Selected quad for the lemma: heaven_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
heaven_n pray_v prayer_n saint_n 5,346 5 6.7276 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
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

There are 19 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

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
prayer 99 Wicked mens Prayers are not altogether in vaine though not altogether accepted 101 Difference in the Prayers of the wicked and godly and difference in their acceptance 102 All that would pray acceptably must be in charity with their neighbours 109 Prayer is to be made onely to the true God 113 In the entrance into Prayer a man must represent God to his mind under such titles names as are aptest to induce him to pray and as may best helpe his faith in prayer 122 In Prayer God is to be conceived of in the distinction of Persons 125 Prayer ordinarily is to be directed to the Father in the name of the Sonne by the holy Ghost 133. 134 We must not be rash in Prayer 150 Man must not needlesly multiply words in Prayer 157 In what cases long Prayers may be made in what not 158 Prayer must be made with holy devotion 160 Prayer may be made to God in all places 166 Publike places fittest for publike Prayer 168 Private places fittest for private Prayer 171 Prayer may bee made with voice or without voyce 179 How farre a voyce is fittest to be used in Prayer 180 Cautions in using voyce in private Prayer 181 When and how a man may pray against others 268 Bodily welfare is to be prayed for both for our selves and others 330. 353 Prayers are to be made daily 373 How oft we must pray 376 Prayers for things of this life should be lesse insisted upon then those that concerne the life of grace and glory 398 How spirituall and temporall things are to be prayed for and how the granting of them is to be expected 749. 750 With Prayer praise thanks must be joyned 691 Prayer must bee made with understanding 716 The minde and heart must joyne in prayer 719 There must bee an holy fervour in Prayer 724 When a man hath prayed he must expect to have the things prayed for 727 It is a difficult thing to pray aright 756 Meanes to strengthen faith in Prayer 760 What a man must do after he hath endevoured to pray aright 764 God would have his children utter to him Reasons grounds why they aske and expect the things for which they pray 685 When men are fallen into Sin it must be their prayer and ca●● to get out by Repentance 6●● The properties of sound Repentance 671 How Saints departed and Angels in heaven are to be honoured by men on earth 305 Salvation is of the free grace of God 451 How a man may prevent Gods giving of him over to sinne 616 Of the kindes of Temptation 510 What a good Temptation is 510 What an evill Temptation is 511 How farre God hath to do in evill Temptations 513 What is properly to tempt to sinne 516 God hath an holy hand in the Temptations sins of men 571 The best are subject to Temptations 633 Who so would bee kept from sinne must resist it in the Temptation 644 How Temptations to sinne are pressed by tempters and how resisted by the tempted 652. 678 It must bee every Christians desire that Gods will be obeyed 285 The chiefe heads to which Gods revealed Will may be reduced 287 Disswasives from disobedience to Gods Will. 28● Motives to obedience to God● Will. 29● Meanes to enable us to 〈◊〉 Gods Will. 29● We must desire that Gods Wi●● be done in an holy manner 30● What is requisite in the right manner of doing Gods Will. 307 Errata Page 6 line 5. reade from p. 34 l 4 r. conceiving him p. 243. l. 6. r. rendition p. 274 l 18. 19. r. considered p. 277. l. 9. r come p. 301. l. 24. r. shall p. 322● l. 12. r. proprietie p. 396. l. 17. r. Th●● they p. 396. l. 19. r. That they p. 43● l. 27. r. unto the. p. 445. l. 26. r use p. ●●● l. 3. r. unto his p. 656 l. 24. r. resist FINIS
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
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
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
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
obstinate to instruct his wife children and servants Gen. 9.27 But the Lord must perswade else words are but winde It concerneth all children Vse 6 and servants to consider what charge God hath laid upon their Governours learning thereby that it is as well Gods will that all under houshold governement should suffer themselves to be taught as that any householders should teach You must therefore willingly be present at times appointed to catechise or to talke of good things and being present attend and learn with all diligence yea sometimes give the father or master occasion to teach you by asking some good question as the Disciples did aske Christ saying What might this parable be Luke 8.9 and by moving him as the Disciple which said Lord teach us to pray Luke 11.1 And when you have received instruction of father or mother forsake it not for they will make you beautifull before God Pro. 1.9 being ornaments of grace to your heads and chaines about your neckes But if you be stubborne and will not bee taught by them then know that as he that will not eate is a murtherer of his body so are yee that refuse instruction murtherers of your soules for the eare that heareth the reproofe of life abideth among the wise Pro. 15.31.32 he that refuseth instruction despiseth his owne soule Therefore Our Saviour inferreth this exhortation to pray aright upon consideration that many prayed amisse whence learne Doct. 2 The more subject any duty is to be performed amisse there is the more cause that Christians doe learne and indeavour to performe it aright The more waies a good duty may be ill done the more care should be had how it may be well done Vpon this very ground the Lord directeth his Disciples to the right manner of giving almes verse 2. and of fasting verse 16. c. Our Saviour reasoneth in like manner for hearing the word aright that because many heard amisse scil some received the word as the high way doth seed not understanding what they heard some as the stonie ground the word tooke not deepe root some as the thorny ground they gave entertainement to worldly cares and pleasures together with the word and so all three sorts became fruitlesse Take heed therfore how you heare saith our Saviour Luk. 8.18 For to the pleasing of God Reason it is not enough that the matter of the thing done be good but the manner how Bonum consistit ex causis integris and the end why and all circumstances in the doing it must be good also so that failing but in one thing doth marre the action Man is subject to faile in prayer many waies Now if there be many by-waies man is in more danger of going out of his way then if there were but one And as mans nature is prone to erre and take the worst so Satan is very cunning and diligent by setting goodly apparences upon by-waies to cause man to mistake the right Wherefore the more subject man is to runne out into by-waies the more heed he should take that he doe not goe aside out