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A02087 Meditations and disquisitions upon the Lords prayer. By Sr. Richard Baker, Knight Baker, Richard, Sir, 1568-1645. 1636 (1636) STC 1223; ESTC S100533 121,730 220

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anguish and torment but in Heaven it is had for not onely the Angels but the Saints of God behold his Face and this is that which makes the heavens to be a heaven of heavens for the heavens which his hands made shall be dissolved but the heavens which his Face makes shall bee for ever and were able to make even hell also to bee a heaven if that were capable to receive it But how doe we know that God is any more in heaven then any where else or that he is in heaven or any where else at all O my soule take heed of comming so neere to be the foole that David speakes of though thou say not in thy heart There is no God yet to let thy tongue but make it a question For doth not David tell us that the heavens tell ●s The Heaven● declare the glory of God and the Firmament sheweth his handyworke● as much as to say The heavens declare that there is a glorious God and the Firmament is a worke that sheweth him to be the workman The heavens indeed declare it so plainely by the heavenly bodies that in them as in plaine letters and characters we may even reade not onely that God is but that he is there But if the heavens declare it never so plainely and we will not take notice or believe their declaration what are we the better For wilt thou believe that the Starres which thou seest as small as sparkes are bigger yea much bigger then the whole earth and then what a world of worlds must there be in the starry heaven which yet are all as nothing compar'd to the magnitude of the greater heavens Wilt thou believe that the motion of the Sunne which yet seemes to stand still is swifter yea manifold swifter then a ●let from a Canon and yet is slownesse compar'd to the swiftnesse of the Primum Mobile Wilt thou believe that the earth as great as it is is yet but a point or centre to the starry heaven and that the starry heaven is so high above us that though the sight of our eyes can reach unto it in an instant yet the swiftnes of a hundred miles a day cannot reach unto it in a thousand yeeres yet is hard by compar'd to the distance of the highest heavens All which and many the like though they exceed our capacity yet they exceed not our knowledge and though they be so strange that theymake both art suspected nature astonished yet are they so certain that they are demonstrable And this is a great ascent from earth to heaven yet an easie one for we know these wonders of the heavenly bodies as perfectly b●ing on earth as if we were in heaven to see them But it is a farre greater ascent from heaven to God and yet a farre easier For who can chuse but know the first cause to be omnipotent which hath made second causes so excessively potent Who can chuse but acknowledge the Creatour to bee infinite who hath made Creatures that to our capacity are themselves infinite And therefore the authour of the Booke of Wisedome speaking in proofe of the deity waiveth all other reasons and insists upon this That by the greatnesse of the creatures and of their beauty the Creatour being compared with them may bee considered God indeed hath reserved the sight of himselfe untill our eyes shall put on Immortality but the sight of his dwelling hee hath afforded to our mortall eyes that though in it we cannot see his person yet by it we may be assured of his being and of his being there For as when wee see a building of invaluable valew we presently conceive it to be the Pallace of a Prince so when we see the Frame of heaven so full of wonders where S●arres are but as dust and Angels are bu● servants where every word is unspeakeable and ever● motion is a miracle we may plainely know it to ●e the dwelling of him whose name is Wonderfull For who is fit to inhabit such a house but hee onely who inhabiteth eternity and who fit to be Master of such servants but he who was a Master before he had servants that is he onely who onely is But why doth God write himselfe of heaven which how glorious soever it be is but of a late building For no doubt God had a dwelling and a place to bee in before hee made heaven and he should rather write himselfe of his ancient mansion place then of his new seate But O my soule be sober For where thou thinkest that God had a place to be in before he made heaven thou art even in that deceived for how could he have a place to be in when place it selfe had yet no being For as heaven and earth were twinnes created both at once so time and place were twinnes made both together and all of them for the use of the creatures none of them for any use to God for God being eternall hath no use of time and being infinite can have no place but out of eternity by his omnipotent Power he produced Time and out of infinitenesse he produced place for no use to himselfe but in relation to his creatures If therefore thou wouldst comprehend where God was before he made heaven thou must comprehend infinitenesse which were not infinite if it could be comprehended And yet as no place is great enough to hold God so none is small enough to exclude him for he is place to himselfe he is place himselfe as David saith Thou art my place to kide me in and it is one of the names which the Iewes attribute to God that he is called Maquom that is to say Place Yet it is happy for us that God writes himselfe to be in heaven because we know now where to finde him least otherwise we might wander infinitely in the search of him and be never the neere not that heaven limits Gods ubiquity but that it regulates our capacity for as one sayd well in another sence Qui ubique est nusquam est so certainely if we knew nothing of Gods being any where but that he is every where we might easily fall into the errour to thinke hee were no where Iustly therefore doth God write himselfe of heaven now that he stiles himselfe Our Father seeing he therefore made heaven because he intended to be our Father that there might bee one House to hold both Him and his Children and that where he is wee might bee also for to be with God where God was before he made the world or where he now is above or without the world is utterly impossible for men or Angels to attaine to But why say we Our Father which art in heaven and say not rather Our heavenly Father seeing by that we tell onely where God is but by this we might tell what he is By that we name onely his place but by this we might name his substance But we must
us if it be not more admirable unworthinesse in us that we admire it not which is so admirable But it may be no question why we admire it not because without question we apprehend it not for if we did truely apprehend what it is to be the sonnes of a Father which is in heaven wee could not chuse but skorne all humane things as meane all earthly things as base and thinke it a shame for them who shall one d●y come to fit with him in his Throne to lie alwaies grovling about his Footstoole But the Angels apprehended it and therfore admired it and as holy as they were some of them could not chuse but envy it and from our rising tooke their fall Which fell out well for ou● experience for by the consideration of their falling we come to conceive a certainety to see plainly a probability of our own rising For why is it more s●range that heavy things should ascend then that light things should descend that men who are of Earthy mould should bee lift●d up into the high●st Heavens then that Angels who are of Heavenly substance were cast downe into the nethermost earth unl●sie we thinke that Gods love towards children is not so powerfull as his anger against servants or that his arme is not so strong in lifting up as in casting downe Wherefore O my soule if thou wonder how it will be possible for ●his heavy body of thine to be raysed out of the dust and to rise to so high a place as heaven thou mayst leave thy wondring if thou doe but consider how it was possible that the light substances of the Angels were cast downe into so l●w a place as hell For as God brought a grossenesse upon the lightnesse of their su●stances which made them descend so he will bring a lightnesse upon the grossenesse of our bodies which will make us ascend But it was after the fall of Angels that God said to man Earth thou art and to earth thou shalt returne but not a word spoken of his comming to heaven It is true for those words were spoken by God as a Iudge Our comming to Heaven is not spoken by him but as a Father and those words are reserved for his Son the Word it selfe to deliver to us and indeed the word delivered them to us in Deed when the word was made flesh for when the Sonne of God ●ook upon him our flesh then our flesh tooke notice of being made the sonnes of God and then the Kingdome of heaven was preached to all believers and this dignity of our Nature is a maine object of the divels envy for why else should the devill beare more malice to men then to all other creatures as we see apparantly he doth for he will never goe into swine if he can possibly ' get into men and when he doth goe it is but to hurt men that when hee cannot hurt them in their persons he will yet like lame malice doe them what hurt he can in their goods Thus the greatnesse of this dignity which wee cannot see in the light we may discerne in the darke for how can we chuse but know it to be exceeding great which nourisheth malice even in divels For certainely if the divels knew nothing of any such dignity ordained for men in the world to come they would never doe as they doe never trouble themselves so much to trouble men so much in this present life thereby to hinder them from the glory to come And are not some men beholding to the divell in this who seeking to hinder us from the glory to come in the life hereafter makes it manifest that there is a glory to come in a life hereafter from which we may be hindred Which if some men otherwise will not easily believe yet this way at least they can hardly deny And even this were enough to breed this faith in an Infidell that there shall be certainely a life after this seeing wee may bee sure the divell would never take such paines for nothing he is not so idle to be so busie for trifles and he would never be so violent in seeking to draw men into sinne if there were not some great matter to be gotten by their sinning And what can the divell get by the sinnes of men but onely the satisfying of his owne malice and how is his malice satisfied but in their miseries and what miseries have wicked men in this life who are rather the favourites of the