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A54928 The spiritual sacrifice, or, A treatise wherein several weighty questions and cases concerning the saints communion with God in prayer are propounded and practically improved by Mr. Alexander Pitcarne. Pitcarne, Alexander, 1622?-1695. 1664 (1664) Wing P2295; ESTC R30533 821,533 890

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as do evil that under them we may lead a quiet and peaceable in all godlinesse and honesty 1 Timoth. 2.2 Rom. 13.3 Isa 49.23 Psa 105 22. Amos. 5.2 Prayer is the best tribute ye can pay to them and the best (p) Vid. August contr liter Petiliani lib. 2. cap. 23.86 92. in Evan. Joan tract 2. office ye can perform to your neighbors and fellow-subjects whatever be the judgment of the world or its reward yet the best Christians will be found to be the best subjects and the best neighbors Sed bonus vir Cajus Seius tantum malus quod Christianus 3. Who will ask whether he should pray for the Kingdom city an place of his abod and nativity 1 Because of severall relations we stand under towards our countrey-men as being fellow-subjects compatriots brethren being neerer in kin to many of them then to strangers and companions we are obliged in a speciall manner to pray for them Psa 122.8 Rom. 9.2 3. Secondly because our peace and welfare consists in theirs Jer. 29.7 And 3. thus we should not only pray for temporals to them but also for grace and spiritual mercies we cannot live securely where the fear of God is not least like the fish in the sea the greater devour and make a prey of the lesser Gen. 20.11 O! then pray for them if thou wouldst not have them make a (q) Isa 59.15 prey of thee Did Abraham so importunatly interceed for (r) Gen. 18. Sodom though he was not concerned in their misery and wilt not thou plead for the place of thy habitation with whom thou must share in their prosperity or adversity It s the Saints priviledge that they may be a blessing in the midst of the land Isa 19.24 and bear up the pillars of a sinking sinfull world Psa 75.3 were there not a Saint on earth how quickly might the earth and all its inhabitants be dissolved Behold the difference between the upright and the wicked the one is a blessing and the other a curse to the place Prov. 11.11 and prayer is that messenger the Saints employ to fetch home the blessing to themselves and others 4. This duty in a speciall maner lieth on them who live together in one family as being yet more neerly concerned in the good or evil of one another It s true this duty doth in a speciall manner lie upon the master of the Family who must with good (Å¿) Josh 24.15 Joshua undertake for himself and all within his house He must be a King to rule there a Prophet to teach and instruct them and a Priest to offer up daily sacrifices with them and for them none are exempted from this duty David though a King on whom the care of the whole nation did ly yet did not forget his family after he had been employed in the publike worship of God it is said of him to his commendation that he returned to blesse his houshold 2 Sam. 6.20 If Cornelius be a devour man his religion must not be confined within his own breast and therefore it s observed that he feared God with all his house and prayed to God allway Act. 10.2 But albeit this duty especially as to the performance of it with the whole family as being their mouth and minister doth ly upon the master of the house yet none in the family are exempted from a private and personal communion with God in prayer what though the head of the house neglect his duty and were a gracelesse man wilt thou go to hell because thy Father and master doth run thither Ah! rather with holy David lament and say Wo is me that I sojourn in Mesech and dwell in the tents (t) Not that David ever was in those countreyes but he called those so amongst whom he was by reason of their fierce barbarousnesse and wickednesse Diodat on the place of Kedar Psa 120.5 and thou shouldst the rather be busie thy self if the rest of the family be negligent that thou mayest get thy name out of the curse that is denounced against prayerlesse families Ier. 10.25 and what knowest thou but thy prayers may procure a blessing to the whole family (u) Gen. 30.30 Labans house and estate was blessed for Iacobs sake and (x) Gen. 39.5 Potiphars house yea and all (y) Gen. 41. Egypt for Ioseph And then if others make conscience of their duty what a shame is it for thee to be singular in evil and that thou alone shalt be pluckt out of the family and cast into hell Ah! be no longer a devil to tempt the Saints by thy wicked example Thou wicked son or servant what wilt thou say and with what horror and confusion wilt thou behold thy Father and master in Glory whilst thou art cast out Oh! said dying (z) Sam. Clerk in his life Mr. Bolton to his children I Verily beleeve that none of you dar think to meet me at the great Tribunal of Christ in an unregenerat state Yet 5 this duty doth ly more forcibly upon those who are of the Houshold of a faith (b) Sicuti in aliis charitatis officiis ita in precibus prima debet esse cura sanctorum Calvin in Eph. 6.18 though the members of that family be far scattered through many nations yet they are more firmly united then those of any other incorporation we have seven ligaments and bonds of union held sorth in one Scripture Eph. 4.4 5 6. which are brought as so many motives to keep the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace v. 3. and may serve as so many arguments to stir us up to make conscience of this duty to pray one for another 1. All the Saints are members of One Body 2. All are animated by One and the same Spirit 3 All are called in one hope and are joynt heirs of the same Crown and Kingdom 4. They all serve the same Lord and master 5. All have one and the same Faith and profession one task and work all are walking in the same way and travelling to the same home and all must lodge together unto all eternity 6. One Baptisme all have the same badge and wear the same livery 7. All have one God and Father in Christ Jesus all are of a noble descent and of the blood Royall as to their regeneration and new birth Is there then any relation like to that which is amongst the Saints Is there any union which is so intimat and strong and yet alas in this jangling and contending age self-self-love as a canker consumeth and eateth our true love to the brethren now are the dayes foretold by our Lord Jesus in which the love of many should wax cold Mat. 24 12. where there is not true love there cannot be a cordiall desire of their good and no prayer for them that God will accept O but its a sad character thou art no son who dost not mind thy brethren and if thou hast no Sympathy
nor purpose to give nor his love and fatherly affection toward us can hinder the Lord from saying to us in reference to all our mercies what he said to his ancient people Ezek. 36.37 concerning the mercies there promised I will yet for this be enquired of by my people to do it for them It is true the Lord often (c) We heard the Jesuit Tolet confessing that the prime and principal mercies both in nature and grace are previous to our asking part 1. chap. 8. pag. 317. with whom Salmeron joyneth tom 5. in evang tract 45. in haec verba scit enim pater vester quid opus sit vobis antequam petatis prevents us with his mercies Isa 65.24 but not to take us off but the more to engage and encourage us to pray and praise him As to the place Joh. 16.26 27. Christ doth not there deny that he will pray for them that being contrary both to his promise and practice but he would there lead his disciples in to the fountain and principal cause of all their mercies viz. the eternal love and free grace of God which did put a difference between them and others from which fountain through his blood all our mercies do stow so that not only our weak and imperfect prayers but also his most effectual and powerfull intercession is but a mean for obtaining and conveighing to us those mercies which our gracious Father of his meer good pleasure and love in Christ Jesus hath appointed and prepared for us from all eternity as we have shown at length and vindicated this place Part 1. Chap. 5. Sect. 1. Pag. 68. Christs scope there is not to exclude his intercession but to prefer the Fathers love and his death and to prevent that mistake that is incident to mourning sinners ah think they Christ is mercifull and tender-hearted toward sinners else he would not have shed his precious blood for them but we are afraid lest God prove a consuming fire to us and pursue us with his justice O but saith our blessed Lord I would not have you even after your eyes are opened to see my love in laying down my life for you and going to heaven to prepare a place and to intercede for you so to look on my death and intercession and my kindness toward you thus sealed and manifested by such convincing demonstrations as to exclude the father and to imagine that he hated you and were unwilling to do you good for saith he the father himself loveth you And though I did not intercede for you yet having elected you to obtain salvation through my blood he would show mercy on you no less then on your forefathers who had not the benefit of my intercession the love of the Father is the first fountain of all our mercies for though we were elected in Christ yet the free love of God who is Father Son and holy Ghost in order did preceed every thing that can fall under the notion and consideration of a mean hence it s said that God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son c. Joh 3.16 1 Joh. 4.9 10. And now we may (d) It s observable that all the objections here may be as we have shown made use of as so many arguments and motives to encourage us in going about this duty where can we then look and not see some one or other motive and encouragment since all that can be alledged by devils or men against this work may serve as a mean to stir us up to the diligent performance of it retort this and the preceeding objection which are so far from holding forth a discharge from and discouragment to pray that in both we have a notable encouragment and engagement to this duty ah what can more sweetly and strongly draw a poor indigent sinner to the rich treasure then the cords of the free promises and where is there such a cordial for a fainting soul that dare not look up to the throne of grace as the consideration of Gods mercy and fatherly love toward us in Christ and what madness must it then be to make these become a heavy burden and so many weights to press us down while we would lift up our hearts to the Lord and to make those healing medicines become deadly poyson to us Ah! had not the Lord prevented us with his free love and gracious promises in Christ what warrant had we more nor devils to draw nigh to God but now having such a loving Father such gracious Promises and so great a Mediator and Advocat we may come with boldness unto the throne of grace that we may obtain mercy and find grace to help in time of need Eph. 3.11 12. Eph. 1.13 Act. 26.6 7. 1 Joh. 3.1 and 4.10.2 2 Cor. 7.1 Heb. 4.16 c. As to the question whether we intended by our prayers to move God its commonly answered and but briefly and in a word that prayer works a change in us but not in God who of himself is willing to give if we were ready to receive he (e) Isa 30.18 waits only that he may be gracious and (f) 1 Chron. 4.10 bless us indeed and prayer enlargeth the heart and those pleas and arguments we use in prayer do serve to strengthen our faith and to beget such a holy humble and confident frame of spirit as the promise of audience doth require and which will be ready to receive mercie aright and to improve them to the honour of the Giver and thus prayer is that rope whereby as the Jesuit g Salmeron from the supposed Dionysius saith we pull our vessel to the rock (q) We do the rather take notice of this allusion as being owned by a Jesuit who otherwise teacheth according to the principles of of the pelagian School that God will concursus scil in actu primo seu voluntas qua Deus statuit cum causis secundis concurrere c is determinable by the will of the creature to this or that act Est ergo inquit oratio que madmodum magnus ait Dionysius de div nominib cap. 3. veluti catena aurea è caelo demissa per quam qui ascendunt videntur quidem cattnam ad se trahere sed revera ipsi potius ab ea trahuntur in caelum dum precamur Deum ' non ipse sit aptior paratior ad nos audiendos sed nos capiendis illius beneficiis preparatiores Salm. in evang tom 5 tract 45. prope finem vid etiam Toletum in Joan. cap. 16.26 27. but not the rock to us But albeit upon the matter this be a truth yet not a satisfactory answer to the question for clearing of which we would offer these few considerations 1. it cannot be denyed that as the exercise of every grace is a mean for the growth and strengthening of it and quickning the heart for for a communion with God So in a speciall manner that spiritual and
not been able to produce one testimony or to make a reply that deserveth consideration we may upon this ground together with positive evidences from the most learned judicious and most approven Fathers affirm that albeit 1. In the dayes of Nazianzen there were several ground-stores brought for this work to wit the rhetorical Dialogues and apostrophes to the defunct which 2. were afterwards laid by some foolish builders yet with much doubting and haesitation and 3. though some did call to the martyrs yet they did not invocat them they were as (m) Usher loc cit pog 444. and Geo. Cassand a moderate Papist thinks it yet sufficient only to present our wishes and desires to them and not to pray to them satis est si dicamus per modum desiderri eas interpellationes explicari posse c. oper pag. 1109. vid. Uss one speaketh only vocati not invocati they were desired as we do the living to pray with us but were not prayed unto 4. Though some did call upon them yet with some moderation not pleading their merits and only in their private devotion Yet 5. till after the death of Epiphanius and Augustine these two great opposers of this idolatrous invention it came not to its height but after a little while it fell into the hands of some (n) Such as Prudentius Paulinus Fortunatus c. Poets who without all modesty used a licentious liberty to passe all bounds and by a strange kind of metamotphosis to make new gods and mediators of holy men and martyrs but all this time it was kept as it were within doors in the private or domestick worship till about the year six hundred For albeit Gnapheus before that time essayed to have insert it into the publick Liturgies yet he and his motion were rejected that great work being reserved for Gregory the great who for that and his other superstitious conceits may well be called the grand innovator and father of superstition and then lastly Adrian the third about the year eight hundred eighty five did put on the cop-stone claiming to himself and his successors the power of Canonization and making Gods of men We need not stay long in confuting this dream yea one of its patrons the learned Swarez doth furnish us with an argument confirmed by the authority of their master Thomas in which we may rest viz. No (o) Religionis virtus circa solum Deum versatur sed oratio est proprius actus religionis c. Swar loc cit cap. 9. sect 2. religious act can without idolatry be terminated in the creature But must only be directed to God But prayer is a religious act Ergo. And before he brings this he tells us that the conclusion of it must be supponed as certain You will then say the controversie is at an end O! but hearken and ye shall hear a limitation its certain saith he that prayer under some consideration as it belongeth to their cultus latriae doth only belong to God but as it falls under cultum duliae so it may be tendred to Saints We will not now meddle with these strange terms but in a word he grants that prayer as it is a religious (p) Ibid. cap. 7. 8. act cannot be made to any creature without grosse impiety and thus he hath hit right for their idolatrous Saint-invocation being a most impious and idolatrous abomination can be no religious performance nor savour of piety and devotion 1. We may argue thus we must not call on him in whom we do not believe Rom. 10.14 But wo to him that believeth or trusteth in any meer creature and makes it his arme and citty of refuge Jer. 17.5 Ergo. O saith Bellarmine the Prophet Jeremy must be mistaken for otherwise Saint-invocation must be disclaimed for (q) Non potest sanctos invocare qui'suo modo in eos non credit in iis non sperat Bell. de sanct beat lib. 2. cap. 20. sect ad primum none can be said to call upon the Saints who doth not in his own way trust and hope in them But thus saith the Lord cursed be the man that trusteth in man under what pretence soever for his heart must depart from the Lord If any thing of it thus be let out towards the creatures He will accept of none of it He dow not away with a corrival You will say they give God the first place and they acknowledge him to be the first (r) Primito auctor bonorum Bell. ibid. author Reply Instruments and means must not share with the first author in what is due to him alone while we use the creature we must only confide and trust in God Whatever we make an object of our faith confidence or hope must be either an Idol or God and the most vile Pagan idolater might run to this popish plea for though they worshiped many inferiour gods yet they acknowledged only one viz. their great Jupiter to be the first and chief author of all As for the two texts Bellarmine citeth the first viz. Gen. 48.16 It is most impertinently alledged and it is as impertinently applied viz. not to the present point of trusting in but of calling upon the Saints and thus also he contradicteth himself while he grants that the Saints were not invocated under the old Testament and the text speaks only of the adoption of Manasseh and Ephraim to be accounted as Jacobs sons and thus to become heads of two distinct Tribes and now Jacob by these words of his blessing performs what he said ver 5. As for the other place we remit him to their own (Å¿) Cajet in Philem. Cajetan who hath so much modesty as to blush at the popish glosse and will not have the Saints there viz. Philem. ver 5. to be named as the object but as the (t) Fides refertur in sanctos tanquam consertes fidei subject of faith so that Philemon there is commended for that faith which he had with all Saints and not which he had in the Saints but as to the genuine sense of the words we rather close with Theodoret viz. that the Apostle having named faith and love doth assign to each of these its proper object so that (u) Yet here there is an inversion of order vid. Calv in loc faith must be terminated in the Lord Jesus and love in the Saints 2. These who teach for doctrines the commandments of men do in vain worship God Mat. 15.9 Wo to such presumptuous fools what plea will they be able to bring when it will be said to them as it was said to that people Isa 1.12 who required these things at your hand But the Scriptures hold out 1. no warrant or command as we shall hear the Papists anon confesse 2. No promise or reward to such a performance and 3. no threatning or punishment for neglecting and slighting it and 4. No example of holy men who have performed it with successe and
justice if then he find an impression upon his spirit to desert his duty and go to his closet and pray he may fear lest Sathan have a hand in it Thus while we are at (f) Thus he laboured to divert the people from attending to Christs Doctrine by a most specious but unseasonable confession that Christ was the holy one of God Luk 4.33 34. Thus also while Paul and those who were with him were at prayer he indeavoured to interrupt them by a fair testimony given to the Apostles and their doctrine by a possessed damsel Act. 16.16 17. If Sathan can steal away the heart from the present duty he careth not by what means prayer if we find some good motion suggested which doth distract and draw away our hearts from the present work if while we are hearing conscience press us to read if while we are attending our Masters business conscience call us to employ that time which is not our own in some religious exercise c. these and the like are unseasonable motions and cannot then proceed from him who hath appointed a season and fit time for every thing under the Sun and made every thing beautifull in its time Eccl. 3.1.11 But as he maketh his servants to reap in due season Gal. 6.8 9. he will also make them sow and bring forth fruit in the right season Psa 1.3 6. As to the effect Though satanical suggestions may be very violent and impetuous and forcibly press us to act yet they are fruitless they bring no provision for the work and for a right and spiritual way of performance they are like water poured out upon the rock not like the rain that falleth upon the valleys Sathans morsels do not feed the soul 1. Then it leaveth no heavenly and spiritual impression upon the heart it doth not enlarge and open it towards God nor stir up self-abasing and heavenly affections 2. Neither doth it give strength for doing the work to which it impelleth in an acceptable maner when the heart is thus stirred up to pray it will continue dead and cold in the performance for his motions often go no further then the imagination fleeting there and not descending to the heart to inflame it But 3. though they affect the heart as when they prevail they must do more or less they quickly evanish and do not abide though he would have us to work that he may ensnare us in the work of our own hands yet he would not have our heart too much fixed on any good work and therefore when we stretch forth our hands he with-draws his help and puts out his candle and the sparks he had blown up he is fitly in respect of his work compared to lightning Luk 10.18 it is an evanishing flash quickly gone which though it may awaken yet it doth not warm the traveller But 4. though it abide and all the while excite and press us forward yet it giveth no strength to do it is like a whip or spur that driveth the weary beast but addeth no help or assistance And though thus the work may be done yet the maner of performance must be dead and formal and as to the end and motives carnal and self●ish and is it any wonder to see Sathan have a hand in such good works But thus we see that Sathan dealeth with the Saints as Pharaoh and the Task-masters once dealt with the Israelites who urged them to work and make brick but would allow them no straw or materials for the work Exod. 5.6 7. But 5. far less doth Sathans impression fit and dispose the heart for doing hereafter a good work flowing from his breath is infectious it rather deadneth and indisposeth then quickneth the heart and rather begetteth a prejudice against holiness then true love to it because of its power which then is not felt and beauty which is not seen and perceived Far less 6. is Sathans motion influential on the life and conversation if it do not encline and dispose the heart for duties of the same kind and nature it can hardly be imagined that it will extend it self further if praying now thus will not make thee love that exercise the better and fit and dispose thee for praying hereafter then though the Lord in his wise providence and for ends known to himself should give what thou thus desiredst that mercy would not prove a mean to increase thy love to him neither wouldst thou labour to improve it for him and lay it out for his honour far less upon this account wouldst thou take heed to thy steps as being loath to offend him and say with him Psa 116.9.12.14 What shall I render unto the Lord for all his benefits I will pay my vows unto him and in my whole carriage walk before him unto all (g) Col. 1.10 well-pleasing being fruitfull in every good work O! but the influence of the Spirit is soul-strengthning and enlarging it is fruitfull like the warm showers upon the mowen grass Psa 72.6 and like that water poured upon the thirsty Isa 44.3 4. As he quickneth and stirreth us up to do So he enableth and helpeth our weakness and infirmities Rom. 8.26 His influence is not partial it extendeth to the whole life and conversation to strengthen and establish us in every good word and work 2 Thess 2.17 1. To do 2. To do well And 3. to do every thing that the Lord commandeth if the Spirit help us to pray he will help us to pray well and love well Now a word of application Use 1 1. Be not puffed up because of some lively as thou didst think impressions on thy heart driving thee to thy knees and drawing thee to the throne but ponder what hath been thy carriage while thou camest before the King how thy heart was then enlarged and what influence that duty had upon thy life and conversation if thou didst vow and pay to the Lord c. Sathan can transform himself and then he is most dangerous and mischievous to the Saints a white devil is an ill guest Use 2 2. O! but take heed that this be not pretended and made a cloak for thy resisting and grieving the Spirit of God Though Sathan at sometimes be permitted to blow the coal that we may see to work yet he is out of his own element when he stirreth us up to our duty and seldom doth he meet with an occasion and opportunity in which he may gain by our prayers and religious performances and therefore unless his hand be manifestly discerned let us follow and entertain such a motion let us embrace and cherish what is good in it not perplexing our selves by enquiring from what hand it did come and though he did suggest it yet if we could guard against his wiles and devices following what is good in it but not for the ill ends proposed by him nor suffering our selves to be ensnared thereby we might thus disappoint and befool him making him hold the
ingenuity left there whether it were not a righteous thing with God to deal with thee according to thy folly 2. God doth not so much value our work and performance as the (g) Mentem offerentis non oblationem attendit glos iuterlin in Gen. 4 4. fountain and principle from which it doth flow and the end and scope at which we aim but untill thy heart be renewed thou canst not act from a principle of love nor make his will and command thy motive nor honestly aim at his glory but thy motives must be carnal and thy end self-interest thou canst not act spiritually nor bring out fruit to God till thou be ingraffed into the true and lively vine the Lord Jesus Joh. 15.5 And therefore thy prayers and performances though never so specious must be an abomination to him self being thy idol before which thou fallest down in every act of worship thou seekest nor God for himself but for thine own base carnal ends which if thou couldest otherwise obtain thou couldst with all thy heart bid farewell to God his worship and service he should hear no more of thy prayers and supplications And thus as the supplicant is not the same not a son but a stranger so the supplication is not alike there is a great difference and inequality in the work it self the Saints pour out other kind of prayers unto God then the unregenerate and therefore no wonder the successe be not the same albeit there may be much art and eloquence and great variety of pertinent expressions yet till the heart be renewed our censer's in stead of incense must be filled with such loathsome filth as must make our sacrifice abominable The old root doth continually send out and communicate so much venom to all its branches that no fruit can be gathered from thence but what is full of deadly poyson a polluted heart will so pollute and infect all our actions and performances that they must be naught in Gods account hence 1 Kings 8.38 this leprosy because of it infection is called the plague of the heart But though these two be very considerable 1. the state of the person for what father will not hearken more to the cry of his son and child then to the voice of a stranger and enemy 2. the quality of the work for who would lay brass in the ballance with gold Yet these are not the main grounds of discrimination and difference as to the present case concerning the acceptance and audience of the one and not the other but that must be brought from another root which now we shall only name as being already more fully opened viz. 1. the assistance and concurrence of the Spirit 2. the merit and intercession of Christ Hence A third reason of the point may be this we cannot pray acceptably without the help and assistance of the Spirit unless he enable us to speak and teach us what to say ah what can we plead upon the account of any though never so eminent work as coming from us Hence saith a (h) Mr. Fenner Sacrif of the faith pag. 6. and pag. 52. reverend Divine God no more respects the prayers of the wicked as being offered up by themselves without the concurrence of the Spirit then he respects the lowing of Oxen or the gruntling of Hogs None have the spirit of supplication but such as have the spirit of adoption and therefore we cannot be assured of the success of our prayers till our son-ship and adoption be cleared and sealed to us See Part 1. chap. 9.4 All the promises are yea and amen in Christ and therefore whatever the Lord out of his general bounty and pity and by the hand of a common providence may bestow upon an Ahab fasting and humbling himself and upon an Ishmael crying and weeping yet they had no covenant right to what they did receive nor could they lay claim unto or plead a (i) Nay Sua rez though a Jesuit and a great patron of the merit of congruity yet granteth ora tionem non esse impetratoriam ex vi promissionis nisi ex fide procedat quia promissio non fit orationi nisi procedat ex fide Suar ubi supra cap. 24. sect 1 2. promise in prayer and therefore though at a venture they might pray and God out of his soveraignty and by way of prerogative might answer their desires yet they could not promise to themselves as not having an interest in the promises that their prayers would prove successefull Christ is the alone way to the Father and he is our altar and therefore untill we be united to him we have not access to the throne and can offer up no acceptable sacrifice Nay saith (k) Zeal Christ pag. ult reverend Mr. Love God is as well pleased with the barking of a dog as with the prayers of a Christlesse man See Part 1. chap. 8. Vse 1. Use 1. Whenever then thou goest to Gods door to knock and cry for an asmes expect to meet with this question who art thou that calls whether art thou a friend or an enemy what is thy plea who brought thee hither what interest hast thou in the place canst thou produce the Kings bond did his Spirit fetch thee hast thou any claim to the purchase of his Son c. It s too ordinary not to consider or regard what prayers we offer up to God but to rest on the opus operatum the work done however it be performed but yet it is more ordinary not to enquire after the person his state and condition many care not what they offer as all gross hypocrits but even amongst the Saints there are not a few who seldom ask who art thou who takest upon thee to sacrifice to the Lord It is indeed an evidence of love respect to provide the best of the flock and not dare to bring the halt and the lame but that 's not enough thou must also take heed in whose hands thou put'st it under the law none durst offer but the Priests who were consecrated to that office and there is a Priest-hood under the Gospel by which only acceptable sacrifices can be offered 1 Pet. 2.5 Rev. 1.6 If thou durst appear before the throne of Justice and wert able to carry thy cause in point of law and equity then thou mightest order thy cause and not fear (l) Gen. 18.25 the juage of all the earth would do right But since we have nothing of our own to hold out but sin and misery indigence and wretchedness and like beggars our sores and manifold infirmities we might be the more hopefull to carry our suit if we could plead our relation to the place Supplicants do not prevail with God as an orator with the hearers but as children with their father the sigh and groan of the (m) Videmus vulgo parcutes magis delectari balbutienti infantia infantium quam universa eloquentra hominum eloquentissimorum ●pat●r
be enough bewailed these ravens have sucked all the marrow and fat out of thy sacrifice and have rendred it a vain and unprofitable oblation those (n) Eccles 10.1 dead flies cause thy ointment send forth a stinking savour They will overspread the whole duty command and captivate the man so that now they will not be repelled and thus they become constant abiding and universal these weeds over-grow and choak the good seed and what crop can be expected and thou willingly entertainest these robbers and evil guests and therefore thou art inexcusable This argument concerning wandring thoughts deserved a larger and more particular disquisition had it not been so fully and judiciously handled by others See Mr. Gurnal loc cit pag. 310. to pag. ●32 Morn Exerc. Serm. 19. Mr. Cobbet Part 3. Chap. 2. Only let us adn as in the like case Part 2. Chap. 3 some few passages from these modern Divines whose words may have weight with such disconsolate ones as are daily mourning under the burden of roving thoughts in holy duties Believe it Christian it is not thine (o) 2 Cor. 12.10 inevitable weakness nor thy (p) Mark 14.38 sensible dulness nor thy (q) Psa 73.21 22. lamented roavings nor thy (r) Gen. 15.11 opposed distractions nor thy (ſ) 1 Joh. 5.13 mistaken unbelief it is not any nor all these that can shut out thy prayer if thou dost not (t) Psa 66.18 regard iniquity in thy heart Morn Exerc. Serm. 1. If we fail in the manner of our prayer and if it be a total failing if we pray without faith without any faith at all without zeal and the like farewell to the success of such petitions but if it be a partial failing and that failing strived against and prayed against the case is very different by the evangelical allay we do what we desire to do in Gods gracious acceptation our Advocate strikes in with us and begs his Father to regard the matter and not the manner of our prayers Mr. Newton on Joh. 17.24 pag. 499. Believers prayers pass a refining before they come into Gods hands did he indeed read them with their impertinencies and take our blotted coppy out of our hand we could not fear too much what the issue might be but they come under the correctors hand our Lord Jesus hath the inspecti-of them who sets right all our broken requests and misplaced petitions he washes out our blots with his own blood his mediation is the fine searse through which our prayers are boulted and all that is course and heterogeneal he severes from the pure what is of his own Spirits breathihg he presents and what our fleshly part added he hides that it shall not prejudice us or our prayers This was the sweet Gospel-truth wrapt up in the Priests bearing the sin of the holy offerings Exod. 28.38 Mr. Gurnal loc cit pag. 330. I have the rather added these testimonies because though it be too ordinary for the most part of titular Christians not to regard what they offer to the Lord though they come in their pollution and offer a corrupt thing to the great King yet their heart never smites them they rest in the work done not caring how it be done though the fowls come down upon their sacrifice and eat it up yet they will not be at the pains to drive them away nor do they lay their loss to heart nor mourn for it but though it be thus with the multitude yet the generation of the righteous will take heed what they offer to the Lord they know that their is no road more infested with thieves then that which is between heaven and earth and therefore when they pass that way they put on the whole armour of God imploring the conduct of the spirit and a convoy from heaven to guard them thither that they may with success carry on that precious traffick and they will follow their dull hearts as closely all the while as a Carrier will do the unruly Horse fearing least if for one moment they should not attend and drive their heart should stand still or start aside and yet notwithstanding all their care and diligence their hearts will mis-give them and those cheaters and robbers will draw on a parly and get advantage of them for the flesh will lust against the spirit so that they cannot do what and as they would Gal. 5.17 The law in the members will war against the law of the mind bringing us into captivity to the law of sin so that though to will be present with us yet how to perform we find not and thus the good that we would we do not but the evil that we would not that we do as the holy Apostle complained and lamenteth and where is the Saint on earth that may not take up the same complaint even when he is most spiritual and best employed in meditation prayer c Rom. 7.15 18 19 21 22 23 24. Though carnal hearts do not value a communion with God yet who knows what a sad affliction it is to the children of God to have their fellowship with him thus interrupted I verily believe saith (u) Mr. Burroughs gosp worsh pag. 281. a late Divine there are many that have already good assurance of Gods love in Christ that if God should speak to them as he spake to Solomon bidding him ask what he should give him who for themselves would put up this petition Oh! Lord that I may be delivered from a wandring spirit in holy duties and especially in the duty of prayer that I may thereby come to enjoy a more holy communion with thy self then ever yet I have enjoyed and such would account this to be a greater mercy then if God should give them to be Kings or Queens over the whole world O Christian is thy deadness and wandring thoughts thus thy burden and is it the great desire of thy soul to be rid of them and art thou striving and endeavouring against them I might tell you those glad tidings which one tendered to his friend in the like case who seing him oppressed with such distempers under such sad complaints came cheerfully to him said I can tel you good news the best that ever you heard viz. as soon as ever you are in heaven you shall serve Christ without interruption and weariness which words saith (x) Thomas Shiphard in a letter from new England pag mihi 39. my Author well thought on revived the man Though the Lord will not utterly y drive out these Canaanites out of the land that they may be for our trial exercise and humiliation yet it is through our fault and negligence if they be not brought under the yoke and are not already become tributaries (z) Judg. 3.4 and ere it be long the victory shall be compleat and they shall no more molest any true Israelite ah why should the Saints be too much discouraged they will not stay long in
desi●●d 3. From the return ma●e to Christs prayer once and again (z) Mat. 26.39 42 44. renewed that th● 〈◊〉 ●●●ght ●●●s f●om ●im it is evident that the prayer may be 〈…〉 when the particular is not gra●ced for 〈…〉 or p●●s a ●ay from him but he did drink it o●● 〈◊〉 the ●●●●om and ye● it were blasphemous to imagine that Christs ●●ayer w●● not heard contrary to what h● himself ●ff●●●th Joh. 11 4● Father I know that thou alwaies hea●est me And pa●●icularly as to that prayer the holy Spirit ●●stifieth that he was heard Heb. 5.7 And then 4. in the general the Scriptures of truth do most clearly fully and frequently assert that they th●● s●ek the Lord shall not want any good thing Psa 34 10. the same is affirmed of them that walk vpright●● Psa 84.11 and of them that fear the Lord Ps● 34.9 H●●ce we may well infer since they shall want ●o good thing they cannot want a return ●o their prayers and 〈…〉 answer from their God the Lord doing what is 〈◊〉 for them 〈◊〉 reference to the particular they desired A●d si●●e no 〈◊〉 shall befall the righteous Psa 91.10 P●●v 12.21 c. therefore they shall not g●●●hat 〈…〉 ●hem 〈◊〉 they should ask it upon a mistake 〈◊〉 ●aths of th● 〈◊〉 are m●●c● 〈◊〉 truth ●esu● ha● k●●p 〈…〉 monies Psa 25.10 If all his 〈…〉 such then 〈◊〉 those paths in which he 〈◊〉 in ●●swering th●● prayers those paths must be su●● 〈…〉 of ●●uth and fidelity in 〈◊〉 forming th●●e 〈…〉 answer them when they call upon him There 〈◊〉 ●ever a p●●yer p●●●●ed out in truth at which the God of truth did ●o● drew nigh and to which he did not 〈◊〉 Psa 145.18.19 all his paths are mercy and truth to all true 〈◊〉 who can produce one exception or instance to the co●tr●●y He never said to such sock ye me in vain Isa 45.19 and then there is a considerable word to this purpose Rom. 8.28 We know that all things work together for good to them that love him if we ponder the scope of the place we will find this general truth to have a special relation to prayer of which the Apostle had been speaking in the two preceeding verses where he had shown our ignorance and that we know not what to ask and the need we stand in of light and help and now saith he you having been assisted to do your duty and pray ar●ght you need not be anxious for Gods part and that which lieth upon him to do by way of return for ye may be assured whether he give or with-hold the particular he will have such a care of you as to do nothing but what he will make contribute and work for your good though we know not what to ask yet God knoweth what to give he will not challenge thee for asking what thou apprehended to be good for thee if (a) Especially since his Spirit may concur and assist thee in the pouring out of such a prayer it being our duty to go to God and hold up to him what we conceived to be good and fit for us committing to him to make choyce for us what he knows to be best See Part 1. Chap. 9. Pag. 269. upon the matter it be lawfull and if thy desire be moderate and submissive although as to the particular there may be a mistake flowing from thy ignorance of the event and those following circumstances which thou couldst not for-see but yet the Lord will do what he of his infinite wisdom and knowledge seeth will be indeed good and convenient for thee and we I and ye believing Romans saith the Apostle do know that God will care for them that love him and who in all things do make their requests known to him he will procure their good by the fittest means though the wicked will not know and acknowledge Gods care and fidelity in performing his promises and therefore think it in vain to seek the Lord yet we know and are perswaded of his love and care Surely the knowledge and belief of this point is a differencing mark and character they who have no interest in Gods love and care will not believe it towards others And thus its certain that the Lord alwaies heareth his honest supplicants Si (b) Aug. ●u●i supra non ad voluntatem tamen ad utilitatem If not according to their desire yet for their profit which if our (c) Our desires are often foolish and ●●rtfull desires would not hinder and obstruct they should alwaies be answered what doth our kind Father grudge to give us such empty trifles which he bestoweth in such abundance upon the wicked would he who hath so loved us as to give his only begotten Son to death for us and to prepare an exceeding and (d) 2 Cor. 4.17 eternal weight of glory for us would he with-hold these perishing thi●gs from us if it were not for our good Rom. 8. ●2 Nay if we had not askt as we could have no solid peace either in the having or wanting such a particular that being the fruit of prayer Phil. 4.6 7. So we might have (e) Deus concedit tratus quod negat propitius vid. Aug. loco jam jam citato gotten in wrath what the Lord now in mercy with-holdeth from thee who hast committed the matter to God and hast referred all to his wise free and loving choyce And thus whatever be the particular ends and reasons of which Sect. 4. why the Lord with-holdeth such and such particular mercies as we desired in the general it is evident that his design herein alwaies is to prevent our hurt and promove our comfort and happiness and that all his paths toward us may be mercy and truth by making all things work together for our good And now to the Objection as it is propounded we answer Although al things did come alike to all yet they are not alike to all though in the outward dispensation there appear no diff●rence yet as to the fountain from which such a dispensation did flow the end to which it doth tend the effect fruit use c there is a vast difference for those things which are mercies blessings and pledges of love to the Saints prove snares judgments and an earnest of everlasting wrath to the wicked and what greater difference can be imagined yea not only is there so great an inequality dissimilitude where they seem to be equal and alike but also where there is an inequality and the advantage appeareth to be on the part of the wicked as while we compare them in their prosperity and success and having (f) Ps 73 7● more then their heart could wish with the godly under persecution affliction and sore calamities yet even thus the case is not altered nor the difference and disproportion less for the Saints afflictions wants and tryals are sanctified unto them and are made to work for their good as being
