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

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A KEY OF HEAVEN THE LORDS PRAYER opened and so applied that a Christian may learne how to pray and to procure all things which may make for the glorie of God and the good of himselfe and of his neighbour Containing likewise such Doctrines of faith and godlines as may be very usefull to all that desire to live godly in Christ Iesus The second Edition enlarged by the Author MATTH 7.7 Aske and it shall be given yeu seeke and ye shall finde knocke and it shall be opened unto you Oratio justi clavis coeli LONDON Printed by Thomas Harper for Ben●●● in Fisher and are to be sold at the signe o● the Talbot in Aldersgate-street 1633. TO THE RIGHT WORSHIP-FVLL Sir THOMAS CREVV and to all his hopefull children all grace and peace in this life all joy and glory in that which is to come be multiplied RIGHT Worshipfull custome doth claim by prescription that such bookes as come under the Presse to bee made publick should be ushered forth with an Epistle Dedicatory which if it want it calleth into suspition that either the Author hath no friends of worth or that the worke is not worthy patronage Wherefore having suffered this Tract on the Lords Prayer to come forth I tread the common path The profit of him to whom dedication is made or testification of respect and thankfulnesse of him that dedicateth or credit and countenance to the booke dedicated is the marke that is aymed at in dedications All these respects have moved mee to make choyce of your selfe For though you be already furnished and fully established in the truths therein delivered yet it shall bee profitable unto you that with some variety you bee put in remembrance of the same things your children likewise who may reape some good hereby will bee induced to read and make use of this booke the rather because it commeth through the hands and under the patronage of their so loving and beloved father These are likewise to acknowledge that dept of thankes due to you for the many kindnesses you have shewed mee for which I do and shall for ever stand beholding unto you also to signifie my well wishing to your children and that for the well deservings of those which are come to age and for the sake of their mother your deerely beloved wife now with the Lod to whom my selfe and mine stood much indebted whom I could not but admire and affect while she lived whose remembrance I shall alwayes honour and whose name I desire to keepe alive for to quicken others now she is dead For to speake within compasse without hyperbole amongst the many gracious women that I have knowne a more compleate Christian to whom the Lord had bestowed such a sweet concurrence of gifts of grace and nature have I 〈◊〉 knowne Nam gau deant bene nati modò renati Gratier est ou●ch●o veniens è corpore vir●us And though birth beautie wit a large heart and good elocution all which were eminent in her without grace are vanitie yet when these are accompanied with love out of a pure heart and of a good conscience and of faith unfained all which abounded in her each doth make other admirable I would say more were it not that I shold renew your griefe in remembrance of your losse but I am assured you have learned to bee thankfull for the enjoyment of so rare an helper so long rather then to over-grieve or bee impatient that you could enioy her no longer If you shall please to suffer these my first fruits in this kinde to passe into the world through your hand they will be the better accepted of the good and defended from those that are bad and I shall remaine much bound to you All that I can say why I publish this booke is I desire by all meanes according to my abilitie to do good in the Church of God I acknowledge many have written worthily upon this subiect whose helps I have used yet none that I know in this manner and I finde that variety in this kinde doth much good Now the God of heaven whose glory I intend in this worke give it favour in the sight of his Church to the edifying thereof to whom be praise and glory for ever Amen Thus commending you and yours to the protection and blessing of the Almightie I humbly take my leave this 26. of May. Yours to be commanded in all Christian duties HENRY SCUDDER To the Reader TO bee much in perswading those that be favorites of some great person to use that interest for their best advantage were an indeavour somewhat needlesse considering naturall selfe-love inclineth men in such cases to be sensible enough of their owne good Yet so dull is our apprehension of matters that are of an higher nature that though wee have the eare of God alwayes open unto us and free accesse to the throne of grace through Christ who appeareth in heaven for us carrying our names in his breast yet wee need stirring up to improve this blessed liberty though the whole world be not worth this one prerogative that wee can boldly call God Father This disproportion of our carriage ariseth in part from Satans malice who laboureth to keepe us in darknesse that we beleeve not or minde not our best priviledges which if wee did how glorious would our lives appeare how comfortably and fruitfully should we walke what honour should God have by us what sweet sacrifice from us how should wee overlooke all opposite power But now by reason wee are prone to beleeve Satan and the lyes of our owne heart and ready to call truth it selfe into question as if these things were too good to be true no marvell if we passe our dayes so deadly For what use of an hidden and lockt up treasure if we use not this key of prayer to fetch from thence for al our need What benefit of all the precious promises made in Christ unto us unlesse wee alledge them unto God and with a reverent boldnesse binde him with his owne word which he can no more denie then ceasse to be God If we tooke these things to heart God should heare oftener from us we would be more in heaven than we are seeing wee should bring as much grace and comfort from God as we could bring faith to graspe and carry away Besides this fore-mentioned mindlesnesse of our priviledges since the fall the soule naturally loveth to spend and scatter it selfe about these present sensible things and cannot without some strife gather it selfe together and fixe upon heavenly things Now this talking with God requireth an actuall bent of the minde and carryeth up the whole soule into heaven and exerciseth as all the parts so all the graces of the soule faith especially prayer being nothing else but the flame of faith And Satan knowing that when we send up our desires to God it is to fetch supply against him troubleth the soule weake of it selfe with a world of
this in the first place wee may learne Doct. 1 The glory of Gods holy Name must be the chiefe of every Christian mans desire and indeavour Psal 96.7.8 It must be every mans first and chiefe care that Gods Name be hallowed and glorified and that his glory be not given to any other Isa ●2 ● Whatsoever ye doe saith the Apostle doe all to the glory of God 1 Cor. 13.31 It was our Saviours prayer and practice he saith Father glorifie thy Name Ioh. 12.28 he saith likewise I honour my Father And I seek not mine owne glory Ioh. 8.49.50 And I have glorified thee on earth Ioh. 17.4 Reason 1 It is due to him that is holy and who onely is holy that hee should be sanctified and his Name hallowed * Isa 5.16 God that is holy shall be sanctified in righteousnesse saith the Prophet Therefore the Seraphims cry one to another Holy holy Isa 6.3 holy is the Lord of hosts the whole earth is full of his glory The foure and twenty Elders say Thou art worthy O Lord to receive glory and honour Rev. 4.11 and power c. And Give unto the Lord O ye kindreds of the people give unto the Lord glory and strength give unto the Lord the glory due to his Name Psal 967.8 saith the Psalm The name of God of Christ Iesus is a name above all names Of him through him are all things saith the Apostle therefore addeth Rom. 11.36 To whom be glory for ever Amen Gods glory is the chiefest good mans life yea mans salvation is to be set behinde it which made Moses to wish rather to have his name blotted out of Gods booke Exod. 3● 12.32 than that God should be dishonoured by the Egyptians who would say if God destroyed the Israelites in the wildernesse that for mischiefe he did bring them out to slay them Reason 2 God himselfe proposeth his owne glory to himselfe for the end of all his actions Eph. 1.5.6 He predestinated us to the praise of the glory of his grace Prou. 16.4 Hee made all things for himselfe yea even the wicked for the day of evill Therefore man should make the glory of God the end of all that he doth Reason 3 It was the end why Christ redeemed man that he might hallow Gods name that both in body and soule he should glorifie him 1 Cor. 6.20 Vse 1 If therefore any man seeke not to glorifie God he is guilty of a most hainous sinne than which no sinne is more common For man since Adams fall is most prone to fall into it ascribing too little to God whom he doth not see setting up and magnifying the creature too much which he doth see That this sinne may the better appeare to the conscience it must be considered when and how God is dishonoured Gods Name is dishonoured when he is professedly denyed to be God this is professed Atheisme or when hee is acknowledged to be God yet is not esteemed and glorified as God Rom. 1.21 which disesteeme is then shewed when that respect which is due unto his person and Name is not given unto him His person is dishonoured when what is due to him is not given to him or is given to another Honour is denied him three wayes in heart word deed and conversation Man dishonoureth God in heart first when he is ignorant and doth not know him Secondly when he hath a meane opinion of him or hath erronious conceits of him questioning his providence power wisedome or any of his attributes Thirdly when he is forgetfull of him Fourthly when he doth not beleeve him thus Moses and Aaron dishonoured God Num. 20.12 Fiftly when he doth not love him Sixtly when he doth not feare him Seventhly when he doth not trust in him Eightly when he is not zealous for him Man dishonoureth God in word First when he speaketh not of him to his praise in confessing him Secondly when he speaketh not for him when hee is dishonored by others Thirdly when he never or seldome speaketh to him in thankesgiving Fourthly when he speaketh against him Man dishonoureth GOD in deed when though he professe God in word yet doth deny him by his evill deeds as they did Rom. 2.23 of whom it is said they dishonoured God and as those in Titus 1.16 which though they professed the knowledge of God yet denied him in their workes Thus God is dishonoured by not giving due honour unto him Gods honour is given to others when men give divine worship to any person or thing but God as to worship Saints or images also when men enter into too neer a league with idolaters Mal. 2.11 as to marry with the daughters of a strange god or when men take divine worship as Herod did the peoples applause saying Act. 12 22. The voyce of God and not of man this glory of divine worship God wil not have given to any other This taking to ones selfe or giving to another the honour due to God proceedeth from these evill causes pride selfe-love too high admiration of the creature from ignorance and want of admiration of the Creator Lastly God is dishonoured when due respect is not given to his Name as to his titles attributes or to his word and holy ordinances Malach. 1.12 or to his Saints and children For all these have a speciall print of his holinesse stamped on them so that if all these or any of these be either set at naught or lightly esteemed hee taketh himselfe in them to be dishonoured And to shut up all in a word all misconceit or irreverent conceit of God or irreverent carriage whether by word or deed either towards God Mal 1.12 Ezek. 22.26 Lev 19.12 Amos 2.7 Mal. 2.10.11 or towards any thing that is holy all abusing or taking of Gods name in vaine all acts of unholinesse and disobedience are a prophaning of the holy Name of God Thus the conscience of every offender may take notice how he hath prophaned the holinesse of the Lord and hath dishallowed his Name whereas hee ought to haue hallowed it But know it is not safe for any to dishonour God for his owne children when they have failed in this point of giving honour unto God have received dishonour and disgrace from him He saith to Moses and Aaron Because ye beleeved mee not to sanctifie mee in the eyes of the children of Israel therefore yee shall not bring this congregation into the land which I have given them Numb 20.12 Deut. 32.51 1 Sam. 2.17 The high Priesthood was removed from the house of Eli because he did not honour God in restraining his sons which caused through their prophanenesse the offerings of God to bee abhorred therefore did God judge his house saying They that despise me shall bee lightly esteemed 1 Sam. 2.30 If God spared not his owne best children will he not then much more poure out shame everlasting contempt upon
to speake something of this Treatise of this godly and painefull Minister of Christ which is written by him without affectation as desirous to cloath spirituall things with a spirituall manner of writing the diligent and godly Reader shall observe a sound cleare substantiall handling of the greatest points that naturally fall within the discourse and a more large and usefull unfolding of many things than in former Treatises It appeareth he sought the good of all so that besides the labours of other holy men there will be just cause of blessing God for his assistance in this worke To whose blessing I commend both it and the whole Israel of God Grayes Inne R. SIBBS A KEY OF HEAVEN The Lords Prayer opened and applyed MATH 6. 9 After this manner therefore pray ye Our Father which art in heaven hallowed be thy Name 10 Thy kingdome come Thy will be done in earth as it is in heaven 11 Give us this day our daily bread 12 And forgive us our debts as we forgive our debters 13 And leade us not into temptation but deliver us from evill for thine is the kingdome and the power and the glory for ever Amen THese words are part of our Saviours Sermon in the Mount they concerne Prayer and doe consist of a Precept or exhortation to pray in a right manner Patterne to exemplifie the said manner The precept is After this manner pray ye The patterne is Our Father c. This Exhortation is inferred upon consideration of divers abuses of prayer whereof our Saviour had warned his Disciples to wit Hypocrisie and vaine babling of the Pharisies and Heathen Hee reasoneth from the dissimilitude that ought to be betweene hypocrites and heathen between true Christians and faithfull beleevers saying verse 8. Be not ye therefore like unto them but pray ye in an holy manner And for that cause doth propose unto them a perfect forme of prayer intimating that if they would pray according as he did therein prescribe they should neither play the Hypocrites as did the Pharisies nor babble as the heathen nor offend any other way in this holy exercise of calling upon the name of the Lord. The words of the exhortation containe these particulars 1 The person exhorting Christ Iesus implied in his imperative speech Pray 2 The persons exhorted Ye 3 The inference whereupon it is grounded Therefore 4 The subject of the exhortation Pray in this manner Pray 1 Sam. 1 1●.15 P●●2 8 Is●●● to pray doth import an holy speech and pouring out of the soule unto God being a joynt act of the minde will whereby the minde by voyce or thought doth make knowne to God the desires of the heart What it is to pray shewing both what a man wold have God to doe for him or to accept from him A bare desire is not to pray for many wish and desire those things for which they never speake or pray unto God Orare est appetere petere Phil. 4 6. Psal 38.9 Neither are words without desires any prayer but when the minde maketh knowne to God what the will desireth this is to pray By what way soever of expression a man doth signifie his desire directing it to God whether it be by thought onely or also by sigh a Psal 38.9 Rom. 8.26 groane or b Psal 39.12 tears or by lifting up * Ps 28.2 a hand or c Psal 123.1 eyes towards God in the heavens or by d Psal 141.1.2 voyce perfect or e Isai 38.14 unperfect if it be but by f Lam. 3.56 breathing it out as it were so be hee intend and understand what he desireth this is to pray Desires are naturall or spirituall Naturall when a man Difference between naturall and spirituall desires in prayer out of a sense of that which hee needeth and which may be for his naturall well being here and for his happinesse hereafter from a meere well-wishing to himselfe doth pray unto God to obtaine it Thus a naturall man a very Balaam may pray Num. 23.10 A spirituall desire be it of naturall or spirituall good things is from the spirit and regenerate part of man Rom 8.26 27. put up to God with holy affections in a spirituall manner to a spirituall end Onely the regenerate can thus pray Ye first the Disciples and under them hee meaneth all Christians Act. 11.26 For although Christ gave his Disciples some precepts that onely did belong to them as Apostles yet hee gave very many precepts to them as they were Christians as that in Marke 13.37 What I say to one I say to all Watch so here what he saith to them he saith to all Pray Therefore hath a double reference both to the sinfull manner dehorted fom and to this holy manner exhorted to He reasoneth thus the manner of hypocritical and heathenish praying is sinfull this manner here propounded is most holy therefore pray in this manner and not as they doe After this manner or thus the word rendred thus or in this manner is a note of likenesse pointing unto the patterne following As if he had said Say Our Father as it is Luk. 11.2 or if you use other words let them be according unto this patterne here prescribed to wit to the same person the same matter in the same kindes of prayer whether it bee in Petition for our selves for that which is good or in deprecation against that which is evill or in Intercessions for others or in Thanksgiving both for our selves and for others and with the same good disposition of heart as is taught in this forme of prayer following The words thus opened the particulars therein offer divers profitable lessons Christs diligence in teaching his servants and familie this necessarie religious duty of praier both at this time of his owne accord and at another time at the request of one of his Disciples is first to be observed Luk 11.1 All the actions of Christ Jesus are observable and of excellent use but onely some of them binde Christians to imitation That I may therefore cleere the foundation of the doctrine to be concluded from Christs practise let it be considered that the actions of Christ were of different natures He did some acts as he was God and as Mediator betweene God and man as his miracles and offering up of himselfe a sacrifice for sinne c. These actions should work in all men an holy admiration of him and faith in him but must not nay cannot be imitated How far Christs example doth bind to imitation He did other actions as hee was man some whereof were indifferent being neither commanded nor forbidden others were necessarie being commanded Those actions which he did which were indifferent doe teach us Christian libertie shewing what we may do but doe not lay a bond upon the conscience to tye us to doe the same Christ did sometimes stand when he prayed this was an indifferent action