world and as David saith They are not in trouble as other men neither are they plagued like other men There must therefore undoubtedly be another world where wicked men shall bee miserable and where the divels malice shall take effect For though the hurt of the divell be all taken in this life yet it is not fully felt till another life which if there were none It should bee skarce felt at all For as a man that is wounded in his heate feeles not the wound till he come to be cold so we skarce feele the wounds of the divell as long as the heat of life is in us but when we come to bee cold and are laid in the cold earth then begins the smart of his wounds and then we feele it when we seeme to bee past all feeling and if this were not so there should be none in the world more happy then the wicked there should bee none more miserable then the godly there should be none a verier foole then the divell we may therefore be as affured that there is a life to come after this as we are assured that the divell is no f●ole that godly men are not miserable that wicked men are not nor can be happy And though it bee no thanke to the divell that we learne this from him yet it will be worth thankes if we can learne it for who that is truely perswaded of a life after this where the godly shall be happy and the wicked miserable will not endeavour and with all earnestnesse endeavour to leade his life so that he may die the death of the righteous and not suffer the transitory things of this world which are but as a messe of Iacobs Potage to withdraw his minde from the respect of his Birth-right which is to sit with Christ at his Fathers Table But for all this are we indeed satisfied in our consciences that God is our Father and that we are his Children may we not be mistaken as the Iewes were who thought themselves sure enough that Abraham was their father yet Christ proves plainly they were deceived For if saith he yee were the children of Abraham yee would doe the workes of Abraham which because they did not doe they could be none of his children for all their boasting And doth not God say the same to us If I be your father where is my love and to love God in Gods owne exposition is to keepe his Commandements If therefore we
the world to come or else will bee concluded for unperfect may wee not very justly justifie it even in this kinde also Let us therefore take a review For though at the first looking wee have discovered nothing yet if wee continue looking as the servant of Eliah did wee shall perhaps discerne a Cloude arrising from the sea of these petitions that will serue to signifie a showre of blessings immediately to follow And we need not stand long a looking for doe not the very first words afforde us a Cloude For when we say Our Father doth it not imply that wee are his children and if the Father alwaies be in Heaven shall the children alwaies be on Earth how then is it true that where hee is we shall be also and that which Christ sayth the sonne abideth in the House for ever For how shall hee abide there if hee never come there seeing therefore Heaven is Gods House and we as children must in our time bee in the house with him we must necessarily at last come to be in Heaven and so one of the blessings is found here which was complayed of to bee wanting in the prayer And when it is savd Hallowed bee thy Name shall not Gods Name eternally bee hallowed If then wee bee appoynted to doe a worke which is eternall must not we be needes eternall that are to doe it and so to our being in Heaven is added eternity another of the blessings complayned of to be missing Let us now come to Thy Kingdome come and will not this afforde us to see the Cloude more plainely For the Kingdome is but in relation to the subjects if therefore the Kingdome bee perfect the subjects must bee perfect also for without perfection of subjects It can never bee a perfect Kingdome and what perfection of subjects could there bee if their should be no other subjects but onely Angels For so there should be but one ranke of subjects which in a Kingdome were a great imperfection To make therefore some other rankes for perfecting of this Kingdome wee also shall bee taken in and then certainely taken in whole and imire● both hody and soule for else the Kingdome should rule over but pieces of subjects which in a perfect Kingdome must not bee If then wee bee taken in whole and intire then must our bodies be raysed and joyned to our soules againe and this is our resurrection another of the blessings complayned of to be missing And may we not continue looking still and come to discerne the cloude yet playner For when it is sayd Thy Will bee done in earth as it is in Heaven are not we to doe as much worke as the Angels and if wee doe as much worke may wee not expect as much blessing and they behold the face of God continually and therefore wee certainely if wee doe the Will of God shall doe so to and so wee have found even the greatest of the blessings which were complayned of to bee missing in this prayer And we have found it here where we least expected it Eor indeed these petitions will afford divers waies of drawing forth these blessings from them according as wee take our standing to discerne the Cloude But this which is done may serve sufficiently to cleere this prayer from all imputation of imperfection seeing we have all the blessings now that can be thought of worth the having Eternall life and that in Heaven and that both in body and soule and in them both to enjoy the blessed vision of God which is life everlasting in its exaltation And now if any man thinke that to fetch the resurrection of our bodies and the rest of these blessings is farre fetched and from the Clouds indeed Let him consider how farre it was fetching it from the words of God to Moses I am the God of Abraham the God of Isaack and the God of Iacob and yet when Christ fetched it so farre it was taken for a proofe neere hand and for a Cloude of witnesses And indeede there is a benefit to us by this abstruse expressing for being lesse obvious It is more speculative in the searching and more meditative in the finding and the more it is wrapped up to the sence the more it is dignified to the understanding And though these Petitions may serve sufficiently to afford these Blessings yet there is a Petition behinde which though it make not so great a shew of a Cloude yet may prove to afford as great a showre of blessings as all the former For when we are delivered from all evill then if death bee evill we are delivered from death and to be delivered from death is life everlasting When we are delivered from all evill then if corruption of the body bee evill wee are delivered from that corruption and to be deliverd from that corruption is the very resurrection When wee are delivered from all evill then if restraint from the sight of God bee evill wee are delivered from that restraint and to bee delivered from that restraint is to be admitted into his presence and to enjoy his blessed vision And now this prayer reacheth full as high as Iacobs ladder and so we have ladder enough to carry us to Heaven and prayer enough to obtaine the blessings of Heaven wee are come to the Consummatum est which is not onely a finishing but a perfecting a perfecting in it selfe in being made perfect and a perfecting of us in making us perfect Let us therefore pray this prayer and let us pray that we may pray it seeing it can never bee too much sayd which can never be enough done Wee have now gone over these petitions as they lie in the prayer Ordine recto but doe they not invite us also to a consideration of them as they lie Ordine Inverso and apply hither that of Christ the first shall be last and the last first For the first of these petitions in our praying will be the last of Gods accomplishing and the last will prove the first and they seeme to have a correspondence to Gods favours shewed to the Israelites in their progresse in the Wildernesse For when wee say Deliver us from evill Is it not the first blessing wee receive from God that we are delivered from the bondage wee were in to satan and this was figured by Gods first favour shewed to the Israelites in delivering them from the captivity of Aegypt after many temptations with signes and wonders The next petition is our desire to bee forgiven and to have our sinnes washed away in the blood of Christ and was not this also figured to the Israelites in the Passover a figure of the true Lambe of God which taketh away the sinnes of the World And these two petitions are immediate to one another as the two favours were intermingled to the Israelites For there could not bee a deliverance without a Passover to them because there cannot bee to us The third petition is for our daily
my Father but I doe not duly pray if I say not Our Father Wee have not done with saying Our Father untill we have said Which art in Heaven that so his humility may bring us to his Majesty his love may lead us to his bounty for as before he abased himselfe in Name to exalt us so here he streightens himselfe in Place to enlarge us and to make us desirous of Heaven as of the only home for his children he restraineth himselfe to Heaven as to the onely mansion of his being But is not this word Heaven as strangely placed here amongst these words as Heaven it selfe is placed above in the height of the Firmament For what words of greater neerenesse then Father and Children yet what words of greater separation then Heaven and Earth who neerer to us then Our Father what further from us then to be in Heaven but least these words Our Father should breed too great a familiarity in us these words Which art in Heaven are justly inferred to make us keepe a distance And yet in truth it is such a distance as doth not so much divide us as that which is strange the very familiarity doth estrange us For as considering God in heaven we have just cause to be astonished with admiration at the greatnesse of his Maiesty So considering him our Father we have iuster cause to admire him with astonishment for the greatnesse of his love and so while familiarity where it findeth effects of defect breeds cause of contempt Here where it finds cause of admiration it breeds effects of Respect And may we not finde some other treasure wrapt up in these words Which art in Heaven For when we say Our Father It carries the mind in an ambiguity and if we apply it to God This is yet a transcendent and gives no period to our understanding but when we adde Which art in Heaven This both determines the ambiguity and limits the transcendency and so the mind hath something now in certaine whereupon to fixe it selfe which though it afford not a visible