up to pray and enlargeth the affections in prayer 2. if by or in prayer he quiet the heart and make thee Hannah like come from the Kings presence with a contented and calmed spirit 3. if whilst thou art praying the Lord smile upon thee and lift up the light of his countenance upon thee and make any intimation to thee concerning his love and thy adoption and son-ship 4. if he stir up in the heart a particular faith whereby thou assuredly expectest the very particular thou desired enabling thee to wait for it maugre all impediments and discouragments but this now-a-daies is not very usual 5. when the Lord doth put a r●stless importunity in the heart whereby it continu●th instant in prayer though with submission as to the particular 6. (d) Cha. 6. after prayer how is suc●ess may be discerned if after prayer thou walk obediently and circumspectly if thou be as carefull to hearken to the voice of the Lord in his commandments as thou art desirous that he should hearken to thy supplications 7. if all the while the Lord delayeth thou wait upon him and look up for an answer 8. but if thou get what thou desired and in that very way and by thess very means which thou pitchedst upon as it often falleth out what needest thou doubt of the success of thy prayers But now we come to particulars and 1. by these directions we may know that our prayers are heard when the thing we desired is not (e) Cha. 9. accomplished as 1. if thou canst discern any thing given by way of commutation and exchange thou wilt not readily more d●ubt of the success of thy prayer then if thy desire had been accomplisht But though thou canst not discern a compensation made to thee yet if 2. thou wast not per●mptory in thy desire if thou durst entrust the Lord and roll all over upon his wise choice thou needst not fear least he dis-appoint thee if thou hast prayed submissively to his will thou mayst be assured that he will do what will be most for thy well 3. would not this support thee if the Lord should deal with thee as he did with Moses giving to him a (f) Deut. 34.1 c. Pisgah-sight of that land into which he so earnestly desired to enter if the Lord do yield far in such a particular as if he laboured to give thee all satisfaction would not that quiet thy heart Nay 4. if he discover his hand by some remarkable dispensation in suspending his ordinary influence or turning second causes even then when it would have appeared that such a mercy as thou desiredst was brought to the birth this may be an evidence to thee that the Lord hath some special respect to thee and to thy prayers and some special design in with-holding such a supposed mercy ●ts true if there be any (g) Psa 139.24 wicked way in thee such a dispensation may be for thy warning and instruction but yet alwaies it is in mercy and in love towards thee who committing thy way to God dost call upon him in sincerity 5. (h) This and the following ho●d forth the effects that a sancti●●ed acnial or rather a graciou● grant ●●cundum cardinem precationis hath upon the heart If the Lord fill the heart not only 1. with a ●●ent submission unto his will but also 2. with a holy contentment and satisfaction in his choyce as being best for thee and thus if 3. out of faith thou canst praise and render thanks to God r●sting on his love care and fidelity whatever sense and carnal reason depone and suggest to the contrary this may be an evidence to thee that the spirit that now resteth upon thee hath led thee to the th●one and hath not suffered thee to go away empty You will say but who is he that useth to praise God for denying what he askt and doth not rather complain and mourn when he meeteth with such a dispensation Ans Our ignorance unbelief and groundless jealousie makes us too often take a quite contrary course to what we ought and should follow and thus while we are called to praise we are ready to murmure and complain and the cause of this our errour and mistake besides our unbelief and sensuality is our negligence and because we will not be at the pains as to bring our hearts into a right frame and to pray with the whole heart so neither to reflect vpon our hearts and prayers and to compare them with the rule and those qualifications which the promise doth require that thus we might judge aright of the success of our work 6. If thou be not discouraged neither entertainest hard thoughts of thy master and his work if thou love not prayer worse but continuest instant in that exercise not daring to run away from God in a fit of discontentment as this may be an evidence of thy patience submission and (i) That which the Lord mainly regardeth is thy faith without which we would soon weary and yet thy patience and submission abstructly considered cannot but be wel-pleasing to God For ●aith our Author here it moves ingenious natures to see men take repu●ses and d●nia●● well which proud persons will not do and 〈◊〉 it mov●s God c. faith So also of the acceptance and success of thy prayer in that the spirit of prayer and supplication doth thus rest upon thee thou mayst conclude that thou hast pray●d in the Spirit and that therefore thy prayers cannot want an answer Now we proceed to the other branch of th● question viz. how we may discern whether mercies come to us by the hand of a common providence or in return to ou● prayers 〈◊〉 (k) Ibid. cha 7. If we can discern the Lords hand in a m●re then ordinary m●nner we may be confident he hath hearkened ●o our voice as first when he bringeth a thing to pass through many difficulties that stood in the way 2. When he provideth and facilitateth the means and makes them conspire and combine in the accomplishing of a mercy for us 3. When he doth it suddainly and ere thou art aware of it as Josephs and Peters delivery from prison and the Israelites return from Babylon they were as men in a dream and could scarce believe what was done because so suddainly and unexpectedly 4. If God do above what we did ask or think giving an over-plus and casting in other mercies together with that which we desired and perhaps for a long time prayed for 5. By making some remarkable circumstance a token for good and a seal of his love and care and thus a circumstance small in its self may be magnum indicium as the dogs not barking at the children of Israel when they went out of Egypt in the night Exod. 11.7 c. 2. The consideration of the time when such a mercy is accomplisht and given may help us to discern whether it be in answer to our prayers as 1. if
that we may run to the fountain it self to have a supply and an up-making there the Lord will with hold many creature enjoyments that we may know our home not to be here and that our minority is not yet past nor the inheritance to be yet intrusted to us as being but pupils who must depend and ro●l themselves and their affairs over upon the care and fidelicy of another and that thus our hearts may be enlarged with longing desires after that day when our wills shall run parallel with our good and the glory and purpose of our Master 4. To prevent our hurt we are ready to mistake and to ask a serpent in stead of an egge but God will not grant such foolish desires but will according to Christs (e) Joh. 17.25 prayer keep us thus as it were against our wills from the evil of the world 1. from the evil of temptation for often (f) See Sect. 2. such things prove an occasion of sin 2. from the evil of suffering for riches honours and pleasures have often proven a precipice from which the men of the world have been cast headlong 5. to promove our good and greater advantage what we desire may prove obstructive of a greater mercy either spiritual or temporal and the Lord in his pity and love will not suffer such a block and impediment to be cast into our way 6. for our instruction what is said of the cross schola crucis schola lucis may well be applied to this dispensation which often through our ignorance and mistake proveth a sad affliction to us thus we may learn no more to live by sense and hereby we may be set a work to examine our hearts and wayes more narrowly that we may know whether such a dispensation proceedeth from anger or love and thus we may be brought to espy what formerly did escape our view c. nay here we might alledge all those motives which prevail with the Lord to afflict his people and honest servants while he doth not pursue any quarrel against them as in the case of Job of the Apostles and Martyrs for as this case is much like to that this being often very grievous to us and looking affliction-like So the ends and motives on the Lords part will be found to be much alike and for the most part the same As to the second branch of the question viz. those ends for which the Lord delayeth to give what he purposeth at length to give we might here resume several particulars mentioned in the former head as there also might be applied much of what we are now to say these cases not being much different as to the present enquiry since both those dispensations flow from one and the same fountain of love wisdom care and fidelity of a compassionat father towards his children and servants 1. Then the Lord delayes to give till we be fitted and (g) Tauto quippe illud quod valde magnum est sumemus eapacius quanto fidelius credimus speramus sirmius defideramus ardentius prepared to receive and that such a dispensation may be a mean to humble and prepare us every thing is good and beautifull in its season and the Lord knows best how to time our mercies right if the Lord should give in our time and before we be prepared to receive and improve such a gift would be as medicine unseasonably taken which would rather encrease and beget then remove diseases but as the Lord thus delayeth till we be fitted to receive and improve his mercies aright So 2. till other things be fitted and be in readiness to joyn with the desired mercy for our good that thus according to that sweet though little pondred or believed word Rom. 8.28 all things may work together for our good that impediments may be removed and other means may be placed and joyn hands with such a mercy that fit occasions may be offered and such circumstances may combine c. and thus a considerable space of time may interveen before the right and fit season come 3. To make us prize the Lords bounty the more when he fulfilleth our desire and to make us the more thankfull for the mercy (h) Augustin supra citat cito data vilescunt soon and easily gotten little prized and soon forgotten 4. To make us pray more frequently and importunatly (i) Ibid. Deus differt dare ut tu discas orare the Lord delayeth that we may add both to the number and measure of our prayers that we may become both more assiduous and more ardent supplicants 5. That at length he may appear for our greater comfort the Lord waiteth that he may be gracious and that our mercies may be full compleat and stable 6. To learn us that hard lesson of submission and that we may not dare to limit and prescribe to the Lord that we may patiently wait and look up to him untill he show us his loving kindness to make us examples to others of patience dependence and self-denial c. I have not insisted on these particulars because many of them or such like are more fully handled and applied to a more (k) Viz. both to this and that which followeth chap. 2. general case by the judicious Mr. Gee in his elaborat Treatise concerning prayer-obstruction Chap. 4. But what hath bee said may suffice for convincing us of our impatience folly and ingratitude to our kind God who waits that he may be gracious to us and who will not with-hold our desires when these are not contrary to his glory the good of his people and our own comfort and happiness CHAP. II. When and whose prayer will the Lord not hear nor answer WE will 1. speak of this question as it concerneth the Saints 2. as it concerneth the wicked Sect. 1. When will the Lord not hear his children and servants and what are these sins that will obstruct and hinder the success of their prayers Psal 66.18 If I regard iniquity in my heart the Lord will not hear me VVE may speak of the Saints prayers either for privat and personal mercies or for publick mercies to the Church and incorporation of believers but as to the present case we need not insist on this distinction but in reference to both sort of prayers we may generally answer with the Psalmist Psa 66.18 if we regard iniquity in our heart the Lord will not accept or answer any of our prayers either for our selves or others See Part. 2. Chap. 1. But it may be askt what are those sins which in a special manner do obstruct and hinder the success of our prayers Ans Albeit we condemn the stoical dream concerning the equality of sins it being evident from the Word of truth and sound reason that there is a great difference between sins and sins some being much more hainous and grievous then others both in respect of the act object manner of performance and many aggravating
and such ends and hath fixed such an order and connexion between the means and the end if he I say inable us to do our duty and if we prove so wise as to follow the right way and use the means we may be confident of the success and that our labour shall not be in vain But it may yet be objected that the Lord having freely promised to give what we stand in need of Obj. 10. Ans and to withhold no good thing from them that walk uprightly Ps 83.11 c. it seemeth needless to interpose our prayers and requests Ans Albeit the promises be altogether free yet the Lord calls for our prayers as a part of that worship we owe to him to testifie our dependance on him and to show his delight in prayer that we may be fitted to receive and the more engaged to improve aright what he giveth and to return to him the sacrifice of praise nay the Lord thereby not only procures our good O! what an effectual mean is fervent prayer to take the heart off the world to strengthen our faith enflame our love c. but provides for our honour also Oh saith (t) Considera quanta est tibi concessa faelicitas quanta gloria attributa orationibus famulari cum Deo cum Christo miscere colloquia optare quod velis quod desideras postulare Chrysost apud Thom. art cit ad 3. Chrysostom consider O man what honour and happiness is conferred on thee while thou art admitted familiarly to converse with God and Christ to propound what thou wilt and to ask whatsoever thou desirest O! how would we prize such familiarity with an earthly King and what an honour and high favour would we esteem it but while we are allowed and invited to this liberty with the King of Kings how do we undervalue that admirable mercy and priviledge and as this heavenly employment of it self is so honourable and excellent So usually it brings with it much beauty to him who is employed in it then the Lord manifests his glory to the soul and lets it enjoy as it were a heaven upon earth then the (u) Cant. 5.1 honey and the honey-comb is set before thee and thou art invited to eat the soul saith (x) Mr. Hodge apology for the Lords prayer pag. 35. one of a praying Saint is sometimes in a sort transfigured and shineeth as Christs body on mount Tabor Ah! from whence should heat and light come if not from the Sun it is no wonder then though such as hide and cover themselves from its beams (y) Mat. 4 1 6. walk in darkness and sit in the cold region and shadow of death But though thus we be obliged to pray though the honour of our Master and our own good do call for diligence herein yet is the promise no less free then if there were no such condition required on our part our prayers are not our money nor a price for what we receive will any man think that we give not freely to these beggers who importunatly cry at our doors and yet there is here some sort of debt and obligation lying on us to pity those who are in misery but there is no obligation lying upon the Almighty to hear us when we cry nay were it not that the promises are altogether free notwithstanding of any condition to be performed by us or any qualification required on our part it were in vain for us to pray or go about any duty looking to the rich recompence and reward which the promise holds forth since though we did all we can yea though we could perfectly obey all the Commands yet are but unprofitable servants Luk. 17.10 when we pay our debt we do not (z) This truth hath extorted a notable confession from the Jesuit Salmeron in several particulars which may serve as so many irrefragable arguments against the popish doctrine concerning merits and supererogation primum quod servi sumus c. Vid. loc Salmer in evang Tom. 7. de parab tract 30. pag. 190. vid. etiam tres rationes quibus ibidem probat nos Deo esse inutiles oblige the creditor to bestow new favours on us but ah how defective and imperfect are our best performances Isa 64.6 I grant that among men there may be so much trouble and travel in seeking and warting on that an answer may be too (a) Et sic verum est tritum illud Senecae nulla res carius emitur quam quae precibus empta Obj. 11. dear coft by the supplicant and yet even thus thy supplication doth not profit him to whom thou makes thy adress far less can our prayers and service extend to the Lord Ps 16.2 if thou be righteous what givest thou him or what receiveth he off thine hand Job 35.7 Lastly it may be objected that the father himself loveth us and what need we then ask any thing from him his love will cry and prevail though we were silent and thus our blessed Lord tells his disciples that upon this very account viz. because the father loved them he would not he needed not pray for them Joh. 16.26 27. And upon this same ground we may further argue thus thou art O man either a reprobat and an object of Gods hatred and certainly thy prayers cannot prevail for thou not being in Christ canst not obtain access Eph. 2.18 Eph. 3.12 or else thou art one of his elect and precious ones and to what purpose wouldst thou pray wouldst thou move his bowels and have them turned towards thee that is already done the Father loveth thee and is more ready to give then thou to receive and if he were not could thy prayers move and change him Ans Ans The Lords love is so far from giving a discharge from prayer that upon this very account he cal s for our prayers Cant. 2.14 because the Lord loveth us therefore he delighteth in our prayers Prov. 15.8 compared with ver 9. as a tender (b) Neque enim renuens preces nostras differt sed hac arte sedulos nos efficiens ad semetipsum attrahere vult nam pater quamvis benignus cum a puero rogatur ahnuit quasi non volens dare non ut neget sed ut ille ardentius petat sibi magis concilietur Chrysost apud Jo. Arboreum theosoph lib. 13. cap. 7. father because he loveth his child will have him come and ask the sons presence and voice is sweet to him and therefore he will not at the first haply give him but lets him stay and renew his request and add pleas and arguments and therefore though our asking be not the true and proper cause albeit it be a mean which his wisdom and love hath made choyce of why he giveth yet he will have us ask as for other reasons some of which were hinted at in answer to the foregoing objection so especially because he loveth us neither the Lords promise
said we are to be excused who have done nothing contrary to the will and decree of God Nay say they the will of God did not only lay an obligation but a necest●ty on us to obey and conform our wayes and is there any reason then why God should complain of us who have such a warrant for all we have don To which vain Plea the Apostle replieth ver 20. Nay but O man who art thou that repliest against God and proceedeth to shew from Gods soveraignty his right and power to dispose of his creatures according to his own good pleasure but from this dispute we may clearly discern that Gods decree is no cloak for sin nor a law to justifie our wayes and desires But you will say though it be not an adequate rule and so not a sufficient ground to denominat an action good because its conform thereunto yet it must so far be acknowledged for a rule as that it must acquite and excuse if not justifie the doer in that it did lay on him a necessity to obey and conform his work thereunto Answ He who would plead not guilty because his wayes are conform to the decrees of God must either be grosly ignorant or desperatly perverse not knowing or not caring what he saith for God by his most holy and spotlesse Decrees doth not force draw necessitat or tempt any man to sin neither doth be thereby command approve or testifie his approbation of or complacency in any sinfull action only he purposeth not to hinder but to permit sinfull men to become a prey to their own lusts and the temptations they shall meet with in their way we must not indeed imagine that Gods providence is sleeping while occasions are offered or that there is in his most holy will no positive act concerning the futurition of sin its long since (e) Circa quod cunque est Dei permissio est ejus volitio actualis Brad de causa Dei lib 1. cap. 22.33 hoc quippe ipso quod contra voluntatem D●ifecerunt de ipsis factaest voluntas ejus propterea namque magna opera Domini ut miro inffabili modo non fiat praeter ejus voluntatem quod etiam contro ejus fit voluntatem quianon fieretst non siueret nec utique nolens sinit sed volens August Ench. ad Laur. cap. 100. Bradwardin did demonstrat the contrary and the Jesuits themselves do confesse that there is a necessary connexion between the divine permission the creatures committing of sin so that the futurition of sin may be concluded by a necessary illation from such a permission of it our Divines and the Dominicans call it a permissive Decree decretum permissivum I like not the expression but the penury of words hath extorted it that epithet and denomination is not taken from the act as if it were not 1. Positive and 2. efficacious but from the object Because the holy Lord thus doth purpose not to procure and work but to permit the creature to follow its course but we will lanch no further now into this Ocean but thus it may appear that the divine Decree concerning the futurition of sin doth not import Gods willing or approving his working or procuring of sin we cannot be said to fight against God or to oppose his will and work while we strive against sin albeit we can do nothing without or beyond the divine appointment and albeit he will order and dispose of our sins to his own glory and thus cause (f) Judg. 14.14 sweetnesse come out of the strong yet this is no excuse for the sinner who (g) Vid. August Euch cap. 101. mindeth no such matter but serveth his own lusts and thus provoketh and dishonoureth God And thus notwithstanding of any decree in God he is justly displeased with sin and justly punisheth the sinner albeit there can nothing come to passe without his efficacious well ordering and all-governing providence yet sin is none of Gods works there is nothing in it that God will own it s a bastard begotten by the wretched creature which cannot without blasphemy be fathered on God what is said of the child is true of the parent what of a particular rod Ezek. 7.5 is verified in every sin it is an evil an only evil not (h) Non solum subjectivè sed etiam formaliter in se only to the committers as that judgment to the sufferers and to the impenitent on whom it was inflicted but also in it self there is nothing in it which God can will or love though he will suffer and permit sin to be yet we cannot say that God willeth sin to be though he decreeth to suffer and permit us to sin yet he decreeth not and willeth not for that doth import his approbation and efficiency us to sin there is here then an efficacious permission and a willing and decreeing to suffer men and devils to sin but there is no warrant or commission no approbation or licence for us to sin and no divine (i) Non in sed circa peccatum efficiency and causality in though about sin Thus then the morality of our actions must not be measured by any decree concerning the futurition of events but by some other rule in which must concur Gods will and appointment setting bounds unto us and designing our duty and discovering what is well-pleasing and acceptable to God honest and laudable in it self and profitable and comfortable to us in the issiue and thus we have the word of God for our direction and have his laws and testimonies to be our rule Deut. 29.29 Isa 8.20 Deut. 30.10 11 12 Deut. 5.29 Psal 147.19 Rom 12.2 1 Thes 4.2 1 Pet. 4.2 c and we may take notice of these three things as necessarily requisit and concurring in that which is a warrant unto and rule of our actions and petitions 1. The good pleasure and decree of God not concerning what shall come to passe but concerning the quality and morall goodnesse of human actions and which doth limit and set bounds to reasonable creatures and prescribeth unto them their duty and this is the fountain and first spring yea and by many judicious and sober Divines is judged to be the supreme adaequate and first rule of morall rectitude Hence we may conceive that Gods laws in Scripture are called Decrees Statuts and Ordinances 2. From this decree and appointment doth to our apprehension flow divine approbation complacency and delight in what is thus appointed to be our work and duty hence that appointment is called the good acceptable and perfect will of God Rom. 12.2 and our actions when conform to that rule are said to be well pleasing in his sight Heb. 13.2 yea the Lord doth not only declare his love of his complacency and delight in these when they are performed but also he is said to will and desire though not according to the (k) Arm. Socin and Jes from thence would collect
rule so it s 2. constant perpetual and immovable we need not fear least the Lord abrogate and disannul it but that same hand of providence which now holdeth out to us what our hears desire may in a moment be lifted up against us that same hand that now seemeth to open the door may shut it when he pleaseth and crush thee if thou stand in the way Sect. 2. For what things and in what order and maner should we pray THe promise being such a sure ground and foundation of prayer we may safely go where see this star point out our way the promises are not only precious and exceeding great 2 Pet. 1.4 But also like the (a) Ps 119.96 commandments exceeding broad and of a large extent they go as far as a rational and sanctified appetite can reach The will I confesse may chuse every (b) Bonum est quod omnia appe●uus Arist Eth. 1. cap. good thing and the promise is of as large a compasse The Lord hath said that he will give grace and glory and are not these very large and comprehensive yet least any should complain he will leave no room for any exception but as he hath promised to give these great mercies so that he will withhold no good thing from his honest servants and supplicants Ps 84.11 Ps 34.9 10. Ps 23.1 Ps 85.12 c. and that he will preserve them from all evil Ps 1 21.7 that he will preserve their soul ver 7. and their body their going out and coming in and that he will not suffer their foot to be moved ver 8 3 5 6. Thus the promise excludeth nothing that is good and I know no good thing which we may not pray for Goodness by the Phylosophers is thought to be a relative property and in the Schools that is called good which is fit and (c) Bonum est ens ut conveniens non fibi ut ex tern●●●● videtur manifestum sed alteri unde Hurtado ex divisione boni in honestum u●ile delectabile recte colligit bonum communiter usurpari pro convenienti quia inquit honestas utilitas delectatio dicunt ordinem ad aliud Hurt metaph disp 7. § 5. § 56. convenient which general may to good purpose be applyed to this case in divinity while we enquire what is good for a Christian and what he may claim and ask as being his by vertue of a promise viz not every thing which his lust doth crave but every thing that is fit and convenient and so good for him It may be riches pleasures honours c. would not hic nunc and at such a season be convenient for him but would prove a snare and therefore there is no promise that we can absolutely and peremptorily plead as a bond for such a supposed mercy The object of the promise must be some good thing bonum tibi there can be no promise made to thee but it must be concerning something which is good and covenient for thee otherwise it were rather a threatning then a promise O! If all our prayers and desires were thus limited and did carry alongst with them this proviso we would not be so peremptory in our requests nor so impatient under a repulse nor so ready to call in question Gods love and care and the truth of his promises when in mercy he refuseth to satisfie our lusts and foolish desires And O! with what confidence security and calmness of spirit might we roll our selves and all our affairs over upon our kind and provident Father who as he will not withhold what as good so will not suffer what is evil to come near us But as thou mayest ask every good so only what is good for no evil can be an object of love and desire but rather of hatred and aversation and so falleth not under a promise but a threatning and thus cannot be a fit material for prayer and supplication but rather for deprecation or imprecation But here we might speak to this question whether we may desire and pray for any evil whether of sin or suffering though not absolutely and for it self yet as it may be a mean for humbling of us and drawing us near to God There be few of those we have read who propound and none who at any length do speak to this material as we conceive case but since there be so many particulars which we must speak to in this Chapter we shall remit this to Part 3. and handle it amongst the cases Only let us from thence suppose that the object of our prayers must be something that is good fit convenient and profitable to us and that not only respectively and in reference to such an end but also absolutly and of it self at least negatively and permissively And thus it must not be evil either morally or physically it must not of it self be either dishonourable to God and contrary to his law or afflictive and bitter to us But as to what is thus good thou art not straitned either by the promise or the nature of this performance we have both conjoyned and meeting together in this center or rather diffused through this large circumferene Mat. 7.11 Your Father which is in heaven shall give good things to them that ask him We need not descend unto particulars these being so many and different whatever thou stands in need of what ever may be useful and profitable either for soul or body for this life or that which is to come for thy state and calling for thy present exigence and condition c. thou mayest ask in prayer and plead a promise for the obtaining of it All which good and desirable things are summarily comprehended under six heads in that perfect pattern which our Lord Jesus taught his Disciples Mat. 6.9 Luk. 11.2 a commentary and explication whereof we purpose not to offer now especially since that hath been often and fully done by many judicious and learned Divines But we shall reduce what we judged necessary to add concerning the object of prayer into two generals viz. of things and persons Of the first we shall speak here and of the second in the following Section 1. Then as to these good things and mercies which are the matter of prayer it would be observed 1. that these are either temporal belonging to our bodily and perishing being in this world or spiritual which do (d) For even these temporal things have a remote tendency and should by us be referred to such a noble end more immediatly concern the soul and our everlasting being and happinesse 2. Both spiritual and temporal mercies may be subdivided for some of them are more some lesse necessary for obtaining the aforesaid ends as amongst spirituals some are necessary for our being and spiritual life others only for our greater comfort vigor and activity in doing so amongst temporals some are necessary for our bodily being and life others only for the comfort better
laid aside while we are running the r●ce that is set before us Heb. 12.1 Since therefore we know not what is the measure and portion and of temporall and outward things which is good and sutable for us we ought not to be peremptory in our desires after such or such a measure of them but should submissively roll our selves over upon the wisdom fidelitie love and care of our Father that he may give us such a portion of these things as may be most conducible for his glory and our eternall happinesse And O! how carefully should we watch over our hearts that our lusts our pride or covetousnesse do not enflame and add fewel to our desires which naturally are thus set on fire labouring to moderat them and alwayes to keep them within bounds that they be not excessive and exorbitant saying with Agur give me neither povertie nor riches Pro. 30.8 and having food and raiment let us according to the Apostles exhortation and Iacobs wish be therewith content 1. Tim. 6.8 Gen 28.20 O! let us often mind our main businesse and cheif end that it may regulat all our desires they being confined and kept in subordination to it Concl. 4. Although none of these outward things no not our bodily life and being which as the end must be more noble then all other things which are but means for maintaining and comforting thereof are so necessary that they should be absolutly and peremptorily loved desired and askt yet we may more confidently and peremptorily pray for a competent measure of those things that are more necessary for our being and life then for meer accessories or for aboundance and afluence of these transitory things we may more warrantably pray for our (g) Mat. 6.11 dayly Bread then that our (h) Psa 4.7 corne and wine may abound and with (i) Prov. 30. Agur we may more peremptorily ask food (k) Sufficientiam non indecent●r vult quisquis vult necamplius vult alioquin non ipsam vult ideo nondecenter vult August ad prob epist 121. cap. 6. convenient and that we be not pinched with poverty then that we may have (l) Qui autem dicit in oratione Domine multiplica divitias meas aut honores meos auge aut fac me in hoc seculo praepotentem atque clarentem c. puto cum non invenire in oratione Dominica quo possit haec vota cooptare Aug. ibid. cap. 12. riches honors and pleasures There is a competency and sufficiency which we cannot determine because it altereth and varieth according to our calling place and condition so that in respect of one and the same man that may be a competency and sufficient portion for him while in a private capacity which after he is a magistrate judge master of family c. is not enough nor sufficient for his condition rank and place albeit it were no difficult work to appoint for every one a Physicall as I may call it competency and measure which may suffice for maintaining his naturall life and being thus a very litle may suffice the most gluttonous appetite for natura est paucis contenta Yet only he whose wisdom is an unsearchable depth can assigne to every man a politique and civil competency sutable not only to his condition and rank in the world but also to his condition as he is a Pilgrime and viator and as he is on his journey home-wards for we are ready either to allow too much or too litle to others and alwayes too much to our selves but certainly a competency is desireable he who is the (m) 1 Cor. 14.33 God of order having appointed severall degrees and stations amongst men doth no doubt allow to every man such a measure of these outward things as may be sufficient to maintain him in such a rank and he may as warrantably petition such a measure of these things as is sufficient for that end as he may ask bread to put in his own mouth nay this civil and morall competency is no lesse then the naturall included in that (n) Mat. 6.11 petition for dayly bread and in Agurs (o) Prov. 30.8 desire of food convenient for the persons (p) Mat. 6.11 us and (q) Pro. 30.8 me must not only be considered in a naturall but also in a morall and politick condition and relation if we be masters of families that will not be food convenient for us which doth not serve for the maintenance of the family and that which may be enough for us and our families will not be sufficient for maintaining us into that rank and degree which is requisit for one who is in a publick charge nor for defraying the expences our place may put us to Yet let us not here exclude the former cautions though such a measure of these things may be comparatively and retatively necessary that is 1. more necessary then what is above the just measure and 2. necessary in reference to our being in and the discharging of our places aright yet these most necessary things ought only be desired and petitioned 1 secondarily giving spiritualls the precedency in our estimation and affection 2. relatively and in subordination to the great and cheif end And thus 3 conditionally if these things be and only so far as they shall prove subservient to the one thing necessary And 4. submissively and with a cheerfull resignation of our selves to the good pleasure and disposall of our kind Father who knoweth best what is good for us to have or want and 5. moderatly too great promotion or honors too great affluence and plenty may prove a snare and a judgement Deut. 32.15 Thy estate may be too great as thy shoes and garments too large much baggage and provision will rather prove a burthen then a help to the pilgrime Oh let us then take heed to the exhortation and see that our conversation be without covetousnesse Heb. 13.5 though thou mayest provide for thy family 1 Tim. 5 8. Though thou mayest lay up a fore hand as Joseph did against the famine Gen. 41.48 though thou mayest thus moderatly care for to morrow and parents provide for their children 2 Cor. 12.14 yet with moderation all care for these things that wants this qualification is sinfull and must be abandoned Phil. 4.6 5. Concl. 5. While we say that temporalls ought not be absolutly askt we do not affirme our prayers for these things should be in that sense conditionall in which the Logicians do call an enunciation conditionall and hypothetick because thus the truth (r) Vera enim est haec conditionalis Si Petrus esset Bucephalus esset irrationalis of neither part is considered but only their connexion and thus doth (ſ) Suppositio ut aiunt nihil ponit affirm nothing to be existing it doth not import that either the condition is or shall be placed or that the consequent viz. what is inferred upon such a supposition or
condition now is or at any time hereafter shall really be I grant the promises concerning these outward things may thus be called conditionall because the condition either 1. of the expediency of these things 2. of faith and other requisits in our prayer and 3. of walking uprightly as to the person and supplicant failing these are not included in the promise which is intailed to such a condition and proviso and so we cannot in faith plead such a promise untill first we begg and obtain a pardon And though there were no such failing either in the person or his performance either in the supplicant or in his supplication which might infer and according to the tenor of the covenant of grace procure a forfeiture of our right and exclude us from the promise though we may confidently and in faith approach the Throne knowing assuredly that we shall have in answer to our prayers either the particular viz. if it be good and expedient or (t) See part 4. sect 1. else the equivalent some other yea some better thing in stead of it yet we must ask with submission as to the particular it self not knowing whether or not hic nune it be good for us and so whether or not the promise doth give us a right to it Thus the promises are conditional in the former sense but our prayers are not For though we ask upon condition yet positively and determinately we ask for that condition rather respects the return grant and answer then prayer it self rather our getting and obtaining then our asking and desicing for absolutely we ask and desire but we do not ask and desire that we may absolutely and upon any terms have and receive but only upon condition if it be good and expedient for us to have And thus the condition is rather included in the object of prayer then in the act it self Yet since the act doth include a necessary habitude to the object and prayer to the return and answer for what is it to pray for such and such a particular but to petition that it may be given to us and we may have it therefore is it that prayer it self is said to he conditional which doth not cannot import that we do not really and properly ask and desire but that we do not ask and desire peremptorily and that we may have upon any terms and that we ask with submission to the divine appointment and in subordination to the one thing that is absolutely necessary But though we thus determinatly and in a maner absolutely ask if we respect the act and performance it self yet looking to the whole complex especially to the grant and return in the supposed case of non-expediency equivalently and by just interpretation we may be said not to ask the particular which we name in our prayers but rather to ask that we may not have it while we ask in subordination to the great end we pray that we may not get that which would obstruct and hinder our obtaining of it And therefore since the particular we pitched on as convenient for us is such as would prove a snare and a weight to beset us while we are running the race that is set before us while we pray for it relatively and in subordination we pray that we may not have it in the supposed case of opposition as shall at greater length be shown Part 4. Here it may be ask't whether we may also pray for the condition and thus pray absolutely for temporals For according to the rule in the Schools An (u) Hypothetica exposita con ditione evadit absoluta hypothetick proposition when the condition is placed becometh absolute And thus if the condition be a part of the object and directly in recto belong to the mater of the petition it is placed there and the petition cannot be said to depend upon it as a condition and so cannot in respect of it be called conditional But not to contend for terms the question is whether we may pray for the condition that it may be placed as for the thing that it may be given viz. 1. That the Lord would give such a particular and 2. make it a blessing Ans There is no doubt that we may ask a blessing with all we enjoy but whether we may ask that such a thing of it self indifferent may become a blessing that we may enjoy it seemeth more difficult For to us such a petition seemeth to import too much eagerness and peremptoriness in our desire after such a thing and therefore whatever may be said of this way of asking in it self as not being simply unlawfull yet it appeareth to be most safe either to ask conditionally or if the condition be also askt and the placing of it be a part of the petition our submission would then be expressed and we would cordially protest that though we ask such a thing and that it may prove a blessing yet we will not grudge nor repine though it be withheld but will acquiesce in the good pleasure of God and will construe a denyal to proceed from the love and care of a Father who knows best what is fittest for us to have or want and who can abundantly compense and make up that supposed loss But since the condition of expediency and subserviency to the great end must belong to the object of our prayers either as a part or limitation of it we may enquire whether alwayes we may reflect upon that condition and only ask these temporals in relation and subordination to the one thing necessary Ans We will not now digresse to speak to that noble question how we should in all our wayes intend and aim at the glory of God But in answer to the present question it will not be denyed that they who must do (x) 1 Cor. 10.31 all to the glory of God must propose this end in that most spiritual and immediate part of worship wherein we have (y) 1 Joh. 1.3 fellowship with the Father and his Son Jesus Christ that they who must eat and drink to the glory of God must ask their dayly bread to the glory of God It s true the Saints do not in every petition actually and formally reflect upon that great end yet virtually and by just interpretation they do so that if they were askt if they desired such a mercy though it should prove prejudicial unto and obstructive of the glory of God and a hinderance of their salvation they might truly reply that they would not in any wise have it upon these terms and that they would prefer affliction to such a supposed mercy and this virtual and habitual intention must exclude all peremptory and impatient desires after these things we must not so forget the chief end as to make these base things our end which we must do when we desire them so absolutely and peremptorily as that we will not bear a denyal when these things are sought