obstinate to instruct his wife children and servants Gen. 9.27 But the Lord must perswade else words are but winde It concerneth all children Vse 6 and servants to consider what charge God hath laid upon their Governours learning thereby that it is as well Gods will that all under houshold governement should suffer themselves to be taught as that any householders should teach You must therefore willingly be present at times appointed to catechise or to talke of good things and being present attend and learn with all diligence yea sometimes give the father or master occasion to teach you by asking some good question as the Disciples did aske Christ saying What might this parable be Luke 8.9 and by moving him as the Disciple which said Lord teach us to pray Luke 11.1 And when you have received instruction of father or mother forsake it not for they will make you beautifull before God Pro. 1.9 being ornaments of grace to your heads and chaines about your neckes But if you be stubborne and will not bee taught by them then know that as he that will not eate is a murtherer of his body so are yee that refuse instruction murtherers of your soules for the eare that heareth the reproofe of life abideth among the wise Pro. 15.31.32 he that refuseth instruction despiseth his owne soule Therefore Our Saviour inferreth this exhortation to pray aright upon consideration that many prayed amisse whence learne Doct. 2 The more subject any duty is to be performed amisse there is the more cause that Christians doe learne and indeavour to performe it aright The more waies a good duty may be ill done the more care should be had how it may be well done Vpon this very ground the Lord directeth his Disciples to the right manner of giving almes verse 2. and of fasting verse 16. c. Our Saviour reasoneth in like manner for hearing the word aright that because many heard amisse scil some received the word as the high way doth seed not understanding what they heard some as the stonie ground the word tooke not deepe root some as the thorny ground they gave entertainement to worldly cares and pleasures together with the word and so all three sorts became fruitlesse Take heed therfore how you heare saith our Saviour Luk. 8.18 For to the pleasing of God Reason it is not enough that the matter of the thing done be good but the manner how Bonum consistit ex causis integris and the end why and all circumstances in the doing it must be good also so that failing but in one thing doth marre the action Man is subject to faile in prayer many waies Now if there be many by-waies man is in more danger of going out of his way then if there were but one And as mans nature is prone to erre and take the worst so Satan is very cunning and diligent by setting goodly apparences upon by-waies to cause man to mistake the right Wherefore the more subject man is to runne out into by-waies the more heed he should take that he doe not goe aside out of the right way of serving the Lord. Vse 1 Hereby is reproved the rashnesse of many who will rush headily into a religious exercise as into prayer preaching hearing the word receiving the Sacrament fasting c. and never looke to the right manner as if there were no way but one and that they could not doe amisse though they never wash their hands from filthinesse nor hearts from wickednesse nor yet so much as thinke before hand how they may bee rightly performed whereas they may and doe faile many waies Thus these good workes being ill done become so abhominable unto God that he saith Isa 1.12.14 Who requireth this at your hands my soule hateth them I am weary to beare them It therefore behoveth all Vse 2 that would serve God in sinceritie to bee very circumspect taking heed how they pray how they heare the word and how they performe all other exercises of religion for they may be and are performed by many in a very sinfull manner Salomons counsell should alwaies be sounding in our eares whensoever we begin any service of God Eccl 5 1.2 Keepe thy foote when thou goest to the house of God c. Be not rash with thy mouth and let not thine heart be hastie to utter any thing before God That we may the better observe this counsell sith it concerneth a preparing a mans self before he speake unto God I will shew first whether preperation be needfull Secondly what that preparation is Preparation to prayer needfull Iob 11.13 First know that preparation to prayer is needfull according to that in Iob If thou prepare thine heart and stretch out thine hands towards him c. Thou wilt prepare their heart saith the Psalmist and wilt cause thine eare to heare Psal 10.17 My heart is prepared O God Psal 57.7 my heart is prepared saith he I will sing and give praise The very first words of the Lords Prayer teaching us to begin with Our Father which art in heaven doe argue that wee should have our spirits composed and our whole man rightly disposed unto this holy duty For first God before whom Reason why a man should be p●epared before he pray Eccles 5.2 H●b 1.13 and to whom we speake is a great God of glorious majestie and God as Salomon reasoneth is in heaven wee on earth He is most holy of purer eyes then to behold uncleanenesse Levit. 10.3 He will be sanctified in all that draw neere unto him to offer this sweet incense of prayer If we doe not sanctifie him by an holy performance of his service hee will be sanctified him selfe upon us in the just punishment of our hypocrisie superstition or prophanenesse Besides God to whom wee pray is privy to all our behaviour yea to the most secret intentions and dispositions of our hearts It concerneth us therefore that wee be prepared to come before him in sort as beseemeth the presence of his holy Majesty Were we admitted to speake to an e●●thly King we would before 〈◊〉 prepare both what and how 〈◊〉 speake and how to demeane our selves in his presence much more then ought we the King of Kings not onely admitting but graciously inviting us to pray unto him Secondly prayer is a most excellent and a most holy worke of the greatest consequence that can concerne man and of great difficulty to be performed aright I come now to the second case to shew what this preparation unto prayer is This preparation is twofold A twofold preparation to prayer The one generall to be made before hand inabling and fitting a man to pray in an instant whensoever he shall be moved to pray The other preparation is particular and to be made immediately before prayer that it may the better be performed Vnto that generall preparation is required that a man be indued with the spirit
to thinke that I had better not pray at all That you feele these defects Answ and do observe these your inabilities and failings in prayer if withall you be humbled and your conscience can witnesse that your desire is that your heart were inlarged and were rightly disposed to prayer this is well this argueth that you have some life and some good disposition to the worke but here is no ground of discouragement or cause why you should forbeare to pray The best of Gods children sometimes have beene in your case David himselfe had his spirit overwhelmed Psal 77.3.4 and was so troubled that he could not speake Ezekiah said that he did chatter like a crane Isa 38.14 he did rather stutter and stammer out his desires to God in a broken sort then by distinct and apt words to expresse them As for wandring thoughts who is free or who can be free so long as sinne dwelleth in him and Satan is alwayes readie to cast them in As for faith it may be that you pray in faith though you conceive otherwise because you feele so much doubting but would you pray in faith do you grieve that you cannot beleeve and can you say with him in the Gospel I do beleeve Mar. 9.24 Lord helpe my unbeleefe then you pray in faith though you feele it not If you feele your selfe worse after prayer this is a misconceit of yours or a suggestion of Satan But if it be so indeed in your feeling this doth not argue that you are worse for your prayer but better for that evill which was in you before unseene is now discovered that you may reforme it The flesh and Satan sometimes may bee more stirring with their tentations but prayer gaineth alwayes a secret helpe of God if you would but improve it But know whatsoever your feeling be if failings in prayer be not allowed but resisted and and prayed against God passeth them by and doth not account them unto you If you endeavour to pray aright and do pray as well as you can though you faile very much this unallowed failing is onely a sinne of infirmitie for which God doth pity you and will spare you as a father doth his sonne that serveth him But not to pray at all is a grosse sinne of wilfull negligence which God hateth and will severely punish Wherefore whatsoever your indisposition be and whatsoever your former failings and discouragements have beene you must breake through all lets know that you have the more need to pray setting about it in the power of Gods might sith that you have no power of your owne Psal 119.88 Psal 119.32 Psal 86.9 Do as David did pray to be quickened and to have your heart inlarged and that God would unite your heart to feare his name If there be truth of desire in your prayer then know that you are heard and accepted not for the goodnesse and worth of your prayer but for the goodnesse and merits of Christ Iesus by whom you offer up your prayers What though you know not how to pray Rom. 8.26.27 the Spirit of him who hath commanded you to pray will helpe your infirmitie and enable you to pray in such sort as God shall accept thereof in Christ Iesus And if you be so heavie and comfortlesse after prayer it is your fault proceeding from groundlesse doubts and false feares but yet no argument that you did not pray aright or that you were not heard much lesse that you should think you pray in vaine or that you had better not pray at all But so long as a doubt and scruple remaineth in my mind Quest whether I may pray or no is it not best for me not to pray till that scruple be removed for I must do nothing doubtingly nor against scruple of conscience Answ To this I answer this is but a delusion of the devill and a groundlesse fancie In things indifferent of which the Apostle speaketh a man must be fully perswaded in his owne minde Rom. 14.5.23 and he must not do a thing indifferent though lawfull in it selfe to be done so long as hee doubteth and doth make scruple of conscience thereabout whether it may be done or no and therefore he must with all singlenesse of heart use meanes by the truth of Gods word to informe his conscience But in things expresly commanded such as is this dutie of prayer in this case a man is not to hearken to any scruple which shall rise concerning the not performing of it but is violently to resist that scruple and to breake through it and to addresse himselfe to the dutie of prayer notwithstanding For whensoever scruples under pretence of conscience shall arise to trouble and hinder a man from performing a necessarie dutie When a man may do contrary to scruple of conscience such as prayer and the like it is lawfull to do contrary to such scruples for a scruple is nothing else but a groundlesse feare wherefore to do a thing commanded by God though it be done contrarie to this scruple is not to do it against conscience for there can be no tye of conscience against any of Gods Commandements Wherefore laying aside all carnall reasoning and objecting as also all scruples and doubting be you encouraged to bee frequent in prayer and that not onely because unspeakable good shall redound to your selfe thereby but out of conscience of dutie because it is the wil of God that you should pray unto him Pray in this manner or as Luk. 11.1 Say Our Father c. Note hence that Doct. 4 The Lords prayer is a prayer and may be used in this verie forme of words for a prayer Our Saviour else would not have said Say Our Father Luk. 11.1 Reason Whatsoever is requisite in prayer may be expressed in uttering the very words of this prayer And in them a man may make his requests knowne to God which to do is to pray Vse 1 This confuteth the rash and ungrounded opinion of those which because the Lords Prayer is a patterne of prayer therefore hold it unlawfull to use it for a prayer As if it might not be both a prayer and a pattern as indeed it is And why may it not as well as a Kings standard weights and measures which are patternes of all sorts of weights and measures of the kingdome by which all both small and great are to be made and examined yet no wise man will say those standards are not weights or will not use them but of all weights if he may will use them because they be perfect and by them he may make others of his owne If the Lords Prayer be a Vse 2 prayer to be used in that verie forme in which Christ hath left it Set prayers are lawfull then without question set prayers are lawfull and no man should make scruple thereat yea in private for this prayer may be said in the closet Mat. 6.6 Besides we have good
warrant from Moses teaching the Priests to blesse the people in a set forme saying Num. 6.24 The Lord blesse thee and keepe thee c. Also when the Ark set forward they had a set forme Numb 10.35 Rise up Lord c. David penned his Psalmes to bee used in the Church and Psal 92. for every Sabbath And Hezekiah commanded the Levites to sing praises unto the Lord with the words of David 2 Chron. 29.30 and of Asaph It is said of our Saviour Christ whose example we may bee bold to follow That he prayed the third time saying the same words Mat. 26.44 Ob. Set formes of prayer doth stint the spirit Sol. It doth not no more then a premeditated Sermon doth stint the spirit of Prophesie or then a conceived prayer by the Minister doth stint the spirit of prayer in the people who must restraine themselves to his words yet the spirit in truth is not stinted in them Order and edification in the Church requireth set formes of prayers and praises to be used in publicke as it hath beene the custome of all established true Churches there being common sinnes to be deprecated common graces to bee prayed for and common mercies to thank God for And in more private praier the ignorance forgetfulnesse and bashfulnesse of some persons before their family or others causeth that for a time it is needfull to use the helpe of a set form which he may reade or repeate so that he joyne understanding and assent of heart thereto Yet it must be remembred that Christians must not alwayes be such novices and weaklings in religion to use set formes of prayer in private which like crutches and bladders serve to initiate and minister to them helpe untill they have gotten strength as if they never intended to pray without them But let this here be observed It must not on the other side be held that onely premeditated studied and set praiers are lawfull He is not meete for the place of a Minister nor worthy the name of a strong Christian that hath so tyed his devotion to a set forme that he will not or cannot vary his petitions for his people or himselfe as particular occasions varie and new necessities require It is impossible that any prayer booke should meet with all occasions either of prayer or thanksgiving which fall out daily And conceived prayer is not so defective and imperfect but if it be pertinent and in truth God liketh it Exo 14.15 though it had no set forme to bring it forth Such were the prayers of Moses at the Red-sea 1. Sam. 1.13 and of Hannah at the Tabernacle their prayers were conceived and brought forth without set forme or voice I conclude this point therefore affirming that it is an error to hold set prayer to be unlawfull and it is no lesse error to hold that no prayer but a set forme of prayer is lawfull In this manner If our Saviour would have us use onely this forme S. Luke would not have varied from this of Saint Matthew saying Sinnes for debts and far for as in the fifth petition neither would he have left out the forme of thanksgiving nor yet would the Apostles have prayed in any other forme All which shew that In this manner signifieth according to it and not onely to use those words whence learne that All prayers must be made according Doct. 5 to the patterne of the Lords Prayer If made according to this they are acceptable if not they are faultie The best confirmation of this point besides Christs expresse exhortation which is authenticke is to compare this praier with the prayers of the Saints recorded in holy writ both before and after this prayer and it will be found that they all may without wresting be referred unto some branches of this prayer even as all the precepts scattered in the Bible may be referred unto the ten commandements Reason The perfection that this prayer hath above all other prayers doth challenge the rule of all the rest for whatsoever is necessarily requisite in praier is to be learned by this if it be truly understood For it plainly teacheth how he must be qualified that doth pray also to whom we must pray what we must aske and with what heart and affection as will appeare in the handling of it Vse 1 Every disciple and member of Christ Iesus should therefore have this prayer in great esteeme because it is of Christs owne composing they are his own words and he did of purpose leave it to be a patterne of prayer to all Christians Onely take heed that you do not with the Papists turne the use of it into abuse through superstition Let all men use this prayer Vse 2 for the guide of all their prayers and as skilfull workemen by the helpe of some small but true modell or draught can erect a large and stately building so we by this compendious but most exact briefe of prayer must learne to enlarge our selves in prayer That use of this patterne for the making of prayers according to it How to frame all prayers by the patterne of the Lords prayer may be made two things must be learned First learne the plaine meaning of the words and the sense and meaning of Christ in them Secondly learne how this patterne may be applied As for the first because such exceeding brevity doth cause some obscurity the more paines must be taken that by the light of other Scripture and helpe of those men which have faithfully travelled in the interpretation of this prayer the true meaning may be found out And untill you meete with better directions use these following First two things in generall one contrary to the other are to be understood in every petition namely petition and deprecation praying for some thing that is good and praying against the contrary evill And it is a sure rule that in the same petition where the good thing is desired the contrary evill is prayed against as in the foure former petitions Also where the evill prayed against is expressed in the petition the contrary good thing to be desired is to be understood in the same petition as in the two last petitions As it is in the commandements in the same commandement that any vice is forbidden the contrary duty is commanded A second rule is If one kind or part of any thing be expressed in any petition all kindes and parts of the same thing are to be understood A third rule is where any one thing is prayed for in any petition the causes effects thereof and whatsoever properly belongeth unto the said thing is understood to be prayed for in the same petition except they fall out to bee the expresse subject of some other petition The second thing to be learned is how application of this prayer may be made to the framing of all other prayers by it which that ye may do take notice that this prayer directeth us unto
three things obseruable in all prayers First the person to whom onely we must pray concerning whom this is the rule That person onely who is God and Lord of heaven and earth is to be prayed unto thus much you learne both in the invocation in the beginning and in the forme of praise in the end of the Lords Prayer The second thing to be observed is what wee must aske the rule thereof is whatsoever may lawfully be asked may without wresting bee referred to one of the sixe petitions If they can referre their request to any petition they may be bold to make it It shall bee needfull therefore to observe the particulars under every petition both what is prayed for and what is prayed against the most whereof shall appeare in the handling of each severall petition to which I doe send you And when you have learned what you may lawfully pray ye may be longer or shorter in any one petition as your present need or the particular occasion doth require which libertie may bee obserued in those prayers of the Apostles which are recorded for our use in the holy Scriptures The third thing to be observed is with what disposition of heart and affection we must pray Which is fully expressed and implyed in that word Amen which requireth that prayer bee made with understanding in truth in fervencie and in faith as will manifestly appeare when wee come to treate of that word Here yet some question may be made touching the order here set down whether it must be precisely kept I answer in the generall it must that is Gods glory must be first in our aime but touching the particular manner of expressing it that is left to the libertie of him that prayeth whether hee begin with praise or with confession of sinnes and asking forgivenesse thereby making way to the other petitions with more confidence There is no rule to be given hereof because we see the Apostles after they were taught this forme did take this libertie Our Father c. Here beginneth the patterne of prayer which because Christ Iesus our Lord gave it to his Disciples is therefore called the Lords Prayer It consisteth of two parts The first is an expressing of a mans desire unto God The second is a manifestation of the assent and right disposition of his heart in putting up the aforesaid desires in the word Amen which though it be but one word yet is full of excellent matter The first part doth branch it selfe into three members 1 Invocation upon God Our Father which art in heaven 2 Petition Hallowed by thy Name Thy kingdome come c. 3 A forme of praise and than●es containing reasons why the former petitions should be made unto God For thine is kingdome power and glory for ever Invocation or calling upon God is here taken in the proper and strictest sense not for the whole exercise of prayer but for appellation in which a man calleth upon him whom hee would have to heare him This invocation consisteth of a description of God who onely is to be called upon in prayer He is described by two arguments First by the relation that is betweene him and his elect in Christ Our Father Secondly by a signe of his soveraigntie and majestie that is by his being in heaven which is the Court of his majestie the place from whence hee sheweth his infinite power goodnesse and glory Which art in heaven The description of God by these two arguments the one arguing his graciousnesse and readinesse of will the other arguing his greatnesse fulnesse of power to helpe all that come unto him is placed of purpose in the very entrance into prayer to strengthen the petitioners faith that hee need not doubtingly say as he did If thou wilt thou canst helpe me Mat 8.2 For he is his father therefore will do whatsoever in his holy wisedome he judgeth fit to be done Neither need he say as that other If thou canst doe any thing helpe us Mark 9.22 For his God and father in the heavens is almighty and can doe whatsoever he pleaseth Psal 115.3 and would have to be done This description of God to whom prayer is made by his relation to them that are to pray consisteth of the appropriating possessive particle Our and of that gracious title of God Father In this one description two things are signified both the condition of them that pray and of him that is prayed unto These words as they looke toward the persons who may pray they intimate a double condition First that they have a right and interest in God they can call him theirs for they are the children of God Secondly Our importeth that common interest and fatherhood in God which the rest of the faithfull have in him from which there groweth a communion of one Christian with another so that they become brethren These two qualities therefore faith in God and love to our brethren are here required in every one that is qualified for prayer Our is not onely here a note of the joyning together of many in prayer when one man is the mouth of the rest because this forme of words is to be uttered by one in the closet Mat. 6.6 as well as by many in publike but it noteth that relation and respect of God to them which is common unto their brethren 2 King 19.19 Thus Hezekiah useth it saying O Lord our God I beseech thee c. Daniel praying alone Dan. 9.17.18 faith Now therefore O our God heare the prayer of thy servant Not but that when we would expresse our particular faith and dependance upon God Mat. 26.39 Ier. 3.19 1 Cor. 4.18 we may say My Father or My God But our Saviour maketh choise of this forme of speech because it is full of instruction and is best agreeing to all sorts of prayer both in private as well as publike Thus we see what this description of God intimateth as it looketh towards those that pray As it looketh towards him to whom prayer is made he is first called Father Father spoken of God is a word of relation to Christ the second person in Trinity Psal 2.7 Ioh. 1.14 and so is proper to the first person in Trinity Secondly in relation to the creature in a more common respect to all as he is the Author of their being and subsisting in nature thus all * Deut. 32.6 three persons are called Father God is also a Father in a speciall respect to his elect in Christ as he is the Author of their spirituall being and subsisting in state of grace * 1 Ioh. 5. ● Isa 9 6. Ioh 3.5 Thus in speciall sort the three persons are and may be called Father by all beleevers And as I conceive in this place this word Father directeth us to God the Father God the Sonne and God the holy Ghost yet so as it pointeth in an order to that person in the Deity
