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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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to speake something of this Treatise of this godly and painefull Minister of Christ which is written by him without affectation as desirous to cloath spirituall things with a spirituall manner of writing the diligent and godly Reader shall observe a sound cleare substantiall handling of the greatest points that naturally fall within the discourse and a more large and usefull unfolding of many things than in former Treatises It appeareth he sought the good of all so that besides the labours of other holy men there will be just cause of blessing God for his assistance in this worke To whose blessing I commend both it and the whole Israel of God Grayes Inne R. SIBBS A KEY OF HEAVEN The Lords Prayer opened and applyed MATH 6. 9 After this manner therefore pray ye Our Father which art in heaven hallowed be thy Name 10 Thy kingdome come Thy will be done in earth as it is in heaven 11 Give us this day our daily bread 12 And forgive us our debts as we forgive our debters 13 And leade us not into temptation but deliver us from evill for thine is the kingdome and the power and the glory for ever Amen THese words are part of our Saviours Sermon in the Mount they concerne Prayer and doe consist of a Precept or exhortation to pray in a right manner Patterne to exemplifie the said manner The precept is After this manner pray ye The patterne is Our Father c. This Exhortation is inferred upon consideration of divers abuses of prayer whereof our Saviour had warned his Disciples to wit Hypocrisie and vaine babling of the Pharisies and Heathen Hee reasoneth from the dissimilitude that ought to be betweene hypocrites and heathen between true Christians and faithfull beleevers saying verse 8. Be not ye therefore like unto them but pray ye in an holy manner And for that cause doth propose unto them a perfect forme of prayer intimating that if they would pray according as he did therein prescribe they should neither play the Hypocrites as did the Pharisies nor babble as the heathen nor offend any other way in this holy exercise of calling upon the name of the Lord. The words of the exhortation containe these particulars 1 The person exhorting Christ Iesus implied in his imperative speech Pray 2 The persons exhorted Ye 3 The inference whereupon it is grounded Therefore 4 The subject of the exhortation Pray in this manner Pray 1 Sam. 1 1●.15 P●●2 8 Is●●● to pray doth import an holy speech and pouring out of the soule unto God being a joynt act of the minde will whereby the minde by voyce or thought doth make knowne to God the desires of the heart What it is to pray shewing both what a man wold have God to doe for him or to accept from him A bare desire is not to pray for many wish and desire those things for which they never speake or pray unto God Orare est appetere petere Phil. 4 6. Psal 38.9 Neither are words without desires any prayer but when the minde maketh knowne to God what the will desireth this is to pray By what way soever of expression a man doth signifie his desire directing it to God whether it be by thought onely or also by sigh a Psal 38.9 Rom. 8.26 groane or b Psal 39.12 tears or by lifting up * Ps 28.2 a hand or c Psal 123.1 eyes towards God in the heavens or by d Psal 141.1.2 voyce perfect or e Isai 38.14 unperfect if it be but by f Lam. 3.56 breathing it out as it were so be hee intend and understand what he desireth this is to pray Desires are naturall or spirituall Naturall when a man Difference between naturall and spirituall desires in prayer out of a sense of that which hee needeth and which may be for his naturall well being here and for his happinesse hereafter from a meere well-wishing to himselfe doth pray unto God to obtaine it Thus a naturall man a very Balaam may pray Num. 23.10 A spirituall desire be it of naturall or spirituall good things is from the spirit and regenerate part of man Rom 8.26 27. put up to God with holy affections in a spirituall manner to a spirituall end Onely the regenerate can thus pray Ye first the Disciples and under them hee meaneth all Christians Act. 11.26 For although Christ gave his Disciples some precepts that onely did belong to them as Apostles yet hee gave very many precepts to them as they were Christians as that in Marke 13.37 What I say to one I say to all Watch so here what he saith to them he saith to all Pray Therefore hath a double reference both to the sinfull manner dehorted fom and to this holy manner exhorted to He reasoneth thus the manner of hypocritical and heathenish praying is sinfull this manner here propounded is most holy therefore pray in this manner and not as they doe After this manner or thus the word rendred thus or in this manner is a note of likenesse pointing unto the patterne following As if he had said Say Our Father as it is Luk. 11.2 or if you use other words let them be according unto this patterne here prescribed to wit to the same person the same matter in the same kindes of prayer whether it bee in Petition for our selves for that which is good or in deprecation against that which is evill or in Intercessions for others or in Thanksgiving both for our selves and for others and with the same good disposition of heart as is taught in this forme of prayer following The words thus opened the particulars therein offer divers profitable lessons Christs diligence in teaching his servants and familie this necessarie religious duty of praier both at this time of his owne accord and at another time at the request of one of his Disciples is first to be observed Luk 11.1 All the actions of Christ Jesus are observable and of excellent use but onely some of them binde Christians to imitation That I may therefore cleere the foundation of the doctrine to be concluded from Christs practise let it be considered that the actions of Christ were of different natures He did some acts as he was God and as Mediator betweene God and man as his miracles and offering up of himselfe a sacrifice for sinne c. These actions should work in all men an holy admiration of him and faith in him but must not nay cannot be imitated How far Christs example doth bind to imitation He did other actions as hee was man some whereof were indifferent being neither commanded nor forbidden others were necessarie being commanded Those actions which he did which were indifferent doe teach us Christian libertie shewing what we may do but doe not lay a bond upon the conscience to tye us to doe the same Christ did sometimes stand when he prayed this was an indifferent action
three things obseruable in all prayers First the person to whom onely we must pray concerning whom this is the rule That person onely who is God and Lord of heaven and earth is to be prayed unto thus much you learne both in the invocation in the beginning and in the forme of praise in the end of the Lords Prayer The second thing to be observed is what wee must aske the rule thereof is whatsoever may lawfully be asked may without wresting bee referred to one of the sixe petitions If they can referre their request to any petition they may be bold to make it It shall bee needfull therefore to observe the particulars under every petition both what is prayed for and what is prayed against the most whereof shall appeare in the handling of each severall petition to which I doe send you And when you have learned what you may lawfully pray ye may be longer or shorter in any one petition as your present need or the particular occasion doth require which libertie may bee obserued in those prayers of the Apostles which are recorded for our use in the holy Scriptures The third thing to be observed is with what disposition of heart and affection we must pray Which is fully expressed and implyed in that word Amen which requireth that prayer bee made with understanding in truth in fervencie and in faith as will manifestly appeare when wee come to treate of that word Here yet some question may be made touching the order here set down whether it must be precisely kept I answer in the generall it must that is Gods glory must be first in our aime but touching the particular manner of expressing it that is left to the libertie of him that prayeth whether hee begin with praise or with confession of sinnes and asking forgivenesse thereby making way to the other petitions with more confidence There is no rule to be given hereof because we see the Apostles after they were taught this forme did take this libertie Our Father c. Here beginneth the patterne of prayer which because Christ Iesus our Lord gave it to his Disciples is therefore called the Lords Prayer It consisteth of two parts The first is an expressing of a mans desire unto God The second is a manifestation of the assent and right disposition of his heart in putting up the aforesaid desires in the word Amen which though it be but one word yet is full of excellent matter The first part doth branch it selfe into three members 1 Invocation upon God Our Father which art in heaven 2 Petition Hallowed by thy Name Thy kingdome come c. 3 A forme of praise and than●es containing reasons why the former petitions should be made unto God For thine is kingdome power and glory for ever Invocation or calling upon God is here taken in the proper and strictest sense not for the whole exercise of prayer but for appellation in which a man calleth upon him whom hee would have to heare him This invocation consisteth of a description of God who onely is to be called upon in prayer He is described by two arguments First by the relation that is betweene him and his elect in Christ Our Father Secondly by a signe of his soveraigntie and majestie that is by his being in heaven which is the Court of his majestie the place from whence hee sheweth his infinite power goodnesse and glory Which art in heaven The description of God by these two arguments the one arguing his graciousnesse and readinesse of will the other arguing his greatnesse fulnesse of power to helpe all that come unto him is placed of purpose in the very entrance into prayer to strengthen the petitioners faith that hee need not doubtingly say as he did If thou wilt thou canst helpe me Mat 8.2 For he is his father therefore will do whatsoever in his holy wisedome he judgeth fit to be done Neither need he say as that other If thou canst doe any thing helpe us Mark 9.22 For his God and father in the heavens is almighty and can doe whatsoever he pleaseth Psal 115.3 and would have to be done This description of God to whom prayer is made by his relation to them that are to pray consisteth of the appropriating possessive particle Our and of that gracious title of God Father In this one description two things are signified both the condition of them that pray and of him that is prayed unto These words as they looke toward the persons who may pray they intimate a double condition First that they have a right and interest in God they can call him theirs for they are the children of God Secondly Our importeth that common interest and fatherhood in God which the rest of the faithfull have in him from which there groweth a communion of one Christian with another so that they become brethren These two qualities therefore faith in God and love to our brethren are here required in every one that is qualified for prayer Our is not onely here a note of the joyning together of many in prayer when one man is the mouth of the rest because this forme of words is to be uttered by one in the closet Mat. 6.6 as well as by many in publike but it noteth that relation and respect of God to them which is common unto their brethren 2 King 19.19 Thus Hezekiah useth it saying O Lord our God I beseech thee c. Daniel praying alone Dan. 9.17.18 faith Now therefore O our God heare the prayer of thy servant Not but that when we would expresse our particular faith and dependance upon God Mat. 26.39 Ier. 3.19 1 Cor. 4.18 we may say My Father or My God But our Saviour maketh choise of this forme of speech because it is full of instruction and is best agreeing to all sorts of prayer both in private as well as publike Thus we see what this description of God intimateth as it looketh towards those that pray As it looketh towards him to whom prayer is made he is first called Father Father spoken of God is a word of relation to Christ the second person in Trinity Psal 2.7 Ioh. 1.14 and so is proper to the first person in Trinity Secondly in relation to the creature in a more common respect to all as he is the Author of their being and subsisting in nature thus all * Deut. 32.6 three persons are called Father God is also a Father in a speciall respect to his elect in Christ as he is the Author of their spirituall being and subsisting in state of grace * 1 Ioh. 5. ● Isa 9 6. Ioh 3.5 Thus in speciall sort the three persons are and may be called Father by all beleevers And as I conceive in this place this word Father directeth us to God the Father God the Sonne and God the holy Ghost yet so as it pointeth in an order to that person in the Deity
but as a rich and bountifull Lord to his creature making his Sunne to rise on the evill and good Mat. 5.45 and sending the raine as well upon the unjust as upon the just These things God in his wise providence bestoweth upon wicked men knowing how to make use of them in humane society both in Church and Common-weale winning thereby to himselfe the glory of his patience and bounty drawing some to an admiration of his goodnesse leading some to repentance and leaving others without excuse at the day of iudgement Vse 2 Would any bee capable of making use of this invaluable benefit of praying acceptably unto God be they exhorted first to use all such meanes as God hath appointed by which they may be made the children of God by faith in Christ Iesus Gal. 3.26 Rom. 10.14.17 as hearing the word preached prayer c. then they must get good evidence that they are in state of grace and then be exhorted to come as children ought to come into the presence of so holy a Father putting off every sinne that may offend him putting on every grace that may delight him regard not iniquity in your heart cleanse your hearts and wash your hands in innocencie lift up pure hands without doubting pray in humilitie for with such sacrifice your Father is well pleased he will not despise such for God hath promised saying If my people that are called by my Name Psal 51 17 shall humble themselves and pray and seeke my face and turne from their wicked wayes then will I heare from heaven and will forgive their sinne and will heale their land 2 Chron. 7.14 Vse 3 All that with good assurance of faith can call God their Father may rejoyce in this that they are of the number of those who may improve this priviledge of praying unto God they are sure if they come not in their sinnes to speed For Iohn saith Whatsoeuer we aske we that is the children of God receive of him because we keepe his commandements and doe those things that are pleasing in his sight 1 Ioh. 3.22 Our doth note also that communion which Christians have one with another in one Father therefore even when they were to pray to God in the closet they were to represent God to their mindes in a notion which hath reference to their brethren as well as to themselves whence wee may collect Doct. All that would pray acceptably must hold a communion and good agreement with their brethren as those that have one common father to them all If a man had not beene in charitie with his brother and held not good agreement with him he was not to offer his sacrifice untill he had reconciled himselfe to his brother Mat. 5.33 The Apostle requireth that men lift up holy hands without wrath 1. Tim. 2.8 Therefore Peter would have all love exercised betweene man and wife that their prayers be not hindered 1. Pet. 3.7 For this common interest Reason 1 which Christians have in God maketh them neare of bloud as we speake having all one Spirit one hope one Lord one faith one Baptisme one God and Father of all Ephes 4.4 5 6. If men do not hold peace Reason 2 and communion with their brethren they cannot come in assurance that they themselves are Gods children for by their love to their brethren they may know whether they be beloved of God or no and may assure their hearts that their prayers shall be heard 1. Ioh 3 19.22 If they love not their brethren they remaine in death 1. Iohn 3.14 Vse 1 Here all proud scornful persons that because of parentage wit wealth or some such complement of nature do disdaine their poorer and meaner brethren may see how much they forget themselves have they not one Father if God be their Father The Prophet Malachy reproveth those which deale not well with their brethren Mal. 2.10 saying Have we not all one Father There are too many of this sort which will hypocritically say Our Father and yet scorne to have any communion with his children Yea the more they approve themselves to be Gods by holinesse of life the more they hate them and reproachfully use them and wish all evil unto them If these thinke they have God to their Father they must know that as the Apostle Iohn speaketh they are liers 1. Ioh. 4.20 because they love not their brethren What may be thought of those tongues that can blesse God and call him Father and yet curse and raile upon those which beare the true image of the same Father These things ought not so to be my brethrē saith Iames 3.9 10. Hereby all that call God Father Vse 2 should enforce upon thēselves the dutie of love and friendship to their neighbours holding with them the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace Ephes 4.3.4.5.6 because the whole bodie is but one the Spirit one c. and one Father of all we must endeavour therefore to bee one in judgement and one in affection that there be no schismes and divisions amongst us Let us love heartily without putting difference in respect of persons for which fault the Iewes are blamed by Iames Iam. 2.4.1 Cor. 11.22.30 and the Corinthians were severely punished by the Lord. Wherefore whensoever we come to God let us come in love to our brethren For how can we looke our Father in the face and expect good things at his hand when he knoweth that there are jarres and falling out betweene us and his other children our brethren Father which art in heaven I will first consider the whole description of him that is to be prayed unto and then come to the severall parts thereof This description can be true of none but of God We have fathers on earth and friends in heaven but no father in heaven or heavenly father but the true God It followeth therefore Prayer is to be made to the Doct. 3 true God And because prayer is a religious worship which must bee given to none but God I adde this Prayer is to be made onely to God Offer to God thanksgiving and Call upon me in the day of trouble saith God Psal 50.14 15. The Angell which had the everlasting Gospell to preach to them that were on the earth who went before the Angel which foretold the fall of Poperie saith Feare God c. and worship him that made heaven and earth Revel 14.7 Our Saviour saith expresly Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God and him onely shalt thou serve Mat. 4.10 He to whom prayer may be made Reason must have those all-sufficiencies which are to be found onely in the eternal and infinite God First he must be able to heare all men therfore Iames biddeth us aske of God Iam 1.5 that giveth to all men He must be able to give all things 1. Ioh. 5.14 If we aske any thing according to his will he heareth us He must be able to