call to thee to pray for them for without them thou canst not obey the (c) Rom. 12.13 Rom. 13.7 8. c. commandment of paying tribute of owing nothing to any man thou canst not be hospital and distribute to the necessity of the Saints c. 4. And as the want of them doth thus hinder the performance of several duties so it is a great temptation to many sins O! saith Agur Let me not have poverty least I steal and take the name of my God in vain 5. Go to the Lyons and Ravens and they will teach thee thy duty they cry to God in their own way the eyes of all things wait upon him that he may give them their meat in due season Ps 104.21 27. Ps 145.15 Ps 147.9 They cry with the voice of nature and will not thou lift up thy soul and thy heart to God indigence maketh them groan and will it not send thee to the Throne and make thee cry to thy Father that he may pity thee 6. What we get by prayer hath a heavenly excellency in it though it were but a morsel of bread it hath more dignity in it then all the gems and diamonds and all the imperial Crowns of the world which come by the hand of a common providence all these things are but the bones without the marrow the whole Turkish Empire saith (d) Luth. in Gen. Luther as great as it is is but a crum which the Master of the family casts to the dogs but be it little or much that is given in return to prayer it is a blessing indeed and part of the childrens bread and it 's excellency appeareth in these particulars 1. In that it is a stream flowing from the purest fountain to wit the love and good will of our Father it is a fruit of love and a seal and pledge of love and as it cometh from love So 2. it tendeth to love it is a coal to enflame our affections and to warm our heart it is a motive and layeth an engagment on us to love our kind Father who visiteth us every morning with his tender mercies but prayerless souls take no notice of Gods hand nor do they much value his love Hence 3. it is a mercy indeed a promised and covenanted mercy as it cometh without that vexation heart-cutring and distrustfull care and excessive toyl and labour so it is enjoyed with less fear and is free of the snares and temptations that otherwise use to accompany it the blessing of the Lord maketh rich and he addeth no sorrow with it Prov. 10.22 It is by prayer that the creatures become good to us and are sanctified as to their enjoyment and use 1 Tim. 4.45 4. The right and title of possession doth add very much to the worth and goodness of things though not in themselves yet as to us who possesse them for 1. Who doth value what a theef robber usurper or oppressor doth possesse 2. How quickly may he be called to an account and as in a moment with disgrace be stripped naked of all yes though there were not such hazard of losing them yet an ingenuous spirit yea a moral Pagan would rather chuse a little to which he hath a right then thus to enjoy great revenues Prov. 16.8 5. We use to judge and esteem of the worth of things by their price especially if laid out by a wise man and good merchant but every morsel of bread the meanest creature thou gettest in return to thy prayers is the purchase of blood it cost more then a world though thou wert the greatest Monarch on earth by all thy Crowns thou couldst not purchase a right and sanctified title to the meanest of the creatures silver and gold may give possession and a civil right but they cannot give a spiritual right unto and a sanctified use of the least crum of bread and therefore we must ask in his name who hath paid the price and in whose blood our mercies must be washen that they may become pure and sanctified and may prove blessings indeed O then since thou canst not enjoy these things in mercy and in love unlesse they be given in return to thy prayer let this be thy way which is not the way of the men of this world though it be an easie and safe way and though only the right and approven way but you will say who doth condemn this way Ans Though few dare with their mouth belch out such atheisme yet in their heart and by their life and practice too many say O let us rather chuse any other way let us imploy our wit care and industry and if that will not do the turn let us add falsehood and deceit and whatsoever course else though never so unlawfull and unjust yet if it be called our own and if we by it be thought to help our selves we will rather follow that way then rest on Gods care and providence 1. because think they if we may enjoy them without God we may be masters of them and dispose of them as we will we may cut and carve for our selves and like him Hab. 2.5 enlarge our desires as hell 2. Because we dow not away with such preciseness tenderness and circumspection in our whole conversation and such zeal and fervency in prayer as is required and therefore we rather work and toyl a week then pray half an hour we rather sweat at our calling then take such heed to our steps We know not we are not acquaint with we love not and cannot endure that way but we know our business and like our work and when it s done it s done and we are at rest but if we get any thing by prayer our work is but as it were to begin we must yet watch over our hearts and wayes and take heed how we use and employ what we have gotten we must return the sacrifice of praise to God for his bounty in giving c. And therefore the Apostle had reason to exhort us That in every thing by prayer supplication and thanks giving we should make our requests known unto God Phil. 4.6 Not as if the Apostle and we now while we are pressing this necessary though much slighted duty would have you enlarge your desires after these things or be too solicitous about them and peremptory in your requests and prayers for them No no if our zeal be spent that way as alas too often it is that will marre the acceptance of our prayers and bring down a curse rather then a blessing but the end and scope of this exhortation is that we would live in a constant dependance upon God committing to him our selves and all our affairs begging his blessing on all our wayes and endeavours and that whatever we get and enjoy be it little be it much it may prove a blessing and may be given in mercy and in love that we may have the sanctified use of all we enjoy and grace to improve
(z) It may be here askt whether the man child be brought forth or if the soul be yet in be pangs of the new birth when it doth thus groan but it sufficeth to our purpose that many have come a great length that way who have perished eternally wilt thou give me Lord since I go gracelesse and Christlesse shew mercy upon me or else I die what do I value other things if I want thy love what can trifles profit me if I be a vessel of wrath and a cast-away But that we may more fully expresse the way how the unregenerate yet looking and panting after a change may be said to pray absolutely for grace we will branch out what hath been hinted at in these three particulars 1. because the object of their prayer is absolutely universally and invariably good and indispensably necessary to salvation and happiness so that no state or condition no combination of circumstances can make it evil or indifferent and no recompence can be made for the want of it 2. Because the desire of the soul is certainly should be so boundlesse and enlarged so absolute and peremptory that no proviso no offers by way of commutation and exchange can satisfie and quiet the soul or make a just compensation 3. Albei● no unbeleever though in the pangs of the new birth and on the way to conversion can pray in faith and in full assurance of acceptance and audience yet he may wait and still venture and say with (a) Esth 4.16 Esther I will present my requests to the King and if I perish I perish And who knoweth but the King will say to him as Ahasuerus said to her what wilt thou what is thy request it shall be granted one thing he knoweth that otherwise he must perish and that there is no other way to escape and therefore he must not he will not give over whatever discouragments on the one hand or alluring baits on the other he may meet with to draw him off knowing that though he should perish it were better to perish at Christs feet and with his eyes fixed on him then any other way especially since he knoweth none who ever ●ook that course and constantly followed it who did miscarry and met with disappointment If it be askt whether the unconverted may pray acceptably we have spoken to that question Chap. 6. Sect. 3. Concl. 11. Albeit it be most proper and pertinent for unbeleevers to pray for grace as to its being and existence yet Beleevers upon a mistake and in the night of desertion when they cannot see to read their charter to the inheritance may pray for the very first work and impression of the spirit It s true if they did see and knew what they had received they could not complain as if they were altogether empty nor could they ask what they had already received but standing to the supposition they cannot well be blamed for asking what is so necessary and they so much love and desire yet if they were only in suspence and under some fears it would be fitter to pray conditionally and to say Lord if thou hast not already wrought in the that blessed change which is so desirable and which I so much long for O Lord work it in me and if thou only hidest from mine eyes that seed of grace thou hast sown in my heart Lord open my eyes that I may see thy work and praise thee for what thou hast done But here it may be aske how doubting Beleevers may pray for grace and whether they may be said to pray in faith Ans 1. Certainly they may be said to pray absolutely for grace in the sense held forth in the preceding conclusion will any think that their longing and thirst will be lesse vehement and their diligence will not be so great as the desire and endeavours of the unconverted but 2. as to the particular expressed in the question it semeth undeniable that Beleevers while they are and so long as they continue in the supposed case of doubting denying fearing c. cannot pray in faith as that importeth an assurance of audience and acceptance but whether or not that be a necessary qualification of an acceptable and prevailing prayer shall in its own (b) viz. part 2. ob 2. place be enquired but if by faith required in prayer be only meant a qualification of him who prayeth rather then of prayer it self a qualification rather of the subject and agent then of the act and performance it self such doubting souls may no doubt be said to pray in faith 1. because it s supposed they are Beleevers and so cannot be without faith yea 2. their prayers may be (c) Heb. 4.2 mixed with faith faith may act lively and joyn in the duty though it carry not the foul the full length and fill it not with joy in the assured expectation of a gracious return yea 3. there may be a kind of recumbency and dependance on God for a gracious return such may adventure and cast themselves upon him for successe Concl 12. Concl. 12 Yet beleevers may pray absolutely and in full assurance of audience for grace when not doubting of their state and the acceptance of their persons 1. They pray that they may persevere and that they may be kept from totall and finall apostacy for perseverance in grace is no lesse necessary then our first being in that state 2. They may in faith pray for the consummacion of grace into Glory that the body of sin may be destroyed and Gods image perfectly restored unto them that the (d) Cant. 2.17 day would break and the shadowes fl●e away that they may see their beloved face to face and may become happy in a full fruition of him unto all eternity Yea 3. they may in faith ask a further measure of grace that they may not stand still in this wildernesse but may go forward that the stock of grace may increase and grow in their hands an● that a further measure of actuall and habitual strength may from time to time be let out to them he who said l (e) Mark 9.24 beleeve might in faith say Lord help my unbeleef as we are commanded to (f) The Christian must be like the Crocadile that as some affirme grows as long as it livethand ceaseth to be when it ceaseth to grow grow in grace 2 Pet. 3.18 so we are obliged to ask of God what he requireth of us that he who worketh in us both to will and to do of his good pleasure Philip. 2.13 would make us grow in grace and (g) Joh. 15.8 bear much fruit to the glory of his name and we may ask in faith relying on the promise to him that hath shall be given and he shall have more abundance Mat. 13.12 Mat. 25.29 Luk. 8.28 I see no reason why it is commonly said that we may not pray absolutely and in faith for the measure and degree for the increase and
reprobat and those who have committed that unpardonable sin against the holy Ghost c. WE need not ask if we should pray for others the Law of God the (a) Jam. 2.8 royall law of love and the constant practice of the Saints do point out this duty and as a threefold cord bindeth us thereunto first then God hath commanded us to pray for others Jam. 5.16 1 Joh. 5. ●6 Secondly he hath promised to answer 1 Joh. 5.14 16. Jam. 5.15 Thirdly he hath accordingly answered those prayers that have been put up for others Gen. 20.17 Exod. 33.17 Job 42.9 8. and though he be a reprobat for whom the Saints do pray yet they shall not lose their labour their prayers shall return into their own bosome they shall not return empty and without a blessing but shall bring with them an answer of peace to the supplicant Psa 35.13 Fourthly not only the Godly have required the mutuall help of one anothers prayers 2 Cor. 1.11 1 Thes 5.25 2 Thes 3.1 Heb. 13.18 but the wicked also as being convinced of the need they stood of the Saints prayers and the good which might be expected from thence 1 King 13.6 Act. 8.24 Fifthly as the Saints have desired others to pray for them so they have been carefull to (b) Orat apostolus pro pl●be orat plebs pro apostolo oro se omnia membra orant coput pro omnibus interpellat August in Psa 34. perform that duty towards others Col. 1.9 2 Thes 1.11 Exod. 32 31. Exod 33.16 Numb 21.7 1 Sam. 7.9 and Christ our head and leader while on earth prayed not only for his disciples Joh. 17. and for the unconverted elect v. 9.20 but also for his bloody persecutors Luk. 23.34 And how did he weep and pathetically lament over apostat Jerusalem Luk 19.41 Luk. 13.34 and he now liveth in heaven to make continuall intercession for his people Sixthly not only hath our blessed Saviour thus by his example taught us this point of our duty but by his command leaving us a pattern in that (c) Ideo non dicimus patermeus sed noster nec da mihi sed da nobis quia unitatis magister noluit privatim preces fieri ut scilicet quis prose tantum precetur Cypr. in lib. de orat Dom. comprehensive directory Mat. 6.9 to pray for others whensoever we pray for our selves and whatsoever we ask for our selves thus we are not there taught to say my Father give me forgive me c. but our Father give us forgive us c. And thus we are more straitly bound to that duty then if either in the preface or the close there had been an expresse command insert to pray for others for thus we are taught to pray for our brethren not only at some seasons and occasions or when we will but alwayes whensoever we pray for our selves and not to ask only some few things for them but whatsoever we ask to our selves and why should we not wish desire and petition all those good things which we desire to our selves to those whom we are bound to (d) Mat. 19 19 love as our selves what indigence and (e) Prose orare necessitas cogit pro altero autem charitas fraternitatis hortatur Autor operis imper in Mat. cir prin tom 2. hom 14. necessity will drive us to ask for our selves that brotherly love should draw us to desire and petition to others and love being a more kindly motive then necessity and the good of others a more noble attractive then self interest it must be a better evidence of sincerity to pray for others then to pray for ourselves You will say must we then pray for all and every one For Answer we shall bring some conclusions partly negative partly affirmative Concl. 1. Concl. 1. We abominat the Popish conceit of praying for the dead as 1 foolish and unprofitable for after death the judgement Heb. 9.27 then we must appear before the tribunal of Christ and be stated into an inalterable condition which all the devotion of Papists all their masses and supplications cannot change 2. as groundlesse and unwarrantable having no command nor precedent in Scripture yea nor from the first and purest antiquity and reason can here have no place for the Saints want no good and they fear no evil which are the two occasions of prayer mentioned by the Apostle (f) The two grounds of prayer mentioned by the Apostle 1. the want and abfence of some good 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. The presence or fear of some evil 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Jam. 1.5 and 5.13 and an irrevocable sentence is already past upon the damned where the tree is fallen there it mustly for ever Ecles 11.3 the evening is come and there can be no more working in the Lords vineyard every one must now receive his reward according as he hath employed the day past David would pray no longer for his child when he heard it was dead the reason he bringeth in reference to the childs bodily life and being here again in the world is applicable to the state and condition of the soul there can be no alteration after death and therefore he would pray no more for either the childs bodily being here again or concerning the eternal portion or spiritual condition of his soul 2 Sam. 12.23 The Saints are now at home and rest secure till the day of the resurrection when soul and body being united shall partake of glory and happiness according to their several capacities to all eternity and till that day they rest upon Gods word as to the resurrection of their bodies which is another kind of (g) This appeareth to me to be the main ground of difference which with submission Ioffer to the consideration of the judicious word then the word of promise which believers on earth plead in their prayers It is the sentence of a Judge and would an earthly Judge take it well if any man should petition him to own and stand to his sentence They are not now on their way nor in the (h) Preces ge mituslachrymae arma sunt athletarum in stadio versantium in agone sudaentium non victorum in caelo triumphantium Tilen synt part 2. disp 49. § 22. condition of a Viator and traveller they are now above ordinances they are no more under the means what then can prayer profit them As for the popish Purgatory that Chapel in which all these Saints are conveened who call for the prayers and masses of the Roman Church or rather that prison in which are detained those captives till the Romanists by their devotion purchase their liberty our Divines long since have thrown down the imaginary partition wall betwixt that goal and hell and have shown that those (i) Mat. 5.26 prisoners shall never be able to pay the uttermost farthing and therefore shall never be set at liberty and it was no difficult task to overthrow a
Reusn symb Imper. part 3. symb 12. Othonis 1. Amicitia non angustis sintbus terminanda est omnes enim quibus amor dilectio debetur amplectitur pervenit au●em usque ad inimicos pro quibus etiam orare praecipimur ita nemo est in genere humano cut non dilectio● etsi non pro mutua charitate pro ipsa tamen communis naturae societate debeatur August ad Preb. epist 121. cap. 8 At pater ut gnati sic nos debemus amicis si quod sit vitium non fastidire Horat 1. Serm. 3. brethren not to interpose with the provoked Father for his favour and that there may be a reconciliation that he would reclaim and shew mercy unto those prodigals who have nothing but husks to feed upon Hence We may further argue thus if we should love our brethren and neighbours and all men are such then we should wish and desire their good both temporal and eternal and from whom can we desire it but from him who only can kill and make alive who only can save and destroy and who sheweth mercy on whom he will And what is it to desire the Lord to do them good but to pray for their good prayer being nothing else but an offering up of our desires to God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith the (u) Arist 2. Rhetor. cap. 4. Philosopher 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to love is to desire those things that are good to any man not for any benefit may thereby redound to us but that they may profit him and canst thou say that thou lovest thy brethren while thou dost not desire their good while thou dost not desire it from God who only can give What though they did hate and persecute thee yet thou must love them albeit not as Augustine speaketh for that mutual love they bear to thee yet for their partaking of the same nature with thee and because of the authority of God who hath commanded thee to love thy neighbour as thy self Let Jeremiahs practice be thy copy though they recompence evil for good though they dig a pit for thy soul yet do not thou leave off to stand before the Lord to speak good for them Jer. 18.20 remember Christs prayer Luk. 23.34 and Stephens Act. 7.60 Albeit as to the measure and degree of love there may be some variety yet in respect of the object we must as (x) Thom. loc cit scil 2.2 quaest 26. art 6. ad 1. Aquinas saith love all men alike and wish to all the same good things Am I my (y) Gen. 4.9 brothers keeper were the words of a wretched Cain although we had no command yet nature bids us saith Dr. (z) Quantumvis non accederet expressum custodiae mandatum na●●ra omnes jubet mutuo esse custodes ac defens●res salutis nostrae alienae D. Paraeus in loc Paraeus keep and procure our own and other mens salvation We might here make use of (a) Si autem diligerent non dicerent quid nobis tibi August ad Sixt. Rom. Presb. epist 105. Augustine his argument whereby he proveth that the devils did not love Christ If saith he they had loved him they would not have said to him what (b) Luk. 4.34 have we to do with thee and if according to the (c) Jam. 2.8 royal Law we loved our neighbours as our selves would we say what are we concerned in our neighbours salvation and why should we mention them in our prayers 5. If once we begin to limit this Assertion we will not be able to rid our feet and assign the bounds where we must stand You will say we may pray for all ranks of men Repl. But the question is for whom in these ranks and why for such and not for others You will say we may pray for all the Elect. Repl. But I would know 1. by what rule we can judge who are Elect who not 2. where they learned that limitation and where did they read in the Word that Gods decree is our rule And 3. if Pastors Parents Subjects c. should not pray for their relations unlesse they belong to the election of God 4. Where do we find such a limitation added in the prayers of the Saints If such and such men be among the number of the Elect I would ask whether such a limitation would not beget a jealousie in the hearers and would not rather irritate those for whom we thus prayed if they were present or heard of it then do them good Yea 6. If this limitation must be added while we pray for some then it must be added when we pray for any though never so eminent as to their carriage and profession for I think none will presume to tell us who are Elect who not You will yet say it s enough we know not that they are reprobates Ans 1. Thus they come up the length of this present couclusion and lead us to an extraordinary case viz. of a revealed decree to which we have already spoken And then 2. Who dare say that he is assured of the reprobation of any man If again it be replyed that we must not pray for the incorrigible enemies of Christ Ans 1. But how shall we know who are incorrigible who not If the (d) 1 Tim. 1.1 2. 1 Pet. 2.13 14 15 17. Prayer is the best tribute we can give to our Kings and Rulers Apostles did exhort to submit unto and pray for vile Nero and these cruel and malicious persecutors who then did bear the sword who are these enemies for whom we should not pray who can be judged to be more incorrigible then they And then 2. Are not all the reprobate incorrigible and therefore if upon this account we may not pray for enemies neither must we pray for any reprobate But 3. We would here remember the caution mentioned Concl. 2. concerning reprobation viz. That as we should not pray for reprobates as such so neither for Christs incorrigible enemies formally as such and standing under such a consideration which upon the mater and as to the present case is one and the same with that of reprobation but abstracting from the decree which is antecedent and the event that is subsequent viz. their continuing in their wicked courses we must absolutely ask that which is good in it self and good for them and which would make for the glory of Gods pardoning mercy and the encrease of Christs kingdom But if it be askt whether we pray for such as enemies of Christ though not as incorrigible Ans If the particle As do import the formal reason and ground wherefore we pray for such we deny that we pray for such as enemies to Christ but rather as men brethren neighbours c. and because of the command of God and that God by their conversion may be glorified c. But if the particle As doth only signifie the object of consideration upon which we must reflect in
with the rest of the members while they suffer and seekest not after a remedy it s a token thou art a rotten and dead member which must be cut off O! but Christ the head continually prayeth for all the members of his body and wilt thou not joyn with him hell and the world are enraged against them they have but few friends and shall these prove unfaithfull and not help them by their prayers whom otherwise they cannot profit wilt thou prove like Pharouh's butler whilst thou art advanced and hast moyen at court wilt thou forget the affliction of Ioseph if hitherto thou hast done so say with (b) Gen. 41.9 him I do remember my fault this day Albeit no Saint should be excluded from our prayers yet more specially we should remember the afflicted whoever be forgotten the sick child will be cared for affliction is a fit season for prayer and not only the afflicted should pray for himself but others should joyn and put up a prayer for him Iam. 5.13 14. But yet more especially we should compassionat persecuted Saints who suffer for righteousnesse sake though Moses Nehemiah Esther and Daniel might have enjoyed the pleasures which a Kings Court could furnish yet the affliction of Gods people did afflict their spirits and send them to the throne to interceed for their brethren You will perhaps say who is he that forgetteth the Saints Answ But it may be thou prayest not for them as Saints but as thy friends and neer relations if thou pray for any one as a Saint thou (c) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 includit supponit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quod enim alicuiconvenitqua tali necessario convenit omui ideoque a quatenus adomne vales consequentia vid Arist 1. Post cap. 4. must pray for all (d) Eph. 6.18 Saints self-love as it may make thee pray for thy self so also for thy relations amongst which may be many Saints but only the love of God can make the love his children as such and all that bear his image though never so mean and despicable in the eyes of the world and not able to serve or profit thee O! let us hearken to the invitation Isa 45.11 Let us ask of God concerning his sons the Lord calleth us and assureth us of successe only let us take heed that we forget none of his sons the father will not take it well that any of his children should be slighted as Joseph would not speak to his brethren till all were present so thou mayest meet with many frowns from the Almighty if thou come alone or forget any of thy brethren behind thee 6. And we shall instance no mo particulars The relation that is between Pastors and people do engage to the mutuall performance of this duty as for the Ministers of the Gospel as they are by their calling obliged so they will make conscience if of any thing to pray that the word preached by them may be accompanied with power for the conversion of the hearers that it may be received with meeknesse and reverence not as the word of man but as the word of the living God which is able to make wise the simple and to save their souls that they may not become unfruitfull hearers but doers that their fruit may be holinesse and the end everlasting life that they may grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ c. Jam. 1.21 25. Rom. 6.22 Psa 19.7.2 Pet. 3.18 c. You will not deny that Ministers should pray for the people committed to their charge for whose souls they must answer in the day of accounts that they have laboured to feed them and rescue them from the snare of the devil and have watched for them and sought their good in every ordinance Heb. 13.17 2 Timoth. 2.24 25 20. But that the people should pray for their Pastor we do not too many will say see such reason or necessity nor is it very usuall Answ What dost thou talk of reason or necessity when may we argue from these if not in the present case and therefore hearken O negligent hearers who care not for your own souls but would cast all the care of them over upon the Minister to whom you deny your assistance in that work and ponder these few amongst many motives that may prevail with you to make more conscience of this so much slighted though most necessary duty 1. Thou canst nor prepare thy heart to hear the word and no wonder then though thou get no good by it if thou neglect this duty if the husbandman take pains on the ground he will not be wanting so far as his care and industry can reach to provide good seed and if thou desire and expect a blessing on the word which is the seed of immortall life as thou will labor to have thy heart which is the ground fitted and enlarged to receive so thou wilt by prayer wrestle with the Lord who is the great master and (e) Joh. 15.1 husband-man that he would enable his messengers that they may speak as the oracles of God in power and demonstration of the Spirit that a door of utterance may be opened unto them for to make known the mystery of the Gospel that they may speak boldly and may exhort and rebuke with all authoritie and may be instant in season and out of season with all long suffering and patience that they preach not themselves but Christ that they may take heed to their Ministy to fullfill it that they may be cloathed with righteousnesse being an example to the flock in word in conversation in charity in faith purity self deniall and holinesse that thus they may save themselves and those that hear them c. 1 Pet. 4 11. 1 Cor. 2.4 Col. 4.3.17 2 Tim. 2.15 Tit. 2.15 2 Tim. 4.2 2 Cor. 4.5 Psa 132.9 1 Tim. 4.12 c. if thou desire the (f) Pet 2.2 sincere milk of the word that thou may grow thereby thou wilt not forget the nurse if thou regard what seed be sown in the ground thou wilt not neglect to go to him who only can fill the hand of the sower and to say to him O! let us not have tares in stead of good seed if thou care for thy spirituall life thou wilt say O! let the stewards hands be full let him have an allowance for us that we starve not for want of the childrens bread 2. What are Ministers weak frail men subject to like passions as others are Jam. 5.17 Act. 14.15 and who is sufficient for such an high and weightie charge 2 Cor 2.16 and therefore as they have need to watch over their own hearts to take heed to ther steps and to be frequent and servent in their addresses to God so the people should wrestle together with them in their prayers to God for them Rom. 15.30 and thereby strengthen their hands against all the discouragments and difficulties they may encounter
Father wilt thou forget thy brethren and the rest of his children Thou who complainest that (x) Phil. 2.21 all seek their own things wilt thou seek for thy self and not for others Thou who professest that thou shouldst love thy neighbour as thy self how darst thou desire and ask any good thing for thy self and not also intreat for the same to thy neighbour Thou who regratest that in this sinning age the love of many waxeth cold why dost thou not pray more frequently and fervently Prayer would eat out malice out of thy heart and out of thy brothers heart if we would pray more for one another we would contend less who dare hate him whom he knoweth to desire and pray for his good and the Lord would draw his heart unto thee if thou didst more zealously lift up thy heart in prayer for him this fire kept alive upon the Altar would consume and root out the seeds of discord contention and jealousie Thou who professest great zeal to the glory of God in the salvation of sinners dost thou do not desire and pray for their salvation Thou who professest thy self a (y) Rom. 1.14 debtor to all men to strangers yea to enemies when and how wilt thou pay this debt if not while thou hast the key in thy hand to open thy Fathers treasure And what wilt thou give unto those or do for them who will not ask from another any thing unto them Thou canst not say thou hast not moyen or thou art afraid lest thou shouldest displease the King if you put in for so many for he himself inviteth yea and commandeth thee and complaineth of the selfishness and narrowness of thy heart and he takes it very kindly when thou hast a publick spirit in prayer when was it that Daniel obtained that Testimonial from heaven that he was greatly beloved was it not while he was praying for the people of God Dan. 9.20 21 22 23. And as for the prevalency of thy request if they be the children of God then saith the Lord ye may command what ye will for those Isa 45.11 and though they be a stubborn generation yea though they were persecuting Pagans thou mayest obtain something for them How oft did Moses hold off a visible stroke from the rebellious Israelites and reverse the plagues that were inflicted upon Egypt So often as he did pray so often he prevailed and when the prayers of the Saints do not prevail for removing an outward judgment nothing can help such are in a hopeless and helpless condition if Moses and Samuel Noah Daniel or Job will not be heard the case must be desperate Jer. 15.1 Ezek. 14.14 but what knowest thou O man but such a miserable wretch may belong to the election of God and that thy prayer may be instrumental for drawing him out of the snare And what mater of comfort should it be to thee if thereby thou didst gain a soul to Christ and if while thou appearest before the tribunal of Christ it be said to thee these are the men and women for whom ye did mourn and pray they that turn many to righteousness shall then shine as the stars for ever and ever Dan. 12.3 Oh parents look on your children wives on your husbands neighbour on neighbour and behold that which may stir thy bowels Ah! hast thou no compassion towards thy relations Alas it may be thou doest not pity thine own soul and no wonder then though thou prove not kind to others who art so cruel to thy self but if thou knewest the terrors of the Almighty and then considered the wofull condition of such wretches how couldst thou forbear how pathetically did the Prophet Jeremy lament when he did lay to heart the outward calamity that was to come upon the people of Israel My (z) Jer. 4.19 bowels saith he my bowels I am pained at my very heart my heart maketh a noise in me I cannot hold my peace And shall not the eternal and unless the Lord in mercy reclaim such inevitable ruine of your brethren and neighbours of the once beloved Nation of the Jews of so many flourishing Kingdoms of Turks and blind Pagans stir up the bowels of your compassion and send you to the throne of Grace to pour out a prayer in their behalf and though ye could forget strangers and such as live at a distance yet it is unnatural cruelty to deal thus with your friends and relations not to pity their deplorable condition nor to awaken those ye see sleeping securely within the sea-mark of Gods displeasure if you would cry mightily to God who knows but the echo of your supplications might allarm them and being conveyed by the arm of the Almighty rouse them up out of their brutish security But alas not a few are more ready to revile their brethren and to cry out against their faults by way of insultation then to pity and pray for them but though a Christian rebuke and loving admonition may be necessary yet thus to revile and reproach is a ready way rather to exasperate then to reclaim them O! but an affectionat fervent prayer to him who hath the hearts of all men in his hand may be very instrumental to melt a hard heart and to turn it to the Lord and do not say they are past remedy whom the Lord hath not as yet cast into hell do not bury them in the grave of oblivion whom the Lord continues in the land of the living what though they have lyen long in a dead Lethargy yet the Lord may revive them and breath the spirit of life and grace into them and make such dry a bones live Ezek. 37.3 4 5.10 11. What though thou hast prayed once and again for such a rebellious son such a wicked neighbour do not faint nor give over though the vision (b) Hab. 2.3 tarry wait for it Holy Monica continued instant in prayer for her son Augustine though she saw no success nor any change wrought in him but there was a compensation made for that delay and at length Augustine not only believeth but becometh a shining light in the Church While Paul did persecute Stephen prayes for him and God answered that prayer Christ while he was on the cross prayed for his malicious murdering enemies and in return to that prayer at one sermon preach't by Peter some thousands were converted Do not then say it were lost labour to pray for such and to what purpose should we pray for these who will not pray for themselves nay but thou shouldst the rather pity such misers who will not pity themselves If thou sawest a mad man not spare his own flesh wouldst thou look on and withhold thy help wouldst thou say he is mad and why should I hold his hands nay but thou wouldst the rather pity him because of his mad cruelty against himself Ah! What are desperate sinners but so many (c) Gal. 3.1 bewitched fools and mad men who are
intended to obscure the mistery of incarnation and to foster that hellish blasphemy of the Pharisees that Christ did cast out devils by (h) Mat. 9 34. Mat. 12.24 Beelzebub the prince of devils The enemy of all truth would give testimony to that great and fundamentall truth that Christ was the promised Messiah that thus he might render the testimony of faithfull witnesses and of the Lord from heaven the more suspect and that he might invalidat and obscure that clear and convincing evidence which the astonishing miracles wrought by him did produce and hold forth But the Lord who can (i) Hoc suit ex omnipotente sapien●ia Dei ut inimiciveritatis fiantipsi testes veritatis August contra Petil. Donat lib 2 cap 30. over-rule and befool the devil and his instruments did thereby declare Christs power over those his enemies that nill they will they they must give a testimony to him and to his servants and the doctrine of the Gospel the confession of adversaries was alwayes acknowledged to be a most (k) Nullum efficacius argumentum c. efficacious largument for the truth Another instance we have in Peters counsell to Christ to spare himself Mat. 16.22 O! may some think there was much love Zeal and tendernesse in that motion but it being obstructive of the work of redemption it came from hell and because Peter in it did follow Sathans suggestion our blessed Lord calls him Sathan v. 23. Thus also while we should be employed in the publick ordinances and attend unto them Sathan may suggest some pious though impertinent as to the present work meditation or stir us up to pray that thereby he may hinder our edification or conviction by the word preached 2. Sathan may presse us to duty as to prayer reading conference c. that he may make those religious performances a snare to catch our selves and others He hath many a time laid this snare before young converts whom he was not (l) The devil will sail with wind and tyde and improve the present temperature and disposition of spirit for his own end able to divert from the exercise of holiness he would labour to drive forward and to make them over do to the neglect of their bodily health and callings that at length he might weary them and make them faint and give over that he might terrifie others from putting their necks under such an insupportable yoke and that religion might be esteemed to be a tyrant and cruel exactor which can never be satisfied and to be inconsistent with health joy use of the creatures lawfull imployments recreations c. Albeit we cannot love God and hate sin too much yet there may (m) See M. Symonds case and cure chap. 20. be a nimium in the external exercises of religion and there may be some excesse and distemper intermixed with our spiritual affections which Sathan by all means will labour to foster and encrease Thus he improved the zeal of the Church of Corinth against the penitent incestuous man that his sorrow might degenerate into dispair and that he might be swallowed up thereby 2 Cor. 2.7 Sathan can well bear that some few and for a short while be very zealous and active for the Lord and diligent and frequent in duties if thereby he can beget a prejudice in the hearts of men against Gods service and can make them think that Christs burthen were like the (n) Mat. 23.4 Luk. 11.46 Pharisees heavy and grievous to be born contrary to that word of truth Mat. 11.30 1 Joh. 5.3 3. Sathan may move us to be frequent in prayer and to wait upon the publick ordinances most punctually that thereby he may either stop and silence the consciences and that thus we may commit sin with the greater freedom and boldness or else as in gross hypocrits that this may be a cloak and pretence a mask and cover to hide our wicked designs and wayes from the eyes of others that so we may be able to do them the more mischief and to sin with the less suspicion and hazard Thus the hypocritical Pharisees that they might with the more security devours widows houses for a pretence made long prayers Mat. 23.14 And Absolom that he might cover his conspiracy and treason will go and pay his vow in Hebron 2 Sam. 15.7 Sathan could well suggest such a fair pretence to Absolom and bear with pharisaical oppressors in their seeming devotion But especially his hand may appear when sinners become so mad as to think not only to hide cheir wickedness from men by those outward performances but also thereby to purchase a liberty from the Lord and thus as it were to hire and bribe him as they do their own consciences to be silent as that impudent woman Prov. 7.14 15. I have this day saith she to the foolish youth whom she enticed to whordom payed my vows and I have peace-offerings with me therefore came I forth to meet thee As if she had said I have payed old debt and by my sacrifices purchased a liberty for us to do wickedly we need not fear I have moyen for time to come I have provided a ransom and given my bond for what debt we can now contract I have (o) Albeit in peace offerings a portion returned to them that offered wherewith they might make a feast unto which this woman in these words inviteth the young fool yet I conceive that mainly she laboureth to allure him by the religious pretence here mentioned See Annot. on the Bible edit Amsterd in fol. ann 1640. peace-offerings with me which will make amends and satisfie for all the wrong we can now do to God 4. Sathan may come and stir us up to religious exercises that thereby he may add fewel to our pride Thus Pharisees of old and superstitious Papists to this day in their madness and exceeding zeal as Paul speaking of his persecuting the Church of Christ calls it are helped of Sathan they meet with fire from hell to kindle their affections in their unwarrantable performances and though their work upon the matter were good and commendable yet Sathan will not draw back his hand if thereby he can puffe them up and beget in them an opinion of their own worth and that by their good works they are justified and merit heaven This perswasion cometh not of him that calleth you Gal. 5.8 This perswasion that by your works ye are justified v. 4. cometh not from God who calleth you to the kingdom of his dear Son but from him who thereby labours to make Christ of none effect unto you v. 24. and to drive you to hell We need not then ask why many Papists are so eminent for works of Charity and liberality and so frequent in their dead formall and carnall way of worship since Sathan will be ready to fill the sails with wind when the vessel is loaden with provision to feed our ambition and pride but if that current
