Selected quad for the lemma: hand_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
hand_n good_a king_n lord_n 7,040 5 3.9036 3 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A33525 A practical discourse of prayer wherein is handled the nature, the duty, the qualifications of prayer, the several sorts of prayer, viz. ejaculatory, publick, private and secret prayer : with the necessity of, and ingagements unto, prayer : together with sundry cases of conscience about it / by Thomas Cobbet. Cobbet, Thomas, 1608-1685. 1654 (1654) Wing C4780; ESTC R29965 290,377 588

There are 25 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

Lord be Judge betwixt Israel and Ammon Judg. 11. 27 Israel injuriously begirts Judah and no other help for them but this Judah cryed unto the Lord Enemies 2 Chron 13. 14 15. Pharaoh with an huge host hath Israel at an advantage and they must needs then thus crye out unto the Lord. Enemies unexpected scornes of the Saints put the Saints upon these short appeals Nehem. 4. 4 5. Hear Oh our God f●r we are despised Their sudden affrighting of them doth as much they all made us afraid Now therefore O our God strengthen my hands Neh. 6. 9 The present hearing of the Princes good will to the Commonwealth put forth godly Subjects then present to affix their Ejaculatory Amen thereto 1 Kings 1. 36. Amen the Lord thy God say so too A sudden hand of God upon others put godly Judgments God Moses upon it thus to pray for Miriam O Lord heal her c. Numb 12. 13. and godly Hezekiah to pray for his people The good Lord pardon every one that prepareth his heart to seek the Lord though not so prepared And the Lord hearkned and healed the people 2 Chron 30 18 19. Any sudden notice of some special service of God unto Special services which some of the Saints are addressing themselves must needs put others that hear thereof by such sudden lifts of their hearts to give them a lift therein Is David going to a solemn Sacrifice godly A●aunah will thus wish him good speed 2 Sam. 24. 23. The Lord thy God accept thee Eli perceiving Hannahs Prayer-business 1 Sam. 1. 16 cannot but add his fiat also ver 17. The God of Israel grant thee thy petition Sudden weighty changes of some of the Saints in their Changes outward condition put others that hear of it upon this holy service of love to them as Boaz his godly neighbours Ruth 4. 11 12. The Lord make this woman like Rachel and Lea● c. Sudden and unexpected Kindnesses others kindnesses shewed to the Saints will put them to speed such a kind of Messenger as this to heaven presently to tell their Father of it Ruth 2 19 20. Naomi seeing Boaz his kindness to his daughter Ruth saith Blessed be he of the Lord that hath not left off his kindness to the living and to the dead Besides even one Ejaculation of the Saints Continuation of Prayer puts them upon making more upon praying thus also without ceasing One Ejaculation begetteth another Isai 26. 9. With my soul have I desired thee in the night yea with my spirit within me will I seek thee early because they had thus prayed they will pray yet more Psal 62. 1 Hear my cry attend to my prayer yet no words there of mentioned and ver 2. From the end of the earth will I cry he had thus cryed and he will therefore cry againe and again As billowes of ten ptation ever and anon stop his mouth and ●n●errupt him so as he now and then doth but peep above water and get breathing space he will thus cry Lead me or guide me or carry me to yonder rock which is higher then I. Hence Jonah in his perishing condition mentioneth his Praiers plurally there were many of these short Praiers like Messengers sent Poste in some great and present stress one after the other to speed succor from heaven J●n 2. 1. 2 7. My Praiers came in unto thee Yea these holy Traders with Heaven using to make as quick returnes as speedy dealings thus with the Lord as they gain upon the Lord they are suddenly sending for more and bespeaking yet more blessing from him When Moses by his short Prayer● hath got a grant of God My presence shal● go with thee Exod 33 12 13 15 16. compared then doth he in a holy wise grow upo● God He hath one short yet no smal reques● more ver 18. I beseech thee shew me thy glory And chap. 34. 9. he hath another reques● yet more Pardon our iniquities and take u● for thine inheritance So Abrahams shor● requests as they are granted Gen. 18. so they multiply If there be fifty Lord in Sodom wil● thou not spare it and then if but forty five then if forty then if thirty then if twenty then if ten Thus much also be spoken to shew the necessity Reasons why 1 From the honor it puts on God of this Duty in sundry respects Let us now briefly add a Reason or two yet further to enforce this duty The first is taken from the nature and property of this duty which honoureth the Lord in a special manner as a glorious In his immensity and Omniscience Spirit which needeth not any words of ours to express what we would to him He can hear the holy language and speech of our spirits he understandeth the meaning of sighes not to be expressed Rom. 8. 26. Ejaculatory Prayer proclaimeth the Lord that he is not as the Idol Gods who needeth not to be awakened by loud out-cryes as 1 Kings 18. 27 as Elijah derided Baals Priests wisheth them to cry aloud c. Who needeth not to be carryed up and down as dunghil Gods do Jer. 10. 5. No this proclaimeth to all the world that the God of the Saints is an all-seeing God espying the least moving of their desires to him that he is in all and through all and filleth every place yea that he is a very present help at any dead lift that he is a God hearing Prayers all sorts of Prayers the shortest of them If Ephraim but lisp and wisper out Turn thou me and I shall be turned c. God saith I have surely heard him Jer. 31. 18 19 20. If Israel take unto them words prayer-wise though but short Take away all iniquity and receive us graciously c. God can and will say I have surely heard him and observed him Hos 14. 1 2 3 8. This glorifieth him as one who assuredly waites to be gracious that any such cry and whisper as this is of the Saints is attended by him Isai 30. 18. The Lord waits to be gracious and ver 19 is a demonstration thereof The Lord will be very gracious at the voice of thy cry The second Reason is taken from the precious fruits of the conscionable exercise 2 From the Fruits of it It s a means of this duty of such sudden and short lifts of the heart to the Lord. 1. It is a very special means to keep our 1 To keep us Spiritual hearts very Spiritual and savoury when so often in heaven taking some short turnes with God and Jesus Christ When so oft with God distances will not so easily grow when conversing so with God there is more of his brightness more of his Image upon such an ones face and heart When gracious persons are ever and anon making such holy stands and pawses of spirit lest being let go too long and at too large a teather they grow unsavoury they are kept
and divisions if any such should be amongst us Reason 5 5. Because publick prayer is in a special 5 It s very delightfull to the Lord. sort delightful to the Lord hee putteth his people in special wise upon it Psal 81. 10. Open thy mouth wide in prayer and I will fill it hee is therefore troubled if publick prayer as well as private be neglected Esay 43. 22. Thou hast not called upon me O Jacob Jesus Christ is very ready to present and perfume publick as well as more private prayers of his Saints Rev. 8. 3. The Lord is ready to reward it in his people Let all the people or Gentiles prayse thee was the Churches prayer Psal 67. 5. and verse 6. Then shall God even our God blesse us they praying for a blessing upon others triumph for a blessing as upon others so upon themselves It is good and acceptable to him that publick prayer bee made for all Saints 1 Tim. 2. 1 2 3. Christ took it kindly that the multitude opened their mouthes to beseech mercy for one that had an imperfection in his speech and beseech him to lay his hands upon him Mark 7. 32. Vpon which he cured him verse 33 34 35. Reason 6 6. Such manner of approaches of Assemblies 6 It s a fruit of Christs death and represents his publick spirit to the Lord are a fruit of Christs purchase that way to Gods throne i● made by the rending of the vaile of Christs flesh Heb. 10. 19 20 22 25. compared it represents the very spirit of Christ which is all for the publick good of his people There are in publick prayer the special influences of the spirit which were scattered in many compacted and gathered as it were in one the waters of various graces running in several gracious hearts as in sundry channels doe here disburthen themselves as in one pleasant and mighty streame One instrument alone well tuned will make good musick in Gods eares but he delights much in these praiers in consort where sundry two or three symphonize in what they ask it shall be done Matth. 18. 19. For there is Christ in the midst of them when thu● gathered together in his name verse 20. Reason 7 7. Because publick prayer is a publick It s a publick ingaging and uniting of hearts engaging and compacting of the hearts and spirits of Gods faithful ones Acts 2. 42. They continued stedfastly in prayers ver 44 And all that believed were together and hal● all things common Zeph. 3. 9. That they may all call upon him to serve him with one consent or one shoulder as it is in the Hebrew As if the former were meanes of the latter The joynt exercises of mutuall graces in the common work breedeth and feedeth love and mutual respect As it is with any two or three Ministers or other godly persons using to pray most together they love and cleave most together as Musicians that use to play often in consort together they use to be most friendly to each other So is it in an assembly of persons conscionably exercised in publick prayer Let us now apply the consideration of this of publick prayer as our duty First in way of reproofe of such who Vse 1 come not constantly or if they doe they Evils of not or late coming to publick prayer come not seasonably to publick praier but they come dropping in when the duty is halfe or almost finished These write not after their copy set them in that representative of pure worship in Gospel-Churches Revel 4. 8 9 10. When the foure living creatures representing the officers are to lead the rest and to begin and carry on the publick worship the rest of the Congregation represented by twenty four Elders for their gravity and experience in matters of the Gospel they are also present ready to fall downe in testimony of their joynt accord in the worship And observe it none of the number are wanting There is not a third or fourth part or half or three parts of the company as too oft with us when to give glory to God in prayer and thanksgiving but there are the whole assembly of Gods spiritual Priests by profession and holy calling the whole twenty foure This also is not according to the expresse pattern of the Primitive Church and the members there they continued stedfastly as in other parts of worship so in praier and the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 noteth their ready attendance upon the same as well as their continuance therein The same word is used Acts 10. 7. for the Souldiers waiting upon Cornelius and of Rulers attending on their work Rom. 13. 6. But for the further whetting and sharpning this admonition Consider First that it is a sinne of omission such 1. It is a sin of omission doe not joine in a duty of publick worship to which each of the assembly are bound being therefore publick as that which concerneth all such doe not give the Lord this holy sacrifice in the time of it God is not now lesse interested in the time of his worship as well as in the worship it selfe then of old Numb 28. 2. You shall observe to offer them in due season The very Prince who of all other hath weightie occasions lying upon him to withdraw or delay his coming into the assembly in the time of publick worship under the Gospel allusively represented under notions proper to that of the Law yet Ezek. 46. 10. And the Prince in the midst of them when they goe in shall goe in and when they goe forth shall goe forth He is to be there with the first and stay till the last all the professed subjects and lovers of Jesus Christ are to watch dayly at his gates and wait at the posts of his doors Prov. 8. 33 34. They are therefore to be in readinesse as those who watch and wait for any holy opportunitie of Christs publick ordinances and worship and so of this of praier among the rest or else they break rule neglect their duty How unsutably doe such walk to the example of other godly people abroad mentioned in Luk 1. 21. The people were there al waiting til Zachary had done offering incense and Exod. 35. mention is made of troops of women assembling at the doore of the Tabernacle 1 Sam. 2. 22. Yet women in regard of family occasions of children and the like if any might have been excused Peter and John went to the Temple at the houre of prayer The Tabernacle and Temple then where they were wont to assemble had publick prayers offered up among other services And not less diligence in ready attending publick worship prayer among the rest is prophecied of as in these dayes of the Gospel witness that Psal 110. 3. Thy people shall bee willing or free and forward sacrificers in the day of thy power Esay 60. 8. Who are these that flye like doves to the windowes Zach. 8. 21. Let us goe
on the one hand when the Lord is silent or when the prayers of the Saints take not according to the desires of the Saints they observe it and acknowledge it as the Prophet Lament 3. 8. perceiveth that the Lord giveth not such gracious entrance and entertainement to his and the Churches prayers And Psal 80. 4 they observe the frowns of the Lord notwithstanding their prayers And Isai 26. 16 18 they observe that no such desired deliverances were wrought by their prayers On the other hand Paul he observeth how long the Lord was silent he kept true account how oft he sought God without answer given and then he mindeth the answer which at length was given 2 Cor. 12. 8 10. They that love the Lord Jesus their Spouse will look after their love-letters which they have sent and carefully attend and await the answer returned If our heavenly Father should by his spirit put the question in our hearts what we have done with our petitions where we have left them we may upon observation and knowledge answer that wee have left them in the hand of the Lord Jesus our elder Brother And if we be questioned how wee have disposed of our sacrifices we may confidently answer we have delivered them and left them in the hand of our blessed High-Priest and do await the successe 3 In a judicious eying examining and owning after gracious Items 3. In a judicious eying examining and owning of after Items or occurrents wherein an answer of our prayers is involved as in secret pacifying of the heart amidst his sad stormy griefe of spirit He thence gathered that the Lord had heard the voice of his weeping Psal 6 8 9. Hee observed that after he had prayed against his enemies plots and whispers they did not triumph in the attaining of their intended mischievous desires and gathers that the Lord did therefore hear his prayer Psal 41. 5 7 10 11. compared David observes the sweet quiet of spirit which he had after his prayer against the rage of his enemies and gathers thereby that the Lord hath heard him Psal 3. 1 4 5 6. Paul seeth and feeleth strength in and from the Lord against his temptations and gathereth therefore that God had heard his prayer against the same albeit the temptations were not removed 2 Cor. 12. 8 9. David being in a pit of feare and rescued and freed of his horrors and his spirit more established in the wayes of God he seeth that he waited not for his answer of prayer in vaine but that he got it at last Psalm 40. 1 2. he observeth how he is quickned and strengthned with the might of God in his spirit and by that perceiveth God had heard his cry Psal 138. 3 When before prayer he was as in outward distresse so in inward stresse and perplexity and after he had prayed he perceiveth how he is every way outwardly and inwardly enlarged he concludeth that the Lord hath heard him Psal 118. 5. and sundry other like instances might be given hereof As Lovers will be opening the boxes wherein are their Letters and reading as the superscription and direction on the outside so that which is written within so will the Saints be looking into the providences of God and see and hearken what they speak and what of Gods mind and grace in answer to their prayers they may perceive Or as Petitioners to earthly Lords will be enquiring of every one of his Attendants and Servants which comes from his presence after their Petitions have been carried unto them what the Lord saith touching their requests whether he hath read it how he accepteth it whether they bring not the answer thereof from him and the like So is it here Heavens Petitioners will be examining and enquiring into and of all after providences occurrent without them and motions made within What news from heaven 4 In a vigilant care to keep with us what 4. In a due care to keep the experimental successes of our prayers by us for our holy use answers and Trophees of prayer we have gained in safe custody and lively and fresh vigour sweetnesse and efficacy The Lovers of the Lord Jesus they wil keep such Love-letters and Answers by them and will ever and anon be reading them over with as much delight and content as at the first and haply at a second perusal and review they take notice of some precious pithy passages that at the first more cursory looking over they observed not and it may be at a third time still they perceive it breatheth more love and more in this or that pathetical expression then at a first yea or second view they were aware of Answers of prayer are like to friendly tokens of the Lords special love to them and how every vigilant friendly seeker of Jesus Christ he owning and looking over and over these bowed pieces of his coyn which at this or that time he hath sent them by such or such a good hand in such or such an Ordinance or Providence or work of his Grace How will they make conscience of keeping the love of the Lord Jesus ingraven upon their hearts if he was lately with them and spake kindly to them in prayer Oh how they will familiarize with him by reviewing and reviving and speaking over in their hearts his last expressions which he used a word spoken to them in mercy is carefully kept by them Luke 8. 15. incorporated into their very hearts James 1. 21 Hence also the Church who had so wished for Christs company Cant. 8. 1. O that thou wert as my brother c. verse 4. professeth her care to keep Christ with her and that nothing provoke him to be gone from her verse 4. I charge you O daughters of Jerusalem that you stir not up nor awake my Love til he please Paul long after that answer mentioned before 2 Cor. 12. 9. he kept the joy of it witnesse that joy of his in his tryals verse 10. Therefore I take pleasure in reproaches c. Reasons to move the godly thus to watch Reasons of watching after prayer 1. We are the Lords children subjects servants after prayer may be these 1. In that our condition is the condition of children subjects servants beggars and therefore we may well attend the good pleasure of our heavenly Father Lord and Master to give answer to our requests the poor are Expectants Psal 9. 18 David praying to the Lord as his King Psalm 5. 3. saith ver 3. He will look up Psal 123. 2. As the eyes of servants look unto their masters hand so our eyes wait upon the Lord c. 2. In that it is certain God will give an 2. It s certaine God will seasonably hear answer of grace to his Saints praiers albeit it may be long first yea in that the Lord oft-times deferreth his answers it the rather calleth for our waiting Habakkuk having praied against the Churches enemies chap. 1. 12 13.