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
to whom Fatherhood and the beginning of all things is ascribed without excluding but necessarily including the other two namely to God the Father the first person in Trinitie the naturall and eternall Father of Christ Iesus who by adopting us in Christ and by begetting us againe by regeneration through the Spirit * Ioh. 20.17 is our Father Thus the Apostle Paul conceived of God when he prayed first he conceived of God as Father of Christ saying Eph. 3.14.15 I bow my knees to the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ then he sheweth how hee conceived God as the father of the elect when he saith Of whom the whole family in heaven and earth are named So did the Apostle Peter conceive of God 1 Pet 1.3 when he gave him thanks saying Blessed be God and Father of our Lord Iesus Christ Which art in heaven Heaven signifieth the heaven of heavens the third heaven where Christ sitteth at the right hand of his Father By the excellencie of this place above others is set forth the majestie and excellencie of him that sitteth therein God doth not so inhabite the high and holy place but that he dwelleth also with him that is of a contrite spirit Isa 57.15 1 Kin. 8.27 Mat. 5.34.35 Psal 11.4 And the Heaven of heavens cannot containe him But because heaven is Gods Pallace and throne in comparison of earth which is but his footstoole and because from thence he doth manifest his glory more remarkeably then from any other place revealing his will power Iam. 1.17 and Godhead in his workes of mercy as David saith Psal 57.3 Psal 102.19.10 Rom. 1.18 He shall send from heaven and save me and in workes of justice as the Apostle saith The wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodlinesse therefore hee will that his being in heaven should as by a signe set forth his glorious Majestie Also his being in heaven doth distinguish him from earthly fathers Luk. 31 13. and putteth difference between him and false * Psal 136.26 Ion. 1.9 gods This description of God by his place is all one with that which the Apostle setteth downe at large calleth him 1. Tim 6.15.16 Onely Potentate King of kings Lord of Lords who onely hath immortalitie dwelling in the light which no man can approach unto c. If this short description be well weighed it will appeare that there could not possibly bee a a more briefe and more apt description of God meet to be represented to the minde of him that is to pray then this which in more words may be thus expressed O Lord God which art Father of Christ Iesus and through him Father of me and of all beleevers we coming to thee in the name of Christ and being moved hereunto by thy spirit of Adoption whereby we call Abba Father we are well assured that thou wilt accept of our praiers praying for our selves and for our brethren and sith thou onely art God which dwellest in the high and holy place from whence cometh every good gift and art Almightie as thou art God to answer thy willingnesse as thou art Father wherefore we call upon thee and do thou vouchsafe to heare us Our Note here that a man must have faith and be in state to call God his Father else he is not sufficiently qualified for prayer Learne therefore Whosoever would make an acceptable Doct. 1 prayer must be Gods childe he must have a right to call God Father and must come to God as a childe to his father Therefore David when hee prayeth approveth himselfe to be Gods childe saying If I regard iniquitie in my heart the Lord will not heare me Psal 66.18 The sacrifice of the wicked is an abhomination to the Lord but the prayer of the upright is his delight saith Solomon Prov. 15.8 It was a true speech of him which said We know that God heareth not sinners but if any man be a worshipper of God and doth his will him he heareth Ioh. 9.31 Reason 1 For the person of a man must be accepted else his sacrifice cannot be good and acceptable for while the tree is naught Mat. 7 18. the fruit cannot be good Thornes cannot send forth grapes Mat. 7 16 neither can thistles beare figges Reason 2 All acceptable prayers are put up in Christs name and are accepted through his mediation Now he is Advocate for none but those for whom he is a propitiation scil beleevers according to his prayer I pray not for the world c. Ioh. 17.9 Reason 3 No man can pray untill he have the spirit of prayer Zac. 12.10 to cause him to mourne kindly for his sinne and to call Abba Father which spirit God sendeth to none but to his sonnes Gal. 4.6 Everie one that cometh to Reason 4 God must beleeve that God is and that hee is a rewarder of them that diligently seeke him Heb. 11.6 They must have faith How shall they call on him on whom they have not beleeved Rom. 10.14 The promise of acceptance Reason 5 and of a gracious hearing is made to the godly Psal 32 6. Psal 34.15.17.18 Iam. 5.16 and to the righteous whose prayers are said to be prevailing If a man have not good assurance Reason 6 that hee is the childe of God he can never answer those strong objections which the devill will urge to keepe him from prayer but if he can shew that God is his Father and that God hath commanded him to pray no objection of Satan can discourage him Vse 1 Hereby all that do not righteousnesse and that love not their brethren for by this they are discerned not to be children of God Ioh. 3.10 but of the devill must understand that if they continue in this their wicked condition and yet pray they deale presumptuously and to them God saith Psa ●0 16.17 What have ye to do to take my covenant in your mouth seeing ye hate instruction Secondly they may learne what to judge of their praiers God accepteth them not for they be no better then either howlings or cries wrung from them by pinching necessitie Hos 7.14 or meere hypocritical mocking of God abhominable sacrifices of which the Lord saith Your incense is an abhomination Isa 113.15 and when ye make many prayers I will not heare It is all one with him as if * Isa 66.3 ye did blesse an Idoll so long as ye chuse your owne waies such as ignorance superstition contempt of religion prophanenesse pride drunkennesse whoredome deceit lying unbeliefe impenitencie and such like God abhorreth all service done to him so long as their soules delight in their abhominations Consider this O ye that forget God saith the Lord lest I teare you in pieces and there be none to deliver Psal 50.22 Thirdly let all impenitent and ungodly persons take notice in how miserable a straight they are and into what a labyrinth and maze their sinne hath brought
borne againe by the Spirit of adoption whereby they have the image of God renewed in righteousnesse and true holinesse and so are become his children by the regeneration of his Spirit wherewith he hath sealed them for his owne Whereas the men of the Vse 1 world doe entertaine in them a base opinion of all that indeavour to keepe a good conscience in all things therein approving themselves to bee Christs Disciples indeed and the very children of the most high hereby they may see their errour their insolencie and their extreame malice and folly Can there be a more notorious folly and madnesse then this when the children of the bond-woman Ioh. 8.44 nay of the devill for herein they doe his lusts shall account of and use the children of the free-woman yea of the everliving God as the filth of the world and the of-scouring of all things 1. Cor. 4.13 How doe these men by defaming the children therein despise God their Father But let them take heed how they despise or misuse the least of those little ones that have indeed given their names to Christ Iesus It is hard kicking against pricks Act. 9.5 It is not safe touching the Lords anointed Psal 105.15 Zach. 2.8 the very apple of his eye And know as base as they be Their Angels and ministring spirits doe alwaies behold the face of their Father which is in heaven Mat. 18.10 Vse 2 Hereby all men should learn of whom to esteeme most honourably whom to make choise of for their yoke-fellowes their servants or their companions also in whom they should most delight and to whom they should shew most love and goodnesse even to true Christians whom David calleth The Saints that bee upon the earth Psal 16.3 and the excellent and well hee might for they have the God of excellencie to their Father If true Christians have God Vse 3 to their Father this should move all men to become Christians indeed to beleeve and to order their conversation aright for such onely the Doctrine meaneth It is the highest advancement and honour that man is capable of to bee called and to bee indeed the sonnes and daughters of God Almighty Iohn doth admire such love in God and such advancement of men that men should be called the sonnes of God 1 Ioh. 3.1 All Christians should be like Vse 4 God Holy as he is holy for it becommeth children to be like their father They should honour and obey him If I be a Father where is mine honour saith God Mal. 1.6 As obedient children they must not fashion themselves according to the former lusts of their ignorance but as hee which hath called them is holy 1 Pet 1.14.15 so they should be holy in all manner of conversation Disobedience of children to their Parents was in the law of the Iewes punishable with death disobedience therefore unto our heauenly Father is much more dangerous They should likewise submit themselves unto his fatherly chastisements Heb. 12.5.7.10 they must neither despise them nor faint under them but must indure them patiently because God therein dealeth with them as with sonnes for their profit that they might be partakers of his holinesse They need not carke and care but in all things they may and must with boldnesse and assurance of helpe repair to God being assured of his fatherly affection towards them for to whom doe children flie in their need but to their Parents We have seene those that bee evill give good gifts unto their children how much more will our heavenly Father give good things even his holy Spirit Luk. 11.13 to them that aske him Lastly it is the joy and comfort Vse 5 of every Christian to consider that they have this honor that they may call God Father and aske him blessing What manner of love hath the Father bestowed in this saith Iohn 1 Ioh. 3.1 that wee should bee called the sonnes of God That wee the sonnes of men of meane men of mortall men of sinfull men yea the very children of the divell should be advanced to bee the sonnes and daughters of God Almighty While vainglorious foolish men vaunt and brag of their gentry and earthly Parentage let us with an holy exultation of spirit rejoyce in this that wee have God to our Father This doth comfort the heart in povertie sickenesse paine disgrace and in all distresses when we know wee have a Father that will not forsake us though our naturall Parents should Psal 27.10 that though tender mothers may forget their sucking children and sonnes of their wombe yet God will not forget his Isa 49.15 hee is wise and almightie and will helpe in the best time he alwaies knoweth what we have need of If wee be children then heires of God and joynt heires with Christ Rom. 8.17 When we duely thinke of this no afflictions can dismay us for we hold them not worthy the glory that shall be revealed in us Rom. 8.18 wee shall by this helpe our selves against heart-eating cares for we have a father and wee know it belongeth to Parents to provide and lay up for their children 2 Cor. 12 13. When we think of this that we are Gods heirs it will keepe us from grieving at and enuying the prosperity of the wicked we will be well content God should give his moveables where he please so long as the birth-right and inheritance is ours for we are begotten to a lively hope of an inheritance incorruptible and undefiled that fadeth not away reserved in the heavens for us 1. Pet. 1.3.4 Whatsoever our estate be in the world we may and ought to comfort our selves with these thoughts Which art in heaven God is described by his being in heaven not onely to shew where he is for he is a God at hand and a farre off Ier. 23.23 24. and filleth heaven and earth but as the majestie of Kings may be set out by their glorious palaces and thrones so heaven Gods most glorious throne doth here set forth his majectie and the perfection of all his infinite excellencies Whence learne Doct. 7 God to whom prayer is made who is Father to all true beleevers is an heavenly majestie invisible perfect and infinite in power goodnesse and all other heavenly excellencies one whose dwelling is in the heavens When God would set forth his owne greatnesse and goodnesse at once Isa 57.15 he saith Thus saith the high and loftie one that inhabiteth eternitie whose name is holy I dwell in the holy place with him also that is of a contrite and humble spirit to revive the spirit of the humble c. The Church doth helpe her faith by casting her thoughts upon heaven the habitation of Gods holinesse and of his glory and thereby gathereth arguments of Gods perfect love to them and power for them when she saith Where is thy zeale and thy strength c. and from the same consideration doth preferre Gods
by that first promise made to Adam that the seede of the woman should breake the head of the Serpent Gen 3.15 from that time it hath beene by Christ administred For though he were not actually incarnate and made man much lesse did he dye and rise againe Gal. 4 4. untill the fulnesse of time in the latter end of the world in the severall times appointed thereunto yet in Gods purpose and appointment as also in Gods promises and to the faith of Adam Abel Enock Noah Abraham and of the rest of the Patriarkes and beleevers the incarnation death resurrection and dominion of Christ had a being and was as effectuall to them that then beleeved in the Messias to be incarnate c. as they now are to any that beleeve in him now after that he is indeed incarnate c. For as the holy Ghost saith Rev 13.8 Christ was a Lambe slaine from the foundation of the world so he may be said to have taken flesh and to have risen againe c. from the foundation of the world Therefore hee saith Ioh. 8.58 Ioh. 8.56 Before Abraham was I am and Abraham was glad to see my day and hee saw it that is he saw him in the promise by the eye of his faith made man Heb. 11.13 dead and risen againe and sitting upon his throne as King governing all things So did David when he said Psal 110.1 The Lord that is God the Father said unto my Lord that is to God the Sonne who was to bee made man Sit thou at my right hand untill I make thine enemies thy footstoole Heb. 13 8. For Christ Iesus is the same yesterday and to day and for ever Thus our Saviour Christ was then Act. 10.36 and is now King Lord of all raigning by his power and working effectually by his spirit in the first times in the ministery of the Patriarches Prophets and Priests as he now in the latter times hath done doth in the ministery of the Apostles and ordinary Ministers both for the gathering and saving of his Church as also for the restraint and destruction of his enemies That the manhood of Christ should in the fulnesse of time Psal 2.6.7 Isa 9 6.7 Psal 110.1 be taken into the partnership of this government designed to the second Person as Mediatour the Prophets before Christ came in the flesh did clearely foretell our Saviour himselfe before his death told the Iewes that the Father judgeth no man but hath committed all judgement to the Sonne Ioh. 5.22 and hath given him authority to execute judgement because hee is the sonne of man that is by an excellency that sonne of man Ioh 5.27 who was ordained to be Immanuell God with us This sonne of man our Saviour who is God blessed for ever had his more solemne investitute and inauguration into this his absolute governement given him of God presētly after that he had for the glory of his Father in the redemption of mankinde humbled himselfe unto the cursed death of the Crosse bearing his Fathers indignation to the full satisfying of his justice for the sinnes of all in whose stead he stood who should beleeve in him which was after that by his death he rising from the dead had destroyed him that had the power of death H●b 2.14.15 