be once stopt and a trade rightly carried on for eternity he will raise what storms he can and send out many pyrats either ●o surprize or draw it back again Many are the snares and temptations hinderances and impediments which the Saints do meet with in their way to heaven whereas hypocrits and formall professors go on in their course without opposition or difficulty But let none mistake as if hereby a pretence were ministred unto the laziness stoth and negligence of such as are in the right way certainly the zeal activity and diligence of those who are without shall stop thy mouth and make thee inexcusable in the great day if thou thus rest upon an orthodox profession and if thou be in Christ and art led by his Spirit (p) 1 Joh. 4.4 Stronger is he who is in thee then he who is in the world thou hast another kind of help and assistance for doing good then others O then let thy work be answerable If in any good motion we can discern one or moe of those wicked designs we may be jealous least Sathan have a hand in it and should guard against his devices which when espied may serve as so many marks and characters whereby we may know the print of his foot though he be disguised appearing in white rayment To which these few may be added 1. As to the matter If in prayer our desires be meerly or mainly selfish and natural Sathan may concur and blow up the coal of carnal heat within And thus there may be much enlargement of affections much fervency and importunity without the help of the Spirit as in that people Hos 7.14 when they assembled themselves and howled for corn wine Isa 26.16 and when they multiplied their prayers and sacrifices Isa 1.15 11. Esau may weep for want of an earthly blessing Gen. 27.34 though he undervalued and little minded the marrow of the blessing the love and favour of God But none can without the Spirit of God say with David one thing have I desired that will I seek after that I may behold the beauty of the Lord Ps 27.4 And with Asaph whom have I in heaven but thee and there is none upon earth I desire besides thee Ps 73.25 Who is able seriously to pray for help to pluck out the right eye and cut off the right hand and to part with his darling lusts and affections unless he be acted and strengthned by the Spirit of God Who can with Agar say give me not riches least they proven snare Prov. 30.8 9. unlesse the Lord breath into his heart such a desire Sathan will not help thee to (q) Mat. 6.33 seek the kingdom of God and his righteousness and in thy desires to prefer holiness to riches heaven to earth and Gods glory to thy own self-interest 2. As to the end Sathan may stir thee up to (r) Jam. 4.3 ask that thou mayest consume what thou gettest upon thy lusts but who doth desire any thing from God that he may be (s) Ps 35.27 magnified and that what he giveth may be employed for his honour unless he get help from heaven Only the Spirit of God can elevate our desires to so high and noble an (t) Of the ends of prayer Part. 2. ch 1. end and make us honestly obey the exhortation 1 Cor. 10.31 He who must do all must also pray to the glory of God and this of our selves we cannot do 3. As to the maner Sathan can stir us up to pour out absolute and peremptory desires for outward things and faint lazy moderate and submissive desires for grace Sathan makes us invert the right order and method he will not protest though thou ask mercy pardon of sins c. that conscience may be stilled and satisfied but thou must not be too earnest and anxious concerning those things and thy desires must not be boundless and illimited a little of grace saith he will do the turn and any kind of desire though never so ●old and formall is sufficient 2. Sathan can move thee to ask the world for it self and to make self thy last end but the Spirit of God must enable us to deny our selves and to ask outward things in subordination and in relation to the great end If Sathan prescribe our lusts must reign and grace must be the hand-maid and be only so far sought as it is subservient to our carnall ends and for a quiet and peaceable fulfilling of our lusts 3. Sathan can beget in the heart a child-like expectation and confidence though thou be a stranger he can make thee expect the portion of a son he will not suffer thee once to question thy state and acceptance least if conscience were awakened thou shouldst seek after a change But it is the work of the Spirit to beget in us childlike affections and make us love God delight in a communion with him and be loath to grieve him and he only can enable us to call him in truth Abba Father Rom. 8.15.4 Sathan can move thee to what is good unorderly by making thee leave thy place and station and invade another mans office (u) 2 Sam. 15.4 Oh! that I were made Judge in the land said Absolom and mayest thou say prayer-wayes Thus also Saul would offer sacrifice 1 Sam. 13.9 and Vzziah burn incense 2 Chr. 26.16.19 They would go out of their own sphere and exercise the ministerial Function wherefore the Lord justly punished both the one and the other It was good and a commanded duty to offer sacrifice but it did not belong to Sauls office it was fit that supplication should be made to the Lord but it belonged not to Saul to do it in a publick and ministerial way as it would appear Saul then did v. 12 it was necessary that incense should be burnt before the Lord but it did not appertain to Vzziah as Azariah told him v. 18. but to the Priests the sons of Aaron who were consecrated to that office But the Spirit of Christ moveth orderly making us to contain within our own sphere and to abide in the same calling wherein we were called according to his commandment 1 Cor. 7.20.24 A heart acted by the Spirit can with David Psa 131.1 say when he maketh his supplication to God O Lord my heart is not haughty nor mine eyes lofty neither do I exercise my self in great maters or in things too high for me The Lord will have all things done decently and in order and is not the author of confusion 1 Cor. 14.40.43 and as he leadeth not his children out of the way So neither doth he bring them to dark and unpassable paths it is not from him that weak Christians especially these of the female Sex do meddle and vex themselves with dark questions and intricat disputes or that the most strong and learned do dive too curiously in things not revealed and in the secrets of the Almighty He knoweth that to be an
end yet if then he did reflect or if after it is gone he would consider he might with (y) 2 Sam. 18.29 Achimaaz say that he saw a great tumult but knoweth not well what it was And 1. he will not find that God was it's object or if it did close with God yet in a philosophical way immediatly and not in the Mediator Jesus Christ 2. Not for himself or because of any beauty and excellency discovered in him there was much of self in it and it did flow rather from what was expected by being with him then by beholding of his face and enjoying himself such a one would rather have heaven without God then if these could be separated God without heaven 3. Though it come (z) A soul thot hath not delight in the exercises of Gods worship may yet find delight while imployed in them arssing from some selfish and carnal motives through an ordnance yet it is not in the ordinance there goeth not alongst with it a discovery of the beauty and amiableness of holiness neither is the heart engaged to love and delight therein But any love to God or to his work and service which they seem to have is selfish viz. because therein something was enjoyed that was pleasant to their taste and the heart was thereby raised up to expect some sort of pleasures hereafter and to escape wrath and judgment but they come not the length to rejoyce in the exercises of religion because God was thereby honoured and thus their joy is not a God-exalting and God-loving but a self-seeking and self-delighting joy But supposing that while we compare transient acts together it were hard to shew the difference between such temporary flashes and that more solid joy which floweth from an inward and abiding principle created in the heart and elevated in its acting above the sphere of nature by the sweet breathings of the Almighty What if the Lord to stay our curiosity and to stir up our diligence that we may not rest upon any measure here attained c. would not clearly reveal and in his word discover it and experience here can have no place if we speak of that special tast which only they get who are to get no more since from that state they fall head-long into the blasphemy against the holy Ghost it may banish anxiety and satisfie us that in their properties and effects they much differ as 1. that temporary flash doth not purifie and change the heart 2. it doth not make us love God for himself nor fall in love with the beauty of holiness 3. it maketh not a man deny himself 4. it doth not abide c. You will say the Saints themselves often complain Obj. that the Lord quickly withdraweth the comfortable sense of his presence that they do not alwayes (a) Ps 34.8 tast and see his goodness and beauty that he often hideth his face and they do not tast that joy and sweetness in the ordinances which they have formerly found many a poor soul may with Bernard say heu Domine Deus rara hora brevis mora Ans Yet it is not such a stranger to them as to others Ans though it go yet it will come again and from time to time renew its visits and it never so withdraweth but it leaveth some pledge behind it till the marriage day and then there shall be no more a separation and departing the Bridegroom shall never withdraw his countenance neither shall he any more with-hold this Jewel yea and during the time of espousals there is a difference between that claim the bride hath to it and the title which any other can pretend and that in respect 1. of her right unto 2. estimation and 3. enjoying of it For 1. it is her allowance her husband hath left it to her in his legacy Joh. 16.22 Secondly it is not such a stranger to the Saints as to others who when they think they have it get but the shell and casket they do not truly enjoy it only they think and seem to have it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luk. 8.18 Thirdly it is better secured to them no man can take it from them and they cannot themselves so lose it that they shall not sind it again if they will ask and make enquiry for it Joh. 16.22 24. Fourthly when they have it they prize and esteem highly of it Fifthly they labour to maintain and cherish it Sixthly it is their affliction to want it and they long for it And seventhly they diligently seek after it in the use of every ordinance But it is not so with carnall hearts it is 1. a mystery and 2. for the most part a matter of mocking to them they do not 3. prize it nor 4. long for it and if it come 5. it surprizeth them in any ordinance as it were at unawares and then 6. they undervalue it and 7. do not labour to retain it and thus 8. it quickly vanisheth and passeth away never to return again and the latter end is worse with them then the beginning 2 Pet. 2.20 21 22. But to return 5. It were no difficult work here to multiply particulars as 1. If such motions come regularly and in the use of the ordinances if while thou art waiting and longing for the breathings of the Spirit if it blow upon thy garden while thou art saying awake O north wind If fire fall on thy sacrifice as it did upon Elijahs 1 King 18.36.37 38. thou mayest safely conclude that it came from heaven 2. If these motions be followed with sutable engagements and promises if as we are moved and stirred up to do good so we are carefull to do and make conscience to follow that motion and if as we promise and pray well so we live well and are circumspect in our walk we do not go to work by fits and starts but keep a constant course in our walking with God and praying to him here there is a concatenation if one link of this golden chain be broken the whole becometh useless yea loseth its name and nature it is no more gold but tinne or brass He cannot pray well who doth not live well è contra But 3. the work of the Spirit is sometimes so signal and remarkable that it bringeth a full and clear evidence with it as 1. when it is so notable and eminent that it elevateth the soul above the sphere of nature and thus by his work it self the Lord discovereth his hand 2. Though the work be not so eminent and ravishing yet it may bring alongst with it a torch in its hand to let us see the place from which it came and thus the Spirit witnesseth with his work and whether his finger be discovered the one way or the other whether he thus work or witness we need not an additional testimony to confirm what he hath deponed There will then be no place for this case 6. We might here
receivest this would sill thy heart with mater both of prayer and praise I do not say that all are alike unfit and unprepared or that upon every occasion we should spend so much or so much time upon this preparatory work When the heart is in such a spiritual frame and disposition as his was Psa 42.1 2. when it thirsteth and panteth after the living Lord it were a pity to stay such a longing soul for one moment from the fountain And 2. we will not alwayes have opportunity especially when we are occasionally called to joyn with others thus to prepare for the work but then we may dart up some short ejaculation to God for his help and assistance which we may confidently expect when the work of preparation was not slighted by reason of our sloth and negligence and though thou didst set apart a considerable time for meditation especially when thou meetest with some extraordinary occasion and when thou joynest fasting to prayer for even those who for ordinary neglect this work will then be at some pains to prepare their hearts for that more solemn exercise but whatever be the occasion and whensoever thou goest about that duty such short and ejaculatory petitions might well be intermixed all alongst the work thus we may bring help from heaven and engage God in our quarrel it is not good to wrestle alone with a hard heart I have read of Luther that whenever he found any distemper and indisposition creep on he would instantly go to the throne and complain of it to God and certainly prayer is one of the best preparations for prayer this was Davids practise Psa 141.1 2 3 4. he would review his heart and his wayes and his prayers and make one prayer the object of another he would pray for success both to the prayer he had made and was to make and thus make prayer a transition from paayer to prayer They who know what a hard task it is to recall their thoughts from worldly and distracting cares and to silence our lusts after they are once in arms they will see a necessity of divine assistance and to dispatch a messenger to the throne of Grace for that effect Though it be necessary to meditate upon and consider our wayes and to take a view of such motives as may imbitter our case unto us yet unless an omnipotent arme go alongst with and apply these considerations they will not prevail with our deaf and stubborn hearts nor draw them off these lovers and turn them to God and therefore since in our private converse with him we are allowed the liberty to intermix those duties and to joyn prayer with meditation we would not in our practice separate those two which are thus so mutually helpfull one to the other and both so subservient and instrumental in disposing and preparing the heart for a more solemn address to God a little eating before meal prepareth a weak stomach and setteth an edge upon the appetite but long fasting takes away the the stomach and blunts the desire after meat prayer is the best harbenger for prayer and a little gust of the heavenly manna will dispose for a set meal but the longer we discontinue our acquaintance with God our love waxeth the colder and the heart the more dead and indisposed for a communion with him and he is thus provoked to hide his face when we draw nigh to him Thus ye see what should be done and will ye thus prepare to seek the Lord but if ye will not if deadness and indisposition come on if the Lord with draw and (m) Ps 66.20 turn away thy prayer thou mayest know whom to blame Hezekiah would only pray for those who made conscience of this preparatory work and for them he was heard 2 Chr. 30.19 20. and such may most confidently pray for themselves and expect that the Lord will (n) Ver. 19. attend to the voice of their supplications When we are unwillingly drawn to the throne and are uncheerfull in Gods presence no wonder though he hide his countenance and send us away empty but when the heart (o) Ps 42.1 2. panteth after him and thirsteth to appear before him when his fruit is (p) Sol. Song 2 3. sweet to our taste and we sit down under his shadow with delight he will welcom us upon whom already he thus beginneth to smile and whom he hath brought in to the (q) Ver. 4.5 Qualification banquetting-house he will satisfie with his goodness such longing souls 5. Before we draw the bow we would have our eyes fixed upon the right mark if the arrow be not right directed neither its swiftness nor the goodness of the bow nor the strength of the arm can profit high raised affections not right levelled are like to a ship carried with full sails but wanting the rudder The end is the main and principal (r) Statuenda est sententia certa sinem esse veram propriam ac realam causam c. Suar. hoc est receptum dogma quasi primum principium in philosophia theologia metaph dis 23. sect 1. circumstance of moral actions nay it is reckoned by Phylosophers most (ſ) Propter rationes quas ibid proponit Suar. praecipue secundam quibus solvendis non fuit par ideo sect 4. § 17. satetur causalitatem finis quodamodo dixisset omnimodo esse molem quasi artific osam intellectualem commonly though most (t) Finis etsi sit postremus in executione est tameu primus in imentione agentis hoc modo habet rationem causae Thom. 1.2 quaest 1. art 1. ad im grosly amongst the four physical causes yea in some respect its (u) Finis precipua est inter circumstantias act vs humani cum aeliae se tantum habent per modum accidentis sinis vero sit causa actus Pet. 8. Joseph id theol moral lib. 2. depec cap. 1. res 4. accounted the first of them but though it should have no place there its influence not being physical and proper but only intentional and objective yet on all hands it s granted that it is the first basis and foundation of morality and the Lord taketh special notice of it and mainly looks after the end we propose in all our actions and endeavours when that is wrong all is wrong all Jehu his zeal against Baals priests and his fidelity in executing the divine sentence against the house of Ahab for want of a right end lost both name and thing It was not obedience but murder therefore saith the Lord I will avenge the bloud of Jezreel upon the house of Jehu notwithstanding any warrant from me he could pretend to Hos 1.4 Though Jehu did what was commanded yet being animated by self-interest and looking rather after Ahabs crown and that he might secure himself in the throne then after the command and glory of God the Lord did not value what he did
but on the contrary most justly threatned to deal with him as a murderer for shedding the blood of Princes to satissie his lust and ambition Base low carnal selfish ends do (x) Noveris itaque non officiis sed finibus a vitiis discernendas esse viriutes officum est autem quod faciendum est finis vero propter quod faciendum est cum itaque facit homo aliquid u bi peccare non vide tur si non proper hoc facit propter quod facere debet peccare con vincitur August lib. 4. contro Julianum cap. 3. spoil and debase the most specious performances and make all our religious exercises and most spiritual acts of worship become a sacrifice to the creature and to be meer idolatry and self-worship When ye fasted and mourned in the fifth and seventh month even these seventy years did ye at all fast unto me even unto me Zech. 7.5 They did fast and that very often and for a long time for the space of their seventy years captivity O! but saith the Lord I do not value your fasting weeping and praying for though ye professed to humble your self before me yet all this was done for your selves ye did not at all fast unto me that I might thereby be honoured ye did not aim at the glory of my name which ye had so much profaned and dishououred but your captivity and low condition made you cry for deliverance self was your utmost end and therefore ye did not at all fast unto me Thus also they are said Hos 7.14 to assemble themselves to howl weep and make many supplications to God and yet he denied that then they cryed to him because they did not seek him with the whole heart nor honestly aim at his glory they sought him only for the fashion and upon design for corn and wine that they might eat and make merry they were content thus to complement with God that they might hire him to gratifie and serve their lusts Ah! who would not abominate that vile woman who with an impudent face durst pretend her vows and peace-offerings for a cloak nay rather as a price whereby she purchased a licence to commit whoredom Prov. 7.14 c. And yet behold how small the difference is between this strumpet and carnal professors she would hire God with her sacrifices to connive at her lust and to prosper her in her wantonness but they will seek after God that he may (z) It s much that ye should be servants of sin but that ye should make God fellow-servant and yoke him in the same servility is not to be endured Mant. on Jam. 4.3 gratifie a more cleanly lust their honour their profit their ease c. And thus both the one and the other would have God according to that sad complaint Isa 43.24 to serve with their sins But 2. though the end thou aimest at be not thus of it self sinfull and unlawfull yet it may be natural and selfish though thou do not with the thief in the fable kindle thy torch to let thee see to steal at the (a) Lucernam fur accendit ex ara Jovis c. lamps of the altar yet thou mayest from thence bring light to let thee see to walk Yea 3. thy aim may be wrong though it be not either sinfull or meerly natural if it be moral or shall I say spiritual thou mayest pray to satisfie and quiet thy conscience which otherwise would flee in thy face and arrest thee as a very Atheist yea thou mayest thus look up to God desiring to make some satisfaction to and be at peace with him and yet thy end may be meerly legall and selfish there may be no love to God in the heart nor any desire to glorifie him and will the Lord accept such a performance If the (b) Hic objici posset quod Suarcz loc cit lib. 1. cap. 14. sect 5. proponit contra suam communem pontificiorum sententiam quod scil orandum sit pro defunctis qui jam beatifica visione Dei fruuntur Sed missis istiusmodi nugis argumentum unde proponemus quatenus viz militare videtur contra finem ultimum orationis Estque ejusmodi OBJ. Si divina gloria à nobis desideretur in oratione postuletur ut in primis verbis orationis dominicae orare docemur sequetur orationem fieri pro ipso Deo cum tamen fiat ad Deum Quemadmodum interdum rogamus hominem ut sibi ipsi aliquod bonum facias sed hoc durum c. Resp Alius esse petere gloriam Dei aliud vero petere propter gloriam Dei in priori gloria Dei est objectum in posteriori finis petitionis Et objectio licet videatur concludere contra utrumque maxime tamen co●●ra primum sed revera contra neutrum de quo nobis nunc non est sermo Ad objectionem tamen paucis Resp cum Soario totam utilitatem vel commoditatem illius extrinseeae gloriae Dei quam manifestari petimus esse propriam illorum hominum qui illum glorificant nostra enim bonitas pietas ad Deum non pertingit Ps 16.2 Job 22.2 Job 35.7 Quamvis itaque petitio nostra tendat in Deum ut in finem imo ticet ut in objectum non tamen dici potest cum proprietate ut lo quitur Suar. nos orare pro Deo quia proprie dicimur orare pro aliquo solum quando per orationem quaerimus illius commodum vel utilitatem glory of God must be the chief and ultimat end of our eating and drinking nay of all our actions 1 Cor. 10.31 Shall we aim at a lower end in the immediat acts of worship And should not all things be to him of whom and through whom they are Rom. 11.35 There be many supplicants at the throne of Grace but alas few level at so noble a mark or look up to so high an end and thus they ask and receive not because they ask amiss Jam. 4.3 It s true thou mayest make the creature thy secondary subordinat and immediat end thou mayest moderatly love and desire it and therefore thou mayest ask it and use the means for obtaining of it bread may send an hungry man to the throne and whatsoever be thy want and necessity thou art allowed to ask a supply and remedy the creature may occasion and give the rise unto thy prayer but thou must not rest up on it thou shouldst pray that thou mayest obtain for God both appointed it as a mean for that end but yet thou mayest not seek it for its self or for thy self that thou mayest lay it out upon thy lusts if we thus seek we shall not receive and if any thing fall to us by a common providence it becometh gall and worm-wood in the belly what we make meat for our lusts becometh fewel to feed the ever-devouring but never-destroying flames of the indignation of the Almighty such as love
themselves inordinatly such as serve and idolize their lusts are forced in the issue to undergo what they most abhor self-love proveth the grossest self-murder Mat. 16.25 Such as make self their last and great end their state is wretched and miserable and their woes shall never come to an end You will say Quaest since prayer should be used as a mean for obtaining the desired mercy how shall I know when I idolize that mercy and make it my ultimate end in prayer Ans Thou dost provoke the Lord and abuse a most solemn and promising ordinance Ans when thou expectest no return of thy prayers and askest not that thou mayest obtain and therefore whatever other end thou mayest propose as discharge of duty the enjoying of fellowship with the Father and his Son an heavenly frame of spirit the shining of Gods countenance in that ordinance and a tast of the heavenly manna yet the proper immediatand direct end of prayer c. is to procure the particular mercy we desire and stand in need of and therefore we must use it for that end and have it often in our eye 1. before we come it must send us to the throne 2. while we come it must animat the desire and 3. after prayer it will make us wait and look for a return But let us beware of the popish leaven that no (c) Suar. lib. 1. cap. 11. sect 13. Ex Alense proponit tres fiues seu fructus orationis viz. 1. ad degustandum seu ad dulcedinem delectationem ex contemplatione amore Dei capiendam 2. ad exsolvendum seu ad merendum satis faciendum divinae justitiae 3. Ad impretandum quod petimus De primo tertio non est quaestio inter nos Pentificios de secundo disputari selet in articulo de merito bonorum operum quod nostri Theologi passim refellunt ut vanum absurdum commentum sed fere nihil ut fatetur Suarez cap. 22. sect 1. hoc loco specialiter de oratione dicere necesse est quamvis oratio sit praecipuum inter tria principalia capita ad quae opera satisfactoria a papistis reduci solent Jejunium enim refertur ad orationem eleemosyna est opus exterius vid Thom. 22. quaest 83. art 13. opinion of merit do feed our expectation who would not abominat that beggar who would ask an almes upon the account of debt as if his asking did give him a right and what creditor would accept of entreaties and requests as good payment all would go to that market where such money were current Ah foolish Papists and unwise how dare ye thus mock the holy one And shall such proud boasting Pharisees (d) Jam. 1.7 expect to (e) An opinion of dignity and merit would hinder and obstruct the acceptance and successe of prayers he who hath money wherewith he may buy needs not begg When we resolve to stand to a legal plea we need not make our supplication to the Judge Job 9.15 receive any thing from the Lord such as would carry on a trade with heaven must not bring such (f) Isa 64.6 filthy rags Ah what are all our righteousnesses all our prayers and performances who will go about to establish their own righteousness but such as are ignorant of the righteousness of God Rom. 10.3 If our works have such a meritorious worth in them Christ died in vain and what do we ow to the free mercy and grace of God For to him that worketh the reward is reckoned not of grace but of debt Rom. 4.4 It is Christs prerogative to ask upon the account of justice and ●o plead the title of purchase but to us all is free his love his blood all the promises all our enjoyments and all the good we stand in need of grace glory our bodily being and life with all its comforts and accommodations Though the Lord by his free promise hath made a connexion between our working and the reward yet we must not imagine any kind of causality by way of merit though our works be via regni yet not causa regnandi They are the way and a mean sanctified and appointed of God for obtaining the blessing but not the cause nor can they give any title by way of purchase and causality but yet the connexion is no less sure and infallible the Lords truth and veracity being as strong and firm a ground and support of faith as his equity and justice hence we may as confidently look for the return of our prayers as if by these we did merit and purchase what we desired But though thus we be (g) Subordinata non pugnant allowed to look after those inferiour and subordinat ends yet if these exclude yea if they no not stoop unto the great and ultimat end viz. the glory of God the whole work is (h) Bonum opus intintio facit non enim valde attendas quid homo faciat sed quid cum facit aspiciat prin quinquag ex prolo Ps 31. August Quicquid autem boni sit ab bomine non propter hoc fit propter quod fieri debere sapientia praecipit etsi officio vidoatur bonum ipso non recto fine peccatum est August lib. contra marred and wants one of the most noble qualifications and that which must be a necessary ingredient in all our acceptable sacrifices not as if in every petition we must reflect upon that high end but that habitually virtually and interpretatively it must alwayes be intended it must so far abide as to have influence upon the whole action so that we must alwayes so carry as if alwayes we did mind and think upon it as he who is riding a journey must so far mind the place he is going to as not to be diverted or driven out of the way And now we come to speak more directly to the main question viz. what is it to intend the glory of God and how shall I know when I make it my great and ultimate end in prayer Ans We may make use of these few characters for a discovery of what end we propound and aim at 1. the end hath a (i) Quid est ergo amor nisi quedam vitta duo aliqua copulans amentom scil id quod amatur August de trin lib. 8. cap. 10. magnetical and attractive vertue it draws out the soul after it and if it be our chief good and the great end it so glueth and uniteth the heart to it that there can be no divorce Hence the soul is said (k) Anima magis est ubi amat quam ubi animat to be more where it loveth then where it liveth And indeed as to the estimation and choice it will prefer what it most loveth unto life it self thus Paul was ready not only to be bound but also to die for the name of Christ Act. 21.13 and the glory of God
very much with God For He will fulfill the desire of them that fear him he will hear their cry and will save them Ps 145.19 O! but every fear is not this reverential and godly fear there may be much fear in the soul and yet this may be wanting the people of Israel were exceedingly afraid when they heard Gods voice out of the midst of the fire and cryed unto Moses ah I this great fire will consume us Deut. 5.24 25. yet there was little of this holy fear in them as afterwards appeared in their frequent murmuring and therefore saith the Lord there ver 29. O! that there were such an heart in them that they would fear me They did then fear God but O! saith the Lord if they would fear me aright there is a slavish and selfish fear of God only because of his power justice and terrours and there is much of this fear in hell where it is accompanied with much enmity and hatred of and rebellion against him and though on earth it may produce an out-side and half-reformation yet no cordial and heart-renovation though some may thus forbear to commit sin yet it makes them not hate sin though it may disturb and drive away the thief from his prey yet it will not make him leave off to covet it this fear may perplex a man and put him on the rack but it cannot convert him and turn the heart unto the Lord. But then there is a son-like and filial fear of reverence due distance and respect which though it exclude not Gods justice for we may thus fear him as being able to cast into hell Luk. 12.5 yet is mainly conversant about 1. his majesty and greatness 2. his bounty and goodness his excellency begets reverence and makes us keep a due distance and his loving kindness makes us stand in aw and fear least we grieve and offend him though the Son did not fear the rod yet would he stand in awe and be loth to offend his kind Father and the greater the Fathers kindness and the love of the Son be the Fathers displeasure will be the more grievous unto the Son when the children of Israel shall return and cordially seek the Lord their God they shall fear the Lord and his goodness Hos 3.5 Ah! were there any thing of this reverence and filial fear in the heart it would be as a load-stone to draw us in to God and it would be as honey and the honey-comb to sweeten our communion with him and make us go about our duty cheerfully and what a notable guard and preservative would it prove against wandring thoughts and what attention and seriousness would it beget and maintain When we speak to a King with what diligence will we watch over our thoughts words and whole carriage the reverence we ow to him will make us circumspect And is it not the want of that reverence we ow to the infinite majesty of the great God that maketh us so careless and negligent of his worship But O! if we did more seriously mind our stistance and did consider what base sinfull wretches we are who are admitted to draw nigh to the (d) Mal. 1.14 great King if we did lay to heart his condescending love his mercy and goodness yet not fotgetting his excellency and greatness with what both confidence and reverence might we approach to him This reverential and filial fear is not opposit unto but is the ground and foundation of solid confidence there can be no security without this fear the false peace of fearless sinners is but desperat madness but where this fear is there is no danger and such a soul needs not perplex it self any more with terrors and a slavish fear it may now come to God with confidence yea and with boldness if thou hearken to the exhortatation and wilt serve God with reverence and godly fear Heb. 12.28 thou mayest also lay hold on the priviledge and consolation and come boldly unto the throne of grace that thou mayest obtain what mercy thou standst in need of Heb. 4.16 Thus (e) Bone Deus inquit Vitus Theodorus in epist ad Melancht qua●tus spiritus quanta fides in ipsius verbis inest tanta reverentia aliquid petit ut cum Deo tanta spe fide ut cum patre amieo se loquisentiat Mel. Adamus in vita Lutheri pag. mibi 142. Luther as Vitus Theodorus testifieth used to pray to God with as great reverence as became a finfull creature speaking to the holy Lord and yet with such hope confidence and boldness as if he had been speaking to a father and intimat friend But ah how should not only formal Professors but the Saints also and children of God be humbled for their careless and irreverent carriage in Gods worship and service many a time might the Lord say even to his precious ones is this the reverence ye owe to your Maker is this the worship ye allow me durst ye deal so with the ruler though a poor creature like your self would not such irreverence in his presence be thought unseeemly and intolerable yea and justly censurable And yet your heart is not smitten for the affront ye offer to me but rather thinks that by such service an obligation is put upon me and that ye have causs to complain if I refuse or delay to answer such formal and lazy prayers O! repent of this your rashness and deadness in my Worship and Ordinances and for your dis-respect and contempt of me lest I deal with you according to your folly 3. We must pray in humility as we must have high and reverential thoughts of God 3. Mumility So we must have low and humble thoughts of our selves pride is detestable in all but intolerable in beggars thou comest to ask an alms from God let the frame of thy heart and thy carriage be suitable unto thy trade and employment if thou draw nigh in thy pride thou mayest fear an answer in wrath But the heavens may be astonished and the earth blush at the popish arrogancy God for bid saith (f) Absit ut justi vitam aeternam expectent sicut pau●er elecmosynam multo namque gloriosius est c. Taper in art Lov to 2. ar 9. Tapperus that the Saints should expect heaven as beggars do an alms it is more glorious for them to receive it as a triumphant garland due to them for their sweating and labouring and saith (g) Magis enim honorificum est habere aliquid ex merito quam exsola donatione Bell. de justif impri bon op contrav 2. princip lib. 5. cap. 3. Bellarmine it is more honourable to enjoy by purchase and merit then by a free donation I am ashamed to relate such a blasphemous dream as (h) Illud quod sumus quod habemu● sive sunt boni actus sive boni habitus vel usus totum est in nobis ex liberalitate divina gratis dante
the Syrophenician woman though disgraced and called a dog yet will not fly from her Master but will cast her self down under his table and look up to him for some crumbs Mark 7.28 and thus turn her reproach into a plea and prevailing argument And the reason of all this is not only 1. because the Lord requireth it the best of the flock must be sacrificed to the great King Mael 1.14 Nor yet 2. is it only because of the great violence and importunity that Sathan and our lusts do use against us either to interrupt our prayers or contract them but also 3. because as a reverend (c) Mr. Bur. grac. spirit part 2. ch 1. pag. 311. Divine speaketh there is in the Saints a holy kind of desperatness not like that unbelieving and wicked despair that was in Judas which drove him away from God and from the means but this desperation that we may keep that word which usually is taken in an ill sense is both the fore-runner and companion of faith it animats our love to God and his Son Jesus Christ and quickens our diligence in the use of the means and it floweth from conviction and sense of our sin and misery and the extremity we are in till we say hold on the remedy which must be sought to by prayer as a special mean Hence while there is any fear upon the soul the sinner though a believer will pray desperatly What though he must meet with devils and men in the way he will venture he is desperate he fears nothing he must kill sin or be killed he must pray and prevail or he must go to hell Hence floweth his impatience violence and impudence when a mans life is at the stake ye need not bid him run and whoever meet him by the way they must not call him unmannerly though he stay not upon salutations ceremonies and formalities O! if we knew our hazard and saw the extremity we are in could we be so careless and negligent and would we offer up such cold and faint desires to God Who can enough admire the desperat folly of sinners for want of this holy desperation Do you think saith a holy (d) Siccine putas Jonam in profundo Danielem inter Leones Latronem in cruce oraesse Hieron in loc citand S. 2. man that Jonah in the whales belly Daniel among the Lyons or the thief on the Cross prayed thus And yet the (e) I do not deny that the thief yea and Jonah also had reason to fear the wrath of God but their outward danger was that which mainly occasioned Jeroms question outward danger in which those supplicants were then was nothing in respect of the everlasting wrath of God which not only those have reason to deprecat who are under terrors but they also who have the surest evidence of Gods love for they as well as others have deserved his wrath and they who stand must pray that they may not fall they must rejoyce with trembling and fear the Lord and his goodness But ah that bodily hazard and fear of the skin should make men so earnest and resolute yea and so desperate as to venture whatever difficulties be in the way there can be none so great that they will not encounter with yea the greatest coward will become stout and will fear nothing if he must kill or be killed if extremity once make a man desperate with what (f) When William the Conquerour landed at Pemsey near Hastings he sent back the ships that his soldiers might see no way to escape but that now they must either fight or die and thus being desperatly resolute albeit they encountred with a great valiant and well ordered army yet they prevailed and got the victory Bakers chron of Engl. pag. mihi 24. Hence politicians in reference to military affairs lay down this rule that a wise Commander should by all means labour to take away all occasion of necessity of fighting from the enemy but should endeavour to bring his own into that necessity vid. Nic. Macchiavel disput de rep lib. 3. cap. 12. per totum courage what care what unwearied strength activity and diligence will he use the means of self-preservation and yet 1. he runs as uncertain and at a meer possibility and may be 2. for a perishing trifle which is as nothing in respect of life eternal and the incorruptible crown which God will certainly give to all them who thus run the Christian race But ah we little mind either the importance and great consequence of the work or yet the honour of our Master Pagans will rise up in judgment against us who do express more reverence and zeal in their devotion to their idols then we in the worship of the true and living God When the Pagan-priest went to sacrifice one went before with a rod in his hand and either he or the priest did stir up and arrest the attention of the people by this memento and alarme hoc (g) Vid. Plut. in Numa pag. mihi 47. age and the Grecian priests their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is thought to have been used for the same purpose this do mind the present work and lay all other business aside when ye are employed in Gods service Ah! did the Pythagorians say (h) Et Alex ab Alexandro genial dier lib. 4. cap. 17. will ye worship the immortal God in transitu in the by and passing and while ye are going about another errand And what preparation before what attention seriousness and fervency in the service of God did the Pagan King (i) In profestis autem omnino in sacerdotum festis per urbem praecones praecedebant qui ut quiescerent ab operibus defisterent jubebant quemadmodum enim Pythagoricos dicunt non sinere homines per transitum adorare Deos immortales illosque orate sed continuo ex ipsa domo mente ad id paratos pergere c. Plutarch ibid. Lop. Floren interpret Numa require and prescribe so that heathnish Rome in this had the advantage of the now apostat and popish Rome their Pagan king complained though the work was Plutarch loc cit done yet if it was not performed with that reverence attention and devotion yea and preparation which was due to the immortal God but the Pope cryeth up the work done and will have it to be meritorious and satisfactory however it be done though perfunctoriously and superficially without knowledge attention c. And O! if many careless and formal Protestants were not liable to the like challenge yea alas the Saints themselves too often so pray as if they intended to provoke the Lord not to give what they so coldly ask for qui frigide rogat docet negare he who remisly and as it were with much indifferency petitioneth doth say that he is not very desirous to have and that it were to little purpose to give him what he thus asketh Ah! that we should