of the right way of serving the Lord. Vse 1 Hereby is reproved the rashnesse of many who will rush headily into a religious exercise as into prayer preaching hearing the word receiving the Sacrament fasting c. and never looke to the right manner as if there were no way but one and that they could not doe amisse though they never wash their hands from filthinesse nor hearts from wickednesse nor yet so much as thinke before hand how they may bee rightly performed whereas they may and doe faile many waies Thus these good workes being ill done become so abhominable unto God that he saith Isa 1.12.14 Who requireth this at your hands my soule hateth them I am weary to beare them It therefore behoveth all Vse 2 that would serve God in sinceritie to bee very circumspect taking heed how they pray how they heare the word and how they performe all other exercises of religion for they may be and are performed by many in a very sinfull manner Salomons counsell should alwaies be sounding in our eares whensoever we begin any service of God Eccl 5 1.2 Keepe thy foote when thou goest to the house of God c. Be not rash with thy mouth and let not thine heart be hastie to utter any thing before God That we may the better observe this counsell sith it concerneth a preparing a mans self before he speake unto God I will shew first whether preperation be needfull Secondly what that preparation is Preparation to prayer needfull Iob 11.13 First know that preparation to prayer is needfull according to that in Iob If thou prepare thine heart and stretch out thine hands towards him c. Thou wilt prepare their heart saith the Psalmist and wilt cause thine eare to heare Psal 10.17 My heart is prepared O God Psal 57.7 my heart is prepared saith he I will sing and give praise The very first words of the Lords Prayer teaching us to begin with Our Father which art in heaven doe argue that wee should have our spirits composed and our whole man rightly disposed unto this holy duty For first God before whom Reason why a man should be p●epared before he pray Eccles 5.2 H●b 1.13 and to whom we speake is a great God of glorious majestie and God as Salomon reasoneth is in heaven wee on earth He is most holy of purer eyes then to behold uncleanenesse Levit. 10.3 He will be sanctified in all that draw neere unto him to offer this sweet incense of prayer If we doe not sanctifie him by an holy performance of his service hee will be sanctified him selfe upon us in the just punishment of our hypocrisie superstition or prophanenesse Besides God to whom wee pray is privy to all our behaviour yea to the most secret intentions and dispositions of our hearts It concerneth us therefore that wee be prepared to come before him in sort as beseemeth the presence of his holy Majesty Were we admitted to speake to an e●●thly King we would before 〈◊〉 prepare both what and how 〈◊〉 speake and how to demeane our selves in his presence much more then ought we the King of Kings not onely admitting but graciously inviting us to pray unto him Secondly prayer is a most excellent and a most holy worke of the greatest consequence that can concerne man and of great difficulty to be performed aright I come now to the second case to shew what this preparation unto prayer is This preparation is twofold A twofold preparation to prayer The one generall to be made before hand inabling and fitting a man to pray in an instant whensoever he shall be moved to pray The other preparation is particular and to be made immediately before prayer that it may the better be performed Vnto that generall preparation is required that a man be indued with the spirit
to 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
and left them in God hath commanded them to pray and so he may doe justly for in Adam they were able to performe it so that if they doe not pray they incurre Gods displeasure and cannot looke to receiue any thing in mercy and with a blessing from the Lord and if they doe pray their prayer is abhominable because they have not Gods Spirit neither can they offer their prayers upon the Altar Christ Iesus by whom onely all prayers are accepted For all that are not indued with his spirit Rom. 8.9 are not his When these aske God regardeth it not Ob. The wicked notwithstanding are in Scripture oft said to pray Answ This is because they utter words of prayer and because sometimes they are heartie and earnest in their desires but these desires are lonely naturall and out of selfe-serving no service of God in his account Ob. If it be said the wicked have had their prayers granted Sol. I answer God heareth prayers two waies in mercy and in wrath Hee may replenish their table whith may bee to them a snare and hee can give them prosperity which will be their ruine Hee giveth it to them many times in wrath as he gave a King to the children of Israel Thus they may see Hos 13.10 that whether they pray or not their case is wofull because they cannot in faith say Our Father Are wicked men then Quest exempted from this duty of prayer By no meanes Answ for prayer is a worship and service of God required in the Commandements and is a duty implanted in nature Were it not better for wicked men not to pray at all Quest sith as hath beene said they cannot pray acceptably and that their prayers are abhominable No for their not praying at all Answ is a greater sinne then to pray in an ill manner All the faults concerning prayer may in a sort be charged upon him that prayeth not at all for hee neither prayeth to the true God nor prayeth good matter nor in a good manner c. A wicked man though he faile much in prayer yet not so much as when hee prayeth not at all It is the note of an Atheist not to pray at all Psal 14.4 Quest What are they to doe doth God cast them upon a necessity of sinne Answ God forbid The wicked themselves while they continue in sinne have put themselves into this straight But there is a way to help all namely to doe as Saint Peter did counsell Simon Magus Act. 8.22 saying repent of this thy wickednesse and pray first repent then pray Isai 1.13.15.16.18 Thus saith God to those for whose wickednesse he said that their incense was an abhomination and that hee would not heare their prayers Wash you make you cleane c. then come and let us reason together c. then come and pray No man then is put upon a necessity of sinne Let the most wicked man in the world be convinced of his sinne let him repent thereof and confesse it let him beleeve in Christ who came into the world to save sinners then he is qualified for prayer and shall be accepted of God when he doth pray Are the prayers of men unregenerate of no use Quest are they not all accepted To this I answer Answ I doubt not but that the prayers of unregenerate men when they are from the heart may in some sort be acceptable so farre forth as thereby to obtaine many good things of God as health deliverance from evils threatned or already afflicted and such like For God that heareth the Ravens when they cry will much rather heare men when they cry though they be not his