sin entred into the world and in like immediate manner shall hee governe when sinne shall cease to be in the world namely after that Christ shall have put downe all rule and authority and power and hath delivered up the kingdome to God even the Father at the end of this world But ever since sinne hath beene in the world and since it hath pleased God to enter into a new covenant with man namely into the covenant of grace which hee established in Christ the whole governement as well that which is vniversall which concerneth the powerfull conservation and wise disposing of all things for the manifestation of the glory of God and for the use of man as also that speciall government which concerneth the Church was conferred upon the second Person and hath beene administred and is yet to be administred by him as Mediatour untill the time of the redelivery of it unto his Father We may conceive the reason why God did governe the world after mans fall not immediately as before out by his Sonne deputed to be a Mediatour betweene him and man to be this because hee in his holy wisedome held it not befitting the purity and holinesse of his nature to communicate himselfe to his creature defiled with sinne otherwise than by a Mediatour This government Christ Iesus tooke upon him and administred as he was first by designation and afterwards actually by hypostaticall union God and man Not as God onely for in that respect the kingdome was as naturall and essentiall to him as it was to the Father and holy Ghost nor yet as man onely for the humanity alone was not capable of such an universall absolute and spirituall dominion invested with power from himselfe to send forth the spirit and to subdue principalities powers and spirituall wickednesse so as to trample all enemies under his feete This government of Gods kingdome by Christ the Mediatour was first made knowne to the Church
to speake something of this Treatise of this godly and painefull Minister of Christ which is written by him without affectation as desirous to cloath spirituall things with a spirituall manner of writing the diligent and godly Reader shall observe a sound cleare substantiall handling of the greatest points that naturally fall within the discourse and a more large and usefull unfolding of many things than in former Treatises It appeareth he sought the good of all so that besides the labours of other holy men there will be just cause of blessing God for his assistance in this worke To whose blessing I commend both it and the whole Israel of God Grayes Inne R. SIBBS A KEY OF HEAVEN The Lords Prayer opened and applyed MATH 6. 9 After this manner therefore pray ye Our Father which art in heaven hallowed be thy Name 10 Thy kingdome come Thy will be done in earth as it is in heaven 11 Give us this day our daily bread 12 And forgive us our debts as we forgive our debters 13 And leade us not into temptation but deliver us from evill for thine is the kingdome and the power and the glory for ever Amen THese words are part of our Saviours Sermon in the Mount they concerne Prayer and doe consist of a Precept or exhortation to pray in a right manner Patterne to exemplifie the said manner The precept is After this manner pray ye The patterne is Our Father c. This Exhortation is inferred upon consideration of divers abuses of prayer whereof our Saviour had warned his Disciples to wit Hypocrisie and vaine babling of the Pharisies and Heathen Hee reasoneth from the dissimilitude that ought to be betweene hypocrites and heathen between true Christians and faithfull beleevers saying verse 8. Be not ye therefore like unto them but pray ye in an holy manner And for that cause doth propose unto them a perfect forme of prayer intimating that if they would pray according as he did therein prescribe they should neither play the Hypocrites as did the Pharisies nor babble as the heathen nor offend any other way in this holy exercise of calling upon the name of the Lord. The words of the exhortation containe these particulars 1 The person exhorting Christ Iesus implied in his imperative speech Pray 2 The persons exhorted Ye 3 The inference whereupon it is grounded Therefore 4 The subject of the exhortation Pray in this manner Pray 1 Sam. 1 1●.15 P●●2 8 Is●●● to pray doth import an holy speech and pouring out of the soule unto God being a joynt act of the minde will whereby the minde by voyce or thought doth make knowne to God the desires of the heart What it is to pray shewing both what a man wold have God to doe for him or to accept from him A bare desire is not to pray for many wish and desire those things for which they never speake or pray unto God Orare est appetere petere Phil. 4 6. Psal 38.9 Neither are words without desires any prayer but when the minde maketh knowne to God what the will desireth this is to pray By what way soever of expression a man doth signifie his desire directing it to God whether it be by thought onely or also by sigh a Psal 38.9 Rom. 8.26 groane or b Psal 39.12 tears or by lifting up * Ps 28.2 a hand or c Psal 123.1 eyes towards God in the heavens or by d Psal 141.1.2 voyce perfect or e Isai 38.14 unperfect if it be but by f Lam. 3.56 breathing it out as it were so be hee intend and understand what he desireth this is to pray Desires are naturall or spirituall Naturall when a man Difference between naturall and spirituall desires in prayer out of a sense of that which hee needeth and which may be for his naturall well being here and for his happinesse hereafter from a meere well-wishing to himselfe doth pray unto God to obtaine it Thus a naturall man a very Balaam may pray Num. 23.10 A spirituall desire be it of naturall or spirituall good things is from the spirit and regenerate part of man Rom 8.26 27. put up to God with holy affections in a spirituall manner to a spirituall end Onely the regenerate can thus pray Ye first the Disciples and under them hee meaneth all Christians Act. 11.26 For although Christ gave his Disciples some precepts that onely did belong to them as Apostles yet hee gave very many precepts to them as they were Christians as that in Marke 13.37 What I say to one I say to all Watch so here what he saith to them he saith to all Pray Therefore hath a double reference both to the sinfull manner dehorted fom and to this holy manner exhorted to He reasoneth thus the manner of hypocritical and heathenish praying is sinfull this manner here propounded is most holy therefore pray in this manner and not as they doe After this manner or thus the word rendred thus or in this manner is a note of likenesse pointing unto the patterne following As if he had said Say Our Father as it is Luk. 11.2 or if you use other words let them be according unto this patterne here prescribed to wit to the same person the same matter in the same kindes of prayer whether it bee in Petition for our selves for that which is good or in deprecation against that which is evill or in Intercessions for others or in Thanksgiving both for our selves and for others and with the same good disposition of heart as is taught in this forme of prayer following The words thus opened the particulars therein offer divers profitable lessons Christs diligence in teaching his servants and familie this necessarie religious duty of praier both at this time of his owne accord and at another time at the request of one of his Disciples is first to be observed Luk 11.1 All the actions of Christ Jesus are observable and of excellent use but onely some of them binde Christians to imitation That I may therefore cleere the foundation of the doctrine to be concluded from Christs practise let it be considered that the actions of Christ were of different natures He did some acts as he was God and as Mediator betweene God and man as his miracles and offering up of himselfe a sacrifice for sinne c. These actions should work in all men an holy admiration of him and faith in him but must not nay cannot be imitated How far Christs example doth bind to imitation He did other actions as hee was man some whereof were indifferent being neither commanded nor forbidden others were necessarie being commanded Those actions which he did which were indifferent doe teach us Christian libertie shewing what we may do but doe not lay a bond upon the conscience to tye us to doe the same Christ did sometimes stand when he prayed this was an indifferent action
three things obseruable in all prayers First the person to whom onely we must pray concerning whom this is the rule That person onely who is God and Lord of heaven and earth is to be prayed unto thus much you learne both in the invocation in the beginning and in the forme of praise in the end of the Lords Prayer The second thing to be observed is what wee must aske the rule thereof is whatsoever may lawfully be asked may without wresting bee referred to one of the sixe petitions If they can referre their request to any petition they may be bold to make it It shall bee needfull therefore to observe the particulars under every petition both what is prayed for and what is prayed against the most whereof shall appeare in the handling of each severall petition to which I doe send you And when you have learned what you may lawfully pray ye may be longer or shorter in any one petition as your present need or the particular occasion doth require which libertie may bee obserued in those prayers of the Apostles which are recorded for our use in the holy Scriptures The third thing to be observed is with what disposition of heart and affection we must pray Which is fully expressed and implyed in that word Amen which requireth that prayer bee made with understanding in truth in fervencie and in faith as will manifestly appeare when wee come to treate of that word Here yet some question may be made touching the order here set down whether it must be precisely kept I answer in the generall it must that is Gods glory must be first in our aime but touching the particular manner of expressing it that is left to the libertie of him that prayeth whether hee begin with praise or with confession of sinnes and asking forgivenesse thereby making way to the other petitions with more confidence There is no rule to be given hereof because we see the Apostles after they were taught this forme did take this libertie Our Father c. Here beginneth the patterne of prayer which because Christ Iesus our Lord gave it to his Disciples is therefore called the Lords Prayer It consisteth of two parts The first is an expressing of a mans desire unto God The second is a manifestation of the assent and right disposition of his heart in putting up the aforesaid desires in the word Amen which though it be but one word yet is full of excellent matter The first part doth branch it selfe into three members 1 Invocation upon God Our Father which art in heaven 2 Petition Hallowed by thy Name Thy kingdome come c. 3 A forme of praise and than●es containing reasons why the former petitions should be made unto God For thine is kingdome power and glory for ever Invocation or calling upon God is here taken in the proper and strictest sense not for the whole exercise of prayer but for appellation in which a man calleth upon him whom hee would have to heare him This invocation consisteth of a description of God who onely is to be called upon in prayer He is described by two arguments First by the relation that is betweene him and his elect in Christ Our Father Secondly by a signe of his soveraigntie and majestie that is by his being in heaven which is the Court of his majestie the place from whence hee sheweth his infinite power goodnesse and glory Which art in heaven The description of God by these two arguments the one arguing his graciousnesse and readinesse of will the other arguing his greatnesse fulnesse of power to helpe all that come unto him is placed of purpose in the very entrance into prayer to strengthen the petitioners faith that hee need not doubtingly say as he did If thou wilt thou canst helpe me Mat 8.2 For he is his father therefore will do whatsoever in his holy wisedome he judgeth fit to be done Neither need he say as that other If thou canst doe any thing helpe us Mark 9.22 For his God and father in the heavens is almighty and can doe whatsoever he pleaseth Psal 115.3 and would have to be done This description of God to whom prayer is made by his relation to them that are to pray consisteth of the appropriating possessive particle Our and of that gracious title of God Father In this one description two things are signified both the condition of them that pray and of him that is prayed unto These words as they looke toward the persons who may pray they intimate a double condition First that they have a right and interest in God they can call him theirs for they are the children of God Secondly Our importeth that common interest and fatherhood in God which the rest of the faithfull have in him from which there groweth a communion of one Christian with another so that they become brethren These two qualities therefore faith in God and love to our brethren are here required in every one that is qualified for prayer Our is not onely here a note of the joyning together of many in prayer when one man is the mouth of the rest because this forme of words is to be uttered by one in the closet Mat. 6.6 as well as by many in publike but it noteth that relation and respect of God to them which is common unto their brethren 2 King 19.19 Thus Hezekiah useth it saying O Lord our God I beseech thee c. Daniel praying alone Dan. 9.17.18 faith Now therefore O our God heare the prayer of thy servant Not but that when we would expresse our particular faith and dependance upon God Mat. 26.39 Ier. 3.19 1 Cor. 4.18 we may say My Father or My God But our Saviour maketh choise of this forme of speech because it is full of instruction and is best agreeing to all sorts of prayer both in private as well as publike Thus we see what this description of God intimateth as it looketh towards those that pray As it looketh towards him to whom prayer is made he is first called Father Father spoken of God is a word of relation to Christ the second person in Trinity Psal 2.7 Ioh. 1.14 and so is proper to the first person in Trinity Secondly in relation to the creature in a more common respect to all as he is the Author of their being and subsisting in nature thus all * Deut. 32.6 three persons are called Father God is also a Father in a speciall respect to his elect in Christ as he is the Author of their spirituall being and subsisting in state of grace * 1 Ioh. 5. ● Isa 9 6. Ioh 3.5 Thus in speciall sort the three persons are and may be called Father by all beleevers And as I conceive in this place this word Father directeth us to God the Father God the Sonne and God the holy Ghost yet so as it pointeth in an order to that person in the Deity
to whom Fatherhood and the beginning of all things is ascribed without excluding but necessarily including the other two namely to God the Father the first person in Trinitie the naturall and eternall Father of Christ Iesus who by adopting us in Christ and by begetting us againe by regeneration through the Spirit * Ioh. 20.17 is our Father Thus the Apostle Paul conceived of God when he prayed first he conceived of God as Father of Christ saying Eph. 3.14.15 I bow my knees to the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ then he sheweth how hee conceived God as the father of the elect when he saith Of whom the whole family in heaven and earth are named So did the Apostle Peter conceive of God 1 Pet 1.3 when he gave him thanks saying Blessed be God and Father of our Lord Iesus Christ Which art in heaven Heaven signifieth the heaven of heavens the third heaven where Christ sitteth at the right hand of his Father By the excellencie of this place above others is set forth the majestie and excellencie of him that sitteth therein God doth not so inhabite the high and holy place but that he dwelleth also with him that is of a contrite spirit Isa 57.15 1 Kin. 8.27 Mat. 5.34.35 Psal 11.4 And the Heaven of heavens cannot containe him But because heaven is Gods Pallace and throne in comparison of earth which is but his footstoole and because from thence he doth manifest his glory more remarkeably then from any other place revealing his will power Iam. 1.17 and Godhead in his workes of mercy as David saith Psal 57.3 Psal 102.19.10 Rom. 1.18 He shall send from heaven and save me and in workes of justice as the Apostle saith The wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodlinesse therefore hee will that his being in heaven should as by a signe set forth his glorious Majestie Also his being in heaven doth distinguish him from earthly fathers Luk. 31 13. and putteth difference between him and false * Psal 136.26 Ion. 1.9 gods This description of God by his place is all one with that which the Apostle setteth downe at large calleth him 1. Tim 6.15.16 Onely Potentate King of kings Lord of Lords who onely hath immortalitie dwelling in the light which no man can approach unto c. If this short description be well weighed it will appeare that there could not possibly bee a a more briefe and more apt description of God meet to be represented to the minde of him that is to pray then this which in more words may be thus expressed O Lord God which art Father of Christ Iesus and through him Father of me and of all beleevers we coming to thee in the name of Christ and being moved hereunto by thy spirit of Adoption whereby we call Abba Father we are well assured that thou wilt accept of our praiers praying for our selves and for our brethren and sith thou onely art God which dwellest in the high and holy place from whence cometh every good gift and