symbole to represent Gods person to our sight which the Israelites sought so grossely in their golden Calfe and many since doe seeke as vainely in their painted and carued Images yet it affords the visible place of Gods presence and this serves sufficiently both to elevate the mind and also to fixe the understanding for we no sooner have a thought of God but the mind hath presently recourse to Heaven as fixing it selfe upon the place where he is visible seeing upon the visibility of himselfe it cannot And is it not another cause why we say Which art in Heaven to make us know that God is no where to be spoken withall but in Heaven For if our thoughts when we pray stay groveling about the earth and our words rather fall from our mouthes then rise from our hearts hough God no doubt may heare such prayer by the extent of his Power yet he heares it not graciously by extending his grace for Earth is not the place where he gives Audience but he hath placed his Throne in Heaven where hee sits both in Maiesty and in merc● and though his mercy continually descend to us yet his Maiesty requires we should come thither to him For as to pray to any but God is Coram non Iudice so to pray any where but in Heaven is Coram non Tribunali Although therfore our feet be fastned to the earth and cannot ascend yet our hearts are at liberty and may and must indeed ascend if we will truely pray for this ascending of the soule in praying is the soule of praying which puts a life into our words thoughts and carries them thither where it is it selfe and as the brethren of Ioseph could finde no favour without bringing their brother Beniamin with them so our hearts are the Benia●in wee must bring to God without which neither our words are gracious in his hearing nor our selves acceptable in his sight Wherefore O my soule when thou goest to pray put away from thee all carnall cogi●ations and raise thy selfe up by ascending into heaven Fixing thy selfe stedfastly upon the Throne of God and never once offer to open thy mouth untill thy heart be first fixed there that thou mayst present thy suit unto him pure freed as in earthen Vessels it can from Earthly mixture and then as thy heart hath ascended up to Heaven so the blessings of Heaven shall descend upon thee and either bring with them the things thou prayest for or greater for never any Heart did knocke at Heaven gate which had it not opened nor sought any thing in Heaven which it did not finde For though his Maiesty make his mercy to keepe state yet his mercy makes his Maiesty to becom gracious and he never denyed the suite of any that came so farre as Heaven to aske it But thou art not O Lord in Heaven onely who art in all places wholly and though no where as contained yet every where as present and though thou takest up no roome with thy being and power yet thou fillest all roomes with thy power and being But when we say Which art in Heaven we must not stay at the Heavens where we see with our eyes the two great Eyes of Heaven the Sunne and the Moone nor yet at the starry Heaven though that be the uttermost object of our sight but there are other Heavens which Salomon cals the Heavens of Heavens whose height is so great that it may rather be admired then can be conceaved yet are they not high enough to hold God but David is faine to goe higher and saith He is exalted above the Heavens and though the highest Heavens have their bounds yet this exaltation hath none but how high soever we conceave it is still higher then that we conceave And why then doe we say Which art in Heaven Not that he is no where else but that he is no where else in so great glory And is he not in as great glory on Earth seeing it is said as well of Earth as of Heaven Heaven and Earth are full of the maiesty of thy glory Nay is he not in hell also in great glory seeing David saith If I go● dow● into Hell thou art there also and God is no where without his glory but is glorified in the punishment of the damned as he is in the happinesse of the Angels We may therefore understand it that God is therefore said to bee in Heaven because hee is there visibly present and amongst his most glorious Creatures And this is a reason why not onely properly but properly onely God is said to be in heaven seeing in this manner he never was on earth nor can be for No man can see God and live much lesse can he be in this manner in Hell for how can the vision of God which is the cause of all happinesse bee had there where nothing is had but
they were but as Moses himselfe had a veile over his face so Moses his words had a veile over their meaning and by this meanes Blindnesse came upon Israel For they tooke that for their Iourneys end which Moses intended but for a bayting place He allowed them liberall baytes at first to make them the more cheerefully goe on their Iourney but they like foolish Travellors that make a dwelling of their Inne tooke such pleasure in their baytes that they never once thought of going any further As therefore God sayd of the ceremonies hee appoynted to the Iewes that hee had given them Statutes that were not good not good indeed to them that understood them not nor could observe them so we may perhaps say of these baytes that God had given them blessings that were not good not good indeed to them that understand them not nor can tell how to use them But now the veile is layd aside the baytes cleane taken away and those blessings of Moses removed a fourme lower for they were to them the very face of the promise but are to us onely the backeparts they were to them as the first fruits but are to us as onely gleanings after the Vintage and therfore though David in the old Testament never saw the righteous forsaken nor their seed begging their bread yet Christ in the new Testament could tell us of one Lazarus who for all his being righteous was faine to lie begging his bread at Dives gate God in his goodnesse is willing to try alwaies to see if any way he can bring us to goodnesse He allowed liberall baytes at first to make them the more cheerefully goe on their journey That succeeded not he hath taken away those baytings now to ma●e us the more intentive to our journeys end Those blessings were promised by the mouth of Moses a servant Our blessings are promised by the mouth of Christ a sonne They trusted to the blessings promised to the person of Abraham we trust to the blessings promised to the seed of Abraham as it is said And in thy seed shall all the Nations of the earth be blessed This is that seed by vertue whereof we stand here as Gods Children and have the honour to call him Father and by which we are borne againe to a new hope of recovering our old inheritance though that be long since removed up to heaven as appeares by the words of Christ to the Thiefe on the Crosse This day thou shalt bee with me in Paradise that wee can never hope to have a Paradise here on earth any more And now O my soule seeing thou dwellest in a house whose windowes are made to looke upward make use of those lights and afford not the Earth so much as a looke but stand gazing to see Christ Ascending into Heaven whither he is gone not onely to take possession himselfe but to provide a place for thee in that Inheritance and give not over gazing untill an Angell assure thee that this Iesus which is taken up from you shall so come as ye have seene him goe into heaven and till then possesse thy selfe in patience and let these meditations be thine ankers that if thou dyest in thy youth thou dost but goe the sooner to God that thou mayest bee the longer with him If thou die for hunger thou dost but goe fasting to God that thou mayst have the better stomacke to the heavenly Banquet if thou sterve for want of clothes thou dost but goe naked to God that thou mayest bee the readyer for putting on the Wedding Garment If thou die with torment thou dost but follow Christ to God that having followed him here the Sheepe before the Shearer thou mayst follow the Lambe wheresoever he goeth And seeing thou desirest to be a Lazarus in Abrahams bosome thou must first be contented to be a Lazarus at Dives gate and as thou tremblest to thinke of being a Dives in hell to want a cup of water to coole thy tongue so thou mayst tremble as much to be a Dives on earth to fare deliciously every day And as for the fawning pleasures of the world consider the fearefull judgements that are passed upon them Woe unto you rich men for ye shall howle and mourne Woe unto you great men for the mighty shall be mightily tormented Woe unto you that live in pleasures for how much yee receive in pleasures here so much shall be added to your torments hereafter Wherefore O my soule close up all with this Corollary that the forbearing thy portion in this world with Christ gives thee right in Christ to have a portion in heaven and that the enduring of miseries which cannot long endure is a way to passe to that felicity which shall never passe away A little hath beene sayd of infinite much that may be sayd concerning the Preface It followes now to speake of the Prayer it selfe which is digested into a structure and composition so absolute and yet so rare that whilst it stretcheth it selfe to all it is comprehended but of a few whilst the simplest in it may see their defects the wisest by it may amend their defects and if understanding be necessary to learn other lessons this Lesson is necessary to learne understanding If a man shall thinke of mending the Penning of this prayer he may as well thinke of mending the framing of the world which if he should goe about to make proofe of in particular he would in general make himselfe ridiculous For if he should adde any thing hee would make it superfluous if diminish defective if alter deformed and such a one would he prove that should presume upon mending these Petitions seeing there is nothing that concernes eyther the life present or the life to come nothing that concernes eyther Grace or Glory nothing that concernes eyther Antidote or Physicke for eyther soule or body but it is all here and all so fully and perfectly here that whatsoever the wit of man shall devise further to these ends will be but as branches out of these roots or as deductions out of these principles and may adde in bulke but not in weight And he should not erre that would affirme that Christ shewed himselfe as perfectly to be God by making this Prayer as by doing his miracles For to let passe the many causes of admiration in it that it is so compendious and yet so copious that it is so plaine and yet so intricate that it is so familiar and yet so sublime that it is of so few parts and yet so compleate all which are characters of Divinity who could have given warrant to the sonnes of men to call the God of heaven their Father but he only who is the Son of God and God himselfe we call God Almighty by his owne warrant to Abraham and we call him Iehovah by the same warrant to Moses but we cannot call him Father but onely by this warrant from Christ who