his own glory and our souls good and the more direct tendency any of these things seem to have to these ends we may be the more earnest in our desiring and praying for it 1 And then 2. our desire to have fellowship with God in that ordinance of prayer and our love towards him and delight in him may be very fervent and intense though our errand and business or rather the special occasion that gave the invitation be not very considerable and though we do not passionatly and inordinatly covet what we ask as to the thing it self The (u) Ps 39.3.6 Watchfulness fire may burn and the heart be hot within while the bellows which did blow that fire and the occasion and first rise of that meditation did come from some outward comfort and accomodation apprehended to be suitable and convenient or some strait affliction or bodily rod as being bitter and unpleasant to sense and the outward man And so much now concerning importunity as it importeth zeal and fervency but as it doth include frequency and constancy it will fall in under the seventh Particular viz. perseverance 6. We must (x) Non solum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Pet. 4.7 sed etiam 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Col. 4.2 watch in prayer Colos 4.2 It s not enough to watch unto (y) In ipsum hoc vigilantes Erasm in Eph. 6.18 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 prayer and for that very (z) As hath been shown chap. 1. end that we may be fit to pray but we must also watch while we are employed in the work for even then we are ready to fall a sleep and unless drousiness be prevented by watchfulness while we are speaking to God it will be as needfull to awake us as it was the (a) Zech. 4.1 Prophet when the Angel was speaking to him and therefore we must watch 1. over the senses and outward man for often theeves break in by that back door and steal away the heart from the duty 2. We must watch over our thoughts and affections which are ready to fall a gadding though the door be shut and not only must we thus watch at the beginning but all (b) Nam vigilare leve est pervigilare grave Martial alongst the duty the soul may set out vigorously and with full sail and yet quickly meet with a contrary blast which may make us turn our course If we do but a little slack our hand in watching what foolish and impertinent what sensual and wicked yea and atheistical thoughts may on a sudden break in what strong lusts and (c) Si non intendes animum Sudiis rebus honestis in vidia vel amore vigil torquebere Horat. 1. epist 2. carnal affections may begin to stir and what irreverent and unseemly words may we utter before the Lord how necessary then must it be for us to keep a watch and considering how weak lazy and short sighted our best watch-men are and how strong subtile and vigilant the enemy is and that he hath the advantage to have already a party within doors what need have we to employ and begg the Kings guard which is alwayes at hand and to say with the Psalmist while he (d) ver● 1. c. ver 8 9 10. was busie at prayer Set a watch O Lord before my mouth and suffer no wicked thought and inclination to arise in my heart Ps 141.3 4. When none sitteth upon the watch-tower or when the watch-man is blind or a sleep how easily may the enemy surprize us O! but when the Lord seeth us standing with our weapons in our hand and looking well about us he pittieth us and though the enemy may approach yet he will not suffer him to prevail a watching eye will look up and bring supply from heaven 7. It s not enough to present our requests once or twice with great seriousness and then to recoyl but we must continue instant in prayer watching thereunto with all perseverance We must pray alwayes and never faint knowing that though an answer tarry yet it will surely come that it is for an appointed time but at length it will not fail except we faint Rom. 12.12 Eph. 6.18 Luk. 18.1 Hab. 2.3 Gal. 6.9 Though there be an interruption and prayer may give place to the performance of other duties yet there must not be a cessation Act. 12.5 We must not (e) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 make an end of praying till the end of our prayer 1 Thes 5.17 As he who goeth to law doth alwayes follow his suit though he doth not evermore speak or think of it he never giveth over but waiteth all opportunities for promoving his cause so though the Saints be not alwayes employed in prayer yet they wait and at every season renew their requests resolving never to weary nor give over till the Lord hear and answer them and either grant their desire or declare his purpose as to the particular by removing the occasion and altering the subject and matter of their petition as often it may fall out as to temporals If the child die David must no longer pray for its recovery and if we have holden out in prayer till the Lord thus declare his mind either by giving or with-holding the particular we need not doubt of the success of our prayers and of a compensation in better things when what we ask is not given see Sect. 2. and Part 4. Ch. 1. Thus then to persevere in prayer is nothing else but to continue instant in it as we have it expressed Rom. 12.12 and to attend the work with activity diligence and might the word there signifieth not only continuance in regard of time saith Mr. (f) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word is attributed to the hunting of dogs which will not cease following the game till they haue got it it signifieth to persevere with str●ngth Mr. Leigh crit sac Leigh but also instancy and importunity Of this last we have already spoken and shall now especially consider that constancy and continuance that is thereby held forth yet alwayes supposing the other as necessarily included When we begin to faint we leave off to pray a lifeless heartless prayer being no prayer in Gods account honest supplicants should rather double their diligence and put to more strength as those who lift a weight when it is not moved and doth not yield at the first essay they fall a work more vigorously the next time and beggars when they meet with no answer will cry and knock more loudly So c. As to the other importance of the word that we may now mainly press that 1. What a priviledge is it that we may come to the King and present our supplications to him as often as we will Yea 2. that we are not only allowed and permitted but also commanded And 3. that we are commended for not giving God rest till he hear and answer and it is held forth as a
evil to come near us For it is as (k) Petamus ut non faciat quod non bene petimus quia ad hoc pertinet quod in oratione dominica dicimus ne nos inducas in tentationem neque enim parva est tenta●io si contra tuam sit causam tua postulatio August tract 73. in Joan. Augustin observeth no small temptation to have our desires and requests to become contrary to our cause and obstruct●ve of our good and interest Hence it must be no small mercy to get that snare broken and when the Lord doth frustrat such desires though offered up prayer-wayes he doth answer that part of our prayer lead us not into temptation but deliver us from evil Mat. 6.13 And it were good that we did more mind that part of our copy and pattern and that when we pray we did as that Ancient adviceth ask that God would not grant what we ask a miss but not only doth the Lord thus answer by not giving those serpents we desire but also 2. by giving us a heart to welcome the dispensation and grace to improve the trial aright he would not suffer us to be cast into the furnace if he purposed not thereby to purge away some dross from us but now for clearing the point we shall not multiply arguments but that the Lord must thus answer all our prayers may appear 1. from the universality of the promise which excludeth no (l) Sed malum culpae peccatum cum non sit eligibile non debet referri ad classem 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 object no case nor condition in which we may be cast no time nor place nor whatsoever other circumstance but as we heard extendeth unto and comprehendeth all things whatsoever we shall ask Mark 11.24 1 Joh. 5.15 and 3.22 Joh. 14.13 c. And therefore there can be no case nor combination of circumstances that can frustrate our prayers of a gracious return and answer otherwise the promise of audience must be too large and so must fail of its accomplishment 2. We may argue from the extent and utility of prayer it is usefull at all times and for every thing hence it s prescribed as a soveraign antidote against every evil and all our fears Phil. 4.6 But if only then it were heard and answered when we get the particular in kind how often would it be useless and to no purpose 3. I would ask what difference there would be between the trials and crosses of the godly and the wicked if to the one they were not sanctified by prayer and not to the other because he restraineth prayer What is said of the creatures 1 Tim. 4.5 may be applied as well to every dispensation of providence it cannot be sanctified to us but by prayer and if we ask the blessing we may as confidently expect it in such a case though never so cross and contrary to our selfish inclination as while we use the creatures with much contentment and satisfaction And we may upon good ground say we know that such a dispensation is good for us and that we had been at a loss if we had wanted it and hence will flow not only patience and submission but also rejoycing and thankfulness thus David by way of congratulation and praise to God could say it is good for me that I have been afflicted Ps 119.71 thus also Paul could rejoyce whether Christ was preacht out of contention and in pretence only which in it self was a sad affliction and tryal to the zealous Apostle or in truth and sincerity as knowing that by the Philippians prayers and none will imagine that he excluded his own though not needfull to be mentioned while he was speaking to them that should turn to his salvation Phil. 1.18 19. Hence also the Psalmist might conclude that he was afflicted in (m) In hebraeoest justitia loquitut de bonitate prohitate Dei hoc sensu subdi● quod me fideliter hoc est meo commodo adfligis castigas observandum est quod fidem Dei erga se in afflictionibus considerat certo sibi p●rsuadens quod fideliter suo ipsius commodo adfligatur a Domino Muscul in loc faithfulness Ps 119.75 and therefore his afflictions must be the fruit and accomplishment of the promises he had pleaded in prayer and so must have been sent by way of return to his prayers 4. we might argue from the sense and meaning of our prayers when regular of which we only speak which must not be absolute and peremptory as to the particular but conditional and dis-junctive Lord give us such a supposed mercy if it be good for us but otherwise we do not desire it and will not have it Or thus Lord give us what we ask or what thou knowest will be better for us As hath been shown Part 1. chap. 7. sect 1. And thus our faith may keep a conformity and correspondence with our prayers (n) Obstrepit enim hic carnis sensus minime apparere quod Deus vs ta nostra exaudiat quando codem semper cursu procedunt afflictiones nostrae Itaque apostolus occu pat quamvis non statim succurrat suis Deus non tamen cos descrere quia miro artisicio quae videntur incommoda in eorum salutem convertat Calvin in loc and we may confidently expect that God will answer them and grant our desires that he will either give the particular in kind if good and convenient for us or else what is better and more fit for us at at such a season 5. Let us ponder that conclusion which the Apostle draweth from what he had said concerning prayer Rom. 8.28 We know that all things work together for good to them that love God It may be this or that particular may seem to do thee no good but take all collectively and joyntly together and if your eyes be opened you will see them mutually conspire for your good If we look upon the prescription of a Physitian we may there see several ingredients which singly and by themselves would rather hurt then profit the patient but if we take in the correctives and more narrowly observe the composition we will be forced to commend the art and knowledge of the Physitian and to confess that all together do joyntly concur and contribute for the patients health So c. Hence it must necessarily follow that whether God give or withhold the particular he doth what is for our good and what is most fit and convenient for us if all things must work together for our God then certainly the several answers and returns to our prayers and this we may as well as these Romans did know and should believe 6. Those Scriptures which hold out Gods purpose to withhold no good thing from his upright supplicants as Ps 84.11 Ps 34.10 c. as they do show that when the particular askt is withheld it is not good for us hic
extrinsecal and moral possibility flowing from the decree and purpose of God concerning the futurition of such an object possibility in the thing petitioned that in that case the Lord will so far respect our prayers as that in return to them he will at length give to them what we asked for them and that though many haply have (o) Whether in praying for the salvation of one particular person or for publick mereles and deliverance to the Church for now we are joyntly speaking of both cases concurred in the work and though we have often petitioned that mercy yet none of our prayers shall be forgotten but all and every one of our supplications shall have a proportionable insluence in procuring the blessing Albeit the mercy may be for a long time with-held yet the Lord keepeth all the prayers of all his honest supplicants in remembrance and in answer to them the mercy in due time shall be given Albeit Monica for a long time prayed for her son Austin his conversion yet none of her prayers were lost the Lord had them all on record and at last satisfied the desire of that zealous woman but we must not imagine that God then only had regard to the prayer put up about the time of her sons conversion nay but every tear and prayer which from time to time she had poured out had influence upon the work and helped forward the new birth of that convert But 2. as to the compensation when the Lord purposeth not to hear and give the particular we prayed for to others that will not be made to them for whom we pray but to us who pray for they being reprobats and despisers of the mercies of God no ordinance can do them good but if they be Saints and yet the Lord in his holy and wise providence will not give them such outward mercies for as to spirituals these shall not be finally with-held from such as we did petition for them albeit the Lord may and no doubt often doth make some compensation to them and will not suffer them to be deprived of the fruit of our prayers although what we did ask was not good hic nunc yet that which universally and in all cases our faith may lay hold on by way of compensation when the particular is with-held must be something respecting the supplicant himself some one or other mercy to be bestowed on him by way of return and answer to his prayers and thus while we pray for the salvation of reprobats or for such publick mercies to the Church and People of God which he according to the depth of his counsel hath determined not to give our prayers notwithstanding are not lost as to us for though Israelites captivity be continued yet they who love and pray for Jerusalem shall prosper Psa 122.6 Albeit the Lord did not give to Davids enemies those mercies he petitioned for them yet his labour was not lost nor his prayers like water spilt upon the ground the Lord did receive and welcom them and would not send back those faithfull messengers empty though no return came to those incorrigible enemies in whose behalf they were sent yet some (p) And this may be the occasion of that expression and the reason why Davids prayer is said to return into his bosom viz. because it did bring along with it some seasonable or some considerable mercy for what we take into our bosom must lye near the heart and have some room in the estimation heart-affecting and bosom-blessing was dispatched to David his prayer returned but not (q) Etsi non eis prosit ego tamen nonsa 〈◊〉 frustratus m●a mercede gloss in loc vid. etiam Lyr. ibid. empty though it be the maner of men yet not of the great and gracious King to send away any honest supplicant without an answer Psa 35.13 But do not mistake and say O! then it must be better with the supplicant when his prayer for others is not heard as to them and when they get no good by it because then it returneth into his own bosom and the good redounds to him Do not I say entertain such a conceit for although we now only mentioned the personal return made to the supplicant when his desire for others was not granted that being the present case to which we should speak and a notable encouragment to to the conscionable and constant performance of that duty whatever might be it's fruit and success as to those for whom it were performed yet we did not exclude that personal return which every petitioner may expect when the Lord doth fulfill his desire towards others we shall not fair the worse because it goeth well with others nor shall the Lord be less kind to us because for our sake he sheweth kindness to others we shall not lose because others do gain by our trading our God hath blessings enew to bestow and though he answer the supplication he will not let the messenger go away without his wages he shall get something in hand but that is not all nor the main but they who by their prayers exhortations c. turn (r) Though Gods servants and messengers labour in vain and though Israel be not gathered yet honest supplicants and labourers shall be glorious in the eyes of their Master and their reward shall be with their God Isa 40.4 5. Yet when God blesseth his own Ordinance as that will cause the hearts of henest labourers to rejoyce So the Lord may out of his good pleasure and soveraign mercy crown that mercy with other mercies both to him who did pray and to him for whom supplication was made mary to righteousness shall shine as the stars for ever and ever Dan. 12.3 not only their prayers and endeavours shall come in remembrance but also the fruit and success thereof but not to obstruct and hinder their mercies but rather to promove their happiness If it be here askt whether the former assertion concerning Gods hearing and answering of all our prayers so far as alwayes to do what is best for us in the particular which we desired and petitioned whether I say that hath place in this case Ans That assertion it self without any further explication might have prevented such a question for while the mater of our prayer is not personal and doth not concern us but others it seemeth a little impertinent to ask whether the Lord when he giveth not the particular askt viz. to others doth that which is best for us for what doth not concern us cannot be said to be more or less convenient for us But 2. albeit what we ask for others doth not concern us as to our personal loss or advantage except when we ask publick mercies for the Church or Incorporation whereof we are members yet to a believer who already hath a right to all personal happiness and felicity no compensation can be made for those spiritual mercies which he doth ask for
all the prayers of his honest supplicants which is the foundation of faith so every Saint hath his own experiences which spiritualized sense and feeling may lay hold upon and is there yet any thing wanting for thy comfort and establishment is there yet any of the sons of Zion who dare doubt of the tender love and care of their Father and which is worse who dare give God the lie he may summond all his creatures and put them to it if there be any among them who can bear testimony against his Word O! what an impudent and blasphemous lie were it to say that God had not kept promise and yet this atheisme lurketh in the hearts of too many yea and so much of unbelief as lodgeth in the best so much also of this venom which the old serpent did (ſ) Gen 3.5 6. spue out upon our first parents and which they too greedily sucked in but after that we have cast out all that poyson and are perfectly purged after that our eyes are anointed and all mists of darkness are dispelled we will doubt no more and complain no more after we are once entered in the light of glory we will then clearly see our errours and mistakes and will proclaim to all eternity the Lords faithfulness in fullfilling all his promises and his bounty and kindness towards us in not granting our foolish and sensual requests nay who did ever hear a Saint on his death-bed when carnal baits and worldly temptations could promise little and furnish no contentment and thus were not able so to allure infatuat and bewitch as formerly who I say was the man that entring upon the borders of eternity durst challenge the Almighty for not accomplishing his promises or who could say that at any time he had called upon God in vain All ages can give their evidences and all beleevers will and must sooner or at length confess that there was never a prayer put up in faith that proved abortive though all our labours and endeavours under the Sun may be fruitless and to no purpose yet prayer will never be as a (t) Hos 9. ●4 miscarrying womb and dry breasts but alwayes proveth that good seed which though it may for a while lie hid under ground yet still yields good fruit for the comfort and satisfaction of the sower What is (u) 2 Sa●●● 22 said of the bow of Jonathan and the sword of Saul is a fit motto of the prayer of faith it never returneth empty And this truth will not be called in question by any except when sense and carnal reason these corrupt judges in the matters of God do sit on the bench and give out sentence But ah our unbelief negligence and estrangedness from God doth deprive our selves and the Church of many mercies and of much matter of comfort to our selves of praise to God and terrour and astonishment to enemies 7. If we consider the many sweet and binding relations which the Lord hath been pleased to undertake towards his covenanted people who are true Israelits and are sincers in their profession if we consider how all the persons of the blessed Trinity are affected towards them what is the love of the Father the purchase of the Son and the work of the holy Ghost our doubting and unbelief will be most unteasonable 1. then is not God our Maker our Lord and Master our Father and Husband c. And will not the infinit Creaator care for his creatures who depend upon him will not the great Lord and Master of heaven and earth care and provide for his honest servants will not the Father of mercies pity his children in the day of their trouble and hear their cry will not the Husband hearken to the voice of the Spouse and grant her desire c. 2. As to the relations under which we stand towards the persons of the blessed Trinity severally (x) Quem enim invocamus Patrem Fratrem Advo●atum Quo ausu Patre jubente Fratrejustituente Advocoeto inpellente Quae fiducia Patre promittente Fraire adjurante Advocato testificante Quid petimus baereditatem quam nobis impetravit Fraterconcessit Pater obsignavit Spiritus sanctus Gerhar harm Evang. cap. 149. is not the x Father our father the Son our brother and advocat and the holy Ghost our helper leader and guide and who will doubt of acceeptance welcome and success while his father commandeth his brother inviteth and his guide and counsellour perswadeth and allureth him to come and present this requests while the father promiseth the elder brother and heir reneweth and y confirmeth his fathers grant our leader and assistant doth put that security in our hand and is willing to engage with them in the same bond and putteth to his seal and subscription confirming their evidence and adding his own what place is there left for unbelief doubting and fears Especially if 3. we consider 1. the Fathers love that mysterious love in giving his only begotten Son to death that we might live Joh. 3.16 1 Joh. 4.9 and shall we think that he who spared not his own Son but delivered him up for us will not freely with him also give us what we shall ask in his name Rom. 8.32 I say not saith the Son that I will pray the Father for you for the Father himself loveth you Joh. 16.26 27. I would not have you think that you have no other ground whereon to build your faith (r) By a most emphatick asseveration which to many of the learned appeareth to be an oath as Joh. 16.23 c. but my intercession I will not pray for you to one who knoweth you not and hath no respect to you I will not pray for you as if ye were enemies and strangers neither should ye thus pray for your selves after that ye are reconciled to him through my blood after ye are become children and mutually love and are loved of the Father and me Courteours will confidently draw nigh to their Prince and we have moyen in heaven the King himself loveth us and hath adopted us to the crown and will he withhold lesser mercies and hide his face while we present our requests to him But as the Father doth thus love us and freely give and by covenant dispone to us all that we can desire or stand in need of So 2. the Son hath laid out a price for us and by his blood hath purchased all these things to us and ever liveth to make intercession for us and to apply to us the merit of his death and to put us in possession of all these good things which are the purchase of his blood ah we seldom visit the throne yet Christ is alwayes there we weary in praying for our selves but Christ wearieth not to pray for us our prayers are cold and without life but Christ doth not faint nor grow remiss our manifold iniquities do cry against us but the blood of Christ doth out-cry them And
since we come not in our own name but in his and ask not for our own worth goodness but for his sake who hath paid our debt and purchased our peace and acceptance through his own blood and who doth concur with us in our supplications why should we fear the Father alwayes heareth him Joh. 11.42 and therefore must also hear us with whom he alwayes joyneth the Father cannot reject us and our prayers unless he also hide his face from the Son of his love which since he will not and cannot do we may rest confident and secure but as the Father hath promised and freely disponed and the Sun purchased all the good things we can ask So 3. the holy Ghost doth enable fit and prepare us both to ask and receive he draweth and helpeth weak ones to ascend to the throne and putteth words in their mouth and teacheth them what to say Rom. 8.26 27. Joh. 14.16 17. And will the Lord reject those prayers that are breathed into us by his Spirit but as the Spirit doth thus help us to pray so to pray in faith as he helpeth our infirmities by enlarging the heart and filling it with spiritual affections so also by working in us a child-like confidence and making us cry not only with the mouth which were no great matter but with the heart having made an impression and sense of it there Abba Father Rom. 8.16 As he leadeth the Saints into all truth and putteth to his seal to the whole Word of God Joh. 16.13 Joh. 14.26 so particularly to the promises concerning the success of their prayers that if they knock it shall be opened if they seek they shall find c. Oh! what a blasphemy were it once to imagine that God could lie and would not perform these promises or that the Spirit of truth would put to his seal to an untruth The Lord pity and pardon our unbelief that having to do with such a compassionat and condescending Lord who hath stoopt so low and come so nigh to us who hath held forth himself to us under the nearest most amiable and engaging relations and who hath taken upon him so many bonds to do us good we notwithstanding will yet doubt of his good will and of his faithfulness in performing his promises Oh! 1. what a dishonour do we offer to our kind Master thus to question his love care and fidelity 2. what a shame to our holy profession 3. what a base return do we make for the many mercies we still receive and 4. what loss and damage do we bring to our selves we expect little and receive little we will not trust God and he will not satisfie our desires Jam. 1.6 7. Are ye now convinced of your folly and guiltiness in thus distrusting the Lord and is it the desire of your soul to have this evil cured O! then 1. ponder frequently and seriously these and such like considerations if this were the matter of your daily meditation if these things did sink down into your hearts and did abide upon your spirits they might prove a notable preservative against your unbelief doubtings and jealousies 2. Let us exercise our selves in the Scriptures especially laying hold on such promises as are most pertinent and sutable to our condition faith must have a word of promise whereon it must rest and the more express and particular that it be our faith will proportionably cleave to it the more firmly O! but what atheisme must there lodge in that heart that dare doubt where it hath this warrand thus saith the Lord 3. Labour to know more of God his love mercy power fidelity c. Ignorance of God his nature and attributes is the mother of jealousie and infidelity but they who know his name will put their trust in him Ps 9.10 With what zeal and success did Moses plead from Gods attributes Numb 14.17 18 19.4 Since sensible demonstrations are so concludent and prevail so much with us who live too much upon sensible objects let us observe and keep a register of the gracious returns from time to time made to the prayers of Gods people and honest servants 1. Our own experiences would be kept on record he who can say with David the Lord hath delivered me out of the paw of the Lyon and of the Bear will be able the more confidently to say with him the Lord will deliver me out of the hand of this Philistine 1 Sam. 17.37 experience begetteth confidence But 2. we should also observe the dispensations of providence towards others the Saints experiences are recorded in Scripture for our instruction comfort and encouragment Rom. 15.4 If God regard the prayer of the destitute this must be written for the generations to come Psa 102.17 18. the success that others have met with will encourage vs to follow the like course 5 Let us be exact and circumspect in our walk if our conscience condemn us we will fear the Judge every blot in our life doth darken and obscure the promise and dazle the eye of faith when the Saints fall their faith doth shake guiltiness is the mother of jealousie when we do ill we become suspicious and are ready to question his love and kindness to us when we prove ungrate and come short of our duty to him O! but if we would believe without staggering let us not halt in our walking let us be conscienciously diligent in every point of duty and (z) 1 Pet 1.14 holy in all manner of conversation if we would plead the promise and ask in (a) Jam. 1.6 faith nothing wavering Hence for trial this will be a good negative mark whereby we may know who cannot pray in faith if we do not walk as children we cannot call God Father nor with confidence expect that he will hear us What son will not be afraid and ashamed to look his father in the face after he hath dishonoured him and how will he blush to mention that relation and to call him Father to whom he hath not paid the debt of love reverence and obedience And if any perfidious and rebellious son should be so impudent as with (b) Herod having given to his son Antipater his Authority as he speaketh his favour his secrets his heart and crown in a will signed with his hand yet that unnatural monster could not stay a little till his fathers death but laboured by all means to prevent nature particularly by sedueing and perswading Pheroras to poyson the King yet having the boldness to offer to kiss his father after he was informed of his conspiracy though the traitor knew not that his conspiracy was discovered met with this terrible repulse Avaunt thou murderer of brethren and father the kiss of a father was not instituted for thee Behold Quintilius thy Judge c. Nich. Caussin holy court part 1. lib 4. pag. 133. Antipater to offer to salute and kiss his father he might expect such a welcom and reward as he met
with from the hand of Herod and to find the severity of a Judge in stead of the love a Father and yet are there not multitudes Ah! how many are there who have the boldness to deal thus with the father of Spirits Who Judas-like with a (c) Every reigning sin is treason and rebellion against the great King and interoretatively Deicide and Regicide and every sinner doth comply and conspire with Sathan and take up arms for him against his Master and Lord. treacherous heart dare offer to kiss him in whom they live move and have their being who is their Father by creation and who offereth unto them and entreateth them to accept of the inheritance of children Such think themselves to be sons and dare call him father though they have the heart of an enemy such have a kind of faith confidence and hope which is nothing but presumption delusion and groundless imagination suggested by the father of lies and maintained and cherished by their own foolish and deceitfull hearts This their faith is not built upon the word it hath not for its warrant thus saith the Lord but only thus saith the murderer and great impostor thus saith the deceiver and our deceitfull and deceived hearts It doth not arise from the Promises as having no foundation there but only from some principles of Sathans Catechism which he carefully instilleth into the ears and minds of his disciples and among the many articles of that anti-scriptural and cursed Creed this to our purpose is one If we have some form of devotion and now and then speak some few words prayer-wayes it 's no matter how we live our prayers will make amends for all God is mercifull and therefore will Sathan say and they upon his word think he will pity his poor creatures and servants and hear them whensoever they cry to him nay such will be ready to apprehend that it were cruelty and injustice to reject such well-meaning supplicants We may not now confute that soul-destroying delusion but what the Apostle said of doubting Jam. 1.7 may far rather be applied to this mad and desperat presumption and confidence Let not such seeure bold wretches think that they shall receive any thing of the Lord though too many be ready to think they shall receive yet saith the Apostle let them not think so or if they do they will but deceive their own souls and whatever for the present may be the dispensations of a common providence yet ere it be long they shall know and be convinced that they received nothing in mercy and in return to their prayers and nothing from the Lord as their God and Redeemer he was better acquaint with the mind of God and did not mistake who said If Iregard iniquity in my heart the Lord will not hear me Psa 66.18 And it was an acknowledged principle that he who was born blind urged against the Jews in his apology for Christ Joh. 9.31 For saith he we (d) Let bold finners consider how gross their delusion must be who contrary to this known truth dare presume and draw nigh in any ordinance without fear know that God heareth not sinners but if any man be a worshiper of him and doth his will him he heareth Neither would the Saints themselves think they were not concerned in this caveat for albeit the Lord will pity them in the day of their trouble and hear their prayers yet if they step aside from the approven path the Lord will hide his face hence the Psalmist having asserted Gods care of his Saints and People and that he would speak peace to such yet he addeth a necessary caution and warning but let them not turn again to folly as if it had been said though they were Gods people his Saints and precious ones who have prayed and wait for an answer yea though they have asked in faith and have met with access and acceptance so that a message of peace is dispatched and is as it were on the way towards them in return to their prayers yet if they should through their folly turn aside from God and in that interim commit some known sin he would recall as it were his former grant and draw back his hand and would not speak peace to them who had made peace with sin Now come we to some positive evidences and marks of the prayer of faith And 1. when the affections are much enlarged when we meet with a gale from heaven filling the sails we may and usually do expect that voyage will prove successfull when God openeth the heart and filleth the mouth with more then ordinary boldness fervency and liberty we readily will apprehend that he purposeth to fill our hands and will not send us away empty according to that word Psa 81.10 Open thy mouth wide but (e) Only he who is said to open the ears Psa 40.6 Isa 50.5 to open the eyes Psa 146.8 and to open the heart whose messenger and interpreter the lips are Act. 16.14 He only can open the mouth to ask aright he only can open it wide both extensively and intensively and make us desire and ask great things greatly grandia granditer ut loquitur August loc cit who is sufficient for such a work unless the Lord put to his hand and I will fill it We may believe he will fill that mouth with songs of praise for his gracious answers which he hath opened so wide in fervent and importunate prayers when we have spiritual boldness in pleading with God we will also have confidence as to the success and therefore these are joyned together and both ascribed to faith Eph. 3.12 We have boldness and access with confidence through faith If the Lord lift up the soul to him if he quicken and inflame the affections with a more then ordinary ardor and zeal we will not readily doubt of our acceptance when fire from heaven thus falleth upon our sacrifice we will be very confident thus Psa 27. we have both Davids fervency and confidence One thing have I desired of the Lord that will I seck after c. v. 4. this was his importunity but then his faith did act strongly and vigorously v. 1.3.5 6. I grant our lusts may add wings to our desires and be as oyl to the wheels and make us very diligent in our pursuit there may be a natural and carnal fervency and importunity which will rather add to our fears then make us in faith rest upon Gods word love and care but the difference may easily appear though we will not now prosecute it because that holy zeal and importunity is 1. spiritual as to the motives and end 2. humble and joyned with much self-emptiness and denial 3. tender of Gods gloty and honour and 4. submissive to his will whileas the natural importunity is 1. carnal 2. proud and selfish 3. careless of Gods glory and interest if it might be satisfied and 4 impatient under a frustration and disappointment
disquieted hast thou not faith canst thou not hope and confidently expect a return of thy prayers Oh! trust in God and be no more troubled and perplexed And to shew how groundless and unreasonable his disquietness was he repeats this pathetick question thrice Psa 42.5.11 Psa 43.5 What made Hannah who came to the throne with a sorrowfull spirit go away rejoicing and her countenance be no more sad 1 Sam. 1.15.18 She came doubting and went away believing and now knowing that God had heard her prayer she looked no more sad And what was it that supported Paul and calmed his spirit while he was buffeted by the messenger of Sathan the tryal and temptation still continued albeit he had prayed against it once and again but was he thereby discouraged nay on the contrary his faith from thence collected a sweet and encouraging conclusion that since he had prayed and the particular was withheld therefore the Lord purposed to do him good by the trial and therefore in the interim he should not want strength and assiststance for wrestling with the temptation the grace of God should be sufficient for him in the combat and for gaining to him a compleat victory at length 2 Cor. 12 7 8 9. And what was it that quieted and composed Davids spirit under that sad and long continued tryal while the Lord for so long a time delayed to answer the many prayers he had put up for deliverance from his enemies I had fainted saith he unless I had beleeved to see the goodness of the Lord in the land of the living Ps 27.13 his faith and confidence that God at length would answer his prayers did keep him at his work and from despondency and dejection of spirit 4. Waiting and looking for an answer is a good symptom thou hast prayed in faith if thou stand upon thy watch-tower to see what the Lord will say unto thee and what answer he will send thee as the Prophet while he waited for the vision it is an evidence that with him Habak 2 3. thou expectest it will surely come when thou hearknest what God will say it s a token thou beleivest he will speak Ps 85.8 but if thou pray and lookst not after a return which is the sin and folly of too many though thou mayst have gone to the throne in obedience to the command and that thou mightest perform that piece of homage to thy Master and Lord yet not in faith laying hold on the promise of thy kind Father if thou expectedst an answer thou wouldst wait for it and wouldst not run away from Gods door so soon as thou hadst knocked 5. If under our tryals and sad sufferings and when the Lord seemeth to hide himself in the day of our trouble and (g) Ps 66.20 to turn away our prayers yea if when by his providence he hath manifested his purpose not to give the particular we have once and again petitioned and many dayes waited for if notwithstanding we are not only silent and submissive patiently acquiescing in his will but also thankfull and cheerfull if thou not only justifie his majesty and take shame to thy self as being unworthy of the least of his mercies but also magnifie and praise him while he thus seemeth to smite thee and frustrate thy expectation it s a notable evidence of thy faith that thou hast prayed in faith and dost by faith live and rest upon his love and care thus David as to afflictions and crosse dispensations acted his faith Ps 22. though he was a reproach of men though they did laugh him to scorn shoot out the lip and shake the head at him and though the Lord was silent while he cryed to him in the day time and night season ver 1 2.7 yet he justifieth God and taketh shame to himself But thou art holy O thou that inhabitest the praises of Israel but I am a worm ver 3 6. and still trusteth in God praiseth his goodness and inviteth others to joyn with him in that exercise ver 9 22 23 25. And then for the other case viz. of denial and frustration as to the particular askt the same holy man is a notable pattern who having fasted and prayed for the recovery of his sick child yet so soon as he heard he was dead anointed himself and went to the house of God to worship and praise him and being comforted himself comforted also Bathsheba his wife 2 Sam. 12.20 24. Now what can uphold the heart under cross dispensations and sad disappointments but faith which can look up to God as the hearer of prayers who when he doth not answer us ad votum as (h) Aug. loccit Permittas ipfis expendere numinibus quid Conveniat nobis rebusque sit utile nostris Nam pro jucundis aptissima quaeque dabunt Di. Juvenal Sat. 10. Austin speaketh yet ad profectum who mindeth our good when he granteth not our desire and doth that which is better for us when he withholdeth what we askt and thus when reason can espie no evil in the enioyment of such a supposed mercy yet faith will look higher and rest upon the wisdom care and fidelity of him who hath promised to withhold nothing that is good from his honest suppliants and to make all things work for their good Hence faith will not only submit to the present dispensation but will thankfully praise God who hath ordered all things for the best and done what was most sutable for us and most subservient to his glory in our everlasting happiness 6. Albeit an immediat testimony either concerning out state and adoption or concerning our acceptance and answer of our prayers be not usual and ordinary yet the latter is more rare then the former If we speak 1. of an immediat testimony and 2. of a perswasion that God will give the very particular we prayed for but otherwise 1. a general assurance and perswasion built upon and drawn from the promises and 2. a perswasion that God will hear and answer our prayers in that way which is best for us is that condition and qualification of prayer after which we enquire But as to that immediat and particular testimony albeit it be not ordinary yet some eminent Saints at some special occasions have met with it and such might close their prayer as Christ began his Joh. 11.41 Father I thank thee that thou hast heard me as to the very particular I have prayed for but this cannot properly be called a mark of faith it being the highest measure and degree of that faith which falleth under the present disquisition and 2. because light needeth not another light that it may be seen and discerned but this particular perswasion is a beam of divine light clearly shining before our eyes and therefore needeth no further discovery nor any marks whereby we may know it But as to the other testimony concerning our state whether it be immediat and by way of direct illumination and irradiation or mediat