audience Fourthly the integrity of our hearts The integrity of our hearts and waies and waies in former workings after God and service for God may by faith in Christ as all in our justification be also pleaded Esay 38. 3. Remember that I have walked before thee in sincerity c. Psal 71. 17 18. O Lord thou hast taught me from my youth and hitherto I have declared thy wondrous works Now also when I am old and gray headed O God forsake me not Psalm 119. 10. With my whole heart have I sought thee O let me not wander from thy Commandements The Lord himselfe maketh it to himselfe a motive to shew mercy to his people Esay 63. 8. They are children that will not lye so be became their deliverer Jer. 2. 2. I remember thee the kindnesse of thy youth c. onely we must use this plea more rarely and sparingly in a self-denying way in faith in Christs righteousnesse as made ours The like also may be said of our integrity with men which in some cases as of reproach slander or injurious dealing from men may be by way of appeale pleaded before the Lord. Jer. 15. 15. Know O Lord that for thy sake I have suffered rebuke Psalm 26. 1. Judge me O Lord for I have walked in mine integrity Fifthly we may plead our sufferings Our sufferings especially those that are most directly and properly for God and his cause Other sufferings also may be pleaded as Nehem. 9. 32 33. Let not all the trouble seem little to thee which hath come upon us Howbeit thou art just in them Psalm 90. 15. Make us glad according to the daies wherein thou hast afflicted us But especially plead those which are undergone for the Lords sake Psalm 44. 22 23. For thy sake are we killed all the day long Awake why sleepest thou Sixthly our former experiences of mercy Our former experiences in like cases may be pleaded as Esay 63. 15. Where is the sounding of thy bowels and of thy mercies towards me are they restrained Which is as much as to say Lord thou hadst wont to be a compassionate God I have had experience in various conditions and cases of thy bowels how commeth it to passe that they are so shut up now So Psal 71. 17 18. Thou hast taught me from my youth up forsake me not now when I am old Psalm 61. 23. Lead me to the rock that is higher then I For thou hast been a shelter to me Lastly the great good which we might both get and doe may be also pleaded The good that we might get and doe God put that plea in their mouthes Hos 14. 2. Take away iniquity and receive us graciously why so so will we render the calves of our lips And Vers 3. We will no more say to the works of our hands ye are our Gods Psalm 119. 33. Teach me O Lord the way of thy Statutes and I will keep it to the end V. 34. Give me understanding and I shall keep thy law Psal 51. 12 13. Restore to me the joy of thy salvation Then will I teach sinners thy way And as the Saints may plead the good which they may do if answered so that good of inward quickning encouragement and enlargement which they may thereby receive Psal 90. 14. O satisfie us early with thy mercy why so so shall we rejoyce and be glad before thee all our daies A third sort of pleas are those respecting Pleas respecting others As their experience of a like help others which are these 1. Others experiences of the like mercy in like cases as Psal 119. 132. Be mercifull to me as thou usest to doe to those that love thy name Lord doe not change thy wont doe to me as thou hast ever done to others in my case Let not me be the first Anomalon 2. Others discouragements or encouragements Their discouragements or incouragements in ours in ours Psal 69. 6. Let not them that wait on thee be ashamed for my sake 29. Let thy salvation O God set me up on high why so vers 32. The humble shall see this and be glad If thou heare me others wil be encouraged or if not they wil be ashamed 3. The subtle and malicious desires of Enemies plots and desires ours and Gods enemies Ah Lord our miseries snares feares straits temptations and falls they are that for which they plot and wait and are ready to reproach us with and therefore the rather tender our case Thus may we plead as others have done Psal 27. 11. Make my way plain because of my enemies Ps 38. 16. I said hear me lest otherwise they rejoyce over me Psal 39. 8. Deliver me from all my transgressions make me not a reproach to the foolish Now touching the last thing propounded namely the rules which we are to attend to in pleading in prayer they are these 1. Look that we plead in faith yea with some strength of faith acted suitably Believingly to our pleas Esay 53. 15 16 17. Where are thy bowels towards me Doubtlesse thou are our Father Why hast thou hardned our hearts from thy fear 2. Look that we doe it with holy skil Improving those promises or Attributes Skilfully of God which are most suitable to our present cases which are most strongly speaking most apt to move at least our selves to believe and such as used to prevaile that way formerly So did the Church Esay 63. 15 16 17. 3. Look we be submissive in our pleas and not inordinate impatient or distempered Submissively Moses was somewhat distempered in those pleas Exod. 5. 22 23. Wherefore hast thou evil-entreated this people why hast thou sent me and Numb 11. 12 13 15. Whence should I have flesh for so many I am not able to beare the burden alone If thou deale thus with me kill me 4. Look that we be humble and self-denying Humbly therein and come not to God to stand upon terms with him or to chop Logick as we say with the holy one Job was too blame herein Iob 23. 4 5. and so were they Esay 58. 3. Wherefore have we fasted and thou regardest it not So Matth. 7. 21. Have not we prophesied in thy name and in thy name done wonderfull works 5. Look that we be sincere in our pleas Sincerely that there be nothing lurking with us and too well approved by us which may be counterpleaded against us and that justly by our own consciences As Esay 58. 3 4. Behold ye fast for strife So Matth. 7. 22 23. Depart from me ye workers of iniquity CHAP. VII About straitnings in Prayer and their Causes Cures and Differences HAving spoken of sundry cases of Conscience touching the incessant practice of this duty of prayer we come now to speak of the seventh Case considerable therein namely concerning straightnings incident to the Saints in prayer and therein we shall enquire of Quae. 7 About the Saints
may well be so called for 1. As that was so this to be presented by all sorts poor or rich none exempted from it 2. As those Offerings were costly to all sorts considering their several abilities so are these Spiritual Sacrifices 1 Pet. 2. 5. witnesse the suppliants tears sighs strivings pleadings c 3. As they were free services Lev. 1. 3. So are these Christs Suppliants are free Sacrificers Psal 1103. Hebr. Their spirit is forward to pray Matth. 26. 41. To will is present with them Rom. 7. 8. 21. Their Prayer is their gift Matth. 5. 24. 4 As those were to be clean and pure so are the Saints Prayers Job 16. 17. Also my Prayer is pure Mal. 3. 1 2 3 4. 5. If we should compare Prayer with their particular Offerings it would answer to this name As their Mincah or Meat Offering Psal 96. 8. All the Subjects of Christs Kingdome must bring an Offering Mincah into the Courts Mal. 1. 11 The converted Gentiles will bring an Offering or Mincah to the Lord meaning especially this holy Offering of Prayer which as that of old 1. Is to be of fine flower Levit. 2. 1. and well sifted tryed and refined in all the particulars and parts of it and mens aimes in it We should not ask amiss either unlawful things or though lawful yet to spend upon our Lusts James 4. 2. It must be mingled with the oyle of Grace and gracious affections 3 Also perfumed with the sweet Frankincense of Christs Merit and Mediation applyed by faith 4. All seasoned with that holy salt of gracious expressions outwardly Col 4. 2 3 6. and mortified desires and affections inwardly Mark 9. 49. 5 Avoiding the honey of humane Eloquence or affectation of expression but especially of inordinate desires or lusts We might also compare it with other of their Offerings but shall forbear remembring this only that we speak thus in reference to these as part of their Worship and not as Types of Christ Prayer is called Incense Psal 141. 2. Let 2 Prayer Incense my Prayer come before thee as Incense Mal. 1 11. In every place pure Incense shall be offered to thy name Rev. 5. 8. Vials full of odors which are the Prayers of the Saints Look as that was compounded of very costly materials Exod. 30. 34. so is a Spiritual Prayer as they were smal beaten so in this matters are not rudely and confusedly but deliberately advisedly preparedly and very particularly presented before the Lord. The Saints in their Prayers have also their hearts broken and bruised and parcelled out sutably to the very particulars mentioned in Prayer nor is the fire of the Spirit and of holy Zeal wanting therein which cau●eth them to send out holy vapors of fragrant spiritual sighs and desires before the Lord and whilst these spiritual Priests are through faith exercised offering up this their holy Incense upon the Altar Jesus Christ there is but a step as it were 'twixt them and heaven that Holy of Holies O how neer are the Saints so exercised to Jesus Christ as that covering Mercy-Seat What precious answers of grace receive they oftentimes from the Oracle of God! How speedily do their holy odors pierce and pass into the Holy of Holies into Heaven Prayer is called a lifting up of the soul and 3 Prayer a lifting up of the heart and soul to God of the heart Psal 25. 1. Vnto thee O Lord do I lift up my soul i. e. to thee do I pray So Psal 86. 4. and 143. 8. The work of Prayer being not so much to lift up eyes and hands and voice as to lift up the heart and soul and as if we had not prayed when our spirits were not elevated Surely that work whereby the souls of Gods Suppliants when sinking when cleaving to the dust are raised up is a great work yet Hannahs Prayer did it She looked no more sad 1 Sam. 1. 15 18. compared The like lift was Davids Prayer to him in that sad plight from under those grievous weights upon his spirit Psalm 6. 1 2 3 4 8. yea hereby Gods Suppliants do get above worldly cares fears and distractions Phil. 4 6 7. Be careful for nothing meaning inordinately but in every thing make your request known by Prayer c. And the peace of God c. shall keep your hearts and minds The work of Prayer is not to move or remove God he is in one mind he is still the same but to move and remove our hearts neer to the Lord and then have we prayed to purpose when by Prayer our hearts and spirits are in a more sublime and celestial frame when we are more above natural carnal and formal self when more off and above the world and all the incouragements and discouragements of it when in and by Prayer we have recovered yea haply exceeded our former lively apprehensions of and affectious to the Lord Jesus our former strength and bent of spirit to his favour and wayes c. For then our hearts are indeed lifted up yea prayer is not only a lifting up of the heart effectivè because when duly performed it doth thus lift it up but it is so formalitèr because the very forme nature and essence of a spiritual prayer lyeth and consisteth in the heavenly movings workings and approvings of the mind and heart as spiritual toward God and Christ in the several expressions of their desires Gracious suppliants as such they mount up with wings as Eagles Esay 40. 31. They approach to the Lord Jer. 30. 21. Draw near to the Lord Psal 73. 28. They flye to heaven for refuge Heb. 6. 18. They flie to the Lord for refuge David who in Psal 143. 8. pleadeth for favour and salvation because hee lifted up his soul to the Lord in the 9th verse reneweth his plea in this expression because he did flye to the Lord to hide him Prayer is called meditation Ps 5. 1. Consider 4 Prayer 2 Meditation my meditation i. e. my prayer Gen. 24. 63. Isaak went out to meditate or to pray so that prayer is not lip-labour if rightly performed but it is a work of the mind exercised herein It is blamed in hypocrites worship and prayer which is therefore accounted null vaine that they draw near with their lips but their hearts are far from God Esa 29. 13. Prayer in the rise of it is a studyed work many a thought spent before hand about the sins which the Saints confesse about the wants which they expresse upon the mercies which they doe acknowledge upon the purity majesty immensity all-sufficiency fidelity and bounty c. of the Lord to whom they pray the beauty and fulnesse c. of the Lord Jesus in whose name they pray yea immediately before they pray they have their preparatory musing of what of whom and through whom they are to ask and as they are praying their minds are attent and intent upon what they pray for yea they usher in their
a little of the excellency The excellency of Ejaculatory Prayer and necessity of the duty of praying without ceasing in an ejaculatory way give Reasons for it and apply it The excellency hereof may appear both by the Nature and by the rise of it It is as I may say the first breath of a Regenerate man as soon as a It 's a Saints first breathing man is born again he thus at least cryeth Abba Father In that ye are the sons of God he hath sent out the spirit of his son into your hearts crying Abba Father Gal. 4. 6. And when his body breathes its last this is a gracious persons last breathing Hence such It is a Saints last breathing parting cryes of Gods children at the stake in the flames amidst the stones on a Cross c. Lord receive my spirit into thy hands I commend my spirit And such were Stephens who was stoned calling on the Lord and saying Lord Jesus receive my spirit Lord lay not this sin to their charge The last words of the Worthies of God we account to be most memorable and to have some spiritual excellency instamped upon them and these words are such like Ejaculations If it were possible to hear the last whispers of the Saints souls as ready to leave their bodies they would be found to be such like breathings of their desire to him to whom they are going Ejaculatory Prayer also is the first and last of set and solemne It is the α and ω of Solemn Prayer Prayer when rightly performed God prepareth the heart of the humble to pray acceptably even by these preparatory liftings up of the heart a prayer-wise Psal 10. 17. The heart is first thus prepared then the hand that way stretched out Job 11. 13 Look upon Solomon in that presidental prayer of his 1 Kings 8. 22. his hands spread to heaven before he spake shewed where his he art was lifted before hand The last also of Solemn prayer is issued in an Ejaculation an Ejaculatory Amen comprehending the closing desires and feeling motions of faith to all before pleaded for All the prayers of a gracious Suppliant are not ended with his continued speech in prayer no his heart is lifting and lifting as you see a bel-rope oft hoising up after you have done ringing the bell Many a long look and heart wish followeth such an ones desire to heaven and all together come before the Lord for mercy Hence the Lord as hee is nigh to them that call upon him so he fulfilleth the desires of them that fear him Psal 145. 18 19. Solomons heart was as well left in heaven after the end of his prayer whereof his fixed eyes there was a speaking sign 1 King 8. 54. as gotten thither before he began ver 22. Ejaculatory prayer It is the spirits of solemn prayer is the very quintessence of solemn praier it is the very spirit into which that is distilled and resolved When a gracious persons heart is left in heaven uttering its after-requests now praier was well carried on These shorter postscripts written after the other longer letter indited by the spirit and directed to the Lord they have ever something of note and worth This epitom● of praier how solid is it So much for a taste of the nature of it Let us withall consider of this holy duti● It is the eccho of the spirit of ejaculatory praier in the spring and rise thereof and namely those lively and forceable ●●bounds of the gracious spirit of a Saint of God moved by the hand of the spirit of God Ejaculatory praier is the harmonious sweet-sounding eccho of the spirit fore-speaking to the heart ●hen thou saidst Seek my face there is the Lords voice my heart answered thy face Lor● will I seek there is the eccho Psal 27. 8. David before he is solemnly praying as afterward he is v. 9 10. He turneth his speech to the Lord telling him what his heavenly desires say I will seek thy face or my hearts desires are so to doe Ejaculations It is the venting of a heart full of the spirit are the spiritual ventings and breathings of a gracious heart filled with the wine of the spirit Eph. 5. 19. very precious verie pleasant to the taste of the Lord. Sometimes the Saints hearts are so filled with a spirit of holy joy sometimes of praise sometimes of love to the Lord that variety of holy desires pressing fast on they are forced to give them vent by short ejaculations Ejaculations are the holy evaporations of a heart throughly warmed with some special workings of faith and love of Christ When Davids heart is thus boyling hot Psal 45. 1. he breaketh off his discourse from Christ verse 2. and breatheth out such holy desires unto Christ verse 3. gird thy sword upon thy thigh c. and verse 4. Ride prosperously And then on againe to his discourse verse 5 6 7 8 9 10. Ejaculations are the holy sparks ascending up one after another from the stirring of the fired coales of the Spirit in the heart From the holy admiration of God and his goodnesse power wisedome faithfulnesse c. proceed holy ejaculations From that transcendency of Gods dispensations to Asaphs reason who had his hearts fore-discourses about the same proceeds that Verily or neverthelesse God is good to Israel Psal 73. 1. From Micahs admiring at the unparallel'd grace of God Mic. 7. 18. Who is a God like unto thee verse 19. Hee telleth the Church what God will doe hee will turne againe and will subdue our iniquities and then maketh his Apostrophe to the Lord Thou wil t ca●t all their sinnes into the depth of the sea and verse 20. Thou wilt performe the truth to Jacob. God calleth for these holy Apostrophes from this ground of admiration at his marvellous providences Psal 66. 3. Say unto God how terrible art thou in thy works The excellency of this fruit must needs partake of the excellency of such a root as is an admiring frame Ejaculations arise from the spiritualizing of the heart upon any occasion As when It s the first fruit of a spiritualized heart David is spiritual in contemplation of the works of God Psal 8. 3 4. When I consider thy heavens c. his heart in ejaculatory wise saith Lord what is man that thou art thus mindfull of him So when he was in a lively manner musing upon the immensity of God Psal 139. 1. to 17 Hee thence breaketh out thus How precious are thy thoughts to me oh God! From the veiw taken of Gods justice or mercy or from any holy discourse with others about the same or from singing and sounding forth Gods praises wherein the Saints are spiritual ariseth some holy ejaculations or other In all these and each of these was Deborah so spiritual Judg. 5. from verse 1. to the last whence that ejaculatory praier of hers So let thine enemies perish oh Lord but let those that