children But as the prayers of a true childe of God differeth from the prayers of him that is unregenerate so is the acceptance with God also different Their difference shall appeare thus Difference betweene the prayers of the wicked and godly and of their different acceptance First a true childe of God doth in prayer call God Father with faith and holy confidence with the affections of a childe For when hee asketh forgivenesse of his sinne it is with griefe that he hath by his sinne offended his Father and it is with an heartie purpose not to offend him againe Also when he prayeth for health liberty grace or for any other good thing it is with a desire that in the injoyment of them he may the better please and honour his heavenly Father But a wicked man calleth God Father onely for forme and in presumption and hee doth not pray unto him with a childelike but either with a servile affection as a malefactor before a Iudge 1 King 21.27 as Ahab did or with a carnall affection in his desire of the good gifts of God and the good things of this life that therewith he may like those reproved by Saint Iames imploy them for the satisfying of some or other of his lusts Iam. 4.3 Secondly the childe of God prayeth chiefly and most heartily for spirituall things as for faith for forgivenesse of sinnes for holinesse for Gods favour and for those things which concerne Gods kingdome and glory But the unregenerate man prayeth chiefly and most heartily for Corne and Wine for temporall things and it may be for heaven and happinesse with Balaam in generall wishes Numb 23.10 but not particularly and unfainedly for graces whereby he may forsake his beloved sin and may live holily unto the end of his dayes Thirdly the prayers of the godly when they are made in sinceritie are like all other their good workes they have a supernaturall goodnesse in them being the acts of the regenerate part through the spirit and are performed to a supernaturall end But the prayers of the wicked though in some things they are unfained yet at best they are but naturall desires not intended as a service of God but onely as a meanes to serve their own turnes in those things which they know can be obtained by no other meanes Now touching the acceptance of prayers with God Those which his children make though they be not without much imperfection yet because they be the prayers of men reconciled to God by Christ and doe proceed from hearts purified by faith and because they are put up in the name of Christ they become acceptable through him so farre as to procure not onely temporall good things but also such as are spirituall and eternall And these things they obtaine of God as from a loving Father and as a fruit of his speciall promise and out of his speciall grace and love to them in Christ Iesus As for the prayers of the wicked because God and his ordinance of prayer is thereby in some part honoured they are in some part accepted so farre that many times they procure temporall good things but it is onely temporall good things such as are common to the elect and reprobate which hee giveth to them not as a loving Father
but as a rich and bountifull Lord to his creature making his Sunne to rise on the evill and good Mat. 5.45 and sending the raine as well upon the unjust as upon the just These things God in his wise providence bestoweth upon wicked men knowing how to make use of them in humane society both in Church and Common-weale winning thereby to himselfe the glory of his patience and bounty drawing some to an admiration of his goodnesse leading some to repentance and leaving others without excuse at the day of iudgement Vse 2 Would any bee capable of making use of this invaluable benefit of praying acceptably unto God be they exhorted first to use all such meanes as God hath appointed by which they may be made the children of God by faith in Christ Iesus Gal. 3.26 Rom. 10.14.17 as hearing the word preached prayer c. then they must get good evidence that they are in state of grace and then be exhorted to come as children ought to come into the presence of so holy a Father putting off every sinne that may offend him putting on every grace that may delight him regard not iniquity in your heart cleanse your hearts and wash your hands in innocencie lift up pure hands without doubting pray in humilitie for with such sacrifice your Father is well pleased he will not despise such for God hath promised saying If my people that are called by my Name Psal 51 17 shall humble themselves and pray and seeke my face and turne from their wicked wayes then will I heare from heaven and will forgive their sinne and will heale their land 2 Chron. 7.14 Vse 3 All that with good assurance of faith can call God their Father may rejoyce in this that they are of the number of those who may improve this priviledge of praying unto God they are sure if they come not in their sinnes to speed For Iohn saith Whatsoeuer we aske we that is the children of God receive of him because we keepe his commandements and doe those things that are pleasing in his sight 1 Ioh. 3.22 Our doth note also that communion which Christians have one with another in one Father therefore even when they were to pray to God in the closet they were to represent God to their mindes in a notion which hath reference to their brethren as well as to themselves whence wee may collect Doct. All that would pray acceptably must hold a communion and good agreement with their brethren as those that have one common father to them all If a man had not beene in charitie with his brother and held not good agreement with him he was not to offer his sacrifice untill he had reconciled himselfe to his brother Mat. 5.33 The Apostle requireth that men lift up holy hands without wrath 1. Tim. 2.8 Therefore Peter would have all love exercised betweene man and wife that their prayers be not hindered 1. Pet. 3.7 For this common interest Reason 1 which Christians have in God maketh them neare of bloud as we speake having all one Spirit one hope one Lord one faith one Baptisme one God and Father of all Ephes 4.4 5 6. If men do not hold peace Reason 2 and communion with their brethren they cannot come in assurance that they themselves are Gods children for by their love to their brethren they may know whether they be beloved of God or no and may assure their hearts that their prayers shall be heard 1. Ioh 3 19.22 If they love not their brethren they remaine in death 1. Iohn 3.14 Vse 1 Here all proud scornful persons that because of parentage wit wealth or some such complement of nature do disdaine their poorer and meaner brethren may see how much they forget themselves have they not one Father if God be their Father The Prophet Malachy reproveth those which deale not well with their brethren Mal. 2.10 saying Have we not all one Father There are too many of this sort which will hypocritically say Our Father and yet scorne to have any communion with his children Yea the more they approve themselves to be Gods by holinesse of life the more they hate them