thus divided Summum bonum the first expresseth the desire of the chiefe good scil the glory of Gods name in the first petition Hallowed be thy Name the means whereby his Name is hallowed and glorified are the matter of all the rest delivered in a most heavenly order Gods Name cannot bee hallowed if hee doe not make his holy Name known by erecting his kingdome therefore the comming of his kingdome is the matter of the second petition And because his kingdome is not made manifest and his Name is not acknowledged to be holy and glory is not given unto him untill his will bee unfainedly obeyed therefore thy will be done is the matter of the third petition Now because no man can do the will of God upon earth except God sustain him on earth therefore daily support from God is prayed for and is the matter of the fourth petition And when a man hath all comfortable supplies for this naturall life yet if he bee not in Gods favour and be reconciled unto God he neither hath will nor power to glorifie God nor can bee accepted in any thing he doth therefore forgivenesse of sinnes and justification before God is the matter of the fift petition Lastly though a man have his sinnes past pardoned and he be justified he cannot do Gods will nor declare that the kingdome of God is come to him nor any way hallow his Name if he have not grace and power against sinne therefore the sanctification of the whole man is prayed for which is the matter of the last petition This is the holy order and subordination of the petitions Fourthly the different manner of propounding the petitions cause a different acception of them some are petitions properly so called when the good things asked are expressed and the evill prayed against is understood as in the foure first petitions some are deprecations when the evill prayed against is expressed and the good prayed for is understood as in the two last petitions The first petition is Hallowed be thy Name here it must bee considered what is meant by Name the object of hallowing then what hallow signifieth Name hath reference to God and it signifieth God himselfe scil the person named Also all such names and titles of God his attibutes actions ordinances and all things which have any speciall print of Gods holinesse stamped upon them are Gods name because by them he is knowne as men are by their names The word thy appropriateth the hallowing of the name unto him who is before named and described in the invocation opposing and preferring Gods name to the name of man or Angell or of any other creature To hallow is either to make a thing holy which was common or prophane or to declare and acknowledge and use holily some thing which is holy already Hallow must not bee taken in the first sense scil to make a thing holy for God and his Name alwayes was is and for ever shall be of it selfe most holy But to hallow Isa 29.23 here signifieth thus much to conceive and acknowledge with the heart and to declare with the tongue and life that God and his Name is holy and to bee respected and used as most holy in like sense as Wisdome is said to bee justified of her children Mat. 11.19 that is declared and respected as wisdome ought to bee respected For to hallow a thing is to respect and use it according to the holinesse thereof Prophaning Gods name is contrary to the hallowing of it The aime of our Saviour is that God may bee set up in mens hearts and may bee glorified and acknowledged in the world For this cause hee maketh choice of the most apt word that could be invented for hallowing leadeth vs to a consideration of Gods holinesse which is the glory of all other his attributes and includeth the cause why he should be glorified and therefore is a word of larger extent than magnified or glorified for the one doth but point out the glory of his greatnesse the other doth not expresse the cause why hee should bee glorified both which hallowed doth For holinesse is that rectitude in God and freedome from all impurenesse and from all shadow of imperfection or sinne which is the excellency and perfection of all other things that are in God and to speake with holy reverence of his Majesty the other attributes of God could not be commendable in God if they were not all infinitely holy His soveraignty would be tyranny his justice would bee cruelty his mercy would be foolish pity his wisdome would bee craft and subtilty if his greatnesse justice mercy and wisdome were not infinitely holy The like may be said of his other attributes For we see in creatures as in the Deuill and sinfull men the more strength and wisdome and skill they have the more mischievous they be because they want holinesse to use these gifts aright Wherefore in saying Hallowed be thy Name we desire that the excellency of his Godhead may be acknowledged as there is due cause according as they sing in the Song of the Lambe Rev. 15.4 Who shall not feare hee O Lord and glorifie thy Name for thou onely art holy Isa 64.2 This word Hallowed is set downe impersonally in such a forme of signification as includeth all persons or things which are capable of setting forth and acknowledging his holinesse As Let thy Name be hallowed by Thee so saith Christ Father glorifie thy Name Ioh. 12.28 and make Me to hallow thy Name in acknowledging thy holinesse and let all others acknowledge thee to be holy and to be the onely true God 1 King 18 36. Thus Elias prayed Let it be knowne this day that thou art God in Israel And God saith when hee will magnifie and sanctifie himselfe Ezech 38.23 I will be knowne in the eyes of many nations and they shall know that I am the Lord. The petition being thus opened we may expresse it in these or the like words Holy Father whose Name is holy to thee therefore all glory doth belong Lord glorifie thy selfe make it knowne that thou onely art God deserving all praises make me and all men to acknowledge thee onely to be God and our God and that of perfect excellencie according as thy Name in thy titles word and workes doe set thee forth And let thy Name Psal 111.9 which is holy and reverend be so honoured that so farre as any person or thing hath upon it any print of thy holinesse it be honoured and respected accordingly And farre be it from me or any man to deny thee in whole or in part or give any of that glory which is due to thee to any person or thing whatsoever or to prophane any thing whereupon any footsteps of thy holinesse is imprinted Hallowed be thy Name If it be observed that to desire that Gods Name should be glorified is the subject of this petition and that Christ hath set
those which never make the glory of God the end of their lives and actions but through selfe-love and pride of heart make their owne pleasures profits and glory to bee the principall and utmost aime of all their thoughts words or deeds who if they attain their owne ends they sacrifice to their owne nets applauding their owne strength wit industrie c. or if they looke out of themselves they give the praise to men and secondarie causes or to blinde Fortune and lucke as they call it but give not glory to the Lord. Pharaoh saith Exod. 5.2 Who is the Lord that I should obey his voyce I know not the Lord. But did not the Lord honour himselfe upon Pharaoh and his land by his wonderfull plagues which he sent amongst them till he made Pharaoh himselfe the Egyptians to know that he was the Lord Exod. 14 4. Iob saith of those wealthy proud contemners of God and of his worship which said What is the Almightie Iob 21.15.19.20 that wee should serve him and what profit should we have if we pray unto him God layeth up their iniquitie for their children and they shall drinke of the wrath of the Almighty Did not the Lord make Senacherib an example to all that should reproach the holy One of Israel when for his arrogating too much to himselfe and for despising the true God the Lord sent his Angell which smote one hundred fourescore and five thousand of his host Isa 37.23.36 so that hee himselfe was constrained to return with shame into his owne country and there while hee was worshipping his God received his death by the hands of his owne sonnes How did God disgrace proud Nabuchadnezzar when vaine-gloriously hee vaunted saying Is not this great Babel that I have built for the house of the kingdome by the might of my power and for the honour of my majestie Here was no acknowledgement of Gods power nor any thing done for the honour of Gods Majestie therefore while the word was in the kings mouth there fell a voice from heaven saying O king Nebuchadnezzar Dan 4.30.31 to thee it is spoken the kingdome is departed from thee Which was fulfilled accordingly for hee was sent to graze with beasts of the field seven yeares untill he was made to know that the most high God ruleth in the kingdome of men Dan. 4.32 But when God restored him to himselfe and to his kingdome then he could give God the glorie of all power and majestie saying in the last verse Those that walke in pride he is able to abase For the same sinne was Belshazzar weighed in the ballance and found wanting and his kingdome given to the Medes and Persians who because he prophaned the vessels of the house of God and praised false gods Dan. 5 23. but the God in whose hands was his breath and whose were all his wayes him did he not glorifie Therefore was the hand-writing sent and that very night was Belshazzar slaine and his kingdome conquered Those two and fortie children who were torne with Beares payd deare for their despising God in that aged Prophet Elisha deriding at once his age his office and his holines crying 2. King 2. Ascend thou bald head ascend thou bald head Lastly not to wearie you with examples of Gods judgements upon those which did either derogate from God or arrogate to themselves any part of that praise which was due to him observe Gods immediate hand upon Herod who because he gave not glory unto God when the people applauded his eloquent oration saying The voice of God Act. 12.22.23 and not of man immediately the Angel of the Lord smote him and he was eaten of wormes and gave up the ghost These severe judgements of God executed upon men because they tooke glorie from God or gave it not to him doth plainly shew that he is very jealous of his name and of his glory and that he will not endure that his glory should be given to another Isai 42 8. For of all things Gods Name and honour is most deare unto him nothing will exasperate him so soone or so much as to be touched in his Name Let all men therefore take heed how they prophane it by any means But it is not enough not to prophane it but if it be prophaned by others if they do not contend for the sanctifying of it they commit a great sin If men be but touched in their owne name and reputation they grow so impatient as by no meanes they will bee perswaded to passe it by without revenge when yet the same persons can see and heare Gods Name dishonoured by oaths blasphemies by idolatrie contempt of religion and of Gods children and their hearts never rise at it and have not a word to speake for God These do not hallow Gods Name I desire that all that reade or heare this would examine themselves by what hath beene said by which they may trie whether they hallow Gods Name or dishallow it And if thou say this petition Hallowed be thy Name and yet by taking his honour to thy self or giving it to another or if by not standing for his glory or not giving it to him in heart word and conversation thou dishonourest God then know thou doest mock God and playest the hypocrite and if repentance and a care to glorifie God do not prevent it thou must with hypocrites one day be the subject of the glory of his justice and wrath because in thy life thou wouldest not be an instrument of glorifying his holy Name he will be glorified in thee because hee was not glorified by thee Thus it appeareth who offend against this point by which wee may see what evils are to be bewayled and prayed against in this petition Vse 2 In applying the Doctrines concerning prayer let this be a received truth that what we pray for that we must endeavour and use all good meanes to attaine according to that in the Psalm 27.4 One thing have I desired that will I seek for All men therefore which professe the Name of God must both pray and seeke by all meanes that the true God be onely set up to be worshipped and that his holy Name may be sanctified which is done when men shew true respect unto him and unto al such things as beare upon them some speciall note of his holinesse First he is to be known and professed to be the onely true God Father Sonne and holy Ghost then to be honoured and glorified as God God is honoured and his name sanctified many wayes as 1 First by knowing and acknowledging him to be such a one as he hath revealed himself to be 2 By admiring him and his works oft times resounding that speech of David Psal 8.1 O Lord our Lord how excellent is thy Name in all the earth 3 By beleeving in him whereby Abraham is said to have given glory to God Rom. 4 20 Ioh. 3.33 For
to be prayed against but not their persons except in the case following Thus David I pray thee 2 Sam. 15.31 turne the counsell of Achitophell into foolishnesse Act. 4.29 And the Apostles say Now Lord behold their threatnings Wee may therefore pray that God would restraine the malice and abate the power and defeate the plots of the adversaries but must not pray against their persons but love them for it may bee they doe belong to God as Paul did who was once a persecutor 3 The very persons of those which sinne unto death incurably may be prayed against I say not saith Iohn 1 Ioh. 5.19 that he shall pray for it And Paul wisheth that they were cut off that did trouble that Church Gal 5.12 David prayeth against the malicious enemies of Christ Psal 69.38 saying Let them be blotted out of the booke of the living and not be written with the righteous But this kind of sinners cannot be discerned by ordinary spirits this kinde of imprecation therefore must be left unto such spirits as was David's and the Apostles and must bee forborne of ordinary Christians except it be when the Church hath righly for evident and just cause cut men off by the curse of Anathema Maranatha not from the body of the Church onely but from the head Christ also as those deserve to be which are open malicious and inveterate Apostates 4 The persons of our enemies and persecutors though they doe what they can to hinder the Gospell are not to be prayed against For our Saviour prayed Father forgive them Luk. 23.34 they know not what they doe Steven said Act. 7.60 Lord lay not this sinne to their charge Yea wee are commanded to pray for them which despitefully use us Mat 5.44 and persecute us 5 Prayer may be made that God would sometimes inflict temporall judgments upon obstinate sinners but without limiting the Lord unto particulars so it be conditionally if their case require it and that it be in love to their soules and persons that they may be therby made to seeke God Thus David prayed Psal 83.16 Fill their faces with shame that they may seeke thy Name O Lord. 6 Lastly God must bee interessed in the cause else no man must be prayed against Gods dishonour not onely a mans private wrong must cause it It must proceed from holy zeale for God and not from passion and private spleene and desire of revenge These rules observed it may be knowne when and how a Christian may imprecate evill against his and Gods enemies and how and when he may not The last thing in the kingdome of grace for which praier must be made concernes the liberties and franchizes therof which are the very good commoditie Rom. 14.16 or livelihood of the subject which so farre as respects this life are freedome from the curse of the Law and dominion of sinne Rom. 6.11 a freedome in righteousnesse thence peace of conscience and joy in the holy Ghost of which the Apostle saith the kingdome of God doth consist scil In righteousnesse peace joy in the holy Ghost Rom. 14.17 The last thing of all which is considerable in this petition is the kingdome of glory Concerning which request must bee made that God would hasten it that Christ would overcome the last enemie 1 Cor. ●5 26 death and so put all enemies under his feet that he would come to judgement in his appointed time to magnifie himself in his just vengeance upon the wicked 2 Thes 1.8 1 Cor. 6.2 the Saints sitting upon them with him in judgement and that he would bestow perfect glory upon all the elect 2 Thes 1.10 whereby hee himselfe may be perfectly glorified in them at that day when also the forme of governing this kingdome by him as Mediator being determined he shall have delivered the kingdome up to the Father 1 Cor. 15.24.28 that God may be all in all to the glory of Father Sonne and holy Ghost for evermore Amen Amen Some of the particulars mentioned in this petition I doe confesse will come to be condered again in the fourth fifth and sixth petitions as the continuance of the course of nature magistracy peace of conscience and eternall glory likewise power against sinne and increase of grace yet the petitioner shall not therein tautologize or make vaine repetitions For here they are mentioned onely as meanes to set forth the glory of God in the comming of his kingdome that his Name may be hallowed but there they have respect to the good of man The Doctrine being thus inlarged the Vses will more easily follow First all such as desire not Vse 1 the comming of Gods kingdome according to the particulars before rehearsed are to be reproved As all that are enemies to civilitie and unto Schooles of learning who because of some abuse of them which will alwaies be of the best things thinke them needlesse All such as deny magistracie be they Familists or Anabaptists or any other for it is their great sinne All such magistrates themselves which turne the point of their authoritie against the Church or at best like Gallio Act. 38.17 care not which way it goe with it well or ill All idle or unfaithfull Ministers which in stead of directing Christs spouse unto him doe smite and wound her Can. 5.7 and shame her by taking her veile from her who in stead of feeding doe starve or poyson Christs flocke All Governours of the Church which make sad the heart of the righteous Ezek. 13.22 and make glad the hearts of the wicked which censure thrust out the good● and receive into the Church and hold in the bad In a word all that doe not beare good will to Sion which is indeed to be an enemy for in this case Hee that is not with us Mat. 1● 30 is against us saith Christ and hee that doth not gather scattereth Lastly if any be open persecutors of the truth or seducers and inticers from it all these may see in this Doctrine as in a large glasse their errors and foule blemishes But he which will say Goe ye cursed Mat. 25.41 42. to all that do not prove themselves to be his friends will have to reckon with all the enemies of his kingdome How many be there that hypocritically will say Thy kingdome come and yet use all meanes to hinder it and keepe it downe And if it came in any place it is the very burden and vexation of their soules Is not this most grosly to mock God But woe be to such Pharises hypocrites which will say to God our Father Thy kingdome come and yet will as much as they can hinder the passage or power of the Gospell of his kingdome Mat. 23 13 which will not enter themselves nor by their good will suffer those that would to enter in Be wise in time It is not safe to cast off or refuse the yoke
Reas 3 Heaven is the place into which all Christians hope to enter and where they hope to dwell for ever good reason therefore that they should accustome themselves to the manners of that place before hand Ob. These examples cannot bee knowne Sol. Answer they may because God hath revealed in his word how the Angels obey him And in what manner Christ obeyed his Father on earth in the same manner the Saints his members doe in heaven Ob. These examples are of such perfection that no man can attaine to the like Answer Sol. though men on earth cannot bee as perfect as their copie yet the better the example is the nearer they may learne to come to perfection Once man could have obeyed and againe shall obey perfectly And it appeares by the examples proposed that it is possible that creatures may doe the will of God perfectly Whereas man is most prone Vse 1 to imitation let him learne hereby to follow examples to some purpose Imitate the Angels and Saints As Christ obeyed on earth and as the Scriptures report that the Angels have done in like manner must every one of us do The particulars hereof see in the next point Let every one therefore unto the precepts and rules of well-doing present to their thoughts the actions of those that have done according to those rules By this meanes we shall better understand the rule and be heartened to put it in practise because it sheweth a possibility that it may be done In doing thus we shall every day grow better and yet not be proud for we shal daily see something before us to which we must aspire to which yet we have not attained Vs 2 Here is an Apologie for all those good Christians which shun the examples of the worst men not onely making the best men on earth their patternes but goe one straine higher they looke unto the obedience of the Angels in heaven This Scripture is their warrant which must alwaies bear them out against the scoffes of prophane and loose men that content themselves vvith a meere form and outvvard face of godlinesse vvho if they be moved to an exacter course of practice they ansvvere vvith a scoffe What would you have us Saints and Angels on earth Answer them againe with this point They must be as Angels here or they do not understand what they say when they say in earth as it is in heaven If they understand what they say they mocke God in that they meane not as they speake and deale prophanely to mocke at the performance of that by another for which they themselves did seeme solemnly to pray They may be told they must obey God like Angels and Saints upon earth or they shall never be Saints and as the Angels in heaven Learne here with what honour the Angels and Saints departed should be honoured by men on earth namely with the honour of admiration and imitation of their graces As for adoration of their persons both God forbiddeth it and they themselves do abhorre it with See thou do it not Revel 22.9 In earth as in heaven This pointeth to an heavenly manner of doing Gods wil whence we learne Doct. 4 Prayer must be made and care had that Gods will be done in an holy manner The heavenly manner as well as the lawful matter of doing Gods will must be observed Eph. 6.6 Servants are exhorted to do the will of God from the heart Not onely to do Gods will but from the heart Our Saviour instructeth his disciples in the right manner of giving almes and of fasting and prayer in this sixth of Matth. Reason 1 Gods commandments do require as well the right manner as the matter of obedience for such is the tenour of the Commandment Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart with all thy soule and with all thy minde Matt. 22.37 The good or evill manner of Reas 2 doing a good deed proveth or discovereth the sincerity or hypocrisie of the heart which is the chiefe thing which God hath an eye unto in everie action Before use can well be made it must bee considered what is requisite in the right manner of doing Gods will wherefore observe these directions 1 First if a good thing bee well done it must be done wittingly and purposely not as bruit creatures or wicked men who may fulfill Gods wil but are not aware that they do it 2 In faith beleeving that it is lawfull for them to do it else it is sinne Whatsoever is not of faith is sinne Rom. 14.23 3 In integritie of heart from an habite and true disposition to keep all the commandments as well as that one which actually he doth keepe for the present else if he allow himselfe in the breach of any one Iam. 2.10 God holdeth him guilty of all And it is the propertie of a good conscience to will to live honestly in all things Heb. 13.18 4 In sinceritie which is when a good thing is done unfainedly Eph. 6.6 Doing the will of God from the heart and from right grounds not for selfe respects onely or chiefly or for by ends but with ayme at pleasing of God and bringing honour to his Name For all things must be done to the glory of God 1. Cor. 10.31 5 Constantly a good conscience will endeavour to do well alwayes Act. 24.16 6 In humility reverence and holy feare of God whose work they do As the Angels observe all the former rules so do they this also For the Seraphims cover their faces with their wings Isa 6.2 and the foure and twenty Elders fall on their faces and cast their crownes before the Throne Revel 4.10 and 5.8 7 Speedily Psal 18.44 Dan. 92. making no delay This was taught by the wings of the Seraphims wherwith they did flie Isa 6.2 David said I made haste and delayed not to keepe thy commandments Psal 119.60 8 Lastly Psal 110.3 Psal 40.8 the will of God must bee done with a willing minde cheerfully and with delight David saith It was his delight to walke in the paths of Gods commandments Psal 119.35 And it was our Saviours meat and drinke to do the will of him that sent him and to finish his worke Ioh. 4.34 By these particulars it appeareth what is further to be prayed for and striven after what also is to be prayed against on the contrarie and avoyded according to the purpose of this third petition The uses follow Vse 1 All formall and hypocriticall Christians also all meere civill honest men which thinke they bee good men and that they have done God good service when they have done onely the matter and outside of some good works may see that they do palpably deceive thēselves If they preach pray heare receive the Sacrament keepe the Church pay everie man his owne and shew now and then some scraps of mercie though there was neither integrity sinceritie nor constancie at all in those actions they thinke God