Petition for our example Father if it be possible let this Cup passe from mee yet not as I will but as thou wilt But may not this petition bee thought superfluous to pray for that which is and will bee done whether wee pray for it or no For God doth what soever he will both in Heaven and in earth and who hath resisted his Will But wee must consider that we pray not for God but to God for our selves that having undone our selves by doing our owne will wee may bee repaired by doing of his Will and not of his Will absolute but of his Will in relation Not when hee commands as when hee said Let there be Light but when hee gives Commandements as when hee said Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart Wee therefore pray that this Will of his may bee done of us by our obedient and cheerfull Acting it and done in us by our patient and thankfull suffering it that concerning the first we may doe as the Captaines said to Ieremie whether it be good or ev●ll wee will obey the voice of the Lord and concerning the latter wee may say as Ely said It is the Lord let him doe to me as seemeth good in his Eyes But if wee understand it so Doe we not then free the Petition from being superfluous and charge it with being impossible For if we understand it of doing his Will actively how is it possible for Earth to doe it so well as Heaven and if of doing it passively how is that done in Heaven at all and if wee can find an answer for this shall wee not perhaps free it from being impossible by making it to bee either slight or improvident for if wee understand it of doing his will actively what great matter is it for Earth to compare with Heaven seeing all impiety began first in Heaven and if of doing his Will passively what doe we then by this Petition but call for Iustice to be done in Earth upon our selves as it was done in Heaven upon the Angels But O my soule consider wee say not Thy Will be done in Earth as it was but as it is in Heaven for it is true there was once an Apostasie in Heaven but it was but once They which exalted themselves were cast downe never to rise and the rest have continued in their uprightnesse never to fall for Christ hath merited as for us to bee purged from our sinnes so for them to be established in their holinesse and what he is to us in restoring hee is to them in confirming But shall wee make God so peremptory a Prince as that his Will must stand for a Law Doe wee well to attribute that stile to God which wee would scarce attribute to a just Prince Sic volo Sic Iubeo stat pro ratione voluntas Indeed where the Will may bee separated from reason this objection may be reasonable but not with God of whose Will it cannot bee so truly said that it is ruled by Reason as that it is the very rule of Reason nothing being otherwise reasonable but as it is conformable to his Will and therefore he gave reason to man that hee might bee capable to doe his Will which because hee hath not given to Beasts they are not all other things they can doe as well if not better then men They can make them Nests and houses and are better Builders They can hoord up and provide before hand and are better husbands They can prevent and circumvent and are better politicians They can extract the spirits of vegetables and are better Alchymists Onely doe the will of God they cannot and therefore how much a man applyes himselfe to doe the Will of God so much may hee bee said a reasonable Creature but if once hee leave to doe that hee is presently compared to the beasts that perish and yet hee is favoured in the comparison too for all things considered man is certainely farre the more unreasonable as appeares by Gods owne complaint The Oxe knoweth his Owner and the Asse his Masters ●ryb but Israel hath not knowne my People hath no understanding And though of the Will of God wee doe not alwayes know the reason yet wee alwaies know there is a reason in it unlesse perhaps we shall speake more properly that not reason is the Rule of Gods Will but either his Will is Rule to it selfe as hee saith I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy or at least some superiour Faculty farre above the capacity of our reason of which it is said Who hath knowne the minde of God or who hath been his Counsellour We are not therfore to stand upon termes with God and to examine or censure his Will by any rule of our reason which if Abraham had done he had never beene the Father of the faithfull but to make an absolute submission and humbly to say Thy Will be done in Earth as it is in Heaven But how can wee be sure at any time of doing the Will of God seeing God seemes oftentimes variable in his Will and continues not alwaies in one minde For was it not Gods Will that the ●sraelites should offer him sacrifices yet he tels them a while after they are an abomination to him Was it not Gods Will that Balaam should goe to Bal●k yet when Balaam sadled his Asse went God sent his Angell to stop his Asse in the way and hindred his going Was it not Gods Will that Moses should number the People yet when David numbred the People God smote him for it with a heavie punishment And how then is it possible to doe his Will that is so variable and so often changeth O my soule take heede for in none of these nor ever in any is there any changeablenesse in God at all all the change is in our selves For God indeed appointed sacrifices to the Iewes that were but ceremonies but hee intended also the substance with them when they therefore offered not the sacrifices that were substantiall had not God just cause to refuse their sacrifices that were onely ceremoniall God indeed commanded Balaam to goe to Balak but when Balaam went with intent to curse Israel whom God intend●d hee should blesse had not God just cause to hinder his journey God indeed commanded Moses to number the people that notice might be taken of their great deliverance but when David numbred them to ground a confidence upon them had not God just cause though not to punish his right numbering yet to punish his wrong confidence For to doe the will of God consists not so much in the act as in the end of doing it otherwise we should be like Iehu who did the will of God indeed in destroying all the house of Ahab but he had his owne ends in it to establish the Kingdome to himselfe We must not therefore thinke of doing Gods will as Polititians mingling our owne ends with
where there is no other will done Wee learne by this Petition what it is wee must doe when wee come to Heaven and doth not this make men carelesse whether ever they come there or no for seeing the Will of God is so unpleasing a thing to doe heere how can they thinke it will be any better or be ere a whit mended to doe it there and therefore if there bee nothing gotten by going to Heaven but doing of Gods will they thinke themselves better as they are and would bee glad to tarry heere still where they may doe their owne wills But O my soule is not this to bee starke dead in sinne For it there were any sence of life or any life of sence remaining in us we could not choose but see the beauty and tast the sweetnesse and smell the Odour of doing Gods Will. Sweeter saith David then the hony or the hony combe More beautifull saith Salomon then the rowes of Iewells or then chaines of Gold More fragr●t saith hee also then an Orchard of Pomegranats or then Myrrhe and Aloes with all the spices O thou eternall light and life of all things so enlighten the eyes and qui●ken the senses of my soule and body that I may both see the Beauty and Tast the sweetnesse of doing thy will I shall not then neede any greater motives of longing to be in heaven then that I may be as able as willing who now am scarce willing but altogether unable to doe thy Will But why doe wee pray that Gods Will may be done in Earth which is done in Earth already and that by Creatures which one would thinke were never able to doe it Hee hath set bounds to the Sea which it must not passe● and the Sea as raging as it is and provoked by all the Rivers of the Earth that come running into it as it were for the nonce to make it passe his bounds yet keepes it selfe precisely within the limits He hath appointed the earth to stand still and not to move and the earth though but hanging in the Ayre and nothing at all to hang upon yet offers not so much as once to stirre He hath chargedthe Trees to bring forth fruit and the Trees though even killed with cold of winter and threatned with tempests of the spring yet take heart to come forth and seeme to rejoyce they can doe as they are bidden The very beasts though never so wilde and savage yet observe the properties of their kind and none of them encroach upon the qualities of another And why all this but onely to doe the Will of God And that which may seeme more strange the Flowers come out of the durty earth and yet how neate and cleane Out of the unsavoury earth and yet how fresh and fragrant Out of the sowre earth and yet how mellifluous and sweet Out of the duskish earth and yet how Orient and Vermillian Out of the unshapen earth and yet in what dainty shapes in what curious formes in what enammelings and Dyapers of beauty as if the earth would shew that for all her being cursed she had something yet of Paradise left and why all this but onely to doe the Will of God And why then should there be complaining as though the Will of God were not done in earth O wretched man It is onely thy selfe that is out of tune in this harmony Man that should be best is of all the worst that should bee cleanest is of all the foulest that should be most beautifull is of all the most deformed most full of graces yet most voyde of grace of most understanding to direct his will yet of least will to follow the direction of understanding Man endued with celestiall qualities yet leaves them all to encroach upon the qualities of every beast upon the obscenity of swine in drunkennesse upon the greedinesse of Cormorants in covetousnesse upon the craftinesse of Foxes in fraud upon the cruelty of Tygers in malice as if he would strive to exceede his first parents in transgressing and try whether God had any greater punishment left then casting out of Paradise that if Christ would have served us in our kinde and as we deserve he needed not have gone for patterns to Heaven he might have found patterns good enough for us amongst the meanest creatures of the earth and as he told the Pharisees the Queene