that is the divell Of this more evident manifestation of Christs Kingship it is that hee himselfe spake to his Disciples when he said All power is given me in heaven and in earth Mat. 28.18 And of this exaltation it is of which the Apostle speaketh saying Phil. 2.9.10.11 Wherefore God also hath highly exalted him and given him a name above every name that in the name of Iesus that is that to the power and soveraignty of Iesus Christ Isa 45.23 now manifested to be Lord all should bee subject for to him every knee should bow Rom 14.11 of things in heaven in earth and under the earth and every tongue should confesse that Iesus Christ is Lord to the glory of God the Father He is therefore said to have on his vesture and on his thigh a name written Rev. 19.16 KING OF KINGS AND LORD OF LORDS By vertue of this exaltation and dominion it is that triumphing over his enemies he ascended up on high Col 2.15 Eph. 4.8.11 12 13. and led captivity captive and gave gifts to men that is to those his officers which under him should erect and perfect his kingdome of grace here upon earth namely He gave some Apostles and some Evangelists and some pastors and teachers for the perfecting of the Saints for the worke of the Ministrie for the edifying of the bodie of Christ till we all come into the unity of the faith and of the knowledge of the Sonne of God unto a perfect man unto the measure of the stature of the fulnesse of Christ Christ Iesus being thus advanced it belongeth unto him to reigne as king untill he have perfected the salvation of all the elect and untill he have put all his enemies under his feet and have delivered up this kingdome to God even the Father This kingdome of Christ differs from all other kingdomes for though it be in the world and above all the kingdomes of the world yet it is not of the world Ioh. 18.36 it is a spirituall and heavenly kingdome bearing rule in and over the soules and consciences of men It is directly opposite to the kingdome of darknesse and of the devill the prince of this world for by his agents through his ordinances by the power of his Spirit 2. Cor 10.4.5.6 he pulleth downe strong holds casting downe imaginations and every high thing that exalteth it selfe against the knowledge of God and bringing into captivitie everie thought to the obedience of Christ having in a readinesse to avenge all disobedience when the obedience of his own subjects shall be fulfilled This kingdome of Christ is an everlasting kingdome Isa 9.7 Dan. 7.27 never to have end whether wee respect the subjects or king for at the last day all that were subject unto him in this world in the kingdome of grace shall in an holy and glorious subjection unto God reigne with him in the world to come in the kingdome of glory for evermore But this present administration and government of this kingdome by Christ as Mediatour is not everlasting for in the end of the world 1. Cor. 25.24 25. Christ shall deliver up the kingdome to God even the Father then the Sonne himselfe shall be subject to him that put all things under him 1. Cor. 15.28 that God may be all in all This giving up the kingdome is not a cessation of it but a delivering of it up to God to his immediate governing of it in a state more glorious than ever It causeth onely a cessation of that forme of government by Christ which was to
of Christs governement much lesse to enter a combination against him Let no man dare either by force or craft to oppose the comming of the kingdome of God whether it be by opposing any of his ordinances or of his people such a one cannot goe unpunished for all that make faithfull prayers in saying thy kingdome come doe pray against him It is hard kicking against prickes Act. 9.5 Follow the counsell of the Lord Psal 2 1● Kisse the Sonne left he be angry and you perish make your peace with him else you must feele that sentence executed Luk 19.27 Those mine enemies which would not that I should reigne over them bring hither and slay them before me Vse 2 Let all men consider the Doctrine in hand in each particular thereof and let him pray accordingly And as GOD hath given unto any man place gifts and meanes they must improve them to the utmost of their power to further the comming of Gods kingdome The Magistrate must doe what lieth in him the Minister what belongeth to him Every one as they to the building of the Tabernacle must bring his gift and doe his part And when ye can doe nothing else yet for your owne particulars open the everlasting doores of your hearts that the King of glory may come in and dwell in your hearts by faith and rule in your hearts by his Spirit And you must also doe as Christ here commandeth pray heartily and say Thy kingdome come In thus doing wee shall honour God and approve that we prayed Hallowed be thy Name unfainedly we shall advantage our selves and our brethren Psal 122.6 Rev. 1.6 Rev. 5.10 For they shall prosper that love and pray for the peace of Ierusalem and we shall be a kingdome of Kings and Priests to God the Father for ever The third Petition Thy will be done in earth as it is in heaven That the Name of God might be hallowed it was needfull that God should make his holy Name knowne therefore request was made that he would make himselfe knowne by the comming of his kingdome Secondly to the hallowing of his Name it is requisite that it be acknowledged to be holy which is done when men doe his will on earth Ioh. 17.4 For then God is glorified on earth when those under him finish the worke he hath set them to doe Which is when the wils of all the subjects of his kingdome are subject to the will of their Lord and King Wherefore that this subjection may bee yeelded prayer is made in this third petition Concerning which subjection this petition directeth unto the matter of it Thy wil be done in earth the manner how as it is in heaven In the matter of subjection the thing to which and the persons who and the place where they must be subject is expressed The thing to be submitted unto is Gods will implyed in a speciall emphasis in the particle thy importing thus much not the will of Satan or the will of men but of God whose will is secret this pertaineth not to us to prie into onely thus much wee are to pray concerning it in generall that he will bee pleased to do whatsoever hee hath determined to do and that we may submit to it and give him the glory of it when it is done revealed this belongeth to us and to our children Deut. 29.29 That we may do all the words of his Law Will doth here chiefly signifie all his revealed will Deu. 12.32 be it revealed by his word or by the event of things by his worke whether it be of things to bee done or suffered The act desired touching Gods will is That it be done as if he should say Let thy truths bee beleeved thy Commandments obeyed and whatsoever thou doest let it be acknowledged and submitted unto as unto that which must needs bee best done because thou Lord didst it Gods will is done by man two wayes in two degrees truly and in endevor ayming at perfection this is Evangelicall obedience perfectly this is Legall obedience This latter is aymed at and is the white and rule of obedience The former is prayed for as the meanes of following after and attaining more and more to the perfection of the Law which is the rule of obedience pressing hard after that obedience in this life which hereafter shal perfectly be done in heaven The persons who should do this will are noted forth by the place where they live where this will must be done viz. all men on earth must desire that Gods will may bee done on earth For be done is put impersonally importing thus much Let it bee done both by me and by all other persons whosoever The manner of doing this will is taken from a patterne and sampler of the heavenly persons manner of doing Gods will These persons are pointed at by the place where they are and where they do Gods will viz. heaven which can bee meant of no other but of the Angels and spirits of Saints departed who do in heaven shew readie faithfull and constant subjection unto God The particle as in which the force of this sentence doth lye is not here a note of paritie equalitie or like quantitie of degree but a note of similitude and likenesse of qualitie His meaning then is Psal 103.20 21. Thy will be done by men on earth readily faithfully unfainedly as the heavenly Angels and spirits do it in heaven The sense of this petition may be thus expressed O Lord and King sith that unfained obedience to thy holy will doth truly honour and glorifie thy Name and doth manifest that thy kingdome is come and is a due debt to be performed of all thy people may it please thee to cause me and all thy people to know thy wil and to submit their wils to the same in all things alwayes in all faithfulnesse upon earth as thy holy Angels and Saints do thy commandments in heaven And farre be it from me or any other to rebell or mutine against thee Thy will be done The doctrine which followeth from the matter of this petition is this Every Christians desire unto God and endeavour in this life must be that Gods wil be obeied and submitted unto in all things 1. Sam. 3.18 2. Sam. 15.26 Teach me to do thy will for thou art my God saith David Psalm 143.10 When the Christians of Casarea saw that Paul was not to be disswaded from going up to Ierusalem they said The will of the Lord be done Act. 21.14 Our Saviour saith Ioh. 5.20 I seeke not mine owne will but the will of my Father which hath sent me And elsewhere in his prayer he said O my Father if this cup may not passe away from mee except I drinke it thy will be done Reason 1 God is an absolute Soveraigne good reason therefore that his will should be the law of his creature especially of his familie Mal. 1 6. If I be
Gods childe and Christs brother Mark 3.35 Hee that doth the will of God the same is my brother sister and mother saith Christ Sixtly God will heare their prayers Ioh 9.31 If any man will doe his will him he heareth And seventhly to such belongeth the salvation of God Psalm 50.23 Be ye intreated therefore by the mercies of God to give your selves both in bodies and soules to GOD. Prove what is that good Rom. 11.1.2 that acceptable and perfect will of God Thinke thus with thy selfe It is sufficient nay too much that I have spent the time past of my life according to the will of men and of the flesh in all manner of wickednesse but now that I am quickned and professe better things now that I am redeemed from my former conversation I will therefore strive and pray that I may live according to the holy will of him that hath redeemed me Thinke thus God will have his will fulfilled by me in obedience or hee will have it fulfilled upon mee in his just vengeance Let every man therfore use all meanes to know and doe the will of God And as much as in us lyeth we must cause others to know and to doe it We have Christs example who also speaking of mans duty saith Ioh. 13.17 If yee know these things happy are yee if yee doe them Now that wee may doe the will of God Meanes inabling men to do Gods will wee must first be ingrafted into Christ and must abide in him drawing grace and vertue from him by the exercise of our faith as the branch doth from the Vine Ioh. 15.5 then wee shall doe Gods will bringing forth much fruit in him Secondly we must deny our owne wisedome and our own will Pro. 3.5 Pro. 23.4 and we must not consult with flesh and bloud but with the word of God and the inward man in which dwelleth the Spirit of God Gen. 22.3 Thus Abraham became able to doe as hard a piece of service as any man can be put unto in offering his onely sonne Isaack the sonne of his hope Rom. 4.19.20.21 who as he beleeved in God in a thing impossible to reason without reasoning against it so did hee performe a commandement of killing his sonne in naturall reason seeming unnaturall unreasonable and impious this he did by resting onely upo the word of God to which he was obedient Heb. 11.19 Thirdly wee must doe our utmost that we may know the will of God else how can wee doe it to this end wee must heare reade and meditate on the holy Scriptures which have the power of God working with them to inlighten the minde with knowledge and to incline the will to obedience Fourthly pray unto God who onely can and will informe the understanding Phil. 2 13. and give both to will and to doe at his good pleasure Thus Paul prayed that the Colossians might be filled with the knowledge of his will Col. 1.9 and that they might walk worthy of the Lord in all well-pleasing David likewise prayed saying Ps 119 8● Quicken me after thy loving kindenesse so shall I keepe the testimony of thy mouth And the Church saith Cant 1.4 Draw mee and we will runne after thee If we will pray and seeke with all our might as we would for hid treasure Pro. 3.4 ● then shall we understand the feare of the Lord and then shall wee know Hol. 6.3 if we follow on to know the Lord. Then shall we also be able to doe the will of God Phil. 2.13 For he will worke all our workes for us and we shall be blessed in our deed Iames 1.25 As in heaven Observe here that the patterne of perfect obedience is taken from heaven whence we may collect Doct. 2 In heaven is all perfect obedience there is no failing there no not in the least circumstance 1 Cor. 13.12 Now I know but in part saith the Apostle but then that is when hee should come to heaven I shall know as I am knowne Peter speaking of the new heavens saith that therein dwelleth righteousnesse 2 Pet. 3.13 Reas 1 1 Cor. 6.9 For heauen is the holy place into which no unrighteous person can enter for when there were disobedient persons in heaven namely the divell and his Angels which kept not their first estate heaven did vomit them forth never to be burdened with them or the like againe In heaven there are no tempters Reas 2 for there are none but God Angels and the spirits of just men made perfect Heb. 12.23 therefore also no temptations unto sinne The thoughts of this will moderate griefe for those our Vse 1 friends which die in the Lord. For the place whitherto death hath made a passage for them is the heaven spoken of in the Doctrine which doth secure us that they are there where they are made perfect where they shal neither offend nor be offended Doth not the meditation Vse 2 hereof worke in Gods children not onely contentment but a longing to lay downe this tabernacle to be translated hence when the Lord shall please sith the exchange will be so happy It is but a parting with a sinfull miserable earth for this heaven wherein dwelleth perfect righteousnesse It is leaving mortality for life sinne for grace and misery for glory in that place where they shall neither bee actors nor beholders of sinne where there is no sinne either to infect or vexe them Vse 3 When we are wearied and almost fainting in our combat against sinne and this wicked world if we would but consider that ere long if we do hold out manfully a while this sinne and flesh shall annoy us no more For when death commeth it is the portall to this heaven spoken of in the text which death doth as certainely separate sinne from soule and body for ever as if doth the soule from the body for a while For our place is this heaven where are the Angels the patternes of our obedience and when we come there we shall be as the Angels Luke 20.36 and shall ever be with the Lord. As in heaven Here Christ doth send us to the best and perfect examples whence note In proposing examples for imitation Doct. 3 men must propose the best such as are perfect and heavenly The examples of Angels and those that be perfect must bee imitated of men on earth Therfore when Paul would have the Corinthians follow him it was with this condition as hee followed Christ or because he followed Christ 1 Cor. 11.1 In the following such examples Reas 1 men shall alwaies have cause to proceed on and grow better and better and shall still be going forward towards perfection for such examples are perfect Reas 2 When men looke upon these perfect copies the sight of how much they come short of what they should doe taketh downe pride which else would arise from the sense of what they haue done
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