words doth expresse the desires of a naturall life but spendeth more words about the spirituall life in the two last petitions Againe Gods indulgence and yeeldance unto mans weakenesse might cause this order giving him leave to aske things more sensible thereby raising him to aske spirituall As our Saviour by curing mens bodies did leade them on to know that he could and would cure their soules letting it appeare to them he could as easily say Thy sinnes are forgiven thee as to say Rise and walke In like manner men may by the experiment they have of Gods power and goodnesse to preserve the body be led to seeke unto him with assurance that he both can and will save their soules That this petition may the better bee understood consideration must bee had of the matter-subject of the desire namely having of bread circumstances which cōcerne the having of this bread The thing expresly desired is bread which doth not signifie supersubstantiall and spirituall bread viz. the Sacrament for the administration thereof was prayed for in the second petition and the bread here spoken of is to be desired every day but the Sacrament not so By bread therfore is first meant that which properly wee call bread Also according to a borrowed forme of speech ordinary in Scripture it signifieth all manner of food Hee giveth to the beast as it is word for word his bread that is his food Psal 147.9 Goates milke is called bread well translated food Pro. 27.27 I could multiply Scriptures in this kinde In like sort by another borrowed forme of speech by this one kinde of sustenance he meaneth all kindes whatsoever whether meate or drinke whatsoever also is needfull for preservation of life as cloathes houses c. Also by bread are meant the causes and good effects of bread as fruitfull seasons good temperature of ayre health and chearefulnesse as the Apostle saith He filled our hearts with food and gladnesse Acts 14.17 In a word all things which may preserve life or restore health as Physicke skilfull and faithfull Physitians peace and good order and all good meanes to maintaine it as a wise and couragious magistracie a strong populous loyall and loving commonalty And whatsoever is contrary hereunto is prayed against as famine pestilence wars sickenesse paine c. The circumstances which concerne the having this bread and meanes of life are divers in number sixe They doe respect 1 The person of whom bread must be asked scil God implyed in Give thou 2 The meanes of obtaining it scil by gift expressed in Give 3 The persons for whom meanes of life is desired scil themselves Vs. others Vs. 4 The time when they would have bread This day 5 The propietie whose bread scil their owne Our 6 The portion both how much and of what sort daily The person of whom all temporall good things are sought is God implyed in the word give and the words of invocation scil Our Father to bee understood in every petition The meanes of maintenance is from God not by restoring any thing hee doth owe unto man but by gift give which hath this full sense give possession give right give continuance give leave to use give a blessing to the use of daily bread The persons for whom bread is asked are us every one upon earth who now are or may be Gods children The time when this bread should be given is restrained to the present time this day The propriety not such bread whereto they have neither spirituall nor civill right or onely civill or onely spirituall but our bread that which wee have true right to in Christ and amongst men The portion how much and of what kind of maintenance is contained in the word daily Daily doth not set out the time when they would have bread For that was signified in this day in which words the time when was precisely determined and our Saviour in so short a forme of prayer would not make needlesse additions But daily bread signifieth such kinde of meanes and so much maintenance as their daily and next necessities doe require all such supply for our naturall well being as we have next need of or such as one day after another successively our estate and condition needeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ab 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 proximè sequens So the word in ordinary acception will beare it But that I may give a sound and cleare exposition of daily bread I referre the Reader unto other phrases of Scripture vvhich carry the same sence with daily bread as first to Iob 23.12 and Pro. 30.8 which is the best Commentary of this petition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for it is the very same petition with this We reade there an attribute given to bread vvhich signifieth a necessary food diet or ordinary or appointed food or food of a mans allowance or convenient food This very thing is expressed in the Greeke by divers vvords and phrases 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dimensum Luke 12.42 It signifieth a mans stint or part where he alludeth unto the care of governours of families of stewards vvho doe appoint to all sorts in the house their severall portions and allowances In Iames 2.15 the vvords translated daily food 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is the same in sence vvith daily bread and are expounded by Iames in the sixteenth verse to be things needfull for the body All these places conferred together shevv evidently that by daily bread is meant convenient provision of food apparell and all other things vvhich the necessity of the person or estate of any man doth require The petition thus interpreted hath this sense O heavenly Father in whom we live and have our being who onely canst fill the hearts of men with food and gladnesse sith we cannot glorifie thee on earth in doing thy will except thou doe sustaine us upon earth vouchsafe therefore unto mee and all the rest of thy children that for this present day wee may have possession right and blessing upon that allowance and convenient supply of food and maintenance which our present condition doth stand in need of Yea afford all such meanes as may make our lives comfortable unto us Be pleased likewise good Father to prevent and remove whatsoever may hinder the welfare of our naturall life so farre as may stand with thy good will and pleasure that while we live wee may both in body and soule lo rifie thee Give us this day our daily bread After Christ had taught his Disciples first to aske the things that did concerne Gods glory in the three first petitions then he willeth them to aske such things as did concern their owne good in the three last petitions Whence it followeth that When any man hath unfainedly desired and sought the things which pertaine to Gods honour and glory Doct. 1 he may then with good warrant pray for and expect all good things for himselfe both for body and soule When the Israelites
Reas 1 of Christ with whom they are married and made one by faith for so he reasoneth All things are yours for you are Christs 1. Cor. 3.22 What they have is given Reas 2 them of God according to that promise made to godlinesse 1. Tim. 4.8 It hath the promise of the life that now is Wherefore if they do also possesse their goods by a true civill right which is the onely determiner of what and how much Christ doth allow to be held in his right they may assure themselves they have a true right of their owne Vse 1 This should teach the children of God not to envie the abundance of the wicked nor repine at their owne little because of the great oddes in the tenure by which each do hold The wicked hold onely by a common right The children of God hold all which they have by a speciall right of donation on Gods part and by right of inheritance in respect of their head Christ Iesus Let the godly therefore bee content yea thankfull for that much or little which they lawfull do possesse For as it is much better in qualitie than the riches of many wicked Psa 37.16 so is their hold by a farre better title than any of the wicked And let them comfort themselves in this that what they have is their owne and that by speciall right in and through Christ Iesus Sith everie beleever hath so Vse 2 good title to what he came by lawfully he may be bold to take and use it for his comfort but with this caution they may not do with their owne as they will That proverbiall speech is true onely of an absolute Lord and owner scil the Lord. Men may not therefore cast away their goods in sport carelesly nor spend them upon their lusts wickedly for though they may have a true right yet is it a limited ●ight it is such a right as the wife hath in her husbands goods not such a right as the husband hath in himself A wife may be bold to use her husbāds goods because she hath right to them by him but she must use them according to his will and for his honour else the husband may justly cut her short and restraine her of her former liberties It is a prophane speech to say as they in the Psalme Our tongues are ours therefore we will speake so to say Our goods are our owne therefore we will spend For whosoever hath best right to any thing hath a chiefe Lord over him by whom he must bee ordered in all his expences to whom hee must give account in the day of reckoning Our bread not others bread whence we may note Doct. 9 All things are not necessarily common amongst Christians There is a distinction of mine and thine of ours other mens Each man hath such a proprietie in that which hee lawfully holdeth that without his leave or just cause no man ought to meddle with it In the verie time when communitie of goods was most needfull Act. 4.22 and when voluntarily the Saints made their goods common even then till a man had passed away his right by his owne act the proprietie and right was still in himselfe For thus saith Peter to Ananias While it remained was it not thine owne and when it was sold was it not in thine owne power Act. 5.4 God hath set this order amongst men that Reason they knowing what they get shall be their owne they may be encouraged to labour Also that hee might try the * Deut. 15.11 liberalitie of the rich and patience of the poore This confuteth the Anabaptists Vse 1 and all others that do hold that all mens goods should be common Which false doctrine is the mother and nurse of idlenesse and confusion amongst men This doctrine likewise condemneth Vse 2 all those that quarrell at Gods unequall distribution of the things of this life by giving to some abundance and to them and some others little or nothing whereupon they grow bold to carve out something to themselves out of the others pl●●tie and they thinke they may do it because that other hath enough What is this but to controll Gods wisedome and to call his absolute Soveraigntie into question May not he do with his owne as he will Mat. 20.15 Let everie one therefore as they are to rest satisfied with their owne yoke-fellowes so rest contented with their own maintenance that is to live onely upon that maintenance Exo 20.17 to which they have a true right when they use it Daily bread that is ordinarie convenient maintenance Here is no prayer for abundance but for daily bread neither too much nor too little but according as shall be needfull be it fine or course much or little Whence note The desires of the things of Doct. 10 this life must be moderate The qualitie and quantitie of things desired must be onely such and so much as is convenient for mans person and condition Such was Iacobs praier namely Gen 28.20 Preservation in his way bread to eate and rayment to put on Agur in his prayer which is the best interpreter of this clause daily bread saith Pro. 30 8. Give me neither povertie nor riches feed me with food convenient for mee Having food and rayment let us therewith be content saith the Apostle 1. Tim. 6.8 A mans life doth not consist in Reason 1 the abundance of the things which he possesseth Luk. 12.13 Abundance is * 1. Tim. 6.9 Isa 5.12 dangerous Reason 2 both to soule and bodie for out of superfluitie are bred and fed these vices namely disregard of God and his works yea denyall of God as he saith lest I be full and deny thee Prov. 30.9 From thence likewise do grow confidence in riches 1. Tim. 6.17 Psal 123.4 high mindednes and contempt of the poore The heart thereby is stolen away and wonne to the love of the world Matt. 22. so much that either it keepeth men that they come not at all to the meanes of salvation They have bought a farme they cannot come or if they do come to the preaching of the Word and sit as Gods people before the Minister yet they do not profit because their heart goeth after their covetousnesse Ezek. 33.31 or if while they heare they begin to affect the Word yet when they are gone the cares of this world and deceitfulnesse of riches choake the word Mat 13.20 and they become unfruitfull 1. Tim. 6.9.10 They that will be rich saith the Apostle fall into temptation and a snare and into many foolish and hurtfull lusts which drowne men in destruction and perdition For if once men affect and love riches it becommeth a root of all evill causing shipwracke of faith and a good conscience Abundance is likewise hurtfull to the body it doth breake mens sleepe So saith Salomon Eccles 5.12 The abundance of the rich will not suffer him to sleepe And out
act in respect of the Father Son holy Ghost in the first act of Faith and conversion of a sinner whereby the person of a man stands justified before God and shall without intercision of justification and losse of this favour of God stand before the barre of Gods tribunall and is and alwaies shall be absolutely justified and acquitted from all sinnes past present to come because all obligations hand-writings against him are in that act cancelled and blotted out he forgiving all trespasses Colos 2.13.14 Yet it must be knowne that of this act there is as it were a double sentence First in Court of heaven at which time the elect in Christ have their names inrolled in the booke of Gods effectuall calling and are numbred among the just which sentence can never be revoked or blotted out this is that which was passed with God that I may so speake after the manner of men in the first act of conversion Secondly this sentence of forgivenesse is passed in the court of the conscience of him that had the former sentence pronounced for him in heaven This sentence is the second act of the holy Ghost wrought in this manner First after that a sinner is cōvinced of his guiltines of sin and of his damnable condition because of his sinne then forgivenesse is offered and pronounced to the eare in that gracious promise of salvation to all that beleeve in Christ Iesus which promise is proclaimed in the ministerie of the Gospell in which light of the Gospell he sheweth unto a man possibility of salvation setting before him I speake of men of yeeres and understanding Christ the meanes of salvation and by this meanes the holy Ghost worketh faith in Christ then confession and griefe for sinne then prayer to aske forgivenesse and grace to live godly and then doth witnesse to his spirit that he is accepted of God Thus sentence is pronounced in the conscience from whence ariseth sense of Gods love which is called the shedding abroad of the love of God in our hearts by the holy Ghost Rom. 5.5 also sense of the loving countenance of God Psal 4.6 7. which is the signe of his loving kindnesse and is that speech of God by which he doth say to our soules he is our salvation and then ariseth in our hearts peace of conscience and joy in the holy Ghost This sentence of forgivenesse unto the conscience hath different degrees it is sometimes more cleare in the apprehension of the soule somtimes more dimme yea sometimes quite blotted out in the counterpane of our release or copie of our acquittance as it was with David Psal 51. so that a person perfectly just before God hath sometime little or no sense or apprehension of it in his owne conscience but doubteth whether he be in state of grace or no. Which happeneth because of the staine and guilt of new sinnes which guilt abideth in the conscience untill a man do confesse his sinnes repent and aske forgivenesse and by a renewed faith apply forgivenes by which meanes the evidence of his pardon is againe by the holy Ghost exemplified and sentence by this new application is againe pronounced in his conscience whence ariseth new assurance of salvation and renewed joy in the holy Ghost This is that justification which for distinction sake Divines call justification by parts or continued or repeated justification or new application of one and the same justification which justification though in respect of the sentence pronounced in heaven is one individuall act whereby a man standeth alwayes just before God yet in respect of the pronouncing of that sentence to the heart it is not actually applyed neither can a particular sinne be said to be everie way actually forgiven untill after it have beene committed is confessed and repented of nor untill forgivenesse be asked and until the holy Ghost hath made new application thereof unto the conscience through renewing of faith by which a man doth againe and againe as new sinnes are committed apply the merits of the bloud of Christ unto his soule Also it must be knowne that the sentence of pardon which is passed in heaven with God is not fully executed untill the last degree of it when sentence of absolution shall be pronounced by Christ Iesus Come ye blessed of my Father inherite the kingdome prepared for you from the foundation of the world Matt. 25.34 It must moreover be conceived and held that notwithstanding this distinction of justification betweene an absolute justification in respect of God and a justification by parts in respect of application to mans conscience there are not two kindes of justification a first and a second as the Papists hold but one and the same justification considered in different respects In respect of Gods actuall acceptation of a mans person justification is absolute but in respect of the actuall application and manifestation of Gods acceptation unto a mans conscience justification is by parts and degrees When a man alreadie justified asketh forgivenesse he doth not ask a new justificatiō but a second or new application of pardon unto the conscience of those particular sinnes which are daily committed together with continuance of Gods favour and more cleare evidence that he is sealed up unto the day of redemption The third thing to be spoken of for the better understanding the word forgive concerneth the effects following the apprehension thereof these are Peace of conscience Rom 5.1 Ro. 14.17 and joy in the holy Ghost These things touching justification and remission of sinnes being opened we may understand what is prayed for when we say Forgive sinnes Wee pray first that those which belong unto Gods election but are not yet converted may be accepted of God through Christ Iesus God not imputing their sinnes to them but unto Christ whereby they are freed from the curse We pray likewise that Christs righteousnes may be imputed to them that they beleeving in Christ might bee saved and for that cause pray that they may beleeve Secondly wee pray that our selves and others being justified and accepted into favour it would please the Lord to continue this his favour and that he would signifie and make the same knowne to our hearts and consciences daily by a new testification of the holy Ghost accompanied with a new application of pardon for new sinnes daily committed and that wee may have more and more assurance of our perfect redemptiō at the day of judgement and that we may have peace of conscience and joy in the holy Ghost in the meane time The particular circumstances in this Petition come next to bee laid open which are three First the connexion of this Petition by this copulative and that is As well forgive sinnes as give daily bread The second is the person who is to forgive that is God the Father through the satisfaction and mediation of the Sonne by the application of the holy Ghost Thus much is implyed in forgive in which