Stevens ejaculatory praier at his death Lord lay not this sin to their charge And assuredly many of the blinded Jews who ignorantly crucifled the Lord of glory fared the better for the ejaculatory prayer of Christ Father forgive them for they know not what they doe Luk. 23. 34. Witnesse the conversion of thousands of those who had a hand in crucifying the Lord Jesus Acts 2. 36 37 38 39 40 41. verses compared Other Saints likewise fare the better for this that the ejaculatory prayers of others of their brethren for them are acceptable prayers to God Onesiphorus will fare the better for the short prayer of Paul at the very day of judgment 2 Tim. 1. 18. The Lord grant that he may find mercy at that day How well then is it in all respects that God will have his Saints praying continually with ejaculatory prayer also 2. In that it is a service which the Lord Second Motive It is that upon which the spirit putteth us often by special motion of his Spirit put his saints upon oft times as well as by general command requireth the same Let me hear thy voice saith Christ to his people Canti● 2. 14. To which the Church answereth in an ejaculatory prayer verse 17. Turne my beloved and be thou like a Roe So Cantic 8. 13. The Lord putteth them upon speaking to him Let me hear thy voice to which they returne an ejaculation ver 14. Make haste my beloved now it will not bee safe to neglect any such motions made by the Lord and by his spirit lest being grieved he withdraw from us 3. In that the most spiritual persons Third motive it is that which the choysest Saints practise much have been and are thus exercised in those holy ejaculations as was Christ as Luke 3. 21. When he was baptised he so prayed when those Disciples returned with that successe he lifts up his heart Luk. 20. 21. I thanke thee O Father Lord of heaven and earth So John 2. 27 28. Father glorifie thy name And so Luke 23. 31. Father forgive them for they know not what they doe So Matthew 26. 46. My God my God why hast thou forsaken me So Luke 23. 46. When to leave the world Father into thy hands I commit my spirit Thus David and Nehemiah and Moses and others who were most spiritual how oft were they thus praying 4. In that ejaculatory prayer hath prevailed Fourth Motive it s very prevailing with God with God for great things persons have been healed of plagues As upon such a prayer of Hezekiah 2 Chron. 30. 18 19 20. verses God hearkned and healed the people Wonders have been done by it as when upon such a Prayer of Isaiah the Sun goeth backward 2 Kings 20. 11. Isaiah cryed unto the Lord and the Sun went back ten degrees Such wonders were done hereby at the red Sea Nehem. 9. 9. as formerly was shewed Now in the second place consider of some Helps to pray thus 1 Heavenly mindedness Helps to help us this way 1 Get and maintain a spiritual frame of heart walk much with God in Meditation and the like and frequent occasion will be offered of such like talking with him A heavenly heart will be often lifted thus heavenward When Sim●on was in such a frame then Lord lettest thou thy Servant depart in peace Luke 2. 29. So when John is in a like frame then Come Lord Jesus Come quickly Revel 22. 20. One Ejaculation or other ariseth out of the heart in such a frame and as a branch thereof get our hearts weaned from the things of the world be as one leaving the world and then an old Jacob will be mounting thus Gen. 49. 18 Lord I have waited for thy Salvation David who was a weaned child was much in holy Ejaculations so was Davids Lord who was so much above the world such have most to do in Heaven and therefore so oft moving that way 2 Get a humble soft heart sensible of sins and self emptinesse Broken hearts will bee often breathing out Ejaculatory sighs and requests The humbled Thief upon the Cross and Publican in the Temple had their Ejaculations 3 Keep in life and light as much as may 3 Sense of Gods love be the sense of the love of God in Christ when the Church is in Christs armes and as in his bosome then she hath her Ejaculatory request Set me as a seal upon thy arm c. Cant. 8. 5 6. This stirreth up holy love in us to God and that will be making ever and anon abrupt expressions of its desire to him Touching the third thing consider of these Cautions Cautions 1. That it bee not too seldom 1 Content not our selves that more rarely wee have some one lift this way but be ever and anon sending up some short requests unto the Lord foure times in one Chapter is Nehemiah doing thus upon several occasions 2 Look that we do it not in a Petitionary 2. That it bee not only in a Petitionary way way only but praising way as well So David Psalm 8. 3 4 5. When I see thy Heavens c. I said What is man that thou art thus mindful of him So Jesus Christ I thank thee Father Lord of Heaven and earth that thou hast hid these things from the wise and prudent and revealed them to babes Luke 10. 21. and John 11. 41 42. Father I thank thee that thou alwayes hearest me 3 Look that be not a bare formal cry 3. That it be not in an affected way for fashions sake a customary Lord have mercy upon me or Lord blesse me or the like in a morning or at going to bed resting therein as if now some goodly service were done or that sufficeth or a more forced out-cry to God occasioned from sudden terrors or distrusts and the like or an hypocritical semblance of a heart lift to heaven by an affected lifting up the eys when in others company or in a seemed squeezing out a hollow hearted sigh in stead of such cordial Ejaculations to which we have been all this while exhorting Lastly Look that none under this pretence 4 That it thrust not out Solemn praier lay aside the due and constant exercise of publick or private Praier in a more continued way Let not one duty justle out another Continued Praier in solemn manner is our duty as well as Ejaculatory Prayer as God willing we shall see in the following part of this Discourse we are the rather to make conscience of Ejaculatory Praier that we may be sit for solemn Prayer and we are so to pray in a continued Prayer as it may leave us sending up our after Ejaculations unto heaven CHAP. III. Touching more solemn and continued Prayer and particularly of Publick Prayer WE have spoken of Ejaculatory Praier proceed we now to consider of Solemn and continued Praier which is either Publick or Church Praier Private or Family Prayer Secret or Closet Prayer Begin
31. 9. Such have little love to others who are little with God apart in praier If we had more Have little love to others of Cornelius his spirit to be conscionably exercised in praying alone also we should have more love to Professors Full of Prayers and Alms fruits of Charity was his commendation Act. 19 2 4. And it is well if the Spiritual Chaldees the souls enemies are not gotten into such mens hearts as of old they did into the Temple yea and that God himself be not Ly open to desertion departed from such as of old from the Temple when this daily Sacrifice and Offering of holy prayer unto God ceaseth with them Surely Daniel was not of these mens temper who though he had such vast Imploiments Imitate not best examples as to take the accounts of the other Princes of the several Jurisdictions and many other State affaires to dispatch yet would not no not for one day no nor one time in the day omit this his constant exercising himself in secret prayer yea when it cometh to a matter of hazard of his life and all his worldly honours yet to forbear this his course of daily seeking of God in secret prayer he had not such a thought Why I need not thus hazard my self I may forbear praying thus to God in my chamber for a while It is but a matter of my own liberty I may pray thus but I am not bound to pray thus by any command of God No verily he saw more in Gods command then so which was of more Soveraignty with him then any earthly Monarchs command He will not only deny to pray to the King as a God which had been a sin of commission but he will not forbear for the Months space praying to the God of Heaven in his chamber which had been a sin of omission Isaac who had such weighty matters as the change of his condition to have occasioned some omission of his retired converses with God yet then also will not leave his usual work of going out into the field to pray Gen. 24. Nor will Jesus Christ whose example is a forcible Argument to urge our imitation of his holy practise he will not omit this holy businesse of secret prayer albeit he had many others of great moment to attend in their seasons hee will rather borrow time from his natural rest in the night if so fully imployed in the day Luke 21. 37 he will get up the earlier in the morning before day rather then want an opportunity for this holy exercise Mark 1. 35. yea when the multitude came together to hear him and be healed of him he will not omit this work but withdraweth for that end and they must stay the while Luke 5. 15 16. yea his chiefest Followers must be dismissed whilst be attends this holy practice Matth. 14. 22 23. And to conclude this Use It would be a shame Are worse then Papists that blind Papists and superstitious Votaries should be more zealous in their way of secret Devotions then we in our secret addresses in prayer to the Lord in the name of Christ Let it then in the second place serve for Exhortation to the conscionable practise of Vse 2 this Duty of secret Prayer If such an one as Let all be exhorted to this Duty Cornelius who had so many Martial occasions to with-draw him who also knew so little of Jesus Christ as that Messiah promised yet was so constant this way wee that enjoy far more helps and spiritual advantages may much rather do it Yea say too many now a dayes should Apostatize as did such like in Davids time Psal 55. 12 13 16. yet let us be the more resolute this way as he was verse 17. Evening and morning and at noon will I pray and truly if ever it were a time to be much with God in prayer together and asunder now is a time for it All the Saints hands in a manner are up in all places and doing exploits for God and it were a shame if ours only should be down especially when the Saints of God in other places think that we in special ply it hard in prayer together and asunder Let Civil Rulers ply it thus as that Magistrates President Daniel did as King David himself did as we heard Psalm 109. 4. hee saith he is Prayer as being more in that then in any other work but I prayer or I will give my self to prayer Constantine the Great as Eusebius telleth us would have this as his Portraiture a man on his knees praying to shew that was his usual practise and posture How oft was Moses the Magistrate with God alone in Prayer Let Ministers whose special Calling lyeth in Ministers this also to give themselves to prayer Acts 6. 4. Be much in it How often is Paul described as thus employed Rom. 1. 9. Ephes 1. 15 16. Philip. 1. 4 2 Timoth. 1. 3. Epaphras the Colossian Minister is commended for this also Colos 4. 12. Eusebius telleth us of James called Justus that his knees were growne hard and brawnie with being so much and oft this way employed And do not Ministers closet sins as vanity of mind vaine glorious reasonings of spirit listlesnesse sometimes to their holy work call upon them for closet study-prayers Doth not their weighty closet work call for this Is not Prayer as once Luther said the best Book in our Study Doth not Satan oft-times come into our studies to assault us in our work as sometimes hee did Joshuab the Priest in his and had we not then more need then others to bee found oft praying there The Lord vouchsafes oft-times to be talking in friendly sort with us in our Studies and it were pity and shame if hereby we should not maintain holy conference with him Who are more potent with God in publick prayer then such Ministers as wrestle it out most with God in secret praier The gracious language which there they learn from the Spirit of God and the choice lively and spirituall prayer-passages and expressions and pleas wherein the Lord breaths upon their hearts when alone are those wherein he is wont to breath upon the peoples hearts in publick prayer Who more prevalent with God then Paul and Peter this way exercised we as the friends of the Bridegroome as Eliezar was of old speed the better in our work of gaining some spouse for Christ that day for which we have been most earnest in secret prayer before hand The defect hereof too oft maketh our ministeriall work so unsuccessefull as it did that of the Disciples assaying to cast out a devill without praying before hand for it Matth. 17. 21. A Minister need not feare but hee shall preach well afterwards if the Lord help him to pray well before hand as Ministers have more advantage of privacy sc their people make account they improve it this way witnesse their frequent commending their cases to them to
alone praying he hath a new name given him he is told he hath prevailed with God Gen. 32 27 28. Then is Daniel told that he is greatly beloved and his prayers heard Dan. 9. 20 22. Again they have this honor put upon them to have choicest secrets revealed to them as to Gods friends in a corner those three Worthies severally praying have this secret given unto them Daniel 2. 19 20. and Jeremiah calling upon God all alone in prison hath great and wonderful things shewed him that he knew not of Jer. 33. 1 2. Peter when alone praying hath the mystery of the bringing in of the Gentiles revealed to him Acts 10. 9 10 11. yea such in special shall have thir honour of deteining of the Lord when he carrieth it ●s willing to be gone Let me go saith Christ to Jacob I will not let thee go until thou blesse me nor did he Gen. 32. 26 27. 28 29. Let me alone saith God to Moses but he suffers himself then and afterwards to be staied from going on his course of displeasure against the people by Moses his wrestling with him as we say hand to hand Ex. 32 10 11 12 13. Deut. 9. 13 14 18 25 26 27 28. compared I held him Cantic 3. 4. by the exercise of faith in prayer The Lord knoweth not how to leave a praying suppliant or to proceed in a way of displeasure against him and is not all this then well for the Saints that each Saints prayer in secret is an ordinance of God and a very acceptable service unto him Let us wind all up with a caution or Cautions two annexed 1. Look that it be not alone secret prayer 1 In secret affect secrecy in respect of the place apart from others but in respect of our desires and indeavour as much as may bee of privacy That as Christ saith of secret fasting and prayer in an extraordinary way Matth. 6. 15 16 17. wash thy face and anoint thee with oyle that thou appear not to men to fast so avoid lowdnesse of voice when alone or if melted in secret let it not bee perceived if you can that you have been weeping yea if you cannot goe aside unobserved of some in the house let us even wish that we might so pray alone that none might know how oft or how long we are therein if any secret motion arise to think of what others will think of us let us abhor the thought of it else if in secret our hearts desire others to take notice of us that desire maketh it before God as if we prayed in the street corner 2 Avoid customarinesse 2. That wee vanish not into customarinesse in praying in our closets going aside thither to pray for fashions sake living in good families and seeing others goe aside for that end we doe it too or wee have been trained up to it and so we will hold it on as a custome Yea lest we goe about it as a more formal task which if we but performe let it be well or ill we mind it not regard it not so we doe it we are satisfied if we doe it not indeed wee are troubled but in all not moved from any principle of love and longing after communion with the Lord in it or prevailing with God through grace by it for pardon of this or that sinne we groane under or supply of this or that spiritual want over which wee mourne Verily such customarinesse will Evils of customariness in it Listlesnesse to prayer produce other evils as listlesnesse to pray even when got into our closets such will have so little of God in their customary seekings of him that they will have little incouragement to set about seeking of him It will also cause slightnesse in praying The Slightnesse in praier formalists praier is called vanity Job 35. ver 13. And if slight in praying usually as sleighty in praising None saith seriously at Praises Exercises of repentance Hearing of the word least where is he that giveth us songs in the night verse 10. 11 12 13. compared Such are as sleighty in setting upon the work of through repentance Such as sleightly complain of their pining away in their sinnes Ezek. 33. 10. and are therefore so roused up to turne unto the Lord as even too well content to dye in their sins verse 11 12. Turne you turne you why will you dye c yea they are as sleighty in hearing the word of God as though but hearing onely some musical song which as we say goeth in at the one eare and out at the other Ezek. 33. 30 31 32. yea commonly such are very serious in some way of Seriousness in some sinne sinne against God Jer. 3. 4 5. Wilt thou not from this time cry namely in this sleighty fashion my Father Behold thou hast done evil as thou couldst Yea such are wont to be serious in discontented complaints of God in his dispensations of providence as that his way was not equal when 't is their owne wayes rather which are unequal as those sleighty complainers of their sinnes Ezek. 33. 10. are bold to charge God verse 17 20. as if his wayes were not equal CHAP. VI. Of Prayer of Intercession and Imprecation HAving spoken of the sorts of prayer in generall we come to speak of the parts which are of special consideration in these sorts of prayer especially of solemn and continued prayer and letting passe those which respect our selves we shall onely single out those two respecting others viz. Prayer of Intercession and Imprecation Concerning prayer of intercession wherby upon all occasions we are bound to pray for others good we shall not mention the persons especially concerned in it as Magistrates Ministers Parents Masters Husbands and all other superiours for their inferiours as also their inferiours respectively for their superiours or any other special relations as of friends kindred for their friends and the like of which Scripture instances are plentiful but we shall consider it generally as that which respecteth all sorts of godly persons nor shall we spend time in urging reasons and motives from the honourablenesse of this holy service of love in it self the advantageousnes of it to the persons themselvs who so plead for others welfare every way the sutableness of this to that matchless pattern thereof in the Lord Jesus and the mighty things which have been done for others thereby and the like But shortly come to lay downe First some rules to guide us in it Secondly some meanes to help us in it Thirdly some markes to discover our gracious speeding in it Touching the first thing propounded observe Rules about praying for others we these rules in it 1. Attend the times and observe them when the Lord is in any more special manner with us by his spirit and quickning presence and when our hearts are got near Mind when God is near us and we him and then do it to him
there in the Greek is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 then was Prayer made which was stretched out upon the Tenters not so much namely in the length and largeness of the intercessions of such as put up the same as in respect of the thoughts holy affections and exercise of the graces of the spirits of those godly Suppliants in their prayer So in Acts 26. 7. prayer was one speciall piece of that service intended in that there mentioned Our twelve Tribes instantly serving God day and night The words are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in a stretched out manner serving God Psal 119. 145. I cryed with my whole heart Davids whole heart acted in that prayer with all earnestnesse his prayer was the common cry of all that was within him his desire love hope and all the graces of his spirit in his heart put forth themselves in his prayer So Rom. 12. 12. Continuing instant in Prayer 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 continuing with all your might in prayer The acceptable prayer is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an inwrought praier A prayer wherein all the active hands within the suppliant are set on work according as there it is said of him Coloss 4 12. Alwayes labouring fervently in prayer for you 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wrestling for you in Prayers A fervent Suppliant doth Wrestler-like bend and writhe and strain every joynt of the new man in their souls yea of their whole mind and heart so far as sanctified that they may take all helps and advantages of the Lord to prevaile with him in prayer All our lines must meet in this center of Prayer our whole man must wait upon this as the creature of the holy Ghost as it will share in this blessing so it must act in begging it and then it will put on the garment of prayses also for it Like as before the whole man went as it were in mourning weeds in the want of that blessing so the mercy will be sweetest to the whole man when it is thus holily imployed in the begging of it or if the mercy be delayed yet it can the more quietly sit downe in the want of it when it hath used Gods means for it A gracious Christian that prayeth much can want much hee hath that inward peace that guards his heart and mind from discontent Phil. 4. 6 7. Make your request knowne to God and the peace of God shall keep your hearts 2. Importunity in prayer consisteth in 2 In frequent renewing of our suits a frequent renewing of our suits when wee are at this holy work early and late the Psalmist was at it early when hee sayd Psal 88. 13 My prayer shall prevent thee and 119. 147. I prevented the dawning of the morning and cryed c. He was a good husband and earnest in this holy work who was at it so early a lively Christian will be up in his spirit and hard at this work when other lazy and drowzy professours are not stirring this way And verily hee had need be up betimes who preventeth the Lord with his prayer whose use it is before we call to answer us Isai 65. 24. Psal 21. 3. The importunate suppliant also will be late at it come for bread at midnight when he might have it inwardly suggested to him that he cometh unseasonably as that parable holdeth fotth Luke 11. 5. 8. He will pray with the first and with the last too he will pray againe and againe For this I besought the Lord thrice 2 Cor. 12. 7 8. His fresh suits freshen up the suppliants praying graces put a new glosse upon his faith love feare zeal holy desires and the like Sometimes the heart is more praying ripe then at other times importunity tryeth conclusions seeth how our hearts prayer-pulses beat at all times the heart is sometimes more full of holy motions and workings much more resolute more fixed upon God and good much more tender and sensible Importunity taketh all advantages of the heart of a Christian an importunate suppliant is wont to bee alwayes taking the skales and ballances into his hand and in his thoughts putteth in the mercies hee needeth and longeth for in the one skale and all his prayers pleas and tears for the same in the other And perceiving the mercies to weight downe all his praiers he then layeth in more prayers and sighs and yet alas they are not weight which makes him still to be laying weight after weight prayer upon prayer al his days Prayer is the souls messenger which it speedeth to heaven there to relate in the eares of its God and King the various cases which do concern it and as good speeding messengers are the most serious and the most serious messengers speed best so it is in the case of prayer yea as messengers are sent againe and againe till their errand bee fully told and their businesse dispatched or sufficient order raken for it so it is here Prayer after prayer is sent up to heaven until either the Lord doe what is desired or that which is equivalent to it as in Pauls case 2 Cor. 12. 7. hee said unto me my grace is sufficient for thee my strength is made knowne in weaknesse An importunate suppliant hath the art of praying and so hath his divers spiritual topick places as I may call them whence he frameth variety of holy arguments and pleas in prayer which is an holy reasoning with God as it is called he hath a great deal of spiritual eloquence and holy rhetorick so that hee is seldome nonplust in prayer but with sweet and apt variety of supplications is againe and againe pressing upon the Lord for mercy and when ordinary prayer seemeth not to prevail importunity in prayer will bee expressing it selfe in an extraordinary way fasting shall be joyned to crying mightily as Jonas 3. 6. and if our prayers alone prevail not it will make us goe another way to work with God even to set others on work to seek God with us and for us Cant. 5. 6 I sought him but found him not verse 8. If you find my beloved tell him I am sick of love 3. It consisteth in a holy impatience 3 An holy impatience of delay or denyall of an answer of delay or of denyal of our holy requests it maketh a gracious suppliant to stand as we say upon thornes the captive exile hasteth to be delivered Isaiah 51. 14. The Church is even sick of love for want of the desired presence of Jesus Christ Cant. 5. 8. Heare me speedily saith David my spirits fayle least I be like to one of those that go down to the pit Psal 147. 7. it is even death to such to be delayed much more to be denyed hence those frequent ingeminations How long Lord how long Ps 13. every day week or month is as seven to importunity love in the soul to the Lord his favours and fellowship keepeth due and true account how long he hath held us off and therefore