is like an Ecclipse or Sea-sickness that will quickly pass And thus 3. the one is foolishly mercifull to himself entertaining a groundless fancy of Gods mercy as separated from his holiness an justice yea and denying the truth of the threatnings thastand against him he laith claim to the promises to which he hath no right and maketh lies his refuge and so perisheth in his delusion going to hell laughing and rejoycing hoping the best till he find the worst and see his case to be remeediless the other is unadvisedly cruel to himself tormenting and vexing his own soul with a needless jealousie the one goeth laughing to hell the other weeping to heaven the one enjoyeth a fools paradise on earth the other a sort of hell in this life living in darkness till the dawning of the glorious and long-lasting day of eternity And thus both mistaking their state and condition the one apprehending it to be better the other to be worse then it is both pass a wrong sentence the one for the other against himself both mis-applying the Scriptures the one to his eternal ruine the other to his present trouble and disquiet and thus it is easie to judge whose case is most dangerous and whose fault and error most grievous only let me add a word to the doubting or shall I say unbelieving believer from (a) Non orarem si non crederem sed si vere crederem illud cor quo Deus videtur mundarem manibus tunderem pectus genas lachrymis rigarem corpore inhorrescerem ore pallerem jacerem ad Domini mei pedes cosque ●●eiu perfunderem crine tergerem haererem certo trunco crucis nec prius amitterem quam miscricordiam impetrarem Nunc vero creberrime in oratione mea aut per portious deambulo aut de faenore computo aut abductus turpi cogitatione etiam quae dictu erubescenda sunt gero Ubi est fides Siccine putamus orasse Jonam Sic tres puer●s Sic Danielem inter Leones Sic cerie Latronem in cruee Hieronym dialog advers Luciser Jeroms pathetick encomium of and exhortation to exercise and act faith particularly in prayer If I saith this holy man did not believe I could not pray but having faith with what humility tenderness reverence and godly fear may we draw nigh to God c. CHAP. III. Some consequent conditions what we must do after we come from the throne of Grace 1. We must wait 2. watch 3. be busie in using the means and 4. renewing our requests and 5. we must thankfully improve what the Lord giveth in return to our prayers With a word concerning the necessity of these and the former qualifications Psa 85.8 I will hear what God the Lord will speak for he will speak peace unto his people but let them not turn again to folly Psa 50.15 Call upon me in the day of trouble I will deliver thee and thou shalt glorifie me 2 Chr. 30.18 19. The good Lord pardon every one c. HAving spoken of the antecedent and concomitant qualifications of an acceptable prayer now come we to show what must be done after we go from the throne Ah! too many go to work heedlessly and without all kind of preparation and perform it perfunctoriously and in a dead formal maner and no wonder though such have done when they have said that when they leave off to speak they minde the work no more but thou who tookst heed to thy steps while thou drewest nigh and who wa st serious when thou didst approach pouring out thy soul unto thy God wilt expect some fruit of thy labour and wilt take heed to thy wayes lest by thy folly thou shouldst intercept and obstruct the return of thy prayers 1. Then after thou hast poured out thy complaint to God thou must wait listen and diligently observe when he answereth and how far he answereth thy prayers we must hear what God the Lord will speak Psa 85.8 If we presented a supplication to a King how would he think himself mockt if we did not stay for an answer If beggars knock and cry but will not wait till an alms come who will send it after them Ah! 1. are we not Gods subjects and servants and should we not look up to our King and Master and patiently wait till he have mercy upon us Psa 123.2 2. Did the Lord ever disappoint them who thus did wait and depend upon him Isa 26.3 Psa 85.8 Mic. 7.7 Psa 107.43 3. But if ye will not wait for an answer if no answer come know who should bear the blame if the beggar be gone while the alms is coming his pride impatience and sloth must be the cause of his not receiving faith is not more necessary in asking then that we may receive and if ye do not wait unbelief must say (a) 2 King 6 33. What should I wait on the Lord any longer And with them Joh. 21.15 What profit have we if we pray to him It was in vain to pray and now to look for an answer 4. Nay though the Lord answer in wrath and reward thy contempt and the dishonour done to his name with some remarkable judgment thou hadst no cause to complain who could endure such an indignity what is truth said Pilat to Christ and when he had said he goth away and will not wait for an answer Joh. 18 38. Ah! will ye deal no better with the great God then a mocking pagan dealt with Christ in the day of his reproach may ye not fear lest he be avenged on you for this dishonour injury and affront offered to his Majesty 5. As you thus dishonour God and provoke him not only to withhold the desired mercy but also to take the rod in his hand So if the Lord should answer follow and pursue you with his mercies while ye are running away from him you would deprive your selves of a double advantage 1. Of the joy and comfort that redounds to an honest supplicant when he observeth God to have hearkned to his desire nay the comfort that many times ariseth from this consideration doth exceed the satisfaction reaped by the naked enjoyment of the mercy it self that being an evidence of our adoption of Gods love towards us of our moyen with him c. 2. We thus deprive our selves of a notable mean 1. for strengthning our faith in the promises 2. for clearing the Lords fidelity in keeping his word to his servants and 3. for judging of the sincerity of our hearts and wayes and knowing when we have prayed acceptably and 4. for encouraging us to continue instant in prayer and to say with him Psa 116.2 therefore will I call upon God as long as I live And as thus you are injurious to your selves So also to the Lord and to your brethren 1. To the Lord if he should answer ye who do not hearken would not hear ye who would not look up to him would not see nor discern his
hand but would (b) Habak 1.16 sacrifice to your own net and ascribe that mercy to your own wisdom activity moyen with or power over some creature helper and second cause and thus though God should deliver us in the day of our trouble yet we would not glorifie him nor would we with him Psa 116.1 2. say I love the Lord because he hath heard my voice c. 2. If we were carefull to ponder Gods wayes towards us and laid up experiences we might be helpfull to others especially to weak Saints and to children of light walking in darkness our experiences might prove a mean to support and strengthen their faith if God regard the prayer of the destitute this shall be written for the generation to come Psa 102.17 18. See this point more fully demonstrated and improven by Mr. Goodw. Ret. of Pray ch 10. Ah! where is the man who hath not reason to smite his breast and say wo's me that I am so guilty of so vile ungrate foolish and mischievous an offence O! let us justifie God if he hath not heard us while we did not listen nor hear what he would say and O! if we were more carefull to amend this fault that is so common and ordinary that we would no more so carry as if we thought with Atheists that our praying were lost labour and if we will trust God and depend upon him we shall have no cause to be ashamed of our expectation he will not fail nor disappoint us if we will go to our watch-tower as the Prophet did after he had prayed Hab. 1.12 13. c. we would with him ch 2.3 find that an answer would at length come that at the end it should speak and not lie though it tarried as to our sense and apprehension yet if we waited for it it should not tarry nor be suspended for one moment after the fit convenient and due time But as this waiting upon God doth import a looking up to him so 2. a patient and submissive a silent and beleeving expectation and not fainting all the while the Lord delayeth to answer our prayers he that believeth will not make hast but will patiently wait upon the Lord his God till he have mercy upon him Is 28.16 Ps 123.2 he will not fret because of cross-dispensations but will rest on the Lord and commit his way unto him knowing that at length he will bring forth his righteousness as light and his judgment as the noon-day Ps 37.7 5 6. We have need of patience that we may receive the promise Least if we fret the promised mercy be withheld Heb. 10.36 It s not enough that we once believe and assent to the promise but we must wait the fit time for its accomplishment And thus as we have need of faith so also of patience that we may inherit and be put in possession of the promised mercy Heb. 6.12 Some Pagans have shown much magnanimity and composure of spirit under their trials and sad disappointments who yet were strangers to this confident and filial dependance upon God and to this Christian patience which is founded upon better grounds and spiritual motives and which is the daughter of faith and one of the priviledges and ornaments of the heirs of glory being of a heavenly descent and coming from him who is the fountain and author of all our graces we would soon faint if we were not strengthned with all might according to his glorious power unto all patience and long-suffering with joyfulness Colos 1.11 There may be some appearance of joy in hypocrits and moralists in the day of their trouble and trial but there can be no real and solid joy but in beleevers who know that yet a little whi e and he who shall come will come and will not tarry Heb. 10.37 And that the Lord waiteth till the fit and appointed time come that he may be gracious to us and bless us indeed Isa 30.18 As the Spirit helpeth us to pray so to wait till the fit time for us to receive come hence the Lord is called the God of patience not only because he exerciseth it toward us but (c) Especially since there also he is called the God of consolation which must be interpreted of his working of it in us and making us rejoyce because he worketh it in us Rom. 15.5 O! then let us labour to exercise this heavenly grace and our labour shall not be in vain the more thou dost venture in thy trade with heaven and the greater stock of prayers thou sendest forth thou mayest expect the larger return nay and the longer thou waitest thou maist expect the more gain as knowing thy trade to be carrying on all the while and thy stock to be in his hand who during the delay will improve it to thy best advantage who will not suffer it to miscarry nor thee to be on the losing hand who hast intrusted it to him yea and 2. such mercies as are long expected and waited for are most sweet and welcom (d) August loc cit cito data vilescunt what we quickly and easily get we undervalue but what we have often askt and desired and long waited for proveth sweet and refreshing A love-letter and token from a dear friend we thought to have been dead will bring much delight and content and those vessels when the voyages prove long and dangerous so that the owners have made their account they shall never hear of them again as they use to return with the greater advantage so their return is more refreshing and comfortable so when our faith is ready to fail and we look upon our prayers as (e) Eccl. 11 1. bread cast upon the waters and as so much lost pains when an answer cometh and a love-token from our God whom we through unbelief had almost thought to have forgotten us O how sweet and acceptable will it prove and the oftner we read and peruse those missives from our heavenly Father especially coming by the hand of a messenger we judged to be lost and as dead we will observe some precious and as it were new passages which will mightily refresh and comfort us and will become a seal and notable evidence of his love to us and strong a support of our faith and confidence in him But 3. if we weary and faint we may through our impatience and discontent provoke the Lord to recall as it were his former grant and not to answer these prayers which otherwise might have laid claim to the promise and would not have wanted a gracious return and answer But as we must thus wait so 2. we must watch as we must look up to God so we must look in to our own hearts and about us to our wayes and course as we must watch unto prayer and in prayer so also after prayer Sathan alwaies lieth in wait and we know not he may have a train laid when and where we are least apprehensive of
towards his creatures Nay sai●h Rainer Panth. de laude cap. 1. If God be considered according ●o his nature and ●ntity which is incomprehensible and ineffable So we cannot properly he said ●o prai●e him but rather to reverence adore and admire him quia inquit secunaum ph●lo●ophum optimorum sed aliquid majus melius laude vid. etiam Thom ● 〈◊〉 quaest 9● art 1. import 1. our sense and acknowledging of Gods bounty and kindness 2 our praising hi● name and proclaiming the riches of his grace and mercy yet ●t it doth 3. necessarily infer our obedience and cheerfull walking in all his commandments to which as upon other grounds and titles we are obliged so also upon the account and by way of gratitude So that the evil must also be unthankfull Ah! how many are there who thus (x) The proverb is verified in too many they render to the Lord 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 requite the Lord Luk. 6.3 We will not speak to this point in the general See the judicious Mr. Gurnall Spir. A●m Part. 3. on Eph. 6 18. Ch. 56. c. only now remember that ingratitude m●keth a man become a (y) Ingratus est seminartum scelerum omuium tel us ipsa faedius nihil creat portentum id omnium est habe●dum maximum Petr Crinit lib. 2. poem monster Ingratum si dixeris omnia dixeris if ye call me an unthankfull man ye speak the worst and (z) Ingratitudine nibil mali non inest Cicer. ad Attic. 8. nihil amas si ingratum amas Plautus in Persa all the ill of me that can be said Ah! how have Pagans abominated that devil of unthankfulness that seed and seminary of all evil It were easie to fill many pages with their invective declamations against it and shall not Christians much more abhor it and yet alas it is the bane of our profession (a) Quo usque se diffundit gratia eo patet ingratitudo who is the man or woman amongst us that are not highly guilty herein Our mercies are not common and ordinary nor such as the dark candle of nature could discover and let us see and therefore our ingratitude must be the greater and the more abominable but honest Christians will make it their work to lament this evil and will study to abound more and more in the knowledge sense and acknowledgment of the bounty and love of Christ that passeth all knowledge Eph. 3.19 But as to the present case if thou wouldst not have the Lord to hide his face from thee and not (b) Gratiarum cessat decursus ubi recursus non suerit nec modo nil augetur ingrato sed quod decipit vertiturei inperniciem Bern. serm 1. in cap. Jeiu Qui enim de bono tuo gloriam sibi quaerit non tibi quarit hic ●ur est latro fimilis est Diabolo quivoluit furam gloriam tuam hic licet propter donum tuum laudetur a● hominibus a te tamen vituperatur qui autem ab hominibus laudatur vituperante te non defendotur ab hominibus judicante te nec liberabitur condemnante te Aug. tom 9. soliloque cap. 15. hear and answer thee in the day of thy trouble be thankfull for the mercies he hath given yea and if thou wouldst not have these quickly removed or else blasted and cursed in the enjoyment if thou wouldst not have thy roses spring up with thorns to prick and molest thee and if thou wouldst have thy comforts stable pure and unmixed and nothing of the wrath and indignation of the Almighty nothing of the curse vexation and venome wrung into thy cup O! then as thy mercies should come by way of return and in answer to thy prayers So let them be received and enjoyed with thanksgiving and used and improven for the honour of the giver 1 Tim. 4.4 5. 1 Thes 5.18 Prov. 10.22 But though providence should smile upon us and men would flatter us in our ingratitude yet what will we do or be able to say in the day of reckoning and account Then as Austin saith We will be found to have been thieves and robbers and like to the devil who sought to steal and rob God of his honour and what will the praise of men and all creature-enjoyments avail us in the day when the Lord judgeth and condems us We will shut up this discourse concerning the qualifications of prayer with an usefull case and question concerning their necessity and how far the want of these or any of them doth nullifie our prayers and hinder their success and acceptance Obj. Ah! will many honest supplicant say if we must pray thus if all these particulars must concur and be required to the acceptable performance of this duty if there must be such preparation before such fervency and importunity in the work and such watchfulness and diligence must follow after wo is me what are become of all my prayers I fear I have never yet prayed aright and O! that I might know whether all these qualifications were essential and necessary and if all be not alike necessary what be those requisits which are more and what less necessary Ans Albeit often such as have least cause to fear are most jealous of themselves and their way yet 1. it's certain that too many prayers are lik water spilt on the ground and like the beating of the air they being as no prayers in Gods account because not such and so qualified as he hath commanded and doth require and there is none of those qualifications we have named which are not held forth and prescribed in the Word of God and which doth not concur to the perfection of the work and contribute to its acceptance and success and therefore it were better with the Psalmist when he was going to praise God Ps 103.1 to stir up our soul and all that is within us to joyn and contribute their help and assistance for the cheerfull and acceptable performance of our duty not separating what the Lord hath conjoyned then to trouble our selves with such a comparison and by enquiring what may be forbo n spared and left undone of that which the Lord hath commanded and required Yet 2. that no tender conscience may be disquieted and that none may go about this duty with terrour and fear which should be performed with so much Son-like boldness and confidence we grant that there are Scripture-grounds and Scripture-instances which with the daily experiences of all Saints do make it unquestionable that God hath heard and will hear the prayers of his servants though they do not punctually observe and reflect upon all these several steps and therefore supposing 1. that thou dost not wilfully stubbornly and purposely omit or slight any part of thy duty 2. that thou hast respect to all Gods commandments labouring to order thy whole conversation aright 3. that thou prayest 1. in sincerity with Hannah pouring out thy soul
predicatui de tribus personis simul exceptis quae pertinent ad incarnationem seu assumptam naturam exam plorum loco hac adsert Deus noster Pater noster Praedestinator Creator Recomc●liator Adoptator Sanctificator exauditor precum Forh instr Histor theo●l lib. 1 ●cap 12. our blessed Lord teacheth us to call God Father not as if thereby he did point out to us the distinction or relation that is among the persons of the trinity or to single out to us the first excluding the other two for its certain we should direct our prayers to God who is Father Son and holy Ghost but to hold out to us (x) Ostenàit ad veram Deo gratam orationem requiri ut in vera siducia oremus ac jciamus nos invocare Deum qui in Christo dilecto suo filio nos dilexit ante jacta mundi fundamenta qui in filios suos adoptavit ac spiritum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nobis donavit qui paternum erga nos gerit animum quem proinde juxta ipsius exemplum mandatum ut panem nostrum invocare possumus Gerhard in loc cont harm cap. 180. the fatherly affection and tender bowels of God and of all the persons of the blessed Trinity and to encourage us to draw nigh to God with confidence as children to a father ready to help and pity us and though we be not limited to the same words or to say no other then is held forth in that pattern and copy yet we may not change our thoughts of God nor imagine that he hath cast off his fatherly care and affection towards us And herein as we have the command So we have the example of Christ he looked upon God as a father in that solemn prayer Joh. 17.1 Father the hour is come glorifie thy Son So also ver 11 21 24 25. For though he hath another kind of interest in the Father then others yet this doth not nullifie and hinder our interest and relation especially since ours is founded upon his God having adopted us in this his beloved Son we are truly sons though not such sons as Christ we are his sons not meerly nor especially by creation but by adoption redemption and a right to the inheritance And that Christ and beleevers have the same Father and thus stand under the relation of brethren he himself is not ashamed to profess Heb. 2.11 and Joh. 20.17 Go to my brethren saith our blessed Lord to Mary and say unto them Iascend unto my Father and to your Father and to my God and unto your God And thus the ancient Church in their prayer Isa 63.16 ingeminat this (y) Dulce nomen patris sweet relation with much confidence Doubtless thou art our Father thou O Lord art our Father our Redeemer And as thus we have 1. a precept and 2. practice so also 3. a promise for our warrant 2 Cor. 6. 17.18 Touch not the unclean thing and I will receive you and will be a father unto you and ye shall be my sons and daughters saith the Lord almighty And 4. this is made one end and design of the sending of the spirit into our hearts viz. because we are sons and that we may know and improve our relation by calling him Father Gal. 4.6 Rom. 8.15 to banish fear and to make us draw nigh in confidence and love 2 Tim. 1.7 But you will say how can we call God Father since we are not assured of our adoption Ans If God be not thy father he must be thy (z) Mr. Murcot being in great anguish because he feared that God was not his father had these words impressed on his mind If I be not thy father am I thy enemy and again if I be not thy father why dost thou follow after me Mor. exerc Serm. 14. enemy for there is no middle state and how darest thou who art stuble draw nigh to the consuming fire If thou be not a son thou hast no interest in Christ in whom only we have access to the Father Eph. 2.18 Joh. 14.6 And if God be not thy Father why dost thou hing and depend upon him yea even then when he frowns and seemeth to beat thee off and drive thee away I spake a little to the like case Part. 2. Chap. 2. Sect. 2. and shall not now say much but remember that the Lord as in another case So also in this (a) 2 Cor 9.7 loveth a cheerfull giver He would not have us to come to his altar and to bring our oblation grudgingly he would not have his spouse look sad or his children to distrust his love and care towards them nor his servants fear least he were such a one as the ill and wicked servant called him a hard master and ill to please Mat. 25.24 What a grief was it to Peter to have his love to Christ questioned Job 21.17 yea though lately he had denied and disowned him and must it not grieve the good Spirit of God when we have base and low thoughts of his mercy and kindness towards us yea even then while we are constantly reaping the sweet fruits thereof Ah! will ye thus requite the Lord and deal no better with him then they Mal. 1.2 I have loved you saith the Lord yet ye say wherein hast thou loved us But if ye will trust him ye have his word he will not disappoint you and ye do thus as it were engage his majesty not to fail you O! then draw nigh to him in confidence and fear not to call him father who hath purchased so great an inheritance at so dear a rate for thee its good in some cases as a reverend divine said to threap kindness upon God He will never challenge thee who hast the heart and love of a son for calling him Father If thou be a child of light though thou fittest in darkness yet thou are still a child and thy father will not disown thee if thou claim an interest in him what though thou blushest to call thy self a son as being unworthy of that relation yet surely God hath not lost his title nor deserved at thy hands that thou shouldst rob him of that relation he hath bought by the unvaluable price of his Sons blood and its observable that the Saints many a time would divide the relation that is mutual at least are more positive and peremptory in asserting the one part then the other and as the prodigal when he had by his riotous living forfeited his son-ship and was brought to confess that he was no more worthy to be called a Son yet durst profess that he had a Father and durst call him by that relation and take on this resolution to arise and go to his father and say father Luk. 15.19.18 So they may call God Father while they are convinced and may from an humbled heart confess that they are not worthy to be called his sons and even then while their face is
had put off her coat and cou●d not put it on she had washen her feet and would not defile them therefore Christ withdrew his Spirit and departs and when she laying to heart and repenting of her folly sought him could not for a while find him she called but he gave her no answer Cant. 5.2 3 6. Thus also while the Spirit of God cryed to Israel and they would not hear and testified to them both by his servants the Prophets and by his motions and inward suggestions but they would not hearken nor obey he withdrew and gave them up to the lusts of their own heart since they would not follow his counsel and directions he left them to themselves and to follow their own counsels Psa 81.8.10 11 12 13. But secondly though the spouse be not so incivil and unmanerly as to hold Christ at the door yet if she do not welcom him and give him entertainment suitable to his worth and kindness his Spirit will not stay if thou dost not make ready and prepare the heart to receive him he will not stay in any other room if the affections be not enlarged and roused up to wait and attend him he doth not value the empty complements of the fancy and imagination if the will which is the mistris and supreme do not welcom him he regardeth not the attendance of the inferiour faculties if thou be in a spiritual lethargy when the Spirit cometh to visit thee if thou meet him with a dead and dull (c) See Sect. 2. heart if thou be fearless of his terrible majesty if thou keep not a due distance casting off that filial reverence and tender respect which is due to so great and compassionat a Lord he will depart and forsake thee res delicatula saith an ancient est Spiritus Dei ita nos tractat sicut tractatur the Spirit of God is tender and sensible of all the affronts and injuries we off●r to him and will deal with us accordingly if we dishonour him he will afflict us and lay us low he will go away and then our (d) If the glory departed with the Ark which was but a symbol of Gods presence 1 Sam. 4 21. far rather when the Lord himself departs glory departs if we do not welcom the Spirit with the whole heart and entertain him with suitable and enlarged affections he valueth not our empty profession and vain oblations Luke-warm Laodiceans will be spued ous of his mouth Rev. 3.16 these who would not (e) Ps 81.10 open their mouth wide to receive his comforts shall have their heart filled with his terrours and shut that it shall not receive his influences But thirdly though there be not a total deadness or laziness though there be some life activity and diligence yet if there be a decay of love and zeal if we do not so cherish and entertain the motions of the Spirit as formerly this may grieve and quench the Spirit if love wax cold and if there be a decay of respect and affection that will bring on some sort of distance between married persons and will hinder friends from conversing so frequently and familiarly together and for this the Lord threatneth not only to remove the presence of his Spirit but also the candelestick and outward ordinances which were the means of conveyance of the Spirit from Ephesus Rev. 2.4 5. because thou hast left thy first love c. As the Spirit may thus be quenched negatively and by omission So 2. positively and by commission as 1. when we prostitute and subject the gifts of the Spirit his work and interest to our selfish and carnal ends desiring a name and taking up a porfession of godliness that with (f) Act. 8.9.19 Simon Magus we may seem some body when we make piety a cloak to cover our pride covetousness c. or use it as a stir●op whereby we ascend to some high place and station in the world c. 2. When we have low and undervaluing thoughts of the gifts and graces of the Spirit though they have some room in our estimation and affection yet if we prefer other things unto them not prizing them according to their worth and excellency nor regarding as we ought the condescension and kindness of the giver we dishonour and grieve the Spirit and he may justly take away those love-tokens thus when we will not lose our favour with man our moyen and interest with the creature our name place and possessions for his truth ordinances c. yea when we so far undervalue these precious things as to be ashamed of them before men when not only fear but also shame will make us dissemble our profession and conceal our graces duties c. may we not be afraid lest as the (g) Luk. 9.26 Son will be ashamed of such when he cometh in his glory So the Spirit when he cometh to manifest himself in the ordinances of life But 3. when not only his gifts and graces his love and his kindness are undervalued but also his commands and authority are despised his motions and sweet insinuations are choaked and opposed while as the contrary suggestions of Sathan the enemy are entertained cherished and cheerfully obeyed must not the Spirit be much displeased and highly provok't with such an indignity would an earthly King endure such an affront nay what friend is he who seeing thee but slight his counsel entreaty and request while thou didst welcom his enemy and gratifie him in what he desired could digest such a disparagement and indignity And 4. so much of illumination which is the work of the Spirit light knowledge and conscience is choaked and opposed by the sinner whatever be the particular transgression so far the Spirit is dishonoured and disparaged and provok't to depart and withdraw nay in every formal disobedience viz. when the command and counsel of God is known there is much not only of contempt but also of rebellion and what will provoke if that do not And thus albeit for distinctions sake we did put a difference between sins some of them being more directly against the Spirit his work and office that being as it were their object yet there is no known sin which may not be said to be against the Spirit of God and his work And thus we come to the second sort of provocation whereby the Spirit is not so directly opposed and quenched his peculiar office and work not being the matter and object of such sins albeit it be (h) The work of the Spirit is thus opposed quasi in obliquo indirectly and as a concurring circumstance but not in recto quasi objectum opposed and choaked by the sinner and here we have a large field if we would come to particulars but the (i) Gal. 5.19 works of the flesh are manifest and their opposition and contrariety to the Spirit of grace and holiness is no less evident Gal. 5.16 If we (k)
to the great King 10. Wilt thou also guard the outward senses 11. Wilt thou look after the frame of thy heart and first give a discharge to distracting objects before thou come before the throne Wilt thou choose the fittest season for calling upon God 12. Wilt thou be more frequent in thy adresses to God And 13 Wilt thou be more serious not giving way to laziness and formality 14. Wilt thou labour to keep thy conscience clear having a constant respect to all the commandments and hating every sinfull way yea and the very garment spotted by the flesh 15. Will ye not walk in the counsel of the ungodly yea nor stand in the way of sinners 16. Will ye watch against the wiles of the devil and resist his temptations 17. Will ye take heed least ye grieve the holy Spirit by dallying with his motions and ordinances c. And Will ye observe these qualifications of an acceptable prayer of which we spake Part. 2. and applied several of them to this present case If ye have come this length there are but a few things which I would now further add for compleating the cure of a dead heart and for holding out wandring thoughts in prayer but before I name those other directions I would premise these two things concerning what we have here said as to the removing the former impediments and obstructions and what we are now to add further by way of remedy 1. ye would remember that the Spirit must (m) The Spirit may be present operatively where he is not present sensibly help you to put these directions in practice else they will serve to little purpose he must help you to take the right course for getting his help and must work what ye are directed to do else your endeavours will be fruitless and yet ye must so (n) Our inability must not be pretended as a cloak for our negligence we have received strength which we should improve waiting for the help of the Spirt apply your selves to perform these things and to follow those or such like directions as if ye stood in need of no help and as if of your selves ye could carry on the work and when thou art acting to the utmost of thy strength thou mayst expect a sensible manifestation of the Spirits assistance 2. We must not think that the most active and diligent Saints do alwaies enjoy the quickning presence of the Spirit this state of our pilgrimage is not for a constant abode and the Spirit is a free agent the wind bloweth where it listeth that thou mayest learn not to ascribe thy enlargements to thine own activity and diligence though none but active zealous and circumspect Christians are lively and enlarged in duty as to any constancy or considerable measure yet they do not alwaies enjoy the same influences nor are alike enlarged but though vivacity in duty may thus for a while be lost to thee yet if it be not lost by thee as it will not be reckoned unto thee as being procured through thy fault and negligence So neither will it marre thy after-comfort and enlargement if the Spirits withdrawing be not penal though it be for thy exercise and tryal yet it needs not discourage thee it shall not hinder thy acceptance nor the success and prevalency of thy prayers but if thou procure this stroke through thy folly and sloth and if thou rest and sit down under it securely not being affected with it as not being much concerned in that dispensations if thou do not lay thy deadness to heart and labourest not to be rid of that burden such a sleeping Jonah may fear a storm from the Almighty to awaken him Now come we to these other directions 1. if you would have your heart enlarged in duty labour to get your heart inflamed with love to your Master and his work if ye (o) Vbi est amor non est labor sed sopor Bern. came in love ye would stay with delight when love is the cord that draws any together they will not weary in the mutual fellowship and society of one another but as there will be a longing in absence So a delight and contentment in presence and enjoyment and what makes the husbands presence so uncomfortable to the adulterous wife but want of love love is an uniting affection and pretend what we will the want of love to God is the cause why we weary at his work and in his company for the heart not being fixed by the bond of love nor arrested by delight it gads abroad and would be rid of the duty as of a wearisom burden hence wandring thoughts break in and the duty is marred but in heaven when we shall see God face to face and love him perfectly we shall not weary of his fellowship unto all eternity We will not digress to speak to these motives which may serve to quicken our love but certainly if we loved the Lord as we should we could not it would be an insupportable burden to stay out of his company and we would sooner part with our life then abandon his fellowship and Daniel would let others know that he served such a master as he would not be ashamed to own and go unto notwithstanding all their cruelty and threatnings Dan. 6.10 If the Lord be kind to David and his love of God be sincere then this must be the conclusion that must needs follow (p) The illation seemeth rather to be founded upon his love to to God then the benefits he had received from God though both be named there therefore will he call upon God as long as he liveth Ps 116.1 2. hence also flowed his gladness to go to the hous● of the Lord Ps 122.1 and would he then readily weary while he was in it 2. When thou find'st thy heart indisposed and that deadness hath already seized on it before we set upon the duty we would stir up and awaken our dull and sleepy spirits and rouse them from their drousiness saying to our soul with Deborah when she was employed in praising God Judg. 5.12 awake awake O my sleepy soul awake awake and draw nigh to the provok't King for thy lif● liberty provision protection c. We will not prescribe the several heads of meditation there being here so many several topicks which may with great variety be improven to this purpose only in the general let me entreat that choice may be made of such considerations as may serve most to quicken 1. the sense of thy indigence misery and hazard and thus 2. what may most humble thee and make thee see thy own vileness and insufficiency for doing so great a work 3. what may most inflame thy heart with love to God and his service and 4. what may most quicken thy diligence and activiity while David was thus employed he found life come in to his joynt When I was musing saith he the fire burned Ps 39.3 and then he goes
if in private we meet with any notable and eminent irradiation and impulse towards any spiritual object I know no reason why we should choak such a motion unless we be straitned by time so that if we give way to it we must neglect the main duty which we intended to go about and which our exigence doth especially call for and in such a case we may see Sathans hand in it and we should beware of his wiles But if we can espy none of his designes we may a little follow that quickning meditation and again return to our work happily with more life and activity It will be found no heterogenious mixture thus to joyn meditation with prayer nor any culpable intermission and interruption of duty to make one thus bring supply and provision for another the book of the Psalms affordeth so many instances that we may think this to have been Davids usual practice A second question may be this Whether honest supplicants use to be more enlarged in publick or in private prayer Ans The winde bloweth where and as it listeth Joh. 3.8 the influence of the spirit is arbitrary both as to the seasons when and the means whereby it is conveyed hence not only are some more enlarged in publick and others in private but also one and the same believer may at one time be more fervent and importunat the one way and at another time the other way and each of these Ordinances have their proper and several advantages For first in publick the gifts of the speaker and his affectionat moving and pithy words and maner of expression as also the reverence and zeal of others joyning in the duty may be very helpfull and instrumental in stirring up the affections and then in private there is 1. more liberty in dealing with our own hearts and rousing them up by some awakning meditation and 2. greater freedom in laying out our condition and expressing our desires before the Lord 3. the whole frame of the duty more condescending and suteable to our disposition and exigence 4. fewer distractions c. You will say it is commonly made by practical Divines a mark of hypocrisie to be more enlarged in publick then in private Ans That mark is especially to be understood of the speaker and that 1. when it is alwayes so and when all his enlargement is in publick and thus 2. when the motives and end is selfish and carnal as respect from and the applause of men c. But otherwise both speaker and hearer may meet with more then ordinary enlargement by the blessing of the Lord upon the publick Ordinance A third question may be this Whether it be a mercy to have our prayers answered and to receive the particulars we ask when we are cold and formal in prayer and careless and negligent in our walk and conversation Ans We may judge by the event for such a dispensation may either 1. flow from wrath not pure for we do not now speak of the success and prosperity of the wicked but paternal penal by way of castigation yea and in some respect judicial for thus for a while they are lulled asleep and are ready to rest in that state and to be satisfied with such empty performances because they are accompanied with success and as Apostat Israel while in prosperity said of their enjoyments These are my rewards which my lovers have given me Hos 2.12 So the Saints themselves in a fit of distemper and while under desertion may think such a dispensation to be a fruit and evidence of love whileas it were better for them to have their way hedged up with thorns that they might go and return to their former love zeal and diligence Hos 2.6 7. These outward things cannot (m) Est honum quod faciat bonum est bo●um undo facias bonum habes ergo aurum bonum est habes non unde fis bonus sed unde facias bonum August de verb. doos serm 5 make us good and happy and therefore only are good and become blessings indeed when they are improven aright and then only are given in love when with the blessing and grace to use them to a right end Or 2. such a dispensation may flow from love and that as it may be an evidence of God's patience forbearance and tender bowels which will not be straitned nor overcome by our ingratitude and manifold failings So also that it may prove a mean to humble us and melt our hearts when we consider and compare our wayes with the Lords dealing towards us and when we see how unequal our wayes have been and what a base requittal we have made to him for his bounty and tender mercies thus the Lord established his Covenant and dealt kindly with Israel that they might remember and be confounded and never open their mouth any more because of their shame when they should see his kindness and tender bowels towards them Ezek. 16.60 61 62 63. CHAP. III. Whether we may pray for any evil either of sin or suffering Psal 119.71 It is good for me that I have been afflicted that I might learn thy Statutes Rom. 3.8 As we be slanderously reported and as some affirm that we say let us do evil that good may come whose damnation is just HAving (a) Part. 1. Ch. 7. Sect. 2 shown that the object of the promises and of our prayers is very ample and large extending to every thing that is good either for life or godliness we b promised to enquire here whether any evil either of sin or suffering were included in the promise and might be desired and prayed for And I think none will deny that every evil as such and absolutely considered is an object of hatred and aversation and an object of the threatnings and so not of the promises and therefore a fit material for deprecation and imprecation but not for prayer and supplication And on the other hand I hope it will not be denied that as to evil of affliction we may pray for it 1. conditionally thus If my heart be so stubborn and hard that nothing will break it but the rod if mercies will but harden my heart and prove fewel to feed my lusts Lord rather let me have the rod then a hard heart and let me rather want mercies and such and such creature-enjoyments which is a sort of rod and may be a very grievous affliction then they should prove weapons of unrighteousness And thus 2. we may pray for such an evil comparatively for with the former supposition there was a sort of comparison and we may say Lord rather let me suffer then sin against thee let me rather lye under any rod and affliction then under thy wrath for ever and with the Emperour (c) Hic non in illo seculo Cluver hist in Maurit pag. 407. Mauritius choose to suffer rather here then in the life to come nay and of temporal evils we may thus choose the