the person God is understood The third circumstance concerneth the persons prayed for us that is the same persons mentioned in the fourth Petition namely our selves and all our neighbours living upon the earth that belong to Gods election be they alreadie justified or not justified As we forgive These words containe an argument to encourage him that prayeth to aske forgivenesse The Evangelist Luke saith for we forgive which place in Luke doth interpret this in Matthew The particle as doth import a resemblance from an act of ours towards man of that which we would have God do for us but it doth not denote either the measure or manner how we would have God forgive us but onely a certaintie of the truth of their owne forgiving of others And although this as and for in Luke shew that these words are a reason and argument to move us to aske and expect forgivenesse from God yet it doth not imply that our forgiving of others is the cause why God should forgive us but arguing from the lesse to the greater argueth thus We do and can forgive therefore God can much more forgive us also This is but a proposing of their estate and condition unto God reasoning from a signe of Gods love and grace towards them that they have cause to expect forgivenesse In like manner for is used Luk. 7.48 Her sinnes which are many are forgiven for she loved much where the womans love was not a cause of great forgivenesse but a fruit and signe of Gods forgivenesse So that in these words he that prayeth doth represent to his owne thoughts and doth utter unto God thus much That sith he himself that hath but a drop of mercie yet could and did forgive and sith this power in them to forgive others proceeded from a reflexe of his mercy towards them and so was an argument that he already loved them therefore they are bold to aske and expect forgivenesse of him who is infinite in mercie and hath begun to shew mercie to them alreadie The sense of this whole Petition may be rendred thus O Lord God who art the onely forgiver of sinnes sith we cannot glorifie thy Name neither can our lives be pleasing to thee or comfortable to our selves so long as thou art unreconciled to us and so long as thou hidest thy loving countenance from us bee pleased therfore through Christ whom thou hast made to be our redemption to be reconciled to me and to all thine elect upon the earth impute not our sinnes to us but free and acquit us from the whole guilt and punishment of all sinnes small and great For this cause we confesse our sinnes and do beleeve thy promise of forgivenesse Lord helpe our unbeliefe Impute likewise the righteousnesse of Christ unto us and grant that thy Spirit of Adoption may daily make more and more application of forgivenesse to our hearts untto he f●● assurance of hope that we may have peace of conscience joy in the holy Ghost and in the end everlasting life Lord this thou canst easily and will readily do for even we that have but a small measure of compassion forgive those that wrong us And sith by this our forgiving of others we know thou hast begun to forgive us continue therefore thy grace and certifie daily to our hearts that thou art our salvation And forgive us our sinnes If it be observed how this Petition is joyned to the former intimating that natural life without forgivenesse of sinne will little availe a man and if it be considered that forgivenesse of sinnes in that sense as hath beene delivered is the subject of this Petition we may note It concerneth all men to desire Doct. 1 and endeavour after forgivenes of their sinnes through Christ with the application and assurance thereof to their hearts and consciences by the holy Ghost They must desire that God would not impute their sinnes but impute Christs righteousnesse unto them that they may be delivered from all guilt and punishment of sinne and may be heires of glorie and that he would daily passe the sentence hereof to their conscience Hoseah saith Hos 14.2 Take with you words and turne to the Lord say unto him Take away all iniquitie and receive us graciously The Prophet David to whom the Prophet Nathan had pronounced forgivenesse of his murder to his eares 2 Sam. 12.13 yet because God had not pronounced it to his heart but withdrew his countenance from him he is therefore earnest with the Lord saying Purge me with hysop Psal 51.7 to 13. make me heare joy and gladnesse Hide thy face from my sinnes and blot out all mine iniquities Renew a right spirit within me Restore to me the joy of thy salvation Vntill sinnes be forgiven Reason 1 they separate betweene God and man whether hee be converted or unconverted Isa 59.2 Your iniquities have separated betweene you and your God and your sinnes have made him hide his face from you that hee will not heare And We have transgressed and have rebelled saith Ieremie thou hast not pardoned Thou hast covered thy selfe with a cloud Lam. 3.42.44 that our prayer should not passe through If a man be not in state of grace his prosperity in this life doth but fat him against his day of slaughter and increase of his dayes are but a multiplication of his sinnes against the day of account And he may looke for death to arrest him every day which if it doe before his sinnes be remitted hee shall be found in his sinnes at the day of judgement to his everlasting perdition If a man be in state of grace yet if by new sinnes the Lord be provoked to withdraw his loving countenance and to shew tokens of his displeasure against him his life becommeth unprofitable and uncomfortable untill God speake peace to his soule againe He cannot come boldly into Gods presence to pray heare or receive the Sacrament or if he doe come he is very heartlesse in the performance of them and all that a man hath though it be a kingdome can give him no comfort Psal 32. Psal 51. as it was in Davids case But when God forgiveth sins God of an enemy becommeth a friend and of a displeased Father beginneth to looke graciously upon his childe from this pardon it is that a man is freed from all miserie and by the assurance and sealing of pardon to the conscience doe follow peace of conscience freedome and libertie of heart to come before GOD at all times and in the end everlasting life Vntill sinnes past be pardoned Reason 2 and the sinner is justified he cannot doe Gods will nor glorifie his name For Luke 7.47 ●7 untill much be forgiven no man can love much for to whom little is forgiven the same loveth little saith Christ A man is not sanctified untill he be first justified he can never repent and live holily in time to come untill hee have hope that all his sinnes past are
David 2 Sam. 12.13 The Lord hath put away thy sinne But they doe not forgive sins authoratively as from themselves Vse 1 This condemneth the abhominable presumption of the Pope who daily taketh upon him to forgive sins Vse 2 This must teach all that would have pardon of sinne to seeke onely unto God and not to any creature living or dead Vse 3 This is comfortable to all that need and desire remission It is well for them that GOD doth not put them over to others but reserveth this power of pardoning of sinnes to himself they that come to him may be assured that he will and can forgive them Psal 86.5 for David saith He is plenteous in mercy unto all them that call on him What though our sinnes have abounded both for greatnesse and number The grace of him that pardoneth aboūdeth much more For with God is plenteous redemption Psal 130.7 All that beleeve this have Vse 4 had their sinnes pardoned must admire and praise the name of God saying with heart and voyce Who is a God like thee that pardoneth iniquity and passeth by the transgression of the remnant of his heritage Micah 7.18 And with David Blesse the Lord O my soule and all that is within me blesse his holy Name who forgiveth all thine iniquities Psal 103.1.3 Forgive this implieth a free gift wherefore if justification be by forgivenesse of sinne we may conclude Salvation is by the free grace Doct. 3 of God The Apostle saith We are justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Christ Iesus Rom. 3.24 Also he saith And you hath he quickened being dead in your sinnes having of his grace forgiven you all trespasses so the word forgive there signifieth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Col. 2.13 And God himselfe saith I even I blot out thy transgression for mine owne sake Isaiah 42.25 Either salvation must be of grace Reason or of works for it cannot be of both Rom. 11.6 for then grace were no grace or works were no works But salvation is not of works therefore of meere grace according to that of the Apostle By grace are ye saved through faith not of your selves it is the gift of God not of works lest any man should boast Ephes 2.8.9 Quest But it may bee demanded how salvation can be said to be of Gods grace when as full satisfaction was made by Christ unto the justice of God whereby it was purchased and merited for us I answer Answ That the justification and salvation of a man to whom God hath given faith should be of Gods grace and yet of merit and therefore of justice herein is no contrarietie if we distinguish and consider different respects In respect of Christ our justification and salvation is of merit and is an act of Gods justice but in respect of us it is of grace and is an act of Gods mercy It is true that salvation is purchased for us but who did it was it not God the Sonne Man did not nor yet can he purchase his owne redemption And though we be saved by that purchase of Christ how were we ordained thereto How was Christ ordained and became a purchaser for us How came we to have the Gospell preached and to have faith by the preaching thereof and the earnest of the Spirit joyned to our faith Is not all this of Gods free grace Therefore the Apostle when hee speaketh of redemption through Christs bloud hee addeth through his rich grace Eph. 1.4.5.6.7 Had man stood in equall tearmes with God when he entred into covenāt with him and the tenour of the covenant had beene that he must keepe the Law or be damned except he himselfe could procure a sufficient suertie to suffer and be damned for him If man had then procured for himself such a suertie and the same suertie had made satisfaction in this case Gods aquitting the offender had beene a meere act of justice But Adam stood bound alone without a suertie and he having sinned both the new covenant and the suertie in whom it was established and all the meanes whereby a sinner is saved are of Gods gracious appointment accomplishment and acceptance he glorifying himselfe by saving sinfull man in a way as well of infinite mercie as of infinite justice Hence it is sith the price was of Gods gracious ordination and was payed by Christ as well very God as very man the greater the price and satisfaction was the greater is the mercie and grace of God in pardoning by such a meanes So that free grace in God and such a purchased redemption by God for man can stand well together Indeed our salvation in respect of Christ is purchased for he hath paid deare for it Therefore when hee doth mediate for us to his Father hee can and doth hold forth his merits and satisfaction for us that his Father may see that now the Law is satisfied he may without impeachment of his justice bee mercifull to such whom Christ doth present unto him But in respect of us salvation is everie way of Gods free grace Vse 1 This doth evidently overthrow all doctrine of merit of works both before and after conversion Before conversion all men are dead in sinnes and trespasses without faith and cannot please God After conversion if a man could do the will of God in all things it were but his due debt The paiment of rent orderly in time to come is no sufficient discharge and payment of debts rents or arrerages behind unpaid but alas when we have done all that is commanded the best must say Luk 17.10 he is an unprofitable servant Vse 2 How comfortable is this to afflicted and burdened sinners that see no worth in themselves and finde that they have nothing in them to pay for a release or ransome here yet they may see grace yea free grace in God If we will but aske forgivenesse 2. Cor. 5.20 and accept forgivenesse for God sueth to us by his Ministers to be reconciled to him and if we would bee thankfull for forgivenesse his name and nature is to be gracious hee must deny himselfe if he do not of his free grace forgive and save us Forgive doth import remitting of guilt and punishment of sinne Whence sith justification is by forgivenesse this followeth All that are truly justified are Doct. 4 freed from all guilt and all punishment of their sinnes The Apostle saith There is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Iesus Rom. 8.1 He saith likewise Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect It is God that justifieth Rom. 8.33 Reason 1 Christ Iesus bare all the guilt and punishment which was due unto man Isa 53.4.5.6 for it is said He bare our griefes and carried our sorrows And he was wounded for our transgressions and the Lord laid on him the iniquitie of us all And Christ is said By himselfe to have purged our sins Hebr. 1.3 Wherefore if
by the discretive conjunctiō but which sheweth that in the latter clause the petitioner doth enlarge his desire and crave Gods helpe against sinne in a further degree then was asked in the first clause scil that God would not onely not leade th●● into temptation of evill Ne inducas sed educas but to deliver them from evill Sinne here is considered in the immediate cause thereof scil temptation prayed against in the first clause Leade ●s not into temptation It is considered likewise in respect of the very act of sinne scil evill prayed against in the second clause But deliver us from evill In the first clause an act of God concerning temptation unto sinne is deprecated namely that he would forbeare to leade into temptation and forbeare to shew himselfe an adversary but this is asked not absolutely but under correction if it might stand with his pleasure and with his glory In the second clause their sute is enlarged wherein they desire a further act of God that if it must needs be that they must be exercised with temptations that he would stand for them and deliver them from the evill of those temptations this latter is asked for absolutely In both clauses of this petition wee must consider the person to whom sute is made scil God the persons for whom us the things praied against namely sin but in different respects both of the cause thereof temptation act of sinne evill Temptation Temptations unto which men are subect Tentatio probationis tentatio se duct●●n are of two sorts proofes or trials of a mans graces these are not to be prai● against for in such hee must rejoyce Iam. 1.2 motions or enticements unto sinne by Satan by evill men or by a mans owne evill heart such as are spoken of Jam. 1.14 Temptation is good or evill A good and blamelesse temptation is when any one that hath right to make experiment of what a man is or of what he will do doth to a right and good end by lawfull meanes make triall whether a man will do or not do that to which he is moved or occasioned An evill and blame-worthy temptation is when the end of him that tempteth is that hee that is tryed or tempted should do that which is evill doing it with a mind to perswade thereunto Leade By this act of Gods leading into temptation we are to understand such an over-ruling act of Gods providence by which he disposeth of all things good and evill whereby partly by what he doth by his concurrence with him that tempteth touching the substance of his act and partly by what hee permitteth in not hindring what he could hinder concerning the evill and irregularitie thereof and partly by what he omitteth leaving a man to himselfe to strugle and wrastle with the temptation it commeth to passe that a man is not onely intised unto but overcome of the evill unto which he is tempted God must be acknowledged to have an holy hand in all temptations whether good or evill In good temptations God is properly an agent and worker Gen. 22.1.2 as when he proved and tempted Abraham by commanding him to offer his onely sonne Isaac likewise when he causeth men to prosper as when he rained Manna to tempt or proove the children of Israel Exod. 16.4 whether they would walke in his law In like manner when he sendeth afflictions as he did to the Israelites in the wildernes to humble them and to prove what was in their hearts Deut. 8.2 whether they would keepe his Commandements or no. In evill temptations God is not at all in proper speech an agent or worker of the evill of the temptation but yet he hath to do in and about all evill temptations and that not onely in determining them to a good end as to his owne glory and also in the concourse of his power to the substance of the act whether of Satan of a mans selfe or of other men when they tempt God hath further to do in evill temptations He hath to do in them both by way of permission in permitting and in not restraining Satan or a mans owne concupiscence or other men from tempting by which way of permission he is said to prove or tempt men as in Deuteronomy Deut 13● in his permission of false Prophets to seduce and also by way of omission insuspending his action and forbearing to give grace or to do that which he was wont to do and if he would could do to keepe a man from acting the sin to which he is tempted By this way of omission God is said to have proved or tempted Ezekiah when the Embassadours of the King of Babel came unto him 2 Chron. 32.31 The Scripture saith God left him to try him that he might know what was in his heart These acts of Gods permission and omission for which in Scripture phrase God is said to tempt or to leade into temptation are expressed sometimes by words of negation and sometime by words of action By words of negation where it is said speaking of the great temptations which the Israelites saw Deut. 29.4 The Lord had not given them an heart to perceive c. By words of action where it is said by the Church Isa 63.17 O Lord why hast thou made us to erre from thy wayes and hardened our heart from thy feare Likewise God saith of false Prophets if the Prophet be deceived Ezek. 14.9 I the Lord have deceived him And in the Revelation it is said touching the ten Kings which became Antichristian God hath put into their hearts to fulfill his will namely Revel 17.17 his purpose and decree concerning the permission of the tyranny of Antichrist and to agree and give their kingdome to the beast c. Now because where God permitteth tempters to tempt and also forbeareth to give grace to resist the temptation he doth not remove that which if it were removed would hinder the temptation nor give that which should hinder the yeelding to it and for that hereupon such is mans sinful disposition temptation and sinning followeth infallibly therefore this permission and omission of Gods is expressed by words of action and by words as it were of eausality as here by leading though God be farre and farre from being any cause of the sinne or of being any blame-worthy cause of the temptation as shall further appeare hereafter To tempt unto sinne properly which God doth not and to leade onely into temptation which God doth and may do doe much differ For to tempt taken in the evill sense is to intice to indeavour to move the will of man to wickednesse and that with a minde to have him to act it according to that of the Apostle Iames Iam. 1.14 A man is tempted when he is drawne away by his lust and is inticed Of this tempting it is which the Apostle Paul speaketh when hee saith to the Thessalonians 1