and reproachfully use them and wish all evil unto them If these thinke they have God to their Father they must know that as the Apostle Iohn speaketh they are liers 1. Ioh. 4.20 because they love not their brethren What may be thought of those tongues that can blesse God and call him Father and yet curse and raile upon those which beare the true image of the same Father These things ought not so to be my brethrē saith Iames 3.9 10. Hereby all that call God Father Vse 2 should enforce upon thēselves the dutie of love and friendship to their neighbours holding with them the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace Ephes 4.3.4.5.6 because the whole bodie is but one the Spirit one c. and one Father of all we must endeavour therefore to bee one in judgement and one in affection that there be no schismes and divisions amongst us Let us love heartily without putting difference in respect of persons for which fault the Iewes are blamed by Iames Iam. 2.4.1 Cor. 11.22.30 and the Corinthians were severely punished by the Lord. Wherefore whensoever we come to God let us come in love to our brethren For how can we looke our Father in the face and expect good things at his hand when he knoweth that there are jarres and falling out betweene us and his other children our brethren Father which art in heaven I will first consider the whole description of him that is to be prayed unto and then come to the severall parts thereof This description can be true of none but of God We have fathers on earth and friends in heaven but no father in heaven or heavenly father but the true God It followeth therefore Prayer is to be made to the Doct. 3 true God And because prayer is a religious worship which must bee given to none but God I adde this Prayer is to be made onely to God Offer to God thanksgiving and Call upon me in the day of trouble saith God Psal 50.14 15. The Angell which had the everlasting Gospell to preach to them that were on the earth who went before the Angel which foretold the fall of Poperie saith Feare God c. and worship him that made heaven and earth Revel 14.7 Our Saviour saith expresly Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God and him onely shalt thou serve Mat. 4.10 He to whom prayer may be made Reason must have those all-sufficiencies which are to be found onely in the eternal and infinite God First he must be able to heare all men therfore Iames biddeth us aske of God Iam 1.5 that giveth to all men He must be able to give all things 1. Ioh. 5.14 If we aske any thing according to his will he heareth us He must be able to
fashions to the Patriarches before the Law yea the second person in Trinity appeared to Abraham Gen. 18.1.3.22 Gen. 32 24. and to Iacob in shape of a man yet in the * Deu. 4.16 law God expresly forbiddeth the representing of him by any similitude whether of man or of any other thing Wherefore neither can any act of Gods particular dispensation in his apparitions to man since the Law bee a dispensation to us who are bound to keepe the Law For it is our duty to obey Gods Law not to follow the examples of Gods owne particular dispensation he being a Law to himselfe and under no Law It is true Christ Iesus was a very man in all things like to us sinne onely excepted was crucified upon a material crosse capable of portraiture yet no image can set forth Christ as he is our Saviour and as he is to be worshipped For an image can onely set forth his bodily shape and his outward state of humiliation These images therefore debase Christ who now is glorified And who so shall now represent Christ to his mind according to the likenesse of an ordinary man or in the likenesse of Christs manhood as it was in his state of debasement the same turneth Christ into an idoll For he is to be conceived of in the minde and to be worshipped not as a meere man whose body onely the image can but uncertainly represent but as God and man and as man now glorified subsisting not as other men do but in the second person of the Deitie Faith apprehendeth more of Christ than the eye can represent or if an image could represent more than it doth yet we have not Gods institution for it but against it Thirdly sith God is in heaven wee learne that we must not needlesly multiply words before him when wee pray but that our words be few This same thing the Holy Ghost inferreth saying God is in heaven and thou upon the earth therefore let thy words bee few Eccl. 5.2 The meaning is bee not rash and inconsiderate but ponder as well your words that you may know how to utter your minde to God as to consider the matter what to speak unto him namely you must use such words and so many as may aptly and sufficiently expresse your desires to God without superfluity of speech and without needlesse and heartlesse repetitions and unnecessary digressions This vain repetition of words babling Mat. 6.7 our Saviour forbiddeth Against this rule Papists doe grosly offend in measuring out their prayers not by weight but by number as they will say so many Pater-nosters so many Avie-maries so many Dirges c. to obtaine their desires of God according as they are prescribed in their Rosaries and they presume to be heard by the merit of their much babling In like manner do offend all those which utter their minde to God with affectation of fine words as if they would court God or on the other side in a loose and carelesse expression or though using apt words yet they utter them without understanding or affection Quest But may we not at all make long prayers nor repeat the same petitions which will require many words Answ The case touching long prayer When there is cause wee may use long prayers we may use repetitions and therefore many words in some prayers namely when the matter of our prayer is large and when in repetition of the same things we do indeed renew and double our desires and do withall expresse a farther degree of seriousnesse and earnestnesse of our heart in putting up the said desires The examples of the prayers of David of Salomon Psal 51. Psal 119. 