art Almightie as thou art God to answer thy willingnesse as thou art Father wherefore we call upon thee and do thou vouchsafe to heare us Our Note here that a man must have faith and be in state to call God his Father else he is not sufficiently qualified for prayer Learne therefore Whosoever would make an acceptable Doct. 1 prayer must be Gods childe he must have a right to call God Father and must come to God as a childe to his father Therefore David when hee prayeth approveth himselfe to be Gods childe saying If I regard iniquitie in my heart the Lord will not heare me Psal 66.18 The sacrifice of the wicked is an abhomination to the Lord but the prayer of the upright is his delight saith Solomon Prov. 15.8 It was a true speech of him which said We know that God heareth not sinners but if any man be a worshipper of God and doth his will him he heareth Ioh. 9.31 Reason 1 For the person of a man must be accepted else his sacrifice cannot be good and acceptable for while the tree is naught Mat. 7 18. the fruit cannot be good Thornes cannot send forth grapes Mat. 7 16 neither can thistles beare figges Reason 2 All acceptable prayers are put up in Christs name and are accepted through his mediation Now he is Advocate for none but those for whom he is a propitiation scil beleevers according to his prayer I pray not for the world c. Ioh. 17.9 Reason 3 No man can pray untill he have the spirit of prayer Zac. 12.10 to cause him to mourne kindly for his sinne and to call Abba Father which spirit God sendeth to none but to his sonnes Gal. 4.6 Everie one that cometh to Reason 4 God must beleeve that God is and that hee is a rewarder of them that diligently seeke him Heb. 11.6 They must have faith How shall they call on him on whom they have not beleeved Rom. 10.14 The promise of acceptance Reason 5 and of a gracious hearing is made to the godly Psal 32 6. Psal 34.15.17.18 Iam. 5.16 and to the righteous whose prayers are said to be prevailing If a man have not good assurance Reason 6 that hee is the childe of God he can never answer those strong objections which the devill will urge to keepe him from prayer but if he can shew that God is his Father and that God hath commanded him to pray no objection of Satan can discourage him Vse 1 Hereby all that do not righteousnesse and that love not their brethren for by this they are discerned not to be children of God Ioh. 3.10 but of the devill must understand that if they continue in this their wicked condition and yet pray they deale presumptuously and to them God saith Psa ●0 16.17 What have ye to do to take my covenant in your mouth seeing ye hate instruction Secondly they may learne what to judge of their praiers God accepteth them not for they be no better then either howlings or cries wrung from them by pinching necessitie Hos 7.14 or meere hypocritical mocking of God abhominable sacrifices of which the Lord saith Your incense is an abhomination Isa 113.15 and when ye make many prayers I will not heare It is all one with him as if * Isa 66.3 ye did blesse an Idoll so long as ye chuse your owne waies such as ignorance superstition contempt of religion prophanenesse pride drunkennesse whoredome deceit lying unbeliefe impenitencie and such like God abhorreth all service done to him so long as their soules delight in their abhominations Consider this O ye that forget God saith the Lord lest I teare you in pieces and there be none to deliver Psal 50.22 Thirdly let all impenitent and ungodly persons take notice in how miserable a straight they are and into what a labyrinth and maze their sinne hath brought
those which never make the glory of God the end of their lives and actions but through selfe-love and pride of heart make their owne pleasures profits and glory to bee the principall and utmost aime of all their thoughts words or deeds who if they attain their owne ends they sacrifice to their owne nets applauding their owne strength wit industrie c. or if they looke out of themselves they give the praise to men and secondarie causes or to blinde Fortune and lucke as they call it but give not glory to the Lord. Pharaoh saith Exod. 5.2 Who is the Lord that I should obey his voyce I know not the Lord. But did not the Lord honour himselfe upon Pharaoh and his land by his wonderfull plagues which he sent amongst them till he made Pharaoh himselfe the Egyptians to know that he was the Lord Exod. 14 4. Iob saith of those wealthy proud contemners of God and of his worship which said What is the Almightie Iob 21.15.19.20 that wee should serve him and what profit should we have if we pray unto him God layeth up their iniquitie for their children and they shall drinke of the wrath of the Almighty Did not the Lord make Senacherib an example to all that should reproach the holy One of Israel when for his arrogating too much to himselfe and for despising the true God the Lord sent his Angell which smote one hundred fourescore and five thousand of his host Isa 37.23.36 so that hee himselfe was constrained to return with shame into his owne country and there while hee was worshipping his God received his death by the hands of his owne sonnes How did God disgrace proud Nabuchadnezzar when vaine-gloriously hee vaunted saying Is not this great Babel that I have built for the house of the kingdome by the might of my power and for the honour of my majestie Here was no acknowledgement of Gods power nor any thing done for the honour of Gods Majestie therefore while the word was in the kings mouth there fell a voice from heaven saying O king Nebuchadnezzar Dan 4.30.31 to thee it is spoken the kingdome is departed from thee Which was fulfilled accordingly for hee was sent to graze with beasts of the field seven yeares untill he was made to know that the most high God ruleth in the kingdome of men Dan. 4.32 But when God restored him to himselfe and to his kingdome then he could give God the glorie of all power and majestie saying in the last verse Those that walke in pride he is able to abase For the same sinne was Belshazzar weighed in the ballance and found wanting and his kingdome given to the Medes and Persians who because he prophaned the vessels of the house of God and praised false gods Dan. 5 23. but the God in whose hands was his breath and whose were all his wayes him did he not glorifie Therefore was the hand-writing sent and that very night was Belshazzar slaine and his kingdome conquered Those two and fortie children who were torne with Beares payd deare for their despising God in that aged Prophet Elisha deriding at once his age his office and his holines crying 2. King 2. Ascend thou bald head ascend thou bald head Lastly not to wearie you with examples of Gods judgements upon those which did either derogate from God or arrogate to themselves any part of that praise which was due to him observe Gods immediate hand upon Herod who because he gave not glory unto God when the people applauded his eloquent oration saying The voice of God Act. 12.22.23 and not of man immediately the Angel of the Lord smote him and he was eaten of wormes and gave up the ghost These severe judgements of God executed upon men because they tooke glorie from God or gave it not to him doth plainly shew that he is very jealous of his name and of his glory and that he will not endure that his glory should be given to another Isai 42 8. For of all things Gods Name and honour is most deare unto him nothing will exasperate him so soone or so much as to be touched in his Name Let all men therefore take heed how they prophane it by any means But it is not enough not to prophane it but if it be prophaned by others if they do not contend for the sanctifying of it they commit a great sin If men be but touched in their owne name and reputation they grow so impatient as by no meanes they will bee perswaded to passe it by without revenge when yet the same persons can see and heare Gods Name dishonoured by oaths blasphemies by idolatrie contempt of religion and of Gods children and their hearts never rise at it and have not a word to speake for God These do not hallow Gods Name I desire that all that reade or heare this would examine themselves by what hath beene said by which they may trie whether they hallow Gods Name or dishallow it And if thou say this petition Hallowed be thy Name and yet by taking his honour to thy self or giving it to another or if by not standing for his glory or not giving it to him in heart word and conversation thou dishonourest God then know thou doest mock God and playest the hypocrite and if repentance and a care to glorifie God do not prevent it thou must with hypocrites one day be the subject of the glory of his justice and wrath because in thy life thou wouldest not be an instrument of glorifying his holy Name he will be glorified in thee because hee was not glorified by thee Thus it appeareth who offend against this point by which wee may see what evils are to be bewayled and prayed against in this petition Vse 2 In applying the Doctrines concerning prayer let this be a received truth that what we pray for that we must endeavour and use all good meanes to attaine according to that in the Psalm 27.4 One thing have I desired that will I seek for All men therefore which professe the Name of God must both pray and seeke by all meanes that the true God be onely set up to be worshipped and that his holy Name may be sanctified which is done when men shew true respect unto him and unto al such things as beare upon them some speciall note of his holinesse First he is to be known and professed to be the onely true God Father Sonne and holy Ghost then to be honoured and glorified as God God is honoured and his name sanctified many wayes as 1 First by knowing and acknowledging him to be such a one as he hath revealed himself to be 2 By admiring him and his works oft times resounding that speech of David Psal 8.1 O Lord our Lord how excellent is thy Name in all the earth 3 By beleeving in him whereby Abraham is said to have given glory to God Rom. 4 20 Ioh. 3.33 For
continue from the fall till after the day of judgement For Iesus Christ having beene faithfull and powerfull as Mediatour in executing that authority which was put upon him Heb. 3.2 Mat. 25 4● Rom 8.21 and that to the saving of all the elect receiving thē into the state of glory and into the possession of the kingdome of heaven and also to the subduing of all enemies executing upon them the vengeance of hell fire and delivering the creature from the bondage of corruption there shall then be no more need of such a mediate kinde of government Wherefore Christ shall deliver up this kinde of government unto God the Father who for ever afterwards with the Son and holy Ghost shall governe all things immediately communicating unto the man Christ as head of his whole body all glory Iob. 17.24.26 and happinesse of which glorie by reason of that eternall and spirituall union which each member hath with the head the whole body shall partake for evermore Col 3.4 1 Ioh. 3.2 Phili 3.21 Vnto this immediate government the Sonne himselfe shall be subject together with the rest of his members that is his government as hee was man and Mediatour betweene God and man being at an end he as man and as head of the Church shall with his whole bodie be subject Not but that he as man was alwayes as inferiour so likewise subject to God but while with the second person in the deity the humanity did as a Viceroy governe all things having the same government with the Godhead he is not said to bee subject but when this government shall be laid downe then this subjection shall be manifest In this immediate government God shall be all in all that is God shall no longer communicate himselfe to his elect in Christ in part and by the mediation of his Sonne and by his ordinances and ministry of man as formerly he did in the state and kingdome of grace upon earth but then hee shall communicate himselfe wholly and by himselfe immediately Revel 21.22.23 For as there shall bee then no need of Sunne nor Moone or any other naturall meanes to sustaine mans bodie in a naturall being so there shall bee no need of Temple that is of any ministrie of the Word and Sacraments to sustaine body and soule in a spirituall and glorious being but God shall be all in all his presence and goodnesse will immediately supply all For sinne being perfectly abolished the creature is capable of a direct and immediate communion with God his creator hee pleasing immediately to communicate to man of his holinesse and of his glory But this delivering up of the kingdome to the Father Quest and to be himselfe subject doth not this diminish the glorie of our blessed Saviour causing it to be lesse after the day of judgement than it was before when all rule and all authority was upon him I answer by no meanes Answ as shall appeare if this mystery of the kingdome bee rightly understood For as God the Father could and did give all the aforementioned authority and kingdome to the Sonne without any the least diminution of the glorie and soveraigntie of the first person in Trinitie so can and will God the Sonne deliver up the same government and kingdome againe to the Father without any the least diminution of the glory and soveraigntie of the second person in Trinitie or without any disparagement or lessening of the glorie of his humanitie For God the Father so gave all authoritie to the Sonne that yet he retained it all to himselfe as God to whom kingdome and power is essentiall and inseparable For whatsoever the Father hath that same wholly he giveth to the Sonne Ioh. 5.17.19.20.26 and yet retaineth that wholly to himself The Father was King still and Lord of all notwithstanding the giving of all power to the Sonne did not take off any power and authoritie from the Father but did onely varie the manner of administration of one and the same authoritie Christ before hee was deputed to this his office of absolute authoritie over all as Mediatour was equall to the Father yet was not made above the Father by vertue of what was given him for 1. Cor. 25.27 he was alwayes excepted that put all things under him so when Christ shall have delivered up the kingdome and all that authoritie which was given him hee shall remaine no lesse equall to the Father For as his essence could not by acceptance of his office admit of any alteration of his authoritie to the greater so his essentiall authoritie and government over all as he is God cannot by the rendering up againe the same office and mediatorie dispensation admit of any alteration of his authoritie to the lesse By this it is plaine that Christ in respect of his deitie looseth no authoritie by this deliverie up of the kingdome to the Father Quest But how will it appeare that the humanity of Christ in state of subjection shall not be lesse glorious than it was before in state of dominion Answ It shall appeare thus First the humanitie of Christ was in the same subjection while it was in state of dominion as it shall bee when that dominion shall be rendred up namely inferiour to the Father as touching the manhood therefore the humanitie receiveth no disparagement by this subjection more in this latter state than in the former He is said in this latter state to be subject that is onely subject and not governing the world as before then hee was subject in one respect but King and governor in another which latter onely is taken away by reddition of the kingdome Secondly though Christ hath given up the kingdome no more to governe as God and man as a Mediatour yet as God he shall still governe though Christ as he is man and as he is a part of his Church shall bee subject yet the manhood of Christ shall still subsist in the Godhead of the Sonne and the fulnesse of his Godhead shall for ever dwell in the manhood Col. 2.9 by reason of the personall union in which respect though the manhood shall not participate in the worke of governing yet it shall participate in the honour and glorie thereof because the Godhead and the manhood make but one Person Thirdly Christ as man remaineth the head of the whole Church which is his bodie establishing them in state of perfect holines and glory through the immediate communion which by him they have with God by reason of that spirituall and inseparable union which they hold with him And it can bee no abatement of glory or content to him to give up such a manner of government which though it was honourable yet it was with a kinde of burthen and care so long as he did not give it up untill he had finished all which belonged to that his Kingly Office in saving all his subjects and destroying all his enemies for the honour