ver 18. Come now and let us reason together c. And then onely it is seasonable to pray when wee lift up our hands and hearts Psal 66. 18. If I regard iniquity in my heart the Lord will not hear my prayers Josh 7. 10 11. Wherefore lyest thou thus upon thy face Israel hath sinned Job 11. 13 14. If thou preparest thy heart and stretchest out thy hand toward heaven if iniquity be in thy hand put it far away else all that is to no purpose God heareth not sinners h. e. imponitent ones John 9. 31. It is no fit season for us to goe a wooing to Christ if not clear of privy leagues with any of our lusts not is it seasonable to trade with the Lord in prayer if we have any kind of traffique with his proclaimed enemies 3. When wee are under any special 3 When under special hurries of lusts power of passions and distempers and as then not seeing the sinne of them to lift up wrathfull hands is unacceptable and so unseasonable 1 Tim. 2. 3. Lift up pure hands without wrath It is not seasonable to offer up our sacrifice with such common yea wild-fire Such leaven of wrath and malice is apt to sowre our very Mincah and maketh it come as out of due season Such was the petition of James and John to Christ Lu. 9. 54 55. Wilt thou that wee command fire to come down from heaven to consume them Such were Jobs petitions Job 3. from verse 3. to verse 11. Such was that of Jonah chap. 4. 3. Take away my life from me Look as it is in a strong blustring time knocks at the doore are scarce heard if at all so is it here the noyse of our distempers outsoundeth the voice of our knocking 's in such like prayers It were better to pause a while till the blustering noise be abated And as Revel 9. 1 3. Silence was made a while before that the holy incense was offered so should it bee here 4. When our heads and hearts are over-full 4 When under hurries of occasions and even sore charged with carnal occasions and inordinate thoughts about them it is not so seasonable to go abruptly from such a crowd and throng into the holy presence of the Lord without some pause It is most unseasonable to enter upon so holy a discourse with God with so many batlers attending us when there should be but one speaker Eccles 5 1 2 3. Such rashnesse is irregular and therefore unseasonable such a foolish seekers prayer will be no better then a dreame arising from multitude of businesse stuffed with multiplicity of unseasonable impertinent and independent expressions 5. When we come to pray in remediless 5 When praying in remediless cases cases or for persons past recovery Jer. 11. 14 Pray not for this people for I will not hear them when they cry unto me for their trouble 1 Sam. 16. 1. How long wilt thou cry for Saul seeing I have rejected him 6. When wee will be praying at such 6 When praying whilst other ordinances cal for our attendance times wherein other ordinances doe call for our attendance As when we will be praying at home when we should rather bee in the publick assembly or praying in our closets when religious family-exercise requires our presence Now let us consider of prayer-seasons Most seasonable to pray offered by the Lord which hee requireth us to take These opportunities are either generall or special The general opportunity 1 When God is near us more generally by his word of prayer is that general Season of grace held forth in the offers of the dispensations of the Gospel Isa 1. 5 6. Seek him whilest he may be found Whilst God may be found it is a season to seek him Isai 21 12. If you will inquire returne come Whilst the Prophets incourage to come 't is a season to inquire Our calling and cry is but the echo of the Lords call Psal 27. 8. When thou saidst seek my face my heart answered thy face Lord will I seek Its the season of the echo to wait upon the voice a demand of grace upon a former offer of it it s very seasonable This blessed day work is most sutable to the day time of the Gospel and grace of God But besides this general opportunity there are some more special praying seasons Ps 31. 8. For this shal every one that is godly pray unto thee in a finding time as it is in the Hebrew As bountifull Princes have their so the Lord hath his special seasons for petitioners to come in with their suits and have each their dayes of audience Our blessed Father hath his set dayes of paying to each child his portion of mercy blessing upon demand and suit for it Now these special seasons of prayer are of three sorts 1. When God in special sort is near to us Or secondly we in special sort near to him Or thirdly in case of emergencies or special necessities calling for speedy help First when God in special is near to 1 When more specially God is near us ●A us then call upon him while he is near Is 55. 6. The Lord as our gracious king goeth his holy progresse and now he is nearer this people and such and such subjects and now againe he is nearer to others Let each accordingly take and observe their particular seasons of holy approaches to him with their suits If the loadstone be near the very iron moveth the approaches of the Lord to us have or should have this holy magnetical attractive vertue to draw us near to him in Prayer 1. Now the Lord is thus in special 2 By some special act of mercy sort near to us by some special mercy vouchsafed to us as when answering to former prayer or the like Psal 34. 18. The Lord is nigh to them that are of a broken heart Yea but wherein or whereby doth he shew that he is nigh to them It followeth He saveth such as be of a contrite spirit Gods ordering some special favour to his people by his providence is called his visiting of his people The Saints repairing to the Lord with earnest fervent Prayer is called their visiting of the Lord. Isai 26. 16. Lord in trouble have they visited thee how tbey have powred out a prayer to thee c. When God first beginneth to give us a gracious visit it is seasonable and sutable for us to give him prayer-visits Exod. 33. 17. And the Lord said unto Moses I will do this thing also which thou hast spoken verse 18. And Moses sayd I beseech thee shew me thy glory Moses made Gods time of giving to bee his opportunity of begging mercy If ever the Saints hearts are filled with love it is when they partake of manifest tokens of the Lords love to them and if ever it be a season of this friendly talking with God or praying 't is then when in such a friendly
to prayer then that lawfull working of heart which proceedeth from faith in Gods immensity And nothing more quickning to serious attention and intention to the duty and to comforble expectation of the issue then a lively apprehension that we speak not to an absent but to a present deity not to a friend out of hearing but to one that is with us and by us when we are praying 2. Faith in Gods omniscience is also 2 In Gods omniscience required in prayer Thus David in his and Jeremiah in his and Solomon in his prayer look at God as one that tryeth the heart and the reynes 1 Chron. 29. 17. Jer. 32. 16. 19. 1 King 8. And faith in prayer cometh not to bring light to God but rather to borrow light from him in all the businesse of praier It knowes his all-seeing eye as well as his all-hearing eare Faith maketh a sincere heart the more free and bold with God because it eyeth him as one who is privy to all it hath to think or speak in prayer Nothing more terrible to sinners thoughts in their wayes then that God seeth them But nothing more comfortable to godly ones then this perswasion that now they are before an all-seeing one they are glad that they serve such a Master and speak to such a father who doth throughly know them and watchfully eyeth them The suppliants of God have secret things in secret corners to commit to the eares of God and oh how well is it for them in their esteeme that they may pray to God which seeth in secret Matth. 6. 6. Pray to thy Father which is in secret saith Christ Suppliants are to seek Gods face about matters carryed on by Gods and their own enemies secretly and slyly and had need eye the Lord as one who seeth what is contrived and done in the dark yea sometimes they are so sorely assailed and charged by the wily enemies of their soules that they have no way left them but to appeale in prayer to the Lords all-seeing eye to judge of the false charges of men and divels and sometimes of their corrupted tempted consciences accusing them when they should excuse disquieted when they should rest in God Hence why art thou so sad O my soul and why art thou disquieted within me trust still in God Psal 42. 5. and verse 7. Deep calleth to deep and verse 8. My prayer shall bee to the God of my life That Tepilla or appeale prayerwise unto the Lord as one that heareth where the right lieth helped much Sometimes we know not what to ask as we ought but the spirit it self maketh intercession for us with sighs and groans that cannot be uttered Rō 8. 26 27. and he that searcheth the heart knoweth what is the mind of the spirit So said Pauls faith so saith the faith of each gracious suppliant 3. Faith in Gods all-sufficiency is requisite 3 In Gods all-sufficiency wherefore Christ teaching us to pray teacheth us to look at God as one whose is the kingdom and the power and the glory Mat. 6. 9 13. compared Hence the lowest room and one days residence in Gods house of prayer is desirable to David Ps 84. 10. He believed that God is a sun and a shield and would withhold no good thing from them that walk uprightly verse 11. Moses prayeth to the Lord for mercy as one whose mercy would fill all the desires and corners of their soules Psal 90. 14. O satisfie me early with thy mercy None are more selfe-empty and needy then true suppliants and therefore faith in Gods all sufficiency is most needfull to them None are more sensible of their utter inabilitie to withstand the force and guile of their soules enemies and so need such a faith the more yea the truth is true suppliants use not to seek of God this or that so much as God and Christ in that which they seek of him God in a spouse in a friend in liberty in health in ordinances in comforts and the like and therefore they must needs eye the Lord as all in all and all without him to be nothing yea in a barren land where no desirable comforts are and can then in seeking him by faith be satisfied with him as with marrow and fatnesse Psal 63. 1 2 3 5. c. 4. Faith in Gods Almightinesse is requisite in prayer Paul who bowed his knees 4 In Gods Almightiness or prayed unto the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ Ephes 3. 14. hee looketh on him as one who was able to do exceeding abundantly above all that we can ask or think according to the power that worketh in us ver 20. So Jehoshaphat in his prayer argueth by faith with God thus 2 Chron. 20. 6. And in thy hand is not there power and might that is there is So Jeremy in his prayer Chap. 32. 16 17. I prayed unto the Lord saying Ah Lord behold thou hast made the heaven and the earth by thy great power and outstretched arm and there is nothing too hard for thee Sometimes Gods suppliants are put hard to it in the course of their prayers the last grain of their faith and patience seemeth to be put into the scale their pressures are such that they even squeeze them to the last drop of their faith and patience there appeareth but some small spark thereof under the ashes they seem to cease in some fainting fits to be even departing onely some gasping panting symptomes left of life therein namely some workings of faith in Gods Almightinesse that he is yet able to help and succour them A may be a possibility in respect of Gods Almightinesse is eyed by faith and that carryeth them out in prayer Sometimes the very faith of Gods suppliants is at a stand at a non plus in regard of Gods will it is an if to them whether he will help yet they beleeve he can help and therefore pray as hee did Matth. 8. 2. Lord if thou wilt thou canst make me clean and such a faith in the Lords Almightinesse doth great things by prayer For hence that I will be thou clean saith Christ immediately his leprosie was clensed v. 3. He who prayeth in faith of Gods power shall have beyond his faith the benefit of his gracious and energetical will So the Centurion in his prayer to Christ believeth that if he but will his servants cure hee can work it he can even command it by his soveraigne word Matth. 8. 8. Speak the word onely and my servant shall be whole He is not sure that he will give out that energaticall word but if he would but speak the word he concludeth that hee hath power over all desirable blessings as servants at his command even as his souldiers were at his beck v. 9 10. And Christ approveth of this his faith in his soveraigne power saying Verily I have not found so great faith no not in Israel So the man mentioned Mark 9. 22 23
reach out thy hand open thy mouth wide inlarge thy self O Desire to crave these and these mercies which the soul needeth which the Lord is ready to give And Love do thou the like never a more lovely object presented to thee from one who so dearly loveth the soul wherein thou art Zeal be thou fervent put an edge upon Desire and Love the case so requireth the mercies are neer its pity they should be lost for want of putting to a little more strength to wrestle for them Humility stoop thou the heart fall down be low and vile before one that is so glorious Fear awe thou the heart let it tremble in the presence of the holy One of Israel Joy do thou enlarge the heart in the sense of mercies already gotten by prayer and more mercies are at hand Hope stand thou on tiptoe and look up and look out for verily mercy is not far off the Lord is neer such secret motives and whispers of faith that are in the souls of Gods suppliants their spirits are incouraged and moved variously to act in prayer from that faith which they have in the Lord when it is exercised Look as Davids faith in the love of God towards him occasioned made that speech in his soul when to praise God so that David from the strength of his faith therein speaketh to his soul And all that is within him to praise his Name Psalm 103. 1. The like speech doth faith occasion in a gracious heart when to pray requiring all within the same to be imployed in furthring the work So when David is to make his prayer to the God of his life in faith that God will command loving kindness to him Psalm 42. 8. here is a charge given in his heart to attend it patiently and hopefully and distempers are commanded to stand by the while v. 11. 3 Faith in Prayer is a moderation to regulate 3. It doth regulate and rectifie the souls pleas yea to dictate Arguments to back those holy pleas Prayers of Faith use to be pleading prayers filled and carryed on in lively reasonings with the Lord. And because oft-times the spirit of a Suppliant may be even non-plust almost and not know how to carry it on by reason of secret cavils raised in the heart whether from Satan or distrust or otherwise Faith then stepping forth and whispering some spiritual and sutable answers cleareth up the mist upon the Spirit and the mistake and sophisme and so the soul is a fresh carryed on in his pleading with God Psalm 77. 7. Will the Lord cast off c. this was secretly whispered by distrust as if God would cast him off but will he do it for ever and so ver 8 9. David his spirit was pinched in these reasonings and cavils at present he could not positively answer that God would not do so the cavil of distrust became a real question to his tempted deserted spirit by reasoning so much with that whilst he was crying to the Lord ver 1 but faith gave light to the case and upon discovery hee perceived that these were but cavils of an infirm spirit of his own ver 10. The case is resolved and determined through the help and light of Faith exercised and acted and standing up which before sate silent and he concluded this was his infirmity Faith is a Second to the soul in its holy wrestlings and pleadings with God to succour it in its suits both in point of assistance perswading with the heart that the Lord will prepare the heart to seek him and so the rather to prevail Psal 10. 17. And in point of Assurance 1 John 5. 15. it is the speech of faith We have what we ask of God It is as sure as if it were already granted And so in point of Acceptance ver 14. We know he heareth ver 7. Now when at any time the spirit of a Suppliant beginneth to give out when any fainting fit is upon it then faith reneweth the charge upon the Lord taketh up the holy weapons which the spirit of the Saints began to lay by the Arguments which it was ready to forgo and now the soul gathers up it selfe afresh and plyeth the Lord with renewed strength of holy requests at this passe was Jonah chap. 2. 4 7. he said he was cast out yet would look again to the Lord and ver 7. when fainting and when faith minding him afresh of something in the Lord he is revived and sends up many Supplications to him What give out wil Faith say nay fie for shame It claps the soul on the back as I may say and bids it chear up wrestle one bout more pursue once again it may be nay it is likely thou wilt prevail nay thou shalt indeed prevail 4. Faith in prayer is an Agent for the 4. It pleadeth soul to improve and plead all the foregoing principles and spiritual Topick places mentioned That of Gods gracious disposition it is a large field and very fruitful in prevailing Arguments when improved by faith so is that of God his All-sufficiency All-mightiness Eternity Immutability and so is that of Christ considered in his Offices Merit Mediation and Intercession the Promises of God likewise are several heads of holy pleas Faith improveth them wisely and seasonably and sutably as the cases of the same require It would bee improving them all in and through the Lord Jesus for the souls succour and support in this Ordinance of Prayer verifying that Isai 12. 3. Drawing water out of the wells of Salvation 5 Finally Faith in prayer becometh as it were the common pledge between the 5. It undertaketh Lord and the Suppliant that each shall do right in all that hath been pleaded Faith undertakes to become bound and to be a pawne to the soul that the Lord for his part will do what is meet and what becometh him for the soul And againe it ingageth it selfe to the Lord that by his help the soul shall attend to its duty which concerneth it See Psalm 55. 3. Davids faith you see there pawneth its credit that the Lord will not shall not say him nay My voice shalt thou hear O Lord and then faithfully promiseth on Davids behalf that he will and shall rightly order his prayer and so wait and leave it with the Lord and unto thee will I direct my prayer and look up 3. In the third place we come to consider of some useful Helps unto sincere Suppliants Helps to saith in prayer Faith in prayer The Helps and Encouragements to faith in Prayer may be such as these 1 Let us take and make all holy advantage of the least may be of Mercy where on 1. Improve every may be of mercy we may ground an expectation of a gracious successe and answer of our prayers We may yea must do thus Meek ones must seek the Lord hoping for his mercy when there is but a may be of being hid from the Lords anger Zeph.