1 Kings 8.22 to 53. Dan. 9. Luke 6.12 of Daniel and of our blessed Saviour Christ Iesus who spent whole nights in prayer and therefore must needs use many words do give us a sufficient warrant But words in prayer without matter many words and repetitions without understanding and without new affections Mat. 6.7 and when men think they shall the rather bee heard for their Oratory or much speaking or when men make long prayers that they may bee thought to have a large gift in prayer or when they do it under any colourable pretence to serve their base ends Mat. 23.14 in these and in like cases long prayers and many words in prayer are unlawfull Fourthly the consideration of this infinite heavenly Majesty and goodnesse of our God and father doth teach us that when we pray unto him wee must performe it with holy adoration and devotion with all holy reverence alwayes inwardly in our hearts as also outwardly when time place and ability serveth with reverent and apt gestures of the body Reason 1 For Christ hath redeemed both our soules and bodies therefore wee must serve him and glorifie him in and with our body and spirit 1 Co. 6.20 which are Gods Reason 2 Though the essence of prayer consisteth in the desire and lifting up of the heart which must therefore be looked unto that it be rightly affected and though God be a Spirit and is not moved with bare bodily gestures Vse of befitting gestures in prayer yet befitting gestures are of speciall use in prayer as partly to help the inward man making the spirit more apt and lively and the minde to bee more attentive to what we are about and partly to expresse the inward devotion and affection of the heart But how far is a man bound in conscience to use outward gestures Quest and what gestures must wee use The worship of God consisteth not in outward gestures Answ The case touching gestures in prayer and when a gesture is not by him commanded it is not properly any part of Gods worship And the Scripture hath not commanded any particular gesture to bee used alwayes in prayer therefore the conscience is not bound to any thing certaine thereabout but left free to observe what in Christian discretion is fittest to be done In Scripture we read of variety of gestures in prayer as bowing the knees Eph. 3.14 Psal 95.6 Iohn 17.1 1 Tim. 2.8 2 Chr. 6.13 Mar. 11 25 Luk. 18 13 and prostrating the body this is most usuall and when we can conveniently is fittest to be used also lifting up the eyes and hands stretching out of the hands knocking the breast looking downe to the earth standing Luk. 24 30 Isa 38.2 sitting at meat and lying in the bed all these postures of the body have been used indifferently Rules touching gestures Yet some rules consonant to Scripture may bee given for our better direction In short ejaculations and in secret praier while a man is in company Neh 2.4 or on his way in his journey or the like in these cases bodily gestures are neither fit nor usefull No gesture is to bee used but such as is apt to stirre up or holily to expresse a right affection to God ward as either
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
by beleeving a man doth set to his seale that God is true 4 By fearing him So saith the Prophet 1. Pet. 3 1● Sanctifie the Lord of hasts himselfe let him be your feare and let him be your dread Isaiah 8.13 5 Also by loving him trusting in him and zeale for him for there is the same reason that all the affections of the heart should be for him as well as any one Iob 1.21 6 By confessing with the mouth that he is just in all his judgements so doth Daniel saying Dan. 9.14 The Lord our God is righteous in all the workes that he doth for we obeyed not his voyce Iosh 7.19 Thus Achan is bid to give glory unto the Lord. 7 Also by acknowledging his mercie goodnesse power Rom. 15.6 Rev. 19.7 c. in praises and thanksgiving He that offereth praise glorifieth me saith God Psal 50.23 8 By contending for God and his truth Isa 59.4 9 By ordering the conversation aright both in doing and suffering Herein Ioh. 1● 8 saith our Saviour is my Father glorified that ye beare much fruit Therefore he exhorteth his disciples unto good works that as lights they may shine before men and glorifie their Father which is in heaven Mat. 5 16. Philip. 1. And Paul was assured Christ should bee magnified in his bodie whether by life or by death And Peter was foretold by what death he should glorifie God Ioh. 20.19 10 Lastly by regarding his holinesse in his titles word and holy ordinances in his holy day the Sabbath and in his children whom he hath made to be an holy people In all these our estimation and speech of them our carriage towards them and use of them must be with speciall respect to God whose holinesse they carrie upon them alwayes putting difference betweene these things and all other which have not the like respect of holinesse Though we cannot in all these hallow Gods name as wee would yet wee must endeavour it that we may be able with the Church to say The desire of our soule is to thy name Now we know the particulars let us give God glory every way and let us make it the end of our life Motiv●s to hallow Gods Name to know and acknowledge him to be holy It is Gods right as you have heard we were created and redeemed to that end and wee have examples of the best David saith he would speake the praises of the Lord and saith Let all flesh blesse his holy Name for ever and ever Psal 145.21 Christ Iesus hath gone before us in seeking his Fathers honour and not his owne It was Ioabs praise so to order the battell 2 Sam. 12.28 that his Lord and king might have the glorie of the day and not himselfe Ought not all Gods subjects to respect their God more than he did or could respect his king Excellently spake Ioseph that the honour of interpreting dreames might not be given to him It is not in me Gen. 41.16 God shall give Pharaoh an answer of peace In like manner Daniel would not assume to himself the power of revealing secrets but saith Dan 2.26.28 There is a God which ye●●alleth secrets The Apostle Iohn when he was in the Spirit heard everie creature which is in heaven and on the earth and such as are in the sea saying Blessing honour glory Rev. 5.13 and power be unto him that sitteth upon the Throne and unto the Lambe for ever and ever These examples are for our learning so that we must alwayes say with the Psalmist Psal 115.1 Not unto us O Lord not unto us but unto thy Name give glorie If God be glorified by us Ioh 13.32 he also will glorifie us Them that honour me I will honour 1. Sam. 2.30 saith God Thus it may be learned what are the desires and endeavours to which the first petition doth leade us Before I passe to the second one thing must be observed from Christs choice of the word hallowed rather than any other Hallowed When Christ would signifie that God was to be esteemed acknowledged with the absolutest honour that could be he saith hallowed that is let thy Name be known and acknowledged to bee holy Whence we may inferre that Doct. 2 Holinesse is the highest title of honour and glory that can belong to any person yea to the most high God As any person or thing is more holy so is it more honourable When the Seraphins would give God the greatest honour and glory they crie Holy holy Isa 6.3 holy is the Lord of hosts The foure living creatures say Holy holy holy Rev. 4.8 Lord God almighty It was the honour of Ierusalem to be an holy Citie It is the glorie of the third heaven to be the high and holy place Isa 57.15 As men were more holy Psal 16.3 so did David count them more excellent For such whom hee calleth Saints he also calleth excellent And when Christ Iesus will present his Church unto himself a glorious Church he will sanctifie it Eph 5.26.27 Reason and present it holy and without blemish Because holinesse in God is the rectitude and perfection of his power mercie justice and all other his attributes which if they were not all holy could not be good much lesse goodnesse neither could he be God if he were not holy yea holinesse it selfe And as for other things the