had paid the third yeeres tithes they might pray saying I have hearkened unto the voyce of the Lord my God Deut. 26.15.16 and have done according to all that thou hast commanded mee Looke downe from thy holy habitation from heaven and blesse thy people Israel and the land which thou hast given us Hezekiah saith O Lord remember now 2 King 20 3. how I have walked before thee in truth and with a perfect heart When zealous Nehemiah had reformed abuses among the Iewes by cleansing the house of God restoring maintenance to the Leuites and standing for the sanctifying of the Sabbath day hee is bold to pray Neh. 13.14.22 Remember me O my God concerning this and wipe not out my good deeds that I have done for the house of my God And againe he saith Neh 13 31 Remember me O God concerning this also and spare me according to the greatnesse of thy mercy And Remember me for good Our Lord and Saviour saith I have glorified thee on earth and now O Father glorifie thou me with thine owne selfe Ioh. 17.4.5 Reason 1 God hath promised to give all good things unto all such men Psal 91.14 15. Because hee hath set his love upon me therefore will I deliver him saith God Hee shall call upon me and I will answer him Reason 2 The injoying of a good estate for body and soule is a good meanes to incourage and enable a man still to glorifie God This argueth all such men of Vse 1 high presumption which will expect that God should blesse them with all things needfull both for this life that which is to come when the time is yet to come that ever they did glorifie his Name in doing his will As if God were bound to preserve and save them and they were not tyed to serve him It shall be therefore a just thing with God to disappoint the expectations of all such men Whereas many unfained Vse 2 Christians being cast downe with a sense of their owne unworthinesse do doubt whether they should ask God any thing for themselves this doctrine may comfort them and may remove this scruple For their conscience can tell them that they desire in their very soules that Gods kingdome should be advanced and his name glorified whatsoever should become of themselves Let such be admonished of their fault and let them not wrong the Lords truth and goodnesse to thinke that he will not be gracious to them in things concerning thēselves now that he hath beene already so good as to give them hearts to desire to glorifie him Vse 3 Would any man with confidence aske of God all things that may do himselfe and his neighbour good let him observe this order set downe by Christ Iesus First seeke the things that concerne God and his kingdome then they may with Gods good leave speake to him for themselves and others Nay if they do not they offend God because they do not improve that gracious leave which hee hath given them for their best advantage Be zealous for God therefore and thence take encouragemēt to pray to him for thy selfe This may be done yet no allowance is given to expect any thing of merit for here the petitioner doth onely present himselfe unto God as one capable of his further favours looking for nothing but of mercie and doth therefore begge what he would have So Nehemiah though hee remembred unto God what he had done for the honour of God yet he saith Spare me Neh 13.22 according to the greatnesse of thy mercies Give us this day our daily bread The subject of this petition or the things desired are all things needfull for this present life Whence observe It is the will of God that his children should aske of him and use all good meanes for the welfare of this naturall life David saith O my God take me not away in the midst of my dayes Psal 102.24 If any man be afflicted Iam 5.13.14 let him pray Prayer is used as a meanes of victorie in warre and to remove famine pestilence and all annoyances of the bodie 2. Chron. 6. Aske ye of the Lord raine in the time of the latter raine Zach. 10.1 Reas 1 God hath promised to give to his children temporall good things as well as spiritual Godlinesse hath the promise of the life that now is 1. Tim. 4.6 Reas 2 The necessitie of man requireth that he should have supplies for this life that he may have a right minde in a sound bodie else he can neither enjoy himselfe nor do good to his neighbour nor do the service and works which the Lord appointeth he cannot profit man nor serve his God Witnesse the condition of distracted and melancholicke of naturals of dumbe and deafe persons Also what can men diseased and in paine do in comparison of what they may do when their minds are free bodies strong and healthie Christ Iesus hath redeemed Reas 3 the bodie as well as the soule and requireth that therewith men do glorifie God 1. Cor. 6.20 therefore the good thereof in its place is to be desired That use may be made of this point take a view of the particulars They respect the principall thing here desired scil life and health also all means thereof The bodie is then in health when it is in such good plight and temper that the soule can in and by it exercise the faculties of reason sense and motion to the comfort of it selfe the benefit of man and service of God The meanes of this good estate are wholsome aire meats drinkes apparell houses and whatsoever will keepe from bodily infections and inconveniences whether they serve to quench thirst or satisfie hunger or preserve from extremities of heat and cold or to restore defects in nature Now because these things cannot be except the Lord give fruitful seasons by causing the heavens to be wel disposed and the earth to be fruitfull request must be made that God would heare the heavens that they would heare the earth Hos 2.21.22 and the earth the corne and the win● and the oyle and that they all would heare and satisfie the necessities of man And when all these things are granted yet such is mans frailtie that if he have not a ●ill to make use of corne wo●●l physicke and so in other things he shall yet remaine destin●● of their use Therefore reque●● is to be made that God would give gifts and skill to men to that end Lastly if a man be furnished with all things before named yet if he lie open to the furie of enemies his life and welfare cannot consist Wherefore a good Commonwealth consisting of wise just and valiant governours and of numerous peaceable loyall and valorous subjects is to bee desired and the contrarie to all these is to be deprecated All therefore that shall debarre Vse 1 themselves of the temporall use of the comforts of this life except for a time when
upon Atheists which in their hearts say there is no God Psal 14.4.6 They call not upon the Lord saith he You shame the counsell of the poore because God is their refuge But know ye the Lord looketh from heaven and doth behold and punish such impiety and prophanenesse In concerneth all Christians Vse 2 therefore to make all the petitions in this Lords Prayer either in this same forme or in other words to the same effect every day It was Christs practise and hath beene the manner of the faithfull in all ages Then shall we hold a gracious familiaritie with God our Father Then will he heare us alwaies and we shall ever have our requests granted when it shall be best for us The case touching how oft in a day wee must pray If it be asked how often in one day prayers are to be made I answer ejaculations and short liftings up of the heart should be very often according as sudden occasions shall minister cause more set and solemne prayers should be made ordinarily at morning at meales and at evening These times doe alwaies minister due cause of solemne prayer and may ordinarily without necessary lets be performed Also at other times prayer must bee made as there shall fall out speciall cause 1 Thes 5.17 For wee must pray continually that is in every state and condition and upon every good occasion when there is opportunity then pray and also praise God No certain rules can be given for any set number how oft this is left unto a mans Christian discretion as his necessities and as his opportunities doe vary But to keepe canonicall houres and to pray by stinted numbers upon beades or otherwise as Papists doe is ridiculous and too too superstitious It will rejoyce a Christian Vse 3 heart to consider that hee hath leave to come to God to preferre his suits unto him every day We are loth to put up petitions unto men too oft lest they should grow weary of us but it should not be so between Christians and the Lord for he is best pleased with those that come oftenest to him In Courts of Requests amongst men there are certaine dayes in which one mans suit is heard at which time other mens suits must be put off to other dayes of hearing Every man cannot have his suit sped every day no not every Terme But all Gods people may come to him by Christ Iesus and have their requests heard and granted in the Court of heaven every day yea seven times and if need be seventie times seuen times in one day Our that is such bread wherto we have true right and proprietie Hence we are taught Doct. 7 The maintenance wherupon a Christian may desire to live must be his owne He must have right both before GOD and man Drinke waters out of thine own cisterne Pro. 5.15 The Apostle commandeth that men should eate their owne bread 2 Thes 3.12 If they have not a spirituall Reas 1 right to their maintenance by their marriage with Christ it will be impure unto them for to the unbeleeving and defiled is nothing pure Tit. 1.15 To desire to live upon that Reas 2 which is another mans were to go about to draw the just God into copartnership of their injustice towards man With what face then can Vse 1 idle persons which have no calling or will not with quietnesse worke that they might have bread of their owne to eate say Give us our bread 2. Thes 3.10.12 the Apostle saith such should not eat untill they have laboured and gotten wherewithall by honest meanes But more especially how dare those that get their living and raise their estates by indirect and unlawful courses such as lying stealing defrauding gaming oppression usurie and such like meanes how dare I say these pray to God that hee would give and blesse to them their own bread when what they have to eate is the meat of wickednesse and what they have to drinke is as the wine of violence But wee unto him that increaseth that which is not his Pro. 4.17 Hab. 2.6 Vse 2 Would any man make this prayer in sinceritie so that he may expect a blessing from God let him be sure that hee have a good title unto that which he would have God to blesse unto him so that he can truly call it his owne There is a twofold right to the things of this life one common to all the other speciall and peculiar to the children of God The common right is founded in Gods goodnesse and bounty to man as he is his creature and is conveighed to man by such acts of Gods providence as do give unto a man a true proprietie amongst men in the things which they possesse this is called a civill right The speciall right is founded in Gods speciall love to his children in and through Christ which is added to their common right namely a right of inheritance which giveth not onely a right to the things themselves but to the blessing and comfortable use of the same this is a spirituall right derived to a beleever through Christ The want of this right is the cause why to the wicked even the things which they lawfully possesse are in their use impure Tit. 1.15 Hence it is that wicked men have not so good and so full a right to the good creatures of God as true beleevers have nor yet can have so comfortable and so sanctified a use of them as the godly may have they never partake of the good creatures of God but hee hath to except against them though not alwayes for the having yet for the abusing and for the unsanctified use of them For God giveth meat and so I may say of other things to them that beleeve 1. Tim. 4.3 and know the truth to be received with thanksgiving Though men may have a common right to the creatures of God without Christ yet they cannot have the speciall right or blessing in the use of them but by Christ For this cause it concerneth us to do two things First make we sure to bee ingrafted into Christ the heire of all things that through him it may bee said 1. Cor. 3 22. All things are ours Secondly we must live in an honest calling Eph. 4.28 and therein labour with our hand or head the thing that is good we must worke that wee may eate our owne bread having a civill right to what we possesse as well as a spirituall We must not thinke to be maintained being in a fruitfull land with Manna and Quailes from heaven for God will not allow his servants to eat either the bread of idlenesse or wickednesse Our bread Here God giveth his children leave to call bread their bread whence observe Everie childe of God hath a Doct. 8 true right to those temporall goods which hee doth lawfully possesse The meeke have right of inheritance unto the earth Matth. 5.5 They have right in the right
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
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
distractions Where he cannot corrupt the doctrine of prayer as in Popery with heresies and superstitious follies there he laboureth to hinder the exercise of it Wherein we should be so farre from being discouraged that we should reason rather that that must needs be an excellent dutie which is so irkesome to the flesh and which the devill so eagerly sets against This should incourage us to this exercise wherein lyeth all our strength that if in spite of Satans annoyance and our owne indisposition we will set upon this duty we shall finde our selves by little and little more raised up to heaven and our hearts more and more enlarged God rewarding the use of that little grace wee finde at the first with increase of strength and comfort To him that hath in the exercise of that he hath shall be given more We should labour not to be ignorant of Satans enterprises who besides his diverting our mindes from prayer and disturbing us in it laboureth by all meanes to draw us to some sin the conscience whereof will stop our mouthes and stifle our prayers and shake our confidence and eclipse our comfort which he oft aymeth more at then the sinne it selfe unto which hee tempteth us We should labour therefore to preserve our selves in such a state of soule wherein we might have boldnesse with God and wherein this gainfull trading with him might not bee hindred To passe over many other causes of the neglect of this entercourse and dealing with God by prayer we may well iudge as one of the chiefe a selfe-sufficiencie whereby men dwell too much in themselves He that hath nothing at home will seeke abroad The poore man saith Solomon speaketh supplications If wee were poore in spirit and saw our owne emptinesse it would force us out of our selves Alas what temptation can we resist much lesse overcome without fresh succour What crosse can we endure without impatiencie if we have not new support What successe can we looke for yea in common affaires without his blessing What good can we do nay thinke of without new strength When we do any good by his power do we not need pardon for the blemishes of our best performances What good blessing can we enjoy so as we defile not our selves in it without a further blessing giving us with the thing the holy use of it Yet we see most men content to receive blessings as they come from Gods generall providence without regarding any sanctified use by prayer whereas holy men knowing that God will be sought unto even for those things of which hee hath given a promise Ezek 36.37 in obedience to this his divine order desire to receive all from him as a fruit of their prayers And Gods manner is to keep many blessings from his children untill they have begged them as delighting to heare his children speake The consideration whereof moveth those that have neerest communion with God to acknowledge him in all their waies depending on him for direction strength successe whereupon he delighteth in shewing himselfe more familiarly unto them in the sweetest experiences of his love guiding them by his counsell whilest they abide here and after bringing them to glory Psal 37 24 As other graces grow in those that are in the state of grace so this spirit of prayer receiveth continuall increase upon more inward acquaintance with God and their owne estates Whence they can never be miserable having God to poure forth their spirits and ease their hearts unto who cannot but regard the voyce of his owne Spirit in them But of our selves such is our case that God who knoweth us better than wee know our selves saith wee know not what or how to pray Rom. 8.26 This language of Canaan is strange unto us Which our blessed Saviour in mercy considering stirred up a desire in his Disciples to bee taught of him the Sonne how to speake to the Father Where thereupon hee teacheth them a forme which for heavenly fulnesse of matter and exactnesse of order sheweth that it could come from no other Author This holy pattern comprizing so much in so little all things to bee desired in six short petitions it is needfull for the guides of Gods people to lay open the riches of it to the view of those that are lesse exercised An endevour which his excellent Majesty thought not unbeseeming the greatnesse of a King For the use of a set forme of prayer and this in speciall I will make no question yet in the use of this prayer we may dwell more in the meditation and enforcing such petitions as shall concern our present occasions For instance if ever there were time of praying Let thy kingdome come let Christ arise and his enemies bee scattered then certainly now is the time for us to ascend up into heaven by our prayers and awake Christ that hee would rebuke the winds and waves and cause a calme that hee would bee strong for his Church in maintaining his owne cause It is Gods manner before any great worke for his Church to stirre up the spirits of his beloved ones to give him no rest How earnest was Daniel with the Lord immediatly before the delivery out of Babylon Dan. 9. And undoubtedly if we joyne the forces of our prayes together and set upon God with an holy violence hee would set his power his wisdome his goodnesse on worke for the exalting of his Church and ruine of the enemies of it Now is the time for Moses his hands to bee upheld whilest Amalech goeth down As in the lives of David Asa Ezekia Iehosaphat c. The prevayling power of praier with God in times of danger appeareth not only in the sacred history of the Bible but hath been recorded in all ages of the Church Euseb l. 5. Tertul. in Apologet. In the primitive Church An. Dom. 175. the army of Christians was called the thundering legion because upon their prayers God scattered their enemies with thunder and refreshed themselves with showers in a great drought After in the good Emperour Theodosius his time An. Dom. 394. upon an earnest prayer to Christ the winds fought from heaven for him against his enemies as they did for us in 1588. And continually since God never left the force of faithfull prayer without witnesse If we would observe how God answereth prayers wee should see a blessed issue of all the holy desires he kindles in our hearts for hee cannot but make good that title whereby he is stiled a God hearing prayer Psal 65.2 which should move us to sow more prayers into his bosome the fruit whereof wee should reap in our greatest need Jt would bee a strong evidence in these troublesome times of the future good successe of the Church if wee were earnest in soliciting Christ with these words which himselfe hath taught us Let thy kingdom come For put him to it and hee will never faile those that seeke him Psal 9.10 He loveth importunity But