of the South should rise up against them in Iudgement so he might have told us the Flowers the Trees the Beasts shall all rise up in Iudgement against Man that we had more need to say O that my head were waters and mine eyes a fountaine of teares that I might weepe day and night then after Trees and Beasts have done Gods Will to come after them all with but onely saying Thy Will be done in earth as it is in heaven But how doe these Petitions hang together or how is not this directly contrary to that which went before For there we desire a Kingdome that we may doe what we list and here we desire subjection and to be at anothers command Yet here is no contrariety for there we desire to raigne over our owne wills and here we desire to be subject to his will and this subjection is our true reigning this service our perfect freedome Or is it not rather a straighter Obligation For by the comming of his Kingdome we may be thought onely subjects at large but by submitting our selves to his will we are servants by vow that seemes to referre to Gods promise to the Israelites Yee shall be to mee a Kingdome of Priests and an holy Nation this seemes to referre to the peoples answere to God All that the Lord hath spoken we will doe And so there is no contrariety betweene the petitions but the latter is a consectary to the former But is it not rather that wee overshoote our selves and make it here a suite to bee made bond-slaves for what is it but slavery when wee can never have our wills but must live alwaies subject to the will of another especially where there is so great an antipathy as betweene Gods Will and ours But O my soule consider how wretched a thing thine owne will is how blessed a thing the Will of God is and be not here a Dogmatist but an Empyricke rather hearken not to thy reason which oftentimes is but a Parasite to thy sence but looke upon experience which rightly discerned will make thee alwaies to discerne the right Hath not misery alwaies followed the doing of our owne will happines alwaies the doing of Gods Will Our first parents left Gods Will to doe their owne will in eating the forbidden fruit and what fruite followed but the utter undoing of themselves and all their followers Cain left Gods Will to doe his owne will in killing his brother and what became of him but that hee became a vagabond lived like a beast and came at last to be killed for a
it is strucken downeward the higher it rebounds upward so the lower thy prayers take their rising from thy heart the higher they ascend up into the eares of God Stoope therefore O my soule and bee sure to bee humble and so thou mayst be sure to command faile ●ot to be lowly and so thou shalt not faile to be exalted be content to be strucken the harder downeward and so thou shalt make the higher bound upward into Heaven But will not this be a dry diet to have onely bread and no drinke to it Did it not even choake the Bethulians and almost wither the Israelites in the Wildernesse Or why should we thinke to have drinke without asking more then bread Is it for that wee sinned first in eating and therefore are punished with begging for bread to eate Or is it that Christ keeps within his compasse and teacheth us to aske for bread from heaven who was himselfe the bread that came downe from heaven Or is it as Christ sayd of the poore that water we have alwaies with us but bread wee have not alwaies such indeed may bee the mazes of thoughts when they wander in darknesse but by the light of the first cause wee shall see the true cause that Christ who is himselfe verbum Abbreviatum makes this prayer for us in a kinde of Hierogliphicks where one character stands for many things and if Moses comprehended all Elementar matter as fire ayre water under the one word of earth why may not Christ comprehend all temporall things under the one word of bread and indeed in this sence oftentimes the Scriptures use it as when wee read in Ezekiel that one of the sinnes of Sodome was fulnesse of bread wee must not thinke that their excesse was onely in eating of dry bread but that they exceeded in the superfluity of all meates and drinkes adding thirst to drunkennesse and making themselves Artificiall stomackes with devises of gluttony But why then should hee use so many words even five whole petitions in expressing spirituall Graces Is ●t not that temporall things like foule cloathes or ragges may well enough bee wrapped up in one bundle together but spirituall graces as things more precious require more roome and being to make us without spot are themselves to bee made up without wrinkle Yet may it perhaps not bee without mistery also that Christ teacheth us here to aske onely for bread as he promiseth us in heaven to give us onely drinke to shew that this life and the next are both but one meale and that we cannot drinke with him in his Fathers Kingdome unlesse wee first eate him here the bread which came downe from heaven But doth not this petition seeme to be out of his right place and doth it not come in before his time seeing Forgivenesse of trespasses is a more excellent gift then giving of bread and in all reason that which is first in excellency should also be first in order Yet we shall finde reason for this ordering of these petitions and the lawes of true Heraldry no way transgressed For as Rachel sayd to Iacob Give me children or else I die so wee much more justly say to God Give us bread or else we die So that as Nature is before Grace and life before a happy life It must needs be reasonable that asking for bread which nature cals for to supply the defects of life should goe before Forgiving of trespasses which Grace cals for to supply the defects of a hapy life and as there is this reason in respect of our selves so their is a stronger reason in respect of God for nothing can more admirably set forth the admirable goodnesse of Gods Nature then the very scituation of these petitions For by this bounty is placed before his mercy and it comes to passe that the Sunne shines upon the good and the bad and the raine fals upon the just and unjust And even for us it is a most happy marshalling of the petitions for if God should never give us any thing but when he hath nothing to forgive us he should never give us seeing our life is a perpetuall encrease of our debts and while wee aske him to Forgive us even in that we commit somthing that needs forgivenes It is proper to this petition that it is not proper to any one sort of creatures but is common to all and therefore though it stand in a valley yet it hath the largest prospect And it may be called the petition of providence for where all the other are intentive to the care of another life this onely is appoynted to make provision for the present life Here now would bee competition for place betweene the two that follow but that Repentance is in wonderfull grace with God and hath the Angels also for speciall friends and therefore hath precedence For when we say Forgive us our trespases is it not plainely the prayer of penitent sinners who are alwaies confessing their sinnes and professing their amendment imploring Forgivenesse and deploring their owne weakenesse all which and onely which are the parts of this petition And therefore this petition if wee did well should not bee spoken with words but with sighes for what can come from a broken heart but sighes and untill the heart bee broken this petition will never bee truely sound And least our owne sighes should not bee sufficient the Spirit it selfe makes request for us with sighes that cannot be expressed which though it bee true of all the other petitions yet most properly of this For if sorrow griefe feare shame all of them great and all of them together deserve sighing they are all here met or are all heere to meete in this Petition There is a word which though it be no part of the petition yet because it brings the petition in it is not it selfe to be left out namely the conjunction And which in all the former petitions was never used because indeed there was no use of it For they went all singly by themselves as chiefly referred to the honour of God who is Actus simplicissimus and chiefely fitted for the mouthes of Angels who are substantiae simplices but now that we are come to the Petitions for the onely use of men now there is use of this conjunction for all blessings in this world are tied as it were by linkes together are not good but in conjunction therefore this conjunction And is now here used that as the first use of it that ever was was to joyne the bodies themselves of heaven earth together so the use of it here is to joyne the blessings of heaven earth together for as an earth without a heaven would have made but a miserable world so these earthly blessings without the heavenly will make but a miserable man And therefore wee have no sooner sayd Give us this day our daily bread but it presently followes And forgive us our
much a singularity of Majesty but much rather a plurality of Persons And being more then One that they are but Three and that Three they are is revealed also to us by St. Iohn where he saith There are three beare record in Heaven The Father the Word and the holy Ghost and these three are one And but for feare of prophanenesse I could here borrow an Argument from some Philosophers who thought God a Number For certainly if he be a Number He must needs be the first perfect Number and that is Three For One is no number being lesse multiplyed by it selfe then added to it selfe and Two is but imperfect being but equall whether multiplied by it selfe or added but Three is more multiplyed then added which is the true Perfection of a Number One other Miraculous secret in Gods Nature seemes revealed to us by St. Iohn where he saith that God is love for certainely if he be love he is all love seeing God is not any thing in part and is not this miraculous wee may conceive that God is just and that he is mercifull and we may perhaps conceive that hee is justice it selfe and that hee is mercy it selfe but to conceive that he is all justice and yet all mercy that hee is all wisedome and yet all power that hee is totally so many things and yet distinctly but one thing this is that we cannot conceive yet this wee must conceive before wee can conceive what the Substance of God is What have we then to say here but as Christ said With man it is impossible but with God all things are possible with man whose understanding is onely perpendicular and measures all things by streight lines It is impossible but with God with whom circles are streight lines and streight lines are Angles both this and all things else are possible And what remaines then for us to doe but seeing