in their mindes hee will write them that is h●e will give them faith repentance and their sinnes and iniquities hee will remember no more Here we see that God promiseth to give knowledge of him and faith in him as well as to forgive their sinnes nay therefore hee giveth faith and the knowledge and feare of him that in a way of mercy mixed with justice he may forgive that so as he saith 〈◊〉 righteousnesse being ou● 〈◊〉 faith Rom. 3.26 God might be just 〈◊〉 justifier of him which beleeveth in Iesus Christ elsewhere is said to have given himselfe for us Tit. 2.14 that hee might redeeme us from all iniquity which cannot be meant by satisfying Gods justice onely that so God if hee pleased might forgive iniquity and that man if hee pleased might beleeve as the diefiers of mans free will would have it but that he might purifie us to himselfe which he worketh by his spirit in the exercise of our * Act. 15.9 faith to be a people zealous of good workes This is the very end why God raised Christ and exalted him with his right hand to be a Prince and a Saviour namely to give repentance as well as forgivenesse of sinnes He doth not say Act. 5.32.32 to give forgivenesse of sinnes to the Israell of God if they will beleeve and repent but he saith absolutely to give repentance that is faith and amendment of life that their sinnes past might actually be forgiven Though faith be not in the text named yet it is understood in the word repentance faith being the first part of repentance whereby an unbeleever turneth from his unbeliefe and becommeth a beleever from whence followeth the whole change of a man by repentance to new obedience In this sense repentance is also taken Acts 2.28 as will appeare if we compare Saint Pauls answer to the Iaylours question Acts 16.31 with that of Saint Peters both answering to one and the same question in effect Peter saith Repent and be baptized Paul saith Beleeve and be baptized So that if Christ dyed and rose againe to give repentance and remission of sinnes he dyed and rose againe and was exalted to give faith and forgivenesse of sinnes Faith considerable in and about forgivenesse of sinnes is either primary or secondary The first is a beleeving in Christ that through him our sinnes may be forgiven and that we through him may bee saved The second is a beleeving that our sinnes are forgiven and that by Christ we shall be saved The first is a single and direct act of the soule Ioh. 1.12 receiving Christ and relying upon Christ and upon the promise of forgivenesse and salvation by him by vertue whereof a man is united to Christ and is ingrafted into him and before God is justified The second is a reflect act of the soule whereby in a mans conscience he hath some spirituall sense that he doth beleeve in Christ and that God hath forgiven him his sinnes and hath justified him through Christ by which act God doth by his spirit speake peace and comfort to a mans soule which is not that faith whereby wee stand just before God but that whereby we are assured our sinnes are forgiven and that we are in state of grace through Christ The primarie faith is that which is to bee chiefly prayed for in the behalfe of our selves and others before conversion The secondary faith is chiefly to be prayed for in the behalfe of our selves and others after we beleeve and are in state of grace and salvation Christs righteousnesse wherby a man is justified before God in that it was performed by Christ for man unto God is virtually and in way of right mans righteousnesse even before he doth actually beleeve and that because by the decree of God the Father and in the purpose of Christ it was performed for all that should through him beleeve But this righteousnesse of Christ is not accounted to a man nor yet is his in possession and use untill he doe indeede beleeve I speake of men of yeeres by that primary faith before spoken of nor yet is Christs righteousnesse ours in any comfortable sense of it to our selves untill we beleeve by that secondary faith before mentioned Now secondly I am to shew what it is to have sinnes to be forgiven Forgivenesse in proper speech is an act of Gods mercy in not imputing or accounting to a man his sinnes and thereupon in not punishing him for sinne Which act is called also in Scripture a taking away sinne A covering of sinne a blotting out of sinne a casting it behind his backe and the like To forgive sinne not to impute sinne and to be justified and discharged from the guilt and punishment of sinne is all one Act. 13 38.39 Here the sense of forgivenesse of sinne is to be inlarged and taken synechdocically for our whole justification and salvation that is not onely for freedome from guilt and punishment of sinne unto eternall death but also for acceptation unto favour by the imputation of Christs righteousnesse unto eternall life In this justification these two things are to be considered First the very act of forgivenesse of mans person in respect of Gods not accounting him a sinner Secondly the application and manifestation thereof unto a mans selfe wherby a man hath assurance that his sinnes are pardoned and doth actually injoy the benefits that follow forgivenesse Forgivenesse in both these respects are here meant That this may bee fully and plainely understood consider the whole order of justification It is first in the gracious purpose of the Father to forgive and justifie a sinner wherefore with the Sonne and holy Ghost he did fore-appoint him thereunto Secondly it is in the Sonne who being God and man did actually by his death and resurrection purchase this forgivenesse Thirdly it is in the holy Ghost who doth actually apply the grace and merit of Christ and so maketh a sinner capable of the favour and mercy of the Father through the merit of the Son When this application is made Christ actually by way of intercession presenteth the sinner unto his Father who thereupon doth actually receive him into favour Now after this act of acceptance of a man into favour is passed with GOD through Christ then the holy Ghost doth make application of it unto the conscience of him that is accepted In the justification of a sinner there is a blessed concurrence of the speciall acts of the three Persons in the blessed Trinity God the Sonne having made satisfaction doth also make intercession for him God the Father having imputed his sinnes to his surety Christ ceaseth to account them unto him and accounting Christs righteousnesse to him hee accepteth of him as most righteous The holy Ghost having made an inseparable union betweene Christ and the sinner he doth seale and ratifie this his justification unto him It must be diligently observed that though justification be but one individuall
Answ and these they have uncertainely without a blessing with them They have them but as fruits of his common goodnesse providence Psal 36.6 Psal 145.9 God knowing what imployments he hath for them amongst men and not as fruits of his speciall love promise and mercy God giveth them oft-times in wrath with a curse Tit. 1.15 they are impure unto them they make leane soules increasing their sin Psal 92.7 fatting them but it is to the slaughter it is that they may bee destroyed for ever whereas on the contrary all that pray aright shall in the best time have what is best for them with Gods blessing as a token of his speciall love unto them Vse 1 It is therefore a great fault in all those that shall under any pretence omit and neglect prayer then which fault I know none more common For except it be when all other helpes faile and they bee in a desperate extremitie who in comparison seeketh unto God by prayer When they be sicke to the Physitian or to the Surgeon onely but not to God by prayer yea some runne to Witches and Wizards to charmes to the divell to any thing rather then unto God If they be in want then they betake them to their friends to their hands to their wits yea to c●asening and shifting but never looke up to God and the like in all other cases The same course they take for their soules If the comming to Church and formall hearing the word receiving the Sacraments and the prayers of others will save them they will not alwaies be wanting in these externall devotions but as for prayer any more then a little lip-labour which indeed is no prayer they are meere strangers to it Causes why men call not upon God This neglect of prayer commeth from prophanenesse and pride of heart from confidence in the creature and from selfe-dependance which causeth them to be unwilling to come into the presence of the holy God or to be beholding to him For this cause God in justice casteth them into want They have not Iam. 4.2 because they aske not or if he give unto them without asking he giveth it with a curse it is impure unto them Tit. 1.15 as before you heard There are some so prophane that they omit prayer in contempt and with deriding all which conscionably performe it But as for those which have got into the scorners chaire and have made themselves unworthy the pearle of a reproof I leave them to the considerations following They carry in their faces the very brand of an Atheist for it is his guise not to pray himselfe but would shame him which maketh God his refuge Psal 14 4 6. And how can they be called Christians to whom the description of the heathen doth so properly agree Ier. 10 25. The Prophet Ieremie describeth the heathen by this that they were families that call not on Gods Name and these he holdeth to be meete persons upon whom God should poure out his fury and fiercenesse of his indignation But I leave these and come Vse 2 to speake to Gods owne children who even in this point of prayer are much to blame For many of them make too little account of this pretious dutie How seldome doe they set about it how loath to come to it how cold and livelesse in it and how soone wearie of it Is it any marvell if they be full of crosses and be impatient under them Is it any wonder that the world doth so oft overcome them and the divell so oft foile them when they are so seldome and so weake in prayer This failing proceedeth from want of faith in God from too much confidence in the arme of flesh and meanes here below and from poring too much upon the prosperitie of those Psal 73.7 who without prayer have more then heart could wish and by laying their owne crosses in which they lie notwithstanding they have praied too close unto themselves From these and the like causes as lying in some sinne unrepented of or the like it is that you are unwilling to pray and when you doe pray your edge of praier is quite taken off But enter I pray you into Gods sanctuarie that you may see confesse and bewaile your folly and learne with that Psalmist to say Psal 73.28 It is good to draw neere to God and to put your trust onely in the Lord. Vse 3 Let all that professe the name of God bee exhorted not to conceive of praier as a thing arbitrarie and indifferent but as of a necessarie duty as hath beene proved in the Doctrine Are any afflicted Iam. 5.13 let them pray Are any in prosperitie let them pray and praise God In what condition or state soever ye are pray For besides that it is Gods command and his immediate worship Manifold motives unto prayer we by prayer injoy an holy communion with God taking sanctuarie under his wings We edifie our selves also in our most holy faith and in all other the saving graces of Gods spirit when we pray in the Holy Ghost for by it all the weapons of our Christian warfare all the good gifts of God and meanes of our salvation become usefull and good unto us By prayer either we shall prevent Gods iudgements and corrections or bee made able to beare them and be made much better by them By prayer wee shall obtaine pardon and repentance of sins past and strength to resist temptations of sinnes to come In thus doing we shall have all such good things as be needfull for us with a blessing upon them or with contentednesse without them grace and peace in this life perfection of grace and glory in the life to come Would wee doe good to our enemies and to our friends and would we doe our selves good would we be beneficiall to the Common-weale and Church then let us pray 2 Chron. 30.20 Gen. 25.21 Mark 9.25 Mat 15.28 Mat. 8.13 Gen. 24.12 For Kings have prayed for their subjects husbands for their wives fathers for their sonnes mothers for their daughters masters for servants servants for masters and all have beene heard in that which they praied Prayer because it is ordained by God and hath his promise calleth in and ingageth Gods power truth for him that maketh it and so through God becommeth omnipotent What hath beene or can be too hard for Prayer Exod 14.15.16 It hath caused the Sea to divide it selfe and become an high way to Gods people also together with the Whale Ionah 2 1.1.10 Iosh 10.12 to give up Ionas alive and set him ashore It caused the Sunne to stand still yea to goe backe It hath loosed chaines and unlocked Prisons Act. 1● 5.7.11 and iron gates and delivered the prisoners What hath not prayer done what will it not doe in the behalfe of the Church or of any of Gods chosen Nothing so deepe but with this bucket we may draw
to thinke that I had better not pray at all That you feele these defects Answ and do observe these your inabilities and failings in prayer if withall you be humbled and your conscience can witnesse that your desire is that your heart were inlarged and were rightly disposed to prayer this is well this argueth that you have some life and some good disposition to the worke but here is no ground of discouragement or cause why you should forbeare to pray The best of Gods children sometimes have beene in your case David himselfe had his spirit overwhelmed Psal 77.3.4 and was so troubled that he could not speake Ezekiah said that he did chatter like a crane Isa 38.14 he did rather stutter and stammer out his desires to God in a broken sort then by distinct and apt words to expresse them As for wandring thoughts who is free or who can be free so long as sinne dwelleth in him and Satan is alwayes readie to cast them in As for faith it may be that you pray in faith though you conceive otherwise because you feele so much doubting but would you pray in faith do you grieve that you cannot beleeve and can you say with him in the Gospel I do beleeve Mar. 9.24 Lord helpe my unbeleefe then you pray in faith though you feele it not If you feele your selfe worse after prayer this is a misconceit of yours or a suggestion of Satan But if it be so indeed in your feeling this doth not argue that you are worse for your prayer but better for that evill which was in you before unseene is now discovered that you may reforme it The flesh and Satan sometimes may bee more stirring with their tentations but prayer gaineth alwayes a secret helpe of God if you would but improve it But know whatsoever your feeling be if failings in prayer be not allowed but resisted and and prayed against God passeth them by and doth not account them unto you If you endeavour to pray aright and do pray as well as you can though you faile very much this unallowed failing is onely a sinne of infirmitie for which God doth pity you and will spare you as a father doth his sonne that serveth him But not to pray at all is a grosse sinne of wilfull negligence which God hateth and will severely punish Wherefore whatsoever your indisposition be and whatsoever your former failings and discouragements have beene you must breake through all lets know that you have the more need to pray setting about it in the power of Gods might sith that you have no power of your owne Psal 119.88 Psal 119.32 Psal 86.9 Do as David did pray to be quickened and to have your heart inlarged and that God would unite your heart to feare his name If there be truth of desire in your prayer then know that you are heard and accepted not for the goodnesse and worth of your prayer but for the goodnesse and merits of Christ Iesus by whom you offer up your prayers What though you know not how to pray Rom. 8.26.27 the Spirit of him who hath commanded you to pray will helpe your infirmitie and enable you to pray in such sort as God shall accept thereof in Christ Iesus And if you be so heavie and comfortlesse after prayer it is your fault proceeding from groundlesse doubts and false feares but yet no argument that you did not pray aright or that you were not heard much lesse that you should think you pray in vaine or that you had better not pray at all But so long as a doubt and scruple remaineth in my mind Quest whether I may pray or no is it not best for me not to pray till that scruple be removed for I must do nothing doubtingly nor against scruple of conscience Answ To this I answer this is but a delusion of the devill and a groundlesse fancie In things indifferent of which the Apostle speaketh a man must be fully perswaded in his owne minde Rom. 14.5.23 and he must not do a thing indifferent though lawfull in it selfe to be done so long as hee doubteth and doth make scruple of conscience thereabout whether it may be done or no and therefore he must with all singlenesse of heart use meanes by the truth of Gods word to informe his conscience But in things expresly commanded such as is this dutie of prayer in this case a man is not to hearken to any scruple which shall rise concerning the not performing of it but is violently to resist that scruple and to breake through it and to addresse himselfe to the dutie of prayer notwithstanding For whensoever scruples under pretence of conscience shall arise to trouble and hinder a man from performing a necessarie dutie When a man may do contrary to scruple of conscience such as prayer and the like it is lawfull to do contrary to such scruples for a scruple is nothing else but a groundlesse feare wherefore to do a thing commanded by God though it be done contrarie to this scruple is not to do it against conscience for there can be no tye of conscience against any of Gods Commandements Wherefore laying aside all carnall reasoning and objecting as also all scruples and doubting be you encouraged to bee frequent in prayer and that not onely because unspeakable good shall redound to your selfe thereby but out of conscience of dutie because it is the wil of God that you should pray unto him Pray in this manner or as Luk. 11.1 Say Our Father c. Note hence that Doct. 4 The Lords prayer is a prayer and may be used in this verie forme of words for a prayer Our Saviour else would not have said Say Our Father Luk. 11.1 Reason Whatsoever is requisite in prayer may be expressed in uttering the very words of this prayer And in them a man may make his requests knowne to God which to do is to pray Vse 1 This confuteth the rash and ungrounded opinion of those which because the Lords Prayer is a patterne of prayer therefore hold it unlawfull to use it for a prayer As if it might not be both a prayer and a pattern as indeed it is And why may it not as well as a Kings standard weights and measures which are patternes of all sorts of weights and measures of the kingdome by which all both small and great are to be made and examined yet no wise man will say those standards are not weights or will not use them but of all weights if he may will use them because they be perfect and by them he may make others of his owne If the Lords Prayer be a Vse 2 prayer to be used in that verie forme in which Christ hath left it Set prayers are lawfull then without question set prayers are lawfull and no man should make scruple thereat yea in private for this prayer may be said in the closet Mat. 6.6 Besides we have good