2. 3. Thus did the Ninivites no body could tell they should bee delivered nor assure them of mercy if they did sue for it but yet none could tell the contrary none could say peremptorily they should perish without remedy If it be but a Who can tell it is a ground of mighty prayers and may cherish a spark of hope therein of successe Jonah 3. Isaiah must lift up his prayer albeit it be but a may be that God would hear the blasphemous speeches of Rabshekah against which he was to bend his prayers on Israels behalf 2 Kings 19. 4. A very peradventure of prevailing in prayer will set Moses a praying Exod. 32. 30. No Scripture telleth thee that thou art a cast-away many Scriptures give thee grounds of a may be at least of salvation Let that therefore raise thee though troubled sore to look and wait for a gracious answer of thy prayer 2. Labour to be stored with sutable Promises to your prayer cases it will bee our 2. Store up sutable promises to prayer cases wisdom to lay up such knowledge of such words of Grace Prov. 10. 14. Jehosaphat was not to seek of a Promise sutable to that he was to pray for 2 Chr. 20. Nehemiah had a like promise ready written on the table of his heart Nehem. 1. 8 9 10. And be we well acquainted with the Attributes of God which are vertually Promises and props to our faith in Prayer Moses in his prayer maketh use of them for that end Num. 14. 17 19. And the Saints oft elsewhere in the Scripture 3. Improve we former experiences both of our owne and others of the gratious 3 Improve former experiences dealings of God with us in way of prayer for meerly as well as otherwise they worke hope Psal 6. 9. The Lord hath heard the voyce of my weeping he will heare my prayer Davids experience of Gods mercifull and faithfull performance of all the desires of his soul for him will make him cry to him with much confidence Psal 57. 1 2. Wee may not rest in mercies and blessings received but we may and must be incouraged from them to reach after and waite for more if we never had tasted of his goodness to us when we sought him yet were we to expect and waite for his gracious answer but tasting and seeing how good the Lord is by experience it is then a blessed thing to trust in him Ps 34. 4. 8. We may well trust him and rest on him as a God hearing prayers when we have tryed him to be such a one or else it will be a shame if speaking it in his word that he is such a one and then speaking it over sensibly in his workes that hee is such a one yet hee cannot be believed If any surely such as by experience know the name of God have proofe of that or any other title or Attribute or word of his wherein hee maketh himselfe knowne to us they will trust in him Psal 9. 10. Gratious answers of prayer given to the Saints are precious pledges of our interest in the covenant of grace and in God as our God and so we are to look at them and be encouraged by them Zach. 13. 9. We are also to quicken up our confident expectations of a gracious issue of our prayers from other experiences therein so the Saints used to do in their prayers mentioned in Scripture Psal 74. 1. 13 14. and oft elsewhere for indeed the Lord in giving answers of Grace to any of his children hath regard to the good and encouragement of them all that which the Lord did for and spake to supplicating wrestling Jacob Gen. 32. hee eyed others that were to come after him therein Hosea 12. 4. He had power over the Angel c. and there he that Angel the Lord himself spake with us not with him alone The regard which the Lord hath to the prayers of destitute ones is written and recorded for the generation to come to make a comfortable use thereof Psalm 102. 17 18. if one of Gods chosen ones fare well in their holy approaches to God the Prophet will put it plurally in the conclusion he draweth from thence Psal 65. 4. the former part of the verse compared with the latter part we shall be satisfied with the goodness of thy house 4 Improve we conscionably the Intercession 4. Improve Christs Intercession of the Lord Jesus for us When he was on earth he prayed for us as you may see in John 17. To bee sanctified by his Truth to be kept from the evil of sin Apostasie we pray for union and communion with the Lord Jesus such as is very strong comfortable and constant whilst we are here and the eternal enjoyment of the Lord Jesus in another world but fear lest our sins might intercept and frustrate our prayers but Christ telleth us and for our comfort that our joy may be full Joh. 17. 13. what is the sum of what hee intercedeth with the Father for on the behalf as of his Apostles so of all Believers vers 20 c. We will and must needs confesse that Christs prayers were without exception and that the Father alwayes heard him John 11. How well is it then for us that the Lord Jesus hath with acceptance prevented us and these mercies are already begged by Christ and granted of God to our hands Surely the Lord hath heard Christ in the desires which hee as Mediatour expressed to the Lord that we and our services and so our prayers might be accepted of which that in Isaiah 49. 8. is prophetically spoken compared with 2 Cor. 6. 2. we may well expect that in our holy approaches and makings out to God for mercy we come in a time of acceptance since the Lord hath heard Christ bespeaking of it if the Lord the rather honour the Lord Jesus because in the dayes of his flesh he made intercession for Transgressours Isaiah 13. 12. therefore shall he divide the spoil c. because he did so surely we may well expect the success thereof and to share in those spoiles if wee are strong and earnest wrestlers with God in his name for the same Solomons request for the grant of their prayers in their several cases which are mentioned 1 Kings 8. and which are granted chap. 9. 3. were shadowing Types of what the Lord will condescend to in all his suppliants cases at the request of this our blessed Solomon Psalm 72. but especially improve his present Intercession and appearing before God for us now in Heaven Heb. 7. 25. Look as whilst the people were praying without the Priest was offering Incense within the Temple Luke 1. 9. 10. So is Christ in that glorious Temple above appearing before God for us whilst we are a praying That was a shadow of this Heb. 8. 5. the Saints Prayers are committed to him there as his charge according to his Office to which the Lord hath appointed him to offer them up
against me saith God Hos 7. 13. yet in pretence cryed to him but in truth they did not cry to him when they howled on their beds their ends were carnal ibid. and they make God a God that were as carnal as they a God that would further the desires of lusts else why do they petition him thereto and this is to bely the Lord and the Lord useth to answer such according to their heart desires according to their heart Idols and not their lip hypocrisies Ezek. 14. he giveth them up to their lusts they secretly chuse Delusions notwithstanding other pretences of sacrificing Isaiah 66. 3. and the Lord chuseth to let them have their choice verse 14. and at length taketh away that good that they seem to have and to prayer they become as speechlesse outed of all their ability to pray Math. 22. 11. CHAP. VII Of Watchfulness required to Prayer HAving handled three of the Conditions required to the incessant practice of this Duty of Prayer we come now to speak of the fourth and last Requisite thereto namely Watchfulnesse which is threefold 1. Watching unto prayer Ephes Praier watching threefold 6. 18. 2. Watching in prayer Coloss 4. 2. 3. Watching after prayer Psalm 130. 1 2 5. In which let us consider severally three things 1 The Nature of the Duty in the three forementioned branches thereof 2 The Reasons and Motives urging to the practice thereof 3 Some Helps furthering the performance of the same Watchfulnesse unto prayer consisteth Watching unto praier consists 1. In readiness to take all praier seasons in these four particulars 1 Being of a wakeful spirit ready and fit to take the due seasons of prayer as the Lord requireth Isaiah 55. 6. Call upon him while he is near as the Saints usual practice is and that is a part of their special priviledge for to do They call upon God in a time wherein he may be found Psalm 32. 6. There is a morning of opportunity which David will take for prayer Psalm 5. 3. True it is that God is up before us he is stirring early for his peoples help as soon as the face of the morning or season of shewing mercy to them appeareth he helpeth them Psalm 46. 5. but yet wee may not be up in our spirits we had need rowze up our hearts as being too oft drowsie at such times and not watching for the first day-break of a season of mercy So that look as David did when to praise God that are we to do when to pray to him Awake early Psal 57. 7 8. There is much spiritual sluggishnesse cleaveth to the spirits of the best in spiritual services as sometimes the eyes of their bodies were covered with sleep when they should have prayed Mat. 26. 4. so is it too oft with our spirits when they are not in wakeful plight That Godly Matron when to utter a Song of Praise to God see how she doubleth and redoubleth the word Awake Awake awake Deborah Awake awake utter a Song Judg. 5. 12. It is not a little calling that will awake our slumbring heavy eyed spirits Sometimes they call up a sleeping Jonah to arise and call upon his God Jonah 1. 6. Zachary must be rowsed out of his sleepinesse to observe the Vision by the Angel Zach. 4. 1. When the Lord Jesus would hear his Doves voice in prayer Cant. 2. 14. see how oft he calleth to her to arise and come away verse 10 13. Sometimes the Spirit of God in their consciences and spirits themselves calleth them up to attend this holy imployment if any morning light of approaching grace peepeth forth or season of doing the Lord service in prayer is observed as in Deborah and David and others of the Saints If ever our spirits had need be up and ready they had need be so when we are to pray A sleepy spirit will scarce speak sense as I may say to God in prayer It is burthensome to a friend to stand listning to a sleepy broken discourse consisting of half words and sentences indistinctly placed and uttered in his ears albeit it be by his friend So is it in a like spirituall disorderly drowsie praying and speaking to the Lord as men in a sleepy fit rather lose something they got in their hand then get more unto the same by craving it in such a drowsie sort So is it here we are losers and not gainers by prayers whereunto our spirits are not wakened to be fit to speak to the Lord as becometh him us 2 In heeding to make use of all holy and 2 In taking all prayer advantages special advantages unto prayer that Divine Providence offereth When Christians wait for such items of Providence such speaking invitations to Prayer then they watch unto prayer indeed As at other posts of the doors of Christ so at this are the Saints to watch and wait Prov. 8. 33. 34. Albeit the Lord in respect of his own disposition to mercy be alwayes ready to hear and help his people yet he is not alwayes to be spoken withal for that end neither are we so fit to speak to him At sometimes againe it is in our hearts to pray to the Lord as David said he found in his heart to pray that prayer to God 2 Sam. 7. 27. At other times that advantage was to seek It requireth much holy skill and care to espie and discern advantages to praier A wandring watchlesse spiritlesse sluggish eye observeth them not espieth them not discerneth not the same 3 In observing narrowly distinctly what In minding all praier occasions necessary weighty occasions of praier we have searching our wayes for that purpose and then lifting up heart and hand in praier Lam. 3. 40 41. Like Pleaders Saints ought to be good Students that they may bee the fitter to plead we are to study our hearts and lives and the cases of both before wee plead them Or look as Trades men do look over and set their marks upon their parcels ere they do retail them so in this case ought the Saints to look over the particulars of their hearts and lives before they do trade with God in prayer about the same 4 In observing wisely the frame of spirit In minding the plight of our spirits when to pray in which we are when wee are to addresse our selves to prayer how fit we are or unfit for prayer how far lively or listlesse or dead hearted how far tender or otherwise senselesse how far serious or slighty what faith is stirring or what distrusts doubts or temptations and like other Musicians which when they are to play as they are about to tune their Instruments they make use of their musical ear attending how far each string is in tune or no too high or too low too sharp or too flat So is it here in the Suppliants of God which are Harpers as wee have shewed it is their peculiar property and gift above other men they have
the divel for a shift will lend them a file there is no keeping of them from their natural wandrings without a very strict hand and vigilant eye kept over them That slippery flitting disposition of heart which ruleth in hypocrites doth at least dwell in the dear children of God so that it is partly in them which is abundantly fulfilled in hypocrites their goodnesse good thoughts and workings in the wayes and Ordinances of God are sometimes too like unto morning clouds which mount heaven-ward in appearance but forthwith vanish out of sight Hos 6. 4. 6 In that God and Christ watch then 6. The Lord then doth watch to help and hear us and Angels to observe and help us to give us a lift in prayer that our spirits may be more and more elevated and to be then whispiring items of Grace to us to rescue us from oppositions of the wily enemies of our souls and the like he waiteth to be gracious to us then in hearing and helping us at the voice of our cryes Isaiah 30. 18 19. He observeth carefully the resistances made by Satan against his Joshuahs Zach. 3. 1 2. As he saith of vowing we may say of praying Say not before the Angel it was an errour a carelesse rash expression of our minds Wee should so carry it before Christ the Angel of the Covenant in such Religious acts as those that have been conscienciously heedful the rather therein yea in that when we are Religiously exercised in prayer and such like worship of God some of the blessed Angels are then and there waiting and observing of us what we do and how we carry it and they are waiting on the Lord there ready to be imployed in any service for our good As when Joshuah is so employed as Christ was there ready for his succour so were there some which stood before him some blessed Spirits ready to be commanded in any service for Joshuah Zach. 3. 1 2 4. verses compared There is an Angel of God ready at hand whilst Daniel is praying to minister incouragement to him Dan. 9. 20 21. May not we then well watch in prayer when the Lord himself thus waiteth upon us and the blessed Angels are watching the grant of a Commission from God for our good 7 In that watchings in praier much helpeth 7. It much helpeth our comfort and confidence in and after prayer both our comfort and confidence in and after prayer when hereby we become more assured of our conscionablenesse in our praying unto God Paul had observed how he was carried in prayer and that his spirit was duly imployed in that service and therefore dareth to appeal boldly unto the Lord and call him to witnesse in what sort he had mentioned the Romans in his prayer Rom. 1. 9. Our waitings in this way of crying and calling upon God is a pledg and fruit of Gods waitings to be gracious unto us Isaiah 30. 18 19. verses compared We may best know the state of our souls by observing what we are usually in our prayers David gathers by this he was one of those godly ones set apart for God Psal 4. 3. Look as skilful persons may gather the state of the body by the beatings of the pulses so may a wise and judicious and vigilant Christian by observing how his spirit usually worketh in prayer Watchfulnesse after prayer doth likewise consist in these four particulars 3. Watching after prayer consisteth 1. In diligent attention to keep up such 1 In due care to keep up praying dispositions after prayer praying dispositions fresh and lively which were operative in us in our prayers It is a great part of a Christians wisedome when he hath gotten an advantage against a slight or formal spirit or any enemies to prayer now to stand his ground and manage this holy victory and when his heart is got upon the wings so to keep it but neither will be effected without a watchfull heed thereto When David was in that praying and praising frame as one suspecting the fidelity of his owne spirit and his owne sufficiency to maintaine the same he intreateth the Lord to keep the same in his servants heart for ever 1 Chron. 29. 18. A praying frame is so sweet that gracious hearts would ever bee in such a plight if it might be and they take all the care they can that they may bee so they therefore crave and improve the faithfulnesse and wisedome of God for that end Great is the insufficiency and inability of the best to keep up their owne spirits therein Even praying Moses albeit he held up long and strongly in prayer yet his hands waxe heavy such is the infirmity of the best that they are not able to hold it out long with strength of elevation of spirit in any holy exercises Care must be taken both to keep and hold such a sublimity of spirit Exod. 17. 12. A stone is brought to beare up Moses hands the strength and stability of that tried stone 1 Peter 2 4 5 6 9. Is to be improved by such which as a holy Priesthood would hold on offering acceptable sacrifice of prayer or prayse And as this care is to be took that whilst we are actually praying it may be thus so even afterwards wee are to look well to it that our praying spirit be not weakned and grow weary that it flag not flack not faile not as the force of the Greek word beareth Luke 18. When a motion is made by the Lord to David to hold on yet seeking of God as he had already done he was awake to heare and improve and followed the motion For such is that which is implyed in that mentioned passage Psal 21. 8 9. compared 2. In looking heedfully and hopefully 2 In listning after the returnes of our prayers after our prayers and listning still when God will answer us by his word and spirit and accordingly observing how far forth he doth not answer us David he is carefull to order his prayer rightly so when he hath done to look up to wait and see what becometh thereof Psalm 5. 3. and Psalm 85. 8. The Psalmist will hearken after he had prayed as verse 7. c. what God the Lord will speak Watching after our prayers and the successe thereof is as the watching of the night-watchman watching for morning Psal 130. 1 2 5. O how eagerly do such of the Saints desire the day-spring of the least shews and out-breaking of the light of the Lord Jesus how earnestly doe they attend the scattering of the night mists and clouds of their troubled tempted spirits How oft doe they look out to espy the least peep of the dawning and the least out-lookings of the day-break and morning light When they have knocked at the door of grace they listen after the least moving of the doore of grace the least noise or news or signe or pledge of the gracious approaches of the Lord to them Hence is it that