Thes 3.5 J sent to know your faith lest by some meanes the tempter have tempted you But to say that God doth thus tempt any man is blasphemy for Saint Iames saith Iam. 1.13 God tempteth no man because he cannot be tempted to evill But to leade into temptation taken in the good sense as it proceedeth from God is onely such an act or acts of Gods soveraignty and wise providence concerning man whereby it so commeth to passe that a man is exposed to the temptations either of Sathan of other men or of a mans owne euill lusts who are the proper and onely actors of temptation unto sinne In this act of leading into temptation allusion may in part be made unto the acts of a Generall of an Army who may according to his discretion lead which band he pleaseth and set them in the Forlorne hope the place of greatest danger and may keepe which band he pleaseth in the Reserve or in some Fort the place of greatest safety It may likewise be somewhat resembled by an act of the Moderator of the games of combats where none might enter the lists and play their prize but according to the permission and appointment of the overseer and moderator of those exercises The Lord God hee is the great Lord of hosts and is the over-seer and over-ruler of the great Theater of the world who doth at his pleasure moderate and order all actions therin in perfection of wisedome to his owne glory Evill is either evil of punishment which is temporall prayed against in the fourth petitiō eternall prayed against in the fift petition Or evill of sinne which is referred either to persons or actions When this word evill noteth out a person in Scripture it signifieth the divell who because he is of himselfe so exceeding evill and doth make it his worke to infect all men with evill he is called the evill or the evill one So he that Math. 13.19 is called the evill one in the Greeke is v. 39. called the divell Some would restraine this word evill that it should meane the divell as if hee onely were prayed against in this petition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that because this word evill in the Greeke hath his article joyned with it which giveth an emphasis to evill pointing at some speciall evill one which is the divell I doe grant that sometimes these articles do give a speciall force unto the words to which they are annexed yet for the most part the Greekes use to adde them rather for a grace and ornament of speech and are so used seven or eight times at least in the Lords prayer So that seeing there is no necessitie in respect of the word evill to understand the divell onely and because evill of sinne is most opposite to sanctification I thinke that it is not Christs meaning to restraine the word evill unto him Evill hath respect to actions and then by evill is meant any irregularitie or swarving in any action contrary to the will of God to which will of God evil of sinne 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 id est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 properly standeth in opposition in which sense it must be taken in this petition and if wee put any emphasis in the article it may as wel denote evill of sinne in generall as any particular evill yet here I doe not exclude the divell as if hee were not meant at all to be praied against but doe include both him and evill men and the evill world the euill heart and all other things so farre as they are movers and inticers unto evill In this very sense are the same words used by Christ saying Father Ioh 17.15 keepe them from the evill or from wickednesse So 1 Ioh. 5.19 The world lyeth in euill or wickednesse And that of the Apostle Rom. 12.9 is without all exception Abhor 〈◊〉 that which is evill cleave to that which is good Evill is here taken indifferently for all manner of evill of sinne and whatsoever doth conduce unto it Deliver implyeth two things First preservation from falling into sin Secondly helpe of God to rise out of sin by repentance both these deliverances are here meant Keeping from evill in Christs prayer Ioh. 17.15 and deliver from evill in this prayer have one meaning When Paul saith Rom 7.24 Who shall deliver he meaneth who shall give mee power against this body of sinne And that Gods giving of repentance is deliverance from evill that saying of the Apostle 2 Tim. 4.25.26 maketh it manifest where Gods giving men repentance verse 25. is all one with recovering themselves out of the snare of the divell which evil is without our question prayed against in ●hose words Deliver us from evill Vs in both clauses leade us and deliver us noteth out the same persons mentioned in the fourth petition scil our selves all our brethren that live upon the earth That we may understand the meaning of this Petition more fully more cle●ly it is to be considered what grace of God it is which is he● prayed for by vertue whereof a man may be delivered from the evill here deprecated First wee pray that God by an act of his gracious providence would free us if it might be from the very temptation unto sinne namely that wee may be delivered and kept from seducers corrupters that they may not tempt us unto evill according as Saint Paul prayed that Satans buffeting 2 Cor. 11.7.8 the prick● in the flesh might depart fro● him Wee may pray that God would please not to leade us unto temptation Moreover sith GOD hath thought it meete that his owne children should bee exercised with manifold tentations and the flesh the world and the divell conspire to assault us with temptations it cannot be but we shall daily bee tempted Wherefore prayer also is to bee made unto God that he would not leade us into temptation that is hee would bee pleased to uphold us and that hee would so effectually worke in us by the grace of his spirit that we may not be insnared by it and held under the power of it so as to be overcome made to yeeld to commit that sinne to which we are tempted This speciall and effectuall grace is it which is requisite both that we may resist temptations and that wee may have both will and ability to live holily righteously in the whole course of our life By this effectuall grace I understand not onely such a work of the holy spirit of God that inlighteneth the minde and which cureth the will by an immediate influence so farre as onely to raise the will from its naturall propensitie to evill to a meere indifferency to resist a temptation to evill if a man will and to imbrace a motion to good if he will But it is such a powerfull worke of the Spirit that it causeth the will so to decline evill that it will resist the temptation if he can and
perseverance that GOD should afford first his prevenient superoperating grace to begin the good worke in the will of man whereby the will being an active power doth suboperate and actually will to beleeve will to repent and to resist a temptation to live godly and to persevere and also that it is needfull that God do afford a subsequent prevailing grace whereby a man under God by his helpe may indeed beleeve repent resist a temptation and doe what may be pleasing in Gods sight and also persevere this is evident both by the Scriptures namely Philip. 2.13 and elsewhere as also by the experience of the best children of God God hath given the Apostle grace to will for hee saith Rom. 7 1● 18.19 to will was present with him when yet he wanted power to doe the good which he would for he saith also how to perform that which was good hee found not The Spouse had grace to wil to runne after Christ yet in the sense of her inability actually to runne she prayeth thus Cant. 1.4 Draw me and we will runne after thee Our Saviour saith Ioh. 6.44 none can come to him except the Father draw him That man commeth to Christ that is beleeveth in him this is the formal and proper act of man but that hee is wrought to this act this is of God by his grace as effectuall as if he were forcibly drawne Now if God should give onely a lesse measure of grace that is if he onely raise the will to an indifferency to will if a man will and shall suspend the concourse of his gracious power requisite to the act of willing and doing that which is good untill the will by its owne liberty now restored by grace shall determine whether it will choose or refuse to will or to doe man in this state shall never partake of that gracious concourse whereby a man should actually will or doe any thing that is truely morally good for man in this state will never determine to will or to doe that which is good but rather the contrary For since mans fall the remaines of inbred sinfulnesse even in the regenerate which doth so easily beset him Heb. 12.1 together with the addition of the weight of a temptation these will if God adde no more then a generall concourse of his power which hee affordeth to the substance of al mens actions good or bad or if hee onely be ready to yeeld a speciall gracious concourse to the doing of a good worke which hee is a like ready to yeeld unto all upon supposition that their will shall first determine to wil or to doe it the weight I say of the disposition of the flesh lusting against the spirit the weight of the temptation will cause that the wils indifferency to good shall cease and the will of man will actually determine for that which is evill Whence it must of necessity follow that every man will inevitably fall into sinne and will live and dye in it and so no man can possibly be saved for wee may well reason thus If our first father Adam who had not in his will two contrary principles flesh and spirit who had not two contrary dispositions and propensities fighting weighing one against the other as every man even he that is most regenerate now hath But if Adams will was habitually and perfectly well disposed to the choise of good only having not the least propensity to evill and had no weakenesse but what was common to him as a creature namely a possibility through freedome of his will to choose the evill and to refuse the good if he would it being possible that he might be deceived in judgement yet because when he was tempted though with no other temptation but such as by his habituall grace he might easily have resisted God left him to the liberty and power of his owne will and did not afford him a speciall helpe by his grace he was overcome of the temptation Let it now be considered if Adam in state of innocency and in a state of perfection if when he was left to the liberty and power of his will the temptation caused his will that was in equall balance to will and to make choise of that which was evill being overcome of the temptation is it possible that any man living who shall have onely grace to will and do well if he will who shall have no more grace of God till first he himselfe hath determined to will that which is good shal ever actually withstand daily temptations or being fallen shall ever rise out of his fall for hee never will will either to resist the temptation or by repentance to rise out of his sinne The matter of this petition and the words being explained they carry this sense O Lord God which lovest good and hatest evill thou which over-rulest and disposest all things by thy divine providence now that of thy mercy thou hast delivered me and all other of us that beleeve from the punishment of all our sinnes past in forgiving all our trespasses do not now we beseech thee expose us unto the temptations of the wicked world of the divell or of our owne evill hearts but that whensoever they assault us to entice us or enforce us to evill we may by the power of thy grace and might resist and overcome them And whereas through our frailty we are fallen and daily doe fall into sinne Lord give grace unto us to rise out of our sinne by hearty repentance For this cause vouchsafe unto us thy holy spirit that good motions may be put into us and may be strengthened in us that by the deeds thereof we may mortifie the deeds of the flesh Let the same good spirit also frame us unto and uphold us in an holy course of new obedience that we may serve thee in holinesse and righteousnesse all the daies of our life to the glory of thy most holy Name in doing thy will Lead us not c. It is evident that sanctification and holinesse of life is the principall thing aymed at in this petition whence if we observe with it the conjunction and which joyneth this to the other petition wee learne Jt ought to be the desire and Doct. 2 endeavour of all Christians as well to be holy in this life as to be happie in that which is to come As well to have power against sinne as pardon of it as well to be sanctified as justified Christ prayeth for all that did should beleeve saying J pray not that thou shouldest take them out of the world but that thou shouldest keepe them from evill Ioh. 17.15 and verse 17. Sanctifie them with thy truth David speaking of presumptuous sinnes saith to God Let them not have dominion over me Psal 19.13 The like prayer he maketh against all sinnes saying Order my steps in thy word and let not any iniquity have dominion over me Psal 119.133 The whole tenor of
Scripture is that we should abhorre that which is evill and cleave to that which is good Rom. 12.9 Reas 1 For Iustification and Sanctification are so inseparably conjoined that no man hath his sins forgiven who hath not withall the fruit of it unto repentance and holinesse of life here in this life This I shall make evident by these arguments following 1 It is one part of the new Covenant of grace that men should be holy and for that cause God hath not onely required holiness to be shewne on their part but hath promised as well to write his Law in the hearts of his people Heb. 8.10.12 as to be mercifull to their unrighteousnesse and not to remember their sinne 2. It is one end to which God hath chosen men in Christ to be holy Eph. 1.4.5 and without blame before him in love as well as to be adopted children by Christ to obtaine everlasting life 3. It is the end of the office and comming of our Saviour Iesus Christ and of the merit and efficacy of his death resurrection and intercession not onely that beleevers should obtaine forgivenesse of sinne and everlasting life but that so many as the Father gave unto him might beleeve repent and live holily and righteously in this present world Tit. 2.14 hee purging them to himselfe to be a peculiar people zealous of good workes 4. It is the end of the Scriptures not onely to lay the foundation of faith for the remission of sinnes that through consolation thereof Ioh. 15 4. Ioh. 17.7 Eph. 5.26 beleevers might have hope but also to sanctifie and cleanse them from the filthinesse of their sinnes that they might be holy and without blemish 5. It is the end of everie Christian mans profession and calling 1. Thess 4.7 not only to beleeve and hope to be saved by Christ but also to be holy and to become the servant of Christ 6. It is the end why God sendeth his Spirit into their hearts and causeth it to dwell in his children Rom 8.16 not onely to be a spirit of adoption to witnesse to their spirits that they are Gods children but also to be a spirit of sanctification to worke out the stony heart Ez●k 36.26 27. and to frame in them a new heart causing them to walke in his statutes and to do them 7. It is the end of the Sacraments the seales of the new Covenant not onely to signifie and seale remission of sinnes by Iesus Christ but also that by him all that beleeve in him being ingrafted into the similitude of his death and resurrection Rom. 6.4 5 6. should dye unto sinne and walke in newnesse of life These things considered it is most apparant that justification and sanctification are never severed in one and the same partie wherefore he that prayeth for and expecteth to be justified must also pray and indeavour to approve himselfe to be sanctified A second generall reason why all Christians should pray for and labour after holinesse is because if a man be not holy and righteous in this life he is not capeable of true glory and happinesse in heaven in the life to come and that whether we respect God or a mans selfe remaining in his sinne God will not admit him let him make what claime hee can unto the kingdome of heaven his put off shall be Luk 13.27 Depart from me I know you not ye workers of iniquity For without holinesse no man shall see God Heb. 12.14 But suppose it were possible that a sinfull man might be admitted into heaven heaven would be no heaven to him The place persons and exercises there would be tedious and a vexation unto him For all things there are things of God holy and spirituall most contrarie to the disposition of a natural and carnall man 1. Cor 2.14 God saith The naturall man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God they are foolishnesse unto him To whom Gods ordinances and presence in them as in hearing praying and praising God and to whom holy company and holy conference is tedious in this life the same heart and affections remaining even these and the like things would be an hell to them even in heaven For to make a man happy even in heaven it is needfull that the faculties and powers of his soule be so fully rectified and perfected that hee may comprehend and enjoy the object that thing wherein mans happinesse doth consist Now though Gods presence in his glory and in his goodnesse which is the object of mans happinesse is alwayes in heaven yet if the understanding the will and the affections of a man be not sanctified and thereby made capeable of and suteable to the object what content and joy can he take therein It is with the reasonable soule in the apprehension of intellectual and spiritual things as it is with the senses in bodily objects Colours though never so orient and various yet they can give no delight to a blinde or ill-affected eye Sounds though never so melodious cannot delight a deafe or ill-affected eare Meat and drink though never so well relished and delicious cannot delight him whose pallat is out of taste nay the best do savour and taste ill with such a one Even so the most spirituall things in heaven would be so farre from delighting a carnall and unholy man that they would seeme to his fancy very foolishnes and they would be to him a very vexation Vse 1 It is therefore an intolerable fault for a man to professe the name of Christ and yet to live ungodly Num. 23.10 this is the fault of too many who desire to have their sinnes forgiven but desire not to have them mortified they desire to go to heaven like cursed Balaam when they dye but endeavour not to be holy while they live But as if this were not enough to be sinfull themselves many do make a jest at all conscionable living in others and a scorne of all that endeavour to keep a good conscience in all things and yet will expect that Christ shall save them How hath the devill deceived these men yet thousands are justly given over to this strong delusion If any of you shall happen to cast your eyes on these lines consider the Doctrine in hand and learne that for certaine he that is not holy in this life shall not bee happy in the life to come For whomsoever God justifieth Rom. 6. those he sanctifieth and whosoever have faith to partake of Christs merits do by the same faith partake of the vertue of Christs death to the killing of sinne and of the vertue of his life and resurrection to the quickening of the inward man And at the day of judgement all that professe Christ and yet obey not the Gospell of Christ 2 Thes 1.8 shall be burnt in flames of Gods vengeance as well as those which know not the Gospell and professe it not at all For
deed and it may bee said that God worketh in man according to mans good pleasure and not according to his owne good pleasure And thus man shall have matter of glorying and boasting in himselfe because he hath differenced and discerned himselfe by his willing to beleeve to repent and to convert and to resist a temptation when another who had alike sufficiencie of grace and had God alike readie to joyne with him to helpe him yet would not beleeve repent convert or resist a temptation The tru●● to be maintained touching this point is that the beginning proceeding and consummation of a mans regeneration and sanctification is of the free grace of God in man without any cause in man moving him thereunto And the cause why he giveth unto some men faith repentance power Rom. 9.11 16.18 Eph. 2.4 5 1 Pet. 2.10 Act. 19.9 against temptations and not to others this is not because he findeth in some good dispositions and such good workes which he findeth not in others but of his meere will and pleasure For God hath mercy on whom he will that is he softeneth hearts and giveth grace to beleeve c. to whom hee will and he hardeneth that is leaveth into impenitencie and unbeleefe whom he will This Doctrine of Gods free and full grace in the worke of sanctification doth also overthrow the merit of workes done by men in state of grace For even then every good worke is done by the continuance and new supplie of Gods grace Now if the doing of good works which are fruits of sanctification be of grace how can they merit This also discovereth the ignorance Vse 2 and folly of such as presume that they can presist temptations at their pleasure and therfore presumptuously runne into manifold occasions of sin and that they can repent when they will and this they thinke they will do hereafter intending to convert and to be godly before they dye thus the devill and a deluded and deceitfull heart doth misleade them For if God give them not grace to resist a temptation and if God convert them not and give them repentance 2. Tim. ● 26 Satan will hold them captive at his will and they will by reason of the hardnesse and impenitency of the●● hearts Rom 2.5 treasure up to themselve● wrath against the day of wrath and revelation of the righteous judgement of God Moreover how doth any man know that God will give him grace hereafter who hath refused and daily doth refuse and resist Gods grace tendred in the Ministery of his Word for the present If he do it is more then ordinary for his ordinary dealing with such sinners is that because they refuse and continue long to refuse when he calleth therefore he giveth them up unto their owne hearts lusts Psal 81.12 that they walk in their owne counsels and either he never giveth them a will to seeke unto him or if he giveth them ever any will to seek him it shall be to seeke him with a meere selfe-serving and so that when they call he will not bee found of them Prov. 1.24.28 For they will not seeke him with their whole heart We heard before in the prosecution of the doctrine how much holinesse deserved to bee desired now would we obtaine it then according as wee are taught by this doctrine we must seek it of God let us say to him Turne thou us Ier. 31.9 and we shall bee turned And with David let us wish Psal 11● 18 36. O that my wayes were directed to keepe thy statutes Open thou mine eyes that J may behold wondrous things out of thy Law And Incline mine heart to thy testimonies and not to covetousnesse And Set a watch O Lord before my mouth keepe the dore of my lips Incline not my heart to any evil thing Psal 141.3.4 And Ps 139.24 Leade me in the way everlasting Let us use all those meanes which he hath ordained to preserve us from sinne let us betake our selves to the Christian armour Ephes 6.13 and resist whatsoever opposeth it selfe to the will of God But this resistance must not be in the power of our owne might but in the power of GODS might through whom it is that the weapons of our warfare doe beat downe the strong holds 2 Cor. 10.4.5 and doe bring into captivitie every thought to the obedience of Christ If we doe thus we shall stand fast in the evill day even in the day of the fiercest temptations Vse 4 Lastly hath any man obtained mercy of God to have power to resist temptations or to recover himselfe out of his sin and is he made able to doe any thing that is good let him take notice that this was of Gods free grace and that it was wholy of his grace He must to the praise of God acknowledge that all is of God nothing of himselfe Hee must acknowledge that God is not onely the Author or beginner Heb. 12.2 Phil. 1.6 but also the perfecter of our faith and that he is not onely the beginner of the good worke of conversion in him but that he hath beene and will be the performer and perfecter of it unto the day of Christ And as wee praise him for that he made us Psa 100.3 and not wee our selves so we must praise him for that he hath regenerated and new made us Iam. 1 1● and not wee our selves being moved hereunto not by any thing in us But as he of his owne will begat us with the word of truth so of his owne will by the same word of his grace Acts 20.32 he doth build us up further till hee give us an inheritance amongst all those that are sanctified If wee will doe this seriously it will keepe us from three of the greatest sins which a Christian is incident to into which he will certainly fall if this present consideration and the like doe not restraine him These are spirituall pride contempt of our weake brethren and unthankefulnesse to God For let our graces bee never so many and never so excellent how can a man thinke highly of his owne worth or meanely of his brother when hee considereth that all he hath is nothing but what he received 1 Cor. 4.6.7 And the more graces wee see in us the more thankefull we will bee to God which gave them to us Let us therefore see God in every good grace we have and in every good worke wee doe then shall wee remaine low in our owne eyes mercifull to our brethren and thanekfull to our God But let us in our thanksgiving give the whole praise of every good worke to God not part to God and part to our selves which is to rob God of all For sith God deserveth all if we give not all unto him hee taketh it as if we gave him none at all Leade thou us not c. but deliver thou us Here note that Gods owne leading of men into