upon such a sure foundation though (g) Habak 3.17 18. heaven and earth should pass away though the mountains should melt as wax and all the host of heaven be dissolved and fall down as the leaf falleth off from the vine yet the Lord will own his (h) Isa 34.3 4. Psa 97.5 Word and will fulfill all his Promises the least jot or title whereof shall not cannot fail Mat. 5.18 Luke 16 17. And doth he not solemnly protest that though he commandeth inviteth and intreateth us to come unto him and pour out our desires before him and proclaimeth his fury and indignation to all persons and families that call not upon his Name yet he never said seek ye me in vain Isa 45.19 Who is the man that dare challenge the God of truth and can say that ever he sought him in vain if in truth and with the whole heart Sect. II. The great prejudice and stumbling block of prayerless souls their mistake discovered what the Lords hearing doth import that the Lord doth not alwayes answer prayer after one and the same maner and what are these different wayes that he never heareth the wicked and wherefore notwithstanding he will satisfie their desire and that he alwayes heareth his servants when they call upon him in truth Prov. 15.8 The sacrifice of the wicked is an abomination to the Lord but the prayer of the upright is his delight Joh. 9.31 We know that God heareth not sinners but if any man be a worshiper of God and doth his will him he heareth THere is one great objection against the success of prayer which proveth a neck-break to carnal hearts and may sometimes be the (a) Psa 73● 2. c. Jerem. 12.1 2. Job 21.7 c. Obj. trial of and a sad temptation to the Saints and it is this Obj. Do not all things come alike to all is there not one event to the righteous and to the wicked and did not the wisest of men observe and preach this truth Eccl. 9.2 Do not the wicked who (b) Job 15.4 cast off fear and restrain prayer prosper as well as they that fear the Lord and who in (c) Phil. 4.6 all things make their requests known unto him And therefore those who are accounted Atheists are unjustly taxed for asking What is the Almighty that we should serve him and what profit should we have if we pray unto him Job 21.15 And the Prophet had no reason to complain of those men who said that it was in vain to serve God to keep his Ordinances and walk mournfully before him Mal. 3.14 Doth not experience that is the best master clearly show that godliness is no gain and that there is no good nor advantage that can be reaped by prayer and that all the promises of audience and all that can be said concerning the success and return of prayer are but empty words having no truth nor reality in them Was not Esau honourable and rich as well as Jacob was not Ahab a King as well as Josiah and were they not alike in their deaths Nay did it not go well with the Jewes so long as they served the Queen of heaven but so soon as they returned to worship the God of heaven they were consumed by famine and the sword Ier. 44.17 18. And therefore they had reason to resolve and say to Ieremiah what they said v. 16. As for the word that thou hast spoken unto us in the name of the Lord we will not hearken unto thee Ans Though few be so impudent as to speak thus with their mouth yet alas it is the heart-language of too many else they durst not cast off fear and restrain prayer before God But that we may encounter with this Goliah who thus defieth and insulteth over the armies of Israel saying in the name of all Atheists as he in the name of the Philistines 1 Sam. 17.9 10. If there be among you a man that is able to fight with me and kill me then we will submit and all of us become tributaries to the God of Israel and pay him the revenue of daily prayer Let us with little David come forth against this Champion in the name of the Lord of hosts whose Truth and Name is blasphemed and whose Worship and Ordinances reproached and in his strength we may confidently say with him v. 46. This day will the Lord deliver thee into my hand and I will smite thee and take thine head from thee for the battel is the Lords and he will give thee into our hands and we may not only be encouraged with David v. 37. from former experiences in other cases as hard and difficult but also from the experience of all Saints in the same case while they have been called out to wrestle with this strong temptation And O that the Lord were pleased to furnish us with a word that may be helpfull to those who shall hereafter meet with the same conflict and that in his strength we may so encounter this Hydra that after one head is cut off two others do not arise and grow up in its place but that it may be utterly overthrown and destroyed the battel is the Lords and his honest servants after they have fought a while with his enemy have alwayes at length found his help and by the following or such-like considerations as so many weapons of proof have prevailed and carried the day and cut off the head of this mighty adversary and enemy of the faith and peace of Gods children For answer we will speak to the two branches of the objection severally and 〈◊〉 to that which concerneth the wicked their success and prosperity applying that point more particularly to those who live in the visible Church that being our case who have some form of godliness though they deny the power of it and never knew what it was to call upon God in truth and thus their prayers being no prayers in Gods account and yet followed with success their case may well come under the former objection and in answer both d to the one and the other we will 1. show what Gods hearing of prayer doth import 2. that the wicked though they pray yet receive nothing in answer to their prayers and 3. that whether they pray or not they receive nothing in mercy and love or for their good but for other holy ends which we shall briefly name and thus all their blessings must be cursed and their prosperity and success their ruine and snare As to the first the Lords hearing of prayer doth import 1. his approbation of the mater and object of our desires for if we ask what he doth not approve if we ask any sinfull and unlawfull thing we cannot ask according to his will and therefore must not think that he will hear 1 Ioh. 5.14 2 〈◊〉 importeth an admission reception and the acceptance of the prayer it self it having those qualifications which the promise of audience doth
suppose and require Iam. 5.15 Iam. 1.6 7. c. See Part 2. Ch. 2. 3. The return and answer must be given in mercy and out of special and paternal love Rom. 8.15.32 Ioh. 16.24.26 27. 4. The desired mercy must be given in faithfulness and as an accomplishment of the promises upon which the supplicant did build his confidence Psa 25.10 Psa 143.1 5. It must be the fruit of Christs purchase and therefore must be askt for his sake and in his name Ioh. 14.13 14. through him only we can have access and acceptance Eph. 2.18 6. Thou must pray in the holy Ghost the Spirit must help thee to pour out that prayer that God will accept and hear Rom. 8.27 See Part 1. Ch. 9.7 The mercy must be given as the reward fruit and as it were the purchase of thy prayer not as if our prayers could merit and deserve the least mercy or had any proper efficiency or causality in procuring the blessing which is totally and solely the purchase of the blood of Christ but because prayer is a mean appointed of God and thus by vertue of his own ordinance and appointment it hath power and doth prevail with him for obtaining not only a reward in the general as every duty and ordinance but particularly for procuring the blessing as to the particular desired and askt whether by giving or withholding it for thus prayer it self must avail and prevail with God Iam. 1.15 16. Hence in the general and at the first view it may appear how groundless and gross the common mistake here is for multitudes do think when the Lord in the course of providence doth give what men did desire and ask that then he heareth and answereth their prayers and on the contrary that when he doth not give the particular that was askt that then he doth not hear and answer the prayer and this gross and brutish mistake hath in great part occasioned and is the main ground of this objection and is the great stumbling-block whereon Atheists fall and ruine their souls But how false both these are may easily appear not only to those who have the Word for their information but even by the light of nature as might be made manifest from the Writings of heathens but now we must speak to the first and here we might resume the several requisits that do concur and must be where any mercy is received as a return of prayer all those being wanting and deficient as to the wicked their asking and receiving except the first and it also very oft for though outward things may be sought and desired yet not in that maner and measure as they do who make them their idol and place their felicity in them and thus we have as many arguments to prove that they receive nothing in mercy and in answer to their prayers as we now did enumerat conditions and requisits in the acceptance and audience of prayers for 1. they ask amiss often as to the matter and alwayes as to the maner and end 2. their prayers have no gracious and spiritual qualification 3. they have no interest in the covenant of Promise neither are they objects of Gods love c. To which we shall only add a word or two first The sacrifice of the wicked is an abomination to the Lord Prov. 15.8 and will the Lord accept and remunerat what he thus loatheth and abominateth and yet such have their desires satisfied which they durst offer to God prayer-wayes for the vilest of men may have some form of devotion 〈◊〉 I have (e) Apud Cambden hoc cit part 1. cap. 7. pag. 162. read of theeves and robbers who when they were going to steal and murder their innocent neighbours have prayed to God for success and who have prospered in such wicked wayes and will any be so absurd and blasphemous as to father upon the holy one of Israel such wicked courses or to say that he did hear and accept such abominable desires and prayers 2. The mercy given in return of prayer is a mercy indeed and proveth a blessing but what the wicked receive proveth in the issue to be a curse and snare as it is given in wrath So it doth them little good thus he gave the Israelites a King in his wrath and they had little comfort in him Hos 13.11 thus also he gave them flesh after they had lusted after it in the wilderness but while it was in their mouth his wrath came upon them Psa 78.29 30 31. And thus the Lord when he satisfieth the desire of carnal hearts hath no respect either to the promise or to their prayers but rather to the threatnings and the cry of their iniquities since he giveth in wrath and what he giveth proveth a judgment curse and snare their riches honours and pleasures become fewel to feed their lusts and thus through their abuse and ingratitude they add to their guiltiness and therefore to their eternal misery and these become as coals heaped on their head What the wise man saith of riches may be applied to all their enjoyments they are kept for the owners hurt Eccl. 5.13 All their consolations as (f) Omnes humanae consolationes fine gratiâ benedictione divina sunt desolationes one speaketh one speaketh are desolations nay to the Saints themselves they have often been strong (g) Secundum tritum illad Aagust●ni relig●o peperit divit●●s ylia devoravit matrem luxiriant animir bus plerumque secundis nec faci le est aequa commonda mente pati Ovid de arte am lib. 2. temptations as Davids ease Solomons peace c. And there is nothing that can sanctifie them and prevent this snare but the prayer of faith 1 Tim. 3.4 5. Jam. 5.16 And thus we may hear the Lord speaking to carnal hearts when he satisfieth their desires what we use to say to ou● unk●od nei●hbours and relations when we grant their request It is (h) Nay sometimes the Lord speake●h thus to his own people as Ezek. 36.22 33. not will we say for your sake nor for your request but for this or that other reason that we will do And thus though their prayers may prove successefull and they get what they desired yet their prayers are not answered neither do they receive in return to their prayers but for such and such other holy ends to which they are strangers and little mind You will say what be these high and holy ends which the Lord doth aim at in such a dispensation Ans These are not the same to all persons nor at all occasions to one and the same person but we will readily find some one or moe of the following ends to have place in every bountifull dispensation to the wicked whether they have a form of godliness and pour out some carnal prayers or not As 1. the Lord will follow them with the blessings of a common providence in (i) Orationem peccatoris ex bono
naturae desiderio procedentem Deus audit ex pura misericordia Thom. 22. quaest 83. art 16. in corp testimony of his general bounty kindness and propension to shew mercy and do good to all his creatures thus he maketh his Sun to rise on the evil and on the good and sendeth rain on the just and on the unjust Mat. 5.45 Thus he is kind to the evil and unthankfull and thus he satisfieth the desire of every living thing Luk. 6.35 Psa 145.16 And as 1. thus to be an evidence of his bounty So also 2. that he may manifest his long-suffering and patience towards the vessels of wrath he will with-hold deserved judgments and follow them with outward mercies Rom. 9.22 And thus he will show that he is what he is called Rom. 15.5 the God of patience not only by working it in his Saints but by exercising it towards all men 3. To allure them and lead them in to repentance Rom. 2.4 This is the end of the (k) Finis operis licet non operantis work and dispensation which though wicked men may abuse to their own ruine yet the Lords counsel must stand they cannot frustrate his holy designs however they pervert his work 4. The Lord will do good to the wicked and satisfie their desires when they offer them up prayer-waies to him to evidence his approbaton of and delight in the prayers of his servants he will so far welcom and regard the very picture of prayer as to give some benefits of a common providence to show the power and prevalency of a regular and a well qualified prayer and to encourage his people to the frequent and incessant practice thereof to raise up their hearts to an higher esteem of prayer and to strengthen their faith and confident expectation of a return to their prayers thus in testimony of our tender respect to a dear friend we will welcome and show kindness to any who is like and doth resemble such a person and thus the Lord taketh notice of Ahabs fasting and prayers 1 King 21.39 But you will say doth not the Lord say Obj. Ans because Ahab had done so therefore he would c Ans Yet Ahabs humiliation was not a proper mean as not being right qualified nor such as the Lord required yet it gets the name and the reward not for it self but as being a sign and shadow of that which should have been and thus the Lord did hearken to Ahab not for his own sake nor for his prayers sake but to evidence his high esteem of that duty when performed aright 5. The Lord will thus satisfie the desires of the wicked for the trial of his honest servants their faith and patience must be brought to the touch-stone and be as many other waies So also assaulted by this temptation and that often proveth a very strong one Psa 73. where we will find the servant of God sore put to it and much shaken His feet were almost gone his steps had wel-nigh slipt when he considered how the wicked had all and more then their heart could wish while he was plagued and chastened every morning thus also Psa 37. Psa 17. from ver 9. Jer. 12.1.2 Habak 1. from ver 13. c. But this doth add very much to the trial when the wicked prosper in their oppression of the Saints when the Lord seemeth to reject his people and their prayers and in his providence to smile upon their enemies and this was the case of the Saints and the occasion of their sad complaints in some of these Scriptures now cited as Hab. 1. Ier. 12. c. But 6. this may not only be for trial but also for correction and a paternal castigation of the people of God for their sins when the Lord is wr●th with them he sets up the right hand of their adversaries and makes their enemies to rejoyce Psa 89.38 42. c. 7. The Lord will thus deal with the wicked in judgment and in wrath You will say how can it be possible that these good things can be given in wrath they seem rather to be pledges of love Ans These things in themselves are mercies and should lead us in to repentance and make us fear and love the Giver but yet those venemous vipers suck poyson out of these sweet flowers and thus in the issue these blessings according to that sad word Mal. 2.2 prove cursed and hurtfull When the Lord purposeth to show his wrath he endureth with much long-suffering and entertaineth with many favours the vessels of wrath fitted for destruction Rom. 9.22 Mercies abused degenerat into curses and prove dangerous snares and occasions of sin and misery hence kindness thus shown to the wicked is called by an ancient misericordia omni indignatione crudelior mercy more terrible then any rod and judgment And another comparing the affliction of the Saints with the prosperity of the wicked calleth the one misericordia puniens mercy punishing and the other crudelitas parcens fury and indignation sparing Wo (l) Male ergo usurus eo quod vult accipere Deo potius miserams non accipit pro inde si hoc ab illo petitur unde homo ladatur exauditus magis metuendum est ne quod posset non dare propitius det iratus Aug. just in Joan. tract 73. to him who gets his will to his ruin the Lord many a time in (m) Aliquando Deus iratus dat quod petis Deus propitius negat quod petis Aug. de verb. dom serm 53. mercy with-holds from his children what he giveth in wrath to enemies the prosperity of fools shall destroy them Prov. 1.32 and not only their abundance and having more then their heart could wish but their necessary accommodations their food and raiment their table and that which should have been for their welfare becometh a snare a trap and stumbling block unto them Psa 69.22 The success and prosperity of the wicked becometh an occasion both of sin and misery first of sin and here we (n) Qui nimios optabat honores Et nimias poscebat opes numerosa parabat Excelsae turris tabula●a unde●altior esset Casus impulsae praeceps immane ruinae Quid Crassos quid Pompeios evertit illum Adsua qui domitos deduxit flagra Quirites Summus nempe locus nulla non arte petitus Magnaque numinibus vota ex●udita malignis Juven satyr 10. might instance several particulars as it proveth an occasion of pride (l) Sed quae reverentia legum quis metus aut pudor est unquam properantis avart Ad scelus atque nefas quodcunque est purpura ducit Juven Sat. 14. if the Lord grant the desires of the wicked they will exalt themselves Psa 140 8. Secondly of impenitence security and self pleasing when Ephraim became rich and found out substance in all his waies he said no iniquity should be found in him Hos 12.8 when the ground of the rich man
(ſ) We are not now speaking of spirituals which have no place here because these shall not be with held no not as to their measure and degree as may appear from Patt 1. Chap. 7. Sect. 2. indifferent and may in the use prove serpents to sting thee and not bread to nourish thee and so could not be given to thee when such but in wrath But if thou hast learned to pray as thou ought'st submitting to him who is (t) Isa 28.29 wonderfull in counsel and excellent in working to the only wise God and thy compassion at Father who will not give thee a stone in stead of fish and confining thy desires within the bounds of the promise for these indifferent things only then fall under the promise when hic nunc they are good to us as hath been shown Part 1. Chap. 7. and Part 2. Chap 2. if thou hast thus learned to pray aright thou needst not doubt of the success of thy prayers but maist be assured that though thou hast not gotten the particular that thou named in thy prayer yet thy prayer hath been heard and answered the true sense and meaning whereof must be this (u) 1 Tim. 1.17 O Lord thou knowest what is good for me to have or want and this is the mercy that I desire if it may prove a mercy and blessing indeed but otherwise let me rather want it then have it in wrath and to be a snare unto me So that every prayer for outward and temporal things must have a condition either tacite or expressed and so must have two parts and members and as we pray for such a supposed mercy upon supposition of expediency and conveniency So we pray against it and that it may not be given upon supposition of inexpediency and hurt Hence its evident that the Lord in denying when the condition of expediency faileth or delaying till it be placed doth hear and answer thy prayer and if he did give the particular he would not answer but reject thy prayer for under both parts of the supposition this is it which is absolutely said and askt Lord do thou as a wise and tender father make choyce for thy foolish child and do as to the particular desired what may prove for thy glory the good of the Church and thy servants comfort advantage and eternal happiness And when we thus pray if the Lord did not with-hold what would be for our hurt for otherwise as we may suppose from Part. 2. Chap. 2. Sect. 2. and what here followeth when these outward things would prove good for us they will not be with-held and if he did give the particular we named he should not answer our prayers nor fulfill his promises nor do according to our faith and expectation nor according to our trust in him or that fatherly care and providence he exerciseth towards his chosen ones but in with-holding what we thus desired in the supposed case of inexpediency he answereth all those ends and engagements And upon the former ground we may yet further argue 1. what is only conditionally askt if the condition fail it is not askt and what is only relatively and in reference to such an end loved and desired when it will not conduce unto but rather hinder and obstruct that end it is not loved and desired but rather hated and loathed But the Saints pray for these outward and temporal things only conditionally and relatively as we have seen Part 1. Chap. 7. Sect. 2. and in the present case the condition faileth and their subserviency to the great end and therefore they being thus cloathed with such circumstances they are not askt not desired and therefore their prayers cannot be said to want an answer because these are not given 2. Such conditional petitions must have two parts and those opposit according to the nature of the condition viz. that such a particular may be given upon the supposition of expediency and upon the contrary supposition of hurt and inexpediency that it may be with-held and not given now both these conditions cannot concur as being opposit and so both these parts joyntly and in sensu composito cannot subsist nor be askt and one of them and that the best and which only in the supposed case is desired and shall I say absolutely x askt is alwaies heard and answered (u) When the condition is placed and included an bypothetical proposition be co●eth absolute condition●lis p●sita cou●● one fit absoluta even then when the particular is not given 3. If our prayers must not be thus resolved and so thus heard and answered when the particular is denied as we would 1 prove forgetfull of our main and great unsiness and the one thing necessary in not asking in subordination threunto and 2. as we might prejudge the Church and wrong others who may be also concerned therein So. 3 we might be inju●●ous to our own selves in reference to our self ends which then must rule and mislead for what knowest thou but in the denial there may be a reservation for some greater mercy of the same nature and kind which would have been obstructed by ●●y getting what for the present thou so earnestly desired if thou hadst come to such a place and hadst been put in such a station and condition of life as thou didst so greedily cover that might have obstructed thy greater preferment and better accommodation in the world and then again ●●y getting such a particular might bring along with it some sad and heavy cross which the having of such a mercy could not counter-ballance and therefore the Lord in his love and in his pity may prevent such a great evil by with-holding a less good And th●n w●at hath been said in reference to the prayers of the wicked that they are not accepted heard nor answered a● being 〈◊〉 abomination to the Lord when the particular they desired is given may serve as a second ground for illustrating the present point concerning the Lords hearing and answering the Saints prayers when the particular is not granted As there will hear be found parity of reason though upon contrary grounds So the ends and designs keeping still the opposition will appear to be proportionably alike by comparing what hath been here said concerning the one viz. the ends propounded in the dispensation of those mercies to the wicked with what followeth Sect. 4. concerning the trials and disappointments of the Saints only in the general now we may suppose that as the Lord in wrath giveth to the (y) Eph. 2.3 children of wrath that which through their folly and abuse becometh a snare and occasion of their ruine So in mercy he with-holds from the vessels of mercy what would harm them and become a temptation and occasion of their hurt and therefore as he answereth ●ot the prayers of the wicked when he giveth them their hearts des●re So he answereth the prayers of his servants when he withholdeth the particular they
included in these all things which must pay tribute to the godly and be subservient to them in their great work that concerneth the glory of God and their own salvation Rom. 8.28 and the wickeds full cup is full of poyson and in the belly will become like gall and worm-wood The Scripture speaks of a strange kind of wine Rev. 14.10 viz. the wine of the wrath and indignation of the everliving God a part whereof is mingled with all their delicious liquors which makes them prove so deadly and astonishing the wicked will never be able to digest or vomit up this wine the fattest and strongest among them will not be able to wrestle with it though they cannot flee from it and therefore in dispair when they find it begin to work and cease upon their vitals they even the Kings of the earth the great rich and mighty men will in vain cry to the mountains and rocks to fall on them and hide them from the wrath of the Lamb from which they cannot flee and before which they cannot stand Rev. 6.15 16 17. and in that day every one shall be able to discern the great difference that shall be between the righteous and the wicked and between him that serveth God and him that serveth him not Mal 3.18 and after that unto all eternity their lot and outward condition shall be no more alike that shall be the general day of audience and discrimination no more prosperity to the wicked nor affliction to the Saints all tears shall then be wipt from their eyes but the wicked shall be cast into that lake that burneth with fire and brimstone Rev. 7.17 Rev. 14.10 Mat. 13.42 Mat. 25.41 46. Isa 3.10 11. What will ye whose priviledge it is to have a good understanding Psa 111.10 become so foolish and brutish as to envy or fret because of the prosperity of evil doers or the afflictions of the Saints Psa 73.3 14 22. and wilt thou be so basely ungrate as upon such an account once to question his love care and fidelity all whose parts towards thee are mercy and truth especially then while he will not suffer thee through thy folly to undo thy self nor put a sword in thy hand whereby thou wouldst offer violence to thy own soul and what are all our lustings our immoderat and peremptory desires after such and such creature-enjoyments but as roving fits of distempered brains seeking after that which may occasion their ruine Let us not then be so earnest and peremptory in such desires nor too anxious concerning the event of our prayers for them let us not measure the answer and success of prayer by such a rule but let us leave all upon the care love and wisdom of our Father You will say wherefore then should we pray for those things since we may not be anxious concerning the success of such prayers Ans As we must pray So we ought to pray so as we may prevail and as we must look to our prayers So after their success but yet we must not be anxious concering the particular whether in kind it be given or not and though the particular we apprehend to be good and desirable be not (g) Hic nunc nobis good for us at such a time yet to pray for it in a regular way is good and acceptable to God and may flow from the breathing and assistance of the Spirit who helpeth us to mind our duty but not to look to the decree of God concerning the giving or with-holding of such a particular now the Lord having put such a price and opportunity into our hand as to see and consider such a mercy which in it self is not evil and may be lawfully desired and may prove a blessing to us it is our duty to improve that opportunity and to hold out the case to God referring all to his wise and holy will and begging that he would do what may be best for us And thus as 1. thou dost thy duty and obeyest the command to make thy request known to God in every thing Phil. 4.6 So 2. now thou mayst have peace while otherwise a tender conscience in no business case or particular can have rest for untill we recommend our case to God how can we expect his blessing But 3. by prayer we will not only thus have a kind of negative peace and fredom from the challenges of conscience but also a positive and promising peace Phil. 4.7 where after the exhortation to pray in every case there is a promise not that we shall get the very particular desired but whatever we get or want we shall get the peace of God to guard our hearts both against anxiety (h) As anxious care is impertinent to us who are servants and children for that lieth on the father and on the master of the master of the family So it is improfitable and can do us no good but rather provoke the Lord to smite us Mat. 6.27 and prayer is prescribed as a remedy of this care Phil. 4.6 and shall we then make our prayers become fewel to feed it by being anxious concerning the event and success of our prayers and care and against grief and disquietness when what we desired is not given and the right and sanctified use of the mercy when it is given our prayers cannot want an answer which shall be better then all outward trifles to wit the peace of God that passeth all understanding If the answer quiet and content our heart it must be full and satisfactory for all we can have is peace and contentment and let the Lord speak it by what mean he pleaseth whether by giving or with-holding such a mercy it is no great matter but certainly some one way or other he will speak peace to his Saints Psa 85.8 And as this spiritual peace is thus promised So it is promising and evidencing 1. it declareth that God hath accepted our prayers for what else is this peace but a messenger from heaven to show us that the King hath heard and welcomed our supplication And then 2. its an earnest and pledge of more and that the Lord will make his dispensation as to the particular to work for our good and thus as such a prayer is good and acceptable whatever be the indifferency of the object in its own nature So it is a mean for good to us and for procuring the blessing which as it is sought So it will not be with-held whether the particular in kind be given or not such a prayer will prove a mean for good though not by the mean that thou didst desire and name the Lord will ●less thee in reference to the particular by doing what he will make prove best for thee though he lay (i) The Saints faith doth offer as Joseph did his two sons both the having or wanting of such a particular mercy to the Lords choice only they peremptorily desire the blessing but yet
they set the supposed mercy to the right hond as it 〈◊〉 were and desire that it may be preferred but the Lord often c. the right hand on Ephraim and prefer him to Manasseh And thus it may appear that though the particular be not given yet the prayer may not only be said to be accepted and heard but also answered though we desire not to contend for words yet we think that when ever the Lord heareth then he may be said to answer because his hearing is never separated from his speaking for either then he stayeth the heart with this spiritual peace or secretly upholdeth the supplicant that he faint not or some one way or other doth him good but if any will refer the answer of prayer to a sensible manifestation of Gods hand either by giving what was askt or making some notable compensation and exchange we will not debate such a nominal question but its certain the Lord may accept and hearken to thy prayer a long t●me before thou meet with any such sensible manifestation of his acceptance But wo (k) Isa 3.11 to the wicked when shall they hear of their prayers though many mercies be ●●spensed to them by the hand of a common providence yet ●●ching in mercy and as a return of their supplications though they have a c●vil ●●ght which no man dare challenge to what they enjoy and whatever grant and donation from the Lord or tenure by his providence they can pretend yet they by their ingratitude and abuse of these mercies which they have emp●oyed as so many weapons to fight against t●e G●ver have forfeited all that right and may every moment be thrust out of all their possessions as tennents at will and certainly one day the heir (l) Heb 1.2 of all things will reckon with them as theeves and usurpers for medling with and taking possession of his goods without his licence and for not acknowledging his propriety by employing them for his honour yea and often here he reckoneth with such they sit in slippery places Psa 73.18 they are not like the people of God who dwelleth in a sure habitation Isa 32.18 as the whirl-wind passeth So is the wicked no more but the righteous is an everlasting foundation Prov. 10.25 the wicked get none of the sure mercies of David promised to the Elect Isa 55.3 but snares fire brimstone and an horrible tempest is the portion of their cup they cannot promise to themselves an hours security from such a storm they know not how soon the Lord will thus rain upon them Psa 11.6 The right of providence is a mutable title and foundation revocable at pleasure the Lord may change his work and the dispensations of providence when he will but he cannot change nor alter his Word and break his promise upon which the mercies of the Saints are founded and therefore their mercies are (m) Mercies given in return to prayer are 1. real 2. stable 3. costly 4. pure 5. witnessing 6. promising real and stable they are sure because they have such an immutable ground as the Word of God and they are the mercies of David and therefore they are real because they are given for the merit and intercession of the typified David they come to them through the covenant of promise whereby the forfeiture is taken off and the curse removed their mercies are me●●●es indeed and no wonder they being so costly though cheap to us they are the purchase of blood they stood Christ at a dear rate they are pure mercies the blessing of the Lord taketh away the sting and thorns from them Prov. 10.22 they are witnessing and sealing mercies they are as so many testimonies of the love of our Father and of the acceptance of our prayers and they are (n) Every one of the Saints mercies may be called Gad for a troop cometh promising mercies and pledges of more yea and of all things whatsoever we shall stand in need of But the wicked are not so they are fed as oxen for the slaughter and their mercies are as so many fore-runners of their wo and misery their blessings are cursed and their mercies given in wrath and in judgment Sect. III. How we may know 1. whether the Lord hath heard our prayers when he deniethor delayeth to give what we asked and 2. whether the mercies we receive be the fruits of Gods general bounty conveyed to us by the hand of common providence or given in love as a gracious return to our prayers Psa 66.19 Verily God hath heard me he hath attended to the voice of my prayer WE will not stay to prove that the Saints may discern the Lords voice while he answereth their prayers there being so many instances hereof in the Word and that not only when he giveth the particular mercy they petitioned as to David Psa 116.1 2. Psa 66.19 Hannah 1 Sam. 1.27 c. but also when the particular is with-held as from Paul who yet discerned the Lords voice and what he said in answer to his prayers 2 Cor. 12.9 Neither will it be needfull to show that we should hearken to the Lords voice and observe what he saith 1. for strengthening our faith by such experiences of the Lords bounty and fidelity 2. that we may pay our vows and return to him the sacrifice of praise and 3. that a new engagement may be laid upon our heart to improve his mercies to the honour of his Name But all the difficulty lieth in this how and by what means we may discern when the Lord speaketh and when he is silent at our prayers and we will find the case more difficult as to its first branch viz. when the Lord with-holdeth or delayeth to give what we askt because we must then wrestle against sense and carnal reason but yet there is difficulty enough to discern from what fountain and by what means our mercies come when we get what we desired We shall speak to both those branches of the question which hath been propounded by several practical Divines but the first so far as we know who at any length hath handled this case is the judicious Mr. (a) Goodw. return of prayer chap. 5 6 7 8 9. Goodwin to whom (b) Such as Mr. Fenner s●rm on Lam. 3.57 Isaac Ambros in mediis Chris Love zeal Chris Gurnal part 1. pag. 43. and part 3 pag. 362. others have added little or nothing but none hath spoken so fully therefore we shall only name some few particulars referring to him for their larger explication adding but a word of observation for the right improvement of these rules And first we will speak to the case in general and then to its several branches 1. then by these and such like marks we may know that our prayers are accepted and heard whether the particular we desired be given or not as 1. (c) Goodw. ch 5. observations taken from before and in praying when the Lord stirreth the hearr
at or about that very time when thou art most instant and earnest in prayer for it as Peter was sent from prison to the Church while they were assembled to pray for him Act. 12.12 2. if in the most fit and acceptable time as first when thou hast most need and thy extremity is great as Peters delivery in that night which Herod had decreed should be his last Secondly to encourage thee against some new trial and conflict Thirdly when thy heart is most weaned from such a temporal mercy and thus thy heart is fitted to receive and improve it which otherwise might have proven a wofull snare and might have become thine Idol if it had been given before the inordinacy of thy affection was cured as the Lord doth not with-hold such mercies from his servants out of want of love So neither so much for what is (i) Former sint if bewailed and pardoned do not hinder the success of prayer past as for the present evil disposition of their hearts and to keep them from hurt thereby 3. If we see the Lord observe as it were some proportion in his dealing with our prayers and walk as there is often a proportion between sin and the punishment of it So between our work and reward and thus when thy desires were spiritual and thy prayers fervent thy success in business was proportionable but now thou art grown faint in prayer and negligent in thy walk and all thy hopes are as it were dasht and now while (l) Exod. 17.11 Meses his hands fall down Amaleck prevaileth if as the more pure and spiritual thy ends in praying were the mercy proveth the more pure and stable and the less zeal and fervency thou expressed in prayer and the more self-interest did prevail the more of bitterness and worm-wood is mingled with the mercy when granted c. and how should the consideration hereof that the Lord will notwithstanding our failings yet regard and in some manner answer our prayers and discover his hand that he takes notice of our way and walk how should this 1. humble us for our manifold failings and not regarding the Lords hand 2. stir us up to thankfulness for thus warning and waiting upon us and filling our hands with so many mercies 3. provoke us to diligence and circumspection zeal and sincerity in every part of his worship and in our whole course and conversation 4. We may discern whether our mercies be given in answer to our prayers by their (m) Ibid. cha 8. effects upon the heart as 1. if they prove not fewel to feed thy lusts but do rather kindle thy zeal for and love to God if they draw thy heart nearer to him and make thee rejoyce more in his favour discovered by the giving of such or such a mercy then in the thing it self and to prize it as a greater mercy that thy prayer hath been heard then that such an outward thing hath been given 2. If the receiving of mercies enlargeth thy heart with thankfulness self-love makes us more forward to pray then to give thanks but thankfulness of all duties proceeds most from pure grace if then the Spirit of grace doth stir thee up to praise God for his mercies he hath helped thee to pray and to obtain such a mercy by thy prayer it must then be a good sign that a mercy hath been won by prayer when it is worn with thankfulness 3. If the receiving of mercies make thee carefull 1. to pay thy vows made in prayer and 2. to improve what thou hast received to the honour of the Giver it is an evidence that such mercies have come from God otherwise they would not thus lead in to him 4. If thou look over second causes by faith acknowledging his sole hand who governeth and ordereth second causes according to his pleasure it is an evidence of thy dependence on him and that thou hast prayed in faith and so must have prevailed 5. If the mercy obtained encourage thee to continue in prayer and in all other cases to run to God making thee say with him therefore will I call upon God so long as I live Psa 116. 1 2. if it quicken thy diligence and strengthen thy faith in prayer it s a token the Lord hath spoken and thou hast heard his answer 6. If with the mercy there come some evidence of love if the Lord smile upon thee and lift up the light of his countenance and intimat his favour there will be no place left for doubting since thou hast not only a love-token but a letter also with it to bear witness of his love And 7. the event will bring with it an additional confirmation that such a mercy hath been obtained and sanctified by prayer if it prove a real and stable mercy if the trouble vexation and snare that otherwise might accompany it be removed it may be an evidence that it is a blessing indeed Prov. 10.22 Now for the right (n) A Caution improvement of these directions I deny not that these and the like particulars deserve our serious consideration and when they occur may be helpfull for discovering the Lords mind in his dispensations towards us but we would distinguish and put a difference between those necessary qualifications of prayer which are required on our part and which belong to the performance it self and so are indispensably required at our hands and between those gracious dispensations which the Lord according to his meer good pleasure may impart or with-hold As to the 1. we would carefully observe those directions that concern our duty for if we be negligent in prayer and in those other duties that relate thereto or if we be loose in our walk we may fear the rod but cannot expect a gracious return to our formal prayers But 2. as to those signs that depend upon the good pleasure of the Lord to bestow or not we would beware of curiosity in requiring expecting or looking to much after them and of rashness and presumption in laying too much weight upon them if they shou d occur Therefore the safest and surest course must be not to lean too much to sensible demonstrations of providence but rather to reflect on Gods Word both on the word of promise and precept and according to that rule to judge of our prayers and their success and thus though we can espy no ground of hope and encouragment from any dispensation of providence yet if we find our prayers run parallel with the promise and the qualifications and conditions thereto annexed and that we have prayed according to the will of God both as to the matter and manner of performance we need not doubt of their success whether we have gotten the particular we askt or not But here it may be enquired whether those mercies which the Saints receive when they are on the declining hand and are negligent in their walk and cold and formal in their prayers be given in