and left them in God hath commanded them to pray and so he may doe justly for in Adam they were able to performe it so that if they doe not pray they incurre Gods displeasure and cannot looke to receiue any thing in mercy and with a blessing from the Lord and if they doe pray their prayer is abhominable because they have not Gods Spirit neither can they offer their prayers upon the Altar Christ Iesus by whom onely all prayers are accepted For all that are not indued with his spirit Rom. 8.9 are not his When these aske God regardeth it not Ob. The wicked notwithstanding are in Scripture oft said to pray Answ This is because they utter words of prayer and because sometimes they are heartie and earnest in their desires but these desires are lonely naturall and out of selfe-serving no service of God in his account Ob. If it be said the wicked have had their prayers granted Sol. I answer God heareth prayers two waies in mercy and in wrath Hee may replenish their table whith may bee to them a snare and hee can give them prosperity which will be their ruine Hee giveth it to them many times in wrath as he gave a King to the children of Israel Thus they may see Hos 13.10 that whether they pray or not their case is wofull because they cannot in faith say Our Father Are wicked men then Quest exempted from this duty of prayer By no meanes Answ for prayer is a worship and service of God required in the Commandements and is a duty implanted in nature Were it not better for wicked men not to pray at all Quest sith as hath beene said they cannot pray acceptably and that their prayers are abhominable No for their not praying at all Answ is a greater sinne then to pray in an ill manner All the faults concerning prayer may in a sort be charged upon him that prayeth not at all for hee neither prayeth to the true God nor prayeth good matter nor in a good manner c. A wicked man though he faile much in prayer yet not so much as when hee prayeth not at all It is the note of an Atheist not to pray at all Psal 14.4 Quest What are they to doe doth God cast them upon a necessity of sinne Answ God forbid The wicked themselves while they continue in sinne have put themselves into this straight But there is a way to help all namely to doe as Saint Peter did counsell Simon Magus Act. 8.22 saying repent of this thy wickednesse and pray first repent then pray Isai 1.13.15.16.18 Thus saith God to those for whose wickednesse he said that their incense was an abhomination and that hee would not heare their prayers Wash you make you cleane c. then come and let us reason together c. then come and pray No man then is put upon a necessity of sinne Let the most wicked man in the world be convinced of his sinne let him repent thereof and confesse it let him beleeve in Christ who came into the world to save sinners then he is qualified for prayer and shall be accepted of God when he doth pray Are the prayers of men unregenerate of no use Quest are they not all accepted To this I answer Answ I doubt not but that the prayers of unregenerate men when they are from the heart may in some sort be acceptable so farre forth as thereby to obtaine many good things of God as health deliverance from evils threatned or already afflicted and such like For God that heareth the Ravens when they cry will much rather heare men when they cry though they be not his children But as the prayers of a true childe of God differeth from the prayers of him that is unregenerate so is the acceptance with God also different Their difference shall appeare thus Difference betweene the prayers of the wicked and godly and of their different acceptance First a true childe of God doth in prayer call God Father with faith and holy confidence with the affections of a childe For when hee asketh forgivenesse of his sinne it is with griefe that he hath by his sinne offended his Father and it is with an heartie purpose not to offend him againe Also when he prayeth for health liberty grace or for any other good thing it is with a desire that in the injoyment of them he may the better please and honour his heavenly Father But a wicked man calleth God Father onely for forme and in presumption and hee doth not pray unto him with a childelike but either with a servile affection as a malefactor before a Iudge 1 King 21.27 as Ahab did or with a carnall affection in his desire of the good gifts of God and the good things of this life that therewith he may like those reproved by Saint Iames imploy them for the satisfying of some or other of his lusts Iam. 4.3 Secondly the childe of God prayeth chiefly and most heartily for spirituall things as for faith for forgivenesse of sinnes for holinesse for Gods favour and for those things which concerne Gods kingdome and glory But the unregenerate man prayeth chiefly and most heartily for Corne and Wine for temporall things and it may be for heaven and happinesse with Balaam in generall wishes Numb 23.10 but not particularly and unfainedly for graces whereby he may forsake his beloved sin and may live holily unto the end of his dayes Thirdly the prayers of the godly when they are made in sinceritie are like all other their good workes they have a supernaturall goodnesse in them being the acts of the regenerate part through the spirit and are performed to a supernaturall end But the prayers of the wicked though in some things they are unfained yet at best they are but naturall desires not intended as a service of God but onely as a meanes to serve their own turnes in those things which they know can be obtained by no other meanes Now touching the acceptance of prayers with God Those which his children make though they be not without much imperfection yet because they be the prayers of men reconciled to God by Christ and doe proceed from hearts purified by faith and because they are put up in the name of Christ they become acceptable through him so farre as to procure not onely temporall good things but also such as are spirituall and eternall And these things they obtaine of God as from a loving Father and as a fruit of his speciall promise and out of his speciall grace and love to them in Christ Iesus As for the prayers of the wicked because God and his ordinance of prayer is thereby in some part honoured they are in some part accepted so farre that many times they procure temporall good things but it is onely temporall good things such as are common to the elect and reprobate which hee giveth to them not as a loving Father
but as a rich and bountifull Lord to his creature making his Sunne to rise on the evill and good Mat. 5.45 and sending the raine as well upon the unjust as upon the just These things God in his wise providence bestoweth upon wicked men knowing how to make use of them in humane society both in Church and Common-weale winning thereby to himselfe the glory of his patience and bounty drawing some to an admiration of his goodnesse leading some to repentance and leaving others without excuse at the day of iudgement Vse 2 Would any bee capable of making use of this invaluable benefit of praying acceptably unto God be they exhorted first to use all such meanes as God hath appointed by which they may be made the children of God by faith in Christ Iesus Gal. 3.26 Rom. 10.14.17 as hearing the word preached prayer c. then they must get good evidence that they are in state of grace and then be exhorted to come as children ought to come into the presence of so holy a Father putting off every sinne that may offend him putting on every grace that may delight him regard not iniquity in your heart cleanse your hearts and wash your hands in innocencie lift up pure hands without doubting pray in humilitie for with such sacrifice your Father is well pleased he will not despise such for God hath promised saying If my people that are called by my Name Psal 51 17 shall humble themselves and pray and seeke my face and turne from their wicked wayes then will I heare from heaven and will forgive their sinne and will heale their land 2 Chron. 7.14 Vse 3 All that with good assurance of faith can call God their Father may rejoyce in this that they are of the number of those who may improve this priviledge of praying unto God they are sure if they come not in their sinnes to speed For Iohn saith Whatsoeuer we aske we that is the children of God receive of him because we keepe his commandements and doe those things that are pleasing in his sight 1 Ioh. 3.22 Our doth note also that communion which Christians have one with another in one Father therefore even when they were to pray to God in the closet they were to represent God to their mindes in a notion which hath reference to their brethren as well as to themselves whence wee may collect Doct. All that would pray acceptably must hold a communion and good agreement with their brethren as those that have one common father to them all If a man had not beene in charitie with his brother and held not good agreement with him he was not to offer his sacrifice untill he had reconciled himselfe to his brother Mat. 5.33 The Apostle requireth that men lift up holy hands without wrath 1. Tim. 2.8 Therefore Peter would have all love exercised betweene man and wife that their prayers be not hindered 1. Pet. 3.7 For this common interest Reason 1 which Christians have in God maketh them neare of bloud as we speake having all one Spirit one hope one Lord one faith one Baptisme one God and Father of all Ephes 4.4 5 6. If men do not hold peace Reason 2 and communion with their brethren they cannot come in assurance that they themselves are Gods children for by their love to their brethren they may know whether they be beloved of God or no and may assure their hearts that their prayers shall be heard 1. Ioh 3 19.22 If they love not their brethren they remaine in death 1. Iohn 3.14 Vse 1 Here all proud scornful persons that because of parentage wit wealth or some such complement of nature do disdaine their poorer and meaner brethren may see how much they forget themselves have they not one Father if God be their Father The Prophet Malachy reproveth those which deale not well with their brethren Mal. 2.10 saying Have we not all one Father There are too many of this sort which will hypocritically say Our Father and yet scorne to have any communion with his children Yea the more they approve themselves to be Gods by holinesse of life the more they hate them and reproachfully use them and wish all evil unto them If these thinke they have God to their Father they must know that as the Apostle Iohn speaketh they are liers 1. Ioh. 4.20 because they love not their brethren What may be thought of those tongues that can blesse God and call him Father and yet curse and raile upon those which beare the true image of the same Father These things ought not so to be my brethrē saith Iames 3.9 10. Hereby all that call God Father Vse 2 should enforce upon thēselves the dutie of love and friendship to their neighbours holding with them the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace Ephes 4.3.4.5.6 because the whole bodie is but one the Spirit one c. and one Father of all we must endeavour therefore to bee one in judgement and one in affection that there be no schismes and divisions amongst us Let us love heartily without putting difference in respect of persons for which fault the Iewes are blamed by Iames Iam. 2.4.1 Cor. 11.22.30 and the Corinthians were severely punished by the Lord. Wherefore whensoever we come to God let us come in love to our brethren For how can we looke our Father in the face and expect good things at his hand when he knoweth that there are jarres and falling out betweene us and his other children our brethren Father which art in heaven I will first consider the whole description of him that is to be prayed unto and then come to the severall parts thereof This description can be true of none but of God We have fathers on earth and friends in heaven but no father in heaven or heavenly father but the true God It followeth therefore Prayer is to be made to the Doct. 3 true God And because prayer is a religious worship which must bee given to none but God I adde this Prayer is to be made onely to God Offer to God thanksgiving and Call upon me in the day of trouble saith God Psal 50.14 15. The Angell which had the everlasting Gospell to preach to them that were on the earth who went before the Angel which foretold the fall of Poperie saith Feare God c. and worship him that made heaven and earth Revel 14.7 Our Saviour saith expresly Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God and him onely shalt thou serve Mat. 4.10 He to whom prayer may be made Reason must have those all-sufficiencies which are to be found onely in the eternal and infinite God First he must be able to heare all men therfore Iames biddeth us aske of God Iam 1.5 that giveth to all men He must be able to give all things 1. Ioh. 5.14 If we aske any thing according to his will he heareth us He must be able to
knowledge and care of them above the knowledge and care that Abraham could have of them saying Isa 63.15.16 Doubtlesse thou art our Father though Abraham bee ignorant of us c. Thou ô Lord art our Father our Redeemer thy Name is frō everlasting The Apostle calleth him King eternal 1. Tim. 1.17 immortall invisible only wise God And he doth call Christ who is one with the Father Blessed and onely Potentate the King of kings Lord of lords 1. Tim 6.15.16 who onely hath immortality dwelling in the light which no man can approach unto that is in heaven to whom be glory and power everlasting These places shew plainly that Gods being in heaven doth set out his purenesse of being his soveraigntie his infinite power goodnesse omniscience truth mercie justice and all other his infinite excellencies His dwelling in heaven Reason and declaration of his power from thence both by his word and works of creation preservation and redemption of man do prove that he is God and in these works his majesty power and all other excellencies of God are written in such great letters that any one may runne and reade them How can any thinke of this Vse 1 God and not be ravisht in his soule with a most high admiration of his glorious and most excellent heavenly majestie Likewise it should cause al men to reverence feare love and obey this Almighty this infinitely good and glorious God whose throne is in heaven who is our heavenly Father Also it should cause us to the utmost of our power whensoever we draw neare to him in any of his ordinances to come in sort beseeming his holy and heavenly majestie putting off all earthly mindednesse and putting on of heavenlinesse lifting up our hearts to God in the highest heavens How doth this discover the Vse 2 sinfulnesse of those that call Gods omniscience providence and power or any other his attributes into question as they in the Psalme saying Psal 94.7 The Lord shall not see c. And as those that said Psal 78.19 Can God furnish a table in the wildernesse c. Can he give bread Can he provide flesh for his people The Psalmist calleth these brutish men and foolish and the Lord did shew that he could send them bread and flesh Psa 105.15 Num. 11.33 and withall leannesse into their soules so that they were not better but worse by it And he could furnish a table and also while the meat was in their mouthes he could in his wrath smite the fattest of them Psal 78.31 Make no question therefore what God can do for he can do any thing but this one to deny himselfe and ceasse to be infinite this he cannot do Vse 3 How terrible should the apprehension of Gods heavenly majestie be to all that live in any knowne sinne willingly For they live in the hatred and displeasure of him who shall send his Sonne in the glory of his majestie Mat. 16.27 who shall come in flaming fire to execute vengeance upon all those that know not God 2. Thes 1.8 and obey not the Gospell Mat. 10.28 who is able to destroy both body and soule in hell fire Vse 4 The consideration of the heavenly majestie omnipotencie and all the other most excellent attributes of God as also the consideration of heaven the place of his speciall habitation doth teach us many lessons concerning prayer First that we should not be rash with our mouthes or our hearts hastie to utter any thing before God Eccles 5.2 For God is in heaven we upon earth saith Solomon A man therefore must be considerate and well prepared before he speake unto him according as I have shewed at large page 30. Secondly this invisibility and incomprehensiblenesse of God our heavenly Father doth teach us that he is not imaginable so as to be likened to any visible thing Wherefore he that prayeth must not represent God not so much as in his thought and phantasie much lesse to his eye in the likenesse of a man or of any other creature The Orthodoxe Christians in all times have beene opposite to the making of any image of God the Father Sonne and holy Ghost either severally or of the Trinitie joyntly but especially to the setting up of any image of God in any place where God was to be worshipped knowing that the beholding of the image doth readily and unavoidably beget a false and carnall conceit of God misleading the imagination turning God into an idoll Rom. 1.23 changing the glory of the incomprehensible and incorruptible God into the image of a finite and corruptible man For indeed by reason of mans pronenesse to idolatry and of Satans deceiveable cunning suggestions and instigations as also for that an image cannot possibly set forth the incomprehensible Being and glory of God but yet leaveth a strong impression that God is present in the image and that he is like unto it therefore it is impossible for any man to represent God to himselfe by an image though it be but to put him in remembrance of God but that he shall quickly become an idolater According to the doctrine of our Church namely Idolatry is to images Hom. Tom. 2. pag. 4● especially in Churches an inseparable accident God saith that the children of Israel saw no manner of similitude on the day that he spake to them in Horeb Deut. 4.15 16. c. out of the midst of the fire Isa 40.18 And to whom will you liken God or what likenesse will you compare unto him saith the Spirit by the Prophet Isaiah Wherefore when we pray we must not conceive of him in the likenesse of any thing but as an incomprehensible Spirit Father Sonne and holy Ghost from whom by whō through whom and to whom are all things God blessed for ever one alwayes to be admired and adored but not possible to bee delineated or comprehended by any imagination of man What though God did sometimes manifest his presence by things visible as to Moses in the burning bush Exod. 3.2 Exod. 24.15.16.17 and to the children of Israel in the cloud and in the likenesse of devouring fire Gen. 3.8 1. Sam. 3.4 1 Kin. 19.12 as also he did to Adam to Samuel and to Eliah by the sound of a voice And what though in a mentall vision God appeare as a majesticke * 1. King 22.19 judge sitting upon a throne in such appearances as might set forth to Micaiah Dan. 7.9 to Daniel and to Iohn Rev. 4.2 3 the soveraigntie eternity puritie severitie and all-sufficiencie of God And what though the holy Ghost descended upon Christ like a * Mat. 3.16 Act. 2.3 dove and upon the disciples in cloven tongues like fire These were onely acts of particular dispensation usefull for the present occasiōs but not to be patterns to set forth God thereby for our imitation For notwithstanding that God appeared in divers