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
it up nothing so high above us or so farre from us but with this hand wee may reach it to us Hee that wrastleth by the strength of prayer though hee wrastle with the strong God shall prevaile as did Iacob of whom it is said Hee had power over the Angell and prevailed hee wept and made supplication Hos 12.4 Of all helps prayer is readiest at hand in all places and at all times if wee be not without our hearts wee neede not be without helpe It is the most universall helpe it is good for all persons at all times in all things It is a most certain helpe no faithfull prayer was ever made in vaine It is a key to open heaven all that have skill to handle it may from thence fetch all things that may doe themselves or their neighbour good Moreover when wee have made our requests knowne to GOD and have commended our cause to him by prayer this will comfort quiet and rejoyce our hearts so that wee neede bee no more sad with Hannah 1 Sam. 1.18 nor need we be carefull in any thing but may goe on in our calling in peace Phil. 4.6.7 and may lye downe in peace being assured that now God careth for us knowing that his wisedome truth and power are all set a worke for us And which is more then all which yet hath beene said Prayer is most pleasing to God hee delighteth to heare the voyce of his children It is a more sweet smelling sacrifice then that of incense It maketh way to thanksgiving It is a glorifying of his great name Sith it is the will of God that Vse 4 we should pray all feare of approaching to the throne of his grace may hence be remoued What though God be a God of majestie and thou bee an unworthy person in thy selfe It is no presumption to presse into his presence when hee commandeth this is instead of his scepter of acceptance of thee though no man might come uncalled unto that majesticall Ahashuereth yet any man might come being called nay the Queene was deposed from her place because she came not at his commandement So that it is not presumption to come but rebellion if you come not sith God every where in his word calleth you So that whatsoever thy case be thou maist come with good comfort to God and bee holpen as they say to the blinde man Marke 10.49 Be of good comfort hee calleth thee God calleth you to this duty feare not therefore to goe to God in prayer at any time Objections against prayer answered To this end you must bee able and willing to answer and resist all such objections and discouragements that Satan and your owne heart shall raise against it You may learne how to answer to those objections against the necessity of prayer namely God knoweth what we need and hee hath already decreed what we shall have and many that make no conscience of prayer have more then heart could wish by that which is written before in this doctrine in the third reason taken from the necessity of prayer And for your help I will propound and answer other objections as followeth I am not assured that I am converted Ob. and am the childe of God or that I have the Spirit of God wherefore I think that it belongeth not unto me to pray You are by profession a convert Answ and the childe of God and it may be you have the Spirit of God though yet you do not acknowledge it therefore it belongeth unto you to pray But suppose that you are not converted doth not God command you to convert Ier. 31.18 and turn unto him and finding your inability to turne you should with Ephraim pray saying Turne thou me and I shall bee turned And do you finde the want of the Spirit you should the rather pray for it that God according to his promise may give it Luk. 11.13 Do not say I cannot pray untill God have given me grace and abilitie to pray but having an expresse commandement of God to pray you must set about it assay to pray as well as you can desiring and expecting grace from him to enable you to pray For God doth not usually let us feele the strength of his grace requisite to the performance of a good dutie till that out of conscience of obeying of the command we craving his helpe do set about the doing of it Ob. My sinnes are so many and so great and I have relapsed into such grievous sinnes since I last prayed that I am ashamed and afra●d that I dare not come into the presence of God againe to pray unto him Answ The greater and more hainous your sinnes are the more need you have to come unto God whom by them you have offended to aske of him pardon of them And sith God is onely able to cure and heale your soule there is the more cause that by prayer you should seeke unto him to cleanse you of your sinnes and to give you power against them David doth not say because his sinne was great therefore I dare not pray but therefore prayeth thus Psal 25.11 For thy Names sake O Lord pardon mine iniquity for it is great And is not forgivenesse of sins one of the petitions which Christ hath bid you to make daily when you pray To bee ashamed for your sinne when you come before God is good and argueth that you are the fitter for prayer Ier. 31.19.20 and that you are now a meet object of Gods mercie and compassion but to be ashamed to pray and not to dare to come into Gods presence being by him commanded is a great sinne to be repented of Indeed we should not sinne at all 1. Ioh. 2.1.2 but if any man sinne be his sinnes many or few small or great we have an Advocate with the Father Iesus Christ the righteous and he is the propitiation who hath made satisfaction for and hath covered and done away all our sinnes When you come before God to pray in the name and mediation of Christ God looketh upon your sinnes which you confesse unto him as satisfied for done away in Christ Why then should you be afraid and ashamed to pray unto him Ob. When I should pray I feele my selfe so much straitened so dead and so much indisposed to prayer I want words and matter I can neither begin or at least hold out well in prayer to the end for that I am pestred with so many wandring impertinent and sometimes evill thoughts I cannot remember all the sinnes which I should confesse nor yet all the needfull good things which I should aske I cannot pray in faith but am so full of wavering and doubting that God is not well pleased with my prayer I oft feele my selfe worse rather then better after I have prayed I rise up oft times from prayers heavie and discomforted and I offend so many wayes in prayer that I oft times am readie
and left them in God hath commanded them to pray and so he may doe justly for in Adam they were able to performe it so that if they doe not pray they incurre Gods displeasure and cannot looke to receiue any thing in mercy and with a blessing from the Lord and if they doe pray their prayer is abhominable because they have not Gods Spirit neither can they offer their prayers upon the Altar Christ Iesus by whom onely all prayers are accepted For all that are not indued with his spirit Rom. 8.9 are not his When these aske God regardeth it not Ob. The wicked notwithstanding are in Scripture oft said to pray Answ This is because they utter words of prayer and because sometimes they are heartie and earnest in their desires but these desires are lonely naturall and out of selfe-serving no service of God in his account Ob. If it be said the wicked have had their prayers granted Sol. I answer God heareth prayers two waies in mercy and in wrath Hee may replenish their table whith may bee to them a snare and hee can give them prosperity which will be their ruine Hee giveth it to them many times in wrath as he gave a King to the children of Israel Thus they may see Hos 13.10 that whether they pray or not their case is wofull because they cannot in faith say Our Father Are wicked men then Quest exempted from this duty of prayer By no meanes Answ for prayer is a worship and service of God required in the Commandements and is a duty implanted in nature Were it not better for wicked men not to pray at all Quest sith as hath beene said they cannot pray acceptably and that their prayers are abhominable No for their not praying at all Answ is a greater sinne then to pray in an ill manner All the faults concerning prayer may in a sort be charged upon him that prayeth not at all for hee neither prayeth to the true God nor prayeth good matter nor in a good manner c. A wicked man though he faile much in prayer yet not so much as when hee prayeth not at all It is the note of an Atheist not to pray at all Psal 14.4 Quest What are they to doe doth God cast them upon a necessity of sinne Answ God forbid The wicked themselves while they continue in sinne have put themselves into this straight But there is a way to help all namely to doe as Saint Peter did counsell Simon Magus Act. 8.22 saying repent of this thy wickednesse and pray first repent then pray Isai 1.13.15.16.18 Thus saith God to those for whose wickednesse he said that their incense was an abhomination and that hee would not heare their prayers Wash you make you cleane c. then come and let us reason together c. then come and pray No man then is put upon a necessity of sinne Let the most wicked man in the world be convinced of his sinne let him repent thereof and confesse it let him beleeve in Christ who came into the world to save sinners then he is qualified for prayer and shall be accepted of God when he doth pray Are the prayers of men unregenerate of no use Quest are they not all accepted To this I answer Answ I doubt not but that the prayers of unregenerate men when they are from the heart may in some sort be acceptable so farre forth as thereby to obtaine many good things of God as health deliverance from evils threatned or already afflicted and such like For God that heareth the Ravens when they cry will much rather heare men when they cry though they be not his children But as the prayers of a true childe of God differeth from the prayers of him that is unregenerate so is the acceptance with God also different Their difference shall appeare thus Difference betweene the prayers of the wicked and godly and of their different acceptance First a true childe of God doth in prayer call God Father with faith and holy confidence with the affections of a childe For when hee asketh forgivenesse of his sinne it is with griefe that he hath by his sinne offended his Father and it is with an heartie purpose not to offend him againe Also when he prayeth for health liberty grace or for any other good thing it is with a desire that in the injoyment of them he may the better please and honour his heavenly Father But a wicked man calleth God Father onely for forme and in presumption and hee doth not pray unto him with a childelike but either with a servile affection as a malefactor before a Iudge 1 King 21.27 as Ahab did or with a carnall affection in his desire of the good gifts of God and the good things of this life that therewith he may like those reproved by Saint Iames imploy them for the satisfying of some or other of his lusts Iam. 4.3 Secondly the childe of God prayeth chiefly and most heartily for spirituall things as for faith for forgivenesse of sinnes for holinesse for Gods favour and for those things which concerne Gods kingdome and glory But the unregenerate man prayeth chiefly and most heartily for Corne and Wine for temporall things and it may be for heaven and happinesse with Balaam in generall wishes Numb 23.10 but not particularly and unfainedly for graces whereby he may forsake his beloved sin and may live holily unto the end of his dayes Thirdly the prayers of the godly when they are made in sinceritie are like all other their good workes they have a supernaturall goodnesse in them being the acts of the regenerate part through the spirit and are performed to a supernaturall end But the prayers of the wicked though in some things they are unfained yet at best they are but naturall desires not intended as a service of God but onely as a meanes to serve their own turnes in those things which they know can be obtained by no other meanes Now touching the acceptance of prayers with God Those which his children make though they be not without much imperfection yet because they be the prayers of men reconciled to God by Christ and doe proceed from hearts purified by faith and because they are put up in the name of Christ they become acceptable through him so farre as to procure not onely temporall good things but also such as are spirituall and eternall And these things they obtaine of God as from a loving Father and as a fruit of his speciall promise and out of his speciall grace and love to them in Christ Iesus As for the prayers of the wicked because God and his ordinance of prayer is thereby in some part honoured they are in some part accepted so farre that many times they procure temporall good things but it is onely temporall good things such as are common to the elect and reprobate which hee giveth to them not as a loving Father
give good gifts yea perfect gifts good for matter good for use every way good which none can do but the Father of lights Iam. 1.17 from whom cometh downe every good and euerie perfect gift He must be able to heare all men in all things at once in one the same time else some that pray should be disappointed which were much for the dishonour of him that is called upon By this the Prophet when hee would prove that God onely and not Baal was to be worshipped and prayed unto discovereth Baals insufficiencies 1. King 18.21.27 saying Crie aloud he is a god either he is talking or he is pursuing or in a journey hee sleepeth whence hee evinceth that he was no God nor yet to be worshipped because hee could not do many things at once He must be able to heare and grant requests alwayes He must be able to know the thoughts and hearts of men else how can those bee heard who are not in case to utter a voice else how can the hypocriticall prayers bee discerned from those that be unfained He to whom prayer is made may else be mocked and cousened with counterfeit worship in stead of currant Rom. 1.27 Now God onely knoweth the minde of the spirit as well as the meaning of the voice Solomon speaking to him saith 2 Chron. 6.30 Thou onely knowest the hearts of the children of men Againe he is onely to be paryed unto in whom we may beleeve Ro. 10.14 but we are to beleeve onely in God Lastly if prayers and religious worship might be given to any but God then the holy Angels and holy men were likeliest to partake in that honour but these neither may nor yet would be worshipped Worshipping of Angels is forbidden Col. 2.18 It is against the wils of Angels and Saints for the Angel said to Iohn Rev. 22.9 See thou do it not I am thy fellow servant c. worship God When Cornelius gave Peter too much honour Peter refused it Act. 10.26 saying Stand up I my selfe also am a man When the people would have worshipped Paul and Barnabas because of a miracle that Paul had wrought they forbad them with detestation renting their clothes Act 14.15 and said Sirs why do ye these things we also are men of like passion with you c. These with the rest of the Saints have no lesse zeale for God now they are more holy in heaven then when they carried about with them many imperfections on earth These things considered we may safely conclude that God onely is to be prayed unto Whereas we reade heare Vse 1 there are yet much people both in Asia and America that worship and pray unto the very devill not with inward worship onely for if these onely did so it were happy with many that are called Christians but with outward worship also Though we cannot speake to them to reclaime them of this devillish idolatrie yet in compassion we should speake to God for them that he would please to send the light of his glorious truth and Gospel to discover their sinne unto them and to recover them out of the snare of the devill who holdeth them captive at his will I do urge this the rather because I am perswaded that when all Israel shall be called namely Ezek. 37.16 when the two stickes prophesied of by Ezekiel Iuda and the children of Israel his companions and Ephraim and the children of Israel his companions shall be joyned into one sticke when as the Apostle saith Ro. 11.26 All Israel shall be saved which state of theirs verse 15. he calleth a receiving of life from the dead when this shall come to passe I doubt not but many of those deceived soules which yet never heard of the Gospel except by Papists who make them whō they convert thrice more the children of the devill then before shall have part in the same resurrection let us therefore pray for them Vse 2 The doctrine in hand is a confutation of all Popish praying to the Saints departed as to the virgin Mary and the rest which practise of theirs hath neither precept nor president in the Canon of Scripture I referre them unto the truth before proved which doth as wel discover the contrary falshood as declare it selfe so that I will forbeare answering their weak and frivolous allegations We do them to understand that the Saints do not heare their vocall prayers much lesse their sighs and grones Isa 63 1● For Abraham is ignorant of us saith the Prophet therfore the Church cleaveth onely to God saying Thou O Lord art our Father and doth relye onely on him And the Psalmist knew none in heaven to relie on but God saying Whom have I in heaven but thee Psal 73.25 Ier. 17.5 But cursed be the man that trusteth in man and maketh flesh his arme and whose heart departeth from the Lord. They provide il for themselves which forsake God the fountaine of living water and hew out to themselves broken cisternes that can hold no water Ier. 2.17 into both which evils the Papists fall into by praying to Saints If the Saints did know what they do unto them they would abhorre it as much nay more then Paul and Barnabas did the peoples offering to do sacrifice to them Act. 14.14 when they were upon the earth Vse 3 By this doctrine the practise likewise of many superstitious women is reproved who in travaile of child-birth will call as well if not more upon our Lady then upon God Vse 4 Let al true disciples of Christ make suit only to the true God who is their Father in heaven For it is hee who is the God which heareth prayer Psal 65.2 who can heare all men in all things at all times though they do but sigh out their requests for it is God onely in whom they may beleeve If we had but as true and ardent zeale against idolaters for setting up many gods as the Princes of Darius had hatred against Daniel for serving the true God onely and were as forward to advance God to the highest honour as they were to deifie their King Darius Dan. 6.7 we should wish there were a firme decree That whosoever should aske any petition of any person save of our Father which is in heaven not for the space of thirtie dayes onely but at any time might be made a publicke example by no lesse punishment then to be cast into a denne of Lions Our Father which art in heaven If we consider the parts of this description joyntly wee may observe that our Saviour doth represent God unto the understanding of him that is to pray under such titles and names as were aptest to induce him to pray and might best help his faith in praier Whence learne Doct. 4 In the entrance into prayer God should be represented to the minde and should be called upon by such names titles or descriptions as are