we know God now but in Aenigmate and shall know him hereafter Facie ad Faciem that wee beate not our braines to expound this Riddle before the time but that contenting our selves to sit in the cloude till he remove it up and shine upon us we acknowledge him to be infinite and not to be measured to be eternall and not to be comprehended to be all wisedome and not to be understood to be all mercy and not to be conceived to be all power and never to be enough magnified to be all glory and never to be enough adored But may wee not make some further use of these words Which art in Heaven that knowing now where God is we may seeke strive to goe thither if we desire to be with him It is enough for God that he hath descended into Heaven as David saith It is a descent to him to see the things in Heaven we must not looke that he will come any lower It is our turne now to ascend up to him It is true he sent once his onely sonne to us on earth but his entertainement was so ill that he had not one pleasing day in his whole life but was Vir Dolorum a man of sorrowes all the time he was amongst us but it shall not bee so with us in going to heaven for if once wee come there we shall desire to continue there still and never to come from thence any more For this is the true Hic whereof Peter spake when he spake in Extasie Bonum est esse Hic It is good being here let us make three Tabernacles one for Christ another for Moses and another for Elias Not Hic here on Earth the being here God knowes is not so good to be worth making Tabernacles Nor Hic here on the Mount as it were betweene earth and heaven for though we mount never so high It is but as an apparition there is no stability in it but Hic here in heaven where Christ hath a Tabernacle not made with hands sufficient to hold both Moses and Elias and us all And it may be mervailed how Moses and Elias were ever gotten to come from thence to meete Christ on the Mount but that we may consider they did not wholy leave heaven when they came to visit the Lord of heaven in whose presence are the joyes of heaven And yet perhaps a further matter in it that seeing the Law and the Prophets reach to Christs suffering It was fit that Moses and Elias representing the law and the Prophets should come to Christ before his suffering or rather seeing Christ was to be Authour of a new Testament and was shortly to have it sealed It was fit that Moses and Elias representing the Old Testament should come in person and make their surrender Enough hath beene said to make us long to be there but how shall we doe to get thither For there seemes as great a space to bee passed as the Gulph betweene Dives and Abrahams bosome This must be the worke of the Petitions following for if we can follow them well we shall quickly overtake Moses whatsoever we doe Elias and come to heaven in body as soone as he though he be gone so many hundred yeeres before us Here offers it selfe a note which though it may seeme of small note yet because nothing is small in the Word of God whereof one jot shall not passe It may not be passed over without observing that where it is said Which art in Heaven and where it is said In Earth as it is in Heaven in both places we have in our translation but onely the singular number whereas in the originall and in most other languages the first is put in the plurall number which expression may not perhaps bee without some mystery seeing one heaven holds all Angels but all heavens cannot hold one God or rather seeing the Angels are in heaven as defined by place but God is in the heavens as being in all places but defined by none which our language might expresse also if it pleased but that it followes the mother tongue which cannot expresse it if it would the word for heaven in the Dutch tongue having no plurall number as in the Hebrew Tongue it hath no singular number It is a great honour to bee the sonne of a Prince and the greater the Prince is the greater the honour to be his sonne O●hen my soule what honour is it to thee t● bee the sonne of him who is the Prince of Princes whose Kingdome is everlasting and po●er i●init Canst thou thinke this and not with Paul be ●apt ●p into the third heaven in an extasie Canst th●u ●ay this and not with Zachary bee stru●n dumbe with amazement God the Almighty and Incompreh●n ible God the God of all Glory and Majesty 〈◊〉 our Father The Angels were created in great glory yet are but ministring Spirits We Dust and Ashes and dwell in houses of clay and for us to bee the children of him whose dwelling is in heaven O most admirable promotion to
Pharaoh that pursues to destroy us but thou art the Lord of Hosts that gettest thee honour upon Pharaohs Host and thine is the glory And for this deliverance from Pharaoh and his Host though but a type of ours Moses long since sung a song so loud that it hath ecchoed from him to David and from David to Esay and from Esay is come to us Thou O Lord art our strength and our song for thou hast beene our deliverance But is deliverance from evill the highest blessing we can reach to by our prayers what becomes then of the resurrection of our bodies and the life everlasting things so much talked off and so highly magnified Are they onely idle names and are there no such things indeed Or are they so little worth the praying for in all this absolute prayer we bestow not so much as a word upon them Or shall we thinke the prayer unperfect seeing the greatest things are left unprayed for and not once named or implyed O my soule take heede let not the weake fancies of thy owne spirit or the strong suggestions of a worse Spirit move such unhallowed doubts within thee For our deliverance from evill shall plainely appeare to bee the highest blessing wee can directly attaine to by our prayers and yet our confidence for the resurrection of our bodies and for the life everlasting shall have foundation enough to stand most firme For the three first petitions seeme chiefly referred to the honour of God in whom all his attributes are equall and therefore in them we goe as I may say upon even gronnd we can finde neither rising nor falling in them we seeme to see nothing that carries any higher than the earth or that tarries any longer then this life and therefore that clause In Earth as it is in Heaven though it be expressed onely in the third petition yet it is by many understood also in the other two but in the three latter which are referred to our owne benefit wee seeme to bee climbing up Iacobs ladder for at every petition we take a steppe higher In the first we begin very low and aske as Iacob did but onely meat and rayment In the second we take a steppe higher and aske a pardon of our faults In the third we goe yet higher and aske an absolute protection from all dangers and deliverance from all evill wherein we may be sayd to have wrestled with the Angell and obtained a blessing for this is the highest steppe we can possibly attaine to in this mortall life But how doth this step reach so high as Iacobs ladder which reacheth up to heaven Marke therefore O my soule for having begun in humility It seemes as if Christ here should say unto us Friend sit up higher for this step of our deliverance from evill seemes to deliver us to Heaven seeing it is contiguous and joynes immediately to the first steppe we shall take in Heaven when all teares shall be wiped from our eyes and they be made cleere to behold the blessed vision of God which is the highest steppe of all and in which consists the summe and summum of our eternall happinesse But why in all this prayer should we have for these things no petition Is it that wee shall have them rather by the participation of Christ then by the intercession rather as sonnes by inheritance then by suit as servants and is as much beyond our prayers as above our capacities Or is it that our deliverance from evill which is the highest steppe we are capable of in this world implies an Adhering to the Deliverer himselfe in the world where we shall be capable Or may we not say that the petition Thy Kingdome come though it goe from us with an onely reference to the honour of God yet it is returned from God to us with this Interence Honorantes me Honorabo and though it reach not so farre as the suite of the mother of Zebedeus sonnes to have one sit at his right hand the other at his left yet hee reacheth as farre as the suite of the thiefe upon the Crosse Lord remember me when thou commest into thy Kingdome But least it should be sayd that we goe about to take the Kingdome of Heaven by violence may wee not make the matter playner by saying that we therefore pray not for the resurrection of the body and for the life everlasting because they are not so properly the objects of fayth which have most to doe in our prayers as they are the objects of hope which is a transcendent to our prayers Fayth indeed prepares us for hope and the things we here pray for for the things we here after hope for but as it is not the fashion of a sonne to pray his father to make him his heire but hee carryeth himselfe dutifully and performeth his obedience and then he doubts not but he shall be heire so it is not our fashion with God to pray for our inheritance which is life everlasting and the Kingdome of Heaven but we pray that as sonnes wee may doe our duties and obey his Will and then we have an assured hope we shall enjoy them Although therefore by Name and in expresse termes we pray here but for the things onely which may bee had here yet by consequent and as in their causes wee pray also for the things which shall be had hereafter For the Graces which are the causes preceding now the blessings which are the effects will necessarily follow that is remission of sinnes and obedience to his Will and an uniting to Christ by the comming of his Kingdome being here obtayned the resurrection of our bodies and the life everlasting and the blessed vision of God will undoubtedly succeed Wee therefore pray onely that all impediments of our owne defects may bee removed and that all graces necessary may be supplyed and for the rest we rest our selves upon God and Fayth seemes here to put us over to hope for we have no more petitions to make but the next thing that followes is that of the Martyr Stephen concerning our eternall life In manus tuas Domine Commendo spiritum meum concerning the resurrection of our bodies that of the Prophet David My stesh shall rest in hope For having the promise of his word and the truth of his promise and the infallibility of his truth for our security though we have not done with Fayth yet wee have now more to doe with hope and thorough fayth are made confident to say in hope I know that my Redeemer liveth and though wormes destroy this body yet I shall see God in my ●esh For we thorough the spirit wayte for the hope of righteousnesse thorough fayth and that being justified by his grace wee shall bee made heires according to our hope of everlasting life But yet at last if it be exacted of this prayer that it must of necessity include also the blessings of