humblenesse and submission of minde or griefe and contrition of heart for sinne or fervency or joy hope and confidence in God or the like The knees are bowed and the body prostrate to shew humble submission a sad countenance and teares serve to shew contrition lifting up eyes and hands expresse the lifting up the heart to God in the heavens in hope and confidence of a gracious hearing Salomon stretched out his hands to expresse his earnestnesse and fervency and the publican smote his breast and would not looke up to heaven that hee might signifie his sorrow and the sense of his unworthinesse In publique prayers a man must use such gestures as are prescribed by lawfull authority or if none bee prescribed such as are in common use in the particular Church in which hee doth live they being free from superstition The not observing this rule is the mother and nurse of much variance and sometimes of schismes in the Church of God In private prayer alone every man may use such gestures as his heart doth prompt unto him provided alwayes that they bee decent and beseeming the holy presence of God and the holy action in hand such as may stirre up and continue right affections in him and may also serve to expresse the right disposition of his heart when he prayeth If a man sit giving of thanks at his meat or at other times when hee prayeth being disabled that hee cannot kneele or stand up then for that sitting is not a gesture of reverence it is convenient that with i● hee expresse reverence and devotion in some other gesture or meanes such as is in use and may bee joyned with sitting I will end the answer to this case about gesture in prayer with these cautions That no man please himselfe in his greatest bodily devotion Cautions concerning● gestures in prayer when it is severed from inward truth and devotion of the heart as if God were well pleased with it for that is grosse hypocrisie When a man is disabled that hee cannot kneele or lift up his hands or performe other acts of holy reverence in prayer this must not discourage him nor yet breed a scruple in him whether hee may pray or whether his prayer shall be accepted for as I said gestures are not of the essence of prayer and it is truth in the inward parts which God loveth and accepteth And when a gesture cannot bee used but with paine to the body or to the endangering of health or distraction of the minde in prayer God requireth it not for gestures are then to be used when they do further Mat. 12.7 and not hinder the heart and spirit in Gods service And in this case God preferreth mercy before sacrifice The case touching the place of prayer Fiftly the consideration of Gods heavenly majesty and specialty of glorious residence in heaven doth teach us that prayer may bee made to God in all places all places here below are alike distant from heaven and God can heare as well in one place as in another Wherefore our Saviour breaking downe the partition wall which stood betweene Iew and Gentile saith Iohn 4.21.23 Neither in Ierusalem nor in that Mount as if they should bee more holy places than other should men worship the Father but the houre cometh and now is that the true worshippers should namely in all places worship him in spirit and in truth According to that of the Apostle I will that men pray every where 1 Tim. 2.8 lifting up pure hands without wrath or doubting But is not the Church a better place to pray in Quest and is not God more present there than elsewere and are not private prayers which are made there more acceptable to God than if they were made in other places I answere Answ Papists and popishly affected say so but without good ground But to resolve this case difference must be put between publique prayers and private In the time of the Gospell in the primitive Church while it was under cruell persecution any place agreed upon by the Ministers and people to assemble in for Gods publique worship was a publique place though it were a chamber in a private mans house for for a long time Christians had no other Churches Tertul. Apol cap 39. but common houses But when the Church was at peace houses were built of purpose and dedicated to God for his publique worship which therefore both in borrowed and in proper speech were well called Temples houses of God or Churches Places publique or private are in themselves alike holy and alike fit for prayer respectively namely the publique place for publique and the private place for private prayer For since the death of Christ all religious difference of place is taken away And Gods presence is not tied to one place more than to another Yet because Churches are set apart for Gods service in that respect they are to bee had in speciall esteeme and reverence so as to be wel and sufficiently maintained and repaired and kept comely with all such outward beautie and ornaments as are beseeming the pure worship of God Also they are to be resorted unto by all sorts diligently at times appointed for the publicke worship of God where all are to behave themselves reverently before the Lord And out of the case of necessitie these Churches are to bee imployed onely for religious uses Touching esteeme of Churches a meane must be kept betweene two extreames wee must not prophane them with Atheists nor yet superstitiously idolize them with the Papists When men are not necessarily hindered Churches are to be frequented where publicke prayers may be best made and are like to bee best heard not because the place it selfe hath more holinesse than any other but because God hath in special sort placed his name in those his holy ordinances which there are performed and is there present Mat. 18.20 according to his promise in speciall sort all the while that the congregation and people of God with whom we joyne in the Church are in the act of performance thereof The Apostle had the Church in such esteeme that from the holinesse thereof he endeavoureth to convince the Corinthians of the greater sinne 1. Cor. 11.22 saying Despise ye the Church of God but by Church he meaneth not the place of assembling but the congregation assembled Also it is better to pray in the assembly of the Church because there we have the helpe of the Minister and the examples of others devotions besides that there is an uniting of the desires of many unto God who delighteth in the joynt prayer of many in such assemblies As for private prayer private places not the publicke are fittest for them Therefore our Saviour warned his disciples that they should not like the Pharises make their private prayers in publicke places Mat 6.5.6 as in the Synagogues or corners of the streets but in private as in the closet c. If
can heare the one as well as the other How farre forth then is a man to use a voyce in prayer Quest Voyce is not of the essence of prayer Answ The case of using a voyce or no voyce in prayer therefore it is not alwayes needfull to be used as in short ejaculations and when a man is speechlesse or when he cannot bee so private that he may conveniently do it or when a man findeth that hee can keepe his minde alike earnestly attentive and rightly affected in prayer without voyce But a voyce is needfull both in publicke and private when a man is the mouth of others that joyne with him in prayer And when a man prayeth alone it is also fit and usefull For God hath made the tongue an apt instrument to expresse the meaning of the heart and with it also we ought to serve and glorifie God And voyce is a good helpe in prayer For a mans owne voyce is heard of himselfe and is reciprocall upon a mans selfe and serveth both to keepe the heart and thoughts from scattering keeping the heart more close to the present businesse and causing him the sooner to take himselfe in the manner and to checke himselfe when his thoughts do stragle As also the voyce serveth to stirre up to continue and to inflame the spirit and affections of him that prayeth But use speech in private prayer with these cautions Cautions touching using of voice in private prayer First you must not thinke that God heareth prayers the sooner or the rather because of speech Secondly that you do it not to be heard of men that it might bee knowne that you pray in private as well as in publicke Thirdly you are not to speak aloud in private prayer to the offence of those who are so neare that they cannot but heare you yet cannot joyne with you in your prayer This Doctrine yeeldeth also Vse 5 unto beleevers plenty of al heavenly comforts Our Father is in heaven therefore hee can heare in every place we need not tyre our selves in going on pilgrimage to any place to seek him for if we can but enter into our hearts lift them up to heaven we shall finde him He also knoweth all things which we need Mat. 6.32 1. Sam. 14. It is not hard for him to helpe with little or no earthly power He is wisedome and knoweth perfectly what is best and when it is best to helpe his children Many parents would do their children good but either want wisedome know not how or want power and are not able But God is both able and knoweth how and he will do his children good for his love to them is more than naturall it is an heavenly therefore an infinite and everlasting love He hath promised never to leave us now his truth is an heavenly perfect truth it cannot be falsified It is not hardnesse of our hearts nor multitude or greatnesse of our sinnes can hinder our happinesse if we will not wilfully reject his grace through our unbeleefe if we will repaire to him and repose our trust in him For as the Apostle saith Rom. 11.23 He is able to graft in againe the hard hearted Iews he can pardon ten thousand talents as wel as one peny and can as easily say Mat. 9.2.5 All sinnes are forgiven as to say Rise and walke Mic. 7.18.19 We can say Our Father is an heavenly Father and who is a God like our God that pardoneth iniquity transgression and sinne that subdueth all our iniquities and will cast all our sinnes into the depth of the sea It is not with God as with man man cannot helpe all his children at once God can be they never so many and never so farre distant Earthly parents may be drawn drie when they have given portions and inheritances to many they have none for the rest as Isaac when he had blessed Iacob Gen. 27.36.38 he had no such blessing for Esau so that hee cryed Hast thou but one blessing O my father God hath mansions and a kingdome for every one of his Ioh. 14.2 his custome is not that one sonne or that sonnes onely should inherit his kingdome but both sonnes and daughters do all of them inherit for our Father is an heavenly Father Also this consideration of the heavenly majestie and power of God added to the consideration of his fatherhood doth give us assurance of hope that we shall have all the petitions which we aske according to his will For as he is almightie hee can do whatsoever he is willing to do as he is a Father Lastly is our Father an heavenly Father then wee can assure our selves that hereafter we shall in our measure partake of his heaven and of his holines and of his glory For after death when we awake we shall bee received into heaven where we shall ever be with the Lord and be filled with his likenesse Psal 17.15 and hee who now by his heavenly wisedome doth guide us with his counsell shall receive us into glorie where we shall see him as he is and ever remaine in his presence where are pleasures for evermore For as we have borne the image of the earthy 1. Cor. 15.49 wee shall also beare the image of the heavenly Of this we need not doubt for our Father is heavenly therefore the children must needs be heavenly Thus much of the Invocation and calling upon him to whom onely prayer may bee made The petitions follow The petitions do contain the matter of all lawfull requests They may be divided differently according unto such different respects as may be conceived of them First if wee respect the number there are sixe distinct petitions and no more I confesse Divines of good antiquity have reckoned seven making two of the last others of no lesse authority have not regarded the number at all Some of the ancient and most of the orthodox later Writers have reckoned but six and as I thinke upon good ground All agree in the five first all the question is about the sixth whether it bee one or two Now because the subject of both sentences in that petition is all one scil sanctification and the conjunction but knitteth Lead us not into temptation and deliver us from evill together into one sentence it is more than probable that is but one petition But whether there be six or seven it is no matter of our faith and doth not deserve any heat of disputation to decide the controversie Secondly if we respect the different persons whom the matter of the petitions concern they are thus divided the three first concerne God only for we say Thy Name thy kingdome thy will c. The three last concern man for wee say Our bread our sinnes lead us not deliver us Thirdly if wee respect that which ought to bee the chiefe end of every mans desire and the meanes to compasse the said end they have this order and are