more they partake of holinesse the more like they are to God and are therfore the more glorious Man at the first was therefore most glorious of all creatures here below because hee was made according to Gods image most holy Vse 1 If holinesse be the highest most honourable title that can bee given then most blasphemous are the Pope and Papists the one for taking to himselfe the other for giving to him a prophane beast and impure Antichrist the title of holinesse in the abstract For the title of holinesse cannot simply be given to any but to God without blasphemie Vse 2 Hereby wee may learne whom to esteeme most honourable most excellent and most worthy our love and goodnes not the most witty most wealthie most beautifull or most noble by birth but as any man is more holy so is he to be held and regarded as most truly honourable Which being so the proud sinfull world erreth foulely in counting themselves the onely men of worth and esteeming the holy ones of God to be base and of no reckoning If to be holy be so honourable and glorious this must perswade Vse 3 men to follow after holinesse Heb. 12.14 Honour is the sharpest spurre to pricke men forward unto any action let it force us upon this of seeking to bee renewed after God in righteousnesse and true holines Be holy Lev. 19.2 saith God for I the Lord your God am holy No honour like this of being an holy man a chosen generation an holy nation
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
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
Scripture is that we should abhorre that which is evill and cleave to that which is good Rom. 12.9 Reas 1 For Iustification and Sanctification are so inseparably conjoined that no man hath his sins forgiven who hath not withall the fruit of it unto repentance and holinesse of life here in this life This I shall make evident by these arguments following 1 It is one part of the new Covenant of grace that men should be holy and for that cause God hath not onely required holiness to be shewne on their part but hath promised as well to write his Law in the hearts of his people Heb. 8.10.12 as to be mercifull to their unrighteousnesse and not to remember their sinne 2. It is one end to which God hath chosen men in Christ to be holy Eph. 1.4.5 and without blame before him in love as well as to be adopted children by Christ to obtaine everlasting life 3. It is the end of the office and comming of our Saviour Iesus Christ and of the merit and efficacy of his death resurrection and intercession not onely that beleevers should obtaine forgivenesse of sinne and everlasting life but that so many as the Father gave unto him might beleeve repent and live holily and righteously in this present world Tit. 2.14 hee purging them to himselfe to be a peculiar people zealous of good workes 4. It is the end of the Scriptures not onely to lay the foundation of faith for the remission of sinnes that through consolation thereof Ioh. 15 4. Ioh. 17.7 Eph. 5.26 beleevers might have hope but also to sanctifie and cleanse them from the filthinesse of their sinnes that they might be holy and without blemish 5. It is the end of everie Christian mans profession and calling 1. Thess 4.7 not only to beleeve and hope to be saved by Christ but also to be holy and to become the servant of Christ 6. It is the end why God sendeth his Spirit into their hearts and causeth it to dwell in his children Rom 8.16 not onely to be a spirit of adoption to witnesse to their spirits that they are Gods children but also to be a spirit of sanctification to worke out the stony heart Ez●k 36.26 27. and to frame in them a new heart causing them to walke in his statutes and to do them 7. It is the end of the Sacraments the seales of the new Covenant not onely to signifie and seale remission of sinnes by Iesus Christ but also that by him all that beleeve in him being ingrafted into the similitude of his death and resurrection Rom. 6.4 5 6. should dye unto sinne and walke in newnesse of life These things considered it is most apparant that justification and sanctification are never severed in one and the same partie wherefore he that prayeth for and expecteth to be justified must also pray and indeavour to approve himselfe to be sanctified A second generall reason why all Christians should pray for and labour after holinesse is because if a man be not holy and righteous in this life he is not capeable of true glory and happinesse in heaven in the life to come and that whether we respect God or a mans selfe remaining in his sinne God will not admit him let him make what claime hee can unto the kingdome of heaven his put off shall be Luk 13.27 Depart from me I know you not ye workers of iniquity For without holinesse no man shall see God Heb. 12.14 But suppose it were possible that a sinfull man might be admitted into heaven heaven would be no heaven to him The place persons and exercises there would be tedious and a vexation unto him For all things there are things of God holy and spirituall most contrarie to the disposition of a natural and carnall man 1. Cor 2.14 God saith The naturall man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God they are foolishnesse unto him To whom Gods ordinances and presence in them as in hearing praying and praising God and to whom holy company and holy conference is tedious in this life the same heart and affections remaining even these and the like things would be an hell to them even in heaven For to make a man happy even in heaven it is needfull that the faculties and powers of his soule be so fully rectified and perfected that hee may comprehend and enjoy the object that thing wherein mans happinesse doth consist Now though Gods presence in his glory and in his goodnesse which is the object of mans happinesse is alwayes in heaven yet if the understanding the will and the affections of a man be not sanctified and thereby made capeable of and suteable to the object what content and joy can he take therein It is with the reasonable soule in the apprehension of intellectual and spiritual things as it is with the senses in bodily objects Colours though never so orient and various yet they can give no delight to a blinde or ill-affected eye Sounds though never so melodious cannot delight a deafe or ill-affected eare Meat and drink though never so well relished and delicious cannot delight him whose pallat is out of taste nay the best do savour and taste ill with such a one Even so the most spirituall things in heaven would be so farre from delighting a carnall and unholy man that they would seeme to his fancy very foolishnes and they would be to him a very vexation Vse 1 It is therefore an intolerable fault for a man to professe the name of Christ and yet to live ungodly Num. 23.10 this is the fault of too many who desire to have their sinnes forgiven but desire not to have them mortified they desire to go to heaven like cursed Balaam when they dye but endeavour not to be holy while they live But as if this were not enough to be sinfull themselves many do make a jest at all conscionable living in others and a scorne of all that endeavour to keep a good conscience in all things and yet will expect that Christ shall save them How hath the devill deceived these men yet thousands are justly given over to this strong delusion If any of you shall happen to cast your eyes on these lines consider the Doctrine in hand and learne that for certaine he that is not holy in this life shall not bee happy in the life to come For whomsoever God justifieth Rom. 6. those he sanctifieth and whosoever have faith to partake of Christs merits do by the same faith partake of the vertue of Christs death to the killing of sinne and of the vertue of his life and resurrection to the quickening of the inward man And at the day of judgement all that professe Christ and yet obey not the Gospell of Christ 2 Thes 1.8 shall be burnt in flames of Gods vengeance as well as those which know not the Gospell and professe it not at all For