bread and this likewise was figured by the next favour shewed to the Israelites his sending downe of Manna day by day from Heaven and his bringing water out of the Rocks The next Petition is for sanctification when our wills are made conformable unto his and though by his Adoption we are children yet by our owne Vow are servants ●nd this also was Figured in the Israelites by his giving of the Law when God said to them ye shall be to me a Kingdome of Priests and an holy Nation and they againe answered God All that the Lord hath spoken we will doe The next Petition is for the comming of his Kingdome which is not onely wages as to servants but an Inheritance as to children For it is not only said Euge bone serve but venite Benedicti Patris and this was also figured in the Israelites when God distributed amongst them the Kingdomes of the Heathen and every Tribe had their stations assigned them in the land of Canaan some by Geometricall proportion and some by Arithmeticall The last Blessing is our first Petition when we shall come to be as Angels and when our Hallowing of Gods Name which is now our worke shall be our happinesse and this was also Figured in the Israelites when they rested in Canaan and subduing their Enemies round about them had nothing but songs of Praise and Thanksgiving for the Blessings they enioyed After this there is no more Figure for we are come to that which cannot be Figured there shall be no more use of the Name of Father for we shall Haliow God in his proper Name and as hee is in himselfe and our charity shall bee in that we shall then love God Not as Misericordem Not as Bonum nobis but as Bonum and not onely love him for himselfe but not love our selves but for him that it is no merveile Saint Paul leaves Faith and Hope behind this Charity seeing They are onely for our selves This only for God and great reason for God shall then be All in All. And now before we make an end to speake of Hallowing Gods Name It may not be unfit to consider the Three First Petitions as they are onely Hallowings or Alleluiahs for observing the difference of the songs we shall perceive the difference of the singers The First when we say Hallowed be thy Name is the Alleluiah of Angels and we may truely say is Canticum Canticorum the song of songs not only because it is sung without ceasing but because it shall be sung without Ending and is both the cause and the effect both the signe and the substance of our Eternall Happinesse The Second when we say Thy kingdome come is the Alleluiah of the Saints in Heaven and is an aspyring to the First but in aspiring in a very neere degree Neere in Dystance though remote in Existence for they are an assurance of Attayning and doe but tarry the time but the time will not be till Time will not be The Third when we say Thy will be done is the Allelujah of the Saints on Earth and is an aspiring to the second but an aspiring in a remote degree for while they are in the world they are subiect to all the rubs of the world while they live in the Flesh to all infirmities of the Flesh yet they have a confidence though no assurance or an assurance though but in confidence and therefore are remisse but not dejected Bold but not presumptuous not out of heart but not out of feare And may it not here be observed that as we beginne in saying Hallowed be thy Name so we end in a kinde of facting the Hallowing it and our first and last words are all for his Glory who is the first and the last and these three Attributes seeme to answer to our th ree first Petitions Hallowed be thy Name for Thine is the Glory Thy Kingdome come for Thine is the Kingdome Thy will be done for Thine is the Power and we seeme to sing not only in the first an unisonewith the Angels but in all the Three the same Ditty with the Saints in Heaven for their Allelujah is Thou art worthy O Lord to receive Glory and Honour and Power and ours here Thine is the Kingdome the Power and the Glory that having sung the Song of Saints and Angels here on Earth we may be admitted into the Q●ire of Saints and Angels in Heaven and sing eternally Thou art mo●thy O Lord toreceave Glory and Honour and Power For Thine is the Kingdome the Power and the Glory for ever and ever Amen And now O my soule Consider how perfect this Prayer is where are the Petitions of Men and Angels the Petions of the Church Militant and Triumphant the Petitions of Innocent Infants Paenitent sinners and Faithfull Beleevers And then harken what Musicke it makes in Gods Eares how Pleasing where the songs are all of Christs owne setting how Melodious where they are all so sweet singers how loud where there are so many voyces especially when this Chorus Cantantium this Quire of singers which hitherto have sung their parts a part shall all ioyne their voyces together in that sacred Antheme For Thine is the Kingdome the Power and the Glory and so End all in that which is the End of all and is it felfe without End The Glory of God FINIS Esa. 1.1 Heb. 2.9 Esa. 59.10 Mal. 2.8 Eph. 4.19 Fph. 3.12 Heb 4.16 Heb. 8.9 ●oh 16.14 Colos. 2.3 Ier. 8.6 Deut. 1.45 Zach. 7.13 Ier. 11.11 Esa. 1.15 Colos. 1.20 Mat. 21.22 Esa. 51.16 Luk. 18.1 Exod 16. 8. 1 Thes. 15.17 Levit 6. 12. 1 Cor. 11. 10. Ezekiel 36 37. Hosea 14. 3. Psal. 87.7 Psal. 10● 1 Psal. 87.7 Iam. 1.6 Psal. 65.2 Luk. 18.13 Psal. ●4 10 Psal. 84.1 Psal. 94.2 Mat. 6. 〈◊〉 I am 3. 41. Psal. 139. 7. 〈◊〉 23 24. Ch●o 2. 6. Psal. 57.5 Eph. 4.10 Psal. 19.1 Rom. 1.20 Wisd. 13.50 Nah. 3.1 Psal. 32.7 Ioh. 14.3 Psal. 66.9 Exod. 〈◊〉 .15 15.3 Psal 104. 2. Zach. 14.9 Esa. 42. 16. Psal. 113 6. Esa. 53.3 ler. 51.53 lob 20.6 Heb. 9. 11. Iob 4. 19. Re● 3. 21. Psal. 73. 5. lob 21. 7 8. Ioh. 8.39 Ioh. 4 19. Ioh. 6. 44. Deut 13.13 Mal. 1.6 Ezek 20.25 Psal 37.25 Ioh. 14.3 Isa. 13.7 Luke 6.24 Wis. 6.6 Revel 18.7 Psal. 19. 7.99 130. Ec●lef 18. 6. Psal 83. 18 Psal. 27. 4. Luk. 10.42 Math. 5.45 Iohn 1. 12. Rom. 8.14 Luke 11.13 Revel 11.4 Isa. 11. 2. Colos. 2.14 Revel 1. 18. Psal 142. 7. Esa. 42. 7. Psal. 51.10 Eccles. 18.1 Mal. 1 〈◊〉 Iudg. 13.18 Psal. 103. 1. Psalm 8. Psal 118. 12. Num. 20.10 Psal. 106.33 Num. 20.12 1 Kin. 8. 65. P Sal. 40.16 Psal. 148. Psal. 118. Exod. 33.21 Revel 4.3 Revel 4.10 Revel 6.10 Math. 5.3 Iam. 4.4 Ioh. 17.16 Revel 3.20 Esa. 41.8 Esa. 63. 16. Col. 2.18 Exo. 33.15 Eph. 2.12 Esa. 26.13 ●udg 9.14 Zach. 4.11 1 Chro. 16.33 Psal. 96.12 Psal. 24.9 Esa. 47.7 Esa. 40.10 Esa. 16.13 Prov. 13.26 Luk. 17. 21. Revel 7.16 Psal. 125.6 〈◊〉 Revel 7.17 Revel 6.11 〈◊〉 Cor. 6.3 Iohn 15.11 Iohn 16.22 M●r. 2.2 Iohn 12.13 Rev. 6.11 Rev. 5.4 Rom. 5.5 Psal. 135.6 Esa. 14.24 46.10 Ier. 42.6 Psal. 49. 20. 73. 22. Esa. 1. 3 Esa. 1.13 Mal. 3.6 Psal. 6.27 Col. 5.9 Psal. 69.9 Psal. 119.105 Iohn 4. 24. Psal 119.66 Psal. 50. 16. Exod. 19.8 Psal. 119.112 2 P● 3. 13. Psal. 14. 3,4 Esa. 1.23 Mic. 〈◊〉 7.2 Rom. 8.21 Esd. 30.33 Cant. 1.10 Cant. 4.13 Ier. 9.1 Exod. 19.6 Ier. 10.23 24.7 Ier. 3.7 Ier. 3.20 Lam. 5●21 Esa. 40.10 Esa. 4.10 1 Cor. 9.17 Iohn 16.17 Wisd. 11.25 lam 1.18 Math. 5.48 Mal. 3.14 Esa. 61.3 Psal. 104.21 Psal. 147.9 Psal. 65.9 Hos. 2.22 Psal. 78.25 Psal. 145.15 Gen. 2● 20. Hab. 1.16 Eccles. 6.2 Eccles. 11.1 2 King 7. Deut. 11.14 Esa. 21.12 Psal. 127.2 Eccles. 5.12 1 King 19. 8. Psal. 90. 31. Rev. 10.6 Esa. 60.19 Math. 6.34 1 Tim. 5.8 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 14.11 Eccles. 5.11 Ecclus. 30.15 Psal. 4.7 Mark 14.3 lam 4.10 Esa. 10.23 Ezek. 16.49 Math. 26.29 Gen. 30.1 Rom. 8.26 ●en 1.x Revel 〈◊〉 Ioh. 8.10 ●oh 1.9 le● 8.22 1 Cor. 1● 44 Luk. 1.6 ●l 18.24 2 Cor. 1.23 5.5 Mich 7.9 Psal. 103.12 Esa. 38.17 ●sa 64.6 Psal. 40. ● Psal. 103. Psal. 136. Psal. 19.11 ●l 15.17 ●od 34.6 Math. 6.12 L●k 11.2 Cal. 6.5 Math. 6.14 Luk. 14.17 ●oh 13 35. Esa. 58.5 Ioh. 22.3 Psal. 16.2 Psal. 18.25 Ezck. 25.12 Exod. 32.3 Phil. 1.15 Psal. 44.22 Acts 21.23 Psal. 68.19 1 Sam. 15.22 Ioh. 1.16 Psal. 25.11 Iob 13.27 Manass. Psal 38.4 Gen. 4 10. Psal. 25.11 Psal. 6.4 Psal. 110.1 Ioh. 11.14 1 lim 2.6 Esa. 53.12 Ioh. 1.6 Psal. 109.7 Esa. 29.13 Heb. 12.29 Ioh. 1.9 Mark 6.5 Math. 18.23 psal 51.4 Psal. 10.4 37.33 Rom. 12.9 Psal. 97.1 2 Sam. 24.13 Psal. 56.4.11 Heb. 13.6 Ier. 15 11. Psal. 51.2 Mark 22.32 Heb. 11.6 1 Cor. 1.8 ler. ●1 9 Ioh. 16.33 Gal. 5.29 Gal. 3.24 Psal. 119 37. Psal. 26.1 2 Psal. 31.3.51 l●b 1 11. Iob 1.8 Iam. 1. ● 1 Cor. 10.13 Prov 30.8 Ioh. 17.20 Psal. 68.18 Iam. 1.14 Luk. 22.31 1 Pet. 5.8 Psal. 26.2 Psal. 141.4 Esa. 37.3 Psal. 18.48 Psal. 49.15 Ier. 9.4 Eccles. 6.13 1 Pet. 5.8 Exod. 14.4 Exod. 15.2 Psal. 118.14 Esa. 12.2 1 Sam. 2.30 Heb. 6.11.18 Psal. 16.9 Ioh. 19 2● Gal. 5.5 Tit. 3 7. Math 22.32 Num. 26.54 lesnua 21.44
beast Saul left Gods Will to doe his owne will in sparing Agag and the fatte of the sheepe and what was th● issue but the utter destruction of himselfe and all his issue But looke now upon those who have gone the other way and see how they have proved Abraham left his owne will to doe Gods Will in offring to sacrifice his onely sonne and was it not his making and made him the father of all the faithfull ●oseph left his owne will to doe Gods will in not embracing the embraces of his Mistris and was it not his making and made all Aegypt embrace him for their Master Daniel left his owne will to doe Gods Will in bowing his knee to God against the decree of the King of Persia and was it not his making and made all Persia bow their knees to him O wretch that I am I now see how unhappy I am that I have a will yet cannot but thinke my selfe happy for having a will For if I had not a will I could not love God and having a will I cannot love him as I should for my will is divided and cannot love him intirely my will is corrupt and cannot love him sincerely my will is w●vering and cannot love him constantly for I am not master of my will nor ever shall be nor ever can be unlesse thy Will O God come and helpe me to master it That it is not the making the P●tition that makes us to be bondsl●ves but it is our being bondslaves that makes us to make the petition as having no other way to recover our freedome but onely the vertue of this Petition Thy Will be done in 〈◊〉 as it is in heaven To doe the Will of God as it is done in Heaven is not onely to doe it fully for the matter but with delight for the manner and therefore David describing a godly man is not contented to say onely That he walked not in the counsaile of the 〈◊〉 but he addeth And his delight is in the Law of the Lord. For without this delight