know that there is so much of the old root in the best that if the Lord with-draw his hand and with-hold the blessing neither rods nor mercies could do us good but the venom within us would suck poyson out of the most pleasant flowers and turn the most healing medicines into deadly corrosives Let us not then rest on our enjoyments though thou be a Son thy Father may grant thy desire in anger parents when most grieved and displeased with their children may give way to them and let them have their will without controll but ere it be long the father will chide his son and upbraid him for his medling and taking upon him and then the son if he be not an unnatural wretch could wish that his liberty had rather been restrained then his father in anger given way to his course and who among the genuin Sons of Zion would not rather choose to be under the rod then to have his hearts desire with the displeasure of his heavenly Father O! then do not mistake as if thou hadst with thy fathers leave and good will because thou didst ask and he hath answered thy desire for he may give thee in wrath as he did the Israelits Psal 78.29.31 thine own hearts desire and not with hold the request of thy lips Let us then examine our hearts and wayes and then rejoyce in our mercies let us observe the Apostles method 1 Joh. 5.14 15. and judge of our having and receiving by the audience of our prayers which must be known not by sensible demonstrations of providence but by comparing our prayers with the right rule viz. the will of God revealed in his commands and promises but if we proceed contrarily and conclude that our prayers are heard because we have the petitions we desired of him we may readily mistake and apprehend these prayers to be heard and answered whereby the Lord hath been provok't and dishonoured O! but when it is with us as it was with him Psa 21.2 6. when the Lord gives us our hearts desire and with-holds not the request of our lips and we rejoyce in his salvation and are glad because he lifts up his countenance upon us when these are joyned together then is our peace stable and our comforts solid but when we rejoyce in mercies and grieve the God of our mercies our joy will end in mourning Sect. IV. A modest enquiry after the reason holy design● and ends why the Lord delayeth or denieth the particular merey that was desired though he accept and answer our prayers Psa 30.18 Therefore will the Lord wait that he may be gracious unto you and that he may have mercy upon you for the Lord is a God of judgment 2 Cor. 12.8 9. For this thing I besought the Lord thrice and he said unto me my grace is sufficient for thee THe present question is not concerning the Lords hiding himself from the prayers either of the wicked or of the Saints that being the matter of the following Chapter but concerning such and such a way of answering the effectual fervent prayer of the righteous which must prevail and cannot want a return viz. 1. why the Lord for so long a time delayeth to give what he purposeth at length to give 2 why he denyeth and with-holdeth the particular mercy that was askt and will rather give some other thing which will be better for us in lieu and consideration of what was desired and thus will rather make a gracious compensation then grant the mercy in kind that was desired We shall begin with the last as being many a time the sad tryal and exercise of the Saints who not seeing the Lords design nor observing the compensation it haply being in spirituals which are not so easily discerned have been ready to apprehend such a dispensation to be in wrath and that the Lord hath hid himself from their prayers But here it would be remembred that our work is not to enquire after the meritorious and procuring cause which by way of demerit doth provoke the Lord either to deny or delay because although the Lord delay to give or deny what was askt yet he doth not as the question supposeth either deny or delay the acceptance and hearing of our prayers yea such a denial and delay is not only in mercy and love but by (a) See Sect. 2 way of answer to our prayers and he who knew no sin did meet with such a return to his prayers Mat. 26.39 42 44. And therefore now we must only enquir concerning the holy ends and gracious designs the Lord propoundeth in such a dispensation under which we would not have the castigation of his people to be comprehended for albeit in his purpose and in the issue that hath much love in it yet it being in it self grievous bitter and afflictive and not a fit (b) See Part. 3. Chap. 3. object of our prayers it cannot so properly be said to be given by way of return to them yet since it proceeds from love and may be very profitable to us and thus may be askt conditionally and comparatively as hath been (c) Ibid. shown we shall in the close add a word concerning it though still it would be considered that there is a great difference between this and those other designs which have nothing of anger and wrath in them and here the object it self being absolutely considered is (d) Malum paena evil a fruit and punishment of sin and a testimony of divine displeasure and therefore whatever be said of the fruit and event yet the thing it self abstractly considered cannot well be called a return and answer of prayer Now let us name some of those gracious ends for which the Lord denieth to give the particular mercy we desired as 1. the exercise of our faith and patience graces are giuen us for use as talents wherewith we should trade and gain and not to be laid up in a napkin to rust and corrupt and therefore its needfull that the Lord in his providence should offer occasions for their exercise as in the present case while he with-holdeth our hearts desire then in patience to submit to his holy counsel and still to depend upon him as it must be the work of honest supplicants So 2. it is their tryal thus the sincerity of their hearts and reality of their grace is brought to the touch-stone not only must our graces be exercised for their growth and encrease but also for their tryal and discovery and to give Sathan the world yea and our own hearts an evidence of their truth yea and sometimes of their strength and perfection if notwithstanding we meet with no sensible demonstrations yet we will believe God's Word of promise depend upon him and patiently bear a seeming repulse and denial 3. Hereby the Lord would draw our hearts off from the creature that we may enjoy a more ful● and immediat communion with himself he will cut off the streams
in but only advanced some steps in the way if such fall back there are small hopes of their recovery and this their back-sliding is a mark and character of their reprobation and rejection for saith the Lord they draw back unto perdition ver 39. O! how dangerous is it to make but some few steps forward and then return and to choak some as it were half-purposes and resolutions and half-convictions and humiliations Felix once p trembled but he quenched that motion and we hear no more of that work on him Agrippa was once almost q perswaded to be a Christian but he followed not his look and what was the event And are there not many a trembling Felix and half-converted Agrippa's among you how often have you quenched and resisted the holy Ghost the Lord hath many a time knocked at your door and hath yet come nearer you and cryed in your ears and pulled you as it were by the arms to awaken you and you have as it were through your sleep spoken some few words in answer to his call and have started to your feet as if ye had purposed to rise and follow him but alas ye soon wearied and notwithstanding this seeming beginning ye quickly drew back and while the Lord with-drew a little waiting as it were till you should put on your cloaths ye have returned to your old couch again and laid your head on the cod and you are how more deeply plunged in your rest and sleep more softly then in former time and were it not a just thing with the Lord to trouble you no more and to say unto you sleep on and take your rest yet a little r sleep a little slumber and folding of the hands to sleep There is a time of awaking coming after which secure sinners will sleep no more then weeping wailing and gnashing of teeth hereafter there will be no ease nor mitigation of their torment unto all eternity 7. There is little hope of proud obstinat stubborn and presumptuous sinners who have hardned their hearts against the fear of the Lord and by boldness in sinning have come to a cursed liberty to sin against knowledge and conscience without check or challenge such impudent wretches are often in Scripture called workers of iniquity they having made it their trade to do wickedly with both hands earnestly and to drink in sin greedily as the Ox doth water and the Word of truth holds such out as men devoted to destruction Iob 31.3 Psa 5.5 Psa 37 1 2. Psa 92.7.9 Psa 94.20 Prov. 10.29 Prov. 21.15 c. And in the day of accounts the sentence will be this depart from me all ye workers of iniquity Luk 13.27 8. Hereticks both speculative and practical are in a most dangerous condition 1. Speculative such as maintain and spread poysonable doctrine for the subverting of those who hear and converse with them are held forth in the Scriptures with a black mark on their fore-head that we may beware of them and may abominat their way Tit. 3.10 11. 2 Thes 2.10 11. where first such are said to be s subverted or quite over-turned and fallen without hope of recovery Secondly they are to be reputed as self-condemned and having a judge within themselves who hath given out sentence against them Thirdly such must not be tolerated but if they continue obstinate and who among them will ever turn after the first and second admonition should be rejected and excommunicated Fourthly we have the reason why the Lord suffers such thus to fall and why he gives them up to such errours not because they are pious learned and ingenuous men as their followers would make us believe and under which mask deceivers usually do cover their wates and by this pretence often prevail with simple ignorant people but because he purposeth to destroy them and never shew mercy upon them And its observable that this is not only said of Antichrist that great impostor and deceiver and of his emissaries those famous seducers and deceivers of the greatest part of the world where the name of Christ is professed but of all these who being seduced receive and embrace damnable errours from whatsoever hand and because they received not the love of the truth while it shined before their eyes therefore did the Lord send them strong delusions and suffered them to believe a lye that they all might be damned 2 Thes 2.10.11 12. And thus the Apostle 2 Pet. 2.1 tells us that as hereticks and false teachers bring upon themselves swift destruction So their way and doctrine their errours and heresies are damnable of their own nature and therefore to all not only bringing damnation to the first hands to the merchants and sellers but also to the buyers and possessors and to all who welcom and embrace them With what indignation then should we hear some plead that hereticks should be tolerated and get liberty to spread their poysonable doctrine as being a simple innocent matter an errour only in the mind while the life and conscience may be pure and holy But though 1. we deny not that truth may go under the notion of errour as in the Roman Church where orthodox professors are accounted hereticks and 2. though we do not think every errour to be inconsistent with true holiness yet 3. it seemeth strange to call a man a holy heretick or that any should have the face to plead that such should be suffered to ensnare and deceive and so ruine and destroy the souls of simple people for though they embrace damnable errours under the notion of truth and new light yet that will not excuse them but by so doing they bring to themselves swift destruction their judgment lingreth not and their damnation slumbreth not they have believed and received a lye that they might be damned But you will say who among us are guilty of this sin Ans We have reason to praise God for with-holding the temptation but no reason to boast of our own strength and stedfastness for had not the Lord preserved (t) Mal. 2.7 knowledge and truth in our teachers lips how easily might seducers have prevailed with many of us Ships that want ballast must be tossed to and fro with every wind such as have no more but a name and profession no change in the heart no grace nor ballast within nor the anchor of hope to keep them from reeling may easily be subverted with the least blast of a temptation and yet there may be a morall pagan and and selfish stedfastness in a way and course in which a man is once engaged without any knowledge or fear of God nay that may also flow from a damnable indifferency and neutrality because too many (u) Act. 18.17 Gallio-like care for none of those things that concern the glory of God they will not be at the pains to try and examine what is right or wrong in points of religion but will live and dye in the religion of their
and that the covenant of grace doth give a dispensation from the law and yield a great deal of liberty so that it is needless now to aim at perfection men must repent and believe and so say they we do but we cannot away with the acuracy and strictness of some puritans we are not now (y) Rom. 6.14 under the law but under grace we know that God is mercifull and Christ hath died for sinners and let ministers say what they please we will trust in God and in our dear Saviour and hope to speed as well as the precis●st puritan We spoke of the obligation of the law Sect. 1. and shall now only show that this wofull errour is a monster of many heads for 1. it denieth Gods justice and saith that the righteous Lord will acquit and clear the guilty contrary to his name whereby he proclaimed himself Exod. 34.7 And its observable that there his mercy hath the first place and is amplified by several expressions as if that were the great and main property whereby the holy one would be described yet by way of anticipation and to prevent this delusion this caveat is added that yet for as mercifull as he is he will by no means clear the guilty thus also after the prophet Nahum had asserted the Lords kindness and forbearance he tells secure sinners that this is nothing to them they will never taste of his goodness for saith he though the Lord be slow to anger yet he will not at all acquit the wicked But they notwithstanding all his goodness mercy and forbearance shall perish in their iniquiries and the reward of their hands shall be given unto them Nah. 1.3 Isa 3.11 2. It denieth Gods holiness and that (z) Habak 1.13 he is of purer eyes then to behold iniquity and thus it must have been to no purpose for the Apostle to exhort us to holiness because we have to do with a holy Lord 1 Pet. 1.15 16. albeit the Lord himself once and again press this motive as Lev. 11.44 Lev. 19.2 Lev. 20.7 c. 3. It denieth the Lords truth and fidelity in fulfilling his threatnings as if these were set down in the Scriptures only to terrifie fools or children but these men know God to be more mercifull then to damn his own creatures and honest servants and the Apostle John think they was too rash and uncharitable in saying that he who committeth sin is of the devil and that he who is born of God doth not yea cannot sin but purifieth himself as he is pure 1 Joh. 3.8 9.3 And St. James was too strict and precise a puritan while he affirmeth that though a man should keep the whole law yet if he offend in one point he is guilty of all Jam. 2.10 4. It separateth Christs offices denying him to be a King and Prophet for though those men would close with him as a Priest and lay hold on that sacrifice he once offered for sin as a perfect medicine to cure all their diseases yet they (a) Luk. 19.14 will not have him as a King to reign over them nor as a Prophet to reveal the safe and narrow way to salvation And thus by separating Christs offices they are separated from him and while they quit two parts they are deprived of the third 3. Practical heresie The third practical heresie is embraced by too many infatuated people who think that they may love God and serve the devil that they may give God their heart while they give the devil their hands and that they may believe in Christ though they keep not his commandments And such will say though we cannot be so strict and precise as some folk yet none love God more and though we often sin against him yet we daily (b) Like the French King who would swear and then kiss his crucifix and then swear again c. repent and ask Gods mercy we are sorry for all our sins and would fain serve God better but we cannot help it and we are sure to keep our hearts for God and we hope he will accept our good meaning and the will for the deed and will never be so cruel as to damn so many well meaning folk who mind him no ill but love him with all their heart though they cannot do all they should c. Oh! that our eyes were a fountain of tears that we might weep and lament the mad security and desperat folly of those wretches what is it not one of the most ridiculous paradoxes to mean well and do ill such a gloss like that of Orleans manifestly destroyes the text our hearts and intentions are a riddle and mystery not only to others but also to our selves and our actions and doings are the best commentary on that obscure text hence while the Prophet complained of the hearts deceitfulness and desperat wickedness which could be known and searcht out by none but the Lord yet acknowledgeth this commentary Jer. 17.9 10. as if he had said do not deceive your selves with your good meaning and the honesty of your hearts for they are exceeding deceitfull but remember this the Lord will render to every man according to his wayes and doings ah who is able to bewail this desperat deceit such as thus mistake the way will miss the place they aim at such as think they mean well and do ill while they think they are on the way to heaven are going post to hell hence (c) Sed aiunt quidam Deum satis habere si corde animo suspiciatur licet actu minus fiat itaque si salvo metu side peccare hoc est salva castitate metrimonia violare salva pi●tate parenti vene●um temperare s●c ergo ipsi salva venia in gehen nam detrudentur dum salvo metu peccant Tertul de paenit cap. 5. an ancient Doctor said well Such saith he as can give God their heart believe love and fear him and yet sin against him that is keep their chastity and yet violat matrimony shall in mercy be sent to hell and with such a supposed pardon of their sins as they had faith and love to God as their sins made no breach upon their love to him So neither shall their punishment make a breach upon his mercy towards them Ah fool I must not our faith be evidenced by our works Jam. 2.18 20 c. and our love by our obedience and keeping of his commandments Ioh. 14.15 21. Ioh 15.14 1 Ioh. 2.5 c. O! if while thou layest hold on Gods mercy and Christs death with thy unclean hands thou wouldst remember that without holiness none shall see the Lord except as a judge coming to take vengeance on them Heb. 12.14 and that Christ will become the author of eternal salvation unto such only though to all those as obey him Heb. 5.9 We might add to these several other damnable delusions as so many branches coming from the former cursed root
Philippi the chief city of that part of Macedonia Act. 16.12 after such an extraordinary and promising invitation to come and help that people as he got Act. 16.9 and yet how small a harvest did follow there being by his ministry in that place converted only one merchant woman Lydia with her family and with much a do the jaylor for first the earth must quake and the prison-foundations shake and it's doors open before his stout heart did tremble or would yield and open to Christ ver 14 15.26.29 And now a dayes how few are they who make conscience of their wayes and are working out their salvation with fear and trembling Ah! do not the wicked lives of many who are reputed good Christians their formality in the worship of God their negligence neutrality and indifferency in maters of soul-concernment their pride avarice self-self-love and self-seeking make it too manifest though there were no such thing recorded in the Word that of the (f) Mat. 22.16 Mat. 22.14 c. many who are called and hear the Gospel only a few are chosen and shall be saved but ah who doth ponder and lay this to heart our neighbours and kins-folk are daily leaving us and going to the pit and yet we their foolish (g) Ps 49.13 posterity and acquaintance approve and follow their way and while we see them die as they lived and perish in their security and vain confidence we are ready to say their end was peace and they died well and is not this brutish stupidity an evidence that we are lying under a judicial stroke since thus (h) Mat. 13.14 15. hearing we do not understand and seeing we do not perceive nor lay to heart that we might escape the like snare and be converted and healed and were there no more but the want of sense and feeling while you hear or read such a terrible discovery of the lamentable state of so many among you that were enough to allarm you for had not your hearts been harder then an adamant with what terror and pricking of conscience would you have cryed out Wo's me I have too good reason to fear lest I be one of that number who are plagued and forsaken of God and who must perish eternally If there were any such marks whereby we could discover when men would die or suffer any considerable loss in their state and outward condition and if accordingly we did warn a whole Congregation that one of them should die in a day or weeks space how earnestly would all enquire yea would any be at rest till he knew whether or not he were the man The disciples were not more anxious when they heard that one of them should betray their Master nor did they more earnestly ask (i) Mat. 26.22 Lord is it I is it I then every one would ask and say is it I is it I that can live no longer But yet while not one in a Paroch but perhaps all except one are warned from the word of truth of the eternal ruine of both soul and body yet how negligent careless and secure are they and have we not then reason to lament and say ah desperat sinners (k) Gal. 3.1 who hath thus infatuated and bewitched you But to say no more to such sleepers who deserve not to hear one word more till they be awaked in hell I would turn me to others if I knew where to look Ah! are there none who will hear or lay their deplorable case to heart Ah! must I be silent or else suppose what I cannot see and imagine some to be so affected awaked and terrified by this discovery or any such like warning from whatsoever hand ah will none tremble while they see themselves to hing over the mouth of the pit by a small threed which may be broken before they draw their breath Is there no mourning captive who seeing himself taken and held by this wofull snare will in much anguish of spirit horror and confusion say ah is there no remedy though my case seem desperat yet is there no (l) Jer. 8.22 balm in Gilead are my wounds so incurable that the great Physician could not heal them are there not bowels in the God of mercy to receive me yet were it now in vain to lay out my desperat and hopeless condition to him would he not hear if I should call on him I have alas destroyed my self and hitherto rejected all his counsel and therefore it were a just thing with God to laugh at my calamity and mock when my fear cometh and to hide his sace from my prayers Prov. 1.26.28 To such as are in this sad condition I have some few things to say partly by way of warning and caution partly by way of counsel and direction and partly for supporting and strengthening (m) Heb. 12.1.2 the feeble knees and lifting up the hands that hang down And 1. beware lest thy fear and apprehended danger feed thy lusts and desperat security and make thee say with them Isa 22.13 1 Cor. 13.2 Let us eat and drink for to morrow we shall die if we must perish let us take a merry life of it so long as we may certainly that were a wrong course for being eased of your fears and that which would without remedy bring you to destruction the premisses are sad and terrible but the conclusion drawn from thence is mad and desperat and thus you bind as with strong cords that wofull threatning to your own backs and by making it a plea for thy brutish sensuality and desperat contempt of the means thou proclaimest thy hypocrisie and that thy fears were not real but pretended and thus makes it appear that thou indeed art the man who hast reason to tremble and fear as being caught in the snare out of which thou wilt never escape Ah! but were your fears real and if you did seriously desire to be eased of them you would rather take such a course as the people of Nineveh did in a case much like to this they being under a sad and as it would then have appeared most peremptory threatning yet say they who can tell if God will turn from his fierce anger and for their part they turned from their evil wayes and humbled themselves before the Lord crying mightily unto him and ye know what the event was God repented of the evil that he had said he would do unto them and he did it not Jon. 3. But let me tell thee O secure and desperat sinner who wilt be at no pains and yet complainest of the terrors of the Almighty as thou began with the mercy of God abusing it and encouraging thy self from thence to add sin to sin and to continue in thy wicked wayes So after thou hast served thy turn with that most glorious attribute which should have led thee in to repentance thou now takest thy self to his justice and threatenings as if these did chase thee away and hold thee
of our silence and say Ah! why do ye thus hedge up and cast lets and impediments in the way by sinning against our Master and Lord and will not put to one hand to the work where is your longing and desiring will ye not do so much as cry a word with the King might do much ah know ye not that he will (u) Ps 145.19 fulfill the desire of his humble supplicants 4. The graces of the spirit as they call 1. by (x) Col. 1.9 10 11. enabling us to go they themselves being talents bestowed upon us for this very end and purpose So also 2. for preventing their decay and lest otherwise they be (y) Mat. 25.27 28 taken from us and we become unfit and unable to walk if thou restrain prayer the Lord will restrain the quickening and strengthening motions and influence of his spirit and then what deadness and coldness will seize upon the soul distempers will then creep on and lusts will begin ro reign and command O then if thou findest any fitness and disposition for the work any stirring and heat within fail while the wind bloweth if thou que●en the spirit by neglecting such an opportunity thou mayest be put to wait cry and (z) Cant. 5.6 complain before thou meet with such a gale again art thou indisposed findest thou much coldness and deadness to have seized upon thee O then cry for fire from heaven to fall upon thy sacrifice and beg that the spirit of life may breath upon thee do not then say I am weak and therefore must not venture to wrestle with the strong and mighty one thou knowest not well what thou sayest whilest thou wouldst make thy weakness a plea for running away from the rock of strength and defence art thou weak and is it not the Lord who must (a) Ps 80.18 quicken and (b) 1 Pet. 5.10 inable thee art thou (c) Mat. 9.12 sick and wilt thou not come to the Physician art thou (d) Ps 50.3 4.9.11 afraid and wilt thou not go where thou mayest be secure When thou wal●est with God and art speaking to him he is engaged in thy quarrel who dare offer violence to any man while he is in the Kings presence the Saints are never so secure as while they are most fervent in prayer and the nearer access they get the more safe they are from Sathans temptations and though even then he may (e) Zech. 3.1 assault them yet he cannot hurt them nor work their ruine prayer is a main part of our spiritual armour whereby we are inabled to stand against the wiles of the devil Eph. 6.18.11 and is it not better to put on our armour then encounter temptations while we are weak and naked And thus neither our weakness nor strength neither our fitness nor indisposition may be pretended as a plea for lying by but both hold forth a strong motive and argument for drawing nigh to God Art thou strong and lively then thou art the more able and the more engaged to thy duty art thou weak and faint then draw nigh to the fountain of life and strength if conversing with the godly be a (f) See Part 3. Chap. 2. Sect. 2. mean for quickning our graces far more must fellowship with the Lord himself work this blessed effect and therefore prayer in which after a special manner we converse with God is held forth as the best mean of our edification and building up in the faith Jude 20. For as acquired habits are encreased by exercise So also the habits of grace and in prayer our faith and other graces are set a work and exercised and therefore must also be strengthned quickned and encreased 5. Our sins should send us to the throne of grace to beg pardon and mercy alas they (g) Gen. 4.10 cry for vengeance and judgements to be poured out upon us and O! should not the Echo of that dreadfull and lamentable voice alarm us to lift up our voice like a trumpet and cry mightily to the Lord to blot our our iniquities and to hide his face from their cry ah should we be silent while these bosom enemies night and day without ceasing make intercession against us and since of our selves we cannot out-cry them our voice being so weak that it cannot be heard by reason of their noise let us employ the Mediators help his blood can (h) Heb 11.24 speak and all the clamours of our sins cannot hinder the Lord from hearkning to what it saith 6. While Sathan (i) Mat. 26 41. tempteth us to restrain prayer this should provoke us to our duty when the enemy (k) 1 Pet. 5.8 9 10. goeth about like a roaring Lyon seeking to destroy us should not we flye to the city of refuge and ah whither should the child when pursued run but in to the fathers bosom 7. Our calling and holy profession our vows and manifold engagements to him in whom we live move and have our being do oblige us to walk with him depend upon him and in every (l) Phil. 4.6 thing by prayer supplication and thanksgiving to make our requests known unto him we are (m) Rev 1.6 Priests and therefore must daily offer up to our God this spiritual sacrifice 1 Pet. 2.5 we are his (n) Joh. 15.15 Ps 25.14 Friends and favourites to whom he manifests his secrets and shall we not lay out our condition to him and acquaint him with our purposes ah shall the Lord so often visit us by his Spirit by his Word and by his Works and shall he not hear from us is (o) 2 Sam. 16.17 this your kindness to your friend would you deal so with a man like your self and will ye thus (p) Deut. 32.6 requite the Lord 8. Our relation to God as our (q) Cor. 11.2 Husband (r) 2 Cor. 6.18 Father (ſ) Joh. 13.13 Lord and Master c doth engage us to the frequent performance of this sweet and amiable duty what art thou a wife and delightest not in the presence and society of thy kind husband art thou a son (t) Hinc Academici nonnulli orbos illos utrisque carentes parentibus dicebant qui orationibus precibusque spretis ad superiorem dívinamque naturam converti negligebant Franc. Venet. cant 3. ton 6. cap. 15. and wilt thou not draw nigh to thy loving father what hast thou such a husband and father so great and excellent and yet so kind and condescending and dar'st thou thus undervalue his love hast thou such a master such a King and Lord to whom thou may'st thus approach and with whom converse so familiarly and wilt thou not improve this priviledge ah shall he stoop so low to thee and wilt thou despise thine own mercies 9. As our relation to God So also our relation to our brethren and fellow-servants doth oblige us to this the (u) Jer. 8.20 harvest is past and the summer is
soul-deceiving and desperat folly if thou hast but attained to the first elements of this Christian and heavenly art it will send thee to trade where thou mayst gain most and will drive thee from the empty cisterns and lead thee to the full fountain it will teach thee to go to him who hath said (n) Joh. 14.13 ask of me what ye will it shall be given you wisdom hath long cryed to you worldlings discovering your folly and pointing out the remedy Isa 55.1 2 3. ah when will you hearken and obey when will you be convinced of your folly and learn to be wise 16. Heaven hell and earth may be our monitors and set us a work 1. wouldst thou yet stay a while in this poor and miserable Inn perhaps that thou mightst do God more service in thy generation or that thou mightst be better fitted and prepared for death c. prayer may add to and lengthen the lease of thy life as it did Hezekiahs Isa 38. 1 2 5. Jam. 5.15 But 2. is hell terrible unto thee and heaven thy joy and delight art thou afraid of the day of judgment and is it the one thing thy soul desires to be accounted worthy then to stand before the Son of man O! then hearken to Christs counsel watch and pray alwayes Luk. 21.36 We need not descend unto particulars for what is that lust thou wouldst have subdued what is that grace thou wouldst have strengthened what is the judgment thou wouldst have averted or what rod or calamity removed what is the mercy whether spiritual or temporal yea what the comfort or consolation though peace of conscience that passeth all understanding joy of the holy Ghost and assurance of thy salvation c. There is no evil so terrible and astonishing that the effectual fervent prayer of the righteous may not remove and no mercy so great and excellent that it cannot procure by the blood of Christ pleaded at the throne of grace Mat. 7.7 Joh. 14.13 14. c. Here is a large field where we might reap a plentifull harvest but we proceed adding only one head moe with its several branches We have heard how the Lord doth call and invite us by his Word and Works by his commands threatnings and promises c. by these the Lord points out out way to the throne and when we turn (o) Isa 30.21 either to the right hand or to the left we may hear the voice of some one or other monitor saying this is the way walk ye in it but though there be so many who thus lift up their voice (p) Isa 58.1 like a trumpet who cry aloud in our ears and spare not yet there is one voice moe a (q) Ps 29.4 powerfull voice and full of majesty and we would hear what it saith and thus 1. the Lord absolutely considered 2. relatively and the several persons of the blessed Trinity and 3. the attributes and divine properties do call and invite us to the constant and serious practice of this duty And 1. the great Jehovah who is and beside whom there is (r) Isa 43.11 none else the all-sufficient and independent being to whom our goodness and service (ſ) Ps 16.2 cannot extend nor any of his creatures be (t) Job 22.2 Rom. 11.35 36. profitable yet he calls for our prayers 1. as a part of that homage we owe to him 2. by way of gratitude and in testimony of our love to him and of his delight in us then the Lord will have us thereby to testifie 1. our reverence and subjection to him 2. our dependance on him and 3. our own indigence and his propriety that we are beggers and hold all as an almes from heaven and 4. that we may thus be the more engaged to improve what we receive for his honour and may be the more (u) It is a sure rule saith Dr. Preston Saint exer serm 1. what we win with prayer we wear with thankfulness ready to return to him the sacrifice of praise c. but not only as his creatures do we owe to him this point of duty and service but also as his favourits and by way of gratitude 1. to testifie our love to him and delight in him if these be s incere a communion with him in this most immediat part of his worship must be sweet when we may thus enter the Kings chambers we will rejoyce and improve the importunity Cant. 1.4 Cant. 2.4 5. 2. He calls for our prayers to testifie his delight in us and in our work O my dove let me see thy countenance let me hear thy voice for sweet is thy voice and thy countenance is comely Cant. 2.14 Poor Saints are ready to complain and say I have no gifts nor parts and am of no account in the world and alas I can do no service to God in my generation ah if thou be poor shouldst thou not beg and though thou be weak yet thou art not dumb canst thou not then cry and importune him who is able and willing to help and strengthen thee thy prayers are good service to God they are great and acceptable sacrifices the prayer of the righteous is his delight Prov. 15.8 Yea Pagans by the light of nature did come to the knowledge of this point the divine moralist (x) Plato tom 1. Alcibiad 2. pag. mihi 137. Plato tells us that the Athenians observing the gods alwayes to favour the Lacedemonians more then them resolved to consult their Idol Ammon and to ask the reason hereof especially since the Lacedemonians were careless what sacrifices and oblations they offered to God and the Athenians did spare no cost and were more frequent and sumptuous in their oblations then all the Grecians To whom the Oracle or rather Sathan transforming himself into an Angel of light to those whom he held fast in his snare if that Author here relate a history and do not as is usual to him alledge this passage in a parabolick way and for the application but the Oracle saith he gave this response that the Lacedemonians good (y) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. interprete Ficino bona verba words which (z) Albeit Plato by way of dialogue brings in Socrates making this interpretation according to his usual maner which Ficinus in his life prefixed to his works ascribeth to his modesty and gratitude toward his Master Plato interpreteth to be nothing else but their prayers did please God better then all the worship and costly offerings of the other Grecians and then he proceedeth in the commendation of this spiritual exercise and to show that God looks more to the inward frame of the heart then outward performances though never so specious and that it were blasphemous to make the holy Lord like a wicked usurer and to think that he can be bribed to hearken to sinners and grant their desires because of their hypocritical devotion and great oblation I wish that Book
righteousnesse 6. His omnipotence and fidelity may allure and invite the most stubborn and unwilling to the frequent practise of this heavenly exercise he hath promised and he is able to do great things for his honest supplicants will ye so far envy your own happiness as not to become one of those all of us would be great and mighty but alas few take the right course for only the praying Christian is (k) According to Pauls prayer Col. 1.9.11 strengthned with all (l) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 might and thus in some sense may be called Almighty all his strength is borrowed and dependent on the first fountain but thus though the world believe it not he is very strong nay saith (m) Nihil est homine orante potentius Chrysost as he is cited by the Author of a treaty of pacification pag. 57. Chrysostom there is nothing more strong and mighty then a praying soul prayer saith (n) Jenk ●n Jude 21. another hath a shadow of omnipotence in it it sets infinit power a work for fulfilling thy desires and (o) Mr. Sam. Clark in his examples pog mihi 504. reports that some Princes professed they feared more the prayers of some Saints then an army of twenty thousand men maketh the Church (p) Cant. 6.4.10 terrible as an army with banners enemies at length will be forced to put to their seal to this truth what ever success and prosperity they may meet with for a while when the day of Gods power cometh the Lord will send the rod of his strength out of Zion and will rule in the midst of his enemies Psal 110.2 3 5 6. It was said of zealous Luther potuit quicquid voluit he could do what he would but may not the same be said of every believer doth not our blessed Lord say as much while he promiseth to give to such whatsoever they shall ask in his name Joh. 14.13 14. Joh. 16.23 c. But ah who hath believed his report who maketh not God a lyar by distrusting this sure word of promise ye will not take Gods word therefore ye will not pray ye will not rest on Gods bond and therefore ye look on the promises as no great encouragments to holiness O if this one word were soundly believed though love to God or to our duty did not prevail with us yet self-love would often send us to the throne but you may as well question all the Scriptures as any one word or portion of them and this promise of audience so often repeated to cure thy unbelief must be more sure then all the bonds and evidences in the world it being easier for heaven and erath to pass then one jot or title of Gods Word to fail and not be fulfilled Luk. 16.17 Mat. 5.18 Hence Davids (q) Which some call Luthers Psalms because when he met with any trouble or difficulty he ran to it as his city of refuge and was not diseppointed confidence Ps 46. though the earth were removed c. yet he would not fear Ah! wilt thou who art called a Christian and who wouldst be reputed a believer dispute and debate question or deny any part of the holy Scriptures while the devils believe and give such a full and firm assent to every word that (r) Isa 55.11 proceedeth out of Gods mouth (ſ) Jam. 2.19 they believe and tremble and wilt not thou believe and rejoyce believe and love and draw nigh to him in full (t) Heb 10.22 assurance of faith Alwayes ye who rest in a state of unbelief and who lodge and entertain such thoughts as ye will not be able to carry to hell with you ye who would say if ye were not ashamed to speak out your atheism and unbelief what a (u) Whether he did vent this blasphemy in his own name or expressing the thoughts of too many we need not enquire we will not undertake his vindication who speaks nothing for him self blasphemous Pamphleter once said (x) Qui petit accipiet Jacobus Apostolus inquit O si Jacobus Rex mihi dicat idem Whites Sermon on Dan. 9.25 pag. 13. O said he if I had the Kings word in stead of Gods and if King James would say what the Apostle James said and would promise to give me whatsoever I should ask I should not be such a stranger at Court as I am in the sanctuary I have I say to you O blasphemous Atheists who thus undervalue the rich promises of God and will not be at the pains to plead them at the throne of Grace a sad message from the Lord and a dreadfull prayer against you who will not pray for your selves that the Lord would pour out his fury and wrath upon you that finding the efficacy of that imprecation ye might once learn to believe that the effectual fervent (y) Jam. 5.16 prayer of the righteous availeth much the words are most terrible and O! if they were more pondered by secure Atheists we shall only offer these four or five observations which deserve our serious meditation and shall not now stay to (z) See the Preface and Part 2. Chap. 2. Sect. 2. press this exhortation further And 1. it would be considered that this dreadfull imprecation is doubled and set down in two several Scriptures by two heavenly messengers without any considerable variation either in matter or words viz. by the Psalmist whether David or Asaph its needless to enquire now Ps 79.6 and by the Prophet Jeremiah chap. 10.25 And I may say with (a) Gen. 41.32 Joseph to Pharoah concerning his dreams that this threatning is doubled because it is established by God and God will shortly bring it to pass however mockers may slight this sad doom and put it far from them 2. It would be observed that this threatning is not concerning some outward and temporal stroke and judgement but concerning the fury and indignation of him who is of (b) Job 37.22 terrible Majesty the (c) Ps 90.11 power of whose wrath cannot be known till it be felt in hell 3. That they who call not upon God are classed and put in one category with Heathens and Pagans what ever be their Church-priviledges and outward profession yet truly and in Gods esteem such Atheists are not better but rather worse then Barbarians 4. That it shall not excuse them nor guard them from the stroke of Gods fury that they are many though they be kingdoms and families though they be never so mighty and numerous the Lords (d) Ps 21.8 9 right hand shall find them out and shall make them as a fiery oven add he will swallow them up in his Wrath. 5. That this judgment is denounced prayer-wayes certainly the servants of God did not delight in their ruine whom they were obliged to (e) 1 Pet. 2.17 honour and (f) Gal. 5.4 love as men and brethren but the Lord having commanded they must obey and must not only