therefore they pray unto him The meaning of these words may bee thus expressed O Lord God which art King of kings and rulest over all we have none either in heaven or in earth to whom we may make our requests but thee for thine is the kingdome it belongeth to thy place of soveraigntie to provide for thy name and honour by advancing thy kingdome by causing thy will to bee done and by preserving and receiving into favour and by giving grace to thy people Thou Lord art able to fulfill all this that we have asked and we do yeeld thee as is most due the glory of thy soveraigntie and power and if thou shalt please to grant these our requests as thou shalt therein deserve so we shall bee readie to give unto thee all glory everlasting wherefore wee are bold to aske and to expect the granting of them For thine c. In the entrance into prayer Christ taught his disciples to represent God to their thoughts under such titles and names whereby they might confirme their faith in prayer and here in the close and end of prayer he doth wish them to presse and urge God from consideration of his soveraigntie power and glory from whence they may encourage themselves by good reasons both to aske and looke for what they have asked whereby we learne The Lord would have his children Doct. 1 have good ground and reason for the petitions they aske of him and would have them uttered unto him in their prayers Thus did Jacob when he prayed to bee delivered out of the hands of his brother Esau saying Gen 32.9.10.11.12 O God of my father Abraham and God of my father Isack the Lord which saidst unto mee Returne into thy country and to thy kindred and J will deale well with thee I am not worthy of the least of al the mercies which thou hast shewed unto thy servant Deliuer me I pray thee from the hand of my brother from the hand of Esau for I feare him lest hee will come and smite me and the mother with the children And thou saidst I will surely doe thee good and make thy seed as the sand of the sea In this prayer Iacob gathereth reasons from the covenant between God and his fathers from Gods commandement and his obedience therto from his acknowledgement of Gods mercie and his owne unworthinesse from the relation he had to God being his servant from the condition of his adversary he being his inraged brother Esau from the extream danger hee and his wives and children were in lastly from a promise that God had made to him in respect of his posterity which could not be fulfilled if Esau should have destroyed Jacob and all his children Vpon all these reasons hee doth ground that petition Deliver me I pray thee from the hand of my brother from the hand of Esau In like manner Salomon confirmeth his faith in the beginning of his prayer 1 King 8.23.24.25.26 And it is ordinary with David throughout the Psalmes Reas 1 Though God need no reasons either to informe him of their need or to move him to supply their need for he knoweth every mans case better then himselfe and is more readily inclined of himselfe to helpe then any man can be ready to aske yet he doth delight that his children should yeeld reasons of their requests because therein they shew proof of their knowledge faith confidence and other graces which is much pleasing to their Father Reasons in prayer doth much Reas 2 confirme faith in us and stir up good affection in prayer For when a man can assure himselfe he hath good warrant to aske and to hope to obtaine hee can breake through all the discouragements which the divell or a mans owne heart can cast in to hinder him Hereby all praying without Vse 1 understanding be the intention of the heart never so good must be judged to be faultie for hee that knoweth not what hee asketh can never give reasons why he asketh Vse 2 This reproveth all rash and inconsiderate entrances and proceedings in prayers which is when men are led therein onely by custome or present sense of necessities but never exercise their faith in uttering any reasons of their requests Hence it is that they are so weake in faith and so cold in devotion and heartlesse in their prayers because they doe not establish their faith and put life to their affections by uttering of apt reasons of their present petitions Vse 3 Whosoever therfore would make a prayer in faith and fervencie must follow our Saviours direction the examples of godly in Scripture who have gone before us in giving reasons of their requests For it doth please God to heare his children reason it out with him Wherefore hee doth sometimes of set purpose seeme not to heare but rather seemeth to deny his children that pray unto him because hee would have them answer all doubts and resist all impediments and be more importunate with him in giving reasons why they should be heard Thus the Lord dealt with the woman of Canaan first he seemed not to heare her then when he heard he seemed to deny her suite and yeelded a reason of his deniall Mat. 15.25 28. yet all this was but to make triall of her faith which when she shewed by her importunate continuance of her suit and wise answering of Christs objection saying Truth Lord yet the dogs do eate of the crums which fall from their masters table shee thereupon received of him a commendation of her faith saying O woman great is thy faith and withall obtained her request even to the full for he said Be it unto thee even as thou wilt Reasons of our petitions may be taken from Gods nature from his promise from our capablenesse to have our prayers granted either because wee are in Christ and are his servants and doe pray in his name or they may bee taken from our need of helpe or from that experience wee have had of helpe in time past or from the thanks and glory that we doe give and will give if it shall please the Lord to grant our requests If from these such like grounds out of Scripture we shall wisely make choise of reasons befitting our present occasions and shall use them understandingly not so much to informe or perswade God what hee should give as to inform and perswade our selves how to aske we shall be much holpen in our praying and God will bee well pleased with our prayers The reason of the asking the aforesaid petitions is set downe in a forme of praise and thanksgiving from which wee may observe Christians must in their prayers Doct. 2 as well offer praise unto God as make requests Wee must as well giue him glory and thanks as pray to him to give us grace or any other good thing Thus saith David Thine O Lord is greatnesse and the power and the glory and the victory and the majestie Thine is the kingdome O