18. 10. Their Angels are always beholding the face of my heavenly Father A godly mans Watch-Tower is a sublimer station and condition then is usual earthly sensual worldly spirits are not fit to keep this holy watch 4. A wise and awful frame of heart apprehensive 4. Holy prudence of the weight and worth of prayer of the glory and greatness of God an holy ability and skil to espy discern and judg of things that differ whether workings or motions the wiser Christians as I said are most observing of such things Psal 107. 4. 5. Composedness of mind and thought together with earnestness of desires and deep 5. Composedness of mind sensibleness of our present pinching and pressing necessities David praying in deeps brings in a night Watchers case often exposed to extremities is in a night watchers posture watcheth for morning break of gracious answers and items from God Psal 130. 15. 6 An holy keeping our selves in a constant 6. Keep up this holy watch in other things and general watch of spirit in other things and passages of our Christian work and way Watch unto in and after hearing the Word and reading of it conference about it meditation upon it and practising of it c. Deut. 6. 25. We must observe all the Commandments of the Lord. PART III. 1 Thes 5. 17. Pray without ceasing Cases of Conscience respecting PRAYER CHAP. I. Touching unregenerate Persons Prayers HAving handled the two former parts respecting the duty it selfe of prayer and the modification and qualifications thereof we now come to the last part of this discourse about prayer namely to speak to some cases of Conscience considerable in the incessant practise of this duty of prayer The first case respecteth the persons Quest 1 which are to obey this indefinite injunction whether onely regenerate persons are bound thus to pray or that it be not also a duty which lyeth even upon unregenerate persons to indeavour obedience to this injuction Pray without ceasing or if such persons should indeavour the practise of this duty how far forth they may come up to it and be carryed out in the obedience thereof and likewise what successe may come thereof whether their praiers may not be heard and answered of God or how far forth at least God may heare and answer even their prayers The case it selfe doubtlesse may lye sad upon some spirits which either suspecting or concluding out of some dismall horrours of heart their estate to be but of the estate of meere naturall persons they question whether the injunction doe lay a bond upon them to obey it albeit it may be they would desire to come up to the obedience of it especially considering that the Scripture requireth that such as pray should pray in faith and believe that they shall receive what they ask Mark 11. 24. Whatsoever yee ask believe that yee receive them and yee shall have them And this they cannot doe finding no assurance of any interest in God nor being able to perswade themselves that Christ died for them in particular and through this mistaken fancy that there can be no true faith without such a firme perswasion and assurance that Christ is theirs which is rather a reflect then direct act of faith and which rather followeth after some time and strength of faith acting upon Christ in a holy casting the soule upon Christ alone for mercy and leaving upon him all the help and salvation which they desire thus are they kept off and scarce dare to pray conceiting that they are not qualified and fitted yet for it they cannot lift up pure hands without doubting Besides God saith that the prayer of a wicked man is an abomination to the Lord. Proverb 15. 8. And they think that they are such wicked ones in themselves and can or will God take a prayer in good part from such wicked ones as they are Surely no. Neither will Satan the enemy of prayer neglect the opportunity to present to them the strictest of the qualifications required of such as seek God by praier and that unlesse they could come up to that strictnesse of the rule which is laid strait that the people of God may by little and little come as near to it as they can and that forthwith at first setting about the work c. it is not for such as they are to attempt the same and better were it for them to sit still and be silent and so would if possible take them off from using meanes to be better and make them resolve never to seek after a better estate then what they are in already the devill knowing right well that God who ordereth such or such an end of good to his people ordereth such and such good means to be used for attaining of that end But such suspicions of tender hearts being most what groundlesse surmises need not must not discourage any from prayer in whom the Lord hath wrought a pliablenesse of heart to the mind of God therein and a desire to obey his injunction thereof this is to them as an inward call and invitation of God to call upon him The more tremblingly they set about this duty with sense both of their owne unworthinesse and unfitnesse to performe it the fitter they are for it And suppose the worst that their surmises are grounded yet verily the more sad they see or suspect their estate to be the more need have they to seek God by prayer When wicked Simon Magus did discover the naughtinesse and falsenesse of his heart Simon Peter doth not now forbid him to pray but he injoyneth him to pray God if perhaps the thought of his heart may bee forgiven him If there be any possibility of a mans salvation if there bee but a perhaps left of pardon and that of one at present in the gall of bitternesse and bond of iniquity as such a one is bound to repent so also to pray Acts 8. 21 22 23. Some will be ready to put off these injunctions of prayer as such as concern Puritans but as for such as they are what boot is it for them to pray It was reckoned among the prophane speeches of them of old Job 21. 14 15. What profit should we have if we pray to him Yea but some now adayes hold it as their judgement that it is to no purpose for unregenerate persons to pray because indeed they are got bound to pray They were as good joyne in the rest of the speeches there condemned and branded for prophaneness and stand up against the holy Ghost charging the prophane speeches of those unregenerate ones and maintaine them in it that they ought not to desire the knowledg of Gods ways they ought not to serve him they ought not to pray to him and therfore may say to God depart from us for we desire not the knowledg of thy ways and what is the Almighty that we should serve him and what profit is it if we pray to him
so assured that another with whom we would pray is regenerrte and so a man must now turne an absolute separatist indeed As for other praiers which do more personally Praying by themselves also respect themselves and are uttered by themselves albeit the parties be unregenerate yet the Lord may heare the same the Lord as a Master grants the request of that hypocritical servant though not as a Father Matth. 18. 26 17. and verse 32. O thou wicked servant I forgave thee the debt because thou prayedst me c. So those rude They are then heard mariners crying in distresse are heard of the Lord. Psal 107. 28. So was mocking Ishmael heard in his cry Gen. 21. 17. God may and doth put forth wonderfull workes for persons which cry to him as they are the children of men albeit not as the children of God many of them Psal 107. 15 21 31. O that men would praise him for his wonderful works which he doth for the children of men Though those that sought him when hee slew them had not hearts right with God Psal 78. 34 36 37. compared yet he being full of compassion forgave their iniquity i. e. as to the punishment deserved by it even utter ruine he passed over that he destroyed them not utterly verse 38. God liketh also to owne the righteous causes even of unrighteous persons and to set himselfe against their affliction Job 34. 27 28. They have caused the cry of the poore to come to him and he hath heard their cry So Exod. 22. 22 23. Though many of the children of Abraham of Isaak and Jacob in Egypts bondage were themselves unregenerate yet they crying also were heard out of respect to their godly Ancestors and the covenant of God made with them Exod. 6. 5. I have heard the groanings of the children of Israel and have remembred my covenant Sometimes God heareth such persons prayers the rather that they may afterwards bee instruments of his peoples good and sometimes that he might the rather incourage all sorts to pray to him Psal 65. 2. O thou that hearest prayers to thee shall all flesh come Sometimes the persons at present unregenerate yet are elect and God in hearing them will look to his owne thoughts of prayer which hee hath towards them and so will be found of those which sought him not aright But in case the parties bee reprobates what hearing God doth afford to any prayers of theirs It is first in common things and such which at least are not properly In common not in things properly saving saving mercies unto them for so God heareth not sinners if any object that evil servants pardon granted upon his request Matth. 18. 32. I answer the Master forgave him the debt not simply but in respect of the consequent vassalage and imprisonment presently deserved by it Matth. 18. 25. or as some interpret the place to be spoken in reference onely to the maine intent of Christ that if a man forgive not his neighbour offending and begging his mercy God will never communicate to him any saving benefit of his mercy in Christ An implacable spirited Christian is at present in a state of damnation 2. The hearing which the Lord doth By God as a Master not as a Father lend to such is from his general providence and pity and rather as a Soveraigne and Master then from any particular grace and as a Father for so he heareth not sinners yea he heareth them rather to leave them without excuse and to take a fuller blow at them afterwards as in the case of that evill servant Matthew 18. the end 3. The Lord useth not to give any sutable They receive not Grace answerable grace as the success of their prayers so he heareth onely Saints and not sinners especially reprobates he changed not the servants heart with his condition Mat. 18. nor theirs Psal 78. 37 38 39. 4. God sometimes heareth them in They are heard in wrath displeasure and anger Hosea 13. 10 11. I gave them a king in mine anger Psal 106. 15. He gave them their desire but sent leannesse into their soule their soule is blasted they were hardned in pride and security thereby and the thing it selfe given is blasted to them in the use of it becoming a snare and vanity and in the deprivall of it vexation of spirit CHAP. II. Touching Distractions in Prayer VVE are now to proceed to other cases of Conscience arising in the incessant carrying on of the weighty duty of prayer The second case now to be handled is touching Distractions or Impertinent thoughts and workings of spirit which disturb and molest us in prayer wherein demand will be made of three things Touching 1 The Causes 2 The Cure Quest or remedy thereof 3 The successe of such prayers wherein such distractions are found Touching the first we say the causes General causes of distractions in prayer of such distractions are either such as are more generall or more particular The more general causes are two 1. Satan that enemy to prayer the Authour of all confusion and so of this confusion Satan of the spirit in prayer that fowle who stealeth away what is spoken to the heart by God in the word he is as busie to steal away the good motions of the spirit stirring us up to speak to God in prayer Satan is at hand to tempt when we are in hand with prayer If we will draw near to God in prayer we may expect the tempter to approach some way or other to disturb us by some sinister subtle suggestions or other Wee must resist the devil in such like distracting motions when we are drawing nigh to God Jam. 4. 7. Resist the devil and he will flee from you And verse 8. Draw near to God c. If wee will pray with all manner of prayer we had need be armed against such like wily assaults of Satan which tend to annoy us therin Eph. 6. 11 18. compared Look as Act. 16. 16 17 18. still when the Apostle and his company were to go to prayer the devil in his instrument the maid possessed maketh a disturbance with her impertinent speeches so is it here if the devil can help it some thing or other shall be set on work to breed distraction or occasion disturbance to us in prayer or he himselfe will be suggesting something to molest us 2. The unregenerate part of man When 2 The unregenerate part in man at any time we should doe any good whether it be to pray or the like evil will bee present with us as he complained Rom. 7. 21. When I would do good evil is present with me that sink of natural corruption will then especially cast out its unsavory smels when so raked into by holy humble acknowledgments and deprecations this dunghill will then be sending out his vapours even when the heart is heated and warmed in prayer by the spirit when a commanding power of
musings 8 Spiritual drowsinesse sluggishnesse 8. Sluggishness and slightiness of heart When heart and mind is of a drowzie temper it is of a dreaming temper full of impertinent fancies even when to be imployed in prayer or the like yea if both body and soul be not in a waking and watching plight the soul wil be apt to be hurried with impertinencies temptations Matth. 26. 41. Watch and pray lest yee enter into temptation Now touching the second thing propounded Remedies against distractions in praier even the Remedies of such distractions in prayer Let but diligent heed be taken and conscionable indeavour used against each of the former occasions and causes thereof and it will help to redresse the same Espy out and bewaile the secret guile and wilinesse of heart get your heart rid of those distrustful cares of that Disconcontent and inordinacy of affection banish that spirit of Lust and of Error from your souls beware of that family contention and that spiritual or corporal supineness and you wil in a good measure get rid of such distractions in prayer But yet for our better help herein 1 Make conscience of holy and due Holy ●●●paration unto prayer preparation of our selves unto prayer Exod. 34. 3. Moses must come alone to God and leave the flocks Jacob ferrieth over all belonging to him on the other side of the river before wrestleth with the Angel Gen. 32. Abraham leaveth the servants and the Asses at the foot of the hill when to goe to sacrifice to the Lord. Gen. 22. David had got his heart into a very serious and fixed frame for that praising part of his prayer and yet as thinking that all too little saith hee will yet rouse himselfe up to that work Psal 57. 7. O God my heart is fixed my heart is fixed I will sing and give praise and verse 8. I my selfe will arise right early So good Deborah rowseth up herself amain to powr out prayses to the Lord Jud. 5. 12. Awake awake Deborah awake utter a song A gracious heart should think it self never enough awaked to such holy work experience of Saints will prove it and when they can by grace get their minds and hearts a little sequestred to consider seriously of the work they are going about and of God and Christ before whom they come and of themselves who are to come before the Lord and the like before they actually addresse themselves to solemne prayer how intently and spiritually and strongly they are wont then to bee carryed through the duty and all other times when they more suddenly and inconsiderately set upon prayer how unprofitably they are wont to spend such a time and how many hurries of spirit this way and that way they are cumbred with and much adoe to make any thing of it at such times 2. Spiritual wisedome is another help 2 Godly wisedome Godly wisedom will choose places for prayer which are freest from any distracting occasion Hence Christ so often repaires to the mountaine to pray Wisedome will seasonably discern a deluding cheating thought yea though it come with its vizard or with its painted face wearing in view the very livery of our heavenly Father and much readier will it espy other thoughts which would slyly withdraw our minds by little and little from the present businesse of our souls Wisedome is before him that hath understanding Prov. 17. 24. whilst the fools eyes are wandring in the corners of the world The wise Christian keeps his eye from gadding after vaine objects and keeps it rather intent upon wisedomes works and wayes The heart of the wise is at his right hand the instrument of action Eccles 10. 2. He hath his heart and spirit at an holy beek to be imployed as wisedom shall direct as there is need of the exercise of thoughts or desires or griefe or joy or feare or anger in an holy way or work a truely wise Christian hath them at hand to do their several homage to the Lord being thereto commanded by his spirit The wise mans eyes are in his head Eccles 2. 14. The truely wise Christian hath the ready and seasonable use of the eyes of his mind and understanding holy thoughts and apprehensions are not to seek when the Lord calleth for the use thereof as in prayer or the like but they are then active and so ready to keep out worse or unjust thoughts A wise Christian being also privy to his owne inability to keep his heart close to God he betaketh himselfe to the Lord as he did Psal 86. 11. Vnite my heart to fear thy name He would have the Lord to keep his heart close to any part of his fear or worship that it scatter not wander not therefrom Intruders cannot get in unseene and untaken notice of whilst this lightsome watchful grace is imployed as they will in darker places This skilfull Pilot at the helm by keeping its eye upon Gods compasse avoids many yawes and much lee-way in a gracious Christians course in prayer or otherwise which other unwise Christians make 3. Wathfulnesse which is the seasonable 3 Watchfulnesse and practical use of that holy wisedome upon every occasion This will bee examining such as knock at the door of the heart whilst the spirit is talking with God in prayer Those godly Church-officers described Revel 4. 6 8. with their eyes before and behind and within also to observe all without and as well also within themselves they goe on uninterrupted in the worship of God as though their cry was but one and the same continued cry night and day They rest not night nor day saying Holy holy holy Lord God Almighty which is and was and is to come This pondering the path of our feet is a help to going right on in this or any other way of God without diversions from it or stumbling in it Prov. 4. 26 27. Ponder the path of thy feet and let all thy wayes be established Turn not to the right hand nor to the left the former is the meanes to the latter A good watch at the City gates the out-lets and inlets of suggestions to the mind or motions from it will keep us from trouble-Cities such trouble-souls as are these distractions and help rid them of such Vagrants as they are Such holy careful oversights of the banks will prevent the dividing of the streams and issues of our minds even our thoughts that they run in no other channel and way then is meet for them When we go to prayer we are assaying by the ladder Jesus Christ to climb up to heaven and this holy care of our feet keeps them from slipping and us from falls Look to thy foot when thou goest into the house of God namely to worship God in prayer or otherwise Eccles 5. 1. When wee go to pray we go spiritually to plow and this holy minding of our work and our hand helpeth to keep us in our right furrow 4 Holinesse and