thus divided Summum bonum the first expresseth the desire of the chiefe good scil the glory of Gods name in the first petition Hallowed be thy Name the means whereby his Name is hallowed and glorified are the matter of all the rest delivered in a most heavenly order Gods Name cannot bee hallowed if hee doe not make his holy Name known by erecting his kingdome therefore the comming of his kingdome is the matter of the second petition And because his kingdome is not made manifest and his Name is not acknowledged to be holy and glory is not given unto him untill his will bee unfainedly obeyed therefore thy will be done is the matter of the third petition Now because no man can do the will of God upon earth except God sustain him on earth therefore daily support from God is prayed for and is the matter of the fourth petition And when a man hath all comfortable supplies for this naturall life yet if he bee not in Gods favour and be reconciled unto God he neither hath will nor power to glorifie God nor can bee accepted in any thing he doth therefore forgivenesse of sinnes and justification before God is the matter of the fift petition Lastly though a man have his sinnes past pardoned and he be justified he cannot do Gods will nor declare that the kingdome of God is come to him nor any way hallow his Name if he have not grace and power against sinne therefore the sanctification of the whole man is prayed for which is the matter of the last petition This is the holy order and subordination of the petitions Fourthly the different manner of propounding the petitions cause a different acception of them some are petitions properly so called when the good things asked are expressed and the evill prayed against is understood as in the foure first petitions some are deprecations when the evill prayed against is expressed and the good prayed for is understood as in the two last petitions The first petition is Hallowed be thy Name here it must bee considered what is meant by Name the object of hallowing then what hallow signifieth Name hath reference to God and it signifieth God himselfe scil the person named Also all such names and titles of God his attibutes actions ordinances and all things which have any speciall print of Gods holinesse stamped upon them are Gods name because by them he is knowne as men are by their names The word thy appropriateth the hallowing of the name unto him who is before named and described in the invocation opposing and preferring Gods name to the name of man or Angell or of any other creature To hallow is either to make a thing holy which was common or prophane or to declare and acknowledge and use holily some thing which is holy already Hallow must not bee taken in the first sense scil to make a thing holy for God and his Name alwayes was is and for ever shall be of it selfe most holy But to hallow Isa 29.23 here signifieth thus much to conceive and acknowledge with the heart and to declare with the tongue and life that God and his Name is holy and to bee respected and used as most holy in like sense as Wisdome is said to bee justified of her children Mat. 11.19 that is declared and respected as wisdome ought to bee respected For to hallow a thing is to respect and use it according to the holinesse thereof Prophaning Gods name is contrary to the hallowing of it The aime of our Saviour is that God may bee set up in mens hearts and may bee glorified and acknowledged in the world For this cause hee maketh choice of the most apt word that could be invented for hallowing leadeth vs to a consideration of Gods holinesse which is the glory of all other his attributes and includeth the cause why he should be glorified and therefore is a word of larger extent than magnified or glorified for the one doth but point out the glory of his greatnesse the other doth not expresse the cause why hee should bee glorified both which hallowed doth For holinesse is that rectitude in God and freedome from all impurenesse and from all shadow of imperfection or sinne which is the excellency and perfection of all other things that are in God and to speake with holy reverence of his Majesty the other attributes of God could not be commendable in God if they were not all infinitely holy His soveraignty would be tyranny his justice would bee cruelty his mercy would be foolish pity his wisdome would bee craft and subtilty if his greatnesse justice mercy and wisdome were not infinitely holy The like may be said of his other attributes For we see in creatures as in the Deuill and sinfull men the more strength and wisdome and skill they have the more mischievous they be because they want holinesse to use these gifts aright Wherefore in saying Hallowed be thy Name we desire that the excellency of his Godhead may be acknowledged as there is due cause according as they sing in the Song of the Lambe Rev. 15.4 Who shall not feare hee O Lord and glorifie thy Name for thou onely art holy Isa 64.2 This word Hallowed is set downe impersonally in such a forme of signification as includeth all persons or things which are capable of setting forth and acknowledging his holinesse As Let thy Name be hallowed by Thee so saith Christ Father glorifie thy Name Ioh. 12.28 and make Me to hallow thy Name in acknowledging thy holinesse and let all others acknowledge thee to be holy and to be the onely true God 1 King 18 36. Thus Elias prayed Let it be knowne this day that thou art God in Israel And God saith when hee will magnifie and sanctifie himselfe Ezech 38.23 I will be knowne in the eyes of many nations and they shall know that I am the Lord. The petition being thus opened we may expresse it in these or the like words Holy Father whose Name is holy to thee therefore all glory doth belong Lord glorifie thy selfe make it knowne that thou onely art God deserving all praises make me and all men to acknowledge thee onely to be God and our God and that of perfect excellencie according as thy Name in thy titles word and workes doe set thee forth And let thy Name Psal 111.9 which is holy and reverend be so honoured that so farre as any person or thing hath upon it any print of thy holinesse it be honoured and respected accordingly And farre be it from me or any man to deny thee in whole or in part or give any of that glory which is due to thee to any person or thing whatsoever or to prophane any thing whereupon any footsteps of thy holinesse is imprinted Hallowed be thy Name If it be observed that to desire that Gods Name should be glorified is the subject of this petition and that Christ hath set
by beleeving a man doth set to his seale that God is true 4 By fearing him So saith the Prophet 1. Pet. 3 1● Sanctifie the Lord of hasts himselfe let him be your feare and let him be your dread Isaiah 8.13 5 Also by loving him trusting in him and zeale for him for there is the same reason that all the affections of the heart should be for him as well as any one Iob 1.21 6 By confessing with the mouth that he is just in all his judgements so doth Daniel saying Dan. 9.14 The Lord our God is righteous in all the workes that he doth for we obeyed not his voyce Iosh 7.19 Thus Achan is bid to give glory unto the Lord. 7 Also by acknowledging his mercie goodnesse power Rom. 15.6 Rev. 19.7 c. in praises and thanksgiving He that offereth praise glorifieth me saith God Psal 50.23 8 By contending for God and his truth Isa 59.4 9 By ordering the conversation aright both in doing and suffering Herein Ioh. 1● 8 saith our Saviour is my Father glorified that ye beare much fruit Therefore he exhorteth his disciples unto good works that as lights they may shine before men and glorifie their Father which is in heaven Mat. 5 16. Philip. 1. And Paul was assured Christ should bee magnified in his bodie whether by life or by death And Peter was foretold by what death he should glorifie God Ioh. 20.19 10 Lastly by regarding his holinesse in his titles word and holy ordinances in his holy day the Sabbath and in his children whom he hath made to be an holy people In all these our estimation and speech of them our carriage towards them and use of them must be with speciall respect to God whose holinesse they carrie upon them alwayes putting difference betweene these things and all other which have not the like respect of holinesse Though we cannot in all these hallow Gods name as wee would yet wee must endeavour it that we may be able with the Church to say The desire of our soule is to thy name Now we know the particulars let us give God glory every way and let us make it the end of our life Motiv●s to hallow Gods Name to know and acknowledge him to be holy It is Gods right as you have heard we were created and redeemed to that end and wee have examples of the best David saith he would speake the praises of the Lord and saith Let all flesh blesse his holy Name for ever and ever Psal 145.21 Christ Iesus hath gone before us in seeking his Fathers honour and not his owne It was Ioabs praise so to order the battell 2 Sam. 12.28 that his Lord and king might have the glorie of the day and not himselfe Ought not all Gods subjects to respect their God more than he did or could respect his king Excellently spake Ioseph that the honour of interpreting dreames might not be given to him It is not in me Gen. 41.16 God shall give Pharaoh an answer of peace In like manner Daniel would not assume to himself the power of revealing secrets but saith Dan 2.26.28 There is a God which ye●●alleth secrets The Apostle Iohn when he was in the Spirit heard everie creature which is in heaven and on the earth and such as are in the sea saying Blessing honour glory Rev. 5.13 and power be unto him that sitteth upon the Throne and unto the Lambe for ever and ever These examples are for our learning so that we must alwayes say with the Psalmist Psal 115.1 Not unto us O Lord not unto us but unto thy Name give glorie If God be glorified by us Ioh 13.32 he also will glorifie us Them that honour me I will honour 1. Sam. 2.30 saith God Thus it may be learned what are the desires and endeavours to which the first petition doth leade us Before I passe to the second one thing must be observed from Christs choice of the word hallowed rather than any other Hallowed When Christ would signifie that God was to be esteemed acknowledged with the absolutest honour that could be he saith hallowed that is let thy Name be known and acknowledged to bee holy Whence we may inferre that Doct. 2 Holinesse is the highest title of honour and glory that can belong to any person yea to the most high God As any person or thing is more holy so is it more honourable When the Seraphins would give God the greatest honour and glory they crie Holy holy Isa 6.3 holy is the Lord of hosts The foure living creatures say Holy holy holy Rev. 4.8 Lord God almighty It was the honour of Ierusalem to be an holy Citie It is the glorie of the third heaven to be the high and holy place Isa 57.15 As men were more holy Psal 16.3 so did David count them more excellent For such whom hee calleth Saints he also calleth excellent And when Christ Iesus will present his Church unto himself a glorious Church he will sanctifie it Eph 5.26.27 Reason and present it holy and without blemish Because holinesse in God is the rectitude and perfection of his power mercie justice and all other his attributes which if they were not all holy could not be good much lesse goodnesse neither could he be God if he were not holy yea holinesse it selfe And as for other things the more they partake of holinesse the more like they are to God and are therfore the more glorious Man at the first was therefore most glorious of all creatures here below because hee was made according to Gods image most holy Vse 1 If holinesse be the highest most honourable title that can bee given then most blasphemous are the Pope and Papists the one for taking to himselfe the other for giving to him a prophane beast and impure Antichrist the title of holinesse in the abstract For the title of holinesse cannot simply be given to any but to God without blasphemie Vse 2 Hereby wee may learne whom to esteeme most honourable most excellent and most worthy our love and goodnes not the most witty most wealthie most beautifull or most noble by birth but as any man is more holy so is he to be held and regarded as most truly honourable Which being so the proud sinfull world erreth foulely in counting themselves the onely men of worth and esteeming the holy ones of God to be base and of no reckoning If to be holy be so honourable and glorious this must perswade Vse 3 men to follow after holinesse Heb. 12.14 Honour is the sharpest spurre to pricke men forward unto any action let it force us upon this of seeking to bee renewed after God in righteousnesse and true holines Be holy Lev. 19.2 saith God for I the Lord your God am holy No honour like this of being an holy man a chosen generation an holy nation
by that first promise made to Adam that the seede of the woman should breake the head of the Serpent Gen 3.15 from that time it hath beene by Christ administred For though he were not actually incarnate and made man much lesse did he dye and rise againe Gal. 4 4. untill the fulnesse of time in the latter end of the world in the severall times appointed thereunto yet in Gods purpose and appointment as also in Gods promises and to the faith of Adam Abel Enock Noah Abraham and of the rest of the Patriarkes and beleevers the incarnation death resurrection and dominion of Christ had a being and was as effectuall to them that then beleeved in the Messias to be incarnate c. as they now are to any that beleeve in him now after that he is indeed incarnate c. For as the holy Ghost saith Rev 13.8 Christ was a Lambe slaine from the foundation of the world so he may be said to have taken flesh and to have risen againe c. from the foundation of the world Therefore hee saith Ioh. 8.58 Ioh. 8.56 Before Abraham was I am and Abraham was glad to see my day and hee saw it that is he saw him in the promise by the eye of his faith made man Heb. 11.13 dead and risen againe and sitting upon his throne as King governing all things So did David when he said Psal 110.1 The Lord that is God the Father said unto my Lord that is to God the Sonne who was to bee made man Sit thou at my right hand untill I make thine enemies thy footstoole Heb. 13 8. For Christ Iesus is the same yesterday and to day and for ever Thus our Saviour Christ was then Act. 10.36 and is now King Lord of all raigning by his power and working effectually by his spirit in the first times in the ministery of the Patriarches Prophets and Priests as he now in the latter times hath done doth in the ministery of the Apostles and ordinary Ministers both for the gathering and saving of his Church as also for the restraint and destruction of his enemies That the manhood of Christ should in the fulnesse of time Psal 2.6.7 Isa 9 6.7 Psal 110.1 be taken into the partnership of this government designed to the second Person as Mediatour the Prophets before Christ came in the flesh did clearely foretell our Saviour himselfe before his death told the Iewes that the Father judgeth no man but hath committed all judgement to the Sonne Ioh. 5.22 and hath given him authority to execute judgement because hee is the sonne of man that is by an excellency that sonne of man Ioh 5.27 who was ordained to be Immanuell God with us This sonne of man our Saviour who is God blessed for ever had his more solemne investitute and inauguration into this his absolute governement given him of God presētly after that he had for the glory of his Father in the redemption of mankinde humbled himselfe unto the cursed death of the Crosse bearing his Fathers indignation to the full satisfying of his justice for the sinnes of all in whose stead he stood who should beleeve in him which was after that by his death he rising from the dead had destroyed him that had the power of death H●b 2.14.15 that is the divell Of this more evident manifestation of Christs Kingship it is that hee himselfe spake to his Disciples when he said All power is given me in heaven and in earth Mat. 28.18 And of this exaltation it is of which the Apostle speaketh saying Phil. 2.9.10.11 Wherefore God also hath highly exalted him and given him a name above every name that in the name of Iesus that is that to the power and soveraignty of Iesus Christ Isa 45.23 now manifested to be Lord all should bee subject for to him every knee should bow Rom 14.11 of things in heaven in earth and under the earth and every tongue should confesse that Iesus Christ is Lord to the glory of God the Father He is therefore said to have on his vesture and on his thigh a name written Rev. 19.16 KING OF KINGS AND LORD OF LORDS By vertue of this exaltation and dominion it is that triumphing over his enemies he ascended up on high Col 2.15 Eph. 4.8.11 12 13. and led captivity captive and gave gifts to men that is to those his officers which under him should erect and perfect his kingdome of grace here upon earth namely He gave some Apostles and some Evangelists and some pastors and teachers for the perfecting of the Saints for the worke of the Ministrie for the edifying of the bodie of Christ till we all come into the unity of the faith and of the knowledge of the Sonne of God unto a perfect man unto the measure of the stature of the fulnesse of Christ Christ Iesus being thus advanced it belongeth unto him to reigne as king untill he have perfected the salvation of all the elect and untill he have put all his enemies under his feet and have delivered up this kingdome to God even the Father This kingdome of Christ differs from all other kingdomes for though it be in the world and above all the kingdomes of the world yet it is not of the world Ioh. 18.36 it is a spirituall and heavenly kingdome bearing rule in and over the soules and consciences of men It is directly opposite to the kingdome of darknesse and of the devill the prince of this world for by his agents through his ordinances by the power of his Spirit 2. Cor 10.4.5.6 he pulleth downe strong holds casting downe imaginations and every high thing that exalteth it selfe against the knowledge of God and bringing into captivitie everie thought to the obedience of Christ having in a readinesse to avenge all disobedience when the obedience of his own subjects shall be fulfilled This kingdome of Christ is an everlasting kingdome Isa 9.7 Dan. 7.27 never to have end whether wee respect the subjects or king for at the last day all that were subject unto him in this world in the kingdome of grace shall in an holy and glorious subjection unto God reigne with him in the world to come in the kingdome of glory for evermore But this present administration and government of this kingdome by Christ as Mediatour is not everlasting for in the end of the world 1. Cor. 25.24 25. Christ shall deliver up the kingdome to God even the Father then the Sonne himselfe shall be subject to him that put all things under him 1. Cor. 15.28 that God may be all in all This giving up the kingdome is not a cessation of it but a delivering of it up to God to his immediate governing of it in a state more glorious than ever It causeth onely a cessation of that forme of government by Christ which was to