warrant from Moses teaching the Priests to blesse the people in a set forme saying Num. 6.24 The Lord blesse thee and keepe thee c. Also when the Ark set forward they had a set forme Numb 10.35 Rise up Lord c. David penned his Psalmes to bee used in the Church and Psal 92. for every Sabbath And Hezekiah commanded the Levites to sing praises unto the Lord with the words of David 2 Chron. 29.30 and of Asaph It is said of our Saviour Christ whose example we may bee bold to follow That he prayed the third time saying the same words Mat. 26.44 Ob. Set formes of prayer doth stint the spirit Sol. It doth not no more then a premeditated Sermon doth stint the spirit of Prophesie or then a conceived prayer by the Minister doth stint the spirit of prayer in the people who must restraine themselves to his words yet the spirit in truth is not stinted in them Order and edification in the Church requireth set formes of prayers and praises to be used in publicke as it hath beene the custome of all established true Churches there being common sinnes to be deprecated common graces to bee prayed for and common mercies to thank God for And in more private praier the ignorance forgetfulnesse and bashfulnesse of some persons before their family or others causeth that for a time it is needfull to use the helpe of a set form which he may reade or repeate so that he joyne understanding and assent of heart thereto Yet it must be remembred that Christians must not alwayes be such novices and weaklings in religion to use set formes of prayer in private which like crutches and bladders serve to initiate and minister to them helpe untill they have gotten strength as if they never intended to pray without them But let this here be observed It must not on the other side be held that onely premeditated studied and set praiers are lawfull He is not meete for the place of a Minister nor worthy the name of a strong Christian that hath so tyed his devotion to a set forme that he will not or cannot vary his petitions for his people or himselfe as particular occasions varie and new necessities require It is impossible that any prayer booke should meet with all occasions either of prayer or thanksgiving which fall out daily And conceived prayer is not so defective and imperfect but if it be pertinent and in truth God liketh it Exo 14.15 though it had no set forme to bring it forth Such were the prayers of Moses at the Red-sea 1. Sam. 1.13 and of Hannah at the Tabernacle their prayers were conceived and brought forth without set forme or voice I conclude this point therefore affirming that it is an error to hold set prayer to be unlawfull and it is no lesse error to hold that no prayer but a set forme of prayer is lawfull In this manner If our Saviour would have us use onely this forme S. Luke would not have varied from this of Saint Matthew saying Sinnes for debts and far for as in the fifth petition neither would he have left out the forme of thanksgiving nor yet would the Apostles have prayed in any other forme All which shew that In this manner signifieth according to it and not onely to use those words whence learne that All prayers must be made according Doct. 5 to the patterne of the Lords Prayer If made according to this they are acceptable if not they are faultie The best confirmation of this point besides Christs expresse exhortation which is authenticke is to compare this praier with the prayers of the Saints recorded in holy writ both before and after this prayer and it will be found that they all may without wresting be referred unto some branches of this prayer even as all the precepts scattered in the Bible may be referred unto the ten commandements Reason The perfection that this prayer hath above all other prayers doth challenge the rule of all the rest for whatsoever is necessarily requisite in praier is to be learned by this if it be truly understood For it plainly teacheth how he must be qualified that doth pray also to whom we must pray what we must aske and with what heart and affection as will appeare in the handling of it Vse 1 Every disciple and member of Christ Iesus should therefore have this prayer in great esteeme because it is of Christs owne composing they are his own words and he did of purpose leave it to be a patterne of prayer to all Christians Onely take heed that you do not with the Papists turne the use of it into abuse through superstition Let all men use this prayer Vse 2 for the guide of all their prayers and as skilfull workemen by the helpe of some small but true modell or draught can erect a large and stately building so we by this compendious but most exact briefe of prayer must learne to enlarge our selves in prayer That use of this patterne for the making of prayers according to it How to frame all prayers by the patterne of the Lords prayer may be made two things must be learned First learne the plaine meaning of the words and the sense and meaning of Christ in them Secondly learne how this patterne may be applied As for the first because such exceeding brevity doth cause some obscurity the more paines must be taken that by the light of other Scripture and helpe of those men which have faithfully travelled in the interpretation of this prayer the true meaning may be found out And untill you meete with better directions use these following First two things in generall one contrary to the other are to be understood in every petition namely petition and deprecation praying for some thing that is good and praying against the contrary evill And it is a sure rule that in the same petition where the good thing is desired the contrary evill is prayed against as in the foure former petitions Also where the evill prayed against is expressed in the petition the contrary good thing to be desired is to be understood in the same petition as in the two last petitions As it is in the commandements in the same commandement that any vice is forbidden the contrary duty is commanded A second rule is If one kind or part of any thing be expressed in any petition all kindes and parts of the same thing are to be understood A third rule is where any one thing is prayed for in any petition the causes effects thereof and whatsoever properly belongeth unto the said thing is understood to be prayed for in the same petition except they fall out to bee the expresse subject of some other petition The second thing to be learned is how application of this prayer may be made to the framing of all other prayers by it which that ye may do take notice that this prayer directeth us unto