knowledge and care of them above the knowledge and care that Abraham could have of them saying Isa 63.15.16 Doubtlesse thou art our Father though Abraham bee ignorant of us c. Thou ô Lord art our Father our Redeemer thy Name is frō everlasting The Apostle calleth him King eternal 1. Tim. 1.17 immortall invisible only wise God And he doth call Christ who is one with the Father Blessed and onely Potentate the King of kings Lord of lords 1. Tim 6.15.16 who onely hath immortality dwelling in the light which no man can approach unto that is in heaven to whom be glory and power everlasting These places shew plainly that Gods being in heaven doth set out his purenesse of being his soveraigntie his infinite power goodnesse omniscience truth mercie justice and all other his infinite excellencies His dwelling in heaven Reason and declaration of his power from thence both by his word and works of creation preservation and redemption of man do prove that he is God and in these works his majesty power and all other excellencies of God are written in such great letters that any one may runne and reade them How can any thinke of this Vse 1 God and not be ravisht in his soule with a most high admiration of his glorious and most excellent heavenly majestie Likewise it should cause al men to reverence feare love and obey this Almighty this infinitely good and glorious God whose throne is in heaven who is our heavenly Father Also it should cause us to the utmost of our power whensoever we draw neare to him in any of his ordinances to come in sort beseeming his holy and heavenly majestie putting off all earthly mindednesse and putting on of heavenlinesse lifting up our hearts to God in the highest heavens How doth this discover the Vse 2 sinfulnesse of those that call Gods omniscience providence and power or any other his attributes into question as they in the Psalme saying Psal 94.7 The Lord shall not see c. And as those that said Psal 78.19 Can God furnish a table in the wildernesse c. Can he give bread Can he provide flesh for his people The Psalmist calleth these brutish men and foolish and the Lord did shew that he could send them bread and flesh Psa 105.15 Num. 11.33 and withall leannesse into their soules so that they were not better but worse by it And he could furnish a table and also while the meat was in their mouthes he could in his wrath smite the fattest of them Psal 78.31 Make no question therefore what God can do for he can do any thing but this one to deny himselfe and ceasse to be infinite this he cannot do Vse 3 How terrible should the apprehension of Gods heavenly majestie be to all that live in any knowne sinne willingly For they live in the hatred and displeasure of him who shall send his Sonne in the glory of his majestie Mat. 16.27 who shall come in flaming fire to execute vengeance upon all those that know not God 2. Thes 1.8 and obey not the Gospell Mat. 10.28 who is able to destroy both body and soule in hell fire Vse 4 The consideration of the heavenly majestie omnipotencie and all the other most excellent attributes of God as also the consideration of heaven the place of his speciall habitation doth teach us many lessons concerning prayer First that we should not be rash with our mouthes or our hearts hastie to utter any thing before God Eccles 5.2 For God is in heaven we upon earth saith Solomon A man therefore must be considerate and well prepared before he speake unto him according as I have shewed at large page 30. Secondly this invisibility and incomprehensiblenesse of God our heavenly Father doth teach us that he is not imaginable so as to be likened to any visible thing Wherefore he that prayeth must not represent God not so much as in his thought and phantasie much lesse to his eye in the likenesse of a man or of any other creature The Orthodoxe Christians in all times have beene opposite to the making of any image of God the Father Sonne and holy Ghost either severally or of the Trinitie joyntly but especially to the setting up of any image of God in any place where God was to be worshipped knowing that the beholding of the image doth readily and unavoidably beget a false and carnall conceit of God misleading the imagination turning God into an idoll Rom. 1.23 changing the glory of the incomprehensible and incorruptible God into the image of a finite and corruptible man For indeed by reason of mans pronenesse to idolatry and of Satans deceiveable cunning suggestions and instigations as also for that an image cannot possibly set forth the incomprehensible Being and glory of God but yet leaveth a strong impression that God is present in the image and that he is like unto it therefore it is impossible for any man to represent God to himselfe by an image though it be but to put him in remembrance of God but that he shall quickly become an idolater According to the doctrine of our Church namely Idolatry is to images Hom. Tom. 2. pag. 4● especially in Churches an inseparable accident God saith that the children of Israel saw no manner of similitude on the day that he spake to them in Horeb Deut. 4.15 16. c. out of the midst of the fire Isa 40.18 And to whom will you liken God or what likenesse will you compare unto him saith the Spirit by the Prophet Isaiah Wherefore when we pray we must not conceive of him in the likenesse of any thing but as an incomprehensible Spirit Father Sonne and holy Ghost from whom by whō through whom and to whom are all things God blessed for ever one alwayes to be admired and adored but not possible to bee delineated or comprehended by any imagination of man What though God did sometimes manifest his presence by things visible as to Moses in the burning bush Exod. 3.2 Exod. 24.15.16.17 and to the children of Israel in the cloud and in the likenesse of devouring fire Gen. 3.8 1. Sam. 3.4 1 Kin. 19.12 as also he did to Adam to Samuel and to Eliah by the sound of a voice And what though in a mentall vision God appeare as a majesticke * 1. King 22.19 judge sitting upon a throne in such appearances as might set forth to Micaiah Dan. 7.9 to Daniel and to Iohn Rev. 4.2 3 the soveraigntie eternity puritie severitie and all-sufficiencie of God And what though the holy Ghost descended upon Christ like a * Mat. 3.16 Act. 2.3 dove and upon the disciples in cloven tongues like fire These were onely acts of particular dispensation usefull for the present occasiōs but not to be patterns to set forth God thereby for our imitation For notwithstanding that God appeared in divers
humblenesse and submission of minde or griefe and contrition of heart for sinne or fervency or joy hope and confidence in God or the like The knees are bowed and the body prostrate to shew humble submission a sad countenance and teares serve to shew contrition lifting up eyes and hands expresse the lifting up the heart to God in the heavens in hope and confidence of a gracious hearing Salomon stretched out his hands to expresse his earnestnesse and fervency and the publican smote his breast and would not looke up to heaven that hee might signifie his sorrow and the sense of his unworthinesse In publique prayers a man must use such gestures as are prescribed by lawfull authority or if none bee prescribed such as are in common use in the particular Church in which hee doth live they being free from superstition The not observing this rule is the mother and nurse of much variance and sometimes of schismes in the Church of God In private prayer alone every man may use such gestures as his heart doth prompt unto him provided alwayes that they bee decent and beseeming the holy presence of God and the holy action in hand such as may stirre up and continue right affections in him and may also serve to expresse the right disposition of his heart when he prayeth If a man sit giving of thanks at his meat or at other times when hee prayeth being disabled that hee cannot kneele or stand up then for that sitting is not a gesture of reverence it is convenient that with i● hee expresse reverence and devotion in some other gesture or meanes such as is in use and may bee joyned with sitting I will end the answer to this case about gesture in prayer with these cautions That no man please himselfe in his greatest bodily devotion Cautions concerning● gestures in prayer when it is severed from inward truth and devotion of the heart as if God were well pleased with it for that is grosse hypocrisie When a man is disabled that hee cannot kneele or lift up his hands or performe other acts of holy reverence in prayer this must not discourage him nor yet breed a scruple in him whether hee may pray or whether his prayer shall be accepted for as I said gestures are not of the essence of prayer and it is truth in the inward parts which God loveth and accepteth And when a gesture cannot bee used but with paine to the body or to the endangering of health or distraction of the minde in prayer God requireth it not for gestures are then to be used when they do further Mat. 12.7 and not hinder the heart and spirit in Gods service And in this case God preferreth mercy before sacrifice The case touching the place of prayer Fiftly the consideration of Gods heavenly majesty and specialty of glorious residence in heaven doth teach us that prayer may bee made to God in all places all places here below are alike distant from heaven and God can heare as well in one place as in another Wherefore our Saviour breaking downe the partition wall which stood betweene Iew and Gentile saith Iohn 4.21.23 Neither in Ierusalem nor in that Mount as if they should bee more holy places than other should men worship the Father but the houre cometh and now is that the true worshippers should namely in all places worship him in spirit and in truth According to that of the Apostle I will that men pray every where 1 Tim. 2.8 lifting up pure hands without wrath or doubting But is not the Church a better place to pray in Quest and is not God more present there than elsewere and are not private prayers which are made there more acceptable to God than if they were made in other places I answere Answ Papists and popishly affected say so but without good ground But to resolve this case difference must be put between publique prayers and private In the time of the Gospell in the primitive Church while it was under cruell persecution any place agreed upon by the Ministers and people to assemble in for Gods publique worship was a publique place though it were a chamber in a private mans house for for a long time Christians had no other Churches Tertul. Apol cap 39. but common houses But when the Church was at peace houses were built of purpose and dedicated to God for his publique worship which therefore both in borrowed and in proper speech were well called Temples houses of God or Churches Places publique or private are in themselves alike holy and alike fit for prayer respectively namely the publique place for publique and the private place for private prayer For since the death of Christ all religious difference of place is taken away And Gods presence is not tied to one place more than to another Yet because Churches are set apart for Gods service in that respect they are to bee had in speciall esteeme and reverence so as to be wel and sufficiently maintained and repaired and kept comely with all such outward beautie and ornaments as are beseeming the pure worship of God Also they are to be resorted unto by all sorts diligently at times appointed for the publicke worship of God where all are to behave themselves reverently before the Lord And out of the case of necessitie these Churches are to bee imployed onely for religious uses Touching esteeme of Churches a meane must be kept betweene two extreames wee must not prophane them with Atheists nor yet superstitiously idolize them with the Papists When men are not necessarily hindered Churches are to be frequented where publicke prayers may be best made and are like to bee best heard not because the place it selfe hath more holinesse than any other but because God hath in special sort placed his name in those his holy ordinances which there are performed and is there present Mat. 18.20 according to his promise in speciall sort all the while that the congregation and people of God with whom we joyne in the Church are in the act of performance thereof The Apostle had the Church in such esteeme that from the holinesse thereof he endeavoureth to convince the Corinthians of the greater sinne 1. Cor. 11.22 saying Despise ye the Church of God but by Church he meaneth not the place of assembling but the congregation assembled Also it is better to pray in the assembly of the Church because there we have the helpe of the Minister and the examples of others devotions besides that there is an uniting of the desires of many unto God who delighteth in the joynt prayer of many in such assemblies As for private prayer private places not the publicke are fittest for them Therefore our Saviour warned his disciples that they should not like the Pharises make their private prayers in publicke places Mat 6.5.6 as in the Synagogues or corners of the streets but in private as in the closet c. If
but trouble and death Psal 104.29.30 and returning to dust wherefore his kingdome of power is to be desired Whereas it is most generally conceived Ob. that this kingdome of God's providence is f●● to be prayed for because it cannot be resisted and because it shall come certainly I answer Sol. that unto me it seemeth most evident that the divell the prince that ruleth in the aire doth so farre as God doth permit usurpe upon this kingdome of power as well though not so much as upon the kingdome of grace by causing disorder in the course of nature by infecting the aire by ruising tempests by causing of fires whereby hee doth much mischiefe as in Iob's case Iob 1. Hee prevaileth much also in holding many parts of the world in barbarisme And when he cannot hinder the ordinary works of God then hee blindeth the eyes of men that they cannot see God in his workes but maketh them beleeve that all things come from nature fortune or humane policie deposing God as much as he m●● of his regencie in the wor●e And what though this kingdome shall come certainly the kingdome of grace shall come as certainely if wee consider Gods decree and power to execute it Onely I confesse the divell more especially would play rex against the kingdome of grace for which cause it is most especially to bee prayed for Moreover this kingdome of power is yet in comming untill this world shall be dissolved And though this kingdome of power be come in respect of Gods act yet there is but a part of his wayes Iob 26.14 yea but a little part that is heard of him that is come to our knowledge and understanding therefore in this respect prayer must bee made that wee may know his kingdome of power for which we may sanctifie his Name The kingdome of grace must bee desired for these causes Reason First the holinesse of Gods Name in all his attributes doe shew themselves most manifestly in the comming thereof The comming of his word to any man and the worke of conversion by the word doe shew the infinitenesse of his wisedome power mercy justice patience and goodnesse in gathering and saving the elect also his wisedome power hatred of sinne and justice in over mastering sinne Sathan and revenging himselfe upon the disobedient are thereby most manifest Secondly the publishing of the word whereby this kingdome is erected is the meanes of revealing the will of God and of making men able to doe his will Therefore the comming of this kingdome is to be desired Reason The kingdome of glory is to be desired because untill it be come the kingdome of grace is not perfect for while there is need of Ministers and ministery there is still a perfecting of the Saints Eph. 4.12 and the measure of the fulnesse of the stature of the body of Christ is not yet attained unto Besides wee which are now called cannot without those who yet are to be called Heb. 11.40 be made perfect But when the kingdome of glory shall be come we shall all be glorious And then it is 1 Cor. 15.28 when God shall be all in all and bee perfectly glorified Thus it is evident that the kingdome of power grace and glory is to bee desired Before wee can make use of this point it shall be needfull to consider the particulars comprehēded in it to be praied for Concerning the kingdome of power request is first made unto God that he would continue the worke of creation renewing the face of the earth upholding all things by his power ordering all things by his wise providence that all men may see his infinite greatnesse goodnesse and all other his holy excellencies We must likewise deprecate that confusion disorder vanitie and defects of the creatures to which the sin of man hath made them subject Then more particularly prayer must be made for mankinde first that that blessing Be fruitfull and multiply and replenish the earth may bee continued else how can the number of the elect bee made perfect Then prayer must be made that men may be endued with such good gifts of nature as may make them civill and apt for societie and may be able in some measure to hold that dominion over the creatures which once man had that he may subdue them and know the use of them Wherefore also Arts and Sciences are to be desired and for that cause that Schooles and all Nurseries of good learning and profitable knowledge may be erected maintained frequented and be blessed and the rather because these make much as for the good of civil societie so for the building up of the Church and do serve to helpe man more clearly to see God in all things The contrarie to these as depopulation and Barbarisme are to be deprecated The requests to bee made concerning the kingdome of grace do respect first the King then the meanes of setting up and governing this kingdome externall both the ordinances and officers of this kingdome and internall the comming of the holy Ghost Next they respect the subjects Then they respect the enemies Lastly they respect the franchises liberties and priviledges of this kingdome The King of this kingdome of grace as at large is before shewed is Christ Iesus God and man for he saith All power is given to me in heaven and in earth Matth. 