to be prayed against but not their persons except in the case following Thus David I pray thee 2 Sam. 15.31 turne the counsell of Achitophell into foolishnesse Act. 4.29 And the Apostles say Now Lord behold their threatnings Wee may therefore pray that God would restraine the malice and abate the power and defeate the plots of the adversaries but must not pray against their persons but love them for it may bee they doe belong to God as Paul did who was once a persecutor 3 The very persons of those which sinne unto death incurably may be prayed against I say not saith Iohn 1 Ioh. 5.19 that he shall pray for it And Paul wisheth that they were cut off that did trouble that Church Gal 5.12 David prayeth against the malicious enemies of Christ Psal 69.38 saying Let them be blotted out of the booke of the living and not be written with the righteous But this kind of sinners cannot be discerned by ordinary spirits this kinde of imprecation therefore must be left unto such spirits as was David's and the Apostles and must bee forborne of ordinary Christians except it be when the Church hath righly for evident and just cause cut men off by the curse of Anathema Maranatha not from the body of the Church onely but from the head Christ also as those deserve to be which are open malicious and inveterate Apostates 4 The persons of our enemies and persecutors though they doe what they can to hinder the Gospell are not to be prayed against For our Saviour prayed Father forgive them Luk. 23.34 they know not what they doe Steven said Act. 7.60 Lord lay not this sinne to their charge Yea wee are commanded to pray for them which despitefully use us Mat 5.44 and persecute us 5 Prayer may be made that God would sometimes inflict temporall judgments upon obstinate sinners but without limiting the Lord unto particulars so it be conditionally if their case require it and that it be in love to their soules and persons that they may be therby made to seeke God Thus David prayed Psal 83.16 Fill their faces with shame that they may seeke thy Name O Lord. 6 Lastly God must bee interessed in the cause else no man must be prayed against Gods dishonour not onely a mans private wrong must cause it It must proceed from holy zeale for God and not from passion and private spleene and desire of revenge These rules observed it may be knowne when and how a Christian may imprecate evill against his and Gods enemies and how and when he may not The last thing in the kingdome of grace for which praier must be made concernes the liberties and franchizes therof which are the very good commoditie Rom. 14.16 or livelihood of the subject which so farre as respects this life are freedome from the curse of the Law and dominion of sinne Rom. 6.11 a freedome in righteousnesse thence peace of conscience and joy in the holy Ghost of which the Apostle saith the kingdome of God doth consist scil In righteousnesse peace joy in the holy Ghost Rom. 14.17 The last thing of all which is considerable in this petition is the kingdome of glory Concerning which request must bee made that God would hasten it that Christ would overcome the last enemie 1 Cor. ●5 26 death and so put all enemies under his feet that he would come to judgement in his appointed time to magnifie himself in his just vengeance upon the wicked 2 Thes 1.8 1 Cor. 6.2 the Saints sitting upon them with him in judgement and that he would bestow perfect glory upon all the elect 2 Thes 1.10 whereby hee himselfe may be perfectly glorified in them at that day when also the forme of governing this kingdome by him as Mediator being determined he shall have delivered the kingdome up to the Father 1 Cor. 15.24.28 that God may be all in all to the glory of Father Sonne and holy Ghost for evermore Amen Amen Some of the particulars mentioned in this petition I doe confesse will come to be condered again in the fourth fifth and sixth petitions as the continuance of the course of nature magistracy peace of conscience and eternall glory likewise power against sinne and increase of grace yet the petitioner shall not therein tautologize or make vaine repetitions For here they are mentioned onely as meanes to set forth the glory of God in the comming of his kingdome that his Name may be hallowed but there they have respect to the good of man The Doctrine being thus inlarged the Vses will more easily follow First all such as desire not Vse 1 the comming of Gods kingdome according to the particulars before rehearsed are to be reproved As all that are enemies to civilitie and unto Schooles of learning who because of some abuse of them which will alwaies be of the best things thinke them needlesse All such as deny magistracie be they Familists or Anabaptists or any other for it is their great sinne All such magistrates themselves which turne the point of their authoritie against the Church or at best like Gallio Act. 38.17 care not which way it goe with it well or ill All idle or unfaithfull Ministers which in stead of directing Christs spouse unto him doe smite and wound her Can. 5.7 and shame her by taking her veile from her who in stead of feeding doe starve or poyson Christs flocke All Governours of the Church which make sad the heart of the righteous Ezek. 13.22 and make glad the hearts of the wicked which censure thrust out the good● and receive into the Church and hold in the bad In a word all that doe not beare good will to Sion which is indeed to be an enemy for in this case Hee that is not with us Mat. 1● 30 is against us saith Christ and hee that doth not gather scattereth Lastly if any be open persecutors of the truth or seducers and inticers from it all these may see in this Doctrine as in a large glasse their errors and foule blemishes But he which will say Goe ye cursed Mat. 25.41 42. to all that do not prove themselves to be his friends will have to reckon with all the enemies of his kingdome How many be there that hypocritically will say Thy kingdome come and yet use all meanes to hinder it and keepe it downe And if it came in any place it is the very burden and vexation of their soules Is not this most grosly to mock God But woe be to such Pharises hypocrites which will say to God our Father Thy kingdome come and yet will as much as they can hinder the passage or power of the Gospell of his kingdome Mat. 23 13 which will not enter themselves nor by their good will suffer those that would to enter in Be wise in time It is not safe to cast off or refuse the yoke
feet Is not the stomack benefited by cooking of meat for the rest of the members of the body We are members one of another This doing of good to our brethren is but lending to the Lord Pro. 19.17 and he will repay with advantage It is sowing in Gods ground 2. Cor. 9.6 which will recompence him that soweth with increase of an hundred fold at the harvest This is to make bagges which will hold Luk. 12.33 and to lay up treasure in heaven and to lay up in store for themselves a good foundation And we shall heare well of this another day 1. Tim. 6.19 when Christ Iesus at the day of judgement shall say Mat. 25.34.35.36 Come ye blessed of my Father inherite the kingdome prepared for you for I was an hungred and ye gave mee meat I was thirstie and ye gave me drinke I was a stranger and ye tooke me in naked and yee clothed me I was sicke and ye visited me I was in prison and ye came unto me Wherefore let us all do what in us lyeth to procure the welfare of our brethren Vse 4 The afflicted servants of God may reape much comfort from hence in all their bodily distresses for the whole familie of God on earth doth pray for them Wherefore God is well acquainted with their case and will assuredly help them in the best time If the prayers of one Isaac could take away barrennesse from Rebecca Gen 25.21 and the supplications of one Eliah who was also a man of infirmities a● Iam. 5.17.18 well as other holy men could remove a dearth and famine what cannot the fervent prayers of so many faithfull do which cry to their common Father day and night for them I know a discouraged heart by the sleights of Satan will sometimes turne this hony into gall saying If God did love me and if I were his childe sith I my selfe have prayed and as you say the Saints on earth do daily pray my crosse would have beene removed but my affliction abideth therefore sure I am not Gods childe I answer thou mayest be the childe of God he may love thee and may heare both thy owne and others prayers for thee and yet the affliction may still remaine For God never promised removall of crosses from his children but conditionally namely if it be good for him that is under the crosse to be delivered then he never faileth to deliver him but if it be good for him to be afflicted it shall remaine still Againe God hath no where told us the time when he will deliver his he knoweth the best times which he will never over-passe But let it be granted that thou never while thou livest have this or that particular crosse removed yet God heareth thee and them and your and their prayers are heard and returne not emptie For they do procure some measure of patience i● thee and contentment to sabmit thy self to thy Fathers correction They do also cause that the paines and crosses of the bodie and outward man shall turne to the good of the soal● 2. Cor. 4.16 and of the inward man to the renewing of it daily All things shall worke together for good Rom. 8.28 and God will assuredly give a good issue out of it in life or at death This day that is for this present day here therefore wee must observe The desires of temporall things are to be confined to the present day Our Saviour saith Take no Doct. 5 thought for the morrow Matth. 6.34 Who is sure to live untill to Reason 1 morrow may not the soule be taken away this night Luk. 12.20 God will have his children Reason 2 live by faith as well for the preservation of their bodies as for the salvation of their soules He will trie hereby whether they that say they depend upon him for the greater will trust him in the lesse God liketh to see and heare Reason 3 his children oft in his presence he hath therefore so ordered it that their necessarie occasions shall bring them before him day by day God looketh for new acknowledgement Reason 4 of his gifts everie day therefore will have that they shall have cause thereof by new gifts from him every day Reason 5 Because it is best for man that his maintenance should be in Gods custodie to be called for every day For if a man had his provision for many dayes in his own power God should cast off his care of him either he would lavish it out too fast or theeves might steale it or vermine devoure it or it might fennew and grow unfit for use and then he might starve But now that the Lord hath undertaken to maintaine us if any thing happen to that which man thought should have been his maintenance God will make it good he holdeth it best that his servants should have their food and other things needfull sweet and wholsome daily as they have need This reproveth all carking Vse 1 and caring for what shal I have hereafter and how shal I live and what shall become of mine another day when yet they cannot say but they have enough for this day Some are so fearefull and so full of vexing care that their hearts never have rest untill they can say they have much goods layd up for many yeares Luk. 12. ●0 and then are never a whit the better for it The true disciples of Christ are subject through weaknesse of faith to fall into this fault but they must be chidden out of it and must be warned of the mischiefes that attend this fearfulnesse and distrust in God for what they shall have hereafter It taketh away all sense and comfort of what they have in present it provoketh God to give over providing for them and to leave them to themselves to learne to know how little all their carking without God can availe them And if he suffer them to thrive in their course that they reserve much for time to come this overplus of estate thus gotten wil breed nothing but pride and trust in riches and many noysome lusts Even as the Manna Exod. 16.20 which contrary to the commandment of God was reserved to the morrow did breed wormes Provision thus gotten will stinke and putrifie and do the owner more harme than good when the rust thereof shall witnesse against them Iam. 5. that they have heaped up treasures together against the last dayes Vse 2 Hath any man convenient provision for the present then let him learne to be content 1. Tim. 6.8 and let him depend on God for the morrow Let us care onely for one thing which is everie day to do our Fathers works which he hath given us to do in our generall and particular calling and wee may assure our selves that such a Father will make provision for such children who if they need any thing they may make their requests knowne to him with thankes for what they have had
act in respect of the Father Son holy Ghost in the first act of Faith and conversion of a sinner whereby the person of a man stands justified before God and shall without intercision of justification and losse of this favour of God stand before the barre of Gods tribunall and is and alwaies shall be absolutely justified and acquitted from all sinnes past present to come because all obligations hand-writings against him are in that act cancelled and blotted out he forgiving all trespasses Colos 2.13.14 Yet it must be knowne that of this act there is as it were a double sentence First in Court of heaven at which time the elect in Christ have their names inrolled in the booke of Gods effectuall calling and are numbred among the just which sentence can never be revoked or blotted out this is that which was passed with God that I may so speake after the manner of men in the first act of conversion Secondly this sentence of forgivenesse is passed in the court of the conscience of him that had the former sentence pronounced for him in heaven This sentence is the second act of the holy Ghost wrought in this manner First after that a sinner is cōvinced of his guiltines of sin and of his damnable condition because of his sinne then forgivenesse is offered and pronounced to the eare in that gracious promise of salvation to all that beleeve in Christ Iesus which promise is proclaimed in the ministerie of the Gospell in which light of the Gospell he sheweth unto a man possibility of salvation setting before him I speake of men of yeeres and understanding Christ the meanes of salvation and by this meanes the holy Ghost worketh faith in Christ then confession and griefe for sinne then prayer to aske forgivenesse and grace to live godly and then doth witnesse to his spirit that he is accepted of God Thus sentence is pronounced in the conscience from whence ariseth sense of Gods love which is called the shedding abroad of the love of God in our hearts by the holy Ghost Rom. 5.5 also sense of the loving countenance of God Psal 4.6 7. which is the signe of his loving kindnesse and is that speech of God by which he doth say to our soules he is our salvation and then ariseth in our hearts peace of conscience and joy in the holy Ghost This sentence of forgivenesse unto the conscience hath different degrees it is sometimes more cleare in the apprehension of the soule somtimes more dimme yea sometimes quite blotted out in the counterpane of our release or copie of our acquittance as it was with David Psal 51. so that a person perfectly just before God hath sometime little or no sense or apprehension of it in his owne conscience but doubteth whether he be in state of grace or no. Which happeneth because of the staine and guilt of new sinnes which guilt abideth in the conscience untill a man do confesse his sinnes repent and aske forgivenesse and by a renewed faith apply forgivenes by which meanes the evidence of his pardon is againe by the holy Ghost exemplified and sentence by this new application is againe pronounced in his conscience whence ariseth new assurance of salvation and renewed joy in the holy Ghost This is that justification which for distinction sake Divines call justification by parts or continued or repeated justification or new application of one and the same justification which justification though in respect of the sentence pronounced in heaven is one individuall act whereby a man standeth alwayes just before God yet in respect of the pronouncing of that sentence to the heart it is not actually applyed neither can a particular sinne be said to be everie way actually forgiven untill after it have beene committed is confessed and repented of nor untill forgivenesse be asked and until the holy Ghost hath made new application thereof unto the conscience through renewing of faith by which a man doth againe and againe as new sinnes are committed apply the merits of the bloud of Christ unto his soule Also it must be knowne that the sentence of pardon which is passed in heaven with God is not fully executed untill the last degree of it when sentence of absolution shall be pronounced by Christ Iesus Come ye blessed of my Father inherite the kingdome prepared for you from the foundation of the world Matt. 25.34 It must moreover be conceived and held that notwithstanding this distinction of justification betweene an absolute justification in respect of God and a justification by parts in respect of application to mans conscience there are not two kindes of justification a first and a second as the Papists hold but one and the same justification considered in different respects In respect of Gods actuall acceptation of a mans person justification is absolute but in respect of the actuall application and manifestation of Gods acceptation unto a mans conscience justification is by parts and degrees When a man alreadie justified asketh forgivenesse he doth not ask a new justificatiō but a second or new application of pardon unto the conscience of those particular sinnes which are daily committed together with continuance of Gods favour and more cleare evidence that he is sealed up unto the day of redemption The third thing to be spoken of for the better understanding the word forgive concerneth the effects following the apprehension thereof these are Peace of conscience Rom 5.1 Ro. 14.17 and joy in the holy Ghost These things touching justification and remission of sinnes being opened we may understand what is prayed for when we say Forgive sinnes Wee pray first that those which belong unto Gods election but are not yet converted may be accepted of God through Christ Iesus God not imputing their sinnes to them but unto Christ whereby they are freed from the curse We pray likewise that Christs righteousnes may be imputed to them that they beleeving in Christ might bee saved and for that cause pray that they may beleeve Secondly wee pray that our selves and others being justified and accepted into favour it would please the Lord to continue this his favour and that he would signifie and make the same knowne to our hearts and consciences daily by a new testification of the holy Ghost accompanied with a new application of pardon for new sinnes daily committed and that wee may have more and more assurance of our perfect redemptiō at the day of judgement and that we may have peace of conscience and joy in the holy Ghost in the meane time The particular circumstances in this Petition come next to bee laid open which are three First the connexion of this Petition by this copulative and that is As well forgive sinnes as give daily bread The second is the person who is to forgive that is God the Father through the satisfaction and mediation of the Sonne by the application of the holy Ghost Thus much is implyed in forgive in which