there is no doing it like the Angels who are therefore perhaps sayd continually to bee singing And to quicken us the more to this Angelicall perfection we may consider that the delight that is taken in God in the doing of his Will doth infinitly exceede the delight of all other objects Godlinesse is the perfecting of the soule and seeing every thing delights most in its owne perfection it must needs be that the chiefe delight of the soule is godlinesse And therefore where the minde is not sensible of this delight it shewes plainely that the soule is degenerated into a grosse corruption and stupidity For if we did but see a glimpse of this in the native purenesse it would plainely make appeare all worldly lustres to be but staines all earthly pleasures to be very paines O Lord God let it be the pleasure of thy Will that I may take pleasure in doing thy Will for unlesse it be thy pleasure it can never bee my will for though we may be good followers yet we are no good beginners and therefore though it please thee to say Turne unto me and I will turne unto you as though we should begin first yet we are faine to returne it backe and say Turne us O Lord and we shall be turned for we God knows are too unweldy to turne us of our selves It must be done by strong hand and none hath strength enough to doe it but thou O God who art the God of strength And if wee would strive as much with the Angels for holinesse as we doe with men for place and dignity we should finde God as ready to take our parts as he was to take our nature and by such a helpe of such a helper we should be able to make good our saying Thy Will be done in earth as it is in heaven We may know what it is to doe Gods Will in earth as it is in heaven by that which St. Iohn tels of the foure and twenty Elders That they cast downe their Crownes before the Throne of God saying Thou art worthy O God to receive glory and honour and power for so must we doe by our wills which are indeed our Crownes cast them downe and resigne them up to God but cast them down not cast them away resigne them but yet retaine them for without wills of our owne we can never doe Gods Will unwilling service is never acceptable as St. Paul sayth If I doe it willingly I have a reward and thus if wee can have wills of our owne and yet not doe our owne wills if wee can willingly renounce our owne wills take Gods Will in their roome and make it our owne will we shall then doe with our wills as the Elders did with their Crownes and then we shall doe Gods Will as it is done in heaven It is a hard matter oftentimes for flesh and blood to say this petition For could our first parents well say it when they were cast out of Paradise Nay did the Apostles who were something more then flesh and blood well say it when Christ told them of his departure from them yet see the weakenesse of our judgements the darkenesse of our understandings This casting out of Paradise was thorough Gods grace an occasion of attaining to a farre better Paradise for if they had tarried there still the Son of God had never come into the world this departing of Christ from them was a meanes of his comming neerer to them for if he had not departed the holy Ghost had not come And thus the two greatest seeming crosses that possibly could be proved the two greatest reall blessings that could be possible And what account then can be made of these petty crosses or of these petty blessings which happen daily to us in this world Surly in prosperities wee may well moderate our selves with this feare that they doe but prepare a way for us to greater crosses and in adversities we may well comfort our selves with this hope that they doe but prepare a way for us to greater blessings Let us therefore endeavour alwaies and doe our best that the best may happen but let us alwaies thinke that best whatsoever happens so we shall neyther clip the wings of hope for the future and wee shall give patience a firme ground to stand upon for the present and let us remember that as it hath beene sayd of old Periissemus nisi Periissemus so it hath beene observed of old Tolluntur in altum ut lapsu graviore ruant that if we give experience leave to speake the truth Shee will tell us There is not a weaker threatner nor a stronger flatterer then fortune is and therefore we can never have any just cause to hinder us from laying Thy Will be done in earth as it is in heaven It is a fearefull thing to make this a petition to God if we doe
not withall make it a rule to our selves that all the actions of our life may be squared by it And therefore O my soule if matter of profit be offred to thee lay it to this Rule whether it bee according to the Will of God or no for if it be not what great advantage soever it make shew of account it but losse If matter of honour bee offred unto thee Lay it to this Rule whether it be according to the Will of God or no for if it be not what great advancement soever it pretend account it but shame If matter of pleasure be offred unto thee Lay it to this Rule whether it be according to the Will of God or no for if it be not what pleasing suggestion soever it hath account it but misery It was conceived by Ahab that it would bee for his profit to buy Naboths Vineyard but when he would not lay it to this rule he payd for his purchase with his blood to Dogges It was pretended to Pharaoh that it would be for his honour to pursue the Israelites but when he would not lay it to this rule he perished himselfe and all his Host in the red Sea It was suggested to Salomon that it would be for his pleasure to entertaine the love of strange women but when he would not lay it to this rule God laid it to his charge both raysing up aduersaries against himselfe and renting the Kingdome from his Sonne to his servant We must first therefore endeavour to make it a rule to our selves and then we may safely make it a petition to God otherwise if we say to God Thy Will be done and intend not to doe it we shall but turne the petition from active into passive Gods Will into his anger and draw it downe to be done upon us in earth as it was done in heaven upon the Angels Many can say this petition devoutly enough so long as they understand it not but when they are told how Christ sayd it Not my will but thy Will and thereby come to know that to pray for doing of Gods Will is to pray against doing their owne wills against their unlawfull lusts against their covetous desires against their ambitious designes against their malicious practices and such like then it strikes cold to their hearts their tongues cleave to the roofe of their mouthes and they could wish the petition might never be made But he that understands it and yet stands to it he that speakes it more from his heart then with his tongue he that is resolv'd to say it because he sayth as he is resolv'd this man makes it a prayer for himselfe and an Hallelujah to God and shall reape the fruit of both in the due time to the other it proves but as the sacrifice of fooles and if it make a noyse it is but as the tinkling of a Cimball a Musicke at which God stoppes his Eares onely the Divell makes himselfe merry But doe we not by saying this petition seeme to forget both God and our selves For is not God most Iust are wee not most sinfull and what can bee the Will of a Iust God to heynous sinners but wrath and indignation and will we pray that the Viols of Gods wrath may be poured downe upon us It is true we come afterwards and say Forgive us our trespasses if this had beene sayd first and wee had first obtained a pardon of our sinnes we might then with some confidence have sayd Thy will be done but whil'st wee are in our sinnes and not so much as a pardon asked to come now with this petition and to put our selves boldly upon Gods Iustice what can it seeme to argue but great precipitation and inconsiderate rashnesse But is it not that this petition is also one of our Hallelujahs to God and a petition made by way of Hallelujah seemes of all other the most effectuall although what neede wee goe so high seeing wee have familiar reason enough beside For what danger can there be in saying Thy Will be done having sayd before Our Father which art in heaven for we come not now as strangers to a Iudge but as children to a father and that which is more to a mercifull father and that which is most of all to a most mercifull father and which is more then that most to a mercifull father who is Father of all mercy and of mercy to all and yet this is not all for may wee not observe that we pray indeed that Gods Will may be done in earth but how as it is in heaven And how is it done in heaven but in bounty and in mercy for even the Heavens and even the Angels themselves have need of Gods mercy as it is said His mercy is over all his workes And up-this Foundation of Gods mercy wee may build our assurance that Gods will is not then done when his creatures are undone but that as it was his pleasure at first to make us so it is his pleasure still to preserve us and as from his everlasting Will we all have our life so by his Will we should all have everlasting life When as yet we were not his Will was wee should be Now that we are his Will is we should be holy And if any man sinne his will is hee should repent and if a man repent his Will is he should be saved Let this Will O Lord be as thy last will which yet can come but as a streame from the Fountaine of thy first will for as it was meerely thy Will that at first made thee to make us so it is meerely thy Will that must make us to be holy that must make us to repent that must make us to bee saved These wils in God are as the chaine of his mercy whereof every linke is fastned to one another and all of them firmely fastned upon us unlesse by the violence of our sinnes the finfulnesse of our wils we doe wilfully breake them O God so frame our wils that they may be fit linkes to be fastned to this chaine of thy will that as one linke drawne on drawes on another so our spirits being guided by thy grace may be guids to our flesh and that our flesh as living by thee may live to thee knowing that though the way of thy Will may bee troublesome in the going yet the journey shall be comfortable in the ending and though it be the secret of thy Will that in doing it we shall meete with many crosses yet it is the purpose of thy Will that by doing it wee shall purchase many joyes and therefore can have no cause to make us afraid to say Thy Will bee done in earth as it is in heaven But is it not too great a boldnesse in this Petition that where all the other make suite for great yet possible things this onely makes a suite which is impossible for how can earth bring forth as good fruit as heaven how