yet a little sleep c. 3 Such as notwithstanding which yet the heart is quiet Prov. 24. 31 33. it breaketh 3. When leaving the heart quiet not his sleep it molesteth not his ease nor is he so much as willing that such spiritual mischiefs and evils should disquiet him he is all for ease and will not have that disturbed ver 33. Yet a little sleep c. such a ones case is sad God regards not him nor any thing he saith but eyeth him as a loathsom sluggard fit for ruine 4 Such as overcome the soul and by degrees 4 When over-running the heart eat out the very motions and dispositions to prayer or any other good work ibid. compared with Prov. 21. 25. such a sluggard had his desires but even his desires too are overcome with such distempers The desire of the sluggard killeth him for his hands refuse to labour 2 There are some other distractions in prayer which may stand with hopeful Others not bindring answers of praier successes of the prayers annoyed by them As 1. Such distractions in prayer which are 1. If resisted strongly resisted prayed against and bewailed Albeit sometimes by their violence they captivate us so that as he said The good we would do we cannot because of that present evil Rom. 7. 21. And this part of the law of our members rebelleth against the law of our minds is quite crosse to the bent of our spirits as spiritual ver 23. whence with Paul as verse 24. we are ready to cry out Wretched men that we are who shall deliver us from the body of this death 2 Such as are frequently overcome so 2. If frequently overcome that notwithstanding that opposition of the Spirit in us by the flesh yet the flesh hath not its will of us Galat. 5. 19. The Spirit lusteth against the flesh namely so as to put it to the worst 3 Such which at the first arising of them do amaze and appall the heart and 3. If amazing the heart so Satanical and not ours 4 Such as are mainly occasioned from bodily distempers melancholy unwonted 4 If occasioned from bodily a●ls drowsinesse sicknesse paines c. in which case he pitieth us as a father his children remembring our frame that we are but dust Psal 102. 13 14. as in sick Hezekiahs chatterings c. Isai 33. 8. 5. Such which are occasioned by some 5 If occasioned by outward occurrents outward occurrents as the disturbance occasioned at that prayer and fasting 1 Sam. 7. 5 6 9 10 7 8. compared so by sudden outcries accidents c. CHAP. III. Touching good things suggested in prayer and how discerned to be or not to be delusions A Third case of conscience about prayer Quest 3 now to be considered of is touching things materially good which are suggested in prayer how they should bee discerned to be or not to be delusions Before we lay downe the marks of differencing Things materially good may be moved in prayer and not from a good principle cause these motions materially good from those which are so formally we must premise that such good things for the matter of the motions may bee suggested and raised up in the spirit of a Christian when praying to God and yet not spring from the spirit of God Even such like motions may be raised from our own natural spirits as far as they are carnal and likewise they may be cunningly propounded by Satan And because this to some may seem strange that good motions should be suggested to Gods people or to others whilst exercised in so good a work and yet the same not to come from a good spirit let us evince it a little from Scripture examples and grounds That such motions may come from our They may arise from mans deceitful heart own hearts as they are carnal will appear by the charactar of mans heart in its selfe considered and as far as natural Jer. 17. 9. The heart is deceitfull above all things and desperately wicked Surely if the heart could not play such a cheat as this that speech would bee too hyperbolical When David sought God in and about his soules cases hee had experience of such seemingly friendly counsels to doe this or that to take this course for his succour and that whereby the Lords displeasure might be removed but by his complaint of them it appeareth he found them deceitful counsels he is weary of such heart-counsels saying Psalm 13. 1 2. How long shall I take counsell in my selfe When David was in so sad a case as he mentioneth Psalm 42. 1 2 3 4. one might think sad musings and thoughts being so sutable to his case need not be suspected to be sinfull yet David perceived that those he had were tainted and therefore chideth his soul for them verse 5. Why art thou so sad O my soul when Asaph was crying to God in prayer in that sad condition Psalm 77. 1 2 c he had motions in his mind then propounding grounds of comfort whilst he sought God for he saith I sought God my soul refused to be comforted verse 2. Again at the same time he had other motions crossing the former and perswading that it was not for such a wretch as he who had lost Gods favour to take hold of comfort and these motions prevailed against the other for he saith I sought the Lord my sore ran and my soul refused to be comforted both motions had their probable grounds of equity and truth but could not be both from a good principle He had also in his prayer many thoughts of Gods past mercies to him yet other motions and inquisitions are made in and by his spirit which make him but the more troubled and overwhelmed amidst his complaints verse 3. I remembred God and was troubled I complained and my spirit was overwhelmed True it is that the thoughts of Gods mercies together with the serious musings of our vilenesse and unworthy walkings they work kindly when they humble us and break our hearts but it is never of God that they should overwhelme us as these did this good man The like might be said of such motions demanding will the Lord cast off for ever is his mercy cleane gone for ever Albeit he doth cast off and his mercy be gone to sense at present yet is it so for ever was there any hurt in these yea verily Asaphs owne conscience being Judge afterwards verse 10. And I said this is mine infirmity Psal 39. 3 4 5 6. David hath motions in his heart which put him upon that Lord make me to know mine end and it was materially a good thought which he expresseth man at his best estate is vanity yea but Davids heart was too hot within him it was distempered heat against the prosperity of the wicked at which he was troubled and these are but the sparklings of that wild-fire he doth as good as pray to hasten his
Instruments when they make their voice gracious as the Hebrew hath it Prov. 26. 15. If Satan could not or did not set a good face upon his Treacheries to mens souls and cover all with the mantle of good and pious motions he would not so properly be said to deceive the whole world Rev. 12 9. But to come to the Marks of distinction Marks of such like motions when delusive and of discerning of this highest straine of the sophistication of our spiritual enemies through suggestions materially good 1 Such motions materially good which 1. When they do but steal away the heart from prayer steal away the heart from the duty of praier in hand though possibly the Duty be carryed on but in an overly manner by reason of those motions such are Satanical on the contrary motions which tend to farther intentnesse and attentnesse thereon they are of God The Spirit of God is a faithful and wise guide and useth not to lead the Saints about or in by wayes but in strait paths right on by all his motions The Spirit of God leadeth the sons of God in a direct way of crying Abba Father For as many as are led by the Spirit of God they are the sons of God And ye have received the Spirit of Adoption whereby we cry Abba Father Rom. 8. 14 15. Isaiah 30 21. Thou shalt hear a voice behind thee saying This is the way walk in it when thou turnest to the right hand or to the left The Spirit moveth nothing to draw us out of the way of God but to put us into it and being in it to move us to keep on When a man in prayer hath his imagination working and exercised about good notions for godly discourse for expatiating on some good subject of meditation or preaching and that in such sort as he cannot and doth not mind scarcely what hee is saying or doing before God in prayer these thoughts and motions are delusive 2 Such motions as come into the heart 2. When they are too violent with such violence that they occasion inward hurries of spirit by them and thereby breaking off the very duty sometimes these though materially good yet are delusive and satanical As when in prayer strong motions are suggested pretending to put us upon being affected with sorrow for some past evil or fear about some evil imminent yet so as the same are pressed and followed with such violence that they bend and tend to amazement and swallowing up of spirits these are delusive Such were those motions in Asaphs heart whilst seeking God which so troubled him that he was overwhelmed Ps 77. 2 In the day of my trouble I sought God and verse 3. I complained and my spirit was overwhelmed Such were the motions to the humbled Corinthian when so violent that he was like to be swallowed of overmuch heavinesse about his sinful and sad estate 2 Cor. 2. 7. Satans divices were in it for his own advantage ver 11. Lest Satan get advantage for we are not ignorant of his devices The Lord never useth to maintain contention to cause the spirits of his people to fail Isaiah 57. 16. I will not contend for ever lest the spirit should fail before me nay rather the Spirit of God useth when such troublous motions grow strong and very heavy to put under his hand to revive the Saints spirits when ready to give out through such hurries of sad pressures of heart Isai 57. 15 16. To revive the spirit of the humble for I will not contend for ever lest the spirit should fail before me Hence that Psalm 94. 18 19. In the multitude 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of my wretched thoughts thy comforts delight my soul The Spirit of the Lord will indeed suggest motions of fear but not such as tend to make us break off through their violence but sweetly rather to draw us to hold on in the way of God Jer. 32. 40. I will put my fear into their hearts that they shall not depart from me he gently leadeth his flock as a shepherd Isaiah 40. 11. Yea if the motions were to confidence in God or joy in God but with such violence as to drive men into strange extasies they are to be suspected So in motions puting upon just anger for the ground of it but with so much violence as not to be kept within bounds of godly moderation and temperature of compassion so in motions putting upon desires of something in its time way and proportion very desirable but so all upon the spur and with so much imperiousnesse upon the spirit as though all present service of God and all other thoughts must forthwith give room and place to this motion which is enough to prove the same to bee delusive the Spirit of God using to work regularly and calmly even when he worketh most strongly Sure it is that it is not one and the same Spirit that speaketh to a mans spirit which whilst it was but then called upon to speak to the Lord about such a businesse of weight it is now in such haste and hurry called off to run a long tract of mental discourse so hotly and so closely with some other matter but Cheater like rather coming galloping to overtake the honest Traveller and falling in with him he must all on a sudden be over intreated to step aside to take his kindnesse and then he shall be told he shall on again and dispatch his business in time good enough when it proveth rather to the poor Travellers loss in the close on every hand 3 Such motions which are empty notions carrying a shew of Scripture language 3. When they are but empty notions but are not Scripture haply some piece of Scripture joyned with something else whereof the main is left out So the Divel at first sight seemed to suggest that Scripture Psalm 91. 11 12 He shall give his Angels charge over thee c. Matth. 4. 6. but look it over again and you shall see the main limitation of the Promise To keep thee in all thy wayes is left out as something is added of the Divels owne in bringing this to back the temptation of Christ Cast thy self down for it is written He shall give his Angels charge over thee c. Thus here is chaff mingled with Gods Wheat Yea here is a pretence of a Scripture when in the terms of it there was no such Scripture Scripture in the divel or in his Instruments mouth is as the Parable in the fools mouth Prov. 26. 7. Like to the legs of the lame which are not equal but halting It is pretended Thus saith the Lord by the false Prophets Jer. 23. 17. They say The Lord hath said c. but ver 28. God counts it all but chaff a meer empty husk What is the chaff to the wheat The like may be said of Jerem. 28. 13. and 1 Kings 22. 11. they did but pretend the word and counsel of God
guard and support him against his temptations Moses shall have all in a view at a distance which they had who went into Canaan Deut. 3. 23 28 David earnestly desired to have built God a Temple It was in his heart so to do and accordingly he made ready 1 Chron. 28 2. yet ver 3. he must not build it but 1 Kings 8. 17 18. God honoured him in selecting his son Solomon to do it ver 19. and he farther honoured David with a glorious testimony of his gracious acceptance of such desires and endeavors of his to have done it even as if he had actually done it v. 18 yea he honoured him with that divine discovery of all the platform of that goodly fabrick that albeit Solomon shall erect it yet David shall have the honour above him in all matters concerning the framing of it 1 Chr. 28. 19. Abraham is denyed his desire in Ishmael Gen. 17. 18. but its fully made up in the blessing upon Isaak and Ishmael some way also fared the better for it v. 6. As touching the other particular namely Rules about the use of means What Rules are to be attended unto in our using of the means with our prayers I answer 1 Sanctfie even the very meanes which 1. Sanctifie even them by prayer you use with prayer for a Blessing upon them So did Nehemiah his petition to the King was sanctified by his petition to the King of heaven Nehem. 2. 4 5. So I prayed unto the God of heaven and then I said unto the King c. and Ezra 8. 21. those godly Jews sought God by fasting and prayer for a right way of proceeding in their return into Judea Asa will set the battel in aray as the means but yet sanctifie it by praier and yet then also professe it is all nothing without the Lord 2 Chron. 14. 10. 11 We have no power help us O Lord our God And indeed when Christians sanctifie the means by prayer they acknowledg God as All in All even in the means as well as the end this will prevent using of unlawful means If Abraham Isaak Rebecca and Jacob had done so they had not used those poor shifts mentioned Gen. 12. and 20. and 26. and 27. no better then lying Besides it will prevent a blast upon that which meanes may bring about without such prayer to sanctifie the same when we use means with success in our desires without prayer we either want the comfort of the thing attained or it is unexpectedly snatched from us or it is some way perverted to some unwarrantable use or rather abuse thereof 2 Be we choice prudent and pious in making use of the means we pitch upon and 2. Use the best means as pious and prudent in the manner of using the same Neither chuse nor use any unlawful means as Rachel and Sarai did to give their maids to their husbands to attain their desire of children by them Or as David in danger at Gath supplicating for deliverance but scrabling too as the meanes Nor are we to use any unsutable or unseasonable means or lawful pertinent means unlawfully or unseasonably but use lawfullest and likeliest means As Mordecai with prayer used Queen Esthers interest with her husband King Ahashuerus and Jacob with his prayer sends Esau a Present a gift using to prosper whithersoever it goeth 3 Look we that there lye no fault or sin upon us in such sort as might blast both our 3. Remove what might blast the means praying and means using also As in Joshuahs crying whilst Achans sin lay upon the Congregation Josh 7. 10 11 12 13. Why cryest thou Israet hath sinned c. So the Israelites for avenging that horrid crime of Bejamin Judg. 19. gather an Army and pray too but for sins among them and too much trusting to their numbers c. twice blasted Judg. 20. Hence when godly Ezra would use means for their safe return to Judea he putteth his company upon solemn humiliaation of themselves before God Ezra 8. lest their sins might way-lay them 4 Use the means in faith Set faith on 4. Use means in faith work as well in the use of means as of prayer Nehemiah prayeth setteth a strict watch encourageth all sorts to fight but all in faith Our God shal fight for us Neh. 4. 9 13 14. compared Moses cryeth Ex. 14. 15. so did the people Neh. 9. 9. and withal Moses useth means prescribed of God for to passe thorow the red sea Exod. 14. 26. he stretcheth out his hand over the red sea to divide it but all this was in faith looking through all their prayers and all secondary means unto the Lord as All in All By faith they passed through the red sea Heb. 11. 29. Asa setteth the battle in array and prayeth but resteth neither on his war-like power nor on his prayers but on the Lord alone We rest on thee 2 Chro. 14. 10. 11. And indeed wee have need to use means in faith looking through means and resting on the God of them and on his promise for succeeding the same Jacob prayeth as well after he had pitched upon the means of pacifying Esau as before and yet resteth on the charge of God that he should return and his promise That he wil be with him and do him good Gen. 32. 10. and on that ver 28. With men thou shalt prevail compared with verse 30. Use the means also in faith respecting the warrantableness thereof lest in that respect what is not of faith become sin to us And let all be done in faith also eying and owning God in all successes of prayers and means as the chief as all So Exod. 15. 1. c. He hath triumphed gloriously the horse and rider hath hee throwne into the sea 5. Be diligent and patient in using means 5. Be diligent and patient therein waiting upon God for the success as they do that dig for Mines Prov. 2. 3 4. Our eyes wait on thee as the eyes of the handmaid upon her Mistress c. Psal 123. 6 In using means be we submissive Bind 6. Be submissive to God therein not God to our praying or meanes using much lesse to this or that means or manner or season either of the use or of the success of the same but leave all with the Lord to do delay or deny as he pleaseth Even Joab spake nobly herein to his brother 2 Sam. 10. 12. Be of good courage and let us play the men for our people and for our God and the Lord do that which seemeth him good This he spake after he had used all warlike means for a good success mentioned v. 10 11. David though he so earnestly desired and industriously indeavoured to build a Temple and was denyed the successe as to himselfe yet resteth quiet and satisfied in Gods mind touching his son and his acceptance of him for other service although not for that So Paul denied of that he so