prodigall sonne saying Father Luk. 15.18.19 I have sinned against heaven and against thee and am no more worthy to be called thy sonne Such was the confession of the honest Publican who with a dejected countenance and humble gesture said Be mercifull unto me a sinner Luk. 18.13 5 It must be entire and unpartiall one particular must leade to the confession of originall sinne so did David Psal 51.5 And from originall sinne wee must ascend to particular actual sinnes and as neare as we are able unto all particulars be they secret or open among which bee sure that thou conceale not those sinnes to which thou art most inclined yea thy best beloved sinnes especially 6 Lastly confession of sinnes must be made with full purpose and resolution of heart to forsake them Whosoever shall in this sort confesse their sinnes shall assuredly be forgiven For he that confesseth and forsaketh his sinnes shall have mercie Pro. 28.13 Debts Sins are called debts because of the resemblance they have to debts by forfeit for not keeping the condition of the obligation When● note Doct. 9 Sinnes do cast men into debt and into arrerages with God Those that are called sinnes 〈◊〉 Luk. 11.4 are here called deb● by Matthew And sinne is likened unto the debt of ten thousand talents Mat. 8.24 Sinne is a breach and forfeiture Reas 1 of that bond of obedience wherein man doth stand bound to God by the Law The consequences of sinne Reas 2 do argue it for when sinne is committed either paiment and satisfaction must bee made by the suretie Christ Iesus or else a man is lyable to the arrest of his own conscience and in certaine danger to be cast into the prison of hell untill hee have payd the utmost farthing that is for ever and ever This serveth to discover unto Vse 1 all sinfu● men that they are much in debt and in the state of bankrupts they are more in debt than themselves and all their friends they can make in this world can satisfie yet foolish men if they be so wealthie and withall so civilly honest as to owe no man any thing they are then proud and insult over their neighbours when yet they make no bones of any sin that may make for their pleasure profit or credit This doctrine doth give these foolish ones to understand that there is a debt of love to be payd to their neighbour and a greater debt of love and obedience to God which debt they must pay or else if it be not answered for they do forfeit their bodies and soules to the wrath of God to be tormented in flames of brimstone for ever Wherefore I wish all such to consider they are farre in debt it may be not of money but in a debt which is ten thousand times worse they are in debt to Go● into whose hands of justice it is a most fearfull thing to fall Heb. 10.31 If they were in debt to man it may be they have or may have wherewith to pay it or might by bribes or favour or cunning de vices or by hiding themselves or by running away or lastly by death quit themselves of their adversaries But this debt of sinne no man can pay for what shall a man give for exchange for his soule Mat. 16.26 What is the whole world to it it cannot buy out one soule Here is no shifting of the arrest of conscience sooner or later it will serve them with a writ to appeare and answer at the great Assises before Gods judgment seat there is no hiding of themselves though they call to the mountaines to cover them there is no running away Rev 6.16 Luk 23.30 Psal 139.7 for whither can they runne from Gods presence And whereas death freeth other debters this debt into which sinne hath cast them is most called for and most terrible after death when within a little while they must come to judgement where Gods justice is so exact and infinite that every particular sin with every aggravation thereof must be put into the inditement and into the plea and be proved against them then hee must passe sentence against them and then except it can be pleaded for them that Christ Iesus hath satisfied for them and unlesse they can shew an acquittance sealed by the Spirit of God in their life time before their death which seale leaveth alwaies an impression of holinesse in him that is sealed if they cannot doe this the exe●tion of eternall damnation is served upon them Oh fear● execution and oh miserable men that are in continuall da●ger of it yet make no care 〈◊〉 prevent it Vse 2 This should stop the mouth● of those that scoffe at such 〈◊〉 feare God for being so 〈◊〉 and so nice as they will ca● 〈◊〉 because they tye themselves so strictly to heare every Sermon which they can with any convenience and because they will not let a day passe without prayer nor will eate a meale but with prayer before and thankes after meate they will not sweare an oath nor runne to Wakes and dancing on the Sabboth day they will not drinke with good company as they call themselves nor be familiar with those that are not so precise as themselves for this they count them fooles and call them Puritans and any thing that may disgrace them This Doctrine giveth these scoffers to know that if these should not doe the things for which they twit them they should runne into the debt before spoken of and what though the omission of some things they doe be but a small sinne as they will account it yet many of these will make a great debt besides the least debt without forgivenesse will damne a man These men therfore might be wiser and should forbeare their scoffes and it were much safer for them to doe as the strictest Christians doe Vse 3 This putteth an apology into the mouthes of those who are excepted against for their precisenesse Are those things ye doe commanded and are the things you forbeare forbidden in the word of God you must looke to that then you have to answer your conscience and all that shall except against you and may say sinne 〈◊〉 a debt you are loath nay you dare not come into that debt which may forfeit your right and comfort in God and may cost you the losse of your soules If this answer may not be taken it is because they want grace true wisedome But howsoever let this comfort and confirme your owne hearts in well doing Let this provoke all men to Vse 4 avoid sinne and if it were possible not to commit it at all But because in many things wee sinne all therefore when wee have sinned let us conceive of it as of the forfeiture of our soules that it may humble us and cause us to seeke in time to get this forfeit wiped out of Gods booke by such meanes as are appointed by God himselfe in his word which are by beleeving and resting
or as a bird touched with lime-twigges it taketh away the life and comfort of spirituall exercises as of hearing praying and receiving the Sacrament he cannot set about them with any nimblenesse of spirit while he lyeth in any sinne Sinne unrepented of taketh Reas 3 root and infecteth further and further it will increase it selfe and beget other sinnes Reas 4 While a man lyeth in sinne he may look every houre when God shall inflict some fearefull judgement or other and then the remembrance of a sinne unrepented of proveth more heavie and more stinging then the judgement it selfe Whereas though a man have sinned yet if God have given him repentance and have recovered him out of his sinne he may come before God with boldnesse and can performe exercises of Religion with chearfulnesse and shall either prevent crosses or remove them or they shall do much good to his soule while they lye upon him Vse 1 This is to reproove all such who as they care not how they fall into sinne so they care as little how they be delivered out of it yea though God call them to repentance and give them space to repent yea though sometimes God awake them by his judgements and by checks of conscience and doth offer them his Spirit to turne them unto him yet neither his patience nor bountie doth leade them to repentance They will say Lord deliver us from evill but refuse to be delivered This their hypocrisie aggravateth their impenitencie and their impenitencie aggravateth all such sinnes as are not repented of for it is a fault to commit any sinne but when it is not repented of this sinne is continued yea doubled and multiplied for everie day they should turne from their sinne as ordinarily as they seeke their daily bread No sinne so dangerous as impenitencie for therefore the sinne against the holy Ghost is unpardonable not in it owne nature but because they that commit it cannot be renewed unto repentance Heb. 6.6 Impenitencie therefore though it be not the sinne against the holy Ghost yet it must needs be a fearefull sinne For he that liveth and dyeth in impenitencie is as sure to bee damned as he that sinneth against the holy Ghost Let all that refuse to forsake their sinnes looke for Gods visitation Ier. 5.3.7.9 as he saith in Jeremy They have refused to returne c. How shall I pardon shall I not visite for these things and shall not my soule be avenged on such c. Vse 2 It doth therefore concerne every man having fallen into evill for who is it that sinneth not to use all means to repent and recover himselfe of his fall and then do his best to hold on a steadie course of new obedience Have not men in prison cause to seeke for deliverance and if any man be fallen into a lapse after a sicknesse hath he not cause to seeke for recoverie of his former health such is the estate of every sinner untill he have repented But let this repentance bee true and sound proceeding from griefe for sin and hatred of sinne not turning from one sinne to another or a bare leaving of sinne but it must be a conscionable turning from evill to good It must be in the bent and intention of the soule and in our whole endevour a turning from all sinne as well as from any one even from as many as wee can come to the knowledge of as well from secret as open as well from beloved sinnes and such as are in credit in the world as from any other Ezek. 8.31 We must cast away all our transgressions saith the Lord. It must be speedie while it is to day lest our hearts be hardened through the deceitfulnesse of sinne It must be constant Heb. 3.15.16 as daily as we aske daily bread If we would but enter into our hearts and consider what wee have done when wee have sinned how wee have transgressed an holy commandement thereby have grieved the holy Spirit disgraced our holy profession and have offended a mercifull Father and a severe Iudge who yet if we will turne will have mercy but if we refuse to turne he will punish and wil not pardon the thoughts of these things would worke griefe and hatred of sinne and hope of pardon from whence would follow repentance never to be repented of if withall we pray heartily saying Deliver us from evill for with all the meanes we do use prayer must be one for as we cannot repent without Gods helpe so he will not helpe and give us repentance except we aske it From evill By evill is meant sinne Our Saviour would have his Disciples pray against sinne under the name of evil Whence we may learne Sinne is evill and God would Doct. 8 have all men when they thinke of sinne represent it to their minde in the name and notion of an evil yea of the most evill thing It is called evill Rom. 12.9 where it is said Abhorre evill Ioh. 5.19 The whole world lyeth in evill Thus David in confessing his sinne unto God doth affect his heart with shame and remorse saying Against thee have I sinned and done this evill in thy sight Psal 51.4 Sinne is absolutely contrary Reas 1 unto God who is goodnesse it selfe yea enmity to him Rom. 8 7. therefore it is the evill of evils Sin doth separate a man frō the Reas 2 greatest good Isa 59.2 It doth separate a man from God No other evill bee it imprisonment poverty disgrace in the world sicknesse death doth separate a man from God he may enjoy God and may have a blessed communion with him notwithstanding the worst of these evils which he cannot do while he lyeth in his sinne Wherefore sinne must needs be the greatest evill Reas 3 Sinne is the cause of all the evill of punishment that any creature is subject unto for sin brought man under the curse and will hold him under it except the mercy of God through the merit of Christ do deliver him Reas 4 Sinne doth give denomination unto all things that are truly evill causing them to be called evill Gal. 1.4 the world is therefore called evill because it is a sinfull wo●ld Men are called evill men 2. Tim. 3.13 because they be sinfull men And because the devill exceedeth all other in sinne he is called the evill one Matth. 13.19 Vse 1 Is sinne evill how then hath it bewitched and deceived most of the sonnes of men for they account nothing evill but what bringeth losse to their estate and shame to their name and paine to their body or some other misery to their outward man as touching sinne many are so farre from judging it to be evill that because they conceive it serveth for their pleasure gaine or credit of all courses they thinke none so good as those that are sinfull What man so vile but thinketh his course good and thinketh all are fooles that are not of his minde The Papist is
prayer 99 Wicked mens Prayers are not altogether in vaine though not altogether accepted 101 Difference in the Prayers of the wicked and godly and difference in their acceptance 102 All that would pray acceptably must be in charity with their neighbours 109 Prayer is to be made onely to the true God 113 In the entrance into Prayer a man must represent God to his mind under such titles names as are aptest to induce him to pray and as may best helpe his faith in prayer 122 In Prayer God is to be conceived of in the distinction of Persons 125 Prayer ordinarily is to be directed to the Father in the name of the Sonne by the holy Ghost 133. 134 We must not be rash in Prayer 150 Man must not needlesly multiply words in Prayer 157 In what cases long Prayers may be made in what not 158 Prayer must be made with holy devotion 160 Prayer may be made to God in all places 166 Publike places fittest for publike Prayer 168 Private places fittest for private Prayer 171 Prayer may bee made with voice or without voyce 179 How farre a voyce is fittest to be used in Prayer 180 Cautions in using voyce in private Prayer 181 When and how a man may pray against others 268 Bodily welfare is to be prayed for both for our selves and others 330. 353 Prayers are to be made daily 373 How oft we must pray 376 Prayers for things of this life should be lesse insisted upon then those that concerne the life of grace and glory 398 How spirituall and temporall things are to be prayed for and how the granting of them is to be expected 749. 750 With Prayer praise thanks must be joyned 691 Prayer must bee made with understanding 716 The minde and heart must joyne in prayer 719 There must bee an holy fervour in Prayer 724 When a man hath prayed he must expect to have the things prayed for 727 It is a difficult thing to pray aright 756 Meanes to strengthen faith in Prayer 760 What a man must do after he hath endevoured to pray aright 764 God would have his children utter to him Reasons grounds why they aske and expect the things for which they pray 685 When men are fallen into Sin it must be their prayer and ca●● to get out by Repentance 6●● The properties of sound Repentance 671 How Saints departed and Angels in heaven are to be honoured by men on earth 305 Salvation is of the free grace of God 451 How a man may prevent Gods giving of him over to sinne 616 Of the kindes of Temptation 510 What a good Temptation is 510 What an evill Temptation is 511 How farre God hath to do in evill Temptations 513 What is properly to tempt to sinne 516 God hath an holy hand in the Temptations sins of men 571 The best are subject to Temptations 633 Who so would bee kept from sinne must resist it in the Temptation 644 How Temptations to sinne are pressed by tempters and how resisted by the tempted 652. 678 It must bee every Christians desire that Gods will be obeyed 285 The chiefe heads to which Gods revealed Will may be reduced 287 Disswasives from disobedience to Gods Will. 28● Motives to obedience to God● Will. 29● Meanes to enable us to 〈◊〉 Gods Will. 29● We must desire that Gods Wi●● be done in an holy manner 30● What is requisite in the right manner of doing Gods Will. 307 Errata Page 6 line 5. reade from p. 34 l 4 r. conceiving him p. 243. l. 6. r. rendition p. 274 l 18. 19. r. considered p. 277. l. 9. r come p. 301. l. 24. r. shall p. 322● l. 12. r. proprietie p. 396. l. 17. r. Th●● they p. 396. l. 19. r. That they p. 43● l. 27. r. unto the. p. 445. l. 26. r use p. ●●● l. 3. r. unto his p. 656 l. 24. r. resist FINIS