came to passe that Rehoboam sinned the infatuating of Rehoboam who was of himselfe partially and corruptly affected towards his young Councellours and the not putting of wisedome into Rehoboams greene head was of God but that Rehoboam made choice of the worst counsel that was a most free act of his owne Now Gods hand was in the disposing of these things that the thing before prophesied might come to passe Thus much the word translated cause doth signifie scil the thing brought about or brought to passe was from God This act of not hearkening must be considered in divers respects First as an evill act of Rehoboam and his evill Councellours in this respect God did not cause it Secondly it must be considered as a meet punishment of that kingdome and as a means to bring to passe the prophesie of Ahijah in which respect that God in justice should leave Rehoboam and his young Councellours to their folly and to the pride of their owne hearts it was good and was caused of God Thus it may appeare as I hope that God hath an over-ruling and disposing hand in mens sinnes without being author of sinne and without any impeachment of his-holinesse The uses follow They are therefore to blame Vse 1 that alter the forme of this petition saying Suffer us not to be led in stead of Leade us not Their end may bee good but their alteration is naught and to no purpose for in truth this change of words doth not cleare Gods justice any more then Christs owne words Let the petition therefore remaine and stand holy as it is set down by Christ for it is presumption to teach Christ how to speake This our tenent is an apology Vse 2 against Papists or any other that shall slanderously affirme that we hold either directly or by consequent that God is the author of sinne although wee say as this petition teacheth us that God leadeth into temptation and hath more to do in the sinnes of men then a bare permission Vse 3 This should cause all men to admire and magnifie the infinit wisedome and perfection of Gods holinesse that can have so much to do with sinners and with their sinnes and yet there doth not so much as one dust or spot of defilement cleave unto him Vse 4 Hereby are condemned the blasphemies of very many who to excuse or lessen their sin will lay the fault on God because Gods determinate counsell hi● providence power permission and his giving men over is in their sin and because he might have hindered it if he would therefore they thinke they cannot chuse but sinne and why should fault bee found with them if God would it shou●● be otherwise Such are brought in objecting Rom. 9. Who hath resisted his will Why doth he yet finde fault This they take from Adam who before his conversion would have laid the fault on God rather then take it on himselfe for he saith Gen. 3.12 The woman whom thou gavest to be wiih me she gave me of the tree and I did eate But take notice that although he thus extenuated his sinne by laying it on God yet God could Gen. 3.17 and did curse Adam and the earth the bitter fruits whereof we feele unto this day Know therefore thou that any way darest put off thy sin upon God if thou do not beleeve in Christ and forsake thy sinne the Lord will one day shew to thy cost that he can bring it about that thou through thine owne evill heart shalt sinne he giving thee over unto it and yet can in holy justice cast thee into hell for thy sinne For he can say he deceived the false Prophet and yet justly punish the said Prophet and all that are deceived by him Ezek. 14.9 10. Vse 5 May God if he please leade into temptation and can we not be overcome by temptation except the Lord permit This should teach all men to live so that God may be their friend and may not be provoked in his justice to give them over to the power of the devill and unto their owne lusts For which cause observe and keepe these directions following 1 First make your peace with God by faith in Christ repent of all sinnes past and having hereby obtained friendship with God then keepe it by being good before him which is then approved when you shall endevour to please him by doing his will in time to come which if ye do for this is to be good before God or to please God then you shall escape the snares and nets the hands and bands of the most enticing harlot in the world the like may be said of all other temptations but the sinner saith Solomon shall be taken by her Eccles 7. 2 As much as in you is abstaine from all sinne for since mans fall Gods giving over unto sinne is a punishment for some former sinne but especially shunne those particular sins for which God doth in speciall sort give men over the chiefe whereof are these following 1 First all refusing 2 Thess 2.10.11 or a slight and formall receiving of the truth For this causeth God to send men strong delusion to beleeve a lye 2 Abusing or not making right use of that knowledge a man hath Rom. 1 21.22 23 24 26 28. doth cause God to infatuate and give him over to vile affections 3 A willingnesse of heart to be ignorant of the truth and a wilfulnesse to practise evill for of such saith the Lord Ezek. 14.4 He that setteth up his idols in his hea●● and cometh to the Prophet I the Lord will answer him that commeth according to the multitude of his idols 4 Presumption of a mans owne power of himselfe to resist temptations Matth. 26.33 34. for this cause the Apostle Peter was given over to fall so fearfully 5 All willing casting of ones selfe into the occasions of sinne for this cause Jehoshaphat's familiaritie with Ahab 1. Kin. 22. caused him to be given over to beleeve Ahabs false Prophets rather then good Micaiah 6 Idlenesse to live without a calling or negligently in a calling Ezek. 16.49 doth expose a man unto the Lords giving him over unto many abhominations for this he gave over Sodom to uncleannes 7 Allowance of secret sinnes this provoketh God many times to give men over unto some grosse open sinne that it may worke sense of sinne shame for sinne and true repentance in the elect may worke unto shame and eternall perdition of the reprobate Shun all sinnes therefore as much as in you lyeth if you would not have God leade you into temptation but especially take heed of those before mentioned Let all that beleeve in Christ and have thereby true interest Vse 5 in God draw comfort from this doctrine for God you see hath an overruling hand in the temptations and the sins of all men Satan therefore cannot winnow us nor buffet us no Luk. 2● 31 he cannot touch us but as
Gods blessing upon it when these two meet namely Pro. 25. ●2 a wise reprover to an obedient eare it is both an ornament and an happinesse in every Christian societie Vs Even such persons as the Disciples which were alreadie converted and had received the true beginnings of sanctification Whence observe Doct. 5 Those which are already converted and sanctified are yet subject unto temptation unto sinne and to lye some space of time in it if the Lord please to leade them therinto and do not deliver them from it Gen. 20.2 2. Sam. 11. Mat. 26.78 Abrahams lying Davids adultery and murther Peters denying of his Master and that saying of James 3.2 In many things we offend all doth evidently prove it Reas 1 Sanctification is but in part while men carry about these sinfull bodies of flesh 1. Cor. 13. they know but in part and have received but the first fruits of the Spirit Rom. 8. There will alwaies be tempters Reas 2 in this life namely the world the flesh and the devill therefore there will be temptations in the best men and the more holy any one is the more malicious the tempter is and more vigilant to ensnare him God hath ordered that man Reas 3 shall be subject to falling into temptations even in his estate of regeneracy to try his watchfulnesse over himselfe and that he may alwayes see matter of humiliation in himselfe and be kept from being exalted above measure and that the power of God in preserving men from sinne and delivering them out of it may bee seene in their weaknesse This confuteth that most false Vse 1 and uncomfortable opinion of some that hold that after a man is converted he cannot commit a grosse sinne against his knowledge I referre them to the examples in the point If they shall denie that Abraham David and Peter were converted at such time as they committed those sinnes as I heare they do they contradict manifestly the holy Scripture for it is most cleare that Abraham had a justifying faith when he was called out of his owne countrey Heb. 11.8 which was before he told any one of his two lyes David was converted before he was King for God saith of him in the very rejection of Saul that he had found a man according to his owne heart Act. 13.22 Now his honest heart was not given him after he had committed adultery and murder but before Samuel anointed him to be King for when Samuel had thought that Eliab the eldest sonne of Jesse a man of an excellent presence had beene the man which God would chuse God doth tell Samuel that he looketh not on the outward appearance 1 Sam. ●6 7 but on the heart Peter likewise was converted before he denyed his Master for our Saviour saith unto his Father concerning all his Disciples except Judas that they kept his word and saith Ioh. 17.6.14 They are not of the world It is to bee wished that authoritie would restraine these revivers of old heresies lest they fret like a Gangrene and increase into more ungodlinesse 2. Tim. 2.16.17 This likewise confuteth the Vse 2 opinion of those that dreame of perfection of holinesse in this life I meane those that thinke that a man at sometime of his life may attaine such a degree of holinesse as not to sinne any more Indeed all Christians must be perfect in truth in desire and in labouring after perfection which yet shall not be attained in the highest degree untill we come to heaven This teacheth us what to Vse 3 thinke of those that boast they know not what temptations meane This argueth that the strong man keepeth the house and that they are like drunken men wounded but are not aware of it For if they were sanctified in truth the devill and flesh would ply them with manifold temptations Vse 4 Let none abuse this doctrine when they are reproved for their running into temptations and their falling into sinne to excuse or lessen their faults by saying the best men are subject to temptation It is easie to fall into sinne as they did but it is not easie to repent and rise out of their sinne as they did Vse 5 This likewise condemneth the ignorance and folly of those who looke that such men as are indeed godly and which make a more forward profession of religion then others should live without sinne Therefore if such happen to sinne they cry out upon them whereas they can applaude themselves and others which do ten times worse Let no man therefore give Vse 6 over his watch but be alwayes armed against his spirituall enemies for he shall meet with temptations wherefore let no man be secure but let him that standeth take heed lest he fall 1. Cor. 10.12 For the best men may have their slips If the Disciples of Christ be Vse 7 subject to temptations and sinnes then let no man be uncharitable in censuring either his neighbour or himselfe as if they could not bee in state of grace because they have beene overtaken with some grosse sin or because they bee combred with manifold temptations All the question must be what is a mans ordinarie walking and touching the sinne they are fallen into it must be considered whether they be convinced that it is a sinne or at least have had sufficient meanes to be convinced but will not be convinced and whether they delight in it or do wilfully lye in it and whether their temptations bee not by them wrastled with and resisted ordinarily for if they resist those sinnes of which they are eonvinced and do not willingly lye in any sinne then they are in estate of grace notwithstanding some fals and many temptations and they may in faith and with a comfortable expectation of helpe from God pray to be delivered out of them Vse 8 If the best men be subject to temptation then no man must thinke it strange that he is daily pestered with temptations neither must he be discouraged as if that befell him which did not befall Gods owne children All our care must be that we be not overcome of the temptation of which I shall speake more particularly in the next point A childe of God if he shall keepe close to God is in a most safe condition notwithstanding temptation For no temptation shall befall them but such as is common to men and God is faithfull and wil not suffer them to bee tempted above that they are able but will with the temptation make a way to escape c. 1 Cor. 10.13 Either God will keepe us from the houre of temptation Revel 3.10 or he will keepe us from the hurt of the temptation For in that Christ in all points was tempted as we are hee having a feeling of our infirmities both can and will succour his owne that are tempted Heb. 2.18 Heb. 4.15 Jnto temptation Our Saviour directing his Disciples to pray against sinne doth first will them to pray against temptation
Whence we learne Whosoever would be preserved Doct. 6 from sinne must pray against and withstand the temptations thereof Hee that is not warie and carefull to resist temptations cannot live godly The divell did deceive Eve through his temptations Gen. 3. and Adam was likewise drawne into the transgression by the temptation of Eve Math. 4. whereas Christ Jesus the second Adam by resisting the divels temptations preserved himselfe from sinne The youth spoken of in the Proverbs was caught and insnared by the subtill temptations of the harlot Pro. 7.10.21 But Ioseph by resisting the temptations of his Mistrisse Gen. 39.9 kept himselfe chaste although her temptations were cunning and most importunate Christ saith again and againe Pray that ye enter not into temptation Luk. 22.40.46 Reas 1 For temptations and motions to sinne are the very seede and kernels of sinne which if they may be entertained so as they may but receive any warmth in a mans heart there is presently a conception of sin which will cause him to bee in labour and travaile of it untill he have brought it forth into act Iam. 1.14.15 There are no creatures so apt to beare issue nor ground so ranke to beare weeds no tinder or gunpowder so readie to take fire as the heart of man is to conceive sinne and be inflamed with lust by evill motions and temptations wherefore all that would avoid sinne have cause to resist it in the temptation To resist beginnings of the evill of sinne Obsta principijs is as needefull to be observed for a rule against diseases of the soule as to withstand evils of paine in their beginning is needefull in diseases of the body Hereby wee may judge what is the cause that sinnes doe abound Vse 1 and spread infinitely It is because temptations are not resisted which fault deserveth sharpe rebuke Yea many are so farre from praying against temptations that they willingly foster and nourish any that shall be offered and like him in the parable doe sweepe and garnish their hearts Mat. 22.44 opening the dores and making it ready prepared to entertaine any temptation They contrary to the Apostles command make provision for the flesh to fulfill the lusts thereof Rom. 13.14 still thinking and plodding on wealth or feeding themselves with high thoughts or are alwaies hunting after unlawfull pleasure running alwaies into those actions places and companies which minister most occasions of temptations Insomuch that the divell and lust are not more ready to present evill motions then the minde is to plot and contrive how to compasse them Micah 2.1.2 or then the hand is to act them yet these men will mocke God and say Leade us not into temptation And if they be exhorted to avoid the occasions of temptations they set light by it and would make us beleeve they are not so simple as to be taken with idolatrie covetousnesse whoredome drunkennes pride revenge or any such like crime although they keepe company with idolatrous or covetous or voluptuous or vaineglorious persons Yea if we would beleeve them they can wallow in the midst of occasions of sinne and yet come forth undefiled Let a man husband his heart as well as he can and let him sow into it the best seed he can get yet he shall finde that too many lusts will of their owne accord spring up hinder the growth of godlinesse in him We count them ill husbands that will not weede their land but if wee should see men plowing and sowing nothing but all manner of weedes would wee not say they were out of their wits Such mad men are all those that nourish in them temptations unto evill But what men sow or suffer to be sowne that they shall reape Prov. 22.8 If they sow wickednesse they shall reape vanitie At harvest when others shall have corne they shall bee sent empty away When in the day of the Lord the good Wheate shall be saved the wicked with their lusts shall bee cast into a fornace of fire Mat. 13.41.42 Vse 2 Would any therefore not be the breeders and nurses to those evils which will like vipers kill all that doe bring them forth Let them take heed of temptations which beget them Wee must be carefull to shun all occasions of sinne for it is much easier to avoid the occasion then running into the occasion to avoid the sinne Occasions and tentations are snares it is much easier to avoid a snare then being intangled to get out of it Let us al therfore watch pray that we fall not into them But it is doubted by some that it is not lawfull to pray against being tempted thinking it lawfull onely to pray that they may not be overcome of the temptation I answer I doubt not but the very temptation it selfe as it is a motion and enticement unto sinne is to be prayed against also For the Apostle Paul did not onely pray to overcome the pricke of the flesh and buffettings of Satan 2 Cor. 22.7.8 but that it might depart from him And why may not a man desire not to meet at al with those his enemies which seeke his life as well as when they assault him desire to quit himselfe of them I confesse request must be made for the one and the other with some difference When we pray that wee may not be tempted it is always under correction not absolute but if it might stand with Gods will and pleasure wee desire to runne the race of Christianitie without meeting with stumbling blockes or any occasions of our stay or turning out of the way but if God will have us meete with these impediments we pray absolutely that we may passe over them and not be let or turned out of the way by them And if he will that wee must enter into the conflict we pray that we may overcome Now because resisting of temptations is of great consequent it wil be worth the pains to consider these foure things First what is a temptation Secondly who are the tempters Thirdly how they tempt Fourthly how a temptation may be resisted 1 Temptation is any and every motion unto the doing of any thing which God hath forbidden in his word or to the leaving undone any thing that God hath commanded or to do any thing otherwise then God hath commanded When a thought of any evill is presented to the minde to be done this is a temptation 2 The tempters are Satan called the tempter Matth. 4.3 Iam. 2 14. and men with whom we converse when they move others to sinne and also the lusts of our owne evill hearts 3 These tempters doe move a man to sinne by presenting unto the minde thoughts of sinne to be committed by him The divell by his suggestions as hee did to David putting him in minde to number the people 1 Chro 2.21.1 Man tempteth by speech or some outward signe whereby he giveth a man to thinke what evill
so well conceited of his Poperie as he looketh to winne heaven by it Ioh 16.2 The persecutour thinketh he doth God good service in molesting such as feare him The swearer thinketh his speech doth not sound well and is without all grace if it be not filled up with oathes The covetous the voluptuous the vaine-glorious all of them applaude themselves in their wayes as if they were good though as Solomon saith the issue there of is the way of death Pro. 14.12 It standeth sin upon that the devill and wicked men should transforme themselves and transforme sin and put some goodly painting upon it to make it seeme good else no reasonable man could be brought to commit it for the will of man doth by vertue of its meere nature so perfectly abhorre evill it being the proper object of detestation that it would alwayes shunne it therefore there is put an appearance of good upon it wherby it may deceive But woe be unto them that call evill good and good evill that put darknesse for light and light for darknesse Isa 5 2● Vse 2 Doth Christ call sinne evill then let us beleeve him and not our owne lying hearts nor yet the father of lyes who would beare us in hand that sinne is not evil But let us alwayes conceive of every sinfull act as 〈◊〉 evil naughtie hurtfull act and let it be our greatest care to avoid sinne Oh if we could represent the acts of sinne under the name of an evill act unto our apprehensions our will would at the first motion loathe and detest it more then it doth a toad and a serpent and would either kill it or runne from it Whensoever therefore wee are tempted unto sinne let us see it as it is a most evill thing let us account of it as it is a most evill thing And whatsoever colours be set upon it or whatsoever good meanes it is called by if the thing so called be a transgression of Gods law let us call it a most evill and most abhominable thing Yea we must conceive of every sinfull action and must account it a greater evill then the eternall torments of hell For the least evill of sinne is greater then the greatest evill of punishment for the greatest punishment is an effect of Gods righteous hand but the least sin is contrary to God it is very enmitie unto his holinesse If sinne might appeare to everie reasonable soule to be as it is such an evill as hath beene said it would worke griefe and repentance of sinnes past and hatred and departing from sinne for ever afterward Vse 3 Lastly how thankfull should all Gods children be to him because he doth preserve and deliver us out of sinne out of the great evill every day and wee have his word that he will continue this grace untill we shall be presented to himselfe without any spot of this evill in the day of the Lord He doth not only pardon us and free us from the guilt and punishment of our sinnes but which is no lesse mercy he doth deliver us from the power of sin he delivereth us from evil We must therefore magnifie the Lord and say Who is a God like thee Mica 7.19 who doest not onely pardon but wilt subdue our iniquitie And with David let us call upon our soules to praise God because as he forgiveth all our iniquities so also he healeth all our diseases that is Psal 103.3 he doth sanctifie us delivering us from all evill For thine is the kingdome and the power and the glorie for ever These words containe the reason of all the petitions it is delivered in an exact forme of thanksgiving so that it doth excellently serve both to confirme the faith of him that prayeth and to give glory unto him that is prayed unto The Evangelist Saint Luke doth not mention this clause It is probable that when our Saviour did teach his disciples in private at the request of one of his disciples he did onely teach them how to make petitions but when hee taught them in publicke he did adde this clause to teach them as well how to praise him and give him thanks as to pray unto him and make requests It is sufficient for our learning that any one Evangelist hath recorded it In this clause wee have the note that sheweth that these words are a reason of the former requests in the word for Then wee have the arguments or grounds of the reason which are taken from certaine respe●● in God which do minister matter of faith assuring them that they had cause to aske and expect of God all the former petitions and do also minister matter of praise shewing what cause there is why all glorie should be given unto him These respects of God are three Soveraigntie Power Glory which are set forth by the appropriating particle thine whereby these three Kingdome Power and Glory are ascribed as proper to God Thine is kingdome c. and also with the copulative and conjoyning the two latter respects or priviledges in God with the former and the power and the glory All which three are illustrated by their continuance for ever Kingdome signifieth Gods absolute soveraigntie over all things to whom onely it appertaineth of right to forgive and to give at his pleasure therefore they make their suite unto him Power signifieth that all-sufficiencie in God whereby he is able to do all things according to the good pleasure of his will Many have kingdome so that it pertaineth to them to help their subjects but want power as it was with the King of Israel who said in the famine 2 Kin. 2.27 If the Lord do not helpe whence shall I helpe But as it belongeth unto God to heare the petitions of his subjects so he hath power to grant whatsoever they shall have need of hence the petitioner gathereth assurance that he shall have his petitions granted Glory is that high estimation honour and praise which is due to any person for their worth and goodnesse this is originally in God as well as soveraigntie and power and in that respect is appropriated to him Wherefore when it is said Thine is the glory thus much is implied that as all glorie and praise is due to him so they do now give it to him And if he shall grant their requests it will be for his glory therefore they are bold to make these petitions and hope to speed in their suites whereas though it appertaineth unto God and he were able yet if the things asked were not for his honour and glory he would never grant them For ever is to be applied unto kingdome power and glorie namely it doth now and shall alwayes belong to his prerogative royall because kingdome is his to heare the petitions of his people He is now and shall for ever be able to helpe them he now hath and shall for evermore have glorie and praise ascribed unto him for granting their requests