consider what a disparagement it wil be to thy glory in the eyes of thy enemies to deale so strictly with thy people men are forbidden to lay a stumbling-block before the blind and wil God lay such an occasion of offence and falling in the way of blind Aegyptians The like plea is used in Psal 79. 9 10 11. Help us for the glory of thy name purge away our sins for thy names sake wherefore should the Heathen say where is there God Render to them the reproach wherewith they have reproached thee O Lord. So Psal 74. 18. 19 22. and in many other places to like purpose The cases wherein Gods name and glory is in any special sort engaged are of greatest weight and concernment and therefore none necd be afraid or ashamed to plead them in such sort before the Lord in such pleas truly if the Lord should deny his Saints he should deny himselfe And the self-deniall of the Suppliant shines forth the more in such pleas when he pleads the case not so much in reference to himselfe as to the Lord himselfe and to his name Secondly the suitablenesse of the relation His relation to us and fitnesse to help us betwixt God and us as Psal 79. 9. Help us O God of our salvation Deliver us for thy name sake As if they would say thou stilest thy selfe the God of our salvation we by thy grace doe eye and own thee as such a one wherefore shew that thou art such a one by saving of us let it appeare that it is no empty title And what is more suitable to a God of salvation then to save his people or wherein shall that Name of thine be more magnified then in thy delivering thy people So Esay 63. 16. Doubtlesse thou art our father our Redeemer c. As if they had said O Lord we have no other but thee of whom should children seek for reliefe or from whom should they expect succour but from their father Now we are resolved to own no other for our father but thee and can a father be curst to his poor desolate disconsolate sick or sad children when it is in his power to relieve them To this we may adde the suitablenesse of the mercies we ask of God unto him and unto us So Numb 11. 17 18 19. Let the power of my Lord be great as thou hast said the Lord is long-suffering and of great mercy forgiving iniquity c. pardon I beseech thee the iniquity of thy people As it is suitable to a sinning people to get a pardon so it is most suitable to a sin-pardoning God to give forth a pardon to them So Psal 130. 4. But there are forgivenesses with thee that thou maist be feared I need not speak more in this case or so much as scruple it that thou shouldst be strict upon a poore desolate tempted creature to mark what is done amisse and so to proceed to condemne or confound such a one as I am for there are Forgivenesses with thee the manifold pardons that I need for my manifold and multiplied sins are in readinesse in abundance with thee thou canst not deny the benefit thereof to me in my case I wil and do conclude it as a granted case there are forgivenesses with thee What then that thou maist be feared Thus the Faith of Heavens suppliants wil be coming within God and wil be framing good conceits of God and telling him how wel they are perswaded of him and of his generous nature that if he deny them he should disparage himselfe in their eyes who had better thoughts of him As Paul desiring Agrippa's becomming a Christian he windeth him in by his holy Rhetorick thus Believest thou the Prophets yea I know thou believest so that if Agrippa deny this he must in a manner weaken his own esteem so when the Saints in their prayers and pleas hold forth their faith in God as such or such an one in his gracious nature the Lord useth not to exercise himselfe short of their apprehensions but it is for his honour to make good the utmost of his peoples desires and expectations of Faith Thirdly the little gain that the Lord The little gain the Lord wil have by our ruines would have by denying his people in the mercies they request David beggeth his own life of God using this plea What profit is there in my blood Psal 30. 9. So did the captive Church plead Psal 44. 12. Thou sellest thy people for nought and dost not increase thy wealth thereby So then poor Saints of God when they come and tell the Lord in their prayers that indeed he may condemne or confound or cut or cast them off he may continue to frown upon them and to withdraw his spirit from them he may deny such and such requests of theirs for such and such just causes in them but what wil he gain thereby he may gain many praises c. by hearing them and helping them but what good wil it doe him to see them oppressed by the enemies of their soules or what delight would it be to him to see them sighing and sinking and fainting under sad pressures c. this is an allowed and a very succesfull kind of pleading We might instance in many other pleas respecting God as that Esay 63. 15. Where is thy zeale and thy strength the sounding of thy bowels and of thy mercies towards me are they restrained These are prevailing pleas since the Lord can as soon cease to be as cease to be zealous of his own glory in his peoples welfare since he neither wanteth power nor wil to help them in any needful case which concerneth them for he hath strength and therefore is able and bowels of compassion and tender mercies and therefore is willing to answer and succour his people Yea every Attribute and Title of God and every promise is a several plea which God cannot deny The second sort of pleas respect the Saints themselves which plead and they Pleas respecting us are of two sorts First some respect the dependency and needinesse of our condition As our needinesse as we are creatures Secondly others the good of grace shining forth in us Of the former sort let us instance in these 1. It may be and hath been pleaded that we are Gods creatures both considered as men and as Saints by calling we are the workmanship of his hands and as such plead for his gracious respects Job 10. 9. Thou hast made me as the clay and wilt thou bring me to dust again As if he should say thou hast been at such cost and paines to make me and now wilt thou altogether marre me by afflictions and temptations so the Church pleadeth Esay 64. 8 9. But now thou art our Father we are the clay thou art the potter be not wroth very sore Which is as much as to say Fathers doe not use to be irrevocably displeased with their children nor wil they correct them
without measure or whip them to death Potters doe not use to conceive so deep a distaste against a poore vessel of clay as to rage against the same without all respect to their own credit or to their own workmanship and therefore surely thou our heavenly Father and Potter canst not wilt not doe thus Thus David pleads his Fashioning by God Psal 119. 73. Thy hands have made and fashioned me give me understanding that I may learn thy Commandements God himselfe maketh it an argument to himselfe why he wil bear his people Esay 46. 3 4. I have made and I will beare even I will carry and will deliver you And it is a prevailing reason with God not to contend for ever lest the soule should faile before me saith he and the spirit which I have made Esay 57. 16. so would God have this an argument to help the weakest faith to expect its desires above all its feares Esay 43. 1 2. But now thus saith the Lord that created thee O Jacob and he that frmed thee O Israel Feare not And so V. 7. For I have created him for my glory I have formed him yea I have made him And therefore surely the Saints may wel urge this in any like case in prayer 2. We may plead the imbecillity and We are fraile creatures frailty of our natures So Iob pleadeth for the speeding of Gods manifesting of his pardoning and reconciling grace to him Iob 7. 21. Why dost thou not pardon my transgression and take away mine iniquitie for now shall I sleep in the dust c. As if he had said Lord if ever thou intendest as I am perswaded thou dost to renew the former beams of thy favour and pardoning mercy thou hadst not need to defer too long lest it come somewhat too late for ere long I shall returne to my dust This is Davids plea in the like case Psal 39. 12 13. Keep not silence at my teares for I am a stranger with thee Spare me a little that I may recover my strength before I goe hence and be no more So Iob pleadeth this Iob 13. 25. Wilt thou break a leafe driven to and fro and wilt thou pursue dry stubble What credit it is to so great a Majesty as thou art to shew thy power against a poor leafe or to runne after a poor leafe which every puffe of wind whisketh hither and thither or is it any honour so much as to a man to be cutting and hewing a poor leafe which can make no resistance Thus Abraham pleadeth for Audience and patience in hearing him because he is but dust and ashes of little substance short continuance before the Lord if the Lord please now to heare him whilst he is before him he is not like to trouble him long it is but a very little and he is gone he is but weak and it is not much discouragement in denial of requests which he is able to beare Gen. 18. 27. And the Lord hath sanctified this plea as an argument to himselfe to shew his servants mercy Psal 103. 13 14. He pittieth those that feare him for he knoweth our frame he remembreth that we are but dust So Esay 57. 16. I will not contend for ever for the spirit should faile before me This prevaileth with the Lord not to charge too hard upon his poore people 3. Plead we the extremities of our miseries We are in extremities inward or outward our extremities being Gods opportunities of hearing and helping us Psal 27. 16. Have mercy upon me O Lord why so for I am desolate And Psal 143. 7. Heare me speedily O Lord why so my spirit faileth I have but a little spirit left O Lord to breath after thee and speak to thee let me not spend that in waste Lord my soule is dying away speak Lord answer Lord before I faint quite away A gracious answer Lord would even fetch life in me again and nothing else but that wil recover me and therefore heare me speedily a poor dying sinking fainting spirit O Lord I intreat thee So Psal 69. 12. Save me O God for the waters are come even to my soule I sinke in the deep mire where is no standing This plea in effect is thus Lord I am ready to drown if ever thou wouldst save a poor perishing servant of thine save me my troubles and temptations are too deep for me I am ready to sinke over head and eares in them and therefore Lord reach hither thy gracious hand and beare up my head above water least otherwise I miscarry but especially if such extremities continue the continuance of them may be pleaded Such is Hemans plea Psa 88. 14 15. Lord why hidest thou thy face from me I am afflicted and ready to die from my youth up whilst I suffer thy terrours I am distracted and God maketh this an allowed plea to himselfe of shewing his people mercy in such a case Esay 42. 19 20. I have a long time holden my peace Now will I destroy and devoure at once And I will bring the blinde by a way they know not c. Christ the Angel useth this plea Zech. 1. 12. O Lord of Hosts how long wilt thou not have mercy on Jerusalem against which thou hast had indignation these threescore and ten yeers 4. Plead we our helplesnesse in our We are helples otherwise selves and in any other besides himselfe So Psal 22. 11. Be not far from me for trouble is neer for there is none to help So Ier. 14. 22. Are there any among the vanities of the Gentiles that can cause raine or can the heavens give showres Art not thou he O Lord our God therefore we will wait upon thee for thou hast made all these things So 2 Chro. 20. 12. We have no might we know not what to doe but our eyes are unto thee Either then thou must help O Lord at this dead lift or else thine enemies will prevaile So Psal 60. 11. Give us help against trouble for vain is the help of man When people are in a perishing condition it must not keep them from making out to God but they must take this to bottom their requests upon for mercy their spirituall oppressours and oppressions must make them repaire to the Lord and that wil prevaile for succour from that great one the Lord Jesus They shall cry unto the Lord Esay 19. 20. because of the oppressours and he shall send them a Saviour and a great one and he shall deliver them Psal 72. 12. It is engaged concerning Christ the true Solomon He shall deliver the needy when he crieth the poore also and him that hath no helper He cannot forget the cry of his sucking shiftlesse babes that hang upon the breast and can no more shift for a living then a poore infant God himselfe urgeth his people to come to him with this plea in their mouthes Hos 14. 2 3. Take unto you words and say Take away all
spread them before the Lord in their prayers and therefore let them bee much with God in secret And let all our brethren and sisters All sorts for Christ brings us into his Chambers and every of them make conscience also of this duty of secret prayer the Lord Jesus bringeth us my brethren into his chambers where he delighteth most to be and rest and shew himselfe and secrets to his Saints Cantic 1. 4. and shall not wee hereby bring him into our chambers also the Lord hideth us in the secret place of his Hideth us in his secret place presence the secret chambers of his providence and protection are our chambers for our safety and honour Psal 31. 20. Esay 26. 20. and shall not our chambers be his for his use that wee there meet and talke with him in secret prayer and he with us by his gracious presence and answers Each particular Saint of God hath his Each Saint hath his chamber or mansion-house in Glory chamber as I may say his mansion-place of glory in which to praise God for ever Joh. 14. 2 3. Why shall not each Saint of God of what condition soever have here his retired oratory and place for secret praying unto God each of them are by their calling Gods hidden ones whilst here Psalme 83. 3. and let them be so in this Each Saint Gods hidden one Set apart for Gods Gods friends respect also by their secret repayres to the Lord in praier Each godly man in particular is set apart unto God Psalme 4. 3. and why then not more apart to pray to him we are his friends James 2. 8. John 15. 15 16. Cantic 5. 1 and let us then be his friends in a corner tell him our minds bee oft doing him this service of love in secret We are his spouses Hos Spouse 2. 19 20. now as Canticles 7. 10 11 12. The Church would have Christ goe aside as it were in private and there she will give him her loves so let us in secret give him this spouse-like love fruits of our lips in secret and there tell him all our hearts The spirit which is in the Saints is a free spirit Psal 51. 12 and truely there is the most free use and employment of that spirit in prayer when sequestred as from all occasions so from all other company Friends are most free and bold when alone so wee with the Lord when alone A gracious person is never more himselfe as gracious then when praying Psalm 109. 4. But I prayer saith he and truely never more seen to be such an one then whon praper or given to prayer in secret Hypocrites may and will pray and haply in private too but we must pray as most desiring privacy When the Lord would demonstrate to Ananias that Paul was converted he doth it by this argument for behold he praieth Acts 9. 11 it was alone in secret that hee Wicked ones have and serve their idols in ●ecret did thus he must inquire him out for hee was got into some corner of the house Let not wicked ones be more forward to set up an idoll in secret or to set up a false Christ in the chambers Ezek. 8. 8. Matth. 24. 26. then we to honour the true God and Jesus Christ thus in secret And that wee may yet a little further presse this so weighty a duty consider that it is indeed our priviledge in many respects ordered by the Lord in much wisedome and faithfulnesse for our good also as well as his glory that hee will have us thus to seek him by our selves alone in prayer For 1. Hee therein tendreth the very credit of his people They need not uncover their spiritual nakednesse before any man whatsoever nor all their personal plagues need be unbared before men it sufficeth that they have this priviledged precept to pray to their Father who seeth in secret and tell him all their hearts In Best for opening all their secrets some cases of personal sins against brethren personal confession of such sins is requisite and sometimes in case of some oppressing burthen upon our hearts wee are to goe to some faithfull Minister or experienced Saint of God and tell them our secret ayles but in ordinary course it sufficeth that wee tell the Lord in secret all our personall and particular failings and wants 2. If solitary Praier were not Gods Best for our necessities ordinance what should Gods solitary ones doe in sundry cases incident to them But now Jeremiah in a solitary loansome prison is encouraged Call upon me and I will answer thee Jer. 33. 13. Sometimes the Saints are like Pelicans and Owls in the desert Psal 102. 6. Well may they make their moans to the Lord but are of all others respect destitute Others would be like other birds fit to ho wt at them and make a wonder of them now welfare solitary prayer Sometimes the Lord worketh upon some one of the family a sonne or daughter or servant or the like the rest remain opposite to all good saying What profit should we have by praying unto God as they say Job 21. 15. nay now will such say of the other person we shall have him a precise foole a mopish sot father now is against child as Luke 12. 35. Now it is well that prayer in a corner where none seeth or heareth but the Lord is an acceptable service and ordinance The poor slave in the infidels family is now the Lords freeman for this business 1 Cor. 7. 21 22. So the poore Christian wife with whom her infidel husband liked to dwell though he yet like not her religion 1 Cor. 7. 13. she may pray alone with acceptance Banished John in Patmos may thus been in the spirit by himselfe alone Revel 1. 10. Manasseh in his fetters yet hath liberty all alone to make his praier to his God 2 Chr. 33. 11 12 13. If this had been no ordinance of God to what purpose had Davids couch-prayers been which yet prevailed Psalm 6. 6 7 8 9. Or how else had his cave-prayers ever come to be available as Psalm 142. title with verse 1 2. 3. If this had not been an acceptable ordinance there had not been such honorable records thereof kept by and with the Lord as 2 Chron. 33. 18 19. this is singled out amongst all that Manasseh did in his loathsome state in captivity as most notable and honourable and therefore is twice Best for the Saints honour repeated and his prayer and his prayer So Cornelius his prayers are as memorials before the Lord Acts 10. 2 4. 4 It is well for the Saints that this is an Ordinance in point of honour that God herein and hereby is wont to put upon them singly and severally as that hereby they come to have Testimonials from the Lord himself of the good of Grace which is in them and of their prevailing with him for desired mercyes Thus when Jacob is all