28.18 And it is He that must reigne till he hath put al his enemies under his feet 1. Cor. 15.25 Now Christ then reigneth when grace Rom. 5.23 and the gift by grace reigneth unto eternall life wherefore prayer must be made that Christ may reigne that grace may be communicated to the elect and may reigne in them by him and that Satan the Prince of darknesse may not reigne Rō 16.20 but be troden under foot daily The externall meanes of establishing this kingdome are first the ordinances thereof viz. Isa 11.4 2. Thes 2.8 Mat. 1.14 the Word Sacraments and Discipline The Word is the rod and breath of Gods mouth it is the Scepter and Gospell of this kingdome The Sacraments are the seals of the covenant that is passed betweene King and subjects Discipline serveth to reforme or cut off evill members of the Church The kingdome of God is come when his ordinances are set up in any place Luk. 17 21 In which respect he said it was among the Iews Prayer therefore must be made 2. Thes 3.1 that The word of the Lord may have free passage and bee glorified every where among Iews and Gentiles And that meere inventions Doctrines and Traditions of men may be abolished and that all superstition will-worship and false worship Mat. 15.13 everie plant which God hath not planted may bee rooted out Likewise that the two onely Sacraments of the new Testament Baptisme and the Lords Supper 1. Cor. 11 23. may be purely and duely administred according to their first institution And that all corruption of the
duty to pray for Reas 1 the dead as well as the living there would have beene some precept or it would have beene commended in some example in Scripture Wherefore wee may conclude in such a case as this from the silence of Scripture that onely the living not the dead are to be prayed for It is vaine and bootlesse to Reas 2 pray for the dead for either they be carried by the Angels into heaven where they need not our prayers Luk. 16. or else they are throwne into hell the Scripture knoweth no third place out of which our prayers cannot fetch them Eccles 9.10 And there is no repentance or forgivenesse in the grave Vse We are therefore to abhorre and avoid that point of Popery which teacheth praying for the dead yet as absurd and vain as it is that old Poperie which was bred in the bone will not out of the flesh of many Protestants For many will never speake of any departed but with this addition God be with him or Lord have mercie on his soule If ye tell them of this fault they say Better say so than worse and if we do them no good by our prayers wee are sure we do them no harme I answer what necessity is there of praying better or worse for them And grant that your prayers do them no harme I am sure they do them no good But in praying for them you do your selves harme in committing a sinne against God by making a prayer which cannot be a prayer of faith Now he is unwise that will do himselfe harme in any thing wherein he neither pleaseth God nor doth good to his neighbour Our implyeth a plaine acknowledgement and confession of sinne without hiding excusing or extenuating of sinnes Whence this is observable In asking pardon of sinne there Doct. 8 must alwayes be an heartie acknowledgement and confession of sinne When David gave over hiding his iniquitie and said I will confesse my transgressions to the Lord then saith he Thou forgavest the iniquitie of my sin Psal 32.5 We have a large example of his confession of sin originall and actuall Psal 51.3 4 5. Daniel saith We have sinned against thee Dan. 9.8 Heartie confession of sinne Reas 1 giveth glory to God for thereby it is acknowledged that God should have been obeyed this giveth him the glory of his authoritie and soveraigntie Also thereby is acknowledged that Gods Law which is broken is equall holy and good else the act of sinne could not be acknowledged to be a fault Reas 2 A free confession sheweth that a man is ashamed of his sinne and that he is humble and sorie for it and he is hereby capable of forgivenesse whereas when a man hath committed a sinne if he will not confesse it it doth then stand God upon to seek out his proofes and bring him to his triall Reas 3 An unfained confession of sinne argueth a true desire of pardon yea it doth put an edge to desire for when the bed role of many damnable sinnes is laid open to the view of a man it will make him earnest with God as it did Daniel who after his confession is most fervent in prayer saying O Lord heare O Lord forgive O Lord hearken and do deferre not for thine own sake O my God Dan. 9.19 God hath promised to forgive Reas 4 those that confesse their sinne If we confesse our sinnes he is faithfull and just to forgive us our sinnes 1. Ioh. 1.9 It is therefore a great fault Vse 1 not to confesse but to go about to hide sinne from God and a mans owne conscience this doth greatly aggravate sinne This sinne is one of the first sins and one of the commonest sinnes that are amongst the sonnes of men When the devill had drawne Adam and Eve into sinne he knew the best way to keepe them from forgivenesse was to teach them to excuse and extenuate their sinne the man layeth the fault on the woman yea upon God himself Gen. 3. the woman layeth it on the serpent neither of them will take it upon themselves Even so it is with all the children of Adam untill God endue them with a great measure of his grace either they will denie or excuse or extenuate or shift it off imputing their sinne either to their naturall disposition therefore they cannot chuse they must bee borne with or they impute their sinnes to the wickednesse of the times or to their companie or to the deuil when all this while the evill heart which is most in fault is not charged at all with any faultinesse whereas in touch whatsoever was the occasion or whosoever was the entise if the heart yeeld to commit sinnes the sinne is a mans own and must be called as it is in the petition Our debt or my d● It is the extreamest folly 〈◊〉 can be to go about to hide si● for it cannot be hidde from his eyes which seeth all things who will one day when all secrets shall bee made manifest fully discover it It is a fault to commit sinne but it is aggravated when it is not confessed If I covered my transgression as Adam or after the manner of man saith Iob Iob 31.33 and 2. By hiding my sinne in my bosome Then what portion of God is there and what inheritance of the Almightie from on high verse 2. For this is the generall evill which is to be applyed to all the particular sinnes mentioned in that Chapter The hiding of sinne therefore is dangerous according to that saying He that hideth his sinnes shall not prosper Prou. 28.13 Would any man have his Vse 2 sinnes forgiven then let him uncover his sins and lay them open before God in confession that so God may hide and cover them in Christ who is the covering and true propitiation of all our sinnes that through him he may put them out of his remembrance as if they were cast into the bottome of the sea In confession it shall be needfull to observe these rules 1 Confession must be heartie not verball for this is meere hypocrisie 2 It must be voluntarie not constrained and forced as w● that of Pharoahs when Gods terrible judgement being upon him hee said I have sinned against the Lord c. Exod 1● 16 3 It must bee mixed with faith and hope of pardon 〈◊〉 was that of Daniel Dan 9.9 saying 〈◊〉 the Lord our God belong mercies and forgivenesses though we have rebelled against thee It must not be a desperate com●sion like that of Judas Mat. 27 4. sayi● I have sinned in betraying inn●cent bloud 4 It must be with holy affections of griefe godly shame for sinne with contrition and brokennesse of heart with a lothing and detestation of the sinnes confessed and with true humiliation of heart Thus did Ezra confesse saying O God Ezra 9. I am ashamed and blush to lift up my face to thee my God for our iniquities are increased over our heads Thus did the
should bee given but if instead thereof hee shall please to give patience and contentednesse and more and more acquaintance with God and a greater dependance on him If God shall give strength and grace sufficient to beare the crosse and to want the thing desired if God by the want of earthly things teach us to esteeme of and to seeke after the true health riches and liberty of the soule If hereby we bee weaned from this present world and bee more renewed in our mindes and can bee brought to have our conversation more in heaven than otherwise wee should have had if our particular prayer had been granted who can say that God hath not heard him who will not say but that God hath given him more than his requests Moreover God doth give unto his children their requests in the same kind when they think he doth not for many thinke that if they have not humility patience power to resist temptations and to pray with life and fervour as they would and if they feele not that they have faith according to that measure which they desire or if they have not the like measure of faith and of the gift of prayer and of other graces which they conceive to be in other Christians they conclude they have none at all whereas God having at their request given these to them in truth in any measure hee hath heard their prayer and hath granted their requests God never intendeth to give to all men one and the same measure of his saving graces but as hee in the parable gave to some more and to some lesse so doth hee in dispensing of his grace If wee have obtained these graces in truth as we have certainely if we continue to desire them and do desire to grow in them Wee should bee now thankfull for what we have and ready to be glad and more thankfull if wee could have more and wee sholud bee carefull to improve what wee have to the utmost But we must not repine against God for that we have so little nor yet envy others for that they have so much nor yet slander Gods gifts by saying hee hath not heard us or given us such and such graces because hee hath not given us so much grace as hee hath given to others or so much as wee have desired that hee should give to our selves This fault must be amended else know that wee deserve that God should be so farre from giving us more that in his justice he may take away from us even that which wee have The least measure of saving grace which hee giveth to any of his children the graine of mustard seed and that which is called a little strength this deserveth to be acknowledged and to be cherished and untill wee can get more wee should walke and worke and fight in the strenth thereof for this little strength if wee put it forth Revel 3.8 will enable us to keepe Gods word and will keep us that we shall not deny Christs name This small measure of grace will uphold us in state of grace and by the support of the word of Gods grace it will build us up Act. 20.32 and bring us to heaven even to an inheritance among them that are sanctified Fourthly God doth often defer the granting of our prayers this must not be accounted a deniall God deferreth to give the thing asked many times because wee are not sufficiently humbled Iudg. 20.18.23.26 or otherwise fitted for audience Sometimes he deferreth the thing petitioned for the triall and exercise of our faith and patience Mat. 15.22 unto verse 28. and hope for this cause hee deferred the woman of Canaan Sometimes hee doth it to quicken our desires and to make us the more importunate with him Sometimes hee deferreth us that we may be drawne to seek him againe and againe hee loveth to see the faces of his children often which hee should not do if we might speed at the first asking Lastly hee sometimes deferreth to give the thing asked to the end that we might the more esteeme the thing asked after that it is granted and may bee the more thankfull for it For such is our corruption and folly that what is lightly come by is lightly set by and what is easily gotten is quickly forgotten But what we get with many prayers and teares and with much wrastling wee esteeme it the more pretious in it selfe and wee acknowledge our selves the more beholden to him that giveth it Now therefore to conclude this point let none say how can I beleeve that God heareth mee when yet I finde that I have not the thing asked Consider what hath last been written I will only adde this If you have not yet that needfull good thing which you have prayed for yet still you must continue to pray for it For know that Gods promise of hearing and granting is not made to this or that particular prayer but to a constant course of asking God would have us alwayes pray Luk. 18.2.7 againe and againe and not faint therefore Christ saith Mat. 7.7 aske seeke knock then it shall bee given then you shall finde then it shall be opened unto you Vse 2 Wherefore it doth concern all that pray to pray in confidence and in an assured expectation of the things they pray for When in the truth of your soule you have assayed and endevoured to poure out your soule to God in prayer though with much infirmity yet it being put up in the name of Christ to be heard for his sake be sure that you adde this that you doe beleeve that you are heard and beleeve that in the best time and in the best manner your petition shall bee granted beleeve this that you shall have what you asked or which is much better which you should rather have asked There is a necessity of faith in prayer without which wee cannot hope to speed I meane not onely that faith by which wee beleeve that God is Heb. 11 6. and that hee is a diligent rewarder of them that seeke him and whereby we do beleeve in him to salvation Mar. 11.24 but that faith whereby we beleeve that wee shall receive in particular the things which in prayer we doe desire of him Faith in prayer is so necessary that Saint James saith If any man lack wisdome the same may bee said of all other things let him aske of God Iam. 5 6.7 c. But let him aske in faith if he do not let not that man saith hee thinke that hee shall receive any thing of the Lord. If we beleeve we glorify God Ioh. 3.33 and set to our seale that God is true in his promise but if we beleeve not 1 Io. 5.10 we make him a liar and do much dishonour his holy name I confesse that a mans faith and expectation may and must differ in degrees it must bee more or lesse according as the things prayed for are