adversaries that presume upon their owne strength shall faint but they that waite upon the Lord shall renew their strength Asa did confirme himselfe against an hoast of more than a thousand thousand enemies by this point in hand saying to the Lord 2. Chron. 14.11 It is nothing with thee to helpe whether with many or with them that have no power And whereas Gods children are many of them little and weak and their adversaries mightie and strong yet if they lay hold on the power of Gods might they shall stand in the evill day and bee sure to overcome Thus John encourageth all Gods children saying Ye are of God 1. Ioh. 4.4 little children and have overcome them because greater is he that is in you than he that is in the world Paul comforteth himselfe in this when persecutours went about to take away his life 2. Tim. 2.12 saying I know whom I have beleeved and I am perswaded that he is able to keepe that which I have committed unto him And hereby we know that our vile body shall be made like Christs glorious body Philip. 3.21 because of that mighty working whereby Christ is able to subdue all things to himselfe And we are assured of that inheritance incorruptible in the heavens because both it is reserved for us and we are kept for it by the power of God through faith unto salvation 1. Pet. 1.4.5 And thine is glory In that glory is appropriated unto God we learne All glory and praise primarily Doct. 5 and properly belongeth unto God Therefore the foure and twenty Elders ascribe glory and honour unto him Revel 4.11 Likewise all creatures in heaven and in earth and under the earth and such as are in the sea and all that are in them are brought in giving glorie and honour to him that sitteth upon the Throne and unto the Lambe for ever and ever Revel 5.13 This is Reason because God onely is of himselfe excellent and glorious If any other persons or things have any excellencie or goodnesse they have it of God for of him Rom. 11.36 through him and to him are all things saith the Apostle to whom bee glory for ever Amen Who so would be further confirmed and would see what use he should make of this Doctrine let him look back into the first Doctrine of the first Petition For ever Here it must be observed that Doct. 5 All divine prerogatives and properties that are in God are everlasting His soveraigntie power and glorie and all his attributes had no beginning and shall have no ending Moses in the Psalme saith From everlasting to everlasting thou art God Psalm 90.2 The Apostle saith To the King eternall immortall c. be honour and glory for ever 1. Tim. 1.17 who also speaking of God in another place saith Who onely hath immortality c. to whom bee honour and power everlasting 1. Tim. 6.16 The nature of God is perfect and absolute without mixture Reason or composition of things contrary or divers so that there cannot be in him any internall cause of corruption and ending Also God is independant and above all other things that there can be no externall cause and therefore no cause that can cause any alteration in him or can put an end to his being therefore God must needs be the same yesterday to day and for ever Is God everlasting in everie Vse 1 one of his properties then let the wicked feare and tremble for the truth of all Gods threatnings in his word is everlasting heaven and earth shall passe but no jot of the truth of his Word shall be unfulfilled Hereby they must assure themselves that the intolerable torments of hell that are appointed for them are everlasting If there might be an end of Gods justice power and glorie there might be an end of torment but so long as God whose breath as a streame of brimstone Isa 30.33 doth kindle hell-fire is everlasting Mark 9. the gnawing worme and scorching fire made to torment every sinner must needs be everlasting Ah how can they endure this everlasting burning Isa 33.14 The thoughts of the eternitie Vse 2 of Gods properties are exceeding joyous and comfortable unto all that have made their peace with God through faith in Christ for his truth his grace and love and his power to save them 1. Thes 4.17 Psal 16.11 is everlasting By this we may assure our selves that after the day of judgement we shall both in body and soule ever be with the Lord in whose presence is fulnesse of joy and pleasures for evermore because he that hath promised and purchased and which hath prepared and reserved an eternall inheritance in the heavens for us 1. Pet. 1.4 ever liveth to fulfill and continue it to us Sith all Gods excellencies are Vse 3 everlasting we must daily and constantly for ever ascribe unto him glory everlasting Amen This is the second part of the Lords Prayer whereby is expressed the right disposition of the minde and heart of a man when he prayeth which is indeed the very life of prayer This Hebrew word Amen remaineth for the most part untranslated in Greeke Latin English and in all other languages It is used either in the beginning or ending of a speech In the beginning of a speech it importeth an earnest asseveration whereunto our saying verily or indeed or in very truth doth answer in this sense it is often used by Christ in the Gospell When it is in the latter end of a speech as here and in divers other places it signifieth two things either a wish of the heart to obtaine what is proposed or else a perswasion of the heart that it shall obtaine that which was proposed Oft times it signifieth both That Amen is a wish and desire of what was before spoken of it appeareth by Benaiah's answer to David when he had appointed Solomon to be ruler over Israel and over Iudah saying Amen which he doth explane by these words The Lord God of my Lord the king say so too 1. King 1.36 That Amen sheweth a perswasion of faith touching the thing before spoken of see Rom. 9.5 where when Paul had said of Christ that he was over all God blessed for ever he addeth Amen that is he was assuredly perswaded that it was so Amen in this place signifieth both the assent and wish of the heart as also assurance of faith and expectation of the petitions before mentioned These different acts of the soule scil a heartie wish and expectation of what is wished are not so different but that they may in one instant be acted at once in the heart and therefore may fitly be expressed in one word so long as the word Amen doth signifie both those acts of the soule As it expresseth the assent and desire of the heart it implieth knowledge truth of heart and fervor in asking As it expresseth faith of the heart it implieth an assured expectation to obtaine
the things asked This sense of Amen may be thus rendred O heavenly Father now that I have asked all these petitions according to thy will in the name of Christ I do heartily wish and desire againe and againe that thou wouldest grant them and I am perswaded and do expect that in the best time they shall be granted Amen As it signifieth assent of heart unto what was asked doth necessarily presuppose the understanding of what was asked Whence we may collect Doct. 1 Prayer must be made with understanding Whosoever praieth must know what it is that he prayeth for Sing ye praises with understanding saith the Psalmist Psal 47.7 I will pray with my understanding saith the Apostle 1. Cor. 14.15 meaning he would pray so that both he might understand himselfe and that others might understand him also Reason Every man must say Amen to his owne petitions as well as to the petitions that others do make for him for this Lords prayer is to be said in the closet as well as in the Church Now the Apostle saith he that occupieth the roome of the unlearned cannot say Amen at the giving of thanks if he understand not what is said by another There is the same reason why a man cannot say Amen to his owne prayers if he do not understand what he hath said This confuteth the Popish Vse 1 divinity which requireth no more in prayer then a generall good intention of the heart which is sufficient though it be not understood what is asked and though a particular attention of the minde be not added and I would it were onely the Papists errour This confuteth the Papists Latin service wherto the unlearned people cannot say Amen Whereas they say God understandeth Latin and doth like of devotion I answer he must understand what the heart saith as well as what the tongue vttereth and as for blind devotion such as that is which is without understanding hee doth abhorre it Yet this is a common fault not only among Papists but of the common sort of ignorant professors of the true religion for even many of them if they have said over their prayers doe thinke they have served God well and and are blest for that day when poore soules they do not vnderstand one halfe of what they speak Let all before spoken of understand that all uttering of words of prayer without understanding are but bare repetitions of words they are no prayers but mere babling which God detesteth Vse 2 Whensoever any man doth pray unto God let him bee sure that if he pray alone he do understand what it is that he uttereth before God and if hee bee the mouth of others that he expresse his desires in such words that those that heare him may understand him that both himselfe and others may indeed say Amen unto his prayer Amen This implieth intention and assent of heart unto all the petitions before mentioned Whence note The minde and heart must alwaies Doct. 2 bee conjoyned with the tongue or thought in prayer There must be truth and intention of heart in all prayers David saith his prayer did not go out of fained lips Psal 17.1 The Apostle saith Hee would pray and sing with the spirit as well as with the understanding 1 Cor. 14.15 The Lord did dislike the prayers of Israel because when they prayed they cryed unto him not with their heart Hoseah 7.14 He did likewise abhorre the praiers of the Pharisees because they onely drew neere unto God with their mouth and seemed to honour him with their lips but their heart was farre from him Mat. 15.8 Reas 1 Truth of heart and true intention of the minde unto the requests or thanks which a man doth offer is the very life of prayer without which words or thoughts in prayer are but an outside and carkasse of prayer and are mere hypocrisie Reas 2 The promise of hearing and granting requests is made only unto hearty and unfained prayers Yee shall seek me and finde me when ye shall search for me with all your heart saith the Lord Ierem. 29.13 And Christ saith whatsoever ye desire when ye pray beleeve that ye receive them and yee shall have them Mark 11.24 Vse 1 This is to discover and reprove much faultinesse in the prayers of many men of whom albeit it cannot alwayes bee said they pray not in understanding for they know what they say yet they may be charged with this fault that they do not pray in the spirit for they do not alwayes mind what themselves or others do utter in prayer or if they minde it do not heartily desire it or not desire all that is asked they will say Amen to the petition for dayly bread but say not Amen to thy will bee done or lead us not into temptation These offenders are of two sorts One sort never take notice of this their slightnesse and hypocrisie and are so farre from being humbled for their faylings that even for their hypocriticall service they expect God should respect them Thus did those Iewes Isaiah 58.3 who said Why have we fasted thou seest us not all such are in the power of hypocrisie who except they repent must expect to have their portion with hypocrites There are another sort of offenders in this kinde that through drowsinesse of body wandering of their thoughts and through an evill custome of slight and heedlesse praying alone or with others do not minde the things which they seeme to pray for but either have their thoughts suspended that they thinke on nothing or else have their thoughts on some other things than what are uttered in prayer but these either take themselves in the manner in the time of prayer whereat they grieve and presently call in their thoughts and fix their heart upon the present worke or at least when they have made an end of praying they will call their faylings to minde and humble themselves before God for them Albeit this latter sort are Gods children for the best are subject to slightnesse hollownesse and many wandring thoughts in prayer yet they must judge this manner of praying to be sinfull and must suf●er themselves to be reproved and must reprove themselves and take paines to avoid this evill of heedlesnesse and hypocrisie in prayer else how can they say Amen to their owne or other mens prayers when they did not give heed or attend unto prayer their prayers must needs be without spirit and life and therefore displeasing unto God This calleth upon every one Vse 2 which would make an acceptable prayer unto God to have a care that not onely the matter of his prayer be good and lawfull and that he also do understand what he uttereth but that his heart and spirit likewise do joyne in the uttering of every request and thanks that he offereth unto God The heart must be lift up unto God and be kept steady upon him and upon every confession petition and thanksgiving from the beginning of prayer
and evill thoughts when he should pray Reas 2 Guiltinesse of conscience especially upon the committing of some grosse sinne together with ignorant conceits of God that his thoughts are like mens thoughts Isa 55.8 implacable and unapeazeable this maketh many a man afraid to looke God in the face This was Davids case Many because they have praied Reas 3 long and as they think have not beene heard hence they are discouraged and out of heart to pray any more So many things as hath before Reas 4 beene shewed are required to make a praier acceptable that it is hard to observe them all when we pray Satan doth Spite nothing Reas 5 more then heartie and faithfull prayer for by it his kingdome is undermined overthrowne and by it he himselfe is cast out of his possession and kept out wherefore it standeth him upon to use all his methodes and devices to hinder a man and either altogether put him by the duty it selfe or so distemper him with evill suggestions doubts false feares presumptions or some other hindrance that he shall be heartlesse faithlesse or meerely formall and hypocriticall in prayer making him content himselfe with the worke done but altogether carelesse how it be done Vse 1 This truth justly reproveth all such as thinke it an easie matter to pray therefore never prepare themselves before nor yet are watchfull over themselves when they are in the act of prayer but patter over certaine words of prayer thinke they shall go to heaven by their good prayers Indeed it is an easie matter to say our prayers you may teach a childe to say them but to pray our prayers aright as hath beene taught before out of the Lords Prayer is found by all experienced Christians to be no easie thing Ob. This doctrine touching the difficultie of prayer is enough to discourage men altogether from prayer Sol. By no meanes for prayer is a necessarie dutie and must bee done and withall it is a most profitable duty and will quit all a mans paines Besides it is not so hard to be done but that it is possible nay certaine that by the help of the Spirit of prayer it may be done in an acceptable manner In these cases knowledge of the difficulties do whet on desire and resolution and doth stirre up care and circumspection it is farre from discouraging any from the worke Wherefore the next use is let Vse 2 none be discouraged from praier because of the hardnesse of the worke Breake through all lets for pray you must Gen. 32.26 Hos 12.3.4 Jacob by much and strong wrastling did prevaile at last Do in the matter of prayer as men use to do in difficult workes Set to it with all care and watchfulnesse Set to it with all the strength which you have and which you can get We must do like those which whet and sharpen their tooles which are blunt and dul We must fetch prayers as David used to do out of meditations If wee shall raise up our mindes to heavenlinesse and get our faith in God strengthened and if we pray for the spirit of prayer and if wee will joyne with the spirit in prayer then much of the difficultie will be taken off The principall helpe to prayer next that of Gods help by his Spirit is the strength exercise of our faith Yea the Spirit of God doth both worke it and worke by it in prayer Means to strengthē faith in prayer We may strengthen our faith in prayer by these considerations First from Gods generall goodnesse to every creature He is good to all Psa 145 9. and his tender mercies are over all his workes He giveth the beasts their food he feedeth the young ravens that cry Psa 147.9 Will hee not much more heare man when hee prayeth unto him He hath heard wicked men such as Ahab Manasses and others Secondly consider that God is all-sufficient and able to help Thirdly consider the universality of his promise made to them that pray and the extent of his mercie towards them He saith every one that asketh receiveth Thus David strengtheneth his faith in prayer saying Be mercifull to me O Lord for I crie unto thee daily Psal 86.3.5 for thou Lord art good and ready to forgive and plenteous in mercy to whom even to all that call upon thee This warrant to pray and these grounds of faith everie man as he is a creature hath in common with all men whereby he may be encouraged to pray and to expect a gracious audience But every childe of God who beleeveth in Christ in whom is the Spirit of God to sanctifie and cleanse the heart causing him to will and to endeavour in all things to please God all such have more peculiar grounds of faith expectation to be heard when they pray These may and must looke into the evidences of their adoption and sonne-ship They must consider whether they do not beleeve in Christ by such a faith which worketh by love but they must not say they have not this faith when their conscience can tell them that it is their desire that it may workby love and that it is their griefe when they faile in their duties of love to God or man now if they by faith have interest in Christ then they may know they are the sonnes and daughters of God Now when we can make good our title to God that we can call him by the spirit of adoption Rom 8.15.16 Father when we can with sonne-like affection call him our Father which art in heaven we may hereby strengthen our faith and assure our selves that he will both enable us to pray and will graciously heare and grant our prayers Is it so difficult a thing to Vse 3 pray aright then is it thus with any man or woman that in prayer they have found that their hearts have beene enlarged their spirits raised up their thoughts gathered in and composed their mindes intentive and attentive their faith strengthened and their conscience eased upon this their heartie and devout powring out their soule unto God O then let them blesse God for it for by his grace they have done a great and difficult worke they have done a blessed and most happie worke It is our great faults that we can onely complaine of our defects in prayer and not also take notice of and be thankfull to God for his helpe in our prayers Which fault if wee would amend we should finde lesse defect and more helpe from God in our prayers hereafter One thing yet remaineth to bee spoken of in a word or two before I conclude which is to answer this question Quest What are wee to doe after we have endevoured to pray aright Answ I answer first wee must not bee carkingly carefull abo●● those things concerning which we have prayed Thus much the Apostle implyeth when he saith Phil. 4.6.7 Be carefull in nothing but in every thing by prayer and