supplication with thanksgiving let your request be made knowne 〈◊〉 God Then the peace that wee have in God and in the conscience that at Gods command we have commended our cause to God should cause our hearts to rest quiet Thus it was with Hannah after that shee had prayed and by Elies speech had hope to speed it is said she went her way 1 Sa. 1.18 and did eat and drinke and her countenance was no more sad So likewise did David when he had prayed he saith I will both lay me downe Psal 4.8 and sleepe for thou Lord onely makest me to dwell in safety Secondly after wee have prayed we must bee diligent in using all good meanes which God hath appointed for the obtayning thereof We have a president for the using of means after prayer and that according to Gods direction in the example of a good Captaine Cornelius hee had fasted and prayed and as wee may judge by Gods answer hee prayed to be informed in the way of salvation God directed him to the ordinary meanes and he most diligently applyed himselfe unto them as we may read Acts the 10.5.9 and all with most happy successe Thirdly it shall bee good for us after wee have prayed from time to time to looke after our prayers and carefully to observe how they are answered and how God hath granted thē whether in the same particular or some other way either in giving us better things or giving patience and contentment without them or quickning us still to prayer and dependance on him causing as quietly to wait on him till he shall please to bestow them and accordingly wee must acknowledge Gods goodnesse to us with thankfulnesse as David did Psal 86.18.19 saying Verily God hath heard mee hee hath attended in the voyce of my prayer Blessed bee God which which hath in turned away my prayer not in mercy from me If upon observation we do not find our petitions granted then we must consider wherein wee fayled in prayer and amend it but we must not bee discouraged nor suffer our soules to bee too much disquieted we must pray againe and wait Ps 42.11 as David did on God assuring our selves that in his good time hee will heare us and that we shall praise him who is the health of our countenance and our God to whom be praise and glory for ever Amen FINIS A Table of the principall things contained in this Booke ASSurance of pardon of sinne to be desired 438. 442. How to be assured that our prayers are heard 753 What is to bee done if a man cannot assure himselfe that his prayer is heard 754 Of what things onely God is the Author 590 A large acquitting of God from being an Author of sinne though it be by his permission though he lead into temptation 576. c. All things are not common amongst Christians 388 In asking forgivenesse a man must confes his sins unto God 477 The properties of confessing sinnes aright 482 In what case a man may do contrary to scruple of conscience 71 Sinne doth cast men into the greatest debt 484 Difference betweene naturall and spirituall desires 5 After a man hath sought the things that concerne God he may desire those which concerne his owne good 327 Desires of temporall things are to be confined to the present day 363 The desires of the things of this life must be moderate 389 All divine properties in God are everlasting 710 What is meant by Evill in the last Petition 518 What it is to be delivered from Evill 521 Sinne is the Evill the worst of all evils 673 The best examples are to bee propounded for imitation 301 How far Christs example doth binde to imitation 8 Primary faith justifieth Secondary faith giveth assurance of Iustification 419. 420 All true Christians have the Lord of heaven and earth to their Father 138 What is meant by Forgive 403. c. Jt concerneth all to desire Forgivenesse 437 Motives inducing to aske Forgivenesse 446 It is God onely that forgiveth sinnes 447 Danger of deferring to aske forgivenesse 466 We must pray that others sins may be forgiven as well as our owne 470 Forgivenesse of sinne is to bee asked for the living not for the dead 475 Jn asking Forgivenesse it is good that a man expresse upon what grounds hee doth aske and expect forgivenesse 494 Who so would have God to forgive them they must forgive others 496 Cautions concerning gestures in prayer 161 Rules concerning gestures in prayer 162 God is an heavenly Majestie infinite in al holy excellēcies 146 God is not to be represented by an Image or under the likenesse of any creature 129. 151 The glory of Gods holy name must bee the chiefest of every christian mans desire and indeavour 196 Governours of Families must teach those that are of their charge the principles of religion 10 Motives to hallow Gods name 214 Jt must be every mans desire to be holy in this life 533 Reasons why we should be holy 540 Motives to holinesse 550 Meanes to be holy 556 We must desire that others may be holy as wel as our selves 621 Holinesse is of Gods free grace not of mans free will 557 Holinesse is the highest title of honour that can be given to any person 217 Justification freeth a man from the guilt and punishment of sin 457 Men already justified must yet aske forgivenesse every day 462 Who so is justified must be beholding to God for forgivenes of all his sins as well as of any 492 What is meant by Gods Kingdome in the second Petition 213. c. Of Christs Kingdome and the government thereof 228 Christs delivering up the kingdome to the Father and his being subject to him is no diminution of his glory 239. c. All Christians must unfainedly desire the comming of Gods Kingdome 248 In what cases man may goe to law and how 531 A man should desire to live upon his own maintenance 378 The enjoying things needfull for this life are of God 341. 342 What is to be held needfull 392 In heaven is all perfect obedience 298 Though Christians cannot be perfect in this life yet they must ayme at perfection 312 Meanes of growing towards perfection 314 What it is to pray 4 Preparation to prayer needful 30 A twofold preparation to prayer 32 What preparation is requisite 37 Requisites in prayer 33 Jt is every ones duty to pray 40 The use of Prayer though God have no need to be thereby informed 44 Causes of mens slacknesse in Prayer 51. 53 Motives to Prayer 55 c. Objections against Prayer answered 60 c. The Lords Prayer may be used and is to be used as a Prayer 72 Set Prayers are lawfull 73 All Prayers are to bee made according to the patterne of the Lords Prayer 79 He that would make a prayer every way acceptable must bee Gods childe 93 Though the Prayers of the wicked be abhominable yet they are not exempted from the dutie of
any object Ob. God saith that his house shall bee called the house of prayer to all people Isa 56.7 and the Saints in the old Testament made their private prayers at the Tabernacle and afterwards at the Temple I answer Answ As concerning the Iews it was most true of the material Tēple in which it was lawfull for none but Iews and Prosylites to pray and of them it is literally understood but it was not in that sense called an house of prayer to all people for the converted Act. 21.28 Gentiles were never suffered so much as to come into their materiall Temple at Ierusalem But it is called an house of prayer to them by way of type or shadow Zeph. 2.11 Mal 1.11 because it did typically import that in the Church of Christ as well Gentiles as Iewes the vaile of the Temple being rent should have accesse to God by Christ who was the true Temple and that in all places to pray unto him We must not attribute like holinesse to our Churches which are onely as the Iewes Synagogues as the Iews did to the Sanctuarie and Temple For God had in them placed visible representations of his presence namely the Arke and the Propitiatory or Mercie-seat and had by Moses said Exo. 10.24 that hee would bee present in everie place where he should place his Name wherefore he dwelt in special sort betweene the Cherubims over the Mercie-seat And that place was so holy by reason of the Altar Mercy-seat and other things which typified Christ that no sacrifice was to be offered ordinarily but at the Temple Wherefore it was a place not onely of publicke 2 Chron. 7.15.16 but also of private prayer and that by particular institution Therefore those which could not come to Ierusalem were when they prayed to looke towards the Temple 2 Chron. 6.38 and those that could come to the Temple were to look towards the propitiatorie in the Sanctum sanctorum Psal 28.2 Thereby typifying that they were to looke unto and to looke for Christ Iesus the Messias the true Temple Altar and Propitiatory to come in the tabernacle of his flesh that by him their persons and prayers might be accepted Christ being come in the flesh and the Temple at Ierusalem being demolished God hath not now sanctified any place more than other whereunto he hath tyed his presence in such sort as he did unto the Temple Wherfore we have not in our Churches neither must wee have unlesse we will bee Iewishly-Popish any such permanent signes of Gods presence For God hath made us no such promise of his presence in such signes Mat. 18.10 Mat. 28.20 onely we have his promise of his presence to his ordinances when we are in the act of publicke prayer and in the reading and preaching of the Word and in administring of the Sacraments which speciall presence continueth onely the time of his divine services and when they cease it ceaseth Quest Are we not bound in conscience to fall downe unto our private prayer whensoever we come into a Church There is no commandment of God for it Answ nor yet that I know of any constitution of the Church for it wherefore the conscience is no way bound to it But may we not at all make our private prayers in the Church Quest When the Church is to you as a private place as when you are alone there you may Answ And I doubt not but that you may also when others are there except when the congregation is joyned in publicke worship so be you do it not to be seene of men Mat 6.5 or not out of an opinion of such an holinesse of the place as tyeth Gods more speciall presence unto it even to the materiall fabricke of it without relation to his publicke worship But while the Minister and people are in any part of Gods publicke worship all present both by the lawes of God and by the doctrine and constitutions of our Church should forbeare their private devotions and should be busied onely in quiet attendance to heare marke and understand that which is read preached or ministred ioyning together in that common worship That with one spirit Rom. 15.6 and one mouth they may glorifie God Which thing they are held not to do Hom of the right use of the Church pag. 8. that under any pretence of devotion shall pray privately in the time of any part of common prayer except onely by secret ejaculations Now whether wee should pray in the Church or out of the Church looking rather to the East than to any other quarter the Gospell hath left us free as to pray in all places so to place our bodies as occasion serveth and as will stand with decencie and conveniencie of the action For as in point of Religion it is not now materiall which way Churches do stand so be it they be made fit to receive the congregation so it is no matter to be stood upon which way we turne our selves when wee pray if our hearts be lift up to our Father which is in heaven Ezek. 8.16 to Christ our true propitiatory whom the heavens do and must receive untill the times of the restitution of all things by whom we have accesse to the Father Wee reade of Idolaters that were blamed who worshipped the Sunne with their faces towards the East but we do not reade in Scripture any thing at all from whence we may so much as probably conjecture that wee ought to pray rather towards the East than towards any other quarter of the heavens It is dangerous to place religion and holinesse either in gestures places or any other actions which have not religion put into them by Gods institution albeit they may have a great shew of devotion or may have the authoritie and countenance of ancient tradition For though the things in themselves may be thought to be no great matter yet to put holinesse in them is no small sinne and is of very ill consequence Our Saviour else would not so vehemently have enveighed against the Pharises and Iewes for putting holinesse in washing of hands and cups Mark 7.1 to the 14. and such like things The evils which by little and little have beene bred and nursed hereby are neglect of some or other of Gods commandements also hypocrisie grosse superstition and idolatry as any may observe partly by the practice of the Pharises and partly the rise and growth of Poperie Touching these and the like things in themselves indifferent the Church and supreame authoritie may for order and decencie in Gods publick worship appoint what they judge fittest to which all under their authoritie must submit but observing them still as things in themselves indifferent and without ensnaring the conscience with an opinion of holinesse in them Sixthly the consideration of Gods heavenly majestie and being in heaven may teach us that Whether a man pray with a voyce or without voyce God
can heare the one as well as the other How farre forth then is a man to use a voyce in prayer Quest Voyce is not of the essence of prayer Answ The case of using a voyce or no voyce in prayer therefore it is not alwayes needfull to be used as in short ejaculations and when a man is speechlesse or when he cannot bee so private that he may conveniently do it or when a man findeth that hee can keepe his minde alike earnestly attentive and rightly affected in prayer without voyce But a voyce is needfull both in publicke and private when a man is the mouth of others that joyne with him in prayer And when a man prayeth alone it is also fit and usefull For God hath made the tongue an apt instrument to expresse the meaning of the heart and with it also we ought to serve and glorifie God And voyce is a good helpe in prayer For a mans owne voyce is heard of himselfe and is reciprocall upon a mans selfe and serveth both to keepe the heart and thoughts from scattering keeping the heart more close to the present businesse and causing him the sooner to take himselfe in the manner and to checke himselfe when his thoughts do stragle As also the voyce serveth to stirre up to continue and to inflame the spirit and affections of him that prayeth But use speech in private prayer with these cautions Cautions touching using of voice in private prayer First you must not thinke that God heareth prayers the sooner or the rather because of speech Secondly that you do it not to be heard of men that it might bee knowne that you pray in private as well as in publicke Thirdly you are not to speak aloud in private prayer to the offence of those who are so neare that they cannot but heare you yet cannot joyne with you in your prayer This Doctrine yeeldeth also Vse 5 unto beleevers plenty of al heavenly comforts Our Father is in heaven therefore hee can heare in every place we need not tyre our selves in going on pilgrimage to any place to seek him for if we can but enter into our hearts lift them up to heaven we shall finde him He also knoweth all things which we need Mat. 6.32 1. Sam. 14. It is not hard for him to helpe with little or no earthly power He is wisedome and knoweth perfectly what is best and when it is best to helpe his children Many parents would do their children good but either want wisedome know not how or want power and are not able But God is both able and knoweth how and he will do his children good for his love to them is more than naturall it is an heavenly therefore an infinite and everlasting love He hath promised never to leave us now his truth is an heavenly perfect truth it cannot be falsified It is not hardnesse of our hearts nor multitude or greatnesse of our sinnes can hinder our happinesse if we will not wilfully reject his grace through our unbeleefe if we will repaire to him and repose our trust in him For as the Apostle saith Rom. 11.23 He is able to graft in againe the hard hearted Iews he can pardon ten thousand talents as wel as one peny and can as easily say Mat. 9.2.5 All sinnes are forgiven as to say Rise and walke Mic. 7.18.19 We can say Our Father is an heavenly Father and who is a God like our God that pardoneth iniquity transgression and sinne that subdueth all our iniquities and will cast all our sinnes into the depth of the sea It is not with God as with man man cannot helpe all his children at once God can be they never so many and never so farre distant Earthly parents may be drawn drie when they have given portions and inheritances to many they have none for the rest as Isaac when he had blessed Iacob Gen. 27.36.38 he had no such blessing for Esau so that hee cryed Hast thou but one blessing O my father God hath mansions and a kingdome for every one of his Ioh. 14.2 his custome is not that one sonne or that sonnes onely should inherit his kingdome but both sonnes and daughters do all of them inherit for our Father is an heavenly Father Also this consideration of the heavenly majestie and power of God added to the consideration of his fatherhood doth give us assurance of hope that we shall have all the petitions which we aske according to his will For as he is almightie hee can do whatsoever he is willing to do as he is a Father Lastly is our Father an heavenly Father then wee can assure our selves that hereafter we shall in our measure partake of his heaven and of his holines and of his glory For after death when we awake we shall bee received into heaven where we shall ever be with the Lord and be filled with his likenesse Psal 17.15 and hee who now by his heavenly wisedome doth guide us with his counsell shall receive us into glorie where we shall see him as he is and ever remaine in his presence where are pleasures for evermore For as we have borne the image of the earthy 1. Cor. 15.49 wee shall also beare the image of the heavenly Of this we need not doubt for our Father is heavenly therefore the children must needs be heavenly Thus much of the Invocation and calling upon him to whom onely prayer may bee made The petitions follow The petitions do contain the matter of all lawfull requests They may be divided differently according unto such different respects as may be conceived of them First if wee respect the number there are sixe distinct petitions and no more I confesse Divines of good antiquity have reckoned seven making two of the last others of no lesse authority have not regarded the number at all Some of the ancient and most of the orthodox later Writers have reckoned but six and as I thinke upon good ground All agree in the five first all the question is about the sixth whether it bee one or two Now because the subject of both sentences in that petition is all one scil sanctification and the conjunction but knitteth Lead us not into temptation and deliver us from evill together into one sentence it is more than probable that is but one petition But whether there be six or seven it is no matter of our faith and doth not deserve any heat of disputation to decide the controversie Secondly if we respect the different persons whom the matter of the petitions concern they are thus divided the three first concerne God only for we say Thy Name thy kingdome thy will c. The three last concern man for wee say Our bread our sinnes lead us not deliver us Thirdly if wee respect that which ought to bee the chiefe end of every mans desire and the